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PageB6

The Daily Sentinel

MDBd y,J

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Kerry Wood wins sixth

straight start as Cubs
sweep Twins
.

BY 1HE •SSPVTED PRESS

Red5ax4.
81aues3

•

Carl Ev=tt had two hits,
scorrd two runs and drove in
another as Boston won at

Atlanta.
Boston's Manny Ramirez
broke out of a 3-for-28 slump
with an RBI double..

Orioles 10,
...... 7
Br.uiy Anderson drove in three
runs with one ofBaltimore's four
homers as the Orioles avoided a
series sweep a1 Philadelphia.
Chris Richard also had three
RBis for the Orioles, who were
ou~scored ~23 in the threegame series that fea!Ured 18
homers.
•

Blewass,

Richi~a3 Henry
Blanco homered. and Ron Bel-

on s, 1\niiias 4

Kerry Wood won his sixth
Slr.light start, and Sanuny Sosa
reached 20 homers for the
eighth Slr.light ~as Chicago.
completed a three-game sweep
of Minnesora.
The Cubs have · won 13
Slr.light at Wrigley Field - their
longest stretch since winning 14
in a row in 1936 - and have
won 20 of25 OYI!r:lll.

Rai1Jgtss&amp;.
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19, 2001 ·Vol 51 , No 234

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Alex Rodriguez hit a threerun homer in the 6tih inning as
Texas won at Houston in the
final game of the first Lone Star
Series. "
Troy Glaus, for-17 against
Each ream won three games in
Los
Angeles this season, hit a
the six-game series.
twO-run homer with one out in
the bottom of the ninth inning
for Anaheim.
The homer capped a four-run
for Anaheim, which won
inning
Mike Redmond and Kevin
Millar had three · hits and two four of six fiom the Dodgers this
RBis apiece as'Aorida complet- season.
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N.Y. -S,N.Y. Y - 7

SEHTlNEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Adopting provisions prohibiting the playing of
sound amplification equipment at
excessive levels topped the agenda
during Village Council's regular
meeting on Monday.
Council approved the lint reading
of an ordinance that would prohibit
any person or organization that
engaged in any performance or used

'-f~IEWMI'UP

It...,.._
r•

KIMM City 4.
•ulln 2
N.Y.Y-2,N.'f.-1
St. Lou118, Chlcllgo While SCIX 3
._2,-t
ChicogD CUIIo
San Francllco 2, Ooldlnd I
Aaaneos. - . o

11,-

4

passes first hurdle

•

BY TOllY M. LEAcH

c-

112
10
12

. . . . ,

Bahluoe 10. Pl....,lilli 7

arty electronic .device in any manner tiaJ likelihood of disturbing the pub- the ordinance include a sound system and other activities which have the
so as to create a public disturbance, licUs reasonable expecration of peace being operated ro request medical or approval of the village.

or, to operate or permit the operation of any sound amplification system &amp;om within a vehicle so that the
sound is plainly audible at a dista'nce
of 50 or more feet &amp;om the vehicle.
Clerk Kathy HyseU defined "public
disturbance" as a loud music revelry,
or electronically reproduced sound
created at a time and a place, or in
any manner so as to create a substan-

and quiet.
Council also agreed that "sound
amplification system" meant any
radio, tape or disc player, loud speaker, or any other electronic device
used fo.r amplification of the human
voice and/or musical instrument and
that there are spe\:rialceprions ro
the ordinance.
ot fall under
Exceptions that

vehicular assistance or to warn of a
hazardous road condition, the vehicle
emitting the amplified sound is an
emergency or public safety vehicle or
one owned and operated by the village or a gas, electric, communications, or refuse company, or a vehicle
being used in authorized public
activities, such as parades, fireworks,
sports events, musical productions

Dod~JS4

.DEADLY ·LITTLE SUCKERS

Maltiias6,

. Devl~4

,

liard .had a !Wo-ruli double as
h6i Milwaukee overoune the
relord-setting ·performance of Bay.
The host Marlins have won
Kansas City~ Blake Stein.
eight
of 11 . and are above .500
Stein (3-5) tied anAL record
BubbaTrammell hit his second
with eight consecutive strike- for the first time this season.
horrer of the game to break an
outs.
eighth-inning tie as San Diego
beat visiting Seattle.
San Diego avoided a sweep of
Tony Womack hit a grand the three-game series by the
Marinen, who had won 20 of22
Orlando Cabrera hit a three- slam and doubled twice as Ari- games.
run homer in the ninth to lift zona beat visiting Detroit.
Seattle, which fell to 52-15,
Four Arizona players homered
Montreal over visi~g Toronro,
had
won all 13 previous starts by
completing the Expos' first series to help Curt Schilling become Aaron Sele.
baseball's first 11-game winner
Jwin &lt;ince May 15-17.
(11-2)

Padft!S 11,
Marlners9

ExpDs4,
Jap1

Sox3

Bud Smith outpitched David
Wells in his first career start as St.
Louis beat visiting Chicago ro
complete a three-game sweep. .
Mark McGwire was ejected
for arguing a called third strike in
the third inning.
The Cardinals also finished
without J.D. Drew, whose right
hand was broken when he was
hit by a pitch in the third.

Giants 3,

.Atlde6c:s o

Kirk Rueter threw six scoreless innings as San Francisco beat
Oakland to cap a perfect homestand with their sixth straight
victory.

Barry Bondi was held homerles.l for the second straight game.

Ar.gels&amp;.

.....

Yankees7

nat~·•

Mike Piazza homered to cap a

Kent, San Francisco. 20.
TRIPLES -NPerez, Colorado, 7;
LCsotlllo, Florida, 6; Vlna, St louis, 6;
Rollins, Philadelphia, 5; OCabrera, Mon·
traal, 5; Womack, Arizona, 4; LG"''zalez,
Artzone, •·
HOllE IIUN8 -Bonds, San Franclaco,
38; LGonzalez, Artzone, 28; Hel1on, Col·
orado, 24; Drew, St. Louie, 21 : LWalker,
Colorado, 21; Pujols, St. Louis, 20;
SSooa, Chicago, 20.
ITOLI!N lASES -LCestllk&gt;, Florida, 23:
Rollins, Philadelphia, 21 ; Plena, Col·
orado, 17; Goodwin, Los Angeles, 17;
Furcal, At~ta. 16; Abreu, Phlla&lt;lelphla,
16; Womack, Arizona. 16.

..,. ICM
• 000 tftCI(

six-run raDy in the eighth inning
as the host Mets averted a Subway Series sweep by beating
Yankees.
.
The Mets had not led the
entire three-game , series, and
trailed 7-2 before taking advantage of shortstop Derek Jeter's HERO TIME- The Mets'. Mike Plaua smiles as he Is congratulated by teammates after hit
error and a depleted Yankees two-run homer In the eighth Inning gave the Mets an 8-7 come-frombehlnd win over the Ne'l(•
bullpen.
York Yankees, Sunday. (AP)
'
~

tit•

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAmNG -MRamlrez, Boston, .357;
Suzuki, Saanla, .35~; JaGlambl, Oak·
land, .:W3; JGonzalez, Cleveland, .343;
McGriff, Tampa Bay, .339; RAiomar,
Cleveland, .337; Oierud, Seattle, .335. ·
RUNB - ARodriguez, Texas, 63; Suzuki,
Saanle, 81; MJSweeney, Kan88s City, 52;
Stewan, Toroolo, 51; Mondesl, Toronto,
50 ; Olerud, Seattle, 49; JGonzatez,
Cleveland,.47.
RBI -BBoone, Seattle, 70; MRamirez,
Boston, 68; ARodrlguez, Texas, 60;
JGonzalez, Cleveland, 57; JaGiambl,

Clemens, New York, 93; Muaalna, New

Oakland, 54; Posada, New Yorl&lt;. 53;
Olerud , Seanle, 53; EManlnez, Seante,
53; APalmalro, Texas. 53.
HITS -Suzuki, Seanla, 108; Stewart,
Toronto, 93; MAamlrez, Boalon, 69; AAo·

York, 88; Nomo, Booton, 85; Colon,
Cleveland, 83; Hudaon, Oakland, 81 ;
Zlto, Oakland, 80; Penlne, New York, 80.
SAVES -Sa88kl, Seanla, 25; MRI•Jer&amp;,
New Voric, 21 ; liawklns, Mlnneeote, 18;

drlguez, Texas. 85; BBoone, Seanle, 85;

Percival, Anaheim, 18; Foulke, Chicago,

JGonzalez. Cleveland, 84; RAiomar,
Cleveland, 82.
DOUBLES -MJSweeney, Kansas City,

13; Wickman, Cleveland, 13: lsring·
hauaen, Oakland, t2; AMHernandez,
Kansas City, 12.

•
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At rurnpike.* s
HService Dept.

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$2495 $4995

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2·wheal

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Check and ad)ust camber and toe, Additional parta and
labor ~~~~~ be reoulred on 101111 'll!llelee:

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1 1 We WJ11 meet or beat any compethor's

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~~~ROYAL.

M-n. llridgoalona,
BF Goodrich.,
Mounting ond bliii'Cng,Rill' blextra.
,

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$1995

Weather

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(6) 17, 18, 19, 2001

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Sentinel
:a

Details, A2

Sports

SPRING
II
MOTORCRAFT I
I
MAINTENANCE' I , · · '
FAST LUBE 1
I
I
PACKAGE
I I
I
I
·
I I • Service lncludea up to 5 quarts of Motorcraft onl ·:
1 ;:;-,..ov;::::.'f:!==..·-~::.·
It1and
new Motorcraft oil flfter • Perform Mutti-Polntl :;
1 ~j~Nm;a.o,.••"*a.o,...,. .. _~ .. .,.,
Vehlcl6lnspectlon • Check and fill necaasary ftuldsl •
I :::r...:-~c:':.C"=.:='..=.:"11 t•AIIIn29mlnuteaorless• !&gt;leselvehlcles may bel !
I • Cll**l:-""' oNill 11"""""'1a.o,.. ._ ~· tl&lt;lra. ,
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H!p:IGt

calendar
Classjfieds ·
ComiCs
Edjtorjals
Obituaries

---- ----------~-r--------~--~-----,~---------~-------~

I

'a!dl(a

Ia eiia a- 12 . . . .

ll w.!~e~,:~onthe.~:_~~. I ~;
II

ith warm weather finally here,
local health
department officials are urging
. people to take steps now to protect
themselves and their families &amp;om
diseases carried by ticks and mosquitos.
These diseases include Rocky
l\1ounrain Spotted Fever and Lyme
Disease from ticks and encephalitis
and West Nile Virus from mosquitos.
Zane Beegle, R .S. , director of
environmental health at the Gallia
County Health Department, advises
· residents who participate in outdoor
activities to be aware of ehrlichiosis,
an illness similar to Rocky Moun- ·
. tain Spotted Fever, and carried by a
tick that is established in Jackson ,
and Lawrence counties in Ohio.
"The Lone Star tick, which car- ·
ries the Ehrlichia bacteria, has
migrated &amp;om Texas and has begun

to make its way further into our
area,'' Beegle said. "We believe that
the· ticks have come to the area
from migrating birds, and travelers
. and their pets, and it has been
found on cattle, dogs and deer. They
are prevalent., in
. wooded, brushy and
grassy areas.
While no recorded human cases
of ehrlichiosis have occurred the
region to date, two cases have been
reported in people who traveled to
Kentucky within the last year.
Symptoms of human ehrlichiosis
begin between one and 21 days
after infection and resemble those of
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever,
including high fever, headache, muscle aches, vomiting and loss of
appetite.
"Ehrlichiosis is an emerging disease, but has probably been around
for a long time and gone unrecognized;' Beegle added. "We have had
several ticks that were positively
identified as Lone Star ticks this year

'

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Low: IGt

Lotteries
OHIO
Pldc J: 1·3--6; Pldl4: Sc9c(lc8
•d I~ !: s-8- 1EZS·27

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81 .3.6 PtlrJ: 6+7 o.ilr4: 9-2·7-4
A2 C 2001 Ohio Vlhy Publilhins Co.

A3

Pleue ... Ticki.A:S

.......... Sdnooi,A:s

FUTURE USE- Use of Meigs Local School's District three
· buildings In Middleport, one of them seen above, will be the
topic of a study to be unveiled next week by an architect
retained to study how the buildings can be utilized. (Brian J.
Reed photo)

Groups line up against state in funding case
ing," Ohio Attorney General Betty
Montgomery argued in a court filing
prepared by three state lawyers. "B)' any
measure, the state has ·met the court's
standard."
The Ohio Supreme Court ordered the
state and the coalition of more than 500
schools suing over Ohio's education system. to ftle the arguments Monday.
The Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of School Funding said the state has

COLUMBUS (AP) - At least 15
groups urged the Ohio Supreme Court
on Monday to rule again that the state
has failed to fiX its school-funding sys.t~ m.
The state, in j!rritten arguments, said' it
has done what 'the court ordered in the
10-year-old lawspit over funding for primary and seccnldary education.
"Even when viewed quantitatively, ,the
sheer magnitude of the advancements
made in the system since 1991 is stagger-

·failed again to respond to the court.
"The srate has offered the court yet
another warmed-over version of the
same structurally flawed sys.tem already
twice rejected," Nicholas Pittner, the
coalition's lead attorney, said .in a court
filing.
The court plans to hear or:.l arguments
on Wednesday. On ·Friday, the Supreme
Court received 100 boxes of evidence In
the case.

Diabetes! "Walk Wllh Us!" --------------~
'

"Walk With Us" is a low·impact diabetes self-management
program that can help you feel your best. Join us at
Gallipolis City Park (or Wai·Mart Pharmacy Entrance
if it rains or is colder than 50 degrees) f!Nery
Wednesday in June at 10:00 am.

..

For more information, call

•'

Sponsored by the HMC Diabetes Education Deparlrmlnt.

(7.0) ··6·5080

'•.
.

'•

MIDDLEPORT - What i1
the best future use for Middlepott~ three school buildings?
A public hearing on the
results of a feasibility study - a
"best use" plan - which was
paid for, in. ,part, by supportive
Middleport High School
alumni, will be held next week,
and will . give residents an
opportunity to hear about the
building:;' conditions and an
architect's ideas about how the
buildings could best be used by
d'ie community once they are

vacated by the Meig:; Local :
School District.
The district will vacate the
bUilding:; in famr ofa new consolidated elementary · school
and new middle school which
will house studerits in the district beginning in 2003.
A citizens' conunittee, '\YOlk- :
ing under the auspices of the :
Middlepott Planning Commission, has headed up a fund-rais- :
ing program designed to raise :
the funds needed to prepare
plans for each of the building:;, :
and ro assist in financing the :
transfer of the real estate fiom
!pe Me~ Local district to the
Village Of Middleport. ·,
The school board has indicated its willingness to consider
returning the property to the
village, if a suitable use for the .
buildings GaD be determined

'

•

Quality:,your...!
I WHEEL ALIGNMENT II

Health department
qffidals warning of
outdoor·daftgers

•

~·

1

The Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family Services as
the Administrative/Fiscal Agent for the Meigs County Family
&amp; Children First Council Is seeking proposals to provide the
Help Me Grow Program (combining Early Start, Early
Intervention and Welcome Home programs) with the goal of
providing a seamless delivery of comprehensive blrth to
three services that are easily accessible and family friendly.
There will be a proposers conference tor all Interested
parties on June 21, 2001 at 9:00 p.m. at the Meigs Cou~ty
Department of Job &amp; Family Services, 3rd Floor, 175 Race '
Street, Middleport, OH 45760. At this conference tl:te
proposal and budget format will be described. Any
organization falling to attend will be Ineligible to submit a
proposal. ·
,1

OVP NEWS STAFF

......

31; Greer, Te-. 23; JaGiambl. Clakland,
22; EChavez, Cleldand, 21; EMartlnez,
Seattle, 20; SIIIWIIrl. Tononto, 19; Glaua,
Anat,.;m, 16; CE-. Bolton, 16.
TlaPLI!I -CGuzman, Mlnneaota. 9;
Suzuki, Seante, 8; Cedeno, D&lt;llrolt, 5;
JE.-maclon, Detroit, 4; Stewart, Toran·
to, 4; CEveran, Boston, 4; IISenchez,
Kansaa City, 4; Alicea, Kansaa City, 4;
RAiof'nar, Cleveland, 4,
HOMii RUNS -MRamlraz, Booton, 21;
ARodrlguez, Texas, 20; CDelgado, TO&lt;on·
to, 20; Thome, Cleveland. 19; Glauo,
Anaheim, 18; RPalmelro, Texas, 18; MOrdonez, Chicago, 17: JaGiambl, Oakland,
17; GVau~n. Tampa Bay, 17.
STOLEN lASES -suzuki, Seattle, 23;
Knoblauch, New Yoric, 23; Soriano, New
York, 20; Cedeno, D&lt;llrolt, 20; Mcl.emonl.
Seanle, 20; Halralon, Bahlmore, 15;
CGuzman, Mlnneeota, 14.
PITCHING {9 Oeclalona) -Clemans,
NewYork,6·1 , .889,3.95; Moyer, Sadie,
8·2, .800, 4.66; PMartlnez, Booton, 7·2,
.ns. 2.01; Redke, Mlnnesola, 8·3, .727,
· 3.43; Burba, Cleveland, 8·3, .727, 6.23;
Mitton, Minnesota, 7·3, .700, 3.63; Mul·
dar, Oakland, 6-4, .667, 3.82; Maya, Min·
nesota, 8-4, .667, 3.07; JMJohnaon, Bal·
timore, 6·3, .067, 3.24.
STRIKEOUTa -PMartlnez, Bosloo, 140;

BY MIWIIIA Ruuru

I

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
PITCHING (9 Doclelons)--Sonllllng, Ad·
zona, 11-2, .848, 2.76; Hampton, Col·
oradO, 9·2, .816, 3.08; Tapal"J, Chicago,
8-2, .600, 4.52; AAoed, New Vodc, 7·2,
.n8, 2.90; Eaton, San Olego, 7·3, .700,
4.78; WMIIIer, Houaton, 7·3, .700, 11.29; 6
are tied with 667.
·
STIIIKEOUTI -ROJohnliOn, Arizona,
159; Schilling, Arizona, 127; Wood,
Chicago, 120; Park, Los Angel81, 105;
Vazquez, Monlrael, 89; Burkett, Atlanta,
89; Altack&gt;, Colorado, se.
lAVES -Nan, San Franoloco, 20; Roclc·
er, "tlanta, 19; Shaw, Los Ahgelas, 19;
Meaa, Philadelphia, 17; Alfonaeca, Flori·
da, 14; Graves, Cincinnati, 14; Hoffman,
San Diego, 14,

,

4Ar II t'O.IIilr: N mb CMI.IMt

•

NA'IIONAL LEAGUE
IATTlNG -LGonzalez, Artzona, .356;
Alou, Houlton, .355; Aurtlla, San Francia·
co, .354; Pujola, St. Loula, .352; LWalker,
Colorado, .348; Halton, Colorado, .340;
NPeroz, Colorado, .337.
RUNS -Helton, Colorado, 70; LWalker,
Colorado, 61; LGonzatez, Arizona, 60;
Fklya, Florida, 56; Bonds, San Franclaco,
55; Kleako, San Diego, 53; SSoaa, Chlca·
go, 53.
Rill -Hel10n, Colof'ado, 79; LWalkar,
Colorado, 66; Bonds, Sen Francloco. 64;
SSooa, Chicago, 63; Pujols, St. Louis, 62;
LGonzalez, Artzona. 62; K~ako, Sen
Diego, 57.
HITI -LGonzalez, Artzone, 93; Aurilla,
San Francloco, 90; PujOia, St. Louie, 67;
Hetlon. Colorado, 84; NPerez, Colorado,
63; LWalker, Colorado, 82; BGllee, Pinsburgh, 81.
DOUBLES -Helton, Colorado, 23;
VGuarrero, Montreal, 22: Lowell, Fk&gt;rida,
21; Abreu, Philadelphia, 20; SOllee, Pitta·
bu~ . 20; Aurilla, Sen Francisco, 20;

BY IIRnAN J. REED
SENllNEL NEWS STAFF

LllilttSTM~

MeisS,

School study
to be unveiled
next week
Architect will
present best uses
for Middleport
buildings

Dia•••.dbacks
8,
T1gCSS3

Canlinals a.

