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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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.. rate 6~40/o
·in May

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ll)oney wisely, possibly by dlreetly rolling it over into
an IRA* to help avoid unnecessary penalties or
taxes. We'll also guide you through a vast array
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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
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lnturanoe CO!IIptlny ot Amerlol, loctled at 711 lroiCI ltreet, Ntwlrtl, NJ OT102477T.

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

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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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'TlMII'IcMy, June 21, 2001

•

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

.

F,._,, June 22

'••

,....

J6

- ••
n, lwt7rl •

r

•Fnr 1

W.VA.

02001

Pnc.

"'

,._

wanting to drain or dredge them to build
on or near' them.
Befon: the ruling. all development project:sthatwbUI.dalfectall.wetlandshadto
be certified, based on whether each project met certain water quality .standmls.
Rep. Keith Faber, a Republican from
Celina, sponsored the bill. He asked the
House to aJl}&gt;rove the bill befun: lawmakers go ·home for summer bn:ak in
order to get the tePJation in place
before tempo'iary rules Gov. Bob Taft put
in place expin: next month.
In Apr~. T:ift ordered that developers
obtain a new state d.redge-and-60 permit
that would 'lie good for 90 days if they
wanted drain or dredge the isolated· ~
lands during the construction of housing
subdiVisions, shopping malls and roads. •

1

r._

-

-

.-.-

Snow

COLUMBUS (AP) - Fonner Ohio Supreme Court Justice•
Craig Wright has been charged with failing to disclose $7, I SO in
pay he n:ceived last year·as a magistrate in suburban Whitehall.
\
David Palmer ofPoweU, a self-proclaimed judicial watchdog..@ed
the complaint alleging r:h.at Wright submitted a false financialjlisclosure statement to the Ohio Ethics Conunission, a first...legree
misdemeanor.
Wright is scheduled to appear in Franklin County Municipal
Court on July 20.
·
,
·
"If there is a mistake, I'D certainly corn:ct it," Wright said 011
Wednesday."It may be some sort of clerical error:· .

· ""

and variable wind. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Friday...Showers and thunderstorms likely. High in the
upper 70s. Southwest wind 5
to I 0 mph becoming nl)rthwest. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Friday
night .. .Mosdy
cloudy with a chance of showers. Low near 60.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
High 75 to 80.
Sunday...Partly cloudy. Low
in the mid 50s and high in the
,
lower 80s.
Monday... Pardy cloudy. Low
55 to 60 and high in the lower
80s.

Cooler and wet conditions
are predicted for the tri-county an:a on Friday, the National
Weather Service said. Partly
cloudy skies are eXpected for
the weekend.
Daytime highs will be in the
70s and overnight lows in the
50s.
Patchy fog could develop
early Friday morning in lowlying areas.
Sunset tonight will be at
9:04, and sunrise on Friday is
at 6:03a.m.
Weather forecaat:
Tonight... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thundentorms. Low 65 to 70. Light

;

~
..,..

.

Storm possibilities remain
BY THE ASSOC?ATED PRESS

both consistency and stability 'wlille :at
the same time preserving · Ohio'!'
resources;' he said.
_
After the bill was introduced in March,
Faber said supporters tried to include
.egulations for non-isolated' Wetlands,
bUs, riven and stn:ams, but decided to
address those issues in future legislati~

M

Phannadst gets

.,

Jail•••e

.

CANTON (AP) -A judge sentenced an Alliance pharmacist to
I I months in prison for selling dru~ taken from work.
Charles Willson, 52, of Berlin Center, was sentenced Wednesday
by Stark County Common Pleas Judge V. Lee Sinclair on his guilty
plea to drug tra(!icking, illegal processing of drug docuntent:s and
1 '·
two forgery counts.
Willson read a prepared statement thanking friends and family for
stanrling behind him and apologizing for his actions.
.
His former partner, Michael A Linhart, previously was sentenCed
to three years for trafficking in dru~. illegal processing of drug documents and drug theft. The two
_ took dru~ 6:om the Rite Aid store

.

I''JUI'.,1R''furcalm ··.~

~

CLEVELAND (AP) -The IDa)W sought to· calm nPgh~
hood residenu upset CJIIIer the accidental \WW!ding of a 9-)'e.ar~
boy during a police clwe lOr twO drug suspects.
· -·
-:
"Be the ~e of1a1011, lie the voice of calm," Mayor Mjchael it,
Whi~ ~ ~ut 31i people Wednesday night at a neigll.borho9ff
assocratwn meetmg.
.
.. , · . ·-''
White told the group that .he had visited the boys bedside '!liP
talked\with the pan:nts oflrewn Williams earlier in the ,day.
"O
"It's going to be touch and go over the next few days:'White saidl

..
....''
~

\City looks to cakh ciWnpers

DAYTON (AP) - People who illegaiiy dump trash in Da~.i\
may have their pictum taken.
.,
!
"It's getting out of control:' said Rick Rayford, an inspector '"
the city's division of housing inspection. "We .my not totally eliminate it, but we're going to make it uncomfortable to trash Dayton:"
. · The city is rotating surveillance cameras among popular illegal,
dumping sites. Officials also are toughening the penalties·for litter- .
ing, up to a $750 .tine and 90 days in jail.
.
And, ifofficials have their way. any vehicles used to illegally dump
junk could be impounded.

..-,

·'.

backs off amendments on
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
bill . protecting gun makers
from lawsuits is. on its way to
Gov. Bob Taft after the Senate
on Wednesday backed down
from a change the bill's sponsor didn't suppqrt.
. Supporten of the bill say
that city officials who don't
have the political wiU to
addreu IUD violence throuah
lciplacion are hirina expensive attorneys to fiaht the
i11ue throuah the courts
Instead.
Opponents,
. mostly
Democrats, say the bill Is a
aymbolic 11esture that won't
stop lawsuits that are forcing
IUR makers to make
safer.
·
One provision in the bill
makes it n:troactive. The bill's
,1ponsor, Rep. Jamie Callender, a Republican from Witlowick, said the provision was
aimed at municipalities that
might file futun: suits related

auns

to past gun violence.
He said it was not meant to
stop current cases. Cleveland
and Cincinnati have pending
lawsuits against gun makers.
· After the House approved
the bill last month, the Senate
removed the retroactive
clause out of concern that it
wu unconstitutional.
At Callender's request, the
House rejected the bill
Wednesday. Hours later, the·
Senate agreed to ~eep che
retroactivity provisicin.
The 19-10 Senate vote had
two Columbus-area Republicans - Sens. Bruce Johnson
and PrisciUa Mead -joining
-~nority Democrats in vating against removing the provision. Its opponents said the
Legislature is legally barn:d
from passing retroactive bills.
Taft is expected to sign the
bill, said Kevin Kellems, a
spokesman for the gQVernor.
KeUems said Taft has no posi-

Veterans look
forward to
new home

tion on the retroactivity issue.
Sens. Eric Fingerhut, a
Cleveland Democrat;, and
Leigh Herington, ·the minority leader from Ravenna, said
the Ohio Supreme Court
would strike down the bill as
unconstitutional. Fingerhut
said the biD was one "on
which no one can construct
an argument" in support. He
quoted the Ohio Constitution, which says: "The General Asaembly shall have no
power to pan retroactive

laws."
Sen. Jeff Jacobson, a
Phillipsburg Republican, said
that if the courts find the
retroactivity
provision
unconstitutional, they can let
the rest of the bill stand. He
said that he believes the
Cleveland and Cincinnati
lawsuits will be dismissed as
frivolous and that retroactivity won't be an issue before
the courts.

for advice

onman91g~

401(k) distrbution?

MARIETTA (AP) - Veterans in this area an: hopeful that
plans go through lOr a 16!!-bed
veterans home that will create
1250 jobs, enhance southeastern
Ohio~ economy and make it
easier lOr them to receive care.
The only other home serving
the 1.2 million veterans in Ohio
is in Sandusky. mon: than four
houn north of Marietta. The
state plans to build another one
in Georgetown in southwest
Ohio this fall.
· Along with Gov. Bob Taft's
announcement bf that project
came news that two other
homes could be built in southern Ohio. The sites are Marietta and Chillicothe.'
Groundbreaking on a new
facility could come as soon as
next year, officials said
"I think it would be great. It's
not very handy for 5omeone to
travel to the one that's then:
·now (in Sandusjcy). Even the
second' one they have planned is
not very close:• said Melvin
Chapman, 76, a Beverly resident
and a World War II veteran.

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PORTLAND - Graveside services will be conducted at 1
SYRACUSE- Carl Weese, 94, died on Tuesday, June 19,
p.m. on Saturday, June 23, 2001 at Browning Cemetery in 2001 at the extended care unit ofVeterans Memorial Hospital
Pprdand lOr Fon:sr "Bud" Summm of Portland, who died on in Pomeroy.
.
D.ecember I, 2000.
He was born on October I0, I 906 in Syracuse;son ofthe late
Nolan ~obtein will officiate. Military gmaide rites wili be Bert md Nellie Potts Weese.
conducted by Racine Post 602, American I.qpon.
He was a n:tired teacher of SO yean, the bst 34 yean at
Racine Southern High School. Mr. Weese was a member of the
•&lt;
local, state and national teachen associations. He was the recipient of the Martha Holden Jennings Foundation award ai an
OU!JWlding teacher.
.
He wu a graduate of Rio Grande CoUege and Ohio Uriivmity. Mr. Weese was a member of the Asbury United
Methodist Church in Syracuse, where he served as a trustee.
Sunday School superintendent and teacher of adults. For a
time, he was tteasurer of the parsonage fund and the Carleton
College Board ofTtustees.
Mr. Weese is survived by two sons, Don of Racine, and Jack
of Cleveland. a daughter-in-law, Linda; four grandchildn:n,
Melanie, Susan, Traci and Ansel; four great-gnndcbildn:n; a sis. ter, Ann Weese Sauvage an!l her husband. John Sauvage; a sister-in-law, Elrna Weese; and a niece and two nephews. !
Besides bis pan:n!S, lie wa pn:ceded in death by his "?fe of
53 yean, Grace Bartels Weese; and a brother, Donald Weese.
Services will be held on Friday, June 22, 2001 at U ' a.m. at
Asbury United Methodist Church in Syracuse, with the Rev.
Wesley Thatcher and the Rev. Bob Robinson officiating.
Graveside services will foUow at Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends tmy call at the Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy on
Thunday,June 21, 2001 from 7-9 p.m., and at the church an
A checkfor $7.060.45 was presented to Gene Lyons, director hour prior to the service.

a

instead.
·
~
Wetlands provide wildlife habitai{i
control flooding and filter poDution. ,
About 90 percent of OhiQ 's origUjl
Wl:dands have been lost and about
percent of the state's remaining ,wetla~
an: isolated, according to the Ohio
·
ronmental Protection Agency.
' .

I

.·

"This bill does what we started out ta
do in the beginning- address isolatdf
. wetlands with fiameworlt that providf.l

where they VW&gt;Ihd and sold them i1legilly.

0---- ~-·~·

"""" Pt. Cli&gt;uct, Cli&gt;uct,

,...,..,, . . . 21, 2001

.

COLUMBUS (AP) -A bill hurriedly passed by ·the House on Wednesday
gi~ the state the ~uthority to .n:gulne
isolated wetlands over the objections of
environmental groups that say the bill
eliminates protections for the sensitive
nature areas.
The legislation, which now goes to the
Senate, stems from a January ruling by
the U.S. Supreme Court that struck
down federal regulation of Wetlands that
are not .~onnected to rivers or stn:ams,
such as landlocked swamps, bogs or mudOats.
The ruling gave oversight of isolated
wetlands 50lely to states, but development of them was halted in Ohio
because the state had no way to review
and authorize project$ of developers

.....

•

· I e.

llY.

-,

House passes bill to regulate wetlands

Ohio weather

0

.·-.

PageAl

I

Pomlroy, .. lldlepoft, Ohio

Wendy's-24}.

Wo11hing•on
Daly -

l9pOI1I ....

the 4 p.m. dolling
~ at 1he pnMous
..... hnlldona, ~
vtdedbySmilhPatlnltl

at Adyeot Inc.

MOney for EMS

Rutland
fiWH . . . . AI

oudining the terms. It was
noted that John Lentes has
also expressed an interest in
being hired as a solicitor.
Council approved the hiring ofTerry PoweD as patrol"
man. Council had approved
the . hiring at its May meeting, but a motion was not
made at that time. It was
noted that Powell had donated .several weeks of work
prior to being hired.
PhyUis
Spangler
has
approached the village about
a drainage problem on her
property. The water is coming off the hill across the
of Meigs County. EmergencyMedlcal SerVice, on Wednesday
road from her home and satby Mildred Ziegler on behalf of the Modem Woodmen of AmerIca, Burlingham camp 7230. The money, Lyons said, will be
urating her basement.
used to purchase needed equipment for the EMS whlcles. The
Fetty is to check with
check represented $4,560.45 raised IJY the local camp
Knight to determine if the
through d!lnatlons and various fund raising projects, with a
Ave~ue and the Sugar Run village can fix the area of
matching fund grant of $2,500 from the national Modem
area, with the exception of Spangler's driveway where
Woodmen organization. Last year, the group g&amp;Ve $4,000 to · TUPPERS PLAINS Mulberry Heights.
the problem is occurring,
the EMS. -Here, center, Is Ziegler presenting the check to Eastern I.ocal athletes, grades
Tests are being performed and wiD see about diverting
Lyons. Other members present were, from left, Grace Ziegler seven through 12, playing fall and should be completed over the water to tl1e storm drain.
Coen, Ola St.· Clair, Eva Robson, (lyons and Ziegler) Roland sports (football, volleyball, golf the weekend.
Maintenance
supervisor
Eastman, Doris Eastman end Aletha Randolph. (Charlene Hoe- .
and cheerleading) should regisDave Davis will check Spanfllch photo)
gler's basement.
·
ter to play on June 26 or June
Fetty reported that first
9,from 5:30 to 8:30p.m. at the
·
floor elevations were taken
donali.ons from Kan:n\ Green- high school office.
ftlg
tgeS
howe, Vailey Lumber, O'DeU
A parent or legal goardian
POMEROY- Rog.ir Dole on aU properties not taken
_..__local
busin
must
accompany
all
athletes.
during the last FEMA flood
Lumber, and uuu:r
· ess- Students who cannot attend Shoemaker, 53, Middleport,
hazard mitigation program.
fnwnPapA1
es to help pay fOr the fields' one of the registration periods pled guilty Tuesday to two The project will not be
upkeep. Picnic tables and new should contact the high school drug charges, and will be sen- reviewed until August, and
soccer progxa111 ended because of soccer equipment was also purin August.
3329 be tween 7:30 a.m. tenced
,...._. --' not enough ....,...
......_ _. WI"th the money and ~r.
at 985
p rosecutor pat Story said the village will have four
·laclc of ..,..., _ "'"' .
r.~
d 2-30
,__ th
~
r_ the
: p.m. to rna"" o er Shoemaker entered guit ty pIeas years to complete the latest
'M'"
10r . soccer &amp;-'-',
wen: ron- . an
arrangements.
project because of the new
bee
,~.:r:.::~~~~ structed byTonys Portable WeldPackets will not be sent to posession of marijuana, a time frame.
·-"-' .;:=;,:1'~_:' --~·~'1!0 ing. ·
home this year. Students will felony of the fifth degree, posFetty reported on a meet'l""
11-= "','! so many
''The childmr. are n:a0y exat- not be pennitted to participate session of oxycodone, a felony ing with Martin Broderick
)litttrt:sand volunteen m the~ edabbutthe,new-leagueandthey oil be · · day if erwork of the third degree, and possesof Leading Creek Conserilllt ~ PI? ~ ~ ~ can~ ~t to Set&lt; out there· and ,, , ·
~ pap .
sion '!f hydrocodone, a felony
vancy District, Bob Allen of
tlPh
Set oil"die giOUnd!'l .,.,.. ~. · •' ·&gt;•.:L..~i.:~.. 'fj;d A:...:. ·· ~"·· ..;.not ~omp e~'l· ·
· ··· of the third degree.
'•''Soc . such "';. SC11t Y"'1"'&amp;
~"'&amp;
e -1'hystcals will be conducted
Th h
. th
ul RCAP and Eva Lunder from
t• cen. a '."·r.~ ~.10 : smile on their flees makes our at Holzer Meigs Clinic on June
e _c arges were e res t the governor's office, about
~ .coumnes ~ ~t:s pppulariLY, etrons totllly worthwhile:'
. of a ~d by oflicen on Shoe30 at 7 a.m.
proposed plans to build a
rs: raptcly ·. ~ . m d.; U.~,
Ramage said a special meeting
Physical forms will be ,dis- makers home on Lower Old
jointly-owned water storage
~~.Its great~ wiD be held at 7 p.m. onJirtie 29 tributed at registration. They Route 7 .01 August 2()()0.
tank .
aRd It gtve! ~ ~nethmg at Rur!and Civic Cemer to elect are new forms, which pa~t:s
Possession ?f man:Ju"?', as
At th~ meeting, Fetty said,
~ to 00 ~ ~ ~ league oflicm willing to promote must complete and sign before charged, carnes a nwamum Broderick informed him that
~ or ~ video g;unes. · soccer inrerests within the coun- the athlete can see a doctor.
po_ssrble sentence of one year m
pruon, and a find of up to LCCD was not interested in
;. Ramage Wd sevml coaches
pursuing the project unless
apd sponsOn haw: already com- ~ .. :._..;~e interestai in coach_
$2,500. Possession of oxy- the village needed the .disto the progr.un and that
'u•1~•
li-codone and possession of
. "'---"s P.IIks and Recreaiion ing or n:fereeing should also
hydrocodone, as charged, each trict's participation.
UiiiiU:
d th
· " sh said.
SYRACUSE - · Deadline
Gommittee has been \\Oiking arten e meetrng, e
·
carry a maximum sentence of
tint to - the IOCI:er fields ready "Once our ollicers haw: been for submitting applications for five vears
in prison and a tine
1
fiir
elected, we wiD begin fOcusing Carleton Memorial Scholar- of up to $10,000.
··-'"'-· ·
ships· is Satu""~·.
~ Thenewnminrsoccerfield,on on w ..uuu., team regJStrabon
·-T· Completed Visiting Ju-1~ Warn:n Lotz
Ohio 124 ~-R;;dand, is n...nna and scheduling:'
applications are to be sent to accepted Sh~;maker's pleas
--..., 1 n ·-·- added that -'-".1.....1 Sharon Cotterill, secretary.
o;!i&gt;mplet:ion and wiD be Uled pri·~·'"II~
YWW&lt;:J
and and set sentencing for Aug.
r!rarily tor childn:n up to 9 yean should sign up fOr the soccer
..lui.!3. Bond was ·continued as pn:Subscribe today.
~ said Bing. Childn:n aged 10 league by July 31 and that praclfti!W__, J ·
viously set.
992-2156
·#Jd older will use the Rutland lice should begin around Aug. I.
POMEROY -A boil adviStory and Assistant Prosecu\Pseball field fOr their soccer For mon: infOrmation, contact • sory will be in effect until tor Christopher E. Tenoglia
pnes, she added.
. .
Ramage at 749-2121 or Bing at Monday for the downtown represented the state at the
~ The group collected $5,500 in 742-fflrf}.
Pomeroy an:a, including Sec- hearing, while Shoemaker was
~
.,.
ond Street, Court Street, But~ represented by Gallipolis attor:
ternut Avenue, Mulberry ney William Eachus.

LOCAL BRIEFS

Regisbltion set

d

12!4.

However, Fetty said, a preapplication package which
has been submitted for
Appalachian Regional Commission grant funds, including LCCD.It can be changed
at a later date, Fetty said.
George Grate and Nate
Wise met with council to
request dust· control at Fox's
Pizza, on the corner of Main
and Salem streets and the
intersection of New Lima
Road.
Wise said vinyl siding on
his home has been ruined
from dust. Council approve(!
purchasing the materials for
dust control in the area, but
Wise will pick up the materials and .Grate will apply
them.
'
Council agreed to take
minimum bids of $3,500 on
the village's pickup, and
$2,000 on the police cruiser.
Bids wiD be opened at the
July I 0 meeting.
Council members present
were Tammy Searles, Ralph
Bales and Martin Andrews.

Pleads to
cha

Soccer

ClUj

·-·"'&amp;"""

Plrunr

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IIIIM

Pllll PIIIIIS. WI 15511
New patients are being accepted.
To make an appointment, please call:

IIMIIlHIIY 122211

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• Adjuslsble Tempered-Glass She?ves
• Clear Crispers and Mea1 ~an
• Whlta-on-Whi1e Styling

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'TlMII'IcMy, June 21, 2001

•

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

.

F,._,, June 22

'••

,....

J6

- ••
n, lwt7rl •

r

•Fnr 1

W.VA.

02001

Pnc.

"'

,._

wanting to drain or dredge them to build
on or near' them.
Befon: the ruling. all development project:sthatwbUI.dalfectall.wetlandshadto
be certified, based on whether each project met certain water quality .standmls.
Rep. Keith Faber, a Republican from
Celina, sponsored the bill. He asked the
House to aJl}&gt;rove the bill befun: lawmakers go ·home for summer bn:ak in
order to get the tePJation in place
before tempo'iary rules Gov. Bob Taft put
in place expin: next month.
In Apr~. T:ift ordered that developers
obtain a new state d.redge-and-60 permit
that would 'lie good for 90 days if they
wanted drain or dredge the isolated· ~
lands during the construction of housing
subdiVisions, shopping malls and roads. •

1

r._

-

-

.-.-

Snow

COLUMBUS (AP) - Fonner Ohio Supreme Court Justice•
Craig Wright has been charged with failing to disclose $7, I SO in
pay he n:ceived last year·as a magistrate in suburban Whitehall.
\
David Palmer ofPoweU, a self-proclaimed judicial watchdog..@ed
the complaint alleging r:h.at Wright submitted a false financialjlisclosure statement to the Ohio Ethics Conunission, a first...legree
misdemeanor.
Wright is scheduled to appear in Franklin County Municipal
Court on July 20.
·
,
·
"If there is a mistake, I'D certainly corn:ct it," Wright said 011
Wednesday."It may be some sort of clerical error:· .

