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                  <text>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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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.
.

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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
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including 70 &amp;om the state
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The coalition, supported
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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

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Saturday 9 to 2

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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

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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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�PageAl

The Daily Sentinel

•••d•y. June 20. 2001

w

'

I

COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
would rq¢n the authority to sign off
on cleanups of abandoned industrial
sites under a bill to implement a state
bond issue that voters approved in
November.
The Senate Energy, Resources &amp;
Environment Committee began hearings Tuesday on a substitute version of
the bill. It would authorize splitting
$400 million over four years between
redevelopment of polluted land and the
acquisition of green space for parks and
recreation.
Local governments would have to
raise 25 percent of the total cost of those
projects. Proposals would have to go

o •••· •••~•

&amp;my Pl Clauilj

Clautt

-

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-

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Stormy weather possible
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Thunderstorms
were
expected on Thursday along a
. stationary frontal system
stretching across the ~ion.
Temperatures on Thursday
were to remain in the 80s.
The front will finally drop
south and east of the region
early Friday with high pressure
building into the area.
Dry weather with plenty of
sunshine is expected into the
weekend. Temperatures will be
pleasant with highs in the 70s
and overnight lows in the 50s.
Sunset tonight will be at
9:04, and sunrise on Thursday
is at 6:03 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...l'artly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. low in the mid
60s. Light and variable wind.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday... Partly
cloudy

with a cl12nce of showers and
thunderstorms. High in the
mid 80s. Light and variable
wind. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Thursday night... Showers
and thunderstorms likely. Low
in the mid 60s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mosdy cloudy with
a chance of showers and !hunderstorms. High 75 to 80.
Saturday... Partly · cloudy
with a chance of showers. Low
in the upper 50s and high 75
to 80.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers. Low in
the mid 50s and high in the
lower 80s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Low
54 to 59 and high in the mid
80s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Low
in the upper 50s and high in
the mid 80s.

Chase wounds.&amp;-year-old ·
CLEVELAND (AP) -A 6-year-old boy sitting on a porch was
shot and wounded during a police chase involving two alleged
drug dealers.
.
Mayor Michael R. White, who went to the scene late Tuesday
night, said it wasn't clear who fired the shot d!2t hit the youngster.
. "Police and I don't know all the facts. I want you to know we
are taking this seriously;'White told area residents who gathered at
the shooting scene.
The boy, whose name wasn't released, underwent surgery at
Rainbow Babies &amp; Children's Hospital, Safety Director Henry
Guzman said. No medical condition was available early Wednesday.

\Volker faces .misc:ount charp

before the Clean Ohio Council, a board
made up .of state and local officials.
The EPA had asked to have the
authority to determine of a cleanup was
done within standards before a certified
professional contractor could issue a "no
further action" letter. The · House
removed that authority from the EPA
and gave it to the contractor. That move
angered environmentalists who felt the
EPA was being written out of the
process.
"Considerable feedback is needed
from OEPA every step of the way:•
agency Director Christopher Jones told
the committee.
The substitute version sets aside $10
million for cleaning up public health

CLEVELAND (AP) -A muAAiJtg victim who found and disarmed his atracker was shot and killed when the teen grabbed the
weapon, loaded it and fired, police said.
·
Police took a 15-year-old into custody in Tuesday's .shooting
death of Eugene Turner, 36, of Cleveland. No charges were inunediately filed.
·
Turner, robbed at gunpoint of $92, ·got a friend and together
they found the suspect and grabbed an unloaded .22-caliber pistol
from him.
The friend said Turner thought about beating up the teen, but
instead tossed the weapon aside and left.The teen then grabbed the
pistol, loaded it and shot Turner in the back. the friend told police.

-

The

•'

Sealed proposals for the Milling and Resurfacing of Mill Street
located In the VIllage of Middleport In Meigs County, Ohio, will
be received by the . Meigs County Commissioners at their
office at the Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 10:00 A.M,
Thursday, July 5, 2001 and then at 11:00 A.M .. at said office
opened and read aloud for the following:
.
The Milling of 978 S.Y. and Asphalt Resurfacing of 2,850 L.F of
Mill St'reet Tn Middleport, Ohio In Meigs County, Ohio Bidders
must note required prevailing wages on this project, Included In
the bid packet.
·
Specifications, and 'bid forma may be secured at the office of
Meigs County Commissioners; · Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769- Phone# 740.992·2895.
A deposit of 0 dollars will be required for each set of plana
and specifications, check made payable to
The full amount will returned within thirty (30) days after receipt
of bids. ·
.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond In an
amount of 100% of the bid amount with a surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners or by certified
check, cashiers check, or letter of credit upon a solvent bank In
the amount of not leas than 10% of the bid amount In favor of
the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners.
Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the
official or agent signing the bond
.
·
Bids shall .be sealed and marked as Bid for VIllage of
·.Middleport ·Mill Street Improvements and mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, .Ohio
45769.
·Attention of bidders Is ·called to all of the requirements
contained In this bid packet, particularly to the Federal .Labor
·Standards Provisions and Davis-Bacon Wages, various
Insurance requirements, various equal opportunity provisions,
and the requirement for a payment bond and performance bond
for 100% of the contract price.
. .
·
.
No bidder may withdraw.his bid within thirty (30) days after the
actual date of the opening thereof.
Meigs Co. Commissioners to reject any or all bids.
Jeff Thornton, President
1
Meigs County Commissioners .
•

.'

,,

'

'
I'

Emma Johnson
Dau!~hter

of

johnson

wv

Plctur81 muet be 'In by Frid1y
June 29, 2001. Plcturu Cln be
plcklld up after July 13th, 2001.

'

: versity students, employees,
· alumni and parents.
"This is a major building
block for economic develop. merit and expansion in the
• region:• said U.S. R~p. Ted
Strickland, D-Lucasville, said.
"This project will make it
more possible for families in
the region to have success and·
opportunities."
James Opatmy. assistant man: ager of the Detroit Airports
.: District Office for the Federal
· aviation Administration, and
Jesse White, federal co-chairman of the Appalachian
Regional Commission, also
spoke, and representatives from
Athens and Vinton Counties
were on hand.
The university has received
more than $5 million from the

Reader Services
Correction Polley
•

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Our main concern In all stories Is
to be accurate. II you knOW of an
error In a story, caII the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

News Department•

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

The main number Is 992·2156.
Oepartme.nt eltlentlons are:

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Pomeroy,
Ohio.
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ALL FLATS AND

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'6.00
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Gallipolis

8c

d~plays

Downtown
Middleport

Artifacts,

Think of Us aa a Su~ Group for

Parents with Teens
Behind the Wheel.

Get the proper auto Insurance for your
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Insurance 8c
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992·5479

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Aalepling·
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UJ.~~

GALLIPOLIS - Revival
services . will be held at the .
Church of God of Prophecy
on White Road, Gallipolis, Fri.day and Saturday at 7 p.m. and
Slinday at 6 p.m. JJ. Davis of
Metz, W.Va., will be the eyangelist. .

Aclviiory issued

.The Daily Sentinel ·

Parent's Name:._,._ _ _ _ _ __;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;;.:._ _,__ _--'

~

Issued licenses • rus.
·Revival planned

Federal Aviation }\uthority to
extend the existing runway.
POMEROY Marriage
including the design of the licenses have been granted in
runway, acquisition of 14 11-cres Meigl County Common Pleas
of land, lengthening the para!- . Court to Charles , William
lei taxiway, moving and Roberts Jr., 23, Racine, and
installing a new instrument Amber Kay Bird, 21, Racine;
landing system and rerouting Terry Wayne Wyatt, 46, Midan adjacent Columbia Town- dleport, and Kathy Diane
ship road to allow for the run- Osborne, 46, Long Bottom;
way protection zone.
Donald Edward Vaughan, Jr.,
The runway project is 23, Pomeroy, and Brooke Ashexpected to be completed in ley Williams, 19, Pomeroy; and
September 2002.
Christopher Lee Tolliver, 18,
The 6,500-square-foot ter- Pomeroy. and Shelly Ann Pofminal will be named the C. fenbarger, 18, Pomeroy.
David Snyder Terminal, and
the runway Snyder Field in
recognitio11 of Snyder, who
donated half of the $1.5 mil- · I '
RACINE -A boil advisory
lion to construct the terminal.
issued
by Thppers · PlainsSnyder is chairman and CEO
of ,Brulant, hie., · and Snyder Chester Water District for an
International Brewing Group area ~t the intersection of
in Cleireland. The airport will County Road 28 and Greenremain the Ohio University' ' wood Cemetery Road, includGordon K. Bush Regional air- ing Tackervlle, and going south
to Ohio 1'24, then east on 124
port.
to Dorcas, has been released.
The results of a sample taken
June 18 are ~onsidered safe.

Airport

'

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

The .Daily Sentinel

Survey

l"'ntecl

fromPegeA1 .

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition tilled
with photographs of . local
children - ages newborn to four
years old. · The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 6th issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild,,
or relative iS involved!

AD Sl:al - 60\

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS .

Dlssolullun

Daily Sentinel

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

Rucltwal 37l.
Ruclty Boola - 4\

Auditions set

. Georae v. Pendleton 11

EXTRA! EXTRA!
·

Gamotl- 6210
Go:nan:l Elat:ft: - 481.
GKNLY - 10

CA$H .

ft1111 inclded in biple Idling ·

.Coming Thursday, July 6, 2001

US8 - 21 l.

A/Cit eo.!- 24~
Al&lt;z!J-42

Council to 111eet

CANTON (AP) - Hundreds of people who put $65 million
into investments d!2t became the target of a fraud investigation
may get back just, 15 pen:ent of their money.
About 800 Cyprus Funds investors, including about 700 from
Ohio, were mailed letters Friday from a court-appointed receiver .
and were told they can expect to get back about 15 percent of their ·
~nts.
·
The checks could be qistributed as soon as August, according to
the receiver, Miami-based attorney Michael Goldberg.
Much of what was invested in Cyprus was used to pay dividends
to earlier investors, an illegal practice known as a pyramid scheme.

CINCINNATI (AP) -A man beat and mutilated his girlfriend
NILES (AP) -The mother of a 12-year-old boy who died two and her 12~~-old daughter and left the .bodies in th~ir ho~e,
years ago of a rare disease oven:ame her hesitation and returned to then lured a neighbor to the house two days later and killed him,
his school to direct a bell choir in his memory.
•
a prose~tor said Thesday. .. .
"I feel [ .need to do this for Christopher;• said N~cy: Grusha, •'· Stan F1tzpatnck, 33, was mdicted Tuesday on three counts of
whose son diedAug.·31,1999, in Boston Children's Hospital of aggravated mUrder, two co!IDts of aggravated robbery and ' one
complications from lung surgery.
· .
' count each of attempted murder and aggravated robbery. Prosecu. Afier he died, Mrs. Grusha came up with the idea of donating tors will try to have him convicted and sentenced to death, Hamilhand bells to St. Stephen Parish
ton County Prosecutor Michael Allen .said.
because Christopher liked his
school and church. His · mother
wanted a living memorial d!2t
would benefit both.
Gary and Nancy Gruaha also
donated a silent bell, with the
clapper removed, in their son's
name to the .Youngstown-area
school.

AEP-47~

Men tenleiiCll!d .

cet fuD 1111011nt

Oloir. 1110111 pi ffet"ie ltli!IIICN'J

CLEVELAND (AP) - An elections boanl worker has been

1

Plul 5. Clay

replaces h11wncl on panel

Victim ..... muaet is sllin

LOCAL STOCKS

AmTetl:SBC 40~
Seara - 39\
POMEROY -The fuUowAaltland lite. - 38!.
Sltoney's -'t.
Har1ey Oavidsor! - 46 ~
ing civil lawsuits h:M: been
AT&amp;T - 20l.
Kn:att - 11 ~
W8I-Mart- 481.
Bank One- 36\
GALLIPOLIS - Paul S. Clay; 70, Gallipolis, died Monday, filed in Meigs County ComKroger- 25
WertdV'a- 24~
BabE-.-18
lands
End38!.
~-~lgtc:Mt - 12
June 18, 2001 in Potomac Nursing and Wellness Center mon Pleas Court:
~
44l.
l.ld. -15
Daily stock repor1S ant
Rockville, Md.
.
'
• Home National Bank.
Oek HI Fnancial- 14l. the 4 . p.m. closing
Chan1:iool 3
Cl:arn*'ll Sltql8 - 5% OVB-25
Born July 2~. 1930 in Haverhill, son of the late Frankand IUcine, against Bill E.
~ ol t:e pmrious
Clly Holding- 10
B8T-35'o
day's1nlnlactions, proMary Belle Miller Clay, he retired from the U.S. Air Force in .Buchanan, Tuppers Plains, and
Duf'()nt- 47
Peoples-19
vided by smtl: ParlnefS
others, alleging default on a
1969 afte! 21 years of service.
Ptemiet- 7~
Federal MogtA - 2l.
at~ Inc.
. After hi~ ~ttrement, he was later .employed as an engineer- · mortgage agreement in the
~ng techru_mn at the Ohio Transportation Research Center '31Dount of$34,621.13;
m Marysville. He had been a resident of Gallia County since
• . Beneficial Ohio Inc.
health care planning.
1986.. He and his late wife we~ also caretakers of Camp Elmhurst, ru.,against Lee~
It is important survey parFrancts Asbury Umted Methodist Church Camp at Rio Musick, Portland, and others,
ticipants ''tell it like it is,"
Grande.
alleging default on a promissoDavenport said, because only
fmm Page A1
H~ was a member of Guce United Methodist Church, ry note in the amount of
through those answers will
Patt;tot Lodge 496 of Free and Accepted Masons, Gallipolis $48,282;
dential, will be conducted by the planning committee have
Shnne Club, ~addi~ Temple Shrine, .32nd Degree Master
• Federal National Mortgage
a team of Ohio University an understanding of what is
Ma'?n ofSco~ttsh_ Rite of the Valley of Columbus, York Rite Association, Chicago, ID.,
researchers Monday through important to residents and be
Bodtes at Galltpohs, VFW Post No. I 080 at Bellefontaine and against Angela L. Capehart,
Friday of next week from 5 to able to address the county's ·
~he Harold Kerr Post of the American Legion at Belle- Pomeroy, and others, alleging Powell.
, 9 p.m. It will take between unique health care concerns.
1ontame.
.
·
default on a loan agreement in
five and 10 minutes to comCommunity, business and
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Sara "Sally" Lee the amount of$25,981 .65;
plete.
·
health care representatives
Booth Clay, on Feb. 13, 1994; four brothers, John Clay,
• Home National Bank,
Participants will be asked a serving on the comrriittee are
Bobby _Clay, ~illiam Cl~y and 'Yillard Clay; and two sisters, Racine, against Carolyn S.
series of questions. Some will Rhonda Dailey, Trina Ham- .
Kather~ne Miller and Mtlda Retd.
Curtis, Jackson, alleging default
MIDDLEPORT OH require only a "yes" or "no," mond, Becky Baer, Bob Byer, .
SurvJVIng are a son, Paul L. (Karen) Clay of Gaithersburg, on a loan ~greement in the KAN Coin Club will meet on or a "satisfied," "dissatisfied," Dr. James Witherell, Pat
Md.; two daughters, ·Susan D. Clay of Cleveland, and Dawn . amount of$4,91.58.
June 25 at 7 p.m. at Trolley Sta- or neutral opinion; while oth- Holter, Norma Torres, LaMar
&lt;R.obert) Pearson of Washington, West Virginia; four grand• Donald K. Wooten, Albany, ". tion. Free and paid drawings, a ers will deal with hospital or Wyse,John Blaettnar, Bernard
children; three brothers, Leonard Clay of New Lebanon, against Janies W. Latham III, coin auction and refreshments agency choice and use, as well Fultz, Mike Swisher, Larry
Ohio, Ge~e Clay.of lro~ton, and_ Charles Clay of Columbus; Athens, and others, alleging are planned. New members are as satisfaction with the facility Lavender, Perry Varnadoe, Dr.
and two SISters, Liz LeWis of Gallia, and Annette Holloway of personal injury sustained in a welcome. Dues are . $10 for and health care received.
Nick l:luston, Dr. Harold
Oak Hill. .
June 25, 1999 motor vdtide adults and $5 for children
Davenport said the results Brown, Paul. Reed, Andy
· Services will be 1 p.m. Friday .in Grace United Methodist . accidenJ, demanding judgment under 16. Information is avail- will be used to assess current Baer, Gina Pines, Davenport,
Church, with the Rev. Greg R. Swann and the Rev.Jonathan in excess of$25,000.
able by writing to OH-KAN strengths and weaknesses in Brenda Merritt, Susan Oliver,
S. Kollman officiating. Burial will be in Olive Cemetery, WalCoin Club; 100 Union Ave., the system and give a direc- Brenda Barnhart and Charnut Township. Friends may call at Cremeens Funeral Chapel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769-1000.
tion for the county's future lene Hoeflich .
from 6-9 p.m. Thursday.
POMEROY -The follow- .
The body will lie in state in the church one hour prior to
ing were sentenced on crimiservices.
project, meanwhile, maintain
Masonic services will be conducted in the chapel at 8:30 nal charges 'in Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
that construction of a new
Common Pleas' Court:
p.m. Thursday by Patriot Lodge 496, F&amp;AM.
County Family and Children
section of U.S. 33 would be
• Rocky Alan Nave, nonMilitary graveside honors will be conducted by the U.S.
First
Council
will
meet
June
an economic boost. to the
hmPageA1
support of dependents, two
Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
Z7 at 9 a.m. at the Meigs
area, and would address safeIn lieu of Oowers, memorial contributions can be made in counts, two one-year senCounty
Departtnent.
of
Job
·
decision.
to
the
Sixth
Circuit
ty concerns.
his memory to the National Parkinson Foundation Inc., Bob tences, to be served consecU- and Family Services offices in Court of Appeals.
Bids on the project were
Hope Parkinson Research Center, 1501 N.W. Ninth Ave., tively.
CASH and the BFC have opened earlier this month in
• Jerry Flou Jr., three counts Middleport.
Bob Hope Road, Miami, Fla. 33136-1494.
maintained
that the new Columbus, but ODOT has
of ·receiving stolen property
highway is' unnecessary and held off on awarding the job
and alleged violation of com!hat
the area would be better pending Sargus' ruling. Now
munity control terms, one year
served if improvements were that the ruling has been filed,
'
GALLIPOLIS
- George Vinton Pendleton II, 61, Gal- sentence on first count, continMIDDLEPORT - Audi- made to the highway as it
ODOT has not indicated
ue on community control, and tions for roles in Rodgers and
lipolis, died Monday, June 18, 200 t.
now
exists.
when
the contract will be
·
Born Nov. 22, 1939 in ·Logan County, W.Va., son· the late court costs.
Hamrnersteins "Oklahoma" to
Local proponents of the . awarded.
• Brent Baile)~ probation Vio- be presented by the Riverbend
· WiUiam and Nora Van Horn Pendleton, he was formerly
· employed by the Gallia County Sheriff's Department and lation, attempted cultivation of Arts Council in September
Rio Grande Police Department .. He was a U.S. Army veter-· marijuana, 18 months in prison will be held Sunday from 2 to
and court cost!.
an of the Vietnam War.
. 4 p.m. and Monday from 6 to
SurviVing are two sons, George V. (Mary) Pendleton Ill of
8 p.m. ,
•
.
.
-- Vinton; and Daniel W. (Belinda) Pendleton of Middleport·
Residenu will be auditionSubscribe today.
three grandchildren and two great-granddaughters: thre~
ing for singing and speaking
brothers; Ray Pendleton, Ronnie Pendleton and Stanley
992-2156
pam from provided scripu, .
Wayne (Anita) Pendleton; and a sister, Priscilla Dodrill of
Amy Perrin is directing the
POMEROY - A dissoluVinton.
production
and may be contion of marriage has been
He was also preceded in death by an infant brother and
granted in Meigs County tacted at 992-7396. She is also
·
three sisters.
Common Pleas Court by inte~ted in hearing from any: There will be no calling hours or funeral services. ArrangeWilliam G. Anderson and one interested in helping with
; ments are by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
costuming, props, set design,
Tonya M.Anderson.
and back stage, as well as cho- ·

hazards on polluted land not ~argeted
for redevelopment.
The bill also sets aside $25 million for ·
recreational trail development, a priority for Gov. Bob Taft, who led the campaign to get the Clean Ohio Fund started.
Sen. Jim Carnes, a St. Clairsville
Republican and. the committee's chairman, wanted assurances that businesses
and industries that pollute land cannot
have the sute clean it up for them.
Jones said the program specifically targets sites where the polluter has gone
out of business or cannot be found.
Ohio law also allows the state to go after
companies that are found to be responsible for pollution, he said.

lllvt ltols won't

'
relics and collectibles
are being
accepted for display at the
Chester Courthouse.
Items for permanent exhibit
or on loan are needed to fiU the
shelves and cases in preparation
for regular visitors hours
scheduled to begin next
month when the Courthouse
will· begin regular open house
on Mondays and Saturdays.
To accept items for display,
the courthouse will be open
Friday, Satunlay and Monday,
10 a.m to 5 p.m. and Sunday, 1
to 5 p.m.
· Those with items to display
but who need to have them
picked up may call 985-3580,
Wdma Parlter; 992-7261, Pat
Holter; or 992-2622, Mary .

Sills fled

charged with wrongly marking the ballots offive nursing home
residents in favor of George Bush in last year's election.
John V. Jackson, 79, of suburban North Royalton, a temporary DAYTON (AP) -A retiree was elected to the City Commisworker at the Cuyahoga County Boanl of Elections, was indicted sion to fiU the unexpired term ofher husband, who died in March.
Tuesday on five felony charges of tampering with ballots and one
Edythe Lewis, 77, said she was delighted to win the special eleccount of misconduct. Each carries a possible 1 112-year prison
tion Tuesday. The fOrmer public health nurse, who had never before
term.
Jackson's lawyer, Henry Hilow, said Jackson didn't do anything been a candidate for office, defeated former city commissioner
criminal. "There was never any criminal activity by John Jackson Abner Orick 4,842 to 2,524.
The 7,366 voles is :unong the lowest in a decade for a citywide
in this mting procedure;' he said.
Jackson was sent as part of a two-person team - one Democrat . election. It represented a 7.5 pen:ent turnout.
Lewis retired in the early 1980s as a nurse and administrator for
and one Republican - to help with absentee voting on Oct. 20.
Prosecutor Bill Mason said the Democratic Worker reported see- the Miami Conservancy District.
i!lg Jackson, the Republican, improperly recording mtes of five
people who wanted to vote for AI Core.
•

The DaHy Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL B.RIEFS

EPA regains authority for cleanups

.

I '

Pomerov. Mkllll•port. Ohio

Wedl nllay, June 20, 2001 ·

Nltlonwlde Mutulllnlurlnce ltld Atnllallld Complniel
Home Ofltce: Columbu8, OH 432'15-2220 ANS12 11100

•

�PageAl

The Daily Sentinel

•••d•y. June 20. 2001

w

'

I

COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
would rq¢n the authority to sign off
on cleanups of abandoned industrial
sites under a bill to implement a state
bond issue that voters approved in
November.
The Senate Energy, Resources &amp;
Environment Committee began hearings Tuesday on a substitute version of
the bill. It would authorize splitting
$400 million over four years between
redevelopment of polluted land and the
acquisition of green space for parks and
recreation.
Local governments would have to
raise 25 percent of the total cost of those
projects. Proposals would have to go

o •••· •••~•

&amp;my Pl Clauilj

Clautt

-

T-

RIO!

-

-

leo

Stormy weather possible
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Thunderstorms
were
expected on Thursday along a
. stationary frontal system
stretching across the ~ion.
Temperatures on Thursday
were to remain in the 80s.
The front will finally drop
south and east of the region
early Friday with high pressure
building into the area.
Dry weather with plenty of
sunshine is expected into the
weekend. Temperatures will be
pleasant with highs in the 70s
and overnight lows in the 50s.
Sunset tonight will be at
9:04, and sunrise on Thursday
is at 6:03 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...l'artly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. low in the mid
60s. Light and variable wind.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday... Partly
cloudy

with a cl12nce of showers and
thunderstorms. High in the
mid 80s. Light and variable
wind. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Thursday night... Showers
and thunderstorms likely. Low
in the mid 60s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mosdy cloudy with
a chance of showers and !hunderstorms. High 75 to 80.
Saturday... Partly · cloudy
with a chance of showers. Low
in the upper 50s and high 75
to 80.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers. Low in
the mid 50s and high in the
lower 80s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Low
54 to 59 and high in the mid
80s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Low
in the upper 50s and high in
the mid 80s.

Chase wounds.&amp;-year-old ·
CLEVELAND (AP) -A 6-year-old boy sitting on a porch was
shot and wounded during a police chase involving two alleged
drug dealers.
.
Mayor Michael R. White, who went to the scene late Tuesday
night, said it wasn't clear who fired the shot d!2t hit the youngster.
. "Police and I don't know all the facts. I want you to know we
are taking this seriously;'White told area residents who gathered at
the shooting scene.
The boy, whose name wasn't released, underwent surgery at
Rainbow Babies &amp; Children's Hospital, Safety Director Henry
Guzman said. No medical condition was available early Wednesday.

