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I
Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

topple Reds, B1

Thursday, June 5, 2003

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 53. No . 192

www.mydaily•entinel .com

FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 2003

Fee increase to benefit county's general fund
'

BY BRIAN

J.

. Meig s
Counly
Commissioners will hold a
second public hearing on June
25 on a proposal 10 increase
lhe conveyance fee charged
on all deed transfers through·
the county auditor.
The charge is now levied at
$1 per $1 ,000 paid for real
estate, but under a .. proposa l

REED

Slaff wriler ·
POMEROY - A proposed
increase in fees charged by
Meigs Coumy in transferring
real estate could generate an
additional $42.000 for the
county's ge neral fund.

now being considered by
commissioners. the fee would
triple to $3 per $ 1,000 paid.
Meig s County Auditor
Nancy Parker Campbell said
the county collected $21,135
last year on the conveyance
fee collection. and to date this
year. has collected $8,406 .
Collections lhrough the past

live years have been consistent, Campbell said.
Fees collected through the
conveyance are paid into the
general fund, Campbell said,
and would help in alleviating
some of the cash !low problems the county now faces.
Other business
Commissioners agreed to

lease a 'corner of land owned
in Chester, near tpe historic
Chester Courthouse. to the
Veterans of Foreign War Post
9053 in Tuppers Plains, for
the erection of a monument
honoring local veterans of
foreign wars.
The land, according to
Commissioner Jim Sheets, is

.

located adjacent to the
Chester llrehouse.
The lease. as approved at
Thursday's regul ar meeting,
will be in e!Tect for 99 years;
at a cost of $1.
Commissioners
also ,
.approved
appropriations
adjustments for County
Engineer and juror fees.
'

Mayor decrees:.'No Meigs Council on Aging celebrates 30 years
more favoritism'
BY.CHARLENE HOEFliCH

News editor

2001 FOCUS ZX3
Sunroof, CD, AC, Alum Wheels

2002 NEON SXT
Power, CO, Sunroof,
12,000 miles

200.1 SABLE LS PREM
Leather, CD,- Power Equip,
19,000 miles

2003 RAM 1500 QUAD
4x4, 5.9 Engine, Power, Trailer Tow

•&amp;,950.00

'9,950.00

5 11,950.00

:S 23,950.00

2002 WINDSTAR SEL
Leather, All Power, 15,000 miles

5 18,950.00

2002 MAXIMA SE
Sunrqof, Auto, Loaded
'

'17,950.00

'

\

2003 SATURN VUE
AWD, V6, Auto, Power Equip

2002 THUNDERBIRD
264 miles, Gott See This One!

5 18,950.00

5 35,950. 00

Repeatparkingucketoffend~rs

and unpaid water bills targeted
BY J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer
POMEROY- Mayor
Victor Young Ill told village
council Wednesday night that
there will be no favoritism
for anyone who does not pay
parking tickets or water bills.
· Young said motorists who
park their cars for more than
the two-hour limit allowed
in downtown Pomeroy are in
violation of the law.
The mayor said he is aware of
all the nicks people use to avoid
getting a ticket and has qn idea of
who is doing what. He has
instructed the police depamnent.
which checks the parking meters,
to tow vehicles parked longer
than the law allows - especially
those of motorist~ who already
have overdue tickets.
Councilman George '
Wright expressed concern
for the people who work
downtown and for any
p01ential cu stomers that shop
there. He was worried that if
a shopper receives a ticket

and it results in towing. the
shopper might not want to
return to Pomeroy.
Young indicated that while the
village could enforce a zero-tolerance factor for everyone. it was
ll10II! concerned with habitual
offenders with "hundreds of dolian;" in unpaid parking tickets.
The mayor said the people
who routinely ignore parking
tickets and work downtown
are more at risk of being
towed than someone like a
potential shopper who
acquires one ticket.
The mayor also plans some
changes in the collection of
water bills.
He said there are residents
and businesses with large,
unpaid water bills.
"From here on out," anyone
who receives a shut-off notice
who fails 10 pay the water bill,
will have their water shut off.
The mayor, who has a
large family, said that if he
has to pay his water bills,
then so should everyone else.

Inside

2003 F150 sc 4x4
XLT, 5.4 Engine, Auto, 3,000 miles

5 23,950.00

2001 TUNDRA LIMITED
VB, 4 Door, Full Power, 4x4

2003 JEEP WRANGLER
Auto, 4x4, AC, 12,000 miles

2001 TAURA,S SES
Leather, Power, Alum Wheels

• Senate set to vote on ·
$49.3 billion spending
plan, See page Al
• New pastor to be
installed at lutheran
churches, See page A&amp;
• Jobless claims rise to
five-week high, See page

AB

'1 0,450. 00

'•

2003 DAKOTA QUAD 4X4
Auto, VB, Power Equip, SL T

*21,950.

00

2001 ESCAPE X~ T 4X4
Auto, Leather, Sunroof, CD

2003 F150 SUPERCREW
Auto, 4x4, 5.4 Engine, Power Equip

5 16,500.00

525,950. 00

2002 F150 SC 4X4
XLT, Auto, Full Power

*21,950.

Natalie Ma~ar,
Southern Elementary

00

Index
2 Sections - 16 Paces

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

'12 950.00

372-7560

2003 MERCURY SABLE
Power Equip, AC, Alum Wheels,
7000 miles

'13 950.00

2002 FOCUS SE
Auto, Power Equip, Cruise

•&amp;,950.00

2003 CHEV S10 ZR5
Auto, AC , Power, 4x4 389 miles

1

'20,950.00

1-77
Exit 132

86
B6
A4

Movies

AS

. Sports

2003 GRAND AM SE
Auto, V6, Power Equip

A3
83-5

Editorials

· Weather

of

Please see Seniors, A5

Joyce Bunch, right, and liamona Hawk who have been with the Meigs County Council on Aging
since its beginning. look over scrapbooks of articles from the early years. They were joined by
Susan Oliver, longtime executive director, for a trip down memory lane. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Landslide

Women seek relief
from flood problems
BY

J.

81-3

A2

_o 2003 Ohio Valley Publi5hing Co.

..

Attention Cancer Survivors!

FOR LIFE

August I 5 and 16
at .the Gallipolis City Park

4 ...

MILES lAYTON

Staff writer
POMEROY- Two women.
victims of recenl !loading,
carne before Village Council
Wednesday to ask what is
being done to solve the recurring problem.
Melinda Strong, a rcsidem
of Mulberry Avenue said her
niece's car was "totaled" during a recent flood . She said at
least'three feet of water ruined
the vehicle, which was parked
in front of her house.
St,rong said that if the vii·
!age would just dig a large
ditch in that area, the water
would have some place to go.
Tammy Sayre, the mother
of nine children. lives at 285
Mulberry Street.
"My house was the main
house that got hit," she said.
Sayre said there was a lot of
damage. A lawnmower. weed
trimmer and several toys were
damaged in the latest flood .
"Last night (Tuesday). I was
chasing
my kids' toys down
A landslide occurred .Thursday night behind the Meigs County Sheriff's office in Pomeroy.
Mulberry
Avenue," she said.
There was minor damage to a patrol car, .but since there is a $2,500 insurance deductible,
Sayre's freezer. which was
the Sheriff's Department said there would be no repair work done on the vehicle. Small landfull
of meat. wa~ destroyed and
slides like this can destabilize the ground and rocks on the bluffs behind the Sheriff's
will
be hard to replace on the
Department which could lead to a larger landslide in the future, (J. Miles Layton)
wages she earns from Wendy's

Partly cloudy, HI: 70., Low: 50s

'22,950.00

POMEROY - • Thirty
years of service to elderly
Meigs Countians will be eel·
ebrated Tuesday by the
Meigs Coun1y Council on
Aging al the Senior Cilizens
Center.
" What
We
Do
Makes
a
Difference,"
will be the
theme of the
observance
which will
get underway .at II
a. m.
and
f e a l u r e Betty Monteomery
auditor
state Beny Montgomery as the
speaker.
Montgomery's career has
focused .on protecting Ohio's
most vulnerable citizens,
including the elderly. She has
prosecuted criminals, helped
victims. protected taxpayers.
reshaped Ohio law, and contin·
ues to provide professional services to local government agencies, such as Councils on Aging.
There will also be remarks
from ·representatives of
Senators Mike DeWine , and
George
Voinovich.. and

RE~Y

A

Restaurant. She has applied for
relief from several agencies
with no success, she said.
Mayor Victor Young lli told
her the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA)
will not provide relief for the
village residents because it
could care less about such . a
small place.

''Last night (1Uesday), I .
!l'as chasing my kids' toys
tkJJn Mulberry Aven~te;'-'
·Ternn\y . . .
·Pi);;Ntoy

rwaldlnt

Young said FEMA places
the blame at the doorstep of
the villa~e for not clearing the
streams 111 the area.
The mayor told both women
the village is doing all that is
possible to clear the streams.
Young, Councilman George
Wright and Street Supervisor
Jack Krauter have been working diligently to see where the
problem is coming from and

Please see Flooding. AS

,

And those inf!!rested in the.fight against cancer•

•I

The 2003 Gallic County Relay for life will be held
MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

A cancer survivors' reception will take place before the opening lap.
All are invited to attend and join us in the fight against cancer!

www.holzer.org

For more information, please call Chairperson Bonnie McFarland at (7401446·5679•

.

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Presbyterian minister
could lose ministry and
church membership
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
minister who has continued
marrying gay couples after a
churcl1 court convicted him of
viola tin g denomination law
by pertorming those ceremonies cou ld be removed
from his ministry and the
Presbyterian Church [USA)
· at a meeting of ministers and
church commissioners.
The Re v. Stephen · Van
Kuiken, minister of Mount
Auburn Presbyterian Church
in Cincinnati. was found
guilty April 21 of violating
church law by a court of the
Cincinnati Presbytery, a cluster of Presbyterian churches
in the area.
Ministers and elder commissioners of the Cincinnati
Presbytery will meet Julie 16
to act on a motion by its ministry committee . The committee is recommending that the
Presbytery find that Van
Kuiken has renounced the
jurisdiction
of .
the
Presbyterian Church (USA),
Melissa Bane Sevier, head of
the Cincinnati Presbytery,
said Thursday.
"If the motion is approved,
the Rev. Van Kuiken would
no longer be a member of the
Pre sbyterian Church (USA),"
she said.
More than 200 ministers and
elder commissioners, the voting members of the Cincinnati
Presbytery, are expected to
attend the June 16 meeting.
Sevier declined to comment
further before the meeting.
Van Kuiken said Thursday
night that the move came as a
shock to him.
'Tm really surprised," he
said. "This basically bypasses
the judicial system."
Van Kuiken has appef!led
the church coun's April 21
ruling to the denomination's

next highest level of courts,
the permanent judicial commission of the synod that .
oversees Presbyterian churches in Ohio and Michigan.
That body has not yet ruled
on ibe matter.
Van has repeatedly said that
he would continue to marry
same-sex
couples
and
believes that same-sex marriages are Christian unions.
Van Kuiken said he feels an
obligation to continue pressing the issue in hopes the
Presbyterian Church (USA )
will slop what he calls it,.; discrimination against homosexuals .
The highest Presbyterian
court ruled in 2000 that minislers may bless same-sex
unions. but cannot marry the
couples. The church follows
. the biblical interpretation generally held by major Christian
denominations that marriage
can be a covenant only
between a man and a woman .
The church's constitution
says that a governing body of
a jurisdiction inay presume
that a c hu rch officer has
renounced church jurisdiction
if the officer "after consultation and notice. persists in a
work disapproved by the governing body." the Presbytery
said in a statement Thursday.
Van Kuiken said he and
members of his congregation
wi ll attend the meeting and he
plans to present his case.
"I am hopeful that they
(Presbytery) would not want
to act so quickly and bypass
the due process," he said.
add ing thai he may file with
the synod for an emergency
· stay of the Presbytery's action.
"If they vote to remove me
as a member, it's like an execution," he said. "It can't be
undone later."

Hospital moving.out
·of city for expan·sion
PAINESVILLE (AP) Lake
Hospital
System
announced it is buying more
than 30 acres and will move
LakeEast Hospital about five
miles south of the city.
The' new, unnamed hospital
is expected to cost at least $50
million, ·which includes the
cost of purchasing the Concord
Township land. The move will
occur within seven years.
For Painesville, losing
LakeEast will cost $1 million
a year in income taxes, utility
payments and fees, City
Manager Rita McMahon said.
"It will be a huge loss," she
said. "It baffles me that in a
time when people are investing in urban renewal they
would choose ·to leave the
city."
Hospital officials said
Thursday that the mCJVe will
give them an opportunity .to
build a modem facility within
a I5-minute drive of more
Lake Coun1y residents. The
,.

new hospital will be located
near the Interstate 90 and
Ohio 44 interchange.
· Steve Karns, Lake Hospital
System senior vice president
of administrati ve services,
said the Concord Township
site offers ease of access for
residents and room to expand
in the future.
"It's also an excellent si te
for attracting physicians and·
careg ivers that commute
longer distances," he said.
Hospital and city official s
have formed a 10-member
committee to lind other uses for
the old hospital near downtown
or to redevelop the, propeny.
Concord Township Trustee
Caroli ne Luhta said the townshi p welcomes the move .
"I've heard nothing but
positive comments from residents,". she said.
Lake Hospital System has
seven faci lili es in Lake
County, including LakeWes't
Hospital in Willoughby.

Judge catches juror
in lie; sends her to jail
CINCIN NATI (AP) - A
j udge jai led a woman who
·said she was so opposed to
serving on .a jury that she
would rather be locked up.
The judge ordered Rache lle
Thomas, 30, jailed for nine
days, the remainder of her jury
duty, after catching her in a lie.
Hamilton County Common
Pleas Judge Dennis Helmick
cited Thomas for conternpt of
· court after she told him she
couldn't serve because she had
to take her son to the doctor. .
On her jury questionnaire:
Thomas said she was not mar-

ried and had no children.
' When the j udge questioned
Thomas about ·her sto ry
Wednesday, she admitted she
"possibly" madei't up.' . ·
"!just feel really uncomfot1able with the court system."
she told the judge. "It's just a
big burden for me to make
these kinds of decisions that are
life-altering."
"You blatantly violated the
trust everybody placed in you,"
Helmick told the suburban
Forest Park woman. 'There's a
penalty to pay for that blatant
violation of tnist."

..

Celebtdllng'spedtll dtlys
nit/1 yolit
Sunday Times-Sentinel

..

PageA2
Friday, June·6, 2003
'

Senate set to vote on
$49.3 billion Spending plan
I

BY JoHN McCARTHY
Associated Press
COLUMBUS - The Senate\
version of the two-year state budget moved closer to passage
. on Thursday, selling up completion of the five-month task
beginning next week.
Little debate was expe~ led
on the $49.3 billion spending
plan. as Republican leaders
secured the votes of enough
Democrats to send the bi ll to a
com mittee to work out differences with the House.
"We have before us a pi\siti\·e budget in some extremely
difficult times," Sen. Rill
Harris. who guided the btrdget
through
hi s
Finance
Commi.ttee, told fellow senators. ''However, we have pro-

'

•

duced a budget that meets
Ohio's needs and invests in
Ohio's future.''
Senate President Doug
White needed 17 votes in the
33-mernber Senate to pass the
budget. but several of the 22
Republicans objected to the
two-year, penny-per-dol lar
sales tax included in the plan.
The four Democrats on the
committee voted to recommend the bill for passage after
winning approval for increases in subsidized chi ld care,
health insurance for lowincome adults and a program
that helps the elderly stay in
tlu;_ir own homes. _.
.
. As niany as six Democrats
could vote for the bill
Thursday, Democratic leader
Sen. Greg DiDonato said.

The House is expected to
reject the Senate changes, .
which include about $500 million more than the House version for educatiori and a separation of the sales tax increase
from a proposal to ask voters
to allow video slot machines
in Ohio 's race tra~ks. The
Senate put that in a separate
resolution.
If the House rejects the
Senate version. a conference
committee of .representatives
· and senators would begin
work on a compromise, likely
next Wednesday. Speaker
Larry Householder said.
One concern is the accuracy
of income projections over the
two years beginning July I,
Householder said. Gov. Bob
Taft's Oftice of Budget and

Management said, Tuesday it
whs projecting a $200 million
deficit fo r the last morllh of the
ct;rren 1 fi sea I year.
Tom Johnson, Taft's budget
director. said the deficit likely
would be resolved by cutting
agency spending and delaying
ihe payment or the state's
bilb, among other things.
Householder said lawmakers should have a better picture of the health of Ohio's
economy next week.
·'That will give us a little
extra 1ime to sort of run the
traps on some questions we
have and one of those is going
to, be the revenue calculations
that the OBM has made," Householder said Wednesday.
Taft must sign the budget by'
June 30.

Defender: Nearly fifth of death
row inmates to·claim retardation
COLUMBU (AP) - Nearly
one-fifth of Ohio inmates facing
execution are expected to claim
tlmt they me mentn.lly Jetanded
and therefore should be spared.
Up to 40 inmates of the 204
prisoners on death row are
expected to file the claims by
Monday's court deadline, Public
Delender DJvid A. Bodiker said.
Nineteen inrimtes have filed so
far.
"We believe that there is substantial evidence of mental retardation and that these prisoners
should be relea&gt;ed from the sentence of death," said Bodiker,
whose ollice is working with private attorneys statewide to file
the claims.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled

Students
let loose
animals in
high school
MASON, Ohio (AP) Some Mason High School
students thought it would be
fun to turn loose a
. menagerie of birds and animals in the school as a
senior prank.
But the prank went bad
and a peacock died. ·
Now, up to I0 seniors
could be barred from graduation ceremonies and four
may be charged with theft
and animal cruelty, officials
in this town 19 miles northeast of Cinci nnati said on
Wednesday.
Warren County Sheriff
Tom Ariss said the peacock,
rabbit and live chickens
were among several birds
and animals stolen from a
nearby farm.
Not all the stolen animals
made it to school, Ariss said.
A second peacock was missing and a kitten and second
rabbit were found off the
school &amp;rounds and returned
to the owner. ·
School officials said the
peacock died after suffering
a broken leg and other
injuries.
"I don't thi nk the kids
understand how destructive
and disruptive these things
can be," said school district
spokeswoman Shelly Benesh
Hausman. 'They may think
it's fun, but they don't realize
the consequences. We take a
dim view of this activity."
The offending students
apparently brought the animals in with them when
they arrived tor classes on
Tuesday and turned them
loose as they walked in, she
. said. ·
"Some of these animals
just started appearing in the
building," Benesh Hausman
said. Administrators and
teachers rounded them up .

••

a year ago that executing someone who is mentally retarded violates the Constitution. After Ohio
inmate Gregory Loll appea!OO
l.llli:r tltt ruling, tte Ohio Supren~
Coort in I:lecemberdelayed his execution indefinitely and gave
defense attorneys six months to
bring foJWard any other claims.
Lou, from Easi Cleveland, had
been scheduled to die last August
for a 1986 murder.
Two immtes scheduled to be
executed this month - · Ernest
Martin and Lewis Wtlliams of
Cleveland- have filed claims.
James V. Canepa, chief deputy
of criminal justice tor Attorney
General Jim Petro. is skeptical
that so mm1y inmates would be
mentally re~.

·Tite number should not be Rehabilitation and Correction.
confused with the legitimacy of · Booiker said testing is one of
those claims," he said. "!'hey are the obstacles to proving a claim.
tiling to pre;e~&gt;'e their right to
The u.S. Supreme Co.urt says
ap!Jeal."
it must be detennined whether
Cm1epa says documents written by Martin and Williams the inmate was mentally retarded
prove that they are not mentally when the crime wa&gt; committed
retarded. Martin wrote and copy- or during trial. Most crimes of
righted a 236-page autobiogm- which death row inmates were
phy and plans a sequel. Wdlian1s convicted are 10 or more years
liled a 62-page legal brief in a old and the structured prison
federal appeals court asserti ng his environment might make prisoninnocence and violation of his ers perform bener on JQ tests
constitutional rights.
today; Bodiker said.
Testing and evaluations done
when inmates are first imprisPsychologists who specialize
oned indicate that no death row in criminal cases have told
inmates are mentally retarded, Bodiker 's office that no tests exist
said JoEUen Culp, spokeswomtm that can measure what someone's
for the Ohio Department of . intelligen~'C was many years ago.

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Quality Window Systems, Inc.

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.qua

www.jimsfarmequipment.com

INTERNET SERVICES

AUTOMOTIVE

BlueStarr Network

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Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

MEDICAL

www.turnplkeflm.com

Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org

BUSINESS TRAINING

Holzer Clinic
Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

www.holzerclinic.com
Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

COMMUNITY

Yokeyes Birthwear ·

lh/CH•RLENE HOEFI.ICH
News editor

the piano. She also preSented
1948- Betty
Pickens Durst Wilkinson.
several patriotic songs dur- Harri s. Reedsville ; Harry
Columbus; James W. Oiler.
ing dinner.
Canter. Doyleltown: Virgil Gallipolis:
Carl
Circle.
Alumni attending from their Norris , MI . Vernon: Tom Racine: peggy Glenn Duffy;
RACINE _ Nearly 200
Wolfe, Racine.
Leanml Bre.we r Beeg le.
Racine/Southern alumni and respective classes were:
guests gat hered in the
1930- Wilm a
Styler,
1949- Eilcen Cartwria ht , Racine; Janice Smith Salser.
Southern High School gym- Waterford.
_
Nashville. Term; oe Stobart, Racine: James Brace. ·nasium May 24 for their
1931-Ed Howell, Flushi ng. Portland. : Carr llj Cleek. Crown City ; Larry Salser..
annual reunion.
1933-Harold
Roush, Columbu s.
1
·
Chil licothe ; Helen Phiilips
. 1&lt;JSO- Dell a Sauer, Pt. Turnbull, Hartford, W.Va .;
"Ohio Cele brates 200 Elkview, W.Va.
years, 1803-200 3" was the
1935- Mary Louise Ours, Pleasant,W:Va.; Barbara A. Linda .H ill Turley, Rac ine:
theme of the reunion with a Huntington, W.Va.
Norris, Mt. Verhon ; Aaron Kay
Willford
Graham.
1936-Elva
Brinker Wolfe, Racine; Ruth Bradford Syracuse. •
.red, whi te and blue co lor
scheme being used in the Barnifz, Pomeroy ; Mary Frank. Racine.
1965- Roger
Sayre,
1951
-Eula
Roberts Columbus: Judi th Sayre
decorations. Hosts fo r the · Virginia
cele bration
were · Lisa Easterday,
Hensler, Middleport.
Brace, Crown City; Lucille
Woods, Junie Maynard, Bob Racine ;
1952- Dora Birch Lipps, Ph·ll·
. .
1 Ips, C 0 1um bus,) Donna
Janice
Edna Wolfe
Little
Hockin g;
.and Nancy Grt.~eser, Tom K n 0 p p ,
Hayman. Simpson, Pasedena, Dail ey Watson. Racine; Jim
Weaver, and Dennis and Racine.
Texas·, Marilyn Brewer Beall, Hamm ,
Blanchesler;Tom
Cindy Wolfe . The Southern
Weave
s
· Gor don
Columbus; Gene Well&gt;,
r. yrac use;
I 9 3 8juniors served baked steak D i x i e ,
Osseo, Mich.; Gary L. Gibbs, Fisher,
Syrac use;
Ellen
Racine.
Schuler Swartwout, Balt ic.
dinner. A quiz aboiut ohio Spencer'
and
some
well-known
1953-George
The iss, SR.D.;· Nancy par ker Gruese r.
Ohioans was conducted by S m i t h ,
:
Belpre:
Ei leen -.Hamlin, . acrne·.
Junie
Beegle Maynard, calss . Portland
1-,''66- 1.rnua
· ·' Ad ams E~ vans ,
Kirkwood, N.Y.: Dana
Van
of
1991.
H a z e I
Hi lld ore
Jordan Hill Meter, Belpre; Joan Brewer Racine :
Jean
Sauva~e
Bob Grue5er gave ~he we!- McKelvey,
w
s
~
. Daniell, Cane! Winche ster·, E eave r,R · yracuse ; Denny
come, Rogt:r . Sayre ave the
Portland; Frank Cleland, Don na
Ward
Larkins, "vans, acme.
invocation, and Shri.ley · R a c i n e :
R b B bG
Portland:
Larry
Birch, R 1967
Johnson recognized the earli· - o en o rucsc r,.
Highland.
Colo.:
Libby Racme;
Ra y R. Profitt Sr. ,
·
est graduate present, Wilma Edith Wolfe
Sayre Styer, class of 1930; the G r i m m ,
Diddle
Fisher,
Racine:
acrne.
one traveling the farthes t. C uya hoga;
Harrold Ci rcle, Racine; Dan
1968- Gcne D. Hud son.
Paul Arno tt of )Portland Raymond
P. Smith , Racine! Joseph Pete Galli polis.
Oregon ; reunion classes. and F u r be e ,
Thoren, Jr., Rac ine.
197 1- Don Smith, Racine;
eight members of the class of Racine.
1954- Sh irley
Stobart Gary Smith, Racine: Jumes G.
2003 attending, Amy Lee ,
I 9 3 9Robert.
. Lexi.ngton ,Ky.; Profitt. Virginia Beach , Va .
Norman Roush, Charleston,
1972- William L. Cle land,
Tom Theiss, Jordan Hil l, Way ne 0.
Brandon Smith, Mariam El R o u s h ,
W Va.; Joyce Hart Manuel, Racine.
Da Baja, Rachel Chapman Racirre.
Mason , W,Va.; Jane Gilmore · 1973-Jetf Hill, Racine.
and Jen Hill.
I 940Amy Lee
Beegle. Racine.
1975- Tammy Roush Hill ,
Also recognized we(e those Paul
F.
1956-S hi rley
Ynonne Racine.
who have served in the armed Arnott, Portland, Oregon: Beegle, Racine,; Janet Beegle
!976- Vi cky Hy se ll El. forces . Scholarships were George . C. Foster, Pittsburgh. Roush, Charl esto n, W.Va.; Dabaja, Racine
awarded to Jordan Hill , $500, Pa .; Albert R, Wolfe, Ruben Beegle. Racine.
1977-Bobb i
Chapman
and Amy lee, $ 1,000.
Olmstead.
1957- l'lon
Johnson, Hill , Racine; Lisa Allen
1941 - Bro.oks Sayre. Portland; T. Dwain Sayre. Woods . Syracuse.
Guests Jeanette Oldaker,
Robert
!97S-Peny K. Hill. Larry G.
band director, and Kim Syracuse ; Carrdll R. Norris. McCutchenville;
Romi ne, president of the Syracuse.
Euler, Pinch , W.Va.; Claudia Fisher, lim Thoren, &lt;~I of Racine.
1942-Ruth
band boosters and .her son
Carn ahari 'Shields Roush, Racine.
1979- Cindy
Patterson
Adam Phillips, wearing one Simpson, Rac ine · ; Martha
1958-Annabel
Rose Wolfe and Denni s M. Wolfe,
of the new band uniforms Watterson Beegle, Racine : VanMeter, Belpre; Patricia R .
were introduced. Oldaker Paul Beegle, R acirne.
Stobarl Emblet, Fayetteville, &lt;~c~~~·-· An thony
Bent z,
1943-Dori s
Picken s N.C.; Dale Hart, Racine .
R .
and Romine spoke of 'the
challenge it bas been to Jackson, Tuppers ; Doris
1959- Shirley Johnsmi.
~c~~~--Tamrny
Smith
rebu 1'td a band at Southern. Hay man Ro ge rs, Ca ne! Portland ; Arlene Theiss
. hester; De Ib ert S mrt· h. Wal 1ace, Delaware ; Ronald Chapman, Raci ne.
;Money has been rai sed to W me
9 2· C.T.
·purchase 50 new uniforms at Racine: ; Beulah Marr Salser, Racine; Nadine Roush R&lt;~Ci~e.Chapman,
about $400 each, but more is Neigler,
Racine ;
Jean Euler. Pinch. W.Va.
. Rac me.
·
1960 - Margte
·
sto ban 1983-Rebecca Lt;e Bentz,
needed for the purchase of C arna han Alk rre,
1944- David A. Brewer, Wolfe, Racine; Pally Rou sh Tonja Salser Hunter, and Jerry
some instruments and addi Seve n Portland.
Pape. Racine: Mary Grace L. Wolfe, all of Racine.
tiona!
uniform s.
."Southern Bears" auctioned
1945- Audrey Boichyn, St. Stoban Cowde ry,
Long
1986- Dixie Du ga n Wolfe,
;off during the evening Clair., Mich ; Blondena Taylor Bottom,
Racine : Becky VanMeter
;brought in $273.50 while an Rainer,
Racine;
Mry tle
196 1 - Mariam Foster Zuspan. Mason: W.Va.
·additional $573.50 donated Easterday
Holter,Racine; Compliment, Nort h Mrytle
1988-Leann
C lark
by alumni was given to the Dorothy Powell Spencer. · Beach , S.C.; Joyce Circle Cunninharn .. Pomeroy; Patrice
b.oosters.
Racine.
Davis, Little Hocking.
Circle Beegle, Portland.
Numerous door prizes of
1946- David B. Sayre ,
1962-Laura Kathryn Hart.
1991 - Junie
Beeg le
Alan
Graham. Maynard, Racine.
flowers donated by area Racine; Herman Carson, Racine:
growers were awarded. Coolville.
Syracuse.
!992-Robin D. Manuel.
Johnson led the singing of
1947- Joan Spencer
1963-Date :F. Smi th . Racine.
the school song with Styer at Mattingly, Clay Center,
Colum bus: Jess W. (Bill)
1998-Nathan
Hensler.
Kansas.
Wood, Coolvi lle; Margaret Racine.

