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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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PageA2

·Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, june 4, 2003

Community wants to start raising
money for a·new military memorial

Ohi'Oweather
Thursday, June 5

concept and fanned the imum visibility and maximum
Pyramid of Remembrance access then we kind of think it
Foundation .
should be on non-miliiary
WASHLNGlDN (AP) - A , They' re working with land." DuBois said.
IJUstee from an Ohio commu- Republican
Rep.
Steve
George Oberlander, a
.ty
foup
asked
··
a
congresLaTourette
of
Madison
and
spokesman
for the National
nl
Republican Sen. George ·Coalition to Save .our Mall,
sion
panel Thes~ay to Voinovich of Cleveland to win added his objection to the
approve a pyramid- ·haped approval from Congress so memorial being built on the
memorial that would honor they :an stan rm·smg
· money.
·
national mall . saying there are
military members killed during
Officials from the National already too many memorials
trmmng
e~erc1 ses or peace- Park Service m1d U.S. Defense · on the grassv space between
·
· ·
th
't
J
k·eepmg
miSSions
at
aren
Department
commended
the
the
U.S.
Capitol
and the
art f
P o war.
memorial's concept Thcsday, Lincoln Memorial.
'The need for this memorial but told the members of the
EnzeiTa, a memorial trustee
has been made clearer in the Senate Energy and Natural and general manager at
aftermath of Sept. II and -the Resources' subcommittee on Lubrizol, told the panel that the
evolving role of our armed national parks that there are foundation is willing to work
forces," IJUstee David Enzerra restrictions to where it cw1 be with both agencies to find a
said. "As our nation continues built.
suitable location either insi!le
to engage in the war against
P. Daniel Smith of the Park the Di strict of Columbia or
terror, we mus~ not forget the Service said the memorial nearby.
sacnfices of tliese brave men should be constrUcted on mili"Our goal is just to get this
and women."
. tary land. such as Arlington memorial built," Enzerra said ·
The . Idea for a rnemonal . Cemetery, because only manu- after the hearing.
.
can1e from a group of students ments to major wars and conSen. Bill Thomas. chairman
m Pamesvtlle who ~ere moved tlicts can be built on national of the national parks subcomby unage~ of Amencan ser- park land.
mittee, said the group's llexi. v1cemen killed m Samaha durRaymond DuBois. director bility in where the monument
in~ a U.S.-Ied United Nations of administration and manage- could be built will help its
miSSion from late 1992 to early ment
at
the
Defense chances of gaining congres1995.
Department, said Arlington sional approval.
Community and business Cemetery is nmning out of
"Since they ' re willing to not
leaders in northeast Ohio, room and a memorial on mili- have it on the mall, and if they
including Lubrizol Corp. of taty land could make it Jes&amp; think that they're prepared to
Painesville and Steris Corp. of accessible to the public.
go Uhead and raise the money
"If there'.s a priority for max- for it, then I don't see any great
Mentor. have embraced the
BY MALIA RULON

Associated Press

KY.

0 2003 AccuWeather, Inc.

0 --- ~~~ilf#'~
•

Sunn~ pt, Cloudy

Cloudy

Showers T·storms

Rain

It'

Flumes

' ,.

Snow

~

lae

Sun may return tomorrow
Today...Cloudy. Patchy drizzle early...Then isolated showers and thunderstorms. Highs in
the lower 70s. West winds 5 to
lO mph. Chance of precipitation
20 percent.
Tonight...Cloudy. Isolated
showers until midnight. Lows in
the lower 50s. West winds 5 to
lO mph. Chance of rain 20 perce~.h u r s d a y . . . E a r 1 y
clouds ... Giving way to some
sunshine. Highs in the lower
70s. West winds around 1o
mp h.
night...Partly
Thursday
cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s. ·
Friday... Partly sunny. Highs
in the upper 70s.
Friday night...Mostly cloudy

with a chance of showers and
thunderstom1s. Lows in the
lower 60s: Chance of rain 30
percent.
Saturday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstonns. Highs in the upper
70s
S~nday .. Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms during the night. Lows in
the upper 50s and highs in the
upper 70s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstonns. Lows in the upper
50s m1d highs in the upper 70s.
Tuesday... Partly "' clgwiy.
Lows in the upper 50s and highs
. in the upper 70s.
·

A DAY ON WALL STREET
June 3, 2003

10,000

Dow
Jones
. +25.14'8,922.95
Pet change
from prev'oos: +0.28

Combat
crews
donate
items

-:-M:c-A::-R-....,AP"'R----,M-:-A-cY_ _ J_U_N-. 7•000

Hlgt1

low

8940.38

8,86132

Record high: 11 .722.98
Jan. 14,2000

June 3, 2003

1,800

Nasdaq
composite
. 1,603.56
Pd. change
.
han pmWJus: +0.81

---:M7.A-::R--:-A::PR:----:M7.A"C:Y----,JU"'N- 1'200

Hlgt1

low

1,603.74

1,584.70

Record high: 5,048 .62
Marth 10, 2000

June 3, 2003

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500
_..·~-·~.!l
.
971 .56
Pet chaf'9e
from prWoos

+0.47

~"

MAR

APR

High

low

973 02

964.47

'

MAY

JUN

700

Record high: 1.527.46
March 24, 2000

AP

Local Stocks
AEP -29.57
Arch Coal- 22.74
Akzo - 25.589
AmTech/SBC- 25.83
Ashland Inc. - '33.01
AT&amp;T - 19.45
Bank One- 37.70
BLI -14.05
Bob Evans - 27.30
BorgWarner- 59 .52
Champion - 2.93
Charming Shops - 4.70
City Holding - 28.81 ·
Col- 23.22
DG - 18.37

DuPon\- 42 .67
Premier - 10.04
Rockwell- 24.39
Federal Mogul - .355
, Rocky Boots - 8.90
USB- 23.70
Gannett- 79.70
RD Shell- 46.0 t
General Electric - 29.05 Sears - 32.45
GKNLY- 3.70 ,
Wat-Marl :..,. 52.85
Harley Davidson- 42.95 We~dy's - 29.66
Worthing1on - 15.32
Kroger- 16.65
Da1\y stock repor1s are
Ltd . -15.34
1he 4 p.m. closing
NSC- 2 1.79
Oak Hill Financial- 24.56 quote.s ot the previous
day's tran sactions, pro~
OVB-23.00
BBT - 34 .70
vided by Smith Partners
at
Advest Inc. of
Peoples - 25.306
GallipQiis.
·
Pepsico - 44.23·

Two reactor tests completed at
Davis-Besse, more scheduled
PORT CLINTON (AP) Two pressure tests on the reactor
cooling system at the Davis-,
Besse nuclear plant have been
' rompleted, and lllOre tests are
scheduled, plant operators told
federal regulators Tuesday.
Plant operators ~ompleted the
tests in May to determine if any
valves needed to be repaired.
Davis--Besse plant manager
Mark Bezilla said operators were
pleased with the results and the
plant is moving closer to a,full
pressure-system test in mid-July.
In March 2002, one month
after a routille shutdown began at
the plant along Lake Erie. workers found that boric acid ate a
hole in the 6-inch-thick steel cap
covering the plant's reactor vessel. It was the most extensive

corrosion ever at a U.S. nuclear
reactor.
.
The cooling sy~1e rn test1 are a
key component to the National
Regulatory Commission approving the plant's restan. ·
FirstEnergy Corp., which
owns Davis-Hesse, ·is hoping to
reopen the plant in early August.
''We've made good progess,"
said Lew Myers, chief operating
offi= of FirstEnergy's nuclear
di vision.
The company also is beginning repairs on two' high-pressure pumps that are part of the
system that would protect the
plant from melting down during
an accident. The company
became concerned that the
pumps could fail if clogged by
debris during an accident.

••

DAYTON (AP) - For
hours after he dropped four
bunker-buster bombs on a
building complex in a
Baghdad neigjlborllood April
7, Lt. Col. Fred Swan had no
idea who the target was.
It was only after Swan - a
weapons systems operator
aboard a B, I bomber - went
on to strike an Iraqi missile site
and then returned to his home
base was he told that Saddarn
Hussein may have been in the
building.
"It probably didn't sink in
right away for any of us,"
Swan recalled Thesd;ty. "It's
just like, 'Wow, that's pretty
huge.' We just happened to be
the crew there at the right time ·
in the right place."
Swan's crew and three others who played imponant
roles in the lmq war donated
flight suits, combat boots,
dogtags, maps and other personal items for display at the
United States Air Force
Museum.
The soldiers included a C17 crew that dropped the first
U.S. paratroopers into combat, a KC-135 tanker crew that
helped support the search and
rescue of a downed ·F-15 jet
fighter, and the crew of an AI0 tank-killer that provided air
~upport for ground fori:es.
Retired Maj. Gen. Charles
Metcalf. director of the museum at Wright-Panerson Air
Force Bao;e, said he put out a
request tor items from soldiers
who had returned from Iraq to
help tell the story of the war.
''111e American public is
really interested in this,''
Metcalf said. 'They've
watched this war on TV, day
by day by day. almost hour by
hour. They' re fascinated by it
And friankly they're very
proud of these youngsters
they've watched."
Among the i(t!ms donated
by Swan's crew wa' a bomb
pin. the metal lanyard that
remains after bombs are
released from the B-1 .

rules that the oflicers who
arrested him did not act reasonably under laws in effect.at
the time .
Village officials said Spingola
was arrested in 1998 after
attracting crowds that ohstJUcted
the tlow of pedestrian traffic,
requiring police intervention .
While speaking, he held up a
graphic pi cture of an aborted
fetus.
After the arrest, officials in
the village about 26 miles east
of Columbus approved an

ordinance designating an area
for publi c speaking .
Spingola was arrested in
1999 while talking to a group
of people on a sidewalk.
When arrested, he said that he
was having a private cnnversation with the group and was
not speaking publicly.
Jurors originall y. awarded
Spingola no damages in connection with the 1999 arrest.
Graham told the jury .that if it
wanted to rule in Spingola's
favor, it had to award at least

such non-wartime missions as
those in Bosnia. Kosovo and
Panama; in training accidents
and in attacks such as the
bombing 'of the USS Cole and
·
the military barracks in Bewt.
•
It would be a 40-foot red
gra nite pyramid with water
!lowing down its sides. The
sides would be engraved with
the insignias of the four
branches of the military and
possibly also with naines of
soldiers, EnzeiTa said.
The cost of the memori1~ has
not been determined. Design
specilicat ions would be completed after the foundation gets
congressional approval to
move lorward on tl1e project,
Enzerra said.
·
On the Net:

Rep.

Steve

e!pvran1idmnember.hm1
Se11ate Energy and Namral
Resmur:es Cwuni//ee: http://energ\:senate./iOI'/

nominitl damages. 1 he jury
returned with an award of $1.
Spingola travels through
various states attending events
where he may find large audiences. He often makes references to the appearance or
attire of the people around
him .
·
Village oflicials said that
can provoke crowd response
to the point that police support
is required to maintain the
peace around Spingola.

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com

Quality Window Systems, Inc.
www.qualitywjndowsystems.co~

INTERNET SERVICES
AUTOMOTIVE

BlueStarr Network

Norris Northup Dodge

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Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

MEDICAL

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Holze·r Medical Center

www.holzer.org

BUSINESS TRAINING

Holzer Clinic

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Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org
Yokeyes Birthwear

www.yokeyes.com
·

Gymnasts recognized

Community Calendar
.

0

NEWSPAPERS

\

Honored at a recent banquet were the fo llowing meml:&gt;ers of the Will Power Girls Gymnastics team: fran, Ellie Bostic , Michaela
Hall, Janelle McClelland, Mac~enzie Hall. and Madison Maynard; back, Morgan Lentes, Amanda McGhee, Erica Blackburn, Alicia
Etzkorn, Haley Ange l, Caitlin Grey, Dory Roettker, Molly Blake, Genna Baker and Morgan Tawney.

Team celebrates season
GALLIPOLIS
- Will
Power Girls Gymnastics team.
their parents and coaches, met at
Golden Corral recently to celebrate the completion of a ·successful competition season.
The Boosters Club coordinated the event, and provided each
of the girls with a colorful tote

bag fLlled with items and pins
denoting competition levels or
special achievenient,.
Head Coach Dave Navarro
e~pressed his pride in the te3111S
and accomplishments.
"I have the best job in the
world," he said.
Assistant Coach Ariel Brinker

assisted him in passing out roses
;md certificates of participation to
each girl. Special . ail'arQ:; were
presented to Cait!inGreYfor best
all-around ·scare, and to Dory
Roettker and Molly Blake as
most improved team members..
Alicia Etzkorn received the
Te3111 Mentor award from team-

mates as the person most willing
to help new team members and
to set aside a positive ex3111ple.
Will Edmonds, owner of Will..
Power, also extended congrarulations to team members. coaches, . and parents, and 'complemented the girls on their hard
work and support of one another.

/

Time out for tips

Checking electrical wiring
simple preventative measure
Faulty electrical wiring causes 40,000 house fires each year
in the United States. These
tires result in 350 deaths, thousands of iniuries
and over $2
,
billion in pr~ny damage.
What can be one to prevent
· 1 fi f
an eIectnca 1re rom occurring in your home ?· Here are
some safety precautions you
should consider:
Check all electrical outlets
for loose wiring or plugs that
don 't fit correctly. Secure coverplates to walls 50 wiring is
not exposed. Install ground
fau lt circuit interrupters
(GI'C ls) in rooms where water
· ht come ·m contact WI'th
mig
electricity
(liathrooms,
kitchens, basements, patios,
pools, etc.). Test them often to
make sure they are working
properly.
·
Use plugs in an appropriate
manner. Don' t disconnect
plug s from the socket by
pulling on the cord. Never
remove the ground prong to
make a three-prong plug fit
into a two-prong outlet.

dren and pets will not be acci- electrical shock. Only use
dentally shocked or burned.
ground fault circuit intenupters
Examine lamps and light fix- · and extension cords designed
tures to ensure that bulbs do for outdoor operation. It is
not exceed th e recommended safer to run one long outdoor
Becky
wattage·
extension cord, instead of sevScrew buIbs 111
· secure 1Y t0 era! smaller ones connected
Baer
prevent overheating.
Occasionally inspect fuses, together.
Extension
circuit breakers and their
Keep a close eye on electriboxes. Ask an electrician to cal outlets near pools and hot
identify and mark each with tubs. Install "while-in-use'.'
Instead, use adapters
toK safely
··
· · the correct rating.
Never weath erproof covers that keep
ak
h
rn e t e transition . eep m
mind that if a plug won ·1 con- replace a fuse with a different moisture and rain away from
c
·
size. If a piece of electronic outside electrical connections.
nect eas1·1 y, don ·I ,orce
It· mto
the outlet. Prevent a dangerous equipment or appliance trips Always tum off all electrical
electrical octofus by limiting the breaker frequently or instJUments when not in use
th e num be r o ·t
• ems p1ugge d shocks you, disconnect it and unplug at the outlet.
into one receptacle.
immediately, then repair or
Finally, be mindful of how
Check electrical cords peri- replace the item. Plug ali' many electrical devices are
odically. Watch for cracked expensive electronics into drawing from your horne's
and frayed cords. Never have surge protectors.
el ctri 1 t
H
cords running under rugs or
Be alert to potential outdoor · e . ca sys em.. ave a pre. carpets, lying on top or fumi - electrical problems. Never use fesswnal electnCian determme
ture or where heavy foot traffic electric-powered tools or lawn 1 ~ your home needs addi~Ional
could cause wear and tear. equipment in the rain or in Circuits to assure contmued
Don't ever staple or nail cords damp conditions. Be especial- safe electrical usage.
.
to keep them in place .
· ly careful with electrical trimBecky Baer 1s a Mergs
Only use extension cords in mers and other cutting devices County Extension age111 wirh
temporary situations. Keep that could unintentionally slice family and consumer scisafety covers closed · so chi I- into the cord, causing severe erices/commuriity develpomem.

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afternoon ,
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accur;;tte. If you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Period ical
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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
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Advertising
Outside Sales : Dave Harris, Ext . 15

ClassJClrc .: Judy Clark, Ext 10

Circulation

•

Friday, June 6
Wednesday, June 4
I?OMEROY
Meigs
PAGEVILLE Scipio . County PERl Chapter 74,
Township Trustees will meet Meigs County Senior Center, ·
at 6:30 p.m . at the Pageville lunch at noon, meeting following. State Rep. Jimmy
townhall.
Stewart, A-Athens, to speak
Thursday, June 5
about health care.
POMEROY
The
Leading Creek Watershed
Saturday, June 7
Committee will h'old a water
COOLVILLE
The
quality sampling demonstra- Coolville
Carthage-Troy
tion at 6:30 p.m. in Thomas alumni banquet will be held
Fork Creek. The group will at the Coolville Elementary
first meet at the Ohio State School auditorum . Doors
University
Extension open at 5 p.m. For more
Service Office on Memorial information call 740-667Drive in Pomeroy then con- 3584.
voy to the creek . The public
is invited. Refreshments will
SALEM CENTER - Star
be served.
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet at
POMEROY - Salisbury 6:30 p.m. for a potluck supTownship Trustees will meet per followed IJy a 7:30 p.m.
at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the meeting at the hall.
Salisbury Township building
on Rock Springs Road.

Other events

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

..

Public meetings

'

'

ENTERTAINMENT

Wed!lesday, June 4, 2003 .

L(ITourette:

/1 up:II• ,,1I'H ~ house.gavila Iou re II

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

'

objections to it,'' said Thomas,
R-Calif.
The
Pyra mid
of
Remembrance' would honor
military members killed during

Jury says police yiolated evangelist's rights
COLUMBUS tAP) - A
federal jllry has ruled that
police in the village of
Granville violated the First
Amendment rights of a man
who describes himself as a
"confrontational evangelist''
by arresting him at two July 4
celebrations.
·The jury awarded Charles
Spingola $3,000 in d(lfnages
for an arrest in 1998 ana$ 1 for
an arrest in 1999. However, he
will get the money only if U.S.
District Judge James Graham

Locai ~·News

· The -Daily. Sentinel
.

.. Page A3.

District Mgr.: Mike Jenkins, Ext 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich. Ext 12

E-ma\1 :
news@fnydailyseritinel.com'

Web:
www.mydaitysenllnet.com

Association,
Posbnaaler: Send address correc tions to The Daily Sen1inel. 111
Court Slreet, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Saturday, June 7
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport
Community
Association will meet at 8:30
a.m. June 7 at the People's
\ Bank ·in Middleport.
SYRACUSE - . The
London Pool "'will tentatively
be opening at 12 noon .
Summer long passes on
sale now are $30 per person, or for a family of four,
$25 per person. Daily passes are $3 for people ages 16
and up, $2 for children ages
five to 15, $1 for children
between the ages of two
and four, and free for anyone younger. For more information on passes, contact
· pool managers Bobbi Hill
(949-01 07) or Brandi Lyons
(985-9824) . The phone number for the pool is 992-5418.

Thursday, June 5
REEDSVILLE
The
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OUCOM) Childhood Immunization
Program mobile health unit wili'
be at Reed's Store from noon
to I p.~providing free immunizations for all area children
from birth to 18. Service is
available to families of all
incomes - even those with
insurance . coverage. Take
child's previous shot records.
The unit is brought to communities in cooperation with
Meigs
County
Health
Department's immunization
Thursday, June 5
program . For more informaTUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School Class tion call 1-800-844-2654 or
of 1960 will have its 43rd contact your local health
annual reunion at the Long department.
Bottom Community Building
Tl.iPPERS PLAINS at noon on Saturday, June 7.
All former classmates and VFW Post 9053 Auxiliary will
friends are Invited. Take a meet at 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
cove red dish,
Saturday, June 7
HARRISONVILLE
RACINE
Racine
American Legion will meet Harrisonville Lodge 411 will
at the hall. A dinner and meet at 7:30p.m. at the temdrawing will. follow the meet- ple. Refreshments will be
served .
ing .