\Volker faces .misc:ount charp

before the Clean Ohio Council, a board
made up .of state and local officials.
The EPA had asked to have the
authority to determine of a cleanup was
done within standards before a certified
professional contractor could issue a "no
further action" letter. The · House
removed that authority from the EPA
and gave it to the contractor. That move
angered environmentalists who felt the
EPA was being written out of the
process.
"Considerable feedback is needed
from OEPA every step of the way:•
agency Director Christopher Jones told
the committee.
The substitute version sets aside $10
million for cleaning up public health

CLEVELAND (AP) -A muAAiJtg victim who found and disarmed his atracker was shot and killed when the teen grabbed the
weapon, loaded it and fired, police said.
·
Police took a 15-year-old into custody in Tuesday's .shooting
death of Eugene Turner, 36, of Cleveland. No charges were inunediately filed.
·
Turner, robbed at gunpoint of $92, ·got a friend and together
they found the suspect and grabbed an unloaded .22-caliber pistol
from him.
The friend said Turner thought about beating up the teen, but
instead tossed the weapon aside and left.The teen then grabbed the
pistol, loaded it and shot Turner in the back. the friend told police.

-

The

•'

Sealed proposals for the Milling and Resurfacing of Mill Street
located In the VIllage of Middleport In Meigs County, Ohio, will
be received by the . Meigs County Commissioners at their
office at the Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 10:00 A.M,
Thursday, July 5, 2001 and then at 11:00 A.M .. at said office
opened and read aloud for the following:
.
The Milling of 978 S.Y. and Asphalt Resurfacing of 2,850 L.F of
Mill St'reet Tn Middleport, Ohio In Meigs County, Ohio Bidders
must note required prevailing wages on this project, Included In
the bid packet.
·
Specifications, and 'bid forma may be secured at the office of
Meigs County Commissioners; · Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769- Phone# 740.992·2895.
A deposit of 0 dollars will be required for each set of plana
and specifications, check made payable to
The full amount will returned within thirty (30) days after receipt
of bids. ·
.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond In an
amount of 100% of the bid amount with a surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners or by certified
check, cashiers check, or letter of credit upon a solvent bank In
the amount of not leas than 10% of the bid amount In favor of
the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners.
Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the
official or agent signing the bond
.
·
Bids shall .be sealed and marked as Bid for VIllage of
·.Middleport ·Mill Street Improvements and mailed or delivered to:
Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, .Ohio
45769.
·Attention of bidders Is ·called to all of the requirements
contained In this bid packet, particularly to the Federal .Labor
·Standards Provisions and Davis-Bacon Wages, various
Insurance requirements, various equal opportunity provisions,
and the requirement for a payment bond and performance bond
for 100% of the contract price.
. .
·
.
No bidder may withdraw.his bid within thirty (30) days after the
actual date of the opening thereof.
Meigs Co. Commissioners to reject any or all bids.
Jeff Thornton, President
1
Meigs County Commissioners .
•

.'

,,

'

'
I'

Emma Johnson
Dau!~hter

of

johnson

wv

Plctur81 muet be 'In by Frid1y
June 29, 2001. Plcturu Cln be
plcklld up after July 13th, 2001.

'

: versity students, employees,
· alumni and parents.
"This is a major building
block for economic develop. merit and expansion in the
• region:• said U.S. R~p. Ted
Strickland, D-Lucasville, said.
"This project will make it
more possible for families in
the region to have success and·
opportunities."
James Opatmy. assistant man: ager of the Detroit Airports
.: District Office for the Federal
· aviation Administration, and
Jesse White, federal co-chairman of the Appalachian
Regional Commission, also
spoke, and representatives from
Athens and Vinton Counties
were on hand.
The university has received
more than $5 million from the

Reader Services
Correction Polley
•

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Our main concern In all stories Is
to be accurate. II you knOW of an
error In a story, caII the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

News Department•

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

The main number Is 992·2156.
Oepartme.nt eltlentlons are:

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Pomeroy,
Ohio.
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Downtown
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Get the proper auto Insurance for your
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UJ.~~

GALLIPOLIS - Revival
services . will be held at the .
Church of God of Prophecy
on White Road, Gallipolis, Fri.day and Saturday at 7 p.m. and
Slinday at 6 p.m. JJ. Davis of
Metz, W.Va., will be the eyangelist. .

Aclviiory issued

.The Daily Sentinel ·

Parent's Name:._,._ _ _ _ _ __;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;;.:._ _,__ _--'

~

Issued licenses • rus.
·Revival planned

Federal Aviation }\uthority to
extend the existing runway.
POMEROY Marriage
including the design of the licenses have been granted in
runway, acquisition of 14 11-cres Meigl County Common Pleas
of land, lengthening the para!- . Court to Charles , William
lei taxiway, moving and Roberts Jr., 23, Racine, and
installing a new instrument Amber Kay Bird, 21, Racine;
landing system and rerouting Terry Wayne Wyatt, 46, Midan adjacent Columbia Town- dleport, and Kathy Diane
ship road to allow for the run- Osborne, 46, Long Bottom;
way protection zone.
Donald Edward Vaughan, Jr.,
The runway project is 23, Pomeroy, and Brooke Ashexpected to be completed in ley Williams, 19, Pomeroy; and
September 2002.
Christopher Lee Tolliver, 18,
The 6,500-square-foot ter- Pomeroy. and Shelly Ann Pofminal will be named the C. fenbarger, 18, Pomeroy.
David Snyder Terminal, and
the runway Snyder Field in
recognitio11 of Snyder, who
donated half of the $1.5 mil- · I '
RACINE -A boil advisory
lion to construct the terminal.
issued
by Thppers · PlainsSnyder is chairman and CEO
of ,Brulant, hie., · and Snyder Chester Water District for an
International Brewing Group area ~t the intersection of
in Cleireland. The airport will County Road 28 and Greenremain the Ohio University' ' wood Cemetery Road, includGordon K. Bush Regional air- ing Tackervlle, and going south
to Ohio 1'24, then east on 124
port.
to Dorcas, has been released.
The results of a sample taken
June 18 are ~onsidered safe.

Airport

'

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

The .Daily Sentinel

Survey

l"'ntecl

fromPegeA1 .

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition tilled
with photographs of . local
children - ages newborn to four
years old. · The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 6th issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild,,
or relative iS involved!

AD Sl:al - 60\

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS .

Dlssolullun

Daily Sentinel

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

Rucltwal 37l.
Ruclty Boola - 4\

Auditions set

. Georae v. Pendleton 11

EXTRA! EXTRA!
·

Gamotl- 6210
Go:nan:l Elat:ft: - 481.
GKNLY - 10

CA$H .

ft1111 inclded in biple Idling ·

.Coming Thursday, July 6, 2001

US8 - 21 l.

A/Cit eo.!- 24~
Al&lt;z!J-42

Council to 111eet

CANTON (AP) - Hundreds of people who put $65 million
into investments d!2t became the target of a fraud investigation
may get back just, 15 pen:ent of their money.
About 800 Cyprus Funds investors, including about 700 from
Ohio, were mailed letters Friday from a court-appointed receiver .
and were told they can expect to get back about 15 percent of their ·
~nts.
·
The checks could be qistributed as soon as August, according to
the receiver, Miami-based attorney Michael Goldberg.
Much of what was invested in Cyprus was used to pay dividends
to earlier investors, an illegal practice known as a pyramid scheme.

CINCINNATI (AP) -A man beat and mutilated his girlfriend
NILES (AP) -The mother of a 12-year-old boy who died two and her 12~~-old daughter and left the .bodies in th~ir ho~e,
years ago of a rare disease oven:ame her hesitation and returned to then lured a neighbor to the house two days later and killed him,
his school to direct a bell choir in his memory.
•
a prose~tor said Thesday. .. .
"I feel [ .need to do this for Christopher;• said N~cy: Grusha, •'· Stan F1tzpatnck, 33, was mdicted Tuesday on three counts of
whose son diedAug.·31,1999, in Boston Children's Hospital of aggravated mUrder, two co!IDts of aggravated robbery and ' one
complications from lung surgery.
· .
' count each of attempted murder and aggravated robbery. Prosecu. Afier he died, Mrs. Grusha came up with the idea of donating tors will try to have him convicted and sentenced to death, Hamilhand bells to St. Stephen Parish
ton County Prosecutor Michael Allen .said.
because Christopher liked his
school and church. His · mother
wanted a living memorial d!2t
would benefit both.
Gary and Nancy Gruaha also
donated a silent bell, with the
clapper removed, in their son's
name to the .Youngstown-area
school.

AEP-47~

Men tenleiiCll!d .

cet fuD 1111011nt

Oloir. 1110111 pi ffet"ie ltli!IIICN'J

CLEVELAND (AP) - An elections boanl worker has been

1

Plul 5. Clay

replaces h11wncl on panel

Victim ..... muaet is sllin

LOCAL STOCKS

AmTetl:SBC 40~
Seara - 39\
POMEROY -The fuUowAaltland lite. - 38!.
Sltoney's -'t.
Har1ey Oavidsor! - 46 ~
ing civil lawsuits h:M: been
AT&amp;T - 20l.
Kn:att - 11 ~
W8I-Mart- 481.
Bank One- 36\
GALLIPOLIS - Paul S. Clay; 70, Gallipolis, died Monday, filed in Meigs County ComKroger- 25
WertdV'a- 24~
BabE-.-18
lands
End38!.
~-~lgtc:Mt - 12
June 18, 2001 in Potomac Nursing and Wellness Center mon Pleas Court:
~
44l.
l.ld. -15
Daily stock repor1S ant
Rockville, Md.
.
'
• Home National Bank.
Oek HI Fnancial- 14l. the 4 . p.m. closing
Chan1:iool 3
Cl:arn*'ll Sltql8 - 5% OVB-25
Born July 2~. 1930 in Haverhill, son of the late Frankand IUcine, against Bill E.
~ ol t:e pmrious
Clly Holding- 10
B8T-35'o
day's1nlnlactions, proMary Belle Miller Clay, he retired from the U.S. Air Force in .Buchanan, Tuppers Plains, and
Duf'()nt- 47
Peoples-19
vided by smtl: ParlnefS
others, alleging default on a
1969 afte! 21 years of service.
Ptemiet- 7~
Federal MogtA - 2l.
at~ Inc.
. After hi~ ~ttrement, he was later .employed as an engineer- · mortgage agreement in the
~ng techru_mn at the Ohio Transportation Research Center '31Dount of$34,621.13;
m Marysville. He had been a resident of Gallia County since
• . Beneficial Ohio Inc.
health care planning.
1986.. He and his late wife we~ also caretakers of Camp Elmhurst, ru.,against Lee~
It is important survey parFrancts Asbury Umted Methodist Church Camp at Rio Musick, Portland, and others,
ticipants ''tell it like it is,"
Grande.
alleging default on a promissoDavenport said, because only
fmm Page A1
H~ was a member of Guce United Methodist Church, ry note in the amount of
through those answers will
Patt;tot Lodge 496 of Free and Accepted Masons, Gallipolis $48,282;
dential, will be conducted by the planning committee have
Shnne Club, ~addi~ Temple Shrine, .32nd Degree Master
• Federal National Mortgage
a team of Ohio University an understanding of what is
Ma'?n ofSco~ttsh_ Rite of the Valley of Columbus, York Rite Association, Chicago, ID.,
researchers Monday through important to residents and be
Bodtes at Galltpohs, VFW Post No. I 080 at Bellefontaine and against Angela L. Capehart,
Friday of next week from 5 to able to address the county's ·
~he Harold Kerr Post of the American Legion at Belle- Pomeroy, and others, alleging Powell.
, 9 p.m. It will take between unique health care concerns.
1ontame.
.
·
default on a loan agreement in
five and 10 minutes to comCommunity, business and
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Sara "Sally" Lee the amount of$25,981 .65;
plete.
·
health care representatives
Booth Clay, on Feb. 13, 1994; four brothers, John Clay,
• Home National Bank,
Participants will be asked a serving on the comrriittee are
Bobby _Clay, ~illiam Cl~y and 'Yillard Clay; and two sisters, Racine, against Carolyn S.
series of questions. Some will Rhonda Dailey, Trina Ham- .
Kather~ne Miller and Mtlda Retd.
Curtis, Jackson, alleging default
MIDDLEPORT OH require only a "yes" or "no," mond, Becky Baer, Bob Byer, .
SurvJVIng are a son, Paul L. (Karen) Clay of Gaithersburg, on a loan ~greement in the KAN Coin Club will meet on or a "satisfied," "dissatisfied," Dr. James Witherell, Pat
Md.; two daughters, ·Susan D. Clay of Cleveland, and Dawn . amount of$4,91.58.
June 25 at 7 p.m. at Trolley Sta- or neutral opinion; while oth- Holter, Norma Torres, LaMar
&lt;R.obert) Pearson of Washington, West Virginia; four grand• Donald K. Wooten, Albany, ". tion. Free and paid drawings, a ers will deal with hospital or Wyse,John Blaettnar, Bernard
children; three brothers, Leonard Clay of New Lebanon, against Janies W. Latham III, coin auction and refreshments agency choice and use, as well Fultz, Mike Swisher, Larry
Ohio, Ge~e Clay.of lro~ton, and_ Charles Clay of Columbus; Athens, and others, alleging are planned. New members are as satisfaction with the facility Lavender, Perry Varnadoe, Dr.
and two SISters, Liz LeWis of Gallia, and Annette Holloway of personal injury sustained in a welcome. Dues are . $10 for and health care received.
Nick l:luston, Dr. Harold
Oak Hill. .
June 25, 1999 motor vdtide adults and $5 for children
Davenport said the results Brown, Paul. Reed, Andy
· Services will be 1 p.m. Friday .in Grace United Methodist . accidenJ, demanding judgment under 16. Information is avail- will be used to assess current Baer, Gina Pines, Davenport,
Church, with the Rev. Greg R. Swann and the Rev.Jonathan in excess of$25,000.
able by writing to OH-KAN strengths and weaknesses in Brenda Merritt, Susan Oliver,
S. Kollman officiating. Burial will be in Olive Cemetery, WalCoin Club; 100 Union Ave., the system and give a direc- Brenda Barnhart and Charnut Township. Friends may call at Cremeens Funeral Chapel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769-1000.
tion for the county's future lene Hoeflich .
from 6-9 p.m. Thursday.
POMEROY -The follow- .
The body will lie in state in the church one hour prior to
ing were sentenced on crimiservices.
project, meanwhile, maintain
Masonic services will be conducted in the chapel at 8:30 nal charges 'in Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
that construction of a new
Common Pleas' Court:
p.m. Thursday by Patriot Lodge 496, F&amp;AM.
County Family and Children
section of U.S. 33 would be
• Rocky Alan Nave, nonMilitary graveside honors will be conducted by the U.S.
First
Council
will
meet
June
an economic boost. to the
hmPageA1
support of dependents, two
Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
Z7 at 9 a.m. at the Meigs
area, and would address safeIn lieu of Oowers, memorial contributions can be made in counts, two one-year senCounty
Departtnent.
of
Job
·
decision.
to
the
Sixth
Circuit
ty concerns.
his memory to the National Parkinson Foundation Inc., Bob tences, to be served consecU- and Family Services offices in Court of Appeals.
Bids on the project were
Hope Parkinson Research Center, 1501 N.W. Ninth Ave., tively.
CASH and the BFC have opened earlier this month in
• Jerry Flou Jr., three counts Middleport.
Bob Hope Road, Miami, Fla. 33136-1494.
maintained
that the new Columbus, but ODOT has
of ·receiving stolen property
highway is' unnecessary and held off on awarding the job
and alleged violation of com!hat
the area would be better pending Sargus' ruling. Now
munity control terms, one year
served if improvements were that the ruling has been filed,
'
GALLIPOLIS
- George Vinton Pendleton II, 61, Gal- sentence on first count, continMIDDLEPORT - Audi- made to the highway as it
ODOT has not indicated
ue on community control, and tions for roles in Rodgers and
lipolis, died Monday, June 18, 200 t.
now
exists.
when
the contract will be
·
Born Nov. 22, 1939 in ·Logan County, W.Va., son· the late court costs.
Hamrnersteins "Oklahoma" to
Local proponents of the . awarded.
• Brent Baile)~ probation Vio- be presented by the Riverbend
· WiUiam and Nora Van Horn Pendleton, he was formerly
· employed by the Gallia County Sheriff's Department and lation, attempted cultivation of Arts Council in September
Rio Grande Police Department .. He was a U.S. Army veter-· marijuana, 18 months in prison will be held Sunday from 2 to
and court cost!.
an of the Vietnam War.
. 4 p.m. and Monday from 6 to
SurviVing are two sons, George V. (Mary) Pendleton Ill of
8 p.m. ,
•
.
.
-- Vinton; and Daniel W. (Belinda) Pendleton of Middleport·
Residenu will be auditionSubscribe today.
three grandchildren and two great-granddaughters: thre~
ing for singing and speaking
brothers; Ray Pendleton, Ronnie Pendleton and Stanley
992-2156
pam from provided scripu, .
Wayne (Anita) Pendleton; and a sister, Priscilla Dodrill of
Amy Perrin is directing the
POMEROY - A dissoluVinton.
production
and may be contion of marriage has been
He was also preceded in death by an infant brother and
granted in Meigs County tacted at 992-7396. She is also
·
three sisters.
Common Pleas Court by inte~ted in hearing from any: There will be no calling hours or funeral services. ArrangeWilliam G. Anderson and one interested in helping with
; ments are by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
costuming, props, set design,
Tonya M.Anderson.
and back stage, as well as cho- ·

hazards on polluted land not ~argeted
for redevelopment.
The bill also sets aside $25 million for ·
recreational trail development, a priority for Gov. Bob Taft, who led the campaign to get the Clean Ohio Fund started.
Sen. Jim Carnes, a St. Clairsville
Republican and. the committee's chairman, wanted assurances that businesses
and industries that pollute land cannot
have the sute clean it up for them.
Jones said the program specifically targets sites where the polluter has gone
out of business or cannot be found.
Ohio law also allows the state to go after
companies that are found to be responsible for pollution, he said.

lllvt ltols won't

'
relics and collectibles
are being
accepted for display at the
Chester Courthouse.
Items for permanent exhibit
or on loan are needed to fiU the
shelves and cases in preparation
for regular visitors hours
scheduled to begin next
month when the Courthouse
will· begin regular open house
on Mondays and Saturdays.
To accept items for display,
the courthouse will be open
Friday, Satunlay and Monday,
10 a.m to 5 p.m. and Sunday, 1
to 5 p.m.
· Those with items to display
but who need to have them
picked up may call 985-3580,
Wdma Parlter; 992-7261, Pat
Holter; or 992-2622, Mary .

Sills fled

charged with wrongly marking the ballots offive nursing home
residents in favor of George Bush in last year's election.
John V. Jackson, 79, of suburban North Royalton, a temporary DAYTON (AP) -A retiree was elected to the City Commisworker at the Cuyahoga County Boanl of Elections, was indicted sion to fiU the unexpired term ofher husband, who died in March.
Tuesday on five felony charges of tampering with ballots and one
Edythe Lewis, 77, said she was delighted to win the special eleccount of misconduct. Each carries a possible 1 112-year prison
tion Tuesday. The fOrmer public health nurse, who had never before
term.
Jackson's lawyer, Henry Hilow, said Jackson didn't do anything been a candidate for office, defeated former city commissioner
criminal. "There was never any criminal activity by John Jackson Abner Orick 4,842 to 2,524.
The 7,366 voles is :unong the lowest in a decade for a citywide
in this mting procedure;' he said.
Jackson was sent as part of a two-person team - one Democrat . election. It represented a 7.5 pen:ent turnout.
Lewis retired in the early 1980s as a nurse and administrator for
and one Republican - to help with absentee voting on Oct. 20.
Prosecutor Bill Mason said the Democratic Worker reported see- the Miami Conservancy District.
i!lg Jackson, the Republican, improperly recording mtes of five
people who wanted to vote for AI Core.
•

The DaHy Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL B.RIEFS

EPA regains authority for cleanups

.

I '

Pomerov. Mkllll•port. Ohio

Wedl nllay, June 20, 2001 ·

Nltlonwlde Mutulllnlurlnce ltld Atnllallld Complniel
Home Ofltce: Columbu8, OH 432'15-2220 ANS12 11100

•

�.

.

PageA4

nlon

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

•••• 20,2011

DEAR ABBY: I have a trne story
to share. It's the story of a man who
married his high school sweetheart.
She supported him through college,
encouraged him to pursue a degree,
and gave him two beautiful children.
She became a wonderful mother. She
never. missed a ballgame. She took
the children to church. She worked
full time and went without in order
to give us more, and he, on the other
hand, never helped around the house
and became obsessed vvith his job.
A female co-worker vvith a questionable reputation began to flirt,
flatter and confide in him about her
. inattentive husband. He allowed
himself to be convinced an affair was
justified, _since_ his vvife was so busy
ratsmg his children. Soon the affair
became common knowledge. He
had to leave his home and family,
whtch suddenly seemed 'invaluable

I

t

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Mlneglng Editor

Chllrlls W. Govey

Publ..her

0'- 1(.-y Hill
Conli'OIIr

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OIIIo _ ,

OUR VIEW
.

Critical
'

POMEROY Rayan
Young lhle was one of seven
Ohio University students involved in projects ranging
from studies of parasites to the
creation of new dance choreography - · to be named
recipients of the 2001 student
enhancement awards.
She graduated
from
Ohio University
summa cum
laude
with
bachelor of
science
in
biological sciences, and has
lhle
been accepted into the
College of Medicine at Ohio
State University. She placed
first in her class in biological
sciences and was named the
outstanding undergraduate in
chemistry and bio chemistry.
Her department thesis was' on
"The Effects of Exercise and
Energy Availability on Bio
Chemical Bone Marken in
Young Women."
.
The enhancement award of
up to $6,000 received by Ihle
will support research, scholarship and creative work for one
year.
· The seven recipients were
selected from 17 nominees by
a committee composed of
Ohio University faculty and
the Enhancement Awards

"'!

