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..age 86 • The Daily Sentinel

·'
'

'
~

Man who won't discuss
past could wreck 'f utute
DEAR ABBY: I am being
married in a few months. Ted
is 20 and I am 22. He tells me
he has "no past," and refuses
to discuss it.
From what I hear from his
frie nds. Ted has tried every. thing in his 20 years of lifedrugs, sex, alcohol, wild parties. They say he has talked
about numerous one- night
stands without proteclion, and·
that he was even involved in
group sex with eight other
guys and one female. (Again,
without protection.) For all I
know, he may even be a
father. He also refuses to be
checked for STDs.
Am I right for wanting to
know how many sexual partners Ted has had? I am still a
virgin. When I try to talk to
him about this he clams up.
Can 1 trust him? - JITTERY
IN
JACKSONVILLE
.
DEAR
JITTERY:
Absolutely not. Your intuition
is warning you. Anyone, male
or female, who has had even
one . unprotected sexual contact should be tested for
STDs. If what his friends are
saying is true, your fiance is
reckless and immature. He
has expcsed himself to diseases that could destroy your
ability to have children - or
even kill you. I urge you to

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
discuss this with your doctor..
I cannot stress strongly
enough how important it is
that you know your fiance's
health status before this goes
any further. You have a right
to that information .
DEAR ABBY: My mother
passed away five years ago. I
have a table and chairs that
belonged to my grandparents
that were given . to me by
Mom before her death. (They
meant a great deal to her.)
Because the set was passed
down to me, must I keep it?
The base of the table is still
good - but would it ,be blasphemous to remove the top
and replace it?
.
The same goes for the
chairs. They're in bad shape.
Should I go to the expense of
having them repaired and
refinished - or is it OK to get
rid of them?. And if I do, what
can 'I tell any family member
who asks? Thanks, Abby. -

TRASH-OR-TREASURE
IN THE TWIN CITIES
DEAR T-OR-T: Stop feeling guilty. Since you do not
like or want the " heirlooms,"
offer them to other family
members who might like to
have them and restore them.
One man's trash is another
man's treasure (and vice
versa).
DEAR ABBY: Mv husband, "Hank," and I are in our
late 20s and have been married five years . We have two
children. On the surface
everything is ~real; however,
our marriage ts falling apart
because of my husband's
addiction to pay- , per-view
pomo~raphic movies. Hank
doesn t understand why the
$60() he spent on these dirty
movies over the past year has
affected me. Our sex life has
dwindled to almost nothing,
which makes me feel inadequate as a wife. We're also
trying to save money for a
house.
I cringe each month when I
open the cable bill - and
each month we have the same
discussion that goes nowhere.
Tonight I told Hank if he continues his habit it would end
our marriage. He said,
"Whatever. I'm not having
this conversation now. " What
can I do, Abby? - HAD IT

42 Use the
phone
1 Method
45 Common
4 "Fancy"
phrases
singer . 49 Circle part
8 Bad-mouth, 50 Lounge
sianglly
about
11 - - tho
53 Nobelist
ground
- Wiesel
floor
54 ~urniture
. 13 SST
mover
destination 55 Viking
14 Mindname
reader's gilt 56 Geometry's
15 Emblem
-Descartes
16 Calendar
57 Chemical
info
suffix
20
17 Pub order 58 Ugly cut
18 Authorize
59 Unmatched 22
20 Work gang
DOWN
23
21 Zodillc sign
22 Paris llrlend
1 Sly trick
24
24 Avarl~e
2 Before long
27 Footpaths
25
3 Guru's
30 At close
26
practice
quarters
31 Slim down 4 Old West
show
32- Kiprur
34 Part o mpg 5 Baseball stat 27
6 Quick lunch 28
35 Charged
7 "Yea,"
29
particles
to Angus
36 Pesky bug
31
8 Diary
37 Clumsy
33
opener
39 Galls kaput,
35
9 Atlas dot
with "out"
10 Gush out
40 Hwy.
12 More lofty
36
41 Hectic
38
19 Guided
place

WITH HANK
DEAR
HAD
IT:
Encourage your husband to
accompany you to marriage
counseling - and hope that
he will "open up." As things
stand, ydpr mamage is dying.
He has substituted movies for
a real relationship with you.
Unless a compromise can be
worked out, you will both
remain unhappy.
Dear Abby is written by
A,b igail Van . Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 189
Ll doubled 39
Mars~
41
to Plato
Shoe-wiping 42
place
Economic 43
Ind.
Smell bad 44
Novelist
- Derr
46
Biggers
Minuscule' 47
Gayle's ·sis 48

-liver oil
Not even
one
Kevin Kline
movie
OPEC
member
Complexion
problem
Low-fat
spread
Gray matter
Flower
w~
product
thoroughly 50 Chicken
Catnap
piece
High pts.
51 Mouths,
Morticla's
in biology
cousin
52 ·Flour-de·Stickler
Web addr.

MIGI!l' 96
~

NICe'?

CARBONAltD
COLA

fLABe'-1 TtJMM"'1 '?
iliiCK ~1ST'?

tll6 REAR'&gt;
CHUNK' 1HI6H~~

.\QUAIN TOR50 ~

PlUMP

Staff writer

Bv J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

SYRACUSE- The drowning death of a Syracuse boy
has been ruled accidental, and
no criminal. charges wiU be
filed as a result of the investi,gation.
Syracuse Marshal Bryan
Pearce said Monday the
results of an autopsy on the
body of 6-year-old Tyler
Willis, son of Bo and Debbie
Willis of Syracuse, indicate no
foul play.
Willi s drowned in a neighbor's · swimming pool in
Syracuse on May 22. He was
pronounced dead at Holzer
Medical Center, and the investigaiion was completed by Dr.
Ted Whitely, Gallia County
coroner, Pearce said.
Immediately followinj! the
boy's death, Pearce satd an
investigation into the circumstances might result in criminal charges. Monday, he said
no charges wi II be filed.
"It was just a terrible accident, and that' s how the death
has been ruled. The investigation is complete," Pearce said.

Bluegrass
takes stage
at Bob
Evans Farm

Inside

WilAT A'~O

01' Ol~ftRENT ONtS
'TO CHOOSE FROM

J. REED

Area ·

....

ARE ~OUSANOS

BY BRIAN

Women_of Gallia, bl~ck heritage
focus of upcoming program

-

IICTT'e? 'THERE

Drowning
death
ruled ·
accidental

.

B.@®

t-1111'\0

Mailing
Moment of sunshine
handled
by Meigs
Industries

I~~

c

hmidie the situation' in ways
BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) · Jan. 19)- Your best chance
You could be the recipient
for financial gain comes today· that won't embarrass this per- By working on what you
of an ideal situation in the
son or make him or her feel
in areas where you will be
best love doing. you have the
year ahead that wi II further
inferior in any way.
potential today for pruisewor- · performing a service for
ARIES (March 21-April
your dreams and hopes .. ·lt
someone in special need .
thy achievements. That murmtght emanate from a least
However. your greater reward
19) - Enga):!e yourself in
mur you hear in the backexpected source, but it will be
will be in self-satisfaction.
productive actiVities that satground will be co-workers
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
in response to something nice
isfy you both mentally and
voicing awe.
phys1cally . Even if this tires
19) - A certain kind of idealyou did in the Past.
LIB'RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
istic romanticism could play a you out somewhat, you'll feel
GEMINI (May 21-June - Yo.u won't feel put upon
role and be a factor today in
good about things .
20) - This is an exceptiontoday by being kind to those
your relationships with perally good day to carry out
wilh whom you're associatTAURUS (April 20-May ·
sons you deal with on a oneplans that you've conceived
ing. Your generous nature
20) - This could tum out to
. on-one basis. It' ll make life
for the purpcses of cultivating
will be based upon realistiC
be a particularly kind day for
beautifucfor you.
good fellowship. People in
thmkmg that won't carry you
you. with both co-workers
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
over the line.
general will be receptive to
and friends being extra nice to
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
2U) - Someone may come to
these kinds of ovenures.
you. You won't do anything
you hat in hand today seeking
CANCER (June 21-July
22)- Although you'll enjoy
particularly special; they'll
help. To your credit you'll
22) - Try to find a quiet . much acceptance arid camaraJUSt want to make you happy.
place to go and meditate toderie with friends and associates today, those for whom
day on those things that you
pcssess a strong desire to unyou ' II feel the greatest apr.reWORD
SC,RIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
derstand better. You ' ll find
ciation will be found within
,
,
"CI20D:I Unllld Fe11ure S'flldle;lle.lro: .
'
Answer
the answers you've been
your own household.
.
I,
1SIDOWN ._!!L
JookiiJE for.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23to
, LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Dec. 21)- Much romance or
previous
I, E,
AVERAGE GAME 245-255
2odDOWN • 15
S&lt;Jmeone for whom you've
social acceptance is in the
by JUDD HAMBRICK
FOUR PLAY TOTAL =
done favors in the past can be
Word
stars for you today. Someone
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
•
113
relied upon today to come
you really like will show you
DIRECTtONS: Make a 2· to 7-!e"er word from the leners on each y&amp;tdlilia .
Scrimthrough for you when you
how very special you are to
Add po1rcs to eacn wortJ or letter USing scoring directions at rlghf. Seven-lener
• 82
M&gt;rds get a 60-pol,nt bonus An words can be louncl in Webstef's New World
need him or her the most.
mage ·
hun or her and how happy she
College Dictiona"1
JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW
Don' t hesitate to ask for assisor he is IO be with yOu.
AVERAGE GAME 191).200
JUOb'S TOTAL
301
tance.
1
CAPRICORN
\).\ CI&lt;Dt.R
[
I-lEVER
VOU I&lt;IIOW
0\&lt;A~, so 1/Mit:J&lt;

(~D~ec~.i2i2~·~z:.,~··~·~~~~;-r===~--r;~~~~~l

www.mydailysentinel.com

§i

Students can
learn a lot from
the newspaper about the
world
in which they live. And
now is the
perfect time to bring
newspapers into the
cia r m.

-

TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 2003

. SYRACUSE
- .
Meigs
Industries has a job which could
affect national security.
The employees are preparing a
Homeland Security information
packet which will be sent to
250,000 health care providers
· throughout Ohio. As soon as the
information arrives, they will be
stuffing envelopes for months.
Steve Bei\a, director of the
Carleton School which operates
Meigs Industries, said the project
is just one of the many accomplished by its hard working labor
force . The school teaches and
trains developinentally disabled
children and adults the secrets to
living and working in their surroundings.
"The employees of Meigs
Industries are pleased to have this
role in the nation's homeland security effort," he said.
. In a joint effort between the U.S.
Department of Health and Human
Services Centers for Disease
Control' and Prevention (CDC) in
Atlanta. Ga., and the Ohio
Departlr\ent of Health, the mailing
i.5 designed to assist the medical
It's an unusual day anymore when two kids can enjoy a game of catch- or arlythlng else- without enduring a cold ·
community in ~oming more
knowledgeable and prepared
rain. Monday, Jacob Rickert, 9, and his sister. Amanda Miller, 13, found the day's sunny weather perfect for a game
about the 'smallpcx virus and the
of catch in front of their South Second Avenue home.
. (Brian J. Reed)
smallpcx vaccine.
: The packets will arrive later this
Summer. Between 20 and 40 adults
will be working on the project.
· Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of
the CDC, said .t.he high priority of
the public's health is very impcrStaff report
ta.nt.
.
"Ensuring that clinicians have
the right to information about
smallpcx and other pctential terRIO GRANDE - The
rorism agents is critical as we work
Rarely
Herd, Johnny Staats and
I(Mited on the present-day site
.
.
toward improving this nation's BY ANDREW CARTER
the
Delivery
Boys and other
of the Gallipolis Developmental
The lineup of Gallia's gallant gals to be
preparedness for a terrorism Stall writer
renowned groups will take the
Center.
anack. "
portrayed
includes
Hannah
Utley
Maxon,
''Mad
stage Saturday at the Bob
Bailey, who will be played
GALLIPOLIS- The conEvans Faim Bluegrass Festival.
Ann" Bailey, Grandma Gatewood, Bernice
tributions of women to Gallia by Barbara Kemper, was a
The full-day event, which
Borden, Alma Holzer; Maybelle Mcintyre, Ullian
County and the area's African- scout and spy during the
begins at 10 a.m. and lasts until
American heritage will be Revolutionary War era who
Mitchell,
Dr.
Ella
Lupton,
Permelia
Atwood,
l0 p.m., will also include the
lauded June 28-29 when the later settled in Harrison
Cherry
Ridge Band and
Marie Menager and Irene Miles.
• Betzing honored by
French Colony Chapter Township. She was well .
Reuugmss.
ODOT, See page Al
Daughters of the American known for her daring feats ,
Each bani:l will perform three
• PHS class of '58 holds
Revolution presents "Gallant skill with a rifle and expen
times
during the event, with a
University in Washington, tice near the turn of the ceoreunion, See page A3
Gals of Gallia Courity and horsemanship.
new group beginning every
Grandma Gatewood, who IJ..C.
· tury between the late 1800s
• Civil War era dance
Our Lamben Lands Heritage"
hour.
wiU be played by Marjorie
Holzer, who ·will lx.! played and early 1900s. She died at
workshop to be held, See
at the Ariel Theatre.
"We're proud to bring this
page A3
Show times are 7:30 p.m. Gtlham Wood. ts famous lor by Jeannie Ecker Sessions, the age of 99.
event back to the fann after its
Menager, to be played by
on Saturday and 2 p.m. on havmg walked the length of . was tiJe wife of Dr. Charles E.
successful introduction last
Rain, HI: 70s, Low: 50s
Sunday. Tickets are $5 each. the Appalachian Trail. · She Holzer Sr. and founded the Jackie Coonen. was one of the
year."
said Ray McKinniss,
"This is the French Colony brought fame Io Gallia Holzer School of Nursing. French 500. the original group
Farm manager.
Bob
Evans
Chapter's Bicentennial event County on a nattonal scale which· is now based at the of French settlers who came to
"These groups represent the full
. University of Rio Grande/Rio Gallipolis in 1790.
. to help preserve the history of with her exploits..
gamut
of Bluegrass. from the ·
Borden. who wtll be played Grande Community College.
Atwood, who will be played
Galiia County," said Benie
traditional
to the soulful to the
Roush , a member of the by Elame Armstrong, was a . Mcintyre, described as the by Lynn Bookman, founded
more contempcrary and from
French Colony Chapter DAR . dynamtc educator and church dar! ing of renowned journal- . Rio Grande College along with
nationally recognized talent to
"We've hear a lot about the leader m the local Afncan- ist 0.0. Mclntyre. will be her husband Nehemiah in
regional
favorites." ·
men of Gallia County, this is Amencan commumty. She played by Dene Pellegrinon . I 876. The Atwoods were
Tickets
are $1 0 for adults and
about the women," Roush taught for more than 40 years The Mclntyres were child- members of a local Free-Will
$5 for children under 12. The
congregation.
added. "We feel this is our in the Gallia County Local hood sweethearts who mar- Bapti st
event
is co-spcnsored by Coca
way preserving what these School District and was ried in 1908. Mrs . Mcintyre , Nehemiah Atwood died in
Cola.
women have done for Gallia known and respected for a Gallia County native , 1869, but Permelia carried
Morgan Tucker, i.st grade
The Rarely Herd, voted
pushing ~oung black children excelled in the areas of busi- on the work of seei!tg t~e
Rutland Elementary
County."
·
"America's
most entertaining
to
do
thetr
best.
Borden
was
a
ness
management
and
concollege
become
a
reality.
·
The lineup of Gallia's galbluegrass
band"
lO years in a
In the Lamben Lands trib- .
lant gals to be portrayed leader in the Boy Scouts local- tract negotiations, strengths
row
by
the
Society
for the
includes Hannah · Utley ly and was also nationally which greatly enhanced her ute portion of the program, ·
Preservation of Bluegrass
Glenn Miller will read the
Maxon , "Mad Ann" Bailey, known as an educator and husband's career.
1 Sections - 11 Pqes
Music in America, is considchurch
leader.
Miles,
who
will
be
played
will
of
Frank
Lambert
to
his
Grandma Gatewood, Bernice
Classifieds
83-5
ered
an innovator of Bluegmss
Mitchell, to be played by by Cind~ Graham, was a daughter, Crystal Wagner.
Borden.
Alma
Holzer,
entenainment. Johnny Staats
Comics
86
Maybelle Mcintyre, Lillian Barbara Scott., was the daugh- leader m the Women 's The Lambert Lands, located
ter of Raben Mitchell who Christian Temperailce Union. in Morgan Township, were
has appeared on the Today
Mitchell,
Dr.
Ella
Lupton.
· pear Abby
'B6
sued
the
Gallipolis
City
She
waged
war
against
the
purchased
in
1843
by
Frank
Show, CBS Evening News and
Permelia Atwood, Marie
School District to end its pcli- use of alcqhol in Galli a Lambert and settled by
CNN, in People Magazine and
Menager and Irene Miles.
Editorials
A4
cy of segregation in the early County and helped . close Lambert and 20 freed slaves
Music Magazine and
Max01,
1
,
who
wi
II
be
played
AS · by Konnie Zinn Carter, 1s con- 1900s. She attended the for- down several local saloons. long before Abraham Lincoln · Country
Movies
has performed on the Grand
Lupton. who will be signed the Emancipation
Ole; Opry Stage.
sidered
the
"'Florence mer Lincoln Colored School
Bl -3
Sports
The Cherry Ridge Band, a
Nightengale of Gallia County. in Gallipolis and attended played _ by Krista! Wion- Proclamation.
A2
Weather
Many descendants of those
She was a nurse during the Gallia Academy after it was . Eckhardt, was the first
local favorit~. is known for its
Civil War and worked. at a integrated. She later became female doctor in Gallia first settlers still call Gallia
( 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Plene see F.,m, A5
hospital believed to have been dean of music at Howard County. She set up her prac- County home today.

The Ne~spaper
Has Class •••

'4--J\\1\\?

•

ACROSS

Astrograph

lO 6tT

Berry .g rowers meet, A3

Monday,
. June 2, 2003
.

www.mydally•entlnel.com

ARm ~?

Index

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~IPI'ION·VP.

1ft

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Did you know that the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation is
offering grant monies for Transitional Work Programs?
Did you know this program can reduce your workers' comp costs?
Call Holz~r Work Link to see how this program can be provided at
.
no charge to stale fvnded employers.

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

Call

446-5733 Or
toll .... 1·866·308·2266

E-

.;
~-

www.holzer.org
,,

�PageA2

Locai·News

The Daily Sentinel

l'tiesday, June 3, 2003

PageA3

.Local News

The Daily Sentinel .

Thesday, June 3, 2003

Clogging competition

Ohio weather •·

Ohio's Hill Country
introduces online
Heritage Trails Guide

Wednesday, June 4

•

f
j Youngstown

......,...........;···r····-· . -;;:;-,

l !!enal'!ld_t50"16~ •

POMEROY- An onli ne
Heritage Trails Guit\e of Ohio's
Hill Country is avai lable at
www.ohiohillcoumry.org.
According to Melanie
Warman, chairperson for the
Ohio's Hill Country Heritage
.Area, which includes · 29
Appalac hian counties as well
as Fairfield and Pickaway
Counties, the new website provides heritage tourism information based on the following
themes: himdmade and homegrown, arts and culture. industrial and transponation history,
underground railroad, nat ural
heritage, hi storic sites and
museums, scenic byways, mid
restaurants and overnight
accommodations.
Authentic heritage experiences are provided by each of
the included listings. The web. site also provides information
about the organization and its
activities.
·
The website is designed to be
expanded and updated, so th at

••

[sa'o!±tJ

[

'

•IColumbus j52'/69' I

W. VA.

~

KY.

C 2003 Ali:uWealher, too.

..

