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                  <text>Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, June 23, 2003

leen still misses
mom in·spite of her abuse
Dear
Abby
ADVICE
answering machine. The message says. "We can't come to
the phone right now, so please·
leave a message and we'll call
you back."
Abby, we love hearing our
mother's sweet voice when we
call. However, our brothers feel
it's "time for a change." Dad
seems fine with leaving it as is.
Please help settle this dispute.
TWO DAUGHTERS
MISSING MOM IN ILLINOIS
DEAR TWO DAUGH·TERS: Please accept my sympathy for your loss. Giief counseling could be helpful for all of
you. Your brothers are probably
not the only people who find
such a greeting to be offputting. I'm sure family friends
.are also disconcerted by it.
Since it bothers your brothers,
perhaps it's time to transfer the
message in your mother's voice
to tape - so you, your sister
and your father can listen to it
when you wish.

•

40 British Inc.
41 High spirits

Sarcasllc 43-remark
balloon
5 Fuel
46 Perched
8 Worry
47 After taxes
48 Treated
12 Seniors'
a sprain
' org.
13 CPR giver 50 Shrub
51 Frat Jetter
14 Navaho
foes
52 Tree·graft
To specify that the ''gift" be 15 Lions' prey
site
53 Singer
p_aid via money order implies 1~ Passing
-James
that there might be insuffiCient 17 gra~r.e
~~-Co!l
. credit
funds to cash the check.
(rev ew)
un1ts
If I received such an "in vita- 18 Hockey
55 Arrogant
tion," I would not send a money
gear
person
order. I would send my regrets. 20 Movie
DOWN
I recommend that you do the 21 Thai
same. Readers, I challenge you
neighbor
to top this 1
22 Aunts et al. 1 Joke
.bl
·
.
b
.
23 Ecological
2 Fleming
Dear A 1y IS wmten Y
hazard
and Smith
Abigail Van Buren, also know11 26 Small hound · 3 Dry, as
as Jeanne Phillips, and was · 29 Bates
champa~ne
founded by her mother, Pauli11e
or Arkin
4 Greek "e'
Pili/lips. Write Dear Abby at 30 Boxing win 5 Small lizard
D Abb
6 "Mister Ed"
www. ear
y.com or P.O
. . 31 Thurman
of films
actor
Box 69440. Los A11geles, CA 33 Me, In Paris 7 Sault .
90069.
34 Old masters
- Marie
35 Sleep-- 8 Raising
36 In good
2 to 8
~...;..;.=-..;,..;..o.;..
repair
9 Solar disk
38 Annoyed
10 Lalique
39 Howard
or Russo
or Guidry 11 Compass

•

DEAR ABBY: I am 13 and
couldn't be more mixed up.
Mom abused us our entire lives.
She lost custody of me and my
four younger brothers and sisters last summer. ·I always
thought I hated her for the beatings she gave us.
The truth is, I don't hate her.
I miss her so. much I don't
know what to do. I can't tell my
dad or stepmom because I don't
think they would understand.
Every night I cry myself to
sleep because I miss Mom. I'm
scared that something bad has
happened to her because she
hasn't tried to .call or see us
even once. What should I do?
Please help. - SCARED
AND SAD . IN THE
APPALACHIANS
DEAR SCARED AND
SAD: You're no longer a little
girl. It's important that you
express your concerns to your
father. You need to talk about
your mother, how she treated
you. and why, and find out
where she is. There is a reason
why your father was given full
custody of you and your siblings. When you're older you
will have a better understand-Ing of what happened.
DEAR ABBY: My sister and
I have a dilemma. Our beloved
mother passed away three
months ago, and both our
brothers want Dad to erase her
voice from the greeting.on his

ACROSS
1

DEAR ABBY: I'm enclosing a wedding announcement
my family and I received yesterday. My family and I are
shocked and appalled. It reads:
"Dear Family: I am asking
for· your cooperation and understanding. My wedding will be
very costly. and this has caused
me to make some unpleasant
decisions:
"I hope you will see this as a
request for a donation and not a
charge for you to attend my·
wedding. I cannot figure out
any way other than to ask each
guest to contribute to the cost:
If anyone is insulted by my
request, I am sincerely sorry:
"Your $330 contribution·
must be received on or before
June 30. Only postal money
orders will be accepted. Please
purcha~e it only from a U.S.
post office. Thank you for your
•contribution."
.
My question is, how should
this "invitation" be handled?
We don't have this kind of
money. Should we tell the
bride-to-be what bad manners
this is? - APPALLED IN
OHIO
No matter what
DEAR APPALLED: No.
Please allow me to do it for direction you turn
you. What you received is not yOU can always flnd
an invitation. It is a solicitation.
Not only is it tacky; it is unbe- ·.
It In the
lievably insulting. When a cou- L_ _!~~~
pie manies, all monetary con- .
tributions should be voluntary.

at
50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 204

dir.
F'reserve 35
fruit
37
20 Luigi's
farewell
38
22 Door
40
41
. openers
23 Play
42
bumpercars
43
24 Felipe44
of baseball .
25 Rostrum
45
26 Cotton unit 46
27 Moon
·
goddess
47
28 Discharge 49
30 Potter's
need .
32 Polished off
34 Reed

19

instrument
Decrees
Franklin
of soul
Corp. giant
Waterllly ·
OversupP.iY
Shopper,s
aid
Find out ·
Mouse
target?
Try again
Lincoln,
Informally
-degree
Society
newcomer

:o---r.r-'"rl--

j

Astrograph
CANCER (June 21-July . your stuff immediately.
22) - Some information you
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
learn from others today could 2~) - Your ur.beat and
prove to be very fortunate for friendly m~nner Will be workyou. You'll immediately know 111 ~ overt1me today. Th_ose
where and how to put it to With who!ll you c~me 111to
exceptionally good use.
contact Will 1rnme~1ately be
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - . drawn to you and Will want to
Changes and shifts could be share your day.
in the offing today, but even if SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23you don't initiate any of them Dec. 21) - Unexpected
yourself, they'll turn out to be lmprovemelJtS could de~elop
exactly what you and another today on the home front m an
need for a project you are area that. m1ght h&lt;~;ve. held
working on.
some tensmn. The umty tt cre'VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ates w11l pull everybody
-An opportunity to straight- together.
.
.
. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22en ~u t a con tiusm~ sttUB;tlon m Jan. 19)- An opening to disan_ Important relationship may cuss a matter that's been in the
anse unexpec~edly_ toda_y. back of your mind will be
~lmost by mag1c thmgs wtll afforded you today. Once it's
_nght themselves and make out in the open you'll take
everyone happy.
charge and make sure it goes
LIBRA ~Sept. 23-0ct. 23) in the direction you want.
There s an exc~llent
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
~h~n~ that !!" opportumty of 19) _ Lady Luck, ambition
a hfeume m1ght be hand~ to and a little help from an outyou today at work. Youii. be sider will make a dynamic
perfect_ly SUited for the jOb COmbinatiOn today tO provide
and m1ght even get to show

you with the ways and means
to further your financial interests.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Much to your delight
you could be invtted to exercise your initiative and
assertiveness in furthering a
personal ambition. In fact.
others might go out of their
way to clear the path.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - An associate mi~ht
surprise you today by com111g
through for you 111 a far
grander manner than you had
expected. This gesture will
give you a jump on your

objective.

··

·

20-May
20)TAURUS
- A lot (April
more than
you '-:::::::==~~~=~==~~====~
r
expected to get done is possible today - all because of a
lucky break you'll get early in
the day. You'll share your
good fortune with those who
work at your side.
· GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- There's a strong chance
y~m could stumble across an
original and creative way of
handling something pertaining to your career or work. It
will prove to be extremely
·
successful.

WORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDO HAMBRICK
C' 2001 UAIIId , _ tt,ndal•. ....,

F,

E.

H,

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®

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AVERAGE GAME 15~185

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DOWN ·-l!L

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• 52

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JUDD'S TOTAL

~It,

Answer
to
. previous
Word
Scrim'
ma~e

243

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... ~\\\) 1'M \-loT 8:&gt; 9..1\'&lt;.S /l.BoUT

Inside: Blues &amp; Jazz edition

AVERAGE GAME 205-215
by JUDD HAMBRICK

OOWN

0
FOUR PLAY TOTAL =
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

DIRECTIONS: Mak11 111 2· to 7·1ener word !rom !he letters on eaCh yardllfle:
AOd polnls \o each word Of l&amp;lter usn~ scor1 ng (Jr&amp;e:tloos at rigtlt Sev8n-l&amp;lter
word!! get a SO-point bonus. All warns can be tound lfl Webster's New World
College Dictionary.
JUDO'S SOLU110N TOMORROW

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ARE 'iOU &amp;OING TO STA'I'
HOME Ti-115 SUMMER?

l THINK SO .. LAST
SUMMER l WENT TO CAMP,

AND !=ELL IN LOVE .. . ·

AH~4H.
Ut11'1E ! 1.
NO MORE HOI"''EWOR.IC..'
NO t'\Otl..E 800"-.., ~
"(E~! NO
Mo~E

lOOt&lt;,'I-!

In NOT EVEN GO I N(,
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-e.. AND THE POOL.

TI-lE LAKE AND TI-lE
OAK.!

•

.

www.mydailysentlnei.&lt;Dm

.River conditions keeping boaters indoors
Dental clinic
· Marina operatQrs
receives $200,000
say rainy weather
hurting
grant to op-erate
~usiness

for a time while a search for a
dentist · continued, and then
two part-time dentists took
over the practice until early
POMEROY - The Meigs· December when it again
County Health Department closed.
has received a second,
In Marcti, Dale M. White,
$200,000 grant from the
an
Athens dentist, was hired
Appalachian
Regional
by
the
health department on a
Commission for operation of a
dental health clinic in Meigs part-time basis. Since June I
he has been employed on a
Count}'.
·
· 'Th1s means we're assured full-time basis. His dental
of another year of operation," assistant is Beth Cremeans.
said Norma
Torres,
health Rhonda Davis, a dental
, I .
.
commiSSioner, notmg that the hygienist, comes in one day a
county through its health week, and Tanuny Taylor is
department tax levy con- the part-time office manager.
tributes an additional $50,000
"Demand for low-cost dento the clinic.
tal care in this county is
Torres, who was instrumen- extremely high," said Torres,
tal in bringing dental health · noting that currently there are
care to the uninsured and only two primary care dentists
underinsured residents of
Meigs County; explained that practicing here.
payment for services is on a .She stressed that the clinic- is
sliding-fee scale with the min- not just for low income residents, but can be used by anyimum being $10.
The Appalachian Dental one. Along with routine dental
Clinic opened in August 2001 work, Dr. White does dentures
in the former oftices of the late and dental appliances. but not
Dr. R. R. Pickerlf on Third orthodontic work, she said.
Currently he sees an average
Avenue in Middleport with the
fit:St ARC grant and local levy of 20 patients a day, with 47
funds.
percent of the patient eligible
Dr. Herbert Rollins, a retired for Medicaid, 50 percent pay
Columbus dentist. was hired to on a sliding fee scale, and
;handle the practice. He left in three percent are covered by
May 2002, the clinic closed insurance, according to Torres.
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
lliews editor

Despite high water
mark, River Sweep·
deemed success
BY J. MILES

lAYTON

Staff writer
- - - - -- - - - POMEROY - The banks
of the Ohio River became
cleaner over the weekend as
more than 90 volunteers participated in the 15th annual
River Sweep.
Paula Wood, director of the
Meigs County Recycling and
Litter Prevention .Program,
said between more than a ton
of trash was collected
Saturday. Three miles of
shoreline in Middleport, three
miles in Pomeroy and six
miles in Racine were cleaned.
Forked Run State Park also
was cleaned.
"I think we made a difference." she said. "Every little
piece we pick up ,makes a dif. ference ."
. Volunteers from Pomeroy,
~acine
and Middleport
deared a lot of tmsh and
debris along the riverbanks,
but Wood said there were
many places where the water
was too high to safely clean.
1

0
0

TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2003

BY TONY M. lEACH
Staff writer

GALLIPOLISe - Recent
heavy rains have left both the
Ohio and Kanawha rivers
muddy and full of debris conditions that area boat club
and marina operators say is
hurting business and. keeping
recreational boaters off the
water.
Ed Mullins, dockmaster at '
the Gallipolis Boat Club, said
Monday the rainy has kept
boats tied to the dock and people indoors.
"Ever sin~e we started getting all of this rain, there hasn't been much activity goinR
on here at the boat club,
Mullins said.
"Many of. our members ·are
leaving their boats tied up and
doing something else. It's hard
to water ski and swim when
it's raining and the river is
hi¥,h and full of debris.
'I would say this is probably
the slowest time I've seen in a
long time."
Randy Smith, CO-owner of
at
Riverbend
Marina
Henderson, W.Va., agrees.
"We are definitely experiencing a decrease in the number of boaters who nonnally
come in around this time of
year," · Smith said, pushing a
After fueling up at Riverbend Marina at Henderson, W.Va., Mason County resident Brett Leach half-submerged . log · away
unties his motor boat and prepares to venture out onto the Kanawha River. A rainy spring has from a dock.
resulted in bad river conditions and fewer boaters, which, in turn, is putting a financial strain
on local boat clubs and marinas . (Tony M. Leach)
Please see Boltln~o A5

. Mobil~ home ordinance set fQr.July 23 hearing
moved into the village be no regulations in Syracuse,
more than five years old.
Gallipolis, Cheshire, Wellston,
The proposal also requires and New Haven, W.Va.
mobile homes to be under·
If passed, the new regulations
MIDDLEPORT
pinned, and requires porches on would relate only to mobile
Middleport Village Council all mobile homes in the village, homes moved into the village
will hold a public hearing on a and requires that any mobile from that point, and would not
proposed ordinance regulating home moved into the village be regulate existing mobile and
the placement of mobile and appraised at least 65 percent manufactured homes at all -manufactured homes on July value of a new mobile home of although some regulations
23. .
.
like kind.
included in the proposed ordiCouncil approved the pro- .The ordinance proposed last nance are already on the books.
posed ordinance for a public mght also proh1b1ts the use oL The planning commission
hearing
during Monday boats and campe~ as livi~g estimates that 25 percent of all
evening's regular meeting. The quarters, proh1b1ts mob1le mobile homes in Middleport
new, stricter regulations pro- h?me par!\s,_and reserves the are in areas where they are forposed Monday night were VI~la~e the nght to refuse per- bidden by zoning regulations.
dmfted by the village's ordi- truss1on to anyone to p~k . a
Council member Kathy Scott
nance committee, and recom- ·mobile home or hou~ tr~ler m voted against placing the ordimended to council for passage ~e v1llage _1f the trailer 1s con- nance before the public for conby the village planning com- stdere(j unht.
sideration.
mission.
In considering the new pro- .
The proposed ordinance posal, the village planning
Other business
requires that all mobile homes . comlnission and 6rdinance com'rom Dooley, President of
in the village be owner occu- mittee considered not only exist- the Middleport Community
pied, sets forth minimum lot ing regulations in Middleport Association, discussed plans
sizes for mobile homes and relating to the placement of for the upcoming July 4 celerequires that all mobile homes mobile homes, but also current bration at Dave Diles Park.

BY BRIAN

Usually when the river is
down, there are places along
the shores of the river where
people can walk so that Uley
can better clean the river
banks.
"I think that if we had been
able to get down there, we
could have gotten so much ·
more," Wood said.
In places where the river
was up too high. the volunteers cleaned loose trash from
nearby street~. Wood said the
trash would have blown into
the river if it had not been
picked up.
Several businesses and vile
!ages donated equipment,
refreshments or money to the
Ohio River VaUey Water
Sanitation Coqx.-ation (ORSANCO) which spol1S(IOO the cleanup.
Wood said nothing remarkable was found this year. In
years past, there have been
Christmas trees, parking
meters and an assortment of
things not usually found in the
Ohio River.

J. REED

Staff writer

Painting brought by French 500 set for restoration
BY BRITTANY

SMITH

Guest writer

Index
Sections - 12 ......
Calendar
A3
Classifieds
83-S
Comics
86
DearAbby
86
Editorials .
A4
Movies
AS
Obituaries
AS
Sports .
Bl-2
Weather
A2
1

Cl 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Cc.

l e i - Dowell, 4tll . , _

Rutland Elementary

Dooley reponed that the
association's efforts to raise
funds for fireworks and other
celebration costs have been
successful, and that the goal of
$7,000 has been exceeded.
Entertainment and an "oldfashioned picnic" are planned fQ!'
the celebration, which will conclude with firewolks.
CoWlCil also:
• Approved payment of bills in
the amount of $6,409.52.
• Approved hiring of Randy
Smith as a part-time, call-in
patrobnan for the police department
• Approved the pwchase of a
chipper, at a cost of $22,995, and
the financing of the pwchase for a
five-year ~riod at 5.5 percent
interest
Present. in addition to Scott.
were Council members Linda
Haley, Stephen Houchins, Bob
Pooler, Robert Robinson, Mayor
Sandy Iannarelli and Oerk Susie
French.

GALLIPOLIS - A painting brought to Gallipolis more
ihan 200 years ago by one of
the original French 500 settlers is being restored for
future generations to enjoy.
Our House Museum, the
painting's owner, took it .to
Cincinnati to a professional
conservator for restoration
and removal of centuries of
dirt and grime that has distort~d the painting's original
1mages.
The 12-by-18 inch painting
is pastoral scene, featuring

·'We are really excited to seet it
restored. .. The restorer said it looks

Reuben, but is possibly Rem;sh:'

- Ilene "-!Jegrlnon

cherubs ' and goats , arid is
·painted on wood.
Dene Pellegrinon, museum
board member, said it looks as
if it could possibly be a piece
of paneling from the Gervais
home, the name of the French
family that brought it here in
1790.
The painting was flaking

and decomposing, but now it
· is being brought back to life
by conservator Mike Ruzka,
Pellegrinon said.
·
"We are really excited to
see it restored," Pellegrinon
said. "The restorer said it
looks Reuben, but is possibly
Flemish ."
.
Research show s that the

painting was handed down
from several families.
The artist's name remains
anonymous but the Our
House has hired a historian to
research the painting to determine where it came from.
Pellegrinon said the historian also may be able to put a
value on the painting.
The painting will be on display for the public at 2 p.m.
Thursday at the museum,
located on Second Avenue.
Ruzka will be on hand to
answer questions about the
painting and its restoration.

FREE Surgical Weight Loss Seminar

J

Are ypu 100 pounds overweight? Why weight?
Call NOW and .make a reservation ·to attend one of the June sessions that is most convenient for you !

In Jackson. OH
Friday, June 27 - 4:00 - 5:30 PM and 6:00 - 7:30 PM
Holzer Medical Center - Jackson
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Thursday, June 26

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6:00 • 7:30 PM and 8:00 • 9:30 PM :

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..----_,;,;..:.;..:.:.:.;;

�•

The Daily Sentinel.
Wednesday, .June 25

•IColumbuo lse'/94' I

W. VA.
KY.

'Inc.

() ····-·~·
C~

Sunny PI, Ckludy

Showt11i

Rain

T-storms

Flurries

S00w

Ice

Sunnys~escontinue
Today... Sunny. Highs near 30 percent.
.
Friday ... Mostly cloudy with
Tonight. .. Ciear. Lows in the a chance of showers and
lqwer 60s. Calm winds.
thunderstorms. Highs in the
Wednesday... Mostly sunn~. lower 80s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. A
Highs near 90. Light and vanslight chance of showers and
able winds.
Wednesday night...Mostly thunderstorms. Lows io the mid
60s and highs in the upper 70s.
clear. Lows in the mid 60s.
· Thursday:.. Mos.tly sunny.
Sunday ... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 80s.
· Lows in the lower ·60s and
Thursday
night .. .Partly highs 80 to 85.
Monday... Partly cloudy.
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the lower 60s and
Lows 64 to 69. Chance of rain highs 8 I to 86.

90. Light and variable winds.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
June 23, 2003

10,000

Dow
Jones

9.000
8,000

9,072.95
Pet.~

-

prMJus: -1.39
June 23,

MAR
llgh'
9,199.70

. 7,000
JUN
Fltconl high: 11.722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

APR

MAY

Low
9,038.29

2003

1,800

Nasdaq
composite
1,610.75
Pet. ~

-

-2.07

pmWlu&amp;:
June 23,

1,800
1.400
MAR

1,200
JUN
Record high: 5,048.62
· March 10, 2000

APR

MAY

High

Low

1,643.21

1,601.4S

2003

1,0541

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500

950
850

981.64
Pet. cMnge
-

p!8'liou8 -1.41

MAR

APR

no

MAY

Htgh

Low

995.69

977.40

JUN
Fltconl high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

AP

Local Stocks
AEP- 30.26
Arch Coal - 22.39
Akzo- 27.S1
AmTech/SBC- 26.03
Ashland Inc. - 32 .40
AT&amp;T- t8.16
Bank One- 37.81
BLI-14.76
Bob Evans - 27.62
BorgWarner- 63.92
Champion - 3.15
Charming Shops 4.81
City Holding - 29.62
Col-24.02
DG -18.61

Thesday, June 24, 2003

Funeral home Senate won't discus&amp;
bill until House-Taft
to close during· differences resolved
investigation

Ohio weather

02003

PageA2

Ohio

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DuPont -

41.86

Peoples - 2S.22
Pepsico- 44.19
Premier - 9.30
Rockwell- 24.12

Fedentl~UI- . 31

USB-24.22
Gannett - 7S.96
General Electric

Rocky BooiS- 9.36

29.68
GKNLY-4.05
Harley Davidson
41.33
Kroger- 15.91
Ltd.- 15.34
NSC - 19.55
Oak Hill Financial 2S.OO
OVB-23.00
BBT- 34.50

AD Shall - 47.69
Sears- 34.78
Wai-Mart- S3.75
Wendy's - 29.S3
Worthinglon- t 3.81
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of · the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Sm~h Parmers at Advesl
Inc. of Gallipolis.