RUSHER'S VlEW

: Ckan water is a goal all of us work toward achieving. That
p(&gt;int is evident. But keeping southern Ohio's creeks and
sQ:eams clear and attractive is of critical importance to the
r~gion 's future, and not only for attracting tourists, sportsmen
other folks. It's a key point in trying to reverse negativ.e
i~ages of the area as a pollution paradise neglected by all, from
he went out of his way to emphasize that
It would have been hard not to syrnWashington on down. ·
he wants a new and warmer relationship
That's why the Raccoon Creek Improvement Comniittee,
pathize vvith President Bush as he prewith the United States, and the betting is
assisted by Ohio University's Institute for Local Government
pared for his first visit as. president to
· .that he Will get it.
,
and Resea.rch Development, is putting togethe'r a management
various capitals in Europe. He and his
The European trip, therefore, enters
plan for Raccoon's watershed.
.
advisers knew that a cool reception (at
the record as just one more piece of evi- ·
Why is this so important? Raccoon runs more than iOO
best) awaited him . By letting it be
dence that Mr. Bush is a man who does
kf1own in advance that he would not
miles through the area, starting near Hocking County, coursing
not change his position on fundamentals
through the western part of Meigs arid emptying into the Ohio .
permit the outmoded ABM treaty to
merely because he encounters opposiRiver south of Gallipolis: It's one of the longest creeks in the
prevent him from · building missile
tion. We have .seen this before - · most
region, and many folks have property or businesses bordering
defenses essential to, our safety afld by
sp.ectacularly
in the matter of a tax cut
on its banks.
,
rejecting the · Kyoto protocols as a
COWMNlSi
- and it is not contradicted by abrupt
There was, we are told, a time when Raccoon was clean and
ruinous and unfair "solution" to the
changes of policy on such trivia as naval
a haven for recreation. Some years ago, it wasn't even that. Mine
problem of global 'warming, he stepped
runoff, debris and creekbank deterioration took their toll and
on the toes of good liberals everywhere, were at one on all th~ fundamentals, and training exercises on the Puerto Rican
made pretty inhospitable. We have been told it's better, thanks
including those holding office in various pledging to work di\igently to narrow island ofVieques. (President C linton had
~J.l!!. difference.s o.n. det;tils,
agreed to a referendum -there, which the
to various conservation efforts, especially those promoted )&gt;y
.center-left governments of Europe.
As a result, he ~ (grudgingly) giVen Navy was bound to. lose, and which
RClC, a citizens group.
. - - --~:~r :rdditttm,· he could· count otr the
better
marks fi r \iis performance than would have been a d1sast~us precedent
: But we have a long way tQ go before Raccoon·evet reacfre'f ~ · ~:~arejy·'!~ncea)ed contempt of m~st
what it used to be.
· ·• ·
• ~ ,_.. ... ~b.~(:&gt;. \)f tlic.~est E~;~ropean media, ~yone expected il_l evf ry c~pidil he vis~ ' for o.ther bases such as ~kinawa.)
Nor does Mr. )3ush s firmness o~
RCIC and ILGARD had the last of a series of public meetwho a~e as ·' ~ependaBly . hostile . to tted. To he sure, h1s trademark flaws ings last week to gather input on what the management plan
Republican prestdents as,.their Amencan above all the familial: tendency to .miss- essentials nJean t~at he is incapable of .
· should address. The input is important, and its surveys w~re
counterp~rts are- Fmally~the usual Euro- peak in minor ways '(as in referring .to compromtse. He hves m the real_ world,
geared toward a number of areas, from flooding to recreati'?nal
pean equlvale,nts. of our domesttc rent-~- "the nation of Africa7) .- were on dis- where we seldom get ev~rytht!lg we
use. ILGARD's Rachael Hoy said input is vital to the process.
m~bs were getttng ready to stage rhe1r play, to the relief critics with nothing·· want:·and he knows _that a tantrum ts n?
.Judging from last week's meeting at Rio Grande, which drew
notsy protests. All m all, the tnp, howev- else to criti&lt;;ize. Bpt in his bearing, his substu~re for negonat10n - as on h1s
about 20 people, the need to take future ·action means some- .
er necessary, must have looked, in grasp of"the issues·, and his refusal to let education btll, where h~ seeded for barething to folks Jiving along the creek.
advance, like a PR disaster getting ready differences of opinion curdle into hostil- ly half a l?~f..But I predtct that th7 Euroity, he was every ~ inch a president of pean politicians who oppo~e hts plans
· Bringing Raccoon back is going to take money, but that's in
to happen. ,
.,
for, ~y, tnlsstle_ defense wtll, ·to theu
So what dtd Mr. Bush do? Dtd he soft- whom the country] could be ,proud.
the future. Completing a management plan is one step in the
m:\nagedto
save
the
best
astomshment, disc?ver themselves, a year
And
he
even
process that needs to be completed. Indications are that will
. en hts ,post,ttons m deference to the
·
. •
,
·anticipated criticisms in the grand tradi- for last. Meeting R\~ssian president Putin from now, consentmg to pla~s for ~utu­
'happen.
From there, it's up to us in the several coJnties that constition of liberal diplomacy? Or, alterna- for the first time, ;e two leaders discov- al d~fense far clos~r to Mr. Bush s p~­
tute Raccoon's watershed to support activity to make it a dril\v,
tivelY; did he fling the differenc_es it_t his ered that they li · d each other on a ~osals than to theu o~ current post~
bo nus that can tton.
not only for tourists, for those of us who live here to enjoy it
hosts _teeth and tell them to like 1~ or purey
! personaI basrs-a
D
d
1
6· h
h
lump tt, as an untutored cowboy nught never be counted n the murky world of , ,ogge ~e~s a ways ,ng tens t e
again as one of the area's natural attractions.
·
· al ffi · ' b h" h h . tttnld, but It IS the mark of true leaders.
'
be expected to do? .
On the contrary, he approached every m~ernauon a al s, ut w IC ·.~ en tt It is becoming increasingly evident that
encounter with courtesy and his signa- eXIsts, Cl!ll often make;. the difference · President Bush is a true leader.
(William Rusher is a Distinguished ·
ture charm, acknowledging the dis- b~tween success tnd f~ure. ~~· Pu~n
not
change
the
Ruman
posltton
s1gFellow
of the Claremont Institute for
agreements but arguing genially for his
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
positions in regard to them, insisting that nificantly on matten in. dispute (any the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Today is Wednesday, June 20, the 171st day of2001.There are
the United States and Western .Europe more than Mr. Bush changed ours), .but Philosophy.)
· 194 days left in the year.
'
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 20, 1782, Congress. approved the Great Seal of the
United States.
On this date:
In 1756, in India, a. group of British soldiers was imprisoned
in a suffocating cell that gained notoriety as the "Black Hole of
.
\.
Calcutta"; most died.
In 1837, Queen Victoria ascended the British throne followBY RED GREEN
jelly powder J.ith a ~t finger. I used to your bathing suit is too big for you.
ing the death of h~r uncle, King William IV.
· ·
We went over to a friend's house like can that were low and fast. Now I
• That first kiss and the grandmother
· In 1863, West Virginia became the 35th state.
recendy to watch a hockey game on TV prefer any veqicle i can enter without who gave it to me.
In 1893, a jury in New Bedford, Mass., found Lizzie Borden
l!lld we were overwhelmed with the cramping. My taste has changed in
• My wedding day and the subsequent
innocent of the ax murders of her father and stepmother.
quality of their picture. We immediately · everything: nlusic, movies and manage- arrests.
In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, the U.S. cruiser
realized that, their TV looking so good able risk.
·
• The day I told my boss the 1ruth and
Charleston captured the Spanish-ruled islan!i of Guam.
must mean that our TV looks really bad.
I even like the fact that my wife is the trouble 1 had finding another job.
In 1943, race~related rioting erupted in Dettoit; federal
We just never noticed. That's because getting older. I've learned that expectaThe lite goes on
troops were sent in two days later to quell the violence that
over
time
you
get
used
to
whatever
it
is
tion
is
a.
two-way
street.
I
think
it's
Everything
is light these days. It s.t artresulted in more than ~0 deaths.
'
you have to look at, day in and day out good · thing that p¢ople 's preferences ed with light beer but now they have
In 1947, Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel was shot dead at the Bev- ugly furniture or a bad wardrobe .You change as they gel olde~. It creates light butter and light mayonnaise and
erly Hills, Calif., mansion of his girlfriend, Virginia Hill, appar- .
learn to accept and make .peace with it. . diversity in our economy, and it reduces light ketchup and on and on it goes.
endy at the order of mob associates.
I think life is a lot" like that. If ~o~ can · the line-ul)f at Disneyland. It also adds Let's face it, light is a .fixture. They even
In 1963, the United States and Soviet Union signed an
reSISt
the pressure to change thmgs to mystery thJ'oughout your life as you make the spelling light. Now it's "lite"
agreement to set up a "hot line" between the two superpowsuit someone else, they will eventually look forward to the next phase and the - vvith 20 percent fewer letters. Now
ers.
get use d to it. An d this appIies equally to changes . if brings. Although I don't
In 1967, boxer Muhammad Ali was convicted in Houston of
your professional and personal life. 1f think I'll ever live long enough to enjoy I'm not sure about this, put I think they
violating Selective SerVice laws by refusing to be drafted. (Ali's
you have the mental toughness to hold· lawn bowling.
make products lite by diluting them. By
conviction was ultimately overturnea by the Supreme Court.)
your ground through the first years of a
Mon;tents to remember
addtng· more water o_f atr or somethm.g
In 1979, ABC News correspondent Bill Stewart was shot to
job or a marriage when your boss is tryI think a person's life is tremendous\y really cheap - whtc~ means that It
death in Managua, Nicaragua, by '! member of President Anasing to maximize your productivity and affected by a small number of mind- must cost less to make hte products. But
tasio Somoza's national guatd.
.
your vvife is trying to maximize your altering experiences __ · surpris~ and . you pay more for them bec_ause they're
Ten years ago: Boris Yeltsin, the newly elected president of
compatibility, soon, just like what hap- cl'lall~nges that went deep .into their ·?etter for you. So you are, m fact, paythe Russian republic, was welcomed to the White House by
pened with our TV, they will eventually psyche and affected all subsequent deci- mg more for less. But then, that's how
·President Bush. German lawmakers voted to move the seat of
not notice your poor reception. You just sions. Here are a list of some of the you got that lite wallet.
the national government back to Berlin.
have to make sure they're never exposed things that had that effect on me:
Quote of the Day: "The most encourFive years ago: The Clinton administration anno\mced it
to other TVs or workers or husbands.
~That
first day of kindergarten where aging event in life is· to see a beautiful 1
would veto the re-election of U.N. Secretary-General Boutros
.By the way, our new television set has I overestimated the reliability .of my woman with an ugly man ." - Red
Boutros-Ghali. Westinghouse Electric agreed to buy Infinity
a great picture.
bladder.
Green
Broadcasting for $3.9 billion.
Never say never
• The deficiencies of my first car and
(R ed Gree&gt;I is the star of"T!Ie Red Greet•
One year ago: After a furious 'last-minute lobbying blitz by
As ( mature (ripen?), I notice that the policeman who pointed them out to Show," a television series sew iti tl1e US. 011
the Clinton administration, the Senate voted 57-42 to approve
Nature has set me up to start liking ' me.
PBS"mtd itt Canada on tlte OllG Network, .
legislation making it .easier for federal prosecutors to try' hate
things I used to hate and vice vena. As:a
• The bad haircut Ol) prom night.
mtd the author of "Tite Red Green Book"
crimes, att;lching the measure to a defense authorization bill.
kid I never liked steak and potatoes. I
• Th~t day at tpe pool when I learned and "Red Green Talks Gars: A Love
· (However, the House stripped the hate c;rimes provision from
preferred Popsicles and eating uncooked how dangerous diving can be when Story. ")
·f ~
·the defense btu the foll9vving October.)
·

or

Bush deserves an

~~for

his European excursion

William
Rusher

of

:TODAY IN HISTORY

Wldn•ar. June 20.1001 :

_

steps, I hope my letter makes· him

think twice. He should go home,
help his wife. be part of his children's
lives, and stop believing he should be
the center of eweryone's attention.
If a married man is tempted by
another woman, I guanntee she's
selfish and looking out for only her
own needs. And if he marries her,
what he'll have is an adulteress who
liennd cheats. I wish I could ehange
everything I have done. - SAQ-

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
beyond belief.
Abby, I traded everything imporrant in life for a woman who's not fit
to wipe my vvife's shoes. Although I
never strayed before, my reputation is
ruined. My children will never again
respect me. I'D be known for the rest
of my life as someone who committed adultery and lied to everyone I
know and love.
. ·
If there is a man reading this who's
considering follovving in my foot-

. lhle gets
$6,000 award

jManagement plan one step
f toward improving Raccoon

By--.!!fJJ_~~~~·~tnd~--/-~~~Pa~g!!:2eAS!!!!.

Man saddened by affair that cost him faVJ/Iily~ resped

glJSWs LATESl FAITH•8GD IN111ATIVE•••

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74CHI82·2156 • Fu: 182-2157

.

DER BUT WISER
DEAR. SADDER: I'm printing
your warning. Anyone who reads it
and fiuf!S it off thinking your story is
unusual, please read on:
DEAR. ABBY: Two years ago, I
met "LiZ," the woman of my dreams.
My marriage of t ~ yean was rocky.
Liz was ambitious, hard-working,
exciting and fun - everything I
thought my vvife wasn't. Liz was an

dip

THURSDAY
.
, POMEROY- Meigs County
Treasurer Howard F'rank to ineet
with County Commissioners and
elected oHiclals during regular
commissioners' meellng, 10
a.m. Thursday, to discuss coun·
ty's llnanclal condHion.
·

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Ulhen you've ·grown aCcustomed·to everyone~ flaws

POMEROY - Rodders 2000
Car Club to meet at Pomeroy's
Wendy's on Thursday, 7 p.m.
Instead of at the home of Jim
Nelson as eariler announced. ,

Council. A total of $39,000 clerk, at 949-2296. Lineup will Grass at 6 and 8 p.m. and Last
, be at 9 a.m. at the high school. Chance at 7 and 9 p.m.
The council was created in
Activities will ·include kids
The day will conclude with
1997 as part of art effort to games from tt a.m. to 3 p.m. fireworks.
support existing researeh and The signing team of Racine
The Racine Fire Departcreative endeavors and pro- United Methodist Church ment will have a chicken barmo~e new initiatives by facul- will perform at noon and the becue at the firehouse at 1 1
ty and students.
.
frog jumping contest will get a.m.
For information contact
~hie, a gradu~te of Southern underway at 5 p.m. Monetary
H1~ School, 1s the daughter awards will be given in both Sale Hart, 949-2656.
of Bill Young of Pomeroy and the adult and youth categories
Ramora Young of Columbus. for the longest jumps.
She is ·married to Paul Ihle,
A karoke contest will be
who received his master of sci- from noon to 2 p.m. and 3 to
POMEROY Matthew
ence in accounting from Ohio 5 p.m. There will be winners and Lisa Smith announce the
University this spring. He is in each hour during the first birth of their third child,
employed by Price-Water- three hqurs, ·a nd those winners Carter Max.
house in Columbus.
will return at 4 p.m. to comCarter was born Tuesday,
pete for grand prizes one of April 17, at the Holzer Medwhich will be a numbered ical Center, Gallipolis. He
Lloyd Middleton doll. Ques- weighed six pounds, four
tions concerning the contest ounces.
RACiNE _ A parade, frog are to be directed to Jen
Maternal grandparents are
.
Hoback at 949-2169.
Darla Hill of St. John's, Ohio
JUmp and other contests, along
Th B
with a variety of entertain- .
e ig Bend Cloggers will and Mark and Carla Morrow
ment will be featured at the perform at 2 p.m., Country . of Buder, Ky., and the paternal

was awarded. .

Newanival

'

'

POMEROY- Sacred Heart
Church obeervtng a dly of
·
Eucharistic Adoration, 9 a.m to 6
p.m. Everyone walcome to
spend tlme With Lord. Social in
the hall.
POMEROY- Fun, Food and
Fellowship for teens at God's
NET, 6 to 10:30 p.m., Friday and
Saturday. Nutritional mea...
video games, computer pro·
grams, board games, pool
tables.

news@mydailyseritinel.com

. 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 1-800~92·2608 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 until6:30 p.m.

Dear Abby is written by Pauline
Phillips and daughter Jean~ Phillips.

Carter Mu Smith

CLYDE &amp;SADIE_........,
I'M PRETTY EAS1 101111 AT
Till I

IF IrS EASY,
I MIIHT 10.

IT'S EASY TO SEE IF
YOU'RE PROPERLY
INSUj:IEDI Bring your
current policies In for a
. FREE POLICY
EXAMINATION!

DOWNING OIILDS MUWN
MUSSER INS.

111 L2nd 992-3381 p.._o

Family Size

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

Healthy Start
Family Size

Without Credible Insurance
(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

*Mon~ly

Income
Guidelines

Family Size

311 FCIIIth 81., M1J1o11a. 011 41780

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

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

2 ····-··········.· · $1,452
3 ····-··········--$1,829
4 ········---~----$2'207
.
5 -~---·····---~--$2'584
.
(i ···············-· $2,962

Ctdl tlllq for •
fm rolltMr kit.

Use the Chart Below to see if
YOIJ qualify:

6-~---···········-$1,975

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

..,...

Healthy Families
2······------······· $968
3--·············--$1,220
4 ---------~------- $1,471
5-----------------$1,723

There is no face-toface interview.

With Credible Insurance

.

740-376-9186
800-726-8411

• Evan If your family'a Income Ia higher, you may atlll be able to get free Healthy Start coverage for your klda.

992·2117

Jahn.MIIItreRJFS.-.
AWitij.AJF8.oom

•

"V
./

not one
object lesson but two. Let me add a
thought for the day:. If you don't
value what you have, you're sure to
lose it.

Healthy Start
Healthy families

event.

E-MAIL YOUR NEWS TO US:'

•

WnH THE URGE TO WANDER: There you _have it -

annual July 4 ~elebration at
Star Mill Park.
.
Plans were made at a recent
meeting of the Star Mill Park
Board. Reservations are being
taken for spaces for craft and
food booths. The fee is $10 for
a 10-foot space and $15 for a
20-foot space. Booths are to be
set up by 11 a.m.
AJ for the parade which will
move through town at 10
a.m., questions concerning
that should be directed to
Karen Lyons, Racine Village

a

•

FORNIA
DEAR. SO SORRY AND
OTHER MARRIED
MEN

grandmother is Sue Smith of
Cheshire.
Great-grandparents
are
Shirley Spears of Point Pleasant, LuciUe Yeauger of
Cheshire, and Ellen Smith of
Middleport.
Greai-great
grandmother is Winnie Spears
of Point Pleasant, W Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith have
tWo other childfen, Cayelynn
and Cody.

Star Mill Palk
sets festival

Community Cllendllr Ia pubo
llahed .. I frM Mt'VIce to nonprofit groupe wllhlng to
announce meeting• and apaclaleventa. The u.lendar Ia not
FRIDAY ·
dHignecl
to promotw •lea or
POMEROY- Pomeroy Church
fund-nl...,..
ol any type. ltema
of Christ will be holding 1 dinner·
are
printed
only
• ap1011 par·
on Friday from 5·7 p.m. Every·
mite.
·
one Is welcome to attend this

·.

another woman is completely gone. .
The expensive lesson I learned is
don't take the easy way out. If your ·
marriage is unhappy, get professional
. help. Identify what's wrong before
venturing down a destrUctive path. I
have lost everything important to me·
- my son, the respect of my exwife, family and friends - and my
own self-respect. I'm reminded every
time I look in the mirror. - SO
SORRY IN SOUTHERN C!Jl-

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES

LOCAL EVENTS
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Sacred Heart
Catholic Women's Club annual
indoor picnic after 6 p.m. Mass
Wedneaday.

airline pilot. Over dinner we told
eaeh other our tales of woe. I walked
her ·to her car; she kissed me. Two
houn later I was an adulterer.
Because we're both pilots, we
could meet vvithout suspicion during ·
overnight layovers in other cities. We
discussed marriage and children. I
felt some guilt about what this would
do to .my 1-year-old son, but the
thought of divoreing my vvife was
surprisingly easy.
After three months, Liz suddenly
became cold and distant. She said she
needed time to think things through.
Several months later, I learned she
was marrying a wealthy man she had
met while we were involved. 1 was
devastated.
I'm noW divorced. My ex and I are
trying to reconcile; but it doesn't
look goo&amp; If things don't work out,
my desire to become involved with

Call now for more Information.
•'

1.800•992•2608
)

·

.,

�.

.

PageA4

nlon

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

•••• 20,2011

DEAR ABBY: I have a trne story
to share. It's the story of a man who
married his high school sweetheart.
She supported him through college,
encouraged him to pursue a degree,
and gave him two beautiful children.
She became a wonderful mother. She
never. missed a ballgame. She took
the children to church. She worked
full time and went without in order
to give us more, and he, on the other
hand, never helped around the house
and became obsessed vvith his job.
A female co-worker vvith a questionable reputation began to flirt,
flatter and confide in him about her
. inattentive husband. He allowed
himself to be convinced an affair was
justified, _since_ his vvife was so busy
ratsmg his children. Soon the affair
became common knowledge. He
had to leave his home and family,
whtch suddenly seemed 'invaluable

I

t

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Mlneglng Editor

Chllrlls W. Govey

Publ..her

0'- 1(.-y Hill
Conli'OIIr

, _ ..... -

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N•
,..., . ., .

LilM'I ....WN 61

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.,., ..,.., .,., ..... ........,...
Hd ••

I

'

.

........

...,.,=....
OIIIo _ ,

OUR VIEW
.

Critical
'

POMEROY Rayan
Young lhle was one of seven
Ohio University students involved in projects ranging
from studies of parasites to the
creation of new dance choreography - · to be named
recipients of the 2001 student
enhancement awards.
She graduated
from
Ohio University
summa cum
laude
with
bachelor of
science
in
biological sciences, and has
lhle
been accepted into the
College of Medicine at Ohio
State University. She placed
first in her class in biological
sciences and was named the
outstanding undergraduate in
chemistry and bio chemistry.
Her department thesis was' on
"The Effects of Exercise and
Energy Availability on Bio
Chemical Bone Marken in
Young Women."
.
The enhancement award of
up to $6,000 received by Ihle
will support research, scholarship and creative work for one
year.
· The seven recipients were
selected from 17 nominees by
a committee composed of
Ohio University faculty and
the Enhancement Awards

"'!

RUSHER'S VlEW

: Ckan water is a goal all of us work toward achieving. That
p(&gt;int is evident. But keeping southern Ohio's creeks and
sQ:eams clear and attractive is of critical importance to the
r~gion 's future, and not only for attracting tourists, sportsmen
other folks. It's a key point in trying to reverse negativ.e
i~ages of the area as a pollution paradise neglected by all, from
he went out of his way to emphasize that
It would have been hard not to syrnWashington on down. ·
he wants a new and warmer relationship
That's why the Raccoon Creek Improvement Comniittee,
pathize vvith President Bush as he prewith the United States, and the betting is
assisted by Ohio University's Institute for Local Government
pared for his first visit as. president to
· .that he Will get it.
,
and Resea.rch Development, is putting togethe'r a management
various capitals in Europe. He and his
The European trip, therefore, enters
plan for Raccoon's watershed.
.
advisers knew that a cool reception (at
the record as just one more piece of evi- ·
Why is this so important? Raccoon runs more than iOO
best) awaited him . By letting it be
dence that Mr. Bush is a man who does
kf1own in advance that he would not
miles through the area, starting near Hocking County, coursing
not change his position on fundamentals
through the western part of Meigs arid emptying into the Ohio .
permit the outmoded ABM treaty to
merely because he encounters opposiRiver south of Gallipolis: It's one of the longest creeks in the
prevent him from · building missile
tion. We have .seen this before - · most
region, and many folks have property or businesses bordering
defenses essential to, our safety afld by
sp.ectacularly
in the matter of a tax cut
on its banks.
,
rejecting the · Kyoto protocols as a
COWMNlSi
- and it is not contradicted by abrupt
There was, we are told, a time when Raccoon was clean and
ruinous and unfair "solution" to the
changes of policy on such trivia as naval
a haven for recreation. Some years ago, it wasn't even that. Mine
problem of global 'warming, he stepped
runoff, debris and creekbank deterioration took their toll and
on the toes of good liberals everywhere, were at one on all th~ fundamentals, and training exercises on the Puerto Rican
made pretty inhospitable. We have been told it's better, thanks
including those holding office in various pledging to work di\igently to narrow island ofVieques. (President C linton had
~J.l!!. difference.s o.n. det;tils,
agreed to a referendum -there, which the
to various conservation efforts, especially those promoted )&gt;y
.center-left governments of Europe.
As a result, he ~ (grudgingly) giVen Navy was bound to. lose, and which
RClC, a citizens group.
. - - --~:~r :rdditttm,· he could· count otr the
better
marks fi r \iis performance than would have been a d1sast~us precedent
: But we have a long way tQ go before Raccoon·evet reacfre'f ~ · ~:~arejy·'!~ncea)ed contempt of m~st
what it used to be.
· ·• ·
• ~ ,_.. ... ~b.~(:&gt;. \)f tlic.~est E~;~ropean media, ~yone expected il_l evf ry c~pidil he vis~ ' for o.ther bases such as ~kinawa.)
Nor does Mr. )3ush s firmness o~
RCIC and ILGARD had the last of a series of public meetwho a~e as ·' ~ependaBly . hostile . to tted. To he sure, h1s trademark flaws ings last week to gather input on what the management plan
Republican prestdents as,.their Amencan above all the familial: tendency to .miss- essentials nJean t~at he is incapable of .
· should address. The input is important, and its surveys w~re
counterp~rts are- Fmally~the usual Euro- peak in minor ways '(as in referring .to compromtse. He hves m the real_ world,
geared toward a number of areas, from flooding to recreati'?nal
pean equlvale,nts. of our domesttc rent-~- "the nation of Africa7) .- were on dis- where we seldom get ev~rytht!lg we
use. ILGARD's Rachael Hoy said input is vital to the process.
m~bs were getttng ready to stage rhe1r play, to the relief critics with nothing·· want:·and he knows _that a tantrum ts n?
.Judging from last week's meeting at Rio Grande, which drew
notsy protests. All m all, the tnp, howev- else to criti&lt;;ize. Bpt in his bearing, his substu~re for negonat10n - as on h1s
about 20 people, the need to take future ·action means some- .
er necessary, must have looked, in grasp of"the issues·, and his refusal to let education btll, where h~ seeded for barething to folks Jiving along the creek.
advance, like a PR disaster getting ready differences of opinion curdle into hostil- ly half a l?~f..But I predtct that th7 Euroity, he was every ~ inch a president of pean politicians who oppo~e hts plans
· Bringing Raccoon back is going to take money, but that's in
to happen. ,
.,
for, ~y, tnlsstle_ defense wtll, ·to theu
So what dtd Mr. Bush do? Dtd he soft- whom the country] could be ,proud.
the future. Completing a management plan is one step in the
m:\nagedto
save
the
best
astomshment, disc?ver themselves, a year
And
he
even
process that needs to be completed. Indications are that will
. en hts ,post,ttons m deference to the
·
. •
,
·anticipated criticisms in the grand tradi- for last. Meeting R\~ssian president Putin from now, consentmg to pla~s for ~utu­
'happen.
From there, it's up to us in the several coJnties that constition of liberal diplomacy? Or, alterna- for the first time, ;e two leaders discov- al d~fense far clos~r to Mr. Bush s p~­
tute Raccoon's watershed to support activity to make it a dril\v,
tivelY; did he fling the differenc_es it_t his ered that they li · d each other on a ~osals than to theu o~ current post~
bo nus that can tton.
not only for tourists, for those of us who live here to enjoy it
hosts _teeth and tell them to like 1~ or purey
! personaI basrs-a
D
d
1
6· h
h
lump tt, as an untutored cowboy nught never be counted n the murky world of , ,ogge ~e~s a ways ,ng tens t e
again as one of the area's natural attractions.
·
· al ffi · ' b h" h h . tttnld, but It IS the mark of true leaders.
'
be expected to do? .
On the contrary, he approached every m~ernauon a al s, ut w IC ·.~ en tt It is becoming increasingly evident that
encounter with courtesy and his signa- eXIsts, Cl!ll often make;. the difference · President Bush is a true leader.
(William Rusher is a Distinguished ·
ture charm, acknowledging the dis- b~tween success tnd f~ure. ~~· Pu~n
not
change
the
Ruman
posltton
s1gFellow
of the Claremont Institute for
agreements but arguing genially for his
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
positions in regard to them, insisting that nificantly on matten in. dispute (any the Study of Statesmanship and Political
Today is Wednesday, June 20, the 171st day of2001.There are
the United States and Western .Europe more than Mr. Bush changed ours), .but Philosophy.)
· 194 days left in the year.
'
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 20, 1782, Congress. approved the Great Seal of the
United States.
On this date:
In 1756, in India, a. group of British soldiers was imprisoned
in a suffocating cell that gained notoriety as the "Black Hole of
.
\.
Calcutta"; most died.
In 1837, Queen Victoria ascended the British throne followBY RED GREEN
jelly powder J.ith a ~t finger. I used to your bathing suit is too big for you.
ing the death of h~r uncle, King William IV.
· ·
We went over to a friend's house like can that were low and fast. Now I
• That first kiss and the grandmother
· In 1863, West Virginia became the 35th state.
recendy to watch a hockey game on TV prefer any veqicle i can enter without who gave it to me.
In 1893, a jury in New Bedford, Mass., found Lizzie Borden
l!lld we were overwhelmed with the cramping. My taste has changed in
• My wedding day and the subsequent
innocent of the ax murders of her father and stepmother.
quality of their picture. We immediately · everything: nlusic, movies and manage- arrests.
In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, the U.S. cruiser
realized that, their TV looking so good able risk.
·
• The day I told my boss the 1ruth and
Charleston captured the Spanish-ruled islan!i of Guam.
must mean that our TV looks really bad.
I even like the fact that my wife is the trouble 1 had finding another job.
In 1943, race~related rioting erupted in Dettoit; federal
We just never noticed. That's because getting older. I've learned that expectaThe lite goes on
troops were sent in two days later to quell the violence that
over
time
you
get
used
to
whatever
it
is
tion
is
a.
two-way
street.
I
think
it's
Everything
is light these days. It s.t artresulted in more than ~0 deaths.
'
you have to look at, day in and day out good · thing that p¢ople 's preferences ed with light beer but now they have
In 1947, Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel was shot dead at the Bev- ugly furniture or a bad wardrobe .You change as they gel olde~. It creates light butter and light mayonnaise and
erly Hills, Calif., mansion of his girlfriend, Virginia Hill, appar- .
learn to accept and make .peace with it. . diversity in our economy, and it reduces light ketchup and on and on it goes.
endy at the order of mob associates.
I think life is a lot" like that. If ~o~ can · the line-ul)f at Disneyland. It also adds Let's face it, light is a .fixture. They even
In 1963, the United States and Soviet Union signed an
reSISt
the pressure to change thmgs to mystery thJ'oughout your life as you make the spelling light. Now it's "lite"
agreement to set up a "hot line" between the two superpowsuit someone else, they will eventually look forward to the next phase and the - vvith 20 percent fewer letters. Now
ers.
get use d to it. An d this appIies equally to changes . if brings. Although I don't
In 1967, boxer Muhammad Ali was convicted in Houston of
your professional and personal life. 1f think I'll ever live long enough to enjoy I'm not sure about this, put I think they
violating Selective SerVice laws by refusing to be drafted. (Ali's
you have the mental toughness to hold· lawn bowling.
make products lite by diluting them. By
conviction was ultimately overturnea by the Supreme Court.)
your ground through the first years of a
Mon;tents to remember
addtng· more water o_f atr or somethm.g
In 1979, ABC News correspondent Bill Stewart was shot to
job or a marriage when your boss is tryI think a person's life is tremendous\y really cheap - whtc~ means that It
death in Managua, Nicaragua, by '! member of President Anasing to maximize your productivity and affected by a small number of mind- must cost less to make hte products. But
tasio Somoza's national guatd.
.
your vvife is trying to maximize your altering experiences __ · surpris~ and . you pay more for them bec_ause they're
Ten years ago: Boris Yeltsin, the newly elected president of
compatibility, soon, just like what hap- cl'lall~nges that went deep .into their ·?etter for you. So you are, m fact, paythe Russian republic, was welcomed to the White House by
pened with our TV, they will eventually psyche and affected all subsequent deci- mg more for less. But then, that's how
·President Bush. German lawmakers voted to move the seat of
not notice your poor reception. You just sions. Here are a list of some of the you got that lite wallet.
the national government back to Berlin.
have to make sure they're never exposed things that had that effect on me:
Quote of the Day: "The most encourFive years ago: The Clinton administration anno\mced it
to other TVs or workers or husbands.
~That
first day of kindergarten where aging event in life is· to see a beautiful 1
would veto the re-election of U.N. Secretary-General Boutros
.By the way, our new television set has I overestimated the reliability .of my woman with an ugly man ." - Red
Boutros-Ghali. Westinghouse Electric agreed to buy Infinity
a great picture.
bladder.
Green
Broadcasting for $3.9 billion.
Never say never
• The deficiencies of my first car and
(R ed Gree&gt;I is the star of"T!Ie Red Greet•
One year ago: After a furious 'last-minute lobbying blitz by
As ( mature (ripen?), I notice that the policeman who pointed them out to Show," a television series sew iti tl1e US. 011
the Clinton administration, the Senate voted 57-42 to approve
Nature has set me up to start liking ' me.
PBS"mtd itt Canada on tlte OllG Network, .
legislation making it .easier for federal prosecutors to try' hate
things I used to hate and vice vena. As:a
• The bad haircut Ol) prom night.
mtd the author of "Tite Red Green Book"
crimes, att;lching the measure to a defense authorization bill.
kid I never liked steak and potatoes. I
• Th~t day at tpe pool when I learned and "Red Green Talks Gars: A Love
· (However, the House stripped the hate c;rimes provision from
preferred Popsicles and eating uncooked how dangerous diving can be when Story. ")
·f ~
·the defense btu the foll9vving October.)
·