Council agreed that such an
offense will be a minor misdemeanor, punishable by a fine up to
$100 for each occurrence. ·
In other matters, council approved
the lint reading of an ordinance that
would provide family health · insurance for the Pomeroy police chief
,.,. . . . No.... AJ

...
•

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

· Discover the Holzer Difference.

�PapAl

Ohio

: The Daily Sentinel

.lcr a III"!W I

cal Ohio cit} of Marysville.
-The chemicals include the pesticides
DDT and ~hlordane, which have been
banned beduse !hey a~e known or a~e
suspected to Quse c:ancet md other
be21th problems.
The creek joins a tributary of the
Scioto Riwt about 10 miles from a
soun:e of drinking water for Columbus.
City officials said contaminated w:ater
would be too diluted to pose a threat
once it reached the city's tmlttnent pbnt.
-In the 1990s, fish downstream from
the plant bad chlordane levels that
exceeded safe levels for human consumption, according to the U.S. Food
and Drug .Administration.
-A crew working for the Ohio
Department -ofTr.msportation disturbed

a Scotts bnd611 and rel=ed some DDT,
chlordane and other chemicals into
Crosses Run while building U.S. 33
between ColumbuJ and Marysville in
the early 1970s..
Scotts said it voluntarily addressed
environmental concerns, before the EPA
became involved.
But former Ohio EPA Director Donaid Scluegardus wrote that the company
didn't address environmental conditions
until1996.
"Since at leasr the late 1980s, Scotts has
known of, or had reason to Susp!'ct, environmental releases of hazardous substances, petroleum and other pollution .
from its Marysville facility," SchregardllSj
wrote in a letter to the company dated
Oct. 21, 1997.

02001

__

r....,. ""
.,o •••- ~••~•
.._ Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

-

said.

Ex-coundlman faces charge

Chance for rain returns to area

ch Iogllt
• gels year .•

·.
••
••
•.
·

:

found in two other wells.
Officials last week feared that solvents may have been
dumped in the West Branch ofNimishillen Creek.
Two monitoring wells the city of North Canton created to
test for a future water source contained high levels of PCE
(tetrachloroethane) and TCE (trichloroethylene) in concentrations that could cause drowsiness. dizziness or death. There are
about 700 wells in the area near this northeast Ohio city, serving about 1,500 to 2,000 people.
The residents were warned against using the water for drinking, cooking, brushing teeth, watering animals or bathing
infants. They also were told to ventilate their homes to allow
any fumes to escape.

CLEVELAND (AP) -A former Akron city councilman has
been charged with extorting $4,000 during his final weeks in
office in 1999.
·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wednesday night ... Mosdy
David A. Portis, 38, a two-term councilman fiom 1995-99,
Showen and thunderstorms cloudy with a chance of show- could face up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine if conreturn to the tri-county area ers and thunderstorms. Low in victed.
..w',edn_,~_,
b
·d 60s.
"I'm shocked," be said after pleading innocent at his amign·-7· .
t e nu
Highs on Wednesday will be
Extended forec:ast:
ment Monday in U.S. Di.s trict Court. "I can't believe it."
in the upper 80s. Overnight
Thursday.. .Pardy . cloudy
An indictment charges that Portis accepted the money from
lows will be around 65.
with a chance of showers and an unnamed person in the six-week period ending Dec. 3,
"bl
1999, after losing the Democratic primary in 5.eptember.
.
.
M ore ram IS posst e on thunderstorms. High near8
0 . . .
Thursday, and the extended
friday... Mostly cloudy with
outlook for the weekend con- a chance of showers and thun0
1ft 81
DAYTON (AP) -A new $20 million runway ramp should
increase the chances ofWright-Patterson .Air force Base landtains a chance for rain, with derstorms. Low near 60 and
temperatUres in the 70s.
high ,·n the upper 70s.
CANTON iAP) - A psychologistfwasb hsentetalncedflito one ing a long-ternf flying mission; offi.cials said Monday.
·gh
"ll
b
.
year
in prison •or selling cocaine out o er ospi o ce and
·
Sunset tom t W1
e at
Saturday... Mostly
cloudy two restaurants.
"This isn't the usual military construction project for the
9:03, and sunrise on Wednes- wt"tb a chance of show·ers. Low
•
Nancy Miller, 39, of Akron, was sentenced
on Monday to the base," said Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohio, said at a groundbreaking
daY is at 6: 03 a.m.
th
·
f. ceremony. "If you're going to have a flying base, you've got to
d h gh 75
Weather forecast:
in e upper 5Os an
i
mandatory minimum for three felony counts of cocaine tra .., gh M tly
L
· to 80.
ficking. She bad worked at Mercy Medical Center in Canton. have the proper stuff here. You've got to have a strong ramp,
.oni t... os c1ear. ow
d h
ld
fro
and that is what this is ail about."
in the lower 60s. Light and
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A
Stark County drug investigators sai s e so cocaine
m
· th e ;mer-"'
ber o f1i ce, a restaurant mu
· 'de t h e bosp1·tal and from an AkronWright-Patterson is headquarters. to the commands that
variable wind.
chanee o f showers m
· dea1s tbat took p1ace between
· August and develop new aircraft, and maintain the supply chain that keeps
Wednesday...Pardy cloudy noon and evening. Low in tbe area restaurant m
N
b
aircraft combat ready. But the base bas only one flying wing,
with a chance of showers and upper 50s and high in the
ovem er.
the 445tb.AirliftWingtbat operates 18 C-141 cargo planes.
thunderstorms. High in the lower 80s.
Millet, who pleaded guilty in May, did not speak at her sen· berore
Common Pleas Judge Judge. Sara Lt'ot· · Miller's
Base supporters fear that the 445th could disappear when Cupper 80s. Southwest wind 5
Monday...Partly c ! oudy. . A tencmg
"
to 1o mph. Chance of rain 4o chance of showers. Low in the attorney, Jeffrey Jakmides, said her downfall began with recre- 141s are phased out over the next few years and that Wright.gh
ational drug use.
. Patterson could become a base without· military planes.
percent.
upper 50s and b1 80 to 85.

Psy

J •I

Spill keeps park dosed
COLUMBUS (AP) -With tuition caps lifted, more Ohio
.
· . parents are expected to take advantage of a state program that
allows them to pay for their children's future college education
: at today's prices ..
: . The Ohio Tuition Trust Authority expects a rush of buyers
· of tuition units at$51 apiece before what likely will be a larger-than-usual annual increase on Oct. I. .
·
Maureen O'Brien, authority marketing director, on Monday
could not say exactly what the increase will be.
"But it's definitely going to be more this year than last year,"
she said.

Stlaft' works on voucher appeal
· COLUMBUS (AP) - .Attorney General Betty Montgomery has hired former Whitewater prosecutor K.eMeth
Starr to help Ohio appeal the school voucher case to the U.S.
Supreme Court.
Montgomery spokesman Joe Case said on Monday the office
is paying Starr's firm up to $10,000 a month for three months.
"We are trying to put the best foot forward·to make sure the
Supreme Court .takes l!P the 'case:• he said. "We think it's a
worthwhile investment."
The state is appealing a December ruling by the 6th U.S.
. • Circuit Court of Appeals that the use of tax dollars for tuition
· at religious schools is unconstitutional.
The money was spent on the state's five-year-old schoolvoucher program in Cleveland.

ralftp bod. es· well for base

N

Anchor Hocking gets buyer

WILMINGTON (AP)- Part of a state park•along Cowan
TOLEDO (AP)- Glassware maker Libbey Inc. is buying
Lake could remain closed for' several days while w;orken clean Anchor Hocking, the consumer and specialty ,glass business of
up a caustic chemical that spilled lfom derailed train cars into Newell Rubbertnaid, for $332 milliqn in cash, the eompanies
the southwestern Oliio lake.
announced Monday.
Sptcialists were taking samples of water from eowan Lake
Anchor Hocking manufactures and markets products that
and from the creek into which the 15,000 gallons of sodium include bakeware, ovenware, glasses, vases and industrial glass
bydro~ide solution spilled Sunday after the train derailed. items. It operates manufacturing and distribution facilities in
There was no indication the contamination bad gone from the . Lancaster, and Monaca, Pa., and employs about 1, 900 people.
creek into the lake, but officials closed the portion of the park
The acquisition follows Libbey's strategy of providing a
near the lake as a precaution.
.
broader range of high quality tableware products, said John F.
Other workers were treating the contaminated water with Meier, Libbey's chairman of the board and chief executive offiacetic acid and citrus acid to neutralize the chemically oppo- cer.
site sodium hydroxide, a base which is used to make soap. The .Libbey, the country's largest foodservice glassware supplier,
concentrated sodium hydroxide which spilled fiom the CSX has
glassware plants in Toledo, Shreveport, La., ~nd City of
freight train can burn skin on contact, state officials said Mon- Industry, Calif. It designs, manufactures and distributes ceramday.
· ic dinnerware, principally for foodservice establishments in the
CSX railroad officials initially said the chemical spilled from
one derailed tank car. But they revised that Monday and said
that a second derailed tanker may have also leaked, said Andy
Thompson, a spokesman with the 0hio Environmental Protection Agency.

u.s.

Man slain at gas pump

AKRON (AP) -A man was shot and killed as he sat in his
car next to a service station pump, and police were investigating whether road rage was to blame.
"It's probably the most obvious thing that stands out," Sgt.
Edward Moriarty said. "To our knowledge, be never got out of
the car."
·
Police Maj. Paul Callahan said . investigators were piecing
together circumstances in Saturday's death ofJeff Zack, 44, of
Akron, and were considering whether it was an attack involvCLEVELAND (AP) -The city wants to allow old indus- ing a motorcyclist. ·
trial lofts to be converted into live-in studios for artists.
"We're running the gamut, from road rage to whether it was
• The proposal was reviewed by a city council committee a hit on him," Callahan said .
Monday night and was referred to the full council for a vote
'
Thesday.
,
The new classification proposed by Councilman Joe Cimperman would allow vacant warehouses to be converted into
NORTH CANTON (AP) - Stark County health officials
,·
. on Monday lifted a five-day ban on well water after testing on ,
studios where artists both live and work.
"L~t this be a signal to people who want to develop our 57 home wells failed to find industrial solvents previously
vacant buildings: the door is open. Come on in:• Cimperman

City eyes loft conversion

HUGE SAVINGS
D1ya Same Aa C..h
DMIIr PtlfllalpltiOn Requited
Hurry, Oflor lnclo Juno 30, 2001

LOWELL C.

.......... 111. , ... ,,...1044. 1111111111, ••

County gets weii'W8ter OK

Family billed
for sending
remains home
•· CANFIELD (AP) - The
.: family of a U.S. Army civilian
: contractor killed in Vietnam
in 1967 was billed $700 for
shipping home his recently
identified remains.
•
"That's not what be died
· : for," said Ronald Degnan of
: · Canfield, brother of the vic: tim, Jerry Degnan. The
: remains, wrapped in an Army
; : blanket, were flown along
· : with a flag in a plywood box
: : to Cleveland.
· •: The Youngstown native was
:: a civilian working for a coot tractor wh_en he was killed.

•
'

NOTICE
The Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family Services as
the AdmlnlstratlvelFiscal Agent for the Meigs County Family
&amp; Children First Council Is seeking proposals to provide the
Help Me Grow Program (comblnlng Early Start, · Early
Intervention and Welcome Home programs) with the goal of
providing a seamless delivery of comprehensive birth to
three servlc;es that are easily accessible an_d family friendly.
There will be a proposers conference for all ·h'ltereated
parties on June 21, 2001 at 9:00 p.m. at the Meigs County
Department of Job &amp; Family Services, 3rd Floor, 175 Race
Street, Middleport, OH 45760. At this conference t.he
proposal and budget format will be described. Any
organization falling to attend will be Ineligible to submit a
proposal.

(6) 17, 18, 19,

Corbin,

LOCAL BRIEFS
Grande/Rio Grande Community College.
The schedule comes as the
result of the May 1 announceRACINE
,
Tuppen
ment
that the Meigs Mines
ATHENS - Norman J. Baxter, 80, fisher Road, Athens,
PJains-Chester Water District Would be acquired by CONdied Monday. June 18,2001 at his r:eidence.
Born Jan. 24, 1921 in Hemlock Grove, son of the late james has issued a boil advisory for SOL Energy, a Pennsylvania
company, at the end of June,
and Lena Baxter, he was retired fiom Philip Sporn Pl:nt ;at Sutton Township.
The area affected begins at and that all SOCCO employNew Haven, W.Va., which later became AEP and where be w:as
· a unit supervisor.
the intenection of County . ees would be terminated at
A gnduate ofTuppers Plain$ High School. he w:as a World Road 28 and Greenwood that time.
Rio Grande's summer
War II ~teran. serving in the European Theatre, where be Cemetery Road, including
received the Combat In&amp;ntry Badge.
•
Tackerville and going south to schedule for min en will
Surviving are his wife, Gilda Ronchi Baxter; two daughters, Ohio 124, then east on 124 to include beginning courses in
Shirley Wright and Tina Jeffen, both of Athens; a son, Charlie Dortas.
writing, communication, col{Debbie) Baxter of Parkenburg, W.Va.; a son-in-law, Cosmas
Customen in the affected lege preparation and career
Papadopolulos of Greece; 10 grandchildren and 12 great- area are asked to boil their development. Classes begin
grandchildren; and three brothers, Clyde Baxter ofAlbany, and cooking and drinking water July 9 at the Meigs Center in
for three minutes before con- Middleport and on the main
John Baxter and Homer (Irene) Baxter, both of Pomeroy. ·
He was also preceded in death by a daughter, Renata suming. San\ples will be taken campus at Rio Grande.
Papadopolulos.
Dr. Greg Sojka, Rio's
and the public will be notified
provost and vice president for
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in Jagers &amp; Sons Funeral . once the remits are received.
· Home, Athens, with John King and Wayn~ Andrick officiating.
academic affairs, said the proBurial will be in Alexander Cemetery. friends may call at the
AaeftaJ
gram will include field trips to
funeral home from 7-9 tonight.
~
a number of campus locations
Military graveside rites will be conducted by K.T. Crossen
and labs. Designated days
Post21.
throughout the sumin.er will
GALLIPOLIS - The Gal~ introduce students to various
lia-Jackson-Meigs Board of campus programs.
Alcohol, Drug Addition and
"We will offer practical
Mental
Health
Services
has
transition
experience for
DAYTON -Word bas been received here of the death of
Howard S. Smith, 78, Dayton, formerly of Pomeroy, on Tues- reorg;1nized public mental SOCCO employees and their
he2lth services in the three spouses, as they move fiom the
day. May 15, 2001.
counties.
world of work to the world of
Born in Pomeroy onAug. l2,1922,he was the son of the bte
Effective July 1, all children education:· Sojka said. "This
Waid and Ola Smith and was a graduate of Pomeroy High
to
age 18 will be served by set of courses will allow them
School.
I He was the owner of Corzatt Plumbing and Howard S. ACCESS:A Center for Coun- to earn required general eduSmith Repair Service, and was a veteran of the U.S..Army Cav- seling, Education and Social cation credits and to· become
Services. Woodland Centers aware of the educational and
alry during World War II.
He was also preceded in death by his sister, Kathleen Getter. Inc. will continue to serve career opportunities available
to them, whether they choose
Surviving are his wife, Ruth L. Smith; a son and d:lughter" adults 18 and up.
"Over the past several years, to pursue those opportunities
in-bw, Rodney B. and Karen Smith; three brothen arid one sister-in-law, Bill .Smith of Dayton, Homer Smith of Louisville, we have seen an increase in at Rio Grande or another
Ky., and James and Connie Smith of Pomeroy; two grandchil- the prevelance and severity of institution of higher educa· "
mental illness and emotional non.
dren; and several nieces and nephews.
Full funding for the proServices were held at the George C. Martin Funeral Home · problems in the adult and
child populations;' said Ron gram is available through the
in Dayton on May 19,2001. .
Memorial contributions can be made to the .American Can- Adkins, executive director of Community Action agencies
cer Society.
the agency.
. of Gallia and Meigs Counties
"At the same time, funding and Athens, Hocking and Yinfor mental he2lth services has ton counties.
juvenile detention facility, and not kept pace with the
making part of the jail or deten- increasing service demands.
tion space available to the coun- The
reorganization will
Pep AI
ty and ntber jurisdictions - fur improve services by allowing
POMEROY - The foleach agency to specialize in a lowing civil lawsuits have
a price.
The Ohio Department of
Plans for the Middle School specific population," he added. been filed in Meigs County
Education requires a plari fur use building. the gotbiv«y!e buildWoodland Centen Inc. will Common Pleas Court:
be in place before a local school ing on South Third Avenue continue to provide Crisislline
o Home National .Bank,
district can seD or commit a which once housed Middleport and 24-bour emergency ser- Racine, agains~ Bill E.
· building to another entity.
High ~bool, are l.es5 conaete, vices for adults and children. Buchanan, Thppers Plains, and
· . In addition to· demoping a . bUt discUssiOns aoout"tb.e' bt.iild- . Children' keen in emerg.!hey others, alleging default on a
practical use fur the bui1c1ing. ing have included using it as a services will be referred to an mortg;~ge agreement in the
. which wiD be ofbenefit to Mid- community center, as home to a appropriate service for stabi- amount of$34,621.13;
. dleport and the surrounding college branch, or as space for lization and ACCESS will
o
Beneficial Ohio Inc.,
communities, the conunittee agency offices or other relltal provide follow-up and ongo- Elmhurst, Ill., against Lee
hopes they can be saved fiom space.
ing care as needed.
Anna Musick, Portland, and
. the wrecking baD, the only t'ate
Over
the
next
several
others, alleging default on a
The middle school's auditoriwhich can betall the buildingl if um is seen as a particularly valu- weeks, Woodland Centen Inc. promissory no.te in the
· a new and suitable use is not able asset to the community. ·
will be referring ongoing amount of $48;282;
found before they become
cases to ACCESS. Beginning
o federal National MortThe committee, with ·input
immediately,
vacant.
re!idents
requestgage Associa~on, Chicago, Ill.,
fiom the general public, will .
'
.
Bill Childs, who bas headed
mg non-emergency sernces against Angela L. Capehart,
likely zero in on more specific
up the citizens' conunittee,.said
for .children . should .call Pomeroy, a~4 others, alleging
uses fur the buildingl once archi- ACCESS
. Monday that $4,200 bas been
at 1-800-562-5565. default on a loan agreement in
tect Stephen Gagner reveals the
raised in contributions from
The number for WCI and .the amount of$25,981.65;
results of his feasibility study. The
; Middleport alumni, and that
Crisisline, 1-800-252-5554,
o Home National Bank,
public hearing will be the 6nal will remain the same.
$2,000 of that bas been comRacine, against Carolyn . S.
bined with $8,000 in gr.mt funds opportunity fur input before the
Curtis, Jackson, alleging
default on a Joan agreement in
· · from the Ohio Governor's citizens committee prepares its
final
report
on
the
project,
: Office of Appalachia to finarice
the amdunt of$4,91.58.
which
is
due
June
30.
MIDDLEPORT
- A • Donald · K. Wooten,
:pn architectural study and best
"Public
input
is
important:'
schedule of summer classes Albany, against James W Lath· use plan for the buildin~
"Childs
said.
"The
committee
designed to meet the educa- am Ill, Athens, and others,
· The ba,lance of the gr.mt and
·
hopes
that
many
residents
will
.
tiona! needs of Southern alleging personal injury suslocal funding will be used to pay
plan
to
attend
Tuesday's
meeting
Ohio
Coal
Company wried in a June 25, 1999
legal expenses and other costs
and
express
their
wishes
for
these
employees facing hyoffi at the motor vehicle . accident,
associated with the aansfer of
building!.
end of June, is planned by the · demanding judgment in
the real estate, Childs said
"from
the
beginning,
the
University
of
Rio excess of $25,000.
The study's results will be
'unveiled at ·next week's public committee bas felt strongly that
hearing, and residents will be · there should be a specific purt&lt;;&gt;r's office provide financial
afforded an opportunity to pose fur the money we have
information on a 1-mill levy,
express their ideas for the build- raised, and that there should be
full accountability for that
which, if implemented, would
~·
froniPapAl
money:·
.
Tlie Village of Middleport·bas
go toward maintenance costs
The meeting will be at 7 p.m.
.expressed interest in using the
for Beech Grove Cemetery.
elementary school on Pearl at Feeney-Bennett American and agreed that possible
During open discussion,
Street.as a new municipal build- Legion Annex, South FOurth amendments would be added council deliberated on variduring the second and third
ing and village jail facility or Avenue.
ous street repairs and we·ed
readings.
Council also approved a let- problems located throughout
ter requesting that the audi- the village.