Tent Crusade Revival set ._Lo_c_a_lf_a_ce_s_ __;____ _
Jocelyn Diane Lawrence

GALLIPOLIS , Ohio New Life Church of God
(behind Car Quest on Airport
Rd .) will host a tent crusade
revival Wednesday, June II
through Wednesday, June 18.
The rev.ival begins at 7 p.m.
daily with the exception of
Sunday, which will begin at 6
p.m.
Featured evangelists are
Ellen Blackwell of Fairfax,
Va:; Jesse McClanahan of

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Hurricane, W.Va.; Bill Gree ne
of Gallipolis; and New Life's
REEDSVILLE - Jessica
Pastor Rick Towe .
and Robert Lawrence of
Special singing will be pro- Reedsville announce the birth
vided by Two For Jesus on of a daug hter, Jocelyn Diane,
June II ; Frank and Ida Martin. horn on May 8 at CamdenJune 12; Ri ght Direction, June Clark Memorial Hospital in
13 ; Joy FM Trio, June 14; Parkersburg, W.Va. The infant
Faithful Followers, June 15: wei ghed R pounds, 3 ounces.
Glory land Believers, June ·1t'l:'
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Cross Creek , June r7: and have a son, Garrett, who will
Mercy on June 18.
be two on June 26.
Pastor Towe and congrega· Gntndpments are Wayne and
tion invite everyone to attend. Tetesa Shamp of Reedsville: Jim
and Donna . Rupe of Reedsville,
Robert L.aWf~!nce of Long Bottom ·
m1d the late Roben Dalton.
Great gra ndparentsd are
John &lt;md Sylvia Causey or

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County Board of Health will
meet al 5 p.m . in the con rereHce
room of the Meigs
Friday, June 6
RA,C lNE
Southern County Health Depart rnent,
Local School Board will have 112 East Memorial Drive.
a special meeting at 7:30a.m. Pomeroy.
at Southern High School.

Clubs and
Organizations

1

Saturday, June 7
MIDDLEPORT The
Middlepori
Comm uni ty
Friday, June 6
Association will meet at 8:30 .
POMEROY
Meigs
a.m. June 7 at the People 's
Cou
my
PERl
Chapter
74,
Bank in Middleport.
Meigs· Coun-ry
Senior
Center.
lun.-tr
at
noon ,
SYRACUSE
The
meeting
following
.
State
London Pool wi ll tentatively
Rep
.
Jrmmy
Stewart.
Rhe opening at I ;1 noori.
Athens.
to
speak
~bou
t
Summer long passes on sale
now are $30 per person, or for health care.
a family of four, S25 per perSaturday, June 7
son. Daily passes are $3 for
COOLVILLE
The
people ages 16 and up. $2 for
children ages five to 15, $1 Coo lville · Carthage-Troy
for chi ldren between the ages alumni banquet wil l be held at
of two and fo ur. and free for the Coolville Elen1en1arv -·
anyone yo un ger. For more Sc hool audi torum . Doors
-inforrnaqon on passes, con- open at 5 p.m. For more infortact pool managers Bobbi Hill· mation ca ll 740 -667-35~ 4.
(949-0 I07) or Brandi Lyons
"
I
SALEM CENTER - Star
(985-9824). The phone num ber for th e pool is 992-54 18. Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet at 6:30
p.m . for a potluck 1upper folMonday, June 9
lowed
by a 7:30p.m . meeting
POMEROY - The Mei~ s
at
the
hall.
Cou nty Republican Party wtll
meet 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs
County Courthouse.

Other events

Thesday, June 10
POMEROY
The
Saturday, June 7
Bedford Township Trustees
HARR ISONV ILLE
wi ll meet at 7 p.m. at the town Harri sonville Lodge 41 1 will
hall .
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the temple . Refres hment s will be
Wednesday, June 11
served .
POMER OY - The Meigs

Wiseman Agency
celebrates 75 years
BY TONY M . LEACH
OVP staff writer
GALLIPOLIS - For 75
years, the Wi seman Agency
has been a presence in downtown Gallipolis .
Lori Waugh, treasurer with
The Wi seman Agency, handed out commemorative glass
mugs Thursday to the insur'.ance firm 's clients during an
open house celebrating the
anniversary.

~ we

Waugh said the loca l insurance agency has been host ing
a year-long ce lebration. complete with prize drawings and
spec ial events, to mark the
firm 's longevity and dedicated clientele.
"Thi s is an excel lent oppbrtunity for our employees and
cl ie nts to come together and
celebrate both their patronage
and ou·r 75th anniversary, all
in a relaxed atmosphere ," she
said at Thursday 's event.

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Seniors
from Page A1

moved into the lower level of
the new Meigs Multipurpo'e
Building.
That year marked the
beginning of real e.xpansion
into the typ's or 'ervices
offered now and the number
of senior ci ti zens receiving
them.
.
While the early emphasis
was on socialization for
se niors, as the ye~ rs went by
the programming expanded
into qualify or li fe issues givin g sen iors · opportunities
for volunteer service in the
comm uni.ty. offering ac tivi tieS where they could learn
new things, Iike computer
skills, and showing them
ways to improve their health
through diet and exercise.
Assistance to th e very
elderly has also taken on new
dimensions as funding was
secured for in-home care services, homemaker and home
delivered meals.
.
. Tue sday's ceiebrjlt!'\')n i~
open to the puhltc.,!. · . ·

Congressman Ted Strickland,
ail of whom have contributed ·
TUPPERS PLAINS
through their respective
Mary Jane Goebel, 94, of
Huber Heights, was , arrested no license plate light.
offices by supporting neces·Tuppers Plains , Ohio died BY MtLUSSIA RUSSELL·
and placed into the Galiia
Brown was arraigned in sary funding for sen ior citiWednesday, June 4, 2003 at OVP staff writer
County
Jail
on
charges
of
posGallipoli
s Municipal Court zen programs.
Shirley Jones' private nursing
session
of
crack
cocaine
and
Thursday
morning. A prelimihome where her husband,
GALLIPOLIS - A soft· on an ouistanding warrant in nary hearing was set for I :30 , Mick Davenport . president
of the Council on Aging's
Frederick B. ,Goebei, current- ball-sized . rock of crack
Montgomery County.
p.m. June 10. He is being held Board of Trus1ees, will give
ly resides.
cocaine was seized by
The rock weighed 9.5 on a $50,000 cash bond.
the welcome and intrmluce
Mrs. Goebel was born Nov. Gallipolis City Police officers
ounces
and
has
a11
estimated
Brown
also
is
scheduled
for
dignitaries.
5, 1908 in Marietta, Ohio, the shortly after I :30 a.m.
Following a noon luncheon
younger daughters of Ethel Thursday during a traffic stop · street value of $12,000,' offi- a pre-trial hearing ·Tuesday,
cers
said.
July
22,
in
Gallia
County
Susan Oliver, who is retiring
and Walter Peters. She was a near the intersection of
The driver of the car,. Common Pleas Court for a as executive director of the
graduate of Marietta College. Second Avenue and Olive
Rebecca L. Goodwin, 20, also previous possession charge.
agency on Aug . I , . will talk
Surviving besides her hus- Street.
A
jury
trial
for
that
incident
of
Huber
Heights,
was
cited
band is a son, Frederick W.
Kevin A. Brown, 19, of for ficticious registration and is scheduled for.9 a.m. Aug . 6. on the program and it 's role
·of service to seniors.
Goebel of Tuppers Plains,
The agency was organized
Ohio; two daughters, Martha
in late I972 in a small office
Mead of Winchester, Va., and
r-mrer the Quality Print Shop
Mary Rose of Mount Holly, ·
in Middleport. The first cenN. J.; seven grandchildren
ter for semors was opened the
and nine great-~randchiidren.
following year in the old
A private burtai was held at
Pomeroy Junior High School
a fami iy cemetery in
.
-,
building.
in 1980 the agency
Coelville, Ohio on Thursday,
.\
June 5, 2003. A memorial
Mass will be conducted on
July 5 2003 at II a.m . . at
COL.UMBUS. Ohio (AP) against former Public Safety campaign" were unsubstantibeen cleared bLil, Young said ,
·sacred
Heart
Catholic ·-.· A lawsuit by a police com- Director Thomas· Rice and ated, and also irrelevant under
it is not enough because
Church in Pomeroy, Ohio - mander and his wife claiming members of the investigatory the legal standard for malice,
uncaring residents upstream
with the Rev. Fr. Walter.. a 1997 city repon on alleged team, former Assistant Safety ljS was Burns' claim the report
still
put trash and other debris
from Page A1
Heinz officiating. Memorials police misconduct libeled Director David Sturtz, former put him in a "bad light. "
near to the water.
may be made to Sacred Heart them h&lt;js been dismissed by a police Cmdr. Dewey J. Dean
The court already had dis·
Young said he knows who is
Church, Mulberry Avenue, Franklih County Common and police Lt. Thomas missed the city and Lashutka have taken measures to solve
doing
a lot of the dumping
Pomeroy. Ohio.
Pleas Court judge.
Fischer.
as defendants.
it.
which
causes the drains and
Arrangements are by the
That leaves police Chief
The report stemmed from
The&lt;case is one of three
"if you will just bear with
Ewing
Funeral
Home, James Jackson's libel case as an internal investigation after libel suits filed in connection us -for a couple more weeks. culverts to be blocked. He said
Pomeroy, Ohio.
the only one remaining over Jackson cleared Burns in · with the report. In May 2002, then it will give us a chance the police department will
the report.
I996 of all but one allegation a Common Pleas Court jury to fix this," the mayor said. · stan citing people who ignore
Judge Patrick - McGrath stemming from Burns' role in ruled that Columbus police
Drains and culverts have the plight of their neighbors.
ruled that police Cmdr. Walter the Investiga tion of an Cmdr. Curtis Marcum and
Burns and his wife Kathleen, upscale prostitution ring .
retired Cmdr. Nick Panzera
Jackson's secretary. didn't
Burns was accused of tam· didn't prove their libel case
show enough evidence to pering with evidence, order- against the city.
prove actual malice.
mg an illegal search of a vehiThat leaves Jackson's suit,
The couple's attorney, Rex cie and concealing or destroy- which is scheduled for trial in
Elliott, said the ruling will be ing investigative reports.
January. In addition to the city,
appealed.
Jackson issued a written Lashutka and Rice remain
"'Being the type of individBY MtLLISSIA RusSELL
'There may have been mis- reprimand, but Rice thought defendants in that case.
ual
that he is and the type of
OVP
staff
writer
takes made in the repon, but no Burns deserved more.
Jackson's attorney, Charles
company
that we are, we felt
RACINE - A" white ele- one wa~ acting· with malice, · Then-Mayor Gr~g Lashutka Ticknor Ill, said he hadn't
it
necessary
to do something
phant auction will take place and that's the standard · they ordered the investigation into read the decision in the Burns
BIDWELL - After nearly to help him through thi s hard
at 5:30p.m. Saturday the Mt. have to prove," Assistant Jackson and others in the case and couldn't comment.
two months of recovery. Bob time," Frazee said.
Moriah Church of God at the Columbus City ~turney Glenn Police Division , which led to
Kathleen Burns had no Evans
Transportation
Sm ith said that he was
top of Mile Hill Road near Redick said on ihursday.
the June I997 report, which comment.
employee Mike Smith of thankful for the support that
Racine. · There will be free
Whether the officials were Kathleen Burns said falsely
Redick said the cit~ has Pomeroy is back on the job in
his fellow Bob Evans
food.
negligent wasn' t the issue, accused her of obstructing the patd at least $2.7 million 111 Bidwell.
employees have shown him
McGrath wrote in the ruling investigation.
legal fees to outside attorneys
On April I I, Smith was dri· and his family.
issued Wednesday.
McGrath wrote that Mrs. to help defend the libel cases. ving a Bob Evans tractor"We are a family-oriented
He dismissed the cases Burns' allegations of a "smear
trailer through Pennsylvania company that puts a great
on his way to New York to deal of emphasis on our
deliver ·a load of products employees and their famiPOMEROY - The Meigs
when he felt severe pain in hi s lies," he added. "And because
County
Chamber
of
He called an ambu- we knew that Mike was the
stomach.
Commerce luncheon schedlance
and
was rushed to a only breadwinner for his fam uh:id for Tuesday has been
local hospital.
canceled so that members
ily, we had to do something."
A few hours later, Smith
· may attend the celebration of
To help offset these costs,
was released from the hospi· fellow drivers and other
the 30th anniversary of the
tal and was on hi s way home
Meigs County Council on
viding the Bengal s with a new with Transportation Manager employees of Bob Evans
Lawyers
for
NFI,
team
saycase
should
Aging. State auditor Betty
Transportation took up donastadium.
Frazee, who had driven tions immediately following
Montgomery · will be the
be dismissed because it can't be justified .Fumier said the NFL is Kurt
p
1 · t·
B'd 11
speaker at the celebration,
ennsy vama rom t we the incident, and have orgaIt.able. t'n the law sut't because it to
with another driver who con- nized a fund-raiser for Smith.
CINCINNATI (AP) - A in Hamilton County Common conspired with. its teams not tinued
the delivery to New
judge is considering whether Pleas Coun. 'That is prepos- to release !financial informa- York.
The event wi ll be from 8
.
to dismiss a lawsuit that says terous." ·
a.m.
to noon, Saturday at the
tion that would support the
On the way back, Smith
shelter
house on the Bob
the Cincinnati Bengals and
Portune's lawsuit said the demands of the Bengals and asked Frazee to pu II over at a
Evans
Farm
in Rio Grande.
the
National
Football
League
RUTLAND
The
Bengals failed to field a com· others for new, publicly gas station so he could use the
Smith
and
his
family - wife
Leading Creek ConservancY. violated the lease for the petiti ve team and therefore financed stadi ums. NFL rest room. Smith passed out
District has lifted the bml Bengals' stadium because the should renegotiate lease lawyer Gregg Levy argued, in the parking lot and an Cindy, and sons. Mike. 20. and
will be there to help.
advisory for ihe following team has played poorly.
terms. The lawsuit also names however,
that privately ambulance was again called Jimmy,_17Sausage,
donated by the
areas: SR 143 from Carpenter
Hamilton County commis- 24 other NFL fra"nchises, owned businesses do not have. to rush him to the hospital.
Bob
Evans
plant
at Bidwell.
to Harrisonville. Cotterill sioner Todd Portune filed the accusing them of fraud, civil to publicly release financial
Smith was taken to another and pancakes. donated
by tile
Road, Ellis Road,- SR 692, lawsuit in January as a tax- conspiracy, antitrust viola- inforf!lation.
, i
Pennsylvania hospital, locat- Bob Evans Corpq will be
Townsend Road, · Gibson payer's action after his two tions and breach of contract.
Stachler said the . lawsuit ed about an hour east of served free of charge but
Road, Blackwood Road. fellow county commissioners
The judge took the dispute ignored a provision in the Youngstown on Interstate 80. donations will be accepted.
State Farm Road from SR refused to join him in the law- under review and did not say lease negotiated between the
Hours from death, doctors
I43 to Woodyard Road, suit over the lease for three- when he wi II rule.
Bengals
and
Hamilton performed emergency surgery
Woodyard Road from State year-old
Paul
Brown
Portune filed the law suit on County that required the on Smith. Thev told him as he
· Farm Road to and including Stadium.
hi s own Jan. 30 in the state county to give two notices to was checking ·aut of the hosHill s Road , Myres Road, and
His
lawyer
argued court. He also filed asimilar the team that it was failing to pita! almost two weeks later
Mudfork Road.
Thursday that Portune had the complaint May 16 in U.S. meet lease obligations before that they hadn't expected him
right to file the law suit in the District Court.
the Bengals could be consid- to survive the surgery.
county's behalf and argue that
ered to have defaulted on the
Shnith suffers from diverticThe $458 million stadi um
ulitis, a condition that causes
· ~IDDLEPOJh Joe the county and its taxpayers was paid for by a half-cent deai.
Gwinn will be , the guest were shortchanged economiPortune had asked the NFL portions of the intestine to
speaker at 6:30 p.m. Sunday cally after providing the stadi- sales tax increase that county to consider loaning the county become inflamed.
at the , Hobson Christian . urn because crowds have voters approved in I996 . .
$80 million to help pay off the
Unfortunately. Frdzee said.
The Bengais haven't made stadium debt within the origi- Smith had not been on the job
dwindled due to the Bengals '
Fellowsh-ip Church.
www:mydllilysentinel.com
the NFL playoffs since 1990 nally projected 20 years. long enough to qualify for
poor performance.
Lawyers for the Bengals and had the franchise 's worst Because of lower-than- medical insurance or disabiliand the NFL said the lawsu it season in 2002 with a 2-14 expected revenue, Portune ' ty benefits, so the substantial
said, retiring the debt now medical bills he accrued will .
should be dismissed because record.
could
take at least 35 years.
hitve to be paid out of his own
Portune's
lawyer.
Robert
Ponune 's arguments fail to
Fumier, said Thursday the
justify it.
The NFL has made stadium pocket.
Bengais
had
argued
they
loans available to eight other
"They ' re asking you to
find. as a matter of law, that needed a new stadium that cit ies, Portune said in a
the Bengals had some implied produced more revenues in January letter to NFL
Paul
contractual obligation to win order to remain competitive Commissioner
among
NFL
teams
in
the
er~
Tagliabue,
in
which
he
also
a cenain number of games,
unknown, unstated," Bengais' of player free agency, but the demanded that the Bengals
lawyer Robert Stachler told county had a right to expect agree to $124 million in lease
Judge Charles J. Kubicki Jr. an economic return for pro- changes.

· Local Briefs

·New York Times identifies the problem
The
lat e
Wi lhnoore
Kendall was a brilliant politi.
cal scientist and a fiendishly
clever conservative. Yale
University made the mistake
of gran ting him a professorWilliam
ship with life time tenu re
.
Rusher
before it discovered, or at
•
any rate realizeu the ftili
•••·· I .J
implications of, that second f...,
aspect of his character.
At Yal e, Kemlall was One of his most frequent targets
of the teachers of young was The New York. Times,
William F. Buckley Jr .. and which then. as now, was a
had a profound influence on fountain of pure liberal prohim . Small wonder
that. paganda. One day. over lunch
·
when Buckley ·fou nded with the senior editors. he
National Review in 1955 as a reported a major discovery :
journal of conservaii ve opin- · ·'] have just realized,'' he said
ion. · Ke ndall \
name with a twinkle. in hi s eye,
appeared on the rna;,thead of "that for .The New York
the very first issue as a senior Times to criticize itself is
editor. Yale subsequently cor- ontologicaliy
inconcetv rected its error by negotiating able!'"
a buy-out of Kendall\ li feDon 't be put off by the $25
time tenure contract for a word phrase, "ontological\y
handsome sum. in return for inconceivable," it simply
hi s promise not to darken it.' means that the thing in quesdoors again.
tion .is. by definition, beyond
During the late 1950s (after · criticism -- i.e, is perfect, a
l .had bec:ome the magatine\ quality usually reserved for
publisher in 1957) one of the nature of God. Since God
Kendall' s assi gnmenb was to is perfect, criticism of Him,
write an occasional co lumn including sel f-c riticism. is
entitled "The Liberal Line:· inconceivable.
In ir. he skewered liberal
What Kendall was saying,
writers atid publi cations as with impish humor, was that
only he could. Inc' itab\.y, one -- at least in its own opinion ;/·~

.

g

•

•

Today is Friday, June 6, the I 57th day of 2003 . There are
208 days left in the year. The Jewish holiday Shavuot begins
at sunset.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 6, \944, the D-Day invasion of Europe took place
during World War II as Allied forces stormed the beaches of
Normandy. France.
·
On this date:
In I 844. the Young Men's Christian Association was
founded in London .
In 1903, I00 years ago. composer Aram Khachaturian was
born in Tillis. Russia.
In I918. the World War I Battle of Belleau Wood , which
resu lted in aU .S. victory over the Germans, began in France.
In 1925. Walter Percy Chrysler founded the Chrysler Corp.
In 1933. the first drive-in movie theater opened, in
Camden. N.J.
In 1934. the Securities and Exchange Commission was
established.
In 1942. Japanese forc.es retreated in the World War II
Battle of Midway.
In I966, black activist James Meredith was shot and
wounded as he walked along a Mississippi ·highway to
encourage bl ac k voter registration.
.
In 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy died at Good Samaritan
Hosp ital in Los Angeles, a day after he was shot by Sirhan
Bishara Sirhan .
In I 978. 25 years ago, California voters overwhelmingly
approved Proposition \3., a primary ballot initiative calling
for major cuts in property taxes.
Ten )Cars ago: A Chinese freighter holding 300 illegal
aliens ran ag round off New York; up to 10 Chinese died after
jumping overboard. At the Tony Awards. "Kiss of the Spide'r
Woman" won best musical ; ~·Angels in America: Millennium
Approaches:· won best play.
Five years ago: The U.N. Security Council demanded in a
unanimous vote that India and Pakistan refrain from furth er
nuclear tes ts and sign nuclear control agreements. "Real .
Quiet" was denied horse racing's Triple Crown as ""Victory
Gallop" won the Belmont Stakes by a nose.
One year ago: Stung by intelligence failures. President
Bush cal led on Congress in a nationally broadcast address to
remake the government with a terrorist-fighting Department
of Homeland Security. israeli troops stormed Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat's headquarters in response to a
Palestinian 'uicide attack oh a bus that killed 17 Israelis.
Today\ Birthdays: Actress Billie Whitelaw is 7 I, cl'vil
rights activi&gt;t Roy inni s is 69. Singer ~vi Stubbs !The Four
Top&gt;) i' 67. Singer-songwriter Gary "U.S." Bonds is 64.
Coulltr) singer Joe Stampley is 60. Actor Robert J::nglund is
54. Folk singer Holly Near is 54. Singer Dwight Twille)• is
52. Playwright -actor Harvey Fierstein is 49. Comedian
Sandra Bernhard is 48. Tennis player Bjorn Borg is 47.
Actre" Amanda Pay., is 44. Comedian Colin Quinn is 44 .
Record producer Jimm y Jam is 44. Rock musician Steve Vai
is -+3 . Rock musician Sean Yseult (White Zombie) is 37.
Actor Max Case lla is 36. Actor Paul Giamatti is 36. Rhythm
and hlue' 'inger Damian Hall (Guy) is 35. Rock mu sician
Bardi Martin is 34. Country singer Lisa Brokop is 30.
Rapper-rocker Uncle Kracker is 29. Actress Staci Keanan is
28.
Thought for Today: "America is a land where a citizen will
eros., the ocean to fight for democracy - and won "t cross the
"reet to vote in a national election." - Bill Vaughan .
~merican journalist ( 19 I5- I977). .
At

Drug bust nets · softball~
·sized rock of crack .

•

.,.
;J

&lt;

~ . . - ,1-

Flooding

• The Spokesman-Review, Spokane, Wash., on homeland-

TODAY IN HISTORY

{

Judge dism·isses lawsuit
over city report

. Securing the homeland ·
doesn't come cheap
When the Office of Homeland Security lowered the terrorist alert level from orange to yel low, there was an extra sigh
of rel ief from tilunicipal leadt;rs around the nation.
They've discovered that Condition Orange can mean
Condition Red for their budgets ....
Citie., have spent an estimated $70 million. a week during
orange alerts. according to a 145-city survey conducted by the
U.S. Conference of Mayors. Most of that is in the ~orm of
overtime pay to police officers ad:l firefighters who are
deployed or put on call for security purposes ....
What 's beco1ning increasingly apparent to municipal leaders is thar while the feds are serious about homeland security,
they're not as concerned about paying for it.
The feds have been promising aid since shortly after the
9/ I I attacks. Recently, some money was finally disbursed, but
many cities such as Spokane still haven 't seen it. .. .
President Bush has told the nation that the war on terror
could take years, perhaps even decades. Now, the White
House and Congress need to find money dedicated solely to
homeland defense, without playing budgetary shell games ....

The Dai'ly Sentinel,• Page AS

'

Jmic 6, 2003

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio·

www.my.dailysentinel.co~

.,

Friday, June 6, 2003

··~-.;
...

.

- The New York Times was,
journalistically
speaking.
God.
We have waited 45 years
for a definitive te st of
Kendall's proposition. But in
the saga of Jayson Blair. the
27-year-old black Times
reporter who was recently
exposed as a wholesale fabricator of news reports, the
Times has at last come faceto-face with the painful
obligation to criticize itself.
For Blair's multiple deceptions were not effectively
concealed . They were known
ali over the newsp~per. Midrank editors had warned editor Howell Raines that Blair
must be stopped from writing
for the Times -- right now.
But Raines, who clearly had
a soft spot in his heart (or
head) for the young prodigy,
wouldn't listen. So the misrepresendtions· went on , until
another newspaper threatened to ex pose blatant
instances of Blair 's piagiansm.
The Times made an enormous display of . admitting
the deceptions-- a front -page
story. and four . full inside
pages de scribing the excruciating details. The top officials of the paper laid the

blame squarely where. they
clearly felt. it all belonged:
on the saggi ng shoulders of
Jay son Blair. Raines accused
him of "a pathological pattern of mi sre presentation,
fabricating and deceiving,"
and publisher Arthur "Pinch"
Sulzberger declared "The
person who did thi s is Jayson
Blair."' Sulzberger'Went on to
acknowledge that "We didn "t
do this right. We regret it
deeply. We feel it deeply. It
sucks."
For a moment it appeated
that this confession of error
might result in the inconceivable : self-criticism on the ·
part of the Times. But the
confession turned out to be
empty rodomontade. devoid
of any serious consequences.
Raines asserted that he had
not offered his resignation,
and Suizberger added that he
would have rejected it if it
had been offered. Nor has
any other individual at the
Time s, save Blair, been
. for.;:ed to walk the plank.
So Wi II moore Kendall was
right after all.
I Wifliam Rusher is a
Disti11guished Fellow 14 the
Clm·emont Institute for the
Studr of St(lfesmanslrip and
Pnlitical Philosoplrr.)

..