or

Bush deserves an

~~for

his European excursion

William
Rusher

of

:TODAY IN HISTORY

Wldn•ar. June 20.1001 :

_

steps, I hope my letter makes· him

think twice. He should go home,
help his wife. be part of his children's
lives, and stop believing he should be
the center of eweryone's attention.
If a married man is tempted by
another woman, I guanntee she's
selfish and looking out for only her
own needs. And if he marries her,
what he'll have is an adulteress who
liennd cheats. I wish I could ehange
everything I have done. - SAQ-

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
beyond belief.
Abby, I traded everything imporrant in life for a woman who's not fit
to wipe my vvife's shoes. Although I
never strayed before, my reputation is
ruined. My children will never again
respect me. I'D be known for the rest
of my life as someone who committed adultery and lied to everyone I
know and love.
. ·
If there is a man reading this who's
considering follovving in my foot-

. lhle gets
$6,000 award

jManagement plan one step
f toward improving Raccoon

By--.!!fJJ_~~~~·~tnd~--/-~~~Pa~g!!:2eAS!!!!.

Man saddened by affair that cost him faVJ/Iily~ resped

glJSWs LATESl FAITH•8GD IN111ATIVE•••

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74CHI82·2156 • Fu: 182-2157

.

DER BUT WISER
DEAR. SADDER: I'm printing
your warning. Anyone who reads it
and fiuf!S it off thinking your story is
unusual, please read on:
DEAR. ABBY: Two years ago, I
met "LiZ," the woman of my dreams.
My marriage of t ~ yean was rocky.
Liz was ambitious, hard-working,
exciting and fun - everything I
thought my vvife wasn't. Liz was an

dip

THURSDAY
.
, POMEROY- Meigs County
Treasurer Howard F'rank to ineet
with County Commissioners and
elected oHiclals during regular
commissioners' meellng, 10
a.m. Thursday, to discuss coun·
ty's llnanclal condHion.
·

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Ulhen you've ·grown aCcustomed·to everyone~ flaws

POMEROY - Rodders 2000
Car Club to meet at Pomeroy's
Wendy's on Thursday, 7 p.m.
Instead of at the home of Jim
Nelson as eariler announced. ,

Council. A total of $39,000 clerk, at 949-2296. Lineup will Grass at 6 and 8 p.m. and Last
, be at 9 a.m. at the high school. Chance at 7 and 9 p.m.
The council was created in
Activities will ·include kids
The day will conclude with
1997 as part of art effort to games from tt a.m. to 3 p.m. fireworks.
support existing researeh and The signing team of Racine
The Racine Fire Departcreative endeavors and pro- United Methodist Church ment will have a chicken barmo~e new initiatives by facul- will perform at noon and the becue at the firehouse at 1 1
ty and students.
.
frog jumping contest will get a.m.
For information contact
~hie, a gradu~te of Southern underway at 5 p.m. Monetary
H1~ School, 1s the daughter awards will be given in both Sale Hart, 949-2656.
of Bill Young of Pomeroy and the adult and youth categories
Ramora Young of Columbus. for the longest jumps.
She is ·married to Paul Ihle,
A karoke contest will be
who received his master of sci- from noon to 2 p.m. and 3 to
POMEROY Matthew
ence in accounting from Ohio 5 p.m. There will be winners and Lisa Smith announce the
University this spring. He is in each hour during the first birth of their third child,
employed by Price-Water- three hqurs, ·a nd those winners Carter Max.
house in Columbus.
will return at 4 p.m. to comCarter was born Tuesday,
pete for grand prizes one of April 17, at the Holzer Medwhich will be a numbered ical Center, Gallipolis. He
Lloyd Middleton doll. Ques- weighed six pounds, four
tions concerning the contest ounces.
RACiNE _ A parade, frog are to be directed to Jen
Maternal grandparents are
.
Hoback at 949-2169.
Darla Hill of St. John's, Ohio
JUmp and other contests, along
Th B
with a variety of entertain- .
e ig Bend Cloggers will and Mark and Carla Morrow
ment will be featured at the perform at 2 p.m., Country . of Buder, Ky., and the paternal

was awarded. .

Newanival

'

'

POMEROY- Sacred Heart
Church obeervtng a dly of
·
Eucharistic Adoration, 9 a.m to 6
p.m. Everyone walcome to
spend tlme With Lord. Social in
the hall.
POMEROY- Fun, Food and
Fellowship for teens at God's
NET, 6 to 10:30 p.m., Friday and
Saturday. Nutritional mea...
video games, computer pro·
grams, board games, pool
tables.

news@mydailyseritinel.com

. 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 1-800~92·2608 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 until6:30 p.m.

Dear Abby is written by Pauline
Phillips and daughter Jean~ Phillips.

Carter Mu Smith

CLYDE &amp;SADIE_........,
I'M PRETTY EAS1 101111 AT
Till I

IF IrS EASY,
I MIIHT 10.

IT'S EASY TO SEE IF
YOU'RE PROPERLY
INSUj:IEDI Bring your
current policies In for a
. FREE POLICY
EXAMINATION!

DOWNING OIILDS MUWN
MUSSER INS.

111 L2nd 992-3381 p.._o

Family Size

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

Healthy Start
Family Size

Without Credible Insurance
(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

*Mon~ly

Income
Guidelines

Family Size

311 FCIIIth 81., M1J1o11a. 011 41780

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

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

2 ····-··········.· · $1,452
3 ····-··········--$1,829
4 ········---~----$2'207
.
5 -~---·····---~--$2'584
.
(i ···············-· $2,962

Ctdl tlllq for •
fm rolltMr kit.

Use the Chart Below to see if
YOIJ qualify:

6-~---···········-$1,975

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

..,...

Healthy Families
2······------······· $968
3--·············--$1,220
4 ---------~------- $1,471
5-----------------$1,723

There is no face-toface interview.

With Credible Insurance

.

740-376-9186
800-726-8411

• Evan If your family'a Income Ia higher, you may atlll be able to get free Healthy Start coverage for your klda.

992·2117

Jahn.MIIItreRJFS.-.
AWitij.AJF8.oom

•

"V
./

not one
object lesson but two. Let me add a
thought for the day:. If you don't
value what you have, you're sure to
lose it.

Healthy Start
Healthy families

event.

E-MAIL YOUR NEWS TO US:'

•

WnH THE URGE TO WANDER: There you _have it -

annual July 4 ~elebration at
Star Mill Park.
.
Plans were made at a recent
meeting of the Star Mill Park
Board. Reservations are being
taken for spaces for craft and
food booths. The fee is $10 for
a 10-foot space and $15 for a
20-foot space. Booths are to be
set up by 11 a.m.
AJ for the parade which will
move through town at 10
a.m., questions concerning
that should be directed to
Karen Lyons, Racine Village

a

•

FORNIA
DEAR. SO SORRY AND
OTHER MARRIED
MEN

grandmother is Sue Smith of
Cheshire.
Great-grandparents
are
Shirley Spears of Point Pleasant, LuciUe Yeauger of
Cheshire, and Ellen Smith of
Middleport.
Greai-great
grandmother is Winnie Spears
of Point Pleasant, W Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith have
tWo other childfen, Cayelynn
and Cody.

Star Mill Palk
sets festival

Community Cllendllr Ia pubo
llahed .. I frM Mt'VIce to nonprofit groupe wllhlng to
announce meeting• and apaclaleventa. The u.lendar Ia not
FRIDAY ·
dHignecl
to promotw •lea or
POMEROY- Pomeroy Church
fund-nl...,..
ol any type. ltema
of Christ will be holding 1 dinner·
are
printed
only
• ap1011 par·
on Friday from 5·7 p.m. Every·
mite.
·
one Is welcome to attend this

·.

another woman is completely gone. .
The expensive lesson I learned is
don't take the easy way out. If your ·
marriage is unhappy, get professional
. help. Identify what's wrong before
venturing down a destrUctive path. I
have lost everything important to me·
- my son, the respect of my exwife, family and friends - and my
own self-respect. I'm reminded every
time I look in the mirror. - SO
SORRY IN SOUTHERN C!Jl-

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES

LOCAL EVENTS
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Sacred Heart
Catholic Women's Club annual
indoor picnic after 6 p.m. Mass
Wedneaday.

airline pilot. Over dinner we told
eaeh other our tales of woe. I walked
her ·to her car; she kissed me. Two
houn later I was an adulterer.
Because we're both pilots, we
could meet vvithout suspicion during ·
overnight layovers in other cities. We
discussed marriage and children. I
felt some guilt about what this would
do to .my 1-year-old son, but the
thought of divoreing my vvife was
surprisingly easy.
After three months, Liz suddenly
became cold and distant. She said she
needed time to think things through.
Several months later, I learned she
was marrying a wealthy man she had
met while we were involved. 1 was
devastated.
I'm noW divorced. My ex and I are
trying to reconcile; but it doesn't
look goo&amp; If things don't work out,
my desire to become involved with

Call now for more Information.
•'

1.800•992•2608
)

·

.,

�Wednea clay, June 20, 2001

P p A I • The D.uy SentiMI
•

•

-.

'

•

•

•
'

Ohio Valley Christian
·lists honor roll students
GALLIPOLIS -The following students were named
to the RAS honor roll for
the sixth six-week grading
period at Ohio Valley Christian School in Gallipolis:
Grade 1: Bryce Amos,
Stephen Atkins, Brandsen
Barr, Jennifer
Blevins,
Katharine Blodgett, Chase
Caldwell, Pater Carman,
Michael Fahmy; Alex Gagucas, Maegan Jewell, Samantha
McClure, Rachel Myers,
Micaela Owens, Kimberly
Sallee, Sarah Beth Sydnor,
Ben Tillis, all As; Hannah
Brumfield, Kayla Brumfield,
Joseph Jarvis, Paul - Miller,
Erin Mithcell, Tori VanFOIsen, Andrew Voss, Samantha
Westfall, Bill Workman.
Grade 2: Zachary Barlow,
Joshua Curry, Aaron Dillard,
Tyler Eastman, Allie Hamil· ton, .Alexis Henry, Daniel
lrwin, Elicia Irwin, Olivia
Kostival, Kathleen Long,
Linfilsey Pennington, Kyle
Scott, Courtney Shriver,
Valerie Terre-Blanche, all As;
Sarah Clary, Garrett Ranegar.
Grade 3: Amanda Allen,
~arly Atkins, Brooke Bowie,
Hali
Burleson,
Ashley
Coughenour,
Rebecca
Evans, Heather Mahan,
Ricardo Maldonado, Lindsey
Miller, Natalie Stone, Melissa
Stump, Julie Tillis, all As; Seth
Amos, Joseph Beaver, Chelsi
Kearns, Wesley Montgomery,
Jonathan VanMeter:
Grade 4: Annee Carman,
Grant Foster, Aubrey Johanson, Jacob McDonald, Quinton Nibert, Jasmine Owens,
Henry Patrick, Andrea VanMeter, all As; Joey Absten,Jasmine Gibeaut, Alex Pasquale,
Koby Queen, Cara Sandell,
Kyle Scouten, Alex Trent,
Tara Workman.
Grade
5:
Richelle
Blankenship, Lindsey Carr,
Vaneetha Christopher, Kari
Evans, Ryan Jackson, 'JYier '
Kearns,
Laurel
Stone,
Heather Wagner, Christoph~
Williams, all As; Jonathan

Beaver, Zachary Carr, Kayla
Hinchmugl, Heather Moran,
Nicholas Stevens, Brooke
Taylor.
Grade 6: Whitnee Caldwell, sarah Cochran, Brandon Coughenour, Adriane
Eastman, Kalee Edmonds,
Carol Fahmy, Julie Hussell,
Stephanie Jarvis, Garrison
Salisbury, Drew Scouten,
Crystal Thomas, all As; Kayla
Frantom, Jade Gibeaut,
Jaymes Haggerty, Megan
Mahan, Rebecca Scites,
Michael Williams.
Grade 7: Sara Beckley,
Vanessa
Burris,
Jacob
Eldridge, Joseph Esmaeili,
Cory Kelley, Keith Peck, all
As; Joseph Barnhart, Kelli
Irwin, Sarah Dawn Jenkins,
Richard McCreedy. '
Grade 8: Aimee Agustin,
Hallie
Carter,
Kaleb
Eldridge, Sara Eldridge, Elizabeth Stevens, Chris Terre
Blanche, all As; Annie Carter,
Kerry Carter, John Hussell,
Kendra Queen, Sarah Smith.
Grade 9: Brody Blankenship, Tessa Haggerty, Holly
Jackson, Dianna Jarvis, Lindsey Wheeler, Alyssa Zirille, all
As; Joshua Jarvis, Heath
Massie, Crystal Taylor.
Grade 10: Mittra Esmaeili,
Jeremy Evans,
Chelsea
Gooch, Kelsey Salisbury,
Christina Taylor, all As;
Joshua Evans and John Pol-

cyn.
Grade 11: Arnit Agrawal,
Andrew
Blankenship,
Michael Jenks, Ginny Miller,
Chad Mourning, Rachel
Tucker, all As; Hannah
Beaver, Demara Brown,
Stephanie Buffington, Sara
Henry, Gabriel Jenkins, Dale
Taylor.
'
Grade 12: Brad Bowman,
Adam Hall, Jason Holdren,
Kandice Johnson, Erica
Massie, Lesley Smith, Nichole
Valencia,
Nathan
Williams, all As; Rebekah
Frans, Kent Haley, Joe Johnson, Morgan Sheets, Amanda
Wilcox.

Don't try to keep up with the ]oneses ·
"Th'ere is something funny
that isn't so funny, to have too
much month at the end of the
money. "
Does this happen to you?
How can you avoid this problem? To prevent this fiomhappening, create a spending plan
or a budget.
To develop the spending
plan begin by identifying
goals, income and expenses.
Goals are what you want to
accomplish. What do you want
to do? Everyone's goals and
priorities are different.
Know your income. Income
is the amount o_f money that is
available. Only consider the
income you are certain to
receive but don't forget to
include interest on savings
accounts and dividends, in
addition to your salary and
wages.
Record your expenses.
Expenses are how you spend
your money. Keep track of

recreation. These itemS can be
reduced by using coupons,
taking advantage of sales and
limiting your outings.
Household spending plans
are best if made for a· month,
becau'se many of the fixed
expenses are paid on a monthly basis. Set aside a certain
amount each month to pay for
large periodic fixes expenses
such as property tax or car
insurance that may only occur
once or twice a year.
Have between three and six
months worth of income in a
savings account just for emergencies. Also have a special
savings account for the specific goals that you have identified.
Based upon previous spending, allocate enough money in
·your budget to cover each
expense ·category. The total of
the expenses should equal the
amount of income. If expenses
are greater than income, first

Becky
Baer
ADVICE
where the money goes, so the
amount needed can be determined.
There are two types of
expenses: fixed and flexible.
Fixed expenses are financial
commitments. The same
amount is usually due each
month, and they must be paid.
Examples would be rent, car
payments, cable and insurance
premiums.
Aexible expenses ftuctuate
each month. There are no predetermined amounts. These
expenses include food, clothing, transportation costs ·and

decrease the allowances for
flexible expenses. Some care'gories may need to be eliminated altogether.
Follow the spending plan.
Keep track of spending. Stay
within the amounts given. A
budget is not carved in stone.
. If there is not enough money
inn one category, cut back on
another to make .up the difference. Periodically review and
revise the budget./), pay raise
or additional expenses may
have occurred that would
cause a necessary revision.
Do not follow another person's budget his goals,
income, and expenses will be
different liom yours. A budget
should work for you. If a lot of
though t is put into developing a spending plan, it will
become a very valuable 6nancial tool.

(Becky Baer is a Mtigs County rxtension agmt for family and
consumer Stienas.)

Dorcas Sonshine Circle gets $100 playground donation
RACINE -A donation of$100 for the
purchase of playground equipment was
made when Dorcas Sonshine Circle .met
recently at the church.
The Circle also voted to serve refreshments at an auction, and to purchase products for and send a donation to the county's men's homeless shelter.
Lois Sterrett presided at the meeting,
with. Kathryn Hart and Letha Proffitt glving the secretary and treasurer's reports.
The group paid for half of the cost of a

new copier for the pastor, and· a sweeper
has been purchased and given to the
church.
A bake sale held -at the church, a fall
bazaar and the auction·were discussed,
Mary Cleek said sympathy cards had
been sent to Ron Brinker, Dorothy Roseberry and Linda· Cunningham. Cards of
encouragement were signed for John Stobart, Glenn and Anna Lee Tucker, G'ene
Hudson, Paul Beegle, Dave and Dorothy
Sayre, Larry Powell, Mike Powell, Esther

West, Lester Manuel, Douglas Circle,
Harold Hager, Vicki Boso, June Turner,
Madelyn Studer, Ethel Orr, Ellen Amott,
Pauline Wolfe, Edison Brace, David Grind· staff, Martha Lou Beegle, Ann Boso, Maria
Delgato, Chaty Cordero, Ruth Smith, Bj)l
Rice, Lizzie Carpenter, Carl Weese, Sandt-a
Howard, Martha Studer, Max Sterrett, Frep
Smith, Alta Ballard, Jimmy King, Raymond
Proffitt, Larry Hubbard, Don Richard Hill,
Mary Stobart, Delbert Patterson, Herb
Pugh, and Naomi Neville.

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__ ,_

61

:olr;l• :A

"!"'&gt;

-

'

YOU CAN ~UY A NEW OR USED VEHICLE POl $&amp;9 DOWi.U
•

Norris North.up Dodge has extra inventory on hand for this sale!
HUNDREDS of vehicles in stock and ready for IMMEDIATE DELNERY
.
DURIIIG THIS HUGII DAY fALl. ,

SYRACUSE -A program on angels was featured at the
recent meeting of the Syracuse Asbury United· Methodist
Women held at the church recently.
Freda Wilson had devotions with scripture taken from
Psalms 34 and 37. "Every Woman Has a Guardian Angel," an
essay to God was written by each member. Sauvage
received the special prize for her essay. Wilson read a poem
about angels on the way home.
Ruth Crouch had the program on angels and decorated
the focus table with angels she had made. Hope Moore had
a reading, "The Little Girl in _the Pink Dress: and Mary Lisle
read "My Talk with the Trumpet Man."
A tape tided "My Conversation with the Lord about
Angels". was read along with other stories about guardian
·
angels.
Moore had the opening prayer and members gave the
purpose in unison to open ·the meeting. Officers' reports
were given by Jean .Stout, secretary, and Ann Sauvage, treasurer. There were 14 sick calls reported. A free will offering
was taken and blessing boxes were collected. Also attenping
were Elma Louks and Marie Houdashelt.

•••
•

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•

••

THURSDAY JUNE 21ST THRU
SATURDAY, JUNE 23RD.
'
..
New vehicles with Rebates &amp; Dealer discounts as high as $4,000111
Financing as low as 0.911. on select makes and models.
,
.All pre-owned vehicles (INCLUDING FACTORY CARS) are pri~
BELOW BLUE BOOK VALUE.
.

•
•

SIGN UP TO WIN A
OR

•

Wins award

CASH SWEEPSTAKES!!

SHADE - Nathan Bricldes of
Shade has been recognized for academic achievement as a United States
National Honor.RollAward winner.
Bricldes, a student at Meigs High
School, will appear in the United
States Achievement Academy's official yearbook, which is published
nationally.
Brickles is the son of Dale and
Angie Brickles of Shade and . the
grandson of Floyd Brickles and
Kenneth and Shirley Sinclair, all of
Shade, and the late Naomi Brickles.