Wadvlsoly
Issued

feOIJiftized

School

Suits filed

11om

Class schedule

Noise

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The main number Is 992·2158.
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ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4. 00

Pap AI

, but no cases of the disease.
" Unlike the more abundant American Dog tick, the
female Lone Star tick is very
small and easily distinguished
from any other tick by a
white dot or star in th e center of her Back. The dog tick
does transmit Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, but it has
not been proven to transmit
Lyme Disease."
Lyme Disease, the most
frequently diagnosed tickborne problem, is a bacterial
infection that can cause skin,
joint, heart and nervous system problems . Humans are
not the only ones who can
contract the disease; pets are
also susceptible. The tiny
deer tick is the primary carrier of Lyme disease.

Beegle said mosquito control spraying bas begun in
th e region to help reduce
th e mosquito population and
the possibility of the West
Nile Virus.
West Nile Viru s can cause
encephalitis in humans and is
usually spread between birds
and mosquitos. Crows and
blue jays are especiaJly sensitive to the virus, and when
large numbers of these birds
are fo und dead, it is a good
indi cator the virus bas spread
to that region.
"We are trying to spray
every night th e weather
allows,'' he said. " And we try
to spray at least every two
wee ks to break the breeding
cycle.
" It is not feasible ot practical to believe that we can kill
every mosquito out there.
We're not going to eliminate
the problem, just curtail it."

Grand opening

· Howard S. Smith

www.mydallysentlnel.com

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

TulltiAJ'. . . . 11. 2.1

Scotts' chemicals polluted land, waterways .
COLUMBUS (AP) - The nation's
largest supplier of do-it-)'Oundf lawn
and g;~rden products has cbJmged the
environment with DDT and other
chemicals, The Colul)lbus Dispatch
reported Monday.
The Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency and nate atromey general's office
have been negotiating for mo~ than four
yean a legal settlement with the Scoas
Co. over a compbint of environmental
damage.
The newspaper reported that records
from the Ohio EPA show:
-Dangerous levels of pesticides and
herbicides. were seeping from Scotts
bndfills and waste bgoons into Crosses
Run, a creek that meanden through the
company's 173-acre complex in the cen-

Pomlf'OY, Middleport, Ohio

11un!My, June 11, 2001

Shelves were stocked with merchandise Monday In preparation for the grand opening of Whitley's Liquor Agency on the
corner of Main and Court streets in Pomeroy. Clifford Whitley,
owner and proprietor of the new liquor store, is seen here with
both family members and employees during the official ribboncutting ceremony. Entertaining customers during the store' s
grand opening was Elvis Impersonator Pat Morgan. (Tony M.
Leach photo)

.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-~

Aroll Coal- 25~

Akzo-421.

AmTechSBC- 40
Ashland Inc. - 38).

AT&amp;T -201.

Bank One - 38~

Bob Evans - 1B

BorgWamer- 44~

Champion -

a),

Channing ShOps - 5%
City Holding- 10
DuPont-48%
Federal MOgul- 2~

Rocl&lt;well - a7Y
.
Rocky Boots - 4 ~

USB-21\
Gannett - eol.
General Elect!io - 49
GKNLY'-9~
Ha~ey Davidson -

Kmart-11),
Kroger- 25

L.anda End -

48~

an.

Ltd. -15
Oak Hill Flnanclal-14 ~
OVB-25
BBT-35%
Peoples - 19),
Pmmler- 1:1

RDShell-80 ~

Sears-39%
Shoney's -l.
Wa~Mart - 48l.
Wendy's - 24).
Wot1111ngton- 12
Daily stock reports am
lhe 4 p.m. closing
quotes of lhe pmvloos
day's transactions, pro- ·
vided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc.

MORELOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

FREE
TV!
WITH PURCHA/E OF A LANE• RECLINER.
IELEtTEO fTYLEl ONLY.

�Page AS :

I

· =

'opinion

The Oilly Sentinel

I

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

1U11d.,. ..... 11, 2MI

111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2158 • Fu: 992·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich

Gene1111 Manager

••
Winner

GALLIPOLIS - Robert Hennesy, chairman of the Woodland Centers Inc. Board ofTrustees, announced the retirement
of Malcolm Orebaugh. eJGeCUtive director. Orebaughi retirement is e&amp;ctive
Aug. 31.
He is one of the original trustees of
the Gallia-Jacbon-Meigs Community
Mental Health Center Inc. and has been
involved with mental health planning.
programming and services for more
than 35 years.
Orebaugh has been professionally
active, serving as pteSident of the Ohio
Chapter of the Association of Mental
Health Administnton, ~gional gowr~
nor of the association, and p~ident of
the National Association of Mental Health Administrators.
Other activities include membership in the Ohio Council of
Behavioral Healthcare Providers, where he has served ·as a
trustee, a state program chairman and a public policy committee member.

The Daily Sentinel

Charlet W. Govey
Publlaher

. . ....,..... 11. 2011 .

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

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NATIONAL VIEWS

Ecoterrorism 5 reach limits
needed sdentific research
• The Herald, Everett, Wash., on ecoterrorism' They don't
like people. They hate learning. And their crimes are blighting
the Northwest.
.
But, hey, they care about animals and trees, Or so they would.
have us believe....
. Federal investigators are still checking, but the fire at the
University of Washington's Center for Urban Horticulture
. appears to have been the work of arsonists. At almost the same
· time, explosives were used to set fire at a commercial tree nursery in Oregon.
Those new attacks came as investigators continue to probe
other apparent terrorist acts by environmental and animal
~ights activists, including two last month in Snohomish County. ... .
... The attack on the UW's horticulture center took a sickening toll on knowledge, claiming records of lifetime research by
professors. The fire destroyed one professor's slides of the teveg.etation of Mount St. Helens. As in previous attacks at Washing~on State University research facilities, the destruction actually
impedes efforts to create a healthy relationship between
humankind and the Earth ....
... With universities increasingly targeted, the state Legislature
· must 'make sure that adequate security resources are available to
: prevent attacks. And federal authorities must continue or
increase their efforts to apprehend the criminals. No matter
what the level of activity so far, people who hate human society and human learning are a danger that must be faced.
· • The New York Times, MJ the embassy bombings verdict:
Diplomatic sensitivities and legal barriers make it difficult for
the American government to prosecute terrorist attacks against
United States citizens .and installations abroad. But when such
cases can be brought to trial fairly, and the evidence of guilt is
·compelling, the result can be a measure or justice for horrifYing crimes. Yesterday's convictions of four men accused of
as5isting or carrying out the 1998 bombing of two American
embassies in East Africa met that test. The case presented by
prosecutors was convincing and the verdicts were fully justi•

.

~d

... Terrorism trials, especially thos e with foreign- born defendants, place a special burden on prosecutors and the court to
ensure that the rights of the defendants in a criminal case are
protected. Those rights were protected in this case. As the trial
opened we expressed concern about Judge Leonard Sand's oral
ruling that confessions made by three of the defendants while
in custody in Africa were admissible even though the three
were not offered lawyers at the time they were questioned. But
we were reassured by a later written decision by the judge, who
ruled that foreign suspects interrogated abroad by American
officials are entitled to the same right against self-incrimination
as suspects in the United States. Judge Sand found that in the
embassy bombing case, the three defendants in question had
been adequately advised of their rights by American investigac
~ tors.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Bush joins trend in indulging fellow baby boomers
lfWorld War II was foaght by the "greatest generation;' baby boomers are the most
self-indulgent, which the current crop of
leaders is about to prove by blowing the
nation's enormous budge1 surplus.
A new study by the bipartisan Concord
Coalition warns that President Bush's tax
cuts and Congress' spending patterns are
likely to deplete the 10-year on-budget
surplus of S3.1 trillion, wipe out reserves
meant for Medicare and furce a new raid
COLUMNIST ·
on' Social Security.
In other words, instead of preparing to
help pay for their own astronomical retire- er example of indulgence).
ment costs, the baby boomer generation's
None of Bush's original tax cut was
leaders are getting ready to squander the intended for the working poor, who don't
surplus -- and leave their children holding pay ·income tax but do pay payroll taxes .
the bag.
This was . somewhat corrected by ·ConIf former President Bill' Clinton's per- gress' making the child tax credit refundsonal morality and self-absorption repre- able.
sented the cultural excesses of the boomer
Still, the biggest part.of the final tax cut
legacy, Bush represenlll economic and ide- goes to the highest income groups. And as
ologjcal self-iru:julgence. :
a recent Congrdsional Budget Office
Bush, unlike Cli~t9n, is Willing to risk study shows, in the past two decades, the
political wrath to refurm · Social Security pre-tax annual. income of the top 1 perand Me~icare, But his tax cuts are so large cenr of household~ increased by 142 perthat he has left too little money to pay for cent while the income for the lowest 20
alterations to these programs.'
percent' ~ropped by 3 .4 percent.
Even reduced to $1.35 trillion by ConThe Concord Coalition's director, Bob
gress, his 10-year tax cut will cost at least B'IXby, &lt;;9n
' fi rms w h at 0 ernocrats have
$1.66 trillion, counting the money the been c~gm·g, namely that, beyond the tax
government will have to pay in interest.
That will reduce the non-Social Security cuts,' new spending commitments in the
surplus to $1.44 trillion.
just passed Congressional budget resoluThis number assumes that Congfes.• tion will sap the surplus further, as will tax
actually allows the tax cuts to end in 2011 and spending actions yei to come.
under a dubious "sunset" provision written
The bottom I_ine, Bixby 6gures, is that
into the tax bill to limit the cost.
the Soctal Secunty surplus, mstead of pro·
Besides being pricey and forcing spend- viding $2.5 trillion to pay down the debt
ing limits on arguably needed social pro- • and strengthen the economy, will only be
grams, such as long-term medical care $1.6 trillion.
insurance and upgrades to child care,
Instead of being reserved or used to
Bush's tax cut goes ·disproportionately to fin.ance private savings accounts to secure
people who already are doing well (aneth- the retirements of younger, post-baby

Morton
Kondr.lcke

boom workers, $900 million of the surplus
will be spent, he calculates.
Do the math. After the tax cuts the nonSocial Security surplus is $1.44 trillion.
Congress' budget resolution anticipates
new spending of $550 billion, the larg~-'51
item being $300 billion for a prescription
drug 'benefit for Medicare.
That is generally considered nowhere
near enough to adequately finance the
benefit - $500 billion is the preferred
Democratic figure - · and it includes just
$28 billion to help uninsured workers buy
health insurance between oow and 2004,
and nothing thereafter.
Counting in debt-servjce costs for this
spending, Bixby figures that' the nonSocial Security surplus will be down to
$490 billion before Congress and Bush
take some almost certain tax actions and
before realistic spending expectations are
figured in.
Extending the . research-and~lop­
ment tax credit ;md other tax laws will cost
$100 billion, and adjusting the alternative .
minimum tax so that middle-class people
aren't clobbered by it will cost $250 billion.
·
Then there's new spending. The CBO
calculates the surplus based onthe notion
that government programs will increase at
the rate ofinflation .(3 percent).
Bush and Congress are pledging to hold
spending to 4 percent. But over the past
three years, the Republican Congress and
Clinton increased it by an average of 6
percent.
To blow a treasure like ·a $3.1. trillion
surplus is irresponsible. Fortunately, there's
time to change the game plan -. after it's
been the main.topic, of the next election.

To split or not to split

As a personnel coordinator, Skidmore handles all aspects of
human resources for the Gallipolis Call Center. Her responsibilities ·include intervi~ing and hiring communicators, and
compiling an~ updating personnel records.
·

·Houdashelt named loan Oltpnator

Joins association

MARIETTA -Julia Houdashelt has 1-:n named the new
loan originator for southeastern Ohio by USDA/Rural DevelopHmendast.h
h . di
"' th
'th Gall. .
. . 1a.ou
e1t wa_s ous~ng rector 10r ~ years Wl
Me1gs Commumty Acnon Agency, and pr1or to that posmon,
was marketing and development director for Tri-County Community Action ~ency, and also former director of the Meigs
County Economtc ~evelopment Office.
.
. .
She will now serVIce a SIX-county area processmg applications
for Section 502 Homeownership loans and Section 504 Repair
loans and grants on a laptop computer.
. .
Houdashelt has conducted · homeownership counseling for
-several years to educate people about the benefits of buying a
home instead of renting.
She has covered an array of topics involved in ·the purchase of
a home during the course that assist participants in saving
money by making informed consumer decisions.
Anyone interested in Rural Development housing programs
or repair loan programs can call 740-37J-7113 for an application. Houdsahelt' will then arcinge 'to meet with ihe eligible
applical).t to continue processing their application.
Information on Rural Development programs can visit the
web site at www.rurdev.usda.gov. or e-mail Carql.Costanzo@oh.usda.gov. at the Marietta office.

Home National Bank in Racine, Ray
Karr ofWesam Construction, Cheshire,
and Jennifer Sheets, a partner in the law
firm of Little, Sheets and Warner, ·
Pomeroy, have been chosen to serve on
the financial institution's board.
~The addition of these two outstanding individuals gives us representation
from additional areas of the county;'
said Nease. "Their beliefS in a strong,
locally owned and operated banking
institution are consistent with the phi,.....,.-., losophy and goals of the Home
National Bank."
Sheets is a graduate of Ohio State
University and the Capital University
Law School. In addition to her service
to many area boards and civic organizations, she is president of the Ohio State
Board of Education.
Karr graduated from Ohio State
University in 1973 and formed Wesam
Construction Co. with his brother in
1978. He has also served on the Eastern
Local School Board for nine years.

Gallipolis, Ohio .resident Jesse Jones won a John Deere Riding
Mower as part of the 43rd aMiversary of Foodland In the tristate area. Jones' name was drawn from entries su!lmitted at
58 Foodland locations In West Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky and Vir·
glnia. Pictured with the new mower are, from left, Twin Rivers
Foodland Manager Bob Dangerfield, Foodland owner Bob East·
man, Jones and Brent Eastman, Foodland vice president and
director of sales and promotions. (Michele Carter photo)

EWINGTON - CCRAngus Farm of Ewington is a new ·
member of the American Angus Association, said Dick Spader,
executive vice president of the national organization with headquarters in St. Joseph, Mo.
·
James Brumfield of Gallipolis is also a new member Spader
said
·
'
With more than 35,000 active adult and junior members, the
group is the largest beef cattle registry in the world. Its computerized records include detailed information on more than
13 million registered Angus.
·

Bank names new directors
RACINE -'IWo local individuals were recendy elected to
serve on the Home National Bank's Board of Directors.

Newdiredor
POMEROY Kerry Sheppard,
R.N, was recendy named director of
nursing at Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center in Pomeroy.
She comes to the facility from Arbors
of Marietta, one of Rocksprings
Rehab's sister facilities, where she was
director of Sub-acute Care.

Joins staff ·
Sandra Rayburn; OTR/L, has joined
the staff of the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy from .the
Holzer Inpatient Rehab in Gallipolis.·
She is a graduate of Eastern Ken- ' ·
tucky University and is working on her ·
master's degree.

Raybum

E-MAIL YOUR BUSINESS NEWS:

news@mydailysentinel.com

. .'

New coorcll-.ator hired
GALLIPOLIS - Karen Skidmore joined lnfoCision Management Corp. as a personnel coordinator in its operatiom
department:
.
The Gallipolis resident most recently served as vice pmident
of travel agency operations at AAA South Central Ohio in
Portsmouth. Skidmore began her new position in June at the
company's facility in Gallipolis.

Healthy.Sfar!.

Nasdaq drops below 2,000

(Mort011 Kondracke is exeaJtive editor .o f Roll
Call, tile tlewspaper of Capitol Hill.)

NEWYORK (AP) -Wall
Street punished technology
.stocks for a seventh straight
session Mo.nday on fears the
sector's worst days are still
ahead. The selloff sent . the
Nasdaq c~mposite index to its
first close below 2,000 since
April.
The pessimism spread to the
broader market, limiting the
modest gains achieved by a
handful of manufacturing and
retail ·stocks. Even betterthan-expected results from
Oracle after the close of regular trading weren't expected to
cheer weary investors.
"This is a 'c omplete abdication .o f anything having to do
. with technology and the overlapping market can't deal. with
this. unrelenting selling;' said
Larry Wachtel, market analyst
at Prudential Securities. "Nortel, JDS Uniphase ... all the
heroes of yesteryear are being
decimated becau~e people are
worried about when their

KILPATRICK'S VIEW
'

'

GALLIPOLIS James Barcus, a
technical support specialist major at
Gallipolis Career Cnllege, recendy
passed a certification examination
offered through the Microsoft Office
User SpecWist (MOUS) progr.un. He
received a certificate from GCC Computer Services director David W. House.
Barcus passed the examination at the
expert-level in Microsoft Powerpoint.
The examination called for on-line
~......~ applications to be desigited and adminBarcua
istered by Microsoft via the internet.
GCC is approved as a Mierosoft Office
User ~pecialist testing center.

Acrording to Bill Nease, president of .

that remaiJls the ·question

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, June 19, the. !70th day of 2001. There
are 195 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 19, 1934, the Federal Co mmunications Commission was created.
On .this date:
In 1586, English colonists sailed from Roanoke Island,
N.C., after failing to establish England's first permanent settlement in America.
In 1862, slavery was outlawed in U.S. territories.
In 1910, Father's Day was celebrated for the first time, in
Spokane, Wash.
In 1917, during World War I, King GeorgeV ordered the
British royal family to dispense with German titles and surnames. The family took the name "Windsor."
In 1953, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, convicted of conspiring to pass U.S. atomic secrets to the Soviet Union,
· were executed at Sing Sing Prison in Ossining, N.Y.
In 1961, the Supreme Court struck down a provision in
Maryland's ·Constitution requiring state officeholders ·to
profess ~ · belief in God.
·
In 1963, Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova returned
: to Earth after spending nearly three days as the first woman
in space.
In 1964, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was approved after
surviving an 83-day Senate filibuster.
.
: In 1977, Pope Paul VI proclaimed a 19th-century
:Philadelphia bishop, John Neumann, the first male U.S.
saint.
In 1999, Britain's Prince Edward married commoner
.Sophie R.hys-Jones in Windsor, England.

earnings
are gomg to
improve."
The Nasdaq composite
index closed down 39.80 at
1,988.63,according to preliminary calculations, its worst
finish since April16, when the
index closed at 1,909.57.
The Dow Jones industrial
average managed a small
advance, thanks to gains in a
handful of non-tech issues,
rising 21.74 to 10,645.38, its
first advance since last Tuesday.
The broader Standard &amp;
Poor's .500 index fell 5. 93 to
I ,208.43.
Technology was again a
focus of investors, who have
shied away from the sector on
concerns that its performance
won't recover until 2002.
\ Although second-quarter
earnings were expected to ' be
horrible, WaD Street has had a
hard time adjusting to .the
sp•te of corporate earmngs
warnings that have been
appearing recently.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Church
of Christ will be holdi~g a dinner
on Friday from 5·7 p.m. at the
church. Everyone is welcome to

Is it easy to apply?
YES! You can call the Meigs County Department 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.
There is no face-to·face interview.