Father's Day vignettes
With Fat her's Day just
around the corner. I'd like
to ;,ha~ with vo u 'ome storie'-1 I' ve vvritien Juwn and
saved over the years about
my 0\1'11 father and God the
Father. One I'm particularly, fonu of comes from
author
April
Our;,ler
Armstron~ . who'c clad was
none other than renowned
life -of-Christ
narrator
Fulton Oursler. Oursler
" ·rote the hi g h!~ acciainwd
1949 . book ."'The Greatest
Story Ever Tolu ."
Armstrong. "ho coauthored the sequel. "The
Greatest
Faith
Ever
Kno\1 n"
• !Doubleda),
1'!5 3 ). with hd fatller. once
descrihed him as having
··unbecoming ang~r on hi~
fc.tce Hnd egg on hi'\ tic .··
But "ha t ,he remembers
most ,.i, idl) about hin1 is
that he "a' her first intrn·
duct ion to God .
"From bahyhoocl... 'he
say;,. "m) fath er iau ght me
to appreciate the 'ecrch uf
God . Ail good fathers.
whatever their failing;,. do
the same . Nobody told me
. that God wa\ lik e my
· father. I JU st ""umell it
hecau'e their name' were
the same. Both of them
were Fathn."
Arm&gt;..tron g ... ay...
..,he
learned thJt in eac h family

George
Plagenz

all over · the world, the
fath er bears a sec ret
responsibility. " He is for
the child tile first ·contact
with the idea of God
because his name and
God's name are the &gt;mne ...
VIGNETTES
FOR
FATHER' S DAY. ..
When he had finished
repairing something around
the hou ;,e or yard. my
father "ou ld &gt;tand back
and survey his handiwo rk.
which often left somethin g
to be desired .
"Well ," he would say.
'·it's better than it was."
it" s a sayi ng that has
stuck with me through the
year~. You won· t find il in
" Bartlett' s
Familiar
Quot ation s... but it has done
more to encourage me at
various time~ than all of the
wi~e musing., by renowned
philmupher' that have been
pre;crved in thal distin ·
gui&gt;hcd volume.
If we wa.nt thing., to be

perfect for us ail the time ,
we are going to be unhappy.
Happiness is improvin g a
situation in our live s even
though the result is not
ideal and leave s some.thin g
to be desired. It is bein g
able to say.'"" Weli.' it ~s better than it was." If we make
just enough progress 10
keep us encoumged. we
have reason to be satisfied.
VIGNETTES
FOR
FATHER'S DAY: ..·
My fath er also had this
saying. which I have fashioned into rules for living:
"Just do it."
As children, we used to
be ready with ali &gt;Ort;. of
exc use s when we were
asked to do some thing . M)l
father would hear us out up to .. a point. Then he
would break in and say.
"Ju st do it." And we did it.
A lot of th e needfi!.l work
of the world goes undone
somebody
is
because
always
saying.
"Why
should I have to ~' .. If there
is ~omet hin g that needs to
be done, we ought to "just
do it. ..
VIGNETTES
FOR
FATHER'S DAY...
Then there wa; the way,
he would handle my
attempts at finding · a quick
fix :
"Wbat does the book of

Benefit scheduled for
Bob Evans employee

Auction
scheduled

Luncheon
canceled

NFL, Bengals ask dismissal
of lawsuit over stadium lease

B.oil advisory
lifted

Soecial soeaker

instructions say 0 "
That was my father's first
qu estion wh en. as a boy, I
went to him for help with
some mt;chanical problem
without l1aving read the
directions first. Many "of us
waste a lot of time by
plunging ahead on our own
without first consulting
life's book of in structions.
A IQt of our diffiqtities,
including many of our
problem s with our health,
are rhe resu)t of not following the " Manufacturer's
Book of Instruction s," the
Bible.
· So, dear readers'. I hope
ali of you , this Father's
Day. can reflect upon the
day\ true meaning, find at
least OQe life lesson your
father taught you (whether
he knew he was te ~c hing
you or not), and be sure to
thank h'im for it.
(HAVE YOU SENT IN
YOUR FAVORITE Bible
rerse (or Ferses) ret? I
tl'llll/ Jo find o /11 m ): readers' most belill'ed Scripture
pas.wges. Readers from 30 ·
Slflles and Canada have
responded so far. Send rour
selections to Farorite Bible
Verses . P.O . Box 06580,
Coft11nlms, 0/rio 43206.
You ma\· inclttde the rea.wm for: your choice. !will
indude the most interestillg
storit's froni my rellders.)

PROUD TO BE APART

OF YOUR LIFE.

Keeping

Gallia,
Meigs.&amp;
Mason
informed

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...

MATINEES

All AGES All TIM[S !.4 00

•

-

&amp; 3:20

�I

•

Faith • vat

The. Daily Sentinel

PageA6

A7

· Friday, June 6, 2003

It is time to try .
the Lord's recipe!

WORSHIP· GO·D THIS WEEK

Many leaders of Hitler's
Germany saw themselves
as ChrJstians - of a sort

The Lord has many rec-ipes
ret-arded in the Bible. H~ prescribed bread that clicl not
include leavenin!!. His recipe
lor makin!! holy oil included
specilicd mnounts of myrrh.
Ron
cinnamon, calamus. and cas~ I a
olended with olive oil. The
Branch
Lord's recipe for perfume
reyuired stacte. 01iyc-ha, galbanum, and lrankmcense.
which was to be beaten very
small "after the art of the batch on us guys at the house.
. apothecary." God's peop le Oh my. it was d~lectable . For
were blessed when thev fol- Sunday lunch. all I ate was
Terry's ilomemade potato
lowed the Lord's recipes.
Too bad He did not have a salad made according to my
mom's recipe. My one comrecipe for potato salad.
My wife, Terry. and I have plaint has now, after 27 years·,
been mruTied for 27 year$. She been eliminated.
As things stand now, she is
,is a gorg_eous woman who is
talented and gifted in a num- proud to make us potato salad.
ber of ways. Nonetheless. I The last two days. she has
have one complaint. and I been asking, "You want me to
~s ure . yQ~ .. one complaint. · mak~: another .potato $ 0lad?"
on ly. .She has never been aole All it took was willingness to
ask Mom for her recipe. Terry
to make a good potato salad.
I immense ly enjoy good cou ld have been basking in the
potato salad. Provide a good compliments of potato sa lad
potato salad for a church func- making for a long time had she
tion, and potato salad will be on ly tried it sooner.
Whatever got into her. she
what I locus on - of course.
incl uding some dessert on the linally realized that it was time
to try Mom 's recipe.
side.
Is it not amazing how the
lerry has made potato salad
of others often make
recipes
for us and it has been alright.
such
a
huge
difference when
But, I was raised in a home
where some of the finest pota- ·one is attempting to accomto salad one could ever eat was plish a cenain th ing?
made. It was made by my ·It is the same in the matter of
mother. Mom made delicious attempting to taste the best of
potato salad that makes my life. Like so many recipes premouth water just thinking scribed by philosophies and
personalities. people -try to
about it.
Through the years. whe n incorporate a variety of secret
Terry wou ld rue her inability ingredient s in the hope that the
to make good potato salad, I best possible concoction will
would say, "Call Mom, and occur. But. all too often. nothget her recipe!'' She never ing more res ults than just a
would. I never could ligure out disappointing taste, desp1 te
continual encouragement from
why.
Our son, Keithen. is gett ing others to try the Lord's rec ipe
married in July. Terry made for life.
Said the Psalmist. "0 taste
. the comment that sile needed
someone who cou ld m&amp;ke and see that the Lord is good."
What about you? Are you,
good potato salad for the
rehearsal dinner. I cited the for whatever reason. putting
' names of a couple of ladies off trying tile Lord's proven
who, in my estimation. make recipe for an abu ndant,
good potato salad. Maybe one blessed life?
It is the absolute truth of
could help her. I suggested.
God
that His principles for livBut. once again .. as ·it
ing,
when incorporated and
involved potato salad, she did
not listen to me. Rather. lo and practiced day-to-day, produce
behold. she got on the phone the best quality of life possiand called TT)Y mother for her ble.
It is time to try the Lord's
recipe. Incredible!
The next day. Terry tried a rectpe.

BY RICHARD

N.

OSTLING

Associated Press
Fascination with Nazism's
' incomprehensible evil is unending, witness the recent made-farTV movie on CBS, the new
'" Hitler\ Diwics'" paperback and
video, and many other books
w1d ;uticles.
lltc religious thinking runong
top Nazis is the rel:1tively unexplored interest of Kent State
University histori an Richard
Steigmann ~Gall in 'The Holy
Reich: Nazi Conceptions of
19 19-1945"
Christianity,
(Cambridge University Press).
Sever,!) book,s have joined the
perenn i &lt;~ debate about whether
Pope Pius XII. a ClUJdidate fnr
Vaticwt beatification and eventual sainthood. did enough to help
Europe's Jews. But even Nazis
who "ere born Catholic (Hitler
among them) Uespised their
childhood church, Steigmmm- .
Gall rep011~.
His own l(x:us is Protestantism.
i.nduding the 1930s confl ict
between pro-Nazj ''Genmm
Cilristiwts" uncb" "Reich Bi-hql"
' .,,, vioe Muller and tre ·Contes.sinoo
UW\
01LU'Ch." which dele tilii biblical ·
trad ition against theological
ht.shions.
''Cnnbsing'' dmlogJrulS wln.e
wori&lt;.s still resort&lt;~e include K;ui
Banh (1886-1 %8) ru1d Dietrich
Bonhneller (I 9()6. 1945 ). who
was executed tor plotting
Hitler's · . assalsination. That
impommt ttle is ably told in tre
d:x:turrentary '"Bo1hoefler.'' sctmulcd to open in theaters June 20,
with public TV w1d home video
rele&lt;1.se next year.
Steigmann-Gall says Nazi
leaders were divided between
;mti-Chtistimls oroutiight pag:ms
(Bom1ann. 1-leydrich. ·1-limmler.
Rosenberg) lmd a htction thai
&lt;tdvocated Protest;mt-llavored
"po;iitive Christiwtity" (Goebbels,
Goering).
.
Hitler lmi:x:nro his own mystical streak but htvot'ed "positive
Christimtity" until Protestants
htiled to fonn the united national
church he wmtted. By 1939. all
clergy and committed lay
Christiw1s were b;nn"d from the
Nazi Pw1y rutd Goebbels was
confiding in his diary tltat Hitler
was "deeply religious, but entirelv anti-Christian."
- Since tcxlay's Christiru1 leadet&gt;
evervwhere unite in denouncin~
ru1ti-Semitism, it's shocking to
rc;!)ize how Nazis could exploit
Protest:mt resources to deve lop
:m extremist f;tith.
M&lt;utin Luther made comments late in lite tl1at were 11:li·
giously &lt;mti-Jewish, tlmugh not
mcially atlti-Semitic. That influenced later Lutlterans·. Then.

James P. and Karen Brady

..New_pastor to be
installed at area
Lutheran churches
POMEROY - James P.
Brady will be installed as pas. tor of St. John Lutheran
Church, Racine,
St. Paul
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy, at
3:30p.m. on Sunday, June 15,
at the St. Paul Ch urch.
Brady recently ,graduated
from Trinity Lutheran Seminary
in Columbus. A resident of
Gall ia County for 27 years, he
was the audiologist at Holzer
Clinic for 16 years and also

and

. worked for Dr. John Wade
prior to goi ng to the semimuy.
His wife. Karen. has worked
for Dr. E. Joiln Stmuss for 18
years. The couple has tive chili.lren and four grandchildren .
TheY will .be residing at 202
. Spring Avenue in Pomemy.
Members of the congregation extend an invitation to the
community to attend the celebration. ·

Church Briefs
Revival
services set

Shelton to sing

PAGEVILLE - Revival services will be held at 7 p.in.
nightly Monday through June
13 at the Pageville Freewill
Baptist Church. There wiII be
special singing. The Rev. Calvin
Minnis will be the speaker.

Gospel s1 nger llmmas
Shelton will be presenting a concert in song at 7 p.m Wedresday
at the the Bmdbury Church of
Christ, 39558 Bmdbury Road,
Middleport. The public is invited
to anend b~ Tom Runyon. pastor.

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news@mydailysentinel.pom

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F~llowship

Con . -!1 :45·9 : 15 a.m... Sun. Mass · 9:30
a.m.. Duilex, M a~s · K:JO a.m .

Apostolic

Chutdt or Jesus.Chrill,AIMJ'Iullc
VanZandt and Woud Rd., Pastor: J ames
1 0 :~ 0

Miller, Sunday Sc hool

Steigrmutn-Gall recount,. from
the 19th centllly onward liberal
Protestant thinkers revol utionized the way mUf»' Gemtans
(and otllei'i) viewed the Bible
rutd Christiru1 tradition.
. Essentially. the , li berals '
thought the Bible mingled fact
with fiction (or"myth") wld they
sifted out the supposedly truthful
residue. or removed faith frOm
the realm of history. The resulting pla,tic Bible was open to
mdical reinte1pt1:tations.
Some sought to discard
Christianity's reverence for tre .
Old Testamenta~ God's Word or
uproot Jesus from hisfirst-&lt;:entl!ry Jewish context. Many clergy
also becrune optimists about
hlllmm experiences rutd were
caught up in . the romantic
nationalism that fostered World
War I w1d Nazism. .
.
The founder of the biblical
mdicals. F. C. Bauer ( 17921860), was succeeded by
Albr1:cht Ritschl ( 1822-1889)
&lt;md' Julius Wellhausen (18441918), both of whom belinled
Jewish religion. Wellhausen's
theory about conllicting sources
thai underlie the Old Testa111ent
jns become virtual dogma.
Ritschl greatly .influenced
Genn;uty's most celebrated theologi&lt;mjust before Hitler· s reign,'
Adolf von Harnack (1851 1930). By 1920, Harnack
spumed the Protestant confessions' insistence that the Old
Testwrrent is divine revelation
&lt;Uld l:m1entcil that churches still
cherished Scriptures he thought
caused "religious and ecclesiastical crippling."
Harnack's anack on the Old
Testament revived the Gnostic
her1:syofMarcion. whose excommunication in A.D. 144 was a
defining n10p1ent tor Christianity.
Hmnack was no racial or political
&lt;mti-Semite, but Nazis:embraced
his mrncated Bible.
Hitler, li1r one, denounced
Luther for keeping the Old
Testament with its "Jewish
muml:x).jumiXl." He also wanted to get rid of the Jewish
Apostle Paul and acCll'ied him of
falsifying the original Jesus rutothcr liberal Protestant theme
in that era.
However, legitimate liberal
!'C holars never taught the Nazis'
historic:dly prepostero~s claim
tltat Jesus w:Nt't Jewish at all
but "Atyw1.''
011the Net:
"Tire Ho/.1 Reich " (prorruJtiona/):
lmp://books.caml!ridge.org/052 1823714./ihn ·
"Brmhoeffer" (pmmotiotul/):
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a.m..

E\•eni ng- 1 ::10 p.m.

Kh'er Valle)'
~ App~t o l ~c Worsl]ip Cente r, 873 S. 3rd
.
-· Ave .. Middleport . Kt:vi n Kunkle. Pastor,

-"

Sunday, !I a.m. Wednesday, 7:00· p.m.:
Youth Fri . 7:30 p.m.
E mmlllmel Apostolic Tabern11cle loc.·
l_.oop Rd off Nc:w Lima Rd . Rutland ,
Services: Sun 10·00 a.m . &amp; 7::\0 p.m..
Thurs. 7:00p.m .. Pa.&lt;;tor Marty R. Hulton

Assembly of God
Uhertl Asstmbly of God
P.O. Bok 467, Dudding Lant:, Mason,
W.Va ., Pa sto~: Neil Tennant, Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and? p.m .

Baptist
Hope Baptist Chun:h (Southern)
570 Grunt St .. Middleport, Pasto r: Re,·.
David Bryan, Sunday school - 9:30a. m..
Worship - 11 a.m. and ti p.m .. Wcdnc~da y
Service - 7 p.m.
Rutland First B11ptlst C hun:h
Su nday Sehoul - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:4.Sa.m.

r

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Young's Carpenter Seruice

GrowingHa

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26 years in local business

Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6215

EWING FUNERAL HOME
106 Mulberry Ave . Pom eroy, OH
740-992-2121
Fax 740-992-2122
Ben H . Ewing
Licensed Embalmer. Funeral Director

Licensed Pre-Need Insurance
Soectalis l

Worship
God Together
This Week!

Adva11ced Heari11g Cmter

First Hapti51 Chun:h
Pastor: Murk. Morrow, 6th and Palmer St.,
Middlepo rt , Sunday Sc hool - 9: IS a.m ..
Wo rship
10: 15 a. m .. 7:00 p. m ..
Wednesday Scrvicc-·7: 00 p.m.
Racine First BaptiSt
Pastor: Rick Rllle, SUnday S~hool - 9 :30
a.m .. Worshi p - 10:40 a.m .. 7. :00 p.m .,
Wcdnc:«::ay Services · 7:00 p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson, Sund~y SchOOl •
IOa .m .. Wors.hip - !! a .m .. 7 :00p.m .
.Wednesday Ser&lt;ices-7:00 p.m.

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor : David Wiseman, Sunday School9 :45 a .m., ~veni ng - 6 :3 0 p.m.,
Wedne:«::ay Ser&lt;ices - 6:30p.m.

'
Bethlehem Baptist Chun:h
_Greut Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH ,
Pas\Or : Daniel Mecca, Sunday School 9:30a. m., Sunday Worship - 10:30 a. m..
Wedne~y Bible Study-6:00p.m .

Okl Bethel fl'ft Will Baptist Church
2K60 \ St. Rt. 7, ' Middh:purt, Sunday
School - 10 a .m .. Evening - 7:00 p,m.,
Thursday Serv i ces ~ 7:00
Hillside Baptist Chun:h
St Rt. 143 j ust o ff Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev.
Ja mes R. Acree. Sr., Su nday Un ifi ed
· Service, Worship - 10:30 a. m .. 6 p .m.,
Wednesday

Scrvu~es

-? p.m .

Victory Baptist Independent
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon , Pustor: l a me~
E. Keesee. Worshi p - lOa .m.; 7 p .m ..
Wednesday Services , 7 p.m.
Fa11h Baptl:il Chun:h
Ra ilroad St, Mason, Sunday Sc hool - l 0
a.m .. Wor shi p - I I a.nJ ., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices- 7 p.m.

1800) 434-4194

"A Home Bank for

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Pomeroy, OH 45769

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29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

P:o . Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
Herbalife Independent
.D istributor

C

J eani e H owell
~
333J-l H y!-.cll Run Rd.
__..
· Ponu:roy, OH 45769
Fnr a w ho k
7 40-992-7996
nt:w you
·'

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I 0:4 5 a.m .. s'unday Evenin g · 6:00 p.m ..

s~rnr~

St. Pomeroy. OH -+5 769
you pay your next home nr

Pastor: Mark McComas

au to premium. l.'h~\.· k ou t ru l es~

Rutland t'ree Will Baptist

Ca ll : Judy. Bnmtli. or Jan e Ann
992- .WH.!' ( 11 omen) ~/ 594-0660 (r\ttiensl

St~ lcm

7 40-949-2217
Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 '1. 20

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399 W. Main St.

Pomeroy, Oh
(740) 992-2 164

" Stuff" For Pets, Farm Animals &amp;
Tropical Fish• Full line of PurinaChow • Garden Seed &amp; Fertilizers

"Lei yo u r li g h1 ~o s hin e hcfnn:

men. that they may sec yo ur
gout! wl)rk~ , and g. Iori fy your
Falhcr in hc ;.l\c tt. "

Mall hew 5: Ih

Homemade

Hour ~

6 um- f\ pm

Desserts Made

St., Pastor: Jamie 'Fnrtne r, Sun4ay

School - 1.0 a.m .. E..vening • 7 p.m.. .
Wedne.Way Scl'\'ices · 7 p.m.

9vfi[[ie's 1\_estaurant

I 122.Jacksnn Pike Gallipolis, 01-f

T

Antiquity 8aptlsl
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship -

~1:Lin

! rwndh·
.'\rmo.\ fl/i,•rc ·

Home People"

his budding gardener already knows one otthe most important rules ol
successlul gardening. You must enrich your soil tor your llowers to be
more beautilut. Maybe you can "get by" with \ired old dirt . but your
garden will not be as vibrant or your plants as "happy".
As this youngster's parents teach her to enrich the soil , they also
are teaching her how to nurture a vibrant spirit by worshipping together in
God's House each Sabbath. In story and in song, she learns ol his Heavenly
Father's role in her lile ... both present and future. She discovers the way to
cultivate her spirit with God's unconditional love, no matter what the
circumstances.
.
Do you enrich younpirit reguta1ty in God 's House? Do you want lo
teet more vibrant instead ot just "getting by"? You can when you worship
each week and learn ollhe Creator's love tor you . "He who gives heed to the
Word will prosper. and happy is he who trusts in the lord ." !Prov.16:201

Rev. Gilben Craig, Jr., Sunday Sc hou! 9:30a.m., Worship - !0:45a.m .

H (um

740-949-221 o.

uardrall . Fence &amp;

! 21 E.

'l

Daily

Sttond Baptld Churth
Ravenswood. WV, Sunday School I 0 am: Morning wo rship II am Evening - 7 pm.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Catholic

!lom e Ctmkt•d MMI.~ &amp; IJtril}' Speduls

Opcr~ 7 day~ a week
7 40-992-77 13

Sacr~

Heart Catholic C hurch
161 Mulberry Ave .. Po meroy. 992 -5998.
Pasmr: Re\1. Walter E. Heinz. Sut. Cun.
4:45 -5: 15p.m.: Muss-5:30 p.m ., Sun .

Birchfield funeral
Home ·

Pomeroy Westside Ch urth of Christ
D22fl Children's Home Rd .. Sunday
S..:hool - II a.m . Worship - IOa.m .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Middlepon C hurch of Christ
5th and Main. pastor: AI ~son. Youth
Minister: Bill Fraz.i er, Sunday Sc hoo l 9:30a. m., Worship- .8: 15. 10:30 a.m., 7
p.m.. Wednesday Senrice:;- 7 p.m.
Keno Chu ~ h of Chris I
Worship · 9 :30 a.m .. Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Paslor·) e ffrey Wallace.• Island

Trinity Churrh
Second .&amp; Lynn, Po meroy, PaMm: R~: v.
Jm:k Noblio. Worship Hl:25 a,m .. Sunday
School 9:15a.m.

Episcopal
COrace lipi.scllpnl Church
326 E. Main 5!., .Pomemy, Rr.: v. Jamus
Bernacki, Re\1. Katharin FoSler, Sunda,-School and Holy Euchsrist II :00 a.m.

a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m.. Tue sday Services
-7:30 p.m.
Central C luster
Asbury (Syr.tcuse), Pastor: Bob Robinson.
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m .. Worship - II
a.m .. Wedne ~ day Services -7:30 p.m.

Holiness

Enterprise
_fastur: Arland King. Sunday School . 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.. Bible Study Wed.

Pa~lor :

Kcllh Rader, Sunday School - 10
a.m. , Wo rship- II a. m.
Forest Kun
Pas tor: Bob Robi nson. Sunday School· 10

Danville Holiness Ch un:h
.11057 State Route 325, Lang~v l b:, Pastor:

a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m:

Gal)' Jadtson. S und a~· S~.:hoo l - 9:30 u.m .•
Sunday v.orship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
Wednesday prayer service- 7 p.m.

Heath lMiddleport )
Pastor: Rod Brower, Sunday School

p.m .

Zion Church of Christ

ThptMrs Plain C hun:h of C hrist
Instrume ntal. Wors.hip Serv ice - 9 a.m .,
Commu nion - 10 a.m .. Sunday Sc hool ·
10:15 a.m., Youth-5:30pm Sunday, Dible
Study Wedne sd ~y 7 pm
Hradhury C hurch nr C hri' f
Mini ster: Tom Runyon, 39559 Bradbury
Road , Middlepon, SUnday School - 9:30

9:~0

Mr.:Ken1:i e, Sunday School 9 :30 a.m .,
Worship - II a.m.. HiO p.m .. Wednesday
Service- 7:00p.m .

Minersville
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School •. 9
a.m., Worship· 10 a.m.
Pearl C hapel

Kose of Sharon Holiness C hurch
Le~tding Creek 'R9 ., Rutland, Puston Rev.
Dewey King , Sunday school- 9 :30 a.m.,
Sunday
worship -7 p.m .. Wcdnesda)'

Kutla•d Church of Christ
1
Sunday School - 9:30 a.nl 1. Worsh ip amJ
Comm union - IO:JO a.m .. Bob J. Werry,

112 mile off Rt 325, Pastor: Re\', O'De ll
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wors hip - 10:30 a.m.. ?:30 p.m .. ·
Wednesday Service - 7:3(1 p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holinetis C hurda
75 Pearl St.. Middlepon . Pastor: Rev.
David Gilhcrt. Sund11y School ~ I0 a.m.

p.m.,Wednesday Service! -7:00 p.m.
Hickory Hills C hurch of C hrist
Evangelist Mike Moore. Sunday School 9 ~.m .. Worship - 10 a.m .. 6:30 p.m.
Se~ice~ -

7 p.m.

Reedsv ille C hurch of Christ
Pastor: Phili p Stunn. Sunday School: 9:30
a.m., Wo rship Service: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study. Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall . Sunday
School - IO : I'i a.m. , Wor~hip - 9: 15a.m ..
Bible Study . Monday 7:00 pm
Sn(nnllle
Sunday

10 :45 a .m ... 7 p.m .. Th u r~day Bible Study
nnd Y0111h - 7 p m.

The Church of J esus
Christ or Latter·Qay Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday Se houl 10:20- l l a .m., Rel~ef
Soc iety/Pri esthood I I :05- 12 :00 noon.
Sacr!lment Service 9 -l O: I S a.m ..
Home making meeting, lsi Thurs .- 7 p.m

Lu.theran
St. John Lutheran Churth
Pine G ro\'e, Worship - 9:.00 a.m.'. Sunday
School - 10:00 ot.m. Pastor : J ames P.
Brady

10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m

8ethany
Pastnr: Dewayne Stutler, S unday Schoo,! ·
10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m., Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m.

Lau~l ClifT F~ Methodist C hurTh
Rev. Le~ Strand ! and Myra L. Strandt,
Sundn·y School - 9:30 a.m .. Wo rship "

lll:JO a.m. t~nd 0 p.m .. Wednesday Ser."JCe
- ?:00 p.m.

S~hool-

Carmel-Sutton
1

Carmel &amp; Ba~han Rd~ . Racine, Ohio,
Pastor: Dewaync Stut ler. Sunday School •
9:30 a.m.; Worship- 10:45 a.m. •" Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.
Morning Star
Pastor: De wayne Stutler, Sunday, Sc hOQ! •
I I a.m ., Wurship- 10 a.m.
East Letart
Pastor: Brian Harkness. Sunday School •
10 a.m., WC!rship · 9 a.m., Wednesday · 1
p.m.

New Ufe VIctory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road. GalliJ'X)Iis. OH
PastOr: Ui\1 Staten, Sunday Service .~ - .)0
a.m. &amp; 7 p m. Wednes:day - ? p.m . &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

R t. 3~8 . Antiquity. Pastor: J es~e Morris.
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Fallh Fuii _Go~pt'l Church
Long Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed. Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m, Worship - 9:]0 a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday ~
fellowsh ip sel"o'ice 7 p.m .

Salem CommunitY C hurch
Lieving Road. West Col umbia. W.Va ..
Pa..'itor: Clyde Ferrell. Sunday School 9:30 ·
am, Sunday evening service 6 pm . ,
Wednesday serVice 7 pm

Tht' Bt'lievers' Fellowship Ministry .
New Li m ~ Rd .. Ru tla nd, Pastor: R~v.
Marg~rct
J
Ro binson, Ser\' ice s:
Wednesday. 7:30p.m .. Sunday. 2:30p.m .
Harrisonville Community Church
P11stor: Theron Durham. Su nday · 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m.

515 Pearl St., Middleport . Pastor: Sam
I
Ande rso n, Sunday School 10 a.m. ,
Ev~ni ng. 7:JO p.m. , Wc:dncstlay Service·
7:30p.m.
faith \'alley Tabernacle Churth
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Re\1. Emmett
Raw son. Su nd ay Eveni ng 7 p.m., ,
Thursday Service~- 7 p. m.
Syracuse Mission
14 11 liridgeman St., Syracu~e. Sunday
School - 10 a.m. Eve nin g
6 p.m .,
Wednei&gt;day s~ r \'ice - 7 p.m.