'

Sweepstakes to be given away Saturday, June 23rd, 3:00 pm. No purchase necessary.
·
All deals depending upon approved credit. Void where prohibited, Winners must be 18 years old or older.
Trade vehicles wtth lien amounts exceeding ACV require supplemental fee.
'

•'
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•

E·MAIL YOUR NEWS TO US:

1

news@mydailysen~nel.com

Page II
~··•dey,

Hottest
Deals
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A.r-u~nd .• 'i'

Nobody
Walks ,
Everybody •
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,CHRYSLER
THERE'S ONLY ONE

No
Manager Pete Somerville
Real[lonable Owner Mike Northup
Offer
'
S.lea Team: AI Durst Neal Pidlf John Sa~ Joe nma Larry Pierce:
Refused
Jamie AIIMIIon she'nt!an OrMn
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------

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JuM 20, 2001

'

WEDNEID\Y's

:HIGHLIGHTS

Brewen' sluggen bury R 5

CINCINNATI (AP) When Devon White's
bases-loaded double put
Milwaukee well ahead in
the eighth, the disgrunded
crowd at Cinergy Field
BALTIMORE (AP) -Cal
stood and booed, then
Ripken Jr., who broke Lou
headed home.
Gehrig's record of 2,130 con- ·
Once again, the Cin9Jlsecutive games, will retire after
nati
Reds were a lost cause.
bis 21st season with the BaltiRichie $exson homered
QJ.Ore Orioles - the only
and doubl~ twi&lt;:e as the
team he ever played for.
Milwaukee . Brewers got
The 40-year-old third baseahead early and rolled to a
man made the announcment
10-8 victory Tuesday
at a news conference Tuesday,
night, extending the Reds'
which would have been
misery
at home.
Gehrig's 98th birthday.
Most of the crowd of
Ripken, a two-time Most
. roughly 22,000 had left
Valuable Player, said it Was the
when Brady Clark hit a
start of another phase in his
pinch three-run homer
career, one that will include
and
.Alex Ochoa followed
more time with It-year-old
· with a solo shot in the
Rachel and 7-year-old Ry.m.
ninth, cutting it to 10-8.
Ripken played in 2,632
Ray King relieved and got
straight games, from May 30,
Ken Griffey Jr. to hit a
1982, to Sept. 20, 1998, when
comeback
grounder for the
he voluntarily ended · the
fipal out.
streak. At the time, Ripken said
"It's not the finish we
he chose to sit down because
expected," subdued man- ·
he feared his Iron Man run
was a distraction to the Ori- · ager Davey Lopes said.
"Winning the game is the
oles.
bottom line, but you don't
Though he is defined by his
make a good impression
consecutive-games
streak,
doing things like that."
Ripken is also one of seven
The Reds never make a
phyers in major league history
good
impression at home,
with 3,000 hits (3,107) and
where they're 7-26, wors\
400 home runs (421).
in the majors. They've lost

Iron-..
.Rlpken to Nllre

CINCINNATI (AP)
The new owner of the Firstar
Center said , there still• is a
chance the Conference USA
basketball tournament could
take ·place th~re.
The to\u:nainent originally
had been scheduled at the
downtown arena for March 6
to 9, 2002. But when The
Nederlander Co. bought the
arena Friday in a bankruptcy
· auction, it rejected a contract
with the conference to host
the tournament.
"We rejected a lot of contracts," Raymond Harris, Nederlander's chief financial officer, said Tuesday. ." We have
every intention of t:illcing to
them (the conference), but
we're focused on getting this
deal closed:'
Conference Commissioner
Mike Slive said he wants to
have a site "in a matter of
weeks, not months."
.
If another contract is not
negotiated, the tournament
could be moved to the Shoemaker Center at the University of Cincinnati or to Freedom Hall in Louisville.
Because the chainpionship
game begins at 11:45 a.lll .• it is
likely the tournament will
have to stay in the Eastern
time zone. Louisville and .
Cincinnati had the highest
home attendance of Conference USA teams in that area.

Twins leg out
ma.rathefl,, ~l o~.g ~

,,_,.

Lucas a

oodfit

orc8vs

"' nearly five hours, 19 runs,
CLEVELAND (AP) - After
13, pitchers and 420 pitches, it's no wonder Twins manager
Tom Kelly lost track of what inning it was.
Minnesota overcame three home runs by Ellis Burks and
several Indians rallies as A.J. Pierzynski's two-run double in
the 12th inning led the 1\vins to a wild 10-9 win Tuesday
night over Cleveland.
"Fortunately, we scored two runs in the ·
18th inning or whatever it was," Kelly
joked after his team's 21st come-frombehind win.
The opener df the AL Central showdown
series had a little bit of everything, including a pinch-hit homer, a go-ahead bunt single, 12 pitchers, an ejection and :the threat
of a thunderstorm - all after the seventh.
"So much went on in this game, I don't
Bulka
know what you're talking about," said
1\vins DH Brian Buchanan. "We were up
6-0 and they just kept hitting pitches. You have to have a 10,
0 lead against these guys."
Pierzynski's double snapped a four-game losing streak for
the TWins, who opened a 1 I /2-game lead over secondplace Cleveland in the Central.
The wild night was similar to the first of 19 matchups
between the teams earlier this month when the Twins beat
the Indians 11-10 at the Metruddhte - scoring the win. ning run in the bottom of the ninth on an infield single.
Corey Koskie .and rookie Brian Buchanan each had four
hits and Pierzynski also homered for Minnesota, which
knocked out starter Bartolo Colon in the fifth.
Burks homered in the sixth, eighth and 12th and Kenny
PleiH ... lHbe.BJ

a;a:•~:s
CINCINNATI (AP) - •
Fo~mer Cincinnati Bengals
quarterback Boomer Esiason
has pledged -$1 million to a
_ Cincinnati hospital to help
hire a top scientist in pul-.
monary research.
.
The money, raised through
_the athlete's promotional campaign with Cincinnati Bell
Inc., would be channeled
_thro\'gh Children's Hospital
Medical Center. The hospital
has provided car:e to Esiason's
·son Gunnar, who was diagnosed . in 1993 with cystic
fibrosis, a genetic lung disease.
· The money will pay for the
Gunnar Esiason/Cincinnati
Bell Research Chair in the
·Life Sciences.
For several years, the
Boomer Esiason 'Foundation
has raised money to fight cystic fibrosis.

~~~;~Yn,ME - Cincinnati's Ken Griffey Jr. hits a solo home run off Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Ben She~s in the sixth Inning
Tl
In Cincinnati. It was the first home run of the season for Griffey. (AP) ·

.............. SJ

SPEED AND POWER - Cleveland center fielder Kenny .
Lofton hits a twcrrun, pinch hit homer off Minnesota's Hec·
tor Carrasco Tuesday In Cleveland. (AP)

_ 1fi~ Co~nty Tour
BY FRANK CAPEHART
OVP CORRESPONDENT

L

races tighten ·up

lor hit 52, while Jake Venoy, Michael
lavendar and Josh Venoy all carded 56,
A three-way playoff, precise play in just ahead of Brad Deal and Daniel
the premier division, developing tight Kaylor.
The premier 15-17 · age division
division chases; and a special annual visiting lovely competitor highlighted tightened up considerably as Bryan
round two ofTri-County Junior Golf at Cromley of Hidden Valley CC [ashRiverside on Monday.
ioned a fine two-over 37 to win the
I_n the 13-14 age group, tl!ree you~f first place Fruth weekly trophy. Last
swmgers came m deadlocke~. for to!¥ • week's winner, Jeremy Banks &lt;if
honors at 42 each. In the exc1tmg two-~ .Pomeroy was close on his heels \vith a
hole 11layo~, New Haven's Heath Stan-·] dandy. 39 for rlql.ner"up honors. Aaron
ley rolled m a putt to. capture the first 1 Miller was one stroke back at 40 along
place Pnuh trophy, while Randall Sha~- 1 with delightful smooth-sw\nging Brittet~ ~fB1dwell won se~ond and Robb1e 1 tany Lincicome from Florida. Brittany
~·lli~mson from Pomt Pleasant was usually makes it here once a year, en
' route to competition in Kentucky a few
third.
Just one stroke back was Steve John- days later, plays from the long tees, and
son ofWellston at 43, ahead ofJackson's always adds luster to the day, winning
John Staton (45) and Enc Van Mater top ladies' honors and pushing all the
(47) of Pomeroy. Tied a_t 51 were Eric [;uys.
·
Milhoan and Brent DaviS. Garrett KayRight behind that group came the
'

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CLEVELAND (AP) John Lucas wore a brightly
colored tie for his first appearance as Cavaliers coach. He
also promised to make Cleveland attractive to free agents, .
open practices to the media
and put a smile on ·everyone's
face.
.
. Oh, and he promised something else.
"We're going to win," said
Lucas, whose swagger and
outgoing personality counters
the
Cavs'
buttondowned
image. "And
.
were gomg
to have some
fun ."
On his initial day as
Cavs coach,
Luaa
Lucas made
quite a first
tmpreSSIOn.
"It's started," said Cavs general manager Jim Paxson, who
took two months to find a
replacement
for
Randy
Wittman. "After the employees' meeting, my wife noticed
that everybody was walking
out with smiles.
"It wasn't because Paxson
finally made a decision. John
had the111 laughing. We may
have to put a seat belt on
him." ,
Lucas has faced tougher
challenges · ·than the Cavs,
overcoming drug addiction
and rebuilding his life · and
career.
So how diffkult could it be
to fix a mediocre NBA team?
"I know about starting over
and I know about trying to
stay," Lucas said.''This is a second chance for all of us."
Lucas, whose career and life
have been about second
chances, was introduced Tuesday as coach of the Cavs the 13th in their 31 - year history.
''I'm not the last Cavaliers
coach," Lucas said. "In fact,
I'm a little bit upSet I'm the
13th.That's a dangerous nurn-

.

RQUND THE COUNTY

research

Rutland plans July 4 celebration
RUTLAND- "Home on the Range" will be the theme
of the Rutland's annual July 4 celebration.
One of the highlights of the ewnt, sponsored by the Rutland firemen, will be the unveiling and dedication of the historical marker in tribute to a descendant of a Rutland pioneer family, Brewster Higley, who composed "Home on the
Range." It will be at 11 a.m. at the Firemen's Park stage.
The parade, carrying out the same theme,.begins at 9 a.m.
The firemen invite c!nuies.
·
·
The dedication of the marker as well as the parade ate
both part of the annual ox roast where activities run all day
long and culminate with a fireworks display at 10:30 p.m.
Refreshments will be served in the old log cabin beside
where the marker will be placed.

The Daily Sentinel

KV Drag~Wy mults, Page B3
Diamond Roundup, Page B6

C.USA touauey
seelrs new honle

UMW hean program on angels

Bltckl81

Inside:

trio of Ryan Roush from Riverside,
Nick Lucas of Hidden Valley, and
Nathan Plantz from C liffiide at 43
each. Jonathan Dillon and Andrew
Whited carded 45, Jared Sims had 46,
and Charles Burns 47, just ahead of
Adam Watson, Tad Saunders, Jaron
Cundiff, and Saul Bennett.
Brandon Burnette of Gallipolis came
in with a 50 to edge ahead of Evan
Dunn of Pomeroy in the one-two finish for 11-1 2 year-olds. That reversed
the first week results and now shows
the two lads deadlocked atop the division with 18 points each . Third place
was Jacob Hunter at 53 and tied with
Mike Taylor at _third overall. Ju!tin
Arnold was close behind fqr fourth and
tied for fifth overall.
In the 10-and-under, Bryan Harris of
.

1

. I

Please see C.Vs. B:S

Please see Tour. B:S
I

II

�Wednea clay, June 20, 2001

P p A I • The D.uy SentiMI
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Ohio Valley Christian
·lists honor roll students
GALLIPOLIS -The following students were named
to the RAS honor roll for
the sixth six-week grading
period at Ohio Valley Christian School in Gallipolis:
Grade 1: Bryce Amos,
Stephen Atkins, Brandsen
Barr, Jennifer
Blevins,
Katharine Blodgett, Chase
Caldwell, Pater Carman,
Michael Fahmy; Alex Gagucas, Maegan Jewell, Samantha
McClure, Rachel Myers,
Micaela Owens, Kimberly
Sallee, Sarah Beth Sydnor,
Ben Tillis, all As; Hannah
Brumfield, Kayla Brumfield,
Joseph Jarvis, Paul - Miller,
Erin Mithcell, Tori VanFOIsen, Andrew Voss, Samantha
Westfall, Bill Workman.
Grade 2: Zachary Barlow,
Joshua Curry, Aaron Dillard,
Tyler Eastman, Allie Hamil· ton, .Alexis Henry, Daniel
lrwin, Elicia Irwin, Olivia
Kostival, Kathleen Long,
Linfilsey Pennington, Kyle
Scott, Courtney Shriver,
Valerie Terre-Blanche, all As;
Sarah Clary, Garrett Ranegar.
Grade 3: Amanda Allen,
~arly Atkins, Brooke Bowie,
Hali
Burleson,
Ashley
Coughenour,
Rebecca
Evans, Heather Mahan,
Ricardo Maldonado, Lindsey
Miller, Natalie Stone, Melissa
Stump, Julie Tillis, all As; Seth
Amos, Joseph Beaver, Chelsi
Kearns, Wesley Montgomery,
Jonathan VanMeter:
Grade 4: Annee Carman,
Grant Foster, Aubrey Johanson, Jacob McDonald, Quinton Nibert, Jasmine Owens,
Henry Patrick, Andrea VanMeter, all As; Joey Absten,Jasmine Gibeaut, Alex Pasquale,
Koby Queen, Cara Sandell,
Kyle Scouten, Alex Trent,
Tara Workman.
Grade
5:
Richelle
Blankenship, Lindsey Carr,
Vaneetha Christopher, Kari
Evans, Ryan Jackson, 'JYier '
Kearns,
Laurel
Stone,
Heather Wagner, Christoph~
Williams, all As; Jonathan

Beaver, Zachary Carr, Kayla
Hinchmugl, Heather Moran,
Nicholas Stevens, Brooke
Taylor.
Grade 6: Whitnee Caldwell, sarah Cochran, Brandon Coughenour, Adriane
Eastman, Kalee Edmonds,
Carol Fahmy, Julie Hussell,
Stephanie Jarvis, Garrison
Salisbury, Drew Scouten,
Crystal Thomas, all As; Kayla
Frantom, Jade Gibeaut,
Jaymes Haggerty, Megan
Mahan, Rebecca Scites,
Michael Williams.
Grade 7: Sara Beckley,
Vanessa
Burris,
Jacob
Eldridge, Joseph Esmaeili,
Cory Kelley, Keith Peck, all
As; Joseph Barnhart, Kelli
Irwin, Sarah Dawn Jenkins,
Richard McCreedy. '
Grade 8: Aimee Agustin,
Hallie
Carter,
Kaleb
Eldridge, Sara Eldridge, Elizabeth Stevens, Chris Terre
Blanche, all As; Annie Carter,
Kerry Carter, John Hussell,
Kendra Queen, Sarah Smith.
Grade 9: Brody Blankenship, Tessa Haggerty, Holly
Jackson, Dianna Jarvis, Lindsey Wheeler, Alyssa Zirille, all
As; Joshua Jarvis, Heath
Massie, Crystal Taylor.
Grade 10: Mittra Esmaeili,
Jeremy Evans,
Chelsea
Gooch, Kelsey Salisbury,
Christina Taylor, all As;
Joshua Evans and John Pol-

cyn.
Grade 11: Arnit Agrawal,
Andrew
Blankenship,
Michael Jenks, Ginny Miller,
Chad Mourning, Rachel
Tucker, all As; Hannah
Beaver, Demara Brown,
Stephanie Buffington, Sara
Henry, Gabriel Jenkins, Dale
Taylor.
'
Grade 12: Brad Bowman,
Adam Hall, Jason Holdren,
Kandice Johnson, Erica
Massie, Lesley Smith, Nichole
Valencia,
Nathan
Williams, all As; Rebekah
Frans, Kent Haley, Joe Johnson, Morgan Sheets, Amanda
Wilcox.

Don't try to keep up with the ]oneses ·
"Th'ere is something funny
that isn't so funny, to have too
much month at the end of the
money. "
Does this happen to you?
How can you avoid this problem? To prevent this fiomhappening, create a spending plan
or a budget.
To develop the spending
plan begin by identifying
goals, income and expenses.
Goals are what you want to
accomplish. What do you want
to do? Everyone's goals and
priorities are different.
Know your income. Income
is the amount o_f money that is
available. Only consider the
income you are certain to
receive but don't forget to
include interest on savings
accounts and dividends, in
addition to your salary and
wages.
Record your expenses.
Expenses are how you spend
your money. Keep track of

recreation. These itemS can be
reduced by using coupons,
taking advantage of sales and
limiting your outings.
Household spending plans
are best if made for a· month,
becau'se many of the fixed
expenses are paid on a monthly basis. Set aside a certain
amount each month to pay for
large periodic fixes expenses
such as property tax or car
insurance that may only occur
once or twice a year.
Have between three and six
months worth of income in a
savings account just for emergencies. Also have a special
savings account for the specific goals that you have identified.
Based upon previous spending, allocate enough money in
·your budget to cover each
expense ·category. The total of
the expenses should equal the
amount of income. If expenses
are greater than income, first

Becky
Baer
ADVICE
where the money goes, so the
amount needed can be determined.
There are two types of
expenses: fixed and flexible.
Fixed expenses are financial
commitments. The same
amount is usually due each
month, and they must be paid.
Examples would be rent, car
payments, cable and insurance
premiums.
Aexible expenses ftuctuate
each month. There are no predetermined amounts. These
expenses include food, clothing, transportation costs ·and

decrease the allowances for
flexible expenses. Some care'gories may need to be eliminated altogether.
Follow the spending plan.
Keep track of spending. Stay
within the amounts given. A
budget is not carved in stone.
. If there is not enough money
inn one category, cut back on
another to make .up the difference. Periodically review and
revise the budget./), pay raise
or additional expenses may
have occurred that would
cause a necessary revision.
Do not follow another person's budget his goals,
income, and expenses will be
different liom yours. A budget
should work for you. If a lot of
though t is put into developing a spending plan, it will
become a very valuable 6nancial tool.

(Becky Baer is a Mtigs County rxtension agmt for family and
consumer Stienas.)

Dorcas Sonshine Circle gets $100 playground donation
RACINE -A donation of$100 for the
purchase of playground equipment was
made when Dorcas Sonshine Circle .met
recently at the church.
The Circle also voted to serve refreshments at an auction, and to purchase products for and send a donation to the county's men's homeless shelter.
Lois Sterrett presided at the meeting,
with. Kathryn Hart and Letha Proffitt glving the secretary and treasurer's reports.
The group paid for half of the cost of a

new copier for the pastor, and· a sweeper
has been purchased and given to the
church.
A bake sale held -at the church, a fall
bazaar and the auction·were discussed,
Mary Cleek said sympathy cards had
been sent to Ron Brinker, Dorothy Roseberry and Linda· Cunningham. Cards of
encouragement were signed for John Stobart, Glenn and Anna Lee Tucker, G'ene
Hudson, Paul Beegle, Dave and Dorothy
Sayre, Larry Powell, Mike Powell, Esther

West, Lester Manuel, Douglas Circle,
Harold Hager, Vicki Boso, June Turner,
Madelyn Studer, Ethel Orr, Ellen Amott,
Pauline Wolfe, Edison Brace, David Grind· staff, Martha Lou Beegle, Ann Boso, Maria
Delgato, Chaty Cordero, Ruth Smith, Bj)l
Rice, Lizzie Carpenter, Carl Weese, Sandt-a
Howard, Martha Studer, Max Sterrett, Frep
Smith, Alta Ballard, Jimmy King, Raymond
Proffitt, Larry Hubbard, Don Richard Hill,
Mary Stobart, Delbert Patterson, Herb
Pugh, and Naomi Neville.

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•
•
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Norris North.up Dodge has extra inventory on hand for this sale!
HUNDREDS of vehicles in stock and ready for IMMEDIATE DELNERY
.
DURIIIG THIS HUGII DAY fALl. ,

SYRACUSE -A program on angels was featured at the
recent meeting of the Syracuse Asbury United· Methodist
Women held at the church recently.
Freda Wilson had devotions with scripture taken from
Psalms 34 and 37. "Every Woman Has a Guardian Angel," an
essay to God was written by each member. Sauvage
received the special prize for her essay. Wilson read a poem
about angels on the way home.
Ruth Crouch had the program on angels and decorated
the focus table with angels she had made. Hope Moore had
a reading, "The Little Girl in _the Pink Dress: and Mary Lisle
read "My Talk with the Trumpet Man."
A tape tided "My Conversation with the Lord about
Angels". was read along with other stories about guardian
·
angels.
Moore had the opening prayer and members gave the
purpose in unison to open ·the meeting. Officers' reports
were given by Jean .Stout, secretary, and Ann Sauvage, treasurer. There were 14 sick calls reported. A free will offering
was taken and blessing boxes were collected. Also attenping
were Elma Louks and Marie Houdashelt.

•••
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THURSDAY JUNE 21ST THRU
SATURDAY, JUNE 23RD.
'
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New vehicles with Rebates &amp; Dealer discounts as high as $4,000111
Financing as low as 0.911. on select makes and models.
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CASH SWEEPSTAKES!!

SHADE - Nathan Bricldes of
Shade has been recognized for academic achievement as a United States
National Honor.RollAward winner.
Bricldes, a student at Meigs High
School, will appear in the United
States Achievement Academy's official yearbook, which is published
nationally.
Brickles is the son of Dale and
Angie Brickles of Shade and . the
grandson of Floyd Brickles and
Kenneth and Shirley Sinclair, all of
Shade, and the late Naomi Brickles.

'

Sweepstakes to be given away Saturday, June 23rd, 3:00 pm. No purchase necessary.
·
All deals depending upon approved credit. Void where prohibited, Winners must be 18 years old or older.
Trade vehicles wtth lien amounts exceeding ACV require supplemental fee.
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'

WEDNEID\Y's

:HIGHLIGHTS

Brewen' sluggen bury R 5

CINCINNATI (AP) When Devon White's
bases-loaded double put
Milwaukee well ahead in
the eighth, the disgrunded
crowd at Cinergy Field
BALTIMORE (AP) -Cal
stood and booed, then
Ripken Jr., who broke Lou
headed home.
Gehrig's record of 2,130 con- ·
Once again, the Cin9Jlsecutive games, will retire after
nati
Reds were a lost cause.
bis 21st season with the BaltiRichie $exson homered
QJ.Ore Orioles - the only
and doubl~ twi&lt;:e as the
team he ever played for.
Milwaukee . Brewers got
The 40-year-old third baseahead early and rolled to a
man made the announcment
10-8 victory Tuesday
at a news conference Tuesday,
night, extending the Reds'
which would have been
misery
at home.
Gehrig's 98th birthday.
Most of the crowd of
Ripken, a two-time Most
. roughly 22,000 had left
Valuable Player, said it Was the
when Brady Clark hit a
start of another phase in his
pinch three-run homer
career, one that will include
and
.Alex Ochoa followed
more time with It-year-old
· with a solo shot in the
Rachel and 7-year-old Ry.m.
ninth, cutting it to 10-8.
Ripken played in 2,632
Ray King relieved and got
straight games, from May 30,
Ken Griffey Jr. to hit a
1982, to Sept. 20, 1998, when
comeback
grounder for the
he voluntarily ended · the
fipal out.
streak. At the time, Ripken said
"It's not the finish we
he chose to sit down because
expected," subdued man- ·
he feared his Iron Man run
was a distraction to the Ori- · ager Davey Lopes said.
"Winning the game is the
oles.
bottom line, but you don't
Though he is defined by his
make a good impression
consecutive-games
streak,
doing things like that."
Ripken is also one of seven
The Reds never make a
phyers in major league history
good
impression at home,
with 3,000 hits (3,107) and
where they're 7-26, wors\
400 home runs (421).
in the majors. They've lost

Iron-..
.Rlpken to Nllre

CINCINNATI (AP)
The new owner of the Firstar
Center said , there still• is a
chance the Conference USA
basketball tournament could
take ·place th~re.
The to\u:nainent originally
had been scheduled at the
downtown arena for March 6
to 9, 2002. But when The
Nederlander Co. bought the
arena Friday in a bankruptcy
· auction, it rejected a contract
with the conference to host
the tournament.
"We rejected a lot of contracts," Raymond Harris, Nederlander's chief financial officer, said Tuesday. ." We have
every intention of t:illcing to
them (the conference), but
we're focused on getting this
deal closed:'
Conference Commissioner
Mike Slive said he wants to
have a site "in a matter of
weeks, not months."
.
If another contract is not
negotiated, the tournament
could be moved to the Shoemaker Center at the University of Cincinnati or to Freedom Hall in Louisville.
Because the chainpionship
game begins at 11:45 a.lll .• it is
likely the tournament will
have to stay in the Eastern
time zone. Louisville and .
Cincinnati had the highest
home attendance of Conference USA teams in that area.

Twins leg out
ma.rathefl,, ~l o~.g ~

,,_,.

Lucas a

oodfit

orc8vs

"' nearly five hours, 19 runs,
CLEVELAND (AP) - After
13, pitchers and 420 pitches, it's no wonder Twins manager
Tom Kelly lost track of what inning it was.
Minnesota overcame three home runs by Ellis Burks and
several Indians rallies as A.J. Pierzynski's two-run double in
the 12th inning led the 1\vins to a wild 10-9 win Tuesday
night over Cleveland.
"Fortunately, we scored two runs in the ·
18th inning or whatever it was," Kelly
joked after his team's 21st come-frombehind win.
The opener df the AL Central showdown
series had a little bit of everything, including a pinch-hit homer, a go-ahead bunt single, 12 pitchers, an ejection and :the threat
of a thunderstorm - all after the seventh.
"So much went on in this game, I don't
Bulka
know what you're talking about," said
1\vins DH Brian Buchanan. "We were up
6-0 and they just kept hitting pitches. You have to have a 10,
0 lead against these guys."
Pierzynski's double snapped a four-game losing streak for
the TWins, who opened a 1 I /2-game lead over secondplace Cleveland in the Central.
The wild night was similar to the first of 19 matchups
between the teams earlier this month when the Twins beat
the Indians 11-10 at the Metruddhte - scoring the win. ning run in the bottom of the ninth on an infield single.
Corey Koskie .and rookie Brian Buchanan each had four
hits and Pierzynski also homered for Minnesota, which
knocked out starter Bartolo Colon in the fifth.
Burks homered in the sixth, eighth and 12th and Kenny
PleiH ... lHbe.BJ

a;a:•~:s
CINCINNATI (AP) - •
Fo~mer Cincinnati Bengals
quarterback Boomer Esiason
has pledged -$1 million to a
_ Cincinnati hospital to help
hire a top scientist in pul-.
monary research.
.
The money, raised through
_the athlete's promotional campaign with Cincinnati Bell
Inc., would be channeled
_thro\'gh Children's Hospital
Medical Center. The hospital
has provided car:e to Esiason's
·son Gunnar, who was diagnosed . in 1993 with cystic
fibrosis, a genetic lung disease.
· The money will pay for the
Gunnar Esiason/Cincinnati
Bell Research Chair in the
·Life Sciences.
For several years, the
Boomer Esiason 'Foundation
has raised money to fight cystic fibrosis.

