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Pagel&amp;

The. Daily Sentinel

••••.,• ..., 21. !"•

Varitek, Red Sox rev up
for Yankee Stadium
BY THE 4SSOCIATEO PRESS

Luis Rivas caught the bill
while backpedaling onto the
outfield grass, and Anderson
easily scored ahead of the ofr· balance throw home.
The Twins fell to 8-1 in
on~-ru n games.

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-(GirMe•-z)atflolidl{aor2-3), 7:05 p.m.
San Diego (Eaton 5-2)81 Housk&gt;n
(Aejo-4-2), 8:05p.m.
Los Angolol (Drililott 3-2) "'Cdooaclo
(CI1aoon 1-1), 9:05p.m.

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D-badcs
. 5

Padres 5,

Expos 3

Cardinals 3,
Phillies 1

MORE LOCAL
SPORTS.
YOUR LOCAL
TEAMS.

Mariners 6.
Yankees 2

Devil Rays 10,
Tigers 2

m;;;~~\ 1;~ngs.
Brewers·7

Rangers 3.

Blue Jays 2

At Turnpike!ls
S~rviCe Dept.

NATIONAL
LEAGUE

'

Rockies 7,
Marlins 2

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QualiiJ.t_,-..

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l WHEEL ALIGNMENT II
. TIRES . I
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$2495 $4995

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advertised price on the some tire.
Conti.-.

$1995

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Orioles 3,
Twins 2

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1111

Jason Varitek and the Bosron
.279
NewYOII&lt;
(~4-1~7-p.a.
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AMhlim (S4JWM4 Til 3-2) It 81 • 701.
Red Sox hope to make a bang
(Hon1gon 2-3). 7:05 p.m.
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at Y:o.nkee Stadium, too.
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QouHouslon
Varitek hit three homers and
T - (Rc!gofo 2-31 at T-llay ( .535 2 1/2
Do4lolt
Chielgo
-8112
0.5), 7:15' p.m.
drove in seven runs Sunday,
13
.386
.535 2 112
-City
Mlturaukee
Sllotllo ( - 2-1 ) atlolo•- c.341
14
112
. - 1112
SllnF....,..,~""')atMzona
cntcogo
Clnctnna11
leading the Red Sox over the
Plttsl&gt;ut91
.357
10
(Sc:toiling6-1), 10:05p.m
Pel G8
Kansas City Royals 10-3.
c-3·3)
City~
a~ 01
.,.__._., _
Sllonle
.744
pan 2·3), 8:05 p.m.
"Kansas City has been
los AngeleS
~
·n
2" , 20 .S.05
AHaoU (Smoltz
0.1) at F1ollda (Smil&gt; 2- • oa~-~
~
.. 12
tough for us all last year and
Arizona ·
23 20 · .535
112
0), 7:05p.m.
·
·7
15 28 .349
Sin Francisco 23 20 .535
112
N.Y. MOIII (Gonzalez 1-1)ot Momoal
T1
this year:• Varitek said. "For us
22 21 .512 1 112
(Annu Jr. 3-5), 7;05 p.m.
San Diego
to come away winning this
21 22 ..o&amp;a 2 1/2
Pittsburgh (ScMoidt 1-1) 81 ~
Colorado
( - 3...). 7;05 p.m.
N.Y. Y 2, Sea1t1o 1, 10 InningS
~·series and winning today is
s... _ , . , _
Frank Menechino hit J
San Diego (Wiliams • -3) at Houston
OOidiM 4, C1lieago- So• 3
Detroit 10, Tampa Bay 5
Los Angeles 10, N.Y. Met&gt; 2
(Eiarton 4·3), 8:05p.m.
just big for m, period."
three- run double off· White
Clotcloonatl , _ 0.1J• ChlcoF c.- MioonoiB 7 , Blh' dC)I8 5
Chicago Culls 6, Arizooa 2
The AL East-leading Red Sox relief &gt;ce Keith Foulke,
San Diego 20, Montreal 7
T0f0111o 6, ToJCU 5
IT•- WI. 1:05 p.m. . •
Florida I , Colorado 0
St. Louis (Kie 6·2) ot Milwooukoe (Haynes · Kanoaa City 6, Bco1on 2
Sox co ntinue their road trip highlighting a six-run raUy in
San Fnmcisoo 6, AUanta 3
....,,8:05p.m.
~4.-3,1Dinniltp
with a three-game .series at the eighth inning Jt Oakland.
Los Angeles (Gagne 1·3) at Colorado
PiHsbut9l 6 . Milwaukee 1
Philadelphia 3, St Louis 2
(Neagle 4·1), 9:05p.m.
SUnclay'o....,..
New York, starting Tuesday
The. Athletics won their
Houaton I , Clnclnn.ti 3
San Foancioco (Or1iz 6·2) at Arizona
Tampa Bay 10. DetiOit 2
night agoinst the second-pl JCe sixth in a row and sent ChicaBalimore 3, MinneiOia 2
( A - 1·3), 10:05 p.m.
Boston 1o. Kansas City 3
Sunder'oGomeo
Yankees.
go to its sixth straight loss. The
Texas 3, Toronto 2
Color- 7, Florida 2
Boston makes a .stop Mon- White Sox fired hitting coach
()akland 6, Chicago Wlolta So• 2
Atlanla 11. San Francisco 6
SUttle 6, N. v. Yankees 2
·
N.Y. Mats 6 , LOS Angeles 5
day in New Jersey to play its Von Joshua before the game
Double-A Trenton &gt;ffiliate.
and replaced him with . Gary
.
" I think that's one bus I
three'stopped
Philadelphia's
pinch-hitter
Marquis
Grismight miss," Red Sox ce nter
som's two-run double on John gome winning streak.
fielder Carl Everett joked.
Dave Veres pitched 1 1-3
Franco's first pitch after pinchEverett twice. missed the
hitter Dave Hansen's RBI innings for his fifth save.
team bus in spring training,
double
off Rick Reed .
irking Boston manager Jimy
Williams.
In other AL games, Seattle
stopped New York 6-2, Cleveland took Anaheim 9-6, Oakkevin Tapani (6-1) allowed
land beat Chicago 6-2, Texas
two
hits in seven shutout ·
Ryan
Klesko
hit
a
three-run
topped Toronto 3-2, Baltimore
1
double off Ugueth- Urbina in innings at Wrigley Field as '
beat Minnesota 3-2 and
the eighth as visiting San Chicago built a 6-0 lead.
Tampa Bay downed Detroit.
Tom Gordon failed to retire
Diego
rallied. Phil Nevin's
10-2.
seventh-inning homer off a batter in Arizona's five-run
Variiek went 4-for-4 in setJavier Vazquez (4-5) had pulled ninth, giving up a two-run
ting .career highs fo~ home
homer to pinch-hitter Erubiel
the Padres to 3-2.
runs and RBis.
Bobby Jones (2-5) allowed Durazo.
Varitek hit a solo .homer in
three
runs - two earned Kyle Farnsworth allowed an
the second inning, a three-run
and six hits in seven innings to RBI double to Craig Counsell
shot in the fourth and a twowin for the just the second an&lt;! a two-ruo double tp
run drive in the eighth. He
.
time
in nine starts since sign- pinch- hitter Danny Bastisia
had gone I 08 at-bats without
ing•with the Padres.
before Jeff Fassero got three
a home run.
Trevor Hoffman pitched a outs for his 1Oth save.
" Anytime you don't have
·
hitless
ninth for his seventh
Rober! Ellis (3-2) gove up
one and you have the capabilsave as San. Diego won its six runs - five earned - . and
ity of hitting one, you know
fourth straight road series. San 11 hits in 13 innings.
itr .Varitek said. "I made ~orne
Diego
shortstop Donaldo
adjustments in my swing. I'm
BIG
STICK
GUY
San
Francisco
Giants
Barry
Bonds
follows
through
on
his
516th
home
run,
Mendez made three errors.
able to see the ball better."
the
second
in
the
game
and
the
5th
since
Saturday,
as
he
bats
in
the
seventh
inning
against
Varitek became the first
Boston player to homer three the Atlanta. Braves in Atlanta Sunday. (AP )
times in a gome since Trot
Nixon did it at Detroit on July
24, 1999.
Ward , batting coac h for Triple- homered twice-. a three-run ag&gt;inst Terry Adams (2-2) in
drive in the sixth and a solo the n'inth.
It was the eight three-homer A Charlotte.
Fernando Vina broke a t-all
game in the majors this season,
shot
in
the
seventh
when
tie
with a his first home run of
Armando
Benite.z'
(3-1)
Chicago
starter . Mark
including two by Toronto's Buehrle retired the first . 16 Giants reliever .Alan Embree pitched a perfect. rinth in the the season, a two-run drive off
Carlos Delgado.
batters. Foulke had been suc- gave up four hotners, tying a Mets' second win in three AmauryTelemaco (4-1) in the .
cessful on 19 straight save major league . record. Andruw g&gt;mes against the visiting seventh at Philadelphia.
Subscribe today.
Dustin H ermanson (S-1)
chances, dating back to last Jones, Brian Jordan and Javy Dodgers. Los Angeles lost for
992-2156
the third time in four games.
gave up one run and five hits
season, before giving up. Lopez also connected.
Kerry Ligtenberg (l-2)
Los
tied it on in seven
as St. Louis
Menechino's two-opt double
pitched a scorel~ss sixth. Livan
that put the A's ahead 4-2.
H ernandez (3-6) gave up
Bret Boo ne hit • three-run
double off wild Roger
seve n runs - ~arned Clemens and Seattle salvaged
the wrap.up of :i three-game
and
series Jt Safeco Field.
Aaro n Sele improved to 6-0,
Greg Vaughn
homered
matching the best start of his twice, Fred McGriff had three
career.
hits and three RBis as Tampa
Emil Brown's RBI single off
But Clemens, who pitched a Bay stopped a five-game losone-hitter at Seattle last Octo- ing streak.
David Weathers (1-2) finished
ber in the ALCS, walked the
Vaughn has three home runs a five-run eighth at Pittsburgh,
bases loaded in the first inning. in two games. M cGriff had which overcame, a 7-0 deficit.
Boone doubled, giving him a two singles and a two-run
Pittsburgh hadn't rallied
team-leading 43 RBis.
homer, giving him six straight · from seven runs since doing so
The Mariners, leading the hits in two days.
against the same team by the
majors with a 32-11 record,
Detroit outscored the Devil same score, beating the Breware 4-2 agoinst New York this Rays 28-7 in winning the first er.; 8-7 on Sept. 8, 1998.
·· two games of the series at
Milwaukee's Devon White
season.
•
Tropicana Field.
hit his record-tying third
grand slam of the month.
Josias Manzanillo ( 1-1)
pitched a scoreless eighth, and
· Mike Williams finished for his
seventh save.
· Pat Mahomes won as a
starter for the first time siqce
A record home-run barrage
1994, helping pitch Texas past by Barry Bonds didn 't help
visiting Toronto.
the San Francisco' Giants beat
Mahomes went five inl}ings, the Braves.
r----------------~,
and Juan Moreno, Mark . Bonds homered twice SunMike
Hampton
(6- 1)
Petkovsek, Mike Venafro and day, becoming the 23rd player
Jeff Zimmerman teJmed ' on to . hit five ·in two games, but aUowed both runs and nine
three-hit relief.
Atlanta hit five of its own in an hits en route to · his fourth
1.
I
A . hee
· 1
I .I .
straight victory over Florida
Before the game, Rangers t 1-6 victory.
2' whII1
I
....
w
I
I
wa
feltura all majCJI bl'ondl: Goodvoor. Flrtt!OflO, Gonorll, 1
owner Tom Hicks assured AU"We held BondS to two and also hit his second career
1· Check and adjust camber and toe. Additional pariS and . 1 1 Mk:holln, Bridgoolono,
UNIROYAL. BF Goad!lch. 1
Star catcher Ivan ,Rodriguez home runs ," Braves manager homer.
L--~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~ L--~!~~~~~~~~---~
that he wori't lie traded befoce Bobby Cox quipped. "T hat's V isiting Colorado won for
just the seco nd time in ·eight
June 2. That's th e date pretty good."
r-------------~---~r------------ ~---- ,
I
SPRING .
f I
MOTORCRAFT I
Rodriguez becom es a 10-year
Bonds has six homers in games, stopping Florida's fourgame
winning
streak.
·
MAINTENANCEIJ ;
FAST LUBE I
veteran wi th five seasons wi th three games, seven in fo.ur
Ryan Dempste&lt; (3-,6) lost
his current team, meaning he games and 21 in 33 games.
I·
I I• Service Includes up to 5 quarts of Motorcraft
can veto any trades.
With 516 homers, he is five for the sixth time in his last
I ;::"",...~ 1"f,~!~~-,....,.-,,
I 1and new Motorcraft oil flher • Pelform Muiii·P&lt;&gt;Intl
behind Willie McCovey and seven starts, allowin.g six runs
I
I 1Vthlcie Inspection • Check and flll nece988ry
I
::r"'~.:::;'~~O::':'l:: C'.::::" I I' AIIJn 29 minutes oti6ss • !)lesel vehicles may
Tpd W illiams, tied for II th o n and nine -hits in five-plus
I
_
' ..""'""'"""mOOIIUopodJCOWI/'0-~ I.· extra:
.
.
·
the career list.
innmgs.
I IOCidtntll H'*- and.,.._, whlf1l .-...., Dllal Ylhlcltl may bl
L:--.. - - -------Bonds also tied a record,
held by mariy, by homerin g in
&amp;.
Pinch-ru nner Brady Ander- four straight official :lt-bats .
son streak&lt;!d home 011 a shal" It's awesome," said Gia11ts
low sacrifice fly, giving Balti- manager Dusty Baker, whose "'
more the win 11 ing run in th~ team has lost three of .four.
After N e\~ York wasted a 3ninth inning at Camden Yards. "He's hitting right-ha nders. (I kad in Fhe eighth, pinch-hirThe Orioles loaded th e left-handers, ·everybody l just kr Len ny H arris hit a two-run
'li bases with one out, and Fer- wish we had gotten another single off Mike Fetters in th e
,
nando Lunar lifted a popup. victory out of his ~ot bat."
bottom half and T suyoshi
•••u·· Minn esota seco nd ba s~ man .J At Atlanta, Wes Helms Shinjo had an . RBI single

Athletics 6.
White Sox 2

at-

~-Sol&lt;~t-3)111illm-

to (PW* 2-3), .. p.m.

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111 ac

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Tuesday·

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Lakers take 2~0 series lead, B1

-

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www. myda i ly~entinel.com

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

'&gt;O '""h • Mdy l2 1001 • Vul. 51 . No 11 s

•

EPA

.altows
water-

impacts
FROM STAFF REPORTS, :,

DARWIN -The 0 io
Environmental Protecti~n
Agency has authorized
the water quality impacts
associated with tqe relocation of U.S. 33 between
Darwin and Athens . .
A hearing on the · project was held Nov. 29,
2000.
The EPA reports the
dis~:harges from the relocation activities ·will not
ex&lt;:eed chemical-specific
water. quality standards
that prote&lt;:t aquatic life
and human health . They
will, however, result in a
&lt;:hange from current
water quality conditions
in West . Branch Shade
River, Middle Branch
Shade
River,
Pratt's
Branch, that branch's
unnamed tributaries anci
nearly an acre of adjacent
'wedands by allowing an
additional waste water
discharge.
· .About 21 ,463linear feet
of stteams will be affected
by the project, primarily
by relocating and ~:ulvert­
ing. The EPA was therefore required to &lt;:onsider
. the· technical, social, eco-,
nomic and 'envirorunen~··:
aspects of the ·project.
To compensate for the
'adverse effects ta the acre
'o f wedands, 1.35 a&lt;:res of
wedand mirigariort will be
credited from ODOT's
pooled . wetlands area near
the Rocksprings Fair- ·
:grounds northeast of the ·
:U.S. 33/0hio 7 inter··c hange at Pomeroy. The
1.35 acres will be part of a
larger wedand complex
consisting of about 15
a&lt;:res. The wetland mitigation site will be designed
to also treat acid mine discharges into the East
Branch Thomas Fork,
which flows through the
site.
ODOT also has committed to provide stream
mitigation in the form of
either bank or in-stream ·
cnhan&lt;:ements or preservation. The linear footage
of stream mitigation will
vary from 21,463 . to
32,195, depending upon
whetlier the mitigation

Dexter rommunity without
power indlfinitely
BY BluN J. REED
SENTINEl. NEWS STAff

GROUNDIIRUKING - Participating In groundbreaking ceremonies Monday morning for Meigs Local's
$33 million building project were from the left, Mark Rhonemus, treasure(, Scott Walton, Randy
Humphreys, John Hood, president, board members; Supt. William L. Buckley; and Roger Abbott and
Wayne Davis, board members. T'he shovel used by Hood was the same one used when ground was broken for Meigs High School 33 years ago. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

Meigs kicks off projects

PIIIH.... Stonll. AJ

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - "This is a great
occasion for the Meigs Local School
District," s~id Supt. William L. Buck- .
ley at groundbreaking ceremonies
Monday morning to kick-off the
district's $33 · million construction
project.
. About I 00 people gathered on the
site where the new middle school
will be constructed for a single
· grqunlibreaJOng held to mark the
beginning of all three phases of the
project - the construction of a new
ele~e'ntary school near R!ltland, the .
new middle school, and the extensive
interior and exterior renovation of
Meigs High School.
Buckley spoke of the financing for
the project, $26,856,763 from the
Ohio School Facilities Commission,
"co-partner in the project", and
$5,726,000 in local funds to be raised
from a 23-year, 3. 95 mill bond / levy
issue. ·
Theme of the groundbreaking
where the shovel used to break

PIHH . . MIIp.AJ ·

Picketing

A GREAT OCCASION -For Supt. William L. Buckley, Monday's
groundbreaklng was In his words, "a great occasion for Meigs
LOcaL· Buckley spoke briefly expressing appreciation to the
board members and others ·who have worked on the building
project as well as the commitment of the community to a goal
of better schools.

What kinds of summer activities are there for children to keep them off the streets and out of trouble?
Harry
Cunnlngh•m, ChMt8r:
There's not really much
for kids to do around
here when they glll out
of schOol. I know that a
lot ot children ~ke to play
ball and the skating ririk
near Chester Is still

Allee !Avlngeton, Rut·

Hlp: .I OI ,
Low: 40a
. Details, A2

Sentinel
Calendar
Classifieds
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Sports
Weather

Lotteries

AS
OHIO
82-4 Pick 3: 9-t-1; Pick 4: 1·9-2-9

85 :sup. LaiiD: 3-12·14-21-33

M

A3 W.VA.
81·3,6
A2

.,.., 5: 7-48 Dilly 4: 5-8-2-Q
C 2001 Ohio Vollay Publisl1in1 Co.

Jim O'Brien, Ponte1oy:
There 8re numerous
activities thai area youth
can entertain themselves
with, like baseball. bas· ·
kelball, swimming, etc.
GoW has recenay become
very popular and there
are two nice golf courses
In the Immediate area.
God's NET also has a
wonderful facility where
kids can enjoy pinball and
a number ol pool tables.

18!111: Being from Rut-

land, I know that there
are several summer
league baseball1eams
that child~en can join.
There are also a nulTiber
of parks and two swimming pools within the
co,.my that they can
entertain themselves
with . Of COU!Se, there is
always skateboarding
and rollerbladlng.

open.

'

211dlolil- 12 ......

