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                  <text>Page B 6 • The o.l_ly Sentinel

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
that is not his. It's unfair to
the child - and lets the biological father off the hook.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 19year-old girl and have a problem with my parents . When I
was younger. I could talk to
them about anything and
everything . They respected
my decisions and supported
me whenever they ,could until I reached junior high.
At that time. I noticed that I
liked girls more than , boys.
When I told my mom and
dad, they dismissed it and
said it was just a phase. It
wasn' t.

I secretly dated one girl in
ninth grade to fmd out if
that's where my feelings were
headed. Then I "came out" to
my friends. They were cool
about it and supported me
100 percent. I didn' t have the
guts to tell my folks until I
was in the I Oth grade.
They exploded. Mom cried

for hours; Dad kicked me out
fo r a week. My parents have
had' no trust whatsoever in me
ever since. We don't talk like
we used to - and whenever
the subject of my sexual orientation comes up, my parents call me a slut, among
other things. I' ve moved out
three times, but I always go
bac k because I don' t have
enough money to make it on
my own.
r m now dating a wonderful
young woman and it' s getting
serious. I don't dare tell my
parents because r m afraid of
their reaction . Please help,
Abby. I need your advice . DESPERATELY SEEKING LOVE AND ACCEPTANCE IN KANSAS
DEAR DESPERATE: I
am sorry you are not gelling
the support you need from
your famil y. They need to
understand that sexual orientation is not a choice. Parents
and Friends of Lesbians and
Gays (P· FLAG) could offer
them some much -needed
insight and support . They can
call the organization at (202)
467-8180; write to 1726 M
St.
NW,
Suite
400,
Washington, D.C. 20036; or
go online to the Web site at
www.pflag.org.
I have a different resource
for YOU. Please contact The

- , Benefots :ire possible to
attain today in situations
where you might share a vestBY BERNICE BEIIIE 0soL
ed
interest with another. If
Your overall prospect~ look
each is willing to do his or her
bright for the year ahead
share. you could end up with
because you will operate in
something to smile about.
area~ in which you are familSCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov.
iar. This will give you ample
22)- You have the tolerance
opportunity to build upon the
foundations you have already
and pa!ience to get along well
with everybody today. regardestablisi1ed.
less of how social they may
CANCER (June 21-July
be. Your positive attitude
22) - Provided you take
helps create a pleasant envipractical measures today
ronment for all .
when attempting to make
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23your dreams a reality, wishful
Dec. 21 ) - Keep your mind
rhinkin2 doe~n't have to be a
on the work at hand today and
no-no. In fact, it can be a good
not on what's in it for you, If
motivator.
you produce to the best of
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) your abilities, things will take'
An important objective is
care of themselves and your
achievable today if your
paycheck will retlect it.
methods are methodical and
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22consistent. It benefits you to
be steadfast. patient and take , Jan. 19) -A social situation
in which you're involved can
things one step at a time.
be restructured today for
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
greater compatibility and con- DOn't ignore the ideas you
gel today. because you're in a
geniality. Take the time to do
good creative cycle and what
your pan to reorganize things
you conceive may be feasible.
properly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb..
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
A~~ ",
rll

19) - Domestic matters that
are important to you should
be given the attention they
need today. Don't move onto
other things until you are satisfied that all is running
smoothly.
PISCES (feb. cO-March
20) - You enjoy soli.tude
from time to time. but today
restrictive condition s could
make you feel uneasy. Plan
your schedule so that it allows
you ample room for intenningling with others.
ARIES (March 21 -April
19) - Get things ~tabilized
today. because you might not
be afforded the opportunity to ,

40 Cartoon

shriek
41 Alflrmatln
42 Pub order
43 Webaddr.
44 Motel
of old
46 Insult,
slangily
off
48 Relented
17 Fiesta
(2 wds.j
ahout
51 Gaudier
18 Perched
55 49th stele
19 TV
Archimeaccessory 5!Y des'
21 Diner
coffee
shout
23 Cotton gin 57 Attacked
by Fido
name
'
5
8
'Shopping
26 Tiny
legume
27 Pallid
DOWN
28 Sneak
In uninvited
3o Circle part 1 Twitch
31 Response
2 Lennon's
on deck
Yoko32 Houston
3 Flop
pi-er
4 Enthusiasm
5 Bellow
33 p;,;-nY
pincher
&amp; Bronco
35 Writing
1 Kind of rug
fluid
8 Female
37 Chinese
relatives
dynasty
9 As well
33 Globe
10 Plumbing
substitute
bend
r.--r.--,-:--r.--r.c6 Expedlt.
12 Habituated
14 Bright·
coloml
bird
15 Pamper
16 Auctioned

to ~w.Th:TrevOO'rojecl.cl

11 Rorem
or Beatty
13 Platter

KoflCom·
mandeer
spinner
45 Victory
19 Truth
goddess
20 Evil laugh
47 Debtors'
22 Politician
letters
Tip48 Chatter
24 Froth
25 Mideast .. 49 "Aladdin"
prince
nation
26 Storybook 50 Tank
52 German
bear
• title start
27 Crusades
28 Sweet treat 53 Be very
frugal
29 Goose's
54 Actress
call
.,.... Dawn
34 Least
Chong
Involved
36 Pine
product
43

..
50 CENTS • Vol . 53 , No. 206
.

Sports
• Reds lose to Cards.
See Page 81
• Jirsa hires two assistants. See Page 81
•Herd's Rader nominated for Mackey award .
SeePage 81

do so tomorrow. This is espe·
cially true in financial areas
where the situation might be a
bit shaky.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - You shouldn't wait on
others today to get your teeth
into matters that require your
attention. Do what needs
doing and let your associates
play catch up if need be.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- Although you usually like
to interact with others. today
you'll be far more productive ,
in an environment that is free
from outside interference.
Take the phone off the hook if
need be.

Obituaries

'C'l'lllQ3........, ,.-~. ~

·....lL
·..!ll_·
Jrd OOIMI

·..lL

-

= 140
JUDO'S TOTAL .

}Norris w·ins first
round of lawsuit
BY J. MILES lAYTON
Stall writer

April 22. Norris illegally sold..,Charles Knight, was not pre126 shares of the bank's stock sent because the bank was
with an approx'imate . book worried that if Norris knew of
the proceedings against him,
value of $1 ,000 per share.
To insure that Norris did not the money could disappear.
hide or lose any of the assets Sheets said this was one of
which Home National claimed the few types of cases where
as damages as part of the civil due process rights, which ordisuit, it asked the Meigs County narily require both sides in a
Common Pleas Court to order court case to be present for a
Norris to put up a $126,000 hearing, to be temporarily SUS·
bond by June 2 which would pended. She . compared it to
guarantee 1ts property would ,, mrular cases m wh1ch a defenbe safe. The plaintiff's side dant could pose potential harm
was the only one preSf!nl at to the plaintiff or be a flight
this hearing.
risk
Judge Fred L. Crow Ill
Norris refused to pay the
granted the order of attach- ,bond and hi s attorney chalment which ordered Norris to lenged the order of attachment
post the $126,000 bond.
Sheets said Norris's attorney,
Please see Norris, AS

Beat the heat

Page AS
• Gladys Walker, 86
• Lucille Werner, 93

AVERAGE GAME 205-215

Atl:! points to tac11 word or ~ener \iSing scomg ch&lt;:lions a1 J9'll s.v.r.-&amp;ettar
word5 'ill'! a 60-powll bl:n.l$. AI words cao be IW'V:I in Webster's NII'N WOftd

mage ,

C&lt;&gt;Aeoo ""'""'"

" 332

Weather

JUOO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

Sunny, HI: SO., Low:

&amp;qs .

TELL 'M1 W\.1/iJ ...

'Wo 6ETS 1'"2'&lt;---,"·

;::3 1\1~ LA'5T

:;o. C\\\C\&lt;.E\-.1

~

-"'

'!-111'16 ::&gt;

=
lol

::c

Trying to beat the summer heat at the Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy, Joseph
Rowers is half-way through ttie latest J.K. Howling novel "The Order of the Phoenix." The
book. which was released Saturday, is about how the young wizard Harry Potter tries to
match wits against the evil forces of He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named otherwise known as the
great and powerful Lord Voldemort. (J. Miles Layton)

E-

~ou

01011'1
RUN
FRO II\

Tilt

ROO"'
SctltAI!I·

Maate Bartor

IN&amp;.

Rutland Elementary

Southern forced to make staffing cuts
J. MtLES lAYTON
Staff writer
Bv

Index
2 Sections - II PIIIH

LOOK , I GOT A LETTER FROM
MMCIE AND PATTI'.. T~E'f'RE
AT CAMP, AND T~E'I' 5A'I'
THE\' MISS ME ...

.,

&lt;;alenda rs
.Giassifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
'
Editorials
Fath• Values
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather '

I-lOW A60lJT 1-lALt= A
BOX OF COOKIES?

,",•lriOt."T ~ ll ..

',

POMEROY Village
police officers, state troopers
and deputies from Athens
County have all pitched in to
assist Sherifl Ralph Trussell in
his one-man operation since
deputies were faid off earlier
this month.
Since laying off his entire
staff of deputies due to a
depleted payroll fund, Trussell
has been working "solo."
answering calls for assistance,
transporting prisoners and
responding to accident calls
-24 hrusaday.
AamlingtoTn=ll.~

Syrrure, Rlrine am Rutlard [Xlice

ofticers have responded to a
number of calls for assistance.

A3
84-6
87
87
A6
A7
A5
A5
Bl-4

,A2

c 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

J.

REED

Staff writer

FOURPlAYTOTAL =
TIME UMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to 7-lett.er woK! from fht ltntrs on eact'o yard~Kle .

Scrim-

REED

Staff writer

BY BRIAN

by JUDD HAMBRICK

Word

J.

May indirectly
benefit local
government

• Coo::ealed weapons bill
CXlUid be dead, See Page A2
• Family Medicine, See
PageA3
,
• Safety when dealing with
electricity, See Page A4
• Places to go, Things to
do, See page AS

0
0

BY BRIAN

"[ want to publicly thank
these officers for providing
assistance on some serious
cal ls," Trussell said.
Trussell said that, due 10 ,
jurisdi ction restrictions, the
departments cannot handle
calls for him. and can only ·
respond to assist at Trussell's
request.
Trussell 's oftice is open
from 8 a.m. until noon ,
Monday through Friday, to
take incident reports. An
answering machine is available during hours when the
office in not staffed.
"For emergency requiring
an immediate response. pea-,
pie should call my cell phone,
at 591-8830, and I will prioritize calls and respond as soon
as possible."

..v

Inside
~dOOWN

Sheriff relying
on police for aid

Sales tax hike
in effect July 1

•.

••OOWN

Answer
to
previou

www.mydailysentinel.com

THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 2003

POMEROY
Gary
Norris, the former Home
National Bank vice president
who is being sued by the bank
on nine counts of illegal activity, won the first round in the
early battles of his civil lawsuit.
In early June,, Home
National Bank filed a complaint that said Norris, along
with other as-yet-named individual s, allegedly detrauded
the bank of funds in excess of
$25,000 in each of nine separate counts of illegal activ1ty.
The bank also clauns that on

~=+--+--+--+-+-

1\'0RJ) SCRIMMAGE- SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK

AVERAGE GAME 210.220

42 U.N.'s

====-==-=--=-:

____,1 -

Midwest tornado
damages church~ A7

Escaping heat wave, A4

Dear Abbv is written bv
Abigail Va;1 Brm•n, also 1=-'-+-:-+-t--- t /awwr~ as Jeanne Phillips, 1 ,.,.~-+-!--+-+-,..,..
and was founded by her "
mother. Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear
Abbv
at
www.BearAbbv.com or P.O.
Box 69440, LOs Angeles, CA
90069.

----:-A_s_tr_o.:::::..gr_a-=-p_h_ _ _----:-_

June 25, 2003

or Bruce

1 Now

Trevor Project. It's a 1 4-hour
toll-free hotline that promotes
tolerance and provides support to gay. lesbian. bi sexual
and transgendered youth.
The Trevor Helpline crisis
line is the onl y 24-hour. 365day to ll-free line solely dedicated to counseling gay and
q uestioning youth . Trained
counselors are always there to
help. and they we lcome calls
from any teen who is having
problems relating tn hi s or her,
sexual orientation - whether
the person is struggling with
self-doubt, peer pressure,
lack of acceptance, rejection
by family members and/or
friends - or having thoughts
of suicide.
' Call (8(:6) 48S-7386 OC go rnlire

IL .....:.___ _ _
Wedn~day,

39 Spike

ACROSS

Teen should beware giving
girlfriend's baby his name
DEAR ABBY: My ISyear-old son, "Jeff,'' has a 17yearold
g irlfri ~ nd,
"Connie," 'who is pregnantbut not with his child. Jeff has
decided he will sign the birth
certiticate to give the baby
&lt;'ur last name. (The real
father wants nothing to do
with Connie or the baby.)
I have no say in this matter.
Her parents know all about
the pregnancy but don't see it
as a problem. In. fact, they
have decided not to tell other
family members that my son
isn "t the father.
When I try to warn Jeff
about what he's getting into,
he cuts me off and says, "It' ll
all be OK, Mom." Abby, my
sori is making a lifetime
fi nancial commitment and
can't begin to appreciate the
whole picture. He assumes
that Connie 's folks will ..take
care of everything."
I am at my wit's end. Any
advice you can offer would
be deeply appreciated. FRANTIC IN IDAHO
DEAR FRANTIC: Take
your son to an attorney immediately. Let the lawyer
explain what Jeff's obligations will be if he abets this
deeeption. Your son appears
to be idealistic and romantic.
However. he should not
declare paternity for a child

Wednesday, June 25, 2003 _

RACINE - The Fmance
Aanning ~ Coounissioo
that is overseeing the financial
recovery of the Southern
School District flexed its muscles this week when it unanimously voted to e~minate a
full-time position in the treasurer's office, which officials say
will save the district approximately $21 ,000.
· Treasurer Pam Carter, who
was the assistant treasurer but
replaced Dennie Hill when he
retired as treasurer in June, said
the position, titled assistant to
the treasurer, was created two

t

years ago to give the treasurer
more time to work with the
superintendent to prepare a
financial recovery plan for the
district which has an $875,000
debt. The treasurer would also
have more time to work with
the state's accountants who are
constantly monitoring ihe district's.financial activity.
, The treasurer's office handles
a budget of more than $8 million with at least 130 employees
on the payroll. Debbie Michael
is currently employed in this
position and will be promoted
10 Carter's former full-time
position as assistant treasurer
later this year.
Superintendent Bob Grueser

made an impassioned plea to
the board to consider how
important the position is to the
school district. While this posi'
tion has many duties which
directly benefit the school district. the person in this position '
is mainly responsible for completing the employee's payroll
each pay period. Similar sized
school districts, like Eastern
Local or Trimble Local, have a
treasurer and two full-time
assistants working for the district.
Trying to work within a tight
budget, Grueser proposed making the job a pm1-time position
Please see Southem, AS

POMEROY - Meigs
County Auditor Nancy Parker
Campbell said Wednesday
local government may benefit
from an increase in the state
sales ,tax, but local vendors
will receive no assistance in
making the conversion.
The state is urging local
retailers to begin re-programming cash registers and computer systems in order to comply with the state's new sixpercent tax rate that becomes
effective July I. The new rate
was approved last week as a
part of the state's new budget
bill.
~'The state, however, will
not pay to updale these systems," Campbell said.
Meigs County shoppers
will now pay a total of seven
percent in sales tax, when the
county's one percent tax is
added 10 the state's new sixpercent rate.

'

Campbell said none of the
proceeds' from the tax hike
will directly benefit local government, but may indirectly
, provide relief in the form of
local government revenue,
which has been frozen as a
part of the state's cost-cutting
campaign.
"I think some of the proceeds of the state sales taX
increase will come to local
government in the form of
local government assistance
revenue, which has . been
frozen and which the state has
considered cutting further,"
Campbell said.
The additional sales tax is
expected to raise $1.21 billion ·
in the next fiscal year, and
$ 1.3 billion in Fiscal Year
2005.
.
The tax will now apply to
services which were previously tax-exempt. including storage facility rental, personal
care. such as manicures, tan·
ning and tanooing, satellite
broadcasting. dry cleaning
and laundry, deliver charges
in connection with the sale of
personal property, and taxi
and limousine services.

'

Making repairs

Due to the recent break in the·weather, street workeiS have been
filling potholes all over Pomeroy like these on Spring Avenue.
Lincoln Heights, a longtime nom~n·s land of crater deep pot. holes. was filled ea~y Tuesday morning. (J . Miles layton)

Free Stroke Risk Assessment
at HMC's 19th Annual Community Health and Wei/ness Fair

FINE• I 1701fT NEEP '-'OU! ...
I CAN HAVE FUN A~~
M"'!'&gt;f:~f!

e...

'

I
•

----· .

-- . ----- ·- .. - -'. ,.----

~.

--

.. ..

-

Review of Medical History of Self and Family
·The following tests :
• Cholesterol
• Blood Pressure
• Pulse Rate
• Body Fat Analysis
Personalized Action Plan Based on Results
Free Stroke Information

Saturday, June 28 • 10 AM - 2 PM
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
The Stroke Risk Assessment
and Health Fair is free
and open to the public.
For more information, call
446-5597.

•

�•
Oh10

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

------~~--------------~--------~~~~------------------------~~-----·

Concealed weapons bill could be de~d

Ohio weather
Friday, June 27

BY JoHN McCARTHY
Associated Press
MICH.

~

I Monotlold I58°/75° I •

i

IND.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Negotiations on a bill that
would allow Ohioans to carry_
h;dden_ . ~ un.s . brok~ on
Wednesda) , leavmg ;ts chances ·
of passage remote betore law·makers break tor the summer
on Thu~day.
.
. _The btll would requrre sher;lis .to tssue permtts to those
who pass a background check
and safety course and pay a $45
fee.
The House wants to allow
people charged with carrying
weapons without a permit in
cars to try to convince a judge
that the weapon was necessary
for a job or personal safety.

!

, ...... ,........... T "'"'''
• : Columbus 61 °/80°

I

1

SUnnv Pt. Cloudy , Cloudy

Sllawers

T·!torms

Rain

F!t.irnes

Snow

Chance of sh9wers tonight
Today... Mostly · sunny. A cerit.
slight chance of showers and
Friday night...Mostly clear.
thunderstorms late in the after- Lows 54 to 58.
noon. Highs in the upper 80s.
Saturday... Mostly
sunny.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph. Highs in the lower 80s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Saturday
night...Mostly
Tonight... Showers and thun- clear. Lows near 60.
derstorms likely... Mainly from
Sunday...Partly
cloudy.
late evening on. Lows in the· Highs 80 to 85.
mid 60s. Southwest winds I0
Monday...Partly cloudy. A
mph becoming northwest. chance of showers and thunChance of rain 60 percent.
derstorms in the afternoon and
Friday... A slight chance of evening. Lows in the lower 60s
showers and thunderstorms and highs 80 to 85.
until rnid-moming ...Otherwise
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A
partly cloudy. Highs in the chance of showers and thunupper 70s. West winds 5 to 10 derstorms until midnight. Lows
mph. Chance of rain 20 per- · 60 to 65 and highs 80 to 85.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10,000

Dow
Jones

r---

- - - 8 ,000

¢. ~

9,011 .53

MAR

H""

P&lt;:l.ci1ango

"""'pr&amp;Yious:

·1.08

MAY

APR

9,161 .74

I.Dw
9,000.66
'

JUN

7 000
•

MAR

1,629.97

MAY

JUN

Roeord high: 5,048 .62
March 10, 2000

, .1;00.26

June 25, 2003

1,050

Standard&amp;

95()/

...

Poor's 500
975 .32

::;:;,=..

.0.83

MAR

APR

~

LAw
974.66

991 .64

MAY

JUN

750

Record high: 1,527 . 48
March 24 , 2000

Local Stocks
"

Astlel"dlnc.- 3).97
.Q'&amp;T -18.16
Blrok One- 37.C8
El.J- 14.94
Bob e....... -28.00
BorgWamer -63.92
Clalpal-3.13
0... I I i IQ Shops- 4.61
City lilk*1g - 28.91

Col-24.75
DG- 18.62

[)JAn- 41 .86
-~- .35

USB-24.66
Cllmelt - 76.13
Geraal Eledri:- :!927
GI&lt;NLY-5.00

liat1ei Dal.idson -

40.20

Kroger- 16.52
lii - 1525

- - 9.43
Rod&lt;well- 23.64
Aod&lt;y BocAs- 9.11

AD Shel- 47.60
Seers-3324
~-54.19

V'let'O{s- 28.95

Wodigur 13.79
Dati SIOdc il!pOf1S lV8 the 4
p.m. ciJsi1g cplfe6 rA the

NSC- 18.98
Qi&lt; Iii F'nao;:iai- 25.45
CM!-23.00
, prellious dlry's ~
BBT -34.22 ·
prcMjed by Srrilh l'lmers
Pl!oples- 26.22
,. -Inc. d r..alipois

-43.56

The ·Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Conecllon Polley
Published
every
afternoon ,
Our main eoncem in all stories is to be Monday lhmugh Friday, 11 1 Coun
accura1e. tf you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy. Ohio. Periodical
story, call lhe newsroom a1 (740) 992- postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and the
Ohio
Newspaper

Association.

· Our 111111n number Ia
(740) 992·2158.
Department extenalona ere:

News
EdHor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext

t2

Reporbor: Brian Reed. Ext 14
Reporter: J. Miles Uy1Clrl ,' Ext 13

-=

Advertising

~
Dave Hams, E&gt;~ . t5
Clau./Cin:.: Judy Clat1c. Ext. 10

Circulation
Dlllrtct lrlgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeftich. Ext. 12

-

WwW.mydailysentinel .com

lDLEOO (AP) _ Names of
six of the eight bodies found
decomposing at a funeral home
have been released, but identifying the last two may take
months, the county coroner
said Wednesday.
Relatives of those identified
said they were shocked and
angered.
"1' ve 1ost my Wire,
·' my mot h·
er, aunts and best friends, but
I've never been hurt like this,"
said Cleveland Richardson,
whose son died last October.
The bodies that have been
identified were found Friday in
a back room a1 the Sherrill,
Harden Funeral Home . . 1\vo
other bodies were .found in a
garage. Some had been gnawed
·by rodents.
The Lucas County coroner,
Dr. James Patrick, said it could
be months before the bodies
found in the garage were identitied and that his office has litUe information to work with.
Another local funeral· home,

CASEY LAUGHMAN
Associated Press

AP

AEP-29.84
Altt1 Coel- 22.59
Akzo-27.19
AmTechSBC- 25.81

BY SEEWER
Associated Press

Boy died
due to
inadequate
insulation,
·grouftding

, ,200

APR
I.Dw

~

1'&lt;:1. d1ango

"""'pr&amp;Yious: .0.18

White said he was hopeful
that discussions among all the
part ies wo~ ld continue, but he
had no plans to cal l the Senate
back before September.
Taft 's ·position on allowing
people without permits to carry
guns wi ll not change even if
talks resume. spokesman Orest.
Holubec said.
"(Taft aide) Jon Allison rei terated our rosilion today. We're
for the Senate vers ion: ·
Holubec said.
Aslanides. a Republican
from Coshocton, said he was·
doubtful tl1e tal k&gt; would
resume before lawmaker'
reces&gt;.
"II doesn"t matter what I
thi nk because the govemor is·
driving this bil l." he 'aid.

meanwhile, ha&gt; offered to cremate the bodies at no cost tothe
fmnilies.
While sitting on the steps of
hi s fro nt porch Wednesday,
Richardson, 89. said a friend
recommended Sheniii ~Harden
to handle the funeral and eremation of his son. Dennis. 59.
He died Oct. 19.
"It was nice:' he said of the
funeral . "They had a suit on
him. He looked real nice.''
· He said the $300 he paid and
the $500 his sister paid was
supposed to take care of the
costs.
He said he becrune suspicious when he could not get a
death certificate from the county health department. He
learned from police over the
weekend that his son wa~ one
. of the bodies found.
'This hurt.~ me. I've never
been hurt so bad in my lite,"
Richardson said, shaking his
head and looking downward.
Richardson said his son was
a crack addict who had many
health ptoblerns.
"I'd let him use my car and

he'd take it to the crack houses.
1· lost three cars that way," he
said. "Drugs - that was hi s
lile."
The widow of one of the six.
Denise Jones, said her husband:
Vernon Jones, was supposed to
have been cremated after his
death from an accidental overdose of blood pressure medicalion on Jan . 16.
She said funeral home owner
Henry Harden would ne ver
give her a stmight answer when
she asked about gening her busband's ashes.
·'He kept saying he didn't
nave the a~hes, " she said.
Finally, on June 12. Harden
gave her a porcelain urn that he
said contained her husband's
remains. The !Jm was placed on
the family's dining room table.
"We'd say 'hi' to it," she said.
She still has the urn. Police
have told her to hang on to it
and not open it.
''I'm \illgry because I trusted
this man to do the right thing. I
paid him $1 ,000 out of my
pocket," she said.
.
"Wh~n I gave him that

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COLUMBUS (AP) - A
boy walking along a bridge
was electrocuted because
insulation on a lamp post
wire had not been properly
wrapped with electrical tape,
an
investigator
said
Wednesday.
The pole on the Town
Street Bridge also was inadequate 1y grounded, said
John Loud of Exp&lt;inent Inc.,
an outside expert · hired by
the city.
·
Willie Wagner, 9, tried to
squeeze through the narrow
gap between the post and a
chain-link fence. As he made
contact with both, 480 volts
of electricity - four times
the amount produced by a
household socket - . raced
through him from the lamp
post to the metal fence.
Willie died May 22 as he,
a friend and the friend's
father walked home from the
COS! Columbus science
museum. Loud was hired
after
a city . investigation
.
,,
fa;led to d1scover what
caused the death.
Willie 's mother, Tina
Brown, said she was
relieved to have an answer.
''I' ve been · pacirig the .
floors, staying off the phone,
001 going nowhere." Brown
said. "Just staying close to
the phone so I could find out
what happened to my son.''
Loud said the insulation
on a wire had been breached,
causing the ba-.e of the pole
to become charged. The
well-grounded fence helped
create a charge powerful
enough to kill Willie.
If the pole had been properly grounded. a fuse would
have blown. cutting the
power to the pole.
He said the wire had been
joined in a splice and that the
insujation on the splice hadn't been pmperly wrapped.

- ·-- -· --------...

(

GALLIPOLIS - John T.
Danicki has been named director of education at Gallipolis
Career College. John is a native
of Lorain, Ohio, but has resided
. in Chillicothe for the apst 17
years.
He graduated with an associ·
ate of arts in business from
Lorain County Community
County and received his bache-

Quality Window Systems, Inc.
www.qualitywindowsystems.com

lor of science degree from Ohio
State University.
John has over 20 years experience as a college administrator
and educator. In addition, enjoys
serving in the community and
currently hols the position of
president of the Chillicothe
Rotary Club. He hopes to
become active in the Gallipolis
community in the near future.

John and his wife Bonnia
have five c hildren: sons ,
Chri stopher, Adam and John
and d aughters Angie and
Jackie . They also have a 15- .
month-old granddaughter,
Kri sta. ·
Summer quarters begin s
July I. For information call
446-4367 .