•

Hobson C hristian Fellowship Chun:h
Pastor: Herschel White . Sunduy School·
10 am, Sunday Church serv ice-6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Restoration Christian Fellowsblp
9365 Hooper Road. Athens. Pastor:
Lonnie Coats , Sunday Worship I0:00 am.
Wcdnuday: 7 pm
Langs...-ille Christian Church
Full Gospe l, Pastor: Roben · Musser.
Sunday School 9:30am •. Worship 10:30
am - 7:00 pm . Wednesday Ser.·ice 7:00 ·

pm

Pentecostal
Penteco~tal

Hohaci:, S u~ay School · Hl a.m..
Eve ning- 7 p.m., Wednesday Services-?

Hazel Community C hurTh

Presbyterian

Pw.tor: Rober Crow.. Worship - I0 a.~.

Graham United Method hit
Wo rship - 9:30 a.m. ! 1st &amp; 2nd Sun), ,
7:30 p .m. (3 rd &amp; 4th SunJ .Wednesda'y

HocklniJPOrl Chul'\!h
Grand Street. Su nday Sctiool- 9: 1.S 'a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Pastor Phil lip Dell

Faith Gospel Churth
Long Bouom, Sunday School · 9:30a.m.,
W01 shi p - 10:45 a.m .. 7:30 p.m.,
We dnesday 7:30 p.m.

Mt. Olive Communily Chun:h

Middleport Prubyter\an

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh·Da)' Ad,-entist
MLilherry HtS. Rd .. Pomeroy. Pastor: .R.oy
Lawinsky, Saturday Ser\'ic~ s: Sa b bath
School . 2 p.m., Worship- 3 p.m.

Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School • -":- t..
Mt. Olh·ll' United ~~etln~ist
Off 124 behind Wilkesvilre. Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m ..
. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 1, p.m .. Thursday
Seh&lt;ices- 7 p.m.

· Ton:h Church
Cu . Rd . 63. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,

g,JQ a.m . Em;og. ,,]Q p.m . w,doed•y
Servi~.:e-

Nazarene
Middleport C hurch of the Nanu-ene
Pasior: Allen Midcup , Sunday Sc~ool 9 :30 a.m.,Wurship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.,
Wedn~ s day Services - 7 p.m ., Pastor:

:Full Gospel Lighthou.'ie
3304.5 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday 'Sdluol · 10 a.m., E\'eni ng
7:30 p.m., Tuesday &amp; Thursday - 7:30
p.m.

Allen Midcap

p.m.
P~ s t o r :

C he!iter
Jane Beattie. Worship

~

9 a.m.,

Rutl1md Chun:h of God
Pastor: Ron Heath. Sunday Worship · 10
a.m., 6 p.m .. Wedne sday Services - 7

S~nday

p.m .

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Rand olp h, Worship -

School - 10 a.m . . Thursday

~ervtces-

7 p.m

Worship - 10 :45 a.m .. ? p.m.. Wednesday
Services · 7 p.m.
9 :~ 0

Sy racuse C hun:h of the Nautr.ene
Pastor Mike Adkins, Sunday School - 9:30

a,m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Long Bottom
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10:30 a ..m.

ReedsviUe Fellowship
Churc h of the Nalarene, Pastor: Teresa
Wa ld eck. Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m ..

a.m .. Worship ' • 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services· 7 p .m.
Pomeroy Church of the Nllurene

\

Reedsville
Worship · 9:30 a.m., Sunday School
!0:30a.m., ·First Sunday of Month - 7 : ~
p.m. senrice

Pastor: Jan U~.vender. Sunday Sc hOol 9:30a.m .. Wo rship · 10:30 a.m . and 6
p.m.. Wednesday ~ervices- 7 p.m.

8

h

United ret ren

7 p. m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m ..

.
Meigs Cooperativr .Pwrish
~ortheast Cluster, Alfred, Pastor: Jane
B c~tttic. Sunday SchoiJ·l - 9 :30 a.m ..
Worshi p- II a.m .. 6:30 p.m.

Assembly
124 , RtK:inc, Pastor: William

St. Rt.

Morse Chapel C hurch
Sunday sc huul - 10 a.m., Worship - I I
a.m., Wednesday Sel'\•ice- 7 p. m.

p.m., Wed ne ~ay Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Service· 7:30p.m.

Full Gospel Churth of lhe Living

Harrison\IIUe Presbyterian Church
Past or: Robert Crow. Worship · 9 a.m.

a.m . Worship • . 10 a .m .• Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m .

Chap ma n. Sunday Sc hool · 10 a.m.,
Worship - 11 a.m .. Wednesday Services •
7 p.m.

p.m.

• Dyesville Community Church
Su nday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worsh ip \0:30a.m,. 7 p.m .

United Methodist

C hun:h of God of Prophecy
O.J . While Rd. off St. Rt . 160•. Pasmr: P.J.

Agape Life Center
" Fuii -G nspel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Pa11 y Wade, 603 Second Ave . Mason, 773-

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline. Coolv ill ~ Church,
Main &amp; Fifth St .. Su nday Schoo l - 10
a.m., Worship- 9 a. m., Tuesday Se.rvicn ·

p.m
Our Saviour Lutheran C hun:h
Walnut ~nd Henry SIS ., Ravensw ood.

Bethel C hurch
Townshi p Rd., 468C. Sunday School - 9

a.m.
Evening Services-6:30p.m.. Wednesday
Services - 6:30 p.m.

Clifton Tabernacle C hurTh
Clirtnn. W.Va .. Sunday School - 10 a.m ..
Worsh'ip - 7 p.m .. Wednesday Sen·icc - 7

Sy racuse First United ~resbyterlan
Pa~tor: Roben Crow, Worship · II a.m.

Sunda!l' School - 9:45 a.m.. Worsh ip - 11
u.m. l1 a..~ t or: James P. 8rad y ·

Syucu.w First Church of God

Mike Foreman , Pastor
Em~rilu s
Lawrence Foreman, Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Sel'\·ices · 7 p .m

. and Bible Study - 7 pm
Ash Street C hurch
Ash St. , Midd leport- Sunday S~·huol - 9:30
a,m., Morning Worship· IO:JO a.m. &amp; 7
pm. We dnesd~y s'e"fvice - 7:00 p.m., Youth
Service-7:00 p.m.

Off Rt. 124. Pastor:. Edsel Hart. Sunday
School-9:30a.m .. Worship · 10:30 ~ . m ..
7:30p.m.

10 a.m.. Worship • II a. m .. Wednesday 7

C hurch or Christ
ln t~rse-=tio n 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent, S unday Bible St udy 9:30a.m .• Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6 ::-lO

Apple and Second St s., Pastor: R~v . David
Russell. Sunday School and Worship- 10

Rejoicing Life C hun:ll

500 · N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport, 1-'astor:

p.m.
Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness, Sunday School ·

7 p.m.

Milt: Hill Rd., Rllcinc , Pastor: James
Satterfield, Sunday Sehou l - 9:45 a.m.,
Evening - 6 p.m .. Wednesday Serv ices - 7

B~thel Worship Cen ter
C hester Sehoul, Pastor: Rob Burber,
Assistant PastOr: Karen Davis, Sunday
Worship: l 0 am. Evening Worship : 6 pm.
Youth group 6 pm. Wedne sday: Pow~r in

Mlddlt'port Community Churth

St. Paul Luthll'nm Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,

MI. Moriah Church of God

Stlvernille Community Church
Wayne R. Jewe ll . Sunday Services
- l(J:OO a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m .. TIJUrsday - 7 :00
p.m .
Pa~lrlr :

Abundant Grace R.F. I.
923 S. Third St .. Middleport. P11stor Ten:sa
Davis , S un day ser vice, IQ a .m ..
Wl·dnesday service: 7 p.m .

Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m .

Church of God

Catvati Bible C hurch
Pome roy Pike. Co. Rd ., Pa~ tor: Rev.
BlackwOOt".i. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wurshtp
10:30
a.m .,
7:30
p.m ..
Wednesday Sel'\'icC - 7:30p.m . ·

Comm unily or Christ
Po rtland -Ra cine Rd .. Pastor: Mkhat:l
Duhl, Sunday School . 9:30a.m., Worship
- 10:30 a,m .. Wedne sday Sen• ic~: s · 7:00
p.m.

Kock Spring.&lt;~
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 9: 15
a. m ., Worsh ip - I 0 .a . m .. Youth
Fe llowship, Sunday - 6 p.m ..

W.Va .. Pastor: David Ru ssell. Su nday
School- IO:OOa.m ., Worship- ~ I a.m.

Hartford Church of Christ In
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va .. Pastor:David Gree r,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m .. 7:00 p.m ., Wednesday
Services - 7:00 p.m.t

Friday, 7 p.m.

Other Churches

5017. ~m· icc lime : Su nday 10 :30 a.m ..
Wednesday 7 pm

Dexter Chun:h of Christ
Past ur: Dill E~ he lman, Sunday sehoul 9:30
a. m ., Norman Will, s uperintendent ,

Christian Union

Faith Fe, ll ow.~hip CrusadE" (or Christ
Pastor: Re v. Fnmk.lin Dicken ~. Service·

Pomero)'
Pastor: Rod Brower. Worship -9:30a.m..
Sunday School- 10:35 a .m.

Rutland
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m .. Worship ·
10:30 t~.m., Thur.;dt~y Services- 7 p.m.

Hysell Run H olln ~ C huKh
Sunda~· School . 9:30 a.m .. Worship -

Latter-Day Saints
Minister: Doug Shamblin, Youth Mini~ter :
Bill Amberger, Sunday School - 9:30a. m.
Worship . 8:00a.m .. 10:30 a.m.. 7:00

Portland ··irsl C hurrh or the Nalilrene
\\lilli am Ju ;; w,, Su nday Sd1Uol •
10:00 a.m ., Morning Worship - 10:4.5 a.m ..
Sunday Service - 6:30p.m.

Savior

Worship - 10:45 p .m .. Sundoty Eve. 7:lXJ
p.m., WeJnesdny Scrvke - 7:30p .m

Mini ~ter

Hradrord Churctl of Christ
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .,

Fairview Bible Cbun:h
Letart , W.Va. Rt I. Paslor:. Brian May,
Sunduy SChool · 9:30a.m .• Worbhip · 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Bi ble Study · 7:00p.m.

prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Rutl11nd Chun:h ufthe Nau.nme
Re v. Louis S. Stttub~. S und~ y
School-9:30a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m .,
6:JO p.m.• Wtldnesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pnty ~ r

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road. Pa~tor : C11arb

Pine Grove Bible Holiness C hurch

Wednesday

M

a.m ., Worship ' I I :00 a.m.

Sunday School - lJ tt .m .. Worship · 10 a.m .

Bearwallow Ridge Church of C hrist
Pa stor: BrU ce 'lbrry. Su nday School -9:3U

-7 p.m.

Pa~tor :

Flatwoods

Community C hurch
Pastor: Ste•.1e Tomek. Main Streel,
Rut land. Sunday Worship--- 10:00 a. m.,
Sunday Sm·ke- 7 p.m.

Ridenour, Sunday School · 9::\0 a.m..
Wor:&gt;h ip - 10:30 a.m., "Wednesday Service

Pastor: Rev. Herben Gr.ne, Sunday School
- IJ:.'O a.m .. Worship - I I a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wcdnc"'-..ay Services- 7 p.m.

P~tstm:

7,Jo

3rd Sunday

Pomeroy. Harriso n \'illc Rd. (R LI 43J.
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday School ·
9:;\0 a.m .. Worshi p • 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m .

l

WILLIAMS &amp; ASSOC.
INSURANCE

Morris
Sunday Sc hool - 9: 30 a.m., Won.hip10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.. WeJnc~day Ser\'icc:s 7 p.m.

First Southern 8aptls t
4 1!172 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. Lamar
O' Brya nt, Sunday Sdwol - 9:.lQ a.m ..
Worship - 8: 15a.m., 9:45am &amp; 7:00 p.m..
Wednesday Services . 7:00 p.m .

Mt . Moriah Baptist
Fuurth &amp; Main St. , Middlcpon . Pastor:

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

Pomero~· Church of Christ
212 W. Main St ., Mini ster· Anthony

Pastor : Jane BcauitL Sunday School - 9

Congregational

Sunday School • IU :30 a.m.• Bible Study 7 p.m.

a.m.
Wo rship • 10:30 a.m .. 6:l0
Wednesday ~rvices- 6:30 p.m.

a.m.• Worship - II a.m.

·r -r ·r ·r ·r

9 : 30 ~

Pomeroy First Baptist
Pas tor Jon Bwcken, Et~sl Main Sl.,
Su nday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m.

Fortsl Ru'n Baptist
Pas10r : Arius Hurt, Su nday School , 10

·r r ·r r ·r

· Church of Christ
Hemlock Gro11t C hristi an Church
Minister: Lurry Brown. Wot"shi p a.m.

Thppen Plains St. Paul

. \

I,

South Be thel CommunitY Church
Ridge - Pastor Linda Damewood,
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship Service

Mt. Hermon United Brethren
In Christ Church
Texils Com munity 3641 1 Wick hrtm Rd. ·
Pastor: Robert S!lndcrs. Su nday Schoo! - ~
9:30a.m ., Worship- - 10: 30 a. m., 7:00
p.m. , Wednesday Senr ices- 7:00 p.m .
Eden United Brethren in Christ
State Ro ute 124, Ree dsville. Sunday
Sc hool - I I a. m.: Sun'day Wa l'!;hip - IO:(X)

Silv~: r

a. m. &amp; 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Ser\'lces 7:00 p .m., ,Wednesday Youth Sen·ice -

IOa.m.

7:00p.m.

C~rleton Interdenominational Church

King sbury Road. Pastor: Robert Vance.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship
Service 10:30 a.m., Eve ning ~~n-ice 6
p.m .
Freedom Gospel Mission

..

Bald Kn nh. on Co . Rd . .l l. Pastor: Rev.
Roger Willford . .Sunda,y School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- i p.m.
Whil~ 's C hapel Wesleyan
· Cool\' illc Road. Pastor : Re ... Phillip

C hesler C hurch of the Nazarene

212 Main St- P.O. 60H 188
Rutland, OH 45l75

740-742-2333 .

"So I strive always to
keep my conscience clear
before God and man."
Acts 24: /6

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0

Nation • World

The Thilll{ sentinel

Inside:

Page AS

Scoreboard, Page 82
Major League Baseball, Page 83
Sosa's bats OK, Page 83

Friday, June 6, 2003

.

Blair, 27, resigned May I after the resignations Thursday.
Associated
Press
he
was found by the limes to
Raines &lt;md Boyd each made
•
have "committed frequent acts statements during Thursday's
NEW YORK_ New York ofjo.umalisticfraud."T\)enews- meeting, drawing prolonged
limes El\ecutive Editor Howell paper announced it would form applause from the staff memRaines and Managing Editor a comnu~ t~ revu:w n~ws- bers, some of whom were in
Gerald Boyd resigned Thursday room pohctes, mcludi~g hinng tears.
amid the turmoil sparked by the , ~racuces, the use of umdenufied
Boyd spoke of his commi!Jayson Blair journalistic fraud souroes. the use of freelancers mcnt to diversity and was
scandal.
•
and byline and dateline prac- briefly intenupted by applause.
"Tilis is a day thiil breaks rriy tices.
.
Retired Ttmes publisher Arthur
heart " Times publisher Arthur
The two top edttors had been Sulzberger Sr. - father of the
Sulzberger Jr. told hundreds of ~e focus of much of the criti- current publisher - also attendstaffers at an emotional morning cts~, parttcularly for allowmg 1 ed the meetmg. standmg stlently
meeting in the newspaper's Blair t~ cover the Washmgton- throughout.
.
third-floor newsroom.
·area sruper case when the met"Everybody ts upset about
The Times announced that ropolitan editor had previously what happened," said Dee
Joseph Lelyveld, 66, the paper's raised concerns about the Wedemeyer, &lt;m editor.
former el\ecutive editor, had reporter's 'mistakes.
According to the Times Web
been named interiim el\ecutive · As shock waves reverberated · site, Raines told his former
editor and would assume over the Blair revelations, stafters: "Remember, when a
Raines' responsibilities. No one Pulitzer Prize-winning limes great srory breaks out, go like
wiU be named interiim managirig reporter Rick Bragg resigned hell.'' '_.'
·
editor, the Tunes said.
May 28. The newspaper had
Minutes after the meeting, he
Sulzberger thanked R.aines suspended Bragg over a story left the building.
and Boyd for putting the inter- that carried his byline but wa'
"They have made enormous
ests of the newspaJ?l!r first,. The reported largely by a freelancer. con'tributions during :their
Bla1r scandal wasn t nneniiOned
"We know this has been a dif- tenure," Sulzberger Jr. srud ot
at Thursday .morning's staff ficult period," Raines said to the Raines and Boyd, "including an
meetmg, but tt had started a Times staff in an e-mail extraordinary seven Pulitzer
weeks-long penod of turbulence announcing Bragg's resignation. ·· Prizes in 2002 and another this
at the Tunes.
Bragg declined to comment on year. I appreciate all of their
BY SARA KUGLER

efforts in continuing the legacy
of our gre~ newspaper."
The editors quit more than a
month after Blair resigned from
the newspaper. later· telling the
New York . Observer that he
"fooled some .of the most brilliant people in journalism" with
his reporting.
An initial investigation found
fraud, plagiarism and inaccurdcies in 36 of 73 articles Blair
'wrote between October and
April. The limes detailed the
fraud over four .full pages in its
May II edition. but the controversy was not quelled.
In an e-mail to staffers on
Thursday, Sulzberger Jr. said
"with great sadness," he agreed
with the editors' decision to
leave.
Raines became executive editor just days before the Sept. I l.
2001, terrorist attacks. The following April, the Times
received a record seven Pulitzer
Prizes- five for its coverage of
the terrorist attacks and another
for coverage of the war in
Afghanistan.

'

Texas·trooper says GOP governor offered
tip on runaway Democrat during boycott
AUSTIN, Tellas . (AP)
Republican Gov. Rick Perry had
a greater role than he previously
revealed in the hunt for more
than 50 Democratic lawmakers
who left the state to block passage of a biU, according to testi'mony tium a state trooper. ·
Lt. Wtll Crais, who led the
search last month, said in a deposition released Wednesday that
Perry was impatient with the
search's progress and at one
point gave troopers a tip on
where to find one of the missing
legislators.
Tellas De~nt of Public
Safety documents released sepa-

*

mtely Thesday indicated that
Perry had personal contact with
DPS officers during the search,
ordered by Republican House
Speaker Tom Craddick.
Fifty-five Democrats disappeared into Oklahoma for near!y
a week to prevent a quorum in
the House, blocking debate on a
Republican bill to redraw congressional disnicts.
·
Crais testified that during the
search for the legislators Perry
handed him a letter saying the
newborn twins of missing state
Rep. Craig Eiland were at a
Galveston hospital. Crais testified that the governor told him,

c,'(J'

In

1889, Eufaula nanve Jamie

"I want the Texas Rangers to go
by and locate Mr. Eiland."
Perry had downplayed his
role, suggesting his office's only
involvement was in trying to
determine whether extradition
from out of state was possible.
This week, Perry did not deny
issuing orders that resulted in
lrOOpers searching tor DemOLTdts.
"You betcha, I told the DPS to
follow the instructions of this
speaker ... follow the law," the
govemor told the Fort Worth
Star-Telegram on Tuesday. He
said he ordered public safety
officials to do "whatever the
DPS needed to do ... to renieve

House members."
The transcript of Crais' testimony, released by the attomey
general's office, was taken in a
lawsuit by another quorum-busting Democmt. state Rep. Lon
Burnam. Ttte suit alleges that
the public safety department
improperly destroyed docu-' ·
ments generated during the
search.
Deputy Attorney General Jeff
Boyd, who is representing the
department, said he plans to ask
a judge to dismiss Burnam's suit.

·'

Bengals sign
seventh-round
draft selection

I

JEANNINE AVERSA '
Associated Press
BY

WASH! N G TON - The
number of American worker.; tiling new claims for jobless
benefits climbed to a five-week
high lw;t week a' companies
coped with an ec6nomy that is
struggling to get back on linn
footing.
The Labor Department reported Thursday that new applica'
tions for unemployment insurance rose by a seasonally adjtlsted r6,CXXJ to 442,00) . for the
work week eitding May 31. The
increa&lt;;e pushed claims to their
highest level since the week ending April 26.
''The labor market obviously
is still contracting, but like the
rest of the economy, it likely wiU
recover step by halting step,"
said.Oscar Gonzalez, economist
at John Hancock Financial
Services.
Separately. the natiori's largest
retailers reported modest sales
gains for May. But shoppers
weren't in the mood to splwge.
Rainy weather in certain regions,
including the Northeast, and a
weak job market limited spending for yet another month.
Orders to U.S. factories feU
2.9 percent ih April trom Man:h,
marking the largest decline in 17
months,
the
Commerce
Department said. The decrease
was a lot deeper than the 1.8 percent drop economists were forecasting.
Manufacturing has been a
major trouble spot for the economy.
A more forward-looking
report released Monday suggested that manufacturing may be
poised for a turnaround. The
lnstirute for Supply Management
reported factory activity declined
at a much slower rate in May,
offering a heartening sign to
economists.

' 1~t FIRST STEp lfV

1ihe latest batch of economic
news Thursday sent stocks
lower. The Dow Jones indusnial
avemge was down 52 points and
the Nao;daq wa' off9 point~ in
moming trdding. ·
Last week's rise in jobless
claims surprised eco.nomists,
who were predicting they would
fall to 421,00). Some of last
week's sharp increase in claims

a1
probably . reflected season
adjustment difficulties related to
the Memori~~ Day holiday,· a
Labor Department analyst said.
For 16 straight weeks new
claims haYe been running above
the 400,00) mark - a level
associated with a largely stag. nant job market, economists say.
The more stable, four-week
moving average of new claims,
which smooths out week-toweek fluctuations., rose last week
by 3,CXXJ to 430,500. the highest
level in two weeks.
The nation's jobless rate
jumped to 6 pen:ent in April a'
businesses cut 48,00) jobs. The
economy has lost a half miUion
jobs in the last three months, a
decline usually associated with
recessions.
Economists predict the unemployment rate rose to 6.1 percent
for May and that another 30,00)
jobs were eliminated during the
month. The employnnent report
for May is released by the govemrnent on Friday.
Even if the economy
improves in. the second half of
this year, as economist' hope,
th~ jobless rate is el\pected to
move higher - . to around 6.3
percent to 6.5 percent later this
·year.
Job growth probably won't be
strong enou~ to accommodate
all the additional job seekers
who would enter the market,
attmcted by ari improved elimate, economists say. That
woul~ contribute to a rise in the
unemployment rate.

SEATTLE
(AP)
Washington coach Rick
Neuheisel told coaches and
players he would fight to
keep his job, a day after he
acknowledged
breaking
NCAA rules by betting on
the NCAA basketball tournament.
· The Seattle Times reported that Neuheisel participated in informul NCAA basketball pools the past two
years.
Two NCAA investigators
and one from the Pac-1 0
questioned him Wednesday
after receiving a tip that he
put up $5,000 and won
about $20,000 by picking
Maryland in 2002.

Pittman charged
with aggravated
assault
MESA, Ariz. (AP) Super Bowl star Michael
Pittman has been charged
with aggravated assault
after police S&lt;!Y he rammed
a car carrying hi s wife. their
son and a baby sitter.
The Tampa Bay running
back, who was charged
Tuesday, faces a preliminary heari ng June 16 on the
two counts.

Today Show's Katie Couric, the historic

WASN'T DRAWING UP THE PLANS.
hid taken into account most of the
details to make the event a special

the Bluff City Inn which dates back to

day. What he hadn't counted ori was

1885.

winning the New Orleans lottery. But

with unique tales that are both enter-

that': exactly what he did. Wanting to

raining and enlightening. And one of

make the most of his

good

build a

like the historic district in Huntsville

Victorian cottage in wbich the couple

or the Civil War legacy of Selma, is on

could begin their new life together. ·

our free walking toitrs. More than

And he ended up with a place where

tours· take place all across the state,

30

I

NCAA basketball
rule changes
delayed

the best ways to learn abour things

fortune,

Jamie used the money to

* Alabama's history is filled

•

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Changes to the 3-point line
and free- throw lane would
be delayed until 2004-05
under a revi:ed recommen- ·
dation by the NCAA men's
and women's rules committees.
· Two months ago, the committees recommended the
cbanges be adopted .next
season.
.

every Saturday at 10:00 a.m., from

his lucky numbers made him feel like
the luckiest man in the worla.

..

* The

Rhodes-Purcell home is still standing

May 24 through july 5. Fortour locations,

WWW.ALWALKI NGTO U RS.COM

directions aAd other information, go to
'

Dothan

today. And its story is just one of
hundreds you can expenence on an
intimate walking tour of Eufaula.

.' · Enterpri"
Eufaula
Florala
Flore net

foi!J
Fort Payne
Greensboro
c...nville
Huntsvillt

!lJLL...a

Jaclrsonriille OpeliiQ
Marion
&amp;lmo

www.alwalkingtours.com. Or caU

Tw~-t&amp;r•

Union Sf'rirlf
Monrotville Thoma.ivillt Vallry
MonttVallo T"!Y
Wttumpka
Montgomery

Mentone

u~

Twcumbia

SJ&gt;ri'W'ille

-

1-800-ALABAMA and ask about
our walking tours.

*
J .

THE FREE

(lJ.a.fJ.tJJn.tl

(J}IllJU.nq fl.ult.A

TAKE PLACE ALL ACROSS THE STATE, EVERY

Mf.I.IJUJ.alj

AT

10:00 .a.m.,

FROM

'm..aJj 24 -'Juhl 5.

'

.

Couch
'the
guy' for
Browns
BEREA (AP) - . Tim
Couch's j0b may be more
secure than tr~ or anyone else
in Cleveland ever imagined.
Browns
coach Butch
D a v i s
seemed to '
diffuse his
team 's simmering quarterback ·controversy on
Thursday by
saying that
Couch
Couch had
never lost his
starting position . to Kelly
Holcomb.
After labeling the Browns'
current quarterback issue as
"much ado about nothing,"
Davis said his two QBs have
been enjoying a healthy competition during the club's
recent "quarterback school"
workouts.
·
Davis . also gave his
strongest signal since the end
of last season. that Couch is
still the Browns' starter.
The Couch vs. Holcomb
debate has been raging for
months in Cleveland, where
fans seem to be evenly divid~
ed about whether No. 2 or
No. 10 should .be No. I.
.
Couch, the club's top draft

Please see Reels, 12

Please see Couch, 12

"Rockies sweep series with Tribe

EL SEGUNDO, Calif.
(AP) - Los Angeles Lakers
star Kobe · Bryant has a tear
in the1. tissue around hi s right
shoulder socket that might · .
- .
requtre surgery.
The tear was discovered
during ali MRI exam
Wednesday at Kerlan Jobe
Medical Center.

Shorter Mansion and the barber~hop in

*

'

New York's Alfonso ~riano, left , is tagged out at home by Cincinnati catcher Jason LaRue .
after a Jason Giambl"hit in the first inning Thursday in Cincinnati. (AP)

Kobe Bryant
might need
shoulder surgery

house, the ancestral home of The

I NFL

CINCINNATI , tAP)
Slumping Hideki Matsui
responded to a batting-order
demotion with a two-run
homer and three doubles, and
the New York Yankees beat
the Reds I 0-2 on Thursday
for a long-awaited win in
Cincinnati. ,
The Yankees won the 1961
. World
Series
against
Cincinnati, but got swept
when they returned in 1976
against the Big Red Machine.
· They also dropped the first
two games of their interleague series in front of
capacity crowds that reveled
in their misery.
Some of the 42.282 fans
that showed up for the final
game waved brooms with '76
inscribed in red. Manager Joe
Torre rearranged his slumping
lineup, wi.th good results.
New York's 10 doubles tied
the club record and every
starter got a hit, with Matsui
delivering the biggest.
Contreras · (3-1)
Jose
escaped two bases-loaded
threats as he remained perfect
in two starts. He gave up five
hits in seven innings, including Jason LaRue's homer in
the second.
Matsui's long homer como
pleted a five-run third inning
off Danny Graves (3-5) that
set the tone and ended his 2for-23 slump.
.
He doubled each of his nel\t
three times up, finishing 4for-5 with three RB!s.
Alfonso Soriano had three
hits, including his 18th
homer. ,
Mariano Rivera pitched the
ninth for the Yankees.