Members of Asbestos Workers, Local 207, set up
an informational picket line Monday at both driveways go,lng Into Meigs High School In protest to
non-union workers being used on the school's
asbestos abatement. Work on the high school, a
part of the $33,000,000 building project of the
Meigs Local School District. got under way yesterday. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Speak Out

,.........M. ft'J

'I'GM(•

POMEROY - Meigs County is under a county-declared state of emergency after receiving n~~ar­
ly two inches of rain late Monday and early today,
with road closings, power outages and other damage
still making life difficult for residents in several communities.
About 60 Dexter residents were still without
power this morning, and may continue to be without power for hour.; or even days, depending upon
when crews can get into the community to begin
repairs.
.
As of presstime, Ronn Robinson of American
Electric Power said the Dexter community was the

Health Department touts programs
. BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Services include a child health . clinic,
which provides physical exams by a
physician, and height; weight, blood pressure, hearing, and vision screenings, as
well as blood lead and blood iron checks.
Oral examinations and cleanings are
also offered during a monthly dental ·
clinic. In addition, cardi ac, vision , immunization, neurology, plasti cs, and hearing
clinics are available for children up to 21

POMEROY - Programs and services
offerei:l by the Meigs County Health
Department were discussed Monday by
Pomeroy Village Council.
Norma Torres, Meigs Co unty health
cpmmJSSIOner,
said
several
free
child/adult health clinks are available for
low-in&lt;:ome families in Meigs Coun ty:

Pleasant Senior

years old .
·Torres said there are special programs
for both women and men, including a
prenatal clinic, mobile mammography
clinic and prostate screenings.
In other matters, Pomeroy Fire Chief
C hris Shank informed council of the
department's intentions to flush the levy

Fair

1&gt;lzer.Medical Center Community Health and Well ness will p~ovide free
ole:stel'lol an3 glucose screenings May 23 from 10 om - 12 noon at the
Community Action Group/Point Pleasant Senior Citizens Center.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discov,er the Holzer Difference.

·For more information,

Call (740) 446·5679
•

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...

_,_,.___

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Tueaday, May 22, 2001

The Daily Serttinel

I

Ohio

PageAl
"~Ue~My. Miry

Wedn11d.y, u.y 23
AceuWeathefS forecalt tot

WASHINGTON (AP) . The
Supreme Court's ruling Monday in a
case involving a secretly recorded cell
phone conversation heartened · the
lawy.:r for Rep. Jim McDermott, who is
being sued by a colleague from Ohio.
" I think it's a very good result for us,"
said lawyer Frank Cicero. "I think it
squarely applies to Mr. McDermott.;'
A lawsuit filed by Rep. John Boehner,
R-Ohio, accuses McDermott, D, Wash.,
of revealing the contents of a pirated
Boehner cell phone conversation to
newspapers that published excerpts
from it.
The case that concluded Monday had
several parallels with the congressman- ·
against-congressman case, but Boehner's
attorney; Michael Carvin, said the faces

IIICH.

More·rain on the way
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A cold front will continue
to move slowly across the
region today bringing more
rain, forecasters said.
The National Weather Service reported that some thundersto rms are possible in the.
south and east and flash flood
watches are in effect.
Things should dry out a bit
by tonight, which should see
clearing skies and cool tem_peratures. Lows Tuesday night
will be in the mid 40s.
After a brief period of dry
weather· Tuesday night, a low
pressure system will keep cool

'1,11d wet conditions across the
region into the weekend.
Highs will only be in _the
upper 50s to mid 60s with
lows in the 40s.
Sunset tonight will be at
8:46 p.m. and sunrise on
Wednesday is at 6:10a.m.
Forecast
Today: Thunderstorms likely. High 68, low 47.
Wednesday: Pardy cloudy.
High 70, low 47.
Thursday: Mosdy cloudy.
High 65, low 49.
Friday: Pardy cloudy. High
66, low 48.

TOLEDO (AP) - Ohio House Minority Le;td.:r Ja ck Ford
is preparing '10 run for mayor ofToledo.
Ford, who served as city council president before. being
elected to the House 111 1994, is seeking the lo cal Democratic
Parry's endorsement. If dected, he would be Toledo's first black
mayor.
Republicans control the Hous. by a 59-40 margin.
House Democratic rules say the minoriry leader or assistant
minoriry leader should step down from their posts if they run
for another public office. Ford said he would step down as
minority leader when he files his petitions for mayor. The .filing deadline is July 13.. · ·
CINCINNATI (AP) - A store owner was acquitted on
Ford can run for" mayor without resigning his House seat. obsceniry charges Monday, a setback to prosecutor~ trying to
His House term ends next year, and he is barred by term lim- keep sexually oriented stores out of the area.
,
its from running for re-election to that seat in 2002 .
A jury of six women and six men cleared Elyse Metcalf on
three counts of pandering obscenity. Metcalf had turned down
a plea agreement with the same prosecute ~ who got Larry
Flynt to stop selling X-rated videos downtown two years ago.
TOLEDO (AP) -A truck driv~r was arraigned Monday on
The jury watched three videos bought by undercover police
charges he slammed his senti into the back of a van, killing
at Elyse's Passion and deliberated for eight hours over two days
rhree people and injuring two others who were returning to
·before returning the verdict in Hantilton Counry Common
Illinois from a fishing trip on Lake Erie.
·
Pleas Court.
Calvin Prescott, was released on $25,000 bail after his hear"I didn't want to plea," Metcalf said. " I believe in what I'm
·ing in Toledo Municipal Court, a Lucas County jail officer
doing."
said.

Jury dears pom store owner .

lhree killed in ·1·75 wreck .

senators recommend marshal

Man enters insa~ity plea

Columbus
. prosecutor gets.case

·1\lvo end up in river
NORTH OLMSTED (AP) -Two people driving through
a park had to be rescued after their car got trapped in floodwaters from the storm-swollen Rocky River early Tuesday.
The two were afraid to open the car's doors and used a cell
phone to get help, said Ed Bak, North Olmsted fire chief
A woman , 22, and her male companion, 21, were not injured
and declined to be checked at a hospital, he said.
A few hours earlier, the National Weather Service has issued
a flash flood warning due to rainfall.
North Olmsted is 13 miles southwest of Cleveland.

Air Force needs workers
DAYTON (AP) - The Air Force says it expects to have
trouble recruiting worker! for civilian jobs at Wright-Patterson
Air Force Base and elsewhere. .
During the next six -years, the Air Force's largest civilian
employer, the Air .Force Materiel Command, will need to fill
about 17,000 dvilian positions, officials said Monday. ·
·
The openings will come from retirements, attrition and new
positions at materiel command locations nationwide, including
Wright- Patterson, where the command is headquartered:
" If we don't do anything now, there will be a crisis," said
Polly Sweet, of the command's personnel office.

Deer startles customers
· CINCINNATI (AP) - Restaurant customers were startled
when a deer crashed through a 6-by-8-foot plate glass window
and ran around inside before bounding out the back door.
No one was injured Monday, but employees had plenry .o f
'broken glass to clean up.
.
"He knocked a table ov~r and came runni?g on through,"
said Steve Beltsos, manager of. Price Hill Chili. "He ran
through the whole restaurant. 1-le ran from one. end to the
other. I let it out the back door. He jumped a 6-foot fence."
About 15 employees and customers were in the restaurant at
the time.

Police say remains were hidden
FORT MITCHELL, Ky. (AP ) - The skeleton of an infant
that was found in a storage space beneath a house's outdoor
patio probably had been there at least five to I 0 years, police
said.
·
"Anyone could. have put the baby in there," said police Sgt.
Tom Loos, because the storage area is easily accessible from
ou tside but sddom used by the homeowners.
Glenn' and Becky Moller, who have lived there I0 years, haw
been cleared of all}' suspicion, Loos said.
"We do anti cipate that we will develop a suspect based on
information from witnesses," Loos said. "We are doing a nei ghborhood ca nvass and talking to anyo ne w ho is living in the ·
area.
" Basically, we're looking for a pregnant mom that lived close
to that locatio!l who didn't end up with a child ," he s~id .

,,

Lawyers
say there
is·mistaken
identity
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
mistaken identity . defense . in
John Demjanjuk's upcoming
U.S. citizenship revocation
trial may depend on his
lawyers' argument that another man, 'one . ·w ho had the
same name, was a Nazi death
camp guard.
Meanwhile, U.S. District
Judge Paul Matia is expected
to rule soon on whether the
case will begin next week or
be delayed at the recent
request
of
Demjanjuk's
lawyers.
Michael E. Tigar, the lawyer
for Demjanjuk, said in documents flied Monday in U.S.
District Court show · that·
Ukrainian officials last month
interviewed a relative of a
de:ad man named Ivan Demjanjuk. The man allegedly
grew up in the same village.
"There is a real risk ·of ntistaken identity, that one Ivan
Demjanjuk has been mistaken
for another," Tigar wrote.
A message requesting comment was left early Tuesday
for Michael Anne Johnson, a
Justice Department lawyer in
the Demnnjuk tase. .
John
Dcmpnjuk,
HI,
changed his first name from
Ivan to John when he beca me
a US citi zen in 1958. His citizenship was revoked in !9H l
when a· judge in Clcvdand
ru led that he was "Ivan the
Terrible," the guard who ran
the gas chambers at the Treblinka death camp. He was
then &lt;'1\tradited to Israel,
where he was found guilty of
c rimes agai nst humaniry and
seutenced to death.
·

Dale D.I Lockhart

•

Plain
Swing

With

"A"

frame

s·

Hh!hback
Heart
·Swine
With
Cedar
Roof "A"
Frame

Richard Myers
REEDSVILLE Richard Mym, 74, of 44611 Myers
Road, Reedsville, died Monday, May 21, 200 I at his residence.
Arrangements will be announced by White Funeral Home.

.

Stonn

Because the ground was saturated when Monday's rains
arrived, roads quickly washed
fromPageA1
out or flooded. The M~igs
' County Sheriff's Department
largest-concentrated outage for reported the following roads as
AEP, and the situation is fur- closed at press time: Counry
ther complicated because AEP Road 18, Peach Fork Road,
·crews cannot get to the area to Whitesville Road, Jacks Road,
·begm repaus.
Ohio 124 at Lan(!$ville Mal. Robinson reported "spo- oori's Run Ohio 692 ' Ohio
radic" and scattered outages .in 681 and ' Ohio · 684 near
other Mei~ communities.
Pa~e Danville Hampton
. "Other than Dexter and a Hollow Smith Ru~ Ohio 124
small . pocket of ho~es i~ betwee~ Syracuse a~d Racine,
A~hens County. nothm.g . ~~ Oak Grove Road, U.S. 33 at
B
aU
' Rid
R d
widespread thiS mornmg,
Robinson said. "There are no Wehia:-"t
. 0°wk R dgeL daokea '
.
. .
h
c a
oa , an
r
m aJOrf Chll'CUit outageaffisw edre a
Road, Kin(!$bury Road, C.R.
1ot o omes are- ecce m
_,, ha R d T:
,
14 , Burung
m oa , anner s
I
one P ace.
R
R d Eli
Hill R d
"We're still pretty overun oa .'
ge
oa • ·
whelmed because we've been Laurel ClifF Road, Rockat it sine~ about a week ago sprin~. Road and Rocksprings
Monday, but we're going to get Rehabilitallon Cen~er, Ohm
in,and get the lights back on in 124 at Rutland, Leading Creek
. the Dexter area just as soon as Road at the trestle, Depot St.m
. we can get our trucks in there." Rutland and Happy Hollow ·
Homes, businesses and other and New Ltma Roads m Rut• building.; in several Mei~ land.
· communities sustained wind
Harris said more flooding is
damage. Harrisonville · and expected today due to stream
. Danville were hardest hit by runciffi and mpre rain which
: wind damage, said David Har- has been forecast.
: ris, public information officer
State and · counry officials
:for the Meigs County Emer- will begin assessing damages
: gency Management Agency
later today, he said.

Windmill

Dutc.h
Windmill

Boosters tourney

· Correction Polley
Our main concem ln~ll stcirles is
to be accurate. II yo know of an
error In a story. call th newsroom
at (740) 992·21 56.

Garden
Cart
Planter

Loe

Cabin

Bird
feeder

•
•

prominent Meigs Counry educator. This year the tournament
will host and honor Dale Harrison and recognize his contributions to the youth of Meig.;
Countv: Harrison was a long.,
time Meig.; High School
teacher and coach.
Past honorees were James
Diehl, Nolan Swackhamer,
James .Vennari, Lee McComas,
Howard Knight, Rita Slavin,
Preston Gibbs,Jack Slavin, Russ
Moore and Charles Chancey.
For information contact
tournament chairman John '
Ktawsczyn
at
992-6394
(home) or at school992-2158.

·The Daily Sentinel
Reader SerVices

News· Departments
The main number Is 992·2156 .
Department elrtentlons are:
General manager
· Ext 12

New•

. Ext 13 ,

or

Ext 14

Other services
Advertlolng
Ext 3
Circulation

Ext 4

Clanllled Ada

Ext 5

To send e-mail

newsa'mydallysentinel.com
On the Web
www.mydallysentinel .com.

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Dissolution
sought

TUESDAY
RACINE - RACO, Tuesday,
· American legion hall in Racine.
Guests wiD be scholarship recipi·
· ants and their families. Potluck
dinner at 6:30 p.m.

·

POMI;ROY - Meigs County
Churches of 'Christ Women's Fel·
lowship, I :30 p.m Thursday, Zion
Church of Ch'i,st. Bradford
Church to hav.l!,.ievotions; program on Bible tnvta.

MIDDLEPORT- Feeney
POMEROY - An action
Bennett rost 128, American
Legion, will honof veterans for dissolution of marriage MIDDLEPORT - Ladies for the TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
with services on Memorial has been filed in Meigs Lord women's Bible study, Tues· Plains VFW Post 9053, Thurs·
Pleas day, 10 a.m., Abundant Grace day, 7 p.m. at the hall.
Day, and a band concert in Counry Common
Church. Womeri of all denominaStewart-Bennett Park, across Court by Thomas A. Smith; tions welcome.
SATURDAY
Mill Street &amp;om the legion Tuppers Plains, and Norma S. ·
RACINE Southam High
RACINE -Ohio Valley Crusade School Alumni Banquet. SaturStnith, Mineral Wells, W.Va.
hall.
for Christ meeting. Racine United day, 6:30 p.m Charles W. HayThe group will place flags
Methodist Church, 7 p.m. All area man, · gymnasium. Tickets at
on graves Friday in Middle- ·
churc;l:les are invhed.
Racine Home Nalional· Bank,
port.
·
Cross Grocery, Southern High
POMEROY Marriage THURSDAY
Services are planned as folSchool.
'
lows on Memorial Day: Mid- licenses have been issued in POMEROY - Preceptor Bela
dleport levee, 1:1:45 a.m., Meigs Cou nry Probate Court Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi The Community Calendar Ia
Riverview Cemetery, 9 a.m., to: Joshua Alan Simpson, 19, Sorority. 6:30 p.m. Thursday at published as a free service to
the home at Joan Corder. Mem- non-profit groups wishing to
Bradford Cemetery, 9 :15 Pomeroy, and Lona Michelle bers not on the social committee announce meetings and spea.m., Middleport Hill Ceme- Riffle, 18, Pomeroy; Jeremy to take a covered dish.
cial events. The calendar Ia not
tery, 9:30 a.m ., Addison Alan Smith, 23, Racine, illld
designed to promote Slllas or
Cemetery, 10: 15 a.m., Gravel Christina Dawn Cooper, 15, RACINE - Racine American fund-raisers of any type. Hems
Hill Cemetery, Cheshire, Racine; and to Gerald Mark Legion Auxiliary Unk 602 to meet are printed only aa space perThursday, 7:30p.m. at the legion mits and cannot be guaranteed
10:30 a.m., Gravel Hill Watson, 37, Reedsville, and hall.
to be printed a specific numCemetery, Middleport, I 1 Rhonda Kay Koehler, 41,
ber of days.
a.tn., lunch~on at annex. Reedsville.
11:15 a.m., Hi&gt;well Hill
Cemetery,
12:30
p.m .,
str~ams, the stream nuugaBurlingham Cemetery, 12:30
tion . requirements will be
POMEROY Units of
p.m. ."
reduced.
The Greater Columbu s the Meigs Emergency Service
A copy of the water qualiA1
Concert Band \vill perform a answered 11 ca lls for assisty certification and related
mu sical program at the park tance on Monday. Units occurs within one n1ile from material ca n be reviewed and
beginning at 2 p.m. The pub- responded as follows:
the project site or further copied at Ohio's EPA Divi- ,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
lic is invited to attend all se rfr0111 ~ JH: mile , respectivel y.
· sio n of Surface Water by call12:22 a.m ., South Third,
. vices and the concert, and
In addi tio n , ODOT will ing (6 14) 644-2001 for an
veterans of all branches of the jo·n nie Meadows, Pleasant Val- study the impacts of highway appointment. Arrangements
U.S. military are urged to ley Hospital;
co nstru ction ·on
several can also be made to review
attend.
8:12 a.m., Powell Street, high-quality . · headwater the certification at Ohio
Mary Roush, Holzer Medical streams located in the project EPA's Southeast District
Center;
area. Headwater streams, Office in Logan at . (740)
9:40 a.m.; Myers Road, which can have watersheds 385-8501.
'
POMEROY -The Meig.; Richard Myers, dead on of only several square miles,
The certification can be
County IKES meeting for arrival;
support different aquatic appealed within 30 days.
May 28 has been canceled
9:45 p.m., Second Street, organisms than larger rivers.
Environmental concerns
due to the Memorial Day Joe Moretti, HMC;
Before and after construc- are at the heart of a lawsuit
holiday.
11:53 p.m., Meigs Motel, tion of the new highway, the filed in federal court by the
Richard Bell, treated.
headwater streams will be Coalition Against SuperfluPOMEROY
eval.uated for fish, aquatic ous Highways and the Buck12:30 a.m., Naylors Run insects, amphibians, in- eye Forest Council. That
POMEROY - An actio.n Road, Grover Klein, HMC; . stream habitat and channel lawsuit, which attempts to
for foreclo1ure . has been filed
11:19 a,m., Starcher Road, !hape to determine . its halt the project for environin Mei~ Counry Common Robert Newell, dead on impacts on these smaller mental reasons, is expected
Pleas Court by LaSalle . arrival;
streams. If the study indicates to be decided prior to the
National Bank of Orange1:42 p.m., Oak Street, Kyle that the highway has only opening of bids on the pro•
burg, N.Y., against Patricia Woods, refused treatment;
minimal impacts to these ject in early July.
Blankenship and others, alleg11:12 p.m., motor vehicle
ing default on a prontissory accident, assisted by Syracuse,
note and mortgage agreement Edwin Wilson, Robert HolThe cost of the repairs.
in the amount of $26,178.84. land, refused treatment.
would total S525 .
A suit has been filed by
RUTLAND
Proffitt also requested ·two
Mercedes Benz Credit Corp.,
8:44 a.'m., Dye · R (lad.•
new 10-pound fire extinfrom PapAl
Chicago, Ill., against Robert Andrew Lambert, HMC.
guishers be · purchased for
Bishop, Middleport, and othSALEM TOWNSHIP
and parking lot area. The police headquarters, located
ers, alleging default on a
1:36 a.n1 ., State Route 124, flu shing was scheduled for inside the Pomeroy Municipromissory· note in the structure fire , Charlie Landers last week; however, rt.~cent pal Building . .Each extin-.
amount of $25,54'5.56 .
residence, no injuries.
·
inclement weather forced the guisher costs $53 apiece.
After listenin g to Proffitt's
dt·partmem's
delay, said
request, council approved th e
Shank.
project time table, notiug sicc
extinguisher
purchase and
Council
listened
to
work is beginning on the Pomeroy Police Chief Mark agreed to haw the police
land where the elementary Proffitt's requ es t to have cruiser rep;~ired .
school will be constructed, repairs done to one of the
In open disc ussioi1, w un cil
from PapAl
that the project is our for departn1cnt's cruisers. Proffin di sc us sed
various
stree t
ground for Meigs High bids, that walls will be going said the cruiser needs a new repairs located · throughout
School J3 years ago was used up this fall, and that the muffier, tune - up, ml change, · the village.
again was "Continuing the · school will be completed in and the radiator needs w be
early 2003 in preparation for flu shed .
Traditional."
In addition to board mem~ occupancy that f.1ll .
As for the middle school,
bers, John Hood, president,
he
said it is about three
Roger Abbott, Wayne Davis,
Randy Hump~reys . and months behind the ·elemen Scott Walton , Bucldey intro- tary school schedule, but it,
duced
Virgil King and too, will be completed in
William King, who served early spring 2003 and open
·
on the board when the dis- that fall.
11on., 111r 2111 lhlu n.n., llr
Renovation at the high
trict was formed.
'~ ()plrl AI 6:Jq PIIIIOf&amp; tlmi Fri.
Among the others intro- school got under way Mon~ ,tu(,..,.
duced were Jennifer Sheets, day and is expected to be
7:05. 7:31, 9:15, 9:45
liB
Ohio School Board of Edu- completed in late 2002,
'
cation president; Don Poole, according to Kunkle.
brief
and
humorKarr,
in
building committee chairman; Joe Kunkle , SSO!ii ous remarks, spoke of ' the
Studies, lead architect and vJork of Karr Construction
his associates; Horace Karr of in building the new high
Karr Construction.• which school in 1968 at a cost of
built Mei~ High School; $1,771,000 and the well over
Ray Karr of Wesam Con" $2 million that it's going to
struction, general contractor cost to remodel it.
Following the ground·on. the Meigs ,High School
"'" ' •
"'"'· ' • •
A t •
Y ,,..,. «o 'I&gt; • no
work, and members of The breaking refreshments were
served
at
Salisbury
School.
Quandel Group, construction management firm . ·
Also
introduced
and
speaking briefly was Rep.
John Carey, R-Wellston,
who congratulated the distri.c t on its building pn;&gt;gram.
He predicted new sc hools in
Meigs Co unty, along with
new highways and the openPl~asant Valley Hospi1al is now accepting current year (2001) magazine
ing of the industrial park,
donations for use by our patients and visitors in lobby areas . .If you have any
will lead to better economic
times.
donations, please drop-off at any of the following locations: Pleasant Valley
"This is wh~t's all about
Wellness Center; Pleasant Valley Auxiliary Information Desk (Main Lobby)
moving ahead," Carey
_.and the Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center. ·
said.
In addressing those gathered under a tent in the
Once again, we ask thm the magazines be current year
field.
Kunkle
vaca nt
(2001) and in good .cond.ition. Any mailing labels with
described the occasion as a
identifying names will be detached. For more information
"proud moment for Meigs
Local, a histori c time, long tc:i
please call, (304) 675-7222:
be remembered beca use of
the vision a~d the com mit Thank you for your assistance, generosity and time.
ment of the community."
The fead architect gave a

Issued licenses

·EPA .

from Pap

POMEROY - Robert "Mike" Newell, 55, of Pomeroy,
died Monday, May 21,2001 at his residence. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Foglesong Funeral Home m
Maso n .