INTERNET SERVICES
AUTOMOTIVE

BlueStarr Network
www.bluestarr.net

Norris Northup Dodge
www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis
www.turnpikeflm.com

Public meetings

Holzer Medical Center
www.holzer.org

Thursday, June 26
SYRACUSE - The 138th
annual meeting of the
Carleton College Board of
Trustees will be hilld at 7:30
p.m. at the Syracuse
Communily Center, formerly
the Syracuse Elementary
School. All members are
urged to attend.

Holzer Clinic
www.holzerclinic.com

Gallipolis Career College
www.gallipoliscareercollege.co{ll

Pleasant Valley Hospital
www.pvalley.org

COMMUNITY

Yokeyes Birthwear
www.yokeyes.com

Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
www.meigscountyohio.com

Clubs and
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NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
www.mydailytribune.com

EMPLOYMENT
lnfoCision Management Corp.
www.infocision.com

GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

WELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS

Precious Memories
www.phCltosonchina.com

Herbalife Independent Distributor
www.herbsndiet.com

Keeping·
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Meigs&amp;
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'

POM EROY
Un de r
spo nsorship
of
loc al
Ameri can Legion p.osts, fi ve
Meigs County teen&gt; atte nded
the 67th Buckeye Boys State
held last week at Bowling
Green State Uni ve rsity.
Go ing from here we re
Matthew A. Salser, son of

Mi chael and Marie Sa lser,
Middleport ; Matthew Lewis,
son of Jeffery and Lisa Davis
of Pomeroy: and Dav id T.
Barnes. son of Lorri Barnes
of Rutl and. sponsored by
Drew Webster Po st .39,
Pomeroy: and Michael Adam
E. Will. son of Michae l and

for only a $1 a day.

Birthdays
Brinker twins
celebrate
POMEROY - Katilyn and
Karington Brinker, children of
Scon and Mindy Brinker, celebrated their first birthdays
recently with a Sesame Street
party theme.
Attending were Vickie
Klaiber and Paul Cmd, Butch
and Penny Brinker. Kent; Kim,
Dusty, Chelsey, and Abby
Eads, Tim, Stafanie, and
Tiffanie Deem, Jack Amanda,
Alexis Stegall, and Sariah
Brinker, Chadie and Shannan

Victoria, and l' aiah Zahran,
St e p~ani e . . Jacob. Josial1.
Joshu a, and Ja, mine Brewer.
Diana and Blake Woods.
Virgil and Pam D il l. Jeremy
Dill and Rachael Rose. Bo
Rachael; and Tamara Willi s,
Doug. Jenn y. Greg. Da11iel.
Dierra, Dru. and
Damesmi
Jenkins. Frank and Donna
Brinker, Rob and
Audi
Harrison, and Donna Bowen.
Sending gifts were Will iam
and Evie Harris. Bill and
Crystal Mmshall. D.J. Lois,
Katllyn and Karlngton
Dylan. and Tattercake Jenkins.
· Brinker
Bob Willis, Charlie. Kell y,
Brewer, Diana Brewer, Mary Ashley, and Whitney Weddle.
Young and Jim Pickens, Jan, and Bobby and Ruth Graham:

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Support groups
Thursday, June 26
POMEROY - Caring and
sharing support group, 1 p.m.
at the Senior Citizens Center.
Dr. Robert Schmoll will speak ·
on macular degeneration.
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FRm PHIRIICY
786 N. 2nd, Middleport

-

-'

....

~ITordabl~!

Grand Prix's

~~f&lt;o

'

Marcella Will of Pomeroy.
and Rya n Stotlart. ' on of
Ri ck and, Me lba Stoburt of
Long Bottom . spon-;oreu by
Fee ney- Be nn ett Po, t 128.
Middleport .
A to ta l ol 1274 hoys
attended the go\'ernmen t
workshop.

Other events

Homecomings/
Reunions

Point Pleasant Register
www.mydailyregister.com

Charter Communications
www.charter.com

POMEROY - Meigs Counly Park. There will be a basket
Churches of Christ Women's dinner.
Fellowship, 7 p.m. at the Zion
Church of Christ. Pomeroy to
have devotions. Take a personal wedding item for display.
Thursday, June 26
SYRACUSE - A free pool
The program will be a Biblical
party will be held from 7 to 9
video.
p.m. at the London Pool in
Syracuse. The party is being
Monday, June 30
sponsored
by the Meigs
MIDDLEPORT - OH-KAN
Coin Club will meet at 7 p.m. County Health Department
at the Trolley House behind Wellness Program and the
the
Dairy
Queen
in Meigs Ciunty Family and
Middleport. The meeting will Children First Council. There
be followed by an auction. The will be free. food , drinks and
door prizes.
public is invited.

Thursday, June 26
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at 6:30
p.m. at the home of Joy
!3entley, Church St., Syracuse.
Sunday, June 29
. TUPPERS PlAINS - VFW
REEDSVILLE ~ Hayman­
9053 will meet at 7:30 p.m. at
the hall in Tuppers Plains. Biram reunion will be held at 1
There will be a special drawing. p.m. at the Forked Run State

The Daily St:ntinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

EN.TERTAINMENT

The school winner' now
ad,•ance to the champion, hip
contest which wi ll be held
immediatel y following'. lhe
I 0:30 a.m. bicentennial parade
on Sept. 6 in Pomeroy.
Trophie&gt;will be awarded to the
~ hool winner,. a' well w, the
county champitms. one from
the ti fth grade and one from the .
sixth grade.

Local students attend Buckeye Boys State

19,950

_
Community Calendar

MEDICAL

BUSINESS TRAINING

of ·Salisbury; Amon Robert'
and
Kevin
Payne
of
Harrisonville; Tyler Cundiff
and Cindy K.auft· of Bradbury;
Vi cki Free man , Cyle Rees,
Cheyenne Dunn Adam Warden
and Wil Crow of Soiuthem
Elementary: 'arid Ashleigh
Duffy, Dylan Hensley, Chelse
Riffl e and Dakota Collins of
Eastern Elementary.

Career center hires new director

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Jim's Farm Equipment
www.jimsfannequipmentcom

'Silent' stones in gallbl~dder
need watching, not treatment

POMEROY
School
champions in the Morgan's
Raid marble shooting tournament have been announced by
Becky Anderson and Bobbie
Karr, co-chairpersons of the
event sponsored by the Pomeroy
Merchant\ Association.
They are Ryan VanMatre and
Brandon Kin g of Pomeroy;
Alaine Arnold and Bobby King

._

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

Marble shooting champions announced .

upper centra l abdomen or
right upper quad rant with
radi ations to the right shoulder
or shoulder blade. Thi s pain
usuall y lasts one to fi ve hours.
However, once symptoms
Martha A. start - a condition your docSimpson
tor refers to as going from
bein g "asymptomatic " to
"sy mptomatic" -. it is fairl y
inev itab le that you will develop such complications as li ver
the six Fs would indicate. It is and/or gallbladder intlamma· k'
For this reason,• symptotru e that f atr-s
mne d people tion.
malic
gall stones are usually
of no rth ern Etl ropean descen t
.
h
·
'd
f
11
treated
with removal of the
have a h1g me; ence o ga ·
stones and that Africa n gallbladder.
Today
th is
A ·
h
surge ry is done with a laparomencans ave a comparalively lo,w rate of thi s disorder. scope a,nd is much less inva-.
On the other hand, both si ve than it used to be .
most likely to develop gall- Hispanic Americans and Healin g times are usuall y
stone s, she Will probably Nauve Americans who tend quick and the incidence of
repc:at one of those mnemomc to have darker skin' color, have surgical probl ems · ~ re low.
devices that doctors are, ~ 0 . a high incidence of gallstones. Since only 50 percent of peo:
fo~d 0 ~, ~n thi s case the SIX Finally, the "fertile" in the ple with gall stones e ver
Fs - fair, fat, femal.~ , llatu- six F's has some validity - at become sy mptomatic, you
lent, .fert~le and forty. Whtl~ least if you're a woman. may never · have a problem
th1s . m mce, neat and lldy, It Re search has shown a link that
needs
treatment.
may not be completely accu· between having had multipl e However, if you ever do
rate. . . .
pregnancies and an increased develop sy'mptoms, you
Whtle II IS true thal gall- risk for developing gallstones. should consult with your farostones are more hkely 1f you The six F s actually leave out
1
are female, obese and over 40, two import ant risk factors. ily physician prompt y.
Famil·y Medtcine® is a
the .olher pomts are probl em- These are a western diet and
atic. For instance, although having a family hi story of •r eekly column. To submit
tlatulence - as well as asso- ~allbladder disease . Al so, it's ql1estions, write to Martha
elated problems of md1ges- mteresting to note that in the A.Simp sort, D.O.. M.B.A ..
tion, upper abdominal bloat- U.S : most gallstones .are made Ohio Unive rsity College of
mg, belchmg, and tatty food of cholesterol , but in Japan a Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
mtolerance- ~an accompany significant number of stones Box 110, Athem, Ohio 45701 .
gallbladder dtsease, many are calcium based. This is Medical information in this
people have gallstones with- probably due to a combination column is provided as an eduout these "gas" problems. of diet and genetics.
carional service onlv. It does
Further, most people who
Most people with gall stones not replace the judgmenr of
complain of gas have prob- never have symptoms, and your personal ph ysic ian ,
lems ranging from anxiety to their "silent stones" are found wh o should be .. relied 0 11
peptic ulcers rather than gall- while doing tests for other to dia gnosis and recommend
stones.
problems. This sounds like treatmem f or any medical
In terms of the skin-color your case. When symptoms conditions. Past columns are
correlation with gallstones, it's appear, the sufferer usually . avi:1ilable online at www.fhra ·
again more complicated than experiences severe pain in the dio.o rg/fm .

$ 1.000. he was so happy."
Jones said of Harden. "He -.tid,.
' You're a blessing in the sky." '
A message ;eeking comment
was left". Wednesday with
Harden. No charges have been
filed.
Families of four of the six
have taken up the offer by
Blanchard Brothers Funeraf
Home to handle the cremations..
The funeml home has not he&lt;rrd
from the other two.
"I found it absolutely
deplomble." said Mark Met-l..
manager of the funeral home
· and president of the Funeral
Directors Associatio n of
Northwest Ohio. " I could not
believe anyone could put somebody through this situation."
Merz said the funeral home
contacted police and the cora-·
ner's office to ofter its services.
which will cost about $1,000
per body.
He said the lxxlies probably
will not be released unti f
Monday. After arrangements
.m-e made with the families, the
cremations could start next
Wednesday.