() ---~ ,_
F

'

Sunny Pl. Cbudy

Cloudy

Showers T-storms

Ra1n

~

~

Flurlies

Soow

Ice

Showers stick around
Thursday.. .Early clouds...Giving
way to some sunshine. Highs in
the mid 70s.
Thursday
night...Partl y
cloudy. Lows in the upper 50s.
Friday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thun-·
derstorms. Highs in the lower
80s.
Satiu'ilay ... Mostly cloudy
with a·chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
mid 60s and highs in the upper
70s:
Sunday.. .A chance of showers
and thunderstorms... Otherwise
partly cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s and highs in the mid 70s.
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 50s and
highs in the upper 70s.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tonight...Cloudy. Scattered
showers and thunderstorms
until midnight...Then scattered
showers. Lows · in the upper
50s. Southwest winds 5 to I0
mph. Chance of rain 30 per-.
cent.
Wednesday.. .Mostly cloudy
with a slight chance of showers. Also a slight chance for an
afternoon thunderstorm. Highs
in the lower 70s. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
Wednesday night...Mostl y
cloudy with a slight chance of
showers. Also a slight chance
for an evening thunderstorm.
Lows in the mid 50s. Chance
of rain 20 percent.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
June 2, 2003

10,000

Dow
Jones
Pct.dlange

~om p!V&gt;ious:

+0.54

June 2, 2003

MAR
High
9003.27

APR
Low
8,851.45

MAY

JUN

•

Rec0&lt;d high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

- - - - - - - --

-

- 1,800

Nasdaq
composite
.~llf.i:S...·
....
.~

----,M,-:A-::R--,-AP"'R-----,M-,-A--.Y--J-U,..-N- 1'200

t ,590.75

Pet. d1ange

m

pnMous:

.0.32

High
1,620.79

low
1,586.48

Record high: 5.048.62
March 10, 2000

June2, 2003

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500
MAR

Pcldlange

m

.

p!9&gt;ious

+0.35

High
979.11

APR

MAY

low
963.59

JUN

700

Raeord high: 1,527 .46
March 24, 2000

AP
'

·Local Stocks
AEP- 29.73"
DuPont- 42.62
Arch Coal - 22.80
Federal Mogul - .40
Akzo - 25.40
USB - 23.64
AmTech/SBC - 25.80
Gannen - 79.54
General Electric - 29.00
Ashland Inc.- 32 .50
AT&amp;T -19.75
GKNLY- 3.45
Harley Davidson -43.18
.Bank One- 37.39
BLI- 13.80
Kroger- 16.45
L1d. - 15.45
Bob Evans - 25.88
BorgWarner- 59.20
NSC- 21 .88
Champion- 3.01
Oak Hll F111811Cial- 24.80
Charming Shops- 4.57 1 OVB - 22 .55
Ci1y Holding - 28.14
BBT- 34.41
Cot- 23.30
Peoples - 25.22
DG- 18.50
Pepsico- 44:10

Prem1er- 9.90
Rockwell - 23.99
Rocky Boots - 8.90
AD Shell - 45.53
Sears- 31 .98
Wet-Mart- 52.46
Wendy 's - 29.80
Wor1hington - 15.26
Daily stock repor1s are
the 4 p.m. closing
quoles of the previous
day's transactions, pro·
vided by Smith Partners

at Advest
Gallipolis .

Inc.

of

o·e1eness Memorial Hospital
to offer health screenings
ATHENS O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer blood pressure screen. ing as well as cholesterol and
glucose screening Wednesday.
The free blood pressure
screening will be open to the
public from I 0 a.m. until noon
and 2 TO 4 p.m. in the lobby of
the hospital's patient entrance.
The cholesterol and glucose
screening, which will be
offered for a $5 fee, will be
available at the same location
by appointment only, from I0
a.m. until noon and from 2 to 4
p.m. To make an appointment,
call O'Bleness' community
relations department at (740)
592-9300. Appointments are
limited.
Free colon-rectal cancer
home screening kits and infor-

mation will be available at the
screening. The free kits can
also be obtained on a daily
basis at the information desks
near the hospital's patient and
visitor entrances.
Cholesterol levels ty pically .
do not change dramatically in
one month so individuals may
want to wait two to three
months before bein~ screened
again. Also, screenings do not
take the place of testing. A
screening indicates whether an
individual's level is below, at or
above normal ranges. For specific readings, an individual
may be directed to see a physician ' for fun her testing. The ·
cholesterol and glucose screening measures total cholesterol,
HDL and glucose levels.

,.

ODOT District 10 Employee of the Quarter Tiffany Betzing receives h.er award from District Deputy Director George M. Collins
at a recent ODOT event. Betzing has been employed with ODOT for ten years.

Betzing honored by QDOT
MARIET'D\- llil~

of Tmnsponatioil District I0
Deputy Director George M.
CoUins is pleased to announce
that Tiffany Betzing, an ODOT
employee with more than I0
years of service. was rec(:ntly
named the first Employee of the
Quarter for District I0. Betzing
is employed at the OOOT
District Office in Marietta where

Retired
teachers
'discuss
bicentennial

~---------- 7,000

8,897.8t

The youth group of the Big Bend Cloggers, Tiffany Ruark , Emily Babbitt and Ashley Knapp, participated in competition at
Hillsboro on Sunday.

POMEROY - Members
of the Meigs County Retired
Teachers diM:ussed bicentennial activities during their
recent meeting, and heard a
presentation from Nichola
Pickens
. Moretti,
Southeastern
Ohio ·
Coordinator for the 2003
Ohio Bicentennial.
Moretti .swoke about the
bicentennial bam painting
project, which she described
as "advenising that fi ts our
rural land&lt;;eape. She said the
re-enactment of Morgan's
Raid is an event that will
· showcase the beauty of
Meigs and Vinton Counties.
Moretti also reflected on
the fond memories of growing up in Eastern Meigs
County, and expressed appreciation to the group for a
scholarship she received
while attending The Ohio
State University.
Gay Penin, president, discussed the need for continued state funding to public ·
libraries, and a'ked members
to bring books for young people to the September meeting.
Me111bers approved a
donation to the scholarship
fund in honor of the late John
Blaetmar.
June Frowine, District VII
Director of the Qhio Retired
Teachers Association, spoke
briefl y about a meeting she
attended in Columbus with
Joe Endry. retired teacher
member of the State Teachers
Retirement System of Ohio.
Marlene Donovan and
John Riebel. Sr. won door

Coming
Thursday:

she works as a Personnel Ofticer tions related to personnel, includ2.
ing processing new. hires. proWhen asked about the award, motion and retirement, evaluaBetzing said she was surprised to tions and coordination of benefits.
receive the award, but very grate.
Each Employee of the Quarter
ful.
is chosen by the Recognition
"I love my job, and work with Commjttee which is comprised
some great people," said of OOOT employees from difBetzing.
ferent departments throughout
Jackson's primary responsibil- the district. Confidential norriinaities include a host of office func- tions are made and reviewed by

the comlnittee, and a decision is
made bao;ed on work performance, motivation, attitude and
overall OOOT spirit.
Betzing lives Marietta with
her husband Kevin. They have
three chiidrin between them Darienne, 9, Aaron, 3, and
Haley, II months.

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com
BlueStarr Network

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

I

www.bluestarr.net
MEDICAL

www.turnpikeflm.com

Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org

BUSINESS TRAINING

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy High School Class of
1958 ce lebrated its 45th
anniversary with a party at the
Riverboat Room of the
Pomeroy Libmry on May 24.
A buffet luncheon was
served and the remainder of
the afternoon was spent taking
snapshots, visiting and remi'
niscing.
Old photos and memorabilia
were displayed along with
class photos of the eight
deceased members with a

CHESTER - The next
Civil War era dance lesson
workshop will be held June 27
at Eastern Elementary gym on
Route 7.
Those attending the workshop to be held from 7:30 to 9
p.m. are to enter the school at
the library entrance. The cost is
$3 a person. Location of the

INTERNET SERVICES
Norris Northup Dodge

.

'

Attending ·were Anna
moinent of silence being
observed in their memory.. . Murray Russell, Tyler,Texas;
Roger Hysell conducted a Fay Thomas DeWees, Grove
humorous program pertaining City; Carl and Vickie Clark
to the fifties, class members Shreve and Bill and Doris
and·school.
Imboden
Ford, aU of
Norben Neutzling, who was Cincinnati; Carl and Carolyn•
unable to attend due to a seri- . Philips Surface, Bob and
ous automobile accident last Janice Parker, all of Marietta;
summer, sent a letter. It was Wilma Ohlinger Acord of
noted that Tom Brown recently Hebron; Harold and Rachel
suffered a stroke, and get well Roush Stout, Hilliard ; Bill
cards were signed for them Fisher. Torch; Bill and
along with Martha Husted Florence Wood, Coolville, ;
Greenaway, former teacher.
Dan Struble, Powell; Phil and

Ann Icenhower Hoffman ,
Williamstown, W. Va.; Gene
and Mary Lou Smith Hawkins,
Middleport ; Tom Games,
Denver, Colo.; Thelma Davis
Jeffers. Pomeroy; Harry Leffle,
Roger and Barbara Hy sell ,
Don E. Roush and Stacie. and
Marcia Qrueser Arnold of
Racine.
The event was planned by
Marcia Arnold,
Thelma
Jeffers, Florence Wood, Harry
Leffle and Roger Hysell.

.Civil War era dance workshop to be held

'

AUTOMOTIVE

PHS class .of _'58 celebrates
graduation anniversary

July and August workshops
will be announced. For more
information, contact Mary and
Gerald Powell 740-992-2622, .
Jane Ann Bums 740-669-3915
or David Stiffler, Jr. 740-6694671.
The dance lessons are being
held in preparation for the
bicentennial military ball on

Friday, Sept. 5, at Chester as a
part of the September 3 to 8
Morgan's Raid Reenactment
event taking place in Vinton
and Meigs County.
All ages are encouraged to
participate. Participants do not
need to bring a partner. There
will be someone to dance with
at the practice lessons, as well

as at the military ball where
200 Confederate Cavalrymen
and 200 Union -and Militia soldiers will be looking for partners with whom to dance .
Attending all the dance lessons
is not required, although all
dancers must be in period costume to participate in bicentennial military ball.

Holzer Clinic

'
Gallipolis
Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

Ohio E;lerry growers to meet Monday at Piketon

www.holzerclinic.com
Pleasant Valley Hospital

PIKETON - Anyone interested in growing strawberries,
blueberries, blackberries &lt;md'or
red and black mspberries is invited by The Ohio State Univer&gt;ity
South Centers at Piketon to attend
a beny twilight meeting at its
Research and Extension Centers
from 5 to 8 p.m. Monday
"This is an important educa, tional event for anyone that
grows ·or wants to grow a berry
crop for farm profit", said Bmd
Bergefurd.
Horticulture
Extension Agent at the OS U
South Centers in Piketon. "We
have been conducting very exten. sive research and den'lonstration
beny trials at_this location for II
year; and have some fascinating
results that we would like to share
with growers that may help them
become more profitable berry
growers"
Currently there are 18 dillerent
research and demonstration trials.
over 300 different research plo_ts.
on benies being conducted by the
stalf of the OSU South Centers.
These include over (iX) summer and fall red ra~pbeny plants,
over 250 thorny blackbeny plants
and over 150 thomless blackberry plants. These include some
new genetic material imported
from China and milde available
to OSU through Dr. Harry
Schwartz from the University of
Maryland.
"We are looking at these new
varieties for yield hardiness and
disease resistance", said Dr.
Shawn Wright, horticulrure specialist at the OSU South Centers.
"As the berry industry grows in
Ohio. it is critical to have producers growing those varieties that

www.pvalley.org

COMMUNITY

Yokeyes Birthwear
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

www.meigscountyohio.com

www.yokeyes.com
NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

EMPLOYMENT

www.mydailytribune.com

lnfoCision Management Corp.

The Daily Sentinel

www.infocision.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

ENTERTAINMENT

Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com

Charter Communications

www.charter.com
GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

WELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS

Precious Memories

Herbalife lndepende~t Distributor

www.photosonchina.com

www.herbsndiet.com

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!
Take your business into the homes of over 40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties EVERYDAY
with a listing of your web address in our

WEBSITE .DIRECTORY
for only a $1 a day.

r;pfaeeJ) f(.) 'f~'

•

will perfom1 well and stay in productJon for a high number of
years."
Other beny trials being conducted by the Ohio State
University South Centers include .
a Black Raspbeny Variety Study,
a Black Raspbeny Alternate Year
Production and Pruning Study, a
Bluebeny Water and Nitrogen
Management Study, Plasticulrure
Strawberry Winter Protection
Study and a Plasticulture
Strawberry Date of Planting
Study to name a few.
In addition to tours and updates
of the beny research trials Dr.
Dick Funt, The Ohio State
Univ.ersity small fiuits specialist

and Dr. Mike Ellis, The Ohio
State Univers~ty s~ fiuit disease spectailst will. provtde
updates on new herbtCJdes for
strawherries, the use of plastic on
strawherries for weed control in
Eastern cultivars, strawbeny renovatton procedures and disease
control t.cw;.tJcs for small fiuil.
Sandy Kuhn, aeny Coon:linatcr
at the OSU s&amp;th -Centers, will
(XUvide an · u(XIate oo the many
exciting opportunities that are
occurring in th,e Ohio Beny
Industry. ''Ohio has the potential
to grow over five to I0 umes the
current production, therefore as
farmers consider alternative
crops. benies seem to be a very

I

viable option", said Kuhn.
.Several companies from the
small fiuit industry, including irri.

·

..

.

gallon, fertJhzer an~ plant supphers have also been mVIted to provide updates on what new items
are available to beny growers.
The Beny Twilight meeting is

free and open to everyone. The
meeting will be held at the OS U
.South Centers, 1864 Shyville
Road in Piketon Ohio.
For more infomJation call 289207 1, (800) 2'!7-2072 or visit
www.southcenter&gt;.osu.edu&lt;http:
//www.southcenters.osu.edu/&gt; .

add itional site&gt; can be added to
the establi shed themes, as well
as allowing t h~ organization to
develop new themes in the future,
Heritage Tourism is one of the
fastest growing segments of the
tourism industry and Ohio's Hill
Country Heritage Area is promoting the state's Appalachian regioo
as an ideal destination for the heritage traveler. said Warman
Ohio's Hill Country is characterized by a distinctive physical environment with an overlay of rich cultural history that
gives it a special sense of place.
The organization is dedicated
to the id.entification , protection,
preservation and appropriate
development of the region. ·
Thts IXU.ifct w-a' funchl by
AnHilff:h 's O:xmmmity Ta:hrology
Fwrl of Otio, the Otio Arts c:o.m
and the Ohio Division of Travel
and Tourism .

U.S.C.F. bicycle race
set for Vinton County
WILKESVILLE The
Wilton Civic Association of
Wilkesville will be hosting the
annual regional/national sanctioned U.S.C.F. Professional
Bicycle Race to be begin on
Friday. June 13, in Wilkesville.
The race route wi II take the
riders along State Route 124,
325, 160. 689, 143, and into
Meigs Cunty . on Road I and
Vinton County Road 9, cover-

ing 62.5 1i1iles: The bikers will
be traveling through Athens,
Gallia, Meigs and Vinton
Counties and will end in
Wilkesville around 8 p.m.
For more information about
the races call Team Columbus,
Hotline 740-32 1- 1446. Contact
Jane Ann Bums 669-3915 or
David Stiftler 669-4671 for
information mi the event.

Volunteers honored
at rehabilitation center
MIDDLEPORT
-. ·
Overbrook
Rehabilitation
Center, Middleport, recently
held its annual volunteer dinner. Mike Crites, activities
director, made opening
remarks, and activity assistant
Nancy Manley shared a poem

and words of encouragement.
· Alan Graham spoke about
hi s experiences as a volunteer, and Pastor Joy Clarke
made remarks a[ld (lffered
prayer. Entertainment was
provided by ''Markie Sue the
Clown ."

Birth
Jones birth
announced
RALEIGH, N.C.- Gerald
and Ellen Rought of Pomeroy
announce the birth of their
great-gra nddaughter, Casey
Janelle Marie Jones, daughter
of Chad and Jessica Hamilton
·Jones of Raleigh, N.C.
She was born on May 13,
2003 at Wake Medical

Hospital in Raleigh. She
weighed 6 pounds, 4 ounces
and was 20 inches long.
Grandparents are Charles
and Gerri Mill er and Mary
Jones. all of Nonh Carolina.
Great gra ndpare nt s arc the'
Rou ghts, Faye Wiggins of
Syracuse. and Bella Jones of
New Have n. W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Jones also
have a dallghter. Lilli-Ann.

Send us your club news and notes
to news@mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

cusPs 213-9SOJ
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Published
every
afternoon ,
Our main concern in all stories is to be Monqay lhrough Friday. 111 Court
accurate. If 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 Assoc 1ated Press
Ohio
Newspaper
and
the
AssoCiation .
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correc·
(740) 992-2t56. '
lions 1o The Daily Senlinel , 111
Department extensions are:
Court Street , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 .

News
Editor : Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Exl. 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
CtoooJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext. 10

Circulation
Dtatrtct Mgr.: Mike Jenkins. Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12

E-mail:
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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

•1n1on
•
•

PageA4

Local Briefs

..

•

Assistance data
updated
POMEROY - The Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency reponed Monday that
. 81 Meigs County residents have
been approved for individual
assistance to. repair property
damage caused by the
President's Day ice storm.
Processing continues for those
applications for assistance
received through the May 13
application deadline. Meigs
County residents filed 191 applications for a'sistance, and
$119,524.78 has been awarded
to assist private homeowners
' with repairs to their homes and
property.
Five home and personal property loans through the Small ·
Business Administration, totaling $109,600, have also been
approved for Meigs County resident,.

www.mydailysentinel.com

· Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
.....

........
~o

..

.Tough battle
Rooting out bias in stories
age-old bane cf editors
• The Grove (Okla.) Sun Daily, on joumal/sric ji-aud:
A New York Times reporter, Jayson Blair, has committed
frequent acts of journalistic fraud, including stealing material
from other newspapers, inventing quotes and .lying about his
whereabouts. The~New York Times di scovered mistakes in at
least 36 of the 73 articles written by Mr. Blair in"just five
months.
The Times described the episode as a low point in the !52year history of the newspaper.
It's also a low point for journalism.
It 's not that newspapers get it right every day, plainly we do
not. ...
Everything works against accuracy in newspapers, and that
is as true at large newspapers as it is at small ones like us.
Newspaper have too little time, and not enough people, and
face governments at all levels that are both bigger and more
secretive. So much to tackle, and so little time and resources
to do it.
So is that an excuse? Of course not. Especially not when tlie
Times management was repeatedly warned about the accuracy of the reporter's articles by its own editors.
But most newspapers make an effort to get it right, and to
present it fairly. The grearest battle every editor faces? The
biases of reporters who mask that bias by leaving essential
facts from their story, or emphasizing certain facts in ways
ihat makes the story unfair, and even untrue.
· _No newspaper has ever figured out how to root out and
eliminate that every day....

TODAY fN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, June 3, the !54th day of 2003. There are
211 days left in the year. '
·
Today 's Highlight in History:
Forty years ago, on June 3, 1963, Pope John XXIII died at
age 8 I. He was succeeded by Pope Paul VI.
On this date:
In 1621, the Dutch, West India Company received a charter
for New Netherlands - now known as New York.
In I808, Jefferson Davis, the first and only president of the
Confederacy, was born in Christian County, Ky.
.
In 1888, the poem "Casey at the Bat," by Ernest Lawrence
Thayer, was first published, in the San Francisco Daily
Examiner.
lil 1937, the Duke of Windsor, who had abdicated the
British throne, married Wallis Warfield Simpson in Monts,
France,
In. 1948, the 200-inch reflecting telescope at the Palomar
Mountain Observatory in California was dedicated.
In 1965 , astronaut Edward White became the first American
to "walk" in space, during the flight of "Gemini 4."
. In 1968, pop artist Andy Warhol was shot and critically
wounded in his New York film studio, known as "The
Factory," by Valerie Solanas, an actress and self-styled mili·
tam feminist.
In 1981, Pope John Paulllleft a Rome hospital and returned
to the Vatican three weeks after the attempt on his lik
In 1983, Gordon Kahl, a militant tax protester wanted in the
.slayings of two U.S. marshals in North Dakota, was killed in
a gun battle with law-enforcement officials near Smithville,
Ark.
In 1'989, Iran's spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini , died.
Ten years ago: President Clinton abandoned his nomination
!&gt;f Lani Gui[lier to head the Justice Department's civil rights
division, agreeing with critics who'd accused her of far-out
i&lt;iews on minority rights.
: Five years ago: President Clinton urged Congress to renew
normal trade benefits for China, saying good relations with
Beijing were crucial amid fears of a nuclear arms race in
South Asia. A high-speed train derailed in Eschede. Germany,
killing 101 people.
- One year ugo:.President Bush, in Little Rock, Ark., to pro·
inotc his welfare initiative. said intelligence agencies and the '
FBI had to do a better job tracking and catching terrori sts,
emphasizing pursuit of "this shadowy enemy." A rock concert
at Buckingham Palace celebrated Queen Elizabeth ll 's 50
years on the throne. Movie mogul Lew Wasserman died in
Beverly Hills, Calif. , at age 89.
·
. Today 's Birthdays: Actor Tony Curtis is 78. Musician Boots
Randolph is 76. Musician Too Slim (Riders in the Sky) is 55.
!linger Suzi Quatro is 53. Singer Deneice Williams is 52.
Rock musician Billy Powell (Lynyrd Skynyrd) is 51. Singer
Dan Hill is 49. Actor Scott Valentine is 45 . Country singer
Jamie O ' Neal is 35, Singers Ariel and Gabriel Hernandez (No
Mercy) are 32. Actress Lalaine ("Lizzie McGuire") is 16.
Thought for Today: ·'What is history but a fable agreed
upon'" - Attrib~ted to Napoleon Bonaparte ( 1769-1821 ).

'Speak Out!'
(740) 992-2156
extension 29

... ·.·~'t .. ~~,~- ....