• The Meigs Band Boosters
· Memorial Weekend GolfTournamenttees otT at 9 a.m. Saturday at Pine Hills Golf Course.
: The format will be a "Bring
: vonr nwn TP:~m , fou~on1e.
: handicap must be a total of 40
: plus, with only player at I 0 or
· undet.
Entry fee is $200 per team,
that includes green fees , cart,
; fodd, beverages and many other
; prizes. Prizes include dub
: house credit of $300 for first
: place, $200 for second and
$1 00 for third.
This is the 11th annual tournament held in honor of a

LOCAL EVENTS

· EMS logs calls

Robert 'Mike' Newell

•

American

.

....

~ Band

s·

set

COOLVILLE - Dale D. Lockhart, 55, of Coolville, died
Sunday, May 20,2001 at Litde Hocking in an automobile acci, dent on Ohio 7.
Born on Oct. 30, 1945, he wu the son of the Loretta Weekley l.ockhan Sntith of Snowville, and the late Glenville Lockhan.
He was a U.S. Navy veteran, heavy equipment operator for
the Operating Engineers Local 132 in Charleston, W.Va., and a
member of the Coolville Masonic Lodge, lifetime member of
the DAV in Cheshire, and a member of the Eagles 1407 in
Orange City, Fla.
'·
.
Besides his mother, he is survived by his wife, Joan Ann Davis
Lockhart; one brother, Howard Lockhart of Snowville; a sister
and brother-in-law, Ruth Ann and Randy Dunfee of Coolville;
one nephew; two nieces; a stepfather, Owens Smith; and a
brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Teddy and Ruby Osborne.
Private funeral services will be held at the convenience of the
family. Arrangements are being handled by White Funeral
Home in Coolville.

The sdecrion of Columbus prosecutor Stephen Mcintosh
was announced Monday. City Council had urged the cicy's
legal department tn hire an outside prosecutor to handle the
case.
....
.
The death of Timothy Thomas, I 9, sparked three days of
rioting,~ 'dusk-to-&lt;hwli curfew and more than 800 arrests. The
officer, Stephen Roach, has pleaded innocent to misdemeanor
charges of negligent homicide and obstructing official business.
A pretrial hearing is set for Thursday.

Prescott, 76, of Ridgeville, Ind., is charged with three counts
of reckless homicide and two counts of aggravated vehicular
assault in Sunday's accident on Interstate 75.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Ohio's senators Monday recomPrescott told police he glanced down and when he looked
KENTON (AP) -A former nurse's aide accused of killing up he saw the van had slowed down for a construction zone. mended Franklin Counry Commissioner Dewey Stokes to
become U.S. marshal for southern Ohio.
an elderly patient in 1998 entered an insaniry plea in cou1.1.
The truck pushed the van about 500 feet ~efore it stopped.
Sens. Mike De Wine and George Voinovich, b.oth R epubliDaniel Brodman, 21, pleaded not guilty and not guilty by
cans, said they asked President Bush to nominate Stokes to the
reason of insaniry Monday in Hardin Counry Common Pleas
Court.
post, a political appointment that changes with the parry that
.
He is charged with aggravated murder and involuntary
wins
the White House.
CINCINNATI (AP) ---'The chief prosecutor for the ciry of
manslaughter in the Dec. 16, 1998, !Ieath of87-year~oldThel­ Columbus has been chosen to represent Cincinnati in the trial
Sefore becoming a counry commissioner six years ago,
ma Longberry. Longberry, a retired Marysville schoolteacher, of a white police officer who shot an unarmed black man last Stokes was a police officer in Columbus for 26 years and was
was a resident at the Corinthian Nursing Home in Kenton, month.
president of the national Fraternal Order of Police fro.m 1987
where Brodman worked.
to 1995.
Judge David Faulkner ordered Brodman to undergo a psychological evaluation.

,

·Legion events

were very- distinct and different, and Stevens wrote.for the majority.
Boehner should still prevail.
Both cases attracted the attention of
In addition, he rioted, McDermott is a news media organizations because of
public official and "nondisclosure the implications over whether they can
requirements can be imposed on public publish or broadcast the contents of illeofficials more easily than the private . gally intercepted phone conversations.
entities involved" in the Pennsylvania · Federal law prohibits intentionally
case.
intercepting calls from cellular teleln Monday's 6-3 ruling, the Supreme phones, if the person making the
Court said a radio host cannot be sued recording knew it was illegal.
In the case that led to Boehner's lawfor airing an. illegally taped telephone
conversation. The court said the First suit, a. Florida couple pleaded guilry to
Amendment trumps wiretap laws in the using a radio scanner to intentionally
case of the host who played a recording intercept the call in 1996.
made by someone else.
The couple gave the tape to MeDer" A stranger's illegal conduct does not mott, then the ranking Democrat on the
suffice to remove the First Amendment House ethics committee, and the cone
shield from speec h about a matter of tents of the tape surfaced in news stopubli c concern." Justice John Paul nes.

House minority leader eyes title

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL B-RIEFS

22. 2001

Lawyer optimistic about ·lawSuit's prospects

Ohio weather

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

cancel meeting

Lawsuits filed

Programs

· Meigs

**

;

**

�A4

Tre Daily Sew mnel

.The Daily Sentinel

Wins

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
C~W.Govey

Publllher
Chllrtene tto.lllch
General Ml11110«
fAifl ID

tJN,., MW JHIJ&amp;HN. liWJ •luNIU h

R. Shawn Lewis
M8naglng Editor
Dlene K8y HIUI

Controller

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Top HMC employee

NATIONAL VIEW

GALLIPOLIS -

Scamm
Credit card ftaud crnelly
punishes unwary
• American Press, Lake Charles, La., on credit repair

scams:

Law enforcement agencies nationwide say they're
tracking down companies that claim they can help consumers get new credit histories with fake Social Security
numbers. And the Federal Trade Commission has filed
dozens of complaints against Various companies that collected fees from victims by promising to repair their bad
credit records by providing fake Social Security cards with
new numbers.
Anyone who applies for credit with a false identification
number is breaking federal law, says the Federal Trade
Commission's Bureau of Consumer Protection.
Credit repair con games are spreading like wildfire on
the Internet and in unsolicited junk e-mail, targeting consumers who are anxious to repair their credit profiles ....
The crooked companies also sell "advice" on how to
develop new credit ratings by doing such things as getting
new . driver's licenses using the new f.D. number another violation of the law by the victim.
There are several ample federal laws covering this practice, including the Credit Repair Organizations Act and
other laws. Cases have also been made under state law in
several states.
The credit repair scam is unusually cruel because, unlike
some other scams·, it puts the victim in an illegal position
that is absolutely transparent. The victim thus becomes the
primary lawbreaker.
Trying to achieve a good credit rating with fake credentials gets people into - not out of- a bind that's
much worse than having a bad credit record.

TODAY IN HISTORY

RYAN'S VIEW

.Sometimes, yes, the grass over there is greener
could afford to buy my friend's 1979. In a way, livihg ·targe recreares .the
Money can't buy happiness.
Trans-Am with soft leather interior. times we clomped around in our mothRight.
.
Surely there are few el'Perienc~ in life er's high heels and pretended that a
This needlepoint bromide surely more uplifting than being 23 and sitting prince had· come over for afternoon tea:
comes from the same people who would behind the wheel of a ·midnight blue You get to fed like someone other than
have us believe a smile should be our Trans-Am cruising toward Daytona yourself. It is why, I think, we spend
umbrella, love conquer.; aU, and things Beach on a Saturday night with other ungodly sums on weddings. For that one
will look be.tter in the morning - all single friends, but you've got to go a day, we are royalty. We splurge on chamfine motto~ if you happen to live inside long.way.
pagne and shrimp and hotel ballrooms.
a Doris Day movie.
· Last week, I took my husband to a We wear gowns and tuxedos. We spend .
Not that I don't cling to. th~e subver- fancy inn in California's wine country more on fresh flowers than we are likely
sive bits of folk wisdom myself when for his birthday. It was a splurge that per- to spend the rest.of o11r lives.
·
crisis strikes. I can fool myself into haps I'll regret when the credit-card bill
No wonder so many ·of us remember
believing just about any comforting lie arrives. But there's something about our wedding day as the happiest of out
for short periods of time, which has . spending a night in a suite with a Jacuzzi lives. Would it have been so had we
saved me a substantial sum in liquor bills. tub, a steam-shower, a feather bed and a skipped the satin shoes and crab appetiz(This i"s the advantage in having a brain view of green, rolling vineyards that can ers and eloped to Reno?
like a golden retriever; it holds no make you start humming "My Favorite
When we arrived home from the inn,
grudges. No matter how many dead Things" from "The Sound of Music."
my son was still grappijng with his state
Call me shallow, but give me a night of reporr on Hawaii and the first-of-theends I have led it into, no matte~ how litde exercise I give it, it runs to the door, living beyond my means and I'm like month bills were still stacked on the
ever hopeful.) ·
Eliza Doolittle with hocolates. I am counter and the frying pan from the
The point is, of course money can buy jolted out of the daily-ness of life and weekend's breakfast was still on the
!t~ppiness.
Maybe
not
Deepak into a parallel universe where the bath- stove. I'd like to say I looked around and
Chopra/Dalai Lama happiness. But foi" rooms are sparkling, the robes are soft concluded that this was true happiness ·
one night, money provides an effective and the pillows fluffed, where solicitous after all. I didn't. At least not at that :
substitute for inner-peace and joy, as I people ask if you'd like ice brought to moment. Oh, I do think that. Of course. :
found out last week.
your room.
,
· ·
But I kept picturing the terrace over- :
OK, I didn't just discover this last
Even in this time when so many looking the vineyards and the endle$1 :
week. I have known this since the fourth around the world are poor;the occasioh- supply of towels ·in the bathroom and :
·grade, when my mother broke down alluxury has its place. I see it as allowing the crisp white pillowcase. My birthday, ·
and bought me go-go boots and the yourself a hot-fudge sundae now and I thought, is just five months away.
.
"Meet the Monkees" album, a day that then, though there's no real justification . (Jo~n Ry~n is ~ columnist for the S4n :
still stands as one of the happiest of my for it. It just lifts your spirits. Life im't an Fr~ncisco Chronicle. &amp;llli comments ID her in :
childhood.
either/or thing: Eit!ter there are thorns care of this newspaper or send her e·mdil~tt : .
It was reinfotced after college when I or there are flowers. There are both.
jodnry~ns.fg~te.com.)

BY JOAN RYAN

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, May 22, the 142nd day of2001. There are
223 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 22, 1947, the "Truman Doctrine~· was enacted as
Congress appropriated military and ~conomic aid for Greece
and Thrkey.
.
.
On this date:
In 1761, the first life insurance policy in the United States
was issued, in Philadelphia.
·
In 1813, composer Richard Wagner was born in Leipzig,
Germany.
In 1868,' the "Great Train Robbe&amp;y" took place near Marshfield, Ind., as seven members of the Reno gang made off with
$96,000 in loot.
In 1939,AdolfHider and Benito Mussolini signed a "Pact of
Steel" committing Germany and Italy to a military alliance. ·
In 1969, the lunar· module of Apollo 10 flew to within nine
miles of the moon's surface in a dress rehearsal for the first
lunar landing.
·
In 1972, the island nation of Ceylon became the republic ·of
Sri Lanka.
In 1979, Canadians voted in parliamentary elections that put
the Progressive Conserve i~ower, ending the 11-year
tenure of Prime Ministe~~ottTrudeau .
In 1990, after years of conflict, pro-Western North Yemen
and pro-Soviet .South Yemen merged to form a single nation,
the Republic ofYemen.
In 1990, boxer Rocky Graziano died in New York at age 71.
In 1992, after a reign lasting ne·arly 30 years"-Johnny Carson
hosted NBC's "Tonight Show" for the last time. .
Ten years -ago: Sonia Gandhi, the Italian- born wife offormer
Prime l'vlinister Rajiv Gandhi, was designated to lead his Corigr~s Party through national elections, one day after his assassination. However, Mrs. Gandhi turned down the position.
Five years ago: President Clinton counterattacked against
Republican criticism of his foreign policy during a commencement address at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New
London, Conn.; the president then traveled toNewYork where
he was cheered by sailors from four nations aboard the USS
. Intrepid.
·
.
.
One year ago: The Supreme Court struck down, 5-4, a federal .law that shielded children from sex-oriented cable TV
channels. A committee of the Arkansas Supreme Court recommended that President Clinton be disbarred for giving false
testimony about his relationship with Monica Lewinsky in the
Paula Jon~ sexual harassment case. (Clinton later agreed to
give up his Arkansas law license for five years.)
Today's Birthdays: Movie reviewer Judith Crist is 79. Singer
Charles Aznavour is 77. Actor Michael Constantine is 74. Conductor Peter Nero is 67. Actor-director Richard Benjamin is
63.Actor Frank Converse is 63.Actor Michael Sarrazin is 61.

,.
LAMB~O'S

VIEW

For Main Str~et, Bush~ tax' cut plan benefidal

Linda I . Addington, RN, of the Home
Health Department at Holzer Medical
Center, was named the May 2001
Employee of the Month, according to
LaMar Wyse, president and Chief Exec~
utiw Officer.
A graduate of Portsmouth High
School and the Holzer School of Nursing, Addington began working at HMC
in July 1978 in the 4 West Unit. In September 1982, she joined the Home
Care Department and worked for three .
years before taking a leave to stay at
home full-time with her three daugh-

ters.
She returned to HMC and Holzer Home Care in September
1991.
·
Addington and her husband Stephen reside in Gallipolis ami
are the parents of three daughters, Lindsey, a freshman at Kent
State University; Meredith, a jnnior at Gallia Academy High
School; and Stephanie, a freshman at GAHS.
Addington is one of the first Employee of the Month recipients to have been nominated by a patient.
As Employee of the Month, Addington received a $100 U.S.
Savings Bond, a reserved parking place designated in her name,
a complimentaty meal in the hospital cafeteria, her picture displayed on the Employee of the Month wall near the Employee
Entrance, and her name engraved on the 2001 Employee of the
Month plaque, also displayed on the Employee of the Month
Wall.
·

Gets certification ·
GALLIPOLIS - Lisa M. Koch of lnhearing Dizziness and
Rehabilitation Center, 435 Second Ave., has been granted

'' .

TuHdiiJ, Mlly 22,2001 ,

Investment rep slates financial program

Loi. J. Breech, cerrified Ohio counselor
with MA South Central Ohio, recently completed the requirements for
Cruise Lines lnternatiorud Association's
cruue counselor certification progr.am.
She u now rec~ by·the cruise
industry as an accredited counselor.
In achieving cruise counselor certification, Breech has made an efforr to
learn aU aspects of the cruise vacation
experience through extensive classroom
training and personal cruise product
involvement.
·
~,.II.~;;:__J AA/1. Travel Agency, 360 Second Ave.,
is one· of more than 22,000 travel agencies across North America afljliated with Cruise Lines International Association.
GALLIPOLIS -

111 Court St., Pomlloy, Ohio
740-1192·2151 • Fu: 1192·2157

Page AS

-

The Daily Sentinel

RlO GRANDE - Amy BowmanMoore, the Edwanl Jones investment
representative' in Gallipolis, Win host a
"Financial Workshop for the Individual
Investor."
This four-week workshop will assist
individuals .i n setting financial and
investment goals.
The class will provide an in-depth
look at the many different types of
investments available to and suitable for
investors who are working or retired.
." Whether you are interested in maximizing your long-term investment
returns, reducing your income taxes, or
maximizing your investment income,
you should plan to mend this informa-

tive class;· Moore says.
The workshop will begin June 5 and
continue every TuesdaY- through June.
The classes will meet fiom 3 to 5 p.m.
and will be at the Senior Resource Center, I 167 Ohio 160. Also evening class~
will be held on the same dates on the
campus of the University of Rio
Grande, 204 Anniversary Hall, fiom 7 to
8:30 .p.m. The textbook may be purchased for $8.
For information or to reserve a seat,
contact Debbie Bartels of the Senior
Resource Center, 446-7000; or Dale
Whitt of the Adult and Continuing
Education Department of the University ofR.io Grande at 740-245-7325 .

Edwml Jones rrac~ its roots to 1871
and is the brgest financial-services firm
in the nation in terms of offices. Plans
are currendy under \vay to expand its
office network to include 10,000 offices
by 2004.
Edward Jones has carved a unique
niche for itself within the financial-services industry by serving the needs of
individual investors exclusively. Its
investment representatives are known fot.
providing face-to-face personalized service to the firm's more than 4. million
clients.
To learn mnre about Edward Jones,
visit its interactive Web site at
www.edwardjones.com.

board certification in audiology.
The certification demonstrates a commitment to professional excellence in audiology by Koch . ·
The board certification program is administered by the
American Board of Audiology to certify audiologists. The certification program began in January 1999.

investment of$4.4 million in its central office and surrounding
telecommunications int"rastrucure in 2000, serving c ustomCrs in
areas of Galli a and Lawrence counties.
"These major investments will enhance our network today
and prepare it for the future ," said James Smith, president of
Ameritech Ohio.

Coune planned

tions infrastructure to help us deliver the products and services

POINT PLEASANT, W Va. - Amy Bowman-Moore, a local
Edward Jones Investments representative, will host a course on
"Tax Planning and Financial Preparation for Minor Children"
on June 6, ll a. m .- 1 p.m. or 3•5 p.m. at the Point Pleasant
Edward Jones location, 806B Viand St.
The program, broadcast via Edward Jones' satellite system,
will be produced by the firm's Professional Education Network
· exclusively for area CPAs and attorneys.
"This program focuses upon the most effective means of
transferring wealth to children," Bowman-Moore said.
Course topics include Qualified State Tuition Plans, college
financial aid, Traditional vs. Roth lRAs and more. The program
is eligible for two continuing professional education hours for
CPAs and accountants.
Continuing legal education credit for attorneys is pending
approval in all states with general education requirements.
. Enrollment fee is $32, including admission for one person
and all course materials. Reservations are required. For more
info~mation or to register for the program, contact BowmanMoore at 740-441-9441 or 304-674-0174.