TOLEDO (AP) - The
operator of a funeral home
where eight decomposing
bodies were found agreed to
temporarily shut down the
business, the mayor'$ office
said Monday.
Sherrill-Harden Funeral
Home will close Wednesday.
Mayor Jack Ford asked
owner Henry Harden to stop
·operating while investigators
look into what happened, said
Megan Vahey, the mayor's
spokeswoman.
Two of the bodies were
found in a garage at the funeral home and six were in a
back room. Officials said four
were in cremation boxes. The
others were in containers.
All had been embalmed
and apparently were left there
over the · past few months,
officials said. DNA tests were
planned to ·determine their
identities.
The building was searched
Friday after authorities
received at least two anony-

mous tips, including one from
someone who identified himself or herself as a funeral
home employee, according to
Ford.
'· Several messages seeking
comment have been left for
Harden.
No charges have been filed.
The funeral home has had
problems with regulators
goi ng back as far as 1994.
In June, the local heal!h
department sent Harden a-letter that he was in violation of
state law because he had not
filed five death certificates
within five days of the date of
the deaths.
State health officials visited
the funeral home in 1994 and
the Toledo-Lucas County
Health Department sent letters to the funeral home in ·
1999 and 200 I regarding the
late, filing ef death certificates. said Michelle Loparo, a
spokeswoman for the state
health department.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Senate will not join discus·sions on a bill that would
allow Ohioans to carry hidden guns until House sponsors resolve differences with
Gov. Bob Taft's office, for
fear of a veto, its president
said Monday.
The House last week rejected. the Senate's version oft~
bill - the first to get Taf! s
support - as too re~tn.ctrve.
The Senate drd not m s~st on
Its amendments, meanmg
there r.s no comnuttee to work
out dtfferences between the
House and Senate proposals.
Senate Presrdent Doug
. sat'd he to ld R,ep.
Wh ne
Roben Latta chairman of the
. House criminal Justice
Committee, that he's satisfied
Taft would sign the Senate 's
bill. So, there's no reason to
form a committee until the
House and Taft work out their
differences he said.
"In my ~pinion, I do not
have the votes to override the
go~emor 's veto. So it would
be useless for rile to send conferees over to negotiate some-

Prosecutor: Company misled people about product
COLUMBUS ' (AP) - A
poultry researcher and her doctor business partner falsely told
people that the powdered egg
yolks they sold had federal
approval and could help the
immune system, a federal prosecutor said Monday as their
ttial began.
Attorneys for the partners
and the company they formed
told jurors in U.S. District
Coun that they did not do anything illegal and that the product made people feel better.
Last August, a federal gmnd
jury indicted Marilyn Coleman
of Richwood; Dr. Mitchell
Kaminski, a plastic surgeon
from Niles, Ill.; and their
company, Ovlmmune Inc.
The 23-count' indictment
includes charges of conspira- ·
cy to commit mail frimd and
distribution of an unapproved
and misbranded drug with
intent to defraud.
"The government will
prove that the defendants
chose to ignore t!!e FDA's
(Food
and
Drug
Administration's) requirements," said Deborah Solove,
assistant U.S. attorney.
Solove said the defendants
told people that the egg powders could cure and prevent
disease, including treating
yeast infections, autism, cancer, chronic fatigue syndrome
and AIDS.
She also said that Coleman
once approached a school
about gt ving the eggs to children, saying that it .could help
them concentrate and be used
for such problems as
Attention Deficit Disorder.
Solbve also told jurors that
the
defendants
misled
investors about the product's
success to get money from
them.
By law, a food supplement

becomes a drug when it is
advertised as treating a disease
and must go through the rigorous drug approval process.
Authorities
raided
Coleman's farm north of
Columbus in 200 I and took
documents
related
to
Ovlmmune.
The indictment charges her
with selling plastic bags of the
pale yellow powder to undercover officers. One bought
$200 worth for his rheumatoid
arthritis and the other $25
wonh to treat his wife's toenail
fungus:.

One of Coleman's attorneys,
Paula Brown, told jurors in her
that
opening
statement
Coleman never intended· to
commit any offense.
"Doctor Coleman told peopie interested in her product
that it was a food., not a drug,''
she said.
She said the investor..•
Raymond Suen, was aware of
disappointing results of a study
of the powder.
.
Suen's company, For Your
Health, Inc .. ran a Web site that
advenised the eggs as "Magic
Bullets" that could be used to

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CLEVELAND (AP)
A
Maple Heights polire officer who
also wodred as a security guard at
a suburban mall was sentenc:td to
three years in (Xison Monday in
tiJ.! death of a snsperted shoplifter.
Three Randall Park Mall
employees said the muscular
Jameel Talley, 35, picked up Guy
W~ls 111, 41, and threw him~
first to a concrete floor last year.
Wills' skull was fra:.'tured, his
collarbon: Wa'i broken, and his
br.tin was truised. He died two
days later.
Talley was coovicted of involuntary manslaughter May 13 in
Cuyahoga County . Common
PleasCowt.
He said he slipped while trying
to haJxlcuff Wills and they fell
Wills was high on heroin and
ax:aine, and IW stuffed a $159
leather coat under his jacket.
axordinl! to TeStimony.
-

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'fucsday, June 24, 2003

.Time Out for Tips

Community Calendar

Never, never, never skake a baby

Public meetings

Never, never, never shake a
baby. )t can cause Shaken Baby
Syndrome - a variety of symptoms that can cause permanent
damage or even death to a young
child.
Shaken Baby Syndrome has
been foundto be one of the leading causes of death from child
abuse. Even though it most often
occurs in babies under the age of
six months, it can also happen to
children up to the age of five.
Many people don't realize the
serious consequences of shaking
a baby. It can result in hemorrhaging and swelling of the
br.tin, blindness, seizures, learning disabilities, paralysis and
impaired growth. In 25 pen_'ent
of Shaken Baby Syndrome
cao;es, the damage is so severe
that the victims die.
Symptoms indicating that
abuse has occurred include:
lethargy, vomiting. seizures,
fussiness/initability, loss of conseiousness and difficulty breathing. Health jJfOfessionals may

Q

Becky
Baer

find it hard to diagnose the
child 's
medical
problem,
because so many of these symptoms are true for common childhood illnesses.
Why do parents and caregivers
shake babies' Perpetrators most
often confess they don't know
how to deal with mounting frus. trntions that result when a baby
constantly cries. Adults need to
remember that babies don't cry
to aggmvatc them; they cry to
communicate their needs. They
may be tired, hu'ngry. unmmtonable, overexcited, bored nr need
attention. If feeding or changing
a diaper doesn't seem to provide

relief. babies should be held
dose. rc&gt;&lt;:ked or sung to, offered
a pacitier. Or taken for a ride in
the car or swing. If the baby
tends to be colicky. teeding the
baby slowly. then burping him
often may help alleviate the crying episodes.
lf attempts to quiet the baby
don't seem to work. and the frustmtion level is increa,ing. the
caregiver shm)ld put. the baby in
a safe place. such as her crib or
playpen. and then go to &lt;mother
room to calm down. Calling a
friend or relative to ll~k our tiustrntions, taking a soothing bath or .
hot shower, or listening to music
can also help relieve the escalating stress. No matter how h•rrd
or how long a baby cries. it is
imperative that the caregiver
never give i11 to shaking the baby
- it could result in pem1anent disability or death.
Beck\' Boer is a Meig.l CountY
Ertension A ~elllll'ith F11milr and
Conntmer Scieltce.'i/Comniwliry
Developmmr.

Tips on container gardening
POMEROY - Container poured into a large. plastic storgardening is convenient and age container and moistened
time-saving and now consti- before using. The soil shou ld
tutes more than 50 percent of hold its form when squeezed
all flower sales. Hal Kneen, · together. Red wiggler wonns
Meigs County extension agent, can be added to large pots to
told Wildwood Garden Club help aerate the soil, he said.
members.
When cqnsidering the plants
Speaking at a meeting held at for the container, look for tlowthe home of Peggy Moore, ers with similar growin g concli Kneen suggested that membe" tions and plan striking color
plant their own containers to combinations. Choose a tall
save money. He described the plant for height. mid-tall plants
various kinds of containers and ones that trail over the conavailable including clay, metal, tainer edge. He displ~yed
plastic, wooden, concrete and many new and interesting varipolystyrene, noting that the clay eties that local growers have
'Ones are ·the most desirable available and demonstrated
because they · breathe . He how he plans to use them in hi s
advised that they cannot be left container gardens.
Soil nutrients need to be
out during winter month s
because they will shatter.
added to container gardens, and
He said that while clay is the speaker suggested that
better, he uses many large plas- before choosing a fenilizer the
tic pots in his yard because they label be read. The first number
are inexpensive, portable and on the fenilizer label indicates
usable for many years . nitroge n content, followed by
Choosing a container or the phosphate and then potash, he
right size for the plants is explained. Fertilizers with
important, he said, noting that higher nitrogen content stimutall plants need a large contain- late · more plant foliage . while
er. He reminded the gardeners for !lowering purposes, a highto disinfect used containers to er content of phosphate and
eliminate diseases.
potash are needed. Osmocote is
As for a growing medium, a good time-release fertilizer
the extension agent recom- for use in "container gardens
mended Scots Metro Mix 510 feeding the plants fbr four
· me d.rum add.mg months, he sar·d.
·
as a growtr)g
compos ted bark and Water
Fill material can be added to
Works Crystals. The crystals the bottom of large pots to
absorb water and release it to reduce the amount of soi I and
plants, thereby decreasing the to aid in drainage. Styrofoam
need to water so frequently.
peanuts, bark or other s ~itable
The growing medium is material can be utilized .

POMEROY - Fronts of alloccasion cards will be collected
by Hemlock Grange to be sent
to St. Jude's Ranch for Children
in Nevada over the next several
months.
TI1e grange will also continue
collecting Campbell soup
labels. pop tabs, and used eye
glasses. Any of the items may
be turned into any grange mem-

Pleasant Valley Hospital

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COMMUNITY

Local News

The Daily Sentinel

Apply an inch of mulch to
the top of the container to con'erve moisture. Pea gravel is
good mulch because it helps
keep plants from rotti ng since
the gravel dries more readily
than wood mulch.
Pres ident Evelyn Hollon
reponed that the shnrbs planted
last su mmer ur Gilmore
Cemetery had been cut down or
removed. Peggy Moore will
check into replacing them.
Five membe rs from the
Wildwood Gmden Cl ub attended the regional meeting held in
Athens. It was announced that
the Oho Association of Garden
Club is sponsoring a red. white,
and blue planting contest in
observance of the bicentennial
year. Pictures of plants are to be
submitted by July I .
· Joy Bentley, beautification
chairperson, updated members
on progres~ the committee has
made. A raised daylily bed has
been constructed at Syracuse
Village Park and daylilies have
been planted in it. All the other
beds have been planted with
annuals donated by Bob's Market
and Hubbard's Greenhouse.
Members were reminded of
the maintenance·schedule at the
park. Beautification work
has
S
begun at the fonner . yracuse
Elementary Building , now the
Syracuse Community Center.
The bed has been cleared of
weeds and is ready for planting.
Refreshments were served.

-·Hemlock Grange collecting cards

Holzer Clinic

bers. It was also noted that the
Grange still has cookbooks for
sale.
At the meeting conduced by
Rosalie Story, the charter was
drapecl in memory of Mildred
Bowen. Roy Grueser gave the
legislative report and plans were
finalized tor serving an auction ..
It was reported by Mildred
Zeigler · of the Modern

Woodmen that new shrubs will
be planted at the grange hall as a
pan of the "join hands" project.
The program was on fathers
with readings by Kim Romine.
Donna Davidson, and Rosalie
Johnson. There was a quiz on
fathers who were United States
presidents.
The July 3 meeting will be
preceded by, a cookout.
.

Tuesday,·::June 24
CHESHIRE - The Board
of Directors of the GalliaMeigs Community Action
Agency will meet at 4:30 p.m.
on Tuesday at the Cheshire
office.
Thursday, June 26
SYRACUSE - The 138th
annual meeting of the
Carleton College Board of
Trustees will be held at 7:30
p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center, formerly
the Syracuse Elementary
School. All me'mbers are
urged to attend.

Clubs and
Organizations
Tuesday, June 24
RACINE - Racine Area
Community
Organization
(RACO) at 6:30 p.m. at the
park building. A potluck dinner
will be served. New members
always welcome.

Wednesday, June 25
RUTlAND
Rutland
Friendly Gardeners, 7;30 p.m.,
home of Janet Bolin.
Thursday, June 26
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at 6:30
p.m. at the home of Joy Bentley,
Church St. , Syracuse.
TUPPERS PL....;INS - VFW
9053 will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
hall in Tuppers Plains. There will
be a special drawing.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship, 7 p.m. at
the Zion Church of Christ.
Pomeroy . to have devotions.
Take a personal wedding item
for display. The program will be
a Biblical video.

Homecomings/
Reunions

Other events
Tuesday, June 24
POMEROY Meigs
County Hea~h Department will
offer a childhood immunization
clinic from 9 to t t a.m. and 1 to
3 p.m. on Tuesday. Shot records
must be provided and all children must be accompanied by
a-parent or legal guardian.
Thursday, June 26
SYRACUSE - A free pool
party will 'be held from 7 to 9
p.m. at the London Pool in
Syracuse. The party is be1ng
sponsored by the Me1gs
County Health Department
Wellness Program and the
Meigs Ciunty Fami ly and
Children First CounciL There
will be free food , drinks and
door prizes.

Support groups

Sunday, June 29
REEDSVILLE - HaymanThursday, June 26
Biram reunion will be held at 1
POMEROY - Caring and
p.m. at the Forked Run State sharing .s upport group, 1 p.m.
Park. There will be a basket at the Senior Citizens Center.
dinner.
Dr. Robert Schmoll will speak
on macular degeneration.

Court News
POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Meigs
Count y Court of Judge Steve
Story between May 20 and
June 10 are as follow s: Mary
L.
Rhonemu s,
Guysville, speeding, $30 and
costs; Shawn M. Riley.
Whitehall , seatbelt , $30 and
costs; Thomas A. Roberts,
Racine. seatbelt , $30 and
costs; Jeremy R. Robinson.
Coolville, equipment mi suse . $20 and costs; Ri chard
R. Ross, Coolville, speedin g,
$30 and costs;
Wendy K. Rosser, Ironton,
seatbelt -passenger, $20 and
costs; Thaepeu s R. Rupp.
Buckhannon, W.Va .. speeding. $30 and costs; Ralph G.
Shon. Vienna, W.Va., speeding , $30 and costs ; Alicia D.
Shuler, Syracuse_ speedmg,
$30 and costs; Branden . M.

Shuler, Roanoke, Va .. speeding, S30 and costs;
Matthew
F.
Shull..
' Staunton,, Va. , speeding:· $30
a nd
costs ;
Fred
H.
Simmonds. Altamonte, Fla ..
speeding; $30 and costs;
Harold R. Sisson. Pomeroy,
seatbelt. $30 and co sts:
Floyd Smith , Vinton, stop
sign, $20 and costs; Shirley
M. Smith, Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and costs; Qustm A.
Smyers, Albany. seatbelt .
$45 and costs; Kimberly A.
Spencer. Racine . speeding,
$30 and costs;
.
.
Karen
M.
Spurltng .
Wilkesville, speeding, $30
and costs; Harold W.
Steiding, Proctorville, speedin g. $30 and costs; Larry W.
Stewart, Rutl and, seatbelt.
$3 0 and costs; Rollre D.
Stewart, Middleport, seat-

·belt. $30 and costs: Sharon
S. Stewart, Rutland, seatbelt,
$30 and costs. stop sign, 520
and

co s t s~

Rebecca 1. Stum p. Shade. ·
speeding, $30 and costs: J.D.
Sturboi s, Athens , seatbelt,
$30 and '' costs; Timothy S.
Taylor. Rad nor. speeding,
$25 and costs: Ryan H .
Terzopplus. Cheshire. tinted
glass. $20 and costs: Shawn
M. Thomas. Albany. seatbelt,
$30 and costs:
Jessie K. Thompson,
Ripley, W.Va .. speeding . $30
and costs: Gary M. Turner,
Quaker C it y. tinted glass,
$20 and costs; Eric S.
Walker, Middleport , seatbelt,
$30 and costs; Je romy, A.
Walker. Athens. ·unreason- ·
able speed fo r conditions.,
$20 and costs.

Tops meet
COOLVILLE - A program on how to . get
in spired to Jose wer,sht
was gi.ven by Brenda Clme
. at a recent meeting of Tops
# 20 I 3 at the Torch Baptist
Church .
Contests were discussed
and a circle of hands was
held to encoura~e each
other. Next meetmg will
be July 8. there will be no
meeting on July I due to
vacation Bible school
being held at the church.

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AUTOMOTIVE

The Qaily Sentinel
Reader SeiVices

treat disease. .
Suen and hi s cJmpany
pleaded guilty last year to conspiring to distribute unapproved and misbranded drugs
in interstate commerce.
The attorney for Ovlmmune.
Kort Gatterdam, said letters
were sent to For Your Health
demanding the claims be
dropped advising that the eggs
are a food product not a drug . .
He also said the company
made numerous attempts to
work with regulators and that
the eggs should be on the mmket today.
'

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

lnfoCision Management Corp.

Police officer
sentenced ·
in deaU1 of
suspect

thing that 's going to have to
go to a veto fight," said
White. a Republican from
Manchester.
It would take 22 votes to
override a veto in the 33member Senate·.
The bill · would allow
Ohioans who pass a background check and complete
safety training to.buy a permit
from the county sheriff for no
· more than $45.
·
•
· Ch~nges made by the
Senme led the State Highway
Patrol to drop its opposition
to the bill. That was one condition Taft made tor his sup·
d 1·
port. whtch he announce .tst
week.
.
.
The Senate versron wou!d
allow loaded guns 111 cars 1f
they were m plam srght or
loCked m stor,Jge . h also
would allow a person wnhout
a permit. who is charged with
carrying a concealed weapon.
to use as :i defense that it was
necessary because the person ·
had a protective order in a
case of domesuc vrolence or
another threat-relatt&gt;d crime.

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NATIONAL VIEW

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aND 1"1-!aT M83NS
Jo8S! GOOO JoB$,
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Jusi;c~C?~ ...

California sattempt to re-do ·
.election is misplaced
San Diego Union- Tribune , on move to recall
California governor:
For the first time in hi story, California is hurtling
toward an election in which voters could recall the
gove rnoL Events are moving sw iftly behind the
sce nes. It 's tim e to si t up and pay attention .
The bid to oust Gray Davis les s than a year after his
re-e lection is an abuse of the reca ll provi sion s of the
state co nstitution . That pro cess should be reserved ...
for officeholders who are guilty of ma lfea sa nce . It
should ndt be employed to refight the la st election . .. .
Yet. whether we approve or not , the que stion of
whether to remove Davis from office appears headed
for the ballot, either in a fall special election or in
Ca lifornia 's regular pre side ntial primary next March .
Among Republican voters, only 8 percent approve
of Dav is' job performa nce. Thi s is significant
because if the rec all ba lloting is held in the fall , the
turnout is likely to be more heavily Republican than
if it is held next March , when Democratic voters will
be drawn to the polls to se lect a presidential candidate .
On the sa me ballot with the recall que s tion, voters
would be asked to choosf! a gubernatorial · successor
from what could be a long li st ·o~ Democratic ,
Republican and third-party candidates ... (to) finish
out the remainin g three years of Davis' term . The victor need not win a l]lajority of the votes, which mean s
Davi s could be replaced by a co nte nder who gained,
say, only 15 percent of the total votes cast. ...
The list of potential Democratic hopeful s is even
lon ger: Sen. _ Dianne Feinstein, Lt. Gov. Cruz
Bu stamante, Attorney General Bill Lockyer,
Treasurer Phil Angelides, not to mention Davis him se lf battling to persuade voters to retain him, thereby .
making the second question on the ballot moot.

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

oderately Confused.

Party waifare erupts over lifllWD.probe
There's no question that
Congress has to investigate the
issue of Iraq's missing weapons
of mass destruction, but the last
thing the country needs is for
the inquiry to Start off as a parMorton
tisan political melee.
Some · Democrats, led by
Kondracke
Sens. Roben Byrd (W.Va.),
Bob Graham (Fla.) and Carl
Levin (Mich.) and former
Vermont Gov. Howard Dean,
have already concluded that ing an urban legena that Bush
President Bush deceived the decided to go to war with Iraq.
country in claiming before the then pressured U.S . intelligence
second Persian Gulf War that agencies to produce data to jusIraq had huge stores of chemi- tify his policy. Or, he "hyped"
cal and biological weapons.
what he was given. Or. he made
Dean. echoing attacks in it up, in the pattern of President
England on Prime Minister Lyndon Johnson in. the Gulf of
Tony Blair, has compared the Tonkin incident.
maner to Watergate. demandBush's adversaries have . it
ing: "What did the president · right this far: Hussein's possesknow and when did he know sion of chemical and biological
it?"
weapons were Bush's main jusGraham, once a sober moder- . tification for going to war and,
ate, has become a fierce Bush if it turns out he didn't have
opponent now that he is run- them. U.S. credibility is in danning for president, accusing ger, especially the next lime the
Bush of weaving "a pattern of administration tries to convince
deception and deceit" to justify the U,S. public and the world to
going to war.
confront another country· on tl1e
Levin, who credited charges "Axis of Evil" list.
that Saddam Hussein had
TI1e quality and content of
WMDs when they were made U.S. intelligence before the war
by President Bill Clinton and the uses to which it was put
and urged Clinton·to attack Iraq by the administration certainly
- is now charging Bush with deserve thorough investigation.
"systematic shading and exag- · but in a spirit of open inquiry,
geration" in the run-up to the not with the kind of predeterlatest conflict.
mined bias lhat Bush's critics
And Byrd, perhaps the most impute to him. Congress may
vociferous of all, asserted June actually perform such investi5 on the Senate floor that a gations, but the opening moves
"perception of deception" hung by the J-louse Intelligence
around Bush and that WMDs Committee engender more
may have been "a manufac- confidence than those in the
tured ex:cuseby an admirristra- Senate.
· tion eager to seize a country."
lit the Senate, Armed
Bush's critics, including Services Chairman John
columnist&gt; and editorial writ- Warner (R-Ya.) · at first
ers, are in the process of build- announced a joint inquiry with

Senate lntel!igence. Then. last
week. the joint inquiry was off
and
Senate
Intelligence
Chairman Pat Robei1s (R-K&lt;m.)
- without any Democrats present - said the in4uiry would
be handled as pmt of his panel's
routine oversight resp&lt;msibil itics. He made no promises of
public hearings or a public
rcpon.
Robens added. "I will not
allow the conuilittee to be
pol iticized ... hut Democrats
complained that this was
already happening. Democmtic
Sen. Jav Rockefeller &lt;W.Va.)
retoned: ''What they appear to
be doing is enti rely inadequate
and slow-paced and potenti:Jly
kind of sleep-walking through
history...
In
contrast,
House
Intellige nce Chai nmmi Poner
Goss tR-Fia.l and ranki ng
member J:me Hannan (DCalif.) worked out a procedure
that won unanimous suppon
from committee -members of
ooth pai1ies.
Goss chose to call the inquiry
a "review." while Harman
ca'iied in an "i nv~stigation." but
they issued a joint press release
saying what they do would be
"serious, f(&gt;eused and comprehensive."
They called for CIA Director
George Tenet to provide
detailed'WMD data to the committee by July I, invited noncommittee Members to examine it provided they sign a special non-disclosure oath and
promised a public summary of
the committee's classified final
report. "So far. so good,"
Hanmm told me in an · interview. "The administration is
cooperating. We've got all the
information Tenet promised
ahead of the deadline ... several

thick binders. Will tile cooperation last'' I don't know. I th ink
the administration bas :1need to
reassure the publ ic."
Harm ~tn wou ldn' t niticit.c
fellow Democrab like Levin
and Graham. hut it", clear she
has a di ftercm approach from
theirs. "I may get there." , be
said of tl1cir conclu,ions about
·Bush. "but I have to go through
the process. And I thi nk we've
got the right proce" .... I will
ti1llow the titcts unllinchingly
wherever they may lead."
H ~um a n said that "tile main
quest ion i,. · W;ts the basic
(intelligence) material adequate
to justil)' actiun - wa' it
actionable''' - because if it
wasn't. was (the war) the right
action to take·'"
The impoi1ant differenc•e
between Hm·man and Graham
i' tl1at she seems to he asking
genui ne questions. whik be
m1d oti1er Bush ctitic' 'eem to
already know the answers.
In the meantime. Rnhens told
me that he wi ll also "follow the ,
m;tterial lvherever it le.uJs." hut
said U!&lt;C of the word "investigation"' is premature. as is i1 guarantee of publ ic hearings. "I
L

•

want to do uur homework

lirst." he said.
He is plainly stil l mifled at
Democrats ellons to politicize
yuestion.s about WMDs. "Dean
is call ing for impeachment.
Other people are accusing the
president of 'Jeccption' and
'lying."' he said. "TI1at's not the
right atmosphere tor this to go
forward.' '
Asked if his inquiry no w
would be bipartisan, Robens
said. "I hop&lt;: so." Let's all hope
so .