· ""

and variable wind. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Friday...Showers and thunderstorms likely. High in the
upper 70s. Southwest wind 5
to I 0 mph becoming nl)rthwest. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Friday
night .. .Mosdy
cloudy with a chance of showers. Low near 60.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
High 75 to 80.
Sunday...Partly cloudy. Low
in the mid 50s and high in the
,
lower 80s.
Monday... Pardy cloudy. Low
55 to 60 and high in the lower
80s.

Cooler and wet conditions
are predicted for the tri-county an:a on Friday, the National
Weather Service said. Partly
cloudy skies are eXpected for
the weekend.
Daytime highs will be in the
70s and overnight lows in the
50s.
Patchy fog could develop
early Friday morning in lowlying areas.
Sunset tonight will be at
9:04, and sunrise on Friday is
at 6:03a.m.
Weather forecaat:
Tonight... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thundentorms. Low 65 to 70. Light

;

~
..,..

.

Storm possibilities remain
BY THE ASSOC?ATED PRESS

both consistency and stability 'wlille :at
the same time preserving · Ohio'!'
resources;' he said.
_
After the bill was introduced in March,
Faber said supporters tried to include
.egulations for non-isolated' Wetlands,
bUs, riven and stn:ams, but decided to
address those issues in future legislati~

M

Phannadst gets

.,

Jail•••e

.

CANTON (AP) -A judge sentenced an Alliance pharmacist to
I I months in prison for selling dru~ taken from work.
Charles Willson, 52, of Berlin Center, was sentenced Wednesday
by Stark County Common Pleas Judge V. Lee Sinclair on his guilty
plea to drug tra(!icking, illegal processing of drug docuntent:s and
1 '·
two forgery counts.
Willson read a prepared statement thanking friends and family for
stanrling behind him and apologizing for his actions.
.
His former partner, Michael A Linhart, previously was sentenCed
to three years for trafficking in dru~. illegal processing of drug documents and drug theft. The two
_ took dru~ 6:om the Rite Aid store

.

I''JUI'.,1R''furcalm ··.~

~

CLEVELAND (AP) -The IDa)W sought to· calm nPgh~
hood residenu upset CJIIIer the accidental \WW!ding of a 9-)'e.ar~
boy during a police clwe lOr twO drug suspects.
· -·
-:
"Be the ~e of1a1011, lie the voice of calm," Mayor Mjchael it,
Whi~ ~ ~ut 31i people Wednesday night at a neigll.borho9ff
assocratwn meetmg.
.
.. , · . ·-''
White told the group that .he had visited the boys bedside '!liP
talked\with the pan:nts oflrewn Williams earlier in the ,day.
"O
"It's going to be touch and go over the next few days:'White saidl

..
....''
~

\City looks to cakh ciWnpers

DAYTON (AP) - People who illegaiiy dump trash in Da~.i\
may have their pictum taken.
.,
!
"It's getting out of control:' said Rick Rayford, an inspector '"
the city's division of housing inspection. "We .my not totally eliminate it, but we're going to make it uncomfortable to trash Dayton:"
. · The city is rotating surveillance cameras among popular illegal,
dumping sites. Officials also are toughening the penalties·for litter- .
ing, up to a $750 .tine and 90 days in jail.
.
And, ifofficials have their way. any vehicles used to illegally dump
junk could be impounded.

..-,

·'.

backs off amendments on
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
bill . protecting gun makers
from lawsuits is. on its way to
Gov. Bob Taft after the Senate
on Wednesday backed down
from a change the bill's sponsor didn't suppqrt.
. Supporten of the bill say
that city officials who don't
have the political wiU to
addreu IUD violence throuah
lciplacion are hirina expensive attorneys to fiaht the
i11ue throuah the courts
Instead.
Opponents,
. mostly
Democrats, say the bill Is a
aymbolic 11esture that won't
stop lawsuits that are forcing
IUR makers to make
safer.
·
One provision in the bill
makes it n:troactive. The bill's
,1ponsor, Rep. Jamie Callender, a Republican from Witlowick, said the provision was
aimed at municipalities that
might file futun: suits related

auns

to past gun violence.
He said it was not meant to
stop current cases. Cleveland
and Cincinnati have pending
lawsuits against gun makers.
· After the House approved
the bill last month, the Senate
removed the retroactive
clause out of concern that it
wu unconstitutional.
At Callender's request, the
House rejected the bill
Wednesday. Hours later, the·
Senate agreed to ~eep che
retroactivity provisicin.
The 19-10 Senate vote had
two Columbus-area Republicans - Sens. Bruce Johnson
and PrisciUa Mead -joining
-~nority Democrats in vating against removing the provision. Its opponents said the
Legislature is legally barn:d
from passing retroactive bills.
Taft is expected to sign the
bill, said Kevin Kellems, a
spokesman for the gQVernor.
KeUems said Taft has no posi-

Veterans look
forward to
new home

tion on the retroactivity issue.
Sens. Eric Fingerhut, a
Cleveland Democrat;, and
Leigh Herington, ·the minority leader from Ravenna, said
the Ohio Supreme Court
would strike down the bill as
unconstitutional. Fingerhut
said the biD was one "on
which no one can construct
an argument" in support. He
quoted the Ohio Constitution, which says: "The General Asaembly shall have no
power to pan retroactive

laws."
Sen. Jeff Jacobson, a
Phillipsburg Republican, said
that if the courts find the
retroactivity
provision
unconstitutional, they can let
the rest of the bill stand. He
said that he believes the
Cleveland and Cincinnati
lawsuits will be dismissed as
frivolous and that retroactivity won't be an issue before
the courts.

for advice

onman91g~

401(k) distrbution?

MARIETTA (AP) - Veterans in this area an: hopeful that
plans go through lOr a 16!!-bed
veterans home that will create
1250 jobs, enhance southeastern
Ohio~ economy and make it
easier lOr them to receive care.
The only other home serving
the 1.2 million veterans in Ohio
is in Sandusky. mon: than four
houn north of Marietta. The
state plans to build another one
in Georgetown in southwest
Ohio this fall.
· Along with Gov. Bob Taft's
announcement bf that project
came news that two other
homes could be built in southern Ohio. The sites are Marietta and Chillicothe.'
Groundbreaking on a new
facility could come as soon as
next year, officials said
"I think it would be great. It's
not very handy for 5omeone to
travel to the one that's then:
·now (in Sandusjcy). Even the
second' one they have planned is
not very close:• said Melvin
Chapman, 76, a Beverly resident
and a World War II veteran.

Whether you're clrang!ngjoba or entering retirement, your 40 I@)
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The Dally Sentinel • Paige A 3

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PORTLAND - Graveside services will be conducted at 1
SYRACUSE- Carl Weese, 94, died on Tuesday, June 19,
p.m. on Saturday, June 23, 2001 at Browning Cemetery in 2001 at the extended care unit ofVeterans Memorial Hospital
Pprdand lOr Fon:sr "Bud" Summm of Portland, who died on in Pomeroy.
.
D.ecember I, 2000.
He was born on October I0, I 906 in Syracuse;son ofthe late
Nolan ~obtein will officiate. Military gmaide rites wili be Bert md Nellie Potts Weese.
conducted by Racine Post 602, American I.qpon.
He was a n:tired teacher of SO yean, the bst 34 yean at
Racine Southern High School. Mr. Weese was a member of the
•&lt;
local, state and national teachen associations. He was the recipient of the Martha Holden Jennings Foundation award ai an
OU!JWlding teacher.
.
He wu a graduate of Rio Grande CoUege and Ohio Uriivmity. Mr. Weese was a member of the Asbury United
Methodist Church in Syracuse, where he served as a trustee.
Sunday School superintendent and teacher of adults. For a
time, he was tteasurer of the parsonage fund and the Carleton
College Board ofTtustees.
Mr. Weese is survived by two sons, Don of Racine, and Jack
of Cleveland. a daughter-in-law, Linda; four grandchildn:n,
Melanie, Susan, Traci and Ansel; four great-gnndcbildn:n; a sis. ter, Ann Weese Sauvage an!l her husband. John Sauvage; a sister-in-law, Elrna Weese; and a niece and two nephews. !
Besides bis pan:n!S, lie wa pn:ceded in death by his "?fe of
53 yean, Grace Bartels Weese; and a brother, Donald Weese.
Services will be held on Friday, June 22, 2001 at U ' a.m. at
Asbury United Methodist Church in Syracuse, with the Rev.
Wesley Thatcher and the Rev. Bob Robinson officiating.
Graveside services will foUow at Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends tmy call at the Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy on
Thunday,June 21, 2001 from 7-9 p.m., and at the church an
A checkfor $7.060.45 was presented to Gene Lyons, director hour prior to the service.

a

instead.
·
~
Wetlands provide wildlife habitai{i
control flooding and filter poDution. ,
About 90 percent of OhiQ 's origUjl
Wl:dands have been lost and about
percent of the state's remaining ,wetla~
an: isolated, according to the Ohio
·
ronmental Protection Agency.
' .

I

.·

"This bill does what we started out ta
do in the beginning- address isolatdf
. wetlands with fiameworlt that providf.l

where they VW&gt;Ihd and sold them i1legilly.

0---- ~-·~·

"""" Pt. Cli&gt;uct, Cli&gt;uct,

,...,..,, . . . 21, 2001

.

COLUMBUS (AP) -A bill hurriedly passed by ·the House on Wednesday
gi~ the state the ~uthority to .n:gulne
isolated wetlands over the objections of
environmental groups that say the bill
eliminates protections for the sensitive
nature areas.
The legislation, which now goes to the
Senate, stems from a January ruling by
the U.S. Supreme Court that struck
down federal regulation of Wetlands that
are not .~onnected to rivers or stn:ams,
such as landlocked swamps, bogs or mudOats.
The ruling gave oversight of isolated
wetlands 50lely to states, but development of them was halted in Ohio
because the state had no way to review
and authorize project$ of developers

.....

•

· I e.

llY.

-,

House passes bill to regulate wetlands

Ohio weather

0

.·-.

PageAl

I

Pomlroy, .. lldlepoft, Ohio

Wendy's-24}.

Wo11hing•on
Daly -

l9pOI1I ....

the 4 p.m. dolling
~ at 1he pnMous
..... hnlldona, ~
vtdedbySmilhPatlnltl

at Adyeot Inc.

MOney for EMS

Rutland
fiWH . . . . AI

oudining the terms. It was
noted that John Lentes has
also expressed an interest in
being hired as a solicitor.
Council approved the hiring ofTerry PoweD as patrol"
man. Council had approved
the . hiring at its May meeting, but a motion was not
made at that time. It was
noted that Powell had donated .several weeks of work
prior to being hired.
PhyUis
Spangler
has
approached the village about
a drainage problem on her
property. The water is coming off the hill across the
of Meigs County. EmergencyMedlcal SerVice, on Wednesday
road from her home and satby Mildred Ziegler on behalf of the Modem Woodmen of AmerIca, Burlingham camp 7230. The money, Lyons said, will be
urating her basement.
used to purchase needed equipment for the EMS whlcles. The
Fetty is to check with
check represented $4,560.45 raised IJY the local camp
Knight to determine if the
through d!lnatlons and various fund raising projects, with a
Ave~ue and the Sugar Run village can fix the area of
matching fund grant of $2,500 from the national Modem
area, with the exception of Spangler's driveway where
Woodmen organization. Last year, the group g&amp;Ve $4,000 to · TUPPERS PLAINS Mulberry Heights.
the problem is occurring,
the EMS. -Here, center, Is Ziegler presenting the check to Eastern I.ocal athletes, grades
Tests are being performed and wiD see about diverting
Lyons. Other members present were, from left, Grace Ziegler seven through 12, playing fall and should be completed over the water to tl1e storm drain.
Coen, Ola St.· Clair, Eva Robson, (lyons and Ziegler) Roland sports (football, volleyball, golf the weekend.
Maintenance
supervisor
Eastman, Doris Eastman end Aletha Randolph. (Charlene Hoe- .
and cheerleading) should regisDave Davis will check Spanfllch photo)
gler's basement.
·
ter to play on June 26 or June
Fetty reported that first
9,from 5:30 to 8:30p.m. at the
·
floor elevations were taken
donali.ons from Kan:n\ Green- high school office.
ftlg
tgeS
howe, Vailey Lumber, O'DeU
A parent or legal goardian
POMEROY- Rog.ir Dole on aU properties not taken
_..__local
busin
must
accompany
all
athletes.
during the last FEMA flood
Lumber, and uuu:r
· ess- Students who cannot attend Shoemaker, 53, Middleport,
hazard mitigation program.
fnwnPapA1
es to help pay fOr the fields' one of the registration periods pled guilty Tuesday to two The project will not be
upkeep. Picnic tables and new should contact the high school drug charges, and will be sen- reviewed until August, and
soccer progxa111 ended because of soccer equipment was also purin August.
3329 be tween 7:30 a.m. tenced
,...._. --' not enough ....,...
......_ _. WI"th the money and ~r.
at 985
p rosecutor pat Story said the village will have four
·laclc of ..,..., _ "'"' .
r.~
d 2-30
,__ th
~
r_ the
: p.m. to rna"" o er Shoemaker entered guit ty pIeas years to complete the latest
'M'"
10r . soccer &amp;-'-',
wen: ron- . an
arrangements.
project because of the new
bee
,~.:r:.::~~~~ structed byTonys Portable WeldPackets will not be sent to posession of marijuana, a time frame.
·-"-' .;:=;,:1'~_:' --~·~'1!0 ing. ·
home this year. Students will felony of the fifth degree, posFetty reported on a meet'l""
11-= "','! so many
''The childmr. are n:a0y exat- not be pennitted to participate session of oxycodone, a felony ing with Martin Broderick
)litttrt:sand volunteen m the~ edabbutthe,new-leagueandthey oil be · · day if erwork of the third degree, and possesof Leading Creek Conserilllt ~ PI? ~ ~ ~ can~ ~t to Set&lt; out there· and ,, , ·
~ pap .
sion '!f hydrocodone, a felony
vancy District, Bob Allen of
tlPh
Set oil"die giOUnd!'l .,.,.. ~. · •' ·&gt;•.:L..~i.:~.. 'fj;d A:...:. ·· ~"·· ..;.not ~omp e~'l· ·
· ··· of the third degree.
'•''Soc . such "';. SC11t Y"'1"'&amp;
~"'&amp;
e -1'hystcals will be conducted
Th h
. th
ul RCAP and Eva Lunder from
t• cen. a '."·r.~ ~.10 : smile on their flees makes our at Holzer Meigs Clinic on June
e _c arges were e res t the governor's office, about
~ .coumnes ~ ~t:s pppulariLY, etrons totllly worthwhile:'
. of a ~d by oflicen on Shoe30 at 7 a.m.
proposed plans to build a
rs: raptcly ·. ~ . m d.; U.~,
Ramage said a special meeting
Physical forms will be ,dis- makers home on Lower Old
jointly-owned water storage
~~.Its great~ wiD be held at 7 p.m. onJirtie 29 tributed at registration. They Route 7 .01 August 2()()0.
tank .
aRd It gtve! ~ ~nethmg at Rur!and Civic Cemer to elect are new forms, which pa~t:s
Possession ?f man:Ju"?', as
At th~ meeting, Fetty said,
~ to 00 ~ ~ ~ league oflicm willing to promote must complete and sign before charged, carnes a nwamum Broderick informed him that
~ or ~ video g;unes. · soccer inrerests within the coun- the athlete can see a doctor.
po_ssrble sentence of one year m
pruon, and a find of up to LCCD was not interested in
;. Ramage Wd sevml coaches
pursuing the project unless
apd sponsOn haw: already com- ~ .. :._..;~e interestai in coach_
$2,500. Possession of oxy- the village needed the .disto the progr.un and that
'u•1~•
li-codone and possession of
. "'---"s P.IIks and Recreaiion ing or n:fereeing should also
hydrocodone, as charged, each trict's participation.
UiiiiU:
d th
· " sh said.
SYRACUSE - · Deadline
Gommittee has been \\Oiking arten e meetrng, e
·
carry a maximum sentence of
tint to - the IOCI:er fields ready "Once our ollicers haw: been for submitting applications for five vears
in prison and a tine
1
fiir
elected, we wiD begin fOcusing Carleton Memorial Scholar- of up to $10,000.
··-'"'-· ·
ships· is Satu""~·.
~ Thenewnminrsoccerfield,on on w ..uuu., team regJStrabon
·-T· Completed Visiting Ju-1~ Warn:n Lotz
Ohio 124 ~-R;;dand, is n...nna and scheduling:'
applications are to be sent to accepted Sh~;maker's pleas
--..., 1 n ·-·- added that -'-".1.....1 Sharon Cotterill, secretary.
o;!i&gt;mplet:ion and wiD be Uled pri·~·'"II~
YWW&lt;:J
and and set sentencing for Aug.
r!rarily tor childn:n up to 9 yean should sign up fOr the soccer
..lui.!3. Bond was ·continued as pn:Subscribe today.
~ said Bing. Childn:n aged 10 league by July 31 and that praclfti!W__, J ·
viously set.
992-2156
·#Jd older will use the Rutland lice should begin around Aug. I.
POMEROY -A boil adviStory and Assistant Prosecu\Pseball field fOr their soccer For mon: infOrmation, contact • sory will be in effect until tor Christopher E. Tenoglia
pnes, she added.
. .
Ramage at 749-2121 or Bing at Monday for the downtown represented the state at the
~ The group collected $5,500 in 742-fflrf}.
Pomeroy an:a, including Sec- hearing, while Shoemaker was
~
.,.
ond Street, Court Street, But~ represented by Gallipolis attor:
ternut Avenue, Mulberry ney William Eachus.

LOCAL BRIEFS

Regisbltion set

d

12!4.

However, Fetty said, a preapplication package which
has been submitted for
Appalachian Regional Commission grant funds, including LCCD.It can be changed
at a later date, Fetty said.
George Grate and Nate
Wise met with council to
request dust· control at Fox's
Pizza, on the corner of Main
and Salem streets and the
intersection of New Lima
Road.
Wise said vinyl siding on
his home has been ruined
from dust. Council approve(!
purchasing the materials for
dust control in the area, but
Wise will pick up the materials and .Grate will apply
them.
'
Council agreed to take
minimum bids of $3,500 on
the village's pickup, and
$2,000 on the police cruiser.
Bids wiD be opened at the
July I 0 meeting.
Council members present
were Tammy Searles, Ralph
Bales and Martin Andrews.

Pleads to
cha

Soccer

ClUj

·-·"'&amp;"""

Plrunr

.!I

ANA! DG CHANNIII

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Opinion

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PageA4

_The_D_an_ySe_ntin_·e_I______

'lll... dlf• JURI 21, 2111

Lydia Council
Iii eels

111 Court St., ~.Ohio
740-992·2151• Fax: 992·2157

.Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

CharleM Hoaillch
General u.nagar
ttllnr 1JJ tU tJilikw liN

R.Shawn1Aw11
Managing Editor

N• ••sip M ./nUn will k

ln•n. lfOI ,.so••lilin.

,.

Dl.w Klly Hill
Conlrallar

-«..-. D4y ~ 6e lal . . . . - . . . AM,.,..
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NATIONAL VIEW

r-tx it
It~

up to Congress to turn
a good idea into reality

KONDRACKE' S VIEW

• The (:QaJtimore), Sun, on low~income kids and changing
schools: Maryland is at the forefront ·of a radical educational
experime nt that Congress is now considering making permanent: Providing a right for low- income students to transfer
&amp;om failing schools to better performing public schools.
The federal right was established by an obscure provision of
the 1999 budget bill. In Maryland, which has been particularc
ly aggressive about implementing the legislation, more than
100 schools have been identified as troubled, the majority of
them in Baltimore. ...
·
But the current law contains serious limitations that Congress, which is now debating re-authorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, should fix.
For one thing, the law requires local officials to allow transfers only within school districts, a major limitation for students
living in urban districts with few high-quality schools to
choose among. For another, the law permits good schools to
refuse to educate children from failing schools because of space
,
limitations.
.. . The concept of requiring local school officials . to give
children in failing schools a right to transfer to a better public
school is an important first step and represents a dramatic
departure for conservatives who, dur'ing the racial desegregation era, championed the neighborhood school above all else.
Now conservatives concede that for people in distressed
neighborhoods, a system of compulsory assignment based on
residence is inherently unfair, It is up t.o Congress to take the
outline of a good idea - more choice for kids stuck in bad
schools - and make it a vehicle for genuine equal education·
a! opportunity

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

-

.

lhunct.y. JUM 21. 2001

COMMUNITY ·NEWS &amp; NOTES

The Daily Sentinel

Charlet W. Govey
Publisher

Page AS

Today is Thursday, June 21, the 172nd day of2001.There are
193 days left in the year. Slimmer begins at 3:38 a.m. EDT.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 21, 1788, the U.S. Constitution went into effect as
New Hampshire became the ninth state to rarity it.
On thi.s date:
In 1834, Cyrus Hall McCormick received a patent for his
reaping machine.
In 1932, heavyweight Max Schmeling lost a title fight by
decision to Jack Sharkey, prompting Schmeling's manager, Joe
Jacobs, to exclaim: "We was robbed!"
In 1945, during World War II,American soldiers on Okinawa
found the body of the Japanese commander, Lt. Gen. Mitsuru
Ushijima, who had committed suicide.
In 1948, the Republican national convention opened in
Philadelphia.
In 1963, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini was chosen to
succeed the late Pope john XXIII; the new pope took the
name l'aul VI.
In 1964, civil rights workers Michael H. Schwerner, Andrew
Goodman and James E. Chaney disappeared in Philadelphia,
Miss. ; their bodies were found buried in an earthen dam six
·
weeks later.
In 1973, the Supreme Court ruled that states may ban materials found to be obscene according to local standan)s.
In 1982, a jury in Washington D.C. found john Hinckley Jr.
innocent by reason of insanicy in the shootings of President
Reagan and three other men.
In 1985, scientists announced that skeletal remains exhumed
; in Brazil were those of Nazi War criminal Josef Mengel e.
In 1989, the Supreme Court ruled that burning the American flag as a form of political protest is protected by the First
Amendment.
Ten years ago: · Secretary of State james . Baker visited
Yugoslavia, where he pleaded for a peaceful solution to multie thnic co nflic ts that were threatening to erupt into civil war.
Five years ago: European leaders agreed to gradually lift a
global ban on British beef expqrts imposed nearly three
m onths ea rlier following a scare over "mad cow" disease. Pentagon officials said Ameri can troops destroyed an Iraqi ammunition depot in March 1991 that may have contained-chemical
weapons.
One year ago: North Korea promised to refrain from longrange missile tests after the United States lifted some economic san ctions against it. Some 55 years after World War II ended,
22 Asi.1n~Am e rican veterans received the Medal of Honor for
bravery on the battlefield during a White House ceremony.
To day's Birthdays: Cartoonist AI Hirschfeld is 98. Actress Jane
Ru ssell is 80. Actress Maureen Stapleton is 76. Actor Bernie
Kopel! is 6R. Actor Monte Mar,k.ham is 66 . Singer O.C. Smith
is 65. Acto r R o n Ely is h3. Actress Mariette Hartley ' is 61.
Co median j oe Flaherty is 60. Rock singer-musician . Ray
Davies (The Kinks) is 57. Singer Brenda Holloway is 55. Actress
, M eredith Baxter is ~4. Actor Mich~el Gross is 54. Couptry
, smgcr Lt'on Everette IS 53. R.ock rnustc1an Joey Kramer (Aero' smith) is 51. !'lock musician Nils Lofgren i1 50.