Thursday, June 26, 2003

Family Medicine

Question: ~ y doctor says
gallstones showed up on an Xray that I had done recently
(not for that problem). She
says there is nothing to worry
about and no.treatment is neeessary because the stones are
small. If I develop symptoms
of gallblaclder trouble , then
she would recommend having
the gallbl adder out. What
symptoms should '! watch for
~~~es~hy did I get the se
Answer: Gall srunes, or
"cholelithiasis" l· n doctor parlance, are found in over 20
percent of the U.S. population
older than 65 . When you ask a
phy sician which patient is

. Rocord hlgll: 11 .722.98
Jan. 14, 2000
1,800

1,602.66

passes a different version of th
same bill, a committee of lawmakers usually works out differences.
~"The. Senate has sort of given
it1 authority for negotiation to
the governor, and the governor
will not budge, so we're kind of
stuck right now," Householder
said.
The Senate abdicated none of
its responsibility and just produced a bill with its own priorilies, Senate President Doug
White said.
"The Senate engaged all
interested parties. We opened
the proce,s, a~ I leel is my
responsi bility. I don't feel we
abdicated to anyone," White
said. "As the House did, as hi s
(Householder's) body could do.
we did what we could do."

Coroner: Six of eight bodies found identified .

Ice

\11.1 Anodatltd ,.,.,

June 25, 2003

The State Highway Patrol
opposed that part of the bill a' a
threat to officer safety, since
there would be no record of the
car owner having a weapon.
The patrol's position wa~ crucia! to Gov. Bob Taft 's suppon.
The agency lifted its opposition
to the bill last week when the
Senate version required guns in
vehicles to be holstered in plain
view or locked up. ·
Rep. Jim Aslanides, the bill's
&gt;ponsor, said a meeting with
representatives · from the patrol
and Taft 's oftice ended without
either side budging fro m their
position, .
·
House
Speaker
Larry
Householder said he was disappointed the House was negoti-·
&lt;lting with Taft and not the
Senate. When each chamber

Local·News

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 26, 2003

PageA3

�•'

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

Down on the Farm

T hursday, June 26, 2003

Safety when ·dealing with electricity .Escaping heat wave
Bv RooNEY M. WALLBRDWN

Contributor
Each year in the United
Suues there arc approximately
290 accidental electrocutions.
an additional R(XJ people die in
tires caused by lillllty electrical
'Y'lems every year. thousands
are shcx:ked ami bumed as the
result pf al'l'i_dental contact with
e l e~tridty ever): yea': and &lt;m
estimated S 1.2 btl lion 10 proper·
tv dama~e occu" each year due
to faulty' usc of electricity.
..
There me many ways 10
which electricJ.I accidents happen. Hazards result irom the
degradmion o! e l ectnc&lt;~ wtre
insulation due to rodents. weath·
ering. or normal wear, i m~roper
wirino. improper wire stze or
type. ~md corrosion of e.lectrical
connections. for example. In
addit ion to these nonnal hazards. agricultural workers are
particuCifty subject to the hazard; of electricity because tall
equi pment, such as grain augers.
combines. and ·raised dump
tntck· beds can become entan·
gled in overhead power lines.
Accidents have also occurred
with overhead po\\!Cr lines when
mmin~
irrieation
pipe.
Agricultural buildings are •subject to dusty. moist m1d corrosive environments. makmg
them especially troublesome
when
using
electricity.
Electricity was the seventh
largest cause of deaths on farms
in 1988. and causes unknown
amounts of property and livestoc k loss every
year.
Fortunately. there are several
devices and methods that can be
employed to protect yourself,
your animals. and your property.
The most common form of
electrical protection is the fuse
or circuit breaker. There are
dev ices that are designed to protect the electrical system from
too much current. These
devices, when used properly,
work ":ell to protect equipment
and prevent electncal fires due
to overloads o the elecuical sys·
tem. They do not. however, protect m1 individual from electrical
shock. Fifteen amps. which is
typically the smallest size breaker found in a normal household.
is 250 times greater than is
required. to cause cardiac arrestin an individual.
Fuses and circuit breakers
have a numbered rating system
which indicates the maximum
amount of current that they will
allow through. The fuses and
circuit breakers are matched to
the size of the electrical wires
used in the system. Thus, fuses
should always be replaced with
·a new fuse of the same rating. A
higher rated fuse will not offer
any protection if the system was
to draw too much electricity and
could result in an electrical tire
or damage to your equipment. A
&gt;maller mted fuse will cause the
circuit to blow the fuse more
frequently. leading to your
aggravation and the temptation
to bypass the system. If
&lt;~ bsolutel v necessary. use a
' maller r.ited fuse for tempor.uy
power. but never a larger one.
Another important safety fea-

ture i~ .. uruunding." Grounding vrounding amJ from a GFC I are
occurs ~hen a ground wire is ~imilar. However. if your equipconnected from ground poten- mcnt docs not have a ground
rial to the frame nf an electrical wire. then a GFCI is your only
device. Grounding is not neces- t(Jml of protection fmm fau_hy
sary for a circuit to work, it is equipment, GFCI \ also oi ler
only there t~ r the protectton .of protection if the grounding
mdtvtduals from stray current. mechanisms ;u·e lctulty.
In a nomml circuit, electricity
There arc three different
flows from the "hot" wire type~ c&gt;f GFC I\ available. The
(which is usually black ) to the most common type ts the .GFCI
electrical device and back to breaker. These are used instcad
ground potential through the of conventional breakers to proneutral ~ire (which is usually teet evervthin g on the circuit.
white or gray ). A ground wire There arc also GFCi outlets that
(which i' usually bare or green) can ca,i lv replace conventional
is proviqed so there can be an outlet,. l'hcsc will offer protecaltemate path for the electricity tion for cvetything plugged into
to !low back te ground potential them. There are abo por1able
if an electrical shor1 occurs. For types that can be plugged into
example. if the wires inside an anv outlet. The device you want
electrical device have become to 'use is then plug~ed into the
wom or the in~;ulatiiln broken GFCI. All GFCI'&gt; are equipped
down such that the hot wire with test button' whid1 intenmakes coo1 tact' with the case 011 tionally cause a _ground fauh to
the device. then the current insure the dc\·rce 1' workmg
could possibly !low through the properly. It is recommended that
individual Using the device back all GFC I's he te,ted every
to ground. It a ground wtre ts month.
present. however, the current
PnlariLation refers to the
·will take the path ot least restS· plugs and outlets that have two
ranee and flow through the differem .si'led prongs or slots.
around wire back to ground The idea behind polatiLation is
instead of flowing through the to ensure that .the hot wire travindividual causing an electrical els through the switch on tl1e
shock.
·
device- before it encounterhs: the
Never destroy or cut off the load or resi, tance. This e1ps
round grounding prong on a ensure tl1ere are no "live" wires
plug to tit it into a socket or that are exposed unless the
extension cord that does. not switch is tumed on and current
accommodate the prong. If the is tm veling through the entire
e9uipmem you are working circuit. Consider. for example. a
wrth does not have a ground lamp : without polarization, the
wire. then consider rewiring the hot wire could be travel mg
device to accommodate the tl1rough the socket and then to
grounding feature. Another the switch . If ~meone was to
option is to use double insulated then touch the socket, they
tools. These toob have an arr could be shocked. Polm·ization
space around the d~vice to help cn&gt;ures that the hot wire travels
insulate you from an electncal through the switch first, protectshock.
ing you from accidental contact
Another protective device with an energized socket.
that can be used is called a
Even with all of these protecGround Fault Circuit lntenupter. ti ve devices in place. you can
commoruy referred to as a GFI or still get shocked if you acctdenGFCL This device is meant to tally touch both the hot and neuprotect human beings from elec- tral wires of a live circuit. This is
trical shocks due to faulty electn- different· from a ground fault
cal equipment. A GFCI works by because during a ground fault
monitoring the current flow to an only some of the current in the
electrical device and companng circuit wi ll flow through you to
it to the amount of current flow- ground. If you touch both hot
ing back. If there is a difference and neutral wires then all of the
between these two values. this current in the system will flow
means that some electricity if through you and your body will
flowing back to ground .rhroug.h act as a normal electrical de vice.
a patch other than the wtre. Thts · Therefore. there are additional
is called a "ground fault" . and precautions you need to take to
when the GFCI detects this. it prevent accidental death and
stops current flow alrqgether in tllJUry.
the circuit. Constder the prevtWhat else can you do 0
ous example in which the wires
I. Install and use the electrical
inside an electrical device have safety devices that are available.
become wom or damaged so
2. Treal every electrical wire
that the hot wire makes contact as a "hot" wire. ,
with the casing . lf a person were
3. Check the condition of all
to use the tool, then electricity power cords and devices and
could possibly flow through the repair or replace as necessary.
individual back to gro und. · 4. Make sure power is disconWhen a GFC£ detects this situa- nected before working on any
tion, it stops current flow before electrical device.
harmful amount&lt;&gt; of electricity
5. If a "hot'' circuit must be
flow through the individual. worked on, call a qualitied elecElectricity will flow through an trician.
individual ea~ier if the person ts
6. Use double insulated tools.
working in wet or damp condi· which put an additional bmlier
tions. which is why it is recom- between you and electricity.
mended that GFCI's be installed
7. .Make sure that any wiring
in all bathrooms, kitchens laun- you do meets the suggestions
dry rooms. garages. and other from the National Electric Code.
buildings where moisture can be which are contai ned in most
a problem. The protection from books on electricity.

Thursday, June 26, 2003

Obituaries
Gladys Walker

•

~----~~~~~71

•

A pair of hogs soak in a pond at Maple lawn Farms in Hiwasse, Ark., wh ile seeking rel ief.from
the sweltering 90:degree heat Tuesday. (APPhoto / The Morning News of Northwest Arkansas,
Marc F.' Henning)
..
·

Excessive rain delays field
work, damages some crops
adequate soil moi sture. compared with 39 percent for the
pa' t five years. Thirty-one
percent of the state had a
ALBANY, Ga. (AP) moi sture surplu s. compared
Farmers Neil and Boyd with onl y 5 percent over the
Hagerso n have about had it pas t li ve years.
with rain. t:?ut the brothers are · All the moisture has been
reluctant to compl ain , con- particul arly tough on wheat.
siderin g that Georgia is ~ust oats and rye. , aid Tommy
emerging from a five-year Ir vin. Georgia· , agricultLJre
drought that cost growers commi ssioner. Many farmers
.grow small grains to produce
millions in crop losses.
"We've got cotton that 's seed for other farmers.
wooly with weeds and
''The wheat and rye seed
grass." said Boyd Hagerson, crops are pretty much gone."
who farms with his brother Irvin said. "Rye planted for
near Jimmy Carter 's home- seed produ ction looks to be a
town of Plains. "We 'd like to complete loss. a,nd all our
clean it up . We need a few small grai n seed crops appear
days of dry weather. Brt you to have reduced yield·s."
hate to complain abou it too
Boyd Hagerson said the
. much." ·
rain has formed ponds in
The rain has delayed the some fields and the excess
harvesting of small grain moi sture is causing wheat to
crops, lowered the qual}ty of sprout prematurely. reducing
rye, oats and wheat anil pre- its val ue.
vented farmers ftom apply·
But some crops, such as
ing herbicides fot weed con- · corn . are thri vi ng.
"We've got a super corn
trol, according to the Georgia
Agricultural
- Statistic s crop." he said. '·But everyService.
thing needs some sun. We
As of Sunday, more than need a week to 10 days to
66 percent of the state had catch up, then it can rain
BY' ELLIOTT MINOR

Associated Press

again . I don 't want to run the
rain off. I'm almost scared to
talk about it."
Neil Hagerson said they
had to irrigate th eir fi elds thi s
time last year because of the
drought. but now the cro ps
look "real good" and they
don 't have to spenJ extra ·
money to water their crops
with machines.
"We ·II take our. chances
with the wet anyti me over
the dry:· Neil Hagerson said .
· Besides their 600 ac res of
corn. the Hagersons have
650 acres of peanuts and
I ,000 acres of cotton on their
family farm . five miles north
of Pl ains.
The stati sti cs se rvice said
the quality of rye, oats ..and
wheat was declining rapidly
because of wet fields, but it
rate s Georgia's corn, peanut
and cotton crop as mostly
good to excellent.
Irvin said, howe ver, that
cotton and peanut s. which
have benefited from the rain,
are on the verge of being
threatened by ·weeds, pests
and disease.

EXTRA! EXTRA!
Coming Friday, July 18,2003
·

"

The

Daily Sentinel

Emma johnson
Daughter of
Frank and janet Johnson
Somefinetown. OH

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!

Pictures must be in by
Thursday July 3rd, 2003.
Pictures can be picked up after
July 11th, 2003.

Complete the fonn below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture . plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more than one ch ild is in the picture,
ple'ase enc lose an additional $2 .00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
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111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

-------------------- --------------------------Child's Name 4s) &amp; Age (sJ=-----------~--------

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www.mydailysentinel.cnm

For the Record

Matching fund campaign
'

·Marriage
licenses

POMEROY
Gladys
Walker. 86, Pomeroy. died
Monday, June 23. 2003, at Darst
POMEROY - Marriage
Personal Care Home in licenses have been issued in
Pomeroy.
Meigs County Probate Court to:
She was born Ocr. 8, 1916, in Patrick Eugene Martm, 22,
Forest Run, daughter of the late Middlepor1, and Chasity D'dwn
Rober1 Walker and Jennie Fow ler, 20. C heshire: Billy
Walker Bartels.
.
George ·Scarbrough, 32,
Gladys was the night opemtor Pori1eroy. m1d Annette Darlene
in Pomeroy for GTE for many Johnson, 36. Middleport;
years, before moving to the Dennis Wayne Sttmley, 42, and
Athens otlice and retiring a~ a Paula Rena Sumley. 41. both of
supervisor. She wa~ a gmduate Rutl;md: Jon Richard VanMeter.
of Pomeroy High School Class 30, Racine, and Renea Ann
of 1934 and a member of the Whited. 2 1, Ravenswood,
Forest Run Unit.ed Methodist W.Va.: Brian Keith Bowers. 37 •
Church.
Pomeroy, and Roxan Cundiff.
Surviv ing is a niece. Mary 31, Pomeroy; James Brian
Ann (Roger) Shoults of Racine Wolfe, 26. Pomeroy. and Molly
and nephews , Gary (Karen) Lynn
McWilliams.
25.
Walker of Racine and Mark ~omeroy : · Donald Eugene
(Sue) Leasure of Lodi, Calif.: Games. 27. and Teny Mane
great nieces and nephews, Casto, 32, both of Ripley.
Jennifer Walker and Eric W.Va.: and Andrew David
Shoult&gt;, both of Raci ne. and Baker. 20. Coolville. and
Max and Andrew Leasure of · Amanda Lynn Neale , 19,
Lodi. Cal if.; and a sister-in-law. Struthers.
Margaret Walker of Racine.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her stepfa·
ther, Conr;td "Dutch" Bartels;
POMEROY
Meigs .
brothers, Harold and Roger County Sheriff Ralph Trussell
Walker; and a sister. Maxine
reported the following acti vity:
Leasure.
• Trussell resp6nded to a large
Graveside services will be
fi
ght
in progress call on Bigley
held at I p.m. on Thursday, June ,
Ridge
Rd .. Long Bottom, for the
26, 2003 at Pine Grove
second
time in· seven days .. A
Cemetery with Rev. Keith
Racine police otlicer assisted in
Rader officiating.
the
call. Trussell anrived at the
Friend&lt;; may call from II a.m.
scene
and made contact with the
. until 12:30 p.m. at the Fisher
complainants.
Suspects were at
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Friend&lt;&gt; may send online con- another residence and Trussell
dolences to www.tisherfuneml- said no fight actually occurcd on
the day in question. Trussell
homes.com.
Memorial contributions may identi!ied suspects. es.corted r
be sent to the Meigs County them from the area and patrolled
Humtme Society, PO. Box 682, the area after the investigation.
• Trussell responded to Joe's
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Country Market in Rutl and.
where a suspect filled his car
wi th gas and left without payi.'lg.
Trussell patrolled the area.
ST. LOUIS, MO. - Lu ~ille
Werner died recently at a~e 93 but the suspect vehicle had left
in St. Louis due to heart fadure. the area before he could arrive
She was preceded in death by from the call on Bigley Ridge.
• Trussell responded to two
her loving husband of nearly 60
alarms reported by Tri-State
years, Dale Werner,
Surviving are her son, Donald Security. one at the NASCAR
Wemer, and his faJTiily, wife store in Rutland, the second at
Nancy. grandchildren Julie, Eastern High School. Both locaDaniel, and David; a cousin Bill tions were found to be secure.
• Trussell responded to a
Mayer of Columbus and nieces
"man
with a knife" call on
Joanne Pickett, Jean Brannan
Woodyard
Rd., at a location
and their children and grandwhere a previous "man with a
children.
report had been filed .
gun''
She is also survived by Dale
Trussell
found the location
Werner's relatives and family in
Middleport including a sister locked and nobody present. A
search was completed, fmding
Betty Fife.
·
Mrs. Wemer was 'born in no injured subjects and no susMiddleport but spent most of pect. Further investigation will
, her life in Columbus. She grad- continue, Trussell said.
• Lonnie
Lemaster
of
uated from . Ohio State
Pomeroy
reported
that
his
2003
University with a degree in
social services and worked for Honda 350FE was stolen from
Franklin County in Columbus his property on . Devenny Rd.
Investigation continues.
in Social Services.
• Trussell responded to a
She was active in many
groups and clubs including her report of shots ftred at a resisorority Alpha Phi, Kentucky dence on Leading Creek Rd.,
Colonels, and senior clubs. and wa~ assisted by Middleport
Lucille and Dale helped to Police. Mike Hmrison was
obtain funding and land to build arrested for disorderly conduct
the Grandview Marble Cliff by intoxication.
• TNT Pit Stop, Middlepor1.
Senior Center. They enjoyed the
senior center, especially the peo- reported a mm1 witl1 a gun, hidple and activities. They wrote ing behind a trdiler. The area
and performed in various musi- was searched, with assisumce
cals and dlmce shows both at the from Middlepor1 Police, but no
center and entertained at nursing subject wa~ located.
• Scon ·Baker of Bailey Run
homes and other Senior
·
Rd.,
Pomeroy; reported that
Centers.
.
while
be was walking with his
Mrs. Werner will be buried in
Beech Grove Cemetery at ·her fan1ily, a man drove up. got out .
birthplace, Pomeroy, next to of his vehicle and started
Dale Wemer, at 12 noon on assaulting him in front of his
family. Investigation continues.
Saturday June 28.

Calls reported

Three fire departments benefited from the annual matching fu nd campaign of the Burlingham Camp 7230 of the Modern .
woodmen of America. Dale Colburn. Avis Bailey, and Mi ldred Zeigler of the Burltngham Camp present checks of $2,977.09
each to Bob Wood of the Chester Fire Department. Rick Blaettnar of the Pomeroy Fire Department. and Elmer Bailey._a trustee
for Bedford Township wh ic h has a fire fund, pictured left to right The total amount ratsed through local projects was
$6 ,'431.26 qua lifying the camp for matching funds of $2,500 from the national agency. (Charlene Hoeflrch)

·Bob's Market and Greenhouses win major award
petition was announced June 12 at
a Charleston gathering that drew
nearly 500 people.
MASON. W.Va. _ Being
"Obviously, we ~Iff very honored to receive thi~ award." said
West Virginia's top priva!ely- Bamitz, who stalled Bob's in 1970
owned business is an accomplish· with 6,00) square feet of greentnent Rober1 W "Bob" Bamitz
credits his v.1fe and tamily for ~er~year.;, with the help of
milking a reality.
his family and employees, be's
Barnitz. his wife Corena. and seen the business grow to 450,00)
fi ve sons opemte Bob's Market square feet- or !().plus acres and Greenhouo;es Inc., re&lt;..ipient of with four locations, a mwti-state
the 2003 Ernst &amp; YOW1g West customer list and plans to add
Virginia Area Entrepreneur of the another 94,00) square feet to its
Year award.
holdings.
'We have been very blessed.
The Bamitz family was nomimy wife and I and all of our sons," nated for the award by David
to be successful," BaJTiitz said. Warner, executive director of the
"It's not all what we do, but also West
Virginia
Economic
through the intervention of a high- Development Authority, partly
er power.''
because Bob's expansion over the
The BaJTiitz family was award- year.; has created jobs.
·
ed from a field of 17 candidates
Bob'semployeerosteravemges
throughout the state. Ernst_ &amp; just over 1.00. peakin~ at I55 last
Young, a natJonally recognized month w1th the addiuon of seaprofessional services firm. gives sonal workers. EDA has also
out the award annually to entre· approved loans for Bob's expanpreneurs in 42 states and some ston.
overseas countries.
Today, Bob's has two West
The winner of this Ye&lt;!f's corn- Virginia locations. it' base in

BY KEVIN KELLY

News·editor

Lucille Werner

Norris
.from Page A1
on several grounds in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
on June 17.
A different judge, D. ~
Evans from Gallipolis, ruled in
favor of Nonris and determined

Southern
from Page A1
next year. This reduction would
have saved the district approximately $12.001
After hearing Grueser's
speech, Finance Planning &lt;md
Supervision Commissiqn charrman Bill Wolfe said the commission was fonned because of
some of the ,financial decisions
made by the school boanl in the
past. He said it is not the commission's fault that d,istnct ts m
the shape it is in. but it is the
commission's job to make tbese

PeM&gt;ylvania. Macyl&lt;md. Indiana,
Illinois. South Carolina and
Georgia
Making it all work are his wife
and sons Bobby. Rick, Scott, Jeff.
and John. in addition to Scott's
wile Anna
Bamitz. who mntinued working a' a laboratory rechnician for
Gocdyear six year.; after founding
the company, said that when he
started out, he never expected the
business to reach it' current level
ofsuccessandcontinuetoexpand.
"I had no idea,'' be said. "You
reallv don't think of these things in
adv.ince. We got bigger as the
market dictated, as long as we
could control the growth.
''Of course, as our sons became
of age to be a force in the business,
we are able to expand and keep
our growth bener controlled," be
added
The new expansion calls for
80,00) square feet to be attached
to its large facility, with 14,00)
square feet of ground-to-ground
individual Quonset strucrures "at
one of our different locations."
Bamitz said.

Local Briefs
VSO meets

Barbecue set

POM EROY - Veterans
Service Comm iss ion will
meet at 9 a. m. on Monday
at
the
office .
I 17
Me morial Drive.

R.ACJNE - The Racine
Volunteer fire Department will
have a chicken barbecue on July
4. Serving will begin at II a.m.
There will also be homemade
ice cream and desserts.

incorrect procedures were
taken to get the order of attachment. The judge determined
that there was not pmbable
cause to order Nonris to pay the
bond.
Kni ght 'aid he was pleased
with the outcome.
"We arc pleased the judge
recognized the invalidity of
thi s order and was willing to
vacate the order:· Knight said.
decisions.
Board members questioned
wbether or not incoming revenue could justify the expense
of the position. Districts like
Trimble Local have bigger budgets and are in better shape
financially.
Wolfe said wben "the district
is back on its feet financially
then it can hire all the new
employees that it want~."- b~t
until that lime the commJsston s
financial decisions regarding
employees take precedence.
. "It is my finn be.lief that the
budget can not jusufy two and
half people;· Wolle &gt;aid. ·111e
payroll is not high enough to
justify this.''

Ma10n ;md one in Parkersburg,
and two in Ohio at Galli)XJlis and
Belpre.
.
Bannitz explained that EDA
supplies up to 45 percent of a loan
wben approved, with other lending institutions providing the .
remainder.
Bob's sales total 80 peroent
from the wholesale sa:tor and 20
percent in retail. It sells 19 indi\~duals, independent garden centers,
mickile men who resell rts plant'
and seedlings. and to fanner's
markets.
Bamitz attributed it&lt;; success to
three factors - quality, servire
and integrity, in that order. His
family and staff make it their business to knoW their business. and
are available to answer questions
from the budding gardener about
the kinds of plants they are buying.
The addition of "plug"
seedlings to their product lioo with Ball Seed Co. one of its
major buyers - has significartly
boosted business since IfJJ7.
Bob's product is shipped to customer&gt; in II states, including West
Virginia Ohio. Kentucky. VIrginia

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.The Daily Sentinel

·The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley .Publishing Co.
Charlene Hoeflich
General manager and news editor

NATIONAL VIEW

Biased
'

Thousands of murders,
:abductions .lack glamour
of Peterson case
• The Exponent- Telegram of Clarksburg:
For every Laci Peterson or Jon Benet Ramsey, there are
hundreds. perhaps thousands more Mary Friends and Maxine
Stain akers.
The latter two names might mean nothin g to some or even
most of yo u.
Friend. 46. and her mother. Stalnaker. 69. both of Jane Lew.
W.Va .. were reported missing by Friend 's sister on Dec. I,
r999. To this day, their case remains unsolved - and largely
unpublici zed.
·
Yes. there have been occasional reports from N9rth Central
West Virginia newspapers and TV stations. But there was no
media frenzy when the women vani~hed. None of the network
or cable TV newscasters came calling . No special accommodations were needed for out-of-state media hordes - because
.. there weren 't any hordes.
A quick scan through newspapers in any part of this country
could provide you with simi lar examples. People go missing
or are killed, yet on ly in a few cases is a collective outrage (or
perhaps curiosity is a better word) mobilized .
Just why is that, really'
A look at the similarities in the Laci Peterson and Jon Benet
Ramsey cases might provide a few clues. Both were considered relatively attractive; also, neither was poor. Each came
from a major media market.
Now ask this question : Would the media frenzy in either of
those cases have been the same without any one of those three
factors'' Maybe - and maybe not.
Our socie'ty's · penchant for voyeuri sm grows alanning.
People are tuning in all too frequently to watch others degrade
themselves in increasingly brutal and amoral ways.
The glaring media spotlight on the Laci Peterson and Jon
Benet Ramsey cases, and the OJ. and Menendez cases before