The investment is part ofAmcritec h's ongoing network infrastructure investment program, desiged to enhance Ameritcch 's
network and service tl)roughout its five-state operating region .
· Ameritech has invested in its network in anticipation uf continued demand for new products and services, with plans to
continue the investment in 2001.

"Our invesnn('nt in these areas bUilds tht: telecon·m~unica­

that our customers expect and deserve."

Ameritech invests S4.4M
GALLIPOLIS -

Wins award

I

Ameritech recendy announced a network

'

· United·Producers report
GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. market report from
Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday.
Feeder Cattle-Steady
275-415# St. $95-$109 Hf. $84-$103, 425-525# St. $90$108 Hf. $82-$95 550;625# St. $S7-$97 Hf $80-$88 650725# St. $75-$93 Hf. $70-$78: 750-850# St. $66-$77 Hf. $65$72.
Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed $45-$50. 75; Medium /Lean $42-$48;
. Thin/Light $35-$42; Bulls $54-$63.
·
Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $510..$975; Bred Cows $350-$700; Baby
Calves $40-$185; Goats $15-$80.
Call the office at 446-9696 .

Local stocks

Kmart-12
Krnge&lt;- 24

AEP-,.50Y.
Att:ll Coal-

Lkt-17
OllkHI Fhn:ial-15

Akzo-43~

Llrd; End - :J6l,

:m.

OVB-25l.

AmTecM&gt;B0-44
Ashland Inc. - 43l.
AT&amp;T-22
Bin&lt; One- 38

BBT-36~

Peoples-19),

Premer- .?},
Aockwel- 46),
Aoc:lcv Boo1S - 4!.

Bob Evans- 18~

RDShel - 61 ~

Sears-41).
Shoney's -~
Wai-Mal!- 5:!
Wendy's-25

Wootlh i!)tOl

12t.

Daly stock reports are lhe 4 .
p.m. dooing quotes of lhe prelirus day's lransactions, provided by Strill1 Pat1ners at
Advest Inc. ol GRirrl"'

-•
•
•

•.

number of tax breaks and loopholes to
Tl\.ere are 25.5 million small-business
WASHINGTON- One of the most reduce their tax liabiliti~.
owners in our country.The}- and the peo- important parts of President Bush's taxThese small businesses and entrepre- pie they employ make up more than half ·
cut plan is the reduction in the top rate. neurs account for 63 percent of the 1.3 of the private workforce in America, and ·
That's because the top rate affects mosdy million taxpayers who would be helped are responsible for more than hal( of the •
small businesses, which create 75 percent by Bush's lower 33-percent top rate.
country's economic growth. These are the
of all the new jobs in this country.
In many cases, these small enterprises risk-takers, investors and innovators who
· The top marginal if,lcome-tax rate, are run · by husband-apd-wife teams, challenge. the status quo in order to crewhich Ronald Reagan cut to 28 percent women starting new careers, ambitious ate new products, services and markets.
in the 1980s, was raised to 33 percent by immigrants, people who began at the They have emblazoned their names acrossBush's father (an action he later said was a bottom and are working hard to achieve · the road signs ofAmeriCa, and have made
mistake)'. Then Bill Clinton came along, the American dream. Often, they are this c;,untry a land of opportonity.
· With the support of virtually every plowing their profits back into the busiThese are the inspiring American
Democrat in Congress, he jacked the top ness to e:wand production, hire more heroes of our day who, sadly, will not get
·rate up to nearly 40 percent (39.6 per- workers, and raise salaries and other ·~n­ their faces on the cover ofTime and are
cent). He characterized it as a tax increase efits.
never profiled on the nightly news shows. ·
on rich people "who do not .pay t)leir fair
This isn't a tax cut for corporate, fat~cat But they are getting up each morning, .
share" when, in fact, the people in the top multimillionaires, as the liberals waht us
putting in 14-hour days, and making ~
rwo tax brackets pay most of the federal to believe. .,
America work.
income taxes.
This is a tax cut 'aimed at the people on
These are the· people who are at the .
Bush wants to cut this top tax rate and Main Street - the merchants, shopkeephearr of the president's pro-growth tax·
. the 36-percent rate down to 33 percent. ers, farmers, and thousands of entreprecut policy, which aims to shake the U.S.
But House and Senate liberal Democrats neurs - who are running relatively small
are fighting to keep the top rate as high as businesses. These are people who dream economy out of its lethargy and infuse its
they can, even though it largely hurts of building a company that will be the small-business, entrepreneurial core with .
small busimsses that are trying to expand, McDon~ld's, Walmart, Microsoft or new energy and optimism about. the '
•
·
invest and hire more workers. Women-. D&lt;;&gt;mino's of the future.They contribute a furore: ·
This
is
why
the
government's
new
data
owned businesses, a major force in -the great deal to our dynamic, highly producshowing that 77 percent of the tax relief
economy's growth, will be especially hurt tive new economy.
if the Democrats get their way.
Over the last two. decades, women- will go to small-busin~s people is so
Democratic leaders keep repeating owne(j businesses have become the important to the debate on future tax ·
their poisonous mantra that the Bush tax fastest-growing part of the small-business rates.
cuts will benefit only the wealthy at the sector. They now employ more Ameri- · You are going to hear a lot of divisive, '
el'Pense of lower-income and mid4Je- cans than aU of the Fortune 500 compa- left-wing demagoguery about "tax cut! ·
class workers. But a U.S.Treasury Depart- nies combined.
for the wealthy" in the. coming Senate
ment s;udy showed on Monday that 77 · These are the people that the Democ- batde over Bush's plan. But when ~u .
percent of the tax relief from lowering ratic Party seems to have forgotten, the hear the liberals make that charge, thmk ..
the top rates will benefit small-business . self-emplored people .who have borne of all thos~ small ~ain Stre~t businesses . ••
owners, .entrepreneurs, and families that the brunt of the· Democrats' polarizing, · that are bemg purushed by the top rate. . ••
·
class-warfare politics. The kind of people That's whom they are really attacking: .
own small farms.
· Though it is not widely known, most that AI Gore, Dick Ge.phardt and Thm And, indirecdy, they are attacking the
of these business people pay taxes through Daschle thin'- should have 40 percent of people who are working for th~m.
the personal income tax, not the corpo- their in~ome skimmed right off the top
{Dontlld I,.ambro is filling in for Morton :
rate tax, which gives bigger businesses a by Uncle Sam.
Kondraclte todd)!.)

BY DQNAUJ I.AMBRO

..

Burl!le Oil Co. was recently awarded the "Sliver Award 2000" by Chevron Products Co. Burllle
had the largest percentage of increased sales In finished lubricants for Chevron's East Cen·
tral Business Area in 2000 . From left are Bob Burllle, Jill Beaver, Chip Young and Jerry Lloyd
of Burllle Oil, and Ed Buban, territory manager from Chevron Products Co .

fl
.
'
I'IIR ·.· liS
D

Tech ral'ly sends Nasdaq,·Dow up
NEW YORK (AP) - · Wall
· Street went on a technology
. buying spree Monday, despite
the absence of any obvious
catalyst, sending the · Nasdaq
composite index 'soaring more
than 100 points and the Dow
Jones industrials to their high·
est close in 16 months.
The rally was notable
because it carne on a day
when there were no major
earnings or economic data.
Investors appeared to be buying solely on the expectation
that better times are ahead and
the determination to get into
the matket before prices get
much higher.
·"There's an old saying on
the Street: When you can
move a market without news,
that's the. best news around,"
said Larry Wachtel, market
analyst with Prudential Secu,. rities. "This market has been
roving for t\VO solid
'""'"'lh , an'd what's happening
&gt;is that oil the mon ey on the
sidelines tha t '~ built up is barreling in. People are sayi ng, "1
have to g~t in there."'
The N asdaq rose 106.71 to
2,305.59, the fi·rst time since
last Au gust, that the tech-dom-

..

Is it easy to apply?

Markets roundup

P~.

-m
+0.32

f---10.000
pre;Jouo

.....

YES! You can call the Meigs County Dep(mment of
Job and Family Services (formerly Meigs County
Department of Human Services) at 992-2117 or 1-800992-2608 to apply or you can have the application sent
to you. The Agency is open Monday Through Friday
from 8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. and Thursday unti/6:30 p.m.

Low

There Is no face-to·face interview.

11.345.72 11.232.84
Record high: 11. 22.98
J•n. 14. 2
FEBRUARY

APAIL

MAY

use the Chart Below to see~~ u qualify:
1,500

1.400
1.300

P~. •

1,312.83
!.ZOO

·. . , " " " '

~1.&amp;2

*Monthly Income
Guidelines ·
.
""
2 -~---------------.•- , $968

Family Size

'

High

Low

1.312.95

I ,287.87

Record high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

1.100

t..:.::r...=:L..-----'----FEBRUARY

MARCH

APRIL

1.000

MAY

3 ;. _______ , ___ ~---- $1,220
4 ____________.___ .;_ $2,207

~------------------------------

inated index has risen five
straight sessions.
The Dow Jones industrial
average closed up 136.18 at
11 ,337.92, adding a· 428.77point gain over the previous
tl1tee sessions. The last time it
closed that high was Jan; 20,
~000,
when it rea ched
11,351.30.
~
lr

The blue chip i1;dex, which
slipped briefly into bear market territory in March , has
recover~a to the point where
it now just 3.3 percent off its
highe st
close
eve r
&lt;;&gt;f
11 J.22.98, reached Jan. 14,
2000.
.
It also has a 5.1 P"rcent gain
so far this year.

5 ----------------- $2,584
6 ----~------------ $2,856
* Even If your family's Income Is.higher, you may still be
able to get free HeJithy Start coverage for your kids.
Call now for more Information.

�•

.--

•
••
-

.•

(

-•World

The Daily Sentinel

Ford to replace more tires
WASHINGTON (AP)- Ford Morm Co. plans to replace
I 0 million to 13 ntillion more Firestone tires on its vehicles
in a· campaign that could dwarf last summer's massive tire
recall, auto industry sources say.
The sources said Ford officials are concerned with the
safety of Firestone's Wilderness AT tires, which are ·standa rd
equipment on the Ford Explorer, the world's best-selling
sport utility vehicle. The tires have been linked to at least 17 4
. U.S. traffic deaths and mo re than 700 injuries.
Ford chief executive Jacques Nasse r was to announce the
tire - replacement plan in Dearborn, Mi ch.,Tuesday afternoon
after traveling to Washington to brief members of Congress
who investigated the tire recall last year, the sources said.
Ford's decision comes a day after Bridgestone/ Firesrone
Inc. severed its 95-year relationship with Ford. The relationship began when Harvey Firestone agreed ro supply tires for
Henry Ford's Model T but became strained amid reports that
some Firestone tires could suddenl v lose their tread. Such
concerns resulted in the recall last );Car of 6 .5 million Firestone tires.

Special coating kills germs
WASHINGTON (AI') - A new polymer coa ting holds
the promise of guarding against infections com nwnly spread
by bacteria lurkin g on thin~s likt· td ep hones Jnd door
knobs. re searchers say.
" You co uld coat Jll)" type of surfarc with this nutcrial , and
it \vould be ·there permancmly," ' sa id Jocrg Tillet•r of the
Massac hu settS Institute of Technology "' It is chemi call y
atta ched so that it ca nnot be washed J\\"a\·."
In a study appearing Tuesday in the i•ruccedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, Tiller and hi s co-authors said
laboratory tests show that th e coating. called hcxyi-PVP, was
able to kill up to '1'1 perce nt of Stap,hy lococcus,
. Pseudomonas and E. coli , all co mmon disease-causing
organisms.
.
Tiller said the coating, applied to glass slides, was tested by
sprayi ng the slides with a concentrated solution of the bacteria groups co mmon in household and hospital infections.
The results were compared to uncoated glass slides that also
were exposed to the bacteria solution.

Red Cross to rejed blood
WASHINGTON (AP) - Michael Brown has been back
from London for eight years, but as far as the American R ed
Cross is concerned, that's not long enough to assure he didn '.t bring mad cow disease hom e with him.
Fearful that the. mysterious illness could work its way into
the blood supply, the R ed Cross is goi ng beyond government regulations, barring donatio ns from anyone who has
spent six months in Europe or three months in Britain si nce
1980.
Brown , a political scie ntist w ho lived in England for six
years, said he typically gives blood about once a yea r and
never considered that mad cow di sease might be lurking in
hi~ veins . '" ·
·
, "My friend s have often wondered." he joked, but quickly
added, "It's not so mething you s ho ~ ld joke abo ut. It 's ju st a
horrific disease. My feeling is obvio usly the folks wh o regulate the blood supply should do w hateve r is necessary to protect it ."
·

PageA6
"AAesMy. M-r 22, 2011
•-·

The Daily Sentinel
· Diamorul Roundup. Page B6

Senate pushes passage of $1.35 trillion tax cu~-

Page.B1
.......,• ..., 22. 2111

A

•l

-L•"

amendments it became dear Democnts a lot of give and ~
·•
were in no mood to cooperate.
.
Still, Republican comervalives said
"There is a lot 6£ &amp;ustration out there," will push in a House-Senate conferen&lt;t
said Sen. John Bre;oux, 0 -La., a supporter conunittee to accelerate the bill's in~

WASHINGTON (AP) Senate
Republicans say a delay in final passage
forced by Democrats won't thwart their
drive to get an 11-year, $1 .35 trillion tax
cut package to President Bush by the end
of the week.
"The people that do not want a tax bill
are trying to use every delaying tactic.they
can," said Senate Finance Committee
Chaimun Charles Grassley. R-Jowa. "It's
not going to happen. We're going to persevere."
The Senate planned to resume votes on
amendments Tuesday, with final passage
possible du~ing the day. Talks then would
begin with the House on the ultimate biD. .
Republican leaders had insisted on getting
tlw Senate biU finished Monday night, but
afi:cr fiw hours of roll-call vott'S on 16

thft

u"!f

of the bill:
Yet amendments to derail or substantially change the legislation, which is supported by a pivotal group of Democratic moderntes, were unsuccessful The bill features
the core of Bush's original tax cut plan,
including across-the-boanl income tax
cuts, but has eIemen ts. desi gned to get a
majority in a Senate divided between 50
Democrats and 50 Republicans.
"We have to reach a compromise that is
sustainable by 51 votes," said Sen. M ax
Baucus of Montana, a key co-sponsor and
ranking Democrat on the Finance Comminee. "I think \Ve have a good bill. It has

tax cuts, which aren't fully phased in
2007. and to slash the top 39.6 P"rcel!'
income tax rate more deeply than the l '
percent called for In the Senate masure: •
"I think we need to try to find" way fO
nuke that occur · sooner," said SenaJ
Majority Leader Trent Lott. R-Miss.
~
· Administration officials concede· tluii:
Bush's proposed 33 percent top rae;
included in the House bill, is unlikely 1,9
survive in the final bill, but they want othijcore elements of his plan - estate . ti¥:
repeal, doubling of the $500 child c~
and marriage penalty relief - to occ~
much sooner than under the Senate bill.:;:

....

.

.....

recalling 1,BOO pounds of beef because it may have beet~
nin taminated with a lethal strain of E. coli bacteria.
::;
Evergreen M ea ts Inc. of Port Angeles, Wash ., announce(!
the voluntary recall Munday in coordinati~ n with the Agri}
culture Department.
.
.
:·:•
There have been no reports of illnesses because of the
beef. the Agri culture Department said.
·=!
Some of the beef being recalled is packaged in 10-pouAH
. "
••
cases labeled "Evergreen Meats Ground. Bee f Pames.
:,:
Also being recalled are 10-pound bags of ground bet£
labeled "Evergreen Meats, Inc., GroundBeef"
!

. Staffing shortages hamper unit

WASHINGTON (AP) - Staff sho rtages and vacancies in
key positions kept J ~ovcTnment anti-computer-cri me unit
from alerting the public of dangerous computer viruses until
th e damage was already done, Congress was told Tuesday.
" While some warnings were issued in time to avert damage, most of the warnings, especially those reb ted to vi ruses,
pertained to attacks underway," the General Accounting
Office said in an audit of the National Infrastructure Protec-,
tion Center.
The investigative ann of Congress blamed a lack of a system to share information gove rnment- wide and a shortage
I
•
of skilled staff for the delays.
, WASHINGTON (AP) - Asian- and Pacific IslanderThe ce nter, created. in 1998; has been operating with just
owned businesses generated nearly S306. 9 billion in revenQe
13 of the 24 employees that NIPC officials say are needed to
in 1997, with maS! firms located in traditional imntigrarit
fulfill the ce nter's responsibilities, the GAO said.
gateways in New York and California.
:
Businesses owned by Asians and Pacific Islanders num;.
bered 913,000 in 1997, according to the most recent Cens.fs
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tad Szulc, a longtime foreign Bureau data, being released Tuesday. They accounted for ;:4
~: ·
and diplomatic correspondent who reported the Bay of Pigs percent of the nation's 20.8 million businesses.
The
figures
were
from
a
survey
of
non-farm
business~
invasion forT he New York Times, died Monday at his Washtaken separately from the 2000 census.
-;
ington home of liver and lung canc.er. He was 7 4.
The majority of Asian- and Pacific Islander-owned firliiS .
Szulc was born in Warsaw, Poland, in 1926. In 1945 he
were
concentrated in four states: California, New York, Texu
dropped ou·t of the University of Brazil and became a
,.. ·
reporter for The Associated Press in Rio de Janeiro. In 1947, and Hawaii.
he moved to the United States and became United Nations
correspondent for the United Press. ·
named~
·szulc joined The New York Times in 1953 and became a
•
WASHINGTON (AP) -Jolin E. Potter, a 23-year post4)
U.S. citizen in 1954. During his 20 years at the Times he was
!
assigned to Washington , Southeast Asia, Latin America, veteran, will be the nation's 72nd postmaster general.
Potter
was
selected
by
the
agency's
governing
board
oh
Spain, Portugal and Eastern Europe. In April 1961, while
workillg as a Miami correspondent, he learned 6f Presidefit Monday. He will succeed' William J. Henderson, who lea~
office' May 31.
.
·
-:
Kennedy's plans to invade Cuba at the Bay of Pigs.
·
.
...., ,..,
"Jack's talent and commitment .have. delivered success ijl
providing affordable, universal mail service for the nation'~! ·
said Robert F. Rider. cjnirman of the postal board of gave.~
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Washington state company is nors~
.
~ ,

Asian-owned businesses thrivinj

Reporter Tad Szulc dead at 74

~

New postmaster general

. ,...

..

~

Company recalls· beef·

..

~

-·• .