Share our missile defense? A good foreign policy ploy
President Bush could utterly disarm his
fOreign and domestic critics by offering to
negotiate . a missile-defense sharing
arrangement with Russia and China.
Democrats at home and allies abroad are
opposed 10 Bush's national milsile-deferue
proposal mainly because he seems bent on
unilaterally abandoning the 1972 Antil$allistic Missile 'Treaty, much as he dumped
the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on global warm-

mg.
Democrats such as Sen. Cad Levin,
Mich., chairman of the Armed Services
CQmmiaee, are also opposed to rwhing
toward deployment of a system that has
not proved to work and might be enormously expensive.
However, if Bush ofFered 10 renegotiate
the ABM Tteaty with Russia and to share
missile-defense systems with that nation
and eventually with China, he could substandally quiet his critics and gain their
support for speeded-up mean:h.
A careful reading of statements by such
adversaries as Levin and Senate Foreign
Relations Chairman Joseph Biden, DDel., suggests that they would go along
with a negotiated missile-defeilse arrange- .
·
ment.
Levin has said he favors "robust research
and development" of defensive systems, ·
particularly those designed to destroy mis- ·
siles in their early boost phase to counteract threats from potentially troublesome
nations such as North Korea and Iran.
He has also argued that "it makes sense
to try to modifY the ABM treaty to permit
development of limited NMD systems
while preserving strategic stability and a
cooperative relationship with Russia:'
Similarly, Biden said last year that ."a
cooperative missile defense could knit
Russia into a Western defense framework.
... It might just pave the way for a worldwide shift from pure deterrence to a mix
of offense and defense:·
In fact, in some speeches Bush has
sounded as if he is willing to talk ·with

Morton
Kondr.rle
COWMNIST

China would deVelop one to overcome it.
Bush could strike through the fog of
suspicion by telling Russia, China and U.S.
allies that they'd be defended by the system
under terms to be negotiated in a successor 10 the ABM Treaty.
When Bush first unveiled . his new
nuclear strategy in his May 1 speech at the
National Defense Univenity. he promised
to "consulr closely" with lll!ies and said.he
was "not presenting ... unilateral d~ons

.
; POMEROY Dealing
• witli stress was the devotional
: topic at a lt'Cent meeting of
Bradford Chureh of Christ's
Lydia Council.
The discussion centered
: around "what tri do when you
; are overwhelmed by it all."
: Tracy Davidson read material
: on the best you can be and the
: gift of keeping smiles up and
sttess levels down.
, Paula Pickens presided and
: had prayer. There was a p&lt;il:m,
: "Vacation Bible School," by
Cherie Williamson. Gerton
. : missionaries will be sponsored
· by the Council forthe next six
: months. A $25 donation to the
: Council · was acknowledged.
: Beverages and peanut butter
; and jelly were the pantry items
: designed for June and July.
: Five- ounce cups for the
: kitchen were set as the items
' needed for the two months.
· Cherie Williamson will handle communion for June, and
Becky Amberger and Diane
Maxwell will do it for July. ·
Sunshine gifis for June will
be given to Paul Will, jim and
Jackie Reed and Marge Wilt.
Thank-you notes were
received &amp;om the Lowell Bing
, family and Bill and Carolyn
Biggs for sunshine bags: Pickens do!lated a creative memories collection scrapbook to
the Council.
Sherry Shamblin and Gerry
Lightfoot will be hostesses for
the July meeting. Refreshments were served by David-

son and Williamson to Suzie
and Christi WiU, Carolyn
Nicholson , Charlotte Han ning, Diane MaxweU, Madeline Painter, Sherry Shamblin,
Charlotte VanMeter, Jattd md
Caitlin Williamson.Amber and
Dylan Davidson, Gerry Lightfoot, and Nancy Morris. Door
prizes were won by Pickens
and Lightfoot.

CHESTER - New officers were named at a recent .
meeting of the ~t Coucilors
Club of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America.
They are Laura Mae Nice,
president; Doris Grueser, vice
president; Esther Smith, secretary; Jean Welsh, treasurer;
Thelma White, sentinel; and
Mary K. · Holter, news
reporter.
Erma Cleland opened the
meeting with scripture from
John: 14. The Lord's Prayer
and the pledge were to the flag
were given, and members
responded to roll call by naming a flower that began with
the first letter of their first or
last name.
Next meeting will. be July
11 and instead of a picnic,
members will go out to a
restaurant. Cleland read a
poem, "Wealthy
Father."
Betty Young and Opal Hollon
gave the secretary and treasurer's reports.
Goldie
Frederick, Ella
Osborne,
and
Margaret
Amberger served refresh-

He added, "We'll also need to reach out
to other interested states, including China
and Russia:' Russia and the United States,
he said, "should work together to develop
a new fOundation !Or world peace .and
security in the 21st century."
He did not ofFer to "work together"
with China, presumably because some in
the administradon are convinced that the
United States and Chiha are de'ltine&lt;i ·to
become strategic advmaries later in this
.century.
Nevertheless, the ofFer should have been
made (and !till could be) as a C3\'l'Ot to
encourage better behavior by China. It
would cost the United States nothing.And
if China pursued a hoscile path, negotiations could be broken off.
Lately, Bush has reversed some other
early unilateralist positions, taking Powell's
side by agreeing to keep t.,J.S. troop$ in the
Balkans, negotiate with North Korea and
take an active part in Middle East diplomacy.
.
In Europe last week, he also agreed to
international cooperation on global
warming while continuing to reject the
Kyoto agreement, which even our allies
haven't ratified.
A missile offer to Russia and China
could help convince critics that we do not
plan to go it alone in foreign policy, but to
maintain the traditional U.S. role of world
leader.

Russia and China abo.ut missile defense;
though he's made it clear he wouldn't give
them a veto on U.S. plans, as the Democrats seem inclined 10 do. ·
At other times, however, administration
officials - Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld for one - have suggested that
we would rwh to deploy missile defenses
as soon as possible, regardless of anyoite
el!e~ views, breaking out of the ABM
'Treaty even though America im 't ready to
conduct testl in space yet.
Critics can't figure out whether sltifi:ing
administration statements represent conflict between the bawkim Rurnsfeld and
moderate Secretary of State Colin Powell
or a good cop/bad cop act designed 10
make Bush look like a centrist.
Lacking certainty, they've assumed the
worst - that Bush is like a tennis ball
being knocked back and fOrth between his
top advisers and that he could as easily end
up siding with the unilateralist R.umsfeld
as with the diplomatic Powell.
Even though Bush has described missile
defense as being designed mainly as protection against attacks from "rogue" states
such as North Korea and Iraq, Democrats
and overseas allies worry that he intends to
develop a system directed against China
and Russia, which would encourage a new
arms race.
Such a system would be huge, costly
and, its 1critics say, ineffective becauSe Rus(Morton Kondracki is exerutive editor ifRoll
sia would maintain its missile arsenal and Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

tniURSDAY
POMEROY - Malga County
Treuurer Howard r=renk to meet
with County Commlulonere and
ellctld offlclala during r~ular
commlaalonere' meeting, 10 a.m.
. Thursday, to dlacusa county's
,, ,~,~la!1 con~ltlon~ ,
POMEROY - Roddera 2000
C8r Club to meet al Pomeroy'a
Wendy's qn Th~raday, 1 p.m.
Instead of altha home 91 Jim
Nef1011 aa earner announced.
I'RIDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Church
of Christ will be holding a dlmer
on Friday 110m 5·7 p.m. atlhe
church. Everyone Is welcome to
attend lhla event.
~

POMEROY - Sacred Heart
Church observing a day of
Eucharistic Adoration, 9 a.m to 6
· p.m. Everyone welcome to
spend time wllh Lord. Social In
1 the hall.

• POMEROY _:, Fun, Food and
Fellbwshlp for teens at God's
NET, 6 to 10:30 p.m., Friday and
• Saturday. Nutritional meals,
" video games, computer pro-

grams, board gamH, pool
tables.
GALLIPOLIS - Revival aer·
vlcea, Church of God of Prophe·
cy, White Road, Ga111polla, Fri·
day and Saturday, 7 p.m. and
Sunday, 8 p.m. J. J. Davia of .
Matz, w. Va., evangellat.

know."
The media buzz triggeredl;Jy my double-barreled. ilnswer indicates the need for
a fuller airing of my ambitions at age 55.
When I was a kid I dreamed ofleading
a cavalty charge across the plains ofRussia.
My saber raised high, my horse galloping,
I was single-handedly defeating the Communist enemy.
As a fantasy, it's still han! to beat.
When I grew older, my heart stirred to
other notions cif glory.
As a Philadelphia high-schooler I wanted to be a U.S. senator.! read "Advise and
Consent" with fascination. On a band trip
to Washington I thrilled at the sight of
Hubert 'Humphrey standing before a
Capitol elevator. When the Democrats had

,,

I

I

yealbook

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FFA students
win awards

2000

Oft EKT W.B.
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in ·the Peace Corps three decades ago, I
came straight here to learn about politics
and government. I worked for the
estimable Edmund Muskie, wrote speech- .
es for President Carter, and served Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill in his daily
philosophic battles with President Reagan.
· A decade and a half ago I nlade my ·
insider's knowledge my ammo in exposing
the political system to newspaper readers.
I've tried to do the same, a tad more raucously, on TV with "Hardball."
Today, I love what I do. Unlike the elected official, I get to tell the whole truth, not
just one side ofit. Unlike the politician, I
can argue positions honestly and without
fear that I might offend a loy..! constituent
group. Name a politician, president or sena10r - Republican or Democrat -· who
can. honestly claim the same..
I get to write and speak both freely and
passionately in a free country, and I get
people to listen to me. Short of driving the
next Joe Stalin off the map, I can't think of
a better thing to do with my life.

(Chris Matthews, a nationally syndicated
columnist for the San 'Framisco Chronicle, is
host of "Hardlxdl" on CNBC and MSNBC
cable channels. The 1999 edition if"Hamball"
u.w published by Touchstone Boolu.)

,,

announce 111H11ng1 and apellama 11'1 prlntad only •
alai ev.nta. Tha Cllendar 11
pennltllllll oannot be
not dlllgned to pi'OIIIOia ..... guaranlald to be prlntad a
cr tund-ralaera of any type.
epeclllo number of dlya.

•.-=-

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Goapel sing,
Sunday, 8:30 p.rt). atlha Middle·
port Church of the Nazarane,
General Hartinger Par1&lt;way. The
"Revelators" to be featured. PH·
tor Allen Mldcep lnvltH pubic. ,
RACINE- Theiss family
reunion committee, to meet Sun·
day, 4 p.m. at home of Tom and
Sheila Theiss. Reunion July 8 at
Star Mill Park In Racine.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Meigs County
Family and Children Firat Coun·
ell, Wednesday, 9 a.m. at the
Department of Job and Family
Services offices, Middleport.

Healthy·Start
Healthy Families

Community Calendar 11 publlahed a1 1 fl'll urviCI ro
non·proflt graupa wlahlngto

l ........................................................._
"•'

FREE
TV!
WITH PURCHAIE OF A LANE"

IEUUED ITYLE/ ONLY.

WASHINGTON - During a contentious Q-and-A ~ession at the New
School in New York City, where I was
speaking recently, a woman lobbed a ver"
hal grenade onto the stage. "'Would you go
back to Pennsylvania and run for office?
And if so, would you run as a Democrat or
a Republican?"
For a moment I ~ uncharacteristically
speechless. I paused before giving what I
thought was a pretty smart response to the
two-parJ query. "I don't knqw, and I don't

"-med in

highest degree that can be
bestowed on an FFA member
and is presented to only the
top 2 percent in the nation.
Only three other members
from Mei~ County have ever
received the award; they are
Stephanie Sayre (1996), Jessica
Sayre (1 998) and David Roush
(1998).
Both girls will receive their
degrees m October at the
National FFA convention.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS

On dreaming·ab@ut other notions ofpersonal glory
their convention in Atlantic City, I waited
in the crowd to see and shake the hands of
the future anti-Vietnam War hero Eugene
McCarthy.
·
· I had caught the Senate bug while still in
grade school, watching Republican Hugh
Scott win his upset in 1958, beginning his
long career as the distinguished,gentleman
from Pennsy vania. In my first national
election, I voted for his Democratic colleague, the great liberal reformer Joseph
Clark.
But in college, I watched the power of
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist joe
McGinniss. T~e mornin~ a week, he
jolted the city's breakfast tables and car
pools with his BOO words of a.m. audacity.
Radio talk-show hosts wonld open by asking listeners, "So, what do you think of
McGinniss?"
In grad school, I made a habit of catching CBS' Eric Sevareid deliver his big-picture reflections on the Vietnam debate.
One of Edward R. Murrow's boys from
World War II, he spoke with the crisp
authority ·of someone who'd been there. I
could not think of anything grander, more
vital to the Republic, than to be a TV news
commentator.
Judging by my career, those dre:inis have
been .powerful. Coming home from Africa

placed fourth.
fourth in the area of diversi6ed
Six FFA members also crop production.
received their state FFA
She produced six acres of
degrees, which is awanded to cabbage, two acres of peppers,
the top two percent of the 12 acres of tomatoes, and one
membership in the state. acre of corn.
Recipients were Lori Sayre;
A few of her responsibilities
Sandy Smith, jeremy Hill,Josh include maintaining greenLarsen, Amy Wilson and TJ. house temperatures. cultivatMoore.
ing, scouting fields, harvesting
Lori Sayre was also named fire wood, production of hay,
Star District State for having and installing drip irrigation.
MIDDLEPORT - David the best scoring State Degree
Courtney Haines of SyraBoyd of Middleport has been application in the district.
cuse and Sandy Smith of
recognized for academic
Jeremy Hill, son of Dale and Racine were selected as two of
achievement as a United States K:uen Hill, Racine, was the · Ohio's candidates for the
National Honor Roll Award entrepreneurship' winner. His American FFA degree. This
·
wmner.
SAE was a 15 percent owner- degree is considered to be the
,Boyd, who attends Meigs ship in two acres of productive
High School, will appear in greenhouses, 12,000 tomatoes
the United States Achieve- and 2,746 square feet of panment Academy Official Year- sies. Hill also placed third in
book, which is published the state in the area of floriculnationally.
·ture.
He is the son of David and
TylerJohnson,_sori ofjoe and ·
janice Boyd, and the grandson Brenda · johnson, Portland,
of Helen Boyd of Middleport placed second in the state in
and Alfred and Mary Cordell the area of nursery operations.
ofBidwell.
His $AE incorporated placemen( at a nursery, ~ere he
gained knowledge and skills in
. plant care, plant identification,
marketing, customer service,
Stock tt U0230
and communication.
RACINE - Several memTravanna Moore, daughter of
bers of the ~cine Southern Richand and Beverly Moore,
FFA Chapter placed in the Racine, placed first in the state
2001 state FFA competition.
in the area of floriculture.
· Aaron S.ayre, ~dvisor, com~
She earned 930.5 placement
* 4 Dr
mended the students on their hours at Karen's Greenhouses
exceptional work. He said that and developed skills in cus• Rear Air
this is the first time in the his- tomer relations, flower cutting,
• AMIFM
Stereo
tory of the chapter that four plant care, and maintenance.
• Power Window
individuals placed in six differLori Sayre, daughter of
• Power Locks
ent areas of proficiency within Aaron and Shirley Sayre,
the · state. 1\vo individuals Racine, placed second in the
*nit/Cruise
placed first, two placed second, state in the area of fruit and/ or
• 7 Passenger
one placed third, and one vegetable production and

already made:'

'HARDBALL'

BY CHial MAmtilws

menu. Games were conducted
by Doris Grueser. Door prizes
went to Thelma White, !nzy
NeweD, and a guest, Richard
White. Present besides those
named were Ruth Smith, and
a guest, Sandra White.

R~CLINER.

Healthy Families

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 992-2l/7 or 1-800, 992-2608 to apply or you can have the application sent
to you.· The Agency is open Monday Through Friday
from 8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. and Thursday unti/6,· 30 p.m.

Use the Chart Below to see if
you qualify:
Family Si~e

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

(

Ther~

is no face-to{ace interview.

3 --~-------------~ $1,220
4 -.-•---------.;. •••• $1,471
5--·····-·····----$1,723
6----·-··········-$1,975

,.,.
&lt;

,,

"'Monthly Income
Guidelines

Healthy Start
With Credible Insurance
(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

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

.

'.
r

Family Size

*Monthly •ncome
Guidelines

2 ·····-----------· $1,452

Family Size
'

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

''

"'Monthly Income
Guidelines

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

• Evan If your family;• Income Is higher, you may still be able to get fr~e Healthy Start coverage for your kld1.

992_2117

Call now for more Information.

1-800,992_2608

�:

Opinion

.The Daily Sentinel

B=.f the Bend

PageA4

_The_D_an_ySe_ntin_·e_I______

'lll... dlf• JURI 21, 2111

Lydia Council
Iii eels

111 Court St., ~.Ohio
740-992·2151• Fax: 992·2157

.Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

CharleM Hoaillch
General u.nagar
ttllnr 1JJ tU tJilikw liN

R.Shawn1Aw11
Managing Editor

N• ••sip M ./nUn will k

ln•n. lfOI ,.so••lilin.

,.

Dl.w Klly Hill
Conlrallar

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r.bliJiri•r Co. ., ~.._..,,.,...~...._

NATIONAL VIEW

r-tx it
It~

up to Congress to turn
a good idea into reality

KONDRACKE' S VIEW

• The (:QaJtimore), Sun, on low~income kids and changing
schools: Maryland is at the forefront ·of a radical educational
experime nt that Congress is now considering making permanent: Providing a right for low- income students to transfer
&amp;om failing schools to better performing public schools.
The federal right was established by an obscure provision of
the 1999 budget bill. In Maryland, which has been particularc
ly aggressive about implementing the legislation, more than
100 schools have been identified as troubled, the majority of
them in Baltimore. ...
·
But the current law contains serious limitations that Congress, which is now debating re-authorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, should fix.
For one thing, the law requires local officials to allow transfers only within school districts, a major limitation for students
living in urban districts with few high-quality schools to
choose among. For another, the law permits good schools to
refuse to educate children from failing schools because of space
,
limitations.
.. . The concept of requiring local school officials . to give
children in failing schools a right to transfer to a better public
school is an important first step and represents a dramatic
departure for conservatives who, dur'ing the racial desegregation era, championed the neighborhood school above all else.
Now conservatives concede that for people in distressed
neighborhoods, a system of compulsory assignment based on
residence is inherently unfair, It is up t.o Congress to take the
outline of a good idea - more choice for kids stuck in bad
schools - and make it a vehicle for genuine equal education·
a! opportunity

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

-

.

lhunct.y. JUM 21. 2001

COMMUNITY ·NEWS &amp; NOTES

The Daily Sentinel

Charlet W. Govey
Publisher

Page AS

Today is Thursday, June 21, the 172nd day of2001.There are
193 days left in the year. Slimmer begins at 3:38 a.m. EDT.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 21, 1788, the U.S. Constitution went into effect as
New Hampshire became the ninth state to rarity it.
On thi.s date:
In 1834, Cyrus Hall McCormick received a patent for his
reaping machine.
In 1932, heavyweight Max Schmeling lost a title fight by
decision to Jack Sharkey, prompting Schmeling's manager, Joe
Jacobs, to exclaim: "We was robbed!"
In 1945, during World War II,American soldiers on Okinawa
found the body of the Japanese commander, Lt. Gen. Mitsuru
Ushijima, who had committed suicide.
In 1948, the Republican national convention opened in
Philadelphia.
In 1963, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini was chosen to
succeed the late Pope john XXIII; the new pope took the
name l'aul VI.
In 1964, civil rights workers Michael H. Schwerner, Andrew
Goodman and James E. Chaney disappeared in Philadelphia,
Miss. ; their bodies were found buried in an earthen dam six
·
weeks later.
In 1973, the Supreme Court ruled that states may ban materials found to be obscene according to local standan)s.
In 1982, a jury in Washington D.C. found john Hinckley Jr.
innocent by reason of insanicy in the shootings of President
Reagan and three other men.
In 1985, scientists announced that skeletal remains exhumed
; in Brazil were those of Nazi War criminal Josef Mengel e.
In 1989, the Supreme Court ruled that burning the American flag as a form of political protest is protected by the First
Amendment.
Ten years ago: · Secretary of State james . Baker visited
Yugoslavia, where he pleaded for a peaceful solution to multie thnic co nflic ts that were threatening to erupt into civil war.
Five years ago: European leaders agreed to gradually lift a
global ban on British beef expqrts imposed nearly three
m onths ea rlier following a scare over "mad cow" disease. Pentagon officials said Ameri can troops destroyed an Iraqi ammunition depot in March 1991 that may have contained-chemical
weapons.
One year ago: North Korea promised to refrain from longrange missile tests after the United States lifted some economic san ctions against it. Some 55 years after World War II ended,
22 Asi.1n~Am e rican veterans received the Medal of Honor for
bravery on the battlefield during a White House ceremony.
To day's Birthdays: Cartoonist AI Hirschfeld is 98. Actress Jane
Ru ssell is 80. Actress Maureen Stapleton is 76. Actor Bernie
Kopel! is 6R. Actor Monte Mar,k.ham is 66 . Singer O.C. Smith
is 65. Acto r R o n Ely is h3. Actress Mariette Hartley ' is 61.
Co median j oe Flaherty is 60. Rock singer-musician . Ray
Davies (The Kinks) is 57. Singer Brenda Holloway is 55. Actress
, M eredith Baxter is ~4. Actor Mich~el Gross is 54. Couptry
, smgcr Lt'on Everette IS 53. R.ock rnustc1an Joey Kramer (Aero' smith) is 51. !'lock musician Nils Lofgren i1 50.