Bush rides high in polls, but watch eco_nomic numbers ·
A month after leading the
nation to victory in Iraq,
President Bush continues to
ride high politically. But both
Republicans and Democrats
say that his re-election next
year is anything but assured.
The leaders of the moderate Democratic Leadership
Council wrote earlier this
month that "if Democrats run
the right campaign in 2004,
Bush's high-flying poll num·
bers si nce the war will land
with a thud on the deck of the
U.S.S. Economy."
Similarly, three ribera-!
Democratic activists from the
Democracy Corps, reviewing
the latest polling data, found
last week that "the president's position is beginning
to slip" and that popular sentiment on domestic issues "is
already shifting fairly dramatically" away from Bush.
Top White House political
strategist Karl Rove has contended for months that the
2004 election will be "close
... more like 2000 than 1984"
and GOP polling adviser
Matthew Dowd predicts that,
before the election, a
Democratic candidate might
even pull ahead of Bush.
In a memo written late last
month, i')owd wrote that "as
we get closer to the start of
the 2004 presidential election
campaign, the Democratic
base vote will continue to
solidify.
"And, as President Bush is
tested in media polls on
head-to-head ballot questions, it will not be surprising
to see the president behind in
some polls ~gainst potential
Democratic candidates and
generic Democratic opposition," Dowd wrote.
"Every incumbent . president in the last 25 years has

.

Morton

Kondracke

been behind the opposition in
the latter part of his term,"
Dowd warned. His purpose
was to prepare observers for
an inevitable tightening of
the race and to assure them
that "the sky is not falling."
Right now, in fact, the sky
looks sunny for Bush. In
practically every poll taken
this month, his overall
approval rating is in the 60s
and he leads an unnamed
("generic")
Democratic
opponent by more than 10
pomts.
In the. NBC/Wall . Street
Journal's matchup against
leading Democrats, Bush
beat Rep. Dick Gephardt
(Mo.), 55 percent to 29 percent, Sen. Joe Lieberman
(Conn.), 53 to 32, and Sen.
John Kerry (Mass.), 55 to 27 :
A Time-CNN poll published May 25 .showed that
56 percent of voters said they
were "very likely" or "somewhat likely" to vote for Bush,
while 41 percent said they
were likely to vote against
him.
··
The liberal Democracy
Corps
activists,
James
Carville, Stan Greenberg and
Robert Shrum, found hope in
the numbers because Bush's
overall approval "dropped
sharply in the last month down from 71 percent to 62
percent" in the NBC poll,
The DLC moderates, AI
From and Bruce Reed, wrote

that Bush's "high poll numOnce the first Gulf War
bers after the Iraq war are was over, in 1991, there were
lower than his father's rat· no more foreign policy crises
ings were after the Gulf War to preoccupy the public.
a dozen years ago. Bush's Now, terrorism, the reconnumbers, like his father's, struction of Iraq, Iran and
show chronic weakness on North Korea are key issues
the economy that could -and Bush is trusted by the
endanger
his
election public much more than
Democrats to solve foreign
prospects if it persists."
Indeed, there is a sharp dif- policy issues.
Bush could suffer if his
ference between Bush's ratings overall, and on national policies lead to a disaster in
security issues, and his rat- the foreign policy realm, but
ings on the economy. And, as both the Democracy Corps
indeed, it was a weak econo- and the DLC analysts said, it
my that helped defeat his is imperative that the
father in !992.
Democratic nominee be
In the Tirne/CNN poll, "credible" on national securiBush scored a 72 percent ty issues.
Bush also goes into the
approval rating for fighting
terrorism; 69 percent for han- election with high marks on
dling the situation in Iraq and matters of character. NBC's
51 percent on foreign policy pollsters asked respondents
in general.
to rate Bush on a scale of I
But his rating on the econ- (very poor) to 5 (very good)
omy was 46 percent positive, , on various attributes.
47 percent negative. On
Sixty-four percent rated
unemployment, the numbers him at "5" or "4" for "having
were 42 to 48. And on the strong leadership qualities ."
federal budget deficit, 40 to Fifty-nine percent rated him
50.
as "honest and straight-forBush is determined not to ward." Fifty-one percent said
repeat the signal mistake of he . was "compassionate
his father appearing enough to understand averunconcerned
about the age people."
domestic economy - and is
But only 39 percent gave
doing what he thinks will him . high marks on "having
produce jobs and growth: the right economic policies
cutting taxes.
for the times" and 44 percent
There is considerable skep• . 11aid he had "the right policies
ticism in the public whether on domestic issues."
this will work. A Gallup poll , So, 17 months before elecshowed that 46 percent of tion day, Bush has to be
U.S. adults think that Bush's favo red for re-election tax cuts are "a bad idea" and unless a weak economy
45 percent think' they are '"a becomes the dominant issue
good idea."
in the minds of voters. Then,
If the cuts do not produce a he could face his father's
better economy by the mid· fate.
·die of next year, Bush could
(Morton Kondracke is
be in trouble. On the other executive ediror of Roll Call,
hand, he has advantages that rhe newspaper 4 Capitol
his father didn' t.
Hill.)

•

Color-coded executions
Amnesty International's
recent , extensively documented report on how race
plays a role in executions in
the United States, "Death by
Discrimination," begins with
this biting Jan. 9 statement
by Sen. Russell Feingold (D·
Wis.):
· "We simply cannot say we
live in a country that offers
equal justice to all Americans
when
racial
disparities
plague the system by which
our society imposes the ultimate punishment."
.
Amnesty's report includes
these cold facts: "The U.S.
will soon carry out its 300th
execution of an AfricanAmerican prisoner since
resuming judicial killing in
1977." By April 10 of this
year, "290 blacks had been
put to death, and at least 10
more have scheduled execution dates by the end of July.
"African-Americans are
disproportionately represented among people condemned
to death in the U.S. While
they make up 12 percent of
the national population, they
account for more than 40 percent of the country's current
death row inmates, and one
in three\ of those executed
since 1977."
The U.S. Supreme Court
addressed possible racial discrimination in capital cases
in McCleskey v. Kemp
( 1987). McCleskey, an
African-American , was convicted of arme'd robbery and
'

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

NATIONAL VIEW

•

•

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

Nat
Hentofl

murder in Georgia in 1978,
Citing a report that indicated
a disproportionate number of
blacks were on death row in
Georgia, McCleskey's attorneys claimed that his pending
execution was unconstitutional under the Eighth
Amendment (opposing cruel
and unusual punishment) or
14th Amendment (equal pro·
tection under the law),
In a 5-to-4 vote, the Court
ruled that "apparent disparities in sentencings are an
inevitable part of our criminal system." In other words,
for a defendant to win an
appeal based on . racial discrimination, the Court said
that he or she must provide
"exceptionally clear pr.QOf'
that, m that particular case,
discrimination had influ·
enced the case's outcome.
The burden of proof, according to the' Cou.rt, is thus on
the prisoner on death row.
This •is due process turned
upside-down.
But, as reported in law professor Stuart Banner's "The
Death Penalty: An American
History" (Harvard University
'
_.,,,

Press, 2002), one of the
Justices, Antonin Scalia, in a
memorandum ci r.culated to
his co lleagues before the
decision - said pessimistically that "the unconscious
opemtion of irrational sympathies and antipathies,
including racial, upon jury
decisions and (hence) prosecutorial decisions is real,
acknowledged in the decisions of this court, and
ineradicable." ·.
Banner says that Scalia's
conclusion was that "racism
and irrationality were facts of
life, and that was that."
However, Justice Lewis
Powell, who actually wrote
that majority decision in
McCiesky v. Kemp, was. troubled, on reflection: in Powell's
published biography, the justice, after he retired, wished he
had voted differently in that
crucial case. Furthermore,
Powell had come to think that
the death penalty should be
abolished - too late, alas,. for
McCleskey, who· was executed in 1991.
Justice Scalia, however,
remains a finn supporter of
capital punishment. Hut
Amnesty International, commenting on Scalia's .conviction that racia:J antipathies are
"ineradicable,"' point s out
that "even if racism is ineradicable ... the death penalty is
not." Justice Powell came to
realize that, but there is not
yet a . majority on the
Supreme Court that agrees

with Powell.
There is increasing disquiet
throughout the country, and
even among some in
Congress, as to whether there
is equal justice on death row
- and not only about racial
disparities. However, there is
not on the current Supreme
Court any member who dissents in every capital case, as
Brennan and Thurgood
Marshall did. Justice Harry
Blackmun also decided, late
in his·term, to "no longer tin- ·
ker with the machinery of
death." The death penalty, he
·said, is unconstitutional. But.
as Banner notes, "the rest of
the Court (has) tinkered on,"
Since George W Bush, as
governor of Texas and as
president, is an unapologetic
supporter of the death penalty, it is highly unlikely that,
in tilling a vacancy on the
Supreme Court, he will nominate anyone with a public
record
of
affirming
Powell
or
Blackmun,
Marshall.
But in his 2002 State of the
Union address , Bush proclaimed that "America will
always stand firm for the ·
nonnegotiable demands of
human dignity," including
'" equal justice."
But, Mr. Pre sident, on
death row, justice is often
color-coded.
INar Henroff is a nationallv
renowned arltlwrity on tlie
First Amendmem and tire Bill
of Riglr/.1.)
.

Ohio court must decide if abuse victim·
can violate their ·own ·protective order
',

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

TUesday, June 3, 2003

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Charlene Hoeflich
. General manager and news editor

Thesday, J11ne 3, 2003

Contest
sponsored
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Soil and Water
Conservation District is again
sponsoring a Big Tree Contest.
This year, the tree feanu-ed in the
contest is the American Beech
(Fagus Granditlora).
The nominated tree must be in
Mei11s County and can only be
norrunated once. The frrst entry
received will be entered in the
contest. The tree does not have
to be on applicant's property, but
the property owner must grant
permission before the tree can be
entered. District personnel and
forestry judges will m~ure all"
trees, and the deeision of the
judges will be fmal.
Entries must be received by
the S&amp;WCD by Aug. 29. Entry
fonns are available at the office
on Hiland Road, or may be
, mailed to applicants.
The winner will receive a $50
U.S. Savings Bond at the district's annual banquet in
Octobet.
·
Questions may be directed to
the office at 992-4282.

Camp set
TUPPERS PLAINS -Fifth
Annual
Eastern · Eagles
Basketball Camp for boys and
girls entering third, fourth, fifth
and sixth grades will be held
from 9 a.m. until noon June 1620.
The cost of the camp is $30
when pre-registering, and $40
on the first day of camr. A camp
t-shirt, camp basketbal apd individual awards are included in the
cost
Information is available by
calling Rick Edwards at Eastern
High School, at 984-3329.

Reunion
scheduled
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School Oass of
1960 will have its 43rd annual
reunion at the Long Bonom
Community Building at noon on
Saturday, June 7. All fonner
classmates and friends are invited. Take a covered dish.

Trustees to meet
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township 'Ihlstees will have its
regular meeting at 7:30 _p.m.
Monday at the. Syracuse VIllage
hall.
POMEROY Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet at
6:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Salisbury township building on
Rock Springs Road.

Boil advisory RUTLAND - Friday the
leading Creek Conservancy
District repaired a main line water
leak resulting in a boil a:lviSOI)'
for the foUowing areas: SR 143
fiom Carpenter to Hanisonville,
Cotterill Road, Ellis Road, SSR
(fJl, Townsend Road, Gibson
Road, Blackwood Road, State
Farm Road from SR 143 to
Woodyard Road, Woodyard
Road from State Farm Road ,to
and including Hills Road, Myres
Road, and Mudfork Road. The
boil a:lvisory will remain in effect
untilliuther notice.

Retirees meet

_______ _____

•

I

h.

coun order.
The case before the state
,
Supreme Coun involves .con,· ·
· llicting opinions by two lower
COLUMBUS (AP) - Even courts. A ruling by the higher
though she had lll1 order of pro- coun is expected this summer.
tectiOn filed agamst he~ ex-h~sThe case arose from a May
band, Betty Lucas mv1ted him 2001 binhday party that Beny
to ~ birthday party for one o~ Lucas, 35, of Newark, held for
therr children.
..
1 one of their children. She invit. The Pm:tY soon dtsmtegmted ed her ex-husband, Joseph
mto fightmg and pohce were Luca~. to the party. although she
called. In an une~pected twist, had a protective order against
lJ?th adults were charged with him at the time from a previous
violatmg the protecoon order- domestic violence arrest.
her ex-husband for anendmg according to coun records.
and Lucas for ,mvitmg him.
The order prohibited Joseph
Now Lucas appeal has land- Luca' from having any contact
ed on the docket of .the Ohio with his ex-wife.
Su[Jreme. Court, which must
During the party, the two
dec1~ II people who seek a dnmk several beers together and
court s protectiOn . can be fought, court records say.
charged wtth VIOlating ·thetr Joseph Lucas wa' charged with
own request. .
violating the protective order
Domestic VIolence groups • and Betty Lucas was charged
have. sided With Lucas and say with com pi icily to viol at~. the
abusive. people .mu~t be held order.
·
responsible for VIOlating protecSeveral domestic violence
uve orders. Prosecutors say watchdog groups are backing
Lucas should be held as Beny Lucas, saying failure to
accountable as anyone else who overturn her· conviction sets
helped her husband VIOlate a back the justice system's role in

BY ANDREW WELSH·HUIIGINS

Associated Press

protecting victims of abuse.
which protect victims under 18 she and her husband were rid·
"Punishing the victim for from prosecution no matter the . \ng. She had a protective order
contacting or returning to the circumstances. Eve n if a against him at the time .
offender does noitling to deter teenage girl was a seducer,
The 8th Ohio District Court
criminal behavior." the groups, "We've made a societal dect- of Appeals in Cleveland ruled in
including the Action Ohio · sion that we're not going to
Coalition for Battered Women charge
that
individual ,'; favor of the woman, saying she
and the Ohio Domestic Sanderson said.
could not be charged with viaViolence Network, argued in
Ron So love, a fom1er law lating her own order.
coun papers.
professor and judge who is now
The three-judge panel pointed
"It tells the victim that she is a family law speciali st in out that 1997 legislation overequally responsible for the Columbus. said people fre- hauling Ohio's domestic viaabuser's violent behavior and it quently violate their own pro- lence laws was meant "to proreinforces the abuser's belief tection orders. but '"an individ- teet the victim. which some·
that his behavior is the result of ual cannot tum on and off a pro- times means protecting the vicfactors outside his control," the tection order."
,
groups argued.
"Thi s is the only circum- tim from the victim's own
Prosecutor Elena Tuhy stance rve ever heard of the .actions or behavior."
argued in a coun filing that complaining party being proseWhen Betty Lucas appealed
women like Lucas who invite cured for violating an order .her complicity conviction to the ·
abusers back want to "have their designed to protect them ," 5th District appellate coun, citcake ·and eat it, too, at the Solove said.
ing the decision in the Nonh
expense of.. the ,l,aws and
Sanderson argued in coun Olmsted case. the appeals court
autl10nty ol the state.
motiOns that the state Supreme . upheld her conviction.
Lucas' attorney, Andrew Court should toll ow a 2000 . The court said it was "overSanderson, argued that Ohto court n1hng mvolvmg a sumlar •e' h. " wh someone· l'k
en
· meant to protect vtctuns
· ·
·arrest
· · Ill
· ' North Ol msted, ·Ill sub- • ac. mo
Iaw IS
.f
. .1 e
ot domestic violence even if urlxm Clevehmd.
Luca'i requested the protection
they make a bad decision about
In that case: a woman also order. and then recklessly
tl1e persollwho abused them.
faced a charge of complicity to exposed herself to the offender
He used the analogy of violate a protective order atier from whom she has sought proOhio's sexual assault laws, police stopped a car in which tection...

Martha Stewart's company ·report~ criminal
investigation, says indictment to be sought
BY ERIN McCLAM
Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) Federal prosecutors are seeking
a criminal indictment against
Martha Stewart "in the near
future," her media company
said Thesday.
Stewart, whose name has
become synonymous with
tasteful living for legions of
followers, has been under
investigation for selling shares
of biotechnology company
lmC!one Systems . Inc. in
December 200 I -just before
disappointing news surfaced
about a key lmCione-produced
drug.
Stewart's attorneys have told
the company that she is the target of a criminal investigation
by the U.S. attorney in
Manhattan, which "intends .to
request the granq jury to return
an indictment agamst her in the
near future."
The
statement,
issued
Thesday morning by Martha

Stewan Living Omnimedia
Inc., did not elabomte on the
possible criminal charges.
Analysts have said charges
could include insider trddi ng or
obstruction of justice·.
A civil complaint by the
Securities and Exchange
Commission also is expected,
according to the .company's
statement. The SEC had notified Stewart in October of its
intent to file a civil complaint
that could cost Stewart heavy
fmes and her job as CEO of her
company,
Stewart, 61, has denied any
wrongdoing in the lmCione
sale. Her personal attorney did
not immediately return a call
for comment Tuesday, and her
public-relations fum said it did
not have any immediate co m~
ment.
Shares of Martha Stewart
Living Omnimedia fell $ 1.63,
or 14.6 percent, to $9.57 in
morning trading Tuesday on
the New York Stock Exchange.
Even before tnu:ling opened

Tuesday, company shares had was tHe company's 1\rst withplunged 52 percent since their out Stewart's name, as well as a
peak of $23. 15 in July 2001. Martha Stewart Signature furThey reached. a low of $5.26 a niture collection.
share in early October shortly
Marvin
Smilon,
a
after Stewart resigned from the spokesman for Manhattan U.S.
New York Stock Exchange's Attomey James Corney,
board ,of directors and after ill! declined to comment.
In its statement, Martha
assistant to her stockbroker
agreed to help prosecutors Stewart Living said its direc·
investigating Stewart's sale of tors "have been planning for a
lmCione stock.
number of possible contingenStewart told the New Yorker · cies, are evaluating the current
for an article published in situation and wi ll take actio n as
January that she estimates she apP.ropriate."
had lost $400 million because
ImCione founder Samuel
of the decline in value of her Waksal, a friend of Stewart, is
more tl1an 30 million shares in to be sentenced next week atier
her multimedia company, pleading guilty in the lmCione
along with legal fees and lost insider-trading scandal. ·· He
business opportunities.
could be sentenced to six to
Stewart's name and image is seven years in prison, plus
tied to an empire of products fines.
from Martha Stewart Every,day
Waksal ha~ admitted he
merchandise, exclus ive to tipped off his daughter Al iza
Kmart, to _,magazines, books Waksal to sell lmCione stock
and TV shows. The company before it plummeted on the bad
has struggled to move forward news. But he has not implicat·
with Everyday Food, · a new ed Stewart, and his plea was
magazine tested in January that not part of an agreement to

cooperate with prosecutors.
Stewart sold nearly 4,000
shares of lmC!one on Dec. 27.
200 I - one day before the
Food and Drug Administration
announced it would not review
lmCione's application for
approval of Erbitux, which the
comp~ny had touted as a
promising
cancer
drug.
lmCione's stock subsequently
plunged.
. Federal authorities want to
know whether Stewart solq
ImC!one shares because she
had insider knowledge of the
impending FDA decision.
Stewart has denied any insider dealing, She" has maintained
that she had a standing order
with her Merrill Lynch broker,
Peter Bacanovic, to sell the
shares if the stock fell below
$60.

Just this week, a new study
was released concluding that
Erbitux was effective against
cancer after all. lmC!one stock
rose sharply on the news.

Sheriff says Rudolph nearly starved during f~rst
winter in woods; foraged and hunted for food
MURPHY, N:C. ' (AP) Olympic bombing suspect Eric
Rudolph told his jailers he struggled to stay alive during his five
years as a fugitive and said he
hunted turkeys, boar and deer, the
sheriff said Thesday.
"ije talked about the condi- ·
lions being hard at times,"
Cherokee County Sheriff Keith
Lovin said. 'The first winter he
about starved. He said, 'It's kind
of hard to live on acorns and
lizards."'

Rudolph was in hiding for five
years, staning in 1998, apparently spending the whole time in and
around Murphy, in the rugged
forestS of western North
Carolina
"He talked about foraging for
supplies and hunting," Lovin
said. 'Turkeys, wild boar, bear,
deer."
Rudolph said he wa&gt; able to
dry some vegetables, the sheriff
said.
Lovin declined to comment on

what type of gun Rudolph used
for hunting or whether authorities
had located it. The Charlotte
Observer reponed Tuesday that
jailer Joe Morris said Rudolph
canied a .223-caliber rifle.
Rudolph was arrested early
Saturday morning behind a giucery store, apparently looking for
food. After a court appearance in
Asheville, he was taken to
Binningham. Ala.. where he is to
stand Uiai in a 1998 abortion clinic bombing.

o•e1eness Memoria~ Hospital
to offer companion class
ATHENS O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer a companion class
for expectant' mothers and
their birth coaches or companIons Thursday, June 12, from
6:30 p.m. until 9 p.m. at the
hospital.
The class, which will be
held in O'Bieness' ba5ement
conference room B-7 , IS

designed to prepare ,a birth
coach or companion to provide reassurance to the expectant mother during the delivery of her baby. The class is
offered free of charge; no registration is required
lnfonnation presented during the class will include:
what to expect during labor, ·
delivery and the first hours

Rudolph, who spent two days
in jail here, did not say anything
about whether he received any
assistance while he was in hiding,
and jailers did not ask hirr\, Lovin
said.
"I do not believe that he spent
this whole time out in the
woods," Lovin said. "I'Ve never
believed that."
When he was arrested,
Rudolph's hair was cut shon, he
had a mustache ·tmd abcut two
day's growth of stubble on his

cheeks and chin. He wore sneakers and his clothes were relatively clean.