Morton Kondracke iJ execurive erliror of Roll Call. rhe
nell'spaper qf' Capiro/ fli /1.

LOCATION,

LOCATION,

lOCATION...

Diana
West

cal content of her book."
·She declined to be interviewed about the political content of the book. did she ?
Columnists Jonah Goldberg
and Andrew Sullivan have
already picked up on this colossal crust - the former ascribing Madame 's declining "to be
interviewed. etc ..'' to a cynical
stmtegy calculated to maintain
poll -boosting victim statu s.
Now that I've caught on, I think
this little story is well wonh
highlighting all over again.
What we ' ve got here is a U.S.
Senator who writes a book to
launch a probable presidential
c:mdidacy While claiming the
near-divine right of ti'rst !adies
(and criminal . suspects) to
remain silent. As,Mr. Goldberg
put it lin National Re view
Online, "She denies that she's
merely a wile, and yet when it
comes time to market herself
she refuses to be a11ything else."
Not that those snarling pit bulls
of the media would ~ver. ever
let . Hillary Clinton get away
with nmning on a platfonn of.

say. having "wanted to wring
his "neck." Or would they?
Judging by the tenor nf Mrs.
Clinton's infomercia ls - I
mean interviews· the answer
is a tail-wagging yes.
All of which somehow
turned my thoughts to the
wretc:hed Marzieh Babakhani.
the heretofore anonymous
woman "of about 40.'' said
Reuters, who. in a gmesome act
of fanaticism, exchanged her
life for the tiniest. briefest blaze
of headlines on ti1e plight of the
Mujahedecn Khalq, or People's
Mujahedee11, an Iranian exile
group dedicated to overthrowing the !'Iamie Republic of
lnm. As The New Yot"k"Time'
noted, the French crackdown
effectively ended the group's
activities in France, "while the
timing of the operation'' -.
which coincided with the recent
eruption of lmnian "udent
prote' t agai nst the regtmc •·seemed to send conciliatOIJ'
' signals" to Iran 's mullah-Jictators.
This, I would tervcnt ly hope,
is the last thing the United
States ww1ts to do, panicularly
atier having otlered encourage·
mcnt to the student protester'
(who arc not. oy the way. atliliated with the People·,
Muh&lt;~cdcc n ). Still. it is also the
case that ' incc 1&lt;)97, our govemment. joined last' year by the
European Union. has deemed
this p~u1iculm· exik gmup a ter-

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

www.mydailysentinel.com

U.S. forces on trail of Critics·and kids give.new
suspected fugitives
Harry Potte·r a big thumbs up

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.
WASHINGlDN (AP) - closed number of houses !.J
Lo we ll Hallltill . 58, New
lnfotmation from a f~ top other buildings were destroy~
BY HILLEL ITALIE
Have n, W.Va .. died of cardiac
aide of Sldlam Hussein led olliL'ials said A few of the vehiAssociated
Press
arrest on Sunday, June 22,
American commando forces 10 des moved out of the compound
2003 at Cabeii-Humington
chao;e a convoy of suspected an:! were believed 10 be attemplBooksellers aren 't the only
Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
lr~i fugitives near the lraji- ing 10 head toc the Syrian border.
ones celebrating the new,
Lowell was ·born on April
Syrian border.
They, too, were ' !ruck.
mega-selling Harry Potter.
2o, 1945"in Gallipol is, son of
And when the shooting . Five Syrian border guards
- of all ages - love
Critics
Alzada Halfhill Hersman and
ended there was a scene of dev- were wounded. It wa~ llllClear
it.
too.
astation: bombe4 houses, where they ha:l been positioned.
the late Wilmer B. Halfhill . In
"Ms. Rowling has imagined ·
blnned-oot vehicles and casual- Officials fii&gt;t said the guan:ls had
addition to his father. he was
this
uni verse in such minute
ties
from
both
sides
of
the
borengaged
in
a
firelight
with
preceded in death by his
and
cl~ver
detai I that we fee l
der, including several Syrian Americans, but later s;rid it was
youn gest brother, Joe, hi s
that
we've
been
admitted to a
border guards.
unclear whether they were hit in
father-in-law, Woodrow L.
looking-glass
world
as palpa-.
U.S.officialsaredi.o;closing lit- shooting wilh gmund uoops or
Foreman, his brother-in-la·w.
hie as Tolkien 's Middle Earth
tle about the incident and call~ 10 by an air atl&lt;¥;;k.
Gary Green. and his si,ter-inor
L. Frank Baum 's Oz," New
the Syrian E'mbussy here got no
Americans may have pursued
law, Phy II is Scott.
York
Times critic Michiko
answers. Nearly a week alter the part of the convoy across the
He was a superintendent for
writes o( "Harry
Kakutani
inciden~ U.S. !Dire; Tuesday border into Syria, one official
Uni ted Construction Co.,
Potter and the Order of the
were still oocupying a town said.
Parkersburg. W.Va. , and
Phoenix."
the fifth of a
where at least part of the attack
None of the Syrians had been
worked for many years at the
Potter novels
planned
seven
occurred; they have released returned to their government as
AEP power plants. Lowell
by
J
.K
.
Rowling.
some 20 people who were of Tuesday, officials s;rid About
wa' a member of the
12-year-old
Meanwhile,
detained, and officials have yet 20 other jX!Ople apprehended
Carpenters Local #650. VFW
Olivia
Beckwith
of
to say whether the op:Tdlion net- during the operation were
Columbus,
Ohio.
got
the
870Post #9926. and American
ted any significant fugitives.
released after it wa' detennined
page book Saturday morn ing.
Legion Post # 140. He served
Working panly on infonma- . they did not pose a threat, a
read
500 pages the first day
in the Uni ted States Na vy
tion from the highest Iraqi cap- senior defense ofticial said.
and the rest on Sunday. Only
Seebee'.
tured so far - Abid Hamid Officials at the Pentagon s;rid
a
dance recital kept her. from
He wi ll be greatly missed by
Mahmud al-Tikriti - 5!lrial they didn't know whether they
fi
ni
shing sooner.
hi s wife. Myra Foreman
operations soldier.; anacked a were from the convoy or the
"l
thought it was very good.
Hallhill , and his children :
convoy of several vehicles in an compound.
It's 870 pages, but you wouldChristy and Jeff Joyner, Carla
anempt to stop what they
The total number killed in the
n't think it was that long," she
and Mike Fuller, and J.R.
believed were high-level fugi- opemtion wa' not available,
said.
tives linked to the fallen Iraqi although it did not appear to
Hallhi ll. all of Akron, Jeff
The early word on Potter Y
government - though "not inclUde Syrians, officials s;rid
Coc hran of Morgan Center.
suggests
it won' t be rememnecessarily Saddarn.'' one Tuesday.
and Gram Hyse ll and Robena
bered as itn invention of marDefense Depwunent official
All of the officials discus.o;ed
Davis and Jason and Lisa
keters,
like the Spice Girls.
S&lt;rid.
·
the incident on condition of not
Hyse ll, all of New Haven.
but
as
a
work of invention that A cppy of the new Harry Potter book, "Harry Potter and the
The special "Task Force 20" being identified by name.
- He was a special. devoted
the marketers, like Order · of the Phoenix, " is displayed , in Virginia Beach, Va.,
transcends
commando team was joined in
State De[Xlltrnent spokesmen
grandfather to his grandchila Beatle s album . Eve'n critics Friday. The book was released at 1 2: 01 a.m . . Saturday. (AP
the convoy operation by an AC- did not return telephone queries
dren. Ashley Joyner, Marissa
''sick of Harry Potter." such as Photo/ The Virginian-Pilot, Genevieve Ross)
130 gtmship and other air sup- Monday a'king when ca'illlllties
Fuller. Taylor and Derek
Chauncey Mabe of the South
port, attacking by ground and air annong the border guanls would
Hyse ll. Sydney Hysell. Derek
Florida Sun-Sentinel. could were sold the first day, more matter.
·'(Harry)
see ms .
along
a
known
escape
and
be
returned
to
Syriaand
wl!ltt
its
Smith. and Michaela and Tyler
not resist the new book.
than
five
times
the
first
depressed
in
the
book.
It's a
smuggling route near the west- effect on U.S.-Synan relations
Davis,
"Row ling, who seems to be week's sales of another recent litt le weird. but .:. I like him
em city of Qaim one official was lil)ely to be. 1:\tJartment
rev ising the rules of writing blockbuster. · Sen. Hill ary that way.'' says 12-year-old
He was the brother of . s;Ud
spokesman Philip T. Reeker
for children. doesn ' t ju st Rodham Clinton's memoirs.
Wi lmer and Barbara Halfhill,
Bret Abadie of Albuquerque.
At some point in the opera- referred questions 10.the Defeno;e
match the merits and plea"Order
of
the
Phoenix"
is
N.M. According to 16-yearDoug and Brenda Halfhill, and
lion, the convoy of a half dozen Department The semor defense
sures that made .the first four fantasy, but not escapist. As old . Annie Kas tner of
Tom and Renee Halfhill . He
vehicles wa~ in a compound at official s;rid he knew of no U.S.
books the biggest successes in the AP's Deepti Hajela notes. Milwaukee, parts of the book
had one sister, Judy and
the village of Dhib, where they govemment conk1Ct with Syria
publishing
hi story.
She Potter "isn 't th e sa me I !- were "kinda scary," but the
Wayne Thompson. He is surwere bombed and an undis- on the i&amp;sue.
exceeds
them,"
Mabe
writes.
year-old Harry readers met in darker tone worked.
vived by his mother-in-law,
While
readers
rave,
sales
the
first ·book ." Ruwling's
"Harry is a lot angrier in
Eileen Foreman of Lorain, his
fall
.
More
than
1.7
records
is_.
now
15,
a
survivor
of
hero
this
one ," she sa id . "That
sister-in -law, Sharon Green,
million copies were sold adventures both des i ~ed. and mean s he was screaming at :
and hi s brothers-in-law,
· across the United Kingdom in unwanted. Several · cnttcs people a lot more. You kind of ·
Everett and Linda Foreman of
the first 24 hours, making it prai sed "Order of the saw a different part of his ·
Sheffield Lake, and Jerry Scott
the fastest-se llin g book in Phoenix" as a more mature, character."
of.New Haven. ·
British history, Bloomsbury more confident work than the
Kastner finished the book
He was a loving uncle to
Publishers said Monday. previous book, ·'Harry Potter Sunday - some dirty dishes
many nieces and nephews.
Borders Group reported and the Goblet of Fire."
j ust had to wait - and "loved
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer will also attend TI1e Ohio
Lowell will be mourned by
weekend sales of more than
"lf Harry has hit his awk- it. The story line was really.
Health Systems recently pre- State
University
Fall
MANY special friends.
900,000 worldwide, an all- ward age, Rawling the writer really good and different from
sented four graduating hi&amp;h Semester 2003. He plans to
Services will be held at I
time high for the U.S-based has already passed through the other ones.
school semors wtth Academtc graduate from OSU Spring
p.m. .on Thursday, June 26,
superstore.
chain.
it," writes Salon.com criti c
"And it was unpredictable, ·
Assistance Awards to provtde~
h . B h1
f
007
2003 at the Fogelsong-Tucker
The U.S. publisher of the Laura Miller.
financial assistance to seniors . .
It a ac e or o
which was good," she said. "I·
Potter book, Scholastic, Inc .,
Funeral Home in Mason,
accepted in colleges and uninee degree 111 nursmg.
Kids were not intimidated think it is probably J.K.
estimates
5
million
copies
W.Va. with Pastor Carl Ward
by
the length or by the subject Rowling' s best one yet."
versities that offer profes- Future goals also constst of
and Pastor Chad Foreman oftisional nursing education.
completing the necessary
ciating. Burial will follow at
Students selected were requirements for becoming a
"There is still a good numweather equals bad sale s,"
Sunshine Memorial Gardens
Brook Bohn of Meigs High nurse anesthetist.
Mullins said.
ber of submerged logs and ·
in Letan, where the American
School, ~arne Crow of
Wright the daughter of
"Fuel is one of our top sell- floaiing debri s out there," ·
•
.
Eastern High School, Jeff
Legion Post 140 of New
Massie of Gallia Academy Thomas and Karen Wnght
from Page A1
ers and when boaters aren't Leach said , preparing to
Haven and YFW Post 9926 of
.
High
School,
and
Sarah
of
Gallipolis,
will
attend
the
lined up to purchase gasoline, launch his motorboat into the
Mason will conduct military
"We usually have about 20 it's definitely going to impact Kanawha River.
Wright
of
South
Gallia
High
University
of
Rio
Gmnde
graveside rites.
to 25 boats pull in here during
School. This is the first year Fall Semester 2003. She
"However, water levels are
Friends may call from 5 to 9
the weekend. Now, J'd say we our wallet," Smith added .
Sales of supplies are down starting to get back to normal
~olzer Health S:y:stems ~ !XO' plans 'to graduate from Rio
p.m. at the funeral home, and
getting less than half that numand· the river is getting clearer
as
well. he added. •
may e-mail condolences to
Vlded Acadenuc Assistance Grande Spring 2005 with an
ber. Hopefully, the weather
Awards
Ill
local
high
school
.
,
d
.
.
"Simply
put,
if
we
don:t
get
each passing day. If we can get
fogelsongtucker @citynet.net.
wi II get better so we can get
seniors.
assocmte s egree m nursmg.
some good weather, I would say
some
sustained
good
weather.
Memorial contributions may
back to normal ," Smith added.
"It's wonderful to see the
Under the terms of the
everything
will be alright." he
this
isn't
going
to
be
a
good
be made to the Lowell Halfhill
Both Mullins and Smith said
program,
Holzer
-·
Health
future
of
health
care
and
to
Little League Memorial Fund,
the . decrease in boaters is summer l&lt;.1r either us or tor added.
Systems will provide full pay- have the opponunity to
According to the National
putting a financial strain on area boaters." he said.
c/o United Construction Co.,
ment
for
in-state
tuition,
financially
assist
these
stuMason
County
resident
and
Weather
Service, sunny weather_
both facilities.
Inc., P.O. Box 4859. Parkersburg,
books,
laborntory
lees
and
ondents
with
their
education",
"It's just common sense that avid boater Bren Leach said is expected to rem:rin in lhe area:
W.Va. 26 104.
campus domutory expenses
.
.
RN
when
there are no boaters on the waterways are in bad until Thursday. when thunder-for the recipients of the satd Sandra Troester, . ,
the
river.
there aren't going to shape but things are looking storm s and more rai n are
awards. Upon completion of MS, Vice Prestdent of Patient
be any boats to refuel. Bad better.
expected.
the accredited program, the Care Services at Holzer
student will have the total Medical Center.
academic assistance award
Recipients of the award were
forgiven by working · at selected by a subcommittee of .
Proud to be apart of your life.
Holzer Health Systems,
Subscribe today • 446-2342
which includes Holzer the Financial Assistance
Committee
for
Holzer
Health
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
POM EROY
Report
Holzer Medical Center - Systems.
cards of Meigs High School
Jackson and Holzer Senior
For more intiJrmation, please
sllldcnts ·can be picked up
Care
Center.
the Holzer. Medical Center
anytime between 8 a.m. and 2
"Holzer
Health
Systems
is
Education Department at
p.m . any weekday at the high
doing their pan to increase
I
school.
the number of RNs available (740)446-5313 ..
SUMMER MATINEES
Nominate them for
in our System for the future,"
WEDTHRU SUN
•
BOX OFFICE OPENS
said Rhonda Dailey, RN,
6:30
PM
MON
&amp;
TUES
BSN. Director of Nursing at
Holzer Medical Center Jackson. "We are taking pan
If they are selected, your
POMEROY - The Meigs
in this nationwide challenge
High School cheerleaders
f)lscarrier will win dinner
by awarding academic assiswill sponsor a cheerleading
tance, therefore ensuring that
for two at
camp from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. · adequate nurses will be here
Saturday at Mei gs High
to provide care in our comSchool.
munity for the future. "
Bolin, the daughter of
The camp is open to any
compliments of
Rick and Brenda Bolin of
. student who has completed
Rutland, will be attending
the sixtli grade. Cost is $25
Pizza Hut
the University of Rio Grande
which includes registration, a
Fall Semester 2003. Bolin
t-shin. light lunch. beverages
apticipates
an associate's
and a cenitlcate.
degree
in
nursing
from Rio
Registration forms may be
Grande Spring 2005. ·
brought to the camp or can be
I.) Send us your name, address and phone number.
Crow, the daughter of
filled out there. Application
2.)
Include your carrier's name, your route number
James and Pamela Crow of
form s can be obtained by
or subscriber number.
Pomeroy, will attend The
writing MHS . Cheerleaders,
:3.)
In 50 words or less, tell us why we should chop.se
Ohio State University Fall
P.O. Box 2, Pomeroy 45769
your carrier.
Semester 2003. Crow anticior can be picked up at the
pates a Bachelor of Science
Mail your entries to : Paul Barker
high school 8 a. m. :o 2 p.m.
degree in nursing from Ohio
7:40,10:05
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
\ Monday th rough Friday.
State
Spring
2007.
'
825 Third Avenue
lii!Lk¥J
l: At the conclusion of the
Eventuldly, she plans to
Gallipolis, Ott 456:31
• J camp. the students will prebecome a nurse anesthetist
IIIIa
~
10:05
Massie, the son of Tim and
sent chant s and cheers
44&amp;-3008
email:
All li. C.ES. All TIMES So&amp; 00
Pam
Massie of Gallipolis,
learned during the day.

Holzer awards
nursing scholarships

Boating

Local Briefs

Fanning the UJYongjlames
HiUary Rodham Clinton, a
Urrited States senator careftl'lly
fanning the media firestorm
over her $8 million memoir to
kindle a possible presidential
candidacy, could hardly have
less in common with Marzieh
Babukhani, an Iranian refugee
who died in Paris this week
after setting herself ablaze to
protest France's massive crackdown on an Iranian opposition
group headquartered in France.
But then I came across that
most remarkable bit about Mrs.
Clinton's best-selling memoir,
"Living History" (Simon &amp;
Schuster, 2()03). It made me
realize that there is a point of
con1parison in the respective
media coverage of these two
persons that makes a small but
significant point about· our ailing political culture.
· Truth be told, this most
remarkable bit about Hillary
doesn' t actually tail between
her book's covers: it is instead a
Clinton comment - or, mther,
a Clinton no-comment - on a
question about the book that
came her way from the very
middle of the mainstream
media, The . WrL, hington Post.
After asking Mrs. Clinton to
discuss some of the high-rev
political commentary in some
of the high-rev political parts of
the memoir, the Post dutifully
relayed to its readers that the
New York senator "declined to
be interviewed about the politi-

Obituaries
Lowell Halfhill

MoNe.'i ~N'T ST~Y
i~ TtieiR ~c::KeT'!O,
PeoPLe! THE:!V

TaX Clli.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Tuesday, June 24·, 2003

rorist organization. Wonh noting, h9wever, is the fact that
Middle East expert Daniel
Pipes. for one. contest&gt; thi' terrorist label. explaining in a column last monti1 that the group
has "really forsworn" the barbaric tactics it once used against
Americans. conti nihg mil it&lt;UJ'
action for the past 15 year' to
"spec ific reg ime targets ."
Indeed. Mr. Pipes has recommended thai SecreUtry of State
Colin Powell remove the gmup
from the li st of tenurist organizations.
In other words. there i' plcnty of room fm dchatc and
analysis - political content regarding this compelling new
· angle on the war ag;tin't
lslum ist tcnorism and the
reg ime' that ·"tppon it. Which,
of comse, remi nds me ;main of
the media lire,tonn ~rou nd
Mrs. Cl inton. elected orlicial ,.
and pmbablc prc&gt;idcn tial hopefu l. that btum on demid of
political substance. This disturhiug spectacle says more
about the media. of cour!&lt;C. than
it does about Mrs. Clinton. It
should make us retlect both on.
the lengths some people allow
themsclve' to go to make a
Il&lt;llitical statement - and the
l e n ~Ih' some arc allowed Io ~o
hi avoid it. .
.
Diona_We.\'1 ;_,. a'mltmmisr
.fiil" Tlw Wr.t.1hing111n 'limes. Site
mn
he
conracred
l'ia
L

Report
cards .ready

Do You Just
Your Sentinel
_
Newspaper carri

Cheerleading
camp planned

"Carrier-of-the-Month"

~
r/IIAt"

Pizza Hut

.....