Share our missile defense? A good foreign policy ploy
President Bush could utterly disarm his
fOreign and domestic critics by offering to
negotiate . a missile-defense sharing
arrangement with Russia and China.
Democrats at home and allies abroad are
opposed 10 Bush's national milsile-deferue
proposal mainly because he seems bent on
unilaterally abandoning the 1972 Antil$allistic Missile 'Treaty, much as he dumped
the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on global warm-

mg.
Democrats such as Sen. Cad Levin,
Mich., chairman of the Armed Services
CQmmiaee, are also opposed to rwhing
toward deployment of a system that has
not proved to work and might be enormously expensive.
However, if Bush ofFered 10 renegotiate
the ABM Tteaty with Russia and to share
missile-defense systems with that nation
and eventually with China, he could substandally quiet his critics and gain their
support for speeded-up mean:h.
A careful reading of statements by such
adversaries as Levin and Senate Foreign
Relations Chairman Joseph Biden, DDel., suggests that they would go along
with a negotiated missile-defeilse arrange- .
·
ment.
Levin has said he favors "robust research
and development" of defensive systems, ·
particularly those designed to destroy mis- ·
siles in their early boost phase to counteract threats from potentially troublesome
nations such as North Korea and Iran.
He has also argued that "it makes sense
to try to modifY the ABM treaty to permit
development of limited NMD systems
while preserving strategic stability and a
cooperative relationship with Russia:'
Similarly, Biden said last year that ."a
cooperative missile defense could knit
Russia into a Western defense framework.
... It might just pave the way for a worldwide shift from pure deterrence to a mix
of offense and defense:·
In fact, in some speeches Bush has
sounded as if he is willing to talk ·with

Morton
Kondr.rle
COWMNIST

China would deVelop one to overcome it.
Bush could strike through the fog of
suspicion by telling Russia, China and U.S.
allies that they'd be defended by the system
under terms to be negotiated in a successor 10 the ABM Treaty.
When Bush first unveiled . his new
nuclear strategy in his May 1 speech at the
National Defense Univenity. he promised
to "consulr closely" with lll!ies and said.he
was "not presenting ... unilateral d~ons

.
; POMEROY Dealing
• witli stress was the devotional
: topic at a lt'Cent meeting of
Bradford Chureh of Christ's
Lydia Council.
The discussion centered
: around "what tri do when you
; are overwhelmed by it all."
: Tracy Davidson read material
: on the best you can be and the
: gift of keeping smiles up and
sttess levels down.
, Paula Pickens presided and
: had prayer. There was a p&lt;il:m,
: "Vacation Bible School," by
Cherie Williamson. Gerton
. : missionaries will be sponsored
· by the Council forthe next six
: months. A $25 donation to the
: Council · was acknowledged.
: Beverages and peanut butter
; and jelly were the pantry items
: designed for June and July.
: Five- ounce cups for the
: kitchen were set as the items
' needed for the two months.
· Cherie Williamson will handle communion for June, and
Becky Amberger and Diane
Maxwell will do it for July. ·
Sunshine gifis for June will
be given to Paul Will, jim and
Jackie Reed and Marge Wilt.
Thank-you notes were
received &amp;om the Lowell Bing
, family and Bill and Carolyn
Biggs for sunshine bags: Pickens do!lated a creative memories collection scrapbook to
the Council.
Sherry Shamblin and Gerry
Lightfoot will be hostesses for
the July meeting. Refreshments were served by David-

son and Williamson to Suzie
and Christi WiU, Carolyn
Nicholson , Charlotte Han ning, Diane MaxweU, Madeline Painter, Sherry Shamblin,
Charlotte VanMeter, Jattd md
Caitlin Williamson.Amber and
Dylan Davidson, Gerry Lightfoot, and Nancy Morris. Door
prizes were won by Pickens
and Lightfoot.

CHESTER - New officers were named at a recent .
meeting of the ~t Coucilors
Club of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America.
They are Laura Mae Nice,
president; Doris Grueser, vice
president; Esther Smith, secretary; Jean Welsh, treasurer;
Thelma White, sentinel; and
Mary K. · Holter, news
reporter.
Erma Cleland opened the
meeting with scripture from
John: 14. The Lord's Prayer
and the pledge were to the flag
were given, and members
responded to roll call by naming a flower that began with
the first letter of their first or
last name.
Next meeting will. be July
11 and instead of a picnic,
members will go out to a
restaurant. Cleland read a
poem, "Wealthy
Father."
Betty Young and Opal Hollon
gave the secretary and treasurer's reports.
Goldie
Frederick, Ella
Osborne,
and
Margaret
Amberger served refresh-

He added, "We'll also need to reach out
to other interested states, including China
and Russia:' Russia and the United States,
he said, "should work together to develop
a new fOundation !Or world peace .and
security in the 21st century."
He did not ofFer to "work together"
with China, presumably because some in
the administradon are convinced that the
United States and Chiha are de'ltine&lt;i ·to
become strategic advmaries later in this
.century.
Nevertheless, the ofFer should have been
made (and !till could be) as a C3\'l'Ot to
encourage better behavior by China. It
would cost the United States nothing.And
if China pursued a hoscile path, negotiations could be broken off.
Lately, Bush has reversed some other
early unilateralist positions, taking Powell's
side by agreeing to keep t.,J.S. troop$ in the
Balkans, negotiate with North Korea and
take an active part in Middle East diplomacy.
.
In Europe last week, he also agreed to
international cooperation on global
warming while continuing to reject the
Kyoto agreement, which even our allies
haven't ratified.
A missile offer to Russia and China
could help convince critics that we do not
plan to go it alone in foreign policy, but to
maintain the traditional U.S. role of world
leader.

Russia and China abo.ut missile defense;
though he's made it clear he wouldn't give
them a veto on U.S. plans, as the Democrats seem inclined 10 do. ·
At other times, however, administration
officials - Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld for one - have suggested that
we would rwh to deploy missile defenses
as soon as possible, regardless of anyoite
el!e~ views, breaking out of the ABM
'Treaty even though America im 't ready to
conduct testl in space yet.
Critics can't figure out whether sltifi:ing
administration statements represent conflict between the bawkim Rurnsfeld and
moderate Secretary of State Colin Powell
or a good cop/bad cop act designed 10
make Bush look like a centrist.
Lacking certainty, they've assumed the
worst - that Bush is like a tennis ball
being knocked back and fOrth between his
top advisers and that he could as easily end
up siding with the unilateralist R.umsfeld
as with the diplomatic Powell.
Even though Bush has described missile
defense as being designed mainly as protection against attacks from "rogue" states
such as North Korea and Iraq, Democrats
and overseas allies worry that he intends to
develop a system directed against China
and Russia, which would encourage a new
arms race.
Such a system would be huge, costly
and, its 1critics say, ineffective becauSe Rus(Morton Kondracki is exerutive editor ifRoll
sia would maintain its missile arsenal and Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

tniURSDAY
POMEROY - Malga County
Treuurer Howard r=renk to meet
with County Commlulonere and
ellctld offlclala during r~ular
commlaalonere' meeting, 10 a.m.
. Thursday, to dlacusa county's
,, ,~,~la!1 con~ltlon~ ,
POMEROY - Roddera 2000
C8r Club to meet al Pomeroy'a
Wendy's qn Th~raday, 1 p.m.
Instead of altha home 91 Jim
Nef1011 aa earner announced.
I'RIDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Church
of Christ will be holding a dlmer
on Friday 110m 5·7 p.m. atlhe
church. Everyone Is welcome to
attend lhla event.
~

POMEROY - Sacred Heart
Church observing a day of
Eucharistic Adoration, 9 a.m to 6
· p.m. Everyone welcome to
spend time wllh Lord. Social In
1 the hall.

• POMEROY _:, Fun, Food and
Fellbwshlp for teens at God's
NET, 6 to 10:30 p.m., Friday and
• Saturday. Nutritional meals,
" video games, computer pro-

grams, board gamH, pool
tables.
GALLIPOLIS - Revival aer·
vlcea, Church of God of Prophe·
cy, White Road, Ga111polla, Fri·
day and Saturday, 7 p.m. and
Sunday, 8 p.m. J. J. Davia of .
Matz, w. Va., evangellat.

know."
The media buzz triggeredl;Jy my double-barreled. ilnswer indicates the need for
a fuller airing of my ambitions at age 55.
When I was a kid I dreamed ofleading
a cavalty charge across the plains ofRussia.
My saber raised high, my horse galloping,
I was single-handedly defeating the Communist enemy.
As a fantasy, it's still han! to beat.
When I grew older, my heart stirred to
other notions cif glory.
As a Philadelphia high-schooler I wanted to be a U.S. senator.! read "Advise and
Consent" with fascination. On a band trip
to Washington I thrilled at the sight of
Hubert 'Humphrey standing before a
Capitol elevator. When the Democrats had

,,

I

I

yealbook

E-MAIL YOUR NEWS:
news@
mydailysentinel.com

FFA students
win awards

2000

Oft EKT W.B.
Was$21,900

CD

MOYI

$17,900

in ·the Peace Corps three decades ago, I
came straight here to learn about politics
and government. I worked for the
estimable Edmund Muskie, wrote speech- .
es for President Carter, and served Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill in his daily
philosophic battles with President Reagan.
· A decade and a half ago I nlade my ·
insider's knowledge my ammo in exposing
the political system to newspaper readers.
I've tried to do the same, a tad more raucously, on TV with "Hardball."
Today, I love what I do. Unlike the elected official, I get to tell the whole truth, not
just one side ofit. Unlike the politician, I
can argue positions honestly and without
fear that I might offend a loy..! constituent
group. Name a politician, president or sena10r - Republican or Democrat -· who
can. honestly claim the same..
I get to write and speak both freely and
passionately in a free country, and I get
people to listen to me. Short of driving the
next Joe Stalin off the map, I can't think of
a better thing to do with my life.

(Chris Matthews, a nationally syndicated
columnist for the San 'Framisco Chronicle, is
host of "Hardlxdl" on CNBC and MSNBC
cable channels. The 1999 edition if"Hamball"
u.w published by Touchstone Boolu.)

,,

announce 111H11ng1 and apellama 11'1 prlntad only •
alai ev.nta. Tha Cllendar 11
pennltllllll oannot be
not dlllgned to pi'OIIIOia ..... guaranlald to be prlntad a
cr tund-ralaera of any type.
epeclllo number of dlya.

•.-=-

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Goapel sing,
Sunday, 8:30 p.rt). atlha Middle·
port Church of the Nazarane,
General Hartinger Par1&lt;way. The
"Revelators" to be featured. PH·
tor Allen Mldcep lnvltH pubic. ,
RACINE- Theiss family
reunion committee, to meet Sun·
day, 4 p.m. at home of Tom and
Sheila Theiss. Reunion July 8 at
Star Mill Park In Racine.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Meigs County
Family and Children Firat Coun·
ell, Wednesday, 9 a.m. at the
Department of Job and Family
Services offices, Middleport.

Healthy·Start
Healthy Families

Community Calendar 11 publlahed a1 1 fl'll urviCI ro
non·proflt graupa wlahlngto

l ........................................................._
"•'

FREE
TV!
WITH PURCHAIE OF A LANE"

IEUUED ITYLE/ ONLY.

WASHINGTON - During a contentious Q-and-A ~ession at the New
School in New York City, where I was
speaking recently, a woman lobbed a ver"
hal grenade onto the stage. "'Would you go
back to Pennsylvania and run for office?
And if so, would you run as a Democrat or
a Republican?"
For a moment I ~ uncharacteristically
speechless. I paused before giving what I
thought was a pretty smart response to the
two-parJ query. "I don't knqw, and I don't

"-med in

highest degree that can be
bestowed on an FFA member
and is presented to only the
top 2 percent in the nation.
Only three other members
from Mei~ County have ever
received the award; they are
Stephanie Sayre (1996), Jessica
Sayre (1 998) and David Roush
(1998).
Both girls will receive their
degrees m October at the
National FFA convention.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS

On dreaming·ab@ut other notions ofpersonal glory
their convention in Atlantic City, I waited
in the crowd to see and shake the hands of
the future anti-Vietnam War hero Eugene
McCarthy.
·
· I had caught the Senate bug while still in
grade school, watching Republican Hugh
Scott win his upset in 1958, beginning his
long career as the distinguished,gentleman
from Pennsy vania. In my first national
election, I voted for his Democratic colleague, the great liberal reformer Joseph
Clark.
But in college, I watched the power of
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist joe
McGinniss. T~e mornin~ a week, he
jolted the city's breakfast tables and car
pools with his BOO words of a.m. audacity.
Radio talk-show hosts wonld open by asking listeners, "So, what do you think of
McGinniss?"
In grad school, I made a habit of catching CBS' Eric Sevareid deliver his big-picture reflections on the Vietnam debate.
One of Edward R. Murrow's boys from
World War II, he spoke with the crisp
authority ·of someone who'd been there. I
could not think of anything grander, more
vital to the Republic, than to be a TV news
commentator.
Judging by my career, those dre:inis have
been .powerful. Coming home from Africa

placed fourth.
fourth in the area of diversi6ed
Six FFA members also crop production.
received their state FFA
She produced six acres of
degrees, which is awanded to cabbage, two acres of peppers,
the top two percent of the 12 acres of tomatoes, and one
membership in the state. acre of corn.
Recipients were Lori Sayre;
A few of her responsibilities
Sandy Smith, jeremy Hill,Josh include maintaining greenLarsen, Amy Wilson and TJ. house temperatures. cultivatMoore.
ing, scouting fields, harvesting
Lori Sayre was also named fire wood, production of hay,
Star District State for having and installing drip irrigation.
MIDDLEPORT - David the best scoring State Degree
Courtney Haines of SyraBoyd of Middleport has been application in the district.
cuse and Sandy Smith of
recognized for academic
Jeremy Hill, son of Dale and Racine were selected as two of
achievement as a United States K:uen Hill, Racine, was the · Ohio's candidates for the
National Honor Roll Award entrepreneurship' winner. His American FFA degree. This
·
wmner.
SAE was a 15 percent owner- degree is considered to be the
,Boyd, who attends Meigs ship in two acres of productive
High School, will appear in greenhouses, 12,000 tomatoes
the United States Achieve- and 2,746 square feet of panment Academy Official Year- sies. Hill also placed third in
book, which is published the state in the area of floriculnationally.
·ture.
He is the son of David and
TylerJohnson,_sori ofjoe and ·
janice Boyd, and the grandson Brenda · johnson, Portland,
of Helen Boyd of Middleport placed second in the state in
and Alfred and Mary Cordell the area of nursery operations.
ofBidwell.
His $AE incorporated placemen( at a nursery, ~ere he
gained knowledge and skills in
. plant care, plant identification,
marketing, customer service,
Stock tt U0230
and communication.
RACINE - Several memTravanna Moore, daughter of
bers of the ~cine Southern Richand and Beverly Moore,
FFA Chapter placed in the Racine, placed first in the state
2001 state FFA competition.
in the area of floriculture.
· Aaron S.ayre, ~dvisor, com~
She earned 930.5 placement
* 4 Dr
mended the students on their hours at Karen's Greenhouses
exceptional work. He said that and developed skills in cus• Rear Air
this is the first time in the his- tomer relations, flower cutting,
• AMIFM
Stereo
tory of the chapter that four plant care, and maintenance.
• Power Window
individuals placed in six differLori Sayre, daughter of
• Power Locks
ent areas of proficiency within Aaron and Shirley Sayre,
the · state. 1\vo individuals Racine, placed second in the
*nit/Cruise
placed first, two placed second, state in the area of fruit and/ or
• 7 Passenger
one placed third, and one vegetable production and

already made:'

'HARDBALL'

BY CHial MAmtilws

menu. Games were conducted
by Doris Grueser. Door prizes
went to Thelma White, !nzy
NeweD, and a guest, Richard
White. Present besides those
named were Ruth Smith, and
a guest, Sandra White.

R~CLINER.

Healthy Families

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 992-2l/7 or 1-800, 992-2608 to apply or you can have the application sent
to you.· The Agency is open Monday Through Friday
from 8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. and Thursday unti/6,· 30 p.m.

Use the Chart Below to see if
you qualify:
Family Si~e

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

(

Ther~

is no face-to{ace interview.

3 --~-------------~ $1,220
4 -.-•---------.;. •••• $1,471
5--·····-·····----$1,723
6----·-··········-$1,975

,.,.
&lt;

,,

"'Monthly Income
Guidelines

Healthy Start
With Credible Insurance
(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

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

.

'.
r

Family Size

*Monthly •ncome
Guidelines

2 ·····-----------· $1,452

Family Size
'

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

''

"'Monthly Income
Guidelines

2····---~---·····-$1,935
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.~
••• ~••• . ...._~••-::..
-~
.

Peat A e • The Ddv Sentinel

-""'-'------....,-......
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· - ... ...,.
• ........
~

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,_..- ........"_...
-..__..
-- ~
- ..._ .........
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·~-~
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. ~-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 21, 2001

'

1

.
••

Couple rnn hot and cold, but their love is ·constant .

DEAR ABBY: I have finaUy
found the love of my life. o·n caU her
Muriel.) We ~nd almost aU our
time together. We share similar interesa; we laugh and cry together.
Muriel and I do not live together, but
· we have a sexual relationship and
·believe we are soul mates.
' There's one big difference between
ADVICE
. us that's causing a major problem: We ·
· have different "body thermostats,"
which makes sleeping together diffi- with her, but if we can't be comfort-cult. When I am comfortable, Muriel able sleeping in the same bed, how
•is shivering. When she's comfortable, can we possibly last? Your thougha,
I am too warm.
please.- SLEEPLESS IN TOLE· When I visit her apartment, it's DO
·overly warm and srufiY with little
DEAR
SLEEPLESS: Your
ventilation. Muriel in turn complains beloved is the kind of woman for
about how chilly I keep my house.
whom IIanne! was invented. Please
. I am at my wit's end about how to don't let it come between you.
.solve this. I care enough for Muriel
DEAR ABBY: I'm writing about
•to want to spend the rest of my life the letter you printed from the

Dear

Abby

woman whose mother wants to celebrate her 50th anniversary surrounded by family and friends, even
though her husband has been dead
five yean. _ .....---:
You statec:khat she hadn't properly
dealt with the death of her 11usband
and could be in a stage of dementia.
You advised a medical and psychological evaluation at the time of her
next annual physical - if not sooner.
WeU, Abby, I personaUy think the
mother's idea is wonderful! Why anyone would condemn her idea and say
it would look foolish is beyond me.
It's romantic and wonderful that this
woman wants to celebrate ,a lifetime
of love and memories - after all,
that's what anniversaries are all about.
Yes, it's sad that her husband will
not be there in body. But it seems to

me that Moms intent is- that he be
there in spirit. Placing a photograph
at his. place setting to· honor his
memory is not exactly sayipg she
expects him to walk in, sit do\vn and
din~. A family portrait that includes
Mo~p holding his picture is hardly
something to get hot and bothered
over, either. I think it's a thoughtful
way of saying her husband is still in
her heart and memory.
Abby, I'm sure that woman is weU
aware that her husband is dead. She
probably cared for him while he wa5
dying, and now lives every day in an
empty house surrounded .by memories of their life together. I see no
crime in wanting 10 share this memory with family and friends. For you
to say the mother may be suffering
from dementia because. of this is
insulting.

Nation • World

The Daily ~tinel

In my opinion, the family ~nd
friends should be more supporuve.
Perhaps her 50th annivetsar}''celebration is a last-ditch effort to get those
around her to acknowledge her husband's life instead of dwelling on the
tragedy of his .death. - MOURNING FOR MOM IN TEXAS
DEAR MOURNING: Your letter is not the only one I received
from readers who disagreed with my
answer. And you could be right. Perhaps I analyzed the letter tqo much
with my head and·not enough with
my heart. After aU, by marking what
would have been her 50th anniver- ·
sary with a celebration of her marriage, she would be hurting no one.
And if it brings her comfort - why
not?

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Aaron Sorkin, creator of"The
West Wing"TV series, will be aUowed to enter a drug treatment p~ instead of serving prison time for possession
of cocame and hallucinogenic mushrooms.
Sorkin, 39, who pleaded guilty Tuesday to a misdemeanor
and _two fel~ny counts, must complete the two-year program
or ruk a pnson sentence and fuie.
"Needless to say, it is a relief to have a resolution regarding·
my legal situation;· he said. "I fully intend to proceed as
directed by the court and am eager to get back to work and
focus on what's important."
·
·
·
Sorkin was bound for Las Vegas when he was arrested
April15 at Burbank airport. He later was charged with one
felony count each of possession of cocaine and mushrooms
and a misdemeanor count of marijuana possession. He had
initiaUy pleaded innocent to the charges.