Owing his time in jail here;
Lovin said, Rudolph "was
always polite; he was relaxed. He
slept off and on."
He said Rudolph at the same
food as the other inmates,
although he asked for some fresh
fmits and vegetables, which
Lovin said he provided.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.

992-2156

after delivery; the role of the
companion; hospital procedures; variations of labor; and
postpartum care. Class .partie·
ipants will also tour the
O'Bieness Birth Center.
For more inforniation about
the companion class or the
other services provided at. the
O'Bieness Birth Center, call
(740) 592-9275.

---,~t~~~~
7:10 &amp; 9:10
Starring Mlcl\llel Doug .., I Albert BrooiQ

Farm
from PageA1

POMEROY· MeigsCounty
· .PERI Chapter 74 will meet
day at the Meigs County
, . Senior Center, with lunch at noon
and the meeting to follow, with
' State Rep. Jimmy Stewan, RAthens, to discuss health care,

..:;.

,~

'

perfonnance of old country,
traditional and gospel music as
well as Bluegrass. Retrogra~
was formed in 2000 and plays
traditional classics.
·
Those anending the blue-

~-------·-· ··---- -

gmss festival may also visit the
fann 's 27th annual Antique
Car and Power Equipment
Show from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Admission is free to see rows
of antique ill!d collectible cars
from the Model A to the
"Woody." Antique fam1 equipment will also be exhibited.
In addition, visitors can tour
the new Homestead Museum

----·---··----- -··---

at the hum. The intemctive
exhibits will acquaint guests
with the history of the Bob
Evans Farms company, the
histotic house, the fann , Gallia
Coullly and other regional
points of interest.
For inforn1ation. call (800)
994-3276. or visit the Bob
Evans Fam1s Web site at
www.bobevans.com.

6:35,6:50,9:40, 9:50

BRUCE AllaiTY ~

THE I·LAWS :;:;

1:1o,1o:oo
7:15,10:05
SHOWN WED. THRU
SUN. BEGINNING 614103

t.U AGES. All TIMES $4 n

'

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Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 3,

•

200~ _

Inside:
Ducks beat Devils, Page B2
Bengal~ cut Aklll Smith, Page B2
Indians notebook, Page 83

·N ews About SeniOr Citizens
In Meigs County
.. MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM

-EVENING MEALS;..._
· -

TUESDAY
Meatloaf
Scalloped Potatoes
Green Beans
Pineapple Upside Down Cake
Roll
Hungarian Pork Chop
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
P,eas &amp; Carrots
Strawberry Shortcake
Roll

.

Biscuit

Mixed Vegetables
Apriccits

17

19

Chicken Tahitian
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
. California Blend Vegetables

Hamburger on Bun
Potato Salad

Baked Beans
Mandarin Oranges

Banana

Chicken Salad Plate

New England Boiled Ham
Fruit Cobbler

'
Grilled Chicken on Bun
Macaroni Salad

Hor Dog &amp; Sauce

Crackers
Cook's Choice

Polish Sausage
Mashed Potatoes
Sauerkraut
•
Fried Apples
Bun
Thursday June 26, 03 Blood Pressure Checks 4:15 ·4:45p.m.

Sausage Gravy
Home Fries
1

•

Liver &amp; Onions
Mashed Potatoes with Gravy

Tomato Juice ·
Fried Apples
Biscuit

Buttered Green Beans
Fruit Cocktail

-

White or Brown Bread
Cook's Cho;ce

Pizza

~

White or Brown Bread

Chefs Salad

RSVP volunteers active in the community
These RSVP Volunteers are shown teaching fifth grade students
several Appalachian skills. This program is called ·:Yesteryear"
and has been held annually for 19 years. This year 273 children
attended "Yesteryear."

are not only aimed at s~niors ,
but at all age groups. so we
would like to call the newsletter
something more appropriate.
Anyone can enter-not just sen·
iors or older adults. Remember,
that is what we would like to
steer away from.
So, put on your thinking cap
' and let's come up with a really
good name that everyone can
relate to. Send your suggestions, .
along with your name and phone
number to: The Meigs County
Council or\ Aging, Inc.,
Newsletter Contest, 112 E.
Memorial Drive. Pomeroy, OH
45769. All entries . must be
received by June 6, 2003.

IRONTON (AP) - Ohio
State sophomore tight end
Redgie Arden pleaded innocent Monday to his second
drunken dri vi.ng charge in 15
months.
Arden, 21, was arrested at
5:54a.m. Sunday on a charge
.of operating a motor vehicle
under the influence, the
Ironton Police Department
said.
In March · 2002, Arden
pleaded guilty to a drunken
driving charge in Ironton, his
hometown . He was seiltencet!
to three days in jail and fined.
Buckeyes _coach
Jim
Tressel had not spoken with
Arden as of Monday afternoon, sports information
director Steve Snapp said. He
declined further comment.
The 6-foot-4, 240-pound
Arden was ex pee ted to compete for playing time at tight
end this year for the defendin'g
national
champion
Buckeyes. He was The Ohio
Associated Press ' Division
IV co-defensive player of the
year in 2000 as a senior linebacker at Ironton High
School.
Ironton is about I 00 miles
south of Columbus.

Edith Sisson is shown teaching children how to measure correctly
so their ~omemade bread and rolls come out perfect.

RSVP Volunteers participate
'in many volunteer opportunities
throughout the community.
Some volunteers choose to assist
at the Meigs County Health
Department, the Cooperative.
Parrish. the Thrift Shop in
Middleport, the Homeland
Security Program and many others. If you are 55 years of age
and would like to share your
skills with others, please contact
Diana Coates at 992-2161.

Representatives from the
Athens Social Security Office
will be at the Meigs Senior
Center to assist people with
very crafty person, Amanda · Social Security problems and to
Milhoan, a library staff person, provide. information . The dates · Everyone has somGJhing to take . home from "Yesteryear" that they made with the assistance of an
will assist you in making your" are June II. &amp; 25 from 10:00 RSVP Volunteer. Pictured is Mrs. Rita Simmons fifth grade class before leaving "Yesteryear." Mrs.
am. -II :00 am.
Simmons class is from Rutland Elementary.
luminary.
All supplies are provided at no
, WE HONOR
cost to you. The date is June 3 at
10:30 a.m·.

--,Support Groups.- p.m. Meeting date is June II:
Lia
Tipton, Occupational
Therapist, Holzer Rehabilitation
Center, is the 'coordinator.
Nancy Stevens, from Holzer
Medical Center, is the facilitator
for the Diabetes Support Group
The meeting will be held on
June 19. Meetings begin at .
10:30 a.m. and are held in the
Conference Room at the Meigs
Senior Center.

Birthday Parties

AD pl'OIJ'eS8 io based upon a uni·
veroallnnate desire on the part
of every orpnllom to Uve beyond
ite income.
-Samuel Butler

The month Iy birthday party
will be held on June 26. The
Golden Belles from the Trinity
Church in Pomeroy will entertain for the June birthday party.
Dixie Sayre is the Music
Director. They will presen't their
program a1,11 :00 a.m.
Bring a friend and join us to
celebrate your birthday.

'

POMEROY,OH

992-3785

POMEROY
The
High School Band
sponsored its 11th annual
Memorial Weekend Golf
Tournament
Saturday,
May 24, with friends,
family and former players
gathering at Pine Hills
Golf Club to' honor .coac h
John Krawsczyn .
For
many
years
Kraw sczyn and his teams
h ave held winning records
at Meigs Hi gh School. He
has also worked for many
past years as .c oordinator
of the band 's tournament
while hi s daughters were
active in the band . In
recognition of hi s accomplishments, several teachers and former pla,ycrs
paid tribute to the &lt;;oach .
The team of Chris
Rou sh. Chad Hanson,
Ste've McCullough and AJ
Vaughan took first place
honors followed by second place team members
Phil
Harrison. · Dale
Harrison , Shorty Lambert
and Rick Ash . Finishing

BOWMAN'S
"We Care For You Like Family"

• HOSPITAL BEDS

• CI'AI' MACHINES

•. WHEELCHAIRS

• NEBULIZERS

•OXIMETRY

24 /lour

•••

An open mind is all very weD in

Its way, but II ought not to be
so open that there is no keeplnr anything in or out of it. It
ahould be capable of shutting
iu doon aomelimeo, or it may This was the first year Lawrence Eblin helped at "Yesteryear."
He assisted in the leather-craft class. Lawrence seemed to have as
be found a little draughty.
-Samuel Butler much fun as the children.

E~uergency

Service • Free Delivery

1-800-458-6844
446-7283
70 l'ine St.

286-7484

594-2100

765 E. Mllin St.

540 W. Union St.

sion with Miami, Boston
College anq Syracuse to ereate a 12-schQ,ol league that
would break intQ_two divi· sions and play a lucrative
championship game in football .

Providence College and
Connecticut.
But athletic director Gene
DeFilippo said he feared that
if Miami left, the Big East
would be devastated anyway
and BC would be left out in
the cold.
Another issue for Boston
College is the longer travel
time to conference games
that will be mostly outside
the Northeast, .and how that
will affect the school's bud· get and the players' sc hoolwork. DiFilippo said he will
have to examine to whole
department and decide
·
Please see ACC. Bl

~

Golf coach John Krawsczyn, center. was honored at the 13th
annual Meigs ,Band golf tournament. Meigs players paying
tribute to him at the tournament were from the left, Steve
McC ullough , Daye Anderson, Clay Crow, Sean O'Brien, Joh n
Bentley, (Coach Krawsczyn). Adam Krawsczyn, Reggie Pratt,
Tommy Roush, and Mick Barr.
third place were Ray
Redm an Sr., Ray Redman
Jr., York Ingles a,nd Bill
Zuspan.
Longest putt on the
number three was won by
Mike Heck . Gerold Moore
won closest to the pin on
number five, and John
Bentley took honors for
the l()nge st drive on ntimber eight.

•

I

The conference bylaws
require a campus visit before
an actual invitation, but it is
considered a formality.
Swofford said he couldn't
think of an instance in which
the ACC has gotten to the
point of visiting prospective
members and not closed the
deal.
Boston College is a charter member of the Big East,
which would be dectmated
by the defection of three
prestigiou s members . BC
would increase its national
exposure and likely reap
more money from a move,
but it would lose traditional
regional rivalries against

s

Mei~:s

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

• HOME OXYGEN

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland. Cavaliers got a
father figure, teacher•. counselor and close friend wrapped
up in a burly, smiling 6-foot-7
package .
The Cavaliers think Paul
Silas is much more than an
NBA coach, which is why they
feel so lucky to have him.
"For us, for
this
team ,
Paul is the
right man for
the job," general manager
Jim Paxson
said.
0
, n
Mo· nday ,
Silas · was
named coach
S]las
of
the
Cavaliers, a
young, struggling team that
should get much better with
the impending arrival of high
school star LeBron James .
Silas, credited with developing youn~ players throughout
his coaching career, will be the
Cavaliers' 15th coach - but ·
the first who will have James,
the Akron 18-year-old and
Cleveland's soon-to-be No. I
overall draft pick.
According to a source within
the league, Silas, who won 208
games in five years with the
Hornets, got a four-year contract. The source, speaking on
the condition of anonymity,
said the deal includes a club
option for a fifth year.
Financial terms were not
immediately available. ·
Money is less of a problem
these days for the Cavaliers,
who went 17-65 this season
but have seen their seasonticket base jump _by thousands
since winning the May 22 draft
lottery and the right to pick
James.
In less than two weeks, the
Cavaliers, who have lost 220
games in the past four years,
have gone from the NBA's
wasteland to one of the ,
league· hottest commodities.
First, they won the rights to
the hometown player everyone
covets. And now, the Cavaliers
have a coach to help James fulfill his massive potential.
A fierce rebounder during
16-year NBA playing career,
Silas knows as well as anyone
what is awaiting James.
Silas is still assembling his
staff. He said his son, Stephen,
who worked for him with the
Hornets, will be on it. Silas
also plans to interview Keith
Smart - Clevelanc)'s interim
coach for 4Q games last season
- about staying on.
Silas, who will tum 60 in
July, was chosen over fonner
New York Knicks coach Jeff
Van Gundy.

Staff report

~~

ST.

•••

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
relaxed Milton Bradley
helped .!he Cleveland Indians
extend their season-long winning streak.
·
Bradley hit a two-run double and Brian Anderson
earned his first win in eight
starts as Cleveland beat the.
Chicago White Sox S-2 to
complete a three-game .sweep
Monday.
"I'm just feeling comfortable, relaxing, aftd enjoying
the game," said Bradley, who
went 6-for-12 with five RBis
as Cleveland came from
behind to win each game of
the rain-shortened series .
The rebuilding Indians
extended their winning streak
to five and. pulled within 2 112
games of third-place Chicago
in the AL Central after starting 7-20.
·
"We ' re just not getting big
hits," manager Jerry Manuel
said after the White Sox
droppe'.t to 2-5 with six
games to play on their longest
road trip in 19 years.
"Mo~e than anything, this is
discouraging," Manuel said.
"When you don ' t hit, as much
as you try to fight it, you try
to do a lot more. Then tt
appears you are tense .. And
the only thing to relieve that
is to get the hits."
Chicago's .242 batting
average ~anks 13th in the AL.
The White Sox have scored
three or fewer runs in 29 of
56 games and their overall
production is down more than
1.3 runs afame from their 5.3
average o last season.
.White Sox management
has maintained that Manuel's
job is safe , but there has been
speculation the sixth-year
skipper may be fired during
the four-city, 14-day road
trip.
Cleveland Indians second baseman Brandon Phillips, left, and first baseman Casey Blake
Brad(ey put Cleveland
draw a bead on a pop up by Chicago White Sox Miguel Olivo in the ninth inning Monday in
Please see Sweep, Bl
Cleveland. Bl?ke, the taller of the two, made the putout to seal the Indians 5-2 win . (AP)

Morris nabs catfish
Coach John Kraws.czyn
honored at golf tournament

.

Social Security

The Caring and Sharing
Support Group meets on the
fourth Thursday of each moni'h
at the Meigs County Senior
Center at I :00 p.m. The meeting
date is June 26. At the June
meeting, Dr. James Schmoll will
~peak on macular degeneration
eye disease. All ages are welcome to imend.
The Stroke Support Group
will meet from l :00 p.m. -2:30

•

NEWTON, Mass. (AP)
- A delegation from the
Atlantic Coast Conference
took an up-close look at
. Boston College Monday,
touring athletic and academic facilities as the league
prepares to fo rm a superconference by emi~~g three
Big East schools to'\'efect.
"If -indeed thi s wor.)&lt;.s out
... this is a good marriage,"
ACC commissioner John
Swofford said at a news con·
ference in BCs athletic
- building. " Boston College
would be an excellent fit for
the ACC in every regard."
The nine ACC members
have voted to di sc uss ex pan-

Crafts, Crafts -

Did you attend the craft class
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Library staff? If you did, you
will' want to come back and
make a spring luminary craft.
Don't worry if you aren't a

Indians sweep White Sox

Silas takes
overCavs

ACC delegation·visits Boston College

Shown is Poily Curtis demonstrating to a student how to make
candles.

--It's time for trips-in Cleveland, an Ohio
Bicentennial · event- $258.00
August 8-9-Kentucky Music
Tour on Rt. 23-$162.00
September 6-7· Cass Dinner
Train in WV-- $195.00
October 14-19-Eivis' Memphis
(plus Nashville)- $716.00
November ·7·12- Branson Fall
Tour &amp; Christmas Lights-·
$662.00
December 3-5- Opryland
Country . Christmas$462.00
It is important for persons to
register for trips as early as pessi b1e so reservations can be
made.
For (urther information on the
trips, contact Alice Wamsley,
Volunteer Trip Coordina,tor, at
992-3938.

•

--

.w e're having a contest!

-Craft~,

27

26

Thank you for your donations
Suggested donation is $2.00 per Meal over age 60 •
and $4.00 per meal under age 60

Cole Slaw
Pears

26

...·

Biscuit

Cook's Choice

30

Battered Dipped Fish

Amish Vinegar Chicken
Baked Potato
Broccoli with Cheese Sauce
Fruited Jello
Roll

The following one day trips
are being offered· by the Meigs
County Senior Center:
Wednes~ay, June 11-Amish
Country which includes an
Amish meal, shopping, and a
tour of a cheese factory. The
cost is$50.00.
Thursday, October 16-Tall
Stacks Festival in Cincinnati.
This trip includes a riverboat
cruise, your meal and bicentennial festivities. The cost is
$75.00.
Thursday, December 4-Ciifton
Mills holiday lights'. The trip
includes your meal, holiday light
display and shopping. The cost
is $60.00.
Other trips available through
Park Tours are:
·
June 9-l1~Niagara Falls and
attracuons- $235.00
July lO-ll-Tall Ships Challenge

Creamed Chicken
Noodles
Mixed Vegetables
Pineapple

25

Potato Wedges

Are you good at contests?
Well, here is your chance to win
a gift certificate for$ 25.00 from
a local· business and help us give
a new name to the ."Older Adult
News."
Many, m'any age groups from
Girl Scout troops to the
·swingin' Seniors use. the Center
for one reason or another. We
would like people to know that
anyone can be a member of the
Center at any age. The $5.00
membership fee goes toward
paying for the paper and postage
for sending out the newsletter.
"Times are a-changin'" and we
would like to have the newslet·
ter title represent the Center a
little differently. Our programs

Johnny Marzetti

Cook'stChoice

Tomaro Sovp &amp; Grilled Cheese

Sugar Wafer
Beef BBQ Plate

20

Tomatoes &amp; Cucumbers

Biscuit

Vegetable Beef Soup
Fresh Fruit
Cheese Cubes
Bluebell)' Muff1n

Fresh Strawberries

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Lemon Lush
Garlic Bread

Cook'S Choice

Fresh Fruit Salad
.Iced Cupcake
Garlic Bread

Spaghetti wilb Meat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Tropical Fruit Salad
Garlic Bread

Carrot Salad

Blueberries
Roll
19

Coleslaw

24

23

Patriotic Carrots

Tuna Salad Plate

White or Brown Bread
Sub Sandwich &amp; FreSh Fruit

13

Star Spangled Steak
Red·Sklnned Potatoes

18

17

16

Cook's Choice

12

Cook's Choice

Ham Loaf Dinner

Fish &amp; Onion Rings

Texas Sheet .Cake
Roll

Barbecued Chicken
Baked Potato
Buttered Corn
Blushing Pears
Roll

Mashed Potatoes with Gravy

OSU tight end
pleads innocent
to DUI charge

Peas and Carrots

11

Meatloaf

Hoi Dog on Bun
Baked Beans
Cal1co Macaroni Salad
Cantaloupe

Beef Stew
Coleslaw
Strawbell)' Shortcake

Hungarian Pork Chop
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy

Turhey Dinner

10

9

White or Browh Bread

12

24

i'

,warm Applesauce
Marshmallow Squares
. Coolr's Choice

5

Barbecued Chicken
Potato Salad
Baked Beans
Apple Pie
. Roll
10
Sloppy Joe Sandwich
Cole Slaw
Potato Wedges
Buttered Corn
Jello Cake

Baked Ham
Sweet Potatoes
Green Beans
Brownie
Croissant

l..nw !t S..,to"'I&lt;&gt;Ci&gt;anct-

Menus 1re prepared by Cl'nthia M'Mannis. RD. LD

THURSDAY
3

.

June 2003

Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Calirornia Blend Vegetables

6

5

Soup Beans and Ham
Seven Layer Salad
Fruit Crisp
Cornbread

Scalloped Chicken

For ingredienl inlorm11tion conlact Belinda Wellington

A 'suggested donation for the
meal is $5 .00. Take out meals
are available for those evenings
when you cannot stay to eat at
the Center. Stop in between 4:45.
p.m. &amp; 5:30 p.m.. and ask for a
take out meal.

The Meigs ,County Senior
Citizens Center evening meal is
served on Tuesday and
Thursday. Spring &amp; Summer
hours for serving are from 4:45 5:30p.m.

4

PageBl
1\Iesday, June 3, 2003

'

The Senior Nutrition Meal is served Daily at'12:00 •

The Daily Sentinel

-·.

f.

During the day the band
boosters
tr eated · the
go lfers to food and beverages and the flag corp
held a car wash. A vote of
thanks was extended by
the boosters to the partici·
pants. ~he staff at Pine
Hills. those who spon·
sored holes, and the merch ants
who
donated
prizes .

Tom Morris of MasCln displays i')is big catch at the Mason levee
Saturday, a 44-inch, 3.1 pound catfish.

•

�L
yi
Page

82 • The Daily Sentinel

Wviw.mydallysentlnel.com

Tuesday, June 3, 2003

Tuesday, June 3, 2003
.