.n

dillllllll'll 'llllglohal.ner.

.. _:_-___,_____.:__ _ _~-:--___:_____________~------ ----· -

1- ~-~--::--·

.. , . , __

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---

�The Daily Sentinel

Nation • World ·

PageA6
Tuesday, June 24, 2003

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page 82
Rice wins NCAA baseball title, Page 83

PageBl

Govern·ment upgrading ·
standards for tires
Bv

DEE·ANN DURBIN

Associated Press

Spectators and television crews gather outside the Supreme Court in Washington, June .23, as
the court announced its 5-4 ruling to uphold an affirmative actiib program at University of
· Michigan law school. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook)

Supreme Court ·preserves
affirmative action in narrow
ruling on college admissions
ment decisions. The court is far
more conservative than in
1978, when it last' ruled on
WASHINGTON. (AP) _ In affirmative action in higher
education admissions, and the
its most significant statement justices have put heavy condiabout race in a generation, a tions on government affirmadivided
Supreme
Court tive action in other arenas over
allowed the nation's colleges
and universities to select stu- the past decade.
dents based in part on race, rulO'Connor said the value of
diverse
classrooms extends far
ing Monday that diverse classrooms mold good citizens and . beyond the campus. Justices
1 d
John Paul -Stevens, David
s~~ ~~u~rs.emphasized that Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg
race cannot be the oveniding and Stephen Breyerjoined her
factor, but a majority acknowl- endorsement of a program in
edged a broad social value in place at the University of
encouraging ali races to learn Michigan's law school.
·and work together.
The law school uses an inex"In order to cultivate a set of act admissions formula that
leaders with legitimac~ in the gives extra consideration to
eyes of the citizenry: it 1s neces- blacks, Hispanics and to applisary that the path to leadership cants from other groups the
be visibly open to talented and school says have historically
qualified individuals of every suffered from discrimination.
race ·and ethnicity," Justice
The program has produced
Sandra Day O'Connor wrote minority enrollment of between
for the 5-4 majority.
12 percent and 20 percent over
At issue was whether admis- the past decade. There is no
sions policies that give one fixed target, the school said.
racial group an edge 4nconsti'This court has long recogtutionally discriminate against nized that 'education is the very
. other groups.
foundation of good citizenIn two decisions involving ship,"' O'Connor wrote, quotlhe University of Michigan, the ing from another landmark rulcourt underscored that racial ing, the Brown v. Board of
quotas are unconstitutional but Education decision that inteleft room for the nation's public grate4 public schools.
universities .- and by exten·
"For this reason, the diffusion other public and private sion of knowledge and opporinstitutions - to seek ways to tunity through public institutake race into account.
lions of higher education must
'The court has in .essence be accessible to all individuals
provided the nation with a road regardless of race or ethnicity,"
map on how to construct affrr- O'Connor wrote.
·
mati ve action programs in
At the same time, the court
higher education that are con- struck down a more rigid,
stitutionaliy acceptable," said point-based admissions policy
NAACP President Kweisi for University of Michigan
Mfume.
undergraduates. That vote was
The court preserved the rules 6-3, with three of the court's
outlined 25 years ago in a land- more iiberdi justices dissenting.
mark ruling that underpin the The difference wa~ a matter of
consideration of race at institu- degree. The Constitution per·
tions or gatherings diverse as mits schools to consider an
military academies, corporate .applicant's race as one among
boardrooms and campus lead- many factors when weighing
ership retreats.
which students will win a place
In the earlier ruling a differ- at a top-notch school, O'Connor
cnt group of justices struck wrote in the. more significant
down a quota system that had law school ruling. What a
excluded a white student from school cannot do, she and other
medical school, but they justices said, is install inflexible
allowed less structured forms or automatic racial preferences.
of affrrmative action.
The law school and its back"Diversity is one of America's ers argued that a "critical mass"
greatest strengths," President of minority students is essential
Bush said after Monday's ruling. to break down racial stereo' 'T~'s decisions seek a care- types and benefits the entire
ful ance between the goal of studen.t body. Minorities must
campus diversity and the funda-. be present in more than token
mental principle of equal treat- numbers to ensure all students
ment under the law." ·
can interact, the university has
Opponents of affmnative said. ·
action, including some of Bush's
But no student's transcript
close advisers, had hoped the will note that he or she "Works
Supreme Court would use this and Plays Well With Others,"
opportunity to ban most consid- Justice Antonin Scalia retorted,
eration of race in any govern- in mocking reference to ianBY ANNE GEARAN

Associated Press

as

guage more often associated
with grade school report cards.
The importance of "crossracial understanding," or of
simply getting along with other
people, is a lesson of life
· learned by "people three feet
shorter and 20 years younger
than the full-grown adults at the
University of Michigan Law
School, in institutions ranging
from Boy Scout troops to publie school kindergartens,"
Scalia wrote in dissent.
Chief Justice William H.
Rehnquist
and
Justices
Anthony M. Kennedy and
Clarence Thomas also dissented in the law school case.
Thomas, the court's only
black justice, accused the law
school of maintaining "an
exclusionll!y admissions systern that it knows produces
racially
disproportionate
results.''
·
"Racial discrimination is not
a permissible solution to the
self-inflicted wounds of this
elitist admissions policy," he
wrote.
Michigan says it accepts only
academically qualified students, no matter their race.
In the companion case,
O'Connor joined Rehnquist,
Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas and ·
Stephen Breyer to strike down
the undergraduate school's
!50-point grading system. The
school automatically gave
minorities a 20-point bonus,
more than for some measures
of academic excellence, writing abili!Y or leadership skills.
Outstandmg athletes also got
20 points, as did impoverished
applicants.
Stevens,
Souter
and
Ginsburg dissented.
The cases put the Bush
administratil'ln in an awkward
spot. The White House had
sided with white applicants
rejected at the Michigan
schools but had not called for
an outright end to affumative
action.
In the end, the high court
made only bare mention of the
administration's argument that
race-neutral alternatives to
affmnative action are already
working in Bush's home state
of Texas and elsewhere.
Alfmnative action programs
should not go on forever,
O'Connor wrote. "We expect
that 25 years from now, the use
of racial preferences will no
longer be necessary."
The law school case is
Gruner v. Bollinger, 02-241;
the undergraduate case is Gratz
v. Bollinger•. 02-516.
On the Net:
http://www.supremecourtus.gov/opinions/02slipopinion.html

PROUD TO-BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
. The Daily Sentinel
Send ils your club &amp; church news .• 992-2156 ·

news@ mydailysentinel.com

'

Tuesday, June 24, 2003

Fackler's bomb beats Athens Croat giant

per hour. A lire will re considered the effects of aging, but it is workcompliant if there is no visual evi- ing with tire manufacturers to

dence of lread separating orcr..::k· develop such a test.
Under the rules NHTSA oogiWASHINGJON (AP)-Ttres ing after the test, and the tire presITlO:rl: for pas&lt;enger cars and light sure isn't lower than the initial naily JlllliXNld, the ageOCy estimated that 30 oercent of tires
trucks will re required to with- pressure.
l1res
also
will
re
tested
for
wouldn't
[llSS aixJ costs to tire
Siand new S)H'd and enduraoce
makers
would
appuach $300 mil- .
tests by 2007 in the first new fed- endurance in a 34-hour test. That
em! safety standards for tires since test will run tires at 75 miles an lion. Still, NIITSA said the \;lew
hour for four hours, carrying 85 slalldard~ are rea&lt;;Onable ones
1~7.
.
~ mHed the Naicml pe11:e11t of the tire's maximum "ba&lt;oed on the best cwrently avail~llaffrSaft:ty~ load, six hours with &lt;x&gt; percent 'of able information."
Goodyear Ttre &amp; Rubber Co.,
iJmk lte~il200l after the the maximum loa:! and 24 hours
with_
I
00
percent
of
the
maximum
the
world's largest tire manufactw;recall of millions ofFtreStooe tires.
"Without question, · these new load. That lest sp:ul is 50 percent er, and Bridgestone-Frrestone
performance requirements will higher than the CUITellt lest and 50 referred questions on the proposals
improve tire safety," said NHI'SA pe11:e11t longer than the rurrent dis-- to the Washington-baserl Rubber
Manufacntrers Association.
~
Administrator Dr. Jeffrey Runge. tance.
Th:
standards
also
include
a
RMA spokesman Dan Zielinski
Most tires on the market airealy
new
test
to
ensure
perfonnance
said
resJXl!lSe so far is mixed. Th:
comply with the new standards.
even
if
a
tire
is
w\derinflated.
Th:
group is pleased that NHTSA is
NHI'SAestimated that 5 to II ~­
cent of tires will have to be test. designed to mimic long-dis- holding otr aging and hazan:kJus
redesigned or modified to comply. tance family trave~ runs the tire for rml test.~ becau.&lt;e it believed there
The new requirements are 90 minutes at 75 miles per hour at wa~n't enough data for those. It ·
expected to cost tire manufocturets the level of tmderinflation that sets wanted light truck5 tested at lower
$31.6 million, NHI'SA said Th: off a vehicle's tire p-essure warn- speeds - a request that NHTSA
didn't honor.
agency estimates they will save at ing system. '
NIITSA didn't 00qx several
Ttre manufacturers are required
least four lives and prevent 102
tili:!r tire safety prqn;als it was to meet the new standards by June
injuries each year.
Under the new criteria, tires considering, including one for I, '2fXJI. Manufacntrers co00uct
must re tested at 87, 93 and 99 checking the strength of a tire's NHTSA's required tests in-house,
miles per hour for 30 minutes at a (Xrl'orrnance on hazardoos roads. atid every type of tire must pass in
time. That is an increase from the Th: agency said it also didn't oo.ler to re sold in the United
cwrent lest of 75, 80 and 85 miles 00qx amm ·lest that ITY.m.Ired States.

Role of Air Force Academy's oversight
board questioned as latest inquiry begins
WASHINGTON (AP) -An Ttllie Fowler, a former tee, Rep. Joel Hefley. R-Coio.,
Air Force Academy oversight Republican congresswoman cautioned against a "fire-andboard failed to press academy from Florida.
forget" approach. "The disleaders about sexual assaults at
Fowler's panel was created missal or demotion of academy
the school and received only a by Congress to examine the leaders will not, by themselves,
fiJtered version of events, Sen. academy's policies and proce- solve the underlying problem,"
Wayne Allard told a congres- dures to deal with rapes .and he said.
sional task force as it met sex uaJ assauIts after allega1!ons
Roche said he and Air Force
Monday for the first time,
that academy leaders were dis- Chief of Staff Gen. John
The Board of Visitors, con- missive of cadets' claims that
Jumper are reviewing whether
gressmen and other prominent they were attacked:
"We
are
not
here
to
tear
anyone hindered the reporting
appointees who essentially ~t
as trustees of the academy, was down an institution, only to of an assault or if a commander
"too much of a rah-rah club" help restore trust and strength- failed to act on available inforrather than demanding infor- en 11 for a new generation of our mation.
mation, as it should have, about nation's leaders," Fowler said.
Fowler's panel also reviewed
the academy's handling of sex- 'The priority of this panel is to findings of an Air Force inquiry
ual assaultS, said Allard, R- ensure today's youn~ women released last week, which
Colo.
cadets of the Atr Force found that dwindling attention
"As a member of the board. T Academy have a safe and was·paid 10 the issue of sexual
can honestly say that we have secure learning environment."
1·
d·
not done our job," Allard said. .. Fowler said she received an assau t m recent years an tden"We have allowed the acade- e-mail from a member of the lifted several policies that hammy's leadership to convince us Air Force Academy •s new class ·· pered the prevention and prosethat everything was OK when of cadets, due to arrive at the cution of sex crimes at the
clearly everything was not academy this week, who said academy.
OK."
she did not feel safe at the
The Air Force report recomAir Force Secretary James si:hool and had opted not to mended reassessing several
Roche said he had assumed the attend.
academy policies, including a
board was acting as a compaAllard also urged the panel to cadet command structure that
ny's board of directors and was focus on whether leaders at the gives senior cadets authority
representing taxpayers. He was academy should be held over freshman cadets. That
surprised to learn they were accountable for the climate that leaves the new cadets vulneranot. Instead, he said, academy permitted assaults to take place. . ble to those who would abuse
officials treated the panel as "a
"It is important for the cadets their authority, the report said.
board you told good news to." who are striving to become .
Fowler said her panel tentaAllard said the board should future leaders to understand
that
there
are
consequences
for
tively
plans to visit the campus
meet at least quarterly, include
more civilians and have unfet- those who fail to uphold the near Colorado Springs, Colo.,
principles that make our mili· on July 10-11 to meet victims,
tered access to cadets.
tary
the best in the world," he accused attackers and others and
The Board of Visitors' role
to hold a public hearing. Her
will be among !ssues examined said.
by the panel, said chairwoman
In a statement to the commit- panel's report is due Sept. 22.

Wimbledon

BY BUTCH COOPER

Staff writer

Days Until
High School

Football
Season!!! ·

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High School.
Fackler finished the game 2-for·
4, while Josh Napper and Luke
Haislop were each 2-for-3 for
Meigs (6-6, 2-2 in district play).
Jason McCumber wa&amp;· 3-for-4
for Athens (3-5, 2-2), while Chris
· Pitts was 2-for-3 , B.J. Allman was
2-for-4 and Tyler Mclead was 2for-5. ·
Fackler's home run came at the
worst possible moment for
Athens·, adding salt to a wound
that had just opened.
With Meigs, trailing 4-2 going

into the eighth , Athens ' starting
pitcher Jeremy Cundiff was simply trying to he! p his team hold on
to the lead.
But, perhaps the eighth inning
was one inning too many.
.
Ken Amsbary led off the bottom
half of the inning with a single to
right field and Napper followed
with a double to right putting runners on second and third with no
outs.
Cundiff, though, managed to get
a couple of quick infield flyouts to

Please see Melp. Bl

Burks' elbow
surgery deemed
successful
CLEVELAND (AP)
fndians desigr\ated hitter Ellis
Burks underwent season-ending
surgery Monday to correct a
nerve problem in his right elbow.
Burks . ~as experienced
numbt\ess and tingling in his
arm for months, and some of
the muscles in his right hand
had atrophied.
The 38-year-oid Burks finished the season batting .258
with six homers and 28 RBls.
He is in the final year of a
three-year contract with the
Indian s, who have · a club
option for 2004.

Cleveland
activates Garcia
'CLEVELAND (AP) - ,
The Indians activated outfielder Karim Garcia from
the 15-day disabled list
Monday and designated Jose
Santiago for assignment.
Garcia had been on the disabled list since May 8 with a .
strained left wrist.
He hit .267 with six doubles
and seven RBls in 14 games
during a rehabilitation assignment at Triple-A Buffalo.
Before the injury, Garcia '
batted . 194 with just six
extra-base hits in 24 games
with Cleveland.
Santiago was promoted
from Buffalo on Sunday after
the Indians J?iayed consecutive 15-innmg games in
Pittsburgh. He did not appear
in Sunday's game.
He was 0-1 with a 3.94
ERA in 15 games with
Cleveland earlier this season.
The Indians are expected to
activate infielder Ricky
Gutierrez from the 60-day
disabled list Tuesday.
Gutierrez has been sidelined all year while recovering from offseason surgery
on his neck and back. He has
spent nearly three weeks
rehabilitating in Buffalo.

Irwin drops out
of Senior Open
with bad back

Make this the best
summer you've ever hadl
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ROCK SPRINGS
It's
becoming a bad year for the
Athens Post 21 American Legion
team in its endeavors against
Meigs County Post 128.
In recent years, Athens has had
Meigs' number, but not this season.
Earlier in the season, Meigs
earred a 7-2 victory at Athens in a
non-distrjct gamj!.
On Monday, Meigs beat Athens
in one that counted.
A Buzzy Fackler three-run
home run in the eighth inning lifted Meigs to a 6-5 victory at Meigs

TOLEDO (AP) - ·Two-time
U.S. Senior Open winner Hale
Irwin dropped out of this
week's tournament on Monday
because of a back injury.
Irwin's back has been bothering him off and on for several wee"s, and he ltad to pull
.out of ttte U.S. Open two
weeks ago. His back "seized
up" after a tee shot.
A member of the Hall of
·Fame, the 58-year-old IrWin
won the 1974, 1979 and 1990
U.S. Opens.
His victory in 1979 came at
the Inverness Club, which is
hosting the Senior Open.
Irwin has 30 victories on
the PGA Tour and 37 as a
senior. His career earriings of
almost $30 million are second only to Ttger Woods.

Volleyball
officiating
classes planned
JACKSON -Classes are
being offered for thos'e seeking Ohio hi~h school volleybail officiatmg licenses. The
classes are being held now
through July 13. . ·
For
information, call
Michael Rouse at (740) 2862482 .

stuns Hewitt
in first round
BY STEVEN WINE

Associated Press
WIMBLEDON, England - Wimbledon
began wi\h an upset unprecedented in the
Open era Monday when defending cham,P.ion Lleyton Hewitt lost to 6-foot-10 quahfier Ivo Kariovic of Croatia.
· Kariovic, the tallest player in tournament
history, dominated
with his serve and
beat Aewitt 1-6, 7-6
(5), 6-3, 6-4 .
Since the first
Wimbledon in 1877,
the
only
other
defending
men's
champion to lose in
the opening round
was
Manuel
Santana; who fell to Charlie Pasareil in
1967. That match; which also marked the
only other defeat of a top-seeded man in the
opening .round, took place one year before
the Open era began.
Karlovic, 24, was playing his first Grand
Slam match and his seventh at the tour
level, but he proved an imposing opponent
for the 5-foot-11 Hewitt.
"It's tough," said Andy Roddick, whose
path to the semifinals became easier with
Hewitt's loss. "The guy looked like he was
serving out of a tree against Lleyton."
Roddick, seeded fifth, hit 14 aces and :21
service winners to beat Davide Sanguinetti
6·2. 6-3, 6-3. He advanced to a showdown
of big serves in the second round against
Britain's Greg Rusedski, who hit 31 aces to
beat Alexander Waske 7-6 (6), 7-5,7-6 (7).
The upset came .on the sport's grandest
stage. In keeping with tradition, the defending champion played the first match of the
tournament on Centre Court, so . that's
where Karlovic made his Wimbledon debut.
"I'd never seen him play," Hewitt said.
"I'd seen him walk around a bit before."
The Croat looked nervous at the start but
poised at the finish. He served out the final
game at love, hitting a 119 mph second
serve for a winner on match point. l:le
raised his long arms and threw a fist, and
that was the extent of his celebration.
Hewitt 's loss was in sharp contrast to his
girlfriend's first-round result. French Open
runner-up Kim Clijsters beat Rossana
Neffii-De Los Rios 6-0, 6-0 in 31 minutes.
Other winners in women's play included
2000 and 200 l champion Venus Williams,
1999 champ Lindsay Davenport and No. 7seeded Chanda Rubin.
Williams, seeded fourth, beat Stanislava
Hrozenska 6-2, 6-2 in 50 ·minutes .
Davenport, seeded fifth, defeated Samantha '
Stosur 7-6 (7-3), 7-5. American Samantha
Reeves eliminated No. 25 Anna Pistolesi 64, 6-4.

Youth golf
Cincinnati 's Austin Kearns tosses his bat after hitting a two-run home run off Philadelphia pitcher Jose Mesa
to win the gam!!, 7-6, in the bottom of the ninth inning Friday, April 11 in Cincinnati. Kearns hopes to break
out of his current hitting slump during the Reds' three-game series in St. Louis. (AP)

Kearns hopes to break
out of hitting slump
Key injuries, suspensions mean no rest for weary youngster
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Austin Kearns, one of the
Cinc.innati Reds' best players this season, has been
mired in a slump.
A 2-for-16 skid dropped his batting average to
.287, prompting manager Bob Boone to give him a
day off Sunday against Arizona.
The Reds were off Monday before the start of a
three-game series tonight in St. Louis.
"I've been trying to get him a day for two weeks,"
Boone said. "He's really dragging."
An injury to center fielder Ken Griffey Jr., plus left
fielder Adam Dunn's two'game suspension for a
• fight with the Philadelphia Phillies, kepi Boone from
resting Kearns earlier.
Kearns has alternated between right field and center this season.
· He has been playing for a month with a sore righ~
arm. He suffered the bruised rotator cuff when
Atlanta pitcher Ray King fell on him after tagging
out Keams at home plate.
"It's been bugging me ever since," Keams said.
"Some days 'lfe better than others."
.
The Reds were still waiting Monday to hear from
major league basebaJI on their appeal of the threegame suspension of frrst baseman Sean Casey for
, being inv91ved in a June 13 fight with the
Philadelphia 'Phillies in Cincinnati.
Reds teammate Adam Dunn has already served a
two-game suspension for his part in that fight, which
began when Dunn charged the mound after Phillies
pitcher Carlos Silva threw a pitch behind Dunn.
Casey said he ran to Dunn's aid after Silva threw
a punch .when his Phillies teammates had pinned
Dunn to the ground.

- -- .&gt;-- -- - -·- -- - -·--- -·- -·- ·

Today's Game
Reck (Haynes 1-li)

a.. .....••(1imko J.5)
8:10p.m.
.Busch Stadium
SL Louis. Mo.
Tomko

Meanwhile, Rainer Olmedo is making his presence felt since the Reds recalled him on May 30
from their .Double-A Chattanooga affiliate.
The rookie infielder batted in the No. 2 spot..in the
lineup Sunday at Arizona, going 1-for-3 with a run
scored in the 6-5 loss to the Diamondbacks. It was
his ninth stl!rt of the season ..
Olmedo:S hit came in the first inning when he beat
out a would-be sacrifice bunt for an infield single.
He said that batting just ahead of Griffey in the order
has prompted pitchers to give him better pitches to
hit. . . .
The Reds. who have experimented with various
leadoff hitters.this season. said Olmedo might 'eventually bat leadoff.
"He could develop into a lot of things," Boone
said. "He could hit leadoff. He's played well."