Clubs and
Organizations

·Check out the latest

sport$ action.on Page 81.

'

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Wednesday, June 4
POMEROY
Meigs
Junior Golf League at Pine
Hills Golf Club, Pomeroy,
signup and beginning day.
Play will be at 8:50 every
Wednesday. For more infer-·
mation call the golf course,
992-6312, Debbie Davis,
992-5921
or .
GaroC
McCullough, 992-5322 .

Pizza Hut
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Pizz~ Hut

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�~·

PageA4

0

The Daily Sentinel

W~nesday,

For the Record
Incidents
reported

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

I

.

.Charlene Hoeflich
General manager and news editor
()

-..._

~

~·

.
•,.

r - ·"'
w'

•

NATIONAL VIEW

l,

Bullies

ril

No justification for
abusing suspects
• Los Angeles Times, 011 Supreme Coun imd police imerrogations: ·
While Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas labored to justify the b!illying interrogation of a fann worker whom an Oxnard
(Calif.) potice officer had just gmvely wounded, Justice John Paul
Stevens, dissenting, called the inquisition what it was: 'the functional equivalent" of torture. Thomas· 6-3 mttiority opinion Tuesday
rolls back decades of constirutional protections against self-incrimination and all but invites the backroom rough-' em-up police tactics
of old.
The fann worker, Oliverio Martinez. is blind and partly paralyzed
from the five bulleL~ that police pumped into his body after they
stopped him in connection with ;m investigation of possible drug
sales in his Oxnard neighborhood. Although Martinez initially complied with orders to dismount from his bicycle, a scuffie resulted
when the officers discovered ill: was canying a knife and Martinez
was shot.
Paramedics arrived and carted away Martinez, bleeding and
screaming, to a hospital. For nearly an hour, as Martinez waited for
medical treatment and then as doctors tended him, the officers pressured him to confess to starting the fight. ...
·
Not once did the potice officers inform Martinez of his right to
remain silent and to have a lawyer present. Instead, to try to badger
him ·into a confession, they took advantage of his physical agony
and mental anguish and the factthat he couldn't.move from the hospital bed.
'
In the end, the officers got nothing useful from Martinez and
never charged him with a crime. Martinez sued, both for the shoot- .
ing and for civil damages on the ground that potice violated his 5th
Amendment right against self-incrimination and his due process
rights against egregious police conduct. The shooting lawsuit still
stands.
·
Writing for a splintered majority, Thomas insisted that where
there was no hann of any legal consequence. there was no foul. ...
Three cases before the court next term could push at the boundaries of permissible evidence in criminal cases. The Martinez case
turns back the clock, and the coming cases could multiply the hann
to a civilized justice system.

TODAY

I~

HISTORY

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday. Juile 4. the I55th day of 2003. There are 210
days lefi in the year.
Today's highlight,in histoty: ·
On June 4, 1942, the Battle of Midway began during World War D.
On this date:
·
In 1812, the Louisiana Tenitoty wa5 renamed the Missouri
Territory.
In 1878, Turkey rurned ~rus over to the British.
In 1892, the Sierra Club was incorporated in San FranCisco.
In I896, Henty Ford made a successful pre-dawn test run of his
horseless carriage. called a "quadricycle," through the streets of
Detroit.
In 1940, the Altied military evacuation from Dunkirk, France,
ended.
In 1944, the U.S. Fifth Army began liberating Rome during World
WarD.
.
In 1947, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved
the Taft-Hartley Act.
In 1954, French Premier Joseph Laniel and Yietname~ Premier
Buu Loc initialed treaties in Paris according "complete independence" to V~etnam.
In 1986, Jonathan Jay Pollard, a former Navy intelligence analyst,
pleaded guilty in Washington to spying for Israel. He is serving a life
prison term.
. In 1989, hundreds, possibly thousands of people died as Chinese
anny troops stormed Beijing to crush a pro-democracy movement.
Ten years ago: The U.N. Security Council agreed to send up to
10,00) more U.N. peacekeepers to six Bosnian cities. Rejecting alle-'
· gations she was a "quota queen." Lani Guinier expressed regret
President Clinton had dropped her nomination to head the Justice
Department's civil rights division.
Five years ago: A federal judge sentenced Terty Nichols to life in
prison for his role in the Oklahoma City bombing. Americans aboard
the shuttle Discovery arrived at the Russian .5pace station Mirto pick
up up U.S. astronaut Andrew Thoma5, who'd spent four months in
orbit.
.
\
Today's birthdays: Singer Gordon Waller (Peter and Gordon) is 58.
Rock musici&lt;m Danny Brown (The Fixx) is 52. Actor Parker
Stevenson is 51. Actor Keith David is 4(. Al;!fess Julie Gholson is 45.
Actor Eddie Velez is 45. Singer-musician El DeBarge is 42. Tennis
· player Andrea Jaeger is 38. Actor Scon Wolf is 35. Actor Noah Wyle
is 32·. Rock musician Stefan Lessard (The Dave Matthews .Band) is
29. Comedian Horatio Sanz is 29. Actress Angelina Jolie is 28.
· ·Thought for Today: 'When you betray somebody else, you also
betray yourself.'' - Isaac Ba,hevis Singer. Potish-born American
Nobell'riz.e-winning author (I 904-1991 ).

'Speak Out!'
(740) 992-1255
extension 29

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

www.mydailyselitiflel.com

Wednesday, June 4, 2003

The Daily Sentinel
'

June 4, 2003 ,

Agriculture key to state, .national economy
Agriculture fibs indeed
been a vital part of Ohio's
economy since the incorporation of our state into the
union in 1803. Two hundred
years ago, many of our state
John
leaders were farmers, trying
Carey
to make their way in an unfamiliar territory - laying the .
. groundwork that would later
become our great state.
Looking around you, it may .
be hard to believe, but not cultural products. In 2000,
much has changed in two Oh10 ranked .14 th among all
hundred years. Our Senate 50 states .with agncultural
President, Doug White, is a ~xports estunatet'l at ~I. I btlfarmer from Adams County, hon. The top five agncultural
and agriculture is still the ex~orts were. soybeans: feed
state's. number one industry. grams.. wheat, vegeta bles,
Agriculture plays a vital and hve. ammals. World
role in the health of Ohio's demand for these and other
economy, contributing $7 3 a~ncultural products ts cerbillion to the market each tamly mcreasmg. N·~ety-stx
year. What many don't real- percent of the worlds con.
.
.
..
sumers hve outstde of the
tze however, IS the tmpor- U.S., and farm production far
tance . agncultural exports exceeds U.S . demand.
have m our economy. I was As one of the nation's
~urpn sed to learn some largest feed corn producers ;
tmportant facts dunng a ~re- Ohio has certainly benefited
sentauon by t~e Foretgn from increased trade to
Agncultural.Servtce dunn~ a Mexico. The volume of U.S.
rec7nt meetmg of the JOlllt com exports to Mexico has
Oh10 House and Senate nearly tripled since 1994,
Agncultural Comrmttees.
reaching 197 bushels valued
Oh10 ts an tmportant prt?- at $486 million in 2000. Ohio
ducer and exporter of agn-

also benefits from increased
trade with Mexico for wheat
products. Our state is the
etghth largest wheat producing state. and since . I994,
average annual U.S. wheat
exports to Mexico have more
than doubled _ in 2000.
exports reached 66 million
bushels valued al $200 million. And Ohio, the nation's
sixth largest soybean producer, certainly benefits from
trade to South Korea and the
Philippines. The U.S has
seen a threefold increase in
sKoybean expon s to Souhth
orea, with tota1.sa1es reac ing $32 mi Ilion in 2000.
Trade to the Philippines has
seen a 40 percent increase in
U.S. soybean exports that
topped $ 160 million in 2000.
U.S. agricultural trade with
foreign countries is certainly
a matter we ali have a vested
interest in. Whether you are
a farmer or not, exporting our
agricultural products remain
important to not only our
agricultural economy. but our
statewide economy as well.
These exports help boost
farm prices and income,
while supporting about
15,700 jobs both on the farm

and off the r~uni in food pro. cess in g. storage. and transportation. Trade wi th other
countries
al so
offers
American consumers a larger
selection of goods which in
'
.
turn offers a more compeuttve market and lower costs
to consumers.
If you would like more
information on agricultural
trade in the U.S. and Ohio.
visit the U.S. Department of
Agriculture
Foreign
Agricultural Service website
at www.fas.usda.go.
As always, 1 welcome your
views on state issues. If you
have any questions. thoughts
or concerns. or if yo u need
:issistance ivorking with a
state government agency.
please w,rite to me : Senator
John Carey, Ohio Senate ,
Statehouse. Columbus, Ohio
43215. or call my office at
(.614) 46.6-8 156.
1State Sen John Corey, RWellston; represerm the 17rh
District, which includes
Gallia ana Meigs COllllties.
His e-mail address is
sd/7@maill:.ml.State.oh.us.)

Democratic duplicity on the Patriot Act
.

"When I am president, there
will be no John Ashcroft trampling on our civil rights.'' Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.
"We can't, in the effort to
protect ourselves and fight terJoseph
rorism, let people like John
.Perkins
Ashcroft take our rights away."
-Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C.
"In my administration, there
wi II be no John Ashcrofts at the
Justice Department." - Sen.
Bob Graham, D-Aa.
decided to exploit the public's
To hear Sens. Kerry, unfounded fears of the Patriot
Edwards and ·Graham tell it, . Act. Fears stoked by the usual
Ashcroft is the second corning .liberal suspects - groups like
of Hermann Goering . 1-lis the Amencan Civil Liberties
Jus~ce Department, they sug- Union &amp;nd People for the
gest, the latter-day equivalent American Way. Fears fanned
of the Gestapo, is rounding up by misleading media reports.
perfectly law-abiding citizens
Like a recent Time magazine
and throwing them into prison article that asked, "Have John
without due process. ·
Ashcroft aiid the Justice
The instrument of AsiJ;rofi's Department unraveled constityranny. according It&gt; the tutional protections in trying to
Democratic presidential hope- ensure our safety?"
fuls, is ·the USA Patriot Act.
In a box accompanying the
The law was enacted following article. Time warned its 4 milthe Sept. II terror attacks. Its lion or ·SO readers that. "If you
aim is to give federal law are suspected of terrorist links,
enforcement agencies the sur- law enforcement can access
veillance a·nd investigative your records, conduct wiretaps
tools they need to deter future and electronic smveillance,
terror attacks. To prevent a search and seize private proprepeat of .the slaughter of thou- erty and make secret arrests sands of innocents that ail without a warrant."
occurred at the World Trade
It also claimed
that.
Center, the Pentagon and in the "Immigrants with no terrorist
Pennsylvania countryside.
links can be det~ined indefiFor all their demagoguery nitely. Thousandsfwere jai led
about Ashcroft. about his and then let .go. Only a few
Justice Department, about the have been charged."
Patriot Act, Sens. Kerry,
In a recent letter to Time,
Edwards and Graham seem to .Barbara Comstock, the Justice
forget that they each voted for Department's public affairs
the Jaw.
diredor, set the record straight.
In their quest for votes in · ''A co~rt order," She wrote,
next year's Democratic pri- "is reqUired , to conduct elecmaries, the three presidential tromc . surveillance or st;~ch
wannabes have obviously ' and set7.e pnvate property.

'

"In national security matters," she added, "the govemment asks the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act
court for this order, after
demonstrating probable cause
that the subject is a foreign
power or an agent of a foreign
power
who
'knowingly
engages' in 'sabotage or international terrorism' or is preparing to do so," like the I9 AI
Qaeda operatives who hijacked
the jetliners on Sept. l I and
used them as guided missiles to
commit mass murder.
As to the detained immigrants, Comstock noted, "The
individuals in question were
illegal aliens who have no right
to remain in the country, or to
walk free duri ng removal proceedings."
As it turns out, "only about
750 illegal aliens were
detained,"
according
to
Comstock, not the "thousands"
Time mentioned. "Most of
them - approximately jOO to
date - have been deported."
she added, -not ' let go' or
'released ....
And lest the Patriot Act's
critics suggest that the loreign
nationals
the
Justice
Department has taken into custody are all harmless individuals whose illegal status is a
mere technicality, Comstock
disabuses that notion. "The fact
that aliens were deported rather
than prosecuted. doesn't mean
they had no knowledge of, or
connection to , terrodsm.''

Cmmtock also mjght have
mentioned that, contrary to the
insi nuations by the Patriot
Act's critics, the law .has been
upheld by federal courts on
three separate occasions so far.

Indeed, just this past week,
the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a challenge to the closed
deportation hearings held for
hundreds of foreign nationals
with suspected connections to.
terrorism.
Solicitor Gener.JI TheOdore
Olsen had argued'1that public
disclosure of information about
how and why certain foreign ers were taken into custody
would provide terrorists clues .
about what federal law
enforcement · agencies know
about their cells or their plots to
kill Americans.
Also, earlier this month, the
nation's highest court turned
away an appeal over the detention of-hundreds of Al Qaeda
jihadis at Guantananlo Bay,
Cuba. And, ·in March, the
Supreme Court rejected a challenge to the government's
expanded surveillance powers
under the Patriot Act.
If the Patriot Act truly tmmpled upon civil rights, if it truly
allowed Attorney General
As hcroft to suspend 6vii liberties, surely the U.S. Supreme
Court would not have passed
on three separate opportu R ~ies
to declare the law unconstitutional.
And if Sens. Kerry, Edwards
and Graham think the nation's
highest court abdicated its duty
to uphold the Constitution, let
them save the American people
from the Patriot Act. Let them ·
propose leg islation repealing
th.e law they voted for.
(.fost•ph Pt•rkins is a colwnnist for The San Diexo UnionTribrme and can be'reached at
.!1 &gt;sep!r. Perkins@V!rion Trib.co
m.)

'

POMEROY-· Meigs County
Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell reported the following activity:
• Ray Skidrnore, Molehan
Rd., reported that an unknown
objcx:t was thrown at his Ford
Ranger pickup truck from a car,
breaking the windshield.
• John Riley, Sr., Riebel Rd.,
Chester, reported tags stolen
from a car trailer.
• Vickie Payne, Starcher Rd.,
reported a burglary at his horne.
Investigation continues. Trussell
said.
• Patricia Cook, Wickham
Rd., Pomeroy, reported she's
receiving ~sing' telephone
calJs.
• Greg Wmebrenner, Sumner
Rd., Pomeroy, reported the theft
of his soil Derick's truck, a 1999
Dodge four-wheel drive, while
parked at G&amp;W Plastics.
• Mike Marcum reported the
. theft of a fishing pole and tacklebox from his truck. while it was
parked in Tuppers Plains.
• William Rife of Strongsville
Rd.. Langsville, wa' arrested tor
allegedly violating a civil protection order, restraining his from
his ex-wife.
• Ruth Kirby, Langsville,
reported that her horne had been
burglarized by three females,
and a guest assaulted. Two suspects were apprehended and
charges are pending.
• Rodney White1 Pomeroy,
wa~ arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct by. intoxication,
on Hutton Rd.
• Keith A.ihley, Pomeroy,
reported the theft of a Civil War
brass cavalry bugle from the
office of the Meigs County
Cqmmissioners, where it was
stored for safekeeping following
a presentation. The value wa~
reported at $1,00).

B&amp;E inveStigated
POMEROY- Meigs County
Sheriff Ralph Trussell reported
the breaking and entering at
Ridgeview Canyout, Ohio 681,
Albany. Enoy was made by cutting the front door lock. Several
cartons of cigarettes were taken,
beer, and $400 cash.

Local BriefS
Dance
-workshop set
EAST MEIGS - The next
Civil War era dance lesson
workshop will be beld on June
17 at the Eastern Elementary
School gym. Participants are to
enter at the school entrance next
to the library. The workshop
will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
and the cost is $3 a person. For
more information contact Mary
and Gerald Powell, 992-2622.
.
'

,Yard sale,
auction planned
SYRACUSE - Proceeds
from a yard sale and auction to
be held Saturday at the Syracuse
Community Center will be used
to - prepare the Syracuse
Elementary building for use as a
community center. The yard
sale will be held from 8 a.m. to
I P..m. at which time an auction
will be held to sell off the
remainder of the donations.

Clinic offered
POMEROY Mei~s
County Health Department will
offer a free specialty pediatric
ear, nose and throat ctinic to
children birth through 21, on
June 17. Appointments are
required, and may be made by
contacting the health department at 992-6626.
The clinic is otl'ered at the
health department in conjunction with the Ohio Department
of Health. Board-certified
physicians will conduct the clinIC and provide necessary followup care:

~ucrative

Earns scholarship

speed trap
business coming ·to end
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
lucrative speed ttap business is
coming to an end for the village of New Rome and its 60
residents.
A law signed by Gov. Bob
Taft last week eliminates
mayor's courts in villages of
fewer than 100 residents.
The mayor's court in the
tiny town on Columbus's
western edge takes in hundreds of thousands of dollars
in traffic fines every year on
speeding tickets written on a
1,000-foot stretch of U.S. 40
where the speed limit drops by
IOmph.
·
After the law takes effcx:t in
about 90 days, the New Rome
cases will be heard in Franklin
County Municipal Court,
which will keep all court costs.
The results are ')ust going to
be amazing," said Pel Anthony,
a village councilman who led

an unsuccessful campaign to secutive years, is found to be
have New Rome djssolved.
unauditable for two audit.~ or
"Justice is going to be fails to provide two municipal
served instead of just bemg a services such as police protecrevenue-producing business tion. trash pickup or street
for New Rome," he said. ·
maintenance. ,
Losing the mayor's court
New Rome has a history of
will be the death knell of New fiscal mismanagement and
Rome, said Scott Sl;law, a questionable elections prac.lawyer who served as magis- tices.
Anthony said he and Mayor
trate of the New Rome
Mayor's . Court for eight Jamie Mueller will ask for a
months in 200 1.
\•[ don't know anyone that . full state audit of the village
will be sorry if New Rome when the hew
• law takes effect..
folds its tent and steals away
Connie Tucker, the village
into the night," said Shaw.
clerk-treasurer, said no village
The new law also could audit is needed because one
spell the end of New Rome as was finished ·la&gt;t year.
a village.
"I'm not going to allocate
A village of less than 150 funds for the audit unless l' m
residents can be dissolved if it forced to," she said.
fails to follow election laws
She estimates that New
for two elections, is declared Rome could lose as much as
to be in a fiscal ~mergency by two-thirds of its revenue by
·the state 'auditor for three con- losing mayor's court.
Jack G. Ellis, vice president emeritus of the Manasseh Cutler
Scholars Program at Ohio University. presents a four-year
scholarship to Meghan Haynes, wh ich includes the cost of not
only tuition and books , but room and board, self-discovery and
intern programs. It is valued at $70,000. (Charlene Hoeflich)

FBI checks packages sent
to congressmen's office
ROSWELL. N.M . (AP)The FBI is investigating two
packages containing COs
that apparently were mailed
from Iran to the Roswell
office of U.S. Rep. Steve
Pearce, and other members
of the House and Senate have
received similarly addressed
packages, ofticials said.
One package containing a
compact disc was delivered
to Pearce's office la1t week,
and the second was delivered
Tuesday.
"Initial examinations indicate each are hannless," said
FBI Supervisory Special
Agent Doug · Beldon said.
"We are examining them
thoroughly to determine the
subst3.11ce of the material on
the ·dises."
/
The Institute of Intelligentsia
in Tehran was listed as the

sender on both packages,
authorities told the Roswell
Daily Record . Ofticials have
yet to confirm whether the
packages were · actuall y
mailed from Iran or from
somewhere else, Beldon said .
Beldon and Pearce spokeswoman Gail Gitcho said
other members of £:ongress
have received similarly
addressed packages in recent
weeks, but neither would
identify other recipients.
.
"We've heard;just with our
conversations with the
Capitol Police, that there
have been other distrip
oftices that have been getting
those same kind of packages," Gitcho said.
Capitol Poli ce spokeswoman Jessica Gissubel said
she could not comment about
any current investigations

..

and would not say how many
other members of Congress
have received similar packagb.
Offices of the rest of New
Mexico ·s·congressional delegation had not received such
packages as of Tuesday, and
a spokesman for Sen. Pete
Domenici. R-N.M., said hi s
oftlce also had not received
such packages.
After Sept. II , 200 I. and
the )lnthrax attacks that fol·
lo1wed, a postal security sys·
tem was set up inside the
U.S. Capitol and other fedev
al buildings that screens
every letter and package sent
to representatives and sena·
tors. Such measures are not
iri place at many district
offices.