Dear Abby is written by Paulim
Phillips and daughtn jeanne Phillips.

·Bombing indictment.near
'

ENTERTAINMENT

.Meigs Chapter DAR names new officers
RACINE - New officers
: for the 2001..()4 ·term were
elected at a recent meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American
'Revolution at the home of
Karen Werry.
Elected were Abbie Stratton,
regent; Emma Ashley, vice
regent; Carol Sisson, chaplain;
, Anna Cleland, recording secretary; Patricia Holter, assistant
recording secretary; Peggy
Moore, corresponding secre-tary; Karen Werry, treasurer;
Rae Moore, registrar; June
Ashley, historian; and Pauline
Atkins, librarian. The new officers were installed by Eileen
·
Buck, chaplain.
• Regent Mary Rose gave
· recognition and a gift of Oow•ers to members reaching cer.tain years of membership and
service to the Chapter. Recognition went to Stratton, 10
years; Buck, Peggy Moore and
Rae Moore, 20 years; Grace
Eich, 60 years; Emma Ashley,
Mary Yost and June Ashley, 25
years.
Ako receiving floral arrangements for recognition of service were Peggy ·Moore and
Anna Cleland.
Patricia Holter and Mary
Powell were commended for
!heir efforts in the res~ration
~f the Chester Courthouse.
~estoration of historical build~ngs is one of the major objec~es of the National Society. ·
.

.."'

to supply soap operas in the
United States.
NEW YORK (AP) -"A
The deals give Los AngelesCivil Action" author Jonathan based Univision the right of
Harr will write a book about first refusal for thousands ol
the search for a long-missing hours of soaps from those
painting by the Italian artist countries and wiU allow UniCaravaggio.
Vision to start a second net"As he did so well in 'A work next year,
Civil Action,' Jon will teD an
The second network, called
absorbing story through the . Univision 2, wiU launch in
eyes and consciences of peo- January and is expected to g~t
pie engaged in a quest," Bob 50 percent of its audience
. Loomis, Random House vice from viewers new to Univipresident and executive edi- sion.
tor, said in a statement Tues- · In an exclusive partnership
with Colombian network
day.
The book has no title yet RCN Television, Univision
and no publication date has will buy at least 300 hours of
been set.
telenovelas, or soap operas,
"A Civil Action,'' published eyery year for the next five
in 1995, received a National years.
Book Critics Circle prize and
Univision also will buy a
was nominated fon National minimum of 800 hours of
Book Award. It was made into soap operas a year froin
a 1998 film starring John Tra- Venezuelan company Radio
volta and Robert Duvall.
Caracas Television, the companies said Monday. That deal
is for a decade.
The agreements are expectLOS ANGELES (AP)
ed to fiD at least one-quarter
Spanish-language network · of the programming space on
Univision said it will enter a Univision 2, but could fill
partnership with Venezuelan more, Univision, executives
and Colombian programmers said.

Jonathan Harr

INSTAll m- New officers of the DAR are from the lett, Pat Holter, Peggy Moore, Karen Werry,
Abbie Stratton, Emma Ashley, June Ashley, Carol Sisson, Pauline Atkins and Anna Cleland.
The Courthouse was built in your eyes or the color of your win the .election by conspiring
1823.The chapter in 1926 pro- skin mea~ nothing' nor ·should to target Holocaust survivors,
vided a now roof; in 1946 it they. Racism to them is an women and minorities with
paid for repairs to the structure anachronism. It's as remote to voter ·suppression ·and massive
with a gift from Mary Bennett, theJ'9 as eight-track tapes, yet disenfranchisement.
"What" is so hatmful and
regent at the time; and in 1976 when we look for guidance to
was instrumental in having the . many of the so-caDed civil hideous abo;_.t aU of this isn't
Courthouse placed on the rights leaders today, we get the that it's racism but that it's polNational Directory of Histori- same hatred and division that itics and personal ambition dis- .
cal Buildings.
Martin Luther King sought to guised as hypocrisy of the
Theme of the National heal four decades ago.
. highest order, because it pre"We got supposed civil rights tends to expose and extinguish,
Defense Report by Atkins was
champions raving for the TV but only undermines and den"Civil Rights:'
" For most young people cameras about how conserva- igrates the honest pursuit of
today," she said, "the shape of tives engaged in 'Nazi tactics' to quality."

Univision

rs

November in JacksoiwiUe, Fla. to continue evangelizing as
Another crusade is planned for long as he lives. "I don't know
October in Fresno, Calif.
how long that will be," he said.
Graham tode in a golf cart
On the Net:
'
onto the stadium's field to
www.louisviUecrusade.org
•
meet with reporters Tuesday.
He climbed out to speak, but
got back inside . the cart to
conse~ve strength under a
beating sun as he answered a
couple of questions.
The preacher said he intends

a

ma

Kimes fa

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WASHINGTON (AP) - A New York company has
; recalled 13 varieties of a herbal drink product because it
::'J contains an acid that can ~e people sick anq is considered
to be a carcinogen.
· Blue ~ght_ Inc., o_fithaca, recalled the products ~~dn~
in coordinauon Wlth the Food and Drug Administration.
: No ilfuesses have been reported because of the product, the
FDA reported.
'
·
The drink products, which come in capsule or powder
· .form, were sold in bottles with the bbel "Treasures of the ·
' •· East:' Only products purchased befon: Au8wt 2ooo are
;;. being recalled.
.
.
.·
·
:= Products being recalled are labeled ·as .the following: Mu
: .Tong, Ba Zheng San, DaQS Gui Si Ni Tang, Dao Chi San,
~ Fu Fang Di Hu Tang, Gan Lu Xiao Du Dan, Kou Yan Ning.
Long Dan Xie Gan Tang, Pai Shi Tang. Xiao Ji Yin Zi, Xin
Yi San, Yang Yin XiaoYan Tang.
·
.

I
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We'll help build your future!

:

Did =saults •Cookie Monttel'

'· !i.e was arrested for allesedly assaulting the furry blue Sesame.
Street chatacter.
.
·
Police say Lee P. McPhatter, upiet that the Cookie Mon- •
~ ster would not pose for a picture at the Sesame Pbce theme
~ park, shoved and kicked the employee inside th~ costume.
~ ~cPhatter, 22, ofWaldorf, Md., denies the allegauons:
"People started yelling at me that I should~ . ashamed of
• myself for hitting Cookie Monster. I did not kick or ~unch
; Cookie Monster. The cop did not want to hear my stde of
the story, and I got arrested," said McPhatt~, ';ho. d~cribed
the character as his 3-year-old daughter Minas favonte.
•. Middletown police said that21-year-old Jennie McNelis
suffered bruised ribs and a cervic~ sprain ~hen McPhatter
shoved her to thd ground, then kicked her m the head and
back.

t

i
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.

PRESCRIPTION PHONE 992·2995
E. Main • Pomeroy, OH
Open Weeknights 'Till 9 • Friendly Service

Subscribe today.
992-2156

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

'1 young
LANGHORNE. Pa. (AP) _:_ A man's plan to have his
daughter meet the Cookie Monster crumbled when

Mon-Frl 8 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
· Sat 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Sun 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.

murder charge

The state. attorn~ ~ ·c ollliderlns Nch action ewn u a
fedenl appeals court reviews the ltatet' or!pW lawtuit allesing thlt Microsoft competet unfairly.
.
·
As attorneys general &amp;om ac1011 the councry meet .thil
week in Vennont, a group funded by Microloft'a competiton is trying to conyince them that Itt la~t product plaru
are more of the same.
·
The group, called ProComp, includes O~cle, Sun
Microrystetns and Netscape, a sublidiary of AOL Time
Warner. ProComp director Mike Pettit wrote a 59-page
paper friticizing Microsoft's practices and gave the presentation to the states Wednesday.
.

C.SI N

NEW HOME
CONSTRUCTION LOAN!

C1®WC3~

need is very important:'White said.
He also testified that an estimated $6.2
billion would likely be needed to com~
plete the ARC highway program, which
is an effort to link the region with the
interstate system.
"We are going through some of the
toughest terrain now,"White said.
The lawmaken on the panel were
generaUy supportive of the proposals put
forth by the witnesses.
Rep. Jerry CosteUo, D-IU., wanted to
know what was keeping corporate
America from investing in the region.
"I think a lot of it has to do with the
stereotype;' Patton said. He said he
bunched an initiative eight months ago
to try to convince business leaders there
are advantages to being in eastern Kentucky today.
The panel appeared supportive of the
witnesses proposals.
"We must keep in mind that 30 years
of investments, rebuilding Appalachia
cannot overcome 150 years of decline,"
said James Oberstar, D-Minn. "It is not
time for us to walk away."

maker.

•lli

,

But Patton says the agency needs at
least $75 million for 2002, and he says
the commission also could use an extra
$15 million annuaUy for high-tech
investments in Appalachia.
"We still have a long way to go," Pat~
ton said.
Former West Virginia Gov. Cecil
Underwood also weighed in on the subject.
"The region simply must be linked to
the Information Superhighway if it's to
participate in the nation's economic
mainstream," Underwood said. "The
region must not be left behind th.e
telecommunications infrastructure, as . it
was when the interstate highway system
was designed."
White also told lawmakers he wants
them to mandate that half ofARC funding should go to the region's 114 "distressed counties;· which have the area's
highest poverty and unemployment
rates. Currently 30 percent of the
agency's . funding goes toward those
counties.
"I think targeting the areas of greatest

WASHINGTON (AP) -State attorneys general worried
about the potential market impact of Microsoft Corp:s new
Windows XP and other producta are discWiing ~hedter to
IDe another ,antitrust lawsuit apimt the computer software

l

~lDal~tn ~lf(!)fa~ lila\\)}~=

WASHINGTON (AP) The
Appalachian Regional Commission has
helped bring jobs and roads to some of
the nation's most impoverished communities, but the federal agency ha.m't finished the · task, witnesses told a congressional panel WednesdaY:
Appalachian officials urged a congressional panel to pass legislation necessary
to keep the agency, created in 1965,
open for at least another fiv~ yean.
Congrc;ss last wrote a three-year reauthorization plan for the agency in 1998,
but ARC Federal Co-Chairman Jesse
White said a five-year plan would be
better.
' ,"It gives us, as someone said, a longer
shelflife to do our planning;'White said.
On the spending side, Kentucky Gov.
Paul Patton ·asked the subcommittee of
the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee to help secure
more money for the conunissiop.
Congress gave the commission $77
miUion in non-highway funds thiJ fiscal
year, an'd the Bush adrilinistratjon is
seeking $66 miUion for next year.:
,

may

New Mlcnlsoft sui possible

~ FARMERS BANK

•

Officials urge Congress to continue aid to region

Fungus lillY fuel

Graham brushes illness aside to lead crusade
weak, he will sit down and
preach.
.
"I've done that before and
would be happy to do that
again if that's what the Lord
wants me to do;· Graham said.
A doctor wiD be close by, as
wiD Graham's son, Franklin,
who is prepared to carry on.
with t)le sermon if his father
can't. ·
·
Graham's last crusade was in

lllund8t. Inn 21. 2111

WASHINGTON (AP) -· Federal prosecutors are said to
be dose to indicting several people in the 1996 bombing
that killed 19 American servicemen in Saudi Arabia.
Speaking on condition of anonymity bte Wednesday, bw ·
enforcement officials said the indictments could come as
early as Thursday.
.
The U.S. airmen were killed when a ttuck bomb exploded ouaide the Khobar Towers, their military housing com.
plex near Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.
dited from New York to stand trial with her son for a 1998
Iran initially was believed to have been involved, accordfillS
killing that could bring the death penalty.'
ing to government investigators. Saudi Arabia has yet to disclose its findings in an investigation carried out joindy with SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) _A disease that has killed
In court, Kimes, 66, agreed to have her arraignment postthe FBI.
thousands of oaks in Northern California has fire officials poned until June 28.
Worried those dead trees
become torches in the worst
Kimes and her son, Kenneth, 26, ai:e charged with the
fire season in years.
Man:h 1998 shooting of David Kazdin, 63, whose body was
Because they are drier than healthy trees, infected oaks are found in a trash b4J near Los Angeles International Airport.
Police believe he was killed after he discovered the KimeWASHINGTON (AP)- President Bush is sending Sec- more likely to catch fire and turn into condui,ts for racing
ses had forged his name on a loan. They allegedly took
retary of State Colin Powell to the Middle East next week Oames, fire prevention experts say.
tO search for prospects for peace, but Bush says a lasting truce When they burn, dead trees "generate a lot of heat and . $200,000. •
make fires burn hotter and make them more difficult to conremains the first priority.
·
The president said Wednesday he would like to see Israel trol," said Louis Blumberg, a spokesman for the California
and the Pales~adopt . confidence-building measutes Departmen~ of Forestry and Fire Protection. "Fires ignite
that were recommended by
fact-finding panel and more easily and,the trees become fuel:'
ZAMBOANGA, Philippines (AP) - An American
Since it fint appeared in 1995 in Mill Valley, Sudden Oak
embraced by the administration. These include a freeze on
woman whose brother was kidnapped and reportedly
· construction ofhoines for Israeli Jews on the West Bank and Death has killed tens of thousands of oak trees from SonoCounty, north of San Francisco, to Big Sur south of the beheaded by Muslim extremists in the Philippines made an
in Gaza.
.
city.
emotional radio appeal Thursday, urging the captives to have
But the United States cannot get to work on the recommercy on him and his children.
mendations by .the panel headed by former Senate Democ"If he's -alive, don't hurt him," Ana Sobero said from Caliratic leader George Mitchell "until the cycle of violence has
IllS
. fornia on Radio Mindanao Network, a nationally broadcast
'been crushed and broken;' Bush said.
' A cease-fire arranged two weeks ago by CIA Director LOS ANGELES (AP) .- Convicted murderer Sante station the rebels have spoken to via satellite telephone from
George,Tenet is teetering. Israeli soldiers killed a Palestinian Kimes appeared in court Wednesday, a day after being extra- the dense jungles where they are holding about two dozen
hostages, including two other Americans.
on Wednesday, and a Jewish si:ttler died in another W~
Bank shooting.
·

••

. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) Frail . from illness, the Rev.
Bil!y Graham said Tuesday he
will preach from a chair if
flecessary at his first crusade
Cince last fall .
•
Graham,
82,
suffers
from Parkinson's disease
and a _brain
condition
that kept him
from giving
the invocation at Presit Graham
dent Bush's
~
inauguration
~nJanuary.
: But Graham plans to preach
:each night at a crusade runoing from Thursday through
Sunday at Papa John's Cardinal
Stadium. Over it's four-day
ifun, organizers expect about
:150,000 people to att~nd the
:crusade, at which Graham wiU
fall people to commit their
!ives to Jesus Christ.
~ "I am grateful for the privilege of having the strength to
be here," Graham told
reporters at the stadium. "I
wasn't sure that we could do
:that. But we've put it in God's
hands, and I think the Lord has
allowed . me to have ·. the
•~trength".
: Graham said he feels as well
can be expected, given his
condition, but he has undergone several operations in the
past year and has been at the
. Mayo Clinic for most of2001.
He was released from the hospital about two weeks ago, he
said.
· He will try to s.tand .while
preaching and can hold ~nto
~he podium. But if he feels too

PageA7

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tors

�...

·'"""=_
..~. ......- .- _ .
.~
••• ~••• . ...._~••-::..
-~
.

Peat A e • The Ddv Sentinel

-""'-'------....,-......
:-"7
· - ... ...,.
• ........
~

__••
,_..- ........"_...
-..__..
-- ~
- ..._ .........
....
_.

-~
...

•

.;;-- _ ...

·~-~
~
. ~-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 21, 2001

'

1

.
••

Couple rnn hot and cold, but their love is ·constant .

DEAR ABBY: I have finaUy
found the love of my life. o·n caU her
Muriel.) We ~nd almost aU our
time together. We share similar interesa; we laugh and cry together.
Muriel and I do not live together, but
· we have a sexual relationship and
·believe we are soul mates.
' There's one big difference between
ADVICE
. us that's causing a major problem: We ·
· have different "body thermostats,"
which makes sleeping together diffi- with her, but if we can't be comfort-cult. When I am comfortable, Muriel able sleeping in the same bed, how
•is shivering. When she's comfortable, can we possibly last? Your thougha,
I am too warm.
please.- SLEEPLESS IN TOLE· When I visit her apartment, it's DO
·overly warm and srufiY with little
DEAR
SLEEPLESS: Your
ventilation. Muriel in turn complains beloved is the kind of woman for
about how chilly I keep my house.
whom IIanne! was invented. Please
. I am at my wit's end about how to don't let it come between you.
.solve this. I care enough for Muriel
DEAR ABBY: I'm writing about
•to want to spend the rest of my life the letter you printed from the

Dear

Abby

woman whose mother wants to celebrate her 50th anniversary surrounded by family and friends, even
though her husband has been dead
five yean. _ .....---:
You statec:khat she hadn't properly
dealt with the death of her 11usband
and could be in a stage of dementia.
You advised a medical and psychological evaluation at the time of her
next annual physical - if not sooner.
WeU, Abby, I personaUy think the
mother's idea is wonderful! Why anyone would condemn her idea and say
it would look foolish is beyond me.
It's romantic and wonderful that this
woman wants to celebrate ,a lifetime
of love and memories - after all,
that's what anniversaries are all about.
Yes, it's sad that her husband will
not be there in body. But it seems to

me that Moms intent is- that he be
there in spirit. Placing a photograph
at his. place setting to· honor his
memory is not exactly sayipg she
expects him to walk in, sit do\vn and
din~. A family portrait that includes
Mo~p holding his picture is hardly
something to get hot and bothered
over, either. I think it's a thoughtful
way of saying her husband is still in
her heart and memory.
Abby, I'm sure that woman is weU
aware that her husband is dead. She
probably cared for him while he wa5
dying, and now lives every day in an
empty house surrounded .by memories of their life together. I see no
crime in wanting 10 share this memory with family and friends. For you
to say the mother may be suffering
from dementia because. of this is
insulting.

Nation • World

The Daily ~tinel

In my opinion, the family ~nd
friends should be more supporuve.
Perhaps her 50th annivetsar}''celebration is a last-ditch effort to get those
around her to acknowledge her husband's life instead of dwelling on the
tragedy of his .death. - MOURNING FOR MOM IN TEXAS
DEAR MOURNING: Your letter is not the only one I received
from readers who disagreed with my
answer. And you could be right. Perhaps I analyzed the letter tqo much
with my head and·not enough with
my heart. After aU, by marking what
would have been her 50th anniver- ·
sary with a celebration of her marriage, she would be hurting no one.
And if it brings her comfort - why
not?

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Aaron Sorkin, creator of"The
West Wing"TV series, will be aUowed to enter a drug treatment p~ instead of serving prison time for possession
of cocame and hallucinogenic mushrooms.
Sorkin, 39, who pleaded guilty Tuesday to a misdemeanor
and _two fel~ny counts, must complete the two-year program
or ruk a pnson sentence and fuie.
"Needless to say, it is a relief to have a resolution regarding·
my legal situation;· he said. "I fully intend to proceed as
directed by the court and am eager to get back to work and
focus on what's important."
·
·
·
Sorkin was bound for Las Vegas when he was arrested
April15 at Burbank airport. He later was charged with one
felony count each of possession of cocaine and mushrooms
and a misdemeanor count of marijuana possession. He had
initiaUy pleaded innocent to the charges.

Dear Abby is written by Paulim
Phillips and daughtn jeanne Phillips.

·Bombing indictment.near
'

ENTERTAINMENT

.Meigs Chapter DAR names new officers
RACINE - New officers
: for the 2001..()4 ·term were
elected at a recent meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American
'Revolution at the home of
Karen Werry.
Elected were Abbie Stratton,
regent; Emma Ashley, vice
regent; Carol Sisson, chaplain;
, Anna Cleland, recording secretary; Patricia Holter, assistant
recording secretary; Peggy
Moore, corresponding secre-tary; Karen Werry, treasurer;
Rae Moore, registrar; June
Ashley, historian; and Pauline
Atkins, librarian. The new officers were installed by Eileen
·
Buck, chaplain.
• Regent Mary Rose gave
· recognition and a gift of Oow•ers to members reaching cer.tain years of membership and
service to the Chapter. Recognition went to Stratton, 10
years; Buck, Peggy Moore and
Rae Moore, 20 years; Grace
Eich, 60 years; Emma Ashley,
Mary Yost and June Ashley, 25
years.
Ako receiving floral arrangements for recognition of service were Peggy ·Moore and
Anna Cleland.
Patricia Holter and Mary
Powell were commended for
!heir efforts in the res~ration
~f the Chester Courthouse.
~estoration of historical build~ngs is one of the major objec~es of the National Society. ·
.

.."'

to supply soap operas in the
United States.
NEW YORK (AP) -"A
The deals give Los AngelesCivil Action" author Jonathan based Univision the right of
Harr will write a book about first refusal for thousands ol
the search for a long-missing hours of soaps from those
painting by the Italian artist countries and wiU allow UniCaravaggio.
Vision to start a second net"As he did so well in 'A work next year,
Civil Action,' Jon will teD an
The second network, called
absorbing story through the . Univision 2, wiU launch in
eyes and consciences of peo- January and is expected to g~t
pie engaged in a quest," Bob 50 percent of its audience
. Loomis, Random House vice from viewers new to Univipresident and executive edi- sion.
tor, said in a statement Tues- · In an exclusive partnership
with Colombian network
day.
The book has no title yet RCN Television, Univision
and no publication date has will buy at least 300 hours of
been set.
telenovelas, or soap operas,
"A Civil Action,'' published eyery year for the next five
in 1995, received a National years.
Book Critics Circle prize and
Univision also will buy a
was nominated fon National minimum of 800 hours of
Book Award. It was made into soap operas a year froin
a 1998 film starring John Tra- Venezuelan company Radio
volta and Robert Duvall.
Caracas Television, the companies said Monday. That deal
is for a decade.
The agreements are expectLOS ANGELES (AP)
ed to fiD at least one-quarter
Spanish-language network · of the programming space on
Univision said it will enter a Univision 2, but could fill
partnership with Venezuelan more, Univision, executives
and Colombian programmers said.