·- - --- - - - --- - -- · - - -

·rri-county
junior circuit
races tighten ,
up this week
Bv

FRANK CAPEHART

Sports correspondent
MASON, W.Va.- Some division chases
for the Tri-County Junior Golf Tour seasonal crown tightened considerably Monday at ·
Riverside Golf Course when the large group
of fledgling swingers found some new contenders step up.
In the premier 15-17 age group, Nick
Lucas of Point Pleasant, in a very tightlygrouped foursome, came in with a 41 to win
the Fruth Pharmacy weekJy trophy by only
one stroke over Jake Venoy of Pomeroy and
Ri)lldall Sharratt of Gallipolis.
In the playoff for the second-place trophy,
Sharratt won on the second extra hole.
Just one more stroke off that pace came
John Staton of Wellston at 43. Josh Venoy
was right behind him at 45, while Ryan
Young and Robbie Williamson, both of
Point Pieasahl, each posted 46.
Craig Barker of Gallipolis recorded 49.
ahead of Wellston's Andrew Johnson and
Darren Clark and Colby Reese of
Gallipolis.
For that division, Sharratt leads with 17
points. Jake Venoy has 14, Lucas 10 and
Josh Venoy nine.
The 13-14 bracket boasted a host .of hitters Monday and looks to have a real tompetitive race taking shape.
Steven Stewart carved out a round of 47
to earn first place and win the Fruth trophy

PIIIH-Golf,al

..
~

--

~·

... "-- ~-

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~scoreboard
Pro baseball
National League
Eut
W
L Pet.
Atlanta .... ........ .48 25 .658

Gl

Montreal ..... ..... .42
Philadelphia .. ..... 39

34
33

.553
.542

, 7'1,
8\

Florida .. .. .......... 38

39

.494

12

New York . .. ....... 33

40

.452

15

Cenlrol
WLPetGB
Chicago .. ........... 40
Houston .... .. ....... 41

34
35

.541
.539

St Louis ....... .....39

35

.527

1

C1nclnnati.... ....... 36
Pittsburgh ..........31
Milwaukee ..... ... .30

38
42
44

.486
.425
.405

4
B'h
10

W.lt
WLPctGB
San Francisco ...45 30 .600
Los Angeles ...... 44
Arizona ............ ..39

31
36

.587
.520

1
6

Colorado ............40

38

.513

B'!r

San Diego .........25 · 53 . .321

21 'ol.

Sundoy'o Gamoo
Baltimore 9 , Atta·nta 3

Toronto 4, Montreal 2

Cleveland 8, Pittsburgh 5
Florida 3, Tampa Bay 2

Chicago Cubs 2. Colcago White Sox 1
Colorado 5, Detroit 3

Oakland 6, San Francisco 5
Anaheim 6, Los Angeles 3
Arizona 6, Cincinnati 5
San Diego 3, Seattle 1
N.Y. Yankees 7, N.V. Me1B 3, 11 innings
Houston 3, Texas 1

Mondly'o Ga-•
Montreal 3, Plttaburgh 0
Arizona 7, Houston 6

Colorado 5, Son Diego 1 •
San Francisco 3, Loa Angeles 2, 11 Inn.
'l'uoodrt'•Ga-·
Pittsburgh (D'AmicO 5-7) at Montreat
(Ohka 5·7), 1:05 p.m.

o'etroit at Boston. 7:05 p.ffi.
Baltimore at Toronto, 7:05 p.m.
Kansas City at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 7:15p.m.
Oakland at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Chicago Wt;te So. atM._ 8:05p.m.

Seanle at Anaheim, 10:05 p.m.
American League Leadera

Sea«lo,

24 ..... ................... .. .... .. ..... Marlena, 6 p.m.
27-29 .. .....................at Logan Tournament

July
3 ..... ........ ................. .. at Wellston, 6 p.m.

5 ... ..Parkersburg (DH) (at URG), 1 p.m.
6 .. .......... .......... ... .Shlnnstan (DH). 1 p.m.

BATIING- Mora, · Baltimore, .361;
!Suzuki, Seatlie, .356; Bradley, Cleveland,
.349; Blalock, Texas, .335; .Qarclaparra,
Boston, .334; Byrnes. Oakland, .330:
MISweeney. Kansas City.. 321 .
. AUNS--Garciaparra, Boston , 62;
COelgado, Toronto, 62; Wells, Toronto, 59;
ASoriano, New York, 58: MRamirez,
Boston, 57; BBoone, Seattle, 57; !Suzuki,
Seattle, 54: Catalanotto, Toronto, 54.
RS~, TaroniJ, 76; Wells, Toronto,
7t: GAroenoan. AMlehl, 66:BBoane, Seettle.
61 : Mfllmrez, Ba6m, 56: GibboM, -......
52JaGiantli, New\b1&lt;,52

HIT5-1Suzukl ,

23 .. ............................ .. ..... .. Athens. 6-5 W

109:

Garclaparra, Boston, 103; Wells, Toronto,
98; ASoriano, New York, 94; GAnclerson,

7 .......................... .. ... ... at Beverly, 6 p.m.
8 1... . ................... .. ... at Nitro (OH). 1 p.m.
10 .................................... Wellston, 6 p.m.
11 .............................. Parkersburg, 6 p.m.
12............. .............. Nitro (OH). 1 p.m.

t3 ....... .. ............. ..at Wiotield (DH), 2 p.m.
15 ... .. ..... ... ... at L.ancaster (OH ), 5:30p.m.
16....... .. ................ ....... ... at Athens, 6 p.m.

t9 .. ........... ............... Athens (DH), 1 p.m.

20 .... -=- ..... District Tournament at Wellston
(All homo gomoo ployoclet Molgo High
School un111a otherwlae noted.)

Dlotrlct Standings
DIS
Lancaster ..... .. .... ......... ....... .4·0
Pickerington .. ... .... .. ..... ... ... .. 4-2
Meigs Co
............ 2·2 ·
Athens ...... ... ...... ....... ..... .. ... 2·2

Anaheim, 94; BBoone, Seattle, 92; Baldelli.
Tampa Bay, ~1 .
.
OOUBLEs-&lt;lAnderson, Anohelm , 27:

Wellston .. ... .............. ... .... .... 0-6

Huff, Tampa Bay, 25; Welts, Toronto, 25;
Mueller, Boston, 25; Matsui, New York, 23;
Catalanotto, Toronto, 23; Bradley, .

Golf

TRIP'LEB-Garciaparra. Boston. 12:
CGuzman, Minnesota, 9; Baldelli, Tampa
Bay. 5; MYoung, Texas, 5; Byrnes,
Oakland, 5; DJimenez, Chicago, 5.

HOME RUNB-4:Delgada. Taror&lt;a, 22:

Valley C.C.

Monday-, July 14 -

(Roundup) Hidden

Cost - $7 per person each week.
Registration-8:30a.m.
Tee Off- 9 a.m.
Age Groups - 15·11. 13·14, 11 ·1 2. 10·
and-under

Pro basketball

Los Angeles (Od.Perez 4-5) at San

Francisco (SChmidt 6-3), 10:15 p.m.
Wedneodoy'o Gomoo
Pittsburgh at Montreal, 1:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
Houston at Arizona, 6:05p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7 :05 p.m.
Florida at N.Y. Mets, 7 :10p.m.

Cincinnati at St. Louis, 8:10p.m.
Colorado at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Lot Angeles at San Frardsco. 10:15 p.m.

Nattonel L.Ngue L.Ndera

.
BATTING-Pujols. St. Louis, .384:
Renteria, St Louis, .348: Sheffield, Atlanta.
.346; Helton, Colorado, .344; lo Ouca, Los
Angeles, .332; Vidro, Montreal, .328;

AGonzatez, Florido, .323.
AUNS-Pujols, St. louis, 67; Hatton,
Colorado, 65; Sheffield, Atlanta. 63; Furcal,
Atlanta, 62; Payton, Colorado, 53;
Berkmari. Houston, 51; Bdncts, San
Francisco, 50.
·

RBI-Pujols, St l.ouls. 66; PrWMson,
Colorado, 88; ~1, Florida, 61 ; Helton,
Colorado, 61 ; SheHield, Atlanta, 61 :
Kearns, Cincinnati, 57: AJones. Atlanta, 53.
HITs-Pujola, St. Louis, 103; Renteria,
St. Louis, 98; Helton, Colorado, 96; Pierre,

Florida. 94: PrWIIson. Colorado, 93: Furcal,
Atlanta, 92; LCaatiHa, Florida , 89: Sl'leffietd,
A~anta , 89.
DOUBLES-Pujols, St. Lauia, 27:
PrWilson, Colorado, 25: Hattan, Colorado,
25: LGonzalez, Arizona, 25; MOUes,
AUanta, 24; Renterla, St. louis, 24; Rolen,
St. lools, 23; ShGroen, Los Angeles, 23.
TRIPLEs-Furcal,
Manta,
8:
CPanerson. Chicago, 7; LWalker, eo.orado,
7; Wigginton, New York, 5; Podf8dnik,
Milwaukee, 5; AGonzalez, Florkta, 5;
Pierre, Florida, 4; JEncarnaclon, Florida, 4;
Payton. Colorado, 4; SFinley, Arizona, 4 .
fiOME RUNS-Lowell, Florida, 23;
. Sl Louis, 21 ;
Dunn, Cincinnati , 22; Pujols_
Sexson, Milwaukee, 21; Jlopez, Atlanta.
21 : Sheffield. Atlanta. 21 : Bonds, San
Francisco, 20.

STOLEN BASEs-Pierre, Florida, 31 :
DRobens. Loe Angeles, 24: EYoung,
Milwaukee, 16; Podaadnik, Mltwaukee, 14;
Delee, Florida, 14; Renteria, St. Louis, 14;

l.oMon, Pittsburgh, 14.
PITCHING (8 Decisions)- WIIIis,
Florida. 7-1, .875, 2.38; KBrown, Los

Angeles, 10-2, .833, 2.22: WWIIIiams, St.
Louis, 9-2, .818, 2.55; Ishii, Los Angeles, 7·

2• .n8, 2.76: Rueter, Son Francisco, 7-2,
.ns. 3.79: Cllacon, Colorado, to-3, .769,
4. 10; Ayala, Montreal, 6--2, .750, 3.09;
HRamirez, Atlanta, 6·2. .750, 4.09:
Reitsma. Cincinnati, 6·2 . .750, 4.99; Dotal,
Houston, 6·2, .750, 1.87.

STRIKEOUT5-Woad, Chicago, 128;
JVazquez1 Montreal. 114; Prior. Chicago,
111 ; Schmidt,
Francisco, 111 ; Nomo,
Los Angeles, 96; KBrown, los Angeles,

san

93; Millwood, Philadelphia, 91 .
.
SAVES-Gagne, Las Angeles, 29:
SmottZ, Atlanta, 27; wagner. Houston, 21 ;
Biddle, Montreal, ' 19;
MiWilliams.
Pittsburgh, 19; Williamson, Cincinnati, 17;
JJimenez, Colorado, 17; Benitez. New
York. 17; Worrell. San Francisco, 17.

American League

Eat
W

L

Pet.

GB

New York . .. ....... 44
Toronto .............. 44

30
32

.595
.579

1

Boston ............... 42 32
Baltimore ........... 33 . 40
Tampa Bay .... ... .25 49

.568
.452
.338

2
10 &gt;a
19
1

c.ntrol
WLPetGI
Minnesota .......... 40
Kansas City ... .... 38
Chicago .............35
Cleveland ........... 30
Oetroit ................ 18

34

.541

34

.528

1

40
43
55

.487
.411
.247

9'.1
21 \

-

s:~

W LPetGB
Seante .............. 49 25 .662
Oakland ............ 44 30 .595
5
AnaMim ............ 36

37

.493

12'11

47 .385
Sundoy'o -

22

Texu . ., , ........... 27

Baltimore 9 , AUanta 3
Toronto 4, Montreal 2

Cleveland 8 , Pittsburgh 5
Florida 3, Tampa 8ly 2
Philadelphia 5. Booton o
Mlnneeota a, MllwaukM 3
Kansas City 5, St. l.oulo 2

Chlcogo Cuba 2, Chlcogo WhMo So. 1
Colorodo 5. Ootrult 3
Ool&lt;land 8, Son Fll!'dooa 5
Anaheim 8, l.ol Angoleo 3
Sen Diego 3, Sooltlo 1
N.Y. YllnliHo 7, N.Y. Mtte 3. 1t lnnlngo
Houlton 3, TIXU 1

IIIOIIdolr'•-3.
Ootrolt
Toronto 13, hnlmoro 4

Ooldlnd 3, T - 1
Tompo Boy 4, N.Y. Yon- 2
'l\llecMr'l CIINMe .
Ootrc!t (Cornejo 3-f) It (lowe 7·
3), 7:011 p.m.
Bontmoro (Holling 4-5) at Toronto
(EIOOI&gt;or 5-3), ' :011 p.m.
Konou City (Gaorvo 1-4) at CIM!ond

1=r..,
Yon-

(Jo.Dovto 8-5).

N.Y.
3-e) It Tempo
B o y ( - 1 ), 7:15p.m.
Ookland (-1&lt;&gt;-4) otT-&lt;"IJ-11, S:OII p.m.
Chlclgo 8ooc (l.oolll 10.2) It
Min- ( - 3-1), 8:011 p.m.
Soottle (GOtCio Hi It Anohtlm (Sole
3-5). 10:011 p.m.
.

....... 1:'11'(1 Qemel

.818, 3.26: Meche, Seattle. 9-3.. 750, 2.89:

South Atlantic Laagua
Northern Olvlalon
W
L Pet.
GB
Greensboro ......... 5
1 .833
x·Lake County ..... 5
1 833
Charleston, WV ... 3
2 .600
lakewoad ............ 3
2 .600
Hagerstown ......... 2
3 .400
Le1dngton ............. 2
3 .400
Delmarva ............. 1
5 .187
Kannapotls ........... 1
5 · .167
Southem Dlvlllon

W

L

Pet.

~~
~~
2~
2~

4
4

GB

Savannah ............ 4

1

.800

x-Hickary .. ........... 4
Capital City .......... 2

2
1

.867
.667

~
1

Rome ................... 2

1
3

.667
.500

4
4

.333
.333

1
t l.
2l.
2l.

Asheville .............. 3
CharlestoncSC .... 2
S. Georgia ........... 2

Augusta ............... t
4 .200
x-won flrwt h11f
Tuotdoy'o Gomo
All-Star Game at lexington , Ky.
Thui'Mity'l Gamet
Capital City at Asheville
Charteston, SC at Rome

3

W
L Pet.
Narfolk ............... 39 35 .527
Dur11am .............. 38 37 .493
Charlene ............36 38 .486
Aicl1mond .......... 34 43 .442
-tDivlolon

GB

8
12

2'h
3
6 '!,

L Pet.
GB
31 .592
Toteda ................37 37 .500
7
ColumiJIJI .......... 35 42 .455
10~
Indianapolis ....... 34 41 .453
104
Mondly'o Gomoo
Durtlam 7, ScrantorlWilkes-Barre 1
Syracuse 6, Louisville 0
lndlonapalls 4, Powtuct&lt;ot 3, 111 game
Indianapolis 7. Paw1ucket2, 2nd game
Norfolk 2, Columbus 1
Ottawa 6, Rtchrnond 4
Toledo 6, Rochester 5. 14 innings
Tuotdoy'o Gomoo
Charkltte at Sy-racuse
Columbus at Buffalo
Indianapolis at Scramon-Wilkes-Barre
Norfolk at LouisviUe
Paw1ucket at Durham
W
louis'lllle .......... 45

Frontier League
E1at Qtvlalon

Evansville .......... 11

9

.654

Richmond .......... 15
Kalamazoo .......... 9

12
17

.556
.346

Florence ............. .4 21 .160
Weat Dlvl1kJn
W

L

Pet.

Gateway ............ 14
Rockford ............ t5

9

.609

~~

· .566

Kenosha ............ 1i
13
River City ........... 12 15
Mid·Missourl. ..... 11 · 15

.&lt;158

GB

:.
1

3:.

9
13'h

GB

.444

1
3',
4

.423

4',

CookCounty ..... tO 14 .417
llondly'o Game

4 '•

Richmond 5, Cook County 2

Tuotdoy'o o -

Chltllcothe at Kalamazoo
Cook County at River City
Evansville at Washington
Florence at Richmond

Kencsha at Gateway
Rockford at MK:I-Missouri
w.clnHd8y'l Gamee
Chillicothe at Kalamazoo
Cook County at River Chy
Evansville at Washington
Florence at Richmond

6

12

12

10

KansasCity ... .s

2

5

20

24

19

LosAngeles ... 2

5
5

5
3

11
9

10
13

13
18

w.dneldair'• GIIMI
Los Angeles at Colorado, 9:30 p.m.

6~

.692

3

point lor tlo.

Scranton ............ 38 38 .500
Rochester ..... ..... 36 39 .480
Syracuse ........... 30 41 .423
SOuth DIYIIIOn

8

D.C. United ..... 2

COiorado ......... 2 7 2
8
9 19
NOTE: ThrM pointe for victory, one

International League
North Dlvlalon ,.
W
L Pet.
GB
Buffalo ............... 43 . 30 .589
Pewtucko1.. ........41 33 .554
2~
onawa ...............39 38 .506
6

Washington ....... 18

Major League Soccer
E..tern ConfaNnce
WLTPteGFGA
MstroStars...... 6 3 2 20 14 10
Chk:ego ..........5 3 3 18 21 16
NewEngland ... 4 3 4 18 17 16
Columbus ....... 4 5 3 15 16 t8

Dallas .............2

lexington at Kannapolis
Savannah at South Georgia

L Pet.
1 · .696

Pro soccer

WLTPtoGFGA
Sen Jase ........ 6 2 3 21 16 13

Lakewood at Lake County

W
Chillicothe .......... 16

Houston ...............6
6 .500
4
Mlnnesota ............ 5
6 .455
Sacramento ... ...... 5
7 .417
San·Antonio ......... 4
7 .364
Phoenix ...............2
9 .182
Tullday'a O.mee
Connecticut at Washington , 7 p.m.
Indiana at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
los Angeles at Houston , 8:30 p.m.
San Antonio at Sacramento, 10 p.m.

W81tem Conrerenc•

Charleston, WV at Hagerstown
GreensbOro at Delmarva
HWry at August.a

S.turdoy'o Gam01
MetroStars at Chicago, 4 p.m.
Colorado at New England, 6 p:m.

D.C. United at Columbus, 7:30p.m .

Dallas at Las Angeles. 1o p m.
Kansas City at San Jose, 10 p.m.

Confederations Cup
GroupPhiM
Group A
W L T GF GA PTS
frx·France ....... 3 o o
a 1 9
11-Colombla ..... 2 1 o
4
2
6
Japan ............. 1 2 0
4
3
3
New 2ealand ...0 3 0
1 1t
0
Group B
W L T GF GA PTS
Ox-Cameroon ...2 0 1
2
0
7
IC·Turkey .......... l

1
BraziL ........... 1 1
Unftod SCates ... O 2

1
1
1

4
3
1

4

4

3
3

4
1

f.wlnl group
x-edvllnCet to Hmtftnlll
-noodoy. Juno18
Japan 3, New Zealand o
France 1, Colombia o
Thurodoy, Juno 11
Turkey 2. United Stotes 1
Cameroon 1, Brazil o
Frtdoy, Juno 20
Colombia 3 ,· New Zealand 1
France 2, Japan 1
Sltun:l1y, June 21
. Cameroon ~ , Turkey 0
Brazil 1, United Stales 0
Bundly, Juno 22
Colombia 1, Japan 0
France 5, New Zealand o
Mondly, Juno 23
United States 0, Cameroon 0
Brazil 2, Turkey 2

Legion baseball

.......

G·olf
from Page B1
for this week. His victory allowed him to
move into the top spot in the bracket with 17
points.
J.R. Greene of Pomeroy stepped up to post
49 and finish as ruimerup for the week. Evan
Dunn of Pomeroy and Jordan Roush of New
Haven tied for third at 51.
Dunn moved into second place in the division. He is tied with Dru Reed at 12 points.
Reed, of Pomeroy, carded 52, as did
Shawn Thompson from Gallipolis for a
fourth-place tie. Michael Taylor and Justin
Arnold, both of New Haven, and Tyler
Houck of Gallipolis each collected 53 in the
close competition.
Right on their heels came Brady Green of
Gallipolis and Cody Hysell from Pomeroy at
55, just ahead of Danny Roush of New
Haven, Chris McCoy of Gallipolis, Chris
Long of Point Pleasant and Cass Lavalley of
New Haven. _
Bryan Harris from Racine made it two in
a row with a first-place total of 43 to collect
his second weekly Fruth trophy. But pushing
him mightily was Will Garrison of PQint
Pleasant, who fashioned a good 45 for runner-up honors.
At third place was Garrett Burdette from

CohJing Wednesday
-.

.

' .

.ACC, Big East
to duke it out
in courtroom

Bv ERIC OLSON
Associ~ted Press ·

OMAHA , Neb. - Rice's first national
Iitle in any sport was the most impressive in
Co l~ege World Series history.
. Rtce scored three runs in the first inning,
then added a record-tying seven in the sixth
as the Owls beat Stanford 14·2 on Monday
mght m the CWS' most-lopsided champi' ·
onshtp game.
"There are a
lot of passionate
people
around Rtce
and they want·
ed this and
needed it," said
67 - year-old
coach Wayne
Graham, who
won five junior
college national championships and completed his 12th season at Rice.
Graham has no thoughts of retiring just
yet.
" I feel like I could go 20 more.'' Graham
said. "''m not going out. We' re starting to
think tomorrow morning ·about winning
another one . We want to come back and do
it agai n."
II was Rice's fourth appearance in the
College World Series, and the Ow'l s had
won just one of seven CWS games before
this year.
"'It means something to Houston ,"
Graham said. 'They ' re proud of the academic tradition of Rice. This was merely a
quest to maintain honor and to do things the
nght way, which has always been so impor·
tant at Ri&lt;.:e . Giving them an athletic championship means a lot.''
Philip Humber pitched a complete-game
five-hitter,·Enrique Cruz drove in four runs
and Paul Janish knocked in three as Rice
(58- 12) battered Stanford (51-18) pitching
for 14 hits.
"Everyone played his best game. and Phil
did a good job," Graham said. "We were
fort unate to have better-rested pitching.''
Stanford (51- 18), which overcame a second ,round CWS loss to reach the final
series and then forced a third game against
Rice, ,lost jl\ the championship game for the
third time in four years.
In their last Iitle game appearance, the
Cardinal lost 12-1 to Miami m 2001. That
loss tied the previous record for largest margin of deficit in the CWS championship.
"We haven' t made much of a gal'le of i&lt;
the lasl two times," Stanford coach Mark
Marquess said.
c

Rice players pile up as they celebrate their 14-2 champ ionship win over Stanford in the
third and fina l game of the College World Series best-of-three championship series Monday
in Omaha, Neb. It is the Owls ' first ever national title in any NCAA t eam sport. {AP)

Freshman left-hander Mark Rornanczuk
gave up the ihree runs in the first inning.
Five innings and fi ve pitchers later, the
Owls led 11 ·0.
Humber (11-3) retired the first seven batters he faced before Brian Hall doubled in
the third . He then set down I 0 of the next 12
before Ryan Garko doubled in the seventh
and later scored to ·end the shutout bid .
Humber walked two and struck out four in
the first championship game complete game
since Brett Laxton of Lotti siana State beat
Wichita State in 1993.
Humber, the Owls' No. 3 pitcher, worked
largely in &lt;he shadows of Jell Niemann and
Wade Tmynsend most of lhe postseason. He
lasted just 3 2-3 innings in Rice\ 5-4 win
over Texas last Wednesday.
,
"I went into my last start thinking about
what bad &lt;.:nuld happen,"" Humber said .
"This time. I just fo.:used on the game and
getting the ball over the plate ."
Rice catcher .lus1in Rucllli satu he would·
n't have predicted sucl1 a strong pcrformance by Humber.
"I thought when we were uown in the
bullpen. his curve might be a problem."
Ruchti said. "He kept puttmg it in the dirt . I
don't know what changed. The key to the win
was his spli1-tlngered fas tball . We got a lot of
weak gro unders anu lazy llies oil thai."
While
Humber
humm ed along.
Romanczuk ( 12-2) struggled from the start
He threw 46 pitche s and walked fi ve as Rice
sent nine men to the plate in the first
Romanczuk gave way to Matt Manship in
the bottom of the second after walking Chris
Kolkhorst 10 stan the inning.
"If you can ' t throw strikes, you can't win
game s.'' said Romanczuk, who threw only
19 of his 50 pitches for strikes.