Largest cigarette maker decides
to back FDA regulation of tobacco
WASHINGTON (AP) - gressional approval.
· help adult smokers make more
The nation's leading cigarette
Phitip Morris is backing leg- informed choices," company
maker tQid lawmakers that it islation by Reps. T9m Davis. vice president Richard Verheij
·now supports Food and Drug R-Va., and Mike Mcintyre, D- told a House Energy and
Administration regulation of N.C., that would allow the Commerce subcommittee at a
tobacco, which would allow FDA ' to regulate tobacco. . separate hearing.
the company to help market Health advocates want FDA
Verheij pbinted to studies in
two prnducts that may be less regulation but say the bill Europe that say snuff and
harmful than conventional cig- backed by Philip Morris is too chewing tobacco are less
arettes.
weak.
• harmful than cigarettes.
Philip Morris USA is lead"Philip Morris wants a gov(:armona. the surgeon gening the push for FDA regula- emment stamp of approval on era!, was skeptical.
tion, though it fought such a their next generation of so"I don't think they have
move in the past.
called reduced-risk tobacco enough scientific data to justify .
At a separate hearing, U.S. products," said Bill Corr, exec- making that statement,"
Surgeon General Richard utive director of the Campaign Carmona said of one British
Cannona said he would sup- for Tobacco-Free Kids. 'They srudy.
port banning tobacco products. want FDA to have authority
Congress passed a law in
but it would be up to Congress that is so weak it will not I986 requiring the placement
to take such a step.
change the status quo."
of surgeon general 's warnings
Mike Szymanczyk, the comSpecifically, Corr said the on all smokeless tobacco prndpany's chief excx:utive, told a Davis-Mcintyre bill would not ucts. That followed the release
House Government Reform go far enough to shield chil- of a government report that
subcommittee that -FDA over- dren from cigarette ads and concluded smokeless tobacco
sight could more ell'ectively_ would not give the government causes cancer and other disenable Philip Morris to market enough power to order the eases and is not a safer substitwo new products it is develop- removal of harmful substances tute for cigarette smoking.
ing that could be less hartnful from cigarettes.
. Carn10na said that recomto smokers than existing cigaAt ·a House Energy and mendation should stand. but
rettes.
Commerce subcommittee hear- some Republican lawmakers
One is a cigarette that the ing, the U.S. Smokeless said it seemed too rigid. ·
company believes ha5 fewer of · Tobacco Co. sought the ability
"For those smokers who ·
the harmful substances found to claim in ads that smokeless can't seem to quit smoking,
in current brands. The other is tobacco prnducts are safer than switching to a less hazardous
. a cigarette-like device in which cigarettes.
product could save l.ives," said
tobacco is electrically heated.
The Conncx:ticut-based com- Rep. Cltff Steams, R-Aa.
'file FDA asserted jurisdic- pany, which makes snuff. also
As .for . .FDA regulation,
tion over tobacco and sought to has asked the Federal Trade VerheiJ said his company
crack down on cigarene sales Commission, which regulates might back such a proposal if it
to minors in 1996, but the false and deceptive advertis- allowed U.S. Smokeless
Supreme Court ruled in 2000 ing, to consider its .request. . Tobacco Co. to make comparthat the ''agencY needed con"Such commumcauon wtH auve health drums.

Meigs
from Page A1
Robin Freeman was given
the University of Charleston
Promi se'' Plus schol31'ship of
$4,000; )uley Eblin a music
scholarship of $2,000 at the
University of Rio Grande ;
and Jennifer Walker the Ohio
l)niversity
valedictorian
scholarship of $1 ,000 and the
Maude Sellers Scholarship of
$400.
Other sc holarships were
awarded as .follows: ·
Brandy Shea and . Rachel
Argabright, $ I ,000 music
scholarships at the University
of Rio Grande;
Deadra Barnett, a Milestone
Benefits Scholarship of
$I ,000;
William Kauff and Jennifer
Zielinski, Milestone Benefits
Scholarships of $500;
Maria Drenner, the . Brad
Runyon Memorial Scholarship
of $1,000 and a student council scholarship of$150;
Elizabeth Wilfong, Ohio
State University trustee scholarship, $750;
Katie Jeffers, Parker Long
Memorial Scholarship of
$400 and a Meigs Local
Teachers Association scholarship of $300;
Heather Hysell, the Brandi
Thomas Scholarship of $500;

Jessica Hooten, the Racine
Home National Bank scholar·
ship to Rio Grande of $480; .
Jeremy Roush, Meigs Local
Teachers Association scholar·
ship of $300;
Emily Story, Ohio State
University . scholarship of
$750; .
Holley Ferrell, Hockin ~
' College scholarship of $300;
Amber BUrdette, a Milestone
Benefits Scholarship of $500;
Josh Eagle and Jimmy
Smith, Overbrook scholarships of $I 00;
Heather Phalin, Veterans of
Foreign Wars of Mason, W.
Va., $500, and American
Legion of New Haven, W. Va.
$750;
Marc Barr, Bedlord Township
scholarship of $300.
In addition to the nearly
$200,000 given in scholarships to Meigs seniors, representatives of U. S. Army and
U. S. Marines were there to
award training grants . to five
seniors that totaled more than
another $200.000.
Army Reserve training'
awards were presented to
Jonathan Diddle, Jamie
Hayes, and Jason Murdock,
each with a value of'$40,600,
and Marine Reserve training
awards went to Steven
McD&lt;tniel and Mathew
O'Brien at a value of $46,200
each.

Singer Manilow walks
into wall, breaks nose
In the middle of the night, he
PALM SPRINGS , Calif. (AP)
- Bany Manilow is trying to awoke disoriented 'and walked
get the feeling again after walk- into a wall.
ing into a wall in his ~droom
He passed out for four hours·
and breaking his nose.
. after the accident but was OK,
· The singer, who's famous for his manager said.
his monstrous proboscis. is · Manilow, whose hits include
maintaining his typical self-dep- "Copacabana," "Mandy" and
recating humor about the injury. "Try in· to Get the Feeling
"I veered to the left instead of Again," said he'll seek a docthe right and slammed right into tor's advice about whether to
the wall," Manilow said.
have surgety.
· "I may have to have my•nose
fixed and, with this nose. it's
going to require major surgety."
The 56-year-old singer said
Tuesday that he· d returned to his
!".Jim Springs home after spending two weeks in Malibu work- ·
ing on longtime friend Bette
Midler's upcoming Rosemary
Clooney tribute album.

'

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·Nation
•
World
.

Two painkillers fail
to slow Alzheimer's
Some previous studies have
MtUJy people hoping to reduce
su~sted
that
certain
pain
relievAlzheimer's
symptoms take
Associated Press
ersJ might slow or prevent dn•gs such tL' Vioxx mld Aleve
.
Al1heimer's. The theory is ba..;ed but should stop because they can
CHICAGO - 1\vo popular in p31ton evidence that some peo- ctitise serious gastrointestinal
IXillt relievers tililed to slow the pie who use a lot of anti-intlam- problems. Aisen said. Six people
progression of AlzJieimer's dis- matory medication, such as those · the d c1e 1 ...,~
·
ease in people with mild to mod- with arthritis, seem to be less m· stu Y · ve 0 ~"-'-' senous
t:fdle menta) decline, a study p!OQI! to AlzJieirner's.
. gasouintestinal bleeding.
found, damperung hopes that · Researchers believe that
Patients took 25 milligmms
widely used anti-inflanunatory intlamrrultion contributes to the Olll-e daily of Vioxx - a standanl
drugs might be an effective treat- neurological damage found in the dose - or220mgs twice-Daily of
ment.
mind-robbing disease.
Aleve- a relatively low dose After a year on the prescription
The earlier srudies were less lor a year. They were compared to
drug Vioxx or over-~ter rigorous than Aisen's research, patients taking a placebo.
Aleve, known genencally as which compared anti-inflammaNorthwestem University pronaproxen, pallents were no better tory drugs and dummy pills head- fessor Linda Van Eldik said it is
offthanthosetakingdummypills. to-head.
possible that higher doses would
. The resuhs "lll'e not ellCO\IIllgHis study involved 351 men have a beneficial effect and that
mgfor~wh&lt;_llll'e_m need?f&lt;~?, and women.about 74 years old on other tmti-inllammatory drugs
~ve immediale -~ average with AW!ejmer's symp- would have bener result,.
said Cieagetown Uruverstty s Dr. tunis. The .findings appear in
"It would have heen great if it
Paul A1sen, who led the sttidy.
Wednesday's Journal of the had worked, but 1don't tl1ink it's
Desptte the·dis&lt;!ppombng find- American Medical Association.
in!ls in people already diagnosed
NIA resean::her Lenore Launer closing the door" to the use ?f
wtth Alzheimer's nonsterot'dal
·d ·
.
. edi ·a1 such drugs aglllltSt Alzhenner s,
,
sat man accompanymg
ton
. ·d ~ Eldik,
be f the
· anti-intlarrunatocy drugs such as that it might be that when , saAL ...}n . Assocamem ,r 0
those . studied could still prove . Alzheimer's has progressed to the · . uutouner s
tatJon s SCJeneffect:Ive m preventmg the disease point of causing· symptoms, it is ttfic advisory counctl.
in the flfSt _place, said Neil 100 far advanced 10 be atlected by
Napmxen 3lld other older nono;..
Buckholtz, ch1ef of the National anti-intlammatory drugs.
Jem1dal llltl!-Jntlamrnatory drugs
Institute on Aging's division of
"Full-blown AW!eirner's dis- target two enzymes involved in
dernentias in aging. The institute ease exhibits extensive brain inflammation. Vioxx is a newer
he!~ pay for ~ study and is pathology," Launer said adding. painkiller called a cox-2 inhibitor
sponsonng conbnumg research "Slowing the progression at that that targets only one of the
on the theory.
stage may be too late."
enzymes.

Wednesday, June 4, 2003
&lt;

'

Rudolph heads to.court

BY ERtN McCLAM

Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) Martha Stewart has 1been
wamed ·that federal prosecutors
plan to .seek an indictment
against her soon in the insidertrading scandal that has been
hanging over her head for the
past year.
Her lawyer said Tuesday that
Stewart would fight any
charges.
The home-decorating mogul,
who built a fortune as a symbol
of gracious living and impeccable taste, has been under investigation for selling 4,000 shares
of biotechnology company
lmClone Systems in December
2001, just before the stock
plunged on disappointing news
about a Food and Drug
Administration decision on an
lmClone cancer drug.
investigators want to know if
Stewart had inside knowledge
of the impending FDA decision.
She is friends with ImClone
founder Samuel Waksal.
Her media company, Martha
Stewart Living Omnimedia,
said Thesday that her attorneys
have told the company that federal prosecutors in New York
intend to ask a grarJd jury for an
indictment "in the near future."
Analysts have speculated
Stewan could be charged with
insider trading or obsbUction of
justice.
The company also said that
fedeml securities regulators,
who previously notified Stewart
they intend to bring ci vii charges
against her, will probably file
their complaint soon.
Reprt!'Hllaiveo; of l:oh U.S. ·

Browns sign White, Page 82
· - Reds notebook, Page 82
Major League Baseball, Page 83

The Daily Sentinel
PageBl
Wednesday, June 4, 2003

--

Reds rally late to beat Yankees·

Holyfield in
negotiations to
:fight Jones Jr.

BY LINDSEY TANNER

Martha Stewart close to being
indicted, company says

Inside:

Evander Holyfield says
he's in negotiations to tight
Roy Jones Jr. fo~ the WBA
heavyweigl)i title on Oct. 4 at
Madison Square Garden. · ·
: The 40-year-old former
four-time champion told The
Associated Press at an
Alabama political gathering
that negotiations for the fight
are ongomg .
· It would be the second
straight heavyweight title
fight for the aging former
champion.
Suspected bomber Eric Robert Rudolph leaves the Jefferson County Jail in Birmingham, Ala.,
Tuesday for a federal court appearance. Rudolph is to stand trial in Birmingham for the 1998
bombing of a Birmingham abortion cli.nic that killed an off duty pollee officer and injured ·a
nurse. He is also a~cused in the 1996 Olympic park bombing in Atlanta. where a women was
killed and scores were injured, and a pair of 1997 bombings in Atlanta that rocked a lesbian
bar and a building that housed an abortion clinic. (AP)
·'

Banning inexperienced drivers
·from using _
cell phones proposed
BY DEE-ANN DURBIN
"We think that inexperienced
_A.:_ss_.·o..:.c. :.ia..:.te..:.d_P_re::.s:.:s_ _ _ _ _ drivers should do nothing more
than concentmte on the driving
WASHINGTON All task," said Joseph Ostennan.
states should prohibit inexperi- director of the NTSB 's Office
of Highway Safety.
enced drivers from using cell
The Governors Highway
phones behind the wheel, the Safety Association, which repNationa! Trdllsponation _Safety resents state safety · ofticials,
Board said Tuesday.
said it supporL~ the bOard's rec- ·
. New Jersey and Maine have omrnendation. '
passed laws prohibiting those
Spokesman Jonathan Adkins
with learner 's permits from said the association has been
usif!g cell phones or other wire- urging states to ban cell phone
less devices while driving. The use among inexperienced driNTSB said it wants the 48 other vers for the past two years. But
states to adopt similar laws. Adkins said the group doesn't
although it can't mandate the suppon a b31J for all drivers.
change.
Board chairwoman Ellen

Engleman said the NTSB doesn't know enough about cell
phone disrraction to recommend a ban.
··we don't want to be sim,
plistic and do a knee-jerk reaction saying cell phones 3l'e all
bad," she said. "We need to tind
out facts and not come to a conclusion too fast."
But she did say it is critical to
alen drivers io the .Problems
caused by disn-actions. According
to an NTSB repon presented
Tuesday, drivers who are distr'dCted will respond up to 1.5
seconds later to a hazard on the
road.

Anderson
rejoins Lions
ALLEN PARK. Mich .
(AP)- Scotty Anderson has
rejoined the Detroit Lions for
the tina! two weeks of offseason workouts after he and his
brother were stabbed outside
a Houston nightclub.
Anderson. a 23-year-old
who is staning his thi rd season as a Lions wide receiver,

missed all of last week 's
minicamp with relati vely
minor wounds from the May
26 stabbings but still has a
bandaged left shoulder.

National League

Ellt Olvltlon
W L Pel -GB
Atlanta' ·
38 . 19 .667Mon1real
33 25 .569 5 ~
Philadelphia ~
31 26 .544
7
New York
26 30 .464 11 ~
•FiorldB
27 32 .4511 12

Central Dlvl1lon

WLPCIGB
31 25 .554
Houston"
31 27 .534
1
St. Louis
29 27 .518
2
Cincinnati
28 29 .491 3~
Plnsburgn
24 31 .436 6~
Milwaukee
22 34 .393
9
W.at Dlvltlon
WLPciGB
San Francisco
35 22 .614
· Los Angeles
32 25 .561
3
Colorado
29 30 .492
7
AriZona
·27 ·3 t .466 8 ~
SM Diogo
17 42 .288 19

Chicago

"J

•

i

et Eyeryone Know Your Dad Is Someone ·
Very Special With A Father's Day
.._ •
Thank You Tribute •..
To Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
On Friday, June 13th!

American League
ENIDtvlolon

New York

Botton
Toronto

B8ttlmore

Tampa Bay

Cenlnll Division
Mlnnesdta
Kansas Clly

Chicago
C-land
Dfllrolt
West Division

.

WLPctOB
33 24 .579 31 24 .51l4
1'
32 27 .542
2
28 28 .500 41.)
21 35 .375 11 ~

WLPCIGB
32 24 .sn 27 '28 .491 ·~
25 32 .439 7~
23. 33 .411
9
·15 40 .273 16~

WLPCIGB .38 18 .679
Otl~land
32 24 .571
6
Anaheim
28 27 .509 9~ .
25 3t .448 13
.
•
1'Uelc1lf'o Clamioo
Anaheim 15; IA&lt;&gt;ntnlal •
,
Boston 11 Pittsburgh, ppd., rain
Florida 13, Oakland 2
'
. SeetHe 4, Philadelphia o
Mlilyaukae at N.Y Mots, ppd., rain .
()lnclnnlltl4. N.Y. Yankees 3
.AU•nla 6, TOKat 5
1-iouston J 1, Balllmore 6
Chicago Cubs S, Jompa Bay 2
Sl. Loulo 11 . Toronto 5
Colo&lt;a&lt;lo 7, Cleveland 3
, Arlzonl2. Chicago Whtte SO&gt;&lt; 1
Detroit 3, Son Diego 2
Loa Angelflo 4, K..,._ Clly 3

CINCINNATI (APr-.The
Yankees don't look any better
playing agafnst the National
League.
Juan Castro's two-out single in. the bottom of the ninth
gave the Cincinnati Reds a 43 victory Tuesday nigh.t,
spoiling the Yankees' .longawaited return to a city where
they haven't had a good
·
moment since 1961.
The Yankees beat the Reds
4-to-1 in the World Series that
year, but got swept when they
played the Big Red Machine
in 1976. They hadn't been
back until Tuesday, when a
· capacity crowd reveled· in
their latest loss .
''Everybody wants to beat
the Yankees,'' said Andy
Pettine, who let a 3-1 lead
· slip away with two wild
pitches and a throwing error.
Just about everybody is
beating the Yankees these
days, a trend that dismays
owner George Steinbrenner.
He .appointed shortstop Derek
Jeter as the II th team captain
on Tuesday, but the move did
little to pull them out of their
rull.
New York opened the season with a 20-4 record and a
five-game lead in the AL
East. Since then, they've
gone 13-20 and briefly lost
their hold on first before
regaining it.
"Everybody's frus trated,"
said Pettitte, who gave up
five hits and three tuns in
seven innings. "That's just
the game of basebalL
Nothing's coming easy right
Cincinnati Reds' Jason L'aRue (23) is congratulated by Russell Branyan. right, and coach now. We made it look easy
Ray Knight (25), after LaRue scored the winning run against the New York Yankees in the
Please see Reds. 81
bottom of the ninth inn ing. Tuesday in Cincinnati. Cincinnati won 4-3. (AP)

ACC begins visit to Syracuse
SYRACUSE. N.Y. (AP)
Atlantic
Coast
Conference officials on
Tuesday began a two-day ·
visit to Syracuse University
as they make final preparalions to invite the university
to leave the Big East for the
ACe.
Members of the delegation arrived separately
throughout the day, university spokes man Kevin
Morrow said.
The ACC group. led by
commissioner
John
Swofford,
met
with
Syracuse coaches, athletic

department officials and key
administrators during a day
of presentation s and tours of
Syracuse's athletic facilities,
Morrow said.
A press conference detailing the visi\ was scheduled
for late Wednesday afternoon.
Syracuse athletic director
Jake Crouthamel said he
hoped to address the ACC's
revenue-sharing! plan with
the visiting co mmittee . The
ACC plan differs significantly from the incentivebased Big East plan.
The ACC voted May _16

SillltHe

r.....