that, prove that this kind of stuff sells with the American· public, which is a pretty sick thought.
And then there is the plight of the relatives of people like
Stalnaker and Friend , whose disappearance is not a cause
celebre. Because their case doesn' t "sell." there are no national campaigns to help, no periodic calls from The Washington
Post or Los Angeles Times to keep the story alive.
It doesn't seem fair, does it?
That' s because, frankly, it isn't.

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

Moderately Confused

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iO 2003 by NEA. Inc.

,

.Page A6
Thursday, June 26, 2003

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 26, 2003

I

Beastly tax cuts are eating up basic services
As Republicans repeated!~
cut taxes to "starve the bea't '
·- meaning the gove rnment Democrats should re-introduce
voters to the "be'ast.'.' showing
them whai they' re losing in
Morton
te rms of quality education,
Kondracke
health care and homeland st.'CUrity.
This is happening a bit 011
both the House and Senate
sides of the Capitol. but it
ought to be pw1y policy high ing President Bush's own No
and low to show voters what Child Lett Behind Act. allowmassive GOP tax cuts mean in ing thousands of poor children
terms of cuts in programs.
to be thrown off Medicaid and
The case is being made most providing less money than
cimsistently by Rep. David. Bush re4uested to reverse the
Obey (D-Wis.). who argued at · shortage of nurses in the couna House Appropriations sub- try. Derimcrats can pick up on
committee markup last week hi s theme and jioint out that
that ''the Republican Party in GOP tax cuts will cause reducCongress is willing to' put huge lions in military housing. port
new tax gifts for the most com- security. land conservation and
fonable in our society ahead of aid tQ stale governments.
every other economic and which are laying off teachers
social value."
and dropping child care l(ir
Citing the House GOP move welfare recipients tryi ng to
to cut inheritance taxes by work.
$800 bi Ilion over 10 years,
SQ far since Bush took
Obey said~ "That money would oflice. taxes have been cut by a
be enough to take care of 30 nominal $1.7 trillion over 10
percent of the long-term Social · years. though the amount sureSecurity shortfall. It would be ly will exceed that - perhaps
enough to provide a decent, double it - when cuts are
rather than a token, prescrip- extended beyond their schedtion drug bene lit for our uled "sunset" dates.
·
And Republicans seem to
semors.
h
·
· d
1
"And," he said, "it would ave rn mm new annua tax
h
·
·
cuts, probably to eliminate
ave given us rna~ trmes over taxes on dividend income,
·
.
enough room to frx this bill ,"
referring to the proposed shelter savings from taxes and
appropriation for the Labor. cut capital gains rates even furHealth and Human Services ther.
and Education departments.
Bush argues· for tax cuts by
Obey, ranking member on claiming they'll stimulate ecoAppropriation·s, pointed out nomic growth and create jobs,
that, to pay for tax cuts. but he and other Republicans
f d also make it clear that they
Republicans were under- un - want to, deprive the governing education programs includ-

Page A7'

'

ment of revenue - '\tarvc the
beast."
Democrats have been tighting back mai nl y by saying
GOP tiL~ cut' have n't produced
growth yet ·- and wo n't and al'&lt;l th'lt they · pri mari ly
benetit the rich and Lkqx:n the
federal ddicit.
Such arguments. whi le valid.
teqd to be speculative, i(leological or theoretical. It 's 1111e that.
despite Bush's tax-ctrttin g. the
ecnnnmy is still Jo,ing jobs.
But a tumaround may be under
· way. We' ll know by next year's
eleu ions.
It 's true that GOP tax 'c u" are
skewed to upper-income tax·payers. Because inheritance
and investment taxes ha ve
been cut - and payroll taxes
paid hy ordinary workers have
not - the total shar'e of ll:deral
taxes paid by hllt"eholtb with
inwmcs greater than $400.000
a ·year wi ll fal l from 24.3 percent to 22~S percent hy 20 I 0.
AmJ it·, true thut the deli cit is
deepening. Oflicial ly pegged at
$400 bi Ilion. it may re&lt;ll:h $500
billion th is year. according the
House Budget Co mmittee
Democrats. Instead of a $5.6
trillion budge t surplus nnce
projected for the period 200220 11 , Democrats chlu·ge there
will be a $Jo trilli ori shortfa ll.
'·a $9.2 trillion reversal."
Republicans frght off the "fairness" argument by saying
De nlocrals are indul g1 ng in

"class warfare" · and defend
themselves against the "liscal
irresponsibility" argtunent by
saying long-tenn deli ~it projections are unreliable.
They also say Democrats are
''big spenders." But GOP tax
cuts are so big that budget cu"

are beginning to bne _into prograrn&gt; that make a drflerence to
ordinary Americans - or peepie ortlinary Americans care
about.
That\
the case that
Democrats can succeed with
politically. With a publicity
hli tt. li&gt;r instance. Obey sueceeded in reversing a GOP plan
to cut federal assistance to
school di stricts where military
installations are local.
He has served notice that he
plans to imroduce amendments
. to reduce the tax breaks given
to millionaires n~x t year by just
$5:000 - from $88.000 to
$83.000 - to free up $1 billion
to be spent on homeland security items cut from the budget
and to impro ve inadequate
hou s in ~ for military families.
At tf1e appropriations heari n ~ last week. Obey pointed
mit that Bush was slowing the
pace of medical resew·ch by
dropping . . the
National
Institu tes ot Health budget
fro m a I5 percent annual
growth rate to under three percent. less enough to keep pace
with intlation.
"Each ye~u·. IJ 111illion peepie lind out that tl1ey have cancer." he said. "More than I mrllion lind out that they have diabetes. and 00.000 tinct out that
they have Pm'kinson's disease.
''Tell , them that it 's more
impm1ant to pass a gargantuan
tax cut than it is to push the
throttle down in finding cures
for these diseases, .. he said.
That's an effective way to
tight.
· Mortem Kmrdracke is execuri•·e ediror of Roll Call, rhe
neorsp&lt;~per r&gt;(Capitol Hill.

Tornado damages church

BY PETE HERRERA
Associated Press

i!

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.
(AI') - A suspected ar;on
wildlire raging about five miles
northwest of downtown
Thmsday threatened home,. a
school and a shopping center.
Firefighters awaited the dawn
to launch a

What do Wall Street stock
resign after he wrote a 'tory
analysts. Justice Depanment
ba~cd on 'omeonc·el,e\ reponlawyers. Roman Catholic bishing and did not te ll anybody -ops. New York limes editors
Cokie
his reader' or his editor' -atld your family pediatrician all
and
where hi., material had come
have in common?
front The Time' i, nnw underSteven. going
They are all now subject to a
a lengthy review of ih
healthy trend that is affecting
Roberts
own policies and i' likely to
professions across America.
adopt two c·hange' tl1&lt;11 other
They are being held more
papers have already instituted.
accountable for their actions.
One i' giving fu ll credit to all
They are being forced to live up
the sources that cimtribute to a
to their own ethical and profes- that finally got the bishops' story. The other is appointing
attention.
sional standards and they are
Another informal but effec- an ombULbman whose job is to
being punished when they fail tive method of accountability is act like inspectnrs general in the
to do &gt;0.
self-policing within a profes- go.vernment. reviewing and
This accountability comes in
cnticit.ing the actions of their
many
different
forms. sion. Jayson Blair was lired by own institutions. Both innova· the dri vmg
· f
Newal York
Times
after a tions would add to the transsometHnes
orce "· The
reporter
another
newspaper
the legal ·System
" 'S t'n the case
· complained that Blair had parenc'J of the limes.
•
·
• ·~
of the stock analysts who were stolen material from one of her
A .l&lt;!cond pattern touching
indicted for providing clients stories. lben media critics at many of these cases is the way
with fraudulent information.
other papers turned up the heat cunllich of interest carnmdcrSometimes whistle-blowers on the limes. demanding more mine professional standards. In
issue reports instead of indict- evidence and explanations. brokerage houses. analy,ts who
ments, measuring "actions Finally, the two top editors advised client~ what ' tucks to
against codes of conduct and were forced to resign.
buy were supposed to be sepanot just codes of law. A good . The staff of the Harvard rated by a "firewall " fro m
example: the inspector general Business Review · demanded investment bankers who sought
of ,the Justice Department criti- the departure of their own edi- business from the 'ame compacized his own colleagues for tor. Suzy Wetlaufer. after she nies the analysts were evaluatmistreating hundreds of immi- started an affair with a key ing . But when anal y'" · were
grantS detained after 9/11 .
source, Jack Welch, the head of rewarded for helping to procure
Accountability can also be General Electric.
banking business by favoring
demanded by more informal
One common thread nmning cer1ain stocks, their indepcnmechanisms. The Catholic through all these cases is the dencc was comprombed.
Church was forced to confront principle of transparency. The
A ' imilar pmblcm plagued
the problem of sexually abusive public has a right to know hmv the . accounting
industry.
, priests primarily because news- · decisions are made that affect Auditors were smrt inizing a
papers hke The Boston Globe the ir lives, and the right to company's hooks while their
first revealed the story. object when they don't like colleagues were ' eeking conParishioners then reacted with what they see.
su iting work from the same
outrage. and started employing
Consider the case of New company. a system that blemtheir own levemge by with- York Times reponcr Rick · ished the integrity of the audits.
holding contributions. a tactic Bragg, who was forced to Both prote,sions m·e now tak-

ing steps to eliminate these conllicts.
A.third panemthat shows up
in many of these cases: a title
like "Rev." or ''Dr." or "Esq."
anachecJ to someone 's name no
lnni!er g_uarantees immunity
frotll scrutiny. and this foml of
accountability otien takes place
on a very personal leve l.
Many new parents now interview pediatricians before their
ch ild is born and choose the one·
whose methods and.philosophy
they lind most congenial. We
know one young couple who
changed doctor' recently when
their lir.'a choice airi ly dismissed their concems about
their baby who had u·ouble eating·:'

.
Many · prok.~&gt;ionals, includ-

ing ' "me in our own tield,
resent this new accountability
and. to be fair. it can sometimes
get out of hand. darkening the
reputation of a whole group
when only a few are truly
guilty. Most priests are not
chi ld abusers, most accountants
don 't cook book,, and most
reponers do not make up stone,,
But in our view. prufessionals should welcome this new
scrut,iny. Like the doctor who
d.id not take his patients seriously. we should be forced to
the tnrst of the public every
And those who are unwilling to
li ve bv. that standard should
lind ari'other line.of work.
(Cokie Rohms and Ste• ·en V.
Ro/Ji•rts are mlwnnists for tlte
Nell'spaper Enll'IJ&gt;rise Assn)

~~ massive

a&lt;;sault''

on ihe t,'I'Ound w1d from tl1e air.
Several hel icopters . were
reauied to ·drop water on the
blaze along be banks of the Rio
Grande that started Wednesday
night and had already consumed some 700 acres.
''RighL noVv we' re all. waiting

for the morning m1cJ praying
that it comes fa~il'r." Gov. Bill
Richardson said. "It wi ll be a
11llL&lt;;sivc

An unidentified woman looks at tornado damage in Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church , Wednesday, on Buffalo Lake. Min n. A
twister ripped the roofs off homes , tossed power lines to the ground and sent residents of Buffalo Lake to their basements
Tuesday night. (AP Photo/ The Journal of New Utm. Dan Iverson)

Followers dwindle, but some still
believe preacher was God, not fraud
Bv DAVID B. CARUSO
Associated Press

The.virtues if accountability

Wildfire threatens
homes; arson
suspected

. properties the Divine
Lorraine Hotel and the Unity
Mis&gt;ion Church - have been
sold since 2000.
·
GLADWYNE, Pa. (AP) " Bas ically we have not
They keep a place set for changed. We just don' t have
Father Divine in the grand
people we once had,"
dining room at Woodmont, the the
Mother Divine said.
French Gothic minor where
History hasn' t quite decided
he once greeted thousands of what to make of Father
followers who believed he Divine, a preacher who rose
was God.
from obscurity by advocating
Hi' nftice there is just' as it a strict moral code .
was at hi s death in 1965.
A plaque outside the Divine
When his widow, Mother Lorraine describes Father
Divine. used the room for a Divine. who was black. as a
recem interview, she left his . civil rights leader. Critics said
big chair empty and pulled up he was a huckster who talked
a seat beside it.
followers out of their savings.
"Father is here with us," she
His early history are matters
said.
of mystery
Since his death. his widow
Journahsts in the moveand other believers have done ment's heyday said he was
their best to preserve Father probably hom George Baker
Divine's presence and sust,ain and mowed lawns in Baltimore
the religious movement he before he became a preacher
founded in New York during and settled in New York.
the first half of the 20th century.
His congregation experiThe International Peace enced it s first signiftcant
Mission still maintai ns its stun- growth after he moved with
ning hilltop estate iH Gladwyne, his disciples to Sayville, on
outside Philadelphia, church Long Island, in 1919. There,
offices in downtown Philadelphia he offered free weekly banand a budget hotel near the quets and help tinding jobs to
University of Pennsylvan ia a growing number of mostly
campus.
black followers attracted by
Believers still gatber regu- his message of "practical
larly to sing religio us and Christianity."
patriotic songs. and li sten to
He urged believers not to
recordings of Father Divine's drink, smoke, swear, gamble
~ ermons .
or borrow money and to pool
There are ' ign' tile mov~­ their resources and practice
mem is in it s twil ight.
communal living.
The Peace . Mi .~&gt; ion has
Followers also eschewed
spent the pa" two decades "undue mingling of the
selling off many of the land- se xes.'' Men and women lived
mark pro perti es Father Divine in separate quarters .
.
Father Drvine barred folamassed with donations from
the faithful in the 1930s. ' 40s lowers from marrying, too
and ·sos. Two Philadelphia saying they should give up tra-

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operating dining halls that
provided free food to thousands. Later the mission began
charging for the meals, but
only a few cems.
Believers said th e meal s
were miracles. Skeptics
weren ' t so sure.
Hundreds of supporters
turned over their weekly
salarie s to the movement . and
critics said the cash bought
Father Divine luxury cars, fine
suits. and choice real-estate in
previously all-white enclaves.
Robert Weisbrot. a Colby
College history professor who
studied Father Divine, said
some of the criticisms are
valid.
"Did he get something out
of it? . Yes, he did," he said.
"But it is remarkable how
many people over the years
counted on him for a cheap
meal, cheap lodging. or a
cheap Sunday banquet."
The suggestion of impropriety still bothers Mother
Divine. She attributes it to
prejudice. "He wasn ' t the
established church , and he
wasn't the right complexion,"
she said.
After years of fending off
accusations, Father Divine
took the movement to
Philadelphia in 1942, eventually acquiring the businesses
and properties which are now
mostIy gone.

All of Albuquerque\ lireiighters were called into duty.
"As soon R' the sun comes up
we ·11 sUu1 sending tl11:111 in."
said Lt. Lynn Reule. About 125
Alhuquerque lirelighters were
on the line just after midnight
Thursday: another I(X) from
outside agencies were poised to
relieve them.
Richardson aiS(l summoned
v'uious National Guard all-terrain vehicles and helicopters
and requested federal help.
Seventl road' were also closed
and traflic was choked in pMs
of the city.
'
Mayor Martin Chavez said
evidence suggested the winddri ven bll!le that broke out at
about 8:30p.m. was not merely
a tlare-up of a Tuesday tire tlmt
started about a mile to the south.
"It h::rs more than one point of
origin which is suggestive of
. arson," Chavez said.
No arrestS were immediately
made.
The fierce flames and resulting thick smoke were visible in
many pans of Albuquerque, a
sprawling city of about
450,000. Ash tell in some areas.
No injuries were reponed and
no structures were damaged.
But hundreds of homes in an
exclusive area and several other
subdivisions and · apartment
complexes were evacuated.
"We have over I00 homes
that are very severely compromised," Chavez said. Between 200 and 250 people
were evacuated from the homes
Wednesday night, Chavez said.
Police ofticers rode through
neighborhoods early Thursday

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diti onal bonds in favor of
membership in a universal
fami ly. He al so rejected racial
identity, urging people to
think of themselves simply as
Americans.
Those teachings were largely overshadowed by his claim
to divinity, which he began to
make in his sermons in the
1930s.
According to the mo vement's beliefs. Christ did not
have the power to full y emancipate man so he died and
returned as Father Divine.
Since his death, believers have
'said that Father Divine simply
"laid down his body," much as
Jesus did before him .
The declaration that .he was
God captivated· the New York
press, especially after Father
Divine was hauled into court
on public nuisance charges in
1931.
A judge sentenced him to a
year in jail, then, four days
later, died unexpe ctedl y.
Interviewed in prison, Father
Divine reportedly said, "I
hated to do it. " Weeks later, he
was set free .
After that, the sect became a
phenomenon. Father Divine
mo ved his base to Harlem.
where he acquired hotels and
converted
them
into
."Heavens" . where followers
lived and worked .
Similar Heaven s opened in
Maryland. New Jersey and
Pennsylvania. Through it all.
the church's key activity was

us~au lt ::

w1d wmounced tl1at resident'
must evacuate after a shift in the
wi nd breathed new lite into the
lire.
At least three evacuation centers were set up throughout the
city. Some resrdent.&lt;; also were
evacuating live,tock to the New
Mexico State FaiJ'!,'l'OUnds.
With the tire' raging several
hundred feet from ber horne. Jo
Chestnut packed up family
belongings and headed for a
&gt;helter while her husband
stayed behind to evacuate their
thoroughbred horse.
"It is very overwhelming; the
thought that so1'11eone may have
st;rned this on. purpose is just
frightening that tlrere is that
kind of evil." she said.
Chavez said firelighters
would be working strictly on
' lrtlcture protection and would
not be fighting the tire within
the area near the river - · the
bosque - which contains salt
cedar, cottonwood trees and
other vegetation. ·
The
disadvantage
Wednesday night was that the
tire could not be fought from
above. Water drops from heli'
copters were key in contailling
a tire that bumed in the area
Tuesday night.
Tuesday's tire - which also
burned about 700 acres in the
bosque - was apparently
caused by tireworks, Chavez
said. It tlared north from the
Interstate 40 bridge over the Rio
Grande. A house under construction was destroyed and
another home was damaged; no
serious injuries were reported. .
Meanwhile, crews in Tuscon,
Ariz., ·were digging breaks on
the crucial northern ·anct southem fronts of a wildfire that
destroyed about 345 buildings
last week in . a mountaintop
vacation hamlet.
. For the first time since flames
first roared toward the Mount
Lemmon community of
Summerhaven, firefighters battled the.Aspen fire Wednesday
without heavy winds.
''Every day we have a good
day, we get closer to being out
of the woods," said Carrie
Templin, a spokeswoman for
he team battling the blaze.
Gusts upward of 40 mph
hampered frrefighters ,almost
since the frre began June 17
northeast of Tucson. Gusts hitting 60 mph helped drive the
flames through Summerhaven
June 19.

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Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

.

Thursday, June 26, 2003

www.mydailysenHnel.com

'

Inside:

Cavs focusing second pick, Page 82
Scoreboard, Page 83
ACC Invites Miami, Va Tech, Page 84

The Daily Sentinel_
Page Bl

G

Thursday, June ~6, 2003

1Ln

St. Louis 9, Cincinnati 6

Marshall Basketball

Jirsa hires
first two
assistants

!Point Pleasant!

I S~uthside I

Fanner's
Market
''

•

Staff

• The Mason County
Farmers· Market will be
open from 8 a.m. to 2
p.m. Saturday, under the
Bartow Jones Bridge.

• t:&gt;aoo: to music by
True Cciuntty from 7 to 10
p.m. Friday, at the Point
Pleasant Senior Center.
Concessions available,
cake walk, SIV50 drawing, and door prizes.
Donation of $3 for singles
and $5 for couples accept-

Gallipolis
Gallant Gals

ed Proceeds will be used
for future activities at !he
center. (No smoking or

alcohol penniucd.)

Summer .

Fun
• This week. s program will be at II am.
Wednesday, July 2 al TuEndie-Wei State Park.
Jennifer Kayser will talk
about Cleopatra .
In case of rain, the evmt
will take place at !he
Mlmn County ubrnry.
The SW1llllf2' Fm in !he
Parle Program is sponsored
by the park and Point
P~cJsant Artist smes. It is
.open to children of all ages
and adults.

Letart
Jam Session
... A jam session will be
held from 6:30 to l0
p.m. Friday, at the Letart
Community
Center.
Featured bands will present country, bluegrass.
and gospel music. Letart
Pioneers 4-H Club will
provide concessions. $1
donation taken at the door.
Evetyone welcome.

Kelly Pllfdekooper

.Pardek~per kicks off music fest Friday
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
· News editor
POMEROY - 'The summer music
series of the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz
Society kicks off at 8 p.m. Friday as
blues legend Kelly Pardekooper, wilh his
electric folk mix of pop, rock and twang,
· move into Pomeroy's riverfront
amiphitheater.
.
The "Rhythm on the River" conceits
will continue every Friday night through
July 25 and then culminate on July 26

with the Big Bend Bl1,1es Bash, an all-day
all-night festival featuring perlonnances
by seven bands.
The Friday night concerts, the. fowth
year for the PB&amp;J music series, are free.
The lineup includes the Carpenter Ants
on July 4, Clarence Bucaro on July 11,
Randy McAllister on July 18, and Alben
Castiglia on July 25,
·
·
While some seating is available there is
also space 10 set up lawn chairs above the
stage area. Refreshments are available.
Pardekooper's· brand-spanklin' new

House of Mud record makes it abundantly clear !hat the singer/songwriter is here
10 stay. Evely track on the record is a
Pardekooper original wilh varied settings
reflecting a personal and highly flexible
paformance style.
h's been said that !here is llOihing falqpants about Pardekooper's music, that it's
"as unassuming. familiar, cornfunable, and
rugged as denim."
.
"He is sure 10 be a crowdplea&lt;ierwhen he
appears her~ Friday," said JaCkie Welker,
PB&amp;J Society president..

• Dn:e Ill 11'19: by ~
Conry Fful ~ fu:m 7

to I0 p.m. Saturday. at the
SQuthside Community
Center.

Dance at
Senior Center

Mason

Country
Fried Band

1·

Catfish
Tournament
• The Fifth Annual
Bend Area CARE Catfish
Tournament will take
place Saturday, at the
Mason levee. Check-in
and registration is at 5 am.
and the tournament begim
at 7 am. Winner and door
prizes will be announced at
-4:30 p.m. Children\
game&lt;; begin at I p.m. For
more information, contact
Elvis Zerkle at (304) 773"
5680 or Tim Roush at
(304) 8l!.2-3574.

•
Frencl'l Colony
Daughters
of
the
American , Revolution
present 'Gallant Gals of
Gallia County and our
Lamben Lands heritage'
7:30 p.m. at the Ariel
Theatre. Tickets fNm
Gallia County Historical
Society and Bernadine's.

IHuntington I
Lewis&amp;
Clark Exhibit
The Highlands
M\L'Ieum and Discovery
Center, 1620 Wmchester
Ave., continues the exhibit through Dec. 9, in celebration of the 200th
anniversary of Lewis .
and Clark's expedition.
Admission is $3.50, $3
seniors, students and children and free to children
2 and younger and members. Call (60&gt;) 329-8888 .
•

Ashland
Swnmer
Fun
• The summer program, sponsored by
Greater Huntington Park
and Recreation District,
is . offered at 2 p.m.
Friday-Saturday, with
"Getting Your Bearings
with Basic Orienteering." at
the Rilla' Park R~ Garden
Room Wilh a View. Othas
include"WalkoflheSemes: .
~a N'lgl1,"2 pm
July 5; liXI ''Wbl Do Owls
Ea?,"2 p.m. lilly ll-12 ON,
$1. Call (~) 6%-5954 or
visit http://www.ghprd.org.

.'

IN TOWN
Norris Northup Dodge
252 Upper R.lver Road, Galllpolla, Ohio

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Pomeroy, Ohio
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992-5432

CINCINNATI (AP)
Austin Knowlton, who
helped Paul Brown found the
Cincinnati Bengals in 1967
and served as the team· s
thainnan for 20 years. died
Wednesday. He was 93.
· Knowlton. also a share,
holder in the Cincinnati Reds
in the 1970s, died of natural
causes in Fon Lauderdale.
Aa.. the Bengals said.
Knowlton , who held a
degree in architecture and
civil engineering from Ohio
State. used the construction
business he owned to finance
•and build 54 college dormit(}ries and other university
buildings in several states.
Ohio
State
awarded
Knowlton a doctorate of
architecture in 1995 and
named their school of architecture after him.
He is survived by two
daughters.

Bengals waive
cornerback
Tierre Sams
CINCINNATI (AP)- The
Cincinnati
Bengals
announced Wednesday that
they have waived cornerback
Tienre Sams.
Sams signed with the
Bengals in 2002 as a college
free agent out of Fresno
State. He played in all four of
the team's exhibition games
in 2002 before being waived
Sept. I.
The Bengals re-signed
Sams to their otTseasonroster
Dec. 31 and later senl him to
NFL Europe, where he
played for the Rhein Fire.

Indians send
Garcia, Miceli to
Yankees
CLEVJ;:LAND (AP) The Cleveland Indians traded
outfielder Karim Garcia and
pitcher Dan Miceli to the
New York Yankees on
Wednesday for a player to be
'. named.
Garcia, who was just activated from the 15-day disAbled list because of a wrist
injury, was with the Yankees
last season after being
released by the Indians
before spring training.
"I was there last year and I
didn 't play too much," a
teary-eyed Garcia said at
Jacobs Field after being told
of the deal. "Unfortunately, I
know they (lhe Yankees)
have a lbt of outfielders there,
too."

"

228 Main St.

Founder, former
chairman of ·
Bengals dies

__

011 • Filler • LuiMI Ollult
Clltdl All Fluids • Clltdl Chusls

.,S1795

· Garcia began the 2002 season with Triple-A Columbus
before the Yankees brought
.him lip in June. He played in
just two games for New York
before he was designated for
assignment on July 3 after the
:Yankees acquired Raul
.
Mondesi from Toronto.
. The Indians re-signed him
to a minor league contract on
. July 13, and after playing in
23 games at Buffalo, he came
back to Cleveland and had a
torrid final 51 games.
Garcia batted .299 with 16
homers and a major leaguehigh 52 RB!s from Aug. 6 to
the end of the season.
The Indians liad hoped he
could continue that pace this
season, but he injured his
wrist during spring training
and struggled.

Cincinnati's Ken Griffey Jr.. right. is greeted at home plate by teammate Sean Casey after hitting a threerun home run against St. Louis in the first inning Wednesday at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (AP)