•'

~s

HIGHLIGI-ITS
Eastem
postponed
WAVERLY Mother
!13tute reared its ugly head on
the Division IV District tournaments again Monday as the
Eastern- Portsmouth Clay district final contest was called in
the top of the second inning
due to rain in Waverly.
This will be the fourth time
that the two teams have tried
to play the finals, but each
time Mother Nature had the
last word.
The game is scheduled for
today at 2 p.m. weather perntitting with Eastern up with
the bases loaded and one out.
Eastern was the visitors, and
had a two out base runner
when Sandy Powell singled
hard off the second baseman
glove. But Clay ace Harness
was able to retire the side
without further trouble.
In the bottom of the .first
Juli Bailey w:illced the first
batter of the inning, but retire
the next three batters to end
the inning.
In the top of the second
inning. Kass Lodwick was hit
by a pitch to .lead off the
inning. Juli ,Bailey then hit a
nubber between second and
the mound that the pitcher
threw into center field for an
error and placed runner of
second and third. Amanda
Yeager laid down the bunt on
a . safety squeeze, but was
thrown out at first with the
runners holding ground.
'I:am!ny Bissell then walked
to load' the bases, that's when
the rains came. After about an
·hour . rain delay, the rain
slacked ofT and work was
started to get the field ready. ·
Another shower came and it
was decided to postpone the
game.
The winner will advance to
regional play on Wednesday at
Pickerington.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The disabled list has gobbled up half of the
Cincinnati Reds' starting lineup,
putting their season at risk before it's
one-third over.
All they can do now is try to stay
in contention while everyone else
tries to stay healthy.
"Not to make excuses, but we
have a lot of guys ·hurt - like $25
million worth of guys that are hurt,"
closer Danny Graves said. " It's tough
for us to compete with some of the
better teams."
. At 19-24. the Reds are ofT to their
worst start since 1997, when they

..---=,..----.

opened 14-29. After
a day ofT Monday.
they open a. three.
game
senes
an
Chicago, trying to
add to their modest
momentum
from
the weekend.
The Reds took
two of three in
Gr~Jfef, Jr.
Houston, winning
their first series since
the last weekend in April. Since
then, Cincinnati had lost 13 of its last
15 games and most of it:S starting
infield.

Third baseman AMon Boone is out
for a few weeks with a broken hand.
shortstop Barry Larkin is sidelined
until June by a strained groin, center
fielder Ken Griffey Jr. is out indefinitely with a tom hamstring and No.
1 starter Pete Harnisch is mit indefinitely with elbow tendinitis.
Second baserwn Pokey Reese also
missed a few games bst week after
splitting op.e n the index finger on his
throwing hand, requiring five stitches.
Reese will play shortstop while
Larkin is on the 15-day disabled list.
Reese came up through the ntinors

--------------------------------------------------------------'

Lakentake
2-0 lead over
Spun, 88-81 ·
SAN ANTONIO (AP) "In some ways that really
So much for the great playoff took the chains off ourselves:·
showdown between the past · Derek Fisher said. "Our coach
two NBA champions.
was gone and everything
The Los Angeles Lakers are seemed to be going their way.
doing · th e same thing to So we just decided at that
ntighty San Antonio that they point to let it all . go and just
did to Portland and Sacra- · play this out fiom that point

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COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. (AP) - College Player
of the Year Shane Battier and
NBA Rookie of the Year
Mike Miller were among 12
players selected to the U.S.
team for the Goodwill
Games.
The te~ is compoied of
NBA players who were either
drafted in 1999 .o r 2000 or
who are 22 or younger.
The United States is the
defending basketball champion at the Goodwill Games,
having beaten Australia 93-85
in overtime in 1998.

JAM IT HOME- Lakers' center Shaqullle O'Neal (34) scores over Spurs defender Tim Duncan (21) In game two of the Western Conference Finals Monday.(AP)

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - Jaret ·Wright felt like a
rookie making his first hometown start.
"I was trying to take it all in:· the Cleveland Indians
right-hander said after Saturday's 4,3 win over Anaheim,
his first major-league appearance since Ju·n e 2. H e had
been out with a shoulder injury.
"My family was here. I grew tip five minutes from the
ballpark. That added some excitement."
He had surgery. on his right shoulder in August, fol.lowed by off-season rehab, 2 112 months
in spring training and extended spring
training, and three rehab starts in the
mmors.
" It felt unbelievable to be out there.:_'
Wright said. "It was like my first time all
over agam.
Wright pitched five innings and
allowed twll runs on four hits. He threw
98 pitches and walked six, including four
·
in a 41-pitch third inning.
"I dido 't like the walks or the number
of pitches I threw," he said. "I was trying to be too fine
with my fastball. I wasn't throwing it down through the

WASHINGTON (AP)
An amateur artist who successfully argued the Baltimore
Ravens stole his idea for a
logo. won again when the
Supreme Court declined to
review the case.
The court's action, taken
without comment, means
Frederick Bouchat can continue with his $10 million
lawsuit against the Ravens
and a division of the NFL.
Bouch.at contended the
Ravens' logo is a copy of the
diawing he made in 1995.
Jurors sided with him after a
five-week trial in federal
court in Baltimore in 1998.

Not seeing your team's
results in the( Daily Sentinel?
Tell your coaches to send
'game and event reports by fax
·
to ~~2-2157 .
J

mento.

on."

In a game slowed to the
pace the Spurs love, with
Shaquille O'Neal having a
miserable offensive night and
Kobe Bryant a mere mortal,
the Lakers still won 88-81
Momhy night.
That makes 17 victories in a
row; nine in the playoffi. It's
the best postseason run since
the Lakers went 11-0 .in 1989
before being swept by Detroit
after Magic Johnson and
Byron Scott were hurt.
" We're feeling real good
about ourselves:• Bryant said.
Los Angeles headed home
with a 2-0 lead in the Western
Conference finals and can
make it a dean sweep into the
finals with victories at the Stapies Center Friday night and
Sunday.
Coach Phil Jackson wasn't
around to see the latest triumph. He was thrown out
after drawing two technicals
in a five-minute span in the
thin! quarter. His departure
wound up being the turning
point.

After that the Laken' shots
feU , the Spurs' shots clanged
off the rim.
"Sometimes it's a simple
game:· San Antonio coach
Gregg Popovich · said. "It
comes down to being able to
put the ball in the hole. We
just could .not get a shot to
fall."
The Lakers, down by 14
points in the first half, overcame a career playoff-high 40
points by Tim Duncan, thanks
to strong contributions fiom
their role players, especially
Fisher, who was 4-for-4 fiom
3-point range and scored 16
points.
Bryant followed his 45point performance in Game 1
with 28 points, including a 3pointer with 1:10 to play that
put Los Angeles ahead 85-7S
after San Antonio had played
far better than it had in the
Lakers' 104-90 romp in Game
1.
"It was fun," Bryant said.
"We were challenged."

Wright at home
agatnst Anaheim .

Artist wins
Ravens suit

•••••

as a shortstop, but was moved to second and won a Gold Glove there.
each of the last two seasons.
He . played shortstop Sunday for
the first time since Aug. 11, 1999.
Manager Bob Boone pbns to keep
him there until Larkin returns.
Harnisch resumed throwing over
the weekend, but felt some discomfort in the elbow and had to limit his
workout. He plans to play catch
again on Tueday and see how it
reacts.
The Reds' fade has dropped them
into fifth pbce in the NL Central, 6
112 games behind St. Louis.

...

zone."

•

Bench coach Grady Little, filling in for manager Charlie Manuel, thought W tight did fine.
"It was good to see Jaret back out there:·· Little said.
"He had a little trouble with his command. That was
~xpected, this being his first start in a year and pitching in
his hometown. But his velocity was good and he threw
some good breaking balls. He gave us a chance to win."
' Wright's velocity, in the 92 mph to 94 mph range, held
'

PI•H ... WrllhL B:S

PluH ... Liken,IJ

TITLE-HUNGRY
-These five
·Rio Grande track
and field ath·
fetes will com-·
pete In the NAIA
Outdoor National
Championships
this week. Pictured (from lett)'
are, front: Jim
Robinson, Matt
Boyles. Back:
Josh hammond,
Ashley Roberts,
Amy Metzler. Not
pictured Is Landon Coate. (submitted photo)

.

Boyles heads to NAIA meet
.

FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

RIO GRANDE - Six
competitors from the University of Rio G rande track and
field team will compete in the
NAJA Nation,als at Simon
Fraser University in Abbottsford , British Columbia starting
may·24. ·
Freshmrn
Matt Boyles
(Easte.rr' M eigs, 2000) and
sophomore Jim Robinson will
vie for the national title in the
men's 3000- meter race-walk.

.

Boyles, a Tupper's Plains
native, enters the meet as the
number one contender, having posted ,a 13:54 in an event
·he just began running during
the indaor track season.
Robinson , from Lake View,
Ohio is currently ranked second nationally with a time of
14:18.
Senior Josh Hammond
makes a return trip torthe outdoor nationals in the javelin .
Hammond, a Coshocton

native, enters as the 12th~
ranked thrower with a launch
of 196-2.
Sophomore discus man
Landon Coate qualified for
th e nationals with a provisional throw of 150-7. The Bellfontaine, Ohio native enters
ranked numbet 28.
Two women's throwers wil).
b e making the return .· trip td
the outdoor nationals. Sopho-

Plus• ... NAIA. U

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Puno1uollon Polito. Ctun. Wtll
Clroomod Anyllmo. (740)4410380
LPN poolllonl ovolloblt· pori·
jtlmo/ otll·ln lor 111 1111111 B111 rail
111 00/hr G1111 Eaporltnct Poy
I 25 Shift Dlfforontlol For Evon•
lngo. S ~0 For Mldnlghll Allen·
dtMj)o bonut avalloblt , loll ol oa·
lilt! Pltltt oall Setnio Hillt at
17•0I448-7t50 lor
mort In·

Alllnlion Work From Homo. Earn
$480 To $1800 PT. 12000· $4500 MEDICAL TAANSCAIPTIO~IST
Per Month FT 1·800.418-2281
Work on your computer Guor·
intnd employmonl Trtlnlng/cor·
AVON I All Alllll To Bu1 or Stll liflcollon (lot) Torten Pub Inc 1·
Shirley Spoart. 304•578·14~
800.84H598
I

•

Relinishing.

From Buoldrnga Call (740)4467604

Tanvny (304)675-5651
Will haul lrash or junk away

S40 oo a toad 304-675-8950

\but 1101 required)

FINANCIAL

14pply.,l'ersDnat

Elrla PromotiOnS
424 Main Stroot
Point --~ wv
........ - 21
Tueocloy, Miry 22

210

for

010 Steks Husband/ W ife Team
To Learn Auto Hauling.

(74;)256-1021

•

Own ACo111JUI8r? Put h
TOWOfk?
www worfloutofyourhomo com
Own a ~C 1 Put n ro Work! For a
tree bOOklet eel! 81l0-429-5653 or
visit us onl1ne
"""gelpewOrlc.com
Person, Acquisitions Jewelry 151

Saa&gt;nd AWifiU8. Ga~polis
POSition Available Director Of
Soc1al Serv1ce1 Arbors Of Galli·
po11s Experience In Longterm
Carel Behavior. Management
Full time Po&amp;Uion With Some
Weekends Management Required Complete Benefit Package
Apply In Person, Send Resume'
To ArbOrs At Gallipolis 170 Pinecrest Onve Gallipolis, OH 45631 ,

Alln William Bias. EOE

ing- great benefit&amp;, call 7 day&amp;
800-429·3610 ext J.38S
POSTAL JOBS· Up 10 $18 35/
hour Hiring tor 2001 Paid training Full benefits Call toll free

1·888·726·9083 a

Responsible Babysitter Naeded

For 2 Month a 19 Month Olds
Rolaling Shill Some Overnight
(740)446-7198
Sales Person·

Fuii·Tima Bene·

fits Retail Ex~erlence Preferred

Apply At Lifeatyle Furniture No
Pnone Calls, Apply

tn

Person

856 Third Avenue Gallipolis .
OhiO

URGENTLY NEEDED· plasma

don01s earn $45 10 $60 lor 2 or 3
hours weekly Ca• Sera-Tee 740·

592 8651

vestment required Exce•enl Prol·
n Potenllat Finance Available/

Good Credrl Toll Free """"(888)
270.2168"····

Earn $90 000 YEARLY repatrlng.
NOT replacing Long cracks In
W1ndsh1elds Free video 1·800·
826 8523 US/Canada, www glass·
mechan1x com

MEDICAL BILLING Unllmrled In·

Fora Better
Employment
Opportunity!
Weofter:
• Full·tlme evening shift
available now
• Up to $7/hour + weekly
bonus potenllal
Paid training
• Patd vacations &amp; paid
holidays
• Medical, dental &amp;
ViSion Insurance
• 401 (i') retirement plan
• Friendly, professional
work environment

NO P'UNDRAIBINGI
Let us show you what
make• lnfoCialon a great
place to work I

lnfoCielon
Management
Corporation
Call today to eohedule
an Interview:

1 SSe-475·7223
ext.1B01
140

Buelnesa
Training'

•Qalllpo(la CotHr Collo'"
(Carttro CIOII"Ill Homt)
C111 Today/740•448·4387,
1·800·2t4·0ol82.
Reg •90·05·12748

••llatiti• or &lt;llai1w..,.,
booed on race. c:dor. nollglon.
origin. or anr ~- llorrto

.....qsueflpal&amp;law:e,
.,.
• or c~sa•niliiiOIL.
, . , . . J"''l• . . nal
luuMI(Ily .....

-

..... tor ... _
whk:hlsln-.ota.
law. 0 . . - ... hlnllly
ilfutuiiidthlllal daeluiQI

n..-ononequol

~310

Homes for Sale

Briel&lt; Home On 28 Acres. 8 t.arve
Rooms Solid Oak Cabinets.
Doors &amp; Tnm Large Famltyroom
W1th Fireplace 3 1/2 Balhl +
Walkout 8aHment W1th K1lchln

Wood Storage Bulld1ng, CIA &amp;
Gaa Heat Excellent Neighbor ~
hood Too Much To Mention
Ready To Move Into Call For Ap-

porntmenl (740)446-11548
F1xer Upper, 2 Bedroom , New
Roof Newer Furnace, Needs

Roule 1 South , Newer, Larger
Home Verv N1ee Consider

Trade-on. (740)446-9966
Small 2 Bedroom, A/C , Has
K1tchen Appliances. Gas Furnace Good Roof, 2 Porches.

Start Your Business Today
Prime Shopping Center Space
A.vailabla AI Affordable Rate

Spring Valley Plaza. Call 740.448·
0101

$0 Down For Good Customers
On Land· Home Packages·

Oakwbod· Gallipoll&amp;. (740)446:l093
14~e70

Southern Dream free De·
live ry free Setup only $9995 1·

cash for remaining payments l)n
Property Sold! Mortgages! Annul
ties l Settlements! Immediate
Quotes!" MNobody beats our prlc
es • Nat1ona1 Contract Buyers

(800) 490.0731 &amp;Ill 101 www na
tlonalconlractbuyers com

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to $500 tnatantly by phonal 1•

871·EARLYPAY l ocN 750005 lsi
ADVANCE FREEl
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
1 888·582 3345
REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale
(2) Houses For Sale 2 Bedroom.
1 Balh. $750 Down Paymanr, Nsar
Gallipolis And Racine Ohio Call
Dav&lt;l 0 1·800·333-6910
tOO'!. remodeled houu In Po-

$998 00 down only $295 par
mon call now 1-801Hi91 ~
PriVate Ptoperty And New Dou
blewide. One Payment (3CM)7387295

Single Pa rent Program Spectal

Frnancing Available (304)755·
7191

330

Farms for Sale

Farm House Beautifully Ramo·
clelod. 2963 Square Foal 11 loa·
es Pond . In-ground Pool. Several
Barns. Garage. Fruit Trees. Clo&amp;e

To Holz8r 1215.000. (740)4484230

340

r.1ERCHANDISE
'

510

Household
Goods

3 PIOCAI LIVing Room SOl Couch
wi'Massaglfs &amp; Reel.ners, L~
seat , Rocker Recliner In Teals.
like New. -4 P18C8 Bedroom set.
Black &amp; Gold Modern Good
PriCe: 6 Piece Ornng Room Set·
Black &amp; Gold Glass Top. Modern
Chaus,
Good
Condition

(740)339-2787
AlmOnd Admiral Refrigerator. $75,
Almond GE Washer, S60, 2

Buelnese and
Buildings

Offici building rn Minorsvolle. 100

Kenmore Wa&amp;hers. S65 Each. 2
Wh~rlpool

Dryers

$50 Each

(74;)448-9066

sq " . ale. covert&lt;l parlclng. carl·
1ng ""'· $300/mo , 614-176-1661

Appl iancet·
Recondllloned
washers. Dryers. RanQes, Aefrigrators, Up To 90 Days Guar·

350 Lob l Acrsage

pllances, ~rench C1ty Maytag ,

1 Aero Locall&lt;l On Route 554. f

741).448.n95

ani&lt;Nidl We Sell New Maytag Aa-

Don t Have land? we Ootn Hurry
Only 10 late LelL 304-738-7295

RENTALS
410

Houses for Rent

Wllh

Air

And

1965 10x50 New Moon, has gas
furnace, new water heater, 740·

Heater $6500 (304)675·3008
Mornings. (740)385 4277 E••n·
ing&amp;
pump &amp; ale $7.500. 740 591·
4043 Of 740·992·0938
1988 14x70 3 Bedroom. shingles
Roof VInyl Siding Remodeled
12x12 Storage Building For Sale
1st Time Home Buyers Program

Special Financing Available
(304)755 5586
28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom. Only
$345 00 Per Month 8 99% Fixed
lntaresl Rate. 1·888·928-3428
AMAZING Lrllie or No Credit
Needed Special Government Fl·

nanclng (304)755-5885

Conlused? Don't Be Call Oakwood Gallipolis Best Prices ,
Best Service, Best People 11 You

BUY Foreclosed Homes From

$10.0001 Repo s &amp; Bankruplcy•s
For Losting&amp; 1·800·319·3323 Ext
1709
condo For Rent, North Myrtle
Beach Sleeps 6. 2nd Row
(74;~57

Pilot Program Renters Needed,

Bedroom T.rallar, S220/mo,

$1 oo Oaposlt On Addison Prke.
No Pets. (740)446-1637 Or
(74;)-3437
3 bedroom mobile home for rent

no pets 740.982·5858

(740)256-1156

NEW AND USED STEEL Steel
Baams. Pipe Robar For Concrare.
Angle. Channel Flat Bar. Steel

(304)675-1422
New &amp; Used Furntture
New 2 PleM Uvmgroom Suites.
$399 Buy. Sol Trade

Walkways New 55 Gallon Drums
With lid &amp; Ring. $7 00 Each L&amp;L
Scrap Metalo (74;)44&amp;-7300

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Hol1day Inn. Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monuments And

Nice Trailer, 4M8, Leat Springs ,

Cleon

3

Bedroom

Mobile Home Near Mercerville

(74;)25&amp;-8574

440

Apartments
for Rent

1-800 191 6777

Livestock

2 ijJp8r•lla yea~ing geldrngs. Palamino. $2500. bay. lokos lo lump.
$1500 740&gt;~5176 .

-530

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

,,

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques,
1124 East Main on SA 124 E Po-

1~=.;;;::.:.:.;.;.;:~...;.:;;.:..-:--::-

Four Charolais Butls. Call daytime
(740)446-4111 ,
evenings
r740,245-038Q

Honlos For 5ale (740)256-6439
Regislarl&lt;l Angus Spronger c.,.s.
Excallanl Blood Llna (740)3888756

11,000 BACK 2 Ton Air Condi·
tloner. 2 Ton Coil. 1 line Set, In-

STEEL BUILDINGS Urgent!!

stalled. $2.295 . $1 .000 Back.