Are you 65 or older~

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(
ptoplt who

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STOPPED DOING DINNER
I
11·PC . 7PLY SU"GICAL STAINLESS
STEEL SETS LEFT'
WERE S2000. NOW Sli95' FIRST 7
CALLE RS BUY SET FOR $368'

Mai~ng

Public Notice

Third Ploco

Transactions

Emma Johnson

BASEBALL
l.Ngue

to terms

with RHP Beau Vaughan. .

CHICAGO WHITE SOX- Activated C
Sandy Alomar Jr. !rom the 15-day disabled
list. Designated C Josh Paul for a&amp;slgnment.

Daughter of
Frank and janet johnson
· Someftnetown , OH

.

In the ftrst, a walk to Kolkhorst, Craig
Stansberry's single and a walk to Vincent
Sinisi loaded the bases. Then Romanczuk
walked Cruz to force in a run,. struck out
Janish and got Austin Davis to pop out.
But two mare runs scored when
Romanczuk . walked Jeff Blackinton and
Dane Bubela.
The Owls added a run in the second after
Kolkhorst walked and Stansberry beat out a
bunt. Jani sh dro ve in Kolkhorst with a fielder's choice grounder.
"We knew we wanted to score some runs
early for Philip,'' first baseman Vincent Sinisi
said. ''It seems like whenever he pitched,
we 'd get one run for him and then shut it
down. We expected to score for him early."
The Owls, who had six hits and two walks
against four pitchers in the sixth, tied a
championship game record with their sevenrun inn ing. It was the biggest outburst since
Southern California had a seven-run inning
while beating Missouri 8-7 in llJ58.
Kolkhorst. who doubled twice in the
inning, drove in two runs with hi s second
one. Janish also had a two-run double, and
Cruz hil a two-run single. Btibela drove in
another run with his base hit .
"We were intense the whole game and
never let up." Janish said .
Stanford s Sam Fuld set Ihe CWS record
for career hits with 24. His R.fll·single in the
eighth broke a tie with Keith Moreland, who
had 23 hi ts for Texas from 1973-75 .
The Cardinal's John Hudgins, who tied a
College World Series record wilh three
wins, was named the tournament's Most
Outstanding Player. He is the 16th player to
win it from the losing team , and firSt smce
Florid&lt;! Stale 's Marshall McDougall in
1999.

Card of Thanks

Coming Fridit';eJuly 11,2003 . , ...

Semifinal losers, 12 p.m. at St. Etienne
SundiY, June 2t
An•l
Semifinal ·winners, 3 p.m. at Paris

'

HARTFORD, Conn. {A P) - A court dale has .
been set in 1he lawsuit seeking to keep three Big
East schools from defecting to the Atlantic Coast
Conference.
Connecticut Superior Coun Judge Samue!
Sferrazza will hear preliminary arguments
Thursday, and state Attorney General Richard
Blumenthal has as ked the j udge to fast-track the
case.
.,
"Events in thi s matter are moving rapidly, and .
the plaintiffs' need to for immediate di scovery .
remains urgent," Blumenthal wrote Monday in a ·
letter to Sferrazza.
The Unive rsity of Connecti cut, Pittsburg h,
West Vi rgi nia, Rutgers· and Virginia Tech filed
the lawsuit this month in Hartford against the
ACC, Miami and Boston College .
The suii claims defendants concocted a "de lib·
erate scheme to destroy the Big East" by in viti ng
Miami , B.C. and Syracuse to join the ACC.
They seek fin ancial damages and want an
injunction to keep Miami and Boston College in
the Bi g East.
Sferrazza will consider moving the lawsuit to
the state' s complex case di vision in Waterbury,
Blumenthal said. In his letter, Blumenthal told
Sferrazza he does not see any need tn move the
case, but is more concerned with how soon it can
be heard . He has asked for a speedy trial schedule, regardless of whether the case gets·moved .
With the case headed to court: officials at
Rut gers have floated a compromise plan to .
defuse the contentious situation . Under the proposal, Miami could join the ACC as long as that
conference agrees to end ils bid to add other Big
East schools.
.,
Robert Mulc ahy, Rutgers: athletir di rector.
confirmed Sunday that he had made the propos-,
a!. He would not discuss the plan at length, but
The Star-Ledger of Newark reporteu . Monuay ·
that other 'Big East schools are apparently supporting the proposal.
.
The ACC responded to the lawsuii last week by
again considering adding Virginia Tech, creating ·
what would be a 13-team league by removing
one of the major obstacles to the plan. ACC presidents ha ve met four time s via conference call in
the ·past two weeks to vote on ex pan sion, bur
have fail ed to do so.
While Mulcahy wants Miami to remain the
marquee team in Big East football . he says the
Hurricanes' departu re would be better than hav- ing a group of teams leave, a move that could :
cripple the conference.
"I would hope Miami would understand that
our first option is for them to · stay with our
league. Tha&lt; wtiuld &lt;ake care of the whole issue ,"
Mulcahy said. "But· if they're uncomfortable and
the ACC feels it has to do something. thi s is a
reasonable way for all sides lo come out of this."
Mulcahy would not comment on whether he .
has spoken with Miami officials about hi s pro- .
posal. Miami ath letic director Paul Dee has said ·
his school did not want to head to the ACC alone.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

&gt;

EXTRA!
EXTRA!
... '*·.
~
~

Thulldoy, Juno ae

SOX-A~reed

i .~

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Rice whips
Stanford in
CWS finale

.

·Cameroon vs. Colombia, 12 p.m. at Lytm
France vs. Turkey, 3 p.m. at Paris
Slturd.ey, June 28

Amertca~n

·

Meigs legion
faces.·Marietta

Semtflnlll

BOSTON RED

Point Pleasant with a 52.
Tied for fourth with 54 each v,.ere Seth
Perry of Meigs and Johnny Wells from Poi Ill
Pleasant, just one stroke in front of Cratg
Jagers from Gallipoli s and Curt\s Grimm of
Poim Pleasant at 55 each, with Bo Bell amy
of Point Pleasant close behind.
ln. the division chase, Harris holds the top ·
spot with 20 points. Burdette is second at 14.
while Garrison has 12 and Perry nine.
.
Erin Dunn of Pomeroy posted a credibl e
53 as the only girl on hand and an aulomatic first-place Fruth trophy for herself.
The 10-and under group had ancilher double winner as solid-stroking Jeffrey Rou sh
of Pomeroy turned in a fine round of 40 for ·
. his second weekly trophy.
Right on Roush's heel s was Torrey Wolfe .
of Ravenswood, who shot 43 to win the runner-up trophy, while Nick Saunders of
Gallipolis posted 46 to capture third place.
Hunter .Bellamy of Pmnt Pleasant earned
fourth, just ahead of Steven Theiss from ·
Gallipolis and Jacob Leach from Gallipolis.
Roush leads the division with 20 points..
Theiss has 10 and Wolfe, Leach and .
Bellamy are tied at eight each.
The young golfers return to action next
Monday at Pine Hills Golf Course in .
Pomeroy.
.
All area youth, boys and girls, are invited to
compete. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with
tee-off for the nine-hole round set for 9 a.m.

Tuesday, June 24, 2003

See Butch COoper's story in WE\dnesday's Sentinel

CLEVELAND INDIAN5-Actlvated OF
Karim Garcia from the 15-day disabled 11&amp;1.
Designated AHP Jose santiago for assign·
ment.
KonoshaatGatewey
TORONTO BLUE JAY5-Activoted OF
Rockford at Mid-Misooun
Shannon Stewart from the 15-day disabled
lltl. Optioned OF Jayson Werth to
' Syracute of the il. ~t OF J_
11on Perry to
Oakland to complete an ear11er trade tor
OF John·Ford Griffin.
College World S.riM
NottONilaoguo
At Aauntlldlt8dlum, OtMM. fMb.
(douWIIIml.-)
FLORIDA MARLIN5-Nsmod Poul
Chom~p(--)
Fournltr atrength and conditioning dlrJCtor.
tlllturdoy, Juno 21
IAIKIT8ALL
Gomo t-Alco 4 , Stanford 3, 10 lnnlngo
HltioN18ooklllllll-latlon
tkrndlly, Juno 12
SACRAMENTO KING5-Acqulrod tno
Gomo 2-9tanford 8, Rico 3
rlglltl
to F Dorluo Songollo Jrcm 8icotan lor
Monday, Juno 12
Gomo 3-Aicl 14, 8tonford 2, Riel wino 2003 ond 2005 oocond-round draft chOICColtego World S.rtoo
••·
J'OOTULL
Nlltlonoi,_Laoguo
MIAMI
OOLPHIN5-Stgnld
DT
Domonto Mct&lt;onzle to 1 two-yoor oantroct.
Melp Atner1011n Legion
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Signod
AB Ml~ Cloud.
5 .................. ..... 111 Muon County, 15-4 L
PITTSBURGH 8TEELERB-Signod DL
10 ..........................11 Morlltta (Of;), 5-2 L Jllllrll- to 1 ono-yHr cantroct.
10 ........................11 Ma- (0H), 1o.e L
COLLIOI
11 ...................................11 Alhono, H W
KALAMAZQO-Nomod Coon Morl&lt;o
13 ...........................Muan Coilnty. 11-i L
15 ............................1t Plckortngtorl, 1-4 L womon'o gon COIICh.
PENN-Nomod l.HIIe 'King Moaro ooft·
21 ...............................11 W.tlltan. 13-5 w
21 ............................... at Wolllton, 13-'1 w boll COIICh.
QUEENS,
N.C.-Nomod
Borctoy
2l! ............................... L.oncqter II, 2·1 W
2l! ............................... L.IIICI$!11, 5-0 w - g h rnon'oi&gt;Ukotboil coach.

College baseball

nearly f,ut an end to the dangerous situation.
Neary.
Michael Warren nailed a hard shot back to
the third baseman, which was to difficult to
field, scoring Amsbary from third.
Fackler then stepped up to the plate tor his
shot over the left center field fe nce to put
Meigs on top for the first lime.
Back to back base hils by Dave McClure
and Haislop again put runners in scoring
position, which was enough for Athens as
Cundiff was .finally relieved by Phillip
Younger.
.
Cundiff allowed II hits in all, along with
&gt;ix earned runs and a pair of walks while
strikin(i out seven .
Dusun Gibbs started lhe game for Meigs.

2003 Tri·County Golf Tour

BBoone, Seattle, 20; WaRs, Toronto, 19;
ASariano, NewYort&lt;, 19;JaGiombi, Ne!ol'lblt&lt;,
Texas, 18; JGonzalez, T8)Cas, 18.
STOLEN BASE.S--ASOriano, New York,
20; ISuzukl, Seattle, 18; Beltran, Kansas
City, 18; Crawford , Tampa Bay, 17;
Mondasi, New York, 15; Hairston Jr.,
Bal11more. 14; Damon, Boston, 14.
PITCHING (8 Declslons)-Halladay,
Toronto. 11 · ?u .846. 3.57; Loalza, Chicago,
10-2, .833, 2.15; DWella, New Vorl&lt;, 9-2,

6~6

3-5
1-8

from Page B1

•

Monday, June 30 - Pine Hills Golf
Course (Pomeroy)
Monday, July 7 - Cliffside Golf Course

(Gallipolis)

19; GAndenon, Anaheim, 18; AR&lt;Jdriguez,

All
14-4
8·6

Woman '1 National Baakatball
Association
Mulder, Oakland, 10..4, .714, 3.26; Lldle,
EMtorn Conflrenco
Toronto, to-4, .714, 4.82: Moyer, Seattle,
W
L Pet.
GB
10-4, .71'4, 2.93.
1 .857
STRIKEOUTB-4:1emens, Ne·~ York. Detraft .......... ........s
Florida (Penny 5·5) at N.Y. Meta (Seo 5·
Cleveland ............. 5
4 .556
2
2), 7:10p.m.
_ _ 106; Mussina, New York, 99~ Halladay,
lndlana
.................
s
4
.566
2
Philadelphia (Millwood 8-5) at Atlanta l.:oronto, 96; Colon, Chicago, 84 ; Loaiza,:. New York ............. 5
4 .556
2
Chicago,
84;
Penine,
New
York,
78
;
(Ru.Ortiz 8-4), 7:35p.m.
Chona«e ..............s
5 .545
2
PMartlnuz,
Boston,
78.
Cincinnati (Haynes 1-6) at St. louis.
5 .500
2'/,
SAVES- Foulke,
.Oakland,
19; Connecticut ......... 5
(Tomko 3-5), 8:10p.m.
7 .222
5
Guardado, Minnesots, 19; Urbina, Texas, washington ........ 2
w....m Confal'lncl
Milwaukee (Quevedo 1·3) at Chicago 18; MacDougal, Kansas City, 16; DaBez,
W
L Pet.
GB
Cubs (Wood il-5) , 8:20 p,m.
Cleveland, 16; Julio, Baltimore, 15;
Las Angeles ...... 10
2 .633
Houston (Redding 4·6) at Arizona Percival. Anaheim, 12.
Seattle .. ...............6
S .545
3~,
(Batista 5-3), 9:35p.m.
Colorado (Oliver 4-5) at San Diego
(Lawrence 4-8), 10:05 p.m.

striking ou1 10 in siK innings of work, whi le
allowing seven hits. five walks and three
runs. only one earned.
Ry an Spaulding relieved Gibbs to beg:-1
the seventh, allowing tlve hils. one walk and
striking oul one to earn the win.
Athens tried to regain control of the game
in the top of Ihe ninlh and nearly did so.
With two outs and nobody on, Pitts (Onnected on a shot agai nst the righl fi eld fence
for a triple and scored on a single by
Mclead.
With the tying run at first, Spaulding
struck out Younger .to end the game.
' .
Athens opened the (iame with a 2-0 lead m
the top of the first innmg off a pair of Meigs'
errors.
Meigs, though, tied it with RBI singles by
Jeremy Blackston in' the third and Haislorin
the fourth before Athens gained lwo runs
over the course of the next fo ur inning s.
Meigs returns to action today, playing hosl
to Marietta in a non-district game.

Meigs

Cleveland, 22; BBoone, Seanle, 22.

Philadelphia 5, Boston 0
Minnesota 8, Milwaukee 3
Kansas City 5, St. LouiS 2

Tuesday, June 24, 2003

The Daily Sentinel . Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of ,local
children - ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 11th issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved!

The
Scipio
Township trustees will
acce~t sealed bids lor
the following: 1978
International
truck,
1800
Load
Star
pumper/tanker, V8 gas
engine, 5 opeed/2
apeed rearend, power
steering,
hydraulic
brakea,
good
lleo/good cab, Vlnt

Call Toll Free:

1·800·357 ·1170

Pictures
muat be In
by
Thuraday
July
3rd, ' 2003.
· Plcturas can be plclutd up alter
July 11th, 2003.

Pomeroy,
OH reHrVI
45781.
The
trUitNI

Complete the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture,
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
Send to:

the rl;ht to reject ony
or all bide.

811,18,24

Get A Jump

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No lm1rtat10ns

All Pre-exrsb~g conditions Ok.
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FDIC!EOL
1·800-992-9200

E•rn btg profits!
Training!
Fr&amp;e Info!
~HSI$•1505

"AFFORDABLE LEGAL SERVICES"'
Consolidate your bills W11tl
F1rst Continemal

D0532HCA27268
Sealed bids will be
opened at the regular
Twp. mooting held July
2, 2003 at 8:30 p.m . at
tho Pagovllle Town
Hall. Bide may bo
mailed
to
Randy
Butcher,
38754 ·
Mudlork
Road,

$100.$500
No Hassles Never leave Horne!
Funds Oeposited ChecKing Account
Next Day Loans By County Bank of
AetJoboft1 Beach, DE Memt&gt;er

O i vor~•

$115

INCORPORATION $115
Not do it .youn~e~ Krtt
CAU 1-eoo.!03-1170

Bad cr8d1t welcomed

LOANS OAC
Free cooeullatioli w~h IMJ; agent
No appiK:ation lee

for free informe.tion

Toli4roo 1--~71

Ftro Your Londlor.tltl
$$So DOWN HOMES!

11:::~=~~:.:,::~~= ..,.au:::~.~·::;:n::~;~ mbt ot dollttt. to f'ltlp mini· I Nc&gt;NoCreon
Ro,.OKI
Tax$0Aepoo
BoniorupO;:iool
to lOw&amp;down
For U.bngt
tnolr

~"'· Wl1tl lm....,to,.~. l a.t .

t-BOIJ.5Q 1 . 17771 ~. 8998

ltQ.6-0 QUEENS BLVD . 1415 FOREST In:,::::::~:::::;:::~
~~=,.II'"LLO , NEW IORK 11375-63&lt;7.

I·

on

Here's all you need to do ...
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and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

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on your home delivered subscription!

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$2.500 00 to $150.000 oo

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Tuesday, June 24, 2003

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\.e ister

Queen ·Pillow Top Mattress
set, New in plastic wNVarr.
W1il accept $199, Cell phone
304·4t2-8098 or 304·552·
1424.

CLASSIF.IED ,

Mrlp County. OH

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Canl

· In One Week With Us
RI:ACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR 'AD NOW ONLINE
m:rtbune
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To

Place
Your

Ad ...

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

rI

~~

C·1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale. Chester Township,
Meigs Co.Jnty, send letters
of interest to : The Daily
Sentinel , PO Sox 729·20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Access to a Computer?
Earn $450·$1500 monthly
part·time or $2,000·$4,500
full-time, 1-S00-585-0760 or
www.OurAnswer.com

Card ShoWer for Bill

Addressers wanted immedi·
ately! No eJIIperience neces·
sary. Work at hOme. Call
405 -44 7_63 §7.

Barnette
To the family and friends of
William 0. [Bill) Barnette_On
June 28th, he will be 93
years old. Make this birthday
memorable by sending him
birthday cards. Address
3891 Georges Creek Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

r

AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. St1lrley Spears, 304·
675 _1429.
:D-::E-::M-::O-::N-::S:::T:::R-::A-::TO-::-::R-::S--:F-::0-::
R
LOCAL STORES. Great
pay, must be outgoing. ener·
getic, mostly weekends, Call
877-260-9133
or
visit
www.jemcopersonnel.com.

GJVF.A\\IAV

8 week old male kittens, litFull Time Maintenance
ter trained, grey and white
Position Available. Apply in
miJCed. 740-256·9125.
person at Holiday Inn ol
Gall1poHs.
Five 10 week old female kit· --.,---~--..,
tens, multiple colors _740 _ Hardware sales clerk, expe:
446·8924 or 74 7o9-.1aeo. rience nice but not necessary. Forward resume to
CLA-570, c/o Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, 825 Third Ave,
Gallipolis, OH 45631

o-

r

Lost Pekingese in Kanauga
area 614103 , goes by the
name of Baby, reward
offered. 740·446·8279.

.

r·-"!"'•ARD--•AL-E_,.
S

y

elderly, Darst Group Home,
now paying minimum wage,
new shi tts: 7am-3pm, 7am·
Spm. 3pm - 11pm. npm·

1 7am , call 740-992-5023.

HVAC Installer Opening:
Benefits available. Apply at
or Send Resume to:
Bennet1's MH Heating &amp;
1 391
Safford
June 25 and 26. 9:ooam - Cooling
5:oopm. 224 Hilda Drive, School , Ad. Gallipolis, OH
45631 !740)446·9416 or t·
Gallipolis.
800-872·5967

YARD S.&lt;\LE·

Pr. PLF.ASANI'

ESTATE TAG SALE
Sat, June 28. 8am-7pm
Sun, June 29, 9am-5pm
Refrigerator. washer and
dryer, multiple Pieces
Furniture, lots ot misc.
1211 VIand Street

Medical Transcrlpttst in Pt
Pleasant areft. Most have
exp. Call (304)273·0892
Need to earn Money? Lets
talk the NEW Avon. Call
Marilyn, 304-882-2645 to
learn all the ways it can wOrk
for you .

leiii!IT3

of

Call Today! 740-446-4367,
1·800-214-0452
www . galllpo~scar&amp;erooltege .com

I

4

MR FIX ITII1
Complete RamOdell~g
Interior &amp; Elrterior. custom
wQOd deck &amp; fences. Chain
Link. All odd Jobs.
(304)675-3733
Tranamlaaionl, all typee,
74G-245-50n.
Will paint, odd jobs, any kind
ol outside work. w111 haUl
anything, $4fh r, 740..4419761 .

i

!O

HOMES

FOR.SALE

WOlD
GAM I

garage, toca1ed on level one
acre lot on Georges Creek
Road.
Asking $80,000.
(740)446·9769
3 Bedroom, 2 Batnroom, 1·
1/2 Car Garage. Gatlipols
City Schools.
Photos,
lnrormatlon
Online
@
www.orvb.com code 60903
. or call740·446-3992
3' Bedroom, 3 Bathroom, 2
Car Garage. ·nice 18X36
lnground Pool.
Addison
Township. Photos, inlorma·
tlon online 0 www.orvb.com
code 11003 or call 740·4464262

" That new guy is

17 I 1. -Q·•t.:omplote

so

cute," one

tho chuckle quoted

SC.RAM-LETS ANSWERS
Shanty - Gtand- Wifcll- Empire- CHAMPAGNE
My l1usband yelled to our landlord , 'My basem.e nt is
filled with water!' The landlord calmly replied, "What did
Yesterday's

)'Ou e •Pect-CHAMPAGNE?"