Jonathan Harr

INSTAll m- New officers of the DAR are from the lett, Pat Holter, Peggy Moore, Karen Werry,
Abbie Stratton, Emma Ashley, June Ashley, Carol Sisson, Pauline Atkins and Anna Cleland.
The Courthouse was built in your eyes or the color of your win the .election by conspiring
1823.The chapter in 1926 pro- skin mea~ nothing' nor ·should to target Holocaust survivors,
vided a now roof; in 1946 it they. Racism to them is an women and minorities with
paid for repairs to the structure anachronism. It's as remote to voter ·suppression ·and massive
with a gift from Mary Bennett, theJ'9 as eight-track tapes, yet disenfranchisement.
"What" is so hatmful and
regent at the time; and in 1976 when we look for guidance to
was instrumental in having the . many of the so-caDed civil hideous abo;_.t aU of this isn't
Courthouse placed on the rights leaders today, we get the that it's racism but that it's polNational Directory of Histori- same hatred and division that itics and personal ambition dis- .
cal Buildings.
Martin Luther King sought to guised as hypocrisy of the
Theme of the National heal four decades ago.
. highest order, because it pre"We got supposed civil rights tends to expose and extinguish,
Defense Report by Atkins was
champions raving for the TV but only undermines and den"Civil Rights:'
" For most young people cameras about how conserva- igrates the honest pursuit of
today," she said, "the shape of tives engaged in 'Nazi tactics' to quality."

Univision

rs

November in JacksoiwiUe, Fla. to continue evangelizing as
Another crusade is planned for long as he lives. "I don't know
October in Fresno, Calif.
how long that will be," he said.
Graham tode in a golf cart
On the Net:
'
onto the stadium's field to
www.louisviUecrusade.org
•
meet with reporters Tuesday.
He climbed out to speak, but
got back inside . the cart to
conse~ve strength under a
beating sun as he answered a
couple of questions.
The preacher said he intends

a

ma

Kimes fa

~~@~~~a~U'a®r:J
CP~O@f3~~~

Ull

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=

WASHINGTON (AP) - A New York company has
; recalled 13 varieties of a herbal drink product because it
::'J contains an acid that can ~e people sick anq is considered
to be a carcinogen.
· Blue ~ght_ Inc., o_fithaca, recalled the products ~~dn~
in coordinauon Wlth the Food and Drug Administration.
: No ilfuesses have been reported because of the product, the
FDA reported.
'
·
The drink products, which come in capsule or powder
· .form, were sold in bottles with the bbel "Treasures of the ·
' •· East:' Only products purchased befon: Au8wt 2ooo are
;;. being recalled.
.
.
.·
·
:= Products being recalled are labeled ·as .the following: Mu
: .Tong, Ba Zheng San, DaQS Gui Si Ni Tang, Dao Chi San,
~ Fu Fang Di Hu Tang, Gan Lu Xiao Du Dan, Kou Yan Ning.
Long Dan Xie Gan Tang, Pai Shi Tang. Xiao Ji Yin Zi, Xin
Yi San, Yang Yin XiaoYan Tang.
·
.

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:

Did =saults •Cookie Monttel'

'· !i.e was arrested for allesedly assaulting the furry blue Sesame.
Street chatacter.
.
·
Police say Lee P. McPhatter, upiet that the Cookie Mon- •
~ ster would not pose for a picture at the Sesame Pbce theme
~ park, shoved and kicked the employee inside th~ costume.
~ ~cPhatter, 22, ofWaldorf, Md., denies the allegauons:
"People started yelling at me that I should~ . ashamed of
• myself for hitting Cookie Monster. I did not kick or ~unch
; Cookie Monster. The cop did not want to hear my stde of
the story, and I got arrested," said McPhatt~, ';ho. d~cribed
the character as his 3-year-old daughter Minas favonte.
•. Middletown police said that21-year-old Jennie McNelis
suffered bruised ribs and a cervic~ sprain ~hen McPhatter
shoved her to thd ground, then kicked her m the head and
back.

t

i
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.

PRESCRIPTION PHONE 992·2995
E. Main • Pomeroy, OH
Open Weeknights 'Till 9 • Friendly Service

Subscribe today.
992-2156

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

'1 young
LANGHORNE. Pa. (AP) _:_ A man's plan to have his
daughter meet the Cookie Monster crumbled when

Mon-Frl 8 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
· Sat 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Sun 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.

murder charge

The state. attorn~ ~ ·c ollliderlns Nch action ewn u a
fedenl appeals court reviews the ltatet' or!pW lawtuit allesing thlt Microsoft competet unfairly.
.
·
As attorneys general &amp;om ac1011 the councry meet .thil
week in Vennont, a group funded by Microloft'a competiton is trying to conyince them that Itt la~t product plaru
are more of the same.
·
The group, called ProComp, includes O~cle, Sun
Microrystetns and Netscape, a sublidiary of AOL Time
Warner. ProComp director Mike Pettit wrote a 59-page
paper friticizing Microsoft's practices and gave the presentation to the states Wednesday.
.

C.SI N

NEW HOME
CONSTRUCTION LOAN!

C1®WC3~

need is very important:'White said.
He also testified that an estimated $6.2
billion would likely be needed to com~
plete the ARC highway program, which
is an effort to link the region with the
interstate system.
"We are going through some of the
toughest terrain now,"White said.
The lawmaken on the panel were
generaUy supportive of the proposals put
forth by the witnesses.
Rep. Jerry CosteUo, D-IU., wanted to
know what was keeping corporate
America from investing in the region.
"I think a lot of it has to do with the
stereotype;' Patton said. He said he
bunched an initiative eight months ago
to try to convince business leaders there
are advantages to being in eastern Kentucky today.
The panel appeared supportive of the
witnesses proposals.
"We must keep in mind that 30 years
of investments, rebuilding Appalachia
cannot overcome 150 years of decline,"
said James Oberstar, D-Minn. "It is not
time for us to walk away."

maker.

•lli

,

But Patton says the agency needs at
least $75 million for 2002, and he says
the commission also could use an extra
$15 million annuaUy for high-tech
investments in Appalachia.
"We still have a long way to go," Pat~
ton said.
Former West Virginia Gov. Cecil
Underwood also weighed in on the subject.
"The region simply must be linked to
the Information Superhighway if it's to
participate in the nation's economic
mainstream," Underwood said. "The
region must not be left behind th.e
telecommunications infrastructure, as . it
was when the interstate highway system
was designed."
White also told lawmakers he wants
them to mandate that half ofARC funding should go to the region's 114 "distressed counties;· which have the area's
highest poverty and unemployment
rates. Currently 30 percent of the
agency's . funding goes toward those
counties.
"I think targeting the areas of greatest

WASHINGTON (AP) -State attorneys general worried
about the potential market impact of Microsoft Corp:s new
Windows XP and other producta are discWiing ~hedter to
IDe another ,antitrust lawsuit apimt the computer software

l

~lDal~tn ~lf(!)fa~ lila\\)}~=

WASHINGTON (AP) The
Appalachian Regional Commission has
helped bring jobs and roads to some of
the nation's most impoverished communities, but the federal agency ha.m't finished the · task, witnesses told a congressional panel WednesdaY:
Appalachian officials urged a congressional panel to pass legislation necessary
to keep the agency, created in 1965,
open for at least another fiv~ yean.
Congrc;ss last wrote a three-year reauthorization plan for the agency in 1998,
but ARC Federal Co-Chairman Jesse
White said a five-year plan would be
better.
' ,"It gives us, as someone said, a longer
shelflife to do our planning;'White said.
On the spending side, Kentucky Gov.
Paul Patton ·asked the subcommittee of
the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee to help secure
more money for the conunissiop.
Congress gave the commission $77
miUion in non-highway funds thiJ fiscal
year, an'd the Bush adrilinistratjon is
seeking $66 miUion for next year.:
,

may

New Mlcnlsoft sui possible

~ FARMERS BANK

•

Officials urge Congress to continue aid to region

Fungus lillY fuel

Graham brushes illness aside to lead crusade
weak, he will sit down and
preach.
.
"I've done that before and
would be happy to do that
again if that's what the Lord
wants me to do;· Graham said.
A doctor wiD be close by, as
wiD Graham's son, Franklin,
who is prepared to carry on.
with t)le sermon if his father
can't. ·
·
Graham's last crusade was in

lllund8t. Inn 21. 2111

WASHINGTON (AP) -· Federal prosecutors are said to
be dose to indicting several people in the 1996 bombing
that killed 19 American servicemen in Saudi Arabia.
Speaking on condition of anonymity bte Wednesday, bw ·
enforcement officials said the indictments could come as
early as Thursday.
.
The U.S. airmen were killed when a ttuck bomb exploded ouaide the Khobar Towers, their military housing com.
plex near Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.
dited from New York to stand trial with her son for a 1998
Iran initially was believed to have been involved, accordfillS
killing that could bring the death penalty.'
ing to government investigators. Saudi Arabia has yet to disclose its findings in an investigation carried out joindy with SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) _A disease that has killed
In court, Kimes, 66, agreed to have her arraignment postthe FBI.
thousands of oaks in Northern California has fire officials poned until June 28.
Worried those dead trees
become torches in the worst
Kimes and her son, Kenneth, 26, ai:e charged with the
fire season in years.
Man:h 1998 shooting of David Kazdin, 63, whose body was
Because they are drier than healthy trees, infected oaks are found in a trash b4J near Los Angeles International Airport.
Police believe he was killed after he discovered the KimeWASHINGTON (AP)- President Bush is sending Sec- more likely to catch fire and turn into condui,ts for racing
ses had forged his name on a loan. They allegedly took
retary of State Colin Powell to the Middle East next week Oames, fire prevention experts say.
tO search for prospects for peace, but Bush says a lasting truce When they burn, dead trees "generate a lot of heat and . $200,000. •
make fires burn hotter and make them more difficult to conremains the first priority.
·
The president said Wednesday he would like to see Israel trol," said Louis Blumberg, a spokesman for the California
and the Pales~adopt . confidence-building measutes Departmen~ of Forestry and Fire Protection. "Fires ignite
that were recommended by
fact-finding panel and more easily and,the trees become fuel:'
ZAMBOANGA, Philippines (AP) - An American
Since it fint appeared in 1995 in Mill Valley, Sudden Oak
embraced by the administration. These include a freeze on
woman whose brother was kidnapped and reportedly
· construction ofhoines for Israeli Jews on the West Bank and Death has killed tens of thousands of oak trees from SonoCounty, north of San Francisco, to Big Sur south of the beheaded by Muslim extremists in the Philippines made an
in Gaza.
.
city.
emotional radio appeal Thursday, urging the captives to have
But the United States cannot get to work on the recommercy on him and his children.
mendations by .the panel headed by former Senate Democ"If he's -alive, don't hurt him," Ana Sobero said from Caliratic leader George Mitchell "until the cycle of violence has
IllS
. fornia on Radio Mindanao Network, a nationally broadcast
'been crushed and broken;' Bush said.
' A cease-fire arranged two weeks ago by CIA Director LOS ANGELES (AP) .- Convicted murderer Sante station the rebels have spoken to via satellite telephone from
George,Tenet is teetering. Israeli soldiers killed a Palestinian Kimes appeared in court Wednesday, a day after being extra- the dense jungles where they are holding about two dozen
hostages, including two other Americans.
on Wednesday, and a Jewish si:ttler died in another W~
Bank shooting.
·

••

. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) Frail . from illness, the Rev.
Bil!y Graham said Tuesday he
will preach from a chair if
flecessary at his first crusade
Cince last fall .
•
Graham,
82,
suffers
from Parkinson's disease
and a _brain
condition
that kept him
from giving
the invocation at Presit Graham
dent Bush's
~
inauguration
~nJanuary.
: But Graham plans to preach
:each night at a crusade runoing from Thursday through
Sunday at Papa John's Cardinal
Stadium. Over it's four-day
ifun, organizers expect about
:150,000 people to att~nd the
:crusade, at which Graham wiU
fall people to commit their
!ives to Jesus Christ.
~ "I am grateful for the privilege of having the strength to
be here," Graham told
reporters at the stadium. "I
wasn't sure that we could do
:that. But we've put it in God's
hands, and I think the Lord has
allowed . me to have ·. the
•~trength".
: Graham said he feels as well
can be expected, given his
condition, but he has undergone several operations in the
past year and has been at the
. Mayo Clinic for most of2001.
He was released from the hospital about two weeks ago, he
said.
· He will try to s.tand .while
preaching and can hold ~nto
~he podium. But if he feels too

PageA7

(F' :B) Farmers Bank
~ We're Your Bank

for Cifeill,

~

l,

'

'

2000 Pontiac Grand Am

ThrH tochOOH from •• , ........ ~ ••••• ,,,,,,,,$12,900

2001 PontlacGrandPrlxSE ............ $14,900
2001 Pontlqc'Grand Prix GT l door... $16,900
--l~I7Chevy$uburban4X4 ............ $17,950
1/2 Ton Ext. Cab Ch&amp;yV 4X4

s

choottfron'i ..................................... 17,950
Pontiac Sunflre ....................... $9,950

1996 Cadillac Eldorado ................. $14,900
1997 Olds Delta 88 .......................... $6,650
2000 Buick LeSabre .................. ~ ... $14,650
1995 Olds Achleva 2 door ................. $5,950
1991 ChevyS-10Ext. Cab4X4 .........$6,950
19991 Ton DuallyDiesel ............... $22,900
1987 Cadillac Deville.~ .................... $4,450

tors

�•
io

The Daily &amp;ntinel

..... A I • The Dilly SrnMnel

U.S. RouteI 33 accident

Page 81
HOUSTON (AP) - Whm
Andrea PU Yms ailed poli«',

11

dJe olfft-ed no specilics ;about
why 1be w~nkd officen to
come co her tuburban ~When m officer arrived,
polia "'Y· a Wd and pmiWd

•

'lHuRsll\v's

HIGHLIGHIS

Ya~

5uccincdy described
wiUt had just tran5piml in four
\Wmls:"l killed my children."
Yms, 36, M&lt; charged wirh

Officials review data on Ford's replacement tires:
WASHINGTON (AP) The head of .a congressional
. CQillnUI:tee investigating tire
safety said he is giving Ford
Motor Co. information about
the safety of its repbcement
tires so the automaker om
decide whelher to change irs
recaU.
House Commerce Commir:ree Chairman Billy Tauzin
wanis Ford to usc Jhe tires
. using the same mtlhods it
used to test the Firestone

Wilderness AT tires that !he
automaur
recalled
bst
monch .
Tauzin
" nude
the
announcement after offi!'i:lk
fulm lhe National Highway
Tnffic Safety Admill®'ation
met privarely wid! committee
staff and said it is too soon to
cbssify · Ford's replacement
tires as datlgerous. NHTSA
cold !he sulf it would examine lhe committee'i analysis
of lhe tires and respond with-

inamo~.

"Unfo
nately, NHTSA
officials despite their
cbinu yesteaby at our hearing - could not and would
not say that any of the
repbument rita on our list
were safe or should, in f.act, be
included in Ford's replacement prog12m,"Tauzin said in
a statement.
After !he meeting, the
ranking Democrat on the
committee criticized Tauzin

REEDSVlLLE - Eoastem
.Local athletes, gn!les sellell
through 12, playing fall sports.

for announcing during a
hemng Tuesday that claitm
data coUected by the stall"
shaM that Ford u reptacini
Firescone tires with some
odter brands that WI more

{fuotbaU. oolleyball. golf and
cheerleading) should ~
to play on June 26 or June 9,
fivm 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at !he
bigb school office.
A parent or leg;d guardian
must accompany aU athletes.
Students who C2Jillot attend
one of the registration periods
should contact the high
school at 985-3329 between
'7:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. 10
"mab other atr:utgemenu.
. · Packets will not be seilt
home this year. Srudents will
not be penni~ to panici. pari on opening day if paperwork is not complete4.
Physicals will be conducted
;It Holzer Mcip Clinic &lt;m
June 30 at 7 a.m.
Physical forms will be distributecf at registtation.

often.
The information "wai
released premarurely and wim
toiniimi regan! for the
real fean of coosumen," said
Rep. John DingeU, whose district includes Ford's suburban
Deuoit headquarters.

verY

Worl«lrs from Aber's Towing and Reet;~very of Ashland begin the
task of clearing a load of lumber from the median of U.S.
Route 30-just west of state Route 60 near HayesvilleTuesday
morning after an east bound semi tractor trailor went out of
control and crashed in the median. No other vehicles were
Involved according to authorities. (AP Photo)

..

Schools using lntemet
report cards to keep
parents infonned
WASHINGTON (AP) When report card day roUed
around for Pam Murphy's
children, she didn't watch the
mail for an official-looking
envelope or dig in a backpack
for a crumpled slip of paper.
Murphy had already .seen
lhe report cards online. .
The mother of four in
Sandy, Utah, clicked her way
to end-of-year grades and
teacher comments for her two
oldest school-aged children
last Friday, with a rype of program many schools are using
to keep parents in the loop.
The days of hiding lousy
report cards may soon come
tn an end for underachievers
everywhere. School sy~tems
nationwide are uploading student information from
grades and test scores to class
schedules, discipline referrals,
homework assignments and
' attendance records - to the
Internet. Using assigned passWords, parents can access the
information anytime, any-

•

s

21, 2111

J.R. HOuse not coming home to WVU
PITI'SBURGH (AP) - He is a
House divided no longn.
J.R.. House, a top prospect who
could become the Piasburgb Pirates'
catcher as early as next season. won't
interrupt his basebaU career co play
quartetNc:k ar WeK Virginia.
House, com for days about whether
to keep pbying basebaU in a fastaccelerating career or to pursue
another lifelong goal of playing major
college footbaU, apparendy w:IS
Sw.ayed to stay during a meeting
Monday with Pirates owner Kevin
McCbtchy and manager Lloyd

McClendon.

record for career passing yanls and
"The young man bas an opportunimet last week with West Virginia ry in fivnt ·of him md I don't fault
coach Rich Rodriguez. who wants all him," McClatchy said "He's being
of his quarterbacks on campus by this wooed to go back md be a homeweekend.
town hero in West Virginia md none
However, House caUed Rodriguez of us can understand lhe pressure he's
on Tuesday night md said he wouldn't under to pby football.
"Part of it has been a childhood
be reporting for summer drills.
"This is what I w.mt to do, for sure," dream and it's also been a childhood
House said "I caDed coach Rodriguez dream to play baseball. He's not trying
bst night to tell him and he wished to hold anybody hostage."
me lhe best ofluck."
It is possible that House could join
Mcilitchy said House wasn't trying the Pirates this season, after teams can
to strengthen his bargaining position expand their rosters on Sept. 1 -. - lhe
or force dte Pirates' hand by threatenbaD.
He holds dte national high school ing to pby footbaU.

" I wao just trying 10 figure out y.ohat
I Wllllted to do. I would haw: loved to
pby for West Virginia and reprnented
that state," House said Wednesday
before Double-A Altoona's game
against Reading~, think I could have
done it and we could haw: had ·success. But, at dte same time, this is lhe
career that I chose out of high school
md it bas been going great and has
been getting better."
House, considered !he Pirates' top
prospect. had dropped hints for days
he w:IS leaninj!; toward playing foot-

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

-Tri 's
slide
stops at

FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) "N ite Razov scored just 74
seconds it~.to the game, and lhe
United States moved to the
. verge 9f qualifying for next
year's World Cup by beating
Trinidad and Tobago 2-0.
The United States (4-0-1),
the leader in !he North and
&lt;16\tr.d 1\mmcall' ,....aitd •
.Caribbep! region, increased
its !fW jo 1~ pqint$, probably
a~drt of the
, on . n
a.mQuntm~ to qualify for
I '
tz •
•
next years tournament m
J~apd South J&lt;oFa. :

..

'•

Benpls waive .
WI LaVell Boyd
CINCINNATI (AP) The Cincinnati Bengals
waiv~d wide receiver LaVeU .
Boyd on Wednesday.
Boyd, a first-year player
fi:um Louisville, spent most of
his 2000 rookie season on the
Bengals' practice squad. He
appeared in the final two
games, with no statistics.
• . Boyd signed as a rookie free
· agent in the spring of 2000
and had four catches for 35
yards in the exhibition season.
He Was 'promoted fivm the
practice squad in November
wjlen Unebacker Marc Megna
Was ~ved.
·

NO.A punishes

--Mexico
state,

~

ALBl)QUJ'_RQUE, N.M.
(1\P) - The NCAA, citing
what the · chairman . of its
Committee · on . Infractions
temied "a rather serious case:'
placed the New Mexico
State's men's basketbaU program on fout years' prol:lation
and Unposed oth,er ~nctions .
The Violations 'date to 1996
when Neil McCarthy -who
led the Aggies to five consecutive' N~AA tournament
appearances - ~ the head
coach.
'
· The ruling also alfects lhe
re'cord of current ~ead coach
Loll Henson, on~ pf p Division I coaches with more than
700 career wins. Henson took
over the program at his alma
mater after McCarthy was
removed jwt before the start
of the 1997-98 season.
One of the sanctions
requires New Mexico State to
vacate the team's records for
the 19%-97 andl997-98 se~~
sons, when lhe Aggies finished
19-9 and 18-12, respectively.