Martha Stewart, chairman and CEO of Martha Stewart Living
Omnimedia, visits the New York Stock Exchange trading floor,
Aug. 2, 2002. Federal prosecutors in Manhattan 'are seek.ing
a criminal indictment against Martha Stewart " in the near
future," her medi~ company said Tuesday. Stewart has been
under investigation for selling shares of biotechnology company lmCione Systems Inc., just before disappointing news surfaced about a key lmCione-produced drug. (AP)

Minneeota 6 1 San Fl'anciiCO 4

.

Happy
Father's Day

=~~d.~m~

d:clined to comment.
Stewart, 61 , has denied any
wrongdoing. She claimed to
have had an arrangement with
her broker to automatically seU
the stock if it dropped to a certain price.
Stewart's chief anomey,
Roben Morvillo, . said Thesday
that if she is indicted, "she
intends to declare her innocence
and proceed to trial." .
Martha , Stewan Living
Omnimedia stock took a beating Tuesday on the news, dropping $2.05 - or more than 18
percent - to $9.15 on the New
York Stock Exchange.
The stock ha~ plunged ~Ill.
just over $19 in June 2002 since
news broke of her sale of
lmClone stock. It hit a low of
$5.26 in October, when she
resigned from the NYSE board
of directors and an assistant to
her stockbroker agreed to cooperate with prosecutprs.
Just this week, a new study
was released concluding that
Erbitux was · effective against
cancer after all. ImClone stock Eric A. Scott, left, specialist at ·the Martha Stewart Living
Omnimedia station at the New "York Stock Exchange, looks up
rose sharply.
Associated Press writer at stock listings Tuesday. Shares of Martha Stewart Living
Devlin &amp;rrett in Washington Omnimedia fell $1.95, or 17.4'percent, to $9.25 in early afternoon trading Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange ..(AP)
contributed to t!tis repon.
•

---·ooomn

Booton (Kim ().()) at Pittoburgh (Benson

Happy
Father's Day

(Your Father's
(Your Father's
Name)
Name)

Love
(Your Name)
r-----------------------------~--------,
Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting ... $10.00 B. 1.X5 Greeting with Plctu.re ... $13.00

5),.5:06p.m .. 1algame
Boston (IJ&gt;we 4-3) al PIIISburgh (0'Am
4-5), 2nd game
Anaheim (Waahburn 5-5) vs. Montrea
(Kim ().()) al Son Juan. 7:06 p.m •.
Toxaa (Thomson 3-8) al Atlanta (t.laddu
4-5). 7:05p.m.
Otlkland (Hudson 4-2) al Florida (Redma
3-2), 7:0!; p.m.
Seattle .(Meche 7·2) a1 Phlladelphl
(Padilla 4-6), 7:05 p.m.
MII»:Oukl!e (Kinney 3-4) at N.Y. Me
(Trachs&lt;ll4·2). 7:10p.m.
N.Y. 'lllnkees (Musslna 7-3) ll Cinclnna
(P.WIIooo 2-4), 7:10p.m.
BaRimore · (Honlgen 1·2) at Housto
(W.MII"" 3-8). 8:05p.m.
18mpa Bay (Zombrano 1·3) al Chico
Cubs (Eales 5-4), 8:05 p.m.
Toronto tLidfo 8·3) al St. Loul
(Simoni8Cohl2-3), 8:10p.m:
C-and (ll'aber 2·2) at Colorado (011
2·4), 9:06p.m.
.
Chicago While Sole (Galland 3·4) a
Arizona (Good 1-1), 9:36p.m.
Otlltort (Knotts 2-4) al San Otego (Tollber
q-1), 10:05 p.m.
.
, Konta~ City (Snydtf 0.3) at Los Ango
(Nor!lo 6-6), 10:10 p.m.
Mlnnaoota (Radke 5-5) 11 San Fra
(J.WHllamaD-1), 10:15_p.m.
·

three school s in hopes of
· becoming
a
12-team
"superconference "
that
would add a lucrative football title game.
If the three sc hools jump
ship, the Big East would be
left with only five footballplaying teams - Virginia
Tech, Pittsburgh, West
Virginia, Rutgers and
Division 1-A newcomer
Connecticut,
which just
to extend . invitations to spent $90 million
on a
Miami, Boston College and 40,000-seat stadium.
Syracuse to begin formal
Big
East
members
discussions on joining the
nine-team league. The ACC
Please see ACC. 82
is said to be courting the

.

OSU needs two more Wins to make CWS
COLUMBUS (AP) - In
the triiddle of May, it didn't
seem likely Ohio State's base~
ball team still would be
playing in June.
Ace pitcher Scott
Lewis had tom a
ligament in his
elbow on May
· 16 in a game
Ohio State lost
9-2 to Big Ten
Conference
champion Minnesota. To
make matters worse. the
Buckeyes lost three of four to
Minnesota that weekend, losing their chance to be the host
team for the Big Ten tournament.
They weren't hitting, they
weren't pitching and they
weren't very good. Something
had to change. because it
appeared as though the
Buckeyes could make the
NCAA tourney field only by
traveling to Minnesota for the
conference tournament, winning four games and becoming Big Ten champions.
They had an outside shot at

an at-large bid if they didn't
win the Big Ten title,. but that
likelihood was slim because
of their disappointing
play
against
Minnesota.
Good decision.
Since
the
debacle against
Minnesota, the
Buckeyes (44, 19). m-e 7-1 and
have rolled into
the NCAA super regionals. They will be at home
against Southwest Missouri
State in a best-of-three series
starting Saturday.
ln their last five games, the
Buckeyes defeated Minnesota
I0-8 and 17 -I0 in the last two
games of the Big Ten tournament, beat Clemson I0-8 in
the first game of the NCAA
regional and smacked around
Auburn, the No. 4 seed in the
nation, 6-2 and 9-7 on the
Tigers' honie field to win the
regional.
·
1\vo more victories will put
the Buckeyes in the College
World Series for the first time

since 1967.
The Buckeyes have made a
complete switch in styles
since the start of the season.
Earlier in the year, they would
get a good pitching performance and score just enough
to win most of the time. They
didn't need much hitting
because they had Greg
Prenger, who t!trew a perfect
game this season, and Lewis,
who had back-to-back games
of 20 and 16 strikeouts.
Now the Buckeyes are
,pound in~ their opponents !nto
submt Sston . hi the etght
games since the start. of the
Big Ten tournament , the
Buckeyes have outscored
their opponents 73-45 tmd hit
18 home runs.
Christian Snavely, who
leads the team in home runs
with 16, has played well, but
other players have been providing the thunder recently.
Anderson hit four home runs
in the first two games of the
NCAA tournament and was
unanimously selected as Most
Outstanding Player in the

,
Ohio State players celebrate
after beating Auburn, 9-7 in
the NCAA regional tournament
in Auburn , Ala .. Sunday. (AP)
Auburn regional.
Now, the Buckeyes are
loose, confident and ready to
take on a team that beat them
18-3 earlier this season. Ohio
State's players say that's
ancient history because it was
their third game of the year.

Herd's
White
steps
dow.n
Marshall- men's
basketball coach
returning to UC
CHARLESTON, WVa. (AP) "
-Greg White cited family reasons in leaving Marshall
Tuesday after seven seasons to
return to the University of
Charleston as basketball coach.
Wh i t e
signed
a
three-year
contract with
the private,
Division II
school, where
he went 6870 as head
coach from
1990-95 .
Financial
White
tenns of the
contr'Jct were not disclosed.
White replaces Jayson Gee,
who left two weeks ago to
become an assistant coach at St.
Bonaventure.
·
"If somebody would have
told me two weeks ago I would
be standing here I would have
said I'm not sure about that,"
White said. "A lot of people SOiY
'why?' The more 1 thought
about it, why not?"
White, 44, has suffered several setbacks in the past two
years, including a tlood that
mvaged his plll'ents' home in
Mullens; a fire that destroyed
his own home in tile South Hills
section of Charleston; and the
death of his mother-in-law.
"I was brought to my knees
with
personal
tragedr
Basketball's a game, and what s
really imponant is your family,"
.White said. "At some pomt
you' ve got to make a decision
about what's right for you and
stop worrying about everybody
else.
"I just thought this was better
for me at this time in my life."
White went 115-84 at
Division I Marshall, his alma
mater, but he was just 29-30 in
the past two seasons. His first
season at Marshall was 199697.
.
In March, after Marshall finished the season · 14-15, the
Thundering Herd declined to
extend White's contract for the
second str.Ught season as the
school had done in earlier years.
Marshall will begin a national search for a new coach, • .
Athletic Director Bob Marcum
said. He didn't specify a timeline on the process to replace
White.
·
"I think we have a good job
here," Marcum said. "We will
attract good candidates."
. White, who has two young
children, said the commute
from Charleston to Huntington ,
wore on him.

Please see White, 82

'

Father's Name·- - - - - -- - - - - - -- -- - -- - - - Your Name(s) _ _ __ _ .:____ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _.:.____ _ _ ~

·• Thursday, JuneS, 2003- Pleasant Valley Wellness Center

Addre•• ------~-----~----~--------

• 4p.m. -All middle and high school girls

City/State/Zlp
Phone._ _ _ __ __ _
Send·Coupon and Payment to: The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day"
·
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

• 5:30p.m. to 7:30p.m. -All middle and high school boys

Deadline For This Special Father's Day Tribute Is
Friday, June 6, 12:00 Noon .
''

HYSICALS

• Cost is $12/student
• For more information call: (304) 675-7222

•

. J

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�'

&gt; · Page 82 • The

Daily Sentinel

.

I
Wednesd~a~June

www.mydallysentlnel.com

4,2003

Reds Notebook
Browns ~ign Ja·mel
Wh_
ite to·four-year deal Reds take reliever in
'

CLEVELAND (AP) Jamel White can finally relax.
He doesn't have to wotry
about being cut by the
Cleveland Browns any longer.
The versatile running back,
who"figured he would be traded or released despite having
his best season in 2002,
signed a four-year contract
Tuesday with the Brown·s.
· The deal includes a $1.3
million signing bonus - and
peace of mind for White.
"It's great,". the 26-year-old
said. "It's also a sense of
relief to have it off my back. I
think I've paid my dues and
played hard. I'm glad that it's
done. so I can just play football." ·
White made the most of his
playing time last season, rushing for 470 yards and three
touchdowns.' He picked up
another 452 receiving yards
on a career-high 63 catches.
When rookie running back
William Green was struggling
early in the season, White
gave the Browns' offense
some much-needed speed and
a breakaway threat.
The Browns signed the
restricted free agent to a $1.3
million tender offer following

·the season, a move that con- second most in club history
vinced White he would be by a running back. Greg Pruitt
dealt on draft day. ·
had 65 in 1981.
Instead. the Browns kept
Despite his breakout season
White and be·gan negotiating and hi s new contract. White
a long-term deal with him says he isn ' t salisfieQ. ·
after the draft. His agent at the
One of the team's hardest
time, Josh Wright, . turned workers, he said he' ll be ' the
down the club's initial otTer, first player in the weight
which included a $800,000 room Wednesday.
signing bonus. ·
"I still want to be an everyWhite, who also expressed down back." he said. "One
his di sappointment at the dav. I want to rush for I ,000
club's first offer, recently yards in a season , not 1,000
replaced Wright with Neil . yards in three years. If anything, this (contract) has only
Schwartl;.
"This deal rewards Jamel made me hungrier because
for his· accomplishments on it's just given me a nibble of
and off the field ," Browns what T can get."
coach Butch Davis_ said of
Wliile admitted the contract
White, one of Cleveland's talks were stressful.
most active players in the
"I'm glad that everything
community. "Jamel's versatil- worked 0 ut ," he said. "There
ity has been a key asset for were some trying and frustratour offense the last two years. ing times over the last couple
"It was our intention all of months when we were
along to work something out working on a deal, but that is
with Jamel , because we want behind us ntlw.
to retain the players who are
"It was just business, and I
productive and contribute to did not want anything that
our success. Everything was said or written to give
worked out exactly as we had myself or the Browns organihoped."
. zation a bad name. I just want
White's 63 receptions were to be a football player and go
the second·-highest o n the out and compete and help win
Browns last season, and the a Super Bowl."
1

Reds

in the sixth on Pettitte's two
· ) wild pitches and his throwing
error. then was on its feet
a nticipating another gamefrom Page S1
winning hit in the ninth.
Asked if it felt like a playthe first month of the season.
off
at mosphere, reliever
It's back to reality right
Chris
Reitsma said . ''I've
now."
For the Reds, the inter- never been to the playoffs. so
league series amounts to a I don't know, but it was a
chance to enjoy a playoff very special atmosphere."
It usually is when the Reds
atmosphere for three days in
their new ballpark, where get to the ninth inning at
they've sold out only twti Great American with the.
·
other games ~ opening day score tied.
Pettine and Jimmy Ha ynes
and a bobblehead giveaway
featuring radio announcers both had bouts of wildness in
Joe Nuxhall and Marty the sixth that cost them a pair
Brennaman.
of runs and a chance to get
The crowd of 41,827 got the win. That left it to the
revved when the Reds tied it bullpens, and the Reds' was a

ACC
from Page 81 ·
Villanova.
St.
John 's,
Providence,
Georgetown
and Seton Hall iiO not play
Division 1-A football.
The presidents of the five
Big East schools left out Of
the expansion plans sought a
meeting with Miami president Donna Shalala after
Miami said it would consider leaving the conference.
. Thlu meeting will take place
in Washington, D.C. on

I illle l;leller.

Reitsma (4-2) struck out
four in two perfect innings,
leavi ng it tied at .3 heading
into the bottom of the ninth.
Jaso~ LaRue almost ended it
with a one-out drive off
Antonio Osuna ( 1-2) - the
ball plopped off the wall in
center. about 2 feet short of a
homer.
LaRue had to settle for a
doul)le, and the Reds had to
settle down on the bench.
After Osuna fanned Felipe
Lopez for the second out, he
fell behind Castro and threw
a cut fastball j ust off the
plate. Castro slapped it just
inside first base for a gameending single.

Wednesday, after the ACC
. The ACC and Big East
concludes its tour of have had nati9nal champiSyracuse.
ons in both basketball and
The Big East has guaranteed Miami at least $9 mil- football in recent years, but
lion an nually for the next neither is regarded as a
five years if the Hurricanes -s trong football conference
remain in the conference. top to bottom the way the
Athletic Director Paul Dee
I 0,
Big
12 ,
said the university still has Big
some work to do before Southeastern and Pac- 10
making .a decision . School conferences have been.
official s' have reviewed the
Guard Josh Pace of the
ACC's projected revenue national champion Syracuse
package and~ were "getting
to feel more and more com- men 's basketball team said
fortable" with the numbers, his feelings on the possible
he said .
switch were neut ral.

(first round of ·draft
'

rush.
''He 's getting better, but
. there's no timetable on him."
Boone said. "They ' re not
doing anything aggressive
with him. like . there's three
more days and they've got .lo
get him ready hy then."
• DUNN LEADS OFF:
For the second straight game,
Boone decided to use Adam
Dunn as hi s leadoff hitter.
Dunn leads· the maJ·ors.with
18 homers but is second in the
NL with 67 strikeouts - not
exactly the profile for a lead- .
off hitter. Headin.g into
Tuesday's game, Dunn was in
a 7-for-53 slump that dropped
his average to .2 13 .and
prompted Boone to bench him
for two games on a recent trip. ,
Boone had planned to use
Dunn in the leadoff spot during spring training. but
changed his mind. With
· Felipe Lopez slumping,
Boone decided to bat Dunn
first for the last two games.
· "If anybody's going to get
live at-bats in a game, it's
going to be him," Boone said.
• D EM p ST E R ' S
RETURN: The Reds plan to
acuvate nght-hander• Rya"n
Dempster off the 15-day disabled list Saturday and ha ve
him start against the Toronto
Blue Jays.
Dempster was di&lt;tgnosed
with an in !lamed nerve in his
neck. and the Reds sent him to
Triple-A Louisville on a rehabilitation assignment to regain
his control. He's 1-1 with a.
.1.29 ERA in two starts for
Louisville.

BY Jo~ KAY

Associated Press

. CINCINNATI _ Rightbander Ryan Wagner was
exclusivl!ly a reliever in his
two years at the University of
Houston . He niight be movinl5 up to the rotation in tl1e
mmors.
·
·Rd
d
Th e C.mcmnatt
e
s
rna
Wagner's adviser. They're not
· No. I pte
· k· aned allowed
Wagner lhetr
·to discuss a contract
· ·
th e 14th avera 11 se Iecuon
m with the Reds as long as
· ·
. T sct
the · dntl t hue ·· ay, contmumg
Houston rem at' ns ,·n the
·
h'
th etr emp asts on pttc mg. NCAA tournament.
· k s ·m the 1as t
The'.r top pte
Wagner grew up in
'
t
h
three ·dra t s ave been P1·tch- Yoakum, Texas and was a fan
ers
Wagner, 20. went 6-5 for of the Houston Astros. He had
Houston with a 2.06 ERA and a ragged motion in high
14 saves this season. He school, and credits the coachstruck out 138 batters in 74 1- es at the University of
3 innings, a tribute to his mov- Houston for smoothing his
ing fastball and his nasty slid- delivery and giving his pitcher. The Reds liked the strike- es more movement.
outs most of all .
The Reds hadn't told him
"He's resilient and he's got how they planned to use him
a great moun'il presence," in the minors.
scouting director Leland
"If they want to use me as a
MaddoJl said. "He's on the starter. a reliever or a closer.
fast track."
I'll do whatever's best Maddox thinks he could whatever is going to gel me to
eventually develop into a No. the majors faster and make an
2 or No.3 starter.
impact with the Reds ,"
"Right now, we're going to Wagner said.
start him out as a setup man,"
• O'NEILL RETURNS:
Maddox said. "But down the Former Reds and Yankees
line. he could go into the rota- outtielder Paul O'Neill threw
lion."
a ceremonial first · pitch
The Reds desperately need Tuesday to shortstop Barry
to develop starting pitching, Larkin. who met him halfway
but haven't been able to do it to1the mound and hugged him .
through the draft. From 1995Larkm ts on the 15-day dis2000. they chose 30 pitchers abled list with a strained calf.
in the first 10 rounds of the He's eligible to be reinstated
·draft. Only Brett Tomko has later this week, but manager
made a significant impact as a Bob Boone said there's no
starter in the majors.
·.
Tile Reds selected left -han- t4+~4+~~·4+~4+
der Jeremy Sowers wuh the . Meigs County Fish &amp; Game Association
20th overall pick in 200 I. ~ .
•
·
even though he had made it t
clear tw was plannmg to go to ·'fJ
~
·
Vanderbilt unless he got at .
/ ,.-:/.'

·' '

-.nnu•l . . .-.· ·

got close to an agreement, so
Sowers went to Vanderbilt
and the Reds lost their right
· tp sign him.
They avoided a repeal last
year by ·taking right-hander
Chris Gruler, a high school
player from California who
wanted to play baseball
instead·of going to college.
A few hours after they
made him the third overall
pick in the draft. Gruler
agreed to a $2.5 million
bonus. He pitched in the
minors last season. but had
shoulder surgery in April and
will mtss this season:
Gruler was advtsed by
agent Ryan Ware. who also is

'.