~~~;~Yn,ME - Cincinnati's Ken Griffey Jr. hits a solo home run off Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Ben She~s in the sixth Inning
Tl
In Cincinnati. It was the first home run of the season for Griffey. (AP) ·

.............. SJ

SPEED AND POWER - Cleveland center fielder Kenny .
Lofton hits a twcrrun, pinch hit homer off Minnesota's Hec·
tor Carrasco Tuesday In Cleveland. (AP)

_ 1fi~ Co~nty Tour
BY FRANK CAPEHART
OVP CORRESPONDENT

L

races tighten ·up

lor hit 52, while Jake Venoy, Michael
lavendar and Josh Venoy all carded 56,
A three-way playoff, precise play in just ahead of Brad Deal and Daniel
the premier division, developing tight Kaylor.
The premier 15-17 · age division
division chases; and a special annual visiting lovely competitor highlighted tightened up considerably as Bryan
round two ofTri-County Junior Golf at Cromley of Hidden Valley CC [ashRiverside on Monday.
ioned a fine two-over 37 to win the
I_n the 13-14 age group, tl!ree you~f first place Fruth weekly trophy. Last
swmgers came m deadlocke~. for to!¥ • week's winner, Jeremy Banks &lt;if
honors at 42 each. In the exc1tmg two-~ .Pomeroy was close on his heels \vith a
hole 11layo~, New Haven's Heath Stan-·] dandy. 39 for rlql.ner"up honors. Aaron
ley rolled m a putt to. capture the first 1 Miller was one stroke back at 40 along
place Pnuh trophy, while Randall Sha~- 1 with delightful smooth-sw\nging Brittet~ ~fB1dwell won se~ond and Robb1e 1 tany Lincicome from Florida. Brittany
~·lli~mson from Pomt Pleasant was usually makes it here once a year, en
' route to competition in Kentucky a few
third.
Just one stroke back was Steve John- days later, plays from the long tees, and
son ofWellston at 43, ahead ofJackson's always adds luster to the day, winning
John Staton (45) and Enc Van Mater top ladies' honors and pushing all the
(47) of Pomeroy. Tied a_t 51 were Eric [;uys.
·
Milhoan and Brent DaviS. Garrett KayRight behind that group came the
'

,,

j.

CLEVELAND (AP) John Lucas wore a brightly
colored tie for his first appearance as Cavaliers coach. He
also promised to make Cleveland attractive to free agents, .
open practices to the media
and put a smile on ·everyone's
face.
.
. Oh, and he promised something else.
"We're going to win," said
Lucas, whose swagger and
outgoing personality counters
the
Cavs'
buttondowned
image. "And
.
were gomg
to have some
fun ."
On his initial day as
Cavs coach,
Luaa
Lucas made
quite a first
tmpreSSIOn.
"It's started," said Cavs general manager Jim Paxson, who
took two months to find a
replacement
for
Randy
Wittman. "After the employees' meeting, my wife noticed
that everybody was walking
out with smiles.
"It wasn't because Paxson
finally made a decision. John
had the111 laughing. We may
have to put a seat belt on
him." ,
Lucas has faced tougher
challenges · ·than the Cavs,
overcoming drug addiction
and rebuilding his life · and
career.
So how diffkult could it be
to fix a mediocre NBA team?
"I know about starting over
and I know about trying to
stay," Lucas said.''This is a second chance for all of us."
Lucas, whose career and life
have been about second
chances, was introduced Tuesday as coach of the Cavs the 13th in their 31 - year history.
''I'm not the last Cavaliers
coach," Lucas said. "In fact,
I'm a little bit upSet I'm the
13th.That's a dangerous nurn-

.

RQUND THE COUNTY

research

Rutland plans July 4 celebration
RUTLAND- "Home on the Range" will be the theme
of the Rutland's annual July 4 celebration.
One of the highlights of the ewnt, sponsored by the Rutland firemen, will be the unveiling and dedication of the historical marker in tribute to a descendant of a Rutland pioneer family, Brewster Higley, who composed "Home on the
Range." It will be at 11 a.m. at the Firemen's Park stage.
The parade, carrying out the same theme,.begins at 9 a.m.
The firemen invite c!nuies.
·
·
The dedication of the marker as well as the parade ate
both part of the annual ox roast where activities run all day
long and culminate with a fireworks display at 10:30 p.m.
Refreshments will be served in the old log cabin beside
where the marker will be placed.

The Daily Sentinel

KV Drag~Wy mults, Page B3
Diamond Roundup, Page B6

C.USA touauey
seelrs new honle

UMW hean program on angels

Bltckl81

Inside:

trio of Ryan Roush from Riverside,
Nick Lucas of Hidden Valley, and
Nathan Plantz from C liffiide at 43
each. Jonathan Dillon and Andrew
Whited carded 45, Jared Sims had 46,
and Charles Burns 47, just ahead of
Adam Watson, Tad Saunders, Jaron
Cundiff, and Saul Bennett.
Brandon Burnette of Gallipolis came
in with a 50 to edge ahead of Evan
Dunn of Pomeroy in the one-two finish for 11-1 2 year-olds. That reversed
the first week results and now shows
the two lads deadlocked atop the division with 18 points each . Third place
was Jacob Hunter at 53 and tied with
Mike Taylor at _third overall. Ju!tin
Arnold was close behind fqr fourth and
tied for fifth overall.
In the 10-and-under, Bryan Harris of
.

1

. I

Please see C.Vs. B:S

Please see Tour. B:S
I

II

�Ohio

w.dnlldiJ, June20, 2001

m:rtbune -SentinelCLASS 'I IE D
.. .
•

~
We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Cant

Pirates' J.R. House may tum
to football at West Virginia

PITTSBURGH {AP) '• This isn't the kind of hit-andrun play the Pittsburgh Pirates
envisioned when they drafted
catching prospect J.R. House
two years ago.
House, considered a certain·
major leaguer attd the best
• player in the. Pintes' farm sys: tern, may announce Wednesday he is leaving Double-A
Altoona for the rest of the season to play quarterback at West
Virginia.
.
West Virginia coach Rich
•
·- Rodriguez wants his quarter~- backs on campus by this week~- end to begin worlcing out for
: the coming season and House
: has hinted strongly to Pirates
: -. pfficials that Wednesday could

In one week With us

'·

REACH OVER 285,GGG PROSPECTS
PL••S YOUR AD NOW

be his last game this season.
Family memben have said
they expect House to be on
the field Sept. 1, when West
Virginia opens against Boston
College.
House hasn't played football
since 1998, when he threw a
national record 10 touchdown
passes in Nitro High School's
victory in the West Virginia
Triple-A championship game.
He still owns the national
scholastic record of 14,457
yards passing in his career and
several other national records.
. House worked out for
Rodriguez on June 12 in
Morgantown and has been
invited to join West Virginia's
team as a wallcon.

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

TilE RRD 10/IEV
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_r

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••,

In Memory .
In Memory of
Thomas Mathew
Parker II
on your thircl
birthday. You are
absent from our
arms but forever
p'resent in our hearts.
filledmemories
with tile joy
Our
are

you gave us.
Love. Momm
&amp; Famil

•

NOW HIRING, ALL POSITIONS
Full/part time • day/evening
Apply after 4 pm
at any Gino's location.

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•

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 3

Living,

1-800-214.()452,

Rd., Ru1·

~JANfXM

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lraller
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HOME HEALTH RN I LPN
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ext. 201 • .

summER

Ksawtu 111111r Drq
I

Tour
lawa,..bl
of Gallipolis made it two
in a row with a fine 39,
ahead of Craig Jaggers and
third-place Alex Hawless.
In the overall point
standings, Banks is leading
the 15-17 group with 18
points, Cromley is close
behind at 14, and Plantz has
12.
The 13-14 bracket also is
tied at 12 points each for
Steven Johnson and Eric
Van Mater, with four others
close behind at eight points
each.
It was announced that
one date change has been
made. The final week for
Fun Day roundup at Hidden Valley will take place
on Monday, July 16.
It was set to.be on July 9,
so competitors make· note.
Next Monday, the young
linksters 're-assemble for
rou11d three at Cliffside in
Gallipolis.
The weather is hot and
the Tour chase is heating
up.
It should be ' an exciting
second half. All local
juniors ,are encouraged to
jCiin in the learning fun
and excitement. Registration is 8:30 a.m., tee-off at
'I .a.m., and fine ~tro king all
morning.
Come and enjoy it.

hours fuWpart
II• hurry!

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~~~•I

• Paid Training ·
• Paid vacaHons
• Paid holidays
• Friday and
Saturday off
day June 22nd, huge &amp;ale,
loya, ciolhea. leo ches1,
comforters, entertainment
1tand, Sugar Run Road,

dence.

~

YARD Sow!Pr. PI.EAs.oo'

Carpllf1 sale
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Tllur. 21 sl 8-?, rain or llhlne

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12.De
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Old Mln'a RIICI
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co-y

Paxson, lucas paused and
reflected for a moment before

talking.

'

·I

,,

I I

7.1141

8.815

9.794

won just 32 games last season
- their fewest since 191\6-87
- and feU apan after a strong
start when center Zydrunas:
llgauslcas sustained a seasonending foot injury.
"1 want to try and win ·
now;' Lucas said. u I want to
work with what we have to
find a way to win. I feel like
we can win together, and
there are some very good
pieces already in place."
·
Lucas, who
overcame ·
cocaine addiction and has
been sober since 1986, draws
from his life experiences to
teach his players and connects
with them on a more personal level.
''I'm a little bit different . .
from your
conventional
coach, but I'm not that different," he said. "I want to win
and I want to find a way to'
create excitement. I told every
player that I tallced to that
they were all too stiff. They
no
were all too rigid · smiles. We're going to have
some fun:'

said. "When Lofton hit the homer I thought we had them."
Torii Hunter opened the 12th with a single off Charles Nagy
· (1-2), rnalcingjust his third career relief appearance in 283 games.
Buchanan foUowed with a single md Pierzynski ripped his double into the right-field corner.
Bob WeUs (5-2) gave up Buries' homer in the 12th and but
pitched three innin~ for the win.
·
Trailing 8-7, the Indians forced extra inning&gt; when laTmy
Hawkins wallced Lotion on four pitches with the bases loaded.
Hawkins got out of the inillng by getting Einar Diaz on a forceout and got into a heated shouting match with plate umpire Dale
Scott while heading to the dugout.
KeUy and several Twins tried to restrain Hawlcins, who tried to
go after Scott before being ejected.
''I'm a little disappointed my closer lost his composure," Kelly
said.'"Th~t's not acceptable and we're going to address that."
The Twins blew a 6-0 lead and trailed 7-6 entering the ninth
Oct. 1 - capped Cleveland's five-run eighth.
However, the Twins, grabbed a brief 8-7 lead on Matt lawton's
RBI single and Koskie's bunt single off Bob Wickman in the
ninth.
For nearly eight innings, the Indians did little against Eric Milton, who took a two-hit shutout into the sixth before Buries hit
his 300th career homer.
Thome connected in the seventh and Buries hit his second solo
shot in the eighth to make it 6-3.
Juan Gonzalez doubled to chase Milton, and Hector Carrasco
gave up an RBI double to Marty Cordova. Thome then hit an
RBI single to make it 6-5.
Lofton, who was kept out of the starting lineup with the lndims facing a lefty. drove a l-1 pitch over the wall in center to giv~ ·
the Indians their first lead at 7-6.
·
Milton gave up eight hits- three solo homers - and four runs .
in 7 1-3 inning&gt;.
Colon didn't get our of the fifth- his shortest outing this season -and gave up six runs in 4 1-3 innings.

their last nine games at
Cinergy Field, iheir longest
such slump since 1986.
Instead of a renaissance
since Griffey, Barry larkin
and Aaron Boone returned
last Friday, the Reds have gotten steammlled, going 0-5 for
an eight-game losing streak
overall.
Not even a go·od showing
by Gritfey and Larkin could
make a difference Tuesday
night.
Griffey hit his first homer
of the season, a solo shot in
the sixth off Ben Sheets (8-4) . ·
He has hit safely in aU five
games since returning from a
torn hamstring, going 7-for18 with five RBis.
Larkin had four hits and a
walk, leaving him 6-for-18
since return ing · from a
strained groin.
"I saw some encouraging
things," manager Bob Boone
said. "Junior hit the homer
and he had some good atbats. Larkin came back with
four hits. That usually bodes
well. I'm encouraged."
As usual, the discouraging
outweighed the encouraging.
Jose Acevedo, a right-hander fresh from Double-A, had
his debut turn ugly right

Long Bollom, PuNino rnl-

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91!1 $-10

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-

01-

" [ made it,, he said.
lucas hasn't wasted any
13th. That's a dangerous time in his new job. He has
spent the last .few days calling
number."
Keeping with team policy. Cavaliers players and
the Cavs did not release the warning them.
terms of Lucas' deal. Several
"They've never seen anyreports have said it's for three thing like me," he s:~id. " I've
years and worth between $8 . got an energy level that these
guys have never seen before."
million and $9 million.
"Today;• Lucas joked when
The hiring •of lucas ended
:isked about the length of his a · drawn-out search. by the
deal. "I haven't even looked at Cavs, who were criticized for
it yet."
,
their secrecy and failure to
The 47-year-old Lucas, a pursue big-name candidates.
point guard for 13 NBA sea"John is the perfect coach
sons. was introduced at Gund for our team right now," Ca~
Arena exactly two mQnths owner Gordon Gund said.
Lucas has a combined 136after the club fired Wittman,
who went 62-102 the past 171 record in two previous
coaching stops wi~h San
two sea5ons.
and
Lucas was an .,assistant in Antonio {1992- 94)
Denver the past three years, Philadelphia (1994-96). He
and wanted another shot as a also was the general manager
head coach foUowing previ- and director of ·basketball
ous stints in San Antonio and operations for the 76ers.
Philadelphia.
All he'll have to do in
After being introduced by Cleveland is fixlthe Cavs, who

Lofton hit a pinch-hit homer in Cleveland's five-run eighth;
"I was talking the other night about that I had neVer done it and
lo and behold there it is;' Buries said "But it sure would have been
nice to do it in a win. It was a strange night. We had a slow start
and an excellent comeback. This team showed we're going to
fight." .
Jim Thome also homered for the Indians, who rallied from a 60 deficit, gave up the lead in the top of the ninth, tied it in the bottom and had a couple of chances to win it in extfl!S.
.. l'I lilce the way we came l;&gt;adc,"lndians manager Charlie Manuel

E.T.

Hulik:a.WV

.._,.WY
v.......... wv

.............

spoz.

7.!12
8.13

a.·

cavs

c.

I

....._wv

Kllllb AldliGid

fnNII Pap 11

Easy Indoor

lla11 I .

LOCA.L
:AUTO
•
RACING :.

Tribe

S6-S7/HR
work nexlble

ok. OIJ'

-

JOBS

O'fi,WMI~

away. He hit a batter, walked a
batter, threw a wild pitch and ·
gave up a three-run homer to
Jeromy Burnitz and a tworun homer by Jose Hernan~
dez in the first inning.
"You could say I was a little
bit nervous," Acevedo said .
"In the first inning, I missed a .
couple of pitches to some
very good hitters."
Sexson added his third
homer in three games· in the
third inning, and doubled to
start the four-run eighth that
put the Brewers ahead 10-4
and sent the fans home.
"This is the Richie Se.xson
we're very familiar with,"
lopes said. "I don't know
who the other guy was and I
don't want to see him any
more, to tell you the truth."
' Sexson has .struggled to ·
make contact most of the seaso n. He leads the Nl in
strikeouts and is hitting only
.252.
"It's going better," Sexson
said. "It's just an ongoing
process. When you hit rock
bottom, you've got to start

over."
Another poor performance
by closer Danny Graves put
the game out of reach. Graves
gave up four runs on three
hits and a pair of walks in the
eighth.
Boone has decided to use
Graves earlier in games to get
him more appearances and
get him straightened out.

�Ohio

w.dnlldiJ, June20, 2001

m:rtbune -SentinelCLASS 'I IE D
.. .
•

~
We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Cant

Pirates' J.R. House may tum
to football at West Virginia

PITTSBURGH {AP) '• This isn't the kind of hit-andrun play the Pittsburgh Pirates
envisioned when they drafted
catching prospect J.R. House
two years ago.
House, considered a certain·
major leaguer attd the best
• player in the. Pintes' farm sys: tern, may announce Wednesday he is leaving Double-A
Altoona for the rest of the season to play quarterback at West
Virginia.
.
West Virginia coach Rich
•
·- Rodriguez wants his quarter~- backs on campus by this week~- end to begin worlcing out for
: the coming season and House
: has hinted strongly to Pirates
: -. pfficials that Wednesday could

In one week With us

'·

REACH OVER 285,GGG PROSPECTS
PL••S YOUR AD NOW

be his last game this season.
Family memben have said
they expect House to be on
the field Sept. 1, when West
Virginia opens against Boston
College.
House hasn't played football
since 1998, when he threw a
national record 10 touchdown
passes in Nitro High School's
victory in the West Virginia
Triple-A championship game.
He still owns the national
scholastic record of 14,457
yards passing in his career and
several other national records.
. House worked out for
Rodriguez on June 12 in
Morgantown and has been
invited to join West Virginia's
team as a wallcon.

.,
'

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8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

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Thomas Mathew
Parker II
on your thircl
birthday. You are
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filledmemories
with tile joy
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Love. Momm
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The Dally Sentinel• Page B 3

Living,

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~JANfXM

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Prior· Home Health experience Is
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summER

Ksawtu 111111r Drq
I

Tour
lawa,..bl
of Gallipolis made it two
in a row with a fine 39,
ahead of Craig Jaggers and
third-place Alex Hawless.
In the overall point
standings, Banks is leading
the 15-17 group with 18
points, Cromley is close
behind at 14, and Plantz has
12.
The 13-14 bracket also is
tied at 12 points each for
Steven Johnson and Eric
Van Mater, with four others
close behind at eight points
each.
It was announced that
one date change has been
made. The final week for
Fun Day roundup at Hidden Valley will take place
on Monday, July 16.
It was set to.be on July 9,
so competitors make· note.
Next Monday, the young
linksters 're-assemble for
rou11d three at Cliffside in
Gallipolis.
The weather is hot and
the Tour chase is heating
up.
It should be ' an exciting
second half. All local
juniors ,are encouraged to
jCiin in the learning fun
and excitement. Registration is 8:30 a.m., tee-off at
'I .a.m., and fine ~tro king all
morning.
Come and enjoy it.

hours fuWpart
II• hurry!

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• Paid vacaHons
• Paid holidays
• Friday and
Saturday off
day June 22nd, huge &amp;ale,
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comforters, entertainment
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Old Mln'a RIICI
Clmaro

co-y

Paxson, lucas paused and
reflected for a moment before

talking.

'

·I

,,

I I

7.1141

8.815

9.794

won just 32 games last season
- their fewest since 191\6-87
- and feU apan after a strong
start when center Zydrunas:
llgauslcas sustained a seasonending foot injury.
"1 want to try and win ·
now;' Lucas said. u I want to
work with what we have to
find a way to win. I feel like
we can win together, and
there are some very good
pieces already in place."
·
Lucas, who
overcame ·
cocaine addiction and has
been sober since 1986, draws
from his life experiences to
teach his players and connects
with them on a more personal level.
''I'm a little bit different . .
from your
conventional
coach, but I'm not that different," he said. "I want to win
and I want to find a way to'
create excitement. I told every
player that I tallced to that
they were all too stiff. They
no
were all too rigid · smiles. We're going to have
some fun:'

said. "When Lofton hit the homer I thought we had them."
Torii Hunter opened the 12th with a single off Charles Nagy
· (1-2), rnalcingjust his third career relief appearance in 283 games.
Buchanan foUowed with a single md Pierzynski ripped his double into the right-field corner.
Bob WeUs (5-2) gave up Buries' homer in the 12th and but
pitched three innin~ for the win.
·
Trailing 8-7, the Indians forced extra inning&gt; when laTmy
Hawkins wallced Lotion on four pitches with the bases loaded.
Hawkins got out of the inillng by getting Einar Diaz on a forceout and got into a heated shouting match with plate umpire Dale
Scott while heading to the dugout.
KeUy and several Twins tried to restrain Hawlcins, who tried to
go after Scott before being ejected.
''I'm a little disappointed my closer lost his composure," Kelly
said.'"Th~t's not acceptable and we're going to address that."
The Twins blew a 6-0 lead and trailed 7-6 entering the ninth
Oct. 1 - capped Cleveland's five-run eighth.
However, the Twins, grabbed a brief 8-7 lead on Matt lawton's
RBI single and Koskie's bunt single off Bob Wickman in the
ninth.
For nearly eight innings, the Indians did little against Eric Milton, who took a two-hit shutout into the sixth before Buries hit
his 300th career homer.
Thome connected in the seventh and Buries hit his second solo
shot in the eighth to make it 6-3.
Juan Gonzalez doubled to chase Milton, and Hector Carrasco
gave up an RBI double to Marty Cordova. Thome then hit an
RBI single to make it 6-5.
Lofton, who was kept out of the starting lineup with the lndims facing a lefty. drove a l-1 pitch over the wall in center to giv~ ·
the Indians their first lead at 7-6.
·
Milton gave up eight hits- three solo homers - and four runs .
in 7 1-3 inning&gt;.
Colon didn't get our of the fifth- his shortest outing this season -and gave up six runs in 4 1-3 innings.

their last nine games at
Cinergy Field, iheir longest
such slump since 1986.
Instead of a renaissance
since Griffey, Barry larkin
and Aaron Boone returned
last Friday, the Reds have gotten steammlled, going 0-5 for
an eight-game losing streak
overall.
Not even a go·od showing
by Gritfey and Larkin could
make a difference Tuesday
night.
Griffey hit his first homer
of the season, a solo shot in
the sixth off Ben Sheets (8-4) . ·
He has hit safely in aU five
games since returning from a
torn hamstring, going 7-for18 with five RBis.
Larkin had four hits and a
walk, leaving him 6-for-18
since return ing · from a
strained groin.
"I saw some encouraging
things," manager Bob Boone
said. "Junior hit the homer
and he had some good atbats. Larkin came back with
four hits. That usually bodes
well. I'm encouraged."
As usual, the discouraging
outweighed the encouraging.
Jose Acevedo, a right-hander fresh from Double-A, had
his debut turn ugly right

Long Bollom, PuNino rnl-

r

94Comry
91!1 $-10

from Page Bl

• Medl(a) Benefits
I 401K

Thulldlly Juno 21a1and Fri· , ........ ••

79.111
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.lii'MI.iQbN&gt;N

Reds

every 6 months

-

01-

" [ made it,, he said.
lucas hasn't wasted any
13th. That's a dangerous time in his new job. He has
spent the last .few days calling
number."
Keeping with team policy. Cavaliers players and
the Cavs did not release the warning them.
terms of Lucas' deal. Several
"They've never seen anyreports have said it's for three thing like me," he s:~id. " I've
years and worth between $8 . got an energy level that these
guys have never seen before."
million and $9 million.
"Today;• Lucas joked when
The hiring •of lucas ended
:isked about the length of his a · drawn-out search. by the
deal. "I haven't even looked at Cavs, who were criticized for
it yet."
,
their secrecy and failure to
The 47-year-old Lucas, a pursue big-name candidates.
point guard for 13 NBA sea"John is the perfect coach
sons. was introduced at Gund for our team right now," Ca~
Arena exactly two mQnths owner Gordon Gund said.
Lucas has a combined 136after the club fired Wittman,
who went 62-102 the past 171 record in two previous
coaching stops wi~h San
two sea5ons.
and
Lucas was an .,assistant in Antonio {1992- 94)
Denver the past three years, Philadelphia (1994-96). He
and wanted another shot as a also was the general manager
head coach foUowing previ- and director of ·basketball
ous stints in San Antonio and operations for the 76ers.
Philadelphia.
All he'll have to do in
After being introduced by Cleveland is fixlthe Cavs, who

Lofton hit a pinch-hit homer in Cleveland's five-run eighth;
"I was talking the other night about that I had neVer done it and
lo and behold there it is;' Buries said "But it sure would have been
nice to do it in a win. It was a strange night. We had a slow start
and an excellent comeback. This team showed we're going to
fight." .
Jim Thome also homered for the Indians, who rallied from a 60 deficit, gave up the lead in the top of the ninth, tied it in the bottom and had a couple of chances to win it in extfl!S.
.. l'I lilce the way we came l;&gt;adc,"lndians manager Charlie Manuel

E.T.

Hulik:a.WV

.._,.WY
v.......... wv

.............

spoz.

7.!12
8.13

a.·

cavs

c.

I

....._wv

Kllllb AldliGid

fnNII Pap 11

Easy Indoor

lla11 I .

LOCA.L
:AUTO
•
RACING :.

Tribe

S6-S7/HR
work nexlble

ok. OIJ'

-

JOBS

O'fi,WMI~

away. He hit a batter, walked a
batter, threw a wild pitch and ·
gave up a three-run homer to
Jeromy Burnitz and a tworun homer by Jose Hernan~
dez in the first inning.
"You could say I was a little
bit nervous," Acevedo said .
"In the first inning, I missed a .
couple of pitches to some
very good hitters."
Sexson added his third
homer in three games· in the
third inning, and doubled to
start the four-run eighth that
put the Brewers ahead 10-4
and sent the fans home.
"This is the Richie Se.xson
we're very familiar with,"
lopes said. "I don't know
who the other guy was and I
don't want to see him any
more, to tell you the truth."
' Sexson has .struggled to ·
make contact most of the seaso n. He leads the Nl in
strikeouts and is hitting only
.252.
"It's going better," Sexson
said. "It's just an ongoing
process. When you hit rock
bottom, you've got to start

over."
Another poor performance
by closer Danny Graves put
the game out of reach. Graves
gave up four runs on three
hits and a pair of walks in the
eighth.
Boone has decided to use
Graves earlier in games to get
him more appearances and
get him straightened out.