L I ·N C 0 1.' N
AMI~IC:AN

LUIIUIII

i,
•

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - Twins manager
Tom KeUy has seen Ellis Burks pull a low
fastball 400 feet to left, push a slider over the
wall in right and hit four home runs in two
games.
Finally, Kelly thinks he's figured out how
to stop Burks.
"I guess we could walk him;' Kelly said.
"Or maybe we'll just plain tell him what's
com mg."
Burks already seems to know.
His fourth homer in seven at-bats - a
two-run shot - rallied Cleveland to a 4-2
victory Wednesday night over the first-place
1\vins and stopped the Indians' season-high,
··
five-game losing streak.
Burks, who hit three solo homers in
Cleveland's 10-9. loss in 12 innings Tuesday
night, broke a 2-2 tie in the fifth by connecting olf Joe Mays (8-5) for his 18th
homer.
"EUis did some great hitting on Tuesday
night, and got lhe big hit again tonight," said
Indians manager Charlie Manuel. "That's
what we need right now."
. The Indians ha'Ve not been behind by
.more than two games since May 4 and have
won four of the first six meetings between
the AL Central's top teams. Minnesota and
Cleveland will play 13 more times this season.
The Twins wasted a couple scoring opportunities and had a costly error and wild pitch
in Cleveland's four-run fifth.
· "We had a couple ofchal)ces but didn't get
that big hit," said Kelly, whose team stranded
11. "Their bullpen did a real nice job. AU of
them."
Rookie Jake Westbrook (1-0) got his fir.it
major league win in relief of Chuck Finley,
who came off the disabled list earlier in the
day and las.ted just 4 2-3 innings.
After using seven reli nws Tuesday, Manuel
used six more with Bob Wickman, who blew
his first save on Tuesday, pitching the ninth
for his 14th save.
Cleveland's bullpen combined for 4 1-3
shutout innings as it again b&lt;&gt;iled out an Indians starter, and Wickman got a chance at
redemption after Tuesday's disaster.
"Last night, I let the team down bad,"
Wickman said. "I didn 't want to do lhat
again. I'd be lying if I said it wasn't on my
'

M'

Democrats: Analysis shows
Bush tax cut cost could
actually reach $1.8 trillion
•

I

five

where.
Such systems have been
around for several years, but
didn't · reaUy take hold until
this past school year.
For Murphy, p,resident , J;/
the PTA at Mount · Jordan
Middle School, the system has
helped her track her ei'ghtlit-grade son Michael's test scores
and grades all year.
"That has helped me in
feeling good about the things
that he's doing," she said in an
interview Wednesday.
John Forbes, technology
specialist with the Fresno,
Calif., Unified School District, said posting gradt.~ for
parents has raised expectations
for students, who now know
"that more eyes are on them."
Forbes said such systems
have revolutionized both parent and teacher attitudes
about student records, since
teachers also can log on and
easily check their students'
grades and attendance in other
classes.

WASHINGTON (AP) found in ~esponse to a query
The tax cut signed into law by from Rangel that the tax bill
President Busll would cost would cost 1.8 trillion over
$467 billion more than . its the next decade under several
advertised .$1:35 trillion price key conditions. The total bud!ilg over 10 years without pro- get surplus over the next
visions that Democrats say decade is projected at $5.6 trilhide its true cost, according to lion, of which about $2.9 'trila
congressional
analysis lion is Social Securiry and
released Wednesday.
.
Medicare trust fund money.
Rep. Charles Rangel of The new estimate .is based
New York, senior Democrat on tax cuts that continue
on the tax-writing House through the end of fiscal year
Ways and Means Committee, 201 1, instead of expiring at th e
s~id the nonpartisan Joint end of calendar 2010 in
Comntittee on Taxation analy- some cases, even earlier - as
sis shows that the tax cut the current law requires. ·
championed by Republicans House Republicans say they
could jeopardize accounts set will pass legislation that would
aside for Social Security and remove the 2010 "sunset" proMedicare.
vision and make the ta·x cuts
'Just keeping the promises permanent.
I in IDC already enaCted taX bill
It also assumes that Congress
means the nation will already will act to limit the . impact of
be operating in the red," the alternative minimum tax
Rangel said. "They already so that it affects roughly the
have promised much more sam ~ number of taxpayers year
than they have paid for and left after year. Partly because of th e
it to future presidents. and tax cut and partly because of
future Congresses to clean up inflation, the number of taxthe mess."
payers hit by the · compl e~
The Joint Committee on alternative tax is projected· to
Taxation, which does official grow from 1.4 million this
tax bill estimates for Congress, year to 35.5 mill ion in 2010.

I f1yr J

GOOD DAY IN THE QUEEN CITY~ Cincinnati Reds' Jason LaRue (23) Is congratulated by Sean Casey, left,
and Aaron Boone (17), after LaRue hit a three-run horne ,run Wednesday. (AP)

Reds win first home
game s ,nee May 26, 11·3
CINCINNATI (AP) -· Every time a Cincinnati
Rech hitter circled the bases to a standing ovation,
manager Bob Boone got a littie more nervous.
Up by 11 runs after five innings, he cou.ld barely
stand i\.
'
As the Reds piled up a season-high four homers
and pulled away to a slump-busting 11-3 victory
Wednesday over lhe Milwaukee Brewers, the manager fidgeted through one of his mC?st unsettling afternoons.
The Reds winning big at Cinergy Field? Naw,
couldn't be.
·
"ActuaUy, I was reilly nervous," Boone sajd. "I wasn't used to ·lhat."
Boone, his players and their fans have gotten used
to only one thing at Cinergy Field this season - losing.
.
•. ·
1
Losing players, Losing games. Los g late leads. Losing by big margins. Losing in stran ~ ways; Name it,
~{'

they'd done it repeatedly since their last home victory, way back on May 26.
Since then, the. Reds had lost ni~e consecutive
home games. Their longest stretch without a home
victory since 1986 put them on pace to shatter all
kinds of records for home-field futility.
Think the 1962 Mets were bad? These Reds have
been much worse at home, gomg 8-26. The Reds
already are nearly halfWay to the Mets' NL record of
58 home losses, on pace to shatier the 1939 Browns'
major league record of 59 losses.
The Browns?. Why, they're even worse than the
Bengals, lhat lowly NFL team right down the river
that won three of it&lt; eight home games last season a better winning percentage.
That's . why Boone c~uldn't relax when Jason
LaRue.hit his .first homer m more than a month duemg a six-run fourth mmng. Not when Sean Casey
, PIHH ... Reds, IS

PIHSe ... nibe, IS

'

·woods taRes on Westchester in Buick·ctassic
HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) -Unable
to win' the real thing last week .at
Southern Hills, Tiger Woods looks
forward to playing the U.S. Open-like
course at the Westchester Country
Club.
.
Woods has avoided the Buick Classic aU but one year since turning pro
because it oftel! was played the week
before the Open.Woods usuaUy takes
that week to polish his game.
"To me, this golf course with its difficulry, how they likp to set it up right
before the Open - high rough, fast,
ha!"d greens - it's great preparation:·
Woods said. ·

t

But playing it the Woods said, but they are precious just
·
week before the the same.
Open "would wear
"T"ere's such a high when you are
me out:'Woods sa1d. playing in a major championship and
No major champi- . you got to put that aside and say, You
onship is at stake know what?"Woods said."There's just
starting Thursday at a bigger high this week· because it's a
the Buick Classic, but whole new week. I take great pride in
Woods said he has what I do and 1 am going to go out
le~rned to get over there and give it everything 1·have got
Woodl
disappointments like to try and get myself in contention
. last week when he and hopefuUy to win."
ended ·hi1 streak of winning four
Woods has played twice before at
major titles. Victories in regular tour Westch ~ster. In 1994, as an amateur,
eJents are easier to come by than in he missed the cut. In 1997, he finished
majors because of their sheer number, tied for 43rd. ·

Though short by modern-day PGA
Tour , standards at 6,722 yards, the
Westchester Co untry Club is narrow
and thickly wooded, with ankle-deep
rough and undulating greens.
Woods said he only hit his driver
four times off the tee during Wednesday's pro-am.He also used his 3-wood
on several holes on which he will
probably use a 2-iron during the tournament.'
"I played a little more aggressive off
the tees just to .see where it would end
up," Woods said after a casual. practice
round of 2-under 69.

PleaH -

luldc, IS ·

�•
io

The Daily &amp;ntinel

..... A I • The Dilly SrnMnel

U.S. RouteI 33 accident

Page 81
HOUSTON (AP) - Whm
Andrea PU Yms ailed poli«',

11

dJe olfft-ed no specilics ;about
why 1be w~nkd officen to
come co her tuburban ~When m officer arrived,
polia "'Y· a Wd and pmiWd

•

'lHuRsll\v's

HIGHLIGHIS

Ya~

5uccincdy described
wiUt had just tran5piml in four
\Wmls:"l killed my children."
Yms, 36, M&lt; charged wirh

Officials review data on Ford's replacement tires:
WASHINGTON (AP) The head of .a congressional
. CQillnUI:tee investigating tire
safety said he is giving Ford
Motor Co. information about
the safety of its repbcement
tires so the automaker om
decide whelher to change irs
recaU.
House Commerce Commir:ree Chairman Billy Tauzin
wanis Ford to usc Jhe tires
. using the same mtlhods it
used to test the Firestone

Wilderness AT tires that !he
automaur
recalled
bst
monch .
Tauzin
" nude
the
announcement after offi!'i:lk
fulm lhe National Highway
Tnffic Safety Admill®'ation
met privarely wid! committee
staff and said it is too soon to
cbssify · Ford's replacement
tires as datlgerous. NHTSA
cold !he sulf it would examine lhe committee'i analysis
of lhe tires and respond with-

inamo~.

"Unfo
nately, NHTSA
officials despite their
cbinu yesteaby at our hearing - could not and would
not say that any of the
repbument rita on our list
were safe or should, in f.act, be
included in Ford's replacement prog12m,"Tauzin said in
a statement.
After !he meeting, the
ranking Democrat on the
committee criticized Tauzin

REEDSVlLLE - Eoastem
.Local athletes, gn!les sellell
through 12, playing fall sports.

for announcing during a
hemng Tuesday that claitm
data coUected by the stall"
shaM that Ford u reptacini
Firescone tires with some
odter brands that WI more

{fuotbaU. oolleyball. golf and
cheerleading) should ~
to play on June 26 or June 9,
fivm 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at !he
bigb school office.
A parent or leg;d guardian
must accompany aU athletes.
Students who C2Jillot attend
one of the registration periods
should contact the high
school at 985-3329 between
'7:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. 10
"mab other atr:utgemenu.
. · Packets will not be seilt
home this year. Srudents will
not be penni~ to panici. pari on opening day if paperwork is not complete4.
Physicals will be conducted
;It Holzer Mcip Clinic &lt;m
June 30 at 7 a.m.
Physical forms will be distributecf at registtation.

often.
The information "wai
released premarurely and wim
toiniimi regan! for the
real fean of coosumen," said
Rep. John DingeU, whose district includes Ford's suburban
Deuoit headquarters.

verY

Worl«lrs from Aber's Towing and Reet;~very of Ashland begin the
task of clearing a load of lumber from the median of U.S.
Route 30-just west of state Route 60 near HayesvilleTuesday
morning after an east bound semi tractor trailor went out of
control and crashed in the median. No other vehicles were
Involved according to authorities. (AP Photo)

..

Schools using lntemet
report cards to keep
parents infonned
WASHINGTON (AP) When report card day roUed
around for Pam Murphy's
children, she didn't watch the
mail for an official-looking
envelope or dig in a backpack
for a crumpled slip of paper.
Murphy had already .seen
lhe report cards online. .
The mother of four in
Sandy, Utah, clicked her way
to end-of-year grades and
teacher comments for her two
oldest school-aged children
last Friday, with a rype of program many schools are using
to keep parents in the loop.
The days of hiding lousy
report cards may soon come
tn an end for underachievers
everywhere. School sy~tems
nationwide are uploading student information from
grades and test scores to class
schedules, discipline referrals,
homework assignments and
' attendance records - to the
Internet. Using assigned passWords, parents can access the
information anytime, any-

•

s

21, 2111

J.R. HOuse not coming home to WVU
PITI'SBURGH (AP) - He is a
House divided no longn.
J.R.. House, a top prospect who
could become the Piasburgb Pirates'
catcher as early as next season. won't
interrupt his basebaU career co play
quartetNc:k ar WeK Virginia.
House, com for days about whether
to keep pbying basebaU in a fastaccelerating career or to pursue
another lifelong goal of playing major
college footbaU, apparendy w:IS
Sw.ayed to stay during a meeting
Monday with Pirates owner Kevin
McCbtchy and manager Lloyd

McClendon.

record for career passing yanls and
"The young man bas an opportunimet last week with West Virginia ry in fivnt ·of him md I don't fault
coach Rich Rodriguez. who wants all him," McClatchy said "He's being
of his quarterbacks on campus by this wooed to go back md be a homeweekend.
town hero in West Virginia md none
However, House caUed Rodriguez of us can understand lhe pressure he's
on Tuesday night md said he wouldn't under to pby football.
"Part of it has been a childhood
be reporting for summer drills.
"This is what I w.mt to do, for sure," dream and it's also been a childhood
House said "I caDed coach Rodriguez dream to play baseball. He's not trying
bst night to tell him and he wished to hold anybody hostage."
me lhe best ofluck."
It is possible that House could join
Mcilitchy said House wasn't trying the Pirates this season, after teams can
to strengthen his bargaining position expand their rosters on Sept. 1 -. - lhe
or force dte Pirates' hand by threatenbaD.
He holds dte national high school ing to pby footbaU.

" I wao just trying 10 figure out y.ohat
I Wllllted to do. I would haw: loved to
pby for West Virginia and reprnented
that state," House said Wednesday
before Double-A Altoona's game
against Reading~, think I could have
done it and we could haw: had ·success. But, at dte same time, this is lhe
career that I chose out of high school
md it bas been going great and has
been getting better."
House, considered !he Pirates' top
prospect. had dropped hints for days
he w:IS leaninj!; toward playing foot-

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

-Tri 's
slide
stops at

FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) "N ite Razov scored just 74
seconds it~.to the game, and lhe
United States moved to the
. verge 9f qualifying for next
year's World Cup by beating
Trinidad and Tobago 2-0.
The United States (4-0-1),
the leader in !he North and
&lt;16\tr.d 1\mmcall' ,....aitd •
.Caribbep! region, increased
its !fW jo 1~ pqint$, probably
a~drt of the
, on . n
a.mQuntm~ to qualify for
I '
tz •
•
next years tournament m
J~apd South J&lt;oFa. :

..

'•

Benpls waive .
WI LaVell Boyd
CINCINNATI (AP) The Cincinnati Bengals
waiv~d wide receiver LaVeU .
Boyd on Wednesday.
Boyd, a first-year player
fi:um Louisville, spent most of
his 2000 rookie season on the
Bengals' practice squad. He
appeared in the final two
games, with no statistics.
• . Boyd signed as a rookie free
· agent in the spring of 2000
and had four catches for 35
yards in the exhibition season.
He Was 'promoted fivm the
practice squad in November
wjlen Unebacker Marc Megna
Was ~ved.
·

NO.A punishes

--Mexico
state,

~

ALBl)QUJ'_RQUE, N.M.
(1\P) - The NCAA, citing
what the · chairman . of its
Committee · on . Infractions
temied "a rather serious case:'
placed the New Mexico
State's men's basketbaU program on fout years' prol:lation
and Unposed oth,er ~nctions .
The Violations 'date to 1996
when Neil McCarthy -who
led the Aggies to five consecutive' N~AA tournament
appearances - ~ the head
coach.
'
· The ruling also alfects lhe
re'cord of current ~ead coach
Loll Henson, on~ pf p Division I coaches with more than
700 career wins. Henson took
over the program at his alma
mater after McCarthy was
removed jwt before the start
of the 1997-98 season.
One of the sanctions
requires New Mexico State to
vacate the team's records for
the 19%-97 andl997-98 se~~
sons, when lhe Aggies finished
19-9 and 18-12, respectively.

L I ·N C 0 1.' N
AMI~IC:AN

LUIIUIII

i,
•

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - Twins manager
Tom KeUy has seen Ellis Burks pull a low
fastball 400 feet to left, push a slider over the
wall in right and hit four home runs in two
games.
Finally, Kelly thinks he's figured out how
to stop Burks.
"I guess we could walk him;' Kelly said.
"Or maybe we'll just plain tell him what's
com mg."
Burks already seems to know.
His fourth homer in seven at-bats - a
two-run shot - rallied Cleveland to a 4-2
victory Wednesday night over the first-place
1\vins and stopped the Indians' season-high,
··
five-game losing streak.
Burks, who hit three solo homers in
Cleveland's 10-9. loss in 12 innings Tuesday
night, broke a 2-2 tie in the fifth by connecting olf Joe Mays (8-5) for his 18th
homer.
"EUis did some great hitting on Tuesday
night, and got lhe big hit again tonight," said
Indians manager Charlie Manuel. "That's
what we need right now."
. The Indians ha'Ve not been behind by
.more than two games since May 4 and have
won four of the first six meetings between
the AL Central's top teams. Minnesota and
Cleveland will play 13 more times this season.
The Twins wasted a couple scoring opportunities and had a costly error and wild pitch
in Cleveland's four-run fifth.
· "We had a couple ofchal)ces but didn't get
that big hit," said Kelly, whose team stranded
11. "Their bullpen did a real nice job. AU of
them."
Rookie Jake Westbrook (1-0) got his fir.it
major league win in relief of Chuck Finley,
who came off the disabled list earlier in the
day and las.ted just 4 2-3 innings.
After using seven reli nws Tuesday, Manuel
used six more with Bob Wickman, who blew
his first save on Tuesday, pitching the ninth
for his 14th save.
Cleveland's bullpen combined for 4 1-3
shutout innings as it again b&lt;&gt;iled out an Indians starter, and Wickman got a chance at
redemption after Tuesday's disaster.
"Last night, I let the team down bad,"
Wickman said. "I didn 't want to do lhat
again. I'd be lying if I said it wasn't on my
'

M'

Democrats: Analysis shows
Bush tax cut cost could
actually reach $1.8 trillion
•

I

five

where.
Such systems have been
around for several years, but
didn't · reaUy take hold until
this past school year.
For Murphy, p,resident , J;/
the PTA at Mount · Jordan
Middle School, the system has
helped her track her ei'ghtlit-grade son Michael's test scores
and grades all year.
"That has helped me in
feeling good about the things
that he's doing," she said in an
interview Wednesday.
John Forbes, technology
specialist with the Fresno,
Calif., Unified School District, said posting gradt.~ for
parents has raised expectations
for students, who now know
"that more eyes are on them."
Forbes said such systems
have revolutionized both parent and teacher attitudes
about student records, since
teachers also can log on and
easily check their students'
grades and attendance in other
classes.

WASHINGTON (AP) found in ~esponse to a query
The tax cut signed into law by from Rangel that the tax bill
President Busll would cost would cost 1.8 trillion over
$467 billion more than . its the next decade under several
advertised .$1:35 trillion price key conditions. The total bud!ilg over 10 years without pro- get surplus over the next
visions that Democrats say decade is projected at $5.6 trilhide its true cost, according to lion, of which about $2.9 'trila
congressional
analysis lion is Social Securiry and
released Wednesday.
.
Medicare trust fund money.
Rep. Charles Rangel of The new estimate .is based
New York, senior Democrat on tax cuts that continue
on the tax-writing House through the end of fiscal year
Ways and Means Committee, 201 1, instead of expiring at th e
s~id the nonpartisan Joint end of calendar 2010 in
Comntittee on Taxation analy- some cases, even earlier - as
sis shows that the tax cut the current law requires. ·
championed by Republicans House Republicans say they
could jeopardize accounts set will pass legislation that would
aside for Social Security and remove the 2010 "sunset" proMedicare.
vision and make the ta·x cuts
'Just keeping the promises permanent.
I in IDC already enaCted taX bill
It also assumes that Congress
means the nation will already will act to limit the . impact of
be operating in the red," the alternative minimum tax
Rangel said. "They already so that it affects roughly the
have promised much more sam ~ number of taxpayers year
than they have paid for and left after year. Partly because of th e
it to future presidents. and tax cut and partly because of
future Congresses to clean up inflation, the number of taxthe mess."
payers hit by the · compl e~
The Joint Committee on alternative tax is projected· to
Taxation, which does official grow from 1.4 million this
tax bill estimates for Congress, year to 35.5 mill ion in 2010.