,t

t
'

··
.. · ·
.
All Girls and Boys 15 and under are wel~ome
Lots of different prlzesl
Numerous door prizes
Free food and drink for alii

.i'

One rod and reel p•r child
Night crawlers and chlcke" llver·s only
No artificial bate or minnows allowed

'

8:00 ,\~ . 2:00 p~

Major.League Baseball: ·ln1erleague play

Sosa's corked bat has .baseball buzzing
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

confiscated by security personnel and turned over to
major league baseball.
Cork insidf! a wooden bat
is thought to help players hit
the ball farther and is
against ba seball . rules.
Several players have been
caught using ~ltered bat s in
the past, including Albert
Belle, Wilton . Guerrero,
Chris Sabo, Billy Hatcher
and Graig Nettles. All were
suspended.
"Unfortunately, it's a dirty
mark, when you consider all
he's
accomplished,"
Yankees manager Joe Torr~
said. "It's really unfortunate
Jor the game. Everybody's
scratching their heads right
now .... It 's embarrassing.
He's too good of a player.
lt,'s toq bad."

Sa,nmy Sosa has everybody tn baseball buzzing
ugatn - about hi s corked
bat , not his home run hop .
In a stunning scene. the
Chicago Cubs star was
ejected during · the first
inning of a 3-2 home victory
over !he Tampa Bay Devil
Rays after umpires discovered cork in his broken bat
Tuesday night.
Sosa said it .was .an honest
mistake, that the corked bat
was one he uses to put on
home run displays in batting
practice and he didn't mean
to cheat in a game.
·
"1 was just trying to get
reaqy and go out there and
get ready for the game, and I
just picked the wrong bat ,"
Sosa said. "I feel sorry. I
just apologize to everybody."
One of the game's greate st
sl uggers, Sosa ranks 17th on
the career li st with 505
homers. He flourished in the
national spotlight during his
1998 home run race with
Mark McGwire, captivating
fans with his flashy smile
and signature hop after connecting.
But now Sosa's reputation
could be tarnished. It's up to
fans and fellow players to
decide if they forgive him
- or believe him .
"Deep down in my heart, I
tru ly believe Sammy didn't
know that was in there ,"
Cubs manager Dusty Baker
said. "But I just hope that
thi s event , whatever it was,
doe sn't tarnish hi s career or
lake away all' that Sammy
Sosa's done. For baseball
and• r Chicago."
In
other
interleague
games, it was: Cincinnati 4,
the New York Yankees 3;
Anaheim 15 , Montreal 4;
· Florida 13 . Oakland 2;
Seattle 4, Philadelphia O;
Atlanta 6, Texas 5; Houston
II , Baltimore 6; St. Louis
11. Toronto· 5; Colorado 7,
Cleveland 3: Minnesota 6,
San Francisco 4; Arizona 2,
the Chicago White Sox I;
Detroit 3. San Diego 2: and

Angels 15, Expos 4
.

Chicago Cubs' $ammy Sosa shatters his bat with a grounder
to second in the first inning against the Tampa Bay Devil Rays,
Tuesday evening at Chicago's Wrigley Field. Sosa was ejected
after umpires found cork in his shattered bat (AP)
Los Angeles 4. Kansas City umpire who took a home run
3.
away from Kansas City's
Boston 's
g'ame
at George Brett in .• 1983
Pittsburgh was rained out because of excessive pine
and rescheduled as part of a tar, a decision later reversed
doubl eheader Wedne sday. by AL president Lee
The only NL game sched- MacPhail.
McClelland said the cork
uled . Milwaukee at the New
York Mets, was also rained was clearly visible.
"I turned it over and there
our and will be made up July was a small probably half28 · ·
dollar size piece of -cork in
Sosa appeanid to drive in the bat right about hal {way
a run with a broken-bat down the barrel head, I
grounder to second . Crew guess," he said. "It' was
chief Tim McClelland galh- notched in thye. I felt it.
ered with the other three and it obviously' was cork,
umpires , examined the han- so I called the crew together
die of th e bat and ejected and it was reminiscent of
Sosa as he stood in the what happened about 20
dugout. The run was wiped years ago with me ."
off the board.
Sosa 's other bats . were
McClelland was also the

.
1t '"
'

~

I fo
t"
11 992 5421
or more n rma 10n ca :
•
First Rd. to left past Chester
on Rt.7 Follow signs.

'

J'H+~~4•W+W+~·~'~~

Bicentennial Bear in each i

FOR
EVERYONE

Braves 6, Rangers 5
At Atlanta , pinch-hitter
Andruw Jones hit a two-out ,
two-run homer in the eighth
inning off Ugueth Urbina
(0-2). John Smoltz got his
major league-leadi ng 21st
save in 22 chances. ·
Juan Gonzalez hit a threerun ·homer for Texas, which
built a 4-0 lead through I
1/2 innings against Ru ss
Ortiz.
.j

Astros 11 , Orioles 6

At " Houston, Morgan
Ensberg hit his first career
grand slam in the Astros'
six-run eighth inning. Craig
Biggiti, Lance Berkman and
Jeff Kent also homered for
Houston, which moved
within a game of the firstplace Cubs in the NL
Centra l.
Cardinals 11, Blue Jays 5
At St. Louis. Matt Morris
(7-3) won· hi s third straight
decision and Jim Edmonds'
two-ritn homer sparked ·a
four-run seventh inning for
Marlins 13, A's 2
Edgar
the
Cardinal s.
Rel)teria and Ti'no Martinez
At Miami, Mike Lowell hit had three RBi s apiece.
a pair of three-run homers and
Florida sent Mark Mulder (8- Rockies 7, Indians 3
3) to his worst stan in nearly
two years. Brad Penny (4-3)
At Denver, Juan Uribe,
pitched seven strong innings playing for the. first lime this
and hit a three-run triple for season after breaking hi s
the Marlins, who won for the right fool in sprin g training ,
eighth time in 11 games.
hit a pair of two-run homers
Oakland outfielder Eric off Ricardo Rodriguez (3-6).
Byrnes went 0-for-4, ending Preston Wilsnn and Todd
his 22-game hitting streak.
Helton also homered for the
· Rock,ies. who
snapped
Mariners 4, Phillies 0 Cleveland's five-game .winning streak.
·
·
At Philadelphia , Jamie

Baskets Wave Pe1unias, New ·Guinea
impatients. Assorted colors Also other
Flats$. Baskets $4 .00 each

Paul Hill Greenhouses

TRASH TO
TREASURE SALE

This Father's Day,
Send ~he World's Greatest Dad ·
on Golf's · ~rea test Road Trip.
Give Dad what he really wams this year ... a trip w the Trail.
One phone call to our central Rcs&lt;·rvatiom number !!;Cts you a
gift certificate he can spend on some of the mosl-pr;~iscd !,':Oli
on this planet. C.&gt;!f .\1a.~.a:d11e ranked The Judge Course at
Capitol Hill as one of the I 0
ALABAMA'S
courses in the country worthy

.. of hosting the US Open. And people who've played the Trai l call it the
number one value hi the world as a golf destination and number 8'in the world for quality over .:H major golf destinations around the
world ... COLT' DIGEST SURVEY
· Now through September 14, Dad (and Mom) can play 3 consecutive days of
unlimited golffor j~st 199 a person (add SlO to each greens fcc at C1pitol Hill.)
"
Hotels, carts and tax not included.
,
This Father's Day, give (:)ad what he really wants , golf on Alabama's
ind·edible Robert Trent jones GolfTrail.
"

All proceeds from the
sale will be used to
prepare the Syracuse
Elementary Building
as a Community Center

D-backs 2, White Sox 1 :
At Phoenix, Chad Moeller
singled home Shea Hillenbrand in the ninth inning
to win it for Arizona.
.
The Diamondbacks, who . ·
found out before . the game·
they lost ace Curl Schilling
·to a broken right hand, ral lied with runs in the eighth
and ninth after seven
shutout
innings
. by
Chicago's Esteban Loaiza;
who leads the majors with a.
1.90 ERA.

Tigers 3, Padres 2
At San Diego, Dmitri
Young hit a three-run l:lomer .
off Brian Lawrence (3-7) in
the ninth lo give Detroit a win '
over the Padres in a matchup
of the worst teams in . the
majors.
Earlier Tue sday,' Young's
brother. Delmon, was the top
pick in. the amateur draft.
going to the Tampa Bay Devil
Rays.
It was the_ first time the
teams played since Detroit
beat San Diego in the 1984
World Series in five games.

Dodgers 4, Royals 3
At ·Los Angeles. D.J .
Ctirrasco (3-4) walked Adrian
Beltre on a 3-2 pitch with the
bases loaded and two outs in
the ninth inning, handing the
Dodgers a victory.
Eric Gagne (I' I) pitched a
scoreless ninth. The Royals
have lost nine of II. At 27-28,
Kansas City has a losing
record for the first time this
season.

Volunteer Audioneer

Dan Smith
OH License #1344
Refreshments will be served.

Donations will be accepted.

• Exercise Equipment
• Roto nl/er
.
• Bicycles

Basket

Flowers For Sale

,--

At San Francisco , Doug
Mientkiewicz homered ·and
doubled twice and Joe Mays
(7 -3) won hi' fourth straight'
start.
Barry Bonds hit hi' 14th
homer this season and No.
627 of his career. Eddie ·
Gu~rdado go t hi s 16th save
in 16 chances. ·

SYRACUSE COMMUNITY CENTER
YARD SAlE AND AUCTION

.t F

Star Mill Park Basket Bingo
June 5, 6 pm
Middleport Legion
21 Games· $20
Specral Games · 50/50 Drawing

"I've got a wife that's
extremely busy and I'm never
able to just go pick the kids up
at school because I'm 50 miles .
away." he said. " I could never
escape the job at Marshall. This
job, you can escape becauSe
the external pressures aren 't the
same. Jhere l'lfen't 15 golf · ·
tournaments. There's not 30
tip-off luncheons, a TV and
radio show every week."
White alsG looks forward to
resuming a successful ba&gt;ketbaJI cmnp he previously held at
Charleston.
"I love kids. I love taking an
8-y~-old and watching him
become a veteran 9-year-old
through a week of experience
in camp and staying in touch
with him. There's so many
. things I love about kids and
camps," he said. "Those are the
great things I remember about
this coaching ex~rience. "
White also wtll serve as an
assistant
to
Charleston
President Ed Welch, who original! hired him in 1990.
.After the 1994-95 seascn,
White took a leave of absence
from Charleston to,serve as a
UCLA assistant for one year.
White took the Marshall job
the following fall.
"He gave me a leave of
absence because he wanted me
to come back," White said. "He
told me when I ·went, 'you'll
never be back.' And I said,
'yeah, I will."'
.
White was the West Vtrginia
Conference coach of the year
in 1992, when he led
Charleston to the conference
championship and a berth in
the NAIA national tournament.

'

At San Juan, Puerto Rico,
Troy Glaus, Tim Salmon
and Jeff Da Vanon homered
in the first inning to spoil
the opener of .Montreal's
second homestand in San
Juan .
Bengie Molina had a
three-run homer in front of
his· home fans and four of
Anaheim's season-high 22
hit s. DaVanon added another homer and Garret
Anderson went 4-for-4 with
a home run and four RBis as
the Angels matched a franchise record for homers.

Twins 6, Giants 4

Moyer (9-2) pitched seven
sharp innings to win hi s
sixth consecutive start and
Brei Boone homered, lead·
ing Seattle. to its seventh
The
straight · victory.
Mariners · improved the
majors ' best record to 38·
18.
Kevin Millwood (7-3) lost
his secbnd straight start. ·

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

~

. from Page 81

.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83
4 ~------------------------~~------~--~~--~~~~--~~
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Saturday, dune 7, 2003

White

I

Wednesday, June 4, 2003

CAN BE
FOUND IN

THE

I

NEWSPAPER

•Sweeper

Grill
•Fumlture
• Clothing
• Shoes
• Chain Saw
• Hedge »tmmer
• Gas

Ad

June 5
9 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Meigs Senior Center
Stackable .Washer/Dryer,
Freezer, Pool table, Misc.
Office Furniture &amp;
Equipment. Lots more!

• House wares
•Lamps
• ·Electronics
• Quilting Frame .
• Christmas Decorations

compliments of

• Toys

•Books
•Doors
•• TOO MUCH TO LIST! '"'"

Racine

qSyracuse

740-949-2210 740-992-6333-,
Member FDIC

BINGO SPECIAL
June Bth
$15 .00 as many packs
as you want.

AUC"I'ION

Friday night
Syracuse Fire Station 6 pm
Large Load w/several
new items

www.rtjgolf.com
1.800.257.3465

Can be found in the
Daily Sentinel Classifieds.

SHO~ CLASSIFIEDS

Ca11992-2155 to find out how to place yours!

FOR BARGAINS ·
'

.

�Wed

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\e

'99 141170 Clayton. 3 bdrm, 2 BEAUT1FUL

CLASSIFIED

MENTS
PRICES

Cole's Mob•le Homes

740·446-2588.

45701' 740-592-1972 '
Coming Soon The All New

"Pinnacle Best Buy" Home
You saw theJTI last year
Many were sold at a fantastiC low pnce. Now w1th more
deluxe featureS than ever
"Where'

You

Get

Your

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Mobile Homes, US 50 East.
Athens. Ohio (740}592-1972

Land Home Packages ava•l-

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
,.
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
m:rihune
Sentinel

To
Place

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

Your
Ad •••

O{fiee 11o~~
Monday thru Friday
·s:oo a.m. to s:oo p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE

Atf AD

Word Ads

Disolay Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

In Next Day'• Paper

Publication

Sunalay In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
Sund8ys Paper

Sunday Display: 1 : 00 p . m .
Thursday for Sundayli

1.

110
llELPWANrnJ

1.

Singers Bands &amp; Vocal
· Groups. All Styles &amp; Ages
Nashville Record Exec!.
Seeking New Talent.
Con-i1ng to Huntmgton
731-424-2229 or 731-424-

2141

Church. 11 1 Church St,
Bidwell, OH clothing and lots
at m1scellaneous. Hot dogs,
dnnks, baked goods June
3 lam1ly yard sale- June 5th
6-7, 9 to 5, ra1n or sh1ne
&amp; 6th, 48040 Adams Ad ,
Friday &amp; Saturday 6th and Aacme
Oh
Womens
7th, large vanety 906 4th clothes. kidS clothes, ru gs,
Ave
Home lntenor. housewares,
fish tank lawn furniture, plus
Friday, June 6, 9 to 5 at
lots more'! Ra1n cancels!
Kessels Pro 1354 Jackson
740-247-4024 S O'Bnen
Pike

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
tor sale, Chesrer Township,
Me1gs County, send letters
of 1nterest to The Daily
Sentinel. PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy7 Ohio 45769
Summer day care For K1ds
Openmg Man- Fn 6am-6pm
for more 1nfo call Kelly
CaS1o 740·6~7-6460

r

June 5 and 6, 2 miles ~ast of 6 lam11y yard sale Duncan's
Porter on 554, baby clothes , residence. 4th &amp; Rollins .
New Haven , June 4th &amp; 5th,
day bed, and lots more
lots of everything .
June 5,6,7
9-?. 1611 Shoestring A1dge 6/612003 · 61712003 9-5 ra1n
baby g1rl lothes, household or sh1ne 3 family year sale :
1tems, sw eper, desk
Albany-corner SA 143 &amp; old
SA 346. Children 's 0·3
June 6 &amp; 7, 8·5 Ambleslde
month to . 3T, weedeaters.
Dr ott Kerr Ad toys, power
fans,household, ladles clothwheel jeep. hnle tykes. exerIng/shoes. Tea cart, miss1on
cise equipment, car seat,
table, typewnter No early
womens and boys clothes
sales
Large Yard Sale
on 554 1n B•dwe ll a block Frtday &amp; Saturday June 6 &amp;
tram the post off1ce . June 3, 7th 9·5 Nelson res1dence,
Pomeroy P1ke 1980 GMC 4
4&amp; 5
X 4 truck , motor hoist. 200
Meadows Sub Div1s1on 3 AMP etectf1c service &amp; wtre,
fam•ly yard sale, Friday 8-4 a~r hockeY table, furniture,
&amp; Satu rday 8· 1 mens, worn- rid1ng lawn mower, bed·
ens. gtrls clothes. furniture, clothes,
somethmg
tor
home decor.
8\leryone

GIVEAWAY

1 ton of river-rock, you must
haul it away 304-773-9566.
serious Inquires only I
2, 10 week old female kittens While w/gray on their
heads. (3041895-3659
3 kinens 446-0478
Bird dog puppies 6 weeks

old. (304)675-2245
Free K1ttens. 6 weeks old.
Grey t1ger To good home.

Can (740)256-6678
I'm Kayla, 5 month old Great
Dane/Dalmatlon mtx. have
all shots and rabies vac.

r

446-3153

Movtng sale c413 4th Ave
Gallipolis. 9am-5pm June 6·
Found at C1ty Nat1ona1 Bank 7 Longaberger baskets,
a p1ece of Jewelry Contact household ttems. baby and
Ra1n or
Lmda or Twila . (304 }674- adult clothing
shine
1000

r

YI\.IU) SALE

·

I

~~=~~~~~===· •
Jl!
liff2 YARil SALE·
GAU~IPOUS
221 Debb1e Dr Frtday and
Saturday, clothes-all s1zes,
toys books. and lots morel
5-10 fam1ly yard sale, Clay
Commumty Building, June 6
&amp;i l. 7am-5pm too much to
ment1on
Garage sale 1149 Bulaville
Pike, June 5·6, 8 00-5 00

0 fovr

WOlD
UMI

of

the

%rambled wcrds be·

MA WH T R

I

•. .....I,...:T:...:;E...,:.Y.,..rJ
_T+--11 :..:.'
A famous comic was host loa
l
couples fiftieth wedding anniver5 I' I
sary. He told the couple that
I . _ . _ __ _....,bigamy
was the only cnme where

~---..;_

0 0 L C E D ~~ -~r~~?1 • is
~~,.:,::_:;:.,_::.,,.::...:;.1_•.::..,,-8--l 0 Comple&gt;e

I

L.-..i.L.....J.-....1..-..1..-~.L..-1

Yesterday's

Multi-familY ,June 6th,7th; 9·
5 0 churcn on Reibel Ad . off
SA 248. Ra in or shine
North of Eastern High
School off SR 7, R1ggs subdiVISIOn Friday, June 6th 8-4
Saturday June 7th 8-12
9' 7

off
Ad)

11

~a de
lht

up of : • chuckle ouo1td

by fdltng in the missing words
'(&lt;lu develop !rom Slep No. 3 below

SCRAM-LETS ANSWIRS

EffO!t - Pnze · Widl/1 · Modest . WISI-i FOR
Gra nny to young ster: "People are always wishing for
what th ey 11aven 1got ' Youngster to granny . "Sure they
are What else can one WISH FOR?"