Reds lose slugfest to Card~
BY R.B. FAU.STROM
Associated Press

Reds at Cardinals

ST. LOUIS - Bo Hart. Jim Edmonds and Scott
Rolen homered in the first inning. leading Matt
Morris and the St. Loui&gt; Cardinals over the
Cincinnati Reds 9-6 WedneS(jay night.
The Cardinals connected early against Paul
Wilson (5-5). He started a few hours alier drawing a
five-game suspension for his actions in a brawl
against the Cubs last week. a penalty that is set to
begin Thursday . .
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his 476th career homer, passing
Stan Musial and Willie Stargell for 21st place.
Griffey's three-run shot in the Reds first was his tlrst
homer in 92 at-bats, and his eighth.of the year overall.
Morris (8-5) won for the first time in ·four stans
despite -his continuing struggles. He lasted six
innings. giving up five runs on seven hits.
· Morris has sunrendered 28 runs in his last 31
innings over six starts since throwing consecutive
shutouts in mid- May.
·
Hart was 3-for-5 for his fifth multihit game in sbt
games since being called up from the minors. He is

Andersoo 1-4
· v.~9-l

_8:10p.m.
Busch Sladium
St. Louis, Mo.

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. - New Marshall
Universitv basketball coach Ron Jirsa wasted little time putting together his coaching
staff.
Jirsa named Bob Mac Kinnon and Josh
Pastorino to the staff on ·lif.i?'"l.-:"~;j;l
Wednesday. The new
Marshall coach expects to
till the remaining positions
on his staff in the ne/\1 several days.
McKinnon . 43, will
&gt;erve as senior assistant for
the Thunderinl! Herd. A
coach
and
veteran
recruiter.
MacKinnon
most-recentlv served on
Jirsa
the staff of Matt Doherty at
the University of North Carolina.
"Bob has had tremendous experience,
both as a head coach and as an assistant in
twu of the top leagues in the country," Jirsa
said. "He has strong connections all over
the country and is accustomed to competing
on the highest levels in the ACC and Big
East. He: will be a valuable asset to our program at Marshall...
,
A native of Buffalo. N.Y.. and the s.on of
longtime NBA coach Bob MacKinnon Sr..
Mac Kinnon played college basketball at
King's College in Wilkes-Barre. Pa .. before
embarking on his coaching career.
Mac Kinnon·s coaching career started at
his alma mater as an assistant before moving· on to assistant coachi ng positions at
Mercyhurst College, George Washington
and Niagam. He took over as head coach at
the United State Merchant Marine

·PIHse see HenL 82

wlft-.
batting 15-for-30 (.500) since his promotion.
Albert Pujols nad a two-run double as the
Cardinals beat the Reds for only the second tiine. in
nine games this season. Pujols leads the major
leagues with a .387 average.
Sean Casey was 3-for-5 for the Reds. making him
12-for-22 in the last five games. Casey batted leadoff for only the second time all season.
Morris was behind 3-0 before he got his first out.
giving up a .leadoff double to Casey and walking

Marshall Football

Herd's Rader .
nominated for
Mackey Award
Staff

report

Please see Reds. 82

Reds' Wilson, Cubs' Farnsworth
suspend~d for last week's brawl
CHICAGO (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds pitcher Paul Wtlson was suspended for five games and Chicago
.Cubs pitcher Kyle Farnsworth was
penalized three games Wednesday
for their brawl last week.
Wilson, Farnsworth and Reds
infielder-outfielder
Russell
Branyan were fined undisclosed
amounts.
It was not immediately known
whether Wilson would appeal.
Farnsworth said he has not yet
decided, but added that he believed
the penalty was fair.
"When two people go at it, it is
still a fight. A fight is a fight, bolh
sides got to gel fined and suspend-

report

ed, whatever they have
to
do,"
Farnsworth
''I
said.
think they
did a fine
·
job."
Farnsworth and Wilson tangled
last Thursday at Great American
Ball Park in Cincinnati.
Wilson squared to put down a
sacrifice bunt.and was upset when
Farnsworth threw an inside fastball. Wilson said something .to
Farnsworth, and the Cubs reliever
headed toward the · plate and
flilJped away his glove.

Wilson threw down the bat and
met him a few feet to the left of
home. Farnsworth made a fool ballstyle tackle and put Wilson on his
back, then threw a punch at the
head of the Reds pitcher.
Both players were quickly covered by u pileup of teammates and
were ejected. Wilson had a cut on
the bndge of his nose that left
blood spattered on his jersey.
Just •as the umpires restored
calm. Branyan left the dugout and
apparently tried to get at Cubs first
baseman Eric Karros. Branyan was
restrained by four teammates and.
again, players emptied both
bull pens.

Wimbledon

,

Roddick lets
Rusedski lose
cool, match
BY HOWARD FENDRICH

Associated Press
WIMBLEDON, England- Andy Roddick
knows how it feels to get so riled by a call that
a tornado of anger swirls
and swirls until it ren!lers
the racket useless.
It was nice to be on the ·
other side of the net this
time: .Greg Rusedski 's ,profanity-filled tirade at the
chair umpire over a disput. ed point was the begillning of th~ end of their
big-serving showdown at Wimbledon on
Wednesday.
Roddick stayed focused and won the final
Andy Roddick, reacts after defeating Greg Rusedski , in 'their five games, including his only breaks of
second-round match Wednesday at · Wimbiedon. Roddick
won the match 7-6 (7-4), 7-6 (7-1), 7-5. (AP)
_
Please see ROddick. 82
I.

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. .
Marshall
University senior tight end Jason Rader was
named to the preseason John M&lt;lckey
Award Watch List.
The Mackey Award is presented annually
to the top tight end in college football.
Rader. a native of St.
Albans, W.Va.. was the
Herd's fifth-leading receiver in 2002, hauling in 30
passes for 320 yard:~ a two
touchdowns. Rader transferred to Marshall from the
University ·of Georgia lotlowing his sophomore season.
Rader
The Mackey Award is
presented by the Nassau County, N.Y.,
Sports Commission. The award winner is
announced in early December and the
recipient is honored at the NCSC's Annual
Awards Dinner in April.
.
The 2002 winner. Dallas Clark of Iowa,
was selected in the tlrst round of the 2003
NFL draft by the Indianapolis colts. Finalist
Mike Seidman of UCLA was selected in the
3rd round by the Carolina Panthers while
fellow finalist Kellen Winslow Jr. will be
returning for his junior year at Miami (Fla.).
The John Mackey Award was created l)y
the NCSC under the guidance of board
member Don McPherson. a Nassau County
native and former NFL and Syracuse
University All-American quarterback.
Mackey. also a Nassau County native, is
regarded as one of the best athletes to have
played the position of tight end. In addition
to being an NFL Hall of Farner. he is
Super Bowl winner (Baltimore. Super Bowl
V) and was the first President of the
NFLPA .
The complete 2003 watch list includes:
Bobby Blizzard. Sr.. North Carolina:
Andrew Clarke, Jr.. Toledo: Chris Cooley,
Sr.; Utah State; Joel Dressen, Jr.. Colorado
State; Tim·Euhus. Sr.. Oregon State; Brock
Edwards. Sr.. Texas: Alex Holmes. Sr.,
USC: Robert Johnson. Sr.. Auburn: Eric
Knott, Jr., Michigan State; Heath Miller,
So.. Virginia: Brett Pierce. Sr.. Stanford;
Jason Rader. Sr.. Marshall: Duncan Reid.
Jr.. Fresno State : Andy Roland, So., Duke;
Bo Scaife. Sr., Texas: Alex Smith, Jr. ,
Stanford: Ben Troupe, Sr., Florida; Ben
Utecht. Sr.. Minnesota: Benjamin Watson, ,
Sr.. Geor~ia; Kris Wilson, Sr., Pittsburgh;
· Kellen Wmslow, Jr.. Miami: Kevin Zureki,
Sr.. Eastern Michigan .

a

f

'

I

!

I

�Page 82 • The Dai,ly Sentinel

Thursday, June 26, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Middleport women roll past Good News
.

BY Elite WHm
Special to the Sentinel

After rain cancelled all 10 league
games from Week 6 on June 16. the
Galliu County Church Softball league
continued on with Week 7 as the
Rodney Methodist women. looked to
remain unbeaten, as did the Good
News and Church of God men.
In action at Fa·ith Baptist field. Faith
took on Church of God. In the
women's ~arne, Church of God (l-3)
picked up 1ts first victory of the season
with a 13-3 win over Faith (0-5).
In the men's game, Church of God
(4-0) remained unbeaten with a 12-2
victory over Faith (0-5) , ·
At the Vinton Park field. Vinton
Baptist took on Living Water. In the
women's game, living Water (3-2)
won ll-2. The loss drops Vinton's
women to 2-3.
In the men's game. Living Water (32) was victorious as well, winning 135. Vinton's men drop to 1-4.
In action at Raccoon Creek Cou.nty
Park, Good News took on Middleport.
In the women's game, Middleport (31) was victorious 20-0. It was the
Middleport women's second shutout of

was 6-for-6 with four runs sc·ored.
Dustin Caudill who was 6-for-6. with
four runs scored . Michael Hammons
who was 5-for-6 with four run s scored
and two home runs. and Matthew
Hemphill who was 4 for 5 with 4 runs
scored.
Fellowship ( 1-4) was led by Derek
Gibson who was 3-for-4 with two runs
scored.
Also in action from Week 7,
Nazarene Church took on First Baptist.
No scores or information were reported.
In a make-up · from Week 6, Church
of God faced Natarene Church. In the
women 's game . Church of God (2-3)
won 2-1 in a game shortened du~. to an
injury. Nazarene's women fall to 2-3.
In the men's game, Church of God
remained unbeaten with a 12-8 victory.
Shawn Waugh sealed the win late in
the game with a three-run home run to
put Church of God (5-0) up fur good.
Nazarene' s men fall to 2-3.
Next week. it's a battle of iivab. as
Faith Baptist takes on First Baptist,
and Church of God takes on
Middlepofl. (::hurch of God will look.
to avenge last year's 2-1 defensive
struggle against Middleport.

GALLIA COUNTY CHURCH
SOFTBALL LEAGUE
the season. Good New s women fall to
0-4.
,,
In the men's game, Good News (4-0)
remained tied at the top of the standings with Church of God. after their
15-4 victory. Good News was led by
John Sipple Sr.. who had a triple. and
Alan Elhott and Michael Barry. both
had hom~ runs. Middleport's men fall
to 1-3.
In the final contest from Week 7,
Rodney Methodist hosted Fellowship
Chapel. In the women's game. Rodney
Methodist remained unbeaten and tied
for ftrst place with First Baptist. after
their 7-4 victory. Rodney (5-0) was led
by .Cheryl Greenlee who was 4- for-4
with three runs scored.
Defensively. Rodney was led by
their outfield trio of Pau·la Whitt.
Robin Caudill and Eileen Hammons.
Fellowship's women fall to 2-3 .
In the men 's game. Rodney (4-1)
picked up their second straight victory
with a 28-7 win.
Rodney Yi3S led by Rob Sanders wito

Division-leading Royals beat lnd.ians·
CLEVELAND (AP) - Rookie Angel
Berroa and Desi Relaford hit RBI singles
in tile lOth inning Wednesday night. giving
Kansas City a 3-l win over the Cleveland
Indians and continuing the Royals· recent
domination of the AL Central.
The first-place Royals improved to l.l-6
within their division. Kansas City is 9-3 in
its last 12.
Raul Ibanez doubled off David Riske (II) to open Kansas City's lOth and Michael
Tucker sacrificed. With Cleveland's infield
playing on the grass, Berroa lined a single
over their heads into right.
After Carlos Febles reached on a rwo-

out intield single. Relaford brought home
Berroa. The Royals are 7 -I vs. Cleveland
this season.
Jason Gilfillan (1-1) pitched one inning
for the win and Mike MacDougal worked
the lOth for his 18th save in 22 opportunities.
llte Indians dropped to 1-8 in extnt
innings.
Cleveland starter Brian Anderson
allowed one run and seven hits in eight
innings, but came away with a tough nodecision when the Indians couldn't push a
second run across.
They loaded the bases with one out in

Reds
from Page81
Barry Larkin before Griffey's homer.
· The Cardinals tied it in the bottom of the
first on Hart's leado!f homer, and two-out
shots from Edmonds and Rolen. St. Louis
added four runs in the second on Pujols' tworun double, an RBI double by Edmonds and a
run-scoring single by Orlando Palmeiro to
make it 7-3.
Aaron Boone had· an RBI double in the
third and Casey had a run-scoring single in
the fourth off Morris. Singles by Casey and
Larkin and a run-scoring groundout by

the eighth, but Royals reliever Jason
Grimsley got Ben Broussard to hit into an
inning-ending double play to keep it tied II.
The Indians played superb defense
behind Anderson from the outset.
Cleveland turned double plays behind
the leti-hander in. the rtrst and second. In
the fourth. third baseman Casey Blake
made a diving stop near the line to take a
double away from Carlos Beltran . .
An inning later, rookie right fielder Jody
Gerut played a ball perfectly out of the corner before throwing out Ibanez trying to
stretch a single.

Griffey off Lance Painter cut the gap to a run
in the seventh.
Cal Eldred retired four in a row to get to tlie
ninth and Jason lsringhausen finished for his
second save in two chances.
Notes: Reds pinch-hitter Jose Guillen was
ejected in the ninth for arguing balls and
strikes .... Hart is the sixth player in Cardinals
history to hit a leadotl homer for his tirst
career homer. The last was Curt Ford in 1986.
... Austin Keams was hitless in four at-bats
and is in a 2-for-26 slump .... Pujols is 4-for9 against Wilson with two homers ... . Morris,
who had lost his last two outings, has never
lost three in a row as a starter. He lost three
straight as a reliever over a two-month period
in 2000 when· he was recuperating from
reconstructive elbow sur.gery. however.

"Josh is one of the brightest young coaches
I have ever been around," Jirsa said. "He has
a great future as a coach. We had success
together at Dayton and he brings that winning
from Page 81
mentality with him to Marshall."
His playing career at Dayton was cut short
Academy in 1997 and won a pair of Skyline by a medical condition, but he remained on
Conference. posting a 38-16 record in two scholarship through his senior season and got
seasons.
an early jump on his coaching career. After
From there he joined up as an assistant hi s playing career ended, he spent one season
coach with Doherty at Notre Dame for one as coordinator of basketball operations before
season before moving to UNC. He was partly becoming a full -time assistant for the 2001responsible for UNC's 2002 recruiting class
02 season.
that was ranked in the top five in the nation.
"I am excited to be in Huntington and to be
Pastorino, 26, a native of Clearwater, Fla. , working
with Coach Jirsa." Pastorino said. "I
where he still holds 17 school records at just wish it was . time to start the season
Clearwater High School. comes to Marshall already. Coach Jirsa is a guy I believe in. l
after a short stint as an assistant coach at believe in what he can do and l am excited
Clemson. He attended the University of about the kind of program we can have here
Dayton where he was the first player recruit- at Marshall ."
ed by then Ayers coach Oliver Purnell.

Herd

Daniela Hantuchova lost a 12-10 third set to
Shinobu Asagoe.
·
And proving that his Grand Slam-debut
upset
of defending champion Hewitt wa$J't a
from Page 81
total fluke. qualifier ivo Karlovic slammed 29
aces in a 6-4, 7-6 (3), S-7. 6-2 win over Paul
Rusedski's serve, to advance to the third round Baccanello.
with a 7-6(4), 7-6(1), 7-5 victory.
Even Roddick and Rusedski - who share'
"l knew he might be a little mad," Roddick the record for fastest serve in history, 149 mJ?h
said, "so if l was going to get back into it'or try - didn't come close to that total. each comp11:
to take over, then that was probably going to be ing 14 aces. Both played stretches of superb
my time."
tennis through the first two sets. neither allowThis entire fortnjght might just be his time. ing so much as a break point. Rusedski
The No. ~-seeded Roddick is looking more and . volleyed brilliantly; Roddick. tinished with 29
more like a player ready to claim his first baseline winners. ·
Grand Slam title. He's fresh off his first grassRoddick seized control of the opening
court title, at Queen's Club, and he's rejuve- tiebreaker with a runaround forehand return
nated - if that word can be used to describe winner. then closed it with a backhand passing
someone who's 20 - by new coach Brad . shot at a nifty angle.
Gilbert.
·
Rusedski seemingly was getting back. . into
"The results · are Speaking right now," the match. leading 5-2 in the third set, when the
Roddick said. "You don't become physically whole &lt;;omplexion changed. With Roddick
better overnight. A lot of it's between the ears, serving at 30-15, he hit a shot that caught the
keeping calm."
'
'
line, and a fan yelled "Out!" Rusedski hit the
That helped Wednesday against Rusedski, ball over the net, but then stopped playing the 1997 U.S. Open runner-up and the man he thou~ht a linesman made the call.
who eliminated Roddick in the third round last
Rodd1ck. a bit confused, too, tapped a volley
year.
over to win the point.
.
Roddick never has been to the round of 16 at
Rusedski briefly argued with chair umpire
Wimbledon, and standing in the way is No. 25 Lars Graff, pleading for the . point to be
Tommy Robredo, who defeated Brian Vahaly replayed. At the next changeover, though,
of the United States 6-4, 6-4, 6-2. Robredo Rusedski came unhinged completely.
knocked off Lleyton Hewitt at the French
Walking off the court, he h1t a ball back to
Open but is much more of a threat on chiy- than the wall behind the baseline. He threw his
grass.
·
racket down beside his chair, threw a ball.
Also into the third round were Todd Martin, tossed his racket again. and screamed ali sorts
who beat three-time French Open champion · of obscenities at Graff.
Gustavo Kuerten: Justin Gimelstob, who
The BBC, which aired the match and pic~ed
topped No. 15 Arnaud Clement; No. 4 Roger up Rusedski's comments on a courtside microFederer and No. 8 Sjeng Schalken.' Venus phone, apologized to viewers. Tournament refWilliams, Kim CliJsters and Lindsay eree Alan Mills said he will tine ~u sedski but
Davenport won in straight sets, but No. 9 didn't immediately announce how much:

Cavs focusing on
second draft pick
CLEVELAND !AP)
The No. I pick in the NBA
Draft is ~ no-brainer for the
Cleveland Cavaliers. The
No . 31 selection will
require much deeper thinking.
The Cavaliers will take
18-year-old high .school star
LeBron James (big surpri se.
huh?) first overall in
Thursday's draft. Barring a
trade, the team will have to
wait until 29 other players
are . chosen before pick in¥
agam.
But as the Cavaliers
learned last year. that second pick sometimes can be
more rewarding than the
First.
"We're hoping we can get
as lucky as we did last
year," team owner Gordon
Gund said Wednesday.
The Cavs dmfted guard
DaJuan Wagner with the
sixth pick in the 2002 draft.
then watched forward
Carlos Boozer slide into the
second round before they
drafted him with the 35th
pick.
·
While Wagner had an
injury-plagued rookie season - he played in just 47
games
Boozer was
arguably the team's most
valuable player, averaging
I0 points and 7.5 rebounds
per game.
The Cavs realize they
probably won't get that type
of production from this
year's second pick.
"We're hoping to find a
player with the 31st pick

that will make ou r roster,"
Cavaliers general manager
Paxson
said.
Jim
"Obviously. Carlos raised
the bar.
"
"I don 't know if he'll (the
31st pick) contribute like
Buoter did. but we can get a
player there that will be on
our roster and have a chance
to be a pretty good player.
whether it's a shooter or
versatile big guy or point
guard."
This week. the Cavalier'
have been trying to fi&lt;j•ure
which players still i.vil be
around when commi ssioner
David Stern puts the team
back on the dol'k in the second round.
One of those possibilities
is Arizona's Luke Walton.
son of Hall of Fame;• Bill
Walton .
Walton and Creighton's
Kyle Korver worked out for
Paxson. Cavs· wach Paul
Silas
and
hi s staff
Wednesday. The pair of forwards followed a run of
point 2Liard&gt; and shooters
the team brought in this
week to show their skills.
Jason Gardner (Ari zona).
Hollis Price (Oklahoma)
and Troy Bell (Boston
College) all could help the
Cavaliers at poilll guard a spot
which
gave .
Cleve land headache s la st
season.
Silas plans to see if James
can play the point during
summer leag ue games. It he
can't, the Cavs need a hackup plan.

(AP)~d Chasity Melvin had

"It wasn't like they were

13 for Cleveland.
shots that people were on us
Feaster knocked down a and we had to create . .W~ were.
pair of 3s, and Dawn Staley able to penetrate and I hen kick
and Shalonda Enis also hit out for an easy shot."
from beyond the arc as the
Fea&gt;ter scored eight of her
Sting shot 56.5 percent in the 14 points in the second half,
second half.
including two key 3-pointers
'This is what we have been which helped ignite the home
in search of all year- to play crowd.
,
good defense and get some
'' I thought the key to that
easy buckets on oftense," said was our execution on
Staley, who finished with 12 oiTense," coach Tnudi Lacey
points. ·we didn't have to said. ''We were more patient
fight for a lot on the offensive waiting on our screens and
end."
getting the shot we wanted.
Staley said it was the
"There were times. particuunselfish play of her team- _larly on the road thi s season,
mates that created some easy where we have nushed our
baskets.
shots and we've run thr'lugh·
"!thought we did a good job our screens and turned the ball
of sharing the basketball in the over. We didn't do that
second half." she said. "The tonight."
.
shots we had. they were pracThe ·sting have now won
lice shots.
ti ve straight at home.

Pro baseball
National League
Eaat

W
Atlanta ............... 49
Monlreal ........... .43
Philadelphia ....... 40
Florida ............... 39

L
26
35
34
40

Pel.
.653
551
541
.494

GB

New York ....... ... 34

41

.453

15

(

7'1
8',
12

Central
WLPe1GB
............ 41
35 .539
Houston ............ 41
37
526
1
St. Louis .......... .40
36 .526
1
C h~ ago

Cincinnati.. .... ... .37

39

.487

4

Pittsbu rgh .......... 32
Milwaukee ....... 31

43
45

.427.
.408

a',
10

Weat
WLPe1GB
San Francisco ..46
31
.597
Los Angeles ... .. 45
32 .584
1
Ari zona ............ .41
36 .532
5
39 .513
6\
Colorado ........... 41

San Diego ...... .26 54 .325
Wednesday's Games
Pittsburgh 6. Montreal 5

21 \

· MilwaUkee 12. Chicago Cubs 6, 10
1nnings

Arizona 3. Houston 2
Philadelphia B. Atlanta 1

St. Louis 9, Cil)cinnati 6
N.Y. Mels 6, Florkla 3
San Diego 7. Colorado 6
Los Angeles 6, San Francisco 0
Thursday's Games
Milwaukee (W.Franklin 4-5) at Chicago
Cubs (Prior 8-3). 2:20 p.m
·
Florida (Willis 7-1) at N.Y. Mets (Heilman
0·0) , 710 p.m
Philadelphia (Wolf 8-3) at Atlanta
(Hampton 3-3) . 7·35 p.m
Cincinnati (Graves 3-6} at St . Louis

(W.WIIIiams 9-2). 8:10 p.m.
Friday 's Games
Chicago Cubs at Chicago White So)l, ,

2:05p.m.
Texas at Houston, 4:05p.m.
Montreat at Toronto, 7:05p.m.
Florida at Boston, 7.05 p.m.
Colorado at Pittsburgh . 7:05 p.m .
Arizona at Detroit, 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets at N.Y. Yankees , 7 :05p.m.
Cincinnati at Cleveland. 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia at Baltimore. 7:05pm.
Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 7:15p.m.
Milwaukee ·at Minnesota, 8:05p.m.
. St. LOUIS at Kansas City. 8:05p.m.
San Diego at Seattle, 1o:os p m .
Los Angeles at Anaheim, 10:05 p.m.
Oakland at San Franc1sco. 10: 15 p.m

Cardinals 9, Reds 6
Cincinnati .. ... 301 100 100 - 6 9 0
St. Louis ....... 340 ' 000 02x - 9 13 0
PWIIson. Heredia (7) . Reith (8).
Dempster (8) and Stinnett : Morris, Pa1nter
(7) , Eldred (7) , lsringhausen (9) and
Matheny. W-Morris 8-5. L-PWilson 5-5.
Sv- lsringhausen (2}. HAs- Cincinnati,
GriHey Jr. {8). St.Louis, Hart (1), Edmonds
. (20), Rolen (1 3).

National League Leaders
BATTING- PUJOis . St. Louis. .387;
Helton, Colorado , .343; SheHield, Atlanla ,
.341 ; Renter ia, St. Louis, .340 ; Vidro,
Montreat, .328: La Ouca. Los Angeles.
.322; Lieberthal , Philadelphia, .321 .
RUNS-Pujols, St . louis, 68; Helton,
Colorado, 68; Sheffield, Atlanta, 63; Furcal,
Allanta. 62; Payton. Colorado. 53;
Berkman, Houston , 52 ; OCabrera ,
Montreal, 51: Bonds, San Francisco, 51 .
RBI- PrW1Ison. Colorado. 67; Pujots. St.
Louis , 66: l owell . Florida , 63: SheHield.
Allanta . 62; Helton ,. Colorado, 61 ; Kearns ,
Cincinnati , 57: AJones. Atlanta. 55.
HITS-PUJOIS, St. LOUIS, 106; Helton,
Colorado, 98; Renteria, St. Lou is, 98;
Pierre. Florida, 95; PrWilson , Colorado, 94:
Furcal, Allanta. 92; OCabrera, Montreal,
90: LCastilto, Florida, 90.
OOUBLES-Pujols, St.louis, 28; Helton ,
Colorado. 27 : LGonzalez. Anzona. 26:
~4Giles , Atlanta, 25; PrWilson, Colorado ,
25, Rentena , St LoUis, 24, B1ggio,
Houston. 24.
i
TRIPLES-Furcal
Atlanta ,
8:

CPatterson, Ch1cago! 7; LWalker. Colorado.
7; Wigginton . New York. 5; Podsednik.
Milwaukee . 5 ; AGonzalez , Fl orida , 5:
Pierre, Florida , 4 , JEncarnacion, Florida, 4 ;
Payton, Colorado. 4 : SFinley. Anzona. 4.
HOME RUNS-Lowell , Florida , 2 3:
Jlopez , Atlanta , 23; DUnn, Cinci nnati. 22 ,
Pujols, St. Loul&amp;, 21 ; SeKson, Milwau kee,
21 ; Sheffield. Atlanta . 21 : Bonds, San
Francisco, 20.
STOLEN BASES-Pierre, Florida , 31 ,
DRoberts, los Angeles , 24: EYoung.
Milwaukee. 16: Podsednik, Milwaukee. 14.
Delee. Florida, 14 ; Renteria, St Louis, 14;
Lofton, Pi H~burgh , 14.
PITCHING (8 Decisions)- Will ls, Florida.
7-1, _875, 2.38: KBrown , Los Angeles . 102 , .833, 2 .22; WW111iams, St. Lou1s, 9-2 ,
.818, 2.55; Chacon , Colora&amp;, 11 -3, .786 ,
3. 91 ; Ishii. Los Anqeles. 7-2, .778. 2 .78 :
Rueter, San Franasco, 7· 2 . .778 , 3 55 ;
Ayala, Montreal , 6-2, .750 , 3 .09; HRamirez,
Allanla , 6-2 . .750 , 4 .09: Reitsma .
Cinc1nnati. 6-2, .7W, 5 .0 1: Dote!, _H ouslon.

KansasC1ty ... OOO 000 0 10 2 - 3 11 1
Cleveland ..... 01 0 000 000
1 6 1
Snyder. G flm sley (8), Gilfillan (9),
MacDougal (10) and Mayne; BriAnderson.
DBaez (9), A1ske ( 10) and Lak8f. W--Gilflllan
~-0 L-Riske 1-1 . Sv--MacDo ugal (18)

o-

Ind ia napoliS at Sc rantonW1Ikes-Barre
'
Nortol k. a! l oui sville
Ottawa at Rochester
Pawtucket at Durham
Toled o at Richmond

Frontier League

American League Leaders

East DIYIIIOn
BATTING-Mora ,
Balt imore,
.361 ;
W
L Pet.
GB
!Suzuki , SeatUS, .358 : Garc laparra . Wash•ngton ..... 19
9 .679
Boston 344 ;, Bradley. Cleveland , .342 : Evansville ......... 18
10
.643
1
Blaloc k. Texas, .335; Byrnes, Oakland , Ch illicothe .......... 16
9 .640
!'1
.325; MiSweeney, Kansas C1ty, .321 .
.
Richmond ........ l7
12
.586
2',
Bos1on .
65 ; Kalamazoo ...... 11
AUNS - Garciaparra.
17
393
8
CDelgado, Toronto, 6 5, Wells , To ronto, 61 ; Florence ............ .4
23
. 1'48
14' ~
MAamirez . Bostof'l , 61 ; A Sori ano , New
Wast Division
Yor k, 59; BBoone, Seattle, 58; !Suzuki,
W
L Pet.
GB
SeatUe. 55. Catalanot1o. Toronto, 55.
600
Gateway ........... 15 · 10
ABI-GDelgado. Toronto , 81 ; Wells , Rocklord ............ 15
13 .536
1'?
Toronto, 72; GAnders on, Anaheim , 66: Kenosha ...... ...... 12
14
.462
3 ·~
BBoone. Seattle . 63: MRamirez. Boston, 56: M1d-Missour1 ..... 12
15
444
4
Millar, Boston, 55; Gibbons, Baltimore , 54 .
14
440
4
Cook County ..... 11
HITS-ISuzuk i.
Seattle ,
111 , RiverCity ........... 12 · 16 .429
4-',.
Garciaparra, Bosto n, 109 ; Wells, Toronto.
Wednesday 's Games
6·2, .750, 1.67 .
100 : ASoriano. New YorK. 97 ; GAnderson.
Kalamazoo 11 ;Chillicothe o
STRIKEOUT$--Wood, Chicago , 136; Anaheim , 94 ; BBoone. Seattle, 93 ; Baldelli,
Cook Co'unty at River City, ppd ,, rain
Schmidt. San Francisco, 117 : JVazquez, · Tampa Bay, 92; MVoung, Texas, 92.
Washington 5, EvansviliP 1
Monlreal, t14 ; Prior, Chicago. 111 : Noma.
DOUBLES- GAnderson . Anaheim . 27:
Richmond 1o. Florence 7
Los Angeles , 96; KBrown , Los Angeles, 93: Huff. Tampa Bay. 26; Wells, Toronto. 26:
Kenosha 4, Gateway 2