,

Tha Community Calendar II

publl11iad a·• • ,.,.. •rvlce to
non-profit groupt wl1hlng to
announce meatlnga and apeclaleventa.
The calandar
Ia not
datlgned to promote salaa or
tund-r~l•ra ot any type. Items
are printed only aa 1p1ca permill and cannot be guarantied lo be prlntad a specific
null!bar of days.

Use the Chart Below to see if
you qualify:
Family Size

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

2 ------------------- $968

3-----------------$1,220
4-----·-----------$1,471
s--~--------······ $1,723

Healthy Start
With Credible Insurance

Without Credible Insurance

(Physician &amp; Inpatient healtb coverage)

(Physician &amp; Inpatient bealth coverage)

*Monthly Income
GuideUnes

.2 ·············---~ $1,452

attend thle event.

Healthy Families

6 ••••••••••••••••• $1,97s

Family Size

LOCAL EVENTS
THURSDAY ,
POMEROY - Meigs County
Treasurer Howard Frank to meet
with County Commissioners and
elected officials during regular
commissioners' meeting, 10 ·
a.m. Thursday, to discuss coun·
ty's tlnanclal condition.

Healthy lamflta

3--············---$1,829
4--·············--$2,207
5 --·····---~------ $2,584
6 ········--······· $2~962

Family Size

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

2--·-···········--$1,935
3--·············--$2,439
4··········-··---- $2,942
5··-····.······---- $3,445
6 ---·········----- $3,949

• Even If your family's Income Ia higher, you may still ba abla to get free Healthy Start coverage for your klda.

992•2117

~~all now for more Information.

1·800-992·2608
•

•

.I

\

�•

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

looltingfor suaess, Awe B3
Di4mond Roundup, Page 86
Loco~

Page II
••••.,.. J

Tl.JEin\v's

HIGHLIGHTS

........

r:1VP CORRESPONDENT

. . . . Operation!
For wet or

dry pickup

COLUMBUS (AP)- The
Ohio State University football team has elected quarterback Steve Bellisari, defensive
tackle Mike Collins, linebacker Joe Cooper and fullback Jamar Martin as co-cap-

tains.
Belliwi and Cooper were
co-captains on last year's team
and are the fifth and sixth
players in Ohio State history
to be elected as two-time i:ap-

the three Spartan runs.
The Spartans made it 6-0 in the
second inning, with two outs Steir
doubled and Guinther reached first
on a passed ball after a strike out. Jessie
Brunton foUowed with a double and
another Mei~ fielding miscue made it
6-0 Athens.
Meigs scored a run in the bottom o(
the third inning, Nick Dertwiller
looped a double down the right field
line. Dertwiller moved to third on a
passed ball and scored on a single off
the bat of Michael Warren.
But Athens came back with two
more ·runs in the top of the fourth

inning. Justin Guinther walked and
Brunton doubled to deep left-center
field. .Brunton scored · on a single by
Jason McCumber for a 9-1 Athens
lead.
Meigs added another run in the of
the fourth inning, Andy Davis singled
and moved up on a wild pitch. Davis
scored on a single by Brandon Hill.
Athens added three more runs in
the fifth inning, Wayne Dicken singled
and moved to third on a pair of wild
pitches. Two more walks loaded the
bases and Jason McCumber cleared
the bas~ with a double down the left
field lirie.

a lot ·to know
your teammates .I'CJpect you
enough to want you to be
one of their leaden," said Bellisari, whose brother, Greg,
was co-captain of the 1996
team.
Bellisari has started 22 · con~
secutive games and ranks sev-·
enth in career passing yardage
at Ohio State. Collins led the
Buckeyes' line in tackles last
·
season with 46.
Cooper was second on the
team with 80 tackles, and
Martin, who is used primarily
as a blocker, started every ·
game for the first time last
year.

Instantly
converts vac to
powerful blower
Eliminates
unexpected
disconnections

Baffe:lto
appeal

suspension
LOS ANGELES (AP) An attorney for Bob Baffert
said the nation's leading thoroughbxcd:' ~w.ill ~peaL
!tis 60!day sulpemion for a
positive drug test on one of
his hones 13 months ago.
Baffert trained Point Given
to victories in the Prealtness
and Belmont stakes this
month - the third time since
1997 one of his hones won
two-thirds of the Triple
Crown - and the swpension
could keep him . out of the
summer's biggest races.

Low profile design
eliminates tipping over

Reyes dose to

Deluxe Tool
Basket

retum

Provides convenience in
storing accessories

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Series

16 Gallon 6.0 HP

Wet/DryVac

CINCINNATI Reds
left-handed reliever Dennys
Reyes played catch Monday
and felt good about his elbow.
Reyes, on the disabled list
since May 30 with tendinitis,
threw 50 pitches from ;about
60 feet in the outfield without a ptoblem. He plans to
throw in the bullpen on Tuesday, the next big test.

(

pleased
Lucas

hiring. ,
f

I

#159653 .·

•

CLEVEL~' (AP) -The
Cleveland Ca ·ers are naming
their new head
John Luc
coach exactly two months alter
they fired Randy Wittman.
And Chris Gatling says the
wait was worth it.
"He's perfect fur Cleveland;'
said Gatling. a
agent who
played for the Cavs last season.
"He~ exacdy what they needed, a coach who can mdtivate
guys and get them to play han!
every night:'
Lucas, whose previow NBA
h~ad coaching experience
includes stops in San Antonio
and Philadelphia, was scheduled
to be introduced as Oeveland's
13th coach during a news conference Thesday at Gurid Mna.
· Even Monday, the Cavs
would not confirm Lucas' hir- ·
ing, which · was finalized last
week when Lucas met owner
Gordon Gund and then accepted the Cavs' offer.
Cleveland gene~ manager
Jim Paxson has been on a twomonth quest to find a coac~·
with NBA experience.

me

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Athens dosed out the scoring in the
sixth inning by plating three runs on
the strength of singles off the bats of
Steir, Brunton and Nick DioGuradi, a
Meigs error and two wild pitches.
The g:une was called after seven due
to the ten run rule with Athens on
top 15-2.
Tyler McLead picked up the win
for Athens, he gave up five hirs,
walked two and struck out five.
Brunton had a pair of doubles and a
single to lead Athens, Steir added a
double and two singles, and B.J. All-

Plnme ._ Mdp. ID

Brewers' homers
send Reds to

~·
"At'! '"
lneans

Blower
Polt

'\.

ROCK SPRINGS -The Athens
Spartans pounded out 10 hirs, and
coupled that with 10 Mei~ errors en
route to a 15-2 win over Meigs in
American Legion basebaU action
Monday evening at Meigs · High
School.
The Spartans jumped out on top
first with three runs in the tint inning,
B.J.Allman walked and moved to second on a passed ball. Dan Steir followed with a run scoring single and
Justin Guinther added another single.
Meigs had two straight errors to plate

1•• 2111

.nds Meigs Legion

Ath"ns
BY D.wl HAIIIIII

I

new depths
CINCINNATI (AP) - worrying about the rough
Every visiting team gets ener- treatment fiom the fans, who
gized at Cinergy Field. Now have gotten to see only two
it's the Milwaukee Brewers' wins by the home team since
May 2.
turn.
In the latest loss, Boone
Richie · Sexson and Jose
.
Her11andez homered as Mil- took the brunt of the boos.
He kept Brian Reith (0-4) ·
waukee rallied Monday for a
6-4 victory that sent the in the game in the seventh
Cincinnaii Reds to new inning when the rookie got
rattled and let a 3-2 lead slip
depths.
away.
Sexson lined out to start
Reds manager Bob Boone
chastised his players during a the inning, Devon White dou25-minute pregame meeting, bled to center and Hernandez
demanding more focus and a hit a hanging slider for his .
fresh start. AU he got was a sea- 1Oth homer, his tint since
son-high seven-game losing May 13.
"It took me a while to hit
streak and more Cinergy mis['lo.
10;• Hernandez said. "He
ery.
· "We ·had our shot;' Boone fhrc;w pr~tty good. He left one
said. "I thought we played right there and I hit it in the
much better tonight. I right spot - 325 feet (down
thought our preparation was the line):'
That's when Reith began to
better. We just have to catch a
I
break, and we haven't caught crumble. ··
"After
that,
the
kid got ratit yet."
tled," said AUen Levrault (3-1),
Not at home, anyway.
The Reds are 7-25 at Cin- who gave up three runs in six
ergy Field, where they've lost innings. "You've just got to let
eight in a tow - their longest that stuff go."
Reith walked Ronnie Belhome losing streak since 1986,
when they dropped 11 liard, then gave up a double to
straight. They've lost 20 of Raul Casanova. Belliard
their last 22 at home, drawing scored on the. play by sliding
hard into catcher. Jason
catcalls and boos.
LaRue,
knoc.king the ball out
The seven-game losing
streak overall is their longest of his hand. Angel Echevarria's
since 19~8. when they sacrifice tly prompted Boone
to come out of the dugout to
dropped eight in a row.
As part of his pregame talk,
,.
.
Plna .. ._hdi,I:S
HURDLER- Reds baserunner Aaron Boofle jumps over a single hit by ·Michael Tucker while Boone told his players to stop
running to second Monday. (AP)
"

·)

Goosen redeemed
with US .Open title
TULSA, Okla. (AP) - for Retief Goosen, the tortu·
ous ordeal lasted just one daf.
When given a chance to atone for one of golf's most
embarrassing moments, the soft-spoken South Afri!::an
made sure he wouldn't have to go through life as the guy
who missed a 2-foot putt to win the U.S. dpen.
No, he'U be remembered as a U.S. Open champion.
"I felt like I needed to win this because of what happened," Goosen said Monday, savoring a 2-stroke victory
over Mark Brooks in the first Open playoff since 1994.
"When the putt went in, it was great
relief. In·a way, I was " little bit shocked
that I won it."
That's understandable, considering
what Goosen went thrm~gh Sunday
-evening. Jus'l: 12 feet fiom his first major
victory and given two putts to make it
happen, he needed three.
.
Suddenly, a golfer who ·was barely
known on •this side of the Atlantic at the
beginning of the tournament was linked
Goosen
with Jan Van de Velde, Scott Hoch, Ed
Sneed and Doug Sanders the victims of unspeakable collapses that let major victories slip
away.
. ·
·
The others also· had a chance to make amends, only to
stumble under the weight of bitter disappointment.
Goosen was different, responding with rock-solid play in
the \8-hole playoff to beat the 40-year-old Texan.
With the trophy in his hand, ti)e new champion could
even poke fun as his misfortune.
· "(Sunday) was quite funny, actually;• Goosen said. "I
sort oflaughed to myself when I missed that short putt to

ap

....... .. o,.n.as

PEP TALKMason County
Legion baseball
coach Brent
Clark addresses
the team prior
the four-run third
Inning of ·
Monday's game
with St. Albans.
Mason County
won14-4.
(Butch Cooper)

'Mason Co. Legion wins
BY DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

ST. ALBANS - Several
Mason County players turned
in big nights Monday as the ·
Post 23-140 American Legion
baseball team defeated St.
Albans, 14-4.
Five Mason County hitters
turned in multi- hit efforts, but
catcher Matt Warner turned in
one of the biggest jobs of the
night in the eighth inning
with a · towering three- run

shot over the fence in the left
power alley. Warner's shot off
reliever Ben Paxton cleared
the 20-plus foot high fence
that surrounds Loftis field, carrying into the trees.
Warner had spent the top
part of several earlier innings
resisting the urges of the slamach flu and heat which had
been · hindering him all day.
His Hobbs-job set the final
spread at I 0 runs and eliminated the need for a ninth

inning.
.
Warner also added a single.
A pair of Wahama high .
schoolers also recorded multiples. Bradford Clark cleared
the loaded sacks during a
sixth-inning rally with a
three-run double and also
added an infield siQgle. Ryan
Hodge also had a pair of siri- ·
gles and two RBI in the 13hit night for Mason County. ·

p,...... Muon..,

..

�PomeroY. Middleport, Ohio

..... 8 2 •The Deily Sentinel

.

'

__
,.,.,...._
v......., .....,..

....,.._.........
AI..__.,

•

~

.lbDo_lluii .. PIId
In

Ma•-.

I ' " '"I Mt'Y ?77'

run......,

2:0011.111. ... .,.......
lhlld 11 tD
II a :daJ •·
-· 12:00 p.m.

Prllllr
HC m• 'Wtg ?&amp;
1:00 p.111. . . IIIIJ ...,_.

run......,

ld II tit
llandiJ Etllllan 1:00p.m.

Jfrldrlr.

rr·

"'A"T"' 'Pt!M
l'llllbr 4:30p.m. ........,
2 Up lltfln bid IIIlO
•llaftdiW.-..·4:30

110

Hllp w.m.d

=:(ACe::;:=::
re-o-or...,tod ltoder lor Ito
Foad Venture• Program. The

Food Vonturoo OlrectOf witt bo
- - l o r .....glng allaH
of 7. Tho following tlporionct
Oomonotralod , . , .,.qu~to&lt;~:
_ . d 110ft
and

ond -

.,.

re.aureea; e-1ttnaive financial

lralnlng and experience, both In
non profit and small buslnean
~ IMO¥Otlvo PI-'"

:;',:','!:::~·~ ~x=~

epoaloing, lilld public dtpor:mlnl,
InCluding compuler/tofiWare ..,....
tudt; Grant writing ond lundralolng lkillo; Sawy notworldng and

~-; Strat.glc
plonnlng ond IHnHoottd lmplt-

"0 ••-•fllrcttD
bogtvonto-wtooliddi~=;T'hundiJ-;~~;~::ll-•ldon
P•••ooo
ctt.rage clue tD lllllldap• llanllly ~oxpooltooce/lkillo:
I
w11
In

ho..

tilt food proctolling ondlor ogrt.

J'... rr. CJIJ ", ! U.lf_ i r'""3

Why walt? Stort mooting Ohio
olngltt tonight t ·800·768·2823
... 11121.

-*'tltnd
......
oging a ondlor ulliltlng

ama11 buainea••• with averag•
ooteo of bttwoon ltOOK to 110
million; in htlplng otaH develOp
lhllr lull potMtlal; manaaina I cl·
-a atnfor
·po1hlon
- portfolio.'
fhlllo
with excellent

· Hex
- Clynlmic,
ond I """1f0lf·
1M
ootory
In 1
nolloniJ.

30 Announcementa

·--·-

-

To You Tlorlft . . _
740-812-11142
Quality clothing and houothold
lttmo. •1.00 bog oalo every
Thuroday. Monday thru Soturdoy
11:004:00.
Will take aelected antiques to
lllo on oonllignmanlln our thop.

Limited opact. Call (30o4)875·
21"

40

GIVMWIY

Free

Kittonl, 3 molao &amp; 2
temalea. They were born on
Euler. (740)448 8582
Young Malt OOg, t.ovto _..,,
alto Female kitten• to good

homo. (740)448 38t7

80 Lost 1nd Found
Found: Small Dog In Crown City

ArM, Near Roadllidt Rnt, Wed·
Call

neaday,

(740)2S6-t524

70

to

Identify,

Y1rdSIII

ly·acclolmtd raglonat aconomlc
dtvtlopmtnl orgonlzollan. Sand
reoumt ond .IIi- ,.,.,._ by
Juno
2tllh to . . ·
- of
tal~.
ACEMt,
M -Cd-

umbuo Rood, Alliono, Oh 45701.

Are you
seeking a
new career?
lntoCislon Management
Corporation has the
career lor JOU.
Join Ul In recruiting
votunllll'a for MIJor·
national hlaJth
orpnlullona. You CFtn
help ll1lllle •

dlfflrwnae.

Gllllpolla

I VIcinity
Mewing Sale- bod, dr-r, bunk·
beda, couch, tove1tat, table,

Cllalra, dllhwolhar, carpal lham·
-.homogym(740)441-f234

Pomeroy,

We offer up to $7/hour
plus weekly bonuses
and a lull time shill wHh
Friday and Saturday off.

c.JI TODAY to find out
more about the career

Middleport

I VIcinity

opportun~lee

atlnloCislon

June 22nd, huge 1ale, toys,
clolhes, Ice cheat, comforters,
entertainment stand, Sugar Run
Road, Long Bonom, Pultlna retl·

Management
·Corporation.

-·
80

1-866-475·7223
ext.1911

Auction
lnd F'- Mlrket

Rick Ptaraon Auction Company,
full lime auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
Llceoeed
f68,0hlo &amp; Woll Virginia, 304·

773'5786 Or 31)4..773-5447.

80

Abaolutt Top Qollar: U.S. Sllvtr,

Ookl Ccilnt, Prootlltl, Diamonds,

Gold Ringe, U.S. Currency,·
M.T.S. Cqln Shop, 1S1 Socond

- · Galipolio, 7~2842.

II

Management
Corporation
ln--

RiprllllltaUw

·Community Newepapor Holdlngo,
Inc., owner or more newspapera In

[ r,IPLOYr.lf_NT
S ERVICES

110

···c··
Ill
lnfoCialon

W1nted to Buy

K.ntucky than any other pubUth·
er, II ...king an ambiUOUI 11111
profeaaional to develop lntamer

odvtrtllling bualneao in tho Rich·
monel, London, Corbin, Morehoad

Help W1ntld

._,.

a n d - · KY mar1&lt;111.

· "''TAEIIIAIICit'""

Ideal candldetoo will have 2+
Singers, Banda &amp; Vocal Groups, yurs of aucceuful outslda nlet
All Styleo/ Agoo . Mo)or Record
A general ·under·
Labtl Sttklng New Artlote. oxptrionct.
llanding of the Internet will be

Coming To

Huntington,

WV

Mc:Cture'a _ , - liiring
oJt 3 locallanl, lull or port·limt.
piclt ... _ . . . . _ .. localion&amp;
bring back between 1 :30am &amp;
1Cl=-. Mondoylwu ~Needad Experienced Crew for
S.Hing and Flni1hing Secnonal

Houoing. Sand Pricing lnformltiOn
and experience to: Southern
Homes, PO BoK 821, Jack10n,
OH«i&amp;&amp;I

O&gt;Wrboooi

helpful, but a comprehentlve

eon...- ;, ,_ oocep~.

lng applicallano lor full • - and
port dmo LPN'S tor evening and
midnight ohifll. Stuting Pay lor
new grada 11 $1 .40 per hour.

Thtnl II lllldilionol pay for ......,;.
ence and we offer evening and
weekend shift differential. In ·
1urance .. availabte lor fui time
drqo by and Iii
out ~n application, or contact

••IJAOJ- -

Krlotit Madden at (740) 192·
6472: E.O.E.

-·but

------~
doytima.
'
--fortvtningand

A~lllo(t bograt II roquild.

- . ....... od.

Al-111-oobnlla

l'liytla-.-. .
Rio-.
.,.
..
.-nooll: _.riO.odu
...-riNntto:

. Dnclorol ........ ft
2 lit
u. ••• ..., dElla-.
P.O.!IOJ&lt; 1110,
011

EIOIAA !WLOYIII

po~

of a 1aot glOWing htoJth

d·---·1181111
-an,..,
..
PIP'.

--..- -

iW*'*'*•

"*"· llljlglon.

340

origin. or q

irl illiililw• to
, . . , .,. .ud1 pi. . . . . . .

11Till6arorcliuii•..,.•··

-:'':'tit•alii

Pre-engineered

nul

-·for--

o..-.. .....,.

187,ol50, 512&amp;

....1illd 1ft 1hil ••• ,.,.
are M?l sNe on ., equal ~

train. For Interview conalderalion
send your re1ume wllh a cOver
letter telling us why you ere the

porson""noedto:
Chorln Govey, Pubtlohor
Ohio Vllay Pul:&gt;liohlng
(Tho Daily Trtbuno),

825 Thin! Ave,

Golllpollo, Ohio 45831

Hoo Largo Parking Lot. Hoo 4
Rtnllll, Aloo Loti Of Floor
Space, Qood lncomt. Call
(740)387-l1tlll

-""*Y-

310 HCIIMSforSIIe
&amp; botli, 2 porchto, NC.
rol~gorator, oltclriC otovt 6 goa

Oan, ...... Land? Wt 00111 Hurry
Only 10 Loll Lttl, 31)4..738-7285.

now-.
-.lrult--.
74CH42-22ta.