All re11 estate ~vertlslng
In this newspaper Ia
· 1ubjacl to lhe Federal
F•r Housing Act of 1968
which makea It Illegal to
edverti1e "eny
pref•rence, llmitiUon or
dltcrlminatlon baaed on
race, color, reHglon, !JIX
familial slalut or national
origin, or any Intention lo
make any such
Plllfeiwlce, limitation or
discrimination."

------~-­

3 Bedroom,, 1 112 bath, brick
on 1 acre. All electric, AC, 2
car attached garage, out
building, extra garage . All
Will do Odd Jobs, paint, new doors. roof &amp; carpet.
mow, weedeat. Call Bill Call (304)675·17 14
(304)882-34 t9.
3 Bedroom. 1-112 bath brick
ranch . Full unfinished basemen!, attached one car

.
_
.
_
.
_
.
by fillin; in the missin9 WOf"ds
'----''---'--'---'----''--' J'OU develop from step No. 3 below.

'

FOR SALE

JOHNS LAWt! CARE
Yardwork &amp; Odd Jobs.
740/36H04t

coed said to her friend. "Yea," her
_
.
·
• ';' friend replied , 'bul he's so dumb
•• that he needs to have a tutor ber -~U::-:P:--:::0----::-T-:I-:-J-:T:---,Irore he could qual ify as a __ , •

l6: I I

To Do

NEW HOUSE lor SALE
Debbie. Drive. 3 bedrooms,
2 balhs .
$t29,000.
(740)245·9268
':-...:.:-:'-~:----­
Payng $400·$500 rent? Why
not buy nice 3 BR nouse, 1/2
acre. level lot, 31/2 miles
from town. Call 740·446·
c4-::73_7_ro~r~ap~p_t.________
River Frontage 11f2 acres

Moon.E HOII-U:S

~----tU·R·S·A-~. . . .
2 Modular Units for sale- 1
unit is 24x36 w1th metal sid·
irlg and is in lair condition is
asking $6,800 ; 1 unit is
24x36 with wood s1dmg and
also in lair condition but
needs some minor repairs
They would be good fo r
Sunday
School
Class
Rooms. Work ShOps or as a
Cabin. Delivery of Units also
can be added . Make all
esquires to Steve Pullins at
(740)992·2478'

Ir
.....
A.c.~.A.l.•·r.. -. p

i~

Lars &amp; .

4 acres Eagle Ridge Rd ..
e.11cavated, electric, septic
permit &amp; wa ter available.
(740)992·003 t

5 bedroom home. neer Rio
Grande, call Century Homes
at 74Q-286-HOME or 74£(286·7113.
Bula'llille Pike, Two Story,
2800 sq, ft .. 3 Bedroom, 21/2 Bath, Family Room ,
Living Room, Game Room.
2 Car Garage, 30x4o Out
Building, Pool , One Acre ~
(740)446-8050
Gallipolis, Mill Creek Ad , 1
mi. from golf course , 3 br.
ranch , brick front , new vinyl
siding, heat pump, excellent
cond., approx. 1/3 ac . asking
$77,500. cajl alter Spm 304675-5038

lp&lt;U

APARThlfNI'S
FOR RENT

I II{\!" 1'1'1 II'
~\.In I ~lilt h.

2 Vehicles Far Sale: 1999
Blazer, loaded, leather interior. asking $2,000 under
WAN'"ill)
book price; 1994 Orand Am,
good, $1 ,900. 740.__ _ TO
_ Bur
_ _ _,.1 .2runs
45·5758.
Wanted to purchase tobacco
2002 Chev~ Impala, like
poundage, highest dollar
paid, outbid anyone. Call new. one owne ~ (senior citi·
~en) ,
18,000 miles. V6
513·295·6309
Carmine Red Metalllc, ask·
ing $14.500. Call evenings
LIVL'mJCK
740-446.0299.

r.

24 .11 36 double wide modular
ciass room . Built very heavy
duty to Ohio building code. 1
large open room . no batn or
kitchen, self coOtained heat
pump unit. Approx. 10 years
old. $6 , 500 delivery avail- 1·3 bedrooms foreclosures
able. 740·992·2478 or 740- nome from $199 mOnth 4%
down 30 years at 8.5% APR
591·9342
for listing call 1·800·319·
Big selection of used 3323 ext. 1709
homes, all sizes. Kanauga - - - - - - - - - . , .
Mobile
Home
Sales, 2 bedroom. ReferenCes &amp;
Gallipolis. OH
(74 0) 44·1• Dsposit. No Pets (304)67503t0
5162

"--------pi

3 bedroom
Cole's Mob1le Homes an
Middleport,
assembled team with over
(740)992-5858
120 years of hopsi ng experi·
ence.. Patriot Homes out- 3 bedroom w1th nice yard &amp;
standing 1(5 year warranty, garage.
1641
i..~ rlcoln
shingles &amp; insulation by Heigt1ts , Pomeroy. Lease ,
Owens Corning, vinyl siding depos1t
B.
references
by Vipco, James Hardie sid· required. 1-740-667-3966
ing available, low "E" ~her~
mopane windows by Kinro 4br. Home l n New Haven .
carriage carpets &amp; flooring everything within wa lking
by Congoled, appliances by distance . No pets. Rent
Deposit
$350 .
General Electric, faucets by $495:
Glacier Bay &amp; Moen. light (304)882-3652
li.11tures, cabinet pulls &amp;
knobs direct from Horiie
1
Depot (easy to matCh iust a
lew good reasons why your
next new home should be Mobile home fo r ren t. no
trom : Cole's Moblle Homes, pets, 1740)992-5858
1~ 266 US 0 East. Athens, Trailer for rent in Mason. No
Ohio,
1·740-592·1972,
~where you get your Pets. !304)773·5751

r - M~~R~~

money's worth~

APARTh1EN-rs

mRRFxr

r

I

Buy or sell
R1venn e
Antiques. 11 24 East Mam
on SA 124 E. Pom eroy. 740992-2526 Russ Moore.
owner

F""'

MIS&lt;:EI.IANEOIIS

MERCHANIJISI:
17 good alurnmum wtndows,
3 sizes. ptus 3 small ones.
StO a 1ece for larger one, $5
for small. Call 740·4 460719
--------2 recliners . 1 DR su1t. 1 kmg
Waterbed , 1 elecmc range. 1
lull bed . 740·446·9780_
2000 Yamaha GP1 200R
Waverunner, 4o hours , like
new. wtlh trailer and warran1y, $5500 . 740·367-00 12.

3 tn 1 ba by bed, $75 ;
Tw1n A1vers Tower IS accept- playpen. S45: h1ghcha1r.
ing applications fbr waiting $?.5; baOy swing, $25; call
list for Hud·subsized. 1- br, anytime (740)949·2 188
apartment. call 675-6679
A1r Cond . UM 2-1 /21on
EHO
Carrier also Jantrol Gas
Furnace
Storm wmdows
SPACE '
and
regular
windows.
IURRENT ·'
Furnace and Air Cond. untl
less th an 1o years old. Call
River lots for re ni· beautiful
740-446-3478 or 740·446 locatiOn . excellent beach.
373
1 to see before taken
call (740)992·5782
out .

r

I

Trailer space for rent in Beautiful engagement nng &amp;
Middleport, (740)992·5856 ·wedding band . 14K gold
w/11 diamonds, StZe 7 112,
\IIIU lll'ltl'i
bought for $800 at Zales will
r.:p'lli
1o~":'H:-O-L~SEIIO~
' ~IJ-&gt;--, sell lor $350, (740)247-2070

CuollS
2 loveseats in good condi·
lion, 1 sewing machine $30
each. 7~0·245·5595 .

AOHA registered appendix 90 Ford Pro be, auto, looks
yearling tilly; 51200.00 . Two good, runs but need work ,
tt1oroughbred
mares: 5300, (740)247-2070
$500.00 each. 22 yo OH
95 LeJCUS SC300 Luxury
mare, run barrels, $1,000,
Sportscar. auto, V-6. sun·
740 843-5176
roof, leather, 12·disc CD,
101K
mi.,
Excel lent
HAv&amp;
Conditi.on, $10,000. Call
GRAIN
304/675-3458 •
Good quality straw. Volume - - - - - - - Lively's Auto Sales
discount &amp; delivery · avail· 1990 Old Ciera
$ 1200 ,
able. Heavy square bales. 1989 Pontiac Bonneville
$2 .85 per bale. (304)675: $800, 1995 Hyundai EJCce15
5724
·
spd $t600, t 992 Olds
Ill I "I'OIU I 1111'\.
Achieve S800, 1988 Ford

I
1
..___iiiUIIRiitliiSiiALEiiiii·- ·
·
10

Tar a
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious.
2 Bedrooms , 2 Floors . CA. 1
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted.
Adul t Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
PaM. Start $385/Mo_ No
Pets. Lease Plus Security
Deposit Required, Days:
740-446·3481 : Evenmgs :
740·367-0502.
.

Land Home Packages avail- •---lilloiiliiiittoloo-'
able. In your area; (740)446Almond Whirlpool Washer
t and 2 bedroom apart- $75. White Whirlpool Dryer
3384
ments, furnished and unfur· $65. (740)446·9066
New 14 wide only $799 nished, security deposit
•down and only $159.63 per required, no pets , 740·992- Good Used Appliances.
month . call Nikki 740-385- 2218
ReConditiOned
and
"7671
Guaranteed .
Washers,
:--:--::-::-::--~---::-::
Bedroom Apartment , Dryers.
Ranges,
and
Mo.~H.E
. R cf:I.o~ New 2003 Dout;llewide. 3 BR Kitchen Furnished, ,All Refrigerators, Some stan 81
1• &amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down Electric,
.._
..,__. ~
$300 Month, $SS. Skaggs Appliances, 76
'
._.,_iiiiiioiiiiii.-pl
and &amp;295/mo. ·1-800·691· Deposit Re'quired .Near High Vine St., (
)
_
740 446 7398
10 used homes under 6777
School. {304)675-3 100 Or -~------$2,000, will help with deliv· =-~~--~~~- (304)675-5509
Keller maple china cabinet.
ery, call Ha-rold 740·385· Two b.droom me bl.le hom e -::-:---::~-=-~-for
sale,
includes 2 Bedroom Apt. 5 min. past antique solid oak table w/
9948
washerfdryer, stove, relrig· Holzer 740-441 -0194
cl aw teet &amp; 5 cha1 rs. oak col14X70 Mobile Home with erator, call !740)992-2377
lee table, Everet1 console
4 rooms and bath. all utilitieS piano $1200, 080 304-6757 x 21
e.~~pando,
newly
$40
FAR1\1S
paid,
0 month . 46 Olive 2982 leave message.
remodeled, newer furnace.
S
Street . (740)446-3945
A must 10 see! I (740)446· •--iiFORiiiitiiiii\iil.Eiio-pl ::=-:-:::=:-:--:-:-::-:-:·
7901.
BEAUTIFUL
APART- Mollot1an Carper. 202 Clark
Nice 43.5 acre farm with MENTS
AT
BUDGET Chapel "Road, Porter, Ohio.
1971 Elcona 12x65 with 32X60 metal pole barn on PRICES AT JACKSON (7 40)446 -7444 1-877-830·
expando, central air $3000 ,.,
A d Add.
·
~.;~reen 1rea
oa •
1son ESTATES, 52 Westwood 9162. Fr~e Estimates. Easy
on rented lot 367-7673
· w
twp.
ooded , lot with level Drive from $297 to S38~ . financing, 90 days same as
1973
Schultz
12X65, frontage nice for building, Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call caSh . Visa/ Master Card .
Central air, on rented lot hunting, pasture (priced to 740-446-2568 .
.Equal Drive· a· little save alot.
available to continue renting. sell) Call (740)441 -0806 . Housing Opportunity,
---~----(740)446-1089 leave. mes· ;Liiiearv•e•M•e~ss:;;a;!lg;;;e·~~-.,
· Thompsons Appli_a·nce &amp;
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· Repair·675-7388. For sale,
sage.
BUSINESS
.....::__~~--,-~-:-:·
· room apartments at V1llage re -conditioned automatic
1995 Redman 14x70, 2BA,
ANDBUU.DINGS
Manor
and
Riverside washers &amp; dryers, refrigera·
2BA, wrap around deck
Apartments in Middleport tors, gas and electr ic
w/porch, heat' pump, gas fur· Point Pleasant, 6th St. From $278-$348. Call 740· ranges , AJD, and wringer
nace. eJCcellent cond. 740· across from courthOuse , 992 -5064 . Equal Housing washers. Will do repa 1rs on
245·5071 .
o!licelcommercial bldg. ask· oPportunitieS.
maior brands in shop or a1
-:--::--.,...-:--::-~--- ing $50.000. day 304-675·
your home
2001 16X80 Schult Single 5734
Located at end ot Chillicothe
Wide, like new. 3 bedroom. evening 304 •675 •5038 .
Road in Gallipolis. Two bed- - - - - -- - - 2 bath, AC. Call after 4pm,
rooms . $400/month plus Used Furniture Store. 130
Motivated seller. (740)256- F"
LoTs &amp;
$400
securi ty
deposit Bulaville Pike. We sell mal·
6306
ACREAGE
required . UtilitieS not ioclud· tresses. dressers couches;
ed. No pets. 74Q-441 -1108. bunkbeds, bedroom suites.
Cole's Mobile Homes
reclmers, grave monuments.
Lot
for
sale
in
Racine
,
US 50 East-. Atliens, Ohio,
Modern 1 br. apt. (740)446· 740-446-4782. Gallipolis.
(740)992·5858
45701, 140-592·1972
0390
OH.

r

SI'QI(IlN(;
G&lt;XlllS

New Haven. 1 bedroom fu r- Russian SKS ri111e . Rueger
niShed apartment. deposit &amp; 10/22 nffle, Marl tn 22 mag
references ,
no
pets. w1th sco e. 740·245-5229.
(740)992·0165

4.5 acres tn Vinton. great
N1ce one bedroom unfur·
hunting , no restrictions. Call
nished apartment. Range &amp;
Century Homes 740-286refrigeralor provided. Water
HOME or 740 -286-711 3.
&amp; garbage pa1 d. Oepos1t
Nice mobile home lots. qwet reqUire~ , Call 740-446-4345
country setting. $115 per alter 6pm .
month, includes wate r,
sewer..trash , 740·332·2 167 Now Taking ApplicationS35 We st 2 Bedroom
Townnouse
Apartments.
Includes Water , Sewage,
Trasn . $350/Mo.. 740-446·
HoUSF_:ii!
1"'0
0008.
FOR lbNJ'

i

I'
~

HOMES

'"·~

the

I' I I i,;.

WAA'ffill

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes se1 up
n~ .. ,ll!ol.l'
for
immediate possession all
To Do
within 15 min. of downtown
"---lliiioililoo-pl Gallipo'lis. Rates as low as
D&amp;J Picky Painters
6%. (740)446·3218.
Free Estimates. Interior an ---------------- .
exterior painting. Give ;,-tlur 1997 l og Home, 21 acres
home or garage a fresh
with fish pond.
Call
more or less, 38R 2 Bath,
new look. We paint homes.
740 256 6681
(
)
"
master suite w/jacuzzi. lull
garages , mobile homes.
basement,
2 decks wfriver
2
houses
for
sale,
1.5
acre$
buildings, barns and roofs.
MIL. Green Scnoot district , view. 2 docks. 1 floating 446·
(Call M·S, ~)
immediate
possession . 2784
(304)895-3074
$26,500
740-446·7029.
20 Years expertence
Timesnare for sate. one
and references.
3 Bedroom newly remod· week per year lifetime .
eled, in Mlddleport. 'cai iTom priced at $6,000. Bonus
In home daycare has openAnderson after 5 p.m.
extra week. T40-256·1470.
ings,
Middleport
area,
992 -3348
Dawn , (740)992·2787

KI\YEJ
3 '---'r--1 ·
~1--r;--,1
W0 R N D

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

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publiahln; reeerve1 the rlgl'rt to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Error&amp; mull be reported on the first day ol
II
Tribune-Sentlnei·Reglatfi wiU be raapon•ible for no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the first insertion. We shall not be
1ny lou or expen11 that reJuitl from thl publication or omission of en advertisement. Correction will be made In the first available edition. • Box number
are alw1y1 confidential. • Currant rete card appll ... • All real 1111111 advertisement• are subject to the Federal ·falr Housing Act of 1968. • Thie newspaper
accepts only help Wlnt~ 1da mHIIng EOE ttandardt. We will not knowingly ltcepl any &amp;dvertisir:-g in violation of the law.

Reg 1#90·05·1274B.

lJ 0 R

I

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

~-

scrambled word~ b&amp;low tc fmm four 1imple words.

l

1:00 p.m.

Sundays Paper

I

fot.~r

Z NT

FRurrs &amp;

BURN
Fa! ,
BLOCK
Cravings: and BOOST
Energy L1ke
Vou Have
Never Expenenced
WEIGHT- LOSS
REVOLUTION
New product launch Oclober
23, 2002 . Call Tracy at
(740 )441 . 1982
-'---:------,--Cool Downll
Central
Coohng ~ystems , New and
Used. Installed (740)446·
6308
Q

June 25, 26 &amp; 27

Where lhfl cusromer

UnderNaw
Managagement

• New Homes
A

• Garages

From 10:00 a.m. to 7:00p.m.
Be sure to also check out the

Stop &amp; Compare

Auros

'
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas.
chevys,
etc!
cars/trucks lrorn $500. For
listings 1•800-7 19-3001 ext
390t
1978 Ford Farmonl . Good
shape. (304)576-2306

Thunderbird $1000, 1989
Chevy Cavalier $400, 1969
Ford Escort $900,1992
Chevy Beretta $1200, 1992
Olds Ciera $1200, 1994
Chrysler .New Yorker $2700,
1994 Plymouth Voyager
$1800, 1993 Ford Aerostar
$14oo. t994 Dodge sp;rll
$900. 1991 Ford Escort SW
$950, t 989 Suzuki GTI 5
spd $999, 1993 Ford ~scort
SW 5 spd $t350.

1987
Buick
Electra
Stationwagon . $1.300. Call
Monday-FridaY 9am-5pm
740·379·2282 or 740·643·
Saturday
9am-3pm
2497.
Sunday
Closed
(740)388-9303
1988 Chevy Celebrity. 4
door, auto. ale, needs some
work . $350.00/0BO call Stock car and trailer, $2,000
OBO. Call 740·256·6870
(7 40)992· 1060
after 6pm.
1992
Cadillac · Sedan
Deville. one owner. new con·
TRUCKS
dillon . 80,000 miles, must •----FOiiiiRIISiii\l.Eiii--"
see to believe! 740-446·
31 17
1990 dump truck, Chevrolet
Kodiac, CATdeisel, 5 esp
1992 Mercury Topaz $700..
transmission. 2 speed rear.
1992
Dodge
Ca ravan
10' dump bed, air brakes,
$1300., Roll Bar (st1ortbed)'
C.D.L. required . 48, 000
$50., Transfer Casee (ford)
$50., 1996 Yarnaha 4-wheel· miles excellent condition.
$10, 500.00 740-992·2478
er. $2500. (304)675·64 18
or 740 - 59t -9342
1993 Geo Melro, $375; pick
up sleeper top, $100; 1969. 1995
Ford
F·250
Chevy dump truck. $1.200. Powerstroke Diesel. superAll OBO. (740)949·2128 cab, one owner, 35,000
leave message
r:niles. $13,000. 740-2459496.
1993 Mercury Marquee .... - - - - - - - - Runs &amp; looks good. $2,300. 1996 Nissan Truck 2.4 L. 5
{304)675·6986
speed, AJC, 74,500 miles.
1994 Chevy Caprice. police (304)675·5730 (ho.me) Work
package, VB 350 engine. (304)675·6753

Nf'w lrrrm -1ddf'd J.#tkiJ•

36198

'

JET
AERATI ON MOTOI.S
Repaired . New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stoc~ Call Ron Eva ns. 1·
800·537·9528.

Hour• 1 Q.8 pm
Closed Sundays

Special l:&lt;
THERAPEmC
MASSAGE

All packs you can
play $20.00
Starburst $1,750.00
Progressive cover all
$600.00 52#'s or under
"Mus1 be 1B to I

East~r &amp;

Mothers Day
Buy 1 Gift Certificate,

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

Cellnd Free!
Heather A. fry L.M.T.

-740-992-5379

WE REPAIR

OfiCr good lhw

• Lawn Mowers

or 10 be in hall"

Al!l·o

AND USED STEEL '
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel . Flat Bar. Steel
Grat1ng
For
Dra 1ns,
Dr1veways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wedne sd ay &amp;
Fnday, 8arn·4.30pm Closed
Saturday
&amp;
Thursday,
Sunday. {740)446-7300

accepting

A Berrer

• Chain Saws

EAGLES CLUB
presents
RICK BRUMFIELD
Tuesday
June 24th

Footers and

Tillers • Edgers

Concrete.