Ducks bea.t Devils, even series
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) The Anaheim Mighty Ducks
have taken away the New
· Jersey Devils' series lead, ,their
momentum and, it would
seem, their confidence.
Could they take away the
Stanley Cup next?
The Mighty Ducks can't
seem to score in regulation
time, but they can't seem .to
• lose in overtime. They seemingly had no reason to still be
in the finals - wasn't the
Devils' four-game sweep supposed to be over by now? but not only are the Ducks in
them, they could win them.
No team in 32 years has rallied from a 2-0 deficit in the
finals to win !he Stanley Cup,
but the Mighty Ducks are
threatening to do exactly that
following consecutive overtime games on horne ice. The
Devils still can raise the Cup
with two' more victories, too,
but those suddenly figure to be
much harder to get than they
previously imagined.
· ·The Mighty Ducks won
their seventh playoff overtime
game, and their second in
three nights, as Steve Thomas'
goal beat the Devils 1-0
Monday night in Game 4 to tie
what once was a very uneven
series at two each.
"Tiie pressure is on . us,"
Devils defenseman Scott
Stevens said,
How many would have
thought that following the
Devils' two dominating 3-0
shutout victories, when it
looked like the Mighty Ducks
might not score in the series,
much less win a game?
"They're a mirror image of
us," Devils goalie Martin
Brodeur said. "They don't
give you much. They scored
only that one goal and that's
usually not going to beat you,
but it was enough for them."
.It's always enough, it seems,
for Mighty Ducks goalie JeanSebastien Giguere, who in' his
ftrst playoff run, already has
only one fewer overtime victory (7) than Brodeur has (8) in
10 playoff seasons.

'

Anaheim Mighty Ducks' Samuel Pahlsson, right, takes
down the New Jersey Devils' Jiri Bicek in a battle for the puck
in the third period of Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Finals in ·
Anaheim, Calif., Monday. The Mighty Ducks beat the Devils,
1-0 in overtime to tie the series, 2-2. (AP)
While Brodeur is only 8-18
in playoff overtime games,
Qiguere is the first NHL goalie
to win his first' seven overtime
games.
.
Getting Ji ggy with it,
indeed. The Devils? They're
just getting nervous.
The Devi ls talked of going
back home Thursday, winning
Game 5 and putting all the
pressure back on the Mighty
Ducks. The Devils are I0-1 in
the postseason at home, where
the Ducks have yet to score.
But what ifthey don't get
that first goal? Anaheim.is 100 when it scores ftrst. And
what if it goes to overtime?
But the Devils' margin of
error - they needed to win
only once in Anaheim to
essentially wrap up the series
- has evaporated. They are
the team pressi ng to score
goals, not the Ducks, after getting only two in two games at
the Pond.
The Mighty Ducks have
scored only four goals in four
games yet, remarkably. could
find themselves a home-ice
victory away from raising the
Cup should they find a way to
win 'Thursday.

Thomas, who owns the
NHL record with 13 overtime
game-winning goals in regular
season play, sensed the Ducks
were very confident even after
Brodeur and Giguere dueled to
a standoff in regulation play.
"We go out there and play
our game, go after them (in
overtime)," Giguere said.
"We're not scared to lose. We
go out there to win."
It took them only 39 seconds
to do exactly that in the fourth·
fastest NHL playoff overtime
game.
.
Brodeur initially stopped
Samuel Pahlsson's shot, but
the puck detlected out to the
right circle, where Thomas
cleanly put it past Brodeur.
No, the ultimate for the
Ducks would be winning the
Stanley Cup. That was considered an unreachable accompli shrnent when they were
only the seventh-seed going
into the Western Conference
playoffs, and again when they
fell behind the Devils 2-0.
Yes, they are - to New
Jersey for a Game 5 it once
seemed they would never play.
· "It's not over yet," Stevens
said.

wrapped up within the next
month. The schools would
probably begin ACC play in
the 2005-06 season.
from Page B1
The ACC delegation
whether it's worth making oil arrived in Chestnut Hil' on
those trips in some non-rev- · Sunday and had dinner v. ith
BC officials in the Bapst Art
enue sports.
Library,
one of the oldest
But he dismissed talk that
buildings on campus. On
travel was a major problem.
ACC representatives visit· Monday, the group took a
ed Miami last week. They're tour of the school's main
scheduled to leave BC campus and one a few miles
Tuesday
morning
for away where the law school,
Syracuse to visit that campus soccer fields and freshman
before voting on a formal dorms are located ; after tile
· news conference. some of the ·
invitation.
Although no timetable has visitors were getting direc ·
been set, Swofford said the lions to Fenway Park .
In addition to Swofford and
whole thing could be
three members of his staff.

ACC

the contingent included two
professors, two athletic direc tors and a· senior women's
administrator from current
ACC schools. They met with
a variety of BC 's academic
and athletic officials all the
way up to the Rev. William P.
Leahy. the school's president.
Although SwotJord had
been to Boston College
before, some visitors were
•
here for the first time. Jeff
Elliott. an associate commissioner, had been to Boston
but ne ve r to Chestnut Hill ,
the aftluent su burban area
where BC is located.

Ben gals cut Akili Smith.
CINCINNATI (AP) Quarterback Akili Smith 's
four frustrating years with
the Cincinnati Bengals
ended Monday as new·
coach Marvin Lewis continued' to remake the roster
of ,the NFL's worst team
by releasing the t:ormer
firsL-round pick.
Smith, 27. was the t~ird
overall pick in the 1999
NFL draft. He said he is
pleased the Bengals gave
him a chance to restart hi s'
NFL career with another
team. ·
"It's a great day," he told
the Bengals' Web site.
Smith said he didn't think
that he'd get another
· ch~nce to be a starter in
Cincinnati, even with the
new coach in g staff that
Lewis installed.
;'There was ·a fresh group
of coaches -that came in this
year, but I didn't really
think it was like a fresh
start and that's what I'm

going 10 get poses is' prorated over the
now." Smith length qf the contract. ·
said.
"This is the best course
T
h
e for the Bengals and for
Beng;tls Akili ,'' said Lewis, who
released him was hired after the Bengals
IWO
days finished a franchise-worst
after signing 2-14 las t season. "We're
JOUrneyman pleased now with the lineS h a n e up or other quarterbacks
Matthews to we've put in place , and .we
Smith
a one-year know Akili will get another
contract to opportunity.''
backup Jon Kitna. who has
In four seasons with
been _ named this year's
Cincinnati,
the 27-yeat-old
starter
already.
The
Bengals' other quarterback Smith played .in 22 g!lmes
is Carson Palmer, the 2002 and started 17 . . He played
Heisman Trophy winner once last season, starti ng in
who was the No. I pick in a home game agains t eventual Super Bowl champion
April's draft.
Tampa
Bay. He finished the
Releasing Smith after
June I allowed the Bengals game I 2-of-33 for 117
to spread out the re.maining yards against one of the
$4.62 million of his $ 10.8 NFL's best defenses.
Smith has completed 215
million signing bonus over
two years. The ani y guar- of 461 passes for 2,212
anteed money in NFL con- yards, five touchdowns and
tracts is the signing bonus, 13 interceptions in his
which for sa lary cap pur- career.

.

-

1957 state champion
Middleport Yellow Jackets.
· BY JIM SOULSBY
Sports correspondent

MIDDLEPORT
Forty-six years ago, a
group of young athletes
from a small southeastern
Ohio community accomplished a goal in the arena
of sports that few others, if
any, from this area have
since duplicated.
The Middleport Yellow
Jacket
baseball team,
coached
by
Nolan
Swackhammer,
was
crowned 1957 Ohio High
School
champions.
In
achieving this feat , the
Yellow Jacket s posted a
perfect 15-0 season.
Saturday, at Middleport's
General Hartinger Park ,
seven former players were
presented plaques commemorating that event by
Dave Boyd and Gene Wise
on behalf of the Middleport
Youth League.
They were Eddie Crooks.
Harland Whitlatch , Junior
Rowley, Sonny Knapp ,

.

.

~

The 1957 state champton Yellow Jacket team were presented plaques at ·a recognition program at General Hartinger
Park. Attending were, left to right, front, Eddie Crooks,
Harland Whitlatch , and Junior Rowley, and back, Sonny
Knapp, Yogi Wayland, Jamie Bowles, and Ed McComas.
Yogi
Wayland,
Jamie
Bowles and Ed McComas.
The other members of the
team were Bob Hennessey.
Dave
Hindy,
Junior
Kennedy, Bobby Nelson,
Steve Bailey. and Jan
Hauck , and deceased members, Tommy Davi s, Roger
Li ghtfoot , an.d batboy

Charles Swackhammer.
Although the passing
years · have thinned the
ranks of the team and some
were unable to attend the
reunion , lime cannot erase
the memories or the pride
associated with that "dream
season".

CLEVELAND (AP)
Sitting instead of hitting is not
Kar'i m Garcia's idea of a good
ttme.
Garcia:s woefu l start was
not what the Indians anticipated, either.
The 27-year-old was moved
into the cleanup . spot after
s lu ~gi n g first baseman Jim
,Thome
signed
with
.Philadelphia as a free agent
·last winter. It seemed to be a
logical move , since Garcia
had batted .299 with 16
homers and 52 RBis in 51
games after· being called up
from the minors last Aug. 6.
· Garcia said he intends to
take a few "dry swi ngs"
Tuesday, then take his cuts
against some pitching in bat·
ting practice later in the week.
FALSE START: Brian
Anderson · admitted that ;giving up a home run to the first
batter ·, he faced, the White
Sox's D'Angelo Jimenez, was
not in his game plan Monday.
"You're down 1-0 and the
meat of the order hasn ' t even
come up yet," Anderson said.
"That's a little detlating and if
you don't pick it up, things
might ge t real nasty."
Two of the five hits and
both RBis allowed by
Anderson were by Jimenez,
who is batting .600 ( 12-for60) in his career against the
Jefl-hander.
· BOYD BUILDING A
· BRIDGE: Jason Boyd inherited runners on first and second and one out when he
replaced Jake Westbrook in
the seventh inning Monday
;_ and promptly got out of
lhe jam.
. Boyd got Carlos Lee to pop
out to center and struck out
the always-dangerous Frank
Thomas to end the seventh.
then pitched a perfect eighth,
striking
out
Magglio
· Ordonez.
The right-hander earned a
relief win Sunday and has
yielded just one run over hi s
last 14 1-3 innings to lower
his ERA to 4.08.
Baez worked the ninth for
his seventh save in his last
eight ·changes and lith over-

The annual report

from Page 81

ness hours for a peri-

od of 1.80 days subsequent to publication
of this notice.
(5) 19, 20, 21, 22, 23,
27, 28, 29, 30, (6) 2, 3,

ahead 3-2 by lining a two-run
double high off the left-field
wall against Bartolo Colon
(5-5) in the sixth inning .
Anderson (3-5) allowed
two runs and five hits over six
innings and won for the first
time since April 9.
Danys Baez, the Indians'
fourth pitcher, worked the
ninth for his II th save.
D'Angelo Jimenez drove in '
both runs against Anderson,
hitting his sixth homer to lead
off the game and adding an
RBI single in the fifth.
Colon, who pitched for
Cleveland from 1997 until
being traded last June,
allowed four runs and seven
hits over six innings, striking
out six.
·
The right-hander gave up a
solo homer to Jody Gerut in
the fourth :
Colon did just that in the
_ first inning. He gave up a
first-pitch single to Matt
Lawton, then struck out the
side, mixing several change- ·
ups and curves with one 98rnph fastball.
.
Chicago went ahead 2-1 in
the fifth on one-out singles by
Joe Borchard, Miguel Olivo
and Jimenez.
.. Lawton
opened • the
Indians' sixth with the only
walk allowtd by·· Colon, and
took second on an infield hit
by Ornar Vizquef. Bradley's
double scored both runners.
Ben Broussard's two-out single scored Bradley.
Pinch-hitter Casey Blake
made it 5-2 with a basesloaded sacrifice fly in the
eighth.

,,

One phone call to our (:cmral Reservations number gets you a .

strong connection
between academic
and
occupational
learning, and estab·
lloh programs which
prepare youth lor post
secondary e8ucatlon
or
unsubsldlred
. employment
as
appropriate. Services

on this planet. Goff AJa,l/aZitre r:mkcd The Judge Course at
Capitol Hill as one of the 10
ALABAMA'S

of hosting the US Open . And people who've playt:J the Trail call it the

number o.n e value in the world as a golf

destination and num-

ahould

world .. . GotF DIGEST SURVEY
N ow through September 14, DJd (and Mom) can pia~ 3 consecutiw days of
unliriuted golf fi&gt;r just

'99

a person (~dd $10 co each greens fee at Capitol Hill.)

Hotels, car ts and tax not included .
This Father~s

Day, giye

,•

deter·

elements

under WIA. Two programs will be awsrded end program costs

,_. must

not

exceed

St30,000.00 each and
shall be for the period
ol July 1, 2003

1.800.257.3465

incredible Rob1.·rt Trem Jones GolfTrJil.

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program

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Dad what he really wants, gulf on Alabama's

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to eligible y~uth and
lncorporstlng the ten

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'

.

NEW YORK (AP) ~
Yankees owner George
Steinbrenner criticized baseball schedule makers and
cornplaine.d that his team is
treated unfairly, The New
York
Times
reported
Tuesday.
The Boss is unhappy about
New York's road trip this
week, when interleague
games begin. His problem:
While the Yankees are in
Cincinnati and Chicago, the
· rjval Boston Red Sox play
Pittsburgh and Milwaukeetwo of the three worst learns
in the National League. ·
"I just hope we pll!y well
against the National League
clubs," Steinbrenner told The
Times in a telephone interview. "I don't think the
schedule is fair."
The Yankees play . three
games each against the Reds
and Cubs, who lead the NL
Central. New York doesn 't
face the Pirates ·or Brewers

this season .
" Katy Feeney makes the
schedule, and she has never
been a favorite of mine ·or a
favorite of the Yankees ,"
Steinbrenner said. "We play
Cincinnati, which is a fine,
fine ballclub; they're going
to be in the middle of it. Then
we play the Cubs.
"N_ow who is the other ~uy
playrng ? They ' re playmg
against Milwaukee. Now
what 's right about that?
They're playing Pittsburgh
and Milwaukee while we're
playing Cincinnati and the
Cubs. l think they got the
best of that deal.
"Bud Selig told me personally that he was overseeing
the schedule, and that he'li'
see to it that it's fine. I used
to be for it, but I'm not for it
anymore. It's too easy for
discrepancies," Steinbrenner
said.
Feeney, a major league
baseball vice president, told

'

·'

The Times it was impossi~le
for every AL East team to
play every NL Central team
this year. There are five
teams in the AL East and six
in the NL Central - plus, the
Yankees play six games
against the crosstown rival
Mets.
· · "I can assure you, I do not,.
and the other schedule contractors certainly do not. purposef!llly think , 'How can
we make li fe more difficult
for the Yankees?"' Feeney
said.
She said the interleague
schedules were made I I/2
years ago, and the Yankees
would play Mi"lwaukee and
Pittsburgh in 2005.
Steinbrenner said he would
be at Wrigley Field on
Saturday, . when
~oger
Clemens is scheduled to
make his third bid for his
300th win against Cubs ace
Kerry Wood.
The Boss also talked about

the state of hi s team in interview~·· with the New York
Daily News and New York
Post.
The Yankees are 15-20 following an lli-3 start and have
a I 1/2-game lead over
Boston.
T m not satisfied with the
team and neither ani they,"
Steinbrenner told the Daily
News. ;,! don' t think we ' re
playing as well as we ' re supposed to, or as well as we ' re
going to be playing."
The Yankees blew a 7-1
lead against Detroit on
Sunday. costing Clemens his
300th victory, before winning 10-9 in 17 innings.
;'I didn't like it at all,"
Steinbrenner told , the Post.
" But I predicted in spring
training that when a team has
a player goirg for any record
it can lead to distractions.
They are all trying too hard
for Roger."

Schilling fined $15,000 for destroying camera
SAN DIEGO (AP)
Arizona Diamondbacks ace
Curt ·Schilling was fined
about $15,000 by major
league baseball Monday for
destroying a camera used to
evaluate umpires.
Schilling smashed part of
Umpire
the
Questec
Evaluation System on May
24 during a home loss to
the San Diego Padres and
said umpires have told him
they are changing their strike
zones to match the machine .
"He was fined the dost of
. the camera, and then there
was a fine imposed on the
disciplinary side," said Bob
Watson, vice president of onfield operations in the corn·
missioner's office.
The total penalty was
about $15,000, according to
three baseball officials who
spoke on the condition they
not be identified.
Schilling plans to appeal.
Schilling said what he did
was "immature," but he hasn' t changed his mind about
the Questec system.
"The process doesn' t

work," Schilling
said. "Questec
itself, the actual
machines, I'm
sure they work.
But machines
don 't call the
balls and strikes.
The umpires do.
The process by
which this was
Schilling
integrated into
rnajor league
baseball is horribly tlawed."
Questec is being used at 13
of the 30 major league ballparks this year. The World
Umpires Association has
filed a grievance, claiming
the computer is inaccurate
and its results change
depending on the operator.
Hearings are scheduled for
July 7, 21, 22 and 31,
according to Larry Gibson, a
lawyer for the WUA.
Gibson said umpires complained about the operators
of the system in Phoenix this
year. He said a former
Triple-A umpire ran the system durin g Arizona home
games last season, put differ-

L.....----

ent people were operating
Questec this year at Bank
One Ballpark.
Last Tuesday, Sandy
Alderson . . e·xecutive vice
president of baseball operations in the commissioner's
office, said he thou ght
Schilling wanted pitches that
are balls to be called strikes.
"I don't want balls called
strikes," Schilling said. "Do
I like when the umpire calls
a ball a strike? Absolutely,
just like the hitter likes a
strike being called a ball. Do
I expect it? Absolutely not. I
want it consistent. It's
human beings. They ' re
going .to. make mistakes.
That 's fine. I understand
that. But I want consistency.
The same things hitters
want."
Diamondbacks manager
Bob Brenly wasn't too sympathetic toward Schilling,
but said Questec needs to be
in all ballparks or none.
In addition to Schilling,
several players around the
majors are upset about the
Questec system.

Atlanta Braves manager
Bobby Cox and some of his
pitchers complained abo ut
the Questec system after a
10-4 loss to the New York
Mets on Sunday night at
Shea Stadium.
''I wish I was close to the
machine. so I could break
it," said reliever Ray King;
who gave up a go-ahead si ngle to Rey Sanchez. "The
umps are more worried
about the machine than calling the game."
Darren Hormes had even
stronger comment~ after gi ving up a three-run homer to
Jeromy Burnitz on a 3-1
pitch. capping New York's
eight-run sixth ·inning.
"This system is one of the
worst things that has happened in baseball. They are
going to feel ramifica tions
because of the system. It's .a
joke," Holmes said.

Are you 65 or older1 ~--~

cost may not exceed

10% of the total contract award. In addl·
lion, 3.0% ol the total

contract award must
be used to serve out~

of-school
Proposals

demonstrate

youth.
must
the

capability to meat performance standards

and to quantify pro-

gram outcomes. For a

copy of the Meigs
County Workforce
Plan, the ten program

grams with local labor · previous submissions
needs, provide a nor be considered.

gift certificate he can spend on some of the most-praised golf

courses in the country \'Vorthy

through June 30,
2004. Administrative

the criteria used In
Public Notice
evaluating the proposals, and a Budget
REQUEST FOR P110- Format Proposal, conPOSAL
tact Theresa Levander
The Meigs County at the Meigs County
Department of Job &amp; Department of Job &amp;
Family Services Is Family Services (740)
seeking proposals to 992·21 t7 ext. 127.
provide a comprehenProposals should
siva youth program to be submitted to
eligible youth ages Theresa Lavender,
14·21 consistent with Meigs County Job &amp;
Meigs
County's Family Services, 175
W· o r k I o r c e Race Street, P.O. Box
Development Plan, t9 1, Middleport, OH
provisions ol the led- 45760 no later than
oral
Workforce June 5,2003 at 4:00
Investment Act (WIA), p.m. All submissions
and related federal must be received by
and state regulatlono, · mall or hand delivery
In establishing youth by the above date and
actlvltlet under WIA, time . No materiels
service providers are received alter the date
expected to link pro- will be Included In

Give Dad what he really wants thi~ year .. . a trip to the Trail.