111-.g In

1 ·3 lodroomt Foreclotod

·-In-~

-F.,.. ••-··•"

30 Yoora at 8.1" APR. Foroawn,
Ull·

dl-·

lngo.IOI).31N323 ..... 17011.

wtllo ..... and
or,
3 lir1ghl·
airy · -room.
dining
arwa and
torgoIMng
To car gorago and hugoi oovonrc1

Oolllpolto- Cotlogo
CCaiMII Cloto To Home)

CaHocllyl740 Utl-4387,
t-800-214-o,l52,
Rtg 190*-12748.

170 MlaceiiiMOUI
New 2•x21 c1rport enctoaed

-and bock T&lt;f0.9112·3348

1depotll,

180 W1ntld To Do
All Make Mowora, Lawn Troctora.
Tllltro Ropillrod. Fret plck·UP,
Delivery o\vallablt. 21 Ytarw Ex·
parlance. Call Mike. (740)4417804

haul your logo to tho mil jutl call
304-675-1&amp;57.
Interior/

l1ttrlqr

P•nt!ng.

MQblll Hom1 BQOII. II(DI

t:~:l:!ft'cX.!.~" ~:;!~.

enca. FrH E111matet, Refertne·
n, (304)895-3835
Lawn

Mowing

environment, competitive pay,

Eom

Up to $350 In 1 day. Invito
your friends to your home for a

Proltulonal Plclura Party, We
provide Clothing and Jtwtlry. Call
(llll0)426-8363

•'

I

2!15110
Local ltoorlng company In nood ol
additional carpal and vinyl lnllall·
er1, 11nt r11ume to· Flooring In·

ery and Warehouse. Apply 0

lltllar, CL4 525, c/o Gallipolis
Tribune, 825 Third Avo., Galllpo·
Ill, Oh 45831.

Avenue, GallipOIII. No Phone

Looking for a new

Fu!~timt

Pollillon, Fumnure Dellv·

Llltotylo Furnlturo. 858 Third

•
•
•

tarred. Position requires c&amp;U du·
tlea, and after hour 1etupa. Send
r11Umt1 to : JA12, 200 Main
Street, Point Plea1ant, WV,

eano.
Halp wantld to trovol with clrcuo,
.will help oract ttnto. Muot·havo
valid drlvtro llconoo. Apply at
Maoon County Falrgroundo, Juno
20th or 21 ot.
IMMEDIATE NEED: Dlrootor ol
Nurlling (RN) lor IUI·Imt wort&lt; In 1
114 bod long ltrm cart Fiatt
1101111y. Exttntlve blnettt pocklgt
lnaiudoo Stoto Civil 8trvloo Fit·
tlramenl. oon t~rn up 10 18 dayE
YIOIIIOII. 11 dayl lick leave and
13 dayo paid holiday• por yoor lor
lull-lime emplcytn. Salary II
oommenFulata with exp11lenoe.
Contaai Keith ltcufftr, Admlnlo·
lrator at Lakin HoEpltal, Lakin,
WV II (304)178.0180, !XI, 101,
Monday thru ~rldor from lam·
4pm. Lakin Hoeplta It an EEO/
Mlmployer

"IEARKI!T ,REIH' career?
ARIY'S Aeatauranta are now
IHking prof111ional candidat11

lor all tevelo ol Managtmont. Ag·

greulve planned unit expan11on

lo taking plooo within llio local tri·
ototo arto. EKporltnoo In lood
Hrvlce 11 advantageous, but not

roqulrod. Exotlltnt Salarloo I
Stntllt Packagta Avallablal

PINH fax you reeume' to 1·80e·

recommends that you do buil•
ness wHh people you know, and

NOT to aond money lhrough tho

mall until

~ou

llio oHoring.

have lnveallgalad

Starl Your Business Today...
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Alfordable Aate.
Sp~ng

0101.

230

Valley Plaza, Call 740.446·

Proteulonal

Service•
TURNED DOWN ON ,
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No FH Unleu We Wlnl
1-888-1582o334S
HII\L tSTAff

310 Homn for Sill

830-11017 or tmall 10:
3 Bid"""" on Routa 2, (304)878ooiiHilndlzoomnat.nat
8332
.
or moll to: Arby'o, 201 Stewart,
Avtf1UE, Wonttlngron, I&lt;Y 411~. · 3 lldroom, 1 bath, oulbulldlng, S
oora1, country otHing , (740)318Molnltnanco porton lor apart• 2134
mtnl work, tomt knowledge of
tltotrloat, oarptntry, and pl~mb· 3 lr homa lor oelo, Stoond Ava.
lng htlplul. 740.9t2·8271
Mk:ldlepart 740·9t2·3348

Own AComputer? Put it
TbWort&lt;?
www.workoutolyourhomo.oom

alte

owo, lintels, otc. Claude Wlntera.
Rio Grandt, OH Cell 740·245·
5121.

for rant, one full

hookup for 0 ..... ~

tral~

•• flmllrtypt, 740- • •.

580 · Pets for Slle

tilt for rant,

AKC Rogloterad Slitltand Slltopdog Pupploa, $225 Each,
(740)379--2638

470 Wlm.d to Rent

AKC -

Houoo In oountry, Olllo vicinity,
(740)441·1115-lpm

eab~whHe,

French City Pet Grooming Has
Moved To Point Pleasant, Now

588 Whitt Road, 3 bedroom, 2
FR.$45Mno.
2
oontrol
air,·noLR.pett,
RM••a.
rwcPnod. (740)44Wtlll
Condo For Rtnl, North Myrtle
Beach, Slotpo I, 2nd Row,
(7401418 8857

LABRADOR PUPPIES, AKC
CHAIF,ON
BLOODLINE,
PROVEN HUNTING ITOCK,
ILACK_ AND YELLOW, M/F
WOAIFE!D. FIRIT SHOTS, NO
GENETIC PROBLEMS, 1200,
(740)143

livery free Solup only $9995 ·,.
888-9211-3426

private rented tot In Ctnlenary.

Home From Rent To Own.
(740)448'31583

1988 Shcullz t2x55, $1500
(740)387~

Pilot Program, Renltra Nao&lt;ltd,

28x8D 3 Or • Bedroom, Only
$34S.OO Per Month 8.19% Flxod
lnltrtlt Rata, t-tt81i-92B-3426

an.Bt&gt;m.

'

Final Dayt, Nallonwlde lnvantory
RldUcllanl (304)738-3409

New And Uted Furniture Store

Threo BR, Mlddltport, S350 par

Sell Grave Monument•

·

INTIIOOUCTORY

(-) 48'x2S', 3 -oom. 2 bath,·
8' exterior walla, vynt1 - · •
Iota of goodies. (Only) $31.31

pets,

referenc11

required.

(740)118 9342 allor llpm.

2 ~· (740)9t2-4802
Boaulllul Rlvtr Vlow Ideal For 1
Or
Poopll, - · Dtpoolt,
No 2Pill,
Footer Trailer Pork, 740-

.

'

And

Mt1WIIncll11
.1,000 lACK 2 Ton Air Condi·
llanor, 2 Ton Coli, 1 Lint Sat, I~·

11olled, ,2,218, t1,ooo Baok,
$1215 Nat prioo, Free Elllmatoo.
Call For QuOin On Othor Sizto.
II You Don't Call Uo, Wt

John Deer 420·C crawler dozer,
very gOOd mechanical condition, ·
$3500, 74Cl-992-3085.

-

Second Avenue, Galllpolia, OH

dapoalt &amp; raterenc11, no p1t1

740-992.01.;5

(304)675-5724.

'

Chrlaty'a Family Living, 33140
Now Uma Rd., Rutland, Ohio, 740742·7403. Apartment, homo and
trailer rentall. Commercial ator•

Ironto avaHablo lor 1-•· Vocan·
citonow.

Ntw doublt WldO 3 ,br, 2 bo.
SQU.OO down only $215. per Furnlohod 2 6 3 Aoom Apart•
monto, Cltln, No Pill, No lltrioi·
mon. 0111 now t-801M1814m.
lng, Aoltrencoe a Dtpooll Rt·
Ntw Doublt Wide. '"5 Ptr qulrtd. Utllltlto Furnlthttl.
Monlhl 3 Bedroom, 2 loth. Frot (7~1811
OoiiVIIY I Stt•up, 1-111·121·
OrtOICIIIIIvlng, 1 lnd I bodiOC!I!
3428
aportmtnll 11 Vllllgt Manor and
Prlvatt Property And New Dou· Rlveflltlt Aportmonll In Middle·
bltwlde, Ono Payment. (304)7:11· port. 'rom h71·1141. Call 740·
7218
111·1084. lqual H011Elllg Opporo

'"""*·
North 41h •••·• Middleport, t

room lflltnoy. ijtllltltt paid, de·
poelt a raltronott, no patE, 740992.0118.
.

'

'

•

TRANSPORTATION

1885 Cavollor, Great Shape
(304)1175-5182
;

1et and ·

chockor oat. (740)446-9888 No
calla oft• llpm

1888 Dodge o'aytona , Very
Clean, Low Mllet, St ooo.
(740)441-1083
,.
1987 Chrysler LeBaron, 4 Cylln·
der, 25MPG, Auto, PS, PB, Cold
Air, TIH, Crul10, AMIFM Caaseue ,
Many Now Pa~s. (740)388-6997 :,
1888

Honda

Accord ,

Air

Grubb'o Plano- Tuning &amp; ~opolre,
Problomo? Ntod Tunod? Call Tho
Plano Dr. 740-445-4525

Condition, Very ·ctean, 5 Speed"
$1800 Good Buy, eau (304)875!·
5143 Altar 6pm
·

Hooked on phonlco, gradot K·3,
StOO, call (740)448-11110

1988 Nluon, low mlloo, $190(}
'-(7_40~)~
___«
________~ ·

lndapondont Hll'botllo Diolriloutor,
Call For Product Or Oppo~unlty.
(740)441-1882

t 98~ Cadillac Sedan

JET

AEAATION MOTORS
Repllilod, &amp; Rlbult In Steck.
Call Ran Evono. t -800-537-9528.
'

.

Plranta G2 Vortlcal Palntboll Gun,
Molk, 14oz. Tank, 200 ball hop·

hniPap:Bl

win, like I couldn't believe
what just happened."
A day Iacer, Goosen walked
to the final hole with a 3stroke lead over Brooks, having erased all memories of the
Sunday debacle. He even
puUed out that dreaded putter
while stiU 100 feet off the
green, taking a conservative
approach.
'.' I knew this time I had it in
the bag," Goosen said.
He could afford a 3-putt
from 25 feet to clinch a bela.t ed victory, but needed only
"K noc k out.I "
someone
two, roBing the second cry
cried out from the gallery.
into the middle of t he cup
Indeed, it was.
from 6 feet for bogey and an
" That was the big 'turneven-par round of70.
around," said Brooks, seeking
"I know now what Jean Van
his first victory since winning
de Velde went thro ugh at
the 1996 PGA C hampionship
Carnoustie," Goosen said,
referring to the Frenchman in a playoff. "Two holes, a 4shot swing and h e's on
who triple-bogeyed the final
cruise."
hole of the 1999 British
Brooks, one of the most
Open when a double-bogey
accurate drivers ·all week,
was good enough to win.
doomed his chance by hitting
"You play so well for 71
only seven of 14 fairways in
holes and then suddenly on
the playoff.
one hole you lose the tournaGoosen earned $900.000,
ment. But I was just trying to
nearly as much as his best seaput that behind me."
son on the European tour.
Amazingly, what the putter
and became only the second
took away, the putter gave
international player in the
back.
past 20 years to win the U.S.
Through the fir st eight
Open. The other was counholes, Goosen was erratic off
tryman and good friend Ernie·
the tee. but saved himself with
· Els, who had victories in 1994
three wonderf~l shots from
and ' 97.
the sand. He also made three
The U.S. Open is the only
putts in the testy five- to 10m ajor th at waits until Monfoot range, casting aside whatday
CD stage an 18-hole playever doubts may have lingered
off, which clearly was a big
in his head from the 72nd
boost' for Goosen.

Meigs

ou t 13. Warren had two singles to lead M eigs, DettwiUer,
Davis, Knapp a nd Hill each
added singles.
Meigs wiU play the Middleport Senior Pony League :
team at home on Wednesday,
and then will have a pair of
double headers this weekend.
Meigs will play Lucasville at
the University of Rio Grande
on Saturday,. and then will
travel to Belpre for a double ·
dip on Sunday.
·

Holzer Home. Care of Veterans
Memorial Hospital has an Immediate
opening for a 'full-time RN. Prior
Home Health experience is preferred.
Must have Ohio and West VIrginia
nursing license.
If interested, please contact Human
Resources at 740-992·2104, ext. 201.

Tp Jpyr yem lelel

M•ll to:

The Daily
Sentinel
Clualflld Adl

P01111roy, OH 45711

CLASSIFIEDS

oacka. (740)2-7

710 . Aulae tor Slla

aacrlllct.etiS5, 304·380-0233.
Fotha(o Day Longobtrger balkat

1to3Diyl

Ear com, $2.25/ buahot, or $5.00

lied· I ntW fuQ OrthopediC mOl·
trtal HI, IIIII In plootlc, ..crHict

Clierry ololl;l bod, pillow top mal·
ntw, still boxed. Can
separate, approx . value $1400,

Open

singles for St. Albans . Josh
Tilton added the only other
hit for St. Albans .
Mason County jumped Ol)
starter Matt Potter in the
third frame, plating four runs
on singles by Durst, Brett
Greene, Kruk, Warner and
Clark to take a 4-0 lead. Potter was tagged with the loss,
working five and two-thirds
innings, giving up ten hits.
His defense committed four
errors behind him .
St. Albans added single
runs in each of the fourth
and seventh innings, but ·
both were unearned tallies .
Greene worked the eighth
inning for Mason County
and did not gave up a hit. ·
frontPageB1
Matt Siover also added a
single for the Mason County
Allman, Guinther, Diosquad.
Guardi and Wayn e Dicken
St. Albans drops to 0 - 8 on added singles.
the season.
Derrick Knapp was the
Mason Coanty, which starter and loser for Meigs,
improved to 4- 1 with the Josh Lyn ch and Brandon Hill
win, will play a double- also ' saw inound duty for
header at Belpre on Thurs- Meigs. The three scattered I 0
day.
hits, walked three and struck

HOME HEALTH RN I LPN

Ntlpbb•rb•nd

111 Court Slrlll

5x8 Utllliy Traitor, $300,
(740)441-1eti1
•

tr111 1e1,

for15Wanll

HIIY I Grain

'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Oia ~
count Available. Heritage Farm:

$128, 31)4.380.Q233

,.........,

lnyttt Dw lnllri

.......-

Livestock

Good tal culling hoy, To cut all
.ahara•. Bob Evans Hktden Valley
Ranch . (740)448·4 11 t daytime,
..
23 cubic loot Frigldoiro cheat (740)245-o380 ...,ningo
lrtozer, $200; 18 BTU Glblon Air Hay &amp; Bright Wire no Straw, Year
Conditioner, $200. Call (740)4484484

still excited

per 100 pound ground in your

.

Beoch St., Mlddltpo~. 2 bodroom
lumllli\od apartmont, utlllllto paid,

saao

-

640

to, ~·re

hole.
Goosen went tri No. 9 with
just a· 1-stroke lead, but the
playoff gO[ away from Brooks
in a hurry.
One of his strengths accuracy off the tee - went
astray, leaving him next to an
oak tree. He wound up with a
bogey, losing' 2 strokes when
Goosen rolled in a sweeping
15- footer for birdie.
At No. 10, Goosen picked
up another 2 strokes. Brooks
tried to cut off too much of
the left- to- right dogleg and
was blocked by trees, leading
to another bogey. The South
African made a 12-footer for
his second straigh t birdie and
a 5~shot lead.

.

NH 479 Haylolno, 911, $3,500; Cui·
II·Gllor Harrow, t 211, $900; Kao·

-Spooilllty
LooolI·740-14843011
IAobltt - 1-800·
Our
281-00lllt

pewter cheaa

hoped

Gear, $1.200; (304)578-9009

moroy, 740-9t2·2528 or 740·992·
I 538. Run Moora. O'Mitf,

with

hope so.

ten Silage Wagon w/Avco·NI

Antlquea

Racine, good condition, nlco 30·30 Morlln rtlla ocopo tllng,
neighborhood, 2 bedroom, air, $275, new plywood doghouoo,
carport, $350 dtpoalt, $350 par $55, (304)11754132

IIAUTIFUL APAATIFINTI AT
IUIIOIT 'RIC!I AT JACK·
ION 18TATE8, 52 Wtotwood
Orlvo lrom $297 to $383. Walk to
ohop I movloo , Call 740·448·
21118. Equal Hauling Opportunity,

Blnglt 8totlon Lot Clttrano• All
Modtlt Floduood. Paymento ~rom
11 n/mc· Hurry lndl Juni lith,
Oekwood· Qalllpolll (740)441·
3013

vaou. (740~782 .

I~

New 14'Wide, 3 Bedroom. Only
$19,850. Free Delivery &amp; Sat Up.

Now 2001 Aootwood 14x70 11om
BR, 2 Beth, already eat up ready
to move in $995 down, S198 par
montt1 740·992·2187
Now 2001 Fleetwood only
$148.48 ptr month. Coli Kareno
74Q.388-4387,

2000 Quality Lawn Tractor, 16.5
HP, 48 Inch Cut, Extended
wanwoty. (740)2,._17

640, Mllclllan10111

$125/mo. (740)441-31145 •.

800-69t.en7.

1984 Long 5~0 larm Tractor, tl'
bl""', t' . Rototllltr, 13750.
(740)258-M74 ' '
.

t 5 cows, 2 with calvta, t 3 to be
1000, (304)875-43158
4QHA yearling colt, Incentive
lund. Big and quiet, (740)4462075

8111·87n.

only $270. par man. call now 1·

(740)441-2514

1311

For Ront Ot Sale On Lond Con·
tract, 2 Bedroom, Air, On Rtntld
Loltn Gallpoill. (740)441-14011

1·888·928·2426
Now 18 11. wide $499. par mon.

18' cattle trailer In good shape.
Hay 1pear and scissor jack.

Buy or tell. Riverine Antiques ,
1124 Eat Moiri on SR 124 E. Po-

ute 50 Eaat A1htna. Ohio, 740·
592·1972.

$191. per mon . call now 1·800·

610 firm Equipment

420 Mobile Homn
for Rent

"1.0181.

73W4011.

FARM SUPPLIES
F. L IVESTOCK

630

aquare foot. We're deaUng
Colel'&amp; MObil. Hof'ntl, Stall Ro-

Llmlttd Or No Crodlt? Gonrn·
mont Bank Finance Only At Ook·
wood In Barbouravillo, WV 304·

'

0175

2 bedroom mobllt homo lor ront,
$325/ month, S300 clepotil, no

•atillactlon rating. Guaranteed

SlnluubaniH, Pick Your Own. Call
ctaUdo Winters, (740)245-6121

BelOw Holiday tnn, I&lt;Ainouga. We

t2i80, 2 bedroom, tocatld In M·
davillo ochool Olalrlct Loootod on
private lot. (7401387~
·

For your new home, cell uel
Number 1 Palm HarbOr dealer In
Ohio, with over 85% cu1tomer

&amp; Ullld
FurroituNSUitte,
Now ·-2 Pleet
Llvlngroom
$399. Buy, Sttl, Trade.
·

304-738-7295.
month plul dapolil, rent lncludet
water, sewer and trath 740·892·

Factory Gool 32x80 $10,000 Dla·
count only $1000.00 Oown, Do·
livery, ond eotup paid by Factory

Fruita I

Vegetablaa ·

w••hor, $75; Three dryera, $80
tach, all Whllo. (740)448-9066

Main-·

.