Must move nowll 25x30, 30x•o.
45x1 oo. liquidation pricing, save

$1295 Net Price Free Esllmates
Call For Quolel On Other S1zes.

ll You Don•t Call Us, We
Both Lose! Mobile Homes Our
Speciality 1·740·.46·6308 I·BOIJ.
291·0098
3 six toot lighted showcases very

3654

8 Foot Water Slide 8 Fool Diving
Board, Steps, Solar Blanket Call

1 Bedroom Furnished Apartment
In Polnl Pleasant Very Nice &amp;

All STEEL· BUILDINGS New up

Clean No Pols (304)675-1388

to 50'1• OFF! Pre engineered wl

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $297 to $383 Walk to
shop &amp; movies Call 740-446·
2568 Equal Housing Opportunity

now

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,

Now Taking Appiicol!ono- 35
wood In Barboursville . WV 304· Wut 2 Bedroom TQtJnhouoe
Aptrtmonlt, lncludori"' Waltr
736·3409
Stwlgt, Truh, 1350/Mo , 740·

ment Bank Finance Only At Oak·

448·0001

18.625 with any hOmo . choCk uo
out wtto doallng , Colo"s Mobile Tara Townhoun Ap1rtmtntt.
Voty Splciout, 2 Bldroomt. 2
HomtS US 80 EaSI, Al~lnl, Oh
8783
FIOOII, CA, 1 1/2 Bath, Fully Cot·
Lot model cttaronco. ont 2000 ptlod, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
2 otory Houto At 1158 Park
ttctlontl 11vt $9,5~5. lor 2000 Polio, Slarl UIS/Mo No Poll.
Drive, 4 Bedroom. 1 Btl~ Up·
1talr1 &amp; Llvlngroom. TV Room &amp; modllolngtu , 5 Pll owned tin· Ltuo PIUI StCUII!y OopOtit At·
orntngroom Kilchon . Btdroom &amp; 1gltt mull go by May 31 , no Ill· quittd, Dayt 140·448·3481,
oonoblo oflor rofuttd, l~ott Evtnlngt 740·357·0502, 740·
Bath On 111 Floor, Full Baumont.
homet won 't 1111 long, 10 1top In 441o0101
BI·Ltvtl Deck . 4X18 POol . Block
and Cl'leCk Ul OUI, We're dtlllng
Workthop. $89.900 Firm.
Colo "• Mobile · Homu Athont
(3041575·1148
1\oii~ RiverTowtrt now ocoopling
OhiO, Optn M•W 8-7, T~UII·Frl. ,
lppKeallono lor 1 BFI
2 Slory Houu On·2nd Avonut,
H Sal 10·5
HUO 1Ubl~in&lt;llp1. for oldlrly
Ntwly Ramodaltd lnalda. Priced
tnd dltablod EOH (304)575·
Mull 1111 1885 Shull 18x80 3
Aeaoonablt. (740)448-308•
H18
bidroom 2 both Excallont condl·
3 Bedroom 1·112 Balh Ail
liOn Call Chtryi, 740.3111-4317.
Uptialtt. 2 l!l&lt;lroom,
Stove
Electric. 2200 Squall Ftel 2
Now 2001 F1totwood on ly a AtfrigoiiiOI Futnlohod No
Apertmtnll, Clood Condition. At
$148 •e por monr~ Call Nlk~i Children, $300/mo, $150 Otpotl1
2403 Mount Varnon ~IJtnue
(74;).446-3170
741).318·4317
Point Pl0111n1 (304)U5·382~
Now 2001 FIUIWOOd. ~ br , 2 480 Space for Rent
3 Bedroom Houao . Balh &amp; 112.
bath Itt up in T~t Counlry Mo·
Double Wlndow1 &amp; Fo rmal Pining
bllt Home Park rudy to move In, F1mlly typo for tmlll oamplng
Floom • PatiO· Gas FJlnact/ AIC,
$995 down. $188.&amp;8 par month, !rllltr hookup and ona dock oltt,
(304)678 •80~ I
f"II740·gg2·8&amp;!8 onyllmt
740·992-2187

Attention Water Fowlers. Butch

&amp; Hank Lab Pups Registered
Chocolale a Black (740)4460080

toll free f.B 66 744 8245 (PIG·

Toyol8s Chevy's Jeeps!

French Clly Pal Grooming Ha&amp;
Moved To Point Pleasant, NQYt

AUTOS FROM $500 00
Police Impounds &amp; Reposl
Please Call lor Llstmgs

1-800.451·0050 Exl C9817

Compulors WE FINANCE DELL
COMPUTERS! Even wllh le88
lhln parlecl cradlll 1·800 477·

!170

Crallaman Chipper Shredder 14"
Chain Saw 22" Hedge Trimmer

5hp Tiller Clas Edger. 1 5hp
(304)675 2385

!180

two wtek

supply of colostomy or urostomy
olmplo phone call No obllgatlont
Coll800·7&amp;&amp;·7880 •

mort o~uon1 Manufaotur•r of

Soo Point Pluo For Ail Your Pain•
lng Noodt Wt Block Plttlburg~
Painll Slkkena Wood Flnlthu
And Mlnwax Slalnt. (304)875·
~
4084

Musical
lnatrumente

Fruits l
Vegetables

FAfiM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Clrubb't PilnO• Tuning a Ropalrt
Problems? Ntod i\rntd? Call Tht
Plano Dr 740•448·4525

oowmlllt, tdDott 1nd o~lddtll
NORWOOD fNDUSTRIES 212
Sonwlll Orlvo Buflalo NY 14125
FREE lnformallon 1·800•578 ·
1313 Ext 200·U

(304t675·f644
•

Sltawbttrioo. Pick Your Own Call
Cieooe Wintors. (74;)245-5121

brand name producte with one

Sawmill $3 895 New Supor Lum·
bormato 2000 larger capaclltu.

Lab.

Friendly,

NOBODY S FATHER CO by Ke·

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!

HVLP Pain! Spraytt Now. Novor
Bun Uud. t1 00 0 Firm. Call
(74;)2&lt;1&amp;-08t0 Evtnlngl

Malo

Real

vln Jonts Mary chapin Carpen·
tar &amp; Aca Smith gu11t On lax·
im com,cdllnlvtrll,lm&amp;IOn etc

FREE $40 worth ol GROCERIES!
Limllod 10 11111 100 calla Toll
lrlonds tnd flmilyl 800·425·4397

a

Black

Yeara Old

Reglllortd Lab pups, 2 yellow, 5
ChOCOiale. ShOll a paptll $259
Nch 741).742·1116

9016 Code AC21 www omcsolu·
tlon com

'

·~3

Autos for Sale

Lincoln Town ear $4500, ga·

741}992-0228

1986 Dodge Daytona Turbo,
Runs Good. $400 (740)441-1083
4·Speed, Automatic, like New
Tires For Sala Or Trade For Nice

4·Wheeler (740)245-9172

610 Farm Equipment
0% Flnonclng On New John
Deere Mower COnditioners And

Blltrl Wilh John Deere Crodll
Approval Call Or Slop By Now!!
Carmichael 1 Farm

&amp; Lawn

(740)448-24121-800·594·1111
7' Bar Cycle Masaay (74012568359
Ford. 2000 Tractor Fo r Sale, Call

(740)256-6863

The
Dally

retail $10,300 asking $8.300. 740742·3114

1991 4a4 Nl&amp;san Pick up. $4200
080 Call Af1er 5 OOpm (304)
875-2006

Iron. $10.800 740-982 6159
740

Motorcycles

Wright
fnHnPage11

$850 oso. (740)367- 0239 After
1994 Honda XRIOO
(740)387-7227

$1200

Tone Paonr Ealla Clean (740)
Message
1999 Honda VTA. 1000F Supar·
hawk 2 Brothers Racing Types
ASking $8000 (004)773-5885
(3041675·7511 (304)675-7423

1997 Ford Eaplortt XLT, 4WD,
43.000 Milot. Excellonr Condition,
Asking $15.900 (740)448-0118
1997 Subaru Outback Sport. 21
mpg. AIC. AMIFM Cassollo. All
Whtti Orlvo, 5 Spotd Manual
$9500 (304)875·4116 Leave
Mo11age
1898 Torch Rod Flroblrd. T·tops,
All Powor. 5 Cylinder, CO Player,
Payoff St8.400 (74;)448-3344
1999 Lumina . 18 000 Milts .
Loaded, 114,000 (30.)882·3339
Cell A~or 5pm
2000 Honda

CIYI~

EX.

Rod.

Totally Loaded, Power Moonroof,

8000K Must Sell, $15 ,500
(304)675-846&amp;
2000 Honda 400EX Four
Whtolor $3095 1998 Lumina.
$4898, 1992 StrOll, $3295. 1986
Celobrily. $888 Four Cavaliers.
COOK MOTORS (740)4480103

Having A Baby Payoff 080 Cali
A"ar 5pm (3041675-2008
750 Boats l Motors
for Sale

1989 Stralo s Open Bow Wllh
trailer Seats 6 Exceltenr Condl-

s

llon OMC 3 0 160 HP In-Board
With Cobra Out Orl11e Asking

$5495 Call Evenings (74014480440
91 Low&amp;, 20' ;Pontoon Boat &amp;

Trailer, 40HP Johnson Outboard,

Well

Trailer. $5800. (3041576-2890
Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1995 Dutchmen Camper with ex-

pan do $10 000 firm. Call740·
992-7739
1997 Fleg&amp;laK pop-up. ate. ~eeps
8 $2250 1973 Sprite sleep&amp; 2 3
$795. located al Ga1herlng Wa·
ters Campgrounds, Apple Grove

740·247·7401
SERVICES
810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional llfallme guaran tee
~oca l references furnished Es·

lobliohed 1975 Cali 24 Hrs (7401
446·0870 1 800·287 0576 Aog·
ers w,ltrprooflng
C&amp;C General Home Main ·
lenenco· Palnllng. vinyl siding.

110 Help Wanted

carpentry doora windows, baths
mobile home repair and more For

free osllmalt call Chet. 740·992·
6323

LOCAL COMPANY
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

Llvlngaton 1 Basement Water
Proofing, all ba .. menl repairs
done free estimates , lifetime
guarantee 14yra on jot! experi·

We would like to announce that our
Pomeroy facility now has a new Call
Center Maf1aljJer. We are currently
seekln9 to fill over 100 positions. No
exp. necessary. Earn up to $1 5/hr.
Very ne~le schedulln9. Both f/t and
p/t avgll. Medlcai/Dentai/Pd
vacatlon/Momt. opps. avail for f/t.
I
Call today, start tomorrow...
1-888-974-JOBS
WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU!

once (304)895-3887
840

Electrical and
Relrlgaratlon

Residential or commerclel wiring ,
new service or repelra Master Ll·
censed electric ia n Ridenour

Elaclllcal . WV000306 304 675
1786

$15 .000

83 Dodge Arlu Slalionwagon.
Auns Good NotOI Bllkt Work
$300 080 Call Bofoto 111m
(740)3-532

her thtrd appearance at
nauonals, she wtll compete m
the dtscus and hammer Metzler ts ranked moth m the
hammer ( 156-2). She ts
ranked number 14 m the discus (135-8)

E
D

1977 Thunderbird. 185 HP.
Inboard/ Oulboard Motor $2500
(740)446-9021

2000 VoUtlwagtn Beetle , Excet-

ltnl
Condition.
(740)258-1021

more Ashley Roberts, a
Rtver Valley Htgh School
grad, w1ll appear at her fourth
NAiA
natmnal
champt-

onshtps (two mdoor, two outdoor} Roberts enters the
nanonals ranked number four
10 the discus (146- 4, an URG
record) and as a prrntlSional
entry m the hammer throw
The other Rcdwoman
competttor wtll b e J umor
Amy Metzler, from logan in

I

2001 Suzuki AM 125, Must Sell,

790

1998 Dodge Intrepid ES. Can·
dyapplo Fled, Loaded . Leather.
Now Tlree. Highway Milll. $8200
080. (74;)441..0135

ftam Page I:S

you have a btoruc arm··
As a rookie m 1997, Wnght
went 8-3 m 16 regular-season
starts and then 3-0 m the
postseason But after gomg on
the disabled list for the fourth
nme m two years, he had
shoulder su rgery last summer.
The lndiallS were off Monday and open a home senes
agamst Detrmt on Tuesday.

f

2000 400EX 4· wheeler. like new
o11er $1,200 In extras $4 800

Llva

NAIA

mance , Wnght satd, ··1
thought I was JUSt OK I certamly dtdn 't want to walk that
many guys I got &lt;aught prckutg at the corners··
A s for how htS arm felt on
the day after, "'There's a little
soreness, but 1t's fine;' he satd
"You throw I 00 pttches m
five mnmgs, you're gomg to
have some soreness, even tf

I

446-1749 Aller Spm Or Leave

Equipped With
(304)882·2545

up, but he had some control
problems.
" You know me," Wnght
sa1d Sunday "'Mtght as well do
11 aU the first nme out.'"
In analyzmg his perfor-

the verdtct, however.
Raiders attorney Joe Alioto sa.id the team
wrll review the dectslon to deternune 1f the
verdict will be appealed
" The jury upheld the NFL"s postbon on all
mues m the c ase," NFL spokesman Joe
Browne satd "'The truth regarding what
happened is found m the IU1ders" own June
23, 1995 , media release announcmg thetr
dectuon to leave Los Angeles. It suted: 'The
IUtders orgamzanon has chosen to relocate
to Oakland "'
Judge Richard C. Hubbell asked the JUry
to reac h one general verdtct m favor of the
Ratders or the NFL The mne-vote maJortry
was the nummum for a verdtct m the ctvil
sult. Unhke cnmmal tnals, ctvil cases do not
reqmre a unantmol.\5 verdict
Dehberattons started .Apnl 30 and began
an e w May 4 when the JUry"s foreman was
dtsnussed ro take a long-planned vacanon
and was replaced by an alternate.
The Ratders , who moved to Los Angeles
from Oakland after wmmng a n anmrust su1t
agamst the NFL m Los Angeles rn 1982.
clanned the league should pay them for
ruuung the team's 1995 plans to move to a
n e w stadrum to be butlt at Hollywood Park

s
s

t 988 Banshee, Runs Needs
Minor Rtpalf, For Sale Or Trade,

1992 Oldsmobile Gulla&amp;&amp; Supreme Con11.ertlble Fully Recondi·
Uoned Climate Control , Power

1993 FO(d Probe for sate, front
end wrecked, good parts car, 4
cyt auto runs gOOd lots of gooo

l
H

1999 Chevrolet S-1 0 truck bur
gundy w1th match1ng topper. all
options Sharpll Excellent condl·

Jet Ski 1999 Kawasaki 1100 ZXI,
L.lke New, Low Hours Aluminum

Everything White Wllh Blac~
Top Really Nice Car Will Sell AI
Nada Wholesale Price $4500
(740)446- 1155 Grear Graduallon
Gntl

c

4467

COG

•

Management,

Raadtha
Classified Ids

to:
For 15 Words
11o 3 Daye
!*dalo Ml Ontr

The Daily
Sentinel
Cl111lllld Adl

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45789

I:.LC

•
.I

.

• •

LOS ANGELES (AP} This ame, the
maverkk lost to the establishment.
AI Davis and the libgious IUiden, who
won a court case two decades ago allowtng
them to move to Los Angeles,lost their S1. 2
billion suit clainung the NFL forced them
b)lck to Oakland in 1995.
Alter a stx-week trial that featured sucks
of cumbersome documents and mcluded
conflicting testimony by DaviS ;md NFL
commissioner Paul Tagliabue, a Supenor
Coon JUry voted 9-3 1ft favor of the league
Monday
The verdict restored some of the NFL's
power, said Davtd C.arter, a sports markenng
consultant
" It remforces thetr authonty as the
league's governing authonry, tt allows them
to gam some control over the L.A market,
and I thtnk it begms to mngmahze AI DaviS
m the eyes of some of the Nauonal Football
League," Carter satd
DaVIS , cottsldered a renegade by many
other NFL team owners because of hts consunt battles wtth the league, ,Pressed tn
Ratders· stlver and black and sat 10 the front
row facmg the jury dunng the tnal
Netther he nor Taghabue was present for

Sentinel

1985 Ford Ranger. 4 Cylrnder. 5
Spaad. St2oo oao. (304)67S

1991 Dodge Slaallh RT Twin
Tu rbo 300HP 5 Speed. AWO.
AWS. Loaded. Sharp Car $7500
080 (Below Bookl (740)4410135

1994 Ford Crown VICiorla. 51.000
Miles One Owner $8.000. 1980
Chovy Malibu, 2 Door. Hard·lop.
30,000 Mllea. (74;)379-2894

Prlca. 1100
(304)675·8132

Like New (740)245-5740

71 0

Mini Rex rabbit&amp;, purebred, parents registered. 8 wks old, regls-

2

Murra~

TRANSPORTAT ION

part, $1,000 080 lor more Info
cail740·742·2827

Reglalarod

Piece, Like New Bessell. Riding

Manufacturer ofltrt

Tobacco Plants~ Order Now To
GuaranieS Early Spring Plantings
Increase Allotments Mean Elllra
Plants Thank You For Your Business Call Danny Dewhurst·

Called Rose"&amp; Pel Grooming Call
For Appointment (304)67S-5010
1erl&lt;l. 74;·992-7078

Bedroom Su1te Set. Queen Size 5
lawn Mower, 42• Cut

Pets for Sale

AKC Regillotod Champion
Bloodline Labrador Rotrievar
Puppies Wormed ! Shots, $200
Each. Call (740)553-1603

was

Anne of Green Gables and The
Continuing Story Factory sealed
VHS mov1es "' 14 99 + S&amp;H Call

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apartments Clean, No Pets, No Smok·
1ng, R1ferences &amp; Deposit Re quired
Ulllltles Furnished

count Avarlabie Herllage Farm
(304)675-5724
I
650 Seed &amp; Fertll zer

1987 Oldsmobile Supreme T·

87% Female Wall. (304)675-7183

$27.450 now $18 980 60x150a14
was $52 .750 now $34 990
80x200x16 was $87 450 now
$59.990 1·800·246·9640

97 Honda Clvk: lX., -4 dr . silver.
koyleso entry, power everylhing, 5
ap , sunroof goOd gas mileage,

1999 Harley Davtdson Electra
Ghde Class1c, Fuel lntecllon, 2

Tops 2 Door. V·8 Buckel Soots.

Rio Granda. OH Cali 740·24S·
5121

plans 30x50x10 was $12 500

trailer renta ls Commercial storefronts a11allable lor lease Vacan
ckls now

poll From $278-$348 Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
tunlllea

Building
Suppllea

Block brick sewer pipes. wind·
ows lintels. ale Claude W1nters,

560

today.

Hay a Brrghl Wire Tie Straw. 'lear

'95 SaiUrn SL 2. 5 speed . air.
64,000 miles Will sell lor payoff,
call 740·992·1677

liON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio. 1-1100.537·9528

(740)258-1922

06_1o_E_lllllll_..:....ngs~---::-::::
1 94
Tempo G~ All Power. 75.000

5pm

Walerllne Spacial 314 200 PSI
$?1 95 Per 100. 1" 200 PSI
U7 00 Per too. All Brass Com·

550

copy

92 Hyundal Elanlra . Needs Some
Werle $550 F~m. Call (740)245-

Someone To Round Bale 50•
Acres Of Hay On Shares Square
Bale&amp; For Sale (304)675-4869

rage kept , excellent condition ,

nace. bellied gao. 75.000 BTU s.

TAIL) Prmce Edward Canada

F_;.;_..:....--:---:--:--::-

thousand&amp;ll 1·800·211·9594 x·
69

pression Flnlngs tn Stock

good shape, $150 00 each 740·
992·5322

so, ao~e14

150 Round Boles Hay, $12 00
each. (740)446-7787

Please Call (304)675·6903 Anylime

4pm

Chri&amp;ly s Family Living. 33140
New lima Ad . Rulland. Ohio 740·
742·7403 Aparlmonl home and

Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·
nett

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandi$8

$8990

Young While Cornloh Pullets.
12.00 Eacli. (740)256-1233
640 Hay &amp; Grain

Leave MesJige (304)695·3740
Stanley Home Products And
Fuller Brush Available To Order Or (304)895·,89
Products Or Request Catalogs •

$100, call 740 742-2373 after

1 Bedroom Apallmonr All Ulllitias
includod. $2751 month (304)675·

Tappan HI Efliciancy 90% Gas
Furnaces. Oil Furnaces 12 Sear

800.872·5967 www oNb com/ban·

meroy. 740·992·2528 or 740·992·

gour

Auto• for Sale

720 Trucks for Sale

'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis-

1(7.=40~~~~n~7~---------;

992·22 18

Limited Or No Credit? Govern·

mero~. great prlct, mull 111 will
consider land contract, 140·898-

SIOO Eich AIC. 5 000 To 23.000
BTU For Sale Stening At $7S 00
Thomp&amp;on Appliance Reparr.
3407 Jackson Avenue. (304)675·
7311

Solid Cherry Bedroom Suite, 9

40 gallon natural gas hot water
tank, $60 Coleman trailer fur -

No Pt11. $230/ Month. lncludea
Final Days, Nationwide Inventory Water, $100 Dopoait (740)4463817
Ae&lt;IUCI~nl (304)738-3409

Lol modal clearance. eave up to

Reconditioned Washer &amp; Dryers,

Va&amp;e&amp; (740)446-4782

1 and 2 l);edroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished, security
daposll requ ired, no pets,\ 740-

Country U11ing· Pick Your Dream
living 1 ana 2 bedroom
Home &amp; We II Sol II Up On A Gracious
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Beauliful 5 Acre Tract, Oakwood·
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
Gallipolis (740)446-3093
counl only $1000 00 Down, De
livery and setup paid by Factory

$42500(740)418 8324

1539 Russ Moore, owner

Beautiful Rover VIew Ideal For I
Or 2 People. References. oaposll
No Poll. Foster Trailer Perk. 740·
441.0181

Nice

630

Graung For Drains Driveways &amp;

See And Ad You Like· Call Us!
(740)446-3093
(74;)446-1519

Factory Goof 32x80 $1 0 000 Dis·

Mobile Home Supply. 740·446·
9418 www orvtu:orrl&lt;llennen

74o-992-em alltr 5pm

1976 14x70. 2·3 Bedroon1. New
Since 1997- AIC Furnace. Water

ows, Anchors, Water Heaters.
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·
naees &amp; Heal Pumps Bennetts

Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer, $150,
Kenmore Range, $100, M1
crowiY8. 125. Sola &amp; Charr $125.