I f1yr J

GOOD DAY IN THE QUEEN CITY~ Cincinnati Reds' Jason LaRue (23) Is congratulated by Sean Casey, left,
and Aaron Boone (17), after LaRue hit a three-run horne ,run Wednesday. (AP)

Reds win first home
game s ,nee May 26, 11·3
CINCINNATI (AP) -· Every time a Cincinnati
Rech hitter circled the bases to a standing ovation,
manager Bob Boone got a littie more nervous.
Up by 11 runs after five innings, he cou.ld barely
stand i\.
'
As the Reds piled up a season-high four homers
and pulled away to a slump-busting 11-3 victory
Wednesday over lhe Milwaukee Brewers, the manager fidgeted through one of his mC?st unsettling afternoons.
The Reds winning big at Cinergy Field? Naw,
couldn't be.
·
"ActuaUy, I was reilly nervous," Boone sajd. "I wasn't used to ·lhat."
Boone, his players and their fans have gotten used
to only one thing at Cinergy Field this season - losing.
.
•. ·
1
Losing players, Losing games. Los g late leads. Losing by big margins. Losing in stran ~ ways; Name it,
~{'

they'd done it repeatedly since their last home victory, way back on May 26.
Since then, the. Reds had lost ni~e consecutive
home games. Their longest stretch without a home
victory since 1986 put them on pace to shatter all
kinds of records for home-field futility.
Think the 1962 Mets were bad? These Reds have
been much worse at home, gomg 8-26. The Reds
already are nearly halfWay to the Mets' NL record of
58 home losses, on pace to shatier the 1939 Browns'
major league record of 59 losses.
The Browns?. Why, they're even worse than the
Bengals, lhat lowly NFL team right down the river
that won three of it&lt; eight home games last season a better winning percentage.
That's . why Boone c~uldn't relax when Jason
LaRue.hit his .first homer m more than a month duemg a six-run fourth mmng. Not when Sean Casey
, PIHH ... Reds, IS

PIHSe ... nibe, IS

'

·woods taRes on Westchester in Buick·ctassic
HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) -Unable
to win' the real thing last week .at
Southern Hills, Tiger Woods looks
forward to playing the U.S. Open-like
course at the Westchester Country
Club.
.
Woods has avoided the Buick Classic aU but one year since turning pro
because it oftel! was played the week
before the Open.Woods usuaUy takes
that week to polish his game.
"To me, this golf course with its difficulry, how they likp to set it up right
before the Open - high rough, fast,
ha!"d greens - it's great preparation:·
Woods said. ·

t

But playing it the Woods said, but they are precious just
·
week before the the same.
Open "would wear
"T"ere's such a high when you are
me out:'Woods sa1d. playing in a major championship and
No major champi- . you got to put that aside and say, You
onship is at stake know what?"Woods said."There's just
starting Thursday at a bigger high this week· because it's a
the Buick Classic, but whole new week. I take great pride in
Woods said he has what I do and 1 am going to go out
le~rned to get over there and give it everything 1·have got
Woodl
disappointments like to try and get myself in contention
. last week when he and hopefuUy to win."
ended ·hi1 streak of winning four
Woods has played twice before at
major titles. Victories in regular tour Westch ~ster. In 1994, as an amateur,
eJents are easier to come by than in he missed the cut. In 1997, he finished
majors because of their sheer number, tied for 43rd. ·

Though short by modern-day PGA
Tour , standards at 6,722 yards, the
Westchester Co untry Club is narrow
and thickly wooded, with ankle-deep
rough and undulating greens.
Woods said he only hit his driver
four times off the tee during Wednesday's pro-am.He also used his 3-wood
on several holes on which he will
probably use a 2-iron during the tournament.'
"I played a little more aggressive off
the tees just to .see where it would end
up," Woods said after a casual. practice
round of 2-under 69.

PleaH -

luldc, IS ·

�p

Of9 M'ffspart, Ohio

I

The Daily Sentinel

T rm' p.J

Bonds breaks more records
during home run binge

'liD

Montreal fO its third 105&lt; in a
Bany BondJ is trying fO row, pitching sewn innings
keep his reconl-bruking and not allowing an earned
home run binge in perspec- run.
tiYe.
"I'm not chasing anybody,"
Bonds said after hilling his
38th homer to break two
major league records in San
Francisco's 8-6 victory at San
Wade Miller aUowed four
Diego on Wrdnesday night. hits in ~n innings to win his
"The season doesn't end in fifth smight home decision as
June...
Houston beat Colorado and
Bonds bit a twO-run shot in swqlt the three-game series.
the eighth inning oft' reliever
Miller (8-3) gave up two
Rodney Myers to brealc a tie runs, one Mlk and s1ruck out
with ~e Jackson (1969) six ro mnain undefeated at
and Mark McGWite (1998) ·cor Enron Field since Sept. 13,
the most homen before the 2000.
All-Star break.
Ron Villone (1 cJ) }!ilve up
Bonds also became the four runs and seven hits in
quickrst to 38, doing it in his five-plus innings ro take the
team's 71st game. Babe Ruth loss.
bit 38 in 88 games in 1928.
"It's all right. We're winning
now," Bonds said. "We're playing better baseball. It's a lot
more ~oyable when you're
Sanuny Sosa hit two home
winning games."
runs, including a grand slam, as
Calvin Mumy lud a career- Chicago snapped a 13-game
high four bits, including a losing streak at St. Louis.
~run homer. and scoml
Julian TaY31ez (5-4) allowed
tluee runs. He also had a triple two runs, eight hiu, wallced
and two singles.
three and struck out five in
In other NL games, Cincin- seven innings for the Cubs,
nati beat Milwaukee 11-3; who had not won at Busch
Atlanta defeated Florida 7-2; Stadium since Oct. 2, 1999.
Philadelphia topped PitaThe loss snapped a fiveburgh 9-5; New York edged game winning slleak for the
Montreal 4-3; Howron beat Cardinals, who had won eight
Colorado
7-2;
Chicago straight at hom~ and are 5-1
defeated St. Louis 9-4; and Los on their 12-game homestand.
Angeles edged Arizona 4-3.
The Cubs have won six of
San Diego catcher Ben their last 11.
Davis said Bonds dido 't even
Mike Matthews
(2-3)
gee his arms fully extended.
allowed three runs on six hits
"If anyone knows how to and struck out four in four
pitch to him, let me know:• innings.
Davis said. It seems like he is
so locked in right now, he hits
,alm~~t anything you throw

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••

p.m, •

2 p.m. • July 1 • FX

I

final two oua of the ninth for the win. Keith Foulke pitchtti
the A's, who won for just the the ninth for his 16th save. :
· second lime in seven pnes.

1. (1) ~~~~2. (2) - 3. (I)
4. (I)

10. (-)

Crow's
Family
Restaurant
Featuring
Kentucky
.FrtedChlck.n

·Athletics

Free Blood Pressure'·&amp;
Diabetes Screeqi~g:

.

.
Friday,
22
2:00pm to 5:00 pm ·

Mariners 4 ·
in

'

?

I

228M•InSt.
Pomeroy, Ohio
or~veWt.,-w

Thru

••
•

992-5432

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

••
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17

Pirates 5

:f:~~e:as~:SDettoit

Exper...Len~~
.
DISH Net WOTA.

•
I

St. At. 248
Chester 985·3308

•

NIKE • REEBOK· ASICS
EASTLAND- DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES- DOCKERS

·Mils 4,
Expos 3
Timo Perez and Robin Ventura homered in the fiflt
inning . against Javier Vazquez
(5-9), and New York won its
•season-high fourth straight
game.
AI Leiter (4-5) sent visiting

!!

I

_

........... , . . , . . _

106 North
Second

Avenue
Middleport, OH

OnlY 135.99/mo.

hlmtelf In position to win
enouah times. eventually he
w!Uwln.
Some would uy Ricky
Rudd tested that premise

2111 N. Second
\

992·5627

Middleport

~UI!ACIIutilon Ftt- rnt -~ ~

a1

mph, May 13, 2000

NetMN: A ChevrOlet t\81

won two or lhe previoUs
three events.

·V..Tum.
...... ,_......,
Dnf N A SCARnis ~.

J.n ••,..

710 -

11'/ / GIIrJnn t'n nllnu.-~ lo hiJI'o'

•..,,. rtlldial r.-1/JIIuns M#h Iris Jlrp·

/uthrr;

) Q},

BicklimJ, und ltis niiJih·

otlft'l' In ,, ._. Wln.rlnn ( ·Np

IJiJ~I'

llllf,er severely, but
eventually. at rainy weather
c~ared out of the Pocono
Mountains, Rudd &amp;at what
his record end his career
Hid he deserved! a ~o~lctory
In the Pocono 500. "
The numbers finally came
up rl&amp;ht for Ruc:k! 1 an&lt;:l

'E"""•

eomeone
nctlced it a

r time .

Until Frld , wne Rudd
won the pole, It hid been
28 ractt since he'd won
one. UnUI Sunday. when he

-

Dnr NASCAR Th i1 Werk.

Harvlck was clearly superior

to everyone else in the 300mller al the new Ktntucky
track, I'Oidin&amp; ott Gre&amp; Biffle

reputedly 1R1r ceuuon
rtaae down the stretch .
Harvic::k palled a stem
test. wlnnln&amp; on a saturday
nl&amp;ht before ttyina to Pocono
for Sunday's Cup event,

where he flnlthed 1~1h . It
was hit Hcond BGN ~o~ictmy
_of the season.

NASCAR

T~ll

tho-·-..-""

Karsyn (11), Zachery (6)

Week

Wltollo
•rt
•1 wouldn't UJ'I'm 100 percent,

PaM Wlrieton Cup ctwmpiof1 Dale
Jarrett'l run It the 2001 tiUe tlowtd ~
Injury, It hln&amp;ln&amp; ·in tne belt he can.
Jarren •uttered a rib lrtiury in a
qualifytn&amp; erath In late May et Lowe:t
Motor SPMd\~t), and tne discomfort 11 at
leatl partially responsible for the feet that
Jeff Gordon hal been able to wrest the
points ~aG away from Jarrett.
A thlrd:plaee flnlth at Pocono algneled
Jlffett 11 almost fully reccwered, snd he Is
only 3e pointt behind Gordon 11 the
clrcutt heads to the Welt coast for the
Start Point roed race.
- : Hlcl&lt;Oty, N.C.

but tt didn't bather me at au (at Pocono)
- I inlan not enoiJih 10 make any

dltference - and I don't have a tot ot
sorenesa after the race. this is really the
flrtt week that I haven 't had that, so I' m
at the point where it'i not a factor one
way or the other enymore:

- - - N i t o l p t a ..... a
uotoron t . - o Uko l!oltJ - ? ' It

helps tremendously. Before Ricky came
elona. for a number of years there,
~therln&amp; Information and doln&amp; different
thlna:s end tryln&amp; to stay ahead of the
&amp;arne WBI totally up to TOdd (Panott) and

our craw. Now we have someone we can
rely on. They tell ua thlnp, It's somethin&amp;
you can really believe In, and there's no ·
substitute for that. Ricky (Rudel) hae the
experience. ·... Todd end Michael
(McSwalm c:tnlcete well, and Ricky
and I communi te welt .~
•Huw doJ!I"'
Flltlnc RUCIII 1o
"...,.......' ~~ · m really excited for Alctcv
and tne entire team. 1think, jutt like mott
evel')'boct)l, we 're aniazed It's taktn thlt
IOn&amp; for them to win. It's Jutt been
clrcumstanctt, but If you kHP puttlna
yourult in that poJitlon tone 100\Jih, lt'J

Ato:44

7001 WIN\ ION lUP \(HW!Jlt
Sonomo, C.IK.

Joliet.
DIJIOnaIii.- · Flo.

July22
July29

l.oLdon, N.H.

~-.Po.

IIIlO Of THE

l'lro!o: Start (April 29. 1984, ot
Mertln"llle. Ve.), pole (Feb. 1. 1995, o!
Daytona Beach, Fie.), win (Au&amp;. 1, 1991,
at Brooklyn, Mich.)
--438racea,27 .
vlctorltl. 138 tot&gt;flve finishes, 200 top
10t, 12 poleJ, over SS0.3 million In
e~~rn1nca

C.: No. 88 UPS Ford Teuru1, owned b)'
Aobort Yltaa
CMW etMf: Todd P•rott
-:Kallay
C - : Jeoon (26), Netalee (13),

wm

luclllllot .loMI VI. , _ .......,
The 7eth liP of the Pocono 500 aew 1 c111sh lnvolvlnl
t710 two youn1 DodCe drl..,o, who dloqrHd on t110
cruclol mottor ol who hit w11om. 'Bucklhot Will P!llhlill
out to thl Mil, end he jUit turned It tNitll from thl WIN.

.-.~--

I

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111 1,.
7 •ldFoot-11•-•
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lr--

IUlCH IIRMDI/If'O'W=
FLORENCE. My. ~ kevin

JOin&amp; to hlll&gt;POn."

••••••••••••

wr.nHot-

Ho hK me whon I woo 101111 unGtmeath him,' Letner
uld. 'K (Jonu' Cll) Wll puahln&amp; oo much,1he '01'
(Lallie~ 1101 In 1he beck Of me: Jon01 uld. ·K Wll
mo10 Olo rocinldeelthen enythln&amp; ... .-y·o fouK,'

WIN'aNot

-··-Dutton . . .

• -

Ricky Rudel hll

flnithld In the top 10 llx
ltrlljht 11Cfl.

NAIO#R T7t5ot
lila
.,._, "8oth lheao IUYI hl\'t hid thtlt llfiore of
C)robltml thil ~ltr. The Incident Wll jult thl lltllt In
en IWfuiHHOn ror the entire, three-c1r Petty
operetlon, Inti Lem1r mutt put totether a aolld a~tond
hllf to diSPIOYI the notion thlt he arrived In Wlntton
Cup tltfort he Wll tttdy.'

L wno noldt tne reco,d for most poles at
Mlchlpn International Speedway?
What pit crew won the annual competition at
Rockin&amp;ham, N.C., four rear&amp; In e row?
3. Who hOidt the recor~ for mott victories from the pole

a.

position?

• -John Andredl's
lilt win on the &amp;rounds of

Pocono Rtctwey wet in a

l9 411M Allld PJ1401~ 'IBS.;B6l

-

'ljOUeJMpoOD ~£) 'Z O't t.UIM UOtJitd PIIIIQ 'I

IO'kart.

IMIMINW

••••••••••
AROUND THf GARAGE

---

Urry Md:tt.ftmt~inuniOmttuc,
lure hi• slumpinf WiMton Cup INn
for driver Kevin Lcpqe,
The latH! announeement I• Jhlt
Dlvld lfft. ..... been with the tam
•m I• NIMiriblt', hu lfft hi• mw·
chltr dl.ltift by mutoal llretmtrlt
bnween him and McCIUN.
Sl:on. Eubfun.I'C'I:Cntly ~~~"

O.k Eamhlnlllnc., ~«ompanicd tht
tam 10 ROid Atlancl for I leiCIIUion

lnd Wid on hind ror lhe Porono ~­
Eg/Man lw 1101 yet bftn hired 1t1

mw ~hid IKJWt\w.

X
VEAH. ITS O!FFER£Nl\ ~

P•:ny, •• u•\111, bed • ~~ri

WI)'

of

dnnibl!J Poli:ono RKiway.
"ltialiltledilrertnl, and b'vealwtyt
llkld dliflll rt. wm a linlc difftra~~."
he 11id. " I mean. haw oftm IR' you
to nndan'tMI"with Jfttuma
fn it'. h) all'iangie. You don~ need 1
~ 10 npu-e tt.t I,IUI, The deal ia.
In Mack Cit I'll: Inil. you have road,
I:WfW racl111 and yuu hive OYIII rKifl8. '

Bulth Sftt; tlol't 11 Walkins Gbt, N.Y.
AllltOn will do her lir11 NASCAR Win11M Cup Srrin rvtnt July 29 at Pocono.
AI 1 AMna reponer fot TNT, lhe will
~on thepmonallltJKII of the livn
oft*'iverundothcl:penonaliliet,andwill
a/!11,1 do liw lmmie¥os lhrouaho1Jt lilt dl)'
fturn aromd lhe ltack .
'
X
Whmdocsthltktvelttrlln~toiJO'.'
SHEEPSKIN IN HAND· U and"Tfllt) wllll fnakn Potrno dllf'er·
.
.
' P'
ftll "
t'Dm1n11 drwer Rynn NC'\''rtllln ha~
·
romplrtcd the t OUrHI ne~t l!ll l')' to
X
cam hi~ dearce In vehicle- strucJure
t'AMILIAR FACE: Liz Allison. cnglnrerina; from Punlue U ni~ i ty in
widow of NASC:AR Slat Dlll't!)' Alii- \\at Lllf~. U .
ton. hll joined TNT'I Win~ Cup
NC"t~o' M\IIn . a fi:lrtrl:ropetl-wlullltllr.
and Bu~~:h Srrin ~351 teams.
look the courKs via the lntw'ld ul
AUII('III will join TNT'' NASCAR Calawba V!llley f ummunlt)' Colleie
brocKiri!l tram July K!'or rht NASC..,_R in llkkory. N.C. lie 1lltcndtrl Purdt ~

JOI'

I jiUI wanted a plact 10 ~t In)'
famlly"l ltrriblt a rir:f. M)' hosbaod
ia Na~y. and t nn wlltn hr i~ o"&lt;•c:r-

•••· I t1pe the race~ fot him and hi•
thipmalu . NASCAR i• 011e of the
thina• 11111 can ktep our fam •l)' m
!he u me roam. Wt havr: lhret bo)'t
th111rc 7, 9 11\d 10 ; nd tht)' ha\'t
~·ariou1 inlrrniS, bul NASCAR was
one of oor hif fam ily 1hi up.
We an: and aN-Jyt will be huJ~ · ,
Dalo Earnbardl fans, It ftels like·
part of our family it gOOt:i'. h n:IIU)'
hun•. Wr art nor the kind of people •
10 Jll vanik towa rd heme• or fcOIIil
Our older ramil)' mcm btrsand our
C'lod arc that for u1. And so lUI
l&gt;1lt EarnhanJt .
The racin11 community and rant
will havt a ion1 road senina ov~ r
chi t irwe ever do. lr i• such 1 ~oad
and unbt'lievab l~ lbin s . Nobody
wiJ / ever rJII hit tV~I· imprnaiv~
1hoH. J hopt they rdlrt hit;. numbn.
11 jutt sum. ria:ht. Our f1mil y will
now 1urn ou r antn tlons lo allll\e
nu of O.E.I . Our thouahts and
f"'l)'tl'l I tt and alw1y1 will be with
the Earnhudl family. May God bt
wilh them 1nd may ht rtn In peace .

.....

~

CD
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Coltt NKil. N••L

• ••••••••••

Fan Tips

• .The HCOnd annual Racing
With Jesus Ministries Fund
Drive 11 a joint project of the
mlniJtrv and Catcttfence.com .
A urlea of auctions will be
held on eBay (ebay.com)
be&amp;lnnin&amp; In August and
runnln&amp; throu&amp;h Oct. 6.
Amon&amp; the drivers who
contributed collectible Items
last year were Rusty wauace,
Bobby Labonte , Jeff Gordon,
Jeff Burton , Oeie Jarrett ,

110 Court Street

Pomeroy, OH 45769 ·
Phone 992·1135
~- jmal@!rOQnol,ntt
-.potlomllnctupgradll.....

Jason Leffler, OliVe Mercls,

Robby Gordon, Geoffrey
Bodine, Robert Pre111~. Rick
Joe Bessey.

for four years before rtlocatin1 In
North Clf'Oiina to drh-e Jllock can for

._ .......

X ClEW OF Ill,.

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

•M!a-Molnln
Huual!oo • - ltol!llfl

RlakJ RIHid to llli

slxttl OOftHOidiV. top.

TOO MVCH INFORMATION•
In 1 current rtlme, O.le Earnhardt Jr.
rewalt !hie IMflinbon for 1ht ~ial hair
hi! tw bMI rK«rtly ~~.-earitlw .
Eimhatdt'l muJ~achc i1 patternt d
1fler tht one wom by ae~or Bllly
Crudup, from the fie~ional barld Still·
water In tlr tno~.·ir "A/111()51 Famou.&lt;L"

X
IN CONTROl.: Entn-inW the
Pucono ~. Jeff Gordon led 1he Win·
~ 1011 Cup Strks in poles tlJ. top-fiw
fi ni shes 191./aps led II,135 ) and aver~~~ ~lolt1in11 jlo!iitioot7.1\J,

10 flnlttt aftd hl1 first
vlnar,lnRDblrt

YNI' No. 21 Ford,
Molweln wes one of
M¥tfll orewmtn wtlio

lh"' to Join

moved with Rudel
when Itt
down
hll own

~

Yetta' operation In

JOOO.RIHidll
lltCIMint to oltoh
ft,. thiJ IIIIOft lftCI
he't now third In
polnta.

...

i

Place Your Business's Ad here

Call The oa·i ly Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

z

.o

CD
~

1\)
I

~

Ill

aa
t

1\) !'
CD •
1\)

Ul

992-2155

ililliiiJ ---- I

N

Cri•IILa... p.n

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

I

...

_
-·
1N ......en-· ·tn
'&lt; """
i

Crawford, Ricky Hendrick and

McClure strugllnc to bring his No. 4 race team back

NASCAATh•-

~:J.CD
:::c CD ~0
~»5i'5i

iJ ""' IUU' fii'I MQII If} ...,... G(Jr.
dDn1111d BlckjorrJ la/ki"JJ ,.-flh ru1·h
t'r. ,,

..

No. 88.

J:!•
Ce!.l»
t»-n
0

N.C•

--ltoln ,. . ., and::.-and --:\itOIIMnl-·---·
D!1H--..,_
aw:

11.-

Oilot ... li:ll~l.AI-IIIOI&lt;I(IIIw~;,:'"'li . .IOIIIIPijl _ _ _ w _ _ _ IIII!_. AID!IH-~rolllrf
•ll.lljiOIIO

-10 DIIH-,.,.,.,.

Wltilltlll www.diJMII Dlll.oom_IOr

v

"""*'

--:Jack

l'vl~•· ll~.

the other, Dale Jarrett't, It

I

Yllld INjal 01dit .... Mll12·- omliMt! llllfttl,

-

finally won a race, it had
been 88 races since his lest
victory. Rudd 'a car owner;
Robert Yates , field1 two
Ford Tauruses each week.
One , Rudd's, is No. 28, and

'I
r

n. Shoe Place
I

lloiiiiJ Lo• IIIIa H'l -

Grea:

Soracue. Cliewolet. 85.585

llldlo-foiNu-

!

992-2635
~tlt3 !

Qt •• ,,... .....-.:

Biffle, fwd, 120.139 mpli,
Mer 7. 1999

in\·ol11cd wilh hit rac1nl a1 all'.' I

-,_tlulr. --""'.....

LONG POND. Pa. - The
contemporary raclna loatc
holds thlt H 1 driver puts

I
·._ DI])~ @t ~.!

7

St&gt;roloe

Mlftly hope loll.

..........

WIQTONCUP

I

7V.,..,

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

1~

Ridenour
Supply

: 1 p.m. Sltlurdlty
Dall • Celt :·
Jack

fROM lAST WEEK

'
'

Phillles 9,

_

_......,._ .......

~
July

See us for Your Stlh!Power Tools &amp;
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For U\ona u I c.n mntrnbel", I
h.ne· ~n a fan of Jdf Gordon.
When I fi