Millwood, Philadelphia. 91 .
Mueller, Boston, 26, Ma1sui, New York , 24;
Rocklord 1, M1d-M1ssouri 0 , 4th inning .
SAVES-Gagne, Los Angeles , · 29: Catalanotto. Toron to.
24;
Bradley. susp., rain
Smaltz, Atlanta, 28; Biddle, Montreal , 21 : Cleveland , 22: CDelgado, Toronto . 22;
Thursday 's Games
.Wagner.
Houslon . 21 ;
MiWilliams. BBoone , Seattle , 22.
Chillicolhe at Kalamaioo
Pit1sburgh , 19; JJimenez, Colorado, 18;
TR IPLES-Garc1aparra. Boston, 12;
Cook County at River City
Williamson , Cincinnati. 17; Bemtez , New CGuzman . Minnesota . 9: Baldelli, Tampa
Evansville at Washington
York, 17; Worrell, San Francisco, 17.
Florence at Richmond
Bay, 5, MYoung, Texas. 5; Byrnes, Oakland,
Kenosha at Gateway
5; DJimenez . Ch icago, 5.
HOME AUN5-CDelgado , Toronto, 23:
Rockford at Mid~M is souri
American League
BBoone. Seattle. 21: ASoriano. New York. 20:
Frldav 's Games
East
Cook County at Kenosha , camp. of susp.
Wells, Toronto, 19; JaG1ambi, New York, 19;
W
L Pet.
GB
·
GAnderson, Anaheim , 18; ARodnguez, Texas, game, 1st game
NewYork ........ '46
30
.605
18: CEverett. Te)(as. 18; JGonzalez, Texas. 18.
Cook County at Kenosha . 2nd game
Boston . ..... .... 44
32
.579
2
STOLEN BA SES--ASoriano, New York ,
Evansville at Chillicothe
Toronto ............. 44
34
.564
3
Gateway at Mid-M issouri
20; Crawford, Tampa Bay. 18; !Suzuki,
Baltimore .......... 35
40
.467
10 '1
Kalamazoo at Florence
Seattl e, 18 ; Beltran, Kansas City, 18:
Tampa Bay , .... 25
51 .329
21
River City at Aocklord
Mondesi. New YorK . 15: ASanchez . D9troit,
Central
Wash ington at Richmond
14; Hairston Jr .. Baltimore, 14, Damon,
WLPe1GB
Boston, 14 .
Kansas C ity ..... 40
34
.541
PITCH ING (8 Declsio ns) -Halladay.
M1nnesota ....... 41
35
.539
Toronto, 11-2, .846, 3 57; Loaiza , Ch1cago ,
41
.468
5'?
Chicago ............ 36
11-2, .846. 1.99: DWells, New York , 9· 2 ,
Cleveland ......... 30
45
.400
10 ' ..
.818, 3.26 : Meche. Seattle. 9·3 .. 750. 2 .89 :
Detroit ........ 18 · 57
.240
22 '~
Meigs American Legion
Dlowe , Boston , 8-3 , .727 , 4 .28; Lid le ,
West
June
Toronto, 10·4, .714 , 4.82 ; Moyer, Seattle ,
WLPe1GB
5
........... at Mason County, 15-4 L
10-4, .7 14, 2.93.
Seat11e .. .... .. 50
26
658
10
.......... a! MBrletta (DH). 5-2 L
STRIKEO UTS--Clemens, New YorK , 112 : 10 .....
Oakland .
..... 44
32
.579
6
. ....... at Marietta (DH) , 1Q-6 L
Muss1na, New YorK , 99 ; Halladay, Toronto , 11
12'1
Anaheim ........... 37
38
.493
............... at Athens. 7-2 W
96 ; Loaiza , Chic ago , 90: Colon , Chicago , 13 . .
Texas ................ 29
47
.382
21
. .. Mason County. 11-9 L
84 : Wakefield, Boston. 82: Pettine. New
Wednesday 's Games
15 .................. ..... ... a1 Pickerington, 5-4 L
YorK , 78, PMartinez , Boston , 78 .
Boston 11 , Detroit 2
21 .......... .. ........ ....... at Wellston . 13-5 W
SAVES-Foulke, Oakland, 20. Urbina, 21 ...................... atWellston . 13-1 W
Baltimore 9, Toronto 2
Te)(as. 19: Guardado. Minnesota, 19 : 22 ........................Lancaster II, 2-1 W
N .Y Yankees B, Tampa Bay 5
MacDougal, Kansas City, 17; JuliO, Battimore, 22 .. ......... : ................. Lancaster II, 6-0 W
Kansas City 3, Cleveland 1. 10 innings
16; DBaez, Cleveland, 16, LCarter, Tampa 23
Texas 9. Oakland 8
........................... A!hens. 6-5 W
. ........Manetta, 5-3 W
Minnesota 6, Chicago While Sox 5. 1 1 Bay, 12; Perc1val, Anaheim, 12.
24 ..
innings
28 .......... .... ........... Wellslon (DH) , 1 p.m.
Anaheim 6. Seattle 3
International League
Thursday's Games
July
North Division
Detroit (Roney 0-1) at Boston (P.Martinez
3
...... at Wellston. 6 p.m
W
L Pet.
GB
4-2), 1:05 p.tn .
.ParkerSbu rg (DH) (at UAG). 1 p.m .
5
Bufialo ......... .45
30
600
.· ChicagQ White Sox (Buehrle 4·10) at Pawtucket ....... .41
6 ........................ Shinnston (OH). 1 p.m .
35 .539
4'
Minnesota (Lohse 6-5), 1:05pm.
7 .......................... at Beverly, 6 p.m .
6',
Ottawa ......... 40
38 .513
N .Y. Yankees (M ussina 9-4) at Tampa Scranton
8 .... ............. . .... a1 Nitro (DH) , 1 p.m .
7' ,
..... 39
39 .500
g',
10 .. ............ ..
. ....... .Wellslon, 6 p.m.
Bay (Standridge 0-2), 2:15p.m
40 .474
Rochester ...... 36
Baltimore {Lopez 1-4) at Toron to Syracuse
11
...... ...... .. .. Parkersburg, 6 p m.
.... 32
41
.438
12
·
12 .... .................... Nitro (DH) . I p m.
(Hendric.kson 5-5), 7:05 p.m.
South Division
13
..... .... .. at Winfield (DH), 2 p.m.
Kansas City (lima 1·0) at Cleveland
W
l
Pet.
GB
(Ric.Rodriguez 3-7). 7:05p.m.
15 ............... at Lancaster (DH). 5:30pm.
Norfolk .............39
37 .513
Oakland (Hudson 5·3) al Texas (Valdes Durham .
16...
........... at Athens, 6 p m.
'
.. .... 38
37 .507
19 .......................... Athens (DH), I p.m.
6·3), 8:05 p.m.
40 .474
Charlotte ...... ,.. 36
3
20 ... ......... District Tournamenl at Wellston
Seattle (Mec he 9-3) at Anaheim Richmond ........ 34
6',
45 .430
(Wash burn 6-6), 10:05 p.m
(All heme g'a mes played at Meigs High
West Division
School unless otherwise noted.)
Friday's Games
W
L Pet.
GB
Chicago Cubs at Chicago White Sox. Louisville ......... 47
31
603
2:05p.m
Toledo ............ 39
37 .5 13
Texas at Houston, 4:05pm.
Indianapolis ... 35
42
.455
Montreal at Toronto, 7:05 p.m
Columbus .... ... 35
44
.443
Flonda a1 Boston. 7:05p.m .
Wednesday's Games
NASCA A Winston Cup
Arizona at Detroit. 7:05 p m.
Syracuse 10, Charlotte 3
The 2003 NASCAR Winston Cup schedN.Y. Mets at N.Y. Yankees. 7:05pm.
Buffalo 8, Columbus 0
ule and standings, with winners in parenCincinnati at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m .
Scranton Wilkes-Barre 5, Indianapolis 4
theses :
Philadelphia at Baltimore, 7·05 p.m
Louisville 11 , Norfolk 5
Feb. 16 - Daytona 500 , Daytona Beach .
Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 7:15p.m .
Fla (Michael Waltnp)
Ottawa 9. Rochester 5
Milwaukee at Minnesota . 8:05 p.m.
Durham 7 , Pawtucket 1
Feb. 23 - Subway 400 , Rockingham ,
St. Louis at Kansas City, 6:05 p.m
ToledO 3 . Richmond 0 , 1st game
N.C (Dale Jarrett)
San Diego at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Toledo 3, Richmond 2. 10 innings, 2nd
March 2 - UAW-DatmlerChrysler 400. ·
Los Angeles at Anaheim, 10:05 p.m.
game
Las Vegas . (Matt Kenseth)
Oakland at San Francisco. 10:15 p m.
Thursday 's Games
March 9 - Atlanta 500. Hampton, Ga .
(Bobby L abOnte)
Charlotte at Syracuse
Royals 3, Indians 1, 10 Innings
Columbus at BuHalo
March 16 - Carol1na Dodge Dealers

Legion baseball

Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
C LEVELAN D INDIANS-Traded OF
Karim Garcia and AH P Dan M1ceh Ia the
New YorK Yan kees IOl a playe r to be
named
NEW YO R K YANKEES-Named Lu1s
·SoJO sp ecial ass1gnment mstructor.
Des1gnated RHP M1 ke Thurman and OF
Charles Gtps on lor ass1gnmenl
TORON TO BLUE JAYS-S1gned RHP
Shaun Marcum . RH P JuStin James. RHP.
Chad Mul holl and and AH P M1chae! 'Alder.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS- Agreed to terms w1th
C Tony A1Ch 1e.O F Tony McQuade C Adam
Tidball and OF Dav1d Gresky
CINCINNATI REDS-Placed LH P Gabe
White on the 15-day diSabled list Recalled
RHP Bria n Reith from LoUisville of the IL
MONT REAL EXPOS-Placed RHP luis
Ayala o n the 15- day dtsabled l1st. retroactive to June-22

N.H.
July 27- Pennsytvama 500. Long Pond.
Aug. 3 - Brickya rd 400 , IndianapoliS.
Aug. 10 - Sirius at The Glen , Wa tkins
Glen. N.Y.
.
Aug. 17 - Mtchigan 400 , Brooklyn.
Aug. 23- Sharpie 500, Bnstol, Tenn.
Aug. 31 - Southern 500, Darlington.

S.C.
Sept 6 - Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400,
Richmond, Va.
Sept. 14 New Hampshire 300.
Loudon.
Sept 2 1 -Dover 400 , Dover. Del.
Sept .. 28 - EA .Sports 500 . Talladega ,
Ala .
Oct 5 - Kansas 400. Kansas City.
Oct. 11 UAW-GM Oualily 500 ,
Concord. N.C.
Oct. 19 Old Dom1n1on 500 ,
Martinsville , Va .
Oct. 26- Ge org1a 500. Hampton.
Nov. 2 - Checker Auto Parts 500,
Avondale. Ar iz ,
Nov. 9 - Pop Secret Microwave Popcorn
400 . Rocki ngham. N.C
Nov. 16 - Ford 400, Homestead, Fla.·
Driver Standings
1. Matt Ken seth ..... ............ .. ..... 2,396
.. ... 2,2 22
2 . Jeff Gordon .... ..
3. Dale Earnhardt Jr ................ 2,220
4. Bobby Labonle..............
. ...... 2, 136
5 . Michael Waltrip .. ...... ...
.. ..... 2.024
6 . Kurt Busch ..
... 2.012
7 . Jtmrhie Johnson ...........
.. 1,965
1.940
8. Rusty Wallace .... ............
9. Kevin Harvick ...
.. .. 1,901
10. Sterling Marlin
.................. 1,892
11 . Tony Stewart ............................ 1,849
12 . Mark Martin.
.. ........ 1.846
13 Robby Gordon .
. . ·-· 1.834
14 . Ricky Craven ................
.. .... 1,797
15 . Terry Labonte ........... ....
.. ..... 1.750
16 . Jeff Burton ..
.. .... 1,737
17 Ryan Newman ..................... 1,736
18 . Elliott 'sadler ..............
.... 1.677
19 . Bill Elliot! ........................... 1,657
20 . Joe Nemechek ....................... 1,639

PITISBUAGH PIRATESI-Recalled RHP
Brian Meadows tram Nashv111e ol the PCL.
SAN DIEGO PA DRES-Agreed to terms
with C Colt Morton S1gned SS Just1n
Smyres.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Assoc iation,
NEW OR LE ANS HORNETS-Named
Kenny Gattison assistant coach
SACRAMENTO
K INGS-S 1gned F
Darius Songaila.

FOOTBALL
Nation&amp;! Football League
CINCINNATI BENG ALS-Released DB
Tierre Sam s.
NEW YORK JET S-S1gned P-TE Dalla s
:
f)leil and OT Joe Minucct
PITISBU RGH STEE LERS-Signed O L
Marvel Sm1th to a contract extens1on.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Named Ta d
Le1weke chief ·eKecut1ve dlfi~er

TAMPA BAY BU CCANEE RS - Re leaseD
LB Bubba Alexander. OT Ryan Fletcher,
WR Ah mad Harris. RB Morgan Kane .
TENNESSEE TITANS-Agreed to te rms
with Jetl F1sher, coac h. on a con trac t
el'(tension th rough th e 2006 season

HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CALGARY FLAMES- Re-s1gned D
Steve Mantador LW Ol eg Sap ryk1n and G
Dany Sabounn.
COLORADO AVALAN CHE- Agreed l o
terms with C Peter Forsbe rg on a one-yea r
contract.
FLOR IDA PANTHER S-C iatmed AW
Valeri Bure off waivers tram St. Lou1s.
NASHVILLE PAEDATOR S- S1gne d D
MarK Eaton . D Tomas Kloucek. LW L1bor
Pivko and LW T1mofe 1Sh1sk anov.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS-Re-signed F
Enc Godard to a two-year contract.

Pro basketball

COLLEGE

Women's National Basketball
Association

'

Auto racing

New York 70. PhoemK 64
Thursday 's Games
Los Angeles at San Antomo. 1 p m
Indiana at Connectic ut . 7 11.m
Friday's Games
Seattle at Cleveland. 7 p m.
Detroit at New York , 7'30 p m
Phoem x- at M 1n~esota B p m

400, Darlmgton, S.C. (Ricky Craven)
March 23 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn .
(Kurt Busch)
March 30 - SamsungAadioShack 500,
Fort Worth , Texas. (Ryan Newman}
April 6 - Aaro n's 499, Talladega, Ala .
(Dale Earnhardt Jr.)
Apr\113- Virginia 500, M artinsvi lle_(JeH
'Gordorl )
April ~7 - Auto Club 500. Fontana , Calif.
(Kurl Busch )
May 3 Po ntiac E.-.c cit eme nt 400,
Richmond , Va . (Joe Ne mechek)
May 25 - Coca -C ola 600. Concord.
'
N.C. {Jtmm1e Johnson)
June 1 - MBNA Am eric a 400, Dover,
Del. (Ryan Newman)
J une 8 - Pocono 500 , Long Pond, Pa.
(Tony Stewart)
June 15 - Si nus Satell ite Radio 400,
Bro oklyn . Mich . ( Ku ~ t Busch)
June 22 Dodge Save Mart 350,
Sonoma, Calif. (Robby Gordon)
JulY 5 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach. Fla.
July 13 - TropiCana 400, Joliet . Ill.
July 20 - New England 300, Loudon,

CENTRAL . IOWA- Named Jeff Bovee
men 's and women's cross count ry coach.
1i1LLSOALE- Na ft;1 ed
Penny
Nee r
women's track and lteld coach.
MANHATTAN- Named Jill Donovan
women's lacros se coach

Eastern Conterence

W

L

Pet.

Detrolt.. ................ 7
1 .875
New York ............. 6
4
.600
Charlotte .......... 7
5
.583
Conn ecticut ......... 6
5
.545
Cleveland .. ........... 5
5
.500
Indiana .............. 5
5
.500
.200
Washi ngton ....... 2
8
Western Conference

W

L

Pet.

Los Angeles ..... 11
2
.846
Seattle .. ............. 6
5
.545
Houston ............. 6
7
.462
Minnesota .......... 5
6
.455
SanAnlonio ....... S
7
.417
Sacramento ....... 5
8
.385
PhoeniK .......... , .... 2
10
.167
Wednesday's Games
Charlotte 61 , Cleveland 50

GB

2

NORTH CARO"INA-GREEN SBORO-

2
2

Named Emily Marron women·s golf coach .
NORTH
CAROLINA WESLEYANNamed Enc Allen men's and women s tenniS coach and Jack G1nn football co ach .
OHIO-Named Clay CalkinS men's and
women 's cross country and track and field
coach .
SAN DIEGO- Named T1m M ickelson
men 's golf coach

l

3
3
6

GB
4
5
5
5 ',
6

WASH INGTON

&amp;

JEFFERSON-

Named C had Moore men·s lacrosse co ach.
WILKES-Named Jon Laude nslager
wrestling c oach
YALE- Named Andy Shay men·s
lacrosse coach

a·,

.'

*

1'~E FIRST ST£p IN

In 1889, Eufaula native Jamie

Also included are the Cour1c-Smith

BUILDING THIS

house, the an~estral hom e of The

Rhodes was making plans to marry
his girlfriend, Mamie Harwell. He

.

Today Show's Katie Cour1c, the hisroric

'

WASN'T DRAWING UP THE PLANS.

. had taken into account most of the

Shorter Mansion and the harhershop

*

Ill

details to make the event a special

the Bluff Citv. Inn which dates back w'

day. What he hadn't counted on was

1885.

winning the New Orleafls lottery. But

Roddick

- I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentinel.com

Scoreboard

NBA

Sting beats Rockers, 61-50
CHARLOTIE. N.C.
- Allison Feaster led the
Charlotte Sting to ,J.he type of
complete game th! team has
been seeking for the past
month.
For most of the season. the
Sting (7-5) have hung their hat
on a strong defense. allowing
just 63~5 points a game - the
second-fewest in the WBNA.
But on Wednesday night.
led by a strong perimeter
game. they got the offensive
production they've needed.
Charlotte hit on all four 3point attempts in the first eight
minutes of the second half to
break open a two-point game
and build a 17-point lead en
route to a 61-50 win over the
Cleveland . Rockers. The
Rockers never pulled within
double digits again.
Merlakia Jones scored 14

Thursday, June 26, 2903

* Alabama's histor~ is fill ed

with unique tales that arc both enter-

,

that's exactly what he did. Wanting to

raining and enlightening. And one of

make the most of his good fortune,

the best ways ro learn about rhings

Jamie used the money to build .a

like the historic district in Hunts\·ille

Victorian cottage in which the couple

or the Civil War legaC\· of Selma. is on

could begin their new life together.

our free walking tours. :--tore than 10

And he ended up with a place where

tours take place all across rhc 'tare.

his lucky numbers made him feel like

e\'en· Sarurdav at I 0:00

the luckiest rman in the world.

* The

J .111 :;

!rom

.\-lay 24 through July 5. For rour lo.:anon,.
•

WWW.ALWALKI NGTOU RS.COM

Rhodes-Purcell home is still standing

Albertville
&amp;hiand
Auburn
Birm ingham
Decatur

today. And its story 1s just one of
hundred-s you can expenence on an
intimate walking tour of Eufaula.

Dothan
Entrrprisr
Eufaula
Florala
Florence

Folry
Forl P'!i'ne
Gretm&amp;oro
Crunvillt
Hunt..villt

~

\ValklnO
tn~

Jacwn uille Optlilra
Manon
Selma
Mtnlant
Spnnguillt
Monrotvillt Thomruvillt
Monle oolla Tro_,
Mantgomtry

directions and other information . !!', w

Tuscumbia
Twb&amp;"t
Union Spring~
Vallry
l*tumj&gt;lra

www.alwalkingwurs.com. Or !.'.all
1-800-ALABA~·IA

our walking tours.

and a~!; ahour

*

A FRU VACATION IUIDI CAll t·IOO·AUIAMA 01 Yllff OUI Wll lift 41 WWW.TOUitlUIIIMI,.....f,

iioo.949.4#44 ~

.,...,,.,.,ja•lf«,.

THE FREE

'
t

I

,.

t11tWam.a W.alll.in.tJ ]D.uii.J TAKE
'.

PLACE ALL ACRoss THE STATE, EVERY

·'

Snlu!tdmj

AT

10:00 a.m.,

FROM

I

7fltw. 2~- JuhJ 5.

�Page B4 •

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 26, 2003

www.mydallysentinel.com

.

.

www.mydallysentinel.com

'

urrtbune - Sentinel - l\egister

ACC invites Miami, Va. Tech Bonds' 73rd
homer·sells
.for $450,000

BY AARON BEARD
Assoc1ated Press

GREENSBO RO . N.C.
The
Atlan tic
Coast
Conference e nded its sixweek . e.xpan"on
saga
WcJne,day by inviting o nl y
Miami anJ Vir~inia Tech to
leave the Bi g E&lt;lst and join its
!~ague.

'These t\\·o in,tituttons represent anJ share the val ues
fur which the ACC has long
been known:· sa id Clemson
President James F. Barker.
head of the league \ Council
of Preside nt s. ""We feel they
will be a greal addition lo our
family ...
Miami and Vir2inia Tech
are the Bi g Eas t 's -two dominant football schoo ls. and the
mo\e to ~u to II sc hools
wasn ·, one' of the many scenario' pre,e nted since the
ACC s \Ole to expand o n
May 13. .
Bm:ton
Co ll ege
and
Syracuse. which also were
ca nJ id ates for expa nsi/?n·
were left behind in the pig
Eas1.
Barker S~Jid the invitation to
Virg ini a Tech. a dark horse
candidate that was added last
week at the insiste nce of
Virginia. wa:. ..subject to final
completion of the conference

Flanked visiting members of the AtlantiC Coast Conference.
Virginia Tech Athletic Director Jim Weaver speaks briefly with
the media following a tour he gave to the ACC members
Wednesday in Blacksburg. Va. (AP)
bylaw requirements"'- a si te Va.
visit th at was under way
Vir2iniu Tech-.., go\'crning
Wedne sday in Blacks burg. board.
meetin g
·earlier

Wednesday.
unanimously
au thorized president Charles
Steger to negotiate a deal
with the ACC. Voting at a
ha stily ca lled meeting in
Roanoke , Va., the Board of
Vi si tors gave Steger the
authority to make the decision himself. and he .said he
was '·inclined to accept"' the
offer.
I
Miami , President Donna •
Shalala said school officials
were
disappointed
that
Boston College and Syrac use
weren't included.
" Since this is a new proposal , we will evaluate it before
. makin~ a decision," she said.
Athleuc director Paul Dee
added it may take a few days
for Miami to decide.
ACC commissioner John
Swofford said he didn't
expect any problems with the'
invitation to either school.
''but that's in their hands."
Boston College said the Big
East was discu ssing future
conference configurations
among a ll of its members. Its
statement noted that Miami
and Virginia Tech are included in those discu"ions.
which is likely to mean that
that Big East is making the
would-be defectors a counterproposal to keep them from
bolting.

·wvu keeping quiet about invitations
Bv JoEDv McCREARY
Associated Press

I

CHARLESTON - West Virginia\
athlet ic official&gt; weren't re~cting - or
ove rreacti ng - Wednesday evening to
the Atlantic Coast Conference's in vitalion of Bi g East members Miami and
Virginia Tech .
We ; t. Virginia at hl etic director Ed
Pa&gt;tilong declined to comment on the
ACC, tlec"ion Wednesday evening.
ci ting a lack of details about the invitation\.
"'I can' t (comment) until the dust settles ;md everybo\:ly knows what the
specifics are:· Pastilong said. "'It' s
changi ng by the hour."'
The addiiion of Miami and Virginia
Tech. the Big East's two most dominant football .,chool s. would make the
ACC an !I-team league.

Bo"on College official&gt; ,aid the Bi g
East was discussing future conference
configurations among a ll ih members .
Its statement not ed that \.1 iami and
Virginia Tech are included in tho'e di' cussions. which is likelv to mean that
that Big East is making the would-be
defector; a counterpropo,al to keep
them from bolting.
The &gt;tatement &gt;aid the ;chooh will
addre ~s "'those issues that ha\e caused
several Bi.g East institutiom to co nsider conference withdrawal."
"'It' s too early to get into speculation
as to what's goi ng to happen ... . We; t
Virginia deputy athletic director Mike
Parsons sai d Wedne,day. "I think we 'II
feel better when it'' all resolved . How
do yo u know wbat'&gt; ou t there ·&gt; ...
There are &gt;o many different ,ccnario,.
yet nothing has ~orne forth a' realit)
yet.''
We,t Virginia anJ four other Bi g

Forsberg decides to retum
DENVER (AP! Peter
For-berg wa;n ·, sure if he
wanted to come back for
another sea;on .
Sure. he \ &gt;till one of the
be&gt;t player~ in the NHL and
he\ coming off perhap&gt; his
be&gt;t -cason. but his heart is
&gt;till in his nati,·e Sweden.
A trip horne with have w
wait - at lea\~ for one year.
For&gt;bcrg signed an S II million.
one-vear
contract
Wedne.,day. en.,uring he will
play at lea\! one more season
with the Colorado A\aJam::he.
"'I ;u.,pect this will be an
annual e\'ent with him:· &lt;;aid
Don BaiLley. Forsberg' s
agenl. .. , don't think Peter
know1 how long he\ going to
pla~ . l think he·, going to take
it a 'ear at a time: ·
1\ft er' becoming the fir;t
'iwedi,h player to earn the
Han Troph\ a~ N'HL \fVP
la't i ear. For,berg ..aid he
"a'n·t 'ure if wanted to play
a 1Oth ,ea.,on with the
Avalal)che ur return to hi'
homeland.
For,berg w a' eligible to
hewme a re,tncted free agent
next Tue-.da' and has indicated he "oulci like to fini'h hi;
career in S"eden. where his
father coat·he' Mo Do of the
. S"ed"h Elite League. He put
off hi' deci'!on until after the
Wo rld
Hock.ev
Champton'&gt;hlp' Ja,t month in
Fi nl and and ha., &gt;pent the rest
of. the off sea&lt;oOn in Sv.eden.
"I '"'peel that in his mind
he \.\a' leaning W that (coming back1 a1 a j)O\'&gt;ibilit). but
he real 1\ v. anted to be sure
th~,, he -'·~., read_v to do e\Pf'V"'J
1hing that goe' with it.- ·
BaJtle) \ald. "'Tlle only way
he could be v. ould be 10 get
~v.a 1 and get back to hi ~
n•1t,. &lt;oU w ;peak. and think il
throug h Ont:e he got back. he
deuded ·Yeah. I'm ready w
do tt ...
f&lt;&gt;r,berg has been one of
the \:HL' s be&gt;t tv•o-way playe r' '1m:e entering the league
. rn 1W-PJ5. the francbi~\
final -.ea...-&gt;n jn Quebec before
rnmmo 10 Demer-.
V., tb~ a rare cQmbination of
~race and power. For&gt;berg ,
"·on the CaJder T ruph~ a; the

,

league's top rookie and was
named to the All-Star team
seven straight years. He ha;
scored at least 80 points six
times
in hi s career. including
I
.
more than I 00 t w1ce. and
helped the A~alanche win
Swnley Cup title&gt; in 1996 and
200 I.
But injuries have taken a
toll in recent years.
Forsberg was knocked out
of the 2001 playoffs with a
ruptured spleen and mi.,o,ed
th!l 2001-02 ,ea;on after
undergoing &gt;urgef)' on both
feet.
Forsberg did return to lead
the league in scoring during
the 2002' playoffs. but the
phy&gt;ical toll and Colorado·.,
first-round los&gt; to Minnesow
in !hi&gt; year'; playofh had
him contempla1ing retirement
from the \'HL at 29 _
For; berg had arguably hi;
be&gt;t &gt;eason Ia" year. becoming the fiN player in team
histO!'}' to lead the league in
scoring with 106 points. He
also led the leag ue with 77
a"i't' and tied teammate
Mil.an Hejduk for the be't
plu&gt;-minus rating in the !"HL
at plus-S 2.
Colorado was 15-2-4-1
when Fonberg ;cored a goaJ
la&gt;t .eason.
The new' of Forsberg \
return was a relief to the
AvaJanche. who aJread) lo&gt;t
goaJie Patrick Roy to retirement earlier thi' year.
- A, e\'eryone knows. Peter
is an important part of our
team and we are thrilied that

he ha' decided to commit to
our hockey club.- general
manager Pierre LacroiA ..aid
in a . '11itement . "He i' a
v..orld-cla&gt;'&gt; athlete and v.e
know our fans will be delighted thai he will be skating in
front of them next &gt;ea.'&gt;OJJ.For;berg ha' I&lt;J8 goaJs and
488 a"i't' in 541 career
game'. He has 44 goaJ' and
72 a~sim m I 03 playoff
game'&gt;.
!

East members filed a lawsuit June 6
against Miami , Boston College and the
ACC. accu,ing them of secretly plott ing to destroy the Bi g East. A
Connecticut judge is sc hedul ed to hear
preliminary arguments Thursday.
Virginia Tech wit hdrew from the
law'&gt;uit Wedne sday. and the remaining
Big East plaintiffs were prepared to
di,miss Boston College as a defendant .
"'We are pleased that Syracu se and
Boston College will remain members
of the Big East. the conference where
the&gt;e great universitie s have always
belonged. We hope that after full con;ideration. Miami and Virginia Tech
will aho remain part of the Big East .''
accord ing to the sl1ltement. signed by
We,t
Virginia
president
David ·
Hardesty and the president s of
Connecticut. Pitt,burgh and Rutgers .
Hardesty was unavailable for further
comment Wednesday.

·-r

way.
Leland 's had estimated
that the ' ball would -.ell for
between S I mi II ion and 52
million. but it wa... clear that
the price would fall well
short of that mark by the
'low pace of the bidding.
At one point. Elkie' tried
to encourage the bidder&gt;.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

· In One Week With Us
.\
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~rtbune
Sentinel

To
Place

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
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Your
Ad.~.

Offtee 11o~~
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN A0

r

A."'N(X,'N&lt;D1JXIS

I

__

r._ ~~~

2898 Parnsh Ave Women's
C lub Huge 4 fam• ly yard
sale Clothmg all stzes.
1nfants
10
adult.
Longa~erger.
furmtur e.
household goods and more
Lost Pek.ngese· m. Kanauga ' Ra1n or Shme
area 614!03. goes by
Saturday. June 28, 8·1
name of Baby. reward
offered. 7~279
3.'4 mile North of FlatrOdc
Aauv'Shme June 28 TWin
YARD SAU(
boys. adUlt Oothmg , accessones . air-conditiOners. Etc

" A STAFISEARCH "
Smgers Bands &amp; Vocal
Groups AH Styles &amp; Ages .
~astJvttle Record EICeCt.
Seeking New Ta lent,
Huntington/Charleston.'
731 -424-2229 of 731-424-

2141

C-t Beer Carry Out permit

r
"
r

tor sale. Chester Townsh.p,
S
Metgs County, send letters
aARD .U £.
u • _.... K'
of tnterest to : The Dat ly
G ~.....,
Sen111101. PO 8o&gt;c 7~20 .
Pomemy. Ohoo 45769..
3 lamily ,ya&lt;d ..~. 227 4th
l:!'l:r"_ _ _ _ _ _., 'Ave. Friday and Saturday.

r

I

GI\1'AWA\'

t..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _,..

June 27 and 2B 9am-4pm
4 tamriy 1,...1, 9-?. baby

part tab. 13 months okj.
SR 7 N c~-o,..,..,.,
7871
Have had aJI ShOtS 10 date. more
· '~Me

s.g Yard

s4te 1903 Aa&lt;;OOO

Saturday. June 28. matemJty

and baf7,t gill clothe$ (}8 '
4 and rT'IoiSCellaneous Items at
montns okt tst ~ts Tara Estates
Paruatty h&lt;&gt;use b&lt;&lt;&gt;M. good - - - - - - - Yard Sale1 100 Second Ave
wlkids. (304)773-61 42
Fn- June Z7 B-5 Sa1·June
28- S..t doehtng. househo'd
Female.
beagle. 1
Boolc.s. 7 van Ramps. e1ec
1/2 ... aid Cal (300)675Hosp. Bed
7353
4
.......~~~-F...
-1-0..,___a_ld____le_krt_·

given

that
Saturday, June

BINGO
SPECIAL
Pomeroy Eagles 2171

$15.00 All packs
you can play
Other Specials
Available
Starting Sunday, June
22, on all Sundays
and Thursdays until
further notice.
Good Teen Gins Clothes
Very much misc. Many families
lnstde American Legion
Middleport
Friday 27th
9 am

on

28,
2003, at 10:110 a.m., a
public ute will be
held at 211 West
Second
Street,
Ohio, in the
parking lot of The
Fa~mera Bank and
Savings
Company.
The Farmers Bank
Md
Savings
Company is ... mng
lor calli in hand or
certified the folloWing col-.! :

-oy.

Saturday, June 28 6:30 pm
First Pack $10.00 1
Then $5.00
Starburst $1 ,800.00
Hot Ball $975.00 ·
Lucky BAll $300.00

11199 CHEVY BLAZ-

American Legion

rt

LEGAL NOTICE

0
1979

Salisbury Townallit:
Trus11iea WiH hold I
public'-ingultlv
budget for ,_. 21104
July 1 D, 2003, Ill 6 :3( '
p.m. at the TownolliJ
Hall,
Roc:Uprlngs
Ohio. Aho a ragu1a
mwting Wil . . hek
to c;onducl any -

JEEP

CJS

J9F83EH83t172
19115 JEEP

WRAN-

G
L
E
R
1J4FY191'8SP265746
The Farmers Bank
Md
Savings
.Company. Porne~oy,
Ohio. reserves the
righl to bid at this
sale~ and to withdlaw

Pomeroy
Eagles

col-··

'

the
priorabove
to . - . FU&lt;ther,

446-8924 or 7~7'09- 1 880 .

Band
High Country

The Farmero Bank
Md
Savings
Company reurves

~

HUge Yard

Sale June 27 &amp;
28 Bam 1 2 m tle out
SandtltH Rd. Toddler adult
baby clothing Namebtapds .
breao maker

I

s-s

Aoao

, 1356

&amp;

1390

-brought(li) 211. 30

0

lew ro form ft7.Jf'

110

.
HEl.J&gt; WMllD

1

t

parHime emplOyeeS. Slop 10

and till out and application at
333
Page
Slreet,
Mu::ldleport, Oh or call 740992·6472 and speak to
Cassy
Lee ,