515 Ma1n Street. Po1nt Pleasant

Underpinning

1·888·928·3428

On Vinyl Skirting Doors. Wrnd·

f.888-811HJ128

710

Mile&amp;. l2.750(304)675-4014

Huge Inventory. Discount PtJces.

Vrne Street. Call 740·448 7398,

quired, deposit required. no pets

Folay Btltaw Sawmill. 48" a 58"
Biacles Wrlh Power Unll. Eacellenl
~•loon. (740)256-1874 $3200

MOBILE HOllE OWNERS

Washers, dryers , refnge~ators ,
ranges Skaggs Appliances . 76

Main Slreet Furniture

Farm Equipment

, JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repa•ed. New &amp; Rebuill In Stock
Call Roo Evans. 1 800·537·9528

(740)446-11523

3 bedroom home Minersville
area. river view, reterences re-

610

Independent Herballle Oistrlbtllor.
Call For Product Or Opportunity
(740)441-1982

Jacl&lt;&amp;on Avenue (304)675-7388

GOOO USED APPLIANCES

Lookong To Buy A New Home?

Mlacellaneoue

Merchandise

For Sale Reconditioned washens dryers and refngeralors.
rnompsons Appliance 3407

Pleasant. electnc only (304)675
1722. (304)675-4144"""' 5pm

Silos For Rent On Ka·

540

3432

nawha River B miles from Po1nt

Camp

Raiders lose latest suit against NFL

Pickup

China Cabinet. $300. Solid Maple
Table With 4 Chairs, $100.
Roll·a·way Bod. S25 (740)••6-

Four Gas Hot Water Heaters, 3040 Gallon , In Good Condlllon

Mobile Homo For Rent In Rio
888·928-3426
•
Granda , Walking Dlttance To
College Available May 23rd
16 Wide Only $195 00 Per Somo
Ulllltito
$250/mo
Month, 8 99,.. F1ud Interest Rate (74;)24!H100

(740)441-.()1 13

SSS NEED CASH? ? WE pay

(74;~

2

Training Free Information Call

Professional
Services

Requrred (740)446-4425 Or

barh , LA, kitchen wlrh electric
range, cenlral au. 740-985 3650

Very Clean $12 900 Make Ollar

230

Ntw double wide 3 br 2 ba

Moddloport. two bedrbom$. lull

WORK FROM HOME! Earn
$500 $7.000/monlh PT/FT Full
Nowf 1-212 812 5490

•

·Spacious

Two ear garage/apartment In

1982 14x70 Fairmont TownhouJe
2 bedroom, 1 large bath w.th heat

www atta~nurdreams com

1100-891.fi177

-

Very Nice Large Dining Room
Table With i 6 Chairs Also,
Electr~c
Plano With Bench

WANTED 73 PEOPLE TO LOSE

www 911 benemealth com

New 16 fl. wide $499 per mon
onty $270 per mon eatt n~ 1·

420 Mobile Homes
fof Rent

985-3550 before 8pm

Ing under $30 All natural Doctor
recommended Free counseling

8111~

Beaufihi,1600 Sq. r.et. ReUored
2nd F~ Apartment In H1stonc
On~tnct Ideal For Professional
CouPle All Modern Amemlie5 3
I.Jvrng 1·112
Sallis. Rear OOd&lt; HVAC S6001
ma Plus Ullht1e&amp; Secunty And
Key OOpQiil No Pals. Reference&amp;

304-738-7295

(304)675-1385

State A Travel Agency rece ive
traln~ng, business support, your
own travel website and tra11el discount/perks Earn b1g $$$ Nomi·
nal startup east! 1 866 699-0901
or
www EarnBucksFromHoms com
30 lbs In 30 days! Program start-

$499 - n only
$199 per mon c.n now 1·800·

Fori-

Preces. Slrll In Boase. $2.000 For
All. Call (304)380-0233

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

EXT 2203

Now 14 It -

Excellont Location On Routt 160 13 Acres With Beaulllul Lake
Balweon Gallipolis And Holzer View Silel $50.000 18 Acres
Hospital 3 Bedrooms. Balli, LIYing With Largo Lake. Mobile Home
Room Family Room. Kitchen With Wrlh Add On $79.500 Gallla
AppUancet, Full Size Basement, County On Blacktop Road
24a2• Finished Garage, 8• tO (740)388-1878

Financing available (800) 322·
1139. EXT 050
PEPSIICOKE/FRITO
LAY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
$$All CASH BUSINESS$$ IN ·
CREASE YOUR INCOME NOW
SMALL INVESTMENT/EXCEL·
LENT PROFITS 1-800·731-7233

490

&amp; Balli 2 COr Garage. Workshop Milo From Rio Groncle. $14,900.
Wilh Loft Mel Bath Frun TttH &amp; Days (740)448·7444. Evenings
Grape.-- (740)256-M37
(740)367-7167

Of 740·992·2795

No Fee Unless We Wlnl

Join ua In recruiting
voluntHra over the
phone for m1jor non·
profit health
organlzallona. ThtH
poalllon• Involve

ol 11161--llloOII

come potential No e•penence
necessary Free lnformarlon &amp;
CD· AOM Investment from $2495

Call 1·800·306·7429 or vlsll
Your

rtt• IIIUbjectiD

gourmel ITIUIIhroom&amp; for U&amp; FREE • Work. Aa lo $45.000 (740)8885552 (74;)446 8238
lnformahon Sparebme Enterpnse
Call free 1 801&gt;910.3088
FORECLOSED GOV T HOMESI
SO OR LOW DOWN! TAX
!NOTICEI
REPO"S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
CREDIT! FOR LISTING! CAU 1·
recommends that you do bUll·
800-50Hn7 el&lt;\ 9813
ness w1th people you know and
NOT to send money through the
Point Ple'!tllnl· 1112 Hogg Street.
mall until you have Investigated
2
Bedroifm Home Basement ,
the offering
Priced $30.000 New Haven. 3
Bedroom Ranch, Carport &amp; out·
A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE Eslab·
buoldong. priced $35.000 Call
fished Vending Route Will sell by
(304)882-2221 Or (304)882·2405
sn/01 Under S9K m1nimum In·

www bus1ness stanup com

Postal Jobs $46,323 00 yr Now
h~ring- No experience-paid train-

7am-7pm
1705
I

BuslneD
Oppprtunlty

$2500 possible monlhly growing

5:00pm 10 7:00pm ONLY
ask Slwtyl
NO phoM callS PieaSB

lorm~IIOn

Modica I Billing Atolllonl noodtd
lmmtdialtlyl FTIPT Will Train Ea·
Otllont lncomt PC IIQUitod 1·
888·448-8773 lXI 2~

Dock Cloanrng.

PAID TRAiliNG PIIOGIIAII
STUDENTS WELCOME

A Or B COL Driver

Dental Hygienist Part llme And/
Or Full-time Dental Hygiene po·
sltlon Available Submit Resume
Or Call Drs Smith &amp; Jorgansen,

Pick·up And

Removal Of Unwanted Items

COL llpining Available
Cali 1·800·348-1380
(740)388-8331 Leave Name &amp;
Number

Repauing Lawn Mowers And

EIIPLOYEES PrUOWEEKLY

llftniJI1tlllt!men
,.,.,.. -""'*for
RADIO STATION PROIIOTlON

...................
---..1hi1111

a . - F• Hauling 11£1

J04.675-19S7

Lawl\ Mow1ng Weed Eallng.

CDL·A Drivers Eaperleneedlln
exper(enced West Coast Available ·areat Pay"MI1es•Beneflrs•
Transportation"Lodging Included

w'anted, 2 Years E~eperlence,

Georgas Ponabla Sawm111 don't
haul your logo 10 the moll JUSt call

Small Engrne

___""'

~inthiii4W 111•

EVENING _,- (5pm TO 9pm)
(Bonus Program In efloc:t)

free 1·800· nl-5933 axl. 2070

Clasa

(74;)44f-Q184

Delivery Available For Quality
Service Call (740)448-7804

Parl·lrme Sales Posnlon. Apply In

THE

Ad (740)441-0359

Housekeeping! Cleanmg Needed

1~-8726

Internet U181"1 Wanted!

(304)675 5801

70

Ctmst1an Mother Would like To

David's General Contractors,
Plumbing Electnc. Pa1nt1ng
Decks. M•sc
work. can

Housrng SOnd Pricing informallon

K•Uens litter Tramed ,

Found wnne Female German
Shephard M1x. Shrine Club Area
Will Giveaway, Call (740)4469743 Or (740)446-7503

Cal

Needed Experienced Crew for

2n3

742 0169

Neadod

nursing asaislantS •Perfect at·

NRA

Found- al Intersection 01 124/
Bradbury Rd . small caramel col·
orad dog, jumps for treats, 740~

e-•ence

No

ttndance bonus every 3 months,
•&amp;onus available for work•ng
ex1n1 shills

thrs year For questions or for
more Info rmation calf 740 742

Lost and Found

5pm

Kelly Onve On Georges Creek

WORK FOR THE

60

(304)675-7738 -

Weekly Processing Mall Easyt

The party hav1ng sweet potato
plants last vear wiN nat have them

Fuzz~

Pa•nt1ng Free Est•mares Call

HOIII-O&lt;korl NHdOd $635

s-

4

uon ROOfing Std
mg. Concr te, Interior &amp; E•tenor

Are you a eanng, team ooenlad
looUig lor 1he perfect job
w1tn great pav? Then were lOOk
IIIII Ior you al Saorric: H;ts Nursong
Center State Tested Nurs•ng
Aides and Cerlihed Nursing
Aides poa•tions ayallable one
l)al1·1ime 2pm 10 1Opm Two call·
In/ fill.01 posr-s lor Bam 10 2pm
and IOpm 10 lam $8 80 an hour
for state tested nursing ass•s·
tants, $5 80 an hour lor certdted

30 Announcements

Giveaway

B&amp;B COns

7am. c:al740-992-5023

... 1821

40

m1ntmum wage. new shrtts 7am~ 7am-5pm. 3pm-fi1Mf1 f1pm-

,. ....

$200D-$500(llmo
www &amp;-CO!iiilbiz.nel

Why walt? Slart meellng Oh10
alnglea tonight 1·800-788·2123

Quality e1o1h1ng and household
11ema $1 oo bag sale e\lery
ThurSday Monday lhru 5aturday
90D-8:00

canng "" 1he -'Y.

Hoi&gt; -

Darst Group Home now paymg

320 Mobile HCJrr~n
for Sale

Instruction

8abys11 Your Child In My Horne.
13 YeliiS Eaponenca Locatl!d By

1202145 (E+3) CCI. Boa 5500.
Chil1icolhe OIU5801

Now To 'tt&gt;u Thrift
9WooiSiimSOn. AINns
740-592·1842

·Schools

1!&gt;.&gt;

more-

Governmenl Jobs S11 OD-S33 00
per hour polenliol. Paid Troiningl
IU!Benofils. For
... 1~4-91!10 elll. 3234

Graduates . Entry Level Svc/

IEHTWIL R'eg R ;

Help W8nllld

""ACCESS TO A COMPUTER'
Put I 10 - 1 S25111r·S7511V FT/
PT FREE info I00·871 ·104S

--......

Ta DaAdallllult II Plld
lnAd1o:•ICI.

110

Duncan grabbed IS rebounds for the
Spurs, while Antonio Daniels added 24
pomts, a ca.eer playoff high. Both were perfect from the foul line - Daruels 12-for-12
and Duncan 9-for-9.
But Duncan's twin tower, Davtd Robmson. struggled though a foul-plagued night
trying to guard O'Neal. Robinson, who
drew his thitd and fourth fouls m a one-second span tn the third quuter, had seven
points and mne rebounds in 27 minutes.
"'Wtth the two of us in there, 1t puts pressure on them:· Robmson satd. "With one of
us out there,tt puts a lot of pressure on Ttm."
San Antonio struggled from long r.mge for
the second str.ught game. The Spun 1112de
just 4-of-16 3-pomt attempts, 1-of-6 to the
fourth quarter, alter gomg 5-for-15 m Game
1. San Antoruo had shot 42 percent on 3pomten m the first two rounds.
··we are one of the best 3-pomt shootmg
teams in the leagJ~e: · Popovtch satd. " Those
are shots that we take and need to make."
O'Neal had 19 points, II below hts playoff
average. and 14 ' rebounds He was just 8-of21 from the field. but he scored to put Los
Angeles up 82-78 wtth 1 ·53 to go and played
tough defense all mght.
Los Angeles never led until 50 seconds
renumed tn the thud quarter, and was never
up by more than four m the fourth unnl

Bryant's only 3-pointer pve the taken the
seven-point lead.
Duncan, who played aU 48 minute~, was
upset about the shots be didn't nuke.
"Down the stretch, they just outplayed u5;'
he satd "Their big two (Bryant and O'Neal}
nude shots down the stretch, and I missed a
couple. I miSsed a couple of open looks
down the stretch and dut was the difference
in the game."
Rick Fox scored 11 points and lud four
steals. while Robert Horry nude two cructal
3-pomten m the second half for Los Angeles.
Duncan's tnside basket wtth 6:18 to play
gave the Spun the1r last lead, 76-75.
O'Neal nude one of two free throws, Fox
scored on a drive .and Bry.ant made two free
throws m .a 5-0 run dut put Los Angeles up
80-76 with 4·54lelt.
Robinson's IS-footer cut it ro 80-78, and
San Antoruo lud a dunce for the lead, but
Terry Porter mtssed a wtde-open 3-pomter.
O"Neal scored on a pass from Bryant to
make tt 82-78, Bryant followed with hiS 3
and los Angeles' second Alamodome conquest was complete.
Jackson md he dtdn "t know why referee
Bob Delaney called the second techmcal
" The referee asked me to move, and I
asked 'Why?' and I was thrown out," Jackson
satd.
Los Angeles scored the next seven pomts,
tying tt on Ftsher"s 3-pomter from the corn er, then took tts first lead of the game, 6463 , on a J-po10ter by Horry

The o.IJy Sentinel • Page B 3

•

�•

Tu11d1y, May22, 2001

__P~y,lllddlt~ ~

AUEYOOP

A&amp;D ....

u.••lstery- Plls, ...

:::::z.•
•o.lle
• HolM Ill p 'e

Fro0

lfU

•

,..,..

Racine Pizza Express
301 Vine Street Racine, Ohio

Public Notice

Apply in person
Mon- Fri 10 am ~ 10 pm.

CASE NO. 01.CV~1 '

All-Makes n-.ctor &amp;
EqulpnoeatPuU
Factory Authoriud
Cue-IHPuU
Dalen
111DD St Rt. 7 South
CooMI,., OH .f5723

,•..,....

Advertise
In thla apace
tor$25per
month

Howardl.
Wrltesel
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout
FTN fiii!MII8
949-1405
. 591-5011 ,..,.

• Grovel Saad •
m Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Servka
ThpiOII •

992-3470

CmFINANCIAL, INC.
lila Clly LAH!n

Y.OUNG'S

Financial

Bervlcft, Inc.
PlalnUII,
va.

Public NoUce

SHEARI STORMS, et

aL

In caae of your
failure to anawer or

Def-ant,

alherwlae N8POIId u

NoncE BY
PUBUCATION

Marl! A. v.n Dyne

Attorney for PlolnUII

121 W. High Strwl
'required by lhe OhiO 11th l'loor
Rul.. of
Civil . P.O. Box 518
P~ure, Judgement Uma, 01110

To Rodney K.
DIVII, lloger L. Dllvla
and Ro•lle J. Hood,
who•• lall known
addre11 Ia unkn-;
you are hereby

by · default will be
rendered 1galnet you
for
the
relief
demanded _In the
Complaint.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

·-Add-·

· Free Estimates

13511 Collage Rd.
7~992-0122
Masltr Cerlified Ttdiolkial~

Over 23 yn axp.

i n t hi S

_space for

BARNEY

IMIIIable.
Special !hanks to Lyle
Gene Bater, Auto Value,

"We don't want to get caught up in
this Jagr-Lemieux (situation)," Holik
added. "Is this their last time with them
together? That's Pittsburgh's concern.
Our concerns are to play the same
game we played·in Pittsburgh at home."
In those two games, the Penguins
'
probably could have counted their real- .
ly good scoring. chances on one hand.
While Lemieux and Jagr combined for
eight shots, most of them weren't good,
~vhich has been par for the series.
Lemieux has two . assists in the four
games and Jagr, the league's leading
scorer, doesn't have a point.
"The worst thing possible for us is to
put it in our mind that this is over," said
Devils forward Patrik Elias, who has
two goals and four assists in the series.
"I hope we are mature enough to
know, and we. went through this last
year, that it's not over until you get your
fourth win. If we put together 60 good
minutes tomorrow, we'll be fine."
· While the Penguins have only played
one good period in this series, they
have shown the ability to come back in :
the playoffs. In the conference semifinals, Pittsburgh 1won the final two
games to beat Buffalo in seven games. ·
· "We've doi:ie it in the past with some
tough situations, and that's because we
believe that we can go on the road and
win a big a hockey game and come
back to our building;• Lemieux said.
"So we believe we can go in there and
beat these guys."
Devils coach Larry Robinson said
you can never count out a team that has
Lemieux and Jagr.
"This is the type of team · that you
can't let get back up and get back into
it," Robinson said. "So if we think we
are just going to g~ Oljt and there is not .
going to be · another team show up for
the fifth game, we are totally mistaken."

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'He's not tlke anyone we've aeen
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Woods.

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' PRICING

CONTRACTORS, INC.