·

580

free refrta-rztor, S1 00; Kenmore

Mollohan Corptt, 202 Clark
Chopot Rood, Porter. Ohio. Free
In Racine, nlct neighborhood, Eallmotto. 80 Ooyt Sam• Ao
Avollablt. VIIO
acRitli"lnlm Star Mil Pork, 4 bad1-an-831).9182
room. $450 depoolt, $450 Rl' mo.
lncluc!H wow, garb,go 6 otW·
ago. ovollobto 7.01.01, 740-MI·
2217.
'
(304)1175-1422
·ra Your Aont $400? Now 3
515
Point Pltatant
Bedroom, 2 Bath Ranch Style

t 4x70, 3 BR Tole I Eteetrlc, Con·
tral Air, Excellent Condition,
Ready to move In lo, Sel up on

au

Rotwelller Pupa, $125. 8 weeks,
tol ohoto &amp; wormed. (740)3881525

For Solt: A..-lllontd waoh·

Lolt modtt Magic Chtl, lroat

"We're not discouraged in
any way," said Fred Davis, one
of the Locomotives' investorS,
all of whom are local residents. "We plan on being here
strong next season."
The team's fans, low in
number but high in energy,

expan-

Callod - · • Pot Grooming. Call
For Appolu~nMI (304)1175-5010

Houllhold

tnnchise:'

... ,....,
Reels

Mason

pupo, trio, bt blacks,

vet checked, cham·
pion ..... $3110, 740-188-1085.

IH liAr I[J IS L

"He did a great job in the
time given and the investors
are pleased with the prog=s
of this first-year professional

11le Dally Sentinel t Page B 3

the ninth for his ninth save
in 12 chances, moving the
Brewers above .500 for the
first time since June 6 .
Afterward, Boone said
make a pitching change Reese, in an 11-for-67
too late, in the fans' slump, should have tried to
judgment.
hit a grounder to the right
"He didn't run out of side in the eighth to drive in
gas," Boone s:~id. "He just a run.
made two mistakes with
"The goal there isn't to
breaking balls."
get a s:~crifice fly or a base
The Reds had a chance in h i t. It's just to get the bat on
the eighth, when David the ball and hit it 50 feet,"
Weathers gave up a walk Boone said . " If you're · a
and a pinch double to Ken good team, you have to do
Griffey Jr., who was out of those kinds of things to
. "
the lineup as a precaution wm.
with a sore leg. That left
Notes:
Brewers
RF
runners at second and third Jeromy Burnitz missed a ·
with none out.
second consecutive game
Weathers
got
Pokey with a · sore elbow. . ...
Reese to strike out on a Casanova hadn't started
slider, then fanned Bill since June 10 because of a
Selby. Finally, Alex Ochoa strained right elbow.... Sexhit a routine fly ball to end son has homered in each of
the Reds' final threat.
the last two games .... Reds
"Pokey was the key," batting coach Ken Griffey
Weathers said. "If I get him Sr. will miss 2-3 weeks to
out without letting a run get treatment for a sore back
score, I can get out of it. I and neck. •.. Reith got his
just went with my slider and first major league hit, RBI
I didn't give in to him."
and stolen base.
Curtis Leskanic pitched

"People have to give it a abOut what's happening." he
chance," · said Roger Work- said. "It's been a tow team
man, president of the 30- eft'on, getting them together
member Locomotives boost- to pull off an evesu evesy
en dub. "With time and help. ~ekend while keeping the
it's going to tum out to be morale up. It has all been very
something . good. The fint positive:'
year \ve've kind of stumbled No doubt, success has
around in the dark:' ·
come siOWl!r than ~ne
River Cities is an
involved with the LocomoThose five RBI were part
sion team in the new Nation- tives, from the handful of
of a seven-run Mason Counal Indoor Football League, inVestors to the p~rs and
ty half of the sixth.
and plays its home games at fans, had hoped
Clark finished the night
the Huntington Civic Arena.
"I don't think vve're where '
with
four runs batted-in.
Huntington was aw.uded a anybody expected. on or off
Ravenswood .
native
li2nchise in January from the the field," said Mark Williams,
Andrew Kruk tallied three
NIFL, which is based in .vice president of operations:
singles
fiom his leadoff spot.
Lafayette, La., and started play "They had a lot to do when
The other hitter to knock
two months later.
they started dlis venture the
safely more than once for
Harrington, former direc- · last week ofJanuary.
Mason County was Kenny
tor of administration and
"They had it up and runDurst, who added a pair of
finance for the city of Hunt- · ning the first week of Februsingles
to go with his sevenington, was instrumel)tal in ary, and the first game was in
inning, five- hit pitching .
: getting the team going, but March. That doesn't leave a
performance.
: has informed the Locomo- lot of time."
Durst gave up just two
: lives' boatd he no longer can . "The league is suffering
earned runs ana fanned nine
serve as general manager. with attendance," Gould said.
St.
Albans , hitters. The
Assistant GM Karri Gould "It's summer and people are
Kanawha , Countians rallied
has been named interim gen- traveling.
.
for both earned runs in the
era! manager, and
the
"But, if they would go (to a
third inning on a jordan
investors will become more game) and see the product,
Adler single and a pair of
involved in the day-to-day t\lat would help. You hear the
blqpp,, hits; to , right field by
operation of the team. , - · - playen'-calls· and-you're right
Zach 'Mifes and Shane
"David helped form this on top of the field."
Shilling.
team in an extremely shor;t
. Adler finished with two

1-t81-118-0128.

mo. Include• water, garbage I
cart lnduotry? Sctnlc Hlllo Nura- pooltll ond oulgolng poraonall· ~ .~Call~-~~~~~~-ty,
wa
wontlo
talk
to
you.
I.
lng Conltr Ia oHering Nurao Aido
Lot rnodtt clearance, uve up to eewage, available 7·1·01, 740~
Training Clusto monthly. It to a
304 875 1
18,825
,with any homo, chock uo 1149-2217.
&gt; ·5 28 OUII wera doallng, COII'I Mobllo
75 hour cour~a, lasting tor 11 Salary and commlooton atnicturo ~~~~;•· (
Moblll homo In Roclnt arot, po
dayo, Monday through Friday bated on experience . Compre~
peta, 740-9t2·5858.
-·us
50 Eall, - · Qh, '
,hanalve
benefltt.
Grow
with
our
Will
Repair
Automobllel,
LaWn
8:30 10 4:30. Thll II a greal OP·
portunltyl Thto ntxl clooo will bo· company's vision by tending a Mowers, and Farm Tractor1, Alto lol model clearance, one 2000 440 Aplrtrnenta
Engine And Tranomloolon Aapolr. oocllonal oavo $9,&amp;25, lor 2000
gin In July, Stop by lodoylor on .....,.. to:
Wlllil SawyerB
ASE
Certillad Mechanic. model tlnglet, 5 pre owned tin·
tor R111t
application or contact Stephanie
P.O. Box 830
(740)441..0199
glaa mull go by May 31, no rea·
Kamper, tnotructor, at (740)448·
London, KY 40743
aonable offer refused, the1e 1 and 2 bedroom opartmonta, lur·
71110
Or omall II wtl..wytrfiOcnhi.com
hamel won't last long, so atop In nlshed and unlumlthtd, 1ecurity
AHtntion· Wort&lt; lrom home. 125/
and check us out, we're dealing, dapoalt required, no peta, 740·
$75 Hour, PT/FT. Mall order.
Cote's Mobile Homes Athen• 992·2218.
FINANCIAL
WWYt.-xmoneymakor.oom
larry's Lawn Care needs a hard
Ohio, Open M·W. 9·7, Thura-Fri.,
t Bedroom Aporimont, Rol~gora·
1-1188·387·3450
H, Sat. 10.5.
working parl·tlme employee tor
tor. Range. A/C ·Included, S289
weed eating, 740·742·2803 leave 210
Buelne11
4VONI All Aroaal To Buy or Sell. 11181tagt,
Mull Sell 1994 Liberty t4x7D, 3 Plus Otpotll &amp; Rtlertnce. HUO
Shlrlfl' Sptorw, 304475-1429.
Opportunity
btdroom/t bath, good condlllon. Apptovod. (740)441-1519
License retplratorr therapltt
CaA Harold, 740-385--4367.
t Room Furnlohod Efllclency, All
INOTICEI'
OOmlno'o Pizza ol Point Pltt.. nl nao&lt;lod lor DME oHico, minimum
now hiring drlverw. Groot work ol 2 yooira clln~l expo~ence pro· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. New 14 It wide S499. down only Utllillll Paid, Sherod Bath, 811

lloxlblt. Apply In poroon, .-zo
Vtend Slrwol, Poinl Plauont.

Block, bride, 11wer pipet, wind·

doc•

A-.

car-

Building
Suppllea

.a or (7..,}'48-

era, dryetl ·end refrigerator•.
Ohio, $450/ Month HUO Ap· Thompoont
3407
provttl (304)87&amp;·8332 or - ...........Appllonoo.
(304)875-7381.
(740)9t24ttt Ill I idl ontr
UIED APPLIANCES
&amp;30 4th Avonuo, 2 Bedroom, 2 GOOD
Wothera,
drytro, relrlgeratora,
Both, Equlppod Kltchon, Contra!
rangtt. SkaQgo Appllancoo. 76
Air, No Poll, $4215/mo.
1/int Str11t, Call 740-448-7398,
to requlrod. (740)44WII58

Service, Fret

Of Unwanted llama. Odd Jobt.

550

0Hice IPICt, 537·112 2nd Ave·

110

3 Bedroom House In Syracull,

14x70 Southern Dream, tree De·

--

Front Photography. (304)S78·
3181

7-~-llpm.

d~l.

appoUnwut.

Photography. Best Pricea, River

410 Spiel for Alllt

One

.

Woddingo. Rouniono &amp; In Homo

1082 Sunoot Orlvt, Vory Good
Gooi11
CondHion. ~h l R o i Roquirod. No Peto. Cal (740)441- Apptte-o:
RROnctitlontd
•tt8
Wlahtfl, llr)llfo. Rengto, Rtlri·
greloro, Up To to Ooyo Guar3 badroom home Mln•ravllle
Wt 8tl Maytog A{&gt;area. river view, reterencea re· -plloncto,
Fltnoh City Moytag,
qulrad, dtpollit raquitod, no ptll, 7-7718.

..vingoll Call 1·888-884·72158 tor

Georgali Portable SawmMI, don't

-Ohio, 1-atJ0.537·95211

· eon
$275/ma,
$200•
nopate.
afttrlpm

(140)418 I:W2

Single and sectional home•.
thouoanda below retail. CaN
1-888·884· 7258 · tor lnlo and

1~··~

- - . . 488 112

(740)1 • •,

II[

320 Mobile Homu
for Sail

1-888-1128-3426

2

Upoloiro,

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

period of rime," Gould said.

No one expected a charnpionship in the Locomotives'
first year, except maybe head
Coach Melvin Cunningham.
the former Marshall University All- American cornerback
who prtdicted a tide before
the team had played a down.
Reality struck quickly for
Cunningham and the team,
which was outscored 202-88
while losing its first five
games. Many of the Locos'
·opponents had indoor footbaD experience fiom previous
yean, unlike Rives- Cities.
But Davis is not worried.
"Even though ~ haVell't
won as many games as ~·d

think so.

. . - . Attlnga I n -

.....,
- · bNutllul ..... glvt
uooool7~

410 Hot till 1of Rent

8 room otyll homo on quilt
olrotl. OHtrlng mocttm kHchon

-rr

4th Avo Stove 6 Rol~gorator
~umllhod. Wllltr Fumllhod,
$300/mo,
$150
Dtpooil,

Filvtf trontoot -

CIALLIPOLII' OPPOilTUNITY

Salop (740)441-7300
Wtttrtlne Special: 3/4 200 PSI
121.95 Ptr tOO ; 1" 200 PSI
$37.00 Par tOO; All Braoo Com·

lltl7tl.

21111

Looking To Buy A Now Homt?

lumoclo. $27,5110 •• 2424 · (304)17&amp;-1315
Dt!&lt;tor, 3 bedroom, ftrwptaco, pot.
vote-·
2 atory,
542,000,

·-opt.

Prices,

Wol&lt;woyo. Now 55 Gollon Dnms
lid 6 Ring, 17.00 Each. L&amp;L

for
l i l l d - EOH. (304)1175-

HUO

nue., (740)118

350 Loti • .Acrllge

5 room

•.
Work From Homo, Part·tlmal Full· (740)441- 1304 . '
tlnMi, $25- $751hr. Potd Vacallona. ·
1-888-878-1042
' 18 Wide. Only $195.00 Per
Montli, 8.119% Fixed lnteraot Rote
With Air And Underpinning
140
BualneU

Tnllnlng

1511,1110. · - -

Owner flollrlng- llulldlng For 5oio
In Golllpollo, OhiO, On Flou1t 7,

'1" Only· Lot Model Doubtowlile'
motivatod and onjoy btlng crot· ' 4 Bodroom, 2 Ballo, wao SM,995,
tlve? All you rooking tor • ca· Now $42,9t7· Price
Good Til
,_ wllli I long - - ond 8·25·01, Hurry To Oakwood·
growing oompony? Art you lntor· Gallipotit, (740~
ellod In a pollitton that oHoro In·
·-Potm-.o•
ourance, 401·K plan and paid

vacalion ume? Are you a person
experience? II oo k
will be benellclal II not, Wo will

ptans.

In-tory, OIIOOUIIt

owa, Anchort , Water Heaters,
Pl.-a &amp; Etectricol Parts, Fur·
, _ &amp; Hoot Pumpo. Btnnotts
Mobile Homo Supply, 740:446·
M18 -.orvb.con&gt;'bome
NEW AND USEO STEEL Steal·
- . Pipe Ratoor For Concreto.
Angle, Channel, Flat Bar, Slool
Grlling For Orolno, Orl.-ways &amp; ·

te:t*• •tor1BA.

now $34,180. IOK200lCUI Wll

wlllchilln_d . .

law.

with

Hugo

On VInyl Skirting, Oooro, Wind ·

1Win _ , . _ , _ awopting

30x50xt0 woo $12,500, now
18,1110. 110xl0x14 woo $27,7SO,

la11Mio9Y"""""'

meeting people?" Are you nit

lloat hU ..111

Vtry Spoctouo, 2 Bttlroomo, 2
F-. CA. t t/2 -._ FUiy Car·
potod, Mull Pool 6 Baby Pool,
Polio, Sllrt 1385/Uo. NO Ptll,
lMM Ptua Sacurity Dtpoolt Roquirttl, Oayo: 74D-44&amp;·3Ut ;
Evonlngo: 740·387-11502, '740·
441-41101.

B adwdiB -..y
lmillllkar ordluiw•lillllorir

(304~1818 ,

(D01)427-263t or (1101)427-8514
training package 11 Included.
Eltimatte, Ctil (740)21j8-9383
had oxpo~ence In marl&lt;tl· ' w
Art you looiing lor Ilia opportunl, you'Ve
odvortlolng, public relotlono
ood Eating Hllloldoo, Dltcheo,
ty to )oin a winning IHm ond be- lng.
or atmllar llltt poslllont and Etc. Mowing, Clean-up, Removal
como

Tara TownhouM Apertmtntt ,

. . ,_FIIr-.gld

This 11ft

Ap.......,ll, lncludoo Wotor
leaz... Tralh. $35QIMo., 740.

-

-.EHOIFEOWNEAS

TUloog ApplicoiiOnt- 35

-

Weal 2 IHtOoln Townhouee

UIOOOI

patio. lmmodiott poootollonl
Reduced
$79,900. McGuirt
-~-luylrr­ -lty 10
Campony, RI!ALTOR
URGENTLY NEEDEO· pllomo 1-80!MI71-7533
- . oom $45 to leO tor 2 or 3
houri ~- Cal Stra·Tto, 740- Groat Nolghbo.-, Good Con·
dillOn, Nittdo Handyman, Houoo/
5112-1 .
Church, $50,000 Make Ollar,
IALPITAFF
Are you a perton that enjoy•

I

All.-..1-~ln
ttilrc t*4•kl . . . to

' ty-CEHTIII
Pooling Dell: Juno 13, 2001

Tire !-.My of Rio Grandi II
liking lil'fiiiCitionl for pori-""'*Y f o r _ .. bo
IOiqot
not limllo&lt;IIO,
CQOIQICCQUOting. finlnce,

3-.
OlirwOIId. Cal

(740)448-3110

ilfornled IIIII ollt 1 .,..

POifTIOII ANIIOU'ICEIEIT
JWIT.,_
IIIIIIIIEU FACUL·

0..,.,.,.... For-

Toio
2-

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
~e River Cities, Locomo~ ~ lost eight of
therr 6rst rune games, General Manager Dave Harrington
has resJgned and recent home
games have drawn barely
1,300 fans a night.
So. a derailment looms for
the upstart franchise, right?
Indoor football will foUow
the lead of Huntington Blizzard hockey and Huntington
~ubs ba.!ebaU and dissolve,
nght?
!h~ who matter don't

540 Mlac:elllneou•
lllerchlndlle

Hllp w.m.d

110

available

Thuraday June 2111 and Friday

Pomeroy, lllcldleport, Ohio .

Locomotives weathering
rough opening season

No phant Olio pltuo. AC&amp;ool II

an Equal Opportunhy Employtr
canimlllod to quality job creotlon
ln .......

Tueect.y, olune til, 2001

"

Devl ll~ i·

loaded, ltl option, very good con·

dillon $38&amp;5 (304)1175-7256

,,

1990 Chovy Corolca LTZ , V-8, .
white, 4-door, runs &amp; Joo~t great"~

Callollor8:30pm, (740)245-5087 •.
1992 Pontiac Bonneville SSE.'
Looded. Wllh All Optlono, While ·
Grey lnte~or, Runs Good, S380it
(304)675·3324

per, O·rlnga. e.tdra part1, tool1,

1987 Mounlalniar, 4 wheel dnva,
excellent conditiOn, 5 Iller anglno,
Rocondlllcnld Woohtr &amp; Dryora, 58,000 mlloa, to1ally loaded,
$1DO Each. NO, 5;000 To 23,000 (304)n:!·5182 or (304)874·1523 ':
BTU For Solo, Starting AI $75.00. 1898 Grand Prix GT, Wnlto, 4"
Thompoon flppllonct Atpolr, door, 24,800 miiH, CD, wall car~
3407 Jac-FOn A-u•. (304)878· lor, (740)441•0218, 1740)891· ' .
7388
7110
.
· RIIIDINTW. HOMI OWNIRI 2000 ford Foouo, 18,000 mllto,
PS, PB, Automatic, Ttlntmllllon , •
Tappan HI llllclonoy 80% 011 Air, CO Ptoyor, rooonotructld IIIIo,.·
'•macH, 011 'umactt, 12 lflf 18800 (304)878-4648
Htal ~ump I Air Conditioning
lyettmE ~111 I Year Worronty 1000 Moroury Cougar, Y·8, Auto;·
lonnltto Htltlng &amp; Cooling, 1· Fully Loaded , 1o,ooo mllu;·
100471·11117 www.orvluomlbtn· lpruae Green Metallic, Bunrcot, ·
(lroy LHthar lnltrlor, 10 dloo co,
ohongor, ,11 ,500, (740)882· 71111' '
lmall new gal dryer, 171; lolld (740)381·1877 (0111)
white 1111111 a ohalra, Clood oondl·
11on,
C740)44H1ot
II Oodgo Oarovon, 3.0 Englno In '
gOOd thape a running condition, ·
Two p1111 ohowo1111, one 8' 1700 (304)678-5810
•
- 8 ••78 - · 740-991-2478. '
ooll (304)875-3,168

...

m.