Yankees' owner Steinbrenner
calls inferleague schedule unfa.ir
'

all. That extended the
bullpen's streak of not allowing. an earned run to 17
mmngs.
COMFORT
ZONE:
Milton Bradley has reached
base safely in 12 of hi s last 19
plate appearances and is batting .362 (2 1-for-58) with 13
RBJs in his last 17 games.
Bradley said a run-in with
Eric Wedge on May 14 in
which the manager criticized
him for failing to run out a
pop up has spurred him to
perform . ·
"I took it as turning a negative into a positive," Bradley
said. 'That brought me closer
to my teammates, to Eric, and
has made me work harder."
IN THE SWING:, Catcher
Victor Martinez, who won the
2002 Lou Boudreau Award as
the top position prospect in
the Indians organization, is on
a tear at Triple-A Buffalo.
The 24-year-old had won
consecutive batting titles and
league MVP awards the past
two seasons at Class A and
Class AA respectively, batting
.329 at Kinston in 2001 and
.336 at Akron last season.
Over hi s last six games
entering play Monday night,
Martinez .batted .542 (13-for24) to raise his overall average to .269.
MOVING
ON
UP:
Infielder Maicer Izturis has
been promoted from DoubleA Akron to Triple-A Buffalo.
The 22-year-old Venezuelan
batted .280 (61-for-218) with
20 RBis and 14 stolen bases
for the Aeros.
Replacing lzturi s at Akron
is infielder Joe Inglett, who ,
was promoted from Class A
Kinston. where he batted .328
(28-for-85) with 10 doubles
and 15 RB!s in 28 games.

elements, the performance standards,

4,

· This Father's Day,
.Send the World's Greatest Dad
on Golf's Greatest Road Trip~·

•

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Form 990 PF for the
Kibble Foundation,
Bernard V. Fultz,
Trustee is available
lor public Inspection
at Bernard V. Fultz
Law Olltce, t11·1/2
West Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
during regular busi-

Sweep

'

Indians notebook
Inactive does not sit
·well with Garcia

PUBLIC NOTICE

'

The J::?aily Sentinel• Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The
department
reaervea the right to ·
re)ect any or att pro·
poaals. In accordance
wtth 2i CFR part 31,
32 Meigs County
Department of Job &amp;
Family Services Ia
prohibited from dis·
crlm.lnatlon on · the
basis of race, color,

national origin , sex,
age, religion, political
belief or dioablllty.
(5) 20, 27 (6) 3 3TC

If so, you qualify for a

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Maiillg Our Sileo Brocllurnl
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help. Be treated with
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Subscriber's Name - - - - - - - ' - - Address - - - - , - - - - - - - - Ci~/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

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Mall or drop off thls'coupon alortg wtth acopy of your photo IDto
OlliQ Valley Mlshlng P.O. Box469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

1

!•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

•

l

�www.mydallysentinel.com

\!tribune - Sentinel - 1\egt~ter
CLASSIFIED
We COve

90 beautiful rolling acres
near Harrisonville . Highway
frontage on SA 143. Gas
well and """stocked pond.
Cash or terms. Call {740)
742;3033

"--gs,Gallla,
And Muon

Calli• Coulll)'. OH

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallytribune.com

Your

I

1&lt;1 "\ I \1 ...

I

Ad •••

(Jfftee llo~~

Word Ads
Dallv

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

DisPlay Ads

In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Monday-Friday for Insertion
Jn Next Day's P•per
iutod&gt;oyln-Column: 1:00 p.m.

sunday• Paper

All blsplay: 12 Noon 2
Buslnesa DaYs Prior To

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p : m.

H()U';ES

!\egi~ter

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
·
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailysentinel.com

1-3 bedrooms foreclosures
home lrom $199 month 4%
down 30 years at 8.5% APR
lor listing ca ll 1·800-3193323 ext.1709

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyreglster.com

Deatrlption • lnc;;lude A Price e Avoid Abbrevl•tlona

• Include Phone Number And Addreaa When Neecled
• Ads Should Run 1 Daya

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Thursday for Sundays

eny lou or txpentt thlt multa from the publltltlon or om IIlion of an advtrtiument. Correction will be mldt In the flrtttvtlltblt tdhlon.
are elway• confldentill. • Current rate card tpplltt. • All r"leallte tdvertl ..menta " ' aubject to the F•d.,.l Ftlr Houtlng Act of 1968.
"iccept• only help.wanttt:lldl mtitln; EOE ttlndlrdt. Wt will not knowln;ly aoc.puny advlr'lltingln violation ot thtltw.

l.._tt•o-IIF.LP-•W.•ANIDl--.-1~"Lo.o_IIF.LP-•W.-ANJID
_ _.IIIIM
Puppy lost. Cora Mill &amp;
Brushy Pqint Area, black
with light brown markingS on
teet. face. and chest 379·
2817

" A STARSEARCH"
Sirigers Sands &amp; Vocal
Groups. All Styles &amp; Ages .
Nashville Record Exact.
Seeking New Talent.
Coming to Huntington.
731-424-2229 or 731-4242141
C- 1 Seer Carry Out perm1t
for sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
of interest to: The Daijy
Sentinel, PO So~ 729-26,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45 76~

I
,
I

I

-Summer camp For Kids
Opening Man- Fr1 6am-6pm
for more in fo. c:atl Kelly
Casto 740·667 -6460

r

r
r

Garage sale- June 6-7, 9-?,
Well residence, 2 mi. west
on 681 at Darwin , linens,
books, pictures, costume
jewelry, nice clothing, much
more. rain/shine

YARDSAU:

La rge sale behind Masonic
lodge in" Racine; Dentlie Hill
residence,
Wednesday,
Thursday, Friday
Baby
items. baby clothes. name·.
bra nd junior to plus size
clothing, r_
efrigerator, home
Bidwell United Methodist interior, misc .
Church. 111 Church St.
Bidwell, OH clOth ing and lots Tuppers Plains community
of miscettaneous. Hot dogs. yard sales. June. 6th &amp; 7th,
dnn.ks , baked goods. June 9am till 5pm
6-7, 9 to 5, rain or shine
Yard sale- 114 mile on
Friday &amp; Saturday 6th and Leading Creek Ad ., June 6
7th. large variety 906 4th &amp; 7, 9am-5pm
Ave.

i

6

Old.

-------.,-·
~I'm Kayla , 5 month old Great Moving-furn1ture. clo thes.
Oane/Oalmalion mi)(, have etc . 9707 State At. 218
~II shots anrf rabieS vac . Mercerville Friday June 6.
«6 ~3153
ram date June 7

spayed and declawed, 9
years old , must be kept
• tnside. TO GOOD HOME
ONLY ! (3041682·3941

r

l&lt;NrAND
FOUND

r

1

wanted-1-60 acres farm in
Gallia County, area not picky
6 family yard sale, Duncan'S 388-8228
I \ 11'1 (n \ II \ I
residence. 4th &amp; Rollins.
New Haven, June 4th &amp; 5th,
.., I 1{\ If I ..,
lots ot everything·
J'UIYI

•HTWJln...r..

Found at City National Bank
Garage sate- June 5·61h,
a p1ece of Jewelry. Contact
9am-5pm, 38545 Gold
linda or Twila . (304)674·
Ridge , Pomeroy, Oh

lOOO

large 21am11y sale, 46061 &amp;
lost: Black, White and 46.123 St. At. 124 tJetween
Orange female cat. Ohio Syracuse &amp; Racine. Thurs.,
$ide of Silver Bridge $25 • Fri., Sat.• 5th, 6th, 7th, very
•award 304·576·3130
good sale.

Sell Avon
Make 40% (740) 446·3358
---------"
··
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spear:;., 304675·1429.

WORD
GAM I ,.
foit•d b1 CI.M R. 'QLLAN - - - - - - -

!?.,orronoe .1etf&amp;r5 cf rh~t
leur sc rcmb!ed words b!!·
low '0 form fovr ~imple words

T
1

1

rj · F

I

I

I

REp

L

·:_ ·I· ITlr I I~ Is It areG;~~;;s t~i~~~gg;~~~~:~:~
. . . . . .
haven't got." Youngster to granny
. - - - - - - - - - - , "Sure they are What else can one

0

· I~·~-;~'--T1-'-T-rl
,

_

•

0
M......:Eii-:7;-'

•

_

'-11---11·
0
.
.

'--":-....l"-...r.-...L.-..1.......1

.'c;;P~~;~ ''•

chuckle quorod

bv filling in tho miSsing words
yQu develop from sttp No. 3 below.

TTEiS

Yesterday 's

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS

Papacy · Motif- Crest- Hearth -REPEAT
I have two neighbors who are very nosy. I overheard
one goss1p say to the other, "You can't believe everyth ing you hear but you sure can REPEAT 1t.'
'

(

.

For w~ll established
Local Co.

SERVING THE
TRI·COUNTY
AREA
• Must have good
Communication ski IIa
• Must have good
driving record· &amp;
provide

own

tran1portatlo.n
• Muot have ability to
be a TEAM player

Send Reaume to:
GoiiiPQIIO Dolly Tribune
RE: Advertising
Soles Rep

825 Third Avenue

Bass player needed for a
working Blues. Rock, &amp;
County Band, please call
740-667-0135,
740-992·
5079
-------Comfort Air is now ac_cepting
applications lor installers
and service technicians ,
experience preferred. but
wilt train . Apply at Comfort
Air 1160 Jackson Pike In
Spring Valley Plaza

•

Lead Guitarist needed for
bar band. Play various music
and country. Most equipment supplied. 740-7099053 or 304-675·3449 ask
tor Frankie.

Licensed Practice! Nurt1ea
(LPN) tor full-time and parttime work in a 114 88d Long
Term Care State Facility.
Full-time employment offers
an extensive benefit package. l~clucllng State civi l
service retirement, earn up
to 15 days vacation . 18 days
siclc leave, ancl 12 plus paid
holidays: health/li fe insurance is available. Salary is
commensurate with experi·
ence. Contact Kim Billups,
DON at Lakin Hospital.
Lakin, WV al {3041675·
0860, ext. 126, Monday th ru
Friday from 8:00 a.m.--4:00
p.m. Lakin Hospital Is an
EOE/AA Employer.

lifeguards wanted· must be
lifeguard certified , please
pick-up (and return applications) at Middleport Village
Oftice by June 2nd, Spm,
interviews wilt be conducted
June 3rd.
Lost your Job? Nsad to
Work? Let's taiK ... Tne new
Avon!
There
.. 2s,ooo··customers in our
area needing service. Earn
$1 ,000.;. Monthly by selling
$20. of Beauty Products to 6
People , 5 days a Week!
Great for : Couples·Single
Mom s-FamiliesHandicapped. Plans to Fit
any Need. No Stock Ups, No
Door to Door. It will Work for
You! $10.00 Start up Fee .
Call April, 304-882-3630 or
1·688·748·3630.

are

Maintenance man , lull time,
sena resume to PO BoK 303
Gallipolis OH 45631
Ohio Valley
Publishing
Compa ny has a part-time
opening in the mailroom .
Please apply in person
Monday-Thursday 8-10am .
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis.
Ask for Tommy Long.
Overbrook Center is seeking
a part-time position tor an
LPN. For more information,
contact Michelle Gilmore at
{7401992·6472

Cosmetologist
needed
lull/part time pd. vacation,
free CE hrs.Fantastic Sams
{7 40)446·7267

Registered Nurse (RN} for
full-time and part-time work
in a 114 Bed Long Care
State Facility. Full-time
emplOyment offers an eden·
siw benefit package. Including State .civil service
retriement, earn up to ~ 5
days vacation . 16 days Sick
leave, and 12 plus paid holidays; health/life insurance is
available. Salary is commensurate with BKperience.
Contact Kim Billups, DON at
lakin Hospital, lakin , WV at
(304)675·0860 ext 126.
Monday thru Friday tram
8:00am-4:00pm. Lakin

Experienced
carpenters·
must be lamiliar with all
phases of residential remodeling. valid drivers license,
tools, transportation , and
references. Local work, pay
Msecl
on
experience
AppllcaUo ns available at
Christians
Construction,
1403 · Eastern
Ave.,
Gallipolis. 446-4514

AN Supervisor
A leading provider of support ser'o'ices to Individuals
with mental retardation and
develop mental disabilities is
loo ~ing for a full time AN
Supervisor . . Benefits lnclud·
ed. Call Dorothy Harper at
7 40:446-7148 or 18/( resume
to 740-446·3987. An Equal
Opportunity
Employer

Concrete mi•er driver's
needed at our Columbus
plant. Class B COL required.
co ntact Arrow Concrete
740.&gt;146-1594