BY PHILLIP ALDER
The leading publisher of bridge books
in North America is
Master Point Press .
However, I wish it
would employ
a
decent editor and
·proofreader.
The
books ate littered with
printing errors, and
"Playing With the
Bridge Legends" by
Barnet Shenkin also
contains several factual mistakes. For example, the 1977 European Championships
were held in Elsinore,
not Copenhagen . And
the Junior European
Championship in Delft
was in 1992, not 1990.
Despite
these
defects, and that some
of Shenkin 's prose
would have benefited
from editing, the book
is an enjoyable read,
with several excellent
deals.
Shenkin. a Scotsman who now lives in
Boca Raton, Fla., did
well on thi s deal in a
1977 match between
England and Scotland .
How
would you
declare si" spades
after West starts with
two top diamonds?
The plan is to get
home if either hearts
or clubs break well,
not to put all one's
eggs into the club basket.
After ruffing the
second
diamond,
Shenkin . cashed the
spade ace, played off

of

l
1 1 13 1

HARTWELL
STORAGE

PACTOIIY DIRI!CT

PJB

~

dummy's two top '-::~-:;::~·::;:~·:::::-=~-~.J
hearts. and ruffed a .heart with his spade
F HE AC
I 0 . When all followed,
he led a club to dummy's ace, ruffed a~
heart with the spade
...
"Get your priorities s\raighl,"
1-- -..u,_c..--,E
king, drew trumps, and
~- 1 1 1
the old timer said . "I have never
cashed the established
. . . .
heard anyone say as !heir last
words , 'I wish I had spent more
heart eight. Shenk in's
12 tricks were four .
T 0 N0 L I
. time a! the-. -- - -."
.
spades, three hearts,
Q Complete the chucldo quoted
two clubs, and three L.....J.-J-.-1.'--..L.-1..
. ....J
bv fillln; In the milling _.d,
you do•tlcp lrom stop No.3 below.
ruffs -- two hearts and
one diamond •• in
• PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN I
hand.
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Will this be the final curtain
for Jagr and Lemieux?
EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ (AP)
-Jaromir Jagr and Mario Lemieux .are
going·through another breakup in what
might be their final game playing
together for the Pittsbu.rgh Penguins.
After seeing his team shut out for the
second game in row, Penguins coach
Ivan Hlinka decided Monday to put
Lemieux and Jagr on different lines for
Game 5 of the Eastern Conference
finals TuesdJy night against the New
Jersey Devils.
Lemieux will cent~r a line with Martin Straka and Alexei Kovalev, while
Jagr will skate with center Milan Kraft
and left wing Josef Beranek as the Penguins face elimination in the best-of.
'
seven senes.
The changes come just a game after
Hlinka reunited his two superstars.
"I think when a team is struggling,
you just try to mix it up a little bit,"
Lemieux said Monday. "That's what we
are trying to do, create some different
line combinations and see if it works ."
"Try something else," Jagr added.
Anything would be better than what
the Penguins did in losing Games 3 and
4 at home. Not only were they
OIUSc8red 8-0, but they didn't even
look like tliey belonged"on the 'same ice
as the defending Stanley Cup champions.
And if that doesn't change in Game 5
at the Continental Airlines Arena, the
Devils will be going to play the Colorado Avalanche and the, Penguins will
be going on vacation and thinking
about changes.
The biggest would involve Jagr, who
expects to be traded to. keep costs down
next year. He earns about $1 0 million
annuall:r.
"We have a great opportunity for us
on 'Tuesday," said Devils center J;3qbby
Holik, who has shadowed Lemieux the
. entire series and !imited him to two

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 8~5

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..

t~~:~~~~~~~;,;,;~~~:~~~~:~~~~~~
~

,....,....,...,...~~-~..,...+.:::-.:--,-:::-:-:::-1

•

I0156. Be sure 10 state your
Hill
Station,
Zodiac
sign. New York, NY ·
CANCER (June 21·1uly 22)
.. Be watchful loday so that
someone who has-a habit of
saddling you with his or her
re~ponsibilitie~ . doesn't lry to
pull off somelhina ~wift on you
aguin .
LEO (July 23·Aull . 22) ..
Keep your cotnmenl~ to your·
self loday. even if you lhink
you have rtomelhina hetpfulto

1 1_1

1 I. ,I

'Your .
'Birthday ·
19) .. Keep .to yourself today
say. Aclually, friends prefer to
lhe
good lhings concerning
feel lhat you accept them for
your
career. Someone whO is
what they are.
.
jealous
may try lo upset your
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
applecan
by 1argeting the e.act
.. Of course. you're not going
things
you
outlined .
lo feel a sense of accomplishAQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb.
ment today if you merely do
19)
..
Your
old
standby
friends
. whm you can get by with. Your
might
see
you
for
who
you
sense of responsibility will
really
are
loday,
bu1
acquain·
make you sulfer guilt.
tance&lt; who don 't pump up
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) •
your ego loday might experi·
· Preach by doing 'today,
ence a different individual.
instead of directing. The examPISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20)
pte you set will get yqur mes·
.. You may be righl. bul if you
sage across louder and beuer
gel inlo a confrontation today
than anythina you say. Besides,
with an individual who oul·
• people tum a deaf ear to what
runks you clout-wise, you'll
they don't want to hear.
lose the baule, as well as your
S!=ORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
pride.
22) .. If you uk for more than
ARIES\March21·Aprit 19)
what Is commensurate to your
·
••
Only
when you prelend lo
input today, people will ask
know
something
thut you real·
you ·to put more In the pot.
ly
don
't
will
you
gel yourself
Choose well betore you 1tart
into
trouble
today.
Your tittle
mlltlns demand•.
deception
will
be
obvious.
to
SAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23·
others
and
make
you
look
fool·
Dec. 21) •• After you 've
ish.
.
. blamed your mate of doing
TAURUS
(Aprit
20-May
somethinstoday, upon investi·
20)
··
If
a
deal
has
already
been
satlon, others will discover
struck
money-wise,
don't
you were projeclin1 your own
auempt 10 get more ou1 of It
behavior onlo him or her. You
loday. Things could quickly
won't like what they think of
1hemselves, •nd you
you.
1 unravel
may end up with nothing.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·lan. ; '
{_

�•

'

SPORIS: Sixers win Game 1 in Eastern finat 81

Page

•••• ,....,a

The Daily Sentinel

t'

BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The San Francisco Giants aren't enccly prospering from all
the home runs Barry Bonds keeps hitting.
Bonds tied a nujor lea~e record with his eighth homer in
five g.ames and became the quickest player in history to 23
homers in a season. The Ariwna Dian10ndbad&lt;s shrugged it off,
thanks to homers from Greg Colbrunn and Reggie Sanden
along with Curt Schilling's six-hitter to beat the Giants 4-2
Monday night.
·
It was San Francisco's founh loss during Bonds' five-game
run.
The only victory came Saturday. when he homered three
times in a 6- 3 win over the Atlanta Braves.The next day, Bonds
had rwo homers, but the Braves combined for five and beat the
Giants 11 -6.
·
Bonds' surge has impressed everyone. but it hasn 't intimidated anyone.
" He's nvinging the bat a" well as 1\·e ewr seen him." Schilling
said of Bonds. " He was 1-for-4, but the two balls he hit when
he flc;w but just missed. They " ·ere real dose.··
Bonds' eighth homer in fiw days equaled the mark set by
Frank Howard, who did it twice in l&lt;JC.H with Washin[;ton . It
also broke the National League onmd held by Jim llmtomle\'
(1929), Johnny Bench (1972) ;Oild Mike Schomclt ( 1979). who
each had seven in a fivc-g;m1e stre.rrh .
The sevent h solo shot .of his home run .binge .olso gave Bonds
23 hont~rs in San frJ.ncisco·s -4-~ g:aJHl'S this se.1son. Mark MeGwire was the previous fastest, recording his 23rd in St. Louis'
47th game during his record-setting 70-homer season in 1998.
But Arizona won to take a half-game lead owr Los Angeles
in the NL West.
.
.
Colbrunn ho mered leading ofT the second . inning ft&gt;r a l ..{)
edge. Bonds tied it in the fourth, but the Diamondbacks took a
3-1 lead on Sanders' fifth - inning two~ run shoe
" It's always good to get off to a good start with our rivalry
team and put sonle runs on the scoreboard, especially for
Schilling," Sanders said.
Also, it was Colorado 6, Los Angeles 3: Atlanta 5, Florida 3:
San Diego 7, Houston 5: and New York 6, Montreal 3.

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St. Louis 3. Phladelpllia 1
Chicago ~ 6, Arizooa 5
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Todd Walker hit a pair of two-run doubles. Walker's first double highlighted a three-run first inning. He doubled again in the
eighth after Larry Walker doubled and Todd Helton reached on
catcher Paul Lo Duca's interference.
On Saturday, Walker's wife Katie gave birth to their first child,
daughter Riley.
"There's really no correlation to having a baby on Saturday
and playing well tonight, but, yeah, it feels great," Walker said.
Adrian Beltre had three hits and scored all three Dodgen runs
·
at Coors Field

Braves 5, Marlins 3
Andruw Jones had two home runs and four RBis and To~
Glavine scattered five hits over seven innings at Miami.
Jo nes hit his 11th and 12th home run s, the I t th multichomer
game of his career, .and helped the Braves win for the fifth time
in seven games. He hit a solo shot in .the first inning off Matt

••

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I'!frastrncture damage
at 1250K so for

1'
•

SENTINB. NEWS STAFF

:••

r-.,.oGamooi
-·--3-!i)lta...land

4-2), 7:05p.m.
Anaheim (Schoeneweis 3-2) al Battimofe

Padres 7, Astros 6

i.

AMERICAN
LEAGUE

••

-·

Golfers
.t

aren't

world and The New York Times
called us '' ... some of the best
public golf on earth."
Golf Magazine listed THE
SENATOR course at our new Capitol
Hill location ·among its top new
courses in the country and THE
LEGISLATOR course in the top 25
newcom~rs. And wait until you
see THE JUDGE!
So, we hope you1l understand
when, like all good golfers, we
like to brag about our scores.
Call today t~ b'ook your golf
and hotel package and get ready
for one of the best golf trips .in
the world.

love

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0

confirmed chat a tornado struck southwestern Meigs
County. Arnencan Electtic Power crews are still
waiting to get into the Dexter community to restore
power there, where 61 households have been without electricity since Monday night's storm.
Emergency Mamgement Agency Director Bob
Byer ·said this· morning that nine of the county's 12
townships sustained damage in Monday's storms.
" We're estimating a quarter-million dollars in
damages, just in infrastructure alone," Byer said.
" That includes damages to roads, bridges and infrastructure."
· Sheriff Ralph Trussell and the county commissioners, working with the Meigs EMA, made a county
state-of-emergency declaration in the early morning
. hours Thesday. and Taft's dednarion is designed to
help dejlloy the Ohio Department ofTransj&gt;Ortation
. · •a11!f other state~level agenci~ :
;, ~~i'~: asked ODOT to work directly. with Meigl
' Clq\lllti' qffic~, tq qc,t~IJ!in~ the .an.!.PI!i~t- !Jf ~tma~
•• · · ·
' ·, of road ·re'\iafr resow:Ces ·ru:!~!-::"&gt;il

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'1'f~,. . . ..~ ;.ft
.
01\tb' 1 l!MA~ officials are

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•
in contact wlch lodl ·
'eme~ncy. rruuilp a"rld are monitoring the situa-

tion from tl).e state Emergency Operations Centc:r.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources,
. ODOT, Ohio Environmental Protection Agency and
American Red Cross have been working directly With local cSfficials in the field since storms began
'

Pi···· ..

Stu: .. AJ

'

.,

/

PAR'I'Y HONORS- Henry and Mary Hunter were honored Saturday for their years of service to the Meigs County Democr&amp;
tic Party by U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, far left, former State Senator Jan Michael Long and Party Chairman Sue Malson. (Contributed photo J

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54 HOL.EI

154

Calendar
C!assifieds

Comics
Editorials ·
Obituaries

HOliES

AS

Details; A2

BY CHARLENE HoEfLICH

Lotteries
OHIO

'

.

82-4 Pick 5: 6-6-{1; Pick 4: 6-4-0-9
BS lud ~ 5: 15-23-24-26-34
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A3 W.VA.

.

31 HOLES

311 HO•CI

MAGNOL7A GROVE

CA,.ITOL HILL

14 HOLE.

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1.800.949.4444

PIUH- CiviL Al

. .

Meigs High School.
Steve Ohlinger was hired as assistant
principal and athletic director at the middle school.
Superintendent William Buckley said
the new assisiant principal's position at
Meigs High will enhance the administrative program there, all owi~ Principal
Dennis Eichinger to devote more t1me to
concentrate on academic and vocational
improven;Ients .

Tony Deem, th e assistant principal, will
handl e atte ndance and special education,
while Gaul's role will be primarily with
discipline.
teachers list
. Added to the substitute
'
were John Barcus, Betheney Bay, lise
Burris, Abigail Cauthorn, Theresa Cooper Jennifer Cummins, Rebecca Evans,
Mary Hill, Lisa Hon aker, Kimberly

PI•••• IH Gaul, AJ

Holser Work Link

l'Nitrille

Al.abama'a Robert Trent Jonn Golf TraU 378 /roles of world-class golf on eigllt sites

.

.'

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

'POMEROY - C hanges in admihis~
trativ~
· ositil)ns at M eigs Middle School
and ·. ·gs High School were made at
· Tues · ' Meig.t Local Board o f Education rotating. ·
Mary O'Brien, as~isrant principal at the
middle ~hool for several years, was hired
as principal there replacing David Gaul,
who was hired as assistant principal at

•
H7GHLAND OAKS

Southern Ohio Democratic Chairmen's .r\ssoc
POMEROY -- Henry and Mary Hunter of ciation, as well as a number of campaign comPomeroy were recognized Saturday for their mittees and the Democratic Action C lub of
contributions to the Meigs County Democra- the old I Oth Congressional distri ct.
tic Party during the party's annual spring din- · Hunter's sister, current Democratic Party
Chairman Sue Maison, was joined by former,
ner.
The Hunters have dedicated 30 years to the State Sen. Jan Michael Long and the party s
local political scene.
keynote speaker, U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, in
Henry Hunter served as party vice chairman presenting the Hunters with a special plaque
from 1976 'to l980, and chairman from 1983 recognizing th eir con tributions to the Party's
to 1989. Mrs. Hunter is also a former chairrrlan growing success.
and •vice chairman.
Long, who serves as Pickaway County JoveIn addition to being acti~ely involved in the nile Court judge. recalled his first meeting
locat ~;mty, both have been members of the
PleiH Hunters, AJ

POMEROY -A Middleport couple has filed a
civil suit alleging breach of
contract, menacing conduct and illegal search and
seizure against rwo former
M eig.t County officials.
Roben D. Fife, and his
wife, Gbdys, who were the
subjects of a raid and forfeiture case in 1993, have
filed the lawsuit · against
former Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes and former Sheriff James M .
Soulsby, demanding compensatory and punitive
damages · in excess of
$25,000 on each of four
claims.
Fife was accused of racketeering, but was not
charged with the offense,
and of running an illegal
pawn shop.
He later admitted to a
charge of trafficking in
f9od stamps and two
counts of receiving stolen
property and was s_e ntenced to three consecutive
18-month terms which
were suspended.
In addition, Fife forfeited
hi s firearm collection,
S185,000 and $60,000
from bank accounts.
In 1997, four yean after
the raid, Fife told The
Daily Sentinel . he . was
· innocent of any wrongdoing, but agreed to the plea
agreement because he hac;i
to take care of his ailing
wife.
"The reason I had to ~o
what I did was I· had to
weigh ... are riches worth
more than my wife's health
. and my being there with
her," Fife said at that time.
The Fifes, who say in
their complaint that they
feared "great bodily harm"
if they filed the suit before
Lentes and Soulsby left
office, allege the defendants
deprived them of their
rights to freedom from ille-

MMS gets new principal; Gaul moves to MHS

Low:40s

:wSpllJOWrtsiiii.IX~U~,---_,B-L-"l3.""6· Dilly :S: 6-2·2 Deily 4: 3·1-6'7
WJ.IleilathWle!iiJrL..____' _uA2,.. C 1001 Ohio Voilloy Publishing Co.

CAMBR7AN RIDGE
Gre1nrill#

.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

brag
OXMOOR VALLEY

.

·Democrats laud Hunters'
lifetime achievements

Sentinel
S7LVER LAKES

YED -The Alva Clark home, pictured here, was heavily damaged in Monday evening's storm.
barJl was also destroyed In the storm. (David Harris photo)

•

about their
scores. I

Gov. Bob Taft has declared a state of emergency for
the county, and the National Weather Service has

'atdr(r

HAMPTON COVE

FROM STAFF REPORTS

the

h .e only ones

who

ANESVILLE - Lt. Gov.
Maureen O'Connor is
expected to visit storm-ravaged areas of Meigs County
today. as emergency teams
continue to assess damage- ·from Monday
night's heavy rains and winds.

'

.

Fifes allege
constitutional
violations in
civil complaint

BvllluiiJ.RaD-

CJ,·m~nt (2·-l) . then added a two-run shut in the sixth. He also
Tony Batista hit a three-run homer as the Blu~ Jays sent t&amp;
had an RBI single in the third.
White Sox tQ their season-high seventh straight loss, 10-1,
Monday. Chicago is now 14- 28, its wont start since 1978 when
the Sox went 13-28 to begin the season.
.
j
"When our pitchers do well, our hitters ~re bad," Biddle sai4:
·
!
Ryan Klesko hit two three-run home 'runs and a tripk ~nd "When are hitters do good, our pitchers are bad."
Monday was originally an off day for the two teams, but sinct
drove in six runs. Klesko's six RBis e.qualed his career high.
it
was Victoria Day in Canada, the Blue Jays asked the Whit;t
Adam Eaton (b-2) got his founh straight victory, going 6 2.:
3 innings, striking out a season-high I0 to equal his career best, Sox to switch the off day to Tuesday. .
They
will
resume
their
series
on
Wednesday.
'
:':
while walking one.
It was the only American League ,g.&gt;me pb~d Monday.
:
Jeff Bagwell's fifth career grand sbm, his second of the season,
Bidclle
(1-4)
lost
his
fourth
straight
decision,
allowing
seve";
highlighted host Houston's five-run third.
•
runs on seven hits in three innings.
Ray Durham, Paul Konerlc.o and Jeff Liefer homered for the
White Sox, who have baseball's worst road record (5-16).
.~
"We're miserable," Konerko said.
~;
At Montreal, Tsuyoshi Shinjo won a game for the second
Toronto starter Steve Parris (3-3) allowed three runs on sit
straight day, hitting a tiebreaking three-run double. After a hits in seven innings.
•
game-winning RBI single with two outs in the bottom of the
He struck out a season-high six and walked one.
•
ninth on Sunday, Shinjo cleared the bases with a two-out douToronto's Jose Cruz Jr., activated off the disabled list befo~
ble off Britt Reames (2-6) in the sixth to break a 2-2 tle.
the game, went 3-for-4 with two RBls.
!
Reames, who hit his first career homer to tie the game in the
Mter Durham homered in the first, Biddle loaded the basel
fifth, lost his sixth straight start.
in the bottom of the inning by walking Alex Gonulez, hitting .
Carlos Delgado and giving up a single to Raul Mondesi.
Fullmer followed with a two-run double and Cruz had a two;
run single.
:. •
Konerko homered in the second. But Biddle gave up a dou~'
ble to Raul Mondesi and a walk to Fullmer before Baris~
homered, his 12th, in the third to make it 7-2 for Toronto.
'
TORONTO (AP) - When the Toronto Blue Jays celebratThe Blue Jays scored three more runs in the sixth on Home(
ed a Canadian holiday, the C hicago White -Sox showed up with
Bush's RBI single, right- fielder Magglio Ordonez's fieldin'g:
gifts.
error and Alex Gonzalez's run-scoring single.
. :
" It's my birthday. I was throwing presents up there, and they
Shannon Stewart hit a single to Ordonez, who let the ball:
kept hitting them," said Chicago starter Rocky Bidclle, who
rick off his glove and roll to the wall, scoring Bush, and allow
turned 25.
-;'!
ing Stewart to reach third.

· We love it when people say
nice things about us.
Golf Digest recently listed
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
Trail among the top 50 golf
destinations in.the world! .
And in its current Places to
Play ratings, Golf Digest gave
most of the Trail's 21 courses
4 stars-and some even got 4Y.,.
Not bad when you consider that
5 stars only go to those once-ina-lifetime courses. And aU of the
Trail's courses got top honors for
.
semce.
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed
us among its top 10 trips in the

a ainst
......cia Is

I
,
:

Mets6,Expos3

Rockies 6, Dodgers 3

www.mydailysenton('l corn

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112 . 5-3), 1:05p.m.
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13
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Sundly'•T - Bay tO. 5lolmit 2

TOfonlo 10. Chicago -

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so (ents • May 23 . 1001 ·Vol Sl , No 2 !6

Wscll

(~

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•~

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.1190
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••

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~ 4-31. 7:05pm.

Wednesday

•

•

•••

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Bonds hot, Giants not

•

'

A Work Injury Management Service
1~,, of Holzer Medical Ceoter. ·

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HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

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---

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