J

'710' Autoa tor Sill

720 Trucke tor S1le

780

91 NIHan Maxima, top condition,

1978 Ford F·150, 4x4, l1700.0r
loaded, $3500; 94 Nioaan Maxi· Trade. Averane condition
(740)448-4053
•
.
.
ma, top condition, loaded, $9200
(304)875-6132
1888 F·250 extended cab 7.3
94 Dodge Shadow, 2 Door, Haich dltool 6 apettl, AC, gooooneck
. Back, $2800. (304)882·2755
hitch, very good oondltton, $3400
~ 740-992·71584
'
15 Neon, Auto, Cold A·lr. Power
Ooorw, Locka And Mirror~. 99,000 1895 F-250, 7.3 P.s .• 5 opoed,
Mlleo, $2,000 080 (740)258- 4.t D gearw, mint condition, BO,OOQ
1233
actual mlln, XLT pockllge, Every
97 Chryolor Sabring JXt, V·8, option except carpet. PW POL
Auto, Aaklng $8200, (740)258- PM, AC, nit, Crulao, Now'Tiroo'
Oil Changed every 3,000 mu11;
1252 Or (740)251-1818
Muot Soo, A!.IIFM/CD, While/
17 Mercury Mountaineer, All Rod Interior, Whllo Leer Fiber·
Wheel Drive, 5 liter, 158,000 glaa Toppor, $15,500, (740)448•
r.tlleo; Totally Loaded, (304)773· 4907
5182 Or (304)1174·1523
t 997 Dodge Ram SLT, 2WD,
llvtly'o Auto Solei· 11105 Dodge 63,000 milia, (740)441-1851
BOD Convertible, Auto, $900,
1983 Mercury Topaz 1 61pd, 85 F·IBO Flotbod, Truck, 4 What!
GOOd Condition, (304)875·
$1200, 1980 Ford Eocort LX, Orlva,
.
auiO, $700, 1891 Chevy Lumina, 1459
auto, $1400, t 985 Chevy Caval!·
tr. auto, $350, 11185 Pontiac Par· 730 Vena I 4-WDI
ooonne sw, auto, $800, 1988 1885 Ford Fl50 lour whoel d~vt
Chevy Cavalier, outo, $4110, 1987 300, e cyl, grea1 work truck. wldt
Plymouth . Voyagtr ·Van. auto; tiret and luhoolo, drlvon doily, lair
$600, 1988 cnevy '0·20 von, lhopo, $11100 finn. ,
auto, •••oo, 1873 'lnttrnoUontl
BU1, IIIPCI, $800, 1980 Ford Pinto, 1887 Plymouth Voyager, new
euto, $800, 1888 Oodgo Ca-n. llrot, ntw ottomotor, runo good
auto, $100, 191a Ford 'Muotong, ntedo · brakt work. noo :
auto, SBOD, 11t1 Ford Tauruo, (740)248 8111 (740)441-.437D
aut.o, •1100, 198~ Ford Taurua
SW, auto, 1800, 1817 Oldi Cut· I 818 .Chovy, 3/4 ton, 14500
1111 Suprtmt, auto, •seo, tltO · ~(7~40~)~1:::41..;07::..44.;..:---:-:~--­
Chovy Coraloo, hpd, •1 000, c
19t0 Maroury llabtt, auto, •1000. 1803 Nll..n Pathllndtr 4x4 V·l,
1190 Plymouth Sundance, ou1o, Auto, Air, loodld, tXOOiltnt ocndl·
"0001 Ill~ Chryolar Loloron, lion,l8.100 740-112•7148
auto, tl 000, 1178 Chevy 1 Ton IID7 p,130, 414, E"e"dld Cab,
Van, auto, 12000, Coil (740)388''
8303, Monday thru Friday, 80,000 mlloo, Loodld, (304)87&amp;·
8;00am·Bpm, Saturdoy e:ooam· 3082
3:00pm, ClootciSundoy'l.
IItt ZR2 S.tO, rod, air OOndltlon,
orulu,
CD, auto, tlnl, ••.ooo
Wrtokt~ liDO Qldt Cutlalt Su· mlloe, aoklng It 4,1100, (7401371-'
promt, good motor, good trana·
million, voriouo body porll, $800 2711
ntgoUabll 74Qolll•5008 INVI

740

Motorcycln

Truckl for 1111
1001 400 4WO Aiotio Cat, G'"".
Brand -Condition. 11oug1o1 Ntw
1873 'ord with '71 oob, dual Ltte Than I Month Ago , Muot
whttla, auto 351 tnglnt, good I all. Paid 15200. Atklng 14700.
- · wiH take ''BOO ollo, or lradl (740)317- 77211 Loavo Matta!!!
lor liOod Ford Flangor or ChiVy S•
10, ?40-9t2·11132
780 Auto Plrta I

720

Auto P1rta &amp;

Acceuorlea

'

TraJJamlllfons? Give Me A Call

AI 740-44tl-0519.

'

"DEBT CONSOLIDATION""
ONE simple low monthly payment.
Eliminate High Interest. Save
while becoming debt

ludg11 Prloed Tranemlaelone
All Type1, Acceu To Over
10,000 TrlnlmllliOnl, Trantfer

Caao1, 7•0·245·15871 , CoR: 339·
37eti.
.

Mailing Out Sales Brochures!
Free Supplies, Postage! ·

Tir11,
Ono month old. flaking $300, will

Start lmmodlatelyl
Genuine Opportunity!

Super Swamper Vampire

nagotlllt. (740)ue et~

780

C1~pera &amp;

MotorHomea
1974 Terry Camper lor ult, 27

loot, $2,400, cal allor 5 - y o .

740-9t2-61101 '
1877 Coachman Cadet , 20·1'12
roo1, 4 new tires, excellent COndl·
lion, (304)1175-48118

19t3 Four Winds motor homo, 28
fool, loll than 4,000 mlloo .
(740)448-1751
S l HVICL ',

810

Honie
lmprovementa

IAIIIEINT
WATII'II'IIOoPINCI
Unconditional llllllmt guaran111.
Local rtlertnon lurnfohtd. EE·
tobllohtcl 1175. Call 24 Hfl, C7401
448·0170, 1-800·217·0578. ~og·
.,. WaterpiOOIIng,
CIC Gtnorol Home Main·
ltntnce· Pointing, vinyl oidlng,
carpentry, doora, WlnciOwt, blthl,
mobile homo flllllr ond ,.,., For
1- totlmall 0111 Chtl. 74HI2·
8323,

Llvlngtton•e Btoemtnt Water
Prooflng, all bEie!llenl rtpairt ,
done, lrtt lltlmateo, lllotlmo
guoranttt. ~~on Job exporl·
I~·~tot~.1.:;;304:)1:=;.::::;;.;7·;......_ __
840 EIICtrlc.l lnd

Rlfrlgel'lltlon

Aocenorln
R;tldtntial or oommtrolal wiring,
1811 Chevy 8·10, 'RunE 'Grut,
2.8 tnglne, Body (lood Shope, 1881 Chvty Covollor, 1100 tor now lfMot or ropelra. Maotar U·
"200 Call IIIII 8:30pl1) , parll, loll Of gooct portl, bad mo- oenotd eltotrlclan, Rldonour
1or 740-11111·5832 ·
Eloctrlcal, wvoooso8 , 304-875·
(740)2111-8210
1788.
'

est i"nstantly. Private. Csl Ameri11 Now.

Art You Looilng For Englnto Or

Programs for renters, hooneo••neJt and
people with credit

I

::~:~:·:1In~
II

For Free Information,

John lldushl srars as heartypartying college student John
"Biulo" Blutorslcy in Natiolllll
Lampoon's Aninwl House, airing
Saturday, June 30, on NBC.
The hit 1978 comedy chroni·
cles lhe rocky relationship be·
tween the rowdy underacbievers
of Delta House and lhe college
establisluncm, including lhe dean
(John Vernon) and the pn:ppyperfect fra~mity across campus.
Tom Hulce, Tun Matheson, Pettr RiePft, Karen Allen. Donald
Sutherland and Kevin Bacon also

star.
110 HMp W1t1tld
.. . . ·. ·•

-

summER
JOBS
$6-$7/HR

Eesy Indoor wom .

fteKible hoiJrs
full/part time hurry!
Positions ftiUng

quldtlyll
1·888·974-JOBS
CD6RIInllement, llC
'•

credit

In
cards ,
, medical bills end

t-8Q0.697·2200

Coli Toll Free:
$$$$ UNSECURED LOAN S up io
$5000. DEBT CONSOLIDATIQN up to
$100,000. Credit Probleme considered .
poo olbl,o) $1 200 Minimum Monthly Income
~lo G
d
Requ ired. 1(800)44 0.6796, EK1ension ho·oo .&lt; Yi'1J'1i,JilMlll~O..Illl!Il
our book.. . uaran 1ee pay·
_ .
.
36
Free applicatiO.f'l Rush
.
envelope:

1

335 5

1

SLM;~;~~~ww~w;.jd.1ra;y;tu;nding~ i.c~amuApp~ty~2~4rrj.~~~~~

t338, Dept 14

S atlola c t Io
Gua,ranteedl Postage, supplies
Ruen Stll
stontped Envelope! GICO
1438, Antioch, Tn.
. Sto" lmmodlatelyl

Home
comprehensive, legal

sln&lt;JO 1890. FRE E Catalog:
writa:P.O. Bo• 701449,1
TX 7~370 NA

�1\JIIday, Jun111, 2001

Pomii'OJ, Mlddl1port, Ohto

The Dally Sentinel• Pege 8 5

PHILLIP

......
halld.,

ACROSS

ALDIIt

44~

4$=-

:=.)

; Marilyn -

SMITH'S

A&amp;D Auto Upllolstery- Plus, Inc.

Rocky R Hupp Agent
Bm 1R9
Mtddleport Ohto --15760

Hauling &amp; .

CIEx:i

Local843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rotlovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Jill! Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer S..rvka

99Z-3470

DAZE lAWN
GARDEN SERVICE

3-0
CONSTRUCI10N
FIM Mtlrn81aa,
In au reel

MowtnQ.Weed

Speclollze-1• ""'
roastruclloa,
remodellac. plumbl,..
eleetrh:al, hoaae mal•·
te..D«,aadrepolr
porcba,&amp;cleckl.

Owner

Eatln._ Tllllni.

Prunln._ Pressure
Wasblna
Stlltfacllol'-.rtedl l
Hourly rates .

Charles R. Dill

740-949-2610

PllotM992-7445
Clll
591-9254

BuelnHt
740-541~50

Cell

as well as diesel and lnduSillaJ equipment

engines, such as bulldozer's, backhoell; and
endloadera. H I can help you call me after 5:00.
Jlml Scott 8t2o3002

or email at:

All Malia Tractor &amp;
EqulpnteBt P1u1s
FactOr)' Authorized
Case-IH Paru

F"'flll""""

949-1405

591-5011

~·

CaUBob ·

Paying JIII.OO

40-949-1

Cell#
614-747-171
CONTRACTING

I also- Degraase automobile and truck motor's

Rooting - Home
lhlntenanceGultll'l- Down
Spouf

P01111roy Eagles

Residential Pressure W8shlng, Single Wldes,
Roofing, Sieling,
DoubleWides, Boars Decks. RVa, and
WindoWII, CJecica,
I CIIITipei's, swimming pools and larm-equlpment- I Porchee, o.rag.,
l've pr-e washed things from filing alation
Room Add.
parking lots, AVa and homes to a corporate

Lear-Jet.

DBPDYIII

types
Roofs,
Specialist

TIM DEEM

Ma1n Corporation

....,.

HowordL.
Wrttesel

• Remodeling
• 0•1'1111"
• Addition•

Free Estimates
Toll Free
1-118&amp;-992-()021
740-992-0021
Locally owned &amp;
operated
-WV028120

Club Bingo
On Thursdays

At 6:30P.M.
lllllnSL,
Po...-oy,OH

perpme
$300.00 Coverall
$800.00 Starbunt
Progm81ve top II

Uc.tOO-IiO

,..,.•.

Hill'• Sell
21110 llllhlln ROid
Rlclnt, Ohio
48771

740 949-2217

Pro(esslonat Work at
Affordable Rates
;, Trucke • H Traller8
• Bolta • Mobile Homes • DrtVIWIY•
• Equipment cleaned I degi"'IHCC

General/Spedallzed Typlna
Temporary Oftke Asslsllnce

Jeff Stethem
Cell740•581•2712

740•581•0477

.Home740•815•4218
Loweet prlcea

MlliUna LlbtlsiEonlopes
Cassette TraDSCrlptlon
Numerous Business Support Services
25 years Sec:retarlal Experience

740-667-3224 or 7 40-667.0038

SAND

LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC CULVERT
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REW.IRE

RIVERSIDE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB TOO LAROe OR SMALL

(under Pomeroy·
Mason Bridge)

10 X 10' 530 00
, 10' X 20' 550.00

CARPENTER
SERVICE·

• R_,Addlllonal
-ng

·-Gar.• - I I Plumlllntl
oun.r.

t J

1•
••

• Gal'lgll
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

CREEK'S
lliUV ARE YOU
TUo;;

7~992-1671

f'tl~Ht,N'? _,...._..

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS Til!

HEAT IN

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

MfETIN6 ··
~OOM

•

remodeling,
drywall, room
additions, and
plumbing.

•

THE BORN LOSER

Terry Lamm

'7r~ 1-\Ni:.CH:&gt;E.\iiNGLY.lEDTO ~

992-0739

· Self-Storage

•• I

f-'U&amp;Mti:.IIEEill m::;u
:-u::£ lS IN 1\CI":mK'&lt; MOOD!

~~"'

High" Dry

biiJ or small lobi;
.small •
londscoplniJ

t

Shoun Seth
(7 40) 985.:. 3583
(7 40) 541 ~3820

-BIG NATE

740-992-5232
Sales ~Ice lnolallatlon

Specializl"'lln Sheet Metal Ductwork

AskMaHow

Wlllllor yoo'tollylng to

CASE NO. 01.CV.fl81
CmFINANCIAl, INC.
lka City Lolln

Fln1nct•t

Serv~eat,

InC.

Pllilntllf,
VI,

SHERR! STORMS, et
·

•••
Dalond•nt,

NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION
To Rodney K.
DIIVII, Roger L. Davia
1nd Routle J. Hood,
whole 1111 known
addraM Ia unknown;
you 1re hereby,
~
h
OUII• d th••
n
you
lle•n n•med •v•
a·
Dtl•ndant In 1 leg•l
action entitled
CIIIFinanclal, Inc. l~a
City Loin Financial
Inc.,
S erv Ien,
Plaintiff va. Sherr! .
S' orma, • I 1 I.,
Defondanta. Thla
ac11on hu been
atalgned
cou
Number 01·CV.fl81
and It pendhig In the
Court of Common
Piau of Melga
county, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
The object of the
complaint It to
f o r • o Io u
th-e
mortg1gt agalnat the
ra•l eetota loc1ted at
183 N. Main Street,
Rutltnd, Ohio 45775,and the prayer 11 to
loraclott ell lntareat
owned by you and ·for

IOMwtlght.li;fpltl•il
your dill lor moxlmum

.

nutrtlton, or l••tloalt your
.-with lila bali
piiOOMI . . . Pfoduclt.
llorblllfo I n -1101
101l111111ng ,......., ....
Call your indlpandllit
lllrbllh dlllrillulcir,
J&amp;L EnterpriH

M•rk A. Van Dyne
Attomay lor Plllntlfl
121 W. High Sti'MI
lth Floor
P.O. Box5e8
Um1, Ohio
45801.()588
(419) 227-158&amp;8
(419) 227--4589 (FAX)
(5) 22, 29, (I) 5, 12, 19,t· "" ·~·)

(740)tM-382t

We con pliO-lila 1
prog""" lor you I

26

Public Notice

Mason,WV

304-773-553}.

• No Carry Outs
::S..J' 4 Tit,...,, -,..
• Mounting, Bal. Extra ·-..,for
· Other sp&amp;crata
.,.. ..
Available ·
155R12
While Supplies Last
155-BOR13

Come In,4..nd See
Connie Or Andrew

~~:::=~~

186-BOR13

(',\. D I h d raul it·~ ,\. Oil

On
June 27,
beginning 11 9:00 a.m.,
a viewing of the
following roada In
Scipio Townahlp will
ba h•ld: Town1hlp
$8.00 column inch weekdays
Road 283 (Bow•r•
!load) b•ftlnnlng
at
$10.00 column inch Sundays
•
Townahlp Road 3
(Woodyard Ro•dl for
0.89 Mil• (VICitlon);
Townahlp Road 74
(Doctor JOnll Road),,-________._ _. '
,.- - - - - - right--of-way beginning
Public Notice
Publici Notice
at the Dead End ( 0,-. 2 3 • - - - - - ,- - • - - - - - - m1Ia eaat o1 1unct1on
Townahlp Ro•d 3)
thane• ••aterly to
Scfplo Townahlp Road
53 (Gib•on Road), II
any rlght-ol·way •xltlll
(Vacation); 0.13 mile of
Town1hlp Ro1d, to be
known •• G...n Roacl,
locat•d •ntlr•ly In
SeCtion 30 and having
• right-of WIY Width of

Advertise your
message

( 111111'1

Ill

..,,&lt;

7 , \ 1'11111('1'111 l'tkt•

Repair Hydraulic Hoeee &amp; Cylinder•
Al10 Sell DHferent Typee Of Olla
Cheater, Ohio
(former Werner Heeling
&amp; Cooling building) •

(740) 985-4194
·. or (740) 985-4384 , ·
24 Houre/7 Days Par WHk

"T.-.e" Sale!' &amp; Senke For
Galllo, Muon, a'nd Meig• COWIII•
Ll'*'led and Imured
WV 015t76

. In--cl•• of your
· failure to anawer or
othorwlll reePGnd aa
required by the Ohio
Rul.. of Civil
:Procedure, judgement
.by dtlault will ba
rendered ag1lnat you
for tha
r•lltl
demanded lri the
. Complllnt.

Pus

HARTWEJJ:
STORAGE

1

AREN T'f'OU

St. Rt. 7
lOx 10$40
10x20$60

SNOOPY.
I'M ~-lOME!
I MISSED
'i'OU50
MUCr.l I
CAME
!-lOME!

. 992-1717

Tt.tE'f REALIZE ~-lOW
·PAN6EROVS IT IS TO ALLOW
UNAUTr.lORIZED PERSONNEL
ON TI-lE IMIWA'(?

6LAP Tp
ME?

see

JONES'

Tr" Service

• Top • Rtmoval • Trim
• Stump Grinding ·

advertised, it is "normal" for South to continue with two spades.
After West leads the
heart king, declarer
has several lines to
eight tricks. v1et I'f he
hopes for nine tricks,
the defense has an
answer to all his
maneuvers. However,
South can make it difficult by ducking at
trick one. Then, to
hold South to eight
tricks, West must
switch to the club six ·
and only the club six!

Wed-neSday, June 20, 2001
A prolonged cycle of unusual achievemeniS could be put
into play in the year ahead. As
a result, material aspifalions to

which you' ve aspired will be
realized . A pal may play a role

your success.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- A more prominent role in an

involvement you have with
friends is destined to be fulfilled today, if you'll let it. It
may have

bro~der

ramifica-

tions than you realize . Gemini.

treat yourself to a birthday
gift. Send for your Astro-Graph
predictions for the year'ahead
by mailing $2 and SASE to
Astro·Graph. c/o this newspa·
per, P.O. Bo• 1758, Murray
Hill Station, New York. NY
I01 ~6. Be sure to state your
Zodiac sign .
. .
CANCER (June 21·Iuly 22)
.: Don't worrr about not haviniJ as much du'l)ct control over
things today us you'd like,
because the ~nd results could
pmw to be ronmrkably adran·
\Lil!COUS f"r you.
LUO (July B·ALI(I. 221 ..
What could prol'e to be the
most suc~ossful fur you todny
al'~ rrujccts thai Ul'e large in
""llt1. stt don'ilcl size or petl•

For 15 Words
1 to3 Days
Ylrcl Sell Ada Only

Over 15 Wordl,
2llf Ptr.Word

Your LINK to

The Daily Sentinel
. Clallifled Ade
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, OH 45789

38 Hebrew,

purple

DOWN
ROIIUin

13 IJecrel
wadding

43 Church

.......

•·I·

45

council
-,IIIICUIII

(hindbook)

47

·--want

lorChrlat-

.......

·rnae . .•"
411-·
{Dref.)

41 f!ood

e::o"

I

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1~

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K WA T E

1..;:;-~

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5
.
. . .

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18

I

Granny always told me that 1
.l ad better get my umbrella if the
w
__eather station says it---'- --Complete
by lilling Inlito1hochuckle
mlsolng quoted
wordo
you develop from step No. 3 below.