�Wednn day, June 20, 2001

The Dillly Santlnel• Pag_e e 5

Pomwoy,
.
. Mlddllpart,Ohlo
-

tfEA Crol8word Puz~l•

••
PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALilltR

1,
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211

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(744))-1'188 4194
or (7jQ) 885 4384
24 Hoi!~ Dlyl Per WHk

CINCINNATI (AP) - Chris Reitsma when Bobby Ay.da, Larry Luebbers, John
· doesn't feel is though he's one of the vet- Roper and Tim Pugh pitched in August
eran$ of the Cincinnati Reds' starting rota- and September.
tion.
An iqjury. a trade and poor performances
IYRACUI! SMALL
Jo
· By comparison, he is.
prompted the Reds to replenish the rotaiNGtNa'DOCTOH8
·· The Reds got a little younger Tuesday tion with rookies. Top starter Pete Harnisch
CONTIIAaCJIIS, IlK.
CONCRffi
13MColllgtHd.
when they called up right-hander Jose has been on the disabled list since May II
740-882-0122
Racine, Ohio 41n1
CONNE~N
Acevedo from Class Double-A Chat- with elbow tendinitis, Osvaldo Fernandez
740-985-3848
.
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_tanooga to make his big-league debut was dett1oted to the minon and Rob Bell
CDNCRETEIIII.OCW/IRICJ( Nillllllty Drlvewaya, . ,OV.r 23 yr. exp,
asainst the Milwaukee Brewers. He got was traded to Texas.
• II'OOien, W1llo, Stopo •
PltJoa, SldiW.IIItt. r All - ' l IU11'8ntllcl
BII'VIotlp.rt.
rocked as the Brewers won 10-8.
Flat Worlc,
The 111111111ger is in
2
available.
Replooemento,
•
Walkl
5
ytlll
nce
The move gave the Reds four rookies in
During a 25-minute meeting with his
Spe&lt;:ial
thonb to Lyle
and Drl•a •·S,.Ddl
Fret EsU"*"
the CUl'!'ent five-man rotation. Reitsma, 23, playen Monday. Boone talked about the
Gene Baker, Auto Value,
&amp; all our loyal ·
'is the most accomplished of the group, team's shortcomil]gs in general. He also
~~~~~~::;,~.
740-742-8015
Jr · custome11 &amp; friends.
with 14 big-league starts. ·
offered to meet with playen individually.
Outdoor Power
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where to go and what to Jo. You feel like them;• he said.
Advertise Btlng "' yourrepelr work
you've been around a little bir, but I'm only
They took him up on the offer Tuesday.
two months into my first season."
n this •pace we'll get yoa going for
Boone wouldn't say how many players .. l_
With their season already scuttled by requested meeting~ or what they discussed.
spring · ,
tor
iryuries and lousy p~rformances at Cinergy
"it was manly s!Utf," he said. "Mbst ofit
'24 per mo~ttt
, · Eve,YSprtng Tune-Up
Field, the R eds have decided to give their was positive."
young piti:hers a crash course on the
gtt a FR~E Blade Sharp•nlng.
Boone was pleased witli the way his
majors.
New equipment arriving dally
players responded to Monday's .meeting, ·
.BISSELL .
Joining R eitsma are Brian R eith, 23, which the Reds foUowed by losing 6-4 to
SH M•nnlng, Wayne or Jim
who has made live starts; Lance Davis, 24, Milwaukee.
BUILDIIU I"C.
or 1 REAI..Iii!AL·on-e new 1-n tractor,
N.,.
Homa
•
VlaJI
who' made his debut last Satutday, and
niover or WHd trimmer.
" I thought the response was good,"
Skii"'•NewGmais
Acevedo, 23.The only veteran in the group Boone said."The intensity level was better.
· •Repl1&lt;0ment
is Elmer Dessens, 29, who has made 38 Their approach was good. Now we 'II see if
Wlndowo
• Room
starts in his ~'ljor league career.
we can maintain it."
Addition• • Rooll•a
The 1999 Seattle Mariners were the last
At 25-44, the Reds are on pace to lose
-~CIAI.IIItll!liDIIfiiAl
team to have four rookie starters - Fred- 103 games. The club record for losses in a
&amp; Service
,
FREE ESTIMATES
'
dy Garcia, John Halama, Gil Meche and season is 101 in 1982 - the only year that
~ O~dor st.
pome~y
740..992·7599
Bob Ramsay, The Reds haven't had fo ur baseball's 6i:s~professional franchise lost 100
. . .:__ 992·2975 ' .
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
rookies in the same rotation since 11993, games.

.t • ...

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22 lioN

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7 Site lo&amp;l

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............... ...43 u~
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1888'-ry

food fllh
4 lndlnl
5 Udy (by,

~~~ ~~'!'n~~!ua~~~ · 15

avoid that club loser.
You must immediately play a diamond
ho nor at trick two..
Th
d iscard
en, you can
that pesky low club on
the third round of diamonds. Once you have
done that, get those
· trumps drawn . as
quickly as possible.

itive influence over your

affairs.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- Some kind of chan8• could
take place today that'll give

SJ&gt;ruCIAL FINANCE DEPARTMENI'
Banluuplcy? Credit Problems?
"We Can Help"!!

you a more direct control over

a situation that has been previously managed by another.
With you in charge, tb ngs will
get beller. Know where to look
Cor romance and you'll rind it.
The Aslro-Graph Matchmaker
in8tanlly reveals which signs
are romantically perfect for
you . Mail $2.7510 Maichmak·
er. c/o this newspaper, P.O. Bo~
17~8. Murray Hill Station.
New York. NY 10156.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) .. A
sect-.! an1bition you've been
privately nurturins ha~ a
chance to become a reality
1tl&lt;lny. If you see the opening.
jump on it and Jon 't settle Co1·

Call U. Firat Or We BOth Losel

Ask For Mike Hindle
or

t.AUaiR
· Cellular

Jeff Warner .Ins.
'992-5479
~..._

sec ond

be~l.

VIRGO (Aug. 2.1-Scpt. 221

•• In tlalking to ~n ·us-~oci ~tc
• toduv. someth ing thnt i ~ suid

r
~~

0

•&gt;'" &gt;

L

.~. ,-

~

.

. . . ...

........ -

......

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:

C88W IRd

...-.

Pollux

. 24 BrldallttiN 45 rtvol
25 AlA
47 "Woe Ia

ne•

=.,

·~'

groups or individuals. They
will serve to have a major. pos-

URNPIICE ~~~N

. ... . . . . .. .. "':' ......
- ~

::;:t.

.BY Plln.LIP ALDitR

1.: oufd cuu!\1!' you to

'

32 Type crl
llllltl
33

Thuf'S dny, June 21 , 2001

I

••• •

caa...pilcl

Take a jump

· In the year ahead, several
new and important friend ships
could be established with either

. .. .

~

~

new~pap8r par~graphlng

I

.

I
·

M I 6C I M

I 1 I I ·BRA NEy
7

1
1A

~~'

I

8

1 I· I

"This TV season reminds m&amp;
of chicken soup ." my husbancf.
grumbled. "It goes down easy but
lit's not a meal to ------·-.'
Complete the chuckle quoted
by f1ll•ng In the missing words
you develop from s1ep No. 3 below.

0

PRINT NUMBERED

~I(::II'~L;ET¥.T~ER~s;•;N;s~o~uA~R~E~S;=:;:~;=:\=~~=i==f:=j
.,. UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS 1 1·
V FOR ANSWER
. .

1 1 ·1 1 1
.

.

.

.

.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Kimono - Rusty- Tweak. Zinnia • WON'T RAIN
Granny always told me that I had better get my umbrella if the weather station says it WON'T RAIN.

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

· S••••·

1 Derlolve
21 Hlllld
23 Fontllr
llra.T,_.. ZAube

....

mllB

P/1

do.... ..

-

:zo IUppld

We are looking at
clll.-'1
"*'... U Twtlchel
mel"
2t 0
;
answering partner's
~
41Poket- •·
takeout double. As a
21 -lVII
50 I I ) - Of •
21
Clve
(poat.l
Armatrong
•
Cunning
llryNW
simple suit bid shows
3t J1eVo1nc1 I FuluN .
3052WWII0-8 points, when you
•
40~
LLIII.'
54 31 c-pbell
Eve'•
vs-· ·
.. •
have 9-ll you must
jump. And you need
only a four-card suit,
•
especially in a majqr.
When leaping to three
ofa minor, 11y to have
•
•
five; but if you have
••
no choice, you have 10
do what you have to .
do •• bridge isn't a
game for cowards.
Someone asked me
if 0-8 and 9-1 I are
•
•
· high-card points. No; .
•
•
those numbers include
distribution points. As
partner must have at
least three cards in the
suit you are bidding, if
you know of an eight·
card fit (you have a
five-card suit), you
CELEBRITY CIPHER
add one point for a
by Lula Campos
Cellbrlty Cipher CFYJIIOiliii!1S .,. CINIOCI frum quotetlonl by famoua
doubleton, two for a
people, pal and 1)11Hf11. Each 1e11or In tile cipher ....... for anothof. _
singleton, and three for
Todsy's c/Ufl: R eqUIIS V
•
a void . If yo~ know of
tKNKFBY
K ZY
MI
'IGNVY
a nine-c.ard fit (you
have a siK-bagger),
TXIYGZ
U X H ·.'
XD
add one for a doubleton, three for singleTXFBYBK
ton, and five for a
void.
This deal contains
NJKBXWNFKI
'KZY
an example . You,
· South, have only eight
X FK YB
MW
BXKNBMNWI
high.-card points, but
.
. partJQNVY.'UX
. IV
AMHNC
.
all are 'm th e sutts
• l'ner haS Jjtdftfist:d'; 'lli\Cf ·. •·· 'PREVIOUS SOLUTiON: "The 1rt of
11 to atrtike a platitude until It purn Ilks an oplgram. - DoO
You add a point for ·
Maraula
:
1'UT DAJL' d.t1'.1'tl 61 , .( _ J) 'C ~~e WDID :
that doubleton diamond. Once you show
PUULII P\!oil 1-'QU tv,_
'b p q• '0 IAMI •
9-11 points with four
lhllto4 lty ClAY 1. POllAN
or more spades, Nonh
Roarrange ltnero ol llle
has an easy raise to
lour JCramblod word1 below to form four Jlmple word1.
game.
After West leads the r--~~:""":-::--::---,1
club queen, · check
BR 0 J E B
2 ·
your losers. There are
four: the lhree missing
E Q NUE
aces and a third-round
club loser. If you lead · Lc·.....,,....T"J"'-n:--r--1
3 4
a trump at trick two, ·
. . . _
you will (should!) lose ::::;~~~~~

SIIE'S A SP'(..

(former W•mer Hullng
, CoqJlng building)

REDS NOTEBOOK

10 "1Mw - .
..- .,.._.. 37 Dripping
1112- .
31--CIIt
11...
41 Sllrl
21 JIJought In, 42 lnkimlltlon :

DOWN

" .1. 1.· 1 1

992-171.7

Repair Hydraui!Q Hell I a Cyllndera
A11o Sell Dl~ 1'ypH Of Olle

11-nv-

I

HARTWELL
STORAGE

lllrfMIIIt """' II ......
Cd your 111· 1 ldolll
......... clotrlioloJ,

_

•cr..n·
nnt.11
-

I I I I' I 1

WV 005176 -

....... .... producls. ·

.-...""""·"'_,.
...,......
_,.,,...

11

0

"""""".
Julllilok-'
gNitool wllllllo belt

I also- Degrease automobile and truck 111Qtor's
· as well as diesel and Industrial equipment
engines, such as bulldozer's. bsekhosf; and
endloadenl. Ill can help you call me after 5:00.
or emsll at:

s.tes Stnice lllllel~
Spedelbqln Shoot Melellluot-'&lt;
.,.,._. SUs.&amp; Senke For
Gallla, ~ ..... Melp COUIIIIei

.loll Wllghl Now .

&amp;laul),

511*oltwd
53U.

........

MIVIOA 11!CIIIOI.OGY

NO .108 TOO U.AQE OR 811ALL

YOUNG'S·

2N70 llahln Aold
AICIIII, Ohio
45771

I1 1AN'ASKED
I GOT THCS ONE WHEN
HER TO KISS TH'

J&lt;ENSJNGJON

10' X 10' 530 GO
10 X 20 S50.00

OFFICE
BUSINESS SERVICES
• Trucks • Home~~ •
Tr1llere
• Balta • Mabile Homa • Drtvew1y1
· • Equipment clelned a deg-sed

FREE ES'niATES.

74:0-992·1671

on lw.li:ll

- ·-·-

Comtlllt

l

Hill'• Self

Siz115' X 10'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8;00 PM

Stop &amp;

TOPSOIL
DIRT
CULVERT

DW.

47~-­

57Sprlng.-

• .::.:....

. Remodlllng

~40) 992·5072

Uc.f00.50

740-949-2217

_.Coiup1111

Sl.17 HI-II!AT
our AND \WI I EH

Mason : .

llllln St,
Poniii'Oy, ott
Plylng$80.00

..-d

. . . .-.Q

• 0.111111

DELIVER¥ AVAILABLE

(under Pomeroy-

AIU

-....

41 FaaluM

11Aul0111p ·....
17nw-

• Q 1tt71

·New~ ·

METAL CULVERT
OEOIEXTILE
· REBAR &amp; REWIRE

RIVERSIDE
STORAGE

.I tl
• I I J
• II 1 I J l

....

w.c:o.

call.

......
11 01._ .,_ . II COmji-

•• Q J

••

UMESTONE

Al"l" : -

JDIIO A lit 7 Soulfl

g.g.1405
591-5011

QJ U I

• F

• Q J

...............
,. .... . . ......

GRAYeL
SAND

CMI-WP111U
Dtalen

Spout

•

740 -992 -1101
or 992-2753

Wi CAHHELP

Equlplllnl hrtl
Flldiii'J All ..... I '

A. • •

U Or I
14 .....ut

"

III I I:

•

Free EstlrTidtes

rwa•CTION
PROJECT?

AU Mallei Tndlr a

Roofing. Home
llllnllnlnce-

Oho -lS 760

3D

....,.

111111111

Howardl.

............ .....
-...
~

...

42

••

\"

b e c(llllt!

deeply in\'olved in nc,\~ intcre!iits. The projr:'t might produce
bc:ncfits fOr all invoh·ed .

LIBRA!Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -

- A co n.structi\'e new wind

could blow in today thai will
give un ambition of yours the
life 'it needs. Your aim may be
either career relotted or person·
all y o ri ented .

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24- Nov.
22) -- What you learn today
· will have a use that you will be
able to start applying immediately. This new knowledge will
be implemented on something
that could be quite profitable.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21 ) -- A channel .might
open up for you ioday that
could start 10 produce a second
source of income for you. II
could be a sold mine 1ha1 is just
waiting 10 be tapped.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- Someone you meet at
this time or whom you just
recenlly mel may be destined
to become a valued relationship. The first sigm of this
could luke place today.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb.
19) -- You m:1y or maf not real- 1

.

ize it, bui chances are you'll be
more closely observed today
· · by your superiors for purposes
of a possible promotion. Give
a good pe rformance.

PISCES (Fe b. 20-M:trch 20)
-· Se,~e ral key soc ial &lt;.tssociations that ha,·en' t been too ~t a­
ble of hth! ~ an bt" strengthe n
toduy. h will be well wonh any
effort you upply towards this
end.

ARI ES !Marc h 21-April 19)
-- You could gel the op portll·
nit\' toduv to rcmo\lC an obsmclc· t'hat · has been impedin g
your pl·og: rc)Os and rep_lace it
wi th som!!thing workable that
can lead to

~ ucces!oi .

TAURUS !April 20-May
20) .. Any bright ideas you ge t
today coni:e ming

somcthin ~

new you could do to your
home or abode would serve
like a breath of fresh air flowing in on your surroundings.

Followup on them.
.
GEMINI (Mny 21-June 20)
-' Although you may be placing greuler emphasis than usual on your material intcre$t
today, it will be u good thing.

This focus could produce
impressive result s.

1•
.

�Wednn day, June 20, 2001

The Dillly Santlnel• Pag_e e 5

Pomwoy,
.
. Mlddllpart,Ohlo
-

tfEA Crol8word Puz~l•

••
PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALilltR

1,
... 57 ::::.--·
_.

A&amp;D Aile U,lllsllrf" Pin,

211

.

Aullnl Ohio

:

'

.
amvemblc .t Yiayltops, Four wbeclcr

~scats, car ICIIs, ht"'linm. truct I!'IJII,

ICIII,

•

~ ICIII, boll C0¥C1S, caqiels, CIC.
llori-Frl 8:30 • 5:00

r:-:
.A.

OVer 40 yrs exptrlence (740) 742 BIBB
1 BBBI-521-otn&amp;

UFE INSURANG CO.
Rr,ch, R 'iupp A9cnt

Wrttesel

Box 1 nl.J
'

r.~ldUir·;wrt

Loc:al843-5214
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer .t.
Dental, Retirement,
Pension .t. 40 IK Rollovers;

•

1iploll• FIB Dlr1
•Mukb
Bulldozer Serylca

Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

CONSTFIUCJION
~:---.
lneured

Sf I

Jalhr Ia HW
COIIIInl&lt;tlooo,

- --··

992-3470

DAZE lAWN
GARDEN SEIYia

types

1¥1owillf. weed
Eatlllf. Tlllln-.

Roofs, .

Specialist

Prunln-. Pressure
Wash Ina
S.llsllcllol a-...111
Hourly rates

rea udell..,,........

---repair
por-dn, &amp;: clecks.

Owner

Charles R. Dill

740-949-2610

,._ 992-7445
c.l
591-9254

Bullnen

Call Bob
40-949-,_..

Cell#

740-541.o350 Cell

1715

TIM DEEM
CONTRACTING
-ng, Siding,·
Windows, Deckl,

Porchea, o..g..,
Room Add.

Free Estimates
· Toll Free
1·1186-992.(11121
740-992-111121
locally owned &amp;
operated
WV028120

Guttn-Down
FIW Elllntal

:1

..~ PLASTIC

,...;-~--i· ;:;;;:;;;;;;;:

...

perpme

$300.00 eo-u
$500.00 Sllrbunlt
Progi'MIIve top I

...,.•.

Lo-lt

DIE HEAT

1!1

'

--

ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTOAV DIAECI'
PHtc:IIICI

·OUALITY
WINDOW

SERVICE
Mowfno&amp;

__ .,_

740-992-5065

Remadlllag

·-&amp;-.a
· ·R-s.a-.

'--·""--

Mlchlne QuiHing

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
- .Ohio

.

EARNHARTI3

. Terryt.amm

pillow p1nela
740-1192-3673

992·0739

••

~~~...:!.~~

remodeling,
drywall, room
addiiions, arid
plumbing.

FABRICS

• VInyl Sldlna • Plllllllna

GA~E-•.so

SYSTEMS

TrtmmifiCJ

• Roam • Utduna I

PIE
t.jS
ltrOviiiiE-1.19

•

._,a ,.,. _

~

•

PAN

'

..• ..

...

_

•

'WE. OlX':t\T TO 1Z£f\IZ£ W14.EM ~
(X$. Kltf.l ~

,--.....;.,""\1

&amp;1m ('W(:A) ~--~
10~

Wllm TI\EY

LAWN

Lf.NIE.

SERVICE

Generai/Spedallzed Typing
Tempoi'IIJ'y Oftlee ~fl~Dce... • .
Mailing Labels/Envelopes
.
Cassette Transcrlpdoll
·
N~;~merous Business Support Services .
2S years Secretarial Experle~

C.ll740•591•2782 740•591•0477
Home 740•1185••218

ALL Mi ill

KEEPSlll!

..OCKS OUT tift
OF OAIIAGIIIG .

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Professional WOI'Ic tit
Af(ordable Rates

Jeff Statham

I cn'HII ONE AN' MAKE IT

WINDOW$ HEAT

bkJ_orsmtiiUI•mt;J..

-

.
.
ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

small
· landscaplno
Shauns.lh
(740) 985-3563
(740) s• 1-3820

740-667·3224 or 740-667..()()38

C~~==~~!J:sf:~l,~.l..,....,~£_....,.._._,.....~.lJL_J

Pomeroy, Ohio

740..992-5232
Pd l ~

Residential · CGiiWiitidal New C~

The One Man Corporation

I

AlkMeHow

Rooklential Pressure Washing, Single Wldoo,
Double Wides, Baal's Decks, RV's, and
~mpe1r's. swimming pools and farm·equlpmentl'w pressure washed things from tilling station

Whlthor ,..... trylnglo
...............
,.1 .....
rout dill l o r -

par1&lt;1ng lots, RVs snd homes to a corpot"ate
Lser.Jet.

Lieenlecl1nd Insured

1115R12
1IINOR13
1111-80R13
17HOR13
181180A13

Jlml Scoa 112-31102

J&amp;L Eillllplllt

(740)81MZ1

Racine July 4th
To reserve booth

I ,'\ ll I 1\ d r a ul i' ., ,\ II i I

for Karaoke conlest info
call Jen 949-2169

( !'lilt 1

to! -..,H- ,\

l'olllt Ill\

PEANUTS
I GOT ftWSELF IN A
LOT Ot= TROUBlE, CIIUCK.

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

Call Krista 949·221 o
l'dd

ANii' IT WAS ALL
VVI"_••.,.v,~T!

/1\V

FAULT?!

1'M su~e

I-4AN6 UP

ON MER!

Chpr,OI)Io

•Reds' rotation as young as they·come

(744))-1'188 4194
or (7jQ) 885 4384
24 Hoi!~ Dlyl Per WHk

CINCINNATI (AP) - Chris Reitsma when Bobby Ay.da, Larry Luebbers, John
· doesn't feel is though he's one of the vet- Roper and Tim Pugh pitched in August
eran$ of the Cincinnati Reds' starting rota- and September.
tion.
An iqjury. a trade and poor performances
IYRACUI! SMALL
Jo
· By comparison, he is.
prompted the Reds to replenish the rotaiNGtNa'DOCTOH8
·· The Reds got a little younger Tuesday tion with rookies. Top starter Pete Harnisch
CONTIIAaCJIIS, IlK.
CONCRffi
13MColllgtHd.
when they called up right-hander Jose has been on the disabled list since May II
740-882-0122
Racine, Ohio 41n1
CONNE~N
Acevedo from Class Double-A Chat- with elbow tendinitis, Osvaldo Fernandez
740-985-3848
.
~
,Master Cwlllled l'tdiJidans
_tanooga to make his big-league debut was dett1oted to the minon and Rob Bell
CDNCRETEIIII.OCW/IRICJ( Nillllllty Drlvewaya, . ,OV.r 23 yr. exp,
asainst the Milwaukee Brewers. He got was traded to Texas.
• II'OOien, W1llo, Stopo •
PltJoa, SldiW.IIItt. r All - ' l IU11'8ntllcl
BII'VIotlp.rt.
rocked as the Brewers won 10-8.
Flat Worlc,
The 111111111ger is in
2
available.
Replooemento,
•
Walkl
5
ytlll
nce
The move gave the Reds four rookies in
During a 25-minute meeting with his
Spe&lt;:ial
thonb to Lyle
and Drl•a •·S,.Ddl
Fret EsU"*"
the CUl'!'ent five-man rotation. Reitsma, 23, playen Monday. Boone talked about the
Gene Baker, Auto Value,
&amp; all our loyal ·
'is the most accomplished of the group, team's shortcomil]gs in general. He also
~~~~~~::;,~.
740-742-8015
Jr · custome11 &amp; friends.
with 14 big-league starts. ·
offered to meet with playen individually.
Outdoor Power
WVIII031712
1~-&amp; 022
"It's not weird," he said Tuesday. "It's nice
"I invited them in my office if they want
··, .
to be asked questions about thing~ like to know if I was talking specifically about
where to go and what to Jo. You feel like them;• he said.
Advertise Btlng "' yourrepelr work
you've been around a little bir, but I'm only
They took him up on the offer Tuesday.
two months into my first season."
n this •pace we'll get yoa going for
Boone wouldn't say how many players .. l_
With their season already scuttled by requested meeting~ or what they discussed.
spring · ,
tor
iryuries and lousy p~rformances at Cinergy
"it was manly s!Utf," he said. "Mbst ofit
'24 per mo~ttt
, · Eve,YSprtng Tune-Up
Field, the R eds have decided to give their was positive."
young piti:hers a crash course on the
gtt a FR~E Blade Sharp•nlng.
Boone was pleased witli the way his
majors.
New equipment arriving dally
players responded to Monday's .meeting, ·
.BISSELL .
Joining R eitsma are Brian R eith, 23, which the Reds foUowed by losing 6-4 to
SH M•nnlng, Wayne or Jim
who has made live starts; Lance Davis, 24, Milwaukee.
BUILDIIU I"C.
or 1 REAI..Iii!AL·on-e new 1-n tractor,
N.,.
Homa
•
VlaJI
who' made his debut last Satutday, and
niover or WHd trimmer.
" I thought the response was good,"
Skii"'•NewGmais
Acevedo, 23.The only veteran in the group Boone said."The intensity level was better.
· •Repl1&lt;0ment
is Elmer Dessens, 29, who has made 38 Their approach was good. Now we 'II see if
Wlndowo
• Room
starts in his ~'ljor league career.
we can maintain it."
Addition• • Rooll•a
The 1999 Seattle Mariners were the last
At 25-44, the Reds are on pace to lose
-~CIAI.IIItll!liDIIfiiAl
team to have four rookie starters - Fred- 103 games. The club record for losses in a
&amp; Service
,
FREE ESTIMATES
'
dy Garcia, John Halama, Gil Meche and season is 101 in 1982 - the only year that
~ O~dor st.
pome~y
740..992·7599
Bob Ramsay, The Reds haven't had fo ur baseball's 6i:s~professional franchise lost 100
. . .:__ 992·2975 ' .
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
rookies in the same rotation since 11993, games.