Go Karts • Mini

Excavation, Utilities,

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

992-7953
591-7002
591·4641

www.wvpcdr.com
cdactar@wv cdr.com

204 Condor Street

SVncute. 01110

JUIJ4&amp;5

Ohio

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

I.awr1 and Garden Equipment is our
business, not our sideline

lmllllt118VIIIIb

With lUI IIIIIIUIIS

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's #I

Call949-2134
r40

t 998 Windsta r Van, 75,000
miles . good condition,
S7000
•
· 740446
•
- tt68 Or
740-446 0137
--::-:--::-.~~·~--=--2000 Ford Explorer Sport,
4wo, sunrool, 6 disc co
player, runn 1ng boards . 740·
441-9838.

r

DoA~~s~OTOR'l

~

BUILDERS IHC.
New Homes • Vinyl
New Gm·agesJ

Siding •

• Replncemcm
Windows • Roofin g
COMMERCIAL and

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

I"
•

MulURCYCLI'.S
1991 Chevy 4x4 pick·up, 8'
1
bed, toolbox &amp; rails, new ~
&amp;
tires. exhaust, many new
2000 Polaris 325 Trail Boss,
parts, very clean, e.11cellent
like new, $2 ,000 Call 740·
condition, $7500, (740)949·
256·1377.
1980 class C 23' Honey
2203
Dodge camper; sleeps 6.
85 ,576 miles ; ale. stove,
!ridge . shower. 13" color TV
with VCR, awning; dual rear
!ires. $5300.00 (740) 985·
4485
-.,, 1{\ II I '-t

c

Ma~~OMES

I

Residential

Guarantee
992-7953
591-4641
L..-..;5;;;9;,;1;..·7.;.,0;;;0;;;2;........1

SAVINGS

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; fiN .~NCIAt SERVICES
BO X 18~ MIDDLEPORT. OH 45750
740-843-5264
3/18 1fn

Get 5 FREE

Hill's Self
· Storage

New
Construction,
Remodeling,

45771

Backhoe and

740-949·2217

Dozer Work. ·
Roofing.

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.
992-7953

Hours

7;00 AM - 8:00 PM
1l14/1 mo.

Sunset Home
Construction

I

HOWARD "z.
WRITfSfl

Free Estimates
992·6215
519-6/4

Pomeroy. Ohio

2 Yoars Locat

PAVING
Henderson, WV

•Free Elllmlleh

875-24117 or 448-2112

949-1405

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675,2457

NELSON'S LAWN

CARE
Residentia l •
Commercia) Mowing
• Mulching • Edging
• Far1iliza1ion • Leaf
Removal • Pruning
• Landscape
Maintenance Spring
and Fau cleanup

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

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

~1(~

High&amp; Dry

SeH-Storage

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'K10' 6 10'K20')

Er Sweet

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

Plants~

Az«le«s)

•

&amp;

! *SEAMLESS
I lmER

(RI!Offoaenarons a

Classlfleds!

~

V. C. YOUNG Ill

4 .. tllflfUals Er Perennials
Fl1llt Er Flowering Trees 6'
Shrubs

Shop

"~
~-~
,~'f.L

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-7 42-34 H

Potato

House for sale: 27 Anne
Street, Pomeroy, $17,500,
will consider any offer. 388·
8591 or 740-709·0064.

Leave Me

More

Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall

MAJftiRNINCE

MON~T!.A. w~

TMIN.IC.IN'!

Atter6pm ~
(BeiO&lt;O 6pm

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooflng &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

New Homes, Room Additions,

*ROOFING
*HOME

' 11401985~80

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,

11

liiU1 PIIIOIIG

YOUNG'S

Bryan Reeves

Bedding, Vegetable

I ..JU~T F!:L'f
Lll(f! I l(._.f!,W WH-'.T

Let me de 11• for y oul

Racine, Ohio

SUE's GREENHOUSE

W!.LI,.. ... le.lf ... Uiol. ·, 1

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Ta~e

General
Contracting

29670 Bashan Road

Advertise
in this
space for $25
\ per month.

I

on

pack $5.00

Buy $5.00 Bonanza

Saves on Cooling.
M
d M b 'l
etal an
0 Ie
home roofs·~ No
Problem. 15, Year

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
I
Unconditional lifetime guar- 1
antee. Local references fur·
nlshed Es!ablished 1975 .
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446- .
0870, Rogers Basement

Jump

R~a~~~~~
SpecialistsCommerc!·al and

-::---:::--::--::-~-~-

eft,, Plastic Bottom . John
Boat wlmlnn Kota Trolling
Motor and Fish Finder. $500.
Call (304)675·4352

All

Dring this coupon

';:======::~
DURO-LAST

Finally ... Mon~ y paid to Y2.lJ. when cancer
strikes. You choose the amount up to $50,000!
Pays in addition to other insurance.
You use Lhe money however you like.
Cuncer wilt strike when you least ex: peel it.
II willlcavt• yo u and your family financially
strapped. CANCER CHECK will be
there when vou need iL
Call nO\'-' to reserve XQYI check .

Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds starl
6:30 1st Thursday
or every month

RESIDENTIAL

19' 1985 Bayliner, 305 VB ,
open bow, blue and white,
runs perlecl, good condition.
740·441 ·0199 evenings.

.i

Pontiac. Buick, Olds

CANCER CHECK

MOTORCl'CLES

1996 Kawasaki 750 Vulcan.
Garage kept, great condi·
lion. 7200 miles. 675-5630,
.675-5664; 606-92:J.6t7 1

VANS&amp;
4-WDs

Chevy.

&amp; Custom Van Dealer·

1992 Harley Davidson
Dyna·Low' 'Rider,
low
mileage, l ~ts of chrome,
Extra tank-lenders &amp; front
tire .
Asking
$12,500 .
(740)949-9027 neg.

$3200.00. (740) 949-2709

i

Pomeroy,

992-2975

1999 Honda 450 4-wheeler,
1995 Plymouth Voyagei' excellent condition. camo
mini·van; am·fm cassette, color, $4 ,000.
740 _44 1_
ac, till, cruise, new tires 8574
Excellent
condition.

4)

Dean Hill
New &amp; Used

SALES &amp; SERVICE

llltween Racine &amp;

$15.00 All packs
you can play

Snapper

GRAVELY TMCTOR

lliiDIIWIId lllll
Stllii1M1124

Pomeroy Eagles 2171

Bucket Truck

(304) 675-5282

Gravely

$7.50 P8r818£8

Other Specials
Available
Starting Sunday, June
22, on all Sundays
and Thursdays until
further notice.

k

We Make House Calls

FlEA MARIO

Tree Service
Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding

Dozer, Ponds .

740·992-2432

JONES'

PC DOCTOR

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
32119 Welshtown f1d.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

BINGO
SPECIAL

1988 Astra Van, Mark Ill,
body excellent, tires good,
V6, 4 sp auto, original miles
110.000. 7 passenger, interi·
or good, runs groat. Asking
$1850. 740-446-4514 day
7-;10·446-3248 after 6pm.

• Weed Eaters

Back hoe and

Members &amp; Guests only

1987 Blazer, V·S, auto, air,
new aluminum rims, new 31~
tires, tinted windows, nice
interior, sharp, runs great,
$3,300, (740)992·7584

Septic Systems,

Bikes

8:00- 12:00

'-r......r...Wns.-&amp;,..1 r

• Snow Blowers

NORTHUP CONSTRUCTION-Home repair, room
additions, garages, rooting ,
siding, carpeting, &amp; remod·
ellng, extensive experience
call 245-9023 or 245·9704

Pole Barns 30~50 by 1Oft.
1ncluded · Plans. sliders,
pa1nted metal , free delivery,
designs better tt1an lumber
Yard kits. 937·718·1471

110M-'

750 East State Street Phone (740)593-6671 .
Athens, Ohio

.~ · ll..fiJ

most insura~ace

• Power Mowers

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance· Painting, viny l
siding, ca rpentry, doors,
windows, baths, mobile
home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chet, 740·
992·6323.

N~W

TFN

-r.&lt;

Tuesday, June 24
6:30pm

Waterprooling.

Kmg S1ze P111ow Top
Mattress set, New still in .
Plastic, Sale $299 , Cell ·
Phone 304·412·8098 or .
304·552· 1424.

992-5479

1-740-992·7007

. . . . . , ._ _ _

Gravely walk-behmd, 4
attachments. $1400, 740·
446·1463.

Jeff Warner Ins.

Fork Rd.

&gt;:&lt; Spring t.&lt;

r'o IMPR~~

Full Size Mattress Set New
in Plastic w1Warr. Sacrifice
S119. Ceil Phone 304-412·
8098 or 304-552-1424

l't~~c'h

PcHIItroy, Ohi(), 45769

inside clearance sales!

j

runs great, $2.000, 740-446· _2_00_2_F
cco-rd-Fcc--25_0_Sccu-p-e-::rCcca-b,
7029.
diesei, 4X4; t996 F-250 2
1994 Corvette Coupe. white, wheel drive; 2002 Camper
red leather intenor. loaded. Terry 5th wheel. 740·388·
9082 or 740·64~145 .
$11,000. 740-682·7512

Celrular

of c•muu/l~l(e

•quipmrnl

Remodeling

740-992-1611

~·•rltty

dothillk' •nd hunlin«

• Complete

Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio

.ALL••&amp;

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

coNmumoN

Sidewalk Sales at
Full's Hallmark

GUt~
~·

WILSON'

ROBERT
BISSEll

Wednesday, Thursday, Friday

Vfx;nABLES

1999 Lincoln NaVigator
wrrv system, 3rd back seat,
Hydroponic tomatoes, vine S21 ,500, (740)992-2209
ripened, locally grown. taste -:;:~~-:--::-~-,-­
the
diflerence!
Hayes 1999 Lincoln Navigator with
Greenhouse.
Gallipolis: TV system&amp; 3rd back seat.
740·441·9279.
S2t ,500 00 (740) 992·2209

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

Publication

I

ldited by CLAY I . POlLAN
Rotorrongtt

All Display: 12 'Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

.......---

T~~~:t;~l S©RJ)lA-~'£.~~·
Q

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

Someone to cut 25 acres of Will pressure wash homes.
Hay on the Share·s at Rio trailers, decks, metal buildGrande. Call (740)245·5492 ings and gutters. Call
(7 40)446·0151 ask for Ron
Wanted person or couple to or lea~e message.
M.5.i.S.1 w/daily routine on
I I\ \ \( I \I
modern dairy farm. lndudin'g
Thl• n.wepaper will not
knowingly accept
milking, feeding young stock ~i:li!or--~
advertisements for real
&amp; crops. Tractor experience
Bl.JSINESS
necessary. Housing &amp; utili0P1utrruNrrY ·
e~late which 11 in
ties possible Wlhourty wage.
violation ol the law. Our
Respond with resume &amp; 3
INOTICE!
readers are hereby
informed lhal all
reterenees in let1er form 10'
dwellings advertised in
JA24, 200 Main Street, pt . OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
this newspaper ere
Pl . wv 26550
available on an equal
~~1'!:20~~~~---~ you do business with people
you know, and· NOT to send
opportunity bases.
SrruATIONS
.
money through the mail until ~:::::::::::~~==~
WANTDl "
" - - - - - - - - " you have investigated the Forclosure 4br, 4ba, $9,900.
ror listing ca:u. 800-719-3001
Babysitting in my home any·
Ex. F144
time. very dependable witn
low reasonable rates. 740·
New He:me 1/2 mile out
446-2052 ask for Candy.
Sandhill Rd. Appro.11 . 2000
TURNED DOWN ON
sq . ft. Lot size 73x 141 . 3br,
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? 2ba, Living Room, Dining
No Fee Unless We Win!
Room, Family Room, 2 car
t -888-582·3345
garage. Will consider trade
Gallipolis Career College
1: I \I I ..., I \II
for Acreage. (304)674·4677
(Careers Close To Home)

..
--::----::--::--::--::--::1100
Help wanted caring lor the

YARIJ SALE·
G.~LUPOUS

r''"

r

1998 red Mustang Coupe, v.
6, auto, aluminum wneets,
rear spoiler. PW &amp; PL. jnteri·
or &amp; ederior e11.cel1ent condition , · asking
· $6500,
(740)247-Bt02
'

=-=----

Display Ads

~'!~day_In-Column:

Overbrook Nursing ana
RehabilatiOn Center current·
ly has openings lor full and
parHime LPN 's. 12 hour
sh1fts and excellent benefits
available to both lull and
part·time employees. Stop in
and fill out and application at
333
Page . Street,
Middleport, Oh or call 740·
992·6472 and speak to
Gassy
Lee,
Staff
Devetopment Coordinator.

1141

I

i

~egtster

Word Ads

1.11'o_Hw&gt;_wAA'
_ ffill_.II'M

A.bsolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver,
Gold Coins,
Prootsets. Diamonds. Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency,·
M.T.S. Coin Shop, J51
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
740-446·2842.
I \11'111\ \II \ I
I
" 11&lt;\ltl "

" A STARSEARCH"
Singers Bands &amp; Vocal
Groups. All Styles &amp; Ages.
Nashville Record Exect.
Seeking New Talent,
Coming to
Huntington/Charleston.
731·424·2229 or. 731·424~
2141

1996 Mercury Mystique·Sl·
V-6 • loaded-clean 106.000
Block. bnck. sewer pipes, miles $2900.00 OBO (740)
wmdows, lintels, etc. Claude 985-4418
W1nters. Rio Grande, OH -:;:;::-::;-:-;:--~-,-­
Call 740·245·5121 .
1998 Olds Bravado, black,
sunroof, loaded, $9,200;
PE·1s
I 99~ Cadillac Catera. power
F'OR SALE '
everything, Bose stereo,
-nice car, sacralice $8,500;
3 male black/tan AKC 1992 Dodge 350 extended
German Shepherd pups. cab, d1es~1. 5 speed, alum
Call only after 5 pm . (740) bed , high miles, runs strong
992·3972
$6,500. 740-643·2285.

i

• Start Your Ads With 11 Keyword 1 Include Complete
Detcrlptlon • Include A Price • A'llold Abbreviations
• I~clude Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

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

ANNouNCEMFNTS

Sui,, .IES

'

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

r

8UIWING

AKC
Golden
Retne'ller
wlpedigree; 10 months,
male,
$300 .00
OBO.
Possible trade for gun or
iewal•y. (740) 992· 7301

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at. 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailytri bune.com
classified@ mydailyGentinel.com

Offtee llowe-.f1

\\\01 \t I \II \I -.,

1

199&amp; Ford Windster, loaded ,
105,000 miles, $4200: 1996
Aerostar, 105,000 miles
S4000; 1996
Cavalier,
145.090 miles, $2500. 740·
245-9020.

RiHT\\:t\

( 'aflin Syracuse
( FfmntrJy .Whlrnty's)
Under new ownership

and new manigement.
COME JOIN US

7 ·

Weeki

NOWGpoo

7 ...

awllt.yllgnt
to d1rkt
Ro1d · ,C.Rd 30 • R1clne, OH

«II on S«le
Morning

Stir

1-740-949-2115

"The Little rcstaun.nt
with the hiJIUte"

Pd 1 me

..

.

,

•

�•

Page B 6 • .~he !&gt;ally Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tuesday, June 24, 2003

Graduation gift cannot mend
rift between daughter and dad
DEAR ABBY: I recently
graduated from colle~e and
received "congrats'
an'd
small gifts from well-wishers, a ll of which I responded
to with written thank-~ou
notes - with one exception:
my father. He still auempts to
carrv on a father/daughter
relaiionship, regardless of
my feelings. Even though I
made a decision years ago to
cut off all contact with him,
he sent me a graduation card
with a large check enclosed.
Abby,
throughout
my
ch ildhood and teens, my
father emotionally and physica lly abused my mother.
After their divorce, he
attempted to do the same to
me. That's when I stopped
communicating with him.
. Mom thinks I should keep
the money. I could really use
it, but I honestly don't think
it's rig ht to keep it without
sending a note of thanks. It's
the last thing I want to do.
Please give me your opinion.
No name or location - sign
me ... GRAD TORN OVER
DAD
DEAR GRAD: Return the
money. Your father is trying
to buy his way back into your
life. If you allow it, the price
YOU will pay for maintaining a relationship with . your
abusive father · won't be
worth any 'amount of money.

Abby, AM I nuts? - MR.
CLEAN IN OHIO
·
DEAR MR. CLEj\N: No.
you are -not "nuts." (And no
one should call you that.)
You ARE obsessive-compulsive. It's a condition that can
be treated with a combination
of medications and counsel·
ing. Please avail yourself of
ADVICE
bOth. It will be money well
spent. Trust me .
DEAR ABBY: I am not
DEAR ABBY: I am a 52- writing for advice or airing a
year-old man ending my third complaint. I'd like to share
marriage, and I'm beginning an act of kindness.
On Mother's Day, my husto wonder if my three exwives could be right - the band and I went to an upscale
consensus is I'm "nuts."
restaurant for dinner. We
Am I " nuts" for cleaning were also celebrating my
the house after my wi(e said husband's 86th birthday. We
she just cleaned it? Am I had almost finished our meal
"nuts" for ironing a shirt she when our food server
already ironed? After we· d informed us that a $entle!Jlan,
go to bed, I'd get up in the who had come 10 with a
middle of the night to rewash group and passed our table ,
the dinner dishes a 0 d sweep had asked that our check be
the kitchen floor. I could go given to him.
on and on.
We were surprised because
I finally took the adviCe of we did not ~now this man.
wife No. 3 and went to my u After we fimshed, my husdoctor. He listened for a cou- band and I went to hts table
pie of minutes, prescribed and thanked him. He told us
two meds, and sent me away that we reminded him of his
with "Have a nice day." grandparents and seemg us
The~ I went to a licensed had " made his day." .
therapist, and in five minutes
So, you see, Abby -there
was told this could take years ARE good and thoughtful
of counseling. Well , we all people who perform good
know what that means - ka- deeds, but we seldom hear
ching, ka-chi ng! Tell me, about' them . I hope if this

Dear
Abby

appears in your column, that
dear man will see it and
know how very much my
hu·sband and I appreciated his
kindness. - VIRGINIA IN
SACRAMENTO
DEAR
VIRGINIA:
You're right. Good deeds are
seldom publicized. That gentleman must have loved his
grandparents very much.
P.S. Your letter made MY
day.

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Paulfne Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles.,.CA
90069.

ACROSS

42 Mach 1
breakers
44 Workout
1 Itch
4 Pats on
centers
47 Tangle
8 Unit of
resistance 49 Agree
51. Quote
11 Fruit
54 Verdi
cooter
12 Sultan's
heroine
56 Yucky stuff
cousin
57 Famous
13 Dtclare
last word
'14 Twice XXVI
58 Melodrama
15 Carbon
59 Charged
deposit
atom
16 Taxis
60 Med.
17 Rich
staffer
pastry
19 Do a math 61 House
shaders
problem
62 James
21 Russian
Bond's Job
emperor
22 Gross
DOWN
25 Kaep
29 Sombrero
1 Ivy League
31 Comic
school
swamp
2 Decree
critter
3 Simon and
34 P11ul
Diamond
Newman ·
4 Want
role
5 Romance,
35 Stare
to Pedro
stupidly
36 Ex-building? 6 LHa story
37 Lyric poem 7 Tijuana Ms.
38 Cato's year 8 Zoologist's
eggs .
39 Web-surfer's
9 The lady
suftlx
Newlywed
40

title
stickup I" ·
13 Heavy
41 Tries
metal band 43 Fed. agents
(hyph.)
18 Statasman
45 Protection
- Burr
20 Racket
· 46 Eavesdrop
23 Genghls - 48 Make a
24 Open wide
video
26 Thunder
49 Bede or Ant
god
50 Theater
27 Autobahn
1rophy
vehicle
51 Lo, 28 Caesar's
52 Mischief·
worst day
maker
30 Boxer's stat 53 Sawbuck
31 Goff teacher 55 Feverish
32 Not theirs
33 Temporary
jobs
35 Big breaths
40 "This - -

.,......;.....,.......,._

The
newspaper is
a valuable
learning tool for
students of
all ages.

It
connects
the
principles and
facts they learn in the
classroom with stories and
events that are
hap)ll:ning here and around

A-strograpb
Tuesday, June 24, 2003

SlOnS.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ·
-This is a day that much can
BY BERNICE BIDE OSOl
be accomplished and promotSuccessful past efforts
ed, so it behooves you to
along with present ones will
begin to pay off in the year
.focus all your energy on proahead. You could receive both · ductive involvements that
have the potential to be great.
· a promotion and a raise in status that will spill over into
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
your social world as well.
22) - You need the type of
CANCER (June 21-July
activity today that challenges
you both mentally and physi22) - Any time we arc willing to share the harves1 we
cally. You'll feel at your best
when you can use your mind
can expect a lot of help from
others. A personal interest of · and your muscles collectively.
.SAGITIARIUS ' (Nov. 23yours can be successfull~ promoted today by using th1s tac- . Dec. 2J) - Although you're
tic.
an innovator yourself, today
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)your greatest rewards mi~ht
By adopting the idea .that it
come through a situation inniisn't important who gets lhe
ated by another. Jump on
credit, only that something
board and be a contri butor'to
the project.
imponant gets accomplished,
the results you're hoping for
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 will be realized today.
Jan . 19) - Give your pen,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
telephone or computer a
- Before you make up your
workout today to catch up on
mind on something you're ·
all correspondence. Once
working on, I isten to all sugthat's out of the way. you'll be
gestions and ideas voiced by
free to move on to more
associates today. There could
imponant issues ·without disbe a gem among the submisruption.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Extra 'rewards are in
the offing today for diligent
effort applied to either your
own operations or those of
someone else. All that's
required is motivation and
method.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20)- Good for you for being
a bit more assertive and direct
today in dealing with others.
You'll gain both acceptance
and respect for being emphatic without being pushy.
ARIES (March :,1 !-April
19). - Optimism is your
greatest as·set today. so hold
on to the thought that everything will come out well in

the long run . It can help you
surmount all obstacles either
real or imagined.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - When you put your
mind to it, you are extremely
effective in dealing with people,
be it on a group basts or
'
wtth a one-on-one contact.
Today you'll display this talent in spades.
GEMINJ'(May 21-June 20)
- Should bold measures be
required to fulfill a material
ambilion today that you've
been nurturing for some time,
use them. Others won't hold
back. why should you?

.

•...ll_

-·..1L
• 108

31d DOWN

• 44
"

JUDO'S TOTN...

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim·

by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL - TIME UMIT: 20 MIN - DIRECTIONS: MU;t a 2· to 7-letlel WOfd frOm !hi liners on Hen vanlinl.
Add pointS to eac:tl word or letttr USing SCOI'ng dirtctiona al right. SrNHener

.....

mag~·

wordl gera 90-poinl bonus. AI words e.n be bnf In w.bsW'I New Wor1d
, _ Dicllono&gt;y.
JUDD'S SOI.llllON TDIIORROW

322

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AVERAGE GAME 210-220

(OJLO ~T U!' 10
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WOIM~ Uli()!£ U\~~
LO&gt;IO&gt; ·'Tt~/11 RtiJI!l!ill!&gt;I11P
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CABLE

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LIKE &gt;10

C()III!IUCIAL
(li(EAK&lt;;,

I
WE S~OULD PUT LIPSTICK ON, AND
LEAVE NICE RED KISS PRINTS AT
T~E BOTTOM OF T~E LETTER ...

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