Earn $450-$1500 monthly
part-time or' ~2.000-$4.500
full-t1me, 1-800·585-0760 or
www OurAnswer- com
At
Aocksprmgs
RehabilitatiOn Center our
focus is on resident care .
Our programs ere outcome
oriented w1t an interd1scipl1·
nary effort to serve t he
"Who le~ person. We are lOOK·
ing for an e:w;cept1onal
AN/LPN to con tn Qut e to th1s
effort II you have long-term
care experience and feet
you could enhance our
efforts to ser~~e a specia l
segment of our community,
we would like to talk to you
Interested
candidates
should
apply
to .
Aocksprmgs Rehabll llaMn
Center. 36759 Rocksprmgs
Road , Pomeroy OH 45769

Work? Let's talk The new
Avon !
ThElre
are
··2s.ooo.. customers 1n our
area needing s'ervice. Earn
$1,000+ Monthly by selling
$20. of Beauty Products lo 6
Peogle. 5 days a Week!
Great for. Coupl9s-Sing le
Moms-FamiliesHandicapped Plans to F1t
any Need No Stock Ups. No
Door to Door. It will Work for
Youl $10.00 Start up Fee
Call Apnl, 304·882-3630 or

1-888-748-3630
Ma1ntenance man. full l•me,
send resume to PO Box 303
Gallipolis OH 45631

Med1 Home Health Agency,
seek1ng
tull -t1 me
Inc
licensed Phys1cal Therapist
for Oh1o and West Virgmia
dient based
We ofler a
compet1t1ve salary, benefitS
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or package, 40tk , . fleK 11me .
Sell. Shtrley Spears. 304· and
SIGN-ON-BONUS
675-1429.
EOE Please send resume
.:.....~=----­ to 430 Second Avenue .
Bartenderlgrill cook, part Gallipolis. OH 45631. Ann
tune , send resume to PO
Diana Harless. Clinical
Bmc 303 GallipOliS . OH
Manager

Thursday 5th -Saturday 7th
45631
9-4 Rocksprings Rd . beside
pallet mill. Household, d•sh- Concrete m1xer drivers
es, lamps, tv's m1sc
needed at our Columbus
Tuppers Plams community plant, Class B CDL requ1red .
contact Arrow Concrete
yard sales. June 6th &amp; 7th.
740.446- 1594
9am till5pm .
Yar~ sale· 1/4 mile on
Lead1ng Creek Ad .. June 6
&amp; 7, 9am-5pm
•

r

YARD SALE·

l'r.I'LEAsANf

Antiques, dolls, avon, misc.
FndaY June 6th &amp; Saturday
Movmg sale
at 2576
Leon-Baden Rd. 314·mi. off
June 7th 8·5 1648 Lmcoln
Addison P1ke , GallipoliS
87. June 51 6 Ra1n or Sh•ne
Heights, Pomeroy Misc.
Friday June 6 and Saturday
June 7 9arn-6pm All items Garage Sale, Fry residence Community Yard Sale
Gunville Ridge Juno 5-6, 6
priced lo sell
next
to
Salisbury 112 miles long, from Pt .
Movmg·lurntture. clothes, Elementary Friday, June 6, Pleasant Rt 2 N to AT 87
follow signs 9·5
etc 9707 Stale At 218 Saturday. June 7th 9-4
Mercerville Friday June 6 Garage sale· June 5·6th ,
Huge Yard Sale! June 5th·
ram date June 7
9am-5pm , 38545
Gold 6th Thur.- Fri. 1 112 miles
Mult1-family yard sale, chil- R1dge, Pomeroy, Oh
from theY on At 62$. Lots of
drens 1tems, nascar items
Everything. 8am-2:30 pm.
and more
Kelly Dr Garage sale- June 6-7, 9-?.
Welt res1dence, 2 mi west Rummage Sale! Henderson
Galhpohs June 57 ooam-?
on 681 at Darwin, linens, Commun•ty BUilding
Saturday &amp; Sunday 3 books pictures. costu me June 6 &amp; 7. 10am-5pm.
Family, name brand clothes, jewelry, nice clothing. much
Saturday. 6·7-03 Adult. g1rls
592 Skidmore Ad Bidwell
more, rain/shine
cloth1ng s1zes 6 &amp; under,
also other 1tems. Corner
Sandhill &amp; Jackson Ave

lew fO form lavr slmpie words .

S A I~ 0

Large sale behind MasoniC
Lodge 1n Racine; Dennie Hill
residence,
Wednesday,
Baby
Thursday, Fnday
items baby clothes, namebrand jUnior to plus size
clothmg, refrigerator, home
intenor, m1sc

one

ldit.d by
lener~

Large 2 family sale 46081 &amp;
46123 St. At. 124 between
Syracuse &amp; Racine, Thurs.,
Frt , Sat, 5th , 6th, 7th, very
good sale

Fnday June 6 &amp; Saturday
Family Yard
Sale.
June 7th --9·4· Dexter com· 4
Saturday, June 7, 8·?, 114
munlty Tools, antiques, furHoward
Street,
Haven
niture. somethmg for everyHetghts, New Haven

TIIAT DAILY C, ~
'UZZLU U~ t"&gt;.CS
R9orronoe

towards Rutland off 7, 3rd
hOuse. Clothing, toys. can dles, baked goods, windows, tru ck topper, misc.

Sa turd ay, June 7th
Frank Road
(just
Flatwoods
ClothtnQ/mlsc. items

r

New 14 wide only $799
down and only $157.93 per
month. Call Nikki 740·385·

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@ myda ilyregister.com

7671
New 2003 Ooublewide 3 BR

&amp; 2 Bath . Only $1695 down

and &amp;295/mo. 1·800-6916777

r

WANIID

roBuv

Med1 Home Health Agency,
Inc . seeking
part-time
Medical Soc1al Worker for
the Gallipolis, Oh1o area
Masters Degree requ1red .
We otter a competitive
needed salary, benehts package ,
Cosm6tolog1st
fuiVparl time pd vacatiOn , 401 k. and llell: t1me EOE
free CE hrs Fantas\lc Sams Please send resume to 430
Second Avenue Gallipolis,
(7401446-7267
OH 45631 . Atl n· 01ana
Experienced
carpenters- Harless. Clinical Manager
must be familiar w1th all
phases ol residential remod · Ohlo Valley
Publishmg
el1ng, valid dnvers license, Company has ~ a part-time
tools. transportation , and openmg 1n the ~ma11room
references Local work, pay Please apply •In person
based
on
expenence Monday-Thursday 8-10am.
Applications available at 825 Third Avenue . Gallipolis.
Chnst1ans
Construction. Ask for Tqmmy Long
1403
Eastern
Ave . Overbrook Center is seeking
Gallipolis. 446-4514
a part-time position for an
LPN Far more ' lnformafiOn,
Head cook_ for summer
contact
Michelle G1lmore at
camp Franc1s Asbury con-8472
tact Chris or Sue Lew•s 740- (7401992
4
2
45
52
5
·__ _·__ _ _ _ _ _ __
Reglstet:ed Hurse (RN) for
Help wanted canng for the full-ume and part-t1me work
elderly, Darst Group Home. 1n a 114 Bed Long Care
Fac1l1ty
Full-lime
now pay1ng minimum wage , State
new shifts. 7am-3pm, 7am· employment oilers an exten·
Spm. 3pm·11pm , 11pm· sive benefit package. 1ncludlam. call 740-992-5023
lng State civil service
retriement, earn up to 15
HVAC company is I00 ~&lt;1ng days vacatiOn , t8 days sick
for ' full time Installers and- leave. and 12 plus paid holihelpers m Heating and days; healttv'life insurance Is
Cooling, send resumes to available Salary is commenPO Box 572 Kerr, OH 45643
surate with experience
Lead Guitarist needed tor Contact Kim Billups, DON at
bar band. Play vartous mus1c Lakin Hospital. La~on. WV at

and country. Most equip- (304)675-0860 ex1 126,
ment supplied. 740-709· Monday thru Friday from
8·00 am-4 00 pm Lakin
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. 9053 or 304·675-3449 ask
for
Frankie.
Silver.
Gold
Coins,
RN Superv1sor
Proolsels D•amonds, Gold
Licensed Practical Nuraea A leading proVJder ot SupRings.
U.S Currency,(LPN) tor full·llme and part- port serv1ces to IndiVIduals
M T.S. Com · Shop, 151
time work in a 114 Bed Long w1th mental retardatiOn and
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
Term Care State Fac li1ly developmental disab1ht1es is
740-446-2842
Full·tlme employment offers lookmg for a full 11m~ AN
an
extensive benefit pack- Supervisor. Benefits mcludwanted to buy-your extra
eel. Call Dorothy Harper at
car, m1nor repairs ok. all age, mcluding State civil
740.446·7148 or fax resume
service
ret1rement
,
earn
t~p
priCBS ok 388-8228
to 15 days vacat1on , 18 days to 740-446-3987 An Equal
Employer
wanted -1·60 acres farm 1n s1ck leave, and 12 plus paid Opportumty
Gallia County. area not picky holidays, health/life msur· FrMIDN.

388-8228

Building lor AenV Lease.
Plenty off parking (7401245-

· Up To 15 Words,_3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

HFJJ&gt;WAA'TED

7 Fam,ly Yard Sale, June 7, Mulli-lamily, name brand June 5th &amp; June 6th SA 124 Access to a Computer? Lost your Job? Need to

1012 Watson Road, 9-5 . clothes 2T-10, toys, mlscel·
Lots of misc. Rain or sh~ne
laneous.
Friday
9·3.
Saturday 9·12, 300 3rd
9523 SA 160 (bes•de the Avenue
Korner) Ttwrs &amp; Fm'lay
Furntture.
household. Thursday and Friday, 35
books. rtds, clothes . much Grape St. , bed spreads,
more
brass birds, antiques. linens,
Bidwell United Methodist lots of m•scellaneous

down and only $157.93 per
month. Cal! N1kk1 740-3857671

5747
The Corne r Restaurant ,
Middleport Oh ., busmess &amp;
building &amp; property, established 1991, turnkey operation, (740)992·3955

r

POLICIES: Ohio Val~y Publiahlng reaervea the right to .cfit, reject, or cencel any ad at an~ bme. ErrOI'a must be report~ on the first day of publication and
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Rtglller will be r"ponalble for no more then IM coal of the apace occupied by the error and .only the first ineerUon. We aha II not be liable
any loaa or expenae that reautta from the publication or oml11ion of an advertisement. Correction will be made In lha. first available edition. o Bo• number
ere atwaya confidential. o Current rate card appllea. • All real estate advertisement• are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. o This
.ccepta only Mlp wanted ada meeting EOE standard1. We w~l not lmowlngly accept any advertlsl.ng 1n violation of the law
"'

110

\'\\Ill \1 I \II\ I...,

"&gt;!. ST"RSEARCH"

New 14 w1de only $799

A1o Grande area, 2400
sq.ft ., OfticeJ Commerc1al

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Days

r
t~ 1r ~~~
rM~ I

3384.

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

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword •Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .•.

abla' In your area, (740)446-

l\egtster

ance Is available Salary IS
commens urate, with experiI \ II'Hn\11 ' I
ence Contact Kim Billups.
"&gt; I In II I "
DON at Lakin Hosp1tal,
La~m . wv at (304 )675·
0860, ex'l. 126, Monaay thru
Friday from 8:00 a.m.- 4 00
p m Lakin Hospital is an
A lead1ng proVider of sup- EOEIAA Employer
port services to Individuals
with mental retardation and
developmental disabilities
has vacant position s lor
Casual LPN 's Pay starts at
$16.00 per hOur For more
information call Dorothy
Harper al Middleton Estates,
74Q-446-8145 or 446-4814
An
Equal
Opportunity

Sell Avon

Make 40% (7401 446·3358
Truck Drivers Immediate
hire, class A CDL required,
exce llent pay, experien ce
reqwred Earn up to S1,000
per week.Call 304 -675·

4005

HFJJ' WAN'IHl

The Board of
Park CommiSSIOners of the
0 0 Mcintyre Park D1stnct 1s
seek!ng a d•rector to serve
as Ch1ef Admin1strat1ve
Officer to d1rect the total
administratiOn .
plann1 ng,
management and operalions olth,e 1co untywide Park
District
Requirements· A
bachelors degree from an
accredited coitege or umverSity Expenence 1n community leadership commumca·
tions (lubiiC relations . tluild mg partnerships. lund raiS·
mg , admtniSira!lve and
f1nanc1al skills
Prospect•ve candidates must complete an
Employment
Appllcal1on
provided by the Park Dtstrict
along w1th a Resume and
Cover Lener outlining their
educaiiOn , traimng. expeuence and cert111catlons
'
Subm it IO 0 0
Mcintyre Park 01str•ct . Gall1a
County Courthouse. 18
Locust Street Room 1262,
Galltpolis. OH 45631-1262

!'

The City of Gallipolis IS
accepting applications for
the pOSition ot Crew Ch1et
PositiOn Will prov1de superv•sory direct!On and routine
da1ly respons1bil•ties for the
tollow1n g
departments·
Streets. Water! Sewer Lme
Mamtenance. Cemetenes.
Parks and Mun1cipal Pool
Dulles will consist or drrectlng, superv1s1ng and participattng w1tn all daily respons1bit1t1es . of those departments. Oual1fied applicants
must possess a mmimum of
high school diploma or GEO
and basic knowledge or past
work e,.;penence 1n the foi'
low•ng areas , co~s1rue110n,

180

WAN'Il-JJ

To Do
W1ll Do 6abys1tting in New

H"en acea

AesponS&lt;ble

mother of 2 grown boys.

(3041882-2091
W•ll pressure wash homes.
trailers, decks, metal bulldmgs and gutters
Call
[740)446·0151 ask tor Ron
or leave message
Will stay with elderly person
m there home N1ghts only

(3041675- 1898

!NOTtCE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO r~com mends that
you do bus1ness w1th people
you know and NOT to send
money through the mall until
you have mvestigated the
ot1er1n

PRon~IONAL

SER\lCP.i

r

;~~====~~

1

,

All real estate adver11slng
In thls newspaper is
subjeel to the Federal
Falr Housing Act of 1968
which makes it Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, 11mltatton or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
origin , or any Intention to
make &amp;ny such l
preterenca, limitation Or
discrimination."
This newspaper wilt nat
knowingly accept
edwertlsements tor real
estate which Is In
vloletlon ot !he law. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advarU ..d In
this newspaper are
available on an equal
oppor1unlty bases.

Stanley and Son , Inc.
Auct•on . Real Estate.
Appraisal Serving you
smce 1960- 3 Generations.
1·888·810-IT-UP Henry Ml
Stanley, IIICAI-AARE

For sale by owner. ranch
style home behtnd Addaville
school , 3BR 11 12 bath,
jacuzz1 10 master suite. neW
s1dmg, 2 car garage, very
n1cc home 367 .7039

TUANEO DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR1TY /SSI?

FOACLOSUAE

No Fee Unless We Win!

1-888-582-3345
HI \11,1111

1310

Ho~m;
mRSALE

13041458-19 16

EQual

1993 Chevy Camara Z28
King Size P1Uow Top Slack, 379·2282 .
Mattress set, New shil 1r\
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- Pla StiC, Sale $299 , Cell 1994 Mits ubish l Ecl1 pse
room apartments al Village Phone 304 -412-8098 or Needs wor k. Make Offer
Manor
and
Riverside 304-552·1 424.
(304)882-3129i
Apartments m Middleport
From $278-$348 Call 740· K1ng SIZe water bed, chest of 1995 P!.ymouth Voyager
992-5064. Equal Housing drawer, dresser, and mght Van . 3 0 V-6 engme, air,
stand. make offer 446·81 05 stereo Excellent Condition
Opportunities
Runs Good. (740)446-1662
Nice 1BR apt , Crown City, Lawn mower. set ' of rear
tires,
Carlisle 1995 Pontiac Bonneville
$250 per month plus secun- turftype
20)(10
10·00-8.
New SSE, excellent co ndition
ty deposit, no pets 740-256Cond1110n, $50 (740)379- $4500 call 256·9275
1249
21 t 1.
2000 Mercury sable LS,
N•ce quiet clean 2 bedroom
Peacocks,
Full Premier. fully eqUipped,
apartment. kitche n appli- M~fe
ances. lurn~shed gas heat Fealhered $50. (740)379- includmg power moon roof,
15,000 firm (304)675- 3354
and AJC &amp; WID hookup. Rei 2111
&amp;·
Depos1t
required NEW AND USED STEEL
2001 Mustang GT, yellow,
(3041675·7628
Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar loaded, auto, 33,000 m1les
Concrete ,
Angle , 388-9950
Now Taking Applicalions- For
Channel,
Flat
Bar,
Steel
35 West
2 Bedroom
For
Drains, 95 Mazda MX3 hatchback.
Townhouse
Apartments. Grating
Includes Water Sewage, Dnveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L 88,000 m11es. new lights &amp;
Tr?&lt;Sh, $350/Mo .. 740-446· Scrap Metals Open Monday 1ires. excellent condition .
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; $4 750 call 446-8222
0008
Friday. 8am-4·30pm . Closed
Pleasant Valley Apartment Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; 95 Windstar GL transmiSSion problem $2000, 92
Are now tak1ng Appl ications Sunday (7401446-7300
GMC Sonoma $4000. 97
lor 2BA. 3BA &amp; 4BA,
Applications are
taken Queen P111ow Top Mattress Cadillac Deville, good cond1·
Monday thru Friday, from set, New In plastic wN-Jarr. tion S1 0.500. 2 Cyl. d1ese1.
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Off1ce IS Will accept $199, Cell phone 4wd tractor. brush hog, plow,
Located at 1151 Evergreen 304·412-8098 or 304-552- d"k $4200 367·0106
Dr1ve Point Pleasant, WV 1424
98 Toyola Camry LE $5900,
Phone No IS (304 )675·5806
Waitt Tanning beds
00 Dodge Neon $3500, 96
E.H.O
Affortable .Convlenent
F1reb1rd $2500, 96 Neon
Tan At Home
Tara
Townhouse
$1 600, 93 Ford Probe
Apartments, Very Spacious, Payments !rom $25fmonth $1500. 93 Pontiac Grand
FREE Color Catalog
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
Am $1350,.96 Thunderbird·
112 Bath. Newly Carpeted, Call Today 1-800-842-1305 $2200, 97 Neon $2000 95
www.np.etstan.com
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
Eagle Summit 51000, B&amp;D
Auto Sales Hwy 160 N 446Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
BUIIJliNG
Pets, Lease Plus Security
SuPPt.IEs
6865
Hous1ng Opportunity.

Deposit Aeqwred . Days· " ' - - - - - - - - - "
740-4 46 -348 1: Evenings:
Block, bnck, sewer p1pes.
740·367-0502
wtndows. lmtels, etc Claude
Twin A1vers Tower is accept- Winters, Rio Grande, OH
1ng applications for wa1tmg c;;a,.l1.,:.7;;;40::;·,:;.24;;;5::;·,;;5~12~1.__....,
hst totr Hu d-subs1zed 1.- br,
11 6 75 6679
1

~~"c; men

ca

-

j

r·-------_.1

Good Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed
Washers,
Dryer s,
Range s.
and
Refrigerators, Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine 51. (740)446-7398

Ohio,
54501
(304)675-5332

1140

1 70

Lw•••••••_.J

591·S342

FOR SALE

(7401446-7444 1-877-8303 Bedroom in Syracuse, 9162. Free Estimates, Easy
Month fmanc•ng, 90 days same as
cash V1sat Master Card.
Dnve- a- little save alot.
3 br. ranch house for rent,
$350 00 a man in New Queen Anne Chair, Bed
Haven 304-675·3458
Frames, Aad1o, Retired bas·
kets, many 1tems (304)675-

3BA 1 balh At 141 $450
plus depoSit 446-4824

Nice older hoQ1e tor rent in
New Haven WV. Has fenced
back yard, 3 br. , new carpet ,
must see lo appreciate w11t

14x70 two bedroom total
electric, $300 a month, $250
deposit, no pets. (740)742-

2714
2 br mob•le home, all appliance mcluded . washer &amp;
dryer 304 -576-9991

2045

r

HAY &amp;

APAKIMENJS
FOR RENT

Fat,

BLOCK (740)992·6020

_
36_oo________

25p (3041675-3354

Under New
Managagement
A n rtrly ot

~_

equipmrn r

1 and 2 Mdroom apart·
menta, furnished and unrur·
nlthed, ucurl~ depotlt
rtQulred, n6 petl, 740·992·

Generatpr, wather ; fullalze
bed liner; Remington 270
rifle; •s eel. Auger pistol, 22
Browning
pump
rifle;

2218.