Neuheisel will
fight to keep job

BUILDING THIS

his girlfriend, Mamie Harwell. He

Yankees roUt Reds, 10-2

CINCINNATI (AP)
The Cincinnati Bengals said
Thursday they signed offensive tackle Scott Kooistra, a
seventh-round ·draft choice
from North Carolina State,
to a three-year contract.
He becomes the second of
their nine draft choices to
sign. The Bengals signed
their No. I pick, quarterback Carson Palmer from
Southern California, just
before making him the first
overall pick of the NFL
draft in April.

Also included are the Couric-Smith

Rhodes was making plans to marry ·

Friday, June 6, 2003

/

five-week high
.

•

Page .Bl

New Vbrk Times executives .Howell Jobless
Raines, Gerald Boyd resig·n
claims rise to
"

The D~ily Sentinel

Georgia AD
Dooley's contract
not extended
ATHENS. Ga. (AP)
Georgia athletic director
Vince Dooley will leave his
job next year after failing _to
secure a contract el\tension
from
sc hool
president
Michael Adams.
Adams
insisted
that
Dooley stick to a deal
reached in 200 I that will
end his 25-year reign as athletic director on June 30,
2004.
.. Adams said the 70-year- ·
old Dooley could stay on
for a year as a fund-raising
consultant, with no change
in his $300,000 salary.
'/'

DENVER
(AP)
Colorado Rockies starter
Jason Jennings could barely
control his anger. He was hitting his spots on the· outside
corner, but plate umpire Dale
Scott wouldn't call them,.
strikes.
It took a while for Jennings
to calm down and use Scott's
strike zone to his advantage.
With Cleveland's hitter laving off the outside pitches,
Jennings started working
inside to get groundball outs.
The strategy worked as
Jennings allowed just four
hits in seven innings in
Colorado's 7-4 victory over
the Indians on Thursday.
"I wasn't getting the pitches
that ) wanted. They were
close, but I have . ~o work
around his zone," said
Jennings, who won for the
first time since May I 0

against Florida. ."It worked
out to my advantage late in
the game because those pitches I wasn't getting away, they
were laying off of. That
opened up the inside comer
and I was able to get a lot of
ground balls."
Jennings (4-5) didn't allow
a hit until Jody Gerut led off
the fourth inning with a
homer, then John McDonald
put Cleveland up 2-1 with a
bloop double to left that landed just in front of a sliding Jay
Payton.
The Jndians got two more

Legion baseball

runs in the fifth on a slow
roller and a wild pitQ!I, but
Jennings breezed through the
sixth and seventh after . the
Rockies scored four runs in
the fifth to take a 7-41ead.
Jennings allowed four runs
and struck out sill in seven
innings to improve to 3-0 at
Coors Field this season.
"He was out of whack out
there for a while," Rockies
manager Clint Hurdle said.
"He was a very angry young
man on the mound, but he g~t
through it."
Jennings' outing capped a
frustrating three-game series
at Coors Field for the Indians.
Cleveland had won five
straight headed into the
series, but managed just eight
runs in three straight losses at
Colorado's
hitter-friendly
park.
The Indians had just four

.

Mason County pounds Meigs

ANDRE'· TtRADO
build some team chemistry
Staff writer
and. come away with a win.
- - - - - - - - - -, In many ways, both teams
played well and showed few
POINT
PLEASANT, signs
of mst, but the Meigs
W.Va. - It's that time of Countians
relief pitchers
year again, and the Mason struggled, and the Mason
County
Post
23/ 140 County team jumped all
American Legion baseball over relievers Young and
team took the field for two Brown to turn a 2-2 tie into
months of summer baseball . a 15-4 Mason County' win.
This · year. the team feaThe game started out as
ture~ a wide variety of playmuch less of an offensive
ers from Mason and Jackson showcase as Ripley's Josh
County West Virginia. Whitlock led the game off
Mason Countians Kenny for Mason County while
Durst, Ned Park. Brandon Meigs countered with
Warner, Chad Zerkle, Jimmy Smith. Smith surrenCameron
Sayre.
and dered two runs in the first
Bradford Clark are the inning. but quickly settled
familiar
faces 1 while down and struck out all
Jackson County talent three baiters in the third
includes seven players from innin g. while Whitlock
Ripley ;tnd five players from looked sharp early, but got
Ravenswqod.
punished in the third inning
This intriguing combina- by Gibbs, who sent a shot to
tion of athletes got their first deep center field for a two
challenge on Thursday night ntn home run that tied the
when the young Meigs game.
County Legion team made : However, Whitlock conthe trip to Point Pleasant. tinued to pitch an effective
The Meigs County team had game, collecting six strikea variety of players from outs along the way, and
Gallia and Meigs counties, allowed the Mason County
and both teams looked to offense to get back into the

" BY

game.
Smith left the game after
the fourth inning with a 2-2
tie, but the score just got
worse from there as relievers Young and Brown combined for ·the last three
innings and,allowed 13 runs,
but were not helped in the
· field with errors by the
defense that prolonged.
innings and put more runllers on base.
The teams traded runs in
the fifth and sixth innings.
and it wasn't until the bottom of the stxth that the
Mason County team blew
the game open.
The offense started to
show up when Ravenswood's Brett Greene singled, on ly to be brought
home by a Kenny Durst RBI
double that regamed the one
run lead for the home team.
After Ripley's Dale Kestner
walked to put runners on
first and second, Whitlock
sent a shot up the third base
line that got into the ou,rtield
and allowed Durst to score
from second.

Please see LecJon. 82

hits - none after the fifth
inning - and are 6-15 in
interleague garnes in two seasons as they head to Arizona
for a three-game set.
Colorado, a league-worst 722 in •on the road, has won
eight stmight and 13 of its
past 16 games at Coors Field.
The Rockies have the majors'
best home record at 24-8 and
their pitchers have won six
straight starts there.
"This is our home park,"
said Larry Walker. who had
three RB!s and two hits to
improve his average to .272.
"Any team that plays in their
own park should have confidence."

Indians
starter
C.C.
Sabathia (4-3) was on a roll
until he rolled off the mound
in the fifth inning .
With hi s team leading 4-3,
Sabathia opened the fifth

inning by walking Payton,
then was called for a balk
after catching his cleats on the
dirt and falling to the ground.
The crowd jeered as the ball
squirted -from his hand and
trickled to the edge of the
mound.
.The tumble seemed to
unnerve Sabathia.
He walked Todd Helton on
the next' pitch, and Walker
made it 5-4 with a slowrolling single up the middle.
Chris Stynes followed with a
run-scoring triple 'and Bobby
Estalella made it 7-4 with a
sacrifice fly off Teqy
Mulholland.
Sabathia allowed · seven
runs - six earned - on nine
hits in 4 1-3 innings to end a
four-game winning streak . .
Jose Jimenez pitched the
ninth for his .14th save in 15
chances, and his I Oth straight.

Devils beat Ducks
EAST RUTHERFORO,
N.J. (AP) -Three u*onventional goals in a totally outof-character game put the
New Jersey Devils in a familiar position -~ up 3-2 in the
Stanley Cup finals.
Brian Gionta scored a goal
and set up Jay Pandolfo_for
the go-ahead score - neither
of which went off the Devils'
sticks - in a decisive secottd
period as New Jersey beat the
Anaheim Mighty Ducks 6-3
in Game 5 Thursday night.
After .four consecutive
games of limited scoring
chances, minimal open ice;
shutouts and el\cellent goal. tending, all of the above vanished in a shootout that was
the antithesis of the series to
date.
What stayed the same was
the Devils' dominance on
home ice. They have
outscored the Ducks 11-3
while winning all three games
at Continental Airlines Arena.
The Devils are II- I at home
in the playoffs, matching
Edmonton's 1988 record for
home wins in a single playoff
year. '
What the Devils can see
clearly is the Stanley Cup,
and they're only one victory
I

away from their third Cup in
nine seasohs. That would
match the Detroit Red Wings
for the most titles since the
Edmonton Oilers won four
straight in the 1980s.
This is the third time in four
seasons that the Devils have
led the finals 3-2. In 2000,
they closed out the Dallas
Stars on the road in Game 6,
but a year later' they squan~
dered their lea~ by losing the
final two games, and the Cup,J
to Colorado.
The Devils can raise the
Cup by winning Game 6 ··
Saturday night in Anaheim,
where the Ducks won two
closely played gam.es in overtime to even the,series.

Plun sH Devils. 82

0

0

�..

..
Page 82 • The

Daily Sentinel

Yiww.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, June 6, 2003
'

-French Open
·chan2e... Hen in·- Harde nne
said ' .. She remains- a 2reat
champion. very difficult to
beat. So it' s, early to say
anything. But _the gap is
becoming smalle r."
One
indication :
On
Saturday. Roland Garros
will ho st the fir't Grand
Slam final since· the 2002
Australillll Ope n featuring
someone other than the
Williams sisters.
Instead. it will be the first
all-Belgian Grand Slam
final. · Th e fourth-seeded
.Henin-Hardenne will play
No. 2 Kim Clijsters. who
advanced bv beatino Nadia
Petrova 7-5.. 6-1. "
"To have two players in
the final. that's unbelievable
for the COJ.!ntry." Henin·
Hardenne sa id .. "Be leian
people have to be going
crazy."
The crowd went crazy
Thursday
for
HeninHardenne and cheered mistakes by Williams, rooting
for an end to her Grand
Slam streak.
''She· s had her chance so
times ,"
Heninmany
Hardenne said. ·'Maybe it's
time to give someone else a

.:hance."
Cheers became jeers when
Wi lliams annoyed fans by
questioning two close calls
that uhimately went in her
favor. In the pivotal seventh
game of the final s~t. with
Williams serving and leading ·4-2. she became so
un"nerved that she lost four·
consecutive points and the
game.
- Her mother criticized the
fans.
"A lack of class and total
ignorance." Price said. ··or.
they just don.' t know tenni s
and the etiquette of tenni s."
Discussing the subject in
her postmatch news conference. Williams choked up.
"I'm not used to crying,"
she said, wiping away tears.
·'It's a little difficult. All my
life I've had to fight. 'It's
just another fight I'm going
to have to learn how to win.
that's all. I'm just going to
have to keep smiling."
Williams lost the final
game at love. When she hit
an errant return on match
point. she walked around
.the net and brusquely shook
Henin-Harden ne's hand.
Again the crowd booed.

William s said she was
miffed at Henin -Hardenne
re2arding one of the dispules with the chair umpire .
Williams hit an errant
serve as Hen in- Hardenne
appeared to ask for time.
But the umpire didn 't see
Henin-Hardenne make · the
reque st. and she denied
doing it, oO the Serve stood.
"I was a linle disappointed with her.'' Williams said.
'' It wasn't the turning point
of the match. obviously. but
I think to start lying and fabricating is not fair."
Henin-Hardenne didn ' t
address the disputed serve.
She was diplomatic when
asked about the fan behavior.
"The crowd gave me all .
the support I need to win,"
she said. " I say thank you to
tnem. but . it's true that
sometimes it was a little bit
too much ."
Loyalties will be more
evenly divided Saturday.
King Albert and Queen
Paola of Belgium will be
part of the crowd, ready to
applaud the first Belgian
Grand Slam champion.

Scoreboard
Pro baseball

6·2, .750, 2.76: Leiter. New York. 6-2.
.750, 4.35: Nathan, San Francisco. 5-2,

NATIOHAL LEAGUE LHdo&lt;l
BATIING--PujOis, St. LOUIS, .379:

.714, 3.73.
STRIKEOUTS-Wood, ChiCago, t

Sheffield. Atlanta, .35-4; Renteria. St.
Louis. .339: Vidro. Montreal, .338:
AGonzalez, Fk:lrida, .335; Lo Ouca, los
Angeles• .333; Ueberthat . Philadelphia.

JVazquez. Montreal, 97; Prior. Chicago,
88: Schmidt. San Francisco. 88; Schilling,
Ar1zona, 82; Millwood, Philadelphia. 76:
Nomo, Los Angeles, 76
SAVE5-Smoltz, Atlanta, 22; Gagne, Los
Angeles . 20; Wagner: Houston. 16:
Benitez, New York:, 16: MiWiUiams.
P1nsburgh. 16: Biddle, Montreal. 15:
Mesa. Philadelphia, 15.

.330.
RUN5-F'urcal. At1anta. 54: PujoiS. St
Louis; 51 : Helton, Colorado, 51 ; Sheffield,
Atlanta, 48; Sexson. Milwaukee. 44:
Payton . Colorado, 43; MGiles, Atlanta, 41 ;
Berkman, Houston . 41: Lofton. Pittsburgh,
4t .

OOUBLES-JKenl, Houston, 22; Rolen,
StLOuis. 21: Hollandsworth, Florida, 21 :
LGonzalez, Arizona, 21 ; PrWilson,
Colorado. 20.
TRIPLES-Furcal, Atlanta, 7; LWalker,
ColoraDo. 7; Wigginton. New York, 5:
CPatterson. Chicago. 5. AGonzalez. '·
Florida. 4: JEncarnacion. Florida. 4:
Payton, Colorado. 4
HOME RUNS- Dunn. Cincir1nali. 18:
Lowell, Rorida , 18; Se,l(son, Milwaukee,
18: Pulols, StLOuis, 16: Sheffield, Atlanta .
16 : PrWilson. Colorado. 14 ; ABoone,
Cincinnati, 14;-PJones. Atlanta. 14;
Jlopez, Atlanta, ' 14; Bonds. San
Francisco. 14 .
STOLEN BASE5-Pierre, Florida, 24:
DAoberts, los Angeles. 1 8; EYoung, '
Milwaukee, 15: LCastillo, Florida, 13;
JEncarnacion, Flonda. 12: Delee. Florida ,
12; Furcal, Atlanta. 11: Lofton. Pittsburgh,
11.

PITCHING {7 Decisi011s)-WWilliams, St.
Louis, 8·1 , .889, 1.99: KBrown , Los
Angeles, 8·1, .889, 2.06: Chacon,
Colorado, 8·2, .800, 3.17; Rueter. San
Franctsco. 6-1 , .857 , 3.33; Prior, Ch1cago,

STOLEN BASES-ASoriano, New York,
17; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 15 ; Hairston Jr..
Baltimore. 14: Mondesi. New York, 14:
!Suzuki, Seattle. 12: Beltran. Kansas City.
12: Damon. Boston, 11 .
PITCHING (7 Decisions )-Moyer, Seattle.

BASEBALL
A-nlaoguo
DETROIT TtGER&amp;-Piaeed t B Carlos
Pena on the 15-day disa~ed list, retroadive
to June 2. Purchased the contract of INF
Warren Morns from Toledo of the IL
KANSAS CITY ROYAL&amp;-Signed OF
Chris Lubanski, C Mitch Maier. 38 Roben

9·2, .eta. 3.21 ; Meche. SeaWe. 8·2 .. aoo.

3.10: Loaiza. Chicago, 8-2, .8(X), 1.90:
Mulder, Oakland, 8-3, .727, 3.08;

McFall, and AHP Chris Goodman.
National L.aogue

Halladay. To ronto. 7-2 .. 778. 4.40: DWells.
New York, 7-2, .778, 3.35; J.Johnson.
Baltimore, 5-2, .714, 3.63; Valdes. Texas.
5-2 .. 714 , 5.01 , Wakefield , Boston, 5·2,

COLORADO AOCKIE&amp;-Sent LHP Vk:
Darensbourg outright to Colorado Springs of

.714, 5.10

AMERICAN LEAGUE Leaders

lowell. Florida, 49: Helton, Colorado. 48:
AJones. Atlanta , 46: Rolen , St Louis , 46.
HITS-Furcal, Atlanta. 80; Pierre, Florida.
77: Putots. St. Louis, 75; LCastillo, Florida,
75 ; Renteria, St. louis, 75; Sheffield,
Atlanta, 73: CPatterson, Chicago, 72.

00;

BATIING-Mueller, Boston, .362; Mora.
Banimore . .359; Blalock, Texas .. 354:
Bradley, Cleveland . .339: Baldelli, Tampa
Bay, .336: TWalker. Boston .. 324:

RBI-PrWilson , Colorado. 52: Kearns.
Cincinnati, 51 ; Sheffield, Atlanta. 51 ;

Luckily. the team was sti ll
hot at the plate in the bottom
of the seventh and surged
forward for · seven runs to
from Page B1
end the game 15-4. Greene
Then. Ripley\ Brian continued his solid game at
Stalnuker walked to load the the plate and brought in the
bases. and Kestner scored fir&gt;! run of the inning. while
from third on a passed ball at subseqtient base hits ·from
the plate. To top it all off, Rave nswood's Chris Barbe .
Ravenswood's
Eric and Durst left the bases
Anderson came to the plate . loaded.
Ke stner then sing)ed to
and blasted a double otT·the
fence in right-center tleld to bri1}g in Greene and
score
Whitlock
and Whitlock immediately folStalnaker and open a sizable lowed with another base hit
8-3 lead for the Mason that brought in two more
runs .
Countians.
Stalnaker stepped to the
Chad Zerkle then entered
plate
and doubled to bring tn
the game to replace
Whitlock on the mound and two more runs and Ripley s
stilled a potential Meigs Zeb Reed tlnally ended the
rally while protecting the barrage with one last RBI
lead. After pulling runners that put t~e score at 15-4 to
on first and second with one end a solid tlrst game for the
out. Young singled to bring Mason County team.
Next.
the
Mason
one run home, but Amsbury
travel
to
was thrown out on his way Countians
to third and the Mason Sistersville for a game . on
Countians escaped the Saturday before returning
inning with minimal dam- home for a 2 p.m. game
age.
against Parkersburg South .

Legion

·Henin-Hardenne beats S. Williams
PARIS (APl - Maybe
S ~r~na Williams really is
the. biggest.
strongest.
fastest player \Vith the best
strokes in women's tennis.
as Andre Agassi says.
That doesn't make her
unbeatable.
Rattled by a hostile crowd
.1nd a brazen opponent.
Wi ll iams fell shy Thursday
m her bid for a fifth consecutive Grand Slam title.
Justine Henin-Hardenne
ended Williams· one-year
domination in major events
by beating her 6-2. 4-6. 7-5
in the semifinals of the
French Open.
Said Williams ' mother and
coach. Oracene Price: "She
knew. this job was dangerous when she took it.''
It was the first defeat for
Williams in her past 34
Grand Slam matches. but
her second loss in a row · to
Henin-Hardenne. Williams
was 21-0 this year before
the Belgian beat her in
Charleston, S.C., in April.
While Williams will
remain No. I next week,
there's been a slight shift in
the balance of power.
"I hope things are going to

.

EMartinez, Seattle, .324.
RUN5-COelgado. Toronto. 53: BBoone.
Seat11e. 51 ; ASoriano. New York, 50;
Garciaparra. Boston. 50: CEverett. Texas.

46: Wells, Toronto, 44; MRamirez. Boston.
44.
RBI-cOetgado, Toronto. 59: Wells ,
Toronto. 55: GAnderson. Anahe1m. 53:
BBoone, Seattle, 48: EMar1inez, Seattle,
47: JGonzalez; Texas, 43; ASoriano. New
York, 42: MRamirez, Boston, 42; CEverett,
TexaS. 42.
HITS-ASoriano, New York. 81: Baldelli .
Tampa· Bay, 77; !S uzuki, Seattle. 76:
Garclaparra. ~oston . 76: Wells, Toronto,
74; GAnderscin . Anaheim, 74: BBoane.
Seanle, 73.
DOUBLES-Wells, Toronto. 22; Mueller.
Boston. 21 : Matsui. New York, 20 : HuH,
Tampa Bay, 20: Catalanono, Toronto, 20;
GAnderson, Anaheim. 19: CDelgado,
Toronlo, 19.

TAIPLES-CGuzman, Minnesota., 8;
Garc1aparra, Bosto n, 8: DJimenez.
Ch1cago. 5: Baldelli, Tampa Bay. 4:
MYoung, Te~tas . 4: Byrnes, Oakland, 4;
OYoung. Detro1t. 4 .
HOME RUNS-;ASoriano, New York. 18;
CDelgado. Toronto. 17: BBoone Seattle,
17; JGonzalez, Texas , 17; ARodriguez,
Texas. 16: Huff. Tampa Bay. 14: CEverett ..
Texas. 14, EMartinez. Seattle, 14

1he PCL.

STAIKEOUTS-Musslna. New York, 88;
Clemens, New York, 82; Halladay; Toronto,
69: Loaiza. Cnicago, 65: PMartinez.
Boston, 62: Pettitte. New York. 61 :
Wakefield. Boston, 61 .
SAVES-Urbina. Texa&amp; 17: Guardado,
Minnesota. 17; Foulke, Oakland, 15; Julio.
Baltimore. 14: MacDougal. Kansas City.
13 ; DBaez, Cleveland, 11 : LCarter, Tampa
Sa~. 11

MONTREAL EXPO&amp;-Recalled RHP Julio
Manon from Edmonton of the PCL Optioned

AHP Sun-Woo Kim to Edmont011,
SAN DlEGO PADRE&amp;-Activaled OF

Mark Kotsay from the 15-day disatied list.
Optioned AHP Jai"et Wright to Portland of
the PCL

FOOTBALL
National Football League
BUFFALO Blll5-Agreed to terms with S

Pro hockey

Chad Cola. '
CINCINNAfl

BENGALS-Signed OT
Langston Moore and OT Scott Kooistra to

National Hockey League

three-year contracts.

STANLEY CUP ANALS
(Best-of·7)

CLEVELAND BROWN&amp;-Released

New Jersey vs. Anaheim
Tuesday, May 27
New Jersey 3, Anaheim a
""

06

Pat BarneS.
DALLAS COWBOY5-Released DT Ron
Moore. S RICk Sherroo, and GRoss Tucker
1ND1ANAPOUS cOLTS- Released OB
Jim Druckenmiller' and WR J~y Getheratl.

Thursday, May 29

New Jersey 3, Anahe1m 0
Saturday, May 31
Anahe1m 3, New Jersey 2. OT

SAN DIEGO CHARGeR5-Signed OL
• Solomon Page to a one-year contract.
HOCKEY
Na110nal Hockey League

Monday, June 2
Anaheim 1, New Jersey 0, OT
Thursday, June 5

New Jersey 6. Anaheim 3, New Jersey
CALGARY FLAMES-Signed D Robyn
leads series 3-2
Saturday, June 7
Regehr
New Jersey at Anaheim, 8 p.m.
PHOENIX
COYOTE5-Signed
LW
Monday, June 9
Frantisek Lukes to a mu1t1year contract
Anaheim at New Jersey, 8 p.m., if necesPITISBUAGH PENGUINs-Named Keith
sary
i
'
( Wehner director of med1a relations.

Transactions

J

COLLEGE
NoRmwEsTERN-PromOled
McCollum to field hOCkey coach.

Kelly

Couch
from Page 81
pick four years ago. passed
for a career-high 18 touchdowns last season and made
14 starts before breaking hi s
right leg in the regular-season finale against Atlanta.
Enter Holcomb.
A career backup in
Indianapolis and Cleveland.
he replaced Couch for the
first-round playoff game
against Pittsburgh and threw
for three TDs and 429 yards
- the third most in NP.._

playoff history.
Following
Holcomb 's .
jaw-dropping performance.
Davis see med to throw the
quarterback position wide
open when he said, ''The
best guy has got to play."
As of now, that still
appears to be Couch, who'll
be entering his fifth pro season, with Holcomb close
behind him.
Davis raved about the
way his two quarterbacks
have handled their head-tohead butrle. which will be
scrutinized next week when
the Browns hold their final
mtm-camp.

Devils

net before Giguere could
react at 3:12.
Samuel Pahlsson tied it
from Page B1
just over three minutes later,
- The only players working but Pandolfo gave the
overtime Thursday were the Devil s the lead for good at
goalies, Brodeur (20 saves 4-3 midway through the
on 23 shots) and Jean- period on a goal that was
, Sebastien Giguere (31 saves initially waved off by refer·
on 37 shots). Giguere hadn't ee Bill McCreary.
allowed more than three
Gionta was trying to get
goals in any playoff game
the
puck down low when it
this spring. including seven
deflected off Pandolfo's
overtime games. ,
The up-and-down, free- skate and past Giguere.
flowing game looked noth- McCreary quickly signaled
ing like the first four games. no goal, indicating Gionta
when there wasn' t a single had kicked the puck in .
. goal scored in the tlrst periBut replays showed there
od.
was no distinct kicking
This time it was 2-2 after . motion by Gionta - the cri·
one before the Devils retook · teria the NHL uses to deterthe lead - not by putting mine if a player is intentionthe puck in the net. but by ally trying to deflect the
letting the Ducks do it for
puck - and director of offithem .
Andy
Van
Giunta, who had been ciating
He
llemond
let
the
goal
stand
without a goal in the playoils. threw the puck toward . after watching a replay.
Babcock said the goal
the net from along the rightwing boards, and it deflect- should have counted. and he
ed off Ducks forward Mike had no problem with the
Leclerc\ stick and into the call.

Reds
from Page B1
Matsui was known in Japan
as "Godzilla" for his prodigious homers, and seemed to
measure up to his three,year,
$21 million contract when he
arrived.
Matsui homered in hi s second spring training at-bat,
and hit a grand slam in his
first game at Yankee
Stadi um.
Hi ~ slump prompted Torre
to drop him to seventh for
Thursday's game. trying to
ease him out of the international spotlight for~ while. It
followed him anyway.
He misplayed a si ngle to
center for &lt;t n error in the first,
dropping hi s head in disgust
as the ball rolled under his
glove.
Two innings later, he hit
one of the most impressive
homers at Great American
Ball Park.
Jorge Posada doubled
home a run· and Robin
Ventura doubled home two
more for a 4- 1 lead.
Matsui went fo a 3-0 count
against Graves, who was
developing . a blister on the
middle f;riger, aJ1d hit the
next pitch off the batter's eye
beyond the wall in center.
Matsui showed no emotion
as he rounded the bases on
his fourth homer overall and
his first since May 7, a span
of 25 games.
The blister forced Graves
from the game after he gave
up eight hits and six runs in
three innings.