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food fllh
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~~~ ~~'!'n~~!ua~~~ · 15

avoid that club loser.
You must immediately play a diamond
ho nor at trick two..
Th
d iscard
en, you can
that pesky low club on
the third round of diamonds. Once you have
done that, get those
· trumps drawn . as
quickly as possible.

itive influence over your

affairs.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- Some kind of chan8• could
take place today that'll give

SJ&gt;ruCIAL FINANCE DEPARTMENI'
Banluuplcy? Credit Problems?
"We Can Help"!!

you a more direct control over

a situation that has been previously managed by another.
With you in charge, tb ngs will
get beller. Know where to look
Cor romance and you'll rind it.
The Aslro-Graph Matchmaker
in8tanlly reveals which signs
are romantically perfect for
you . Mail $2.7510 Maichmak·
er. c/o this newspaper, P.O. Bo~
17~8. Murray Hill Station.
New York. NY 10156.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) .. A
sect-.! an1bition you've been
privately nurturins ha~ a
chance to become a reality
1tl&lt;lny. If you see the opening.
jump on it and Jon 't settle Co1·

Call U. Firat Or We BOth Losel

Ask For Mike Hindle
or

t.AUaiR
· Cellular

Jeff Warner .Ins.
'992-5479
~..._

sec ond

be~l.

VIRGO (Aug. 2.1-Scpt. 221

•• In tlalking to ~n ·us-~oci ~tc
• toduv. someth ing thnt i ~ suid

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. 24 BrldallttiN 45 rtvol
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groups or individuals. They
will serve to have a major. pos-

URNPIICE ~~~N

. ... . . . . .. .. "':' ......
- ~

::;:t.

.BY Plln.LIP ALDitR

1.: oufd cuu!\1!' you to

'

32 Type crl
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33

Thuf'S dny, June 21 , 2001

I

••• •

caa...pilcl

Take a jump

· In the year ahead, several
new and important friend ships
could be established with either

. .. .

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new~pap8r par~graphlng

I

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·

M I 6C I M

I 1 I I ·BRA NEy
7

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8

1 I· I

"This TV season reminds m&amp;
of chicken soup ." my husbancf.
grumbled. "It goes down easy but
lit's not a meal to ------·-.'
Complete the chuckle quoted
by f1ll•ng In the missing words
you develop from s1ep No. 3 below.

0

PRINT NUMBERED

~I(::II'~L;ET¥.T~ER~s;•;N;s~o~uA~R~E~S;=:;:~;=:\=~~=i==f:=j
.,. UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS 1 1·
V FOR ANSWER
. .

1 1 ·1 1 1
.

.

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SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Kimono - Rusty- Tweak. Zinnia • WON'T RAIN
Granny always told me that I had better get my umbrella if the weather station says it WON'T RAIN.

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1 Derlolve
21 Hlllld
23 Fontllr
llra.T,_.. ZAube

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We are looking at
clll.-'1
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mel"
2t 0
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answering partner's
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41Poket- •·
takeout double. As a
21 -lVII
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llryNW
simple suit bid shows
3t J1eVo1nc1 I FuluN .
3052WWII0-8 points, when you
•
40~
LLIII.'
54 31 c-pbell
Eve'•
vs-· ·
.. •
have 9-ll you must
jump. And you need
only a four-card suit,
•
especially in a majqr.
When leaping to three
ofa minor, 11y to have
•
•
five; but if you have
••
no choice, you have 10
do what you have to .
do •• bridge isn't a
game for cowards.
Someone asked me
if 0-8 and 9-1 I are
•
•
· high-card points. No; .
•
•
those numbers include
distribution points. As
partner must have at
least three cards in the
suit you are bidding, if
you know of an eight·
card fit (you have a
five-card suit), you
CELEBRITY CIPHER
add one point for a
by Lula Campos
Cellbrlty Cipher CFYJIIOiliii!1S .,. CINIOCI frum quotetlonl by famoua
doubleton, two for a
people, pal and 1)11Hf11. Each 1e11or In tile cipher ....... for anothof. _
singleton, and three for
Todsy's c/Ufl: R eqUIIS V
•
a void . If yo~ know of
tKNKFBY
K ZY
MI
'IGNVY
a nine-c.ard fit (you
have a siK-bagger),
TXIYGZ
U X H ·.'
XD
add one for a doubleton, three for singleTXFBYBK
ton, and five for a
void.
This deal contains
NJKBXWNFKI
'KZY
an example . You,
· South, have only eight
X FK YB
MW
BXKNBMNWI
high.-card points, but
.
. partJQNVY.'UX
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AMHNC
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all are 'm th e sutts
• l'ner haS Jjtdftfist:d'; 'lli\Cf ·. •·· 'PREVIOUS SOLUTiON: "The 1rt of
11 to atrtike a platitude until It purn Ilks an oplgram. - DoO
You add a point for ·
Maraula
:
1'UT DAJL' d.t1'.1'tl 61 , .( _ J) 'C ~~e WDID :
that doubleton diamond. Once you show
PUULII P\!oil 1-'QU tv,_
'b p q• '0 IAMI •
9-11 points with four
lhllto4 lty ClAY 1. POllAN
or more spades, Nonh
Roarrange ltnero ol llle
has an easy raise to
lour JCramblod word1 below to form four Jlmple word1.
game.
After West leads the r--~~:""":-::--::---,1
club queen, · check
BR 0 J E B
2 ·
your losers. There are
four: the lhree missing
E Q NUE
aces and a third-round
club loser. If you lead · Lc·.....,,....T"J"'-n:--r--1
3 4
a trump at trick two, ·
. . . _
you will (should!) lose ::::;~~~~~

SIIE'S A SP'(..

(former W•mer Hullng
, CoqJlng building)

REDS NOTEBOOK

10 "1Mw - .
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deeply in\'olved in nc,\~ intcre!iits. The projr:'t might produce
bc:ncfits fOr all invoh·ed .

LIBRA!Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -

- A co n.structi\'e new wind

could blow in today thai will
give un ambition of yours the
life 'it needs. Your aim may be
either career relotted or person·
all y o ri ented .

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24- Nov.
22) -- What you learn today
· will have a use that you will be
able to start applying immediately. This new knowledge will
be implemented on something
that could be quite profitable.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21 ) -- A channel .might
open up for you ioday that
could start 10 produce a second
source of income for you. II
could be a sold mine 1ha1 is just
waiting 10 be tapped.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- Someone you meet at
this time or whom you just
recenlly mel may be destined
to become a valued relationship. The first sigm of this
could luke place today.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb.
19) -- You m:1y or maf not real- 1

.

ize it, bui chances are you'll be
more closely observed today
· · by your superiors for purposes
of a possible promotion. Give
a good pe rformance.

PISCES (Fe b. 20-M:trch 20)
-· Se,~e ral key soc ial &lt;.tssociations that ha,·en' t been too ~t a­
ble of hth! ~ an bt" strengthe n
toduy. h will be well wonh any
effort you upply towards this
end.

ARI ES !Marc h 21-April 19)
-- You could gel the op portll·
nit\' toduv to rcmo\lC an obsmclc· t'hat · has been impedin g
your pl·og: rc)Os and rep_lace it
wi th som!!thing workable that
can lead to

~ ucces!oi .

TAURUS !April 20-May
20) .. Any bright ideas you ge t
today coni:e ming

somcthin ~

new you could do to your
home or abode would serve
like a breath of fresh air flowing in on your surroundings.

Followup on them.
.
GEMINI (Mny 21-June 20)
-' Although you may be placing greuler emphasis than usual on your material intcre$t
today, it will be u good thing.

This focus could produce
impressive result s.

1•
.

�- ..

•

--- ... .

Page B6

The Daily Sentinel

Reds finally win at home, Bl

..... 20.

Thursday

• •

•

•
•

N~s 30-30

club: Bonds and Gonzalez;
knuckleballs dancing for Wakefield, Sparks ·
BY TilE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Three weeks before the AllStar game, the National
League already has a 30-30
club - · Barry Bonds and Luis

Gonzalez.
•

Bonds matched the major
league record for home runs
· before the All-Star brealt with
No. 37, while Gonzalez
homered twice to reach the 30
mark Tuesday night.
Gonzalez also doubled and
drove in six nins as the ArizOna Diamondbacks beat the
Los Angeles Dodgers 9-2. He
leads the league in hitting at
.361 and has 68 RBfs.
"Obviowly, I just want to
keep doing what I'm doing;·
he said. "The homers are nice,
but my batting average is up
there, so I'm becoming a better hitter."
Bonds tied the record set by
Reggie Jackson in I 969 and
equaled by Mark McGwire in
1998.
After connecting in San
Francisco's 4-3, IS-inning loss
at San Diego, Bonds still has
18 games to break the mark.
Bonds did a litde bit of lobbying to make sure his solo
shot in the fifth inning count-

in the seventh inning as St.
Louis beat Chicago for the
13th straight time at Busch
Stadium.
The Canlinols have ·won five
in a row overall. Winner Matt
Morris singled to help set up
Vina's tiebreaking single.
Vina has 22 RBis this season, with I 0 coming in eight
games against the Cubs.

Pirates ••
Phillies 5
Jason Kendall, playing a day
after getting a cortisone shot
in his injured "left thumb, got
three hits and drove in three
. runs to lead Pittsburgh · at
PNC Park.
The Pirates had a seasonhigh 17 hits. Derek Bell hit a
two-run homer as Pittsburgh
won its fourth in a row.
Philadelphia lost for the
eighth time .in 11 games. The
Phillies have given up at. least
one run in five straight games.

Astlos 6,
Rockies 4

ed.

Rookie · Roy Oswalt gave
Bonds' high drive to right- up three hits before being hit
center field hit off a sign that by a line drive in the seventh
hahgs barely beyond.the fence, inning as Houston defeated
and the ball bounced back on Colorado at Enron Field.
the field.
Oswalt was struck in the
Second-base umpire Paul right forearm· by Ben Petrick's
Emmel didn't immediately liner. Oswalt left with a bruise,
rule it was a home run. But and X-rays were negative.
Bonds, who was standing on
Billy Wagner, activated from
second base, signaled that it the disabled list before the
was gone.
game, worked the ninth for his
. The umpires huddled for a 14th save in 15 chances.
moment before Emmel sent
Bonds home.
Giants relief ace Robb Nen
blew .the save, giving up three .
runs in the ·ninth, with Mark
Kotsay bitting a two-run sinCliff Floyd hit a grand slam,
gle with two outs tQ tie it.
Kevin Millar drove in three
~n Diego got a lot of help
runs and Florida won its seain the 15th to stop the Giants'
son-high fifth in a row.
six-game winning streak.
. The Marlins moved into a
With runners at first and
tie with Adanta for second
second and two outs, Ben
place in the NL East, 3 1/2
Davis struclt out, but reached
tint on Ryan Vogelsong's wild games behind Philadelphia.
pitch. With the bases loaded,
Mi~
Colangelo hit a
grounder to shortstop Rich
Aurilia, who made a throwing
error that ended a game· that
Troy Mattes pitched seven
lasted 5 hours, 1(&gt; minutes.
scoreless innings in his major
league debut, but New York
scored four runs i!l the eighth
against Montreal's bullpen at.
Shea Stadium.
Mattes, promoted from
Randy Johnson won his
Triple-A Ottawa earlier in the
fourth straight decision as Ariday, retired the first 14 batters.
zona beat Los Angeles at
He left with a 1-0 lead after
Dodger Stadium.
giving up only two hits.
Gonzalez hit a two-run
The Mets took advantage of
homer in the fifth off Darren
three errors in the eighth to·
Dreifort and added a · threebreak loose against relievers
run shot against Jesse Orosco
Guillermo Mota, Graeme
in the eighth. Gonzalez also
Lloyd and Ugueth Urbina.
hit an RBI double.

Ma:tins 12,
Braves 2

Mets4,
Expos I

Diamondbacks 9,
Dodp:s2

AMERICAN
LEAGUE

cardinals J,
Cubs2

Tim Wakefield and Steve
Fernando Vina drove in the Sparks showed how de\:iStatgo~ ahe?:d run with a drag bunt

ing a knuckleb~ can be.
Wakefield came .within
three outs of pitching Boston's
second no-hitter this season,
losing his bid on Randy
Winn's broken-bat single in
the ninth inning as the Red
Sox won 5-4 at Tampa Bay on
Tuesday night.
"What did Willie Stargell
used to say about Steve Carlton's slider? 'It's like trying to
drink coffee with a fork,"'
Red Sox pitching coach Joe
Kerrigan said. "That's about
what it was tonight, trying to
hit that baby."
Sparks didn't flirt with history, but was just as effective as
Wakefield with that slow, tantalizing pitch. Sparks pitched a
three-hitter as Detroit beat the
New York Yankees 7-1 at
Comerica Park.
"It was ridiculous," Detroit
catcher Brandon lnge said of
Sparks' knuckleball. "It wasn't
only the movement, he was
changing speeds so well. They
didn't have a chance."
Wakefield (5-1), who twice
tlirted with pitching no-hitters for Boston in 1995, was
trying to duplicate the feat of
teammate Hideo Nomo, who
held Baltimore hidess ·on April
4.
.
In the ninth, speedy Jason
'JYner Jed off with a slow
bouncer that second baseman
Jose Offerman charged. Offerman's hurried toss was high
and pulled first baseman Brian
Daubach off the bag.
Official scorer Jim Ferguson
reviewed it on the replay and
ruled it an error on Offerman.
The crowd of I 2, 950 cheered
when the ruling was posted.
But Winn broke it up for
good. lining a 1-2 pitch over
third basemim Chris Stynes for
a clean single. 'JYner, who had
advanced on a passed ball,
scored on the hit.
"I'm not disappointed I gave
up the hit. I'm !llOre menrally
and emotionally drained right
now to take a no-hitter ·into
the ninth,"Wakefield said.
Wakefield retired Greg
Vaughn before walking Fred
McGriff. Derek Lowe gave up
Aubrey Huff's RBI single and
Steve Cox's tWo-run double
before holding on for ~is I 1th
save.
Trot Nixon hit a pair 9f solo
.homers, Daub~ch had an RBI
double off Bryan Rekar (1-8).

npn7.

Yankees I
Sparks (5-2) walked two and
struck out none in an 85-pitch
outing. Sparks, who has six
no-decisions in his last nine
starts, has not lost since April
24.

Palmer hit a rsolo homer in
the fourth off Randy Keisler
(1-2) and a two-run double in
the seventh for Detroit, which
snapped a three-game skid.

o:tohs s.

Blue Jays 1
On a night that belonged to
Cal Ripken,Josh Towers (5-1)
was the star, allowing one run
in seven innings to lead Baltimore past visiting Toronto.
The Orioles hit five so,lo
ho~ers, including two by
David Segui, in their third
straight victory.
Ripken, baseball's Iron Man,
announced before the game
that he "w ould retire after this
season.

Ma:tne:s a.
Athlellcs 7
Bret Boone's sacrifice~ fly .
capped a two-run rally in the
ninth inning as S~atde rallied
at Oakland to avoid its first
three-game losing streak of
the season.
The A's scored twice in the
eighth off Arthur Rhodes (50) to take the lead, but the
Mariners came back in the '
ninth against closer Jason
Isringha":lsen (1-2).
I

Range:s 7,
Angels 5,

Ivan Rodriguez hit a solo
homer and an RBI single .in a
five-run sixth inning as host
Texas rallied past Anaheim.
Rodriguez added his second
solo homer in the eighth, giv- ~
ing him the I 4th multihomer
game of his ca~r. He has 15
homers this season, nine i!l his
last 15 games.
·· ·
Juafi. Moreno (1-0) pitched
1 1-3 scoreless innings for his
first career victory. Jeff Zimmerman got his Sixth save.
·

White Sox s. ,.
Royals 3 ,
Royce Clayton hit his first
homer in nearly a year and
James B~dwin (3-4) won for
the first time in five weeKs .as
host Chicago beat · Kansas
.
. '
.
C lty.
Clayton's three-run homer
off Jeff Suppan (3-(&gt;), was his
first since last July 14, when he
was with Texas. He went 115
games without'a homer.

.,

Looking for adviCe

on

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.1.111-CII II I

1171111

· Pal I PI aaar, Wllll.l

Larry A. WllJlama

New palients are being accepted.
To make an appointment, please call:

llltl IJHIIY llllll

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY The
state's unemployment rate
slighdy increased in May to ·
4 percent, due mosdy !o
jobs that ended because of
the end of the school year.
The rate was 3.9 percent
in April.
Meigs County logged 6.4
percent unemployment in
May, while Gallia County's
rate was 4.9 percent.
The state's current figure
reflects the temporary loss
offood and service work at
schools, said Jon Allen,
spokesman for the Ohio
Department of Job and
Family Services.
The number of workers
unemployed in May was
233,000, unchanged tiom
April:
The U.S. unemploYment
rate decreased from 4 .5
percent to 4.4 percent in

~ea . .

Helping out
IDDLEPORT "Let us not be
weary in well-doing;' the Aposde
Paul wrote to the Galatians. That's an
admonition which has come to life

,: I
in the calloused \lands of a group of
II!!~ th
UDitd! Meti,odlst v.2luhteets, who ha-ve come "~o.Mc;igs ,
CQ~ties
Iii!.~
•
ens"
,
"'"Ct~i11.._0!'"
ID behalf Otftefs.
·
2.9;Jacksqn, 5.8; Lawrence,. ·
"'1 " a~"""ek~Of':fi3i:'l.t-WorK
· p:
·~
4.8; "ar).dVinton,.9.6.
The team came to the community earlier t.his week .armed
The unemployment rate
with paintbrushes and sandpaper, hammers and nails, ready to
of 14.5 percent in Morgan
help. a local person or two in the name of Christian charity.
County was the highest in
Self-described as "cross-generational;' the group of volunteers
the state, DJFS officials said.
ranges in age tiom 12 to 77, including Eddie Ricard, pictured
Delaware County had
here, who was accompanied by his grandfather, a retired pastor,
the lowest rate for the
and his grandmother, the daughter of a minister.
.
month at 1.6 percent.
At the Harris home in Middleport, the volunteers took on the
County and city rates are
task of scraping, painting and repairing the home's exterior. They
unadjusted; meaning they
also took care of some minor repairs, as well, including some
do not take into account
. patching on the roof.
seasonal adjustments in
. In addition to sweat - and it is hot work - some of the
"employment.
·
group's volunteers have also invested funds in the week's projects.
DJFS, which had diSput· · "We:ll probably spend about $500 of our own money as we
ed recent unemployment
complete these projects;' said Jim Zimmerman, one of the vc:ilrates," said May's statistics
unteers.
"rnore accurately reflect the
It's not the first year that the 9(){)..member First United
economic
climate
in
Methodist Church of Bowling Green has chosen Meigs &lt;::ounty
Ohio;· Allen said.
as a missions site,.although this year's group of 13 inCludes severStatistics from , February
· aJ first-time visitors.
The group has been lodged at Middleport's Heath Ul]ited
through April didn't fully
reflect the number of layMethodist Church, and while ·missions work is at the top of the
offs and unemployment
week's "to-do" list, the trip is not without its social benefits, as
claims, the department said.
well, according to Zimmerman.
The unemployment rate
."We're glad that we can help people," Zimmerman said. "But
is largely based on a survey
we have ·a good time, too."
.
of just .under 2,000 Ohio
"The most interesting thing;• he said, " is that we get to see a
households
conducted
side of the people that we go to church with that we're not used
monthly by the U.S. Cento se~ing."
sus Bureau for Ohio's
Bureau of Labor Market
Information.
for other

/i

of

Teclllf'i '

H!p:.70t

Sentinel
2 s.ct1H1- 11 ......

Calendar
Classjfieds

Comics
Edjtorjals
Objtuarjes

Sports
Weather

Lotteries

BY TONY M. LbcH
SENllNa ~STAFF

AS

OHIO .
84-6 Pick 3: 2·:5-5; Pick 4: 0-5+5

. BZ ,..~ 15-21·~28-36-41
A4 11U • ""7-2-4-2
.
A3 W.1A '
81·2.5·6.8 o.lly 3: &amp;-3-1 Dellr 4: 6+2-8
A2 c 1001 Ohio Valley .Publishing Co.

RUTLAND -Area children
who enjoy playing on a soccer
teatn can now do so thanks tri the
revitalization of the Meigs County Soccer League.
The once-defunct sixcer associationbas been gM:n a new lease
on Iiy a large number of interested parents who believe local

we

aackdownon

dog problem
FROM STAFF REPORTS

RUTLAND - A new ordinance designed to
address a growing problem with dogs running
loose in the Village of Rutland will impose fines
for the dogs' owners.
At this month's regular meeting of Village
Council, Mayor Dick Fetty discussed the problem, and proposed a new ordinance, approved by
council, imposing a fine of $50 for .the first
offense and $100 for the second, for dog owners
whose dogs are running loose within the village.
In other business, council discu ssed an arrangement with Pomeroy · attorney Charles Knight,
who was hired as village solicitor earlier this year.
Knight has agreed to return to the village his
$350 retainer, minus the village's contribution
toward Public Employees Retirement System
benefits.
Council approved the arrangement, and
Knight will be asked to prepare an agreement

(304) 422-55811

8 Prudential
hcurflltl pr'OdUOta Ire orrtM IIWough Pnloo ltouf'tlltl Corporation and Prudtntlll
lecuml.. Incorporated (both membtft III'C), both tubeldltl'tft Of TtMI
lnturanoe CO!IIptlny ot Amerlol, loctled at 711 lroiCI ltreet, Ntwlrtl, NJ OT102477T.

rtnder....,

"""'"Uif

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or we 8CMOt•.PtMII' oont~
jOUI'IU-..,Iol- ......... lltOiypOOIIM-'OW.,.,... ... _ _ _ H
you Mvtl!llployer IIIGGIIIIn rout *11(k) plan, VOU tn11 Wlftt to ~ ..,_ 1111 ) I'll

-HMMrPruitntlal nor 1t1111N prortaalonllt

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- l l o l l l o o l - lnd
of

PIHH 1H Rutl•nd, Al

Ill
fr....... Df The

youth an: rrmsing out on a chance
to participate in one of th~ most
popular sportll in the 'Mlrld.
Amanda Ramage and Emily
Bing, co-chatts ofthe new league,
said around 75 individuals have
· contacted them about the sportll
organization, which, they say, is
ironic considering the former

PI- IH Soccer, Al

SOCCER KIDS
- Jeffrey Teachout, Bruce
Davis, A.J.
Howard, Olivia
Davis and
Sharaya White
take some time
Wednesday to
work on their
soccer skills at
the new junior
soccer field
located In Rut~
land. (Tony M.
Leach photo)

The Me-.age.

Parkeraburg, WV 28104
8UJin111

ldtland tO,,.

Soccer league 'kicks off

Low:IOI
. Details, A2

RIO GRANDE- A fuD slate of swnmer cl.-s 10
meet the educational need&gt;; of Southern Ohio Coal Co.
miners facing ~liS at months end is planned by University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College.
The move comes as a result of the May I announce. ment that the Me~ Mines, owned by American Elec- ·
ttic Power, are being acquired by Corisol Energy. a 1\=- ·
sylvania coal company, on June 30. The announcement
said all SOCCO employees will be terminated at that
time.
Rio Grande's summer schedule for miners includes
beginning courses in writing. communicati~n, co~
preparation and career development Classes ~July 9
at the Meigs Center in Middleport and on the main
campus at Rio Grande.
A College Day featuring representatives from Rio
Grande, Hocking College and other institutions is June ·
24 from 1-4 p.m. at the Salem furta! Union Center near
W11kesville. Miners an: eligible for higher education benefiiS from Rio Grande ifthey sign up for at least 12 credit hours within 13 days of their layoff.
·
•
Dr. Greg Sojka, Rio Gr.mde's pnM&gt;St and vice president for academic affairs, said the program includes field
ttips to a riwnber of campus locations and labs. Designated days throughout the summer will intrOduce stu- .
derus to various campus programs.
"We will offer practical transition experience for
SOCCO employees and their spouses as they move

PlHH Ill Mlnen, Al

.

4421 Emerson Avenue, Suite 205 ·

PI8111DI
Mem/Jm; a-sts Hosptllll System

FROM SWI' REPORTS

Field Supervisor

Own1n

•••••
,
HISPbl

to miners

I

chao8ingjobsor entering retirement, your 40l(k)
distribution may be the single largest and moat critical sum or
money you'll have to manage.
, .

opening of his new office located at:

beneRis

·. Increase caused
by the
ending of the
school year ,

M:~tes

www.mydaily\entinel.com

Rio Grande
g

Brian J. Reed photos

401(k)

is pleased to announce the

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so cent\ • June 21 . 200 I • Vol 51 . No . H6

Whethery~u're

w. eorbla.

Ho•IIDMINewspsper

Melp County"s

Hol%81" Medieal Center is o proUd supporter of this year's American
Cancer Society Relay b- life, June 22 · 23, at Gallipolis City Park.
•

, alk - Friday 7pm through Noon Saturday
,
Survivor's Lap - Friday at 6 pm
' Luminary Ceremony - Friday at 9 pm
'
'
Come walk with us!.
For more information, call Bonnie Mcfarland at

(740) 44-·5679

Discover the Holzer Difference.

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