1AV

·

. l:l&gt; PRINT NUMBERED ~ LE HERS IN SQUARES

'

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Quaker- Venus- Rouse - Purely- SEQUEL
"Haven't you noticed," a friend asked, "movies that
are big hits are turned into a television SEQUEL?"

• Bucket Truck

Anyon•lntarelledln
thoaa ro•d chang••

lnylt• Tho Emlrt Nttqhbgrhpqd
To ygyr Yard Slltl
Mall to:

11 Plrll

·=:

I'·I

COlli.

dele. .

rnventor

IIC111P
We are looking at
50 Dear
replying to partner's
52 DDE'a
40 Circle pao1a a Canlront
rival
32 - ·Lockll,
takeout double. He is
41 Healtatlon • ActrFL
53
Bachalor'•
asking you to name the
Merlcal
aoundt
34 TOOk a
lllatwonla
10 SerlliS of
42 Actreu
bruth
54 Actor
unbid suit where you
HelangiiiiiH
35 Sedlnlliry
Jollnoon
have greatest length.
I DON'T WANNA WASTE
So, unless going
TH' DAY DOIN' NOTNIN' It
straight into no-trump,
which we covered yesterday, you usually do
that; and simultaneously you give partner
an idea of your hand
strength. If you make a
simple, nonjump suit
bid, you show some 0. 8 points -- yes, you .
may have a Yarborough. You pass, converting your partner's
.l NfVEif ICNtw ~0 MU(~ 2
takeout double into a
TIMf COlJLI&gt;
8M
penalty double, only
when lloonngg and
If viA~T&amp;I&gt;
1- ssttrroonngg
in the
opener's suit.
S'TANI&gt;ING
:
Before you look at
CELEBRITY CIPHER
the
auction, can South
6TIL~.
-~
by Luis Campo•
.
win nine tricks in
if.
C.lollnty Cipher cryptogram• lfl creotod from quotallono by 1....,.
spades after West leads
- " · put and p1nont Each letter In lho cipher &amp;landS lor another.
the heart king?
Today's clue: V equals M
'-·1-'i
South's one spade
KBNPFEFBD
shows four or more
EDO
MS
'OAB
spades and 0-8 points. ·
,..14£'~ e£fN tw-.1 '
up OM
FEDETDEFAUKT
East contests with
W~'1' :;tt-(( J-lf.
two hearts because he
..
FYEOUOCJB
E
POIIMLB
001\~N{,~
is a disciple of the
Law of Total Tricks.
Y u La
'FCDDP
uo
CKOUY
One corollary of this
J M K
law is that you should
BFUTDEV.' · E K
bid as high as your
YEDZCUP.
combined
trump
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I wouldn't know what to wear against i
length. So, with eight
· him: earmuffs or football pads." - New heavyweight champion •
• hearts, bid, at. ~ast to •. · :•"·Haalln Allhma!ll on Mike 'ryoon.
·
.
;
the eight-trick level.
South should act
I!IDIIIII'!--""'!ti:'llm~rrJ:;;;rr.:IT'i4rii~w;;::i\l .again because he has a
F;c~"" •oav••
maximum. A double
Reorronga lettero of the
would work well here
four
ocrcmblad word• bebecause two hearts is low to f11rm
four tlmpla word1.
slated to lose three
spades, one heart, one
""""'T' diamond and one club.
That would g1ve
North-South
200
points. However, with
TRUSY
all his points in the
suits partner has

30 '"'·

You •r• required to
antwar 1M Complaint
wllbln 28 daya 1fler
the 11at publication of
thll notice which will
b• . publllhod once
•ch w"k ,for 1lx (8)
euccaulve w.. ka.
The la•t pulllloatlon
will be made on June
·26, 2001 and the 28
dly• for •newer will
oommanca on thll

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7 Golden
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NEA Cro11word Puzzle

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the perfect

Job .. .

Dally
Sentinel
Classifieds

992·2156

'lbur - .- - - - 'Birthday ARIES (March 21 -April 19)
-- A coalition you need to put
together for a situa1ion that
requires a team effon might fall
in you lap today. It will serve
as the cataly st thai brings
everyone together for a com·

t.:.loui intimidate you .
Thev'n•
lm:kv &lt;.·harm .
VIIICfn !Aug. 2.1-Scpt. 22 )

-- If )'Oil make the sli~htcSI
cffon 1oday. Lady Luck will
jump on board ant.l make it possible IO'r vouto achieve success
in obt01it~ing an objc~tive thai

you felt

was

mon cause.

bey ond your

· reach.

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct . 23) ·
- Conditions concerning your
socinl communication ~ could

begin to show a marked
improvement today. That con-

versation you thought would
never take place could happen
' at this time.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) •• H'ear out any person who
wants to talk to you today ·
about a business proposal or
personal investment. It might
tum out to be the qeal of a life·
time.
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec . 21.) .. Do not discount
things that come easily today.
be~uuse your 11rcatcg1 auet
will be your ublllty to make on·
the-spot decl•lons. OptlmiHm.
enhunces your success.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Iun.
19) ·• Be prepared to net imme·

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- You may be on to something today that could increase
your earnings or holdings. If
you sense that you're on the
right track. do it now while you
have the Mida• touch.
diately today should somclhing
oppo11unc develop for you conceming your work or career. IL

could be the type of break I hat
comes and goes very quickly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) .. Crcutive i~ca&gt; that fiash
th1·ough your head toduy
should not be treuted With
indifference. Even if you cRn't
us.: them now. commit them to

pu(ler. because they'll be win·
ncr&lt; one doy.
PISCeS (Feb. 20-Mnn:h 20)
.. Persistency will be the •ecrtt
today for mukin11. cvcrythlna
full into pluce. Once you put
the pednl lo the -metal. road·
blncks could sutldenly open up
anti Jil'c you the ildl'anlase you
noed.

'·
.I

I

·I
I

I

"

\. I

\

'

�BY THE

~SOCIATED

B6

Baseball

· · The Daily Sentinel
PRESS

Mark McGwire has 011ertaken Mike Hampton in the homerun nee.
McGwire homered for the fourth time in five games, a threerun drive Monday night that led the St. Louis Cardinals over
the Chicago Cubs, 6-2.
"llhink he's getting real dose, the way he's stroking the ball,"
Cardinals manager Tony La Russ.a ~d, "He's very dangerous
when he goes up there now."
McGwire, on the disabled list because of a knee injucy until
May 28, hit his sixth homer of the season and 560th of his
career in the fifth inning off Kevin Tapani (8-3).
While ~pton, the Colorado Rockies' ace pitcher, has hit
all five of his career homers this season, McGwire needs just
three homers to tie Reggie Jackson for sixth place on the career
list.
"In tny four at-bats, that was the only pitch to hit that I could
. get extended on," McGwire said. "The rest of the time they
were bearing it way in on me or away. That was·the only ball to
hit, and I was lucky enough to get a hit."
At St. Louis, the Cardinals beat the Cubs for the 12th sttaight
time at home. St. Louis has won four in a row since a 1-8 trip.
Samtny Sosa hit his 21st homer, the 407th of his career. He's
homered four times in three games and is tied with Duke
Snider for 32nd on the career list.
Darryl Kile (8-6) ended his three-game losing streak, allowing two runs and five hits in seven innings. He had a seasonhigh I 1 strikeouts. .

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St. Loull8, Cllicago Cubo 2
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(Bolmol2·2), 7:015 p.m.
(MI- ~)It N.Y.- (Tra·
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Darryl Hamilton hit a go-ahead single in.the seventh at Shea
'
Stadium, just his fourth RBI in 44 games this season.
Seattle,
Mariners
losing
streaks
aren't
as
rare
as
Cat" Ripken's
;Jbrk Wendell (3-2) pitched a perfect seventh, John Franco
survived a two-hit eighth and Armando Benitez finished to off days used to be, but they sure don't happen very often.
The Mariners, who own the majors' best record at 52-16,
remain perfect in 12 save chances.
New York starter Glendon Rusch allowed an unearned run dropped their second straight game Monday night. Seattle,
beaten 4-3 at Oakland by the Athletics, lost two in a row for the
in six innings and struck out six.
first
time in a month and the fourth time all season.
Marlins 7, Braves 6
"It's not nice to lose two in a
loiing pitcher Norin
At Thrner Field, Javy Lopez's throwing error on a potential
Charlton
(2-1)
said.
"We've
taken
all
16
lo~ pretry hard. We'
inning-ending double play in the ninth inning allowed the godon't expect to lose."
ahead run to score as Florida beat Atlanta.
The Mariners' loss came after the Baltimore Orioles beat the
Florida, which erased a four-run deficit to win on Sunday,
Toronto Blue Jays 3-2, and it was revealed that Ripken plans to
wiped out a 5-0 deficit ~gainst starter Tom Glavine.
Braden Looper (2-2) won despite facing just one batter. retire at seasons' end.
He broke a record most considered unbreakable wnen he
Antonio Alfonseca got his 15th save by pitching the ninth.
Glavine is 1-3 with a 7.33 ERA in his last five outings, a 27- played in 2,632 consecutive games - topping Lou Gehrig's
inning stretch in which the left-bander give up 41 hits, 22 2,130.
Seattle had not dropped rwo straight since May 18-19 to the
earned runs and 18 walks.
New York Yankees. The Mariners have not lost three in a row
Altros 13, Rockies S
all
season en route to the third-best 68~game start in baseball
Lance Berkman and Jeff Bagwell each had four RBis, and
·
~
history.
Houston matched its season-high for runs.
Frank Menecbino drove in a pair of runs to help Oakland
Shane P,.eynolds (7-5) won for the third time in four starts,
win
the ballgame.
allowing three runs and 10 hits in seven innings.
Barry Zito (4-6) ended his five-game losing skid and snapped
Pedro Astacio (5-8), pitching on three days' rest, gave up nine
the
Athletics'
runs - seven earned - and seven hits in 5 2-3 innings for vis. . four-game losing streak by allowing
. three runs in
seven mnmgs.
iting Colorado.
,
Zito won for the first time since April 24 in Chicago, a span
Craig Biggio doubled in his final at-bat, extending his hitting
streak to 18 games, matching Arizona's Mark Grace for the NL's of 11 starts, and improved to 4-1 with a 3.48 ERA in night
· games.
longest this season.
Yankees 10, Tigers 1
, American League
Roger Clemens became the AL's first nine-game winner', and
Mariners lose seconcl straight; Ripbn to caD it quits
•

row:•

~H).
N.Y. 't~id

against
state

.

•
.
Alfonso Soriano ,sc~red three runs and drove in four as. Ne't'
York won at Detroit.
·
' •·
Bernie Willianu capped New York's five-run fourth with
two-run homer. Williams, who was 2-for-5, has 15 hits in 30 at;.
bats.
.
j
Clemens (9-1) won his fifth consecutive start, allowing all
unear~ed. run _and seven hits. He struck out six during .
seven-tnrung stmt.
.
.,
Orioles 3, Blue Jays 2
_I
Brian Roberts tripled and scored the tiebreaking nm in thj:
seventh inning, and fellow rookie Jay Gibbons hit his secon~
homer in two games as Baltimo~ beat visiting Toronto. ; 1
David Segui had two bits and drove in a run for the Oriolef,
who moved past the Blue Jays into third place in the' AL Jl~;
· Sidney Ponsofl (4-4) gaye up two runs in the first, then threW
six scoreless inqings.
:
Chuck McElroy ~itched a perfect eighth, and Mike Tromb~ey
got three outs for bJS fifth save.
.
· ··!
White Sox S, Royals &lt;4
;
Magglio Ordonez homered for the sixth time in seven game!&gt;
and Mark Buehrle won his fifth straight start as Chicago be:tt
visiting IUnsas City.
Jeff I,iefer hit a two-run shot for the White Sox, who despite
getting swept over the weekend at St. Louis, have won 17 of23.
Buehrle (6-3) allowed three runs and· nine. hits , iii seven
innings. He hasn't tost ·in 10 starts. Keith Foulke pitched the
ninth for his 14th save in 15 chances.
'
&gt;
Chad Durbin (4-6) allowed five runs and seven hits in 2 2-3
·inilings.
.

.

bf

''

Dress
for

Middleport
ent
store

\l

Open in September 1999,
Ohio Valley Check Cashing &amp; Loan
otTers Cash loans - ·
Hold -personal checks for 14 days.

lnsurlnce
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subUrban Clj:V~l.a~lf ~l!~tf"
S13,0sO, pet $tudentdrqm,
local taXes;
. In all, Meigs spent about
$6,600 per,s~dent. Bea.:;hwood spent about $14,600.'
Ohio spent the i~teiven­
ing year responding to the
seven areas of concerned
oudined by the. court, .
including the overreUance
on local property taxes. Its
plan was included in the
state's $45 billion budget,
vyhich Gov. Bob Taft signed
rwo weeks ago.
On Friday. the. Supreme
Court received 100 boxes
of evidence in the case,
including 70 &amp;om the state
and 30 from the Coalition
for Equity and Adequacy
of .School Funding. Written arguments were filed
Monday.
The coalition, supported
by 502 dues paying districts, argues that the state's
plan falls far short of
:addressing the court's con- .
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In his ruling, Sargus determined
that ODOT bad not misrepresented
the environmental impact of the project, and denied the groups' motion
for an injunction halting the $90 million project.
Sargus was able to make his final
ruling, Acheson maintains, because of
his decision co not allow CASH to
present expert '!testimony from· con 7
sultants.
· '
Acheson, who said that he is "profoundly .disturbed" by Sargus' ruling,

is quoted as saying that the ruling
aUows ODOT to " regulate itself."
"Judge Sargus has chosen to interpret the National Environmental Policy Act as a loosely defined set of
guidelines which ODOT interprets as
it pleases," Acheson said.
"If every federal judge interpreted
the law this way, we might as well
throw out our national environmental
standards," he added.
CASH has 30 days to appeal ~e

PIMM-CASH,A3

TURNING DIRT - Turning a spadeful of ceremonial dirt at
the groundbreaklng for improvements at Ohio University Air·
port were, from left, Director of Airport Operations Linda
Stroh, Vice President for Finance Dick Siemer, Trustee and
Alumnus C. David Snyder, O.U. President Robert Glidden, ·
Assistant Vice President for External Relations Pam Parker,
and U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland. (Submitted photo)

Improvements to
ai~rt. ~n

as-.

. -+..C,· Ievelt»pmeld tool~
I

DON'T HANG UP ..... JoAnn Williams of Syracuse says she won't. Next week about 400 resi· ·
dents selected .at ra11dom will be called upon to give their opinion on health care services In
Meigs .County. Survey results will help determine the direction which health care takes In the
future.
· ,,

SuiVe~· gathers

health care views

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Mei~ . County Community

POMEROY
"Your
opinion counts when it comes
to kn"o wing what Meigs
Countians want in the way of
health care now ~nd in the
ti,tture," sa19 Mick Davenport,
. emphasizing the importance
of an upcoming · telephone
,
survey.
Davenf!ort, chairman of the

Health Planning steering
committee, said the survey's
overal) goal is to get input
from residents about whether
. they lire satisfied with the current le\rel of health care services available, · and what, if
any, improved or expanded
services they would like to see
over the l01ig term.

HIP: 1011

Ta • .,..

Sentinel
2 lldllll ":; 12 ......

Calendar
·Classified$

Star Supply

•

•

favor of the Federal Highway Adrninisttation and the Ohio Department of
Transportation.
Sargus' decision was announce!! last
week.
Sargus was ruling on a complaint
from CASH and Buckeye Forest
Council filed in April 2000, which
asked that the project be halted
because environmental impacts of the
project as proposed were misrepresented in documents ODOT filed at
the federal level.

'1fr11toll;i\
in

COmics

&lt;tlark's Mitch's
Produce&amp; .

FROM STAFf REPORTS

ATHENS -The leader of a group
opposed to the construction of a new
portion of U.S. .33 between Darwin
and Athens says that the group has not
decided ·if it will appeal a federal
court ruling issued last week.
The Athens Messenger quotes Todd
Acheson of the Citizens Against
Superfluous Highways as saying that
the group is reviewing its options following a ruling by U.S. District Court
Judge :Edward Edmund Sargus Jr. in

The information obtained
through the survey, which
starts next week, will be used
to develop a health care plan
for Meigs County, Davenport
said.
'
The random survey, where
participants remain anonymous and their answers confi~

Plus•.,. Survey, A3

FROM STAFF REPORTS
The project will increase
ALBANY
Two economic
development
improvement projects which opportunities in the region by
promise to make the Ohio providing access for businesses
Univenity Airport a regional to grow and expand.
gateway to the rest of Ohio
"The university's vision
entire
and the nation were kicked encompasses the
off Monday.
region. What's good for
Ground was broken for a southeastern Ohio is good for
project to extend the runway Ohio University. We're workfrom 4,200 feet to 5,600 feet ing together to build a
and to construct a modern promising future," OU Presiterrninal.
dent Robert Glidden said.
Meigs County commis"This is a testament to what
sioner.&gt; Mick Davenport and can happen when various lev~
J im Sheets were among the eIs of government and private
local and university officials partnerships work together •
who attended the ground..
·for the common good."
b reakmg ceremony.
,A small jet can reduce the
The improvements will rime between the O.U. Airallow larger aircraft, such as port and Cleveland to a little ·'
commuter planes and corpo- · more than 30 minJtes _
rate jets, to use the airport and
open the possibility of a com" roughly the time it takes to
muter airline being based jn drive from Pomeroy to
southeastern Ohio. There are Athens. The improved airport
no runways of 5,000 or more is expected to be used by
in the 26 Appalachian Ohio · tourists, businesses, Ohio Urncounties.
Ple..e 1ee Airport. A3

+ Financial Services

Open: Monday - Friday 9 to 6
Saturday 9 to 2

o Job too big o"maill
,
1,O:it!maNt88
can be faxed or e·malled.
1

H undecided-on U.S. 33 a

.

•

'

f;l·;:s148

www.mydaily!ientinel.com

COLUMBUS (AP)
The debate over the way
Ohio funds its schools was
ready on Wednesday to
move from the hands of
)awmak:rs and back into
the court system.
· Attorneys for the state
and the coalition of schools ·
suing Ohio were scheduled
to argue their case before
the Ohio Supreme Court.
. The court gaVe the state
until this month to respond
to its May 2000 ruling that
found the school-funding
~ystesn unconstitutional.
· The court says Ohio's
system creates disparities
between rich and poor dis- ·
tricts by relying too much
on local property taxes.
For example, last year
just $990 in.local property
ta:x~s were raised to pay fot
.e ach
_. attending
rural M~igs
. 1
:b~~~~f~~~~;~)isltti~t""
,.!n~

a,

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On'llie 'T

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

20111 ·Vol s 1 No 2J&lt;;

(ltw••• 3-3) 11 a · •o• (Town

4-1~ 7:05p.m.

c-on
~ (YIIono 1-21•- (-.
fCalanMt. ,..._

ColoradO (Chacon 4·3) at Houtton

Meti 2, Expos 1

Wednesday

AROUND THE DIAMOND

II If: IIIIAIIeut
W

SPORIS: Reds, Tribe both lose, 81

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White
Funeral
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Home
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CooMIIe, OH
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A2 Cl :lOIIi 01110 Vllloy PubiJriuiif CD.

Governor wants-to avoid overrides
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Tafi
. wants to work with lawmakers to avoid
overri4es ofhis budget vetoes, th.e speaker of
the Ohio House said Thesday.
"The governor has indicated he might
want \0 try to work on a few of the things
so that they wouldn't be DVl!rriden:• said
Speaker Larry Householder, a Glenford
Republican.
"Maybe some of the overrides the gover-

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have some other issue
with them that makes
good common sense,''
Householder said. "I
think we ought to hear
him out."
The speaker said Taft

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staff members have been lobbying lawmakers about the vetoes.
·
Some of the vetoes involved provisions
that could be addressed in separate li~gisla­
rion rather than through an override,
Householder said.
For example, Taft vetoed a provision that
would have eliminated the requirement of a
backflow prevention device between a public water system and another water system.

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