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The tlaily Sentinel

•

Basebal

Page H3
Friday, June 6, 2003

Williams pitches no-hit ball.for 7}a innings
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
mnmgs; Los Angeles 5.
Perhaps the Toronto Blue Kansas . City
2: . and
. Jays should've protested Minnesota 5. San Franci sco.
-the1r lack of hitting at Busch 2.
Stadium.
In the National League .
Woody Williams beat his Milwaukee swept a doubleformer team with his arm and header from New York , 8'7
bat, pitching no-hit ball for 7 and 5·3.
1-3 innings and driving in
In St. Louis. it was 1-0 in
four runs as the St. Louis the second inning when the
Cardinals romped 13-5 Cardinals put Eduardo Perez
1
Thursday night for a threeon second base ami 1Ti no
game sweep.
. "This is the best game I've Martinez on first with no
ever played, all around ," outs.
·
Williams said. "Not degradMike Matheny hit a shal low fly ball and left fielder
. h
b
.~!stf~~" Yany means, but it Frank Catalanotto tried for a
The Cardinals outscored shoestring grab. Third-base
Toronto 32-15 in the series umpire Kerwin Danley ruled
- a stat that looked even it was a catch and Perez. who
- h
had run to third, was doubled
worse untt 1 t e Blue Jays got off second and Martinez was
five runs in the ninth inning.
By then, Toronto was ready tagged out.
to get out of town.
Cardinals manager Tony
"They have a great team La Russa sprinted onto the
over there," Orlando Hudson field to argue, and replays
said. ."Lmk what they just showed Catalanotto trapped
did to us. They handed it to the ball.
us."
The umpires huddled and
Along with being held hit- after several minutes. they
less until Hudson's clean sin· ruled it a base hit and the St.
gle in the eighth, the Blue Louis runners returned, loadJays played the game under ing the bases. The decision
.protest. They got rankled cost the Blue Jays their first
:when an umpire's reversal triple play since 1979.
cost them , a triple play, and . " It's always· been in the
manager Carlos Tosca was book, but they 've been really
ejected for the first time in emphasizing the last several
his major league career.
, years is get the play right, get
· In other interleague games, the play right." La Russa
it was Atlanta 8, Texas 4; said. "From the. other side,
·chicago Cubs 8, Tampa Bay Carlos has got to argue. But
I; Colorado 7, Cleveland 4; the ball' hit the grass.''
San Diego 5, Detroit 1;
Tosca protested because he
Montreal 8, Anaheim 7 in 14 said the Blue Jays had gotten
innings; Pittsburgh 5, Boston a forceout at second. He said
•4; Florida 2, .Oakland 0; he knew Catalanotto had not
Seattle 5, Philadelphia 4: caught the ball.
~New York ·Yankees
10,
"Yeah, I knew that at the
Cincinnati 2: Houston II, time," he said. "I could see
Baltimore 1; Chicago White that from where I was sitting.
Sox 3. Arizona 2 in I 0 But when two umpires make

a definitive out call, well .....
Home plate umpire Wally
Bell. the crew chief. 'aid it
was a group decision to
reverse the call.
"When we get together as a
crew. our job is to get the call
right," Bell said. "We got the
call ri ght. The ball skipped
into the glove.''

·si ngle. Lofton then hit a long
tly ball to center.

Standinus
National League

White Sox 3,
D-backs 2, 10 inn .

East Division
W

Atlanta

l

Pet · GB

40 19 .678
34 26 .567

Montreal
6'l
Philadelphia
31 28 .525
9
Florida
. 28 33 .459 13
New York
26 32 .448 13'7
Central Division