(740)992·5970

Employer FIM/DN

for
1111.
New/UJed
&amp; aurg\ng.
213 Bedroom upstalre apart· Uphol1t1rv

A ·
Metabolism
Breakthrough! 1 lost 40
pounds in 2 months .
Ephedra Free. 1-888 -5467207
~

mont. $375.' month. $250 (30&gt;4)~!!8·1 887
Otpoal1. Nawly Rtmo&lt;ltltd.
80NO Of TH! lOUTH
No Poll. (»4)895·3815
(Talee ot Uncle Aemua) full
Apartment In downtown langth movla. VCR ta~ $29
call 688·315·eoo4
Clalllpollo 868-717~

Ins.
992-5479

JtH98 Peach Fork Rd.
PomtrOJ'• Ohio, 4J769

1.·7 40-992-7007
Haun 1M pm
lundayl

CIOH~

~'R~
High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage

* Spring •:•
•:&lt; Special *
TIERAPEmC
MASSAGE
Easter &amp; Moth&amp;rs Day

Buy 1 Gift Certificate,

Get l nd Free!

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Heather A. Fr)' L.M.T.

740·992-5232

·Also now accepting

740-992-5379 '
' Offer gmd lhru 5-1 1-0J

mosl insurance

Seplic Systems,
Footers and
Concrete,
Excavation, Utilities,
Back hoe and
Dozer, Ponds.

PC DOCTOR

Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

HOME CREEK

ENT., INC.

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

WE REPAIR

992-7953
591·7002
591-4641

www.wvpcdr.com
cdoctor@wv cdr.com

I Makes &amp; Models

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
•Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
• Tillers • Edgers
• Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

JONES'

Tree Service

k

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

• Bucket Truck

We Make House Calls

(304) 675·5282

Gravely

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Dean Hill

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

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

New&amp;: Used

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975

475..SOuth Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Lawn and Garden Equipment is our
business, not our sidelille

1-800·822-0417
"W.Y's #I Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
Van Dealer"

740·992-2432
BoATS &amp; MumRS
mRSALE

CANCER CHECK

1994 Ranger R-72 Dual
console . 1 15 HP Mercury
Tracker Outboard . 3 props.
45 #
motor
guide
2
Humrn1ngb1rds, GARMIN·
GPS Ranger Tra1ls trailer
with cre me wheels and
spare. Ru ns and looks

BUILDERS IDC.
New Homes • Vinyl
ng • New Garages
• Replacement

Wmdows • Rooling
COMMERCIAL and

great $6,000.00. (7401446-

RESIDENTIAL

6970

FREE ESTIMATES

10

740-992·7599
DURO-LAST
ROOFING
Flat Roof
Specialists·
Commercial and
Res1dential
Saves on Cooling.
Metal and Mobile
home roofs· No
Problem. 15-Year
Guarantee
992·7953
591·4641
591 -7002

HOME
IMPROW~IF.NfS •

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

HOWARD l.
WRITfSEl
dOORIIG
dOME
MIINnNAIICE
' dEAMLESS
GOnER .
I

*Free EsiiiDIIts•

949·1415

Fmall y ... Money pllld to~ w hen cancer
stnke s You choose the amount up to $50,000!
Pavs in add1t10n to other insurance.
You· use the money however you like.
C:.mcer will strike when you least expect it.
It w lllleavc you and your iamtly financiall y

Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds slart
6:30 lsi Thursday
or every monlh
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get 5 FREE

S1rapped CANCER CHECK will be
there when yo u need .it
C all now to reserve ~check.

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
Box 189 MmDLEPORT. OH 45760
740-843-5264
3/ 18 lfn
General
Contracting
New
Construction,
Remodeling,
Backhoe and
Dozer Work.
Roofing.

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Rac1ne, Oh1o

4577 1

740·949·2217

Slzea 5'x1 o~
. t01M130'
Hours

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

7:00AM • 8:00PM

992-7953

1/14,1 mo pd

CARE

Removal • Pruning

• Landscape
Maintenance Spring
and Fall cleanup

(740) 985·9829
(740) 591·3891

Let 111e ::lo 1t for you'

UNII1 Pllmll

Sunset Home
Construction

CARPENTER .
SERVICE

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

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrlclll 6 Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutter&amp;
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting ,
• Patio and Porch Decks

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411

YOUNG'S

5/9-814

Free Est1ma1es
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomqro','. Oh!o

22 'fears loc I

MYERS PAVING

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

Henderson, WV

879-2497 or 441-2112

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

June 6·7
Campsite available
with full hookups

Call 949·2734

Bedding, Vegetable &amp; Sweet
Pomto Plants,
4.. annURls &amp; Pennn/als
Fruit &amp; Flowering Trees &amp;
Shrubs
(Rhoaoaenarons &amp;
NOW Open
Azaleas)

all mr Sale

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads 1 Streets

FLEA MARKET

SUE's GREENHOUSE

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

'

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'x10' 610'x20']

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

Ri\l'J"\\a~

&lt;·artIn Syracuse
(Former/\ Wh1rnt'} $)

Under new ownership
mana8ement.
COME JOIN US
7 D11ys AWeek!
Morning

and new

7doyo

a wWtt i1V11ght
toa.~l

"The Little restaurant
Wit~ the big tute"

Morning Star Ro1d • C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

1·740·949·2115
,,

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

Residential •
Commercial Mowing
• Mulching • Edg1ng
• FMilizat1on • Leaf

$119, Cell Phone 304·412·
8088 or 304·552·142~ .

~eff ~arner

Ntw ltmrJ AdJrd H·'tt:ltly

NELSON'S LAWN

Full Size Mattress Set New
in Plastic wf'Narr. Sacrifice

Cellular

umollll•i:~"

chnl.iu~~: ~ud humin~~:

Stop &amp; Compare

ll"'"'""'"'"'.,.•..,.""~'""--------~-':!"--~-..,...,..,..,

$2.50 par balo. Roglatored
:24,;;68
~------:- 'Block Angua bull , 2112 )'tlrt
2 br. ap1. In Clalllpolla old ~~8·1062
$425 .00 a mon. (740)4~1·
tnduetrlal Sewing Machine
1322

'

comes ftrs~

740·992-1611

"'--oi

Mobile home for rent no Specla11(7401448·6308

r

I

miles $13,000 00 740-949-

.AlltEL

Wflers /fiB c ustomor

l; MowRcva.~-s I

~~----·G·~--~......

Cravings,Like andYouBOOST
Energy
Have
2BR mobile home for rent
Never
Experienced
.
$325 a month plus $200
WE1GHT· LOSS
deposit Need references.
REVOLUTION
Phone 388-0578
New product launch OCtober
Beautiful River V1ew Ideal 23, 2002. Call Tracy at
For 1 Or 2 People, (7401441-1982
References. Deposit, No
Central Cooling Systems.
Pets, Foster Trailer Park,
new· &amp; used , as low as
740·441-0181.
$850.00
installed
May

pots, (740)992·5858

• New Home~
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

200 1 Yamaha YZ 125 d1rt
Good quality slraw Volume
BASEMENT
bike
with racmg equtpment
discount &amp; d~llvery availWATEAPROOF1NG
740-258-1709
able Heavy square bates.
Unconditional hfetime guar·
$2 .85 per bale. (3041675·
BoAls &amp; MamRs antee. Local references fur·
5724
n1shed Esta blished 1975
FOR SALE
II!\ '\...,l'fiU I \I H 1\
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446·
17'
Starcraft,
1nboard 0870. Rogers Basement
Mercury CrUiser 302 eng1ne, Waterproofing
dual ax le uttmg trailer
Stored for several years'
Make Offer. (7 40)379-2 111
C&amp;C
General
Home
1988 Baratta Super Sport, Maintenence- Pa1ntmg. vinyl
27' cruiser wfcuddy, 225hp Siding , carpentry, doors,
Inboard/outboard , new ta n- windows . baths. mobile
dem tra~ler . $10,000 OBO
home repa1r and more ~or
Adull electric scooter like 1989 Grand Pnx Runs 740-992-9066
free est1mate call Chet . 740·
Wai·Mart has tor shopping gOOd $600 {304)675-3769
992-6323
1988 Baratta Super Sport,682·6650
Lumuna 27' crwser wlcuddy. 225hp
1990
Chev.
Black leather love seat $100 Thunder Limited Edition , Inboard/outboard , new tan 55 gallon aquanum w/ black 66K miles, one owner. 3 1 V- dem trailer, $10,000 080
shelving umt S350 1997 6 PS, PB, AO, PW &amp; door 740-992-9066
OldsmObile Acheiva $2500 locks arn'fm cassene, new - - - - - - - - 379·9249
t1res &amp; battery, garage kept , B1m1ni top 22-28ft in length
$4495, serious inquires only, al so stainless stee l prop,

2BR 5 m•les south 218
Gallipolis.
$335
Incl.
water/trash $200 depos(t BURN

740-256-1337

coNmucno•

WILSON'

,\lUI\' Sl IU'I.I 'S

AQHA Reg 2 Year old
CAMPI::RS &amp;
Geld1ng 15 1 HH , Gay-barKing &amp; Leo on top 3 chicks ~
· 1.,.-M·m-D;;R.:,H;;;oiii~iiiiF"Iispi
and harQ twist on bottom, 1996 CBA600F3 eMcellent
loops ci rcle both ways
conditiOn,
yoshimura 27' Prowler 2000 model like
Stops good &amp; backs up
exhaust, 10k miles $4000 new. sleeps 8 Hitch and
$2,000 304-576-2847
sway bars included $10.000
OBO 645-1308
call 740·446·1750 or 740·
H1gh Quality ·yearling Angus
1996 Yamaha Wolverine 350 709-1382
Bulls, $800 each Roy
4x4, excellent cond1hon .
Cummings (3041675-6248
$2700 740-379-9038
Su11olk sheep for sale,
96 HD Road Kmg , low mtles.
(740)949-2494
1999
Harley
Heritage excellent condition . $14.000.
Spnnger. exc cond1t1on 446- Call alter 5 00 pm (304)576·
White laymg chickens for 6253
2933
sale. 75e each 740·985·
2000
Harley-Davidson
&gt;.: \ R\ I&lt; I 'i
3956
' Sotttall Standard
8, ooo

, br. Cottlge In Gallipolis Good mile gra11 hay square
$250. month ,. Deposit. '-'6· bales, never been wet ,

.

FORTRUSCAKSLE_'

iO

French City Mobile Homes
Open House May 30 thru
June 14 B1g Sav1ngs, B1g
Rebate. 446·9340

n

Il(1211

L--------.,1
PETs

liiiiiii1ilall

3 Bedroom home only
$13,500 for lishng call
1·800-719-3001 Ext F144

vehiCle and eqwpment oper- fenced pasture, R1ver Valley (7 401 446-2885
a110n. carpentry. plumbing. D1stnct (740)367·0144
REDUCED PRICE Small
electrical , masonry and 3 Br, 1 Ba, full unf1mshed hOme. excellent begmn1ng
cement
work ,
and
basement, new kitchen, new home or rental property
lawn/grounds care includmg
windows
and
vmyl 740·742·3 1281eave name &amp;
planting and seedmg of $ _
DO. (7401367 _
Only
senous
53 900
0299 number
grass.
trees .
shrubs. or 709 0299 leave message. 1nquires please
Position IS full-hme salaried
oflermg a competitive ' and 3BA Ranch Style Home. Three Bedroom, One Bath'
comprehensiVe
benefit City schools, 2 car garage. Ranch Style Homa 1n
package. including health covered carport
above Addison Twp Call (740)446·
Insurance Applications may ground pool . partially fin - 8491
be p1cked up at the otf1ce ol ished lull , dry basement.
Momu: HoME'&gt;
the City Manager. 518 S73k 446-9545 5-tOpm or
fUR SAL~
Second Avenue . Gallipolis. leave message dunng day
Ohio 45631 Applications
will be accepted until5 p.m, 4 Bedrooms 2 1/2 baths, 12,.;60 Clayton new doors
oJu~n~e:,.1;,;1:,.·~200;;3:..,;E;;O;;:E;..._., 5 52 acres. Pt Pleasant . and Windows , hot water lank
and under p1nn1ng, no t1res
B•'IL"nt..•ESS
lnlorma!IOnlphotos onl1ne
u....,u,
www.orvb.com code 51903 or axles, needs lots of work
$500 740-388·8128 after
t.--.:l'RAININ.-:::.;:~(;-.,J (3041675-5773
~
- - - - - - - - - 6pm
Gallipolis Career College 4 br 1 1/ 2 baths. br1ck and
(Caree~ Close To Home)
frame full basement, 2 car 1996 NorriS Mob1le Home
Call Today! 740-446-4367 , gara ge New haven WV 14)(80 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
1·800·214-0452
(740)446-4274
complete k1tchen . cove red
porch . 2 storage bwldmgs.
vfflwgalllpoJ1scareercollegecom
Cape Cod house bUill m acre land N1ce Prope rty.
Rea #190-05-1274 8.
~,.,.:;:~,::,;:~~~:::....., 1999 4 bedroom . 2 bath, Call Somerville Realty
oak cabinets. 2 car gar age (3041675·3030 or (3041675~I ISCHJ.ANffiUS
$135,000 ca11740-256-H09 3431
For Sale 15x30 Pool. 3rd Home on pond F1ve Poi~ts 2003 Clayton 16ll:80 3 BR 2
summer $ t ,000 Alr eady area . Pomeroy 1 3 acres 3 Bath, partially lurn•shed. 2
10x 12 bu1ldmg,
Taken down. (304)882-3246 br., 1 1J2 baths, dinmg decks
room
,tam,ly
room
,ston
e
f1re·
reduced
pnce
245·5 100
after s·oo om ·
place has gas logs base180
WAN"rm
ment w1th finished room. 24 ~ 36 double wide modular
class room . Bu1!t very heavy
To Do
M'd 80's (7401 992·3493
duty to Oh10 building code. ,
Custom.
ail
bnck
3BA
21 12 large open room, no bath or
Great Gilts, beautiful wood
Bath. 3200 sq. h. l1v1ng area kitchen . ·self contained neat
signs tor any occasion
on 51/2 acres w1th pond, pump unil ApproJ~ 10 years
Residential-Busine ss. Blue·
30x40 delached garage, 4 ol d $6, 500 delivery avail·
Star banners $25. and up.
m1les p*&gt;t hosp11a1 on 160 able 740-992·2478 or 740(3041675-6925

i0~

Ford Escort, 5 speed. good
condition, 105k m11es. $2000
OBO call 446-3239 leave
message
~1'111'...;;...'='____.,

4 acres Eagle Ridge Ad ., ,,.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
1984 Ford 1 ton truck , 15
Jack
Russett
Terner
excavated, electnc, sept1c
SPACE
loot lighted box with roll up
Pupp1es 1o Weeks Old 3
perm11 &amp; water available, ..._
fOR RFNr
door, V-8. automatic $2000
(7401992-0031
Female.
$150 each . call 446-4254 or 446·0205
space for rent '" (740)245·5624.
90 beautllul rolling acres
rt, 740 992-5858
1990 dump truck Chevrolet
near Harrisonville. Highway
Lab
Puppies,
AKC ,
Kod1ac , CATde1sel. 5 esp
hontage on SA 143. Gds
Chocolate. vet checked. dew
transmission, 2 speed rear.
well and stocked pond
claws removed , very healthy
10' dump bed, a1r brakes,
Cash or terms Call (740)
and friendly (740)367-0659
C.D.L. required . 48 , 000
742-3033
Want to rent lot lor mob1le (7401645·2293
miles excellent cond1t1on
Bwldmg lots close to Pt. home, 16X80, close to city Reg1stered Border CoJ11e $10. 500.00 740-992-2478
pups Per1&amp;Ct Father's Day or 740- 591·9342
Pleasant at Meadow hHis off
Sand hill Ad. (740)446-9340
g1ft Shots, wormed, Importor 304·675-3000
ed blood lines and working 1992 Chevrolet S 10 Blazer
excellent conditiOn $3000
parents (740)379-9110
Housmow
call446·0425
Lot for sale m Aacme,
Goons
S1amese kittens ; bOrn April
(7401992-5858
30 - ready 6-10 S100.00 1997 Dodge Dakota 4x4
Nice mob1le home lots, quiet 3 hardwood bedroom sets, 1 740-949-9015
lruek $8000 740·256-1709
country setting , $115 per hosp1tal bed , all electric,
89 KW T600 400 Cummms
I \In I"' 1'1'1 II...,
month , tncludes water, never used 256- 1426
w/Jake . 90 Ravens Magnum
,\ 11\I"IOCh.
sewer. trash . 740-332·2167
For Sale. Sleeper Couch,
45ft w/s1de Kit &amp; 3 boxes &amp;
R1o Grande area, 3 to 30 Entertainment Center, Desk.
FARM
eQu,pment $20,000 . 740acres lots, some restnphons, Tw1n Bed , K1tchan Table and ~
EQulP!\nNr
709-0336
water &amp; eloctric. (740)245- Cha1rs&amp; queen size bed98 Dodge Durango $9500.
room suite. (740)446-0415
5747
Troy Buill Bronco 5-HP 98 Ford Wmdstar van
I! I \I \I "'
For Sale: Recond1t1o ned Rototiller. Brand New. $500 $3200, 94 N1ssan 4x4 PU
washers, dryers and refrig· 304 675-3824
$3400. 98 Ford F250 314 ton
erators
Thompsons
PU, V8 . auto &amp; air $4700.
Appliance. 3407 Jackson
LIVENIOCK
B&amp;D Auto Sales Hwy 160 N
HOUSE'i
Avenue, (304)675·7388.
446·6865
FOR RENT
1-3 bedroO ms foreclosures
home from $199 month 4%
down 30 years at 8 5% APR
tor hstmg call 1-800·3193323 ext.1709

ROBERT
BISSEll

i

2 bedroom References &amp;
Dapos11. No Pets. (304)675- Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter. OhiO
5162

Moore St Hartford, WV 6
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes se t up rooms.&amp; bath: needs _work
for immed1ate possess1on all N1ce large lot 740-742·
within 15 min of downtown 2535
Gallipolis Rates as low as
N1ce custom bu11t Cape Cod,
6% (74014~6·3218
over 3,000 s~ ft. , close lo
(740)446·376 4 or
10 Room house, 7 acres. town

$279,000 446 2927

Lars&amp;
ACREAGE

3 acres Ready to build
Mason
Co.
$20.000.