Staff
Development Coordinator.

------

Help Wanted Female oarHay
Someone
on the
to cut
Shares
25 acres
at Rio
ot
tender apply wr1111n at post
Grande Call (740)245-5492
4464 134 lrd Ave Gall!pohs.

Oh&lt;a

Wanted person or couple to
~

Pl•nt Adm inisttator
Gallipolis, OH Plant

wl da dy rout1ne on
modern da1ry farm. Including
mtlkmg, leechng )'OUng Slack
&amp; crops Tractor e.perience

For over 60 years Reed

nec8$63ry. Housing &amp; ub i.._
nes posstble wlhourty wage.

Manufaduflng

s

in thia newsp8per ia
aub;ec:t to the Fedefel
Flir Housing Act of 1968
which makee it illegal to

2D.,......,....a
..............

--------

.JOHNS LA- CARE

Ya~" &amp; 000 .J:ibs
7WJ67·704 1

Thl• ttteWIP"fWi will not
lutQW'ingfy KCept
..:tvtlftiNrnents tor real
m.lewhfcht. in
Yiofation of 1M law. Our
meter. ~~re hereby
informed fMC Ill
dweftinp advertised in
this newrpapv •re
ava\able on .n equal

"--tiioiiotiiltiitiitiiitiiliiil...

1997 LOQ Home. 21
w•rh fish pond
(7 40)2.56-666 1

2

houses for

acres
Call

sa le. 1 5 acte!i

MIL. Green Scnool diStrret.
.
edat
•mm t e
possessron ,
526.500 74().446.7029 •

:3 Bedroom newiy remodelEd 1n MldcleJX!rt call Tom

An&lt;1efson after 5 p.m
992·3348
3

Bedroom.

iii:~;;;;;~.,_

__...,

can be added Make all
esqurres to Steve Pullms at Apartment bwldmg. Aacrne.
t740)m·2478
OH . 1nctuaes 4 ·apartments,
1 offiCe, 4 lots wi sewer &amp;
2 Renta l trailers and land water taps Call (740) 949139 Church Street Brdwell. 2493 or (740) 949-2305
gooa renters 1n tratlers
Po+nt Pleasa nt. 6th St
520.000. 388-6070
across from cour thoUse
2001 16X80 Schutt S•ngle ottteel~mmerCial bldg. ask·
Wtde. like new. 3 bedroom. '"9 350 000 day 304.£752 bath . AC Call after 4pm 5734
Motr.&lt;atea seller (740)256- even+ng 904.fi75-5038

_6306
_
_ _aou~
__
_..,3
200
t SchUltz
wide:

r~·-·11·11'S
·.··&amp;..._...
AL"Rf.AGE

4 acres Eagle Afdge Ad .
excavated . etectrtc . septiC
perm1t &amp; water ava•table.
(7401992-0031
Lot lor sate 1n
(?40\992-5858

Racme .

N1ce mobile hOme lots. qu1et
country sett1ng . S1 15 per
month . mcluaes
water.
seHer trash . 74()..332·2167

591·9342

6Gf, _( 740~3218

1·112 bath bllCk

"""""' 1'8',.,..

garages. rnoble homes .
tutdlngs . Darns and roots
(Citll lf.S. W)
(:IM)I9S-3074

~iscrimination ."

Cabtn Dehvery ot Unrts a lso

;:::--":'!'----,

w"-'l'D&gt;

we palO( homeS.

di.erimination '-Hd on
.-.ce, eolor, relieJon, • •
111mif~ .t.tu. Of rtlltioNtt
origin, or any intention to
make any such
preference, limit.don Of

NICe 43 .5 acre farm · W1th
32X60 meta l pole barn on
Green tree Road. Addtson
twp Wooded , lot wnh level
frontage niCe lor butldmg,
huntrng pasture {pnced to
sell ) Call ·(740t44l-D806.

.....

sao

r\ei!W look

advertise ~ .ny
preference, lirnitetion Of"

2 Modular Un.ts tor sale· 1
un•t +S 24x36 w1th metal s•d·
1ng and •s 1n la!f cond1Mn ts
askmg $6 ,800; 1 umt IS ·
24x.36 w1th wood sldtng and
also 10 fa 1r conelrtron but
needs some m•nor repa1rs
They would be good tor
Sunday
School
Class
Rooms Work Snops or as a

bedroom. 2 bath. NC. oownspoutmg , deck. large appltTURNED DOWN ON
ances
washer &amp; dryer
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
_,..,;,.,
532 000 00 . ad)usreo for
No Fee Urlless We Win!
movmg expen·ses./740) 949~
1-BSB-582-3345
H 1stortc 3BA log home. 40 1131 after 6 pm
acres. Cole Valley Ra .
S 175 .000
Hol!eys 24 x 36 double wide modular
r10
llo\IDi
Assoc1ates call 740-988- dass room . Bu+lt very heavy
SAl
duty to Oh10 1Ju11t11ng code 1
1030
RJII
.£.
large open room . no bath or
(3)FHA &amp; VA l"lome!. set up House tor sa le· '27 Anne ~rtchen , self conta10ed heat
ror tmmediate possess.on all Street. Pomeroy. Sl7.500. purhp unrt Approx 10 years
wrthm 15 m1n. of downtown wtll consider any otfftf 388- old $6. 500 deliVery available 740-992-2478 or 741).
Gal~pc:W+s. Rates as low as 8591 Of 74Q-7Q9.0064

rancn Futl untlnrshed basement. attached one car
gar- •..-~t_., on leve4 ooe
Electnc gu1tar and amp.
· ~"'"""
Faro Probe
~e let oo Georges Creek
1992
1987
·
Aa
•000
Dodge van can 740-256- '
ad.
~k.ng
·
1102 ... r.- L ·-~
(7..0)446-9769
....,. -.lUI"'-"
11110
3 Bedroom. 2 Bathroom, 1112 ea. Gao-age Galhpat•
City Schools
Photos.
lnformanon Online
0
06JP;ckyPointofs
.....orvo com CCKJe 60903
Free EsDmates lnterlof an
Of call 740-4-&amp;&amp;3992
GNe your
3 Bedroom. 3 Batl'lroom 2
hOme or Q31aoe a tresn

PoPtar

In Hartford WV. mobtle h&lt;lme
w, flat lOt all tor $9500. Mtke B•g select1on of used
SlaCk -Old Co lony Realty homes all Sizes Kanaug.a
304-542-5888
Mob +le
Home
Sales.
-:::--::-=-=-::-- Galh polls. OH (740)44 1·
NEW HOtJSE lor SALE .,
0310
Debbie Dnve 3 bedrooms ----,- - - - - .2 batl"ls.
S129000 Co le's Mobil e HorT)es an
)
•
1740 245 9268
assembled team wrth over
.
120 yeafs of hOUSt.nQ expert·
ence Patnot Homes Lout·
Sandhill Ad Appro:r 2Q(?O
standing t 5 year warr~nty.
SQ ft LOt Size 73w14f . 3t:lr.
shmgles &amp; rnsulatron by
2ba, LN1ng Room . Otn1ng
Owens
Corn1ng. vtf¥ sld1nq
Room Fam•ly Room . 2 car

can

7 room hOuSe tJr sale. AIC

for ltstlng ca ll 1·8()0-319·

3323 ext 1709
3 bedroom
MlelOieport.

h~use

no

1n
pets

17 40 )992-5858

garage Will consJOer tracJe by VtpCO. James Hatd+e sl(j- 4br Home +n New Haven.
1ng ava 1lat:Me IO'IIr ·t tt1er~ everythri'lg wttrun wa lk tng
tor Acreage i304t€7&lt;-Mm

Payng S400-SSOO rent? Why

mooane wlflOOWS 1:1)' Kmro atstance- No oetS ·Rent
camage carpets &amp; tloonng 5495
OepcSII
S350

r

not ouy na 3 BR house T 2 by Congoled appliances by (3041882·3652

acre Jevei lot 3T 2 miles General ElectriC. taucets cy lllllll"~~-~--.,
tram town Ca ll· 7.40·4.46· Glac•er Bay &amp; Moen. hgllt
\lolln..EFOR~JD;
r... rures c ab•net pulls &amp; ___
ft.L"•
.
4 73 7 for appt
~not'ls

2784

Oh tO

1

·740-592·1972

'"_u_g_~_'

T tmeshare

1

d trect from HoMe

River Front.ge 11 2 acres Depot (easy ro match JUSt a
more or less. 3BA 2 Bam.
few good reasons why your
ma5tef SUit(!: 'N 1acw:zt full
ne..t ~ home stlauld be
basement. 2 Oeck.5 w nver trom: eote·s Moo•~ Homes.
wteW 2 docks 1 noanng 446- 1S266 US 0 East A[l'1ens

2br AC S25000 amon. utll. no pets ref 304-6 75·

4874
Moode· home for rent

r

no

ll
oets
o::r"'{ 74()~)992
_-5858
_ _ _.,

APFOR~~·ts

for sale one
-w_n_e.:..re_worth~
_
-YOUI- ___
ftL"I
year , ftfet1me. money's
priCed a1 56.000 Bonus
Cotes Moc•le Home5
extra week. 740-250-1470
US 50 East ~then$
t ana 2 oeoroom aoart45701 740-592-!972
mef'1t5. turn•sheO and U(l!'urniShed
secunty depos.t
Land Home Packages avBJIreQUlfe&lt;1 no
740-992able In y-our area {740)4462216
I 0 uSEd hOmM under :1384

Car Gatage, nrce· r 8X36 week per

lnground Pool
Add1son
T~ Photos IITformaoon o,tfine 0 ..,... 01"10 com
co0e 11 003 Of
7 4()..4.46..
4262

1·3 oedrooms foreclOsures
horne from S199 month 4""
aown 30 years a i B 5 '~ APR

t'~~~l

oeu..

Soft · out of 52 000 'olftll helD W!trl Clell'J~
nq,God:&gt;
(740)992·
ery cau Harokl 7.&amp;0- 385- Maser area 3br 2 oa ot0e1
2529
r.ome 14x70 must be I'TlOVed
9948
304-882 . ,, oe
1973
Sct1~u
f2X65
Certtral aJr or rented lot New T4 w1ae only S799
av.!lllabe to CMtnue renting Oown .and only St59 63 erer
f7A0)4.46-1089 leave mes- f"'1M1TI call NriOO 7-'0-385saQo
7671

:.:1980=-1.-.-70-Hally--oa-,.-tr-.,-~.

New 200:3 0Jlo01eo.tlol0e 3 Bfl

-

s
________
=
_

1 Bedroom
Apanmer-t
t&lt;Jtchet'l Furrusneo
All
Electr~IC
$300 Mont'1

Deposit Reqt.~~red . Neat Htgn
Scl10ol 1304)675-3100 Or
(:JOo&lt;t€75-5509

2 Bearocm ~ 5 m1n Da$1
HcWzer 74Q-.4.4 t ..()19-4

28R upsta1r5 act 5ito'tt!: ._
er 3 br 1 1r2 ba total etec· &amp; 2 Bath Qr1fy $ 1695 oown trtOQe.
'*ater
~asn
tnc on V acres rtet 2 car ana &amp;295-mo 1~9f ·
S27Sinc 5275 · 7&lt;C&gt;4A1-D583 Of 74().4.46..7620
""""'l' 1'ld Wes&lt;
Colutnt:4 WI/ call 304- 7TJ.
· Pnce Redi.JCbl S18 000 a11e&lt; 7cm

· en

5126

I.

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by follin9 VI Jhe """""9
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de

r r r ,. r r I'
J'OU

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Yesterday's

VI'" LETS ANSWIIS
uneaf · Yucca· Igloo- Dtsarm- YOU AGAIN
-Old you have a good tJme,- the fellow .asked h1s date
·on yes - hrs date yawned 'It was very educatJonal 1
learned l'lo!to go outwllh ·YOU AGAIN "
•

J

'

...,., &amp; Clean 3 Br Moc&gt;te .c. room:s and bam _an Uflh1la
1995 Aeanat' 1411!70 2SR Home Cor ner lo~ New Card $COO monin 46 OM
28A. wrap around CleO!; ~ Central 4lr &amp; l'leat Slroo&lt; (740,.US.39o&lt;5
.. potd'l hal :JtJI'I'IP oas fur· caroort
oumutiO•no
nace e- rem
7~ 1'1(JrneStead Sene 130CI882- Uooern l br act. ( 7AQ~

~

IAedo Home !nc
see4ong

part-time

Me&lt;&gt;caJ 5&lt;x:&gt;al """""' br
11e Galftc:lolrs Otwo area.
IQ.stas OeQree requtred
We of6~ a~
salat;' oeneflts padlaQe

401 k.

EOE -

c:ona

245-5071

Q.

45631 Aan CJ!a,a -

0

·

&amp;6t!!OCai T~ '" Pt
P'leasarK area lWu5t ~'!&lt;We

""" Coil !304~
Need 10

eMf'\

2ol05

0390

"""'

resum&lt;e: to .t30 Second
A- " "
Gatbpo&lt;os 0H

t• 1· o.-.c......_

11111111

·-

All rul H1JIW advertising

~:~l~~~~J

weelo:.
.........,rtXX~Withocca51()1"1·
·---~iiO
iittii[){iii)--,J
_.::;me·
,
,

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~::~,:~~~~~RES

!NOTJCE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends ttlat
you do busmess wrttl people
you know, and NOT to send
ll'IOf'1ey through the ma•l until
you have lfllle5tlgated the

BCl0-201·8987

E&lt;&gt;Jill Opporumty E-

1• I I ::,
. ., . ~,,U_R,,
,;. A,,I_I'I,:erl~-0.~~~'-'• t~.e clt..tt~e

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I

1170

Jlo!\u:~

FOR SAU:

'' ''"1\1

.,_c:om
___

One housewife to ano"Jter. "My
~
new house •s completely auto.
.
_ .
.
mated. so f dJd the only senstbte
r---:-::-:::--::-:~:-·~thtrog. I let my maid go and h1red a

You can find
the perfect
pet in .the
-~
Classifieds!
)
'
. . . . . . _ .~ L.----------

10

Will paint, odd jobs, any k1nd
ol outside work , w1ll haul
anyt~ung . S4/hr. 7 40-441 ·
9761 .

401k , vacauon ,time and a
half lor holtday work , tak~ng Will pre!SU're wash homM .
erences requmxl . call 446· applicatiOns
weekdays tra 1lers. dedcs. metal build·
tngs and guners. · Call
4514 tor more 1nlormat10n. between 8am·4p m.
(740}446-015 1 ask tor Ron
Chrtstlans
Construct ion
Ga lltpolts. Oh
Overbrook Nursing and or leave message.
- - - - - - - - RehabliatJon Center current·
Hardware sa; l e~ clerlo:. expe·
b t
ly has opemngs for tull and
rlence niCe u not&lt;l'neces· part·time LPN·s. 12 hour
sary
FoNrard resume to shltts and excellent benefrts
CLA·570 c.ro Galllpoits Da• ly available to both full and
Tnbune. 825 Hu rd Ave.

RH l C

- ~

WA-'llD
t..,--·TiioiiiDoiiiiito_ _..

locations, compewe wages.

J I I ! I' I'
t"

lluiO

Now hiring full and part time
help,
at little Johns
Kanauga and Centenary

IJI~MEAC

II

$9

at any time. Errors mutt be reported on tbe first day at publicatton and
witt bt resporasitM tor no mor1 than the c01t Cl'f the .,.ce occupied by the error and only the fird inHrtion. We ahall not t. li..t:M
lftll 5oss Of expente tMt rHUrtl from the publication or omiufon of 1n advlf1iaement. Coneetion will be made in the firlf av.ilable edition. • Bo• number
are atw.ys confidtntial. • Cwrenl rate card 1pplin. • All r••l HtMt advertisemants ar.• tubject to the Federal Fair Housing Ac1 of 1968. • This...,.,..,,....
KUpll only help nnted 8Cia meeting EOE Nndlrds. We wilf not knowingly Keep!: any advettiling in vio4ation of the law.

paced env.,anmenl: and
· at»e to pr10ntlzelhand!e~ar1·
l\'IJ.scEJ..J.A.--.~ .
•
ous ClencaJ dutieS wtttl m1n1·
Access to a Computer? mal supefVL$100 such as ryp- 25
Senous ~ w.nted
Earn $450-51500 monthly '119· answenng phones. fil·
lrltJ man OISttlbuflon. oata Who want to LOSE we~ght
part-twne or Si()()(J..$4.500
entry. and scheduling. Yo\J We Pay You eag, tOf the
ful..ttme . 1·80Q..585-0760 or
wlfl also process payrol and pou10S you LOSE !
__..
__
0.._"'__
create. rece.ve
purchase Sate. NaturaL No Drugs

'fii'Ctm

,

POUCIES: OhH:I Valley Publiahint rntfYn 1M righl to edit. re;ect or c.ncel •ny ad

c-.

~ words.

t; R 0 U

Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m.
Thur-sday for SundiiYS

I~

SOC:ttJ.)~ -l6f,!rS"

· ta1

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

Publl~tlon

Minerals. a Harsco company Respond wtft'l resume &amp; 3
has been an 1ndustry leader references tn lener form to:
1r1 the manufacture ot tndus· JA24. 200 Ma1n Street, Pt .
tnal .aggregates used lor PI WI/ 25550
Absolute TO() Doflar U S
root1ng products and +ndus·
S.lver,
Gold
Co1ns.
tMl aor3SIVeS We are cur·
Proofsets. Diamonds. Gota
rently seekJng a mo1N.ated
A1nos.
U.S Currency Ptant Admtn1strator for our
MTS Co'n Shop 151 Gal!ipoM OH tao ilty
Gallipolis
Cot~
Second Awenue. Gall1.......sts
~-""
{Careers Close To Home}
740-446-2842
Repo n 1ng d irectly to the Call TOday' 74()..446-4367
Plant Supenntendent. you
H30G-214-Q45i
must oe extremety Ol'gan- ~allipoltsc:anMtreol'-ge com
•90-05~;;;:;,1::;2.:.;
74;:.B:....,
1zed: able to worJI m a last- r:!Jir:A.;::egli,;;

Hv·~

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

Tribune-Senti~ilter

Addresser! wanted 1mmedi- CM'cJefS
atefy' No expeoence necessary. Work at home Call Computer
liter acy
1n
·~ .. 7 "~7
W r.......... ~s and PAS Oft'ice
~ ~
·~_VON
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ana strong customef serviCe
1pm
Amencan
Legoo A
' AU Areas 1 To Blr;' or skJIIS arE requ1red
JO
lOYeable. well mannered.
Annex . tJhddleport. Oh10. Setl 5rnrley Spears 304- ·E dwards ex.penence JS a
young tablly. """"' Indoor or outdoor wtup 675- 1429
plus ThiS IS a 40 hours per
""""'good~ Free
SSOO
per
table
Food
·i!t'IMI
lie
Op
10 good ho&lt;T-.. 7 - · able Btg Bena 0oQoers
-.. nsta r
en 1ng at
BeneliU avarlaOie Apply at
~"' "
7143
Friday June 27 &amp; Saturday. or Send Resume to.
28th
S 30-4 00 Bennett's UH Heatmg &amp; In aOdJtJOn to p nmq the
Small dog. part lab/part-- June
~on
SR
1-43
1 I"''Ws Cooling
1391
Safford Harsco faffilfy yw can taU
~- noute&lt;e&lt;l-sl'oall "' tc
oate. Gooo wRn Children. oil SA 7 . 0&lt;1 tne roglll. School , Ad. Gat1i1&gt;00s OH atMll'1tage of a competJtNe
Only to -.g home (7ol0) Furrwure. d::llhes. coltecta-. 45631 {740)446-9416 or J- salary and comJ;M'ehensrve
beneh15 .nctoOmg meocal
742-2878
bleo, eoc.
IIO!l-872-5967
def'11al VISIOl'l 401 k pen5IOn
ano mucn more. Reply 10
Harsco CorPQfat:IOfll Reed
WCJID
T11J.T IIAilJ
M1nera!S co K Wallace 350
'AIIII
PUliUI
Churcn Aoao. Camp
- - - - - - Uioo4 tr,. ClAY I . POUAH - - - - - HiM
?&gt;.
1700!-aatlB
.
Fax 717-6 12-5619
2eoo·..a~ ,..._... rY .._
Ema,l tmrtoOree&lt;trTun com
four K.ramblea
be·

. 1

..__ ...·-

2nd:

Free kitten$. r740) 992-()433
Caldweii/Baum Yard Sale
Of leave mess age
U., 1 51 &amp; 2nd One mde
Lab nu puPVf, approxJ- soutn of Tuppers P13105 on
malely 2 monlht; aid. tree to SR'7. Many!1em5 9-?
good nome [740) 992 .. 592 Flea/ Cfalt Sale J&lt;.wle 27111.

You'll catch _.d
ev-erything yo~
need in the -.1
Classifieds!

- ......._,

2 lamoly: Juno Z7 &amp; 28 ' July

Bo idgeman Sueet

June 27th
only
--:' J _.,F

Bu•lne•• Days Pr-Ior- To

·ll1_10______
_.1
~•t '"UIJUIL
llfl2\\':4.'"TTD

Cal~e

Friday~

-:...J"T"'?'.....~-... -

r

1st &amp;

....__

Bill Spaun. PI
ula-d

muttaple ~s. 740-

rens

Public Notice

1 GNCT18W3X K 17984

Ausa.ell .

,.,_ed

ER

"Must be 1B to play or to be lf1 halF

Middle

the righl to reject ""!
or all bids 1Ubmitl8d.
The
abovo
described collatera
will be sold " as is
where Ia", with ,n,
·~ or impllec
warranty gMin.
For lurther informa
lion, or lor an appall d
ment to inspect colla!
eral. prior to sale dab
contact
Cyndk
Rodriguez at 992
2136.
(6) 25. 26, Z1 3TC

Monday- Fr-iday for- In•ertton
In Next Day' s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
for- Sundays Paper-

Help wanted canng for rne
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now pay•rJ9 mn"llmum wage.
new st11tts 7am-Jpm. 7amFrKlay. B-? . Camp Cooley,
5pm. 3pm-11pm
11 pmMtlton Ad. 8th hOuse on
7am , call 740-992·5023

r

------......lFemale JaCk

All Display: 12 Noan 2

Gathpolls. OH 45631

Rd. out 218 , Name Brands
3 adof'atie kittens to good boys ll-24 ,..,
"lome 2 caliCOS. one tan &amp;
Friday and Saturday. June Yard
sale
all
week .
...... . (740) 742·2954
27 and 21!. 9am-5pm. 224 Mltle5tone Rd. Aw'e Grove.
H!fda OriVS, Galltpobs, OH
Past the church
Child
6 week aid male """""'· .,.
rer tratned. grey and White Saturday, 8am·5pm , m•sc .
!"''11llled 74().256-9125 .
dothtng. canntrlQ ,~ars , some
\VAIVDD
.
tLJrntture rtems. 141 to
R) Bll '
Camper tap fa&lt; short bed Lincoln Pil&lt;e 10 Northup Ad. ..___oitiioiiiiiiiot_.,..

Gladge ·DakOta (740) 742·

PUBliC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby

ESTATE TAG SALE
S
•·- 26 Bam 7
at. . ~~.... e
·
• pm
Sun, June 29. 9am-5pm
Retngera!or. washer and
dryer. multiple Pieces
Furnrture. lots of m•sc .
1211 Viand Street

2 rna~ ..vv.c: part be.s...t.o. +tems . children-plus !tze r'\111
~
~ dothing. hOme decor. much

Call (740 ) 992·3139

Display Ads

Daily In-Column : 1:00 p.m.

Bookkeeper- large construe·
Mn l1rm. full time. experi·
enced only need apply.
qu•cx bOOks, AR,AP payroll ,
)Ob costing. works well w•th
publ•c . start tmme&lt;Mtely ref·

me

Com•ng to

Word Ads ·

Ir._.~.~-~-.f:-~.".u.~......
~ t.,11·0-".·.]p_\\_;'."ll-~J.

U\11
Retr~er : reddish·
brown with purple spot on
tongue . Lost in Hood road
area. Answers 10 SCamp.
Rewa rd . (740) 992...()086

,

Register

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

• Start Your Ads W;t:h A Keyword • In&lt;:lude Complete
DHc.ri9tiOn • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation I
• Include Phone Number And Add reo When Needed
• Ad'l Should Run 7 0~1

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

1600

&lt; '

We Cove_._..,
Meigs, Gallia,
A"ctMaen
Counti•Uk
NoOtMI

eiHC.nl

&gt;aying. "What' s another ·
$25.000'1 "
Later. a' the bidding
,eemed to &gt;tall, she taunted
the potential buyer;. say ing.
"You'll be so sorry in the
morning:·
:
Finally. it became clear ·
that no one would top the bid :
by McFarlane. creator of the
Spawn comic 'trip.
Me Far lane said he had set
a limit of $2.1 million when
he went into the auction for :
the McGwire ball. "We went ·
well past that number:· he ·
said. ·'That limit didn't stop
me last time ...
McFarlane would not say
what hi s limit was for the :
Bpnds ball.
.
"' I wi'h I didn't have this ·
compul,ion but that guy. :
Barry. broke the record, so
now I'm in a position where.
to some extent I' ve got to
potentially protect my assets .
·here." McFarlane said.
:
"' It's tough to say you've :
got the o,econd-best ball ...
He said he would use the :
Bond s ball much as he did .
the McGwire one. putting it
on dis play.
'Til make a quick call to
the Hall of Fame to put it on ·
display."' he 'aid.
The ball was ordered sold
after a two-week trial to
Jetermine its ownership.
Alex Popov. a Berkeley.
Calif.. restaurateur caught
the ball and lost it in a
serum. Patrick Hayashi. a
graduate studenl. wa' at the
bottom of the pile of people
and picked it up after it fell
from Popov· s g love.
The ensuing court baule
cost both men hundreds of.
thousands in attorney fees
and the sale mig ht wind up
being a loss for them .
"'The
funny
thin g,''
McFarlane 'aid. "'Theo,e two
guys have two sets of
lawye rs that they've goi 10
pay court costs. These two
guy&gt; could actually be in
debt when it\ all said and
done:·

NEW YORK (API
Todd McFarlane got off
much cheaper thi ' time.
The man who paid $3.2
million for Mark McGwire·.,
70th home run ball in 1999.
bou~ht the one Barry Bond&gt;'
hit tor hi s record 73rd at an
Wedne,day for
auction
$450.000 .
Bidding by phone from
Dalla,. McFarlane wa'
pleased with the outcome.
"'I knew it wouJJ go for a
fraction of the other ball."' he
said. "' I think we did well
tonight."'
With auctioneer Cathy
Elkies runnin g the sale.
whi c h wa' conducted by
Lelands.com. bidding began
at $200.000 and moved in
increments of 525.000.
With all comm ts"on .,·
included. th e official purcha.o,e price will be recorded
as $5 17.500.
There were . 12 regi;tered
bidder&gt;. so me of them in the
room at the ESPN Zone
· restaurant . McFarlane. on h is
way to a businc;s meeting in
Arkansa.,, wa' bidding over
the phone from Dallas with
Michael Heffner. pre,ident
of Leland's handling his call.
McFarlane said he hoped
that hi' prese nce in the auc. tion would "are off other
bidder\.
m hoping th at they all
know that I'm bidding and
they'll go. 'Oh. it's the psyc ho. he's eot too much
money! anJ nobody will bid
and I'll get it for the minimum ainoum. I'm hoping
I'll just scare them by my
presence and get it at low
\'aiue ...
It might have worked that

1

CLASSIFIED

Money? l.e.t5
Cail

ta* ltle !ifW_ Avon

Mat"';n 304-1182·2645 10
tearrr l/1. ttll! 'Wi!'f't &lt;t cat1 ..ail;

0

fU_,
_,

"'

fa&lt;"""

•
---------

'.1

�'

Thursday, June 26, 2003

out

Gntc.ous liVIng 1 and 2 bed·

_ _ _ ___:____
room aj;i~lfttnents at V!llag&amp; ·eeaullfu l engagement nflg &amp;
Manor
and
A1ver!nde
,
M I
weaamg oana . 14K gold
Apartments. 10
•ad e:port w, 11 d•amonas. stze 7 1/2.
.''8
Ftom
.....,.... .l
bough! for $800 at ZaleS Will
·
sell for $350.1 740)247-2'010

Call 740S278992 5064 Equa Hous,·ng
Opportunities

Thund8rbird $1000, 1989

f71o
Alllll'l
I'"--..Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiooo_.l
mRSAU:

Chery Caval""

$400, 1989

Ford Beretta
Escort S 1200.
$900,1992
Chevy
1992
Olds Ciere $1200. 1994
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS. C1'1rysler New Yorker $2,700.
Hondas ,
chevys,
etc!
1994 Plymooll'1 Voyager
carsltructs. from $500. For $1800. 1993' Ford Aerostar

listmgs ·HWCH19·3001
390t

eJ~t

·~~~~-----~~~~~~~

Dodge Spl'n
$900. 1991 Ford Escon SW

rclngeraror prO\IIdea Water

446-\463

1740 1388·9303

wo'k $350 001080 call

(740)992·1060

John Deere ground manure
after qpm
spreader ($450). hand pa1nl· 1992 Mefcury Topaz $700
1992
Dodge
Caravan
Nice Two bedroom apart· ed lnd1an plates (61$300
$1300
.
Aoft
Bar
(shoftbed)
menl. large room . tully obo ) nngs 446·8945
$50 .. Transfer Casee (ford)
equipped kitchen central - - - - - - - $50 . 1996 Yamaha A-wheel·
h eat in g coo11 ng . NEW AND USEO STEEL
er 52500 (304}675-6418
hOokup Steel Beams P'tpe Rebar
wasner 'aryer
For
Concrete .
Ang le. 1993 Geo Metro. S375. piCk
Channe l, F lat Bar. Steel
UD sleeper to p. $100. 1969
Now Tak,ng Appt,catiQns- Gratmg
For
Dra ms . Chevy dump truck . $1 ,200
35 West
2
Bedroom Drlv&amp;:Nays &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Townhouse
Apartments . SCrap Metals Open Monday,
'Includes Water
Sewage . Tuesdav. Wednesctav &amp; leave message.
Trash. $350/Mo 74G-446- Fnday. Bam-4 30pm Closed 1993 Mercury- Marquee
(J)()8
Thursday
Saturday
&amp; Runs &amp; loo~s goOO. S2.300

1304)882·2523

'fROCK~
"r'll:""-~---..,

L--···'011-S.A;:I.E
;O:;.,_.t
1990 dump truck . Chevrolet
Kod1ac, CATdel&amp;el . 5 esp
transrmssion , 2 speed rear.
10' dump bed, a~r brakes.
C 0 L reqwed 48 · 000
mil es excellent conditiOn
Sl O. 500.00 740.992·2478

"Mtn R1vers Tower IS accep11rjg apphcatK&gt;ns for wamng
. hst for Hud-subs1zed . 1- br,

apartment , call 675-6679

delivery, 7029
ya'o '"•~ 937 · 7 ! 8 ~ 1471
1996 Fo'd Winds\ao, loaded,
105,000 m•les, 54200; \~
Property tor sa'le. Ford Truck
Aerostar. 105.000 m11es
, 996 c.,.,,.,.
l'raller space for rent rn F - 150, new electnc wheel· S4ooo.
cha1r (3041576·9929
I
145,000 mues, $2500 740245-9020
Woode n playg,ound set,_ - --"' ----power wheels barte'y opet· 1997 Bwck LeSab,e. beauated 4 wheel.,; sea" ca,. tfful ca, exc. cond 304-675IQP cargo haule' 1740)742· _256_3- - - - - 1800
2 ""•seats •n good cond•· ~::::;-~----..., 1997
Cad•llac Sedan
non. 1SOWln&lt;J mach•ne, 530
HL1UJINI;
D""•lle 70,000 mdes,
EOO

c

pa&gt;nted

metal ,, ••
aes•gns beHer than lumber - - - - - - - -

r

each. 740-245-5595

:l Prec.e lJIIInQ room su1te

Clean . In good snape. ~.

, __ 167 5-6986
1"""

Almond Wh1rlpool Washer
S75, White Wh1rlpool Dryer

$65 1740)446-9066

SuPPIJI.~

SB.SOO

van

51600 .

88

1·7 40-992-7007

SMALL
ENGINE
REPAIR

Orrve- a· liTtle save aiOt
Appliance &amp;
Aepa lr-675--7388 · For sale. English

Lmcoln Navigator
wrrv syslem, Jrd back seat,
1999

s~,

.500. 1740)992·2209

1985
Harley·Davidson
1999 Lrncoln NavigatOf with lowrider ; custom wheels .
TV system&amp; 3rd back seat. avo engme. new paint. 4

BulldOg

speed transm1ss•on . new
seat. lots of chtome &amp; new
parts E"cellent cond1t1on

510,500.00 OBO 174019492203

lw-•Viluiiiii;•:-r
iili
"III.E
iiiiiiis_.l

r

Galhpohs, =iii:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 52800 88 Otosmobile $300, lion. 7200 mile&amp; 675-5630.
IV
Ph 1304)882-2755
675-51!64; 606-923-ll17 1

A'~~m

Ir

Buy or selL Arverrne
Amtques. 1124 East Ma!n
on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740992-2526
owne'

1992 Harley Dav•dson
Dyna-low
Alder.
tow
HydroponiC lomat~s . v1ne
mileage, tors ot chrome·.
npenea. lOCally growri. taste 90 Fora PrObe . auto. lOoks EXIra tank·fenders &amp; front
the
d•tference'
Hayes gooo. runs but need work. t.re.
Asking
Sl 2.500.
Greenhouse.
Galllpohs SJOO. {740)247·2070
(740)949-9027 neg.
740-441·9279.
94 Shadow. 4c.y.. aUio, sun- 1996 Kawasaki 750 Vutcrut .
roof. spo11er. new pamt. Garage kepi . great COflCii.

Russ

Moore.

98 Chrysler Cooc:otd S4500. 1999 Ya~aha GP· 760. 2
Dod9e Neon &amp; 1600.95 seater. wave runner wtth
AOHA reg.!tered apperdl11 PontiaC F1rebtt'd $2500, 92 ,,a;le,. Soi.OOO !'h. 1304)675yearling My 5t20Ct 00 Two Chevy Cavalier 5750. 97 4815
thOroughbred
mares. Mercury Tracer 52500 , 93 - - - - - - - Probe
51600 ,97 2000 Polans 325 Tratl Boss.
S500 00 each 22 yo OH Ford
mare. run narrets . Sl .OOO. PontJac Sunfire S3600. 96 kke , _, 52.000. Call 74GFord Contour S2000, 98 25&amp;-13n.
1740)843-5 176
Monte Catlo 55200. 96 - - - - - - - Plymouth Breeze S2200. 97 H.,ley 89 FXSTC motorcy·
Breo 9 y-ear oro AOHA
MrlSubtstlt EcltpSe $3600, 99 cle, 1340cc, 11.743 m•les.
Bucl&lt;olun 15700), 8 yea' old Mustang
S6500. 99 Foret 511 .500, 1304)6754027

2 recliners 1 OR su11. 1 lung s&lt;anda'd B'ed Bay Geld&lt;ng Contour 53200. 97 Toyota
IS8001 740-446-8945watefbed 1 electriC rar-ge. 1
Camry 55500 96 T-Bird
f ull bed 74().446-9780.
52600. 99 Chrysler CoocooJ
Aatlt:l1ts and CtiiC.kens tor
SJ600.
95 Dod!le Neon
sale Cat! 740-44HJ9l8
JET
$1695. B&amp;D Auto Sales Hwy
AERATION UOTORS
\S()N 446-6865
Aepa1red NeW &amp; RebUilt In Registered patnt ana QUar· - - - - - - - Stock Can R01"1 Evans 1· ter horses al ages and col· Stock car and trailer. 52.000
1100-537-952B
ors pnced ro sefl 740-446- OBO Call 740-256-6870

.~.,6jlm

3413

sllaiJe$3800256,1534

·0~

6..

750 [a; I State Street

A then•.

A IJo now accepting
moJI imurance

OWer OWer&amp;
Chain Saws

Septic Systems,

Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers. Edgers
Go Karls • Min' I
Bikes

G

JONES'

PC DOCTOR

Tree Service

.f~

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

We Make House Calls

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

ravely

IIIII .... 124

204 Condor Street

Ju)J4&amp;5

ThuNIJy. June

Dean Hill

Pomcm~·.

New&amp; Used

Ohio

475 South ChllfCh St.
Ripley. WV 25271

992-2975

:1
CIII949-2J34
..... ~...:.:!

Lawn and Garden f."quipme/1/ is our

1-800-822-0417

business, not our sideline

-wvs #I

Manning K. Roush
Owner
0 en Mon-Fri 9-5

BISSELL

· ,

ElR r 1(, It I THIS AD
FrJrj &lt;J t iU S1'J (fJ PER HU~JDRED

BUILDERS InC.

I_. J[~§TA-CA€iiHI~ I

New Home' • Vinyl

Siding • New Garage&lt;

1 l~ GEt Cash Today

• Replacement

1

.~j)l

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
Van Dealer·

·

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

Pomeroy Eagles

Sunday
Doon Optn 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 lsi Thursday

of every month
All pack SS.OII

Bring this ooupon
Buy S5.00 Bonanza
Gd 5 fR£[

992·7953

~;::;==;:;:;:=~

sft.

PlastiC Bonam John

t