Padres 5, Tigers 1

At Phoenix . Frank Thomas
At San Dic~o. Keith homered and doub led home
W
L Pel GB
Lockhart hit a' go-ahead the go-ahead run in the I Oth . Chicago
32 26 .552
Houston
33 27 .550
homer in th ~ ' ixth '" the a' Chicago snapped a fiveSt.louis
31 27 .534
t
Cincinnati
29 30 .492 3'-.
Padres avoided a three-game game los in g strea k.
Ptrtsburgh
25 33 .431
1
sweep.
Milwaukee ·
24 34 .414
8
West Di'.'iSion
Detroit ( 16--l I.J is once Brewers 8, Mets 7,
W L Pel GB
Mariners 5, Phillies 4 again saddled w;ih bi1sebafl's
San Francisco
36 23 .610·
1st
game
Los Angel·es
33 26 .559
3
;vorst record. having given it
Colorado
31 30 .508
6
Mike Cameron's three-run up for une day to the Padres
In the opener, Richie
~~~0&amp;~~
~~ l~ ·: ~~~ ~~
hom·er off Jo'e Mesa in the ( 18-43)
American
League
Sexson. Eric Young, Geoff
ninth led Seanle to its ninth
East Division
straight victory and team- Marlins 2, Athletics 0
Jenkins and Royce Clayton
W l
Pel GB
New York
34 25 .576
record IJ~h in a row on the
homered to help Milwaukee
Boston
33 25 .569
'.,
road.
Toronro
32 29 .525
3
Florida rookie Dontrclle to its first victory at Shea
28 30 .483 s',
Cameron fouled off two Willis pitched seve n impres- Stadium since September Baltimore
Tampa Bay
22 36 .379 11',
consecutive bunt attempts . sive innings against the 2000.
Central Division
WLPctGE
before hitting an 0-2 pitch team he grew up rooting for,
Minnesota
33 25 .569 - t
into ihe left-fie ld bullpen. outdueling Oakland's Ted
Kansas City
\128 29 .491 4
Chk:ago
26 33 .441
7
Brewers 5, Mets 3,
Kazuhiro Sasaki retired Jim Lilly.
Cleveland
23 35 .397 9h
Thome and Bobby Abreu
Detroit
16 41 .281
16
Willis, ,an Oakland native. 2nd game
West Division
with the bases loaded for his gave up five hits again st .the
W
L Pet GB
IOth save.
Seanle
40 18 .690
visiting Athletics. He struck
Milwaukee scored four
Oa~and
33 25 .569 "7
out four and wa lked three .
Anaheim
29 28 .509 10't,
times in the first off secondTexas
25 33 .431
15
Cubs 8, Devil Rays 1
game starter Tom Glavine
Thuraday's Garnes
Atlanta a, Texas 4
Expos 8,
before he le ft with inflammaCubs B. Tampa Bay 1
At Chicago. Sammy Sosa. Angels 7, 14 inn.
tion in his elbow. Ben Sheets . Chicago
COlorado 7, Cleveland 4
waiting to learn what his
8, N.Y. Mets 7, 1st game
pitched seven sharp mmngs Milwaukee
Milwaukee 5, N.Y. Mats 3, 2nd game
punishment will be for using
San Diego 5. Detroit 1
Ron Calloway. filling in for for the Brewers.
a corked bat. hit an RBI sinMontreal a, Anaheim 7, 14 1nnings
the
injured
Vladimir
Pittsburgh 5, Boston 4
gle in the first and also
Florida .2, Oakland 0
Guerrero,
hit
a
game-ending,
reached on an error during
Seattle 5, Philadelphia 4
two-run sing l-e wit h two outs Braves 8, Rangers 4
N.Y. Yankees 10, Cincinnati 2
the Cubs' seven-run thirp.
Houston 11 , Baltimore 1
Sosa went 1-for-4 and is 4- in the [4th to lead Montreal
St.loui&amp; 13, Toronto 5
past Anaheim in Puerto Rico.
Javy Lopez hit a tiebreakO'llcago While Sox 3, Arizona 2. 10
for-24 in his last six game s.
Calloway aho hit a three- ing homer in the seve nth as Innings
Los Angeles 5, Kansas City 2
Minnesota 5 , San Francisco 2
.
run
·homer
as
the
Expos
won
Atlanta
completed
a
home
Pirates 5, Red Sox 4
Friday's Gamet
for jusr the second time in I0 sweep of Texas.
N.Y. Yankees (Wells 7·2) at Chicago
(ZAmbrano 5--4), 3:20p.m.
Gary Sheffield also home- Cubs
At
Pittsburgh, Kenny ga me~ .
Texas (Lewis 4~3) vs. Montreal
red for the Braves, who (l.Hemande z 4·4) at San Juan, 7:05
Lofton homered and hit a
extended Texas' longest los- p.m.
tiebreaking sacritlce tly in the Astros 11 , Orioles 1
Oakland (Zito 6-4) at Philadeiphia
ing streak of the se~so n to six (Myers 5-4), 7:05 p.m .
eighth to help the Pirates snap
Seattle (Franklin 4-3) at N.Y. Mets (Seo
Roy Oswalt struck out a games .
a three-game losing streak.
2·2), 7:10p.m.
Toronto (Halladay 7-2) at Cincinnati
starter
Mike (Riedllnq
Jeff Reboulet had an infield season-hi gh II , and Brian. Atlanta
()-2), 7: to p.m .
single off Ramiro Mendoza in Hunter drove in four runs to Hampton left in the second
Anahe1m {Appler 4·2) at Florida
4-6) , 7:35 p.m .
the eighth. stole second base help Houston complete a with a strained groin, but six (Pavano
Pittsbufgh (Welts 2·2 ) at 'Atlanta
and moved to third on three-game hon,1e sweep.
relie ve rs limited the Rangers (Reynolds 4-t), 7:35p.m.
BOston {Wakefield 5-2) at Milwaukee
Abraham Nunez's pinch-hit
to one run .
(Fra nklin 3-4), 8:05p.m .
Tampa Bay (Bierbrodt 0·2) at Houston
{Robertson 4-3), 8;05 p.m.
Ba~more (Helling 3-4) al St. Lou~
(Tomko 2-4), 8:10p.m .
Minnesota (Rogers 4·2) at San Diego
(Paavy 4-5), 9;05 p.m.

.Bat controversy

Kansas City_{K.Wilson 2·0) at Colorado
(Cook 2·5), 9.05 p.m .
Cleveland {Ja.Oavis 4-4) at Arizona

MLB finds no cork in Sosa's 76 tested bats
.

BY NANCY ARMOUR
Associated Press

-Sosa can appeal any discipline imposed.
But how did this happen in
the first place'?
Sosa uses bats made by
three ditferent manufacturers.
While each · brand is visibly
different, Alderson · said all
bats made by the sal)1e maker
look similar. The bat Sosa
· used Tuesday night wa~ made
by Tuflbat. '
Jones said it \ easy to see
how Sosa could have grabbed
the wrong bat.
'Tve got five boxes of bats
in there... Jones said. ''Bat
doesn 't feel good, you throw
it in this box. Bat feels good,
that 's going to be a

· CH ICAGO - The rest of
Sammy Sosa's bats · were
clean, just as he promised .
they'd be .
·
· Now baseball officials have
to decide what to do about the
one that started this mess.
, Bob Watson, baseball's vice
president in charge of discipline, was at Wrigley Field on
Thursday, conducting interviews - before returning to
New York to decide what punishment Sosa deserves for
.using a corked bat.
"Whatever they decide to do, I have to deal with it,"
So~a said.
A piece of cork was found
just above the handle in
Sosa's bat Tuesday night.
·when it shuttered after he
~rounded out in the first
mning of the Chicago Cubs'
3-2 victory. Sosa insists it was
a mistake, saying he accidentally pulled out a bat he uses
to put on home run displays
for fans in batting practice. Tests Wednesday appeared
to support that. X-rays of 76
bats confiscated from Sosa's
locker Tuesday night found
no cork or illegal substances,
said Sandy Alderson, executive vice president of baseball
operations in the commi ssioner's oftice.
· "Good. That makes everybody feel a lot better,"
Atlanta's Chipper Jones said. Chicago 's Sammy Sosa is a ll smiles during batting practice
"It doesn't take away. from Thursday at Chicago's Wrigley Field. Bob Watson, baseball's
what happened, but it gives vice president in' charge of discipline, was at Wrigley Field on
some validity to what Sammy Thursday conducting interviews to help him determine how
was saying.Jf he's got one bat Sosa should be punished for using a corked bat. X-rays of 76 ·
that ~ot mixed in with the rest bats confiscated from ·Sosa's locker Tuesday night found no
of hts bats, then I believe it cork or other tampering that's illegal in baseball. (AP)
was an honest .mistake." .
Sos~'s bats in the Hall of It's something 'l' m never in baseball."
Fam~ might still be examined, going to forget." '
Sosa swears he 's never used
Alderson said. The Hall has
Sosa has been baseball's anything illegal. Dozen.s of
five of Sosa's bats, including quintessential good guy the his bats have broken over the
the one he presented in mid- last five seasons, a lovable years without anything suspiApril, more than a week after slugger with an ·infectious cious being found.
he hit. his 500th home run .
smile and a feel -good story.
And if he was trying to
The tests went a long way While Mark McGwire and cheat, he said. why wouldn 't
toward easing people's minds. Barry Bonds got the home run he have tried to grab the bat
Sosa was greeted with rousing records, Sosa got most of the before anyone saw it''
cheers when he did his tradi - adulation.
"I would have come back to
tional sprint to right field
"To get caught and it's the plate and picked up all the
Wednesday night , and fans Sammy - that's a big deal. pieces, don't you think?': he
gave . him a standing ovation That's
a
huge
deal." said. " I didn't pick it up. I
wheh he came to the pi ate m Cincinnati Reds pitcher went to the dugout. So you
the first inning.
Danny Graves said. "That's guys can see the difference ."
One fan held up a sign that like saying Roger Clemens is
It doesn ' t mean he's nllthe
read, "Still Lovin Sammy."
scuffing the ball. It just totally .hook. Other players who've
"They know that I am an breaks your heart, you know used corked bats have been
innocent person ," Sosa said. what I mean? I'm not saying su,spended for up to I 0 games,
"When I went to right field, Ro ger Clemens scuffs the and Alderson said he thinks
everybody was cheering for ball. I'm just using his name precedent will play a part in
me. I feel very happy inside. because he's the b.~s t pitcher Watson's decision.
I '

(Ed.Gonzalez t-0),.10:05 p.m.
Chk:ago Whtte Sox (Buehrle 2·8) at

.

gamer. You go I0 at-bats
without getting a hit, you
throw it in a box. get a new
one. You're always inter:
changing."
After what happened this
week, baseball probably
needs to address that,
Alderson said.
"If this was a batting practi ce bat, the possibility of con·
fusi ng that bat would suggest
that we probably ought to be
awfully careful about having
any of those Bats around ," he
said. "It 's not something
we've looked at, but we wi ll.''

los Angeles (Ishii 4-2), 10:10 p.m.
Saturday 's Games

Oakland (Harang O-o) a1 Philadelphia
(WoH 6-3), f;20 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees {Clemens 6·3) at·Chicago
Cubs (Wood 4·4) , 2 ;20 p.m.
BBitlmore (Ponson 7-3) at St. louis
(Stephenson 3-4) . 4;05 p.m.

Detroit (Maroth 1·10) at San Francisco
(Schmidt 4-2), 4;05 p.m.

1

Cleveland (B.Anderson 3-5) at Arizona
(Patte,.on 0·3), 4:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Sele 2·3) al Fk&gt;rida (Phelps
2-Q), 8:05p.m.

!6)1as (Park 1-3) vs . Montreal (Vargas
2·2) at San Juan, 7:05 p.m.
Boston (Fossum 4-4) at Milwaukee
(Quevedo o-21. 7:05 p.m.
Pittsburgll (Fogg 2·2)

at Atlanta
(Aamirez4·2), 7:05p.m.
Tampa Bay (Reyes 0·2) at Houston
(J.Johnson 0·1), 7;05 p .m.

Seattle (Garcia 5-6) at N.Y. Mets (leiter
6·2), 7;10 p.m.
Toronto (D.Oavis 3·3) at C incinnati
Dempster 1-4), 7:1 0p.m .
' ) ·Kansas City (~eorge 5·4) at Colorado
Chacon 8-2), 8.05 p.m.
Minnesota (Santana 2- 1) at San Diego
(Loewer H). 10:05 p.m.

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(just
haul it away 304-773-9566. shredder, .alec heater/blow· table, typewriter No early Flatwoods
Rd)
sales.
serious Inquires only!
Cloth ing/mi sc . items
er, vcr, bike, old tiller, cloth ·
ADVERTISING I
ing &amp; jackets, boll &amp; flat fold 7 family yard sale, June 6th
~ kittens 446-0478
Thu rsday 5th -Sat urday 7th
fabric -all kinds. sewing &amp; 7th. Go to Forest Ru n turn
SALES
9-4 Rockspri ngs Rd . beside
6 Weeks old kittens to good notions, HI, ~~:·glide exerciser on Morning Star, stre.ight
REPRESENTATIVE
pallet mill. Household, dishonto Court St. follow signs .
home, 2 male, 2 females.
es . lamps, tv's mi sc.
June 5,6,7
C lothing of all sizes, toys ,
Litter trained. Call 446-4269
For well as1ablishad
9·?, 1611 Shoestring Ridge tools , ant iQues, various gym
YARD SALELocal Co.
6 year old fema le m itten baby girl clothes, household equiPment, VHS tapes, too
PT. PLEASANT
pawed bobtail cat-fixed &amp; Items, sweeper, desk
much to list 949-2048
declawed. To indoor home
June
6
&amp;
7,
8·
5
Ambleside
Family
Yard
Sate.
Fou r family garage sale , 4
only.
Very friendly, 992·
Or. ott Kerr Ad. toys, power June 6t h &amp; 7th, H4 mile o ut Saturday. June 7, 8·?. 114
1090
wheel jeep. little tykes, exer· Hemlock Grove Ad. oN of Howard
Stre et ,
Haven
7 week old puppies, mixed cise equipment, c ar seat, Rocksprings Ad . past nurs- Heights, New Haven.
breed, call 388·9956
womens 8nd .boys clothes
ing home 5·10 min. o ut of
Pomeroy, something for Estate Sate
Bird dog puppies 6 weeks June 6-7. 9-Dark, 7 miles
everyone, name brand items Sat. June 7, . 2805 Pa rrish
• Must have goo~
old. (304 )675·2245
hom Porter on 554, 5 1/2
·Communication skills
_...:.__:.___-:c:-- miles from C heshi re , cloth· Friday &amp; Sat urd ay June 6 &amp; . Ave 9am .
.
Free kittens, gray/white or ing, Jr. miss-plus size. boys 7th 9-5 Nelson residence, Garage Sale Fnday 8:~0 .
• Must h'ave good
7
179
1
gray ( 40 )992·
and girls infant- 10, computer Pomeroy Pike. 1980 GMC 4 Saturday, .8 :00. Bes1de
driving record &amp;
provide own
I'm Kayla, 5 month old Great parts, toddler bed , lawn X 4 truck mcilor hoist 200 Wendys_ Girls and boys
DaneiDalmation mht, have mower, microwave , knick AMP elecfric servic'e &amp;. wire, · clothes, toys. great variety.
transportallon
all shots and ra bies vee. knacks. curtains, bed linens, air hockey table, furniture,
• Muol h,ave ability to
Rummage Sale! Henderson
446·3153
glider rocker and much riding l awn mower, bedbe a TEAM player
Community Build ing.
more.
clothes,
something
fOr June 6 &amp; 7, 1Oam-5pm.
Lab mi~ pupPies, 2 c hocoeveryonE!
late, 1 black, 10 weeks old Me adows Sub Division 3 - ' - - - - , . -Saturday, 6-7 -03. Adult. girls
Send Resurne to:
family
yard
sale,
Friday
8-4
·
Friday
Jun e 6 &amp; Saturday clothing sizes 6 &amp; under.
446-2460 after 4;00
&amp; Saturday 8-1 mens, wom- Junt 7th -9-4- DeKter com - also other items. Corner Gallipolis Dally Tribune
Lab
puppies
Golden ens, girls clothes. fu rniture. munity. Tools, antiques. fur·
RE: Advertlilng
Sandhill &amp; Jackson Ave.
Retrieve r miMed , wilt be )"lome decor.
·
niture , something lor every5ales Rep
- e~ece lle nt swimmers. beautiYard Sale Burdette Addn,
one
825 Third Avenue
ful must see 304-675-7560 Moving sale 4 13 4th Ave
June 6, 7, &amp; 9th, something
GaUipolla, Oh1o 45631
Ga llipolis. 9am-5pm June 6· Friday June 6th &amp; Salurday for everyone, clothing, turni·
Ven,led gas fieater.&amp; love 7. Longaberger baskets, Jun e 7th 8-5 1648 Lincoln
ture &amp; ect .
sea1 304-675·1349
household item s, baby and Heights, Pome roy. Misc.
Lost your Job? Need to
adult cloth ing.
Rain or
WAI\'TEI)
Work? Let's talk... The new
Garage
sale!
51005
BUY
shine.
YARD SALE
Baldknob Sl lllersville R oad ~---oiriirriiiiiri__,.. Avo n!
are
There
Moving
sale
at
2576 off Bashen Road, Saturday
"25.000 ..customers in our
Addison Pike, Gallipolis . Even 1ng Post 1964 featuring Absolule Top Dollaf' U.S. area needing serv ice. Earn
YARDSALEGold
Coins, $(000+ Monthly by selling
Friday June 6 and Saturday the Beetles . baby. kids &amp; Silver..
GALLII'OLIS
June 7 9am·6pm All items adults clothes , tools. house- Proofsets, Diamonds. Gold $20. of Beauty Products to 6
hold items &amp; muc h more, at Rings .
U.S, Currency,- People, Eo days a Weeki
priced to sell.
the McMillan's, June 6th &amp; M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Great for; Couples-Single
221 Debbie Dr. Fri day and
Second Avenue , Gallipolis,
Multi -family, name bran d
Saturday, clothes-all sizes.
M O'm s-F ami I i e s •
71
'
clothes 2T-10, toys, miscel· _ _h_.- - - - - - - 740-446-2842.
toys, books. and lots more!
Hand1capped. Plans to Fit
laneous,
Friday
9·3, Garage Sale, Fry residence
any Need. No StocK Ups , No
wanted
to
buy-your
e~etra
to
Salisbury
3 lamily yard sale, 1/2 mile Saturday 9 ·12. 300 3rd nexr
Door to Door. 'I t will Work for
car,
minor
repairs
ok,
all
Elementary Friday, June 6 ,
· out Clark Chapel Road, Aven ue
Youl $ 10.00 Stan up Fee.
prices ok 388·8228
Saturday, June 7th 9--4
Bidwell. June 5 &amp;6
Call April, 304·882-3630 or
One day only, kids and
wanted-1·60 acres farm in 1·888· 748-3630.
5·10 tamity yard sale, Clay adults clothing. toys , home North of Eastern H igh
Gallia Coul"'ty,.area nol picky
School
oil
SA
7,
Riggs
subinterior,
6441
State
Rciute
Co mmunity Building , June 6
Medi Home Health Agencv.
388·8228
&amp; 7, 7am-5pm. too much to 588, Rodney, 9-3 Saturday. division. Friday. June 6th 8-4
Inc.
seeking
full·lime
Saturday
June
7th
8·
12
I
\
11'
1
!I\
\II
'\
I
June 7
mention
licensed Physical The rapist
" IIH II I"
for Ohio and w est Virgin 1a
client based . We offer a
competitive salary, benefits
TH&amp;TDAILT C,.fi"'-() ~ ..... ,( _ 1)-c.: ~G!,~~ ~WOID
package, 401 k, fleM time .
):JI.!.:J ~"U ~.,
~
UMt

1 23,950. 0 ~

1 11 ,950. 00

2003 SATURN-VUE
AWD, V6, Auto, Power Equip
'

1 18,950.00

_____

towards Rutland off 7, 3rd (L PN) for full-time and parthouse. Cloth ing, toys, can· time work in a 114 Bed long
die s, baked goods, win- Term Care State Faci lity.
dows. truck top per, misc.
Full-time employment offe rs
an extensive benefit pactc.Moving Sale. Cheshire, OH age, incl uding State civi l
F'e .
across 1rom
PSI plant on service retirement, ea rn up
At. 7
Friday _&amp; 8 aturday , to 15 days vacation, 18 days
Jun e 6·7 (9·4) Furniture , sick leave, and 12 plus paid
dishes. tools. toys, clothing · holidays; health/lila in sur·

t

00

r

2003 F150 SC 4x4
XL T. 5.4 Engine, Auto. 3,000 miles

2001 TUNDRA LIMITED
VB, 4 Door, Full Power. 4x4

1 22,950.

'23,950.

00

..

00

2003 JEEP WRANGLER
Auto, 4x4, AC, 12,000 miles

'1~ 1 950.

2001 TAURAS SES
Leather, Power, Alum Wheels

r

1 10,450.00

00

'.

.

2003 DAKOTA QUAD 4X4
Auto, VB, Power .Equip, $LT

2001 ESCAPE XLT 4X4
Auto, Leather, Sunroof, CD

'18,500.

00

2003 F150 SUPERCREW
Auto, 4x4, 5.4 Engine, Power Equip

1 25,950.~ 0

i

2002 F150 SC 4X4
XL T. Auto. Full Power

'13 950.

00

•

00

2002 FOCUS SE
Auto, Power Equip, Cruise

-------loittol

1 9,950. 00

~y

CLAY R. rOL1AN

p y z H E R

.I

1 ,--;1
I _,_I:...r--1-=r.:-:-1

f-Tl

I~ IM0IL II [lll .I
I~!
I
Is
I..-------'1I I
'
S M 11 U U

Til; old gent goes to the shoe
repair man "I should be a song
.
.
.
. .
wr iter." he tells the fellow. "My
~stloes..squeak so bad ly thai I have
A T E K B' 'music in - - - --- -."
.
f--...,.::....:;..1,.,:..,.,:::.....:..y.,..;,:.,l-"1
Comp1olo '"" chuckle QUOted

.

~

1 20,950. 00

s

0
.

l-......JI.......I--I.--1.--'---' you

PR··01NNED AUr'O CEN'I'.R

A leading provider of sup·
pori services to individuals
with mental retardation and
deve!opmen1a1 disabil ities
has vacant positions for
Casual l,PN's. Pay Starts at
$t6.00 per hour. For more
information call Dorothy
Harper al Middleton Estates,
740-446-8t45 or 446-4B14.
A.n
Equal
Opportunity
Employer FIM/ON.

Reorronge lenet.s of rhe
four Krambled wordS be·
low to f orm four simp~ wor d s.

I

372-7580

&lt;r-;)

0

2003 CHEV 510 ZR5
Auto, AC , PoWer, 4x4 389 miles
I

P

runu•

1 21,950.00

·

2003 MERCURY SABLE
Power Equip, AC·, Alum Wheels.
7000 miles

ro

w

!
2003 GRAND AM SE
Auto, V6, Power Equip

SERVING THE
TRI·COUNTY
AREA

1-77
Exit 132

bv filling In the miutng words

d•velop from

step No. 3 below .

tcmRsl
SCIAM-lm ANSWERS .

Yes\e.rday's
.
Kettle • Agate - Shawl - Yearly • GET WELL
My sister-in-law says that when company 1s cormng
lcl •she hasn 't had time to stra1ghte!' the house . she
JVers the coffee table wilh GET WELL cards

., RIPLEY, WV

Access' to a Computer?
Earn $450-Sl500 monthly
part-time or $2,000-$4 ,500
lUll-time , 1.aoo-585-0760 or
www.OurAnswer.com

BURGER KING '
MANAGEMENT

OPPORTUNrTY
We're seeking career onented indilliduals whO W!ll stiive
to achie\le the · sesr incustamer satisfaction and team
work. If vou have a deSire to
succeed Wlth a goal driven,
team oriented. and growing
compan~. We oHer health.
dental, and li1e insurance.
401 k bOnus program. ptescrlptton caret. pa1d vacation ,
management apparel , ~
, advancement within. Apply
in person at the Burger King
restaurant located at Upper
River Rd. in Gallipolis OH Or
mail resume to Burger King,
65
Upp.er
River
Ad ..

Pool manager and life·
guards wanted-must be life·
The Uni versity of Rio guard certified, please pick·
Grande lno.;ites applications up (and retur~) applications
for the position of Athletic at Middleport Vill$ge H.all by
Director.
June 11tr1 at 5pm

AN Supervisor
A leading provider of sup·
port services to ind ividuals
with mental retardation and
developmental disabilities is
looking for a full time AN
Supervisor. Benefits includ 3 Bedroom newly . remod- 24 x 36 double wide modular
ed. Call Dorothy Harper at
eled. in Middleport, call Tom class room. Buill very heavy
740-446-7148 or lax resume
Anderson after 5 p. m.
duty to Ohio building code . 1
to 740-446·3987 . An Equal
992~ 3348
large open room , no bath or
Opportunity
Employer
kitchen. self conta1ne·d heat
F/M/DN.
3BR Ra nch Style Home
pump unit Appr011 . 10 years
City schools: 2· car garage.
old . $6, sao delivery avail·
Truck Drivers. Immediate
covered carpo rt , above
hire, class A COL requ ired ,
able. 740·992-2478 or 740·
ground pool , partially linexcellerit pay, exper ience
59\ ·9342
ished tull , dry basement.
required Earn up to $1 ,000.
$73k 446-9545 5·1 Opm Of 3 br. mobile home in New
per week.Call 304-675·
leave message duri ng day
Haven on nice corner lot.
4005
3br, 2ba , on 85x156 lot, heat Central air, k1tchen appliances. carport, outside storpump ,
wal~·in - c losets .
age area, Homestead Bend
12x20 porch. 20&gt;&lt;2 4 outBroke r 304-882-2405
buil ding. Brown :La ne, AP,ple
Gallipolis Career College Grove. (304 )57~·2809
Cole's Mobile Homes
(Careers Close To Home} .
US 50 East , Athens. Ohio,
4
bed
room,
old'er,
2
story.
Call Today! 740-446-4367, .
45701 ' 740-592· 1972
extra
lot
plus
1/2
acre
lot
mil
,
1-800·214·045 2 '
www.gallipoliscareercollege.com no land contract . 554 Coming Soon The All New
Bidwell 740-379-2540
"Pinnacle Best Buy" Home
Rea #90-G5· 1274B.

Maste rji degree in Phys ical
Education or re lated field is
preferred . Must have know l·
edge of l he theori es and
practices at physical education and program management. A minimum ol 5 years
prior related e~~:perience in
coaching in clu ding at least 2
years in a managemen t
capa city.
Admin istrative
experience in a college or For Sale t5x.30 Pool. Jrd
university preferred.
summer $1 ,000 Already
Taken down. (304)882·324 6
Position 1 ava ilable J uly · 1, . after 5:00 pm.

2003.

1110

Resumes will be' r~eived
and reviewed until position is
filled. All applicants must
submit a let1er of interest
and resume including the
namas of three referen ces
to :
Ms. Phyllis Mason, SPHR,
Director of Human
Resources
University of Rio Grande

·PO Bo• 500
Rio Grande, OH 45674
Eniail-pmason @rio.edu

1a. 740·245·4909
EEO/AA Employer

Cape Cod house built in You saw them last year.
1999, 4 bedroom , 2 bath, Many were sold at a fantasOak cabinets , 2 car garage tic low price_ Now wilh more
$ 135,000 caii74Q-256 -1709 delu~ee features than ever.
"Where You Get Your
Coles
M oney's
Worth"
Mobile Homes. US 50 East.
Athens , Ohio (740)592-1972

~

WANITD

To Do
'

Drum lessons- $15.00 per
1/2 hr. , $25. _per hr. call
Nathan Vollma'r' 304·674·

0023
Economy Tree Care-Quality
Woril. at Economy Prices
Jason Rodgers 256-8136 or
Jet1 Rodgers 256·6987
Great GiNs; beautifu l wood
s1gns 1or any occasion.
Residential-Business. BlueStar banners. $25. and up.

.

BUSINESS

r

A_~_.

........

~:n. ~

FQRSw:

I

I

----- ·-----"-----~ - -or----

I

·,

.

fJ40

~

BUSINFSS
AND. BULDINGS

Rio Grande area , 2400
sq.ft .. Office! Commercial
Building for Rent/ Le:ase.
Plenty ott park1ng. (740)245-:
5747
The Corner Restauran t,
Middleport , Oh ., business &amp;
bui lding &amp; property. established 1991 . turnkey operation , (740)992·3955

r

FORCLOSURE
3 Bedroom home only
$1"3,500 for listing call
1-800-719-'3 001 Ext. F144

LoTs&amp;
AL"RUl;E

1 acre bui lding lots; 3&amp;112
acres. and 5 acres !racts
Green Schools. Great loca·
tion . At 588. (740)446-9966
1/2 acre lot, Tycoon Lake on
Eagle Road
City water.

Home on pond. Five Potnts
area. Pomeroy 1.3 acres 3
br . . 1 1/2 baths, dining
room,family roofn,stone lireplace has gas logs . base·
ment with Hnished room .
Mid 80's (740) 992·3493

$85oo.oo (740I 247·nooor
(304) 532-6271
4 acres Eagle R1dge Ad ..
excavated. electric . septic
per mi t &amp; wat er ava1lable .
(7 40)992·0031

Lot lor sale 1n Racine .
Moore SL Hartford . WV 6 (740)992-5858
rooms &amp; bath ; needs work.
N1ce large lot.
740-742- Nice mobile home lots , quiet
country sett1ng . $ 115 per
2535
month . includes
water.
Mt Vernon . Price Reduced.
sswer. trash . 740·332-2167
Custom built k itchen , 3br.
2ba. enclosed pat1o po rch . Rio Grande area. 3 to 30
full basemen!. large lot. acres lots. some 'restnctions.
Close to Pr imary School. wate r &amp; electric. (740)245·
Cal!
Somerville
Rea lly 5747

(3 04)675·3030
3431

(304)675-

Nice custom built Cape Cod.
over 3,000 sq . fl .. close to
town .
(740)446-3764 or

(7 40)44 6·2885.

It I ' I \I '

HUl~SloS
FOR Rf;]\'f

Three Bedroom. One Bath 1·3 bedrooms foreclosures
Ranch Style
Home in horne hom $1 99 month 4"0
Add ison Twp. Call (7 40)446· down 30 years at 8 5",., APR
tor listing call t -800-31 9·
8491
3323 eon.1709

i

~

I

MOBILE HOMES
FORSALE
. 2 bedroom. References &amp;

12K60 Clayton. new doors
and w indows. hot water tank
and under pinning. no t1res
or axles , needs lots of wo~
SSOO 740·388 -8128 after

6pm

Gal1ipolio OH 45631
I

New 2003 Doub lewide. 3 BA
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down
and &amp;295 /rno. 1-800-69 1·
6777

FORCLOSURE

HVAC company 1S looking
for full time installers and·
!NOTICE!
helpers in Heaft ng and OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHCooling, send resumes . to lNG CO. recommends lh at
PO BoiC 572 Kerr. OH 45643 you do business with people
you tc.now. and NOT to send
HVAC Installer Opening :
money through the mail until
Benefils available. Apply at
you have investigate't1 the
or Send
Resume
to : of1ering.
.
Bennett's MH Heating &amp;
Coo ling
1391
Safford Never lose money again in
School, Rd . Gallipolis, OH MLM I Instead, lry EMM! It's
45631 {740)446-9416 or 1· new, it's hot, it pays up to
800-872-5967
1Ok weekly! No selling! Gel
.:.M.:.a:..in.:.1en-'-'ancec.:.__m_a_n_,-fu_l1_1_im
_e_, free info 8D0-242-Q363 ext.
and
SIGN-ON-BONUS . send resume to PO Box 303 \606
EOE. Please send resume
to 43'0 Second Aven Ue , Gallipolis OH 45631
Gallipolis: OH 45631 . Attn : Ohio
Valley
Publishing
.Diana Harless, Clinical Company has a part-time
Manager
opening in the mailroom .
Stanley and Son . Inc.
. Please apply in person ·· Auction, Real Estate,
Modi Home Health Agency, Monday-Thursday 8·10am .
Appraisal. Serving you
Inc. . seeking
part· time 825 Thil'd Avenue . G"allipolls. since 1960- 3 Generations.
MediCal Social Worker tor Ask for Tommy Long.
1-888-BID-IT·UP. Henry M
the Gallipoljs, Oh io area .
S1an1ey. 111CA1-AARE
Masters Deg ree required . Part-time collector neededTURNED DOWN ON
We offer a competitive Gallia, Meigs. and Mason
salary, benefits package , counties. 30-35 hours per SOC1Al SECURITY /SS1?
401k, and l!fJII time, EOE . week, must be honest. reli·
No F® Unless We Win!
Please send resu me to 430 able, and have good driving
1.~·582-3345
Second AvenUe. Gallipolis, recoid. Send resume to Paul
I( I \I I ' I \ II
Ohio
Val ley
OH 456 31. Attn : Diana Barker, ,
Harless, Clinica l Manager
Gallipolis
Ohio
__
__545631
__
T_h•_ro__
r.·O.... VI"~
Help wanted caring for the
elderly, Darst Group Horne . Reliable ultrasound Tech.
please contact
now paying minimum wage , needed
10 Room house. 7 acres.
.new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am· Comprehensh1e Women 's fenced pasture , River Valley
5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pm- Care 304-675-2229 Salary District (740)367-0144
neg.
7am. call74()..992-5023 .

-p_~is-hi_~_·_82

down and only $157.93 per
month . Call Nikki 740-3957671 .

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

Oi'PoKIUNITY

.

New 14 wide only $799.

For sale by owner, ranch
style home behind Addaville
school.
3BA 11/2 bat h,
jacuzzi in master suite. new
siding. 2 car _ garage. very
nice, home 367-70.39

il'\\'\(1\1

.

New 14 wide only $799
down and only $157.93 per
' month. Ca ll Nikki 740·385·
7671 .

Thia newspaper will not
Mowlngly aceept
advertisements for real
estate which Ia in
violation of the law. Ou r
readers are hereby
informed that all
ctwellinga advertited In
th la newspaper are
available on .a n equal
opportunity baaea.

Jim's Carpentry and small
landscaping. 20 yrs e~eperiestimate.

Bartenderl grill cook. part
Will babysit in my hOf!!B.
time, - send resume to PO
Over 5yrs professional expeBox 303 ~allipolis OH
rience with children. Great
45631
References. Call anytime.
Cosmetologist
needed 256 6338
full/part time pd. vacation . --:c-:-----,-free CE hrs.Fantaslic Sams Will Do Babysitting in New
(740)446-7267
Haven area. Responsible
mother of 2 grown boys.
E11pe rienced
carpenters· (304)882 -2091
mus t be familiar with all
phases of resid'Bn!ial remod-· Will pressure wash homes.
eling, valid drive rs license, trailers, decks. metal buildtools. transportation , and ' ings and gutters . Call
references . Local work , pay (740)446 -0151 ask for Ron
based
on
e~eperie nce. or leave message.

3384.

In this newspaper 11
subject to the Fede ral
Fair Housing Act of 1968
whleh makea It lttegal to
advertise Nan~
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
origin, or any lnlentlon to
make any such
prererence, limitation or
discrimination."

Sell . Shirley .Spears, 304·
.Free
ence.
675· 1429.
(740)446-2506

Applications avail able at
Christians
Construction ,
1403
Eastern
Ave ..
Gallipolis. 446-4514

Land Home Packages available. In your area. (74£)446-

. ,,
All real estate edvertlaing

'"·""""·'''

(304 )675-6925

AVON ! All Areasl To Buy or

FOR SALE

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up 1995 mobile home, e~&lt;cellent
for immediate possession all conditi on. 2BR 2 bat h. must
within 15 min . of dowhtown see, no reasonable oilers
Gallipolis. Rates as low as refused 740-682-7571
6% (740)446-32 18
1996 Norris Mob1!e Home
2/3 acres Lev€! Lot. 2 story 14x80. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
house , 8 rooms, 2 baths, complete kitchen , covered
porch and large deck, heat porch , 2 storage buildings,
pump. recently re_modeled. acre land ' N1ce Property.
corner of Green tree of Call
Somer11ille
Realty.
Bulaville
Pk.
$69.500. 1304)675-3030 or (304)675(740)36].7272
3431

ATHLET1C D1RECTOR

Respons ibilities for this part·
time 12 month pos ition
include, but are no1 limited
to, plan ning, organizing, and
coordinating all Inter~
collegiate and intramural
athletic functions and programs pertaining to the use
of athletic facilities at t he
U nivers ity.
Re commends
plans. policies and procedures with subordinate staN
for the proper functioning of
assigned areas. Administers
ath letic facilities in costeNective and sate ma nner in
order to provide services for
university and comm unity
members. Responsible for a
staf1 of 10 .

20 MnHILE HoM~

H OMfS
IUR SALE

llaPWANITD

Family Yard Sale , June 7, Sat 9-3 Rain or shine, 3149 June 51h &amp; June 61h SA \24 Llcen..d Proct1co1 Nursoo

1012 Watson Road . 9-5, Bulavi lle Pk. super Nintendo
HI! My name is JeffreY Lots of misc. Rain or shihe
and games, womens and
Coon. I am a lonely lellow
teen girls clothing, · A&amp;E ,
looking for a companion. 9512 State At 160 9-5pm.
Mudd, Old Navy, Etc. Most
hOuld like to talk and gooH
$1 .o
. o and under, house1 s. I 9523 SR 160 (beside the wares, .Weed. eaters. home
oo ks wou ld be a Pu
have brown ha .lr, b1ue eyes, Korner) Thurs &amp; Frjdav,
,, interior, bookcaSeA
·
Furniture.
household,
5 •9•
nyone mterested
----~---please contact me at PO books, ~ids, clothes. much Sat 8-5:30 old glassware,
BoM 57. Portland, OH 45770 :m-:-o-:-re_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ... clothes, what-nots, miscella·

r• .

10

110

·------

De posit. No Pets . (304 )675·
5162

2 BR house. stove 8 refrigerator furniShed . •$290 a
month. $150 deposrt. located at 1928 1/2 Chestn ut
740-446-3870 or 446-9061

�Page

86 • The

Daily

Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

L,t.'O--I~ili~ioiiQilisiiii~-_.1 ~~--A·:;~\~.~ .g;i:~i in•'S_.Ir

L,--•
AN
-11QU
_ ""
_,_rl

Pleasant Valley Apartment Buy or sell. Riverine
Are now taking Applical10ns Antiques, 11 24 East Main
(304)675-5332
tor 2BA . 3BR &amp; 4BA .. on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740------~- Applications
are taken 992-2526. Russ Moore,
3 bedroom. no pets. VrU5!ge Monday thru Frtday. from "'ow:;;ni"e~r.~----....,
of Patriot, deposrt and refer- 9:00 A M-4 P.M. Ofltce is ~ MISCELLAN ..UUS
enyes reqwred 740-379· Located a t 1151 Evergreen
L'"CIIANniSF.
M c..n
2540
Onve Pomt Pleasant. WV
Phone No is (304)675-5806
3 br. ra nch hou se lor rent, E.H.O
Adult electric scooter like
$350.00 a man. 1n New
Wai-Mart has for shopp1ng
682-6850
HaVen 304-675-3458
Tara
Town house

3 Bedroom in Syracuse
Ohio.
$450/
Month

Apartments. Very Spacious .

. 38R 1 bath Rt. 14 1 $450
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, I
plus deposrt 446-4824
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted ,

1'120

MOHILE Hm lt,l;.

Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,

IUK RfNl'

Pat10, Star t $385/ Mo. No
Pels, l ease PluS Security

trailer tor rent.
no pets, private, $200
month, security, references
required 446-7754 after 5 :00
pm
12~e:60

2BR

Deposit Required. Days :
740-446-3481 ;- Everimgs:
74D-367-0502.
- -- - - - ' - - -

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting apphcattons for waiting
2 Bedroom. air. ww carpet. list tor Hud-subsized. 1- br.
very nice, no pets , in apartment, call 675·6679
Gallipolis. 446·2003 446- EHO
1409
SI'ACE
I'UK RENT
2 BR on private lot, no ins1de
pets. $385 a month, $385
deposit 740-446-9116

t

r

r'o ~=M·

WILSON'

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONmUCTIDN

1\lt~l\'
Where

comes !Jrsn

A uriel) &lt;&gt;f
•• q uir " ''"m

N,.,,, ltmu AdJ;·dll·-h-' kl)'
.16198 Pl11Cil Fo1rk R.I .
P"''"'"'J', Ohi4;, 45769
Ho11r• 10-6 pm
Closed Sundays

~
"'~ .
Hin~ &amp;Dry
Self-Stor~ t~e
~

*Spring*
*Special*
THERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE

.

Easter &amp; Mothers Day
Buy 1 Gift Certificate.
Get 2nd Free!
Heather A.. Fry· I .. M.T.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5379

740-992-5232

Ol fer gn.lll lllru

Also

I~~N;tjNNNil

onto village water/
wastewater lines. No

exceptions.
Effective July 2,
2003.
Non-paid
ullllty
bills, If the BPA cannot
collect
lhe
amount owed from
the resident who

made the bill , the
landlord I property
owner will be respon til&gt;le for the total payment of the bill before
services will
be
turned back on al the
property. No exceptions.
' : Effective July 2,
2003.
: Effecllve with the
August 2003 billing,
water
rates
will
increase by twelve

percent. Example: A
minimum bill for two
th"ousand
gallons"
usage will go from
· $8. t4 for water to
$9.12; senior citizen
rate will go from $7.33
to $8.21 .
Adopted by the
Middleport Board of
Public Alfairs June 2,
2003.
(6) 5,,6, 9 3TC .
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
THE PEOPLES BANK·
lNG &amp;TRUST COMPANY
PLAINTIFF
CASE NO. 02 CV 124
. -vs~

JOHN M. HAGGERTY,
ET AL. NOTICE OF
SALE

By virtue of an Order
of Sale Issued out of

70'1ot conveyed to
Joseph W. DummiH
the Common Pleas and
Tammy
S.
Court
of
Melg~
DummiH as described
County, Ohio, in the _ In Volume . 313, Page
case of The Peoples 629 of the Deed
Banking &amp; Trusl Records of Meigs