RE F
I

ADVERTISING
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

~~~:~;~T s©~~~-~t-~s·
0

Bartender/grin cook, part
time, send resume to PO
Box 303 Gallipoli$ OH
45631

s

Absolute Top Dollar: U . .
Silver.
Gold
Coins.
Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold
Rings, · U.S. Currency,M.T.S. Coin ShOp, 1 ~1
Second .}.venue. Gallipolis.
Multi-family yard sale, chil- 740,446-2842.
drens 11ems. nascar items
. and more .
Kelly Dr. wanted to buy-your extra
car, minor repairs ok, all
Gallipolis June 5 7:0Qam-?
prices
ok 388-8228
fiT&lt; YARD SALE· ' ,
u... .... ~ERO"Ilt""·~ .~

Access to a Computer?
Earn $450-$1500 monthly
part-time or $2,000..$4,500
full-time, 1·800-585-0760 or
www.OurAnswer.com

YARD SALE-

·Friday. June 6, 9 to 5 at ~
Pr. J'u:AsANT
GIVFAWAY
Kessels Pro 1354 Jackson
Pike
Antiques , dolls. a\IOn. mise
1 ton of river-rock . you must Garage sale 1149 Bulaville leon·Baden Ad . 314-mi. off
87 . June 5/6 Rain or Shine.
haul it away 304·773-9566 . Pike, June 5-6, 8:00-5:00
Serious Inquires only!
June 5 and 6, 2 miles east of Community Yard Sale
Gunville Ridge June 5-6. 6
2, 10 week old fem'ale kit· Porter on 554, baby clothes.
1/2 mlltif long, from Pt
day
bed,
and
lots
more
tens. White wlgray on their
Pleasant At 2 N. to RT 87
heads. (304)895-3659
large Yard Sale
follow signs 9:5.
on 554 in Sidwell a block
3 kinens 446-047.§
from the post oHice, June 3, Huge Yard Sale! June 5th·
6th Thur.·Fri. 1 112 miles
4&amp; 5
Bird dog puppies 6 weeks
!rom the Y on At 62S. Lots of
Moving sale 413 4th' Ave Everything. Bam-2:30pm.
1304 1675~ 2245
Gallipolis. 9am-5pm June 6WANilD
Free Kittens. 5 weeks old. 7. Longabe rger baskets,
Grey tiger. , To good home. household items, baby and
mBuv
aclult clothing _ Rain or
Call (7401256-6678

l ittl e German Shepherd
pup. (304)675-7740
--------Small white cal . blue eyes.

A leading provicler of sup·
port services to individuals
with mental retarclation and
developmental disabilities
has vacant positions for
Casual LPN 's. Pay starts at
$16.00 per hour. For more
information call Dorothy
H~rper at Middleton Estates,
740-446-81 45 &gt;Or 446-4814.
An
Equal
Opportunity
Employer F/M!DN.
--------A
Metaboliam
Breakthrough! I lost 40
pounds in 2 months.
Ephedra Free. 1·888·546·
7207

Head cook fo'r summer
camp Francis Asbury contact Chris or Sue Lewis 74()-.
245-5254
Help wanted caring for the
elderly, Darst Group Home.
now paying minimum wage,
new shif1s. 7am-3pfn, 7am·
5pm , 3pm· 11pm, 11pm7am, call740-992·5023.

HVAC company is looking
for full time Installers and·
helpers In Heating and
Coating, sene! resumes to
PO Box 572 Kerr. OH 45643

FIM!DN.

The Board of
Park Commissioners of the
0 .0 . Mcintyre Park District is
seeking a director to serve
as Chie.f Administrative
Officer to direct the total
planning,
administration .
management and opera tions of the countywide Park
District.
Requirements: A
bachelo rs degree from an
accredited college or univer·
sity. Experience in community leadership, communications. public relations. building partnerships, fl lfld raisand
ing: administrative
financial ski lls.
Prospecti~~e candidates must comp lete an
Employment
Application
prO'o'ided by the Park District
along with a Resume and
Cover Let1er outlining their
education, training, experi·
ence and certifications.
Submit to 0 .0 .
Mcintyre Park District, Gallia
Coun ty Courthouse, 18
locust Street. Room 1262,
Gallipolis. OH 45631-1262

The City of Gallipolis is
ac"ceptlng applications fo r
the position of Crew Chief.
Position will provide supervi·
sory direction and routine
daily responsibilities tor the
fo llowing
depa rtments;
Streets, Water/Sewer line
Maintenance, Cemeteries,
Parks and Municipal Pool.
Duties Will consist of directing, supervising and participati ng with all daily respon·
sibilities of those depauments. Qualified applicants
must possess a minimum of
high school diploma or GEO
and basic knowledge or past
work expgrience in the fol·
lowing areas; construction,
vehicle and equipment oper·
ation, carpentry, plumbing,
electrical, masonry and
ancl
ce ment
work,
lawn/ground's care including
planting and seeding of
grass,
trees.
shrubs.
Position is full-time salaried
Offf;l!ring a competitive . and
compre hensive
benefit
package. including health
insurance. Applications may
be picked up at the oflice of
the City Manager. 518
Second Avenue. Gallipolis.
Ohio 45631 . Applications
will be accepted until 5 p.m.,
· June 11 ,2003. EOE

WANrED
To Do

Great Gifts; beautiful wood
signs for any occasion.
Residential-Business. BlueStar banners. $25. and up.
{3041675·6925

Will

It

H~m;

JiURSALE

4 Bedroo ms 2 112 baths,
5.52 acres. Pt. Pleasant.
Information/photos onl ine
www.orvb.com code 51903
{3041675·5773

MOBILE HOME'&gt;
JiURSALE

12x60 Clayton , new doors
and windows, hOt water tank
a.nd under pinning, no tires
or a~les. needs lots of work
$500 740·386·8128 al1e1
6pm

Do Babysitting in New 4 br. 1 1/2 baths. Prick and

Haven area. Responsible frame, lull basement. 2 car 1995 mobile home. e~cellent
mother of 2 grown boys. garag e, New haven WV condition . 2BA 2 bath, must
see, no reasonable offers
{3041882·2091 .
{7401446·4274
refused 740·662·7571

Will pressure wash homes. Cape Cod house buill in 1996 Norris Mobile Home

trailers, decks, metal build- 1999, 4 bedroom, 2 bath,
ings and gutters. Call oak cabinets, 2 car garage
(740)446-0151 ask for Ron $135,000 call 740·256-1709
or leave mess~ge .

14x80, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
complete kitchen. cove red
porch, 2 storage bUildings ,
acre land . Nice Property.
Call Somerville Rea lty.
(3041675 -3030 or (304)675·
3431

Will set for the elderly or disabled
Day
or
night .
Monday-Friday. Call Jan
675·7792 Cell 1·704-2087107

2003 Clayton t 6x80 3 SA 2
Bath, partially furnished, 2
decks,
10x12 building ,
reduced pr1ce 245-5100

All reel estate adv1rtlalng
In thla newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Houalng ACt of 1968
which makea II Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrtminallon baaed on
reca, color, religion, sex
familial alatua or national
origin, or any lntlnllon to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
c!Jacrlminatlon."

Will stay with elderly person
in there hOme. Nights only.
(304)675·1 898
II '\ \'\t I \I

I NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
you do business with people ·
you know, and NOT to send
money through the mail until
you have investigated the
offering.

24 x 36 double wide modular
class room . Built very heavy
duty to Ohio building code. I
large open room , no bath or
kitchen , self contained heat
pump unit. Appro)( . 10 years
old. $6, 500 delivery avail·
able. 740-992-2478 or 740.
591·9342
'99 14x70 Clayton. 3 bdrm, 2
bath, all electric, central ale,
new carpet. water lihes &amp;
underpinning. $16,000 . 6758707

'

Thl1 newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advartlaementa for real
tttete which Ia In
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dweltlnga advertised In
thlt newapaper ere
·available on an equal
' opportunity beaes.

Never lose money ag8.in in
MLMI Instead, try EMM! It's
new. it's hot, it pays up to
1Ok weekly! No selling! Get
free into 800-242·0363 ext.
1806

r

Cole's Mobile Homes
US 50 East, Athens, Ohio,
45701 . 740-592- 1972

Custom, all brick 38R ?112
Bath, 3200 sq. ft . living area
on 51/2 acres with pond,
30x40 detached garage, 4
John's Contracting
miles past hospital on 160
Services
carpentry, painting, roofing, $279.000 446·2927
insulation, decking-rree estiFor sale by owner, ranch
mates 740-367·0437
style home behind Addaville
school,
38R 11/2 bath.
Stanl9y and Son, Inc.
jacuzzi in master suite. new
Auction, Real Estate,
siding, 2 ca.r garage, very
Appraisal. Serving you
since 1960- 3 Generations nice home 367-7039
1·888·810-IT-UP. Henry M.
Stanley, IIICAI-AAAE
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win I
1 ·888 ~ 582 · 3345

1-t l \1 l '•d \II

FORCLOSURE
3 Bedroom home only
$13.500 for listing call
1·800·719·3001 Exl. F144

Coming Soon The All New
"Pinnacle Best Buy" Home
You saw them last year.
Many were sold at a fantas·
tic tow price. Now with more
deluxe features than ever.
'"Where Yow Get Your
Money's
Worth"
Coles
Mobile Homes, US 50 East,
Athens , Ohio (740)592- 1972
Land Home Packages avail·
able. In your area. (740)446-

3384 .
New 14 wide' onl y $799
down and only $157.93 per
month. Call NiKki 740-385767 1.
New 14 wide only $799
down and on ly $157.93 per
month. Call Nikki 740-385·
7671.

French City Mobile Homes
Open House May 30 thru New 2003 Doublewide . 3 SA
June 14. Big Savings, Big &amp; 2 Ba1h. Only $1695 down
and &amp;295/mo . 1-800-691 ·
Rel;late. 446-9340
6777

r

Home on poncl .. Five Points
Bli!&gt;'INE&amp;'i
area, Pomeroy 1.3 acres 3
AND
BUILDINGS
br., 1 1/2 baths, dining
room ,lamily room ,stone lire1
place has gas logs. base- Rio Grande area. 2400
sQ.
ft.,
~office/ Commercial
ment with finished room .
Building for Rent/ Lease.
Mid SO's (J40) 992·3493
Plenty off parking. (740)245Moore St. Hartford, WV 6 5747

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
Truck Driver., Immediate lor imrr]ecliate possession all
hire. class A COL req!.lire.d, Within 15 min. of downtown
excellent pay, experience Gallipolis. Rates as low aS
required . Earn up to S1,000. 6%. (740)446·3218.
per week. Call 304·675·
4005
3 Br. 1 Ba , full unfinished
basemen"!. new kitchen , new rooms &amp; bath; needs work .
windows
and
vinyl. Nice large lot. 740-742BIBNENS
$53,900.00. (7401367-0299 2535
TIIAINING
or 709-0299 leave message.
Nice custom buill Cape Cod ,
3BR Ranch Style Home. over 3,000 sq. rt .• close to
Gallipolis CarMr Collel.e City schools; 2 car garage, town .
(740)446-3764 or
(Careers Close To Home)
covered c8rport . above (7401446-2685.
Call Today! 740-446-4367,
ground pool, partially fin1·80Q-21 4.0.52
ished fu ll , dry basement. REDUCED PRICE Small
www . ~allipoli.ctreen::ollage . com
$73k 446·9545 5· 1Opm or home, excellent beginning
Reg lf90.05-1274B.
home or rental property.
leave message during day
'r40-742-3128 leave name &amp;
'
3br. House on 3/4 acre , on number.
Only
serious
Eckard Chapel. {3041675· i~quires please
8635
For Sale 15x30 Pool. 3rd
Three Bedroom, One Bath
·summer $1 .000. Already 3br. House on 3/4 acre, on Ranch Style Home In
Taken down, (304 )882-3246 Eckard Chapel . (304)675 - Addison Twp. Call (740)4468635
after 5:00pm.
8491

The Co rner Restauran t,
Micldleport, Oh., business &amp;
building &amp; property. established 1991, turnkey opera1;on . {740)992·3955

r

Lurs&amp;
ACRFAGE

3 acres Ready to build
Mason
Co.
$20.000.
(304)458·19tp
4 acres Eagle Ridge Ad.,
excava ted , electric, septic
permit &amp; water availab le.
(740)992·0031
Lot for sale in
{740)992·5858

HIP! HIP! HOORAY!
'

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••

'1,",'

.

•

I

•! ~~ '·

' '

.•J •• '

1

•

' , ' ,·,

·,

.•
...

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H=JJl .

r

Registered Border Collie
.TRucKS
pups. Perfect Father's Day
gift. Shots, wormed , import.mRSALE
ed blood lines ahd working
parents. (740)379-9110
1984 Ford 1 ton truck, 15
root
lighted boK with roll up
Siamese kittens ; bOrn Apr~
d-oor, V-8 , automatic $2000
30 • ready 6·10 $100 .00
call 446-4254 or 446·0205
740·949·9015

I \ln t ..,l 1'1'1 II ..,
S I 1\ I &lt;., I ( U 1,

rlri!!!u--'!':FARM
___.,
Lw-..;EQUIPMENTiiiif,lliiiiiiliil;.,.,.l

3 hardwood bedroom sels, 1
hospital bed, all elilctrlc, ...,
never used 256·1426
For Sale: Sleeper Couch,
En tertainment Center, DesK,
"TWin Sed, Kitchen Table and
Chairs&amp; queen size bed room suite. (740)446-Q415

AQHA Reg. 2 Year old
Gelding 15.1 HH, Gay-bar·
King &amp; leo on top. 3 chicks
and hard twist on bOttom,
loo ps circle both ways.
Stops good &amp; ba·cks up.
2 bedroom. References &amp; Good Used Appliances , $2,000. 304·576·2847
Deposit. No Pets. (304)675· Aeconclitioned
and High Quality, yearling Ang~s
5, 62
Guaranteed.
washers, Bulls, SBOO. each Roy
3 bedroom. $500 per mo. Dryers.
Ranges,
and Cummings (3041675·6248
plus deposit, referen"ces Refrigerators, Some start at Suffolk sheep for sale,
required ,
no
pets, $95. Skaggs ApplianceS , 7.6
1740 949 2494
Harrisonville area, 740-742- Vine St;., (740)446-7398
)
"
7303, 740-347-4370.
. Mollohan ·carpel, 202 Clari&lt; White laying chickens for
sate. 75~ each 74Q-98S.
3BA , bath At . 141 $450 Chapel Road ; Porter, Ohio.
3956
plus depos;t446·4824
(740)446-7444 1~877 · 830·
9162. !=ree Estimates, Easy
Nice older home tor rent in · financing, 90 days same as
New Haven WV. Has fenced cash . VIsa/ Master · Card.
back yard , 3 br., new carpet, Drive- a· little save alot.
Good quality straw. Volume
must see to appreciate. will
discount &amp; delivery a'o'ail·
rent to non- smokers, no Queen Anne , Chair, Sed
able . Heavy square bales.
Frames,
R~dio.
Retired
baspets call 304·675·3961
kets, many 11ems. (304)675· $2.65 per bale. (304)675·
5724
2045

R&lt;;~cine .

LM~~~

II&lt;\ "\"'1'1II&lt; I\ I ill \

Used Furniture Store 130
Bulaville Pike Gallipolis OH
AIJil)';
12K66 2BR trailer for rent.
446-4782 . Good
buys.
•UK SALE
no pets, private, $200
Check us out. Hrs 10-4
month, security, references
Man-sat
required 446-7754 after 5:00
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas,
chevys ,
etc!
cars/trucks from $500. For
P
_m___________
. . . . . .. . . . . . . . .
14x70 two bedroom total ___
!lstlngs 1·800·719-3001 ext
electric, $300 a month, $250
Buy or sell. Riverine 3901
deposi1, no pets, (740)742·
Antiques. 1124 East Main 1989 Grand Prix. Auns
2714
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- good. $600. (3041675·3769
2 SA trailer, $280 month 992·2526. Russ Moore ,
1990
Chev.
Lumuna
plus deposit, near Holzer owner.
Th
under
Limited
Edition ,
Hospital 446-9204 call after
66K miles. one owner, 3.1 V2:00p.m
6. PS. PB. AC, PW &amp; door
2 br. mobile home, all applilocks, amlfm cassette, new
ance included. washer &amp; Aclult electric scooter like tires &amp; battery, garage kept,
Wai·Mart has for shopping $4495. Serious if")quires only,
dryer 304-576-9991
682·6850
(7401992-6020
2BA 5 miles south 218
Gallipolis,
$335
incl. Black leather love seat $100 1992 Dodge Stealth ES.
water!trash $200 deposit 55 galion aquarium w/ black dual overhead cam. 24
740·256-1337 .
shelving unit $350 1997 valve. V-6, black, pw, cruise,
Oldsmobile Achelva $2500 tilt , ale, Ssp, $3,300,
2BR mobile home for rent 379-9249
(7401742·2169
$325 a month plus $200
BLOCK 1993 Chevy Camaro Z2B.
deposit. Need referen c~s. BURN
Fal,
Phone 388-0576
Cravings,
and BOOST Black. 379·2282.

~~

~ r

'

r=:sl

Beautiful River View Ideal
For 1 Or 2 People,
References, Deposit, No
Pets, Foste r Trailer Park,
740·441-0181 .
Mobile home for rent, no
pels, {7401992-5858

r

Wanted to rent· Pasture in
Gallia Co. with good fences
Phone: Jim
&amp; water

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfur·
nished. security deposit
required, no pets, 74()..992·
2218.

1br. Cottage in Gallipolis.
$250. month+ Deposit. 4462468
2

br.

apt. In Gallipolis
$425.00 a mon. (740)4411322
- - - - - - -- 213 Bedroom upstairs apartment. $375. month. $250
Deposit Newly Remodeled.
No Pets. {3041895-3815
. Apartment in clowntown
Gallipolis 886·7174

Energy Like
You Have
Never Experienced .
WEIGHT- LOSS
REVOLUTION
New p"roduct launch October
23, 2002. Call Tracy at
(7401441-1982

1990 dump truck, Chevrolet
Kodlac . CATdelsel, 5 esp
transmission, 2 speed rear,
10' dump bed , air brakes,
C.O. L required . 48 , 000

1995 Plymouth Voyager
Van , 3.0 V-6 engine, air.
stereo. Excellent Condition.
Runs Good. {7401446-1662

1997 Dodge Dakota 4~4
1•uck $8000 740.256-1709
89 KW T600 400 Cummins
w/Jake. 90 Ravens Magnum
45ft w/slde Kit. &amp; 3 boxes &amp;
equ i pm~nt. $20.000 . 740709.-0336
98 ·Dodge Durango $9500,

1996 CBR600F3 excell ent
condition ,
yoshimura
exhaust, 1Ok miles $4000
OBO 645· 1308

• Garages

'

1999
Harley
Heritage
Springer. exc. condition 4466253
2000
Harley-Davidson
Softtail Standard 8, 000
miles $13,000 .00 740-9493600
2001 Harley Davidson 883
1700 mite~ $7000 call 3677296

• Complete
Remodeling

Ntul ItnnJ Addrd Werkf)'

740-992-l&amp;n

J619B Pe"clt Fork Rd.
Potntroy1 Ohio, 45769
1-740-992-7007

srop &amp; Compare

~'R~
High&amp; Dry

~~ Spring *
,~ Special ,~

TIERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE

Self·Storage

Easter &amp; Mothers Day
Buy 1 Gih Certificate ,

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

H£athu A. Fry L.M .T.

Vary Spacloua. ¥1·32t1

j

BUIUIING

StiPI'UE'l

•--Jtiiiiiiiiiil_ _.
Block, brick, sewer pipes ,
windows, lintels. eto. Claude
Winters, Alo Grande, OH
Call741l-245-5121 .

LARRY SCHEY

#cHiVRO,~T#

Get 2nd Free!

740-992-5379

740·992-5232

750 East State Street

Offer good thru ~-1 1 -03

n;o BoAlS &amp; MaroRS
I'OR SALE

·-

Septic Systems,
Footers and
Concrete,
Excavation, Utilities,
Back hos and
Dozer, Ponds .

PC DOCTOR

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

k

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

We Make House Calls

992-7953
591-7002
591-4641

• Lawn Mower.&amp;
• Power Mowers
•Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
~ WBBd Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
• Go Karls • Mini
Bikes

Gravely

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Dean Hill
New 8t Used

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
32119 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Pomeroy, Ohio

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

992-2975
Lawn and Garden Eq11ipment is our
business, not our sideline

1-800-822-0417
·w.vs #I

Chevy, Pontiac. Buick, Olds

&amp; Custom
"I 1&lt;\ H Is

r

10

I BISSEll

HOME

•~.....,IM..

BUILDERS me.

17'
Starcraft,
inboard
PR.oV
..EM•ENTS·
. · -_.
Mercury Cruiser 302 engine,
dual axle tilting trailer.
BASEMENT
Stored for several years ..
WATERPROOFING
Make Offer. (7 40) 379-2 t 11 Uncondit1onal lifetime guarantee. Local re ferences fur1988 Baratta Super Sport. nished . Established 1975.
27' cruise r w/c uddy, 225hp Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
inboard/outboard, new tan· 0870, Rogers Basement
dem trailer, $10.000 080 . Waterproofing.
740·992·9066

H ·

Phone (740)593-667

Alhens; Ohio

Also now accepting
most iri.Hirat~ce

Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New fiatr·"·,uc•; l
• Rcplacc menl
Windows • Roofing
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance - Pain.ting, vinyl
siding . carpentry, doors ,
windows . baths . mobile
home repair and more. For
free estimate cal l Chet, 740·
992·6323 .

Sunday
Early birds start

6:30

591-7002

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
tRODFING
I •HOME
i MAIIITEIIAIICE
. •SEAMLESS

amER
*FI'Itl Jsdmltll*

949-1405

1st

Thursday

of every month

CANCER CHECK
ru.

Finally ... Money p:1id to
wh~;.:n. cancer
stri kes. You c hoose the amount up to $50.000~
Pay~ in add ition to other insuranCe.

You use the money however you like .
will strike when you least expect it.
It will leave you and yo ur family finam:ial\y
&gt;!rapped. CANCER CHECK w1ll he
Cmc er

there when you need it.

Call now

to

reserve

~check.

All pack $5.00
Bring I his coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES

Get 5 FREE

740-843-5264

Hill's Self
Storage

Flat Roof
SpecialistsCommercial and
R esidential
Saves on Cooling.
Metal and Mobile
home roofs- N o
Problem. 15-Year
Guarantee
992-7953

4:30

Doors Open

DURO-LAST
ROOFING

591-464t

l

Eagles
BINGO 217t
Every Thursday &amp;
Pomeroy

COMMERCIAL and

740-992·7599

29670 Bashan

Road
Racine. Ohio

45771

740-949-2217
1;'

Sizes 5'x1 o·

to 10'x~o·
Hours

7:00AM· 8:00 PM
1/14/1 me. pd

BOX 189 MIDDLEPORT , OH 45760

General
Contracting
New
Construction,
Remodeling,
· Backhoe and
Dozer Work.
Roofing.

3111\ 1rn

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do it fer y o u l

HOME CREEK
EHT., INC.
992-7953

YOUNG'S

Sunset Home
Construction

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More

• ·Room Additions 1
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp;.Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
Free Estimates

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-34'11
Advertise
in this
space for 525
per month.

V. C. YOUNG Ill .
992-6215
5/9-B/4

Pome1oy. Ql\lo
012 Y rs Local

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

671-2417 or 448-2112
Call Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

NELSON'S LAWN
CARE

FLEA MARKET

Res idential •

space

Commercial Mowing
• Mulching • Edg ing
• Fertilization • Leaf

CINBf

Paul Hill Greenhouses

• • 2 lledroomo, 2 Floors. CA. 1· Jiiiro;;,;~~---..,

992-5479

Hours 1D-4 pm
Cloted Synd•y•

Hmu;o;

PEh.Ho.n0e No Is (304)875·5806. Truck topper, e~~:cellent con·
dltion, maroon , will fit Ford 8
~ Tara
TownhOuse ft. bed S350 379·9046 or

Jeff Warner Ins.

2001 Yamaha YZ125 dirt
bike with racing equipment
740·256-1709

2000 Mercury sable LS ,
Premier, tully equ_i pped.
including power moon ropf. 1994 Ranger R-72 Dual
Central Cooling Systems, 15.000 llrm. (3041675·3354 console. 115 HP Mercury
new &amp; used, as low as
Tracker Outboard. 3 props,
$850.00
installed
May 2001 Alero 2d. 46k $5.995 . 454#
motor
guide
2
1996 Malibu 62K, $5.395.,
Spedal l (740)446-6308
1996 Cavalier 96K $2,995., Hummingbirds. GARMIN Full Size Mattress Set New 17 others in stock starting at GPS . Ranger Tralls trailer
in Plastic wfWarr. Sacrifice $1.495. COOK MOTORS . with crome wheels and
spare.
Runs and looks
$119, Cell Pnone 304-412- 74o-446-0103
great. $6 ,000 .00. (7 40)4468098 or 304·552·1424.
2001 Mustang GT, yellow, 6970.
loaded,
auto, 33,000 miles
Generator; washer; full size
bed liner; Remington 270 388·9950
Bimini 1op 22-2811. 1n length.
rifle; 45 cal. Auger pistol; .22 95 Mazda MX3 hatchback, also stainless st'eel pro p.
Br()Wnlng
pump
rifle; 88,000 miles, new lights &amp; 25p. {3041675·3354
(740)992-5970
tires , e~cellent co ndition ,
CAMI'EIIS&amp;
$4750 call 446-8222 ~
Good mix grass hav. squa re
MmuR
bales. never been wet, 95 Windstar GL transmis$2.50 per bale. Registered sion prob lem $2000, 92 27' Prowler 2000 model, like
Black Angus bull, 21 12 years GMC Sonoma $4000, 97 new, sleeps a Hitch and
old 446-1062
Cad illac Deville, good condi- sway bars Included $10.000
tion $10.500. 2 Cyl. diesel. can 740·446-1750 or 740lnclustrial Sewing Machine · 4wd tractor, brush heg, plow, 709·1382
lor
sale .
New/Used disk $4200 367-0106
Upholstery
&amp; surging.
Ford Escort, 5 speed, good 96 HD Road King . low miles.
. (304)458-1.667
conditio n. 105k miles. $2000 excellent condition. $14,000.
JET
080 call 446·3239 leave Call after 5:00pm. (304)576·
AERATION MOTORS
2933
message
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Aon Evans. 1800·537·9528 .

----------c:

Cellular

A vuitry oi ~amoun11goo
d orhing and hunrinj!:
equlpmtnr

WE REPAIR
1996 Yamaha Wolverine 350
4)(4, excellent condition,
$2700 740-379-9038

Flowers For Sale

Pe1a, Laosa Plus Securl1y
Deposit Required , Days:
740·446-3481 : Evenings:
74Q-367.01102.

Under New

Managagement

.98 Ford Windstar van
$3200, 94 Nissen 4x4 PU
$3400, 98 Ford F250 314 ton
PU, va, auto &amp; air $4700,
B&amp;D Auto. Sales Hwy 160 N
446-6865

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
·Drive from $297 to $383.
Walk to shop &amp; movies . Call Lawn mower. set or re ar
740-&gt;146·2568.
Equal tur1type
Carlisle
tires,
Hou~ng Opportunl1y.
20X10.
10:00·8.
New
Conctlllon , $50. (740)379"
Gracious livirig. 1 and 2 bed·
2111 .
room· apifttments at Village
Star Mill Park Basket Bingo
Manor
and
Riverside Male
PeBcocks,
Full
Apartments In Middleport. Feo1hered. $50. (7401379·
June 5, 6 pm
From $278·$348. Call 740· 2111
Middleport Legion
992-5064. Equal Housing
NEW
AND
USED
STEEL
21 Games- $20
Opportunities.
Steel Beams , Pipe Rebar
Special Games - 50/50 Drawing
'Nice 1BR apl, Crown Cl1y, For
Concrete,
Angle,
Bicen1ennial Bear in each Bingo Basket