~~~

I

2:.~~~=
1980 cl... C

23' Honey
Dodge ca.,_, ..._ 6.
85.576 llliiH; · aJc. stove .
lndge. .,._.._ 17

~TV

With VCR. awJW19, dual rear
tires 16300 00 (740) 985-

44115

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Rac1ne. Ohto
45771
740-949-2217

Sizes 5'x1 0'

to 10'1130'
Hours

591-4641

591-7002

7:00AM-8:00PM
ll4.1mopd

Advertise
in this
space for 525
per month .

HOWARDL

.......
.......
WRITfSEl

•Ill• Ell
Wild

•fNIIIFJII-··

0870

Roge's Basemen&lt;

waterprootng

Comme fCICI I~"nVWif19
u~
· • Mutct11ng • E&lt;lg•ng
• Fertlluahon • leaf.

spaceforS25
per month.

High 8l Dry

~!:c"a':'ng

Self·Storage

Ma•menance Spong

33795 Hiland Rd.

--.. -

(740) 985-9829

Pomeroy. Ohio

"""""

~ 7:

and

Fall cleanup

IOOfo'&gt;g '
Siding. catpefNIQ. &amp; remodeling: ~ eJCpei1811Le
cal 245-9023 01 245-9704

SHOP
CLASSIAEDS

FOR
BARGAINS

Dear

Abby

AzllleQs)

aii1Hr

sate

...
"""-

in th..: fast bnc . A more advcnturuu.., you i..; apr 10 emerge
~tnd r:nu~nc
::::: ::

acri vitia: ...

in ma ny cxcitmoe

are lonkinr: out for I heir inter-

your dut ie-.;;

~nd

assignmenr"i.

today. lh cy could begin to
overlap each other and build
up inlo a large pile that will
bury you under your work .
\'IRGO (Aug. 23-Scpl. 22!
-

Spend your frce ·lime

h~ v­

Your goals can be :tc.::hievl!d

lo&gt;day. but only if you don't
dcp~ndcnt
upon
nthc,rs.
Cohons on whom you can
usu:.d!y count may bt' tnn
wrapped up in their own pmb'
!ems.
SCORPIO (0" , 2-1-Nov.
22) - Unless someone else
takes the bull by the horns and
i nitiate~.

some project s or

activitws. you aren 't likely 10
have a productive day. Your

talk you into negl ecting your
work in l ieu of ;unu!'.ement

and frolic.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - There are manv thin us
you can partake ni' today~
However. make

ccrt~li n

you

own activisr abiliti~:..; are apt

to be immobile loday.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21)- II might be far too
easy to allow your emotinns

frJgile
al this time. so t:.tke care in
how you treat others today. Be
. cognizant of rho se littll'

to override your com mon
se-nse or logic when it corn~s

to financial issues today.
t;nfortunateiy, fe,•lings arc
ponr advisors.

CAPRICORS (Dec. 22 Jan . 19) - Be sure today to
hnnor all of the h.:rms you
agr~cU upon in ail arrange -

any linanc ial or commerc ial

Bei ng inconvcnlcnl.·cd ;.~t tht!
moment i~ not a good cxcu-;e

rdmlon,hip with them: Keep

pushover for ktt1ng others

take the need&lt; of others into
consideration.
ARIES (March 2 1-April

ing fun with friend.s today. but
under no circumc;tancr: u ii 0 \'11
m:.attt:rc; to on: r o;,h:.uJow your

AQUARIUS (lait 20-Fch.
19) - Left lo your own
device&gt;. you'll be an effccl\I'C
prmluccr
today .
Unfortunately. ymt'll be a

ment you had with another.
for brealin~ a pl~dgc .

Jl)) - SensiriviliL'S

are

people and provoke hurt feelmg..; .

T.\ UIWS (A pri l
20) -

20- M e~y

No matter \\hal you

1hink. &lt;lbout another\ hl"11avior

touay.

keep any unkind
thoughts ro ynur~t:lr. Later .
v. hcn it blov,rs over. it'll he

Jiflicult t•l patch thing' up if
you spe;1k out .on thcrn .

GEMINI IMay 2 1-June 20)
There 's nothing \HOng
w!rh your earn ing capacity,
it's yo ur spending hahl t."i th;Jt

arc the problem• Curb

e~ny

t;&gt;'(trav;J g;mt trmfl'nc1eS you
hav~

today and take command

over vour wallet.

\\ORB SCRIMMAGE'" SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
t 100l U&gt;!I!Ra hoh'"l !iyr&gt;all:•r 1,.;

@@@@@
T, @@@@@
A.@@©@ .
(9@@@@@@

.

AVERAGE GAME

205-2\5

Answer

'"DOWN

~...!!L

2nd OOWN

•...ill_

J•dDOWN

·...lL

4Jh DOWN

• 85

to
previous
Word
Scrim·

110-180
by JUDD HAMBRICK

AVERAGE GAME

•

-

=

Aad ~ms 10 £lacn word or lener USing scoring directions a1 nghl. Sellen-letter
AI! word'&gt; car; be found 10 Wetl:Sfefs New World

words gel a 60-pomt
College Du:11or.ary

mag~

323

JUDO'S TOTAL

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to 7·lener word from the letters on each yarfJine.

oo'nus

JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

~"

J~'51\\\N£

r.w;, IF I

\\16 A \£RRII3L£

~AD

FilM OF

YOO K~OW, AP1Cnll1ES
I/JOR111 ATIPJSANil
WORDS, BUT SO IS AN

US SEING MUG(;f.ll.'ii~
C.OVLtJ'Vo G0r $2.000
l'I'IOM WNNEL 3

&lt;SENSEOI= Dl\?rCTION

£XPRESSION ...

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

DREAM I'Orl. ZOO 3 ·,
LE55 E-MAIL,

MitRE /11E- I'M\ L.

• Room AddhloN •
Remodeling

•NowG•J'09H
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing I Guttors

0

• Vinyl Siding a P•lntlng

0

• Patio and Pon:h Dlckl

'

.

0
0

Free Eslimales
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Henderson, WV

87H.,or

.

MARCIE AND PATT~ WILL
APPRECIATE 6ETTIN6
THESE COOKIES ...

-..,z&lt;
rn

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

~

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

....0

L--'-'

~

c:::

&lt;

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

MANLEYS
SELf STORAGE

(741) 992-3194
992:-61i35

'

GOING TO CAMP.
HUH? '{OU 6UV5 ARE
60NNA AAVE FUN ..

!HiS &amp;L.ANI(.E.T IS THE

T EE
THE DUNE GRA.SS
t!;lo THE Rot.X;H THE
PA!Z.K INE. LOT IS OUT ·

RiH' r\\&lt;1\.

Cafe
in

S~TaCUSe

• f onru-Til Whlllk' \ 'n

L ndu ne~ u" rM.-r!Jiip

and ncv. mana!emcnt.

CF · BOUNDS .

.t

=

COME JOIN US

-- -~ "(OU E:I-UO"&lt;I
YOUi't. ""'
RETII&lt;:(ME:NT, MOM/&lt;IA. 7

=
..
~

7 Days A Week!

:\lorning

D&lt;&gt;.t&gt; WA5 A
TUSE 50CK .. .

rK)M

WAS

A SCARF...

0
....

MG

..

...

F(){i:.'ffi( FI~TTIIAE IN MY
L1 FE, I fl.'..\II;_ Tf\t. TIME:. TO

T~\l(l- Wf\E~I/0:.

,._,

llloming Star Road· C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

43 Swab brand
(hyph.) ;
44 Big Dipper
bear
45 Has a fever
46 - mater
47 File label,
maybe
49 Sigh
of conten!
51 Maldenname
indicalor
52 Role
for Madonna
53 Up till now

infrucrions th at -.,_(an unnerve

,

·--

1-740-949-2115

han!! on ri gh L bee au-;~
charl~:co; an.: in lhc y~ar ahead
you could tind yourc;;clf living

-

Ullll Pllllll

MYERS PAVING

740-992-5232

Bedaing, Vegetable·&amp; Sweet
l'otJito Plants,
4"' lllllfllllls &amp; Perennials
Ffllit &amp; Flowering Trus &amp;
Slrrubs
{llllollodeNirons &amp;

15 Retrieve
17 Merriesl
19 Telephones
20 Song of loy
22 E,xecs'
degrees
24 Draw a
bead on
25 Glare
proleclor
26 Ms. Dunne
of films
27 Louis
29 Weep
loudly
34 Suilors
36 Kitchen ilem
39 Heavy
sound

nv
""""'
"'"""'

97 Beedl St.
~~
;:~~~;::;;;~~;:;;;:;:::;:~ middleporti OH
~~r:;; SUE's GR6ENHOUSE (10'1110' 610'11201
~
(740) 59l-3891

Le'. me jo 1~ for·ycu'

740-742-3411

C&amp;C
General
Home
..,.,__... f'alrMg w¥
song ca&lt;pent.y 1100&lt;$

The
:
.
'
:
"
==
Daily -&gt;S.
=.!::e
,S entinel

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

FREE ESTIMATES!

Advertise
in this

43
46
·
48

HOME CREEK
~NT., INC.
992-7953

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

- $25.00 per month! =E.S: N~~~~ ,---~-~-tllti--,--,"9
,
Cal_24Esta!&gt;hshod
Hrs (7 4011975,
4A6-

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

Sunset Home ·
Construction

•II II

BY BERNICE BEOt OSOL
You'd better budle up and

ests as "ell.
I.EO (July 2J-Aug. 22) Unless you keep pace with

Im· ..n~
~
ones.

(740) 843-5264
DURO-LAST
ROOFING
Flal Roof
SpecialistsCommercial and
Residential
Saves on Cooling.
Melal and Mobile
home rools- No
Problem. 15-Year
Guarantee ·

ACROSS

I, am one of m'any cducalors
who believe lhat il is the parents' resr.onsibilily to di,cipline
I heir chtldren and leach !hem
proper social conduct. That
said, this is how I handle my
responsibili1y:
Every year on thdir&gt;t day of
school I prc,ent the rules of
conducl in my dass lo I he new
ADVICE
studenl s. I tell lhem thai I
expect everyone to behave and
respccl each other.
Up,"
received hundreds of , I 1ell them thai I am well
olhers from readers of bo1h aware that some children like 10
sexes peppering me with ques- call names and hun other chi!·
lions about eating disorders.
drcn 's feelings, bu1 I do notiOIReaders, if you or someone erale !his kind of behavior. I
you know needs help or infor- say, "If anyone hils you or hulls
mation, ANAD can be contact· your feelings - lell me immeed by phone: (847) R3l- 3438: dialely.". l will call the parenls
fax: ·(g47) 433-4632; e-mail: of !he abusive sludent and tell Box 69440. l.f1s Angeles, CA
anad20(al)aol.com; or the Web them what their child did. and 9(}()69.
.---,.- -..,-..,.-,-site: www.anad.org. Read on:
that I will not admil their chi ld ,---------....;,~
DEAR ABBY: I would like in my cia% the next day unless
to comment on lhe lener from accompanied by one of hi s/her The Newspaper
'"Fed Up." the 13-year-nld girl parents. I cxpec1 1he parent 10
whose mother is bulimic ana si t in our classroom the entire Has Class ...
who is ridiculed in school by day and make sure that his/her
Students can
olher kids because she is over- child does nnl hun anyone.
learn a lot from
weight.
I then ask the students. " How
the newspa I wa~ trained in anorhercoun- many of you think your mother
try to become a leather. Our or father will have the time to
per about the
psychology leacher · explained si t in our class the whole day ?''
world
to us thai , since parents cannot No one raises a hand. No stuin which they live. And
be present in school 10 protect · dent ever dares 10 abuse anothnow is the
their children, il is 1herefore the er student in my cla~s.
leachers' and the principal's full
I hope !hat chi ld's letter will
perfect time to bring
responsibility to protect the slu- cause people 10 think and
newspapers into the
dents from physical and emo- change the discipl ine policies
classroom. ·
tiona! abuse by olher stude nls. that exisl in many U.S. sc hools

LIBRA iSepL 23-0cl, 23)

Let me show you ho"'
arfordahl~ and eas)· il is 10
~et th~ coverage you need.

burial and final expenses

-~' .~ . ~ ~4 · ~
. .. ., · &lt;J)

Hox 189 Middle~rt

BINGO 2171
Every Thursday &amp;

lo Byron
Sine- non
I Sweel
Harvesl
liqueur
llme1
6 Trades
Sports
11 Bailed out
prelims
12 Devastalion 50 Cartoon
13 Sliff
kin~
15 Bogarl's
54 Faktr's
hal
failh
16 Sidled
55 Colander
- and I hope that other caring 18 Omaha's sl. 56 Harem
h'!ad
1eachers and principals will fol- 19 PC "brain"
21
Nutritious
57
Turf
low my psychology leacher's
grabber
instntcl nn' and prevent abu- 22 grain
Polite
sive students from hurting helpaddress
DOWN
Jess studcnls. - RETIRED 23 Humane
t Harsh cry
or g.
TEACHER IN ATLANTA
2 Brazilian
, DEAR TEACHER: If there 25 London's
port .
Oldwere more 1cacticrs like you. I 26 Smile
upon 3 Tokyo,
would not receive lhc hundreds 30 Fral leller
formerly
of heartbreaking leucrs I do 31 Relirees
4 Average
from
sludents who are
killy
sizes
harassed. . bullied and taunted 32 Ga. neighbor 5 Blissful
spol
by their classmates. Orchids to 33 Kyolo sesh
35
Pondered
6
Snakes
you.
37 9-digii iD
do il
Dear A!J/Jy is writren bv 38 Borsch!
7 Roll of bills
Abigail 1-Zm B11ren, also knowi1
ingredient
8 Cosmelies
as ll'llww Phillips, and wm 40 Weighl
brand
9 Skin delail
units
founded hi' lwr mmhe~ l'auli11e
10 Injury resull
Plti//ips. Write Dear Ahbv m 41 Wood
residue
14 Sgls. and
""""'.DearAbbv.mm or P.O. 42 Before,
Cpls.

busin~~s ol11 of 1h~ pkrurc .

20()}

ror your ramlly and

Don 't lea ve the debt or

•. ; -~ ,Y . .

'

2~.

CASCER !Juno 21-July
22) - If ~ o u expect others to
do things for you today. you 're
going to lirst have to set the
example. Othe" wdl re,pond
if 1hey are ass ured that you

~

1

Bring your

I
' l.aSI checking statement
I
I
"Laot pay check slub
"Photo 1.0. 'Phone Bill with name and address 1
I.
1
16 Main
I

Window5o • Roofing

t••~s ptige .•or as lOW a~ ro h~:it1'~ I =IQ-=1415~

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7.

Astrograph

SALES&amp; SERVICE

liMJJI 'Kill &amp;
........ . . .

DEAR ABBY: I was deeply
tou ched by the leiter from. "Fed
lJp in Fort Myers, Flu.," regarding a young girl affected by her
mother's bulimia., The chi ldren
al school call her cruel names.
and so docs her mother.
Eating di &gt;ordcrs arc widespread illnesses that affccl all
segments Df sociely. They may
affecl not only the body, bul
also lhe mind - and appropriale treatmenl is necessary.
Abby. I would like 10 invile
your readers 10 contact the
National
!issocialion
nf
Anorexia
Ncrvosa
and
Associ&lt;itcd Disorders (ANAD)
for free resources and referrals.
Through our h01linc and
rcspon-.c lo mail and e-mail
inquiries. ANAD provides
counsel and informmion to
ihousands of anorexics, bulimics. compulsive eaters, !heir
fam ines. and also 1hc healthcare community in al l parts of
the globe. Our referral lisl
includes more than 1.500 therapists and inpalicntloutpalient
programs in the United States,
Canada and several other countries, including Great Britain,
Germany, Auslral ia, New
Zealand, Fmnce, Italy, Spain,
Mexico. Colombia and more.
- VIVIAN HANSON MEEHAN, PRESIDENT, ANAD
DEAR VIVIAN: Thank you
for the information. After I
primed the letter from ··Fed

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR

I

992-2155

Phone (740)593-6671
Ohio

'=RU
======::::
MARIO ~:::;=:59:1:-464::::1~~~===~==~

runs great.$4500 Boat w/mtnn Kota Trolling
negotaabAe 740-245-5466
Motor and F~ Flndet' SSOO
- - - - - - - - Can (304~S.4352
22ft Yellow Stone. great •r-~~--~-,

¥0l1R
BUSINESS

~....

t·.-,. L..M.T.

Offorr J&lt;M" lhru ' II (11

• Lawn Mowers
p
M

parl.s.

~DVERTISE
.

A.

740-992-5379

tlloA~s~ Ir:lkM~:~ I
t986 Bayiner. 19 001. new

#cHiVRO,~T/

Get 2nd Free!
Heath~r

992-7953
591·
7002

441·9838

1740)247·8\02

LARRY SCHEY

Buy I Gift Certificate.

·--·4-i.itWDsitiiii.__,.

740-446-0137 .
1998 rea Muslang Coupe , V6. auto. a1um1num wheels, 2000 Ford Explorer Sport.
rear spotler. PW &amp; PL. interr·
4WO. sunroof. 6 diSC CO
or &amp; extenor eJCCellent condi·
player, runn,ng boards. 74()..
liOn.
ask1ng
S6500.

521 .500 00 (740) 992·2209
puppy,.
r e-cond1t)onet.1
automatiC 12wks. old Can (304)882· 2002 Ctwvy Impala, like
washers 5 dryers. refngera· 3568
new. one owner {semor crtl·
tors. gas and electnc . , ; ; , ; . . . - - - - - - - . zen) . 18 000 m•tes, ve
fR~;rrs&amp;
ranges , Al D. and wnn ger
Carm•ne Red MetalliC, ask·
washers w ;u oo repa~rs on .
1ng 514.500 Catl even•ngs
m8JOr brands .n shop or at ....,
740-446--0299

74G-446-•782
OH

IIISSME

Ea ster &amp; Mothers Day

WE REPAIR

4054

Thompsons

Used Furnrture Store. 130
Bulav1tle P1ke We sell mattresses , dressers. couches.
builkbeds, bedroorrf suites.
reclnlefs. grave monumenta.

TIUIPEmC

Footers and
Concrele,
PicJlup $5800. 97 Olds
•
E
1· Ut'l't'
e"""'"" s5600 . 96 GMC
xcava 1on , 111es
Sonoma 52200. B&amp;O Auto
Back hoe and
Sales Hwy 160 N. 446o6865- 1--------1
D'
p
r~
JIM'S SMALL
ozer, onds,
VAI'&lt;'i &amp;
HOME CREEK
ENGINE REPAIR
32119 Wel5htown Rd.
ENT., INC.
1991 Chevy 4114 pick-up, a·
p
fled. loolbo&gt;t &amp; ,., 10 , new
omeroy, OH 45769
,,••, exhaust, many new
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can get the help they need

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APART- A1r Cond Unn 2·1f2ton GOOd qualtfV straw VOlume
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'"The Lml~ rN.Jur-.dnl
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• Religion briefs See
PageA2
• NASCAR' See Page AS
• Local briefs See Page
AS

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Index
2 Sections - 12 hps

Briefs

AS

Oassilieds

B3
B6
"
B6
A4

tomics
OearAbby
Editorials

.

1 89

'6.39 ..,.

,.-

"'"

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Obituaries

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Sports
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occurred just behind the county courthouse. Other landslides were reported behind
the former Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes on East Second Street,
Union Avenue, Cave and
Locust Streets in Pomeroy.
Fairlane Drive in Middleport,
and on Peach Fork Road. (See
related story, page 1.)
Accord ing to Byer. one
home. located on Bald KnobStiversville Rd:, is in danger
hecause of a slide there, but
no . financial assistance is
available to private landowners for repairs. However. Byer
said, ODNR's Division of
Mine Reclamation is expect-

ed to inspect at leas! four sites combi nation of damage to
where damage might be par- trees and land in the February
tially mine-related.
ice storm, and the heavy and
"To my knowledge. fund- constant rains of May and
ing to repair these slides on early June.
private property is not availFor the past two weeks, torable, unless emergency funds rential rains have fallen in
would be avail able from many parts of the county,
ODNR Mine Reclamation," especially on June 19, when
Byer said Thursday.
.
areas of the county received as
Byer said ODNR will investi- much as three and a halfinchgatethe slides on Union Avenue es of rain in less than an hour.
and Locust Street in Pomeroy
Byer said he plans to file a letand Fairiane Drive
in ter of intent with the Ohio
Middleport, because there is a · Emergency
Management
possibility the areas were weak- Agency, stating plans to apply
ened by abandoned mine sites. for funds from the Ohio Disaster
However, Byer said, the Relief Fund for infrasuucture
slides are largely blamed on a damage. Lebanon, Letart and

Rutland Townships and the
County Highway Department
have reponed $51 1,000 in darnage to roads. bridges and culverts due to the heavy rains.
Byer said he has received
"four or five" reports of private
property damage, including the
home on Bald Knob-Stiversville
Road in Lebanon Township.
Byer has applied for a mitigation planmng grant through
the Federal Emergency
Management Agency, in
hopes of preparing a plan for
preventive measures. The
pian !11USt be completed in the
next year if the county is to
receive mitigation funding . .

BY J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer
POMEROY - Landslides
are threatening the property
of many people in Meigs
County, but there seems li ttle that can be done in the
way of assistance to the
owners.
Emergency · Management
Agency Director Bob Byer
said numerous landslides
have been reported to hi s
age ncy, but added that
unle ss the home ow ner's
property is located above a
mine. there is little relief the
state or federa l government
can provide.
•
·
Jan Snider and her husband Rand y live on Union
Ave outside Pomeroy. They
bought a new home in
October 200 I with the proceeds from the sale of their
home in Cheshire which was
purchased by lhe AEP buyout. The Sniders wanted to
be closer to Randy's mother,
Mamie Stephenson, who

li ves next door. Their homes
are perched on the side of a
steep llllsteady hill where
land sli des have become
common since the ice storm
in February.
"We never dreamed anything like this would happen." Jan said. "Thi s ·was
where we wanted to retire ."
The Snider·, hac:kyard
feature s a nice woudcn deck.
a cat and a view of a muddy
hillside which slides c:loser
and closer to their house
after each rainstorm.
"Alter each had rain. we
would notice the hi ll move a
little bit more. hur the rain last
week was devastating,'' Jan
said. 'The hill started comi ng
down. We thought we were
going to have lo evacuate."
The rains ex posed a deep
Cllt of earth that split the
yard in two. In fron t of this
exposed clitT of dirt which
Please see Landslide, AS

Jan Snider stands inside the latest s pot whe re the most recent landslide threatens her new
home on Union Avenue outside Pomeroy. (J. Miles Layton)

A2

J

libraries
scramblin e
to the ,l ibrary's computers for
decide whelher to ctm1pl y violating this policy," Eblin
with lhe law. Ehlin said reac- said .
tions i"roin librarians across
Filtering de vices can block
vary across the state.
regular clean web sites if
"Many librarians have stat- they have a word considered
ed tha( they will refuse to offens'ive. For instance, a
install filters and foreg@ fed- patron looking for sites for a
eral funding." she said. school project about beavers
'They sec it as an issue of might be surpri sed. Filtering
free speech. Other librarians devices can also block access
see it as a form of collection to ordinary e-mail accounts.
development. They don't
'' I have heard filters
purchase Playboy magazine referred to as a blunt instruwith library funds. so why · ment," Eblin said. · "They
should I hey object to filtering may keep out most of the bad
the Internet. They wish to stuff, but they block a lot of
apply for federal grants and useful, constitutionally prowill install the filters in order tected material as well. With
to recei ve those funds."
filters , it is conceivable . to
Meigs Cmmty Publi c see a woman with breast canlibraries do nol use filters, cer or a pre-teen victim of
but they have an Internet pol - sex ual abuse be unable to
icy in place. There is a com- lind the resources they need
puter use policy which for- to help them . through their
bids lhe viewing or printing situation via the Internet at
of sexually explicit matl!rial the public library."
or other material inappropriEblin said lilters provide a
ate for use in a public setting. false sense of security. Web Olita Heighton. a librarian at the Pomeroy branch of the Meigs
"We have on occasion had site developers can and do County Library, helps Ashley Spradling, a junior at Meigs High
to bari a patron from using · Please see ~lock. AS
School, surf the Inte rnet. (J . Miles Layton)

1 9111 Annual Co111111unity Health Fair

:loltcen.ter

Thomas

]f't. Rt. 35 &amp; 160 Gallipolis, Ohio

555 Park St., Middleport, Ohio

Rt. 2 By

7 40-446-2002

740-992-6611 •1-800-733-3334

304-675-5200

Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sunday ll-5

Mnn.-Fri. 7-5• Saturda 7-3

Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sunday 11-5

"For the Entire Family"
Saturday, June 28
10 AM - 2 PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

no it center.
P~ss

Bl-3

POMEROY- Pornography
is not an option at the Meigs
County Public Library especially since the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled that libnuies can
add filtering devices to protect
the public .
Justices ruled Monday that
the federal government can
money
from
withhold
libraries that won't install
blocking devi ces. Kri sti
Eblin, director of the Meigs
County . Public Library system, said this policy will not
have much effect because the
only federal funding librari es
receive in Ohio is for large
construction and technology
grants.
Four justices said the law
was constitutional, and two
others said it was allowable
as long as libraries disable
the tiller for adu lt patrons
who ask. The law does not
spec ifically require the disabling. The 6-3 ruling leaves

•

C 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Valley Lumber
&amp; Supply Co.

'

POMEROY - The Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources will investi gale
some of the ! 7 landslides
which occ urred in Mei gs
County last week, to determine if they mi ght be blamed
in part on abandoned mine
sites.
·
Meigs County Emergency
Management Director Bob .
Byer met with Meigs County
Comm issioners Thursday to
discuss the in ve;tigation uf
the · slides, one of which

BY J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

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.ODNR to investigate cause of landslides

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5

www.mydailysentinel.&lt;am

FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 2003

Residents keep fearful eye on hillsides

Ceiling Fans

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Art tor illustrative purposes only. Not exactty as shown.

• Royals trump Tribe.
See Page 81
• Cards over Reds. See
Page 81
• ACC after the Big
East? See Page 81
• MLB scoreboard, 82

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