Company, Plaintiff, County, Ohio.
vs. John M. Haggerty, ·I Reference
Oeed:
et
Volume 334, Page
al., Defendants, upon 607, Meigs Counly
a Judgment therein Deed Records.
rendered, being Case Auditor's Parcel No.:
No. 02·CV·, 124 in 15-02009.000
said Court, lhe Sheriff The above described
of Meigs County, real estate is sold " as
Ohio, will offer lor Is" without warranties
sale at the front door or covenants.
of the Courthouse In PROPERTY
Pomeroy,
. Meigs · ADDRESS: Parcel No.
County, Ohio , on the I •. 695 Oliver Street,
· 101h day of July, 2003, Middleport,
OH
al 10:30 a.m., the lol· 45760; Parcel No. 2 •
lowing lands and
735 Beech Street,
tenements , Parcel No. Middleport, OH 45760
I being Jocaled al 695 REAL ESTATE
AT:
Oliver
Street, APPRAISED
Middleport, QH 45760, Parcel
No . I
and Parcel No. 2 $16;000.00; Parcel No.
being located at 735 2 • $16,500.00. Each
Streel, parcel of real estala
Beech
Middleport, OH 45760. cannot be sold lor
A complete legal less than two·thlrds
lhe appraised value.
description of
the real estate Is as TERMS OF SALE:
10% down day of
follows:
PARCEL NO. 1:
sale , balance
on
Situate In lha· VIllage delivery of deed. Sold
of Middleport, in lhe subjecl to second
County of Meigs and half 2002 and accrued
State of Ohio: Being 2003
real
estate
Lot N424 in Lower taxes.
Pomeroy,
now
ALL
SHERIFF'S
Middleport,
Ohio. SALES
OPERATE
· Reference is made to UNDER THE DOC·
deed recorded In TRINE OF CAVEAT
Volume 239, Page 575 EMPTOR
and Volume 157, Page PROSPECTIVE PUR·
ARE
498 , Meigs County CHASERS
URGED TO CHECK
Deed ·Records.
Reference
Deed : FOR LIENS IN THE
Volume 69, Page 729, PUBLIC
Meigs County Official RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. THE
Records.
COUNTY
Audilor"s Parcel No.: MEIGS
15.()0523.000
SHERIFF MAKES NO
PARCEL NO.2:
GUARANTEE AS TO
Slluated In the Village THE STATUS OF
of Middleport, Meigs TITLE PRIOR TO
County, Ohio and SALE
being Lot N427 In · Jennifer L. Sheets,
Altorney lor Plainllfl
Lpwer Pomeroy, now
(6) 6, 13, 20
Middleport, Ohio.
EXCEPTING a 40'by
I

I

.

110w

'1 -11-4/.l

aaepting

most i11.w rance

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

WE

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

1·74o-g92-7007

Stop &amp; Compare

l)ll

Cellular

.-.n~o,,.n,.~f

dorh.iu~ ~nd 1-unHilljl;

740-992-1611

1

'. AlltEL

Sl llli'UIS

rne c us lomer

Under New
Managagement

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remod eling

~Tr.oy_8_u.iltiiii1Biira11n.co•.· 5·-·H,JP.

r

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Board of Public
Affairs agreed to
implement the follow·
Jng policy: No wells
can be drilled or driv·
en In the Village of
Middleport. All new
services muSt hook

6,

2003

;

www.mydallysentinel.com

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

PC DOCTOR

HOME CREEK

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

ENT., 'INC.

REPAIR

992-7953

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Bikes

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Lawn and Garden Equipment i!' our
busines~, llot our sidelin e

r

__

\(4-ANSWDs
, ~ ·-~ _:

"W,V's # I Chevy. Pontiac. Buick, Olds
&amp;
Dealer"

=== ~~::!==~~:!~~
I J=====
BISSELL'
Pomeroy Eagles
.

BUILDERS IDC.

1995Jeep Wrangter. 4cyL5
speed 4WD Soft top and
·
bikini ·top. Good
Condition. New Homes • Viny l
137,000 miles. (740)367Sidi ng • New r.,.,,.,ed
71 52.
, R•'Jll"··•·rn··nt
... .. ~.. . .
1998 Dodge Caravan Windows • Roo fing
161 .000 miles very dependCOMMERCIAL and
able, ale,
2 side doors,
RESJOENTIAL
$3500
OBOPD.740-388-9017

jl'&gt;«l

l

M&lt;Y~?jtCYCLES

I

Earl,v birds start
Cl:3f) I st Thursday
f
th
o every mon
All pack $5.110
Bring this coupon

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
BOX IM9 MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760 _

Get 5 FREE

740-843-5264

Hill's Self
Storage
45771 .

740·949·2217
$1zes 5'x10'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
1/1411mo pel

The Daily Sentinel • Page

----

~

-

-

-

-·

B7 '

- - -.-~

ACROSS

41 .G ave
medicine
1 Toady's
43 Kimono
answer
sash
4 Union
44 BTU kin
pariah
45 List of
8 Feign
candidates
11 Growing
48 Sugary
treat
medium
12 Had on
52 Gist
13 Good
53 In a frenzy
interact. There may be a reason It's sad that your husband's
buddy
55 Chalet
your child was not welcome. If insecurities were so great that 14 Comic-strip
feature
56 Malure
doll
he 's )laving relationshi p or he jeopardized your health .and
57 Grimace
behavior problems, now is the destroyed your marriage._ (It 15 Kmghted
Gulnnese
58 Bias
time to give him the soc ial see ms that the excess we1ght
16 Mammoth 59 Salon
skill s he will need for the rest' you had been carryi ng around
supply
17 Toss out
of hi s life .
was HIM.)
19 SheiKS,
60 ts idle
usually
6t Flrst·down
DEAR ABBY: "Big Girl in
CONFIDENTIAL
TO
21 Kipling
yardage
Des Moines" said .she felt "EXHAUSTED IN MARYnovel
good about getting re sults LAND": Xou and the children
22 N9nflylng
DOWN
from her diet and exercise pro- have suffered far too long. For ·
bird
gram. but complained that her their sake. li sten to your attar23 Light
1 Sherpa
boyfriend had turned into a ney!
·
bender
sighting
26 Hellas
2 Has lunch
"food cop." There may be a . Dear Abby is written by
29 Get-up·
3 Fills the
subtext going on in their rela- Abigail Van Buren, also known
and·go
shelves
tionship . It 's possible that he 's as Jeanne Phillips, and was
30 Mix
4 Colony
actually trying to sabotage her founded by her mother,
32 Lemons
of bees
weight loss.
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear 34 The Fuzz
5 Snowy
6 They exlsl
I know. My · soon-to-be-ex- Abby at www.DearAbby.com 36 Word
in
a
threat
7
Changed
husband sabotaged every Of . P. 0 . Box 69440, Los
38
Putter's
into
I·
attempt I made to lose weight Ange1es, CA 90069.
org .
8 "Dancing
thr9ughout our more than 20
39 Pullover
Queen"
years of marriage. He was
(hyph .)
.group
always subtle about it. For
instance, he ' d tell me I'd been
working hard and "deserved a
treat" - or HE needed a treat
and then he'd keep offering me
"just a bite." It was amazing
Students can .
how suddenly he wanted to eat
learn a lot from
fatty meals at fast-food restauthe newsparants.
My husband worried I
per about the
would lose so much weight
world
that I'd decide I could do betin which they live. And.
ter than him. "Big Girl" should
now is the
keep her eyes and ears open
and stick to her diet.
perfect time to bring
SOONTO·BE·EX
IN
newspapers into the
RENO
I
DEAR SOON-TO·BE·EX:

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
1990 dump truck. Chevrole' Unconditional llletime guarKodiac, CATdeisel. 5 esp antee. Local references 1urshed. Established 1975.
transmission. 2 speed rear. n1
~
UH~ ( 74~«·
10' .L.
dumprequifed
bed, .air48brakes.
C.D
. 000 0870. Rogers Basement
miles excellent condition. Waterproofing .
$10, 500.00 740-992·2478 - - - - - - - or 7.40- 591-9342
General
Home
Maintenance- Painting, 11inyi
1992 Ford F150 truCk . :k&gt;o\ sid1ng. carpentry, doors,
6 cyl , 5 speed, 117k m11es wmdows. baths. mobile
446-6464
home repair and more . For
1997 Dodge Dakota 4x4 free est1mate .call Chat. 740·
trUCk $8oOO 740·256- 1709 992-6323.

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411
Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

.\118

,r,

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do it for,youl

.,;.;-..,......,...-

(2 wds.)
Mosl
ancient
Salad
veggies
Hitch
Fast sfed
Ferrara or
Gance
,1
Gourf
mand's
malady
Garden tool
Home
appliance
Bench
Miss
Piggy's
word

The Newspaper
Has Class •••

Astrograph

BY BERNICE BEOE 0sOL
, Objectives you set for your•self are reachable in lhe year
' ahead, but it might take a bit
·more patience Ihan you will
,anticipate. Things may go
•slowly in the beginning, but
.by sticking 10 your aims.
you'll break through the barrier.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20)- You won"t tolerate for
one minute being bossed
around by anyone today , yet
this is exactly what you may
do to someone else who isn t
in the position to answer you
back. Cool it.
CANCER (June 21-July
· 22) - The only person who
· will end up looking bad in
frmll of others today will be
you if you take it upon y~ur­
self lo say unnanenng things
about another pal wbo isn't
presem .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)Treat the re so urces of another
'as a sacred lrust should it be
:placed under your care Ioday.
:All eyes wi II be on you to see
just how you li ve up to the

faith entrusted in you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- If you come.on too strong

in your involvements WJifi
others today you ' II be pushed
to the fringe of the crowd and
ignored instead of ending up
tfle cenler. of attention .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
. - You are usually very sensilive to the privacy of others,
but today your cunosity could
pu sh your inquiry over the
line. You may end up pokmg
your nose in\o . ~ matter an acquaintance is anxiou s to keep
quiet
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Restrict your purchases today to Items you
deem necessary and vital and
you won't get yourself in any
l'inancial difficulty. Waste
your money on fooltsh nonesse ntials and it's anmher stow
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21)- Whenever we try
to beal the odds where things
are obviously stacked -againsl
us, we can expect to be losers .
Instead of succumbing to this
pilfall ·today . use co mmon

family today . Your presenlati on must b e well thought out
and calmly voiced if you wan t
to make an impact.
ARIES (March :U-Aprll
19) - Be very careful al who
you a point the finger of
blame today . Needless to say
it won"t go over too well and
you'll be the bad guy in the
scenario.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - It's not apt to be Lady
Luck urging you onward ana
upward in an involvement
where there is a high caliber
of risk. Chances · are it' ll be
your own faulty judgment
making that callioday.

sense, not wi shful thinking.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19)- Telling whoppers
is not your forte, so if you try
to beat someone who is an expert with exaggerations at his
or her own game today, you
will come out second· best~
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ff\J.
19) - Unless your counterpart in a joint venture po s·
sesses the expertise you lack,
the endeavor will be mediocre
at be st and not achieve anything near what you were
hoping to gain.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Don· t allow anger to
dominat e what ); DU want Io
get off your ch est to your

2nd00WN

0
0
0

3rd DOWN

WORD SCRIMMAGE'" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
.

4th DOWN

10 2003 UI'Wl f(l F111111 Synd~•. Ino:

Answer

-

. o/'lwN • 75
2nd DOWN •..!J!_
lSI

3rd DOWN

•..!!!L

-347

• 81
AVERAGE GAME 220.230 ·

JUOO'S TOTAL

to
previous
Word
Scrim-

AVERAGE GAME 215-225
by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOURPLAYTOTAL =
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Make a 2- :o 7."1ettsr word hom. !he letters on each yardllna.
,l,(tej points 10 eacn word or letter uSing scoring directions at "'''C- Seven-letter
word!! get a 60-pont bonus. All wordS can be IOunclln webater'a New World
Colllf9o D&lt;~&lt;•na~.
JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

mag~

C/ 2003 Un..d I'Mh.-. Syndkat•. Inc;.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;

t!OLOINI"7

"V1CIORIR'S 5fLRET"
$WIIl\5U!T II\OOEL5 "?

11\Etfl.
Al\111, UP
IN 11\E

U~ AND 1111'

Remodeling
• New Garages

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

.. .

lHei'RE

IIJt\/11'5 lHE

OtffERENGE BffiOCEIJ

.

AIR!!

OUR TUIM\1ES

WOULD LOO"'
f'L.AT, TOO , 1~
II.IE STOOD
RROUNO WITH
0UR AR/115 UP

I O»E

DOEbN'T

OUT ONE

~IP,

HA~E ~Ell.

MAKE&amp; T\1e

AI'J!I~ I ~

Rt6~TTt%H
APPER~ LON&amp;

! WANT
1U6ET

LEAiol!

IRATE ,
TOO!!

~E

RtR .

AN~

CIITALOC.

IN THE AtR!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy. OhiO

519-B/4

22 Years Local

MYERS PAVING
Henderson ,

WV

875-2497 or 448-2912
Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

FLEA MARKET
$7.50 per
,,. space
at
M
L
aplewood ake
State Route 124
Between RaciJ1e &amp;
S yraCUSe,
· Oh 10
'
, June 6~7

Commercial Mowing
• Mulching • Edging
• Fertilization • Leaf

(740) 985-9829
(740) 591 • 3891

was not invited to her son's
birthday party.
We have lived in our closeknit neighborhood for three
years. All of the other children
on our street we re invited, a nd
they told my son all about it at
school the next .day. Now he
feels left out and sad. Until
now, he thought he was good
friends with the birthday boy.
I know thi s sort of thing happens, but for a mother to orga.nize a party and knowingly
exclude one child doesn't
seem right. How should I han·
die . it, Abby ? SMALLTOWN MOM IN IOWA
DEAR MOM: By all means
ask the mother what happened .
Since your son was the only
child not in vi ted to the party,
shame on her for abetting that
kind of exclusion.
However, before approachin~ the mother, in vlte the
neighborhood children to your
home and observe how they

• Patio and Porch Deckl
Free Estimates

More

949-1405

ADVICE

9 Bin
1 o Clothes
42
11 Herd
of whales 44
18 Points
45
a gun
20 Regre)ted 46
47
22 Fouls up
23 Pipe pfas1lc
24 Mob scene 48
25 .Brats
26 Gold leal
49
27 Mugs
28 Border
50
31 Actress
51
- Garr
33 Crestfallen 54
35 Exhausted
37 Wax.Coated
cheese
40
girdel'll

992-7953

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Ad'ditions,
Garages, Pol.e Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall &amp;

*

Dear
Abby·

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

Sunset Home
Construction ·

in this
space for $25
per month.

Removal • Pruning
• Landscape
Maintenance Spring
and Fall cleanup

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

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

HOWARD£.
WR/TESfl

10

Call now to reserve J1ll!£ check.

B $5 t"' B a
uy . "' on nza

740-992-7599

iiiiiiia.i·

Finally ... Money paid to YO!! when cancer
strikes. You dwo~c.: the amount up to $50,000!
Pavs in additi~m to other insurance.
Ymi use Ihe money however you like.
C&lt;.~nccr wi ll ~trike when you least expect it.
II will leave you and you r fam il y financia lly
strapped. CANCER CHECK will be
there when you need it.

Sunda)'
Uoo~ Open 4:30

FREE ESTIMATES

1988 Beretta Super' Sport,
27' cruiser w/cuddy. 225hp
inboard/outboard, new tandem trailer, $10,000 080 ,
740-992-9066

CANCER CHECK

BINGO. 2171
Evl'ry Thursduy &amp;

-------1994 17 11211. . DynaS1y ·'
Runabout Jet Dr1ve Boat,
w/Bimini TOp, oil injected,
90HP seats 6 Comfortably,
95 Windstar GL 1ransmis- •ery clean , garage kept,· *ROOFING
sian problem $2000, 92 winterized. comes wllra1ler *HOME
GMC Sonoma $4000 , 97 . and many other accesCadillac Deville. good condi- sories_Including Boat Cover.
MAINTENIIICE
1ion $10,500, 2 Cyl. diesel, Askrng $6.000 OBO. 740SEAMLESS
4wd tractor, brush hog, plow. 441-1461
disk $42oo 367-oto6
GmER
98 Toyota Camry LE SS900. Bimini top fits boats 22-28h.
00 Dodge Neon $3500. 96 in leng1h. also st~inless steel
*freelstJ••'*
Flreblrd $2500, 96 Neon prop 25p (304}675-3354
$1600, 9j Ford Probe f7liO
CA\II'Jl!S &amp;
$1500, 93 Pontiac Grand
MrTlllR HoMEiooi
Am $1350, 96 Thunderbird "-..,;iitiiiiiitiiiiliiiiiiiir'
$2200, 97• Neon $2000, 95
Eagle Summit $1000, · 8&amp; 0 1999 30ft. Mallard camper. NELSON'S LAWN
Auto Sales Hwy 160 N. 446- very ntce, eXcellent cond. lull
CARE
bed, many extras $10 ,300.
6865
Residential •

98 Dodge Durango $9500,
98 Ford Windstar van
$3200. 94 Nissan 4JI4 PU
$3400. 98 F.ord F250 314 tqn
PU. VB, auto &amp; air $4700.
B&amp;D Auto Sales Hwy 160 N
446-6865

1-800-822-0417

!;~~;:~==~

95 Mazda MX3 hatchbaCk,
88,000 miles, new ligh1S &amp;
tires . excellent condition,
$4750 call 446-8222

TKUCKS
IUR SALE

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

992-2975

32119 Welshtown Rd.
p
QH 45769
omeroy,

DEAR ABBY: I'm proud to
say I always enjoyed a close
relationship with my fonner
husband's immediate family.
Although
we
are
now
divorced, I've remained in frequent contact with my exmother-in-law.
The proble m is I am in a new
and serious relationship with
another man, and I'm afraid if
I tell him I still communicate
with my ex's mother, ·he ' ll go
berserk. I don ' t want to anger
or hurt him, but feel"he should
know the truth. Above all , I
don ' t want to sacrifi.ce the
friendship I have with my exmother-in-law. Please tell me
how to handle this situation.
-HOUSTON EX
DEAR EX: Disclose to your
gentleman friend the fact that
you still have a relationshiP.
with the woman, and don 1
apologize for it If the romance
progresses, it will be very difficult to hide it
, Your letter raises a red flag.
.If a relationship with .your former mother-in-law would truly
'make him "go berserk," how
will he handle other things he
might not like about you?
Please keep your eyes open
and make no rash commitments.
: DEAR ABBY: Please help
:me. I need to know if I should
.approach another mother
.about why my 10-year-old son

J

Pomeroy, Ohio

IUR SAL~

Ford Escort. 5 speed, good
condition, 105k miles. $2000
OBO call 446-3239 leave
message

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
Estimates

www.wvpcdr.com
cdoctor @wv cdr.com

• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karts • Mini

JIM'S SMALL
. ENGINE REPAIR

Top · Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

We Make House Calls

Gravely

1------;_-1

Tree Service

(304) 675-5282

591-7002
591 -4641

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• S
I
• Cham aws
• Snow Blowers

JONES'

~ ·

--,
· L:;=:::::==::::~
1996 CBA600F3 excellent r
condi1ion,
yoshimura
DURO-LAST
exhaust, 10k miles $4000
ROOFING
080 645· 1308
Flat Roof
-------Specialists- .
1999 Harley Heritage
Commercial and
Springer. exc.condition 446Residential
6253
Saves on Cooling.
Metal and Mobile
2000
Harley-Davidson
home roofs- No
Solttail Standard 8, 000
Proble m. 1'5-Year
miles $13,000.00 740-949·
3600
Guarantee
2001 Mustang GT. yellow.
992· 7953
loaded, auto. 33,000 miles 2001 Yamaha YZ125 d1rt
591
-4641
388-9950
bike with racing equipment
591·7002
2002. Black GMC Yukon SLT, 740-256-1709
21.000 miles. Chrome rims. 1750 BoAlS &amp; MOTORS
leather interior. 44 t -0432
Advertise
2002 Pontiac Sunfire,
Standard
Transmission ,
13.500 miles. PS. PB. AC,
AM/FM radio/CO Player.
E:~ecellent
Condition .
$10.000. (304)675-5776

-

her friendship with ex's mom

-;;=;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

~=

Friday, June

:Woman reluctant to · sacrifice

6 wks , CKC Cocker
Spahiels, shots , dewclaws
removed. tail docked . $250;
yearling
colt,
$350.
(740)742-2525

Roto1iller Brand New S500.
For sale dog house. dog
pen. and carrier for small - 304 675-3824
med. size dog . $30.00 each
LMSTOCK
or $80.00 for all call 304Want to rent lot for mobile 674-0023
2BA mobile home far rent. home, 16XSO. close to c1ty. -------~ High Quality. yearling Angus
$325 a month plus $200 (740)446-7762
Full Size Mattress Set New Bulls, $800. each . Roy
deposit Need references
in Plastic wfWarr. Sacrifice Cummings (304)675-6248
Phone 388-0578
Wanted Pasture to rent. S119. Cell Phone 304-412Performance tested Angus
Fenced
far
canle. 8098 or 304-552-1424.
Bulls, 16 man . old , semen
Beautiful River View Ideal Thurman/Rio Grande area.
JET
tested &amp; ready tor service
For 1 Or • 2 People, (740)6826519 ,
AERATION MOTORS
$1 OOO.Diamond l .Farms
References , Deposit, No
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In 304-675-1888
Pe,ts. Faster Traile r Park,
Stock. Call Ron Evans, t Suffolk sheep tor sale,
1,4o-441-0181
. no, "'j~O
HouG(I)[SEH~W
800-537-9528
(740)949-2494
lqlc)bile home for rent.
--,
_0
~s. (740)992-5858
King Size Pillow Top White laying chickens for
APARTMENTS
3 hardwood bedroom sets, 1 Mattress set. New still in sale. 75Q: each 740-985fUR RENr
hosp1ta1 bed, all electric, Plastic, Sale $299, Cell ~39":5,.6-----,--.,
never used 256·1426
PhOne 304-412-8098 or
HAY &amp;
GRAIN
.
1 and 2 bedroom apart- For Sale: Sleeper Couch , 304-55?,-1424.
.
ments. furnished and unfur- Entertainment Center, Desk. King stie water bed, chest of
!lfshed, security deposit Twin Bed, Kitchen Table and drawer, dresser, and night Good quality s1raw. Volume
~uired, no pets, 740-992Chairs&amp; queen size bed- stand. make offer 446-8105 discount &amp;· delivery avail2'218.
able. Heavy square bales.
roam suite. (740)446-04 15
Large tres houss/play house $2.85 per . bale. (304)6751br. Conage 1n Gallipolis
(electric wired) sola ~ 5724
$250. month + Deposit. 446- For Sale: Reconditioned chairs. electric range. dish
washers, dryers and refrig2468
erators.
Thom'psans washer best offer 304-6752 Bedroom Apt. 5. min. past Appliance. 3407 Jackson _13_49_ _ _ _ _ _ [.lo-...iiAiliirili'IUliliiil..,,.
Avenue, (304)675-7388.
Walzer 740-441-0194
Medical equipment, hospital ~
FOR SALE
bed.
wheel
chair.
hydraulic
Apartment in downtown Full size bed $75. full size lift walker. ponie chair. lift $500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Gallipolis 886-7174
bed 5150, twin mattress &amp; chairs 304-675-1349
Handas. chevys, etcl
be»: springs $80. queen size - - - -- - - - cars/trucks from $500. For
BEAUTIFUL
APART· manress $50, king size matMENTS AT BUDGET tress &amp; bq11. springs $100. NEW AND USED STEEL listings 1-800·7 19-3001 ext
Beams, Pipe Rebar 3901
•
PRICES AT . JACKSON nice Broyhi l couch &amp; chair Steel
For Concrete, Angle,
ESTATES, 52 Westwood $175, table and chairs $125, Channel. Flat Bar. S1ael 1974 Cadillac Elderado.
Drive from $297 to $383. lamps 510 each, coflee table Grating
For
Drains, good condition, law miles.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call $45. Skaggs Appliance 76 Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp; l $1200. (304)895-3573
740-446-2568.
Equal Vine St. 446-7398
Scrap
MetalsWednesday
Open Monday,
,Housing Opportunity.
Tuesday,
&amp; 1'989 Grand Prilc 'Runs
Good Used Appliances. Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed good. S600. (304}675-3769
~~io~psa~~~~~t1sa~~~~~~:g~ Reconditioned
and Thursday, Saturday &amp; 1992 Dodge Stealth ES.
Manor and Riverside Guaranteed
waShers, Sunday. (740)446-7300
d~al overhead . ca m, 24
Ranges.
and Old Records 78,45,333; valve. V-6, black, pw, cruise,
Apartments in Midd_leport. Dryers.
A
S
From $278-$348. Call 740- efr lgeralors, orne start at 1940
through
1980, tilt, ale, Ssp. $3.300.
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
992-5064. Equal Hausmg VIne St.. (740)446-7398
Andrews Sisters. Beatles(_.7_4_0)'-7-42_·2_1_69____
Opportunities.
and more. (304l675 "1199 · 1993 Chevy Camara Z28 .
-------202
379 2282 ·
Nice 1BR apt, Crown City, Chapel
MollohanRoad,
Carpet,
Porter, Clark
Ohio. Queen. Plllow Top Mattress Black, ·
$250 per month, plus securi- 740 44 6 7 44 1 877 830 set, New in plastic wfWarr. 1994. Dodge Intrepid 78 ,000
ty deposit. no pets 740-256· (
" ~estimates,
" -Easy· Will accept $199, Cenphone mr·les SSOOO.OBO 304_675 _
91 62.) Free
•1249
,
financing , 90 days same as 304-412-8098 or 304-552- 2035
. qutet
. clean 2 bedroom cash , Visa/ Master .c ard . 1424.
N1ce
1994 Mitsubishi Eclipse.
·apartment. kitchen appli- Drive- a- linle save alot.
SONG OF THE SOUTH Needs work. Make Offer.
ances. furnished . gas heat - - - - - - - - (Tales of Uncle. Remus) fuH ('"')882 3129
and NC .&amp; WID hookup. Ref Queen Anne Cheir. Bed leng1h rnovia. VCR 1ape $29 &amp;
Deposit
required . Frames, Radio, Retired bas- call 888-315-6004
1995 Pontiac Bonneville
'(304)675-7628
kets. many items. (304)675- ~:;;.;.;.~.;;.;;;..._ __,1 SS E. excellent condition
-Now Taking Applications- -,-204_5_ _ _ _ _ _ _
$4500 call 256-9275
35 West 2 Bedroom Used Furnt1ure Sfore 130 L.________,.. 1997 Cavalier $3,295., 1999
Townhouse Apartments . Bulaville· Pike Gallipolis OH Block. brick. sewer pipes. Cavalier $3,895., 1993,
'Includes Water Sewage, 446-4782. Goad buys. windows, lintels, etc. Claude 1995, 1996 · Grand-ams.
Trash, 5350/MO., 740-446- Check us out. Hrs 10-4 W1nters , Rio Grande, OH 1995 -· full size GMC
0008.
Mon-Sat
can74o-245_5121.
$3,895. Cook
Motors
3
(740)446-0l0
2000 Mercury sable LS.
Premier, fu lly equipped,
including power moon roof,
$7,500. fi rm. (304)675-3354

r

2003

6 month , old Engtrsh
Sheepdog, male $250.00 or
trade tor chocolate lab or
bassett hound 949·2181

2BR 5 miles south 218
Gallipolis.
$335
incl .
water/trash $200 deposit
740-256·1337

r

6,

.

Lab
PUppies,
AKC,
Chocolate,
vet
checked.
dew
- - -- - - - BURN
Fat.
BLOCK claws removed . very healthy
Cravin'gs, and BOOST and friendly. (740)367-0659
Energy Like you Have ~(7_4_
01_64_5_
-2_
2_
93_ _ __
Never Expenenced.
WEIGHT· LOSS
Now ready! AKC Maltese
' puppies. Shots and papers.
REVOLUTION
2 males, 2 females, Great
New product launch October pets!
_ _7454
23. 2002. Call Tracy at ::..:.__:__740
_446
_ _ _ __
{740)441 -1982
Siamese kittens: born April
- ready 6-10 $100.00
Central Cooling Systems, 30
740-949-9015
new &amp; used . as low as
$850.00 installed May
I IR\1 ' t 1'1'111'
Special! (740)446-6308 '
,\ II\ I SIO! 'China cabinet with 12 piece
place setting, microwave
stand. 2 mirrored end tables,
bedroom dresser 740-2561304

Friday, June

Campsite available
with full hookups
Call 949 • 2734

~:;;:;;:=;;;=::;::;~~;;;;;=;;;:::;;;;;;~
SU'r'$ GR'rrtuHOUrr£
/Iii.
......,,,
~

Bedding, Vegetable Er Sweet
·
Potato Plants,
4" annuals Er Perennials
Fruit &amp; Flowering Trees . &amp; "
Shrubs

~(Rhododendrons

Er

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
· t Parking Lots • Playgrounds
t Roads t Streets
WV

Contraclors Lie. q003506
'fE)., I: M"'t&gt;E A 111STAk:E..
&amp;UT W..._ ....T CONC.EitN IS

MANlEYS
SElf STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(lO'xlO' 6 10'x20r)

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

T~T

W-vu" a\.

oF

YOU~~'

FO~

"(OV TO POtNT Tt:-~AT

oUT \ ~

S&gt;PITEFLIL ANt&gt;

r\EAN- Sf'tRITED!

Cafe
in Syracuse
( l ;ormerl r \VIufflt'\":f )

Under nc~ uwnef~hip
ami new management
COME JOIN US
7 Days A Week!

~

1-J(LL ..,AAV&amp;: .).):&gt;\
' 1\ U1\Lt:. wt:l.ME-D 1
AI-41-4 ...81'\CK 1"0
1"HE !lHAL.LOW

END' OF 1"Hf
1"HINKIN&lt;i POOL.

Now

Opon
7dayo

NORT~UP CONSTAUCAzaleas)
TION-f.4ome repair, room
II
S 1
a """kdayllgl'lt
addibo~S. garages, roof1ng,
Q On Q 1e
to dar I'll
siding. carpeling, &amp; remod- Morning Star Road - C.Rd 30 • Racine , OH
eling, &lt;jr&lt;1ensove experrence
1-740-949·2115
Pdl mo
call 245--9023 or 245-9704 "-----.:.;;,:~;:;,;r,.,;;;:;,:.:~----..

"The Lmle re,Maunmt
~ nh

thf' h1g taMe"'

l

•

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, June 6, 2003
~,_..

a question or a comment, write: NASCAR
WIN~

I l &gt;N t "lIP

What: Pocono 500
Where: Pocono Raceway.
Long Po~d . Pa. (2.5 miles).
.200 laps/500 miles
.
When: Green flag drops at 1
p.m. Sunday
Lut year's winner: Dale Jarrett
Quallfylnl rec:ord: Tony Stewart, Pontiac, 172.391 mph,
July 21, 2000
Race rec:ord: Rusty Wallace,
Ford, 144.892 mph, July 21.
1996
Moat recent race: The key
moment in Sunday's MBNA
400 occurred on the 203rd
of 400 laps. That's when
Ryan Newman, seeing an opportunity to keep Tony Stewart a lap down, outraced
Stewart's Chevrolet back to

,._t

Hit S

HliSCH St-

the start-finish line on a caution flag . "I knew he (Stewart) had a really fast race
car and, at times, the
fastest on the track," said
Newman, who won for the
third time in only two seasons and 57 races. Stewart
had fallen a lap down due to
a pit-road violation. When
the green flag waNed for the
final time, with six to go,
Stewart tried to pass second-place Jeff Gordon on the
inside at the same time Gordon was trying to make a
similar move on Newman .
Slowing to avoid Gordon
cost Stewart's Chevrolet momentum, and his teammate,
Bobby Labonte, thus wrestled third away from Stewart.

This Week, r:,lo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053

~lf · S

What: Trace Adkins Chrome
300
Where: Nashville Superspeedway, Lebanon , Tenn .
(1.333
miles),
225
laps/ 299.925 miles
When: Green flag drops at 8
p.m. Saturday
Last year's wll\ner: Jack
Sprague
Track quallfytne record: Randy
LaJoie , Chevrolet. 163.324
mph, April 11, 2003
Race record: David Green,
Pontiac, 122.724 mph, April
12, 2003 . .
Most recent race: Joe Nemechek, in a Chevrolet. won
Saturday's MBNA 200 at
Dover. Matt Kenseth dominated, but a late-race spin
sent him to fourth place.

CIMHSMI\N lH\ICI\

What: O'Reilly 400k
Where: Texas Motor Speedway, Justin (1.5 miles), 167
laps/ 208.15 miles
When: 9 p.m. Friday
Last year's winner: Brendan
Gaughan
Track quallfylnl record:
Scott
Riggs,
Dodge,
181.953 mph, June 7, 2001
Race record: Jack Sprague,
Chevrolet, 133.62 mph,
June 8, 2001
Most rec:ent race: Jason Leffler, in a Dodge, won Friday's
MBNA 200 at Dover. It was
Leffler's first truck victory of
his career.
Notable: This race will paired .
with an Indy Racing League
event, which will be run Sat·urday night.

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

RAY EVERNHAM'

FEUD OF THE WEEK

•

v
WINSTON CUP CAR.OWNER

E
·,

R

....

s
Sterling
Marlin-

.Dodges having trouble catching up with competition
'
had major
body changes, and this year we had a major
body change and everybody had to cut the bodies off. We
NASCAR This Week
did that. Some of the teams are still fairly new, and I think
we're
still paying the price.
ay Evemham masterminded three of Jeff Gordon's
"The Dodges are coming together as a whole, and I think
four Winston Cup championships. After leaving Gor- ·
a Jot of cards are stacked up against them. Hopefully, you'll
don and Hendrick Motorsports, he played a leading·
role in Dodge's return to the circuit after an absence of al· " see a better second half of the season out of the Dodges."
most a quarter-century.
.,
Next on the NASCAR horizon is Toyota, the Japanese
Still, in his role as a Dodge team owner, Evernham has , manufacturer that has announced plans to enter the Craftsbeen unable to duplicate the heady success of his tenure as man Truck Series next year and Winston Cup in 2007.
Gordon's crew chief.
·
"We look at them (Toyota) as another competitor,"
Evernham said. "Certainly NASCAR is a tough sport. As
"It seems like I learn something every day that I didn't
know, and when you don't know how much you don't know, long as the rules are kept the same for everybody, I think
they're going to find it as tough going as everybody did.
that's when you're the most vulnerable," Evernham said.
"I think Dodge did a great job coming in. They've won 11
"Just putting this thing together has been a much bigger
job than I thought. I can't be as much hands-on on the com- or 12 races, got a bunch of poles and had some success. I
suspect Toyota will have some success, but they're not go.. petition side. I sat out (the competition side) when I
ing to come in and take
learned about business and learned about the structure of
putting teams together.
·
over this sport
and dominate_it.
"I feel like I worked pretty hard and I've gone to school
That's just not
a good bit on that, but our competition side is behind because I've left a void over there. What I underestimated is going to happen."
the time it would ~!Ike to get the right people in the right
places and then get them the experience as a team and
Contact Monte
time to jell together. The other thing you never count on
Dutton at
are the lightning bolts that hit you -like rule changes, or
tug50@aol.com.
people getting hurt, or people leaving and going to other
teams and things like thaC' ·
An owner since 2001, Evernham has
visited victory lane only twice, in
back-to-back races won by Bill Elliott at Pocono and Indianapolis in
the summer of 2002. ·
Elliott and Jeremy Mayfield
drive for Evernham in red
Dodges numbers 9 (Elliott)
and 19. Originally Evernham
paired Casey Atwood with
Elliott, but Mayfield joined
the team in 2002.
"We've had so manyrule changes on the
Dodge program .
Every year we've

By Monte Dutton

R

.
:Jalitlll~ll .

..

'
''i:. ~ '--~ ~llean'a··

-~ dlecneme?

, .

2. What IS the middle llllllt Of
both Richard Pdy end Dlr!8l
: Wllltrt~? '

'·-·NA$CAR
Who twtd•
the NCO!d'
tor ~t
·,,
viCtortill
on a dirt
track?
• 4. Who was the ilrst driver to
use a radio to talk with his ·
crew?
.
. I. What were the foul: melel of
cars in whiCh Richard Petty won
Daytona 500s?
I. Who won the last Winston
: Cup race at-North Wilkesboro
. (N.C.) SpeedWay?

u

s

Jeff
Gordon

First at The Winston and most recently in the MBNA 400. Sterling
Marlin became upset at Jeff Gordon
for allegedly wrecking his Dodge .
"It's getting kind of old. I don't know
what's wrong with the '24,' but I
need to find out," Marlin said.
"I definitely got into him, no doubt
about it," Gordon admitted. "I certainly didn't mean to . I don't know if I
caught the apron or just got a big
push. We were racing hard for position, and the front end j~st took off
on me."
NASCAR This Week's Monte Dut·
ton lives his take: "Gordon is an aggressive driver, but it's only fair to
note th.at the winner of Sunday's
race, Ryan Newman, said of secondplace-finishing Gordon, 'He raced me
clean, like a professional.· ·

voun TUHN
LHH R~ FROM OliR f!EAOERS

New rules for Winston
believe I have a simple solution for
The Winston being about speed
and having the best car win . All
the current segment basic formats
are fine, but here is how I would
change the starting order for the second and third segments:
First segment: The current qualifying format is·fine as is. (Including a
four-tire change brings the appropri·
ate attention to the pit crews.)
Second segment: After eliminating the cars that finish 21st or
worse, invert the entire field .
Third segment: No more e.limination. Instead, take each driver's average finish from the first two segments and have that determine the
starting order. (If two or more are
tied, then revert back to how they
qualified .)
I know having the fans vote for
how many to invert is a way to involve us, but I feel that eliminating
the sandbagging for position would
make each of the three segments
better. Besides, the fans always vo~r
for the highest number to invert, fP
where is the suspense?
Ja:k Dunaway
Havelock, N.C.
We think your ideas are very interesting and appreciate you letting us
know about them.

llail!' 'Otribune
~oint ~leasant 1\egtster

II &lt;01 NOS /\Nil I Ofll .

Daily Sentinel

I

When Ryan Newman won the pole
for Sunday's MBNA Armed Forces
Family 400, it marked the 11th time
he has qualified fastest in only 57
races .
His pole-winning percentage is
.193. For comparison. Jeff Gordon's
career percentage is .126, Bill El- ·
liott's is .061 and Rusty Wallace's is
.059.

' l.l8f •• 'ajiQOWIPK)
'UQPJOO

pull ~ng 'elpoo ·~ ••
"0961 UIIIIIIIIS ~ 't 'EV ll1fM
.(u&amp;,j lNI1 ., '881 'Z '.IIIIAJV 'l

:t.IMIIIY

Valley

&amp; Sup-p ly
Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

992-6611

.........,_...
252 Upper River Rd.
106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

Gallipolis, OH

Main Street, • Rutland, Ohio

740-742-2289 or 1-800-837-8217
Call for hours or to make an appointment

A Special Supplement to the

~aUipolis

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