$250 per month, plus securl- Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
1y depos11, no pe1s 741l-256· Grating " For
Drains,
1249
Dfiveways &amp; Walkways. L~L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Baskets Wave Petunias, New Guinea
Now TaKing Applicatlons- Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
impatient&amp;, Assorted colors Also other
35 West 2 l;ledroom Friday, Bam-4 :30pm. "closed
Townhouse
Apartments, Thursclay,
Flats &amp; Baskets $4.00 each
Saturday
&amp;
Incl udes Water
Sewage, Sunday. {740)44&amp;-7300
Trash, $350/Mo., 740-448·
0008.
Queen Pillow Top Mattress
- - - - . , - - - . , - - set, New In plastic wfWarr.
Pleasant vaney Apartment Will accept $199, Cell phone
Are now taking Applications 304·412--8098 or 304·552ror 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR.. 1424.
Application• are
1aka~
r-----o:.:o::-::~r"':p::"----....,
Monday thru Friday, lrom SONQ OF THE SOUTH
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office Ia (Talea of Uncle Remus) full
Located at 1151 Evergreen length movie, VCR tape 529
Drive Point Pleasant, WV call 888·315-6004

112 Ba1h. Nowly Carpaled,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pat!o, Start1 S3851Mo. No

\lUll' Sl'lli'U 'S

WhB r&amp; lt!B customer
comes flrstl

• New Homes

King Size
Pillow Top
Mattress set, New still in
Plastic, Sale $299. Cell
Phone 304-412-8098 or
304·552·1424 .

~.,t.partments,

WILSON'

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

miles excellent condition. ~~~~~~~~~
$10, soo.oo 740-992-2478 . r
or 740· 591 ·9342
1992 Chevrolet SID Blazer
eKcellent condition $3000.
call 446·0425

2 bedroom, f bath house For Sale · Reconditioned
$350./mo. References +
washers, dryers and refrigDeposit Required . Located
erators .
Thompsons
In ~int Pleasant. (304)593·
1200
. Appliance . 3407 Jackson
A'.'enue, (30;4)675-7388.

WRITE AN AD' &lt;"
~~:-==--!(~i!i~OOh;lo~YI;IIo;y;;;Pu~b~ll;;oh~lng;;r;ooorv;::.:,
:tn:e~rl:g!'d to edh, reJect. or ctncel eny ld It tny tlmt. E"or• mutt be reported on tht llr1t dey~~
HOw Tn
T
~
__:_
• Start Your Adt With A Keyword • Include Complete
Tribune-Stntlnei-Reglater will be rttponalble tor no mort than the cost Of the •Pice occupied by tht trror and onl~ the flrat lnMrtlon. W•
Successfu I Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .. ~.

SPACE

AtrJUi·
FURSAU:

Jack
Russell
Terrier 98 Toyota Camry LE S5900,
Puppies. 10 WeekS Old . 3 oo Oodga Neon $3500 , 96
Fernate. . $150 each . Flreblrd $2500 , 96 Neon
• (740)245·5624.
$t600 , 93 Ford Probe
$1500 , 93 Pontiac Grand
Lab
Puppies,
AKC . Am $1350. 96 Thunderbird
Chocolate, vet checked, dew $2200. 97 Neon $2000, 95
claws removed, 1Very healthy Eagle SUmmit $1000, B&amp;D
ancl frlendtv. (740)367-0659 Auto Sales Hwy 160 N. 446(7401645·2293
6865

ro . -I

FURJbNr .

'

To
Place

t

Building lots close to Pt.
JiURRENT
Pleasant at Meadow hills off
Sand hill Rd . {7401446·9340
Trailer space for 'rent in
or 304·675·3000.
I
Nice mobile home lots, quiet
country setting, $115 per
month, includes
water.
sewer. trash , 740-332-2167
Want to rent lot for mobile
Rio Grande area, 3 to 30 home, 16X80, close t~ city.
acres lots. some restrictions,
water &amp; electric. {740)2455747

Countl• Uke
NoQne
. EleeCIIn! ,

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTs·
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
·\lrribune
Sentinel

Twi" Rivers Tower Is accept·
ing applications tor waiting
list for Hud·subsized , 1· br.
apartment , call 675-6679
EHO

I'E:JS

FUR SALE

Rer'noval • Pruning
• Landsc.ape
Maintenance Spring

IN

and Fall Cleanup

(7 40) 985-9829
(740) 591-3891

Tlf

$7.50 per
at
Maplewood Lake
State Route 124
Between Racine &amp;
Syracuse, Ohio

June 6-7
Campsite available
with full hookups

Call 949-2734

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

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

SUE's GREENHOUSE [10'x10' 610'1120')
Beaaing, Vegetable a Sweet
[740) 992-3194
Potato Plants,
4" annuals a Perennials
992-6635

cLASS IFl EDS
FOR
BARGAINs

Fruit

Morning Star Road· C.Rd

In Syracuse
(Formtrly Whimt)·S)

Under new ownership
and new maflagement.

COME JOIN US
7 Days A Week!

NOW 0,..
?dey&lt;

• week dtyllght
to dark!

30 •

1·740-949-2115
' '

carl-

a Flowering Trees a

Shrubs
(RI!Oaodenarons a
AzaleRS)
all on Sale

.

RinT\\a\.

Racine, OH
Pd 1 mo

"The Little restaurant
with the big taSle"

'

'

�.I

.f

I

·'

I

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, June 3, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Day-care kids leave calmly
when provider plans ahead
DEAR ABBY: As a childcare provider for ' many years,
I would like to offer some
advice to "Child-Care Pro in
New Jersey," who is stumped
about what to do when Mom
(or Dad) comes to pick up the
children and they start acting
up.
.
Sometimes children are
ADVICE
confused about how to act
when their parent arrives. The
day-care provider can help by time to talk to Mom.
beginning to discuss ahead of LOVES KIDS IN ORE·
time what will be said the GON
"
minute Mom or Dad arrives.
DEAR LOVES KIDS:
"Let's tell Mom about that Those are good suggestions,
neat pictu'i·e you made today," and thank you for them. N"w
or, "Tell Mom how you used let's hear 11 from some other
good words to tell Jeff how . child-care professionals:
DEAR ABBY: Having
you felt instead of hitting
him."
worked in child care more
When Mom walks in the than 20 years, the best advice
door, be ready with positive I can offer is this: When the
things to say. She is probably misbehaving starts, ask the
mentally and physically tired parent, "Would you like to
at that point and needs all the handle this or do you want me
help she-can get to make it a to?" That way, you acknowlgood transition.
edge the misbehavior and the
I agree with you, Abby, the fact that it must be dealt with,
child'care provider should without undermining the parstep in if the children begin ent.
actmg up - and the children
Waiting until the next day
should be warned that you'll to discipline the child would
use discipline if you need to. serve no useful purpose. If the moment Mom walks in, ANOTHER PRO IN HENthe adults begin talking DERSON, TENN.
among themselves, that's the
DEAR A.P.: I agree.
DEAR ABBY: It is not
time kids act up. Mom should
be told you'll call her later unusual for children to act up
with any news. This is a kid's when the parents arrive.

Dear

Abby

Here's how I handle it:
I talk to the children about
their behavior before their
parents get here. I have ihem
ready to · go so there 's no
chance for them to misbehave. And I offer them a
reward - like a healthy
snack - to take with them if
they gel ready to go without a
fuss . - BEEN THERE IN
PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR .BEEN THERE:
Way to go! I see nothing
wrong with providing an
incentive for good behavior.
DEAR ABBY: Since I was
a kid I've loved basketball.
I've played it since the fourth
grade, and now I'm planning
to participate in the Special
Olympics. My goal is to
become a professional player.
Mom always told me that
whatever I hope to achieve, I
can make it happen. All I
have to do is put mY mind to
it and not give up. The possibilities are endless.
When people out there tell
me I' m stupid or an idiot, I
respond by saying that I have
good coping skills and a lot of
potential. I like myself and I
care about others.
My messaj?:e to anyone with
a disability IS this: Tell yourself you can be an achiever
and say to yourself, ''I'm
going to make something of
myself' - and it will hap-

pen . -DETERMINED TO
SUCCEED IN TACOMA
DEAR DETERMINED:
Thank you for sharing your
philosophy. It app lies to
everyone, not just people
with disabilities . A person
who has a goal to pursue is
far better off th an a person
'
who has none .
Your mother deserves to be
commended for being a terrific role · model and teacher.
Give her a hug for me.
Dear Abby is writcen by
Abigail Van Buren. also
known as Jemme Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pa~~line Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby • at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

ACROSS

37 Brawl
39 Aladdin's
1 Domestic
servant
animal
40 Stock option
4 Tummy
41 Fawn's
muscles
parent
7 Baby
42 Ebb
buggy,
45 Pitched,
as a ship
in London
11 CD
49 Game-show
preceders
name
12 Blueprint
50 Not up yet
14 Add s_taH
52 Wood
15 Max.
, .
chopper
neighbor 53 Srta.,
16 Brownishin Paris
purple
54 River
17 Elevator
In Asia
8 Coolidge
pioneer
55 Tear
or Gam
18 More
56 Some jets
9 0~
creepy?
57 Jo's s1ster
10 Gl s.dinner
20 Steps
58 LL.D.
13 Mesh ·
22 Large tub
holder
19 Currier
23 F.lle label
and24 Alpine call
DOWN
21 Hurry
27 Hunks flex
24 Poetic
them
1 ,Gumshoe's
edverb
30 Pamplona
need
25 Viking
cheers
2 Church
name
31 Volcano's
alcove
26 Shy creature
shape
3 1917
27 Jungle
32 -de
abdicator
snakes
cologne
4 Charm
28 Servant
34 Dundee
5 Say on
29 Wrap
refusal
impulse
31 French
35 Fetch
6 Cul-de-.manor
7 Moon,
36 Kln.d
33 Luau guitar
olchop
in poetry
35 Wind-

•
•

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 190

This might be the year
when you' ll finally b~ able to
get an enterprise off the
ground !hal you've had trouble launching. Once you get it
rolling and working well, everyihin g you've done so far
will fall in line.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) - You 'II be doing today
what you do best: coming up
with creative new concepts
for all to enjoy. And since
you're also a capabl~ promoler in gelling your ideas
out. your day will be one of
fulfillment.
CANCER (June 21-July
22)- If you've got the financial wherewithal, enjoy your
inclinalions logo on a spending spree today, bul try 10
make sure that your purchases
can also provide some pleasure for others.

LEO (,July 23-Aug. 22) Center stage will be. reserved
specifically for you today, so
use your naiUral showm.anship qualities . welL You ' ll
want Ihe show you direct to
be. well received by your

audience.
VIRGO (Aug. 23.·Sept. 22)
- One of the things you do
best is to function as the
power behind Ihe Ihrone .
You 've learned you can ac-

complish more by planli ng
suggestions in Ihe minds of
ossociates !hat !hey believe
are their own.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- If all you can find is one or
lwu pals lt1 do something wilh
today. il'll be OK. but you'll
thrive the most in large group
endeavors . "The more the
merrier" could be your mono.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Because you ' ll lake
great pride in all that you do
Ioday . success in your endeavors comes easier to you

than usual. Onlookers will admire your effort and Iry to
emulate your style.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - If whal you believe in today is challenged.
you'll be easily aroused to a
righteous defense. This is because, to you, the philosophy
by which you live your life is
worth defending.
.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - You're smart
enough today to trade on the
business at:umen of an ex peri ·

enced associate. lf you can
hop on board the guidelines
she or he has laid oul. you
won·r hesitate to do so.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
. 19)- 01plomocy and lact are
rwo of your greatest weapons

for defusing opposilion and
advancing your personal in leresis. You'll use smiles and
gratitude very effectively today.
.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Weather permitting.
Iry 10 participalc in some
.form of outside activity today

Racine bank
alleges fraud
i·n lawsuit

38 PI9J1acles

39 Arflpl11
41 Sleep phe-

nomenon
Rear-ends
Pipe joints
Druid
Pasternak ·
heroine
47 Depart
48 Cabinet dlv.
51 Halter
42
43
44
46

BY

thot you find both physiql
and fun. It doesn't have to be

Scholarships awarded to Meigs students

strenuous, but one that exer-

BY

""'oo..,.

0

ales. It· s your nature to do so

. . DOWN

0

of your o'wn v_u_~it·ion ..

2nd DOWN
JrrJ DOWN

-

= 84

1SI DOWN

"' 1 05

=

99

-383

=

JUDO'S TOTAL

~!h

·

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim·

95

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor

family. co-workers or associ-

DOWN

0

AVERAGE GAME 190-200

=
TIME LIMIT : 20 MIN

by JUDD HAMBRICK

POMEROY - Scholarships
totaling nearly $200,000 were
awarded to Meigs High
School graduating se niors
during an awards assembly
Tuesday.
Receiving the
large st
award was Meghan Haynes,
the Mana%eh-Cutler Scholars
Award from..Ohio University .
Jack Ellis, vice pres ident
emeritus for development
and associate director for
of
the
development
Manasseh Cutler . Scholars
Program , was there to present

FOUR PLAY TOTAL

DIRECTIONS : Ma~e a 2· to 7· ~N91 word from th81etlers oo 8aCh yardline.

. ACkl poims to eaCM wmo or tetter usng sc:onng directions a1 n~t. Seveo:lener
wolds IJIII a GO-point t&gt;OOus. All words can be found In Wfl;bster's New '{'lorld .

...,

mag.; ·

College Dictionary.

JUDD' S SOLUTION TOMORROW
C :x103 Unlltd Ftlh.llt Syhdlult. ll"ol; .

Al~WEN&lt;&lt;O ARE
SOME SIMP\.E

CRITERIA TO KW'
. us Cl'IJQS&lt;... "~"
APRETTY LAI!EL

'!I\ IS ON\0

l.I)()(S NICE!

\IIHAT DO '(0&lt;.1
THINK?

Inside

'

• Community wants to
start raising money for
new military memorial,
See page A2
• Team celebrates season, See page Al
• Time Out for Tips, See
page Al
.
• Two painkillers fail to
slow Alzheimer's, See page
A6

the scholarship to Haynes.
He said its value is more
than $70,000 because it
includes not only four years
of tuition and boo~s. room
and board, but self-discovery
and internship programs for
the pre-medical student.
Kelly Johnson received the
Ohio Board of Regents academic scholarship of $2,205 a
year for four years. He also
re ceived an Ohio State
University Trustees · scholarship of $1 ,800 a year for four
years of study.
··Ohio First four-year scholarships of $26,000 each were
awarded by the University of
Rio Grande to Mi chele

Runyon and Melinda Chancey.
Allison Williamson and
Candace Felly received $4,300
trustees scholarships from the
University of Rio Grande.
Fetty also received the URG
Jones Scholarship of $1,500
and a ·music scholarship of
$1 ,000 , while Wili amson
received a $1 SO scholarship
from the Meigs Student
Council.
Brook Bolin was presented
a two~year, 'all expense paid
scholarship to the University
of Rio Grande by Holzer
Health Care along with
another URG sc holarship
from Peoples Bank for
$1,085. She also received the

Linnie Taylor Scholarship of
$2,000 and the Wild Turkey
Association schol arship of
$500.
Presented full tuition. twoyear tech prep "scholarships at
Washington
Stale
Community College, each
valued at over $4,000, were
Ashley Colwell, Brandon
Ramsburg, and Samantha
Tilley. Colwell also received
the MHS faculty award of
$250 and. a Milestone
Benefits Scholarship of $500,
and Ramsburg received the
Bend Area Care scholarship
of $500.

Officials again
deny request for
fund transfers
J.

REED

Staff writer

f

Ca11ldy Rooe, lot &amp;raM
Rutland Elementary

Index

T~EN

VOU AAVE TO BE REAL
QUIET A6AIN W~EN VOV PUT
IT BACK ON, 50 VOU DON'T
WAKE UP VOU~ DOG ...

2 Sections - 1l Paps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

Editorials
Movies ·
Sports
Weather ,

A3
83-5
86
86
A4
AS
81-3
A2

C. 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACTNE- Home National
Bank of Racine filed a lawsuit
Tuesday against a former vice
president and lending officer,
Gary Norris, alleging he
defrauded the financial institution of an unspecified
amount of money over a period of several years.
The lawsuit alleges that
Norris of Meigs County,
along with other as-yetnamed individuals, defrauded
the bank of funds in excess of
$25,000 in each of nine separate counts of illegal activity.
Norris had authority to
approve loans, negotiate
terms of loan s, review the
creditworthiness of customers
and was in charge of securing
.collateral to protect the
bank's interest, the suit stated.
The bank alleges that an
audit of all loans originated
by Norris showed that the
defendants converted funds
from loan accounts for
· Norris' personal use. as well
as for the benefit of others
who were not named .
"We fully intend to answer
the complaint with a full
denial of the .rather vague
claims in. the plaintiff's complaint, " Attorney Charles
Knight, who is representing
Norris, said Tuesday.
Norris posted a $126,000

'We fully intend
to answer the
oomplaint with a
full denial of the
rather vague claims
in the plaintiff's
complaint;'
- CMrlN Knlgh~ attorney
,,.,..,ltng a.ry Non1•

surety bond Monday as
ordered by Meigs Common
Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III.
Jennifer L. Sheets, an attorney and a memeber of the
bank's board of directors said,
in an affidavit that Norris was
aware he was under investigation for potential fraudulent .
activity when he resigned
from his job at the bank on
May 17, 2001.
According to Sheet's affidavit, an investigation was
being conducted by the FBI
but was put on hold because
of Homeland Security issues.
The case -is now an active FBI
investigation , the document
stated.
The bank is seeking a judgment in excess of $25,000 on
each of nine counts, interest
at a rate of I 0 percent a year,
attorney fees, punitive damages and costs.

..

Please see Meigs, AS

appear likely in June

Bo1lOMS Bl&amp; ENOU13K

1lJ GOVER

MILES lAYTON

County officials
work together
Sheriff: Deputy layoffs to curb spending

BY BRIAN

TANK·TOP SWIMSI.AITO
TlVIT AREN'T ~KI~ 116-KT !

f---,

J.

Staff reporter

Scholarsh ips totaling nearly $200,000 were presented to these Meigs High School seniors Tuesday at the annual awards
assembly. They are left to right, front , Maria Drenner, Jennifer Walker, Brook Bolin, Samantha Tilley, Allison Williamson,
Candace Fetty, Meghan Haynes, Ashley Colwell, and Michelle Runyon ; second row, Kelly Johnston, Jeremy Roush, Katie
Jeffers, Melinda Chancey, Jessica Hooten, Emily Story, Hollie Ferrell, Robyn Freeman; third row, Mathew O'Brien, Heather
Hysell, Amber Burdette , Brandy Shea, Juley Eblin, Josh Eagle . Jimmy Smith, Heather Phalin, back row, Marc Barr, Rachael
Argabright. Deadra Barnett, Brandon Ramsburg, Elizabeth Wilfong, William Kauff, and Jennifer Zielinski. (C harlene Hoeflich)

cises your muscles and mind. .
ARIES (March ZI-April
19) - Taking u recrealio nal
break today might be more
impurlant to you .than you
Ihink. Pani cipating in a fun
activity can recharge your
baneries in ways no olher oullet can.
·
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - A substanlial part of
your day today will be spent
looking out for the 'needs of

www.mydailysentinel.com

driven mist

Students can
learn a lot from
· the newspaper about the
world
in which they live. And
now is the
perfect time ·to bring
newspapers into the
clas r om.

c :HlO:IlJ,..M r ..,.,. Syndlulol. tnc

"n

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 2003 .

The Newspaper
Has Class •••

WORII SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK

AVERAGE GAME 245-255

.

36 Apple skin

~~------~--A_st_r~og~r~ap~h_· ----~~~~~~
BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

Reds beat Yankees, Bl

POMEROY - A wholesale
layoff of Meigs County
Sheriff's deputies appears
inevitable tlris month, unless
the Fourth District Court of
Sheriff Ralph Trussell
Ap~ls issues a ruling in a into his salarie,&lt;; line, insisting that
civil lawsuit filed by Sheriff
Ralph Trussell before June 13. because the courtly's jail is closed
Trussell said Tuesday he has ruxl will not reopen. fuOOs set
issued a second layoff notice to asid: for food fcr ~ L~ not
his deputies and other staff, oo:ded
advising that June 13 will be
Meanwhile, commissioner&gt;
their final day on the job due to have denied Trussell's two
lack of funds in his payroll line requests to tnmster the fund&lt;;,
item. Trussell initially issued saying their Cincinnati attorlayoff notices to be efTective ney, Tom Leubbers, has
May 30, but was able to trans- advised against transfering any
ter funds from his Furtherance funds within Trussell's budget
of Justice Fund, a discretionary while the lawsuit Trussell filed
account, to make an additional is pending.
• ,
Trussell's second request for
. $ 12,000 payroll.
Trussell has requested the the transfer died for lack of a
transfer of$29,(XXl from money motion at last week's commisMeigs County Commissioner.; ' sioner.;' meeting.
appropriated for jail ~on
"1 ~~ the reque.&lt;;t a sront

tinl! to d:nllllStr'dle to th: public
that the fuOOs are available for
trdlbfer, and that tOO;e funds C01.ll9
keep deputies on Ill! ro00 and in
Ill! mmmunities we seJVe ti:K a
month or longer," Trussell said
In his civillawsuil Trussell ao;ks
the apreais court to issue a writ of
mandamus Ol1i:!ring commissionCI&gt; to fund his office at a ''reasonable and noce&amp;'ill)'" level. Other
sheritf.'i in lhe state have suca:eded
in securing funding ti:Kiheiroffices
through similar suits, Trussell said
Trussell said the layoffs set
for next week will be all-inclusive, with the exception of an
office secretary who will continue to work half-time to
.process sheriff's .sales and
other administrative operations.
Now. deputies are working
two, I(J.-hour shitis with two
road oftlcer.; and a dispatcher,
and a late-night/early-morning
four-hour shitis with one dispatcher and one officer on
duty. Trussell said.
Once layoffs are tlnal and
deputies are off work , the
office will operate only during the daytime hour.; in order
to take statements and criminal complaints from the public, Trussell said.

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

Staff writer

funds are made in the earliest part ·
of the year. for example, and are
not required at anY other time.
· Last week, county commissioner.; 'commended elected
county officials and d:partment
heads for tlx;ir efforts to control
spending. Grueser 'said commissioner.; were able to forego taking
an advance payment on real estate
collections because expendintres
were liritited to bare necessities.
Meigs County T~urer
Howard Frank said funds appro:priated at the beginning of the
year are probably Ill! end of the
appropriations for 2003.
"The budget commission oertified a total of all available funds to
the county commissioner.; in
January," Frank said. ''No ad:Jitional funds will be certified until
county receipts exceed the original certification."
"Unless new money becomes
available, it is the duty and
responsibility of the budget COlllmission to make sure the money
to run county government is nor
over certified, and make certain
the county budget is balanced.". ·
"Any budget .is similar to giving a bag full of candy to a clilld
to last him all year," Frank
"If the child eats all the candy the
fli'St 30 days of the year, he will
have none for the balance of the

POMEROY - Counry officials' eftorts to cul'b spending are
paying off, according to financial
reports prepared by Auditor
Nancy Grueser.
The county's growing financial
woes - increased opemting co;1s
in county government and
increased demands in the form of
unpaid mandates from the· state
and federal govemment1, combined with dwindling revenue
from all sources -· . prompted
county commissioner.; to impose
15 percent, across-the-board cuts
in appropriating funds to county
offices in Januar;&gt;.
·
"Our deparinlents are tJying
very hard to control expenditures
because we all realize there will
be no additional money coming,''
Grueser said Thesday.
As of May I , $1.3 million of
$16 million available in the county·s general fu1Jd had been spent
and while that figure reflects
d:ficit spending when the entire
year's budget is considered, many
of the county· s largest annual
expenses come due in the tln;t·
quar1er of the fiSc:al year, Grueser
said
Payments to the Sheriff's
Depanment and the Prosecuting
Attorney's Furthemnce of Justice
and Law Enforcement . Trust year.''

srud

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�</text>
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