Hml~:l&gt;
mR S~LE

10

AT
AT

Walk lo shop &amp; movies Call

US 50 East Athens . Oh•o

In One Week With Us

APART·
JET
1992 Dodge Stealth ES,
BUDGET
A£AAT10N MOTORS
dual overhead cam, 24
JACKSON Repa ired, New &amp; Rebu1tt In valve ,oV-6 black . pw crUise .
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· ""· ale. Ssp
53.300.
Drive from $297 to $383 8()().537-9528.
(7401742-21 69'

bath, all electnc, central ale,
new carpel, water ~nes &amp;
underpinning. S16,000 6758707

Pd 1 mo

•,

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

w\Yw.mydailysentlnel.com ·

Wednesday, June-4, 2003

Working wife, mom yearns·
for some time to call her ow.n
DEAR ABBY: I am a 26year-olc;l wife an:d mother of a
I 6- month-old son. For the
most part, I feel blessed.
However, there are times when
I feel overwhelmed working
and being a wife and mom. I
never seem to get a break.
We live with my husband's
dad because we had some
credit problems and are trying
to get back on our feet. My
.father-in-law thinks I should
do most of the household
'chores and that I should still be
able to find enough time for
myself- but it hasn' t worke&lt;!
out that way.
If I want to spend a few
hours with my friends, · my
husband and his dad think it's
an imposition when I ask them
to baby-sit. On the other hand,
my husband takes off and
hangs out with his friends any
time he feels like it.
· Am I wrong to feel there's a
. double standard. here? Don't
get me wrong - my husband
and son and I do spend some
time together, and we're active
in our church. But I can't help
feeling I need more time for
myself. Please help. OVERLOADED IN THE
'NORTHWEST
DEAR OVERLOADED:
Before any more tensions and
resentments build, it's time to
draw the line and speak up. As
it stands, your father-in-law

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
has a built-in maid and your
husband has reverted to adolescence. Whether you get
church-based or secular marriage counseling, get it NOW
before you cave in under the
stress of your-current situation.
You and your husband need to
get back on your feet and find
a place to call your own.
DEAR ABBY: I am 15 and
have never had a boyfriend.
All
my
friends
have
boyfriends, and I'm the on Iy
girl without a guy. This whole
yeat I've had my eye on a
senior at my school. I try my
best to get his attention.. but he
doesn' t seem to take the hints.
We say "hi" to each other in
the halls, but that's about it.
How can I get him to notice
me, Abby? I mean, I'm really
in love with him and want him
to know how I feel. There's
only one problem - I'm kind
of scared to approach him.
Graduation is almost here and
soon he' II be leaving. What

A_st~ro_g=---r_ap=---h_ _ _ _ _

8Y BERNICE BEDE 0sOL
In the year ahead condit ions

might be such that who you
know wiII become more 1111ponant th an what you know.
It behooves you to stay connected to nld friends as well
as the many casual contacts
you' ll meet.
GEMINI (May 21·June
20) - Don't take it upon
y.,urself to assume that you
· know what others want in the
way of making plans .
Chances are you" ll be way off
base and will meet wi th unhappy responses.
CANCER (.June 21-July
2'2)- Be extra careful where
something of value is at stake
today when dealing with
friends or associates. Th is
could be a delicate area. so
you must treat it very considerately.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - ·
Those who are usuall y
aligned with you could be reluct~nt participants today.
Don t take them for granted
nnd try to force others to comply with your demands .j usI
because they have in the past.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepi. 22)
- Usua lly you're an extremely re spon sible person
and are ever mindful of yo ur
duties. Today, however. if
something apl?cars too distasoeful. you re likely to
sweep it u.nder the rug.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- It might be very easy today
to get drawn into an ende avor

in

\~tlic.:h

y_ou are

c h asi~g

an

elUsJve .nunbow. You U be

srri"'l 10 steer tutnlly dear of
any ente rprise that os chancy
or risky .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Should you be required to make a decision today th at co uld affect loved
ones as wei! as yourself. don't
-rush to JUdgmen t. Check--out
·every angle before making up
your mind.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21)- A number of disruptive situations could pop
up today and cause delays in
yo ur schedule . Keep your
mind flexible and don't let
them get you off track or out
of cont rol.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-

Mr. Hyde
48 Type
1 Loaf
of bear
6 Newspaper 49 Bundle
edition
52 Fancy
11 Nerdy cap 53 Garrulous
12 In va1n
54 Shark
13 Tell jokes
domai~s
14 Still good
55 Opinion
15 Things
(hyph.)
16 Have a
56 Rice field
hunch
17 To be,
DOWN
to Brutus
18 Moray · •
1 Edible
19 No future
roots
2 Storms
23 Statutes
about
21
25 Gear teeth
3 Glossy
26 Several pts.
paint
29 Stylish;
4 Has a cold
22
tor some
5 Fiddle32 Douse
de--24
33 Ice skater
6 Weld
-- Babilonia 7 Slanted
26
34 Monastery
type
dweller
8 Tip of a
27
35 Hesitant
pen ·
sounds
9 Everybody 28
36 Run
10 Bruce -30
.in neutral
of kung fu
38 TV adjuncts 11 Imported
31
40 Lose
cheese
12 Gas or oil
interest
37
41 Shade tree 16 Gala event
39
42 Lunar effect 1 B Big pitcher
46 Like
20 Muule
, 41

should I do?- SCARED TO Abby. - PROUD OF MY
MAKE THE FIRST MOVE GRAD IN VIRGINIA
IN FLORIDA ".
DEAR PkOUD: When
DEAR SCARED·: Give · or someone receives a gmduation
send him a graduation card announcement, one should do
with a sincere note wishing more than "be happy." Good
him luck and leuirg him, know manners dictate that the
you'll miss seeing him on announcement should not be
campus. It will give him an ignored. At the least, a card or
opening and show him that letter of congr'dtulations is in
you like him. If he doesn't order. (Gifts are optional.)
respond after that, . set your
Dear Abby is written bv
s1ghts on a cute JUmor Abigail lim Buren, also known
someone who' II be around for as .Jeanne Phillips. and was
another year.
founded bv her mother.
DEAR ABBY: Graduation Pauline Phiilips. Write Dear
time is here. My senior is bliss- Abby at www.DearAbby.com
fully happy to be graduating o; P. 0. Box 69440, Los
from htgh school. She Angeles, CA 90069.
addressed her own announcements and sent them to fami ly
and friends of her choosing.
J would like to send a message to the recipients of the
millions of announcements
that' will anive .during these
next few weeks: Please take
these announcemehts for what
they are - they are NOT a
request for gifts.
My daughter is thri lled to be
going through this rite of passage. I remember how I felt a
few years ago when I began , ~o matter what
receiving announcements from
.the children of friends, won- direction you turn 1 t;-;--t---t-dering if a present or monetary
gift was expected. Well, TillS you can always find ,, m--t---+-senior's parent wants to say: ,
It In the
Please just be happy for the
graduating student. Thanks, ~ '--~

·- ,__I_ _ _ _ _ _

Jan. 19) - You might think
go1ng in that you ha ve the upper hand in an important arrangement in which you're involved today. but.the opposite
IS apt to be true . Be prepared

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 191

43 Achilles'

epic
Marlo's
dad
45 Units
of energy
47 President's
no
48 Type size
49 Dell or
. Gateway
wares
50 "I knew ill"
51 Sunbeam
52 Hack off

New
business
coming to
Pomeroy
BY

3rd 00\Nl.l

- 87 .
-=_l!_

4th DOWN

•

2ndDOWN ,;

JUOO'S TOTAL

77

55 .

AVERAGE GAME 115-125 '

by JUDD HAMBRICK ·

I'I'E GOT
ON&lt; &gt;~Clll

FlO\!!: IS
FeilD

_.)

Ccwot.A!

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

=

C 20IXl

GREG
IIJON'M
NOQIMN

FRA~tS

FoRO
(OI'POLA
OIRECTEO "ll'E

I!(!IT ISH

GOOFA1liER'

1WICE!

''AI'OCALYPSE

OPtN

AND

'(ES, SuT
FAANCIS fOI'.D
Clli'1'0L~

ALSO D\\lb:;TED
"ON&lt;fPDM
1\iE H&lt;AilT '

U~ed

Ful\ft Syrldlc•lt Inc

Inside .

HEY, ARE WE

~ERE

TO PtCl&lt;
O!J1' A fjOTTLE
OF \/,liNE OP.
OEMTE
CELE9Rtn~?

NOW "!

WHI
CAN'T
.WE
DO

~ .?

i

-,-

ArlO fO~ n\05E w~O
REALL""f UJ ANT A TttRILL .
ll\E NEW
'

"METALLIC THONG':

DO
HA~E

• Olive: orange alumni
meet, See page A2
• Summer camp planned
.at Meigs Museum , See
page A3
• Family Medicine, See
page A3
• Meigs students' acheivements recognized, See
page A7
Rain,

HI: 70., Low:

5011

Yard sale seeks to
First Pomeroy students raise money for
community
center
at school for final day
BY

THAT
ISN'l'

H•nnah Cleek, 4th pade
Pomeroy Elementary

Index
1 Sections - 11 Pllees

Weather

J,

MILES LAYTON

Staff writer

Entered first
g~ade in new
building in 1961
BY BRIAN J' REED
Staff writer
POMEROY - As Scott
Walton and Edie Mees King
entered first grade in the new
Pomeroy Elementary ~chool ,
m September, 196 1, the world
was gmppling with the reality
of the new Berlin Wall.
Bob Dylan was about to
make his big musical debut in
New York City, and a summer
filled with civil rights demonstrations in Alabama and
Louisiana was just ending.
But for the two" new students. entering a new school
building for the first time,
events happening elsewhere
across the United States and

around the world were not as
important as the adventure
awaiting them - their tirst
day of school ever.
With new book satchels and
unsharpened pencils, paper
and crayons. Walton entered
the first grade cli1ss of Farie
Erlewine. and King in the
class of Dorothy Barnes
Woodard. They would complete'Six years there under the
leadership of Principal Ralph
Spencer, and, Iuter, Ed
Bartels.
They would later go on to
become the first fres hmen
class entering Meigs High
School, and graduated there
in 1973.
Now, an era h&lt;L~ ended.
Students left the building
for the last time Wednesday,
and Walton and King were
there for that, too.
They were there at the
beginning, in 1961, and there

at the end, in 2003. as the
school was closed in favor of
another new' building, the
Meigs Elementary School in
Rut!and. which will open in
August.
Aside fium being his old grade
school "stomping grounds,'' the
building holds even more special memories for Walton.
When hi s fa mil y first
moved to Pomeroy, his fanlily
home sat on the lot where the
school building now stands.
In fact. the steps to the
school's front doors are located in the very spot where
steps once led to the Walton
home.
" It's a sad day," Walton.
who now serves on the Meigs
Local Board of Education,
said.
"To see students leavi ng the
building for the last time gives
one a degr~e of reflection.''

SYRACUSE-Aoommunity
''yard sale" and auction is being
held Saturday to mise money for
.renovation of the old Syracuse
Elementary School which will
soon serve as a community center.
Those seeking hidden treasures
can start' at 8 a.m. in the school's
•· gymnastum.
'1 am elated with the amount
of things we have. The gym is so
. full that we have had to start
using other rooms in the school to
put things," Carol Jean Adams,
chainnan of the Syracuse
Community Organization's ways
and means cornmjttee, said.
Among the items are a I00year-old bed, lawn equipment, a
juicer that is still in the box, stereo
equipment, bicycles, some board
games and a few vintage glass
bottles.
At I p.m., veteran auctioneer
Dan Smith will auction off what'

ever remains.
"Everyone in the community is
helping. The camaraderie has
been exceptional," Adams said
She hopes the sale will provide
enough money to put tables and
chairs in the classrooms and help
out with other longrange plans ·
the board has for the building.
She said 30 to 40 volunteers
helped to put the yard sale together.
The elementary school, whicH
served the village for decade~.
was closed nearly two years ago
when
a new Southern
Elementary School was built_in
Racine.
·
Bob' Wmgett, a fonner Ohio
Valley Publishing Co. publishei,
purchased the old school last
September. He donated the building to the village which transferred owrmhip to the Syta:USC
Community Organization earlier.
this year. .
·
Wingett. the organization's
president, anended grade school
there.

Please see Sale. AS

Raiders on horseback plot Historical ·marker
sweep through Pomeroy
to·be dedicated

AN'ffil l NCr

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies ·
Sports

sons receiving services are benefiting from those services.
··we're very pleased with the
recognition of treatment quality that this accreditation represents," said Wellspring chief
operations officer John Wick
said.
"In addition to · recognizing
our quality of care, CARF has
also provided us with guidance
regarding how to improve the
already high quality of services
that we provide to our clients.
We welcome this input and are
already striving to put this
guidance into practice,"
The center was founded in
1986, and has treated hundreds
of clients frpm I0 different
countries since its inception.
The center is also available
as an informational resource to
civic, church, and law·enforcement leadership.

Scott Walton and Edie Mees King look at a "Wall of Memories" at Pomeroy Elementary
School on Wednesday, the last day of school in the 42-year-old bu ilding. Both were members of the school 's first first-grade class. {Brian J. Reed)

BY

1 SUPPOSE I{QU
CAN READ MY MIND..

REED

ALBANY - The rece nt
accreditation of Albany's
Well spring
Retreat
and
Resource Center recognizes
programs that treat survivors of
cults.. The facility, located in
rural Meigs County, is considered the only residential cult
treatment center in the United
States.
The
Commission
on
Accreditation of Rehabilitation
Facilities awarded the center
· accreditation for one year for
its program of rehabilitation of
former cult members, and for
its program for treating children and adolescents.
The commission said the
accreditation outcome is awarded to organizations that, on balance, demonstrate that the per-

J.

MILES LAYTON

Staff writer

SO '(00 KNOW JUST
WHAT I'M iHtNKtN6, 14UH?

J.

Staff writer

DIRECTIONS : Make a 2· lo 7·1etler word from the !titters 0 11 each y&amp;rd~ne .
Add points to eaCfl word or 1ener usr.o scoring Olreclions at right Seven-lener
words gel 111 DQ.poonl bonus. All words can be found in Webster's New Wortd
~ llt~ge Oic1ional)l .
JUDD'S SOLUTION TQMORROW
;
·~

STILl ...

0
0
0

41h DOWN

.. l-&lt;ll

~T

BY BRIAN

MILES LAYTON

ordinance will allow Charlie
Ritchie to get the final
approval necessary for a building permit from the state to
begin construction on Ritchie's
Quick Lube. Specializing in oil
changes and lube jobs,
Ritchie's Quick Lube will be
built withi n a month and
employ at least four people.
· According to Charles Knight,
who was representing Ritchie,
there was concern that approval
for the variance would be
delayed or denied because the
building is in the t)oodplain.
Knight said John. Anderson,
village administrator, told his
client that · he would riot
approve constmction of the
business because of the existing laws prohibit construction.
Knight said he understood
that Anderson was concerned
for the village and doing his
job, but a business of this type
was an exception because it
would basically built in such a
way so that it is higher than the
floodpl ain.
The operational nature of the
business was such that even if
there was a major flood, the
business would not be ·as
affected because essentially it
.• is a large open garage.
Mayor Victor Young III and
council members agreed that
the ne w business would be
welcome in Pomeroy.

Jl'dDOWN .

mag~ ·

Residential
cult treatment
center accredited

124.
A variance in the zoning

2r.:I OOWN

297

'

Village
POMEROY .
Council gave special -permission for a change in the existing floodplain ordinance to
allow a new business to be gin
construction along State Route

TAURUS (April 211-May
20) - The only way you' ll
ge l the support of others in a
career matter today is 1.0 first
assure them that there will be
as much in it for them as there
is for you.

,.

J.

w__ ,nydailysentinel.com

Staff writer

for sul·cess.

1st DOWN

,

.

_____J

Answe1r
to
previous
Word
Scrim-

THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 2003

44

pating in business or pleasure

PISCES (•'eb. 20-March
211) ..:.... Unless you are very
certain that you're ab le to so.
don't make any prom ises to

AVERAGE GAME 191)-200

Dr. Frankenstein's ·
gofer
Recipe
qtys.
Simdy's
reply
Ear cleaner
(hyph./
"Voila." .
(hyph,)
Ooor part
Clothes or
spice-Bobby-of hockey
Votes in
Fed the
furnace
Greasy

today. but don· t try to mix U1e
two. Each will fal l short of
their mark if you attempt to
spli t the concentration needed

·

I

·~...

gret your pledge later when
delivery IS expected and it's
not that easy.
ARIES (March 21-April
19)- Stick to either partici-

. AQUAKIUS (jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Un less you're vety
diligent today you might let
yo urself be jockeyed into a
positi on whe re you' ll end up
bei ng subservient to the demands ' of ano ther. Think
"equality'' in all your d.eci-

'1.

"

I

another today. You might re -

and don· t .~et careless .

sio rt~;.

cp[acG?) f(; '}~· ThimJ~ f, JfJ, .Jll~

ACROSS .

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0 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY
Confederate Gen. John Hunt
Morgan and a handful of his
men will be raiding severdl
downtown businesses at II
a.rn. Friday.
Main Street. between
Butternut and Sycamore
streets, and Court Street
· wi II be shut down so reennactors on horseback can
have the full run of the town.
Traffic wiII be rerouted down
Second Street.
Darrell Markijohn, who
wi ll be portraying Gen.
Morgan, said Friday's raid is a
kickoff for a larger raid in
which 150 to 200 horsemen

are expected to invade Meigs
County in September. He said
the raiders are rested, · ready
and waiting for Friday's event.
Markijohn pmised the community for ils support, especially those who wi ll be at the
mercy of the raiders.
The raiders on horseback
will "rob" Farmer's Bank
drive-through. Tellers say ·
they don' t know whal to
expect.
Markijohn said an undisclosed amount of cash in the
form _of Union greenbacks
will be taken in the raid.
Bolts of fabri c will be
stolen from The Fabric Shop.
The raiders, who have been
in the Civil War movie "Gods
and Genemls," also will take
shoes from Chapman Shoes.

and are expected to chowdown at the Court Street GrilL
But before they get too carried away with raiding the vilIage, a nasty surprise in store,
village rs say.
The raiders also wi ll
attempt to steal Jane Ann
Williams· purse while she is
working at Williams lnsurarce.
Wi lliams, no mere· damsel
in distress, may put up a tight
to keep her purse frnm falling
into Confederate hands. Soldiers
who are undeterred by her fist s
and harsh words will be greeted by a contingent of bluecoated Yankee soldiers led by
James Diler. .
·
Sensing possible doom. the
raiders will head off into the
noonday sun to mid Meigs
Cotmty again in early September.

Staff report

Comm ission's Longaberger
Legacy lnitiati ve and the
Wilkesville Village Council,
.
Vi nton County.
WILKESVILLE
A
The program will open with
Morgan' s Raid historical · the Wilkesville American
marker will be dedicated in
ceremonie s at 7 p.m. Friday Legion , Ladies Auxiliary and
the Sons of the Legion of the
on the Wilkesville Village Joseph Freeman Post 476 preSquare under sponsorship of senting the colors and rais ing
the Vinton County Chamber the flag .
of Commerce.
The Vinton County High
Guest speaker will be
School Band will play the
Darrell Markijohn of Canton, national anthem and ot"er
a member of the Ohio
''
Bicentennial Commission. He patriotic songs, and students ·
.
of Wilton Elementary School
is coordinating the Morgan's will lead in the pledge to the
·Raid re-enactment to be held
in Vinton arid Meigs .counties fla~ichard A Hagerty, a forSe~~·e;:~rker is sponsored by mer Wilton School principal,
the Ohio Hi storical Society, a coach, and a Vinton
Ohio
Bicentennial
Please see Marker, AS ·
the

I

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Diabetes Support Groups

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The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, June 8 from 2:00 · 4:00 pm at the Hospilol's Picnic Shelter.
PICNIC I Pleo~e bring one covered dish if you plan 1o ollend .
Featured speaker · Jennifer Sheets, HMC Nutrition Services Department,
who will tolk about "Healthy Summer Meals·.

MEDICAL CENTER

In Meigs County: Thursday, June 19 ot 10:30 am - Meigs &amp;lnior Center

Diabetes SeN-Management Paogram

-

Saturday, June

14 from 8:00am - 5:00pm in the French 500 Room

Discover the Holzer Difference
www.holzer .org

'

coli

(740) 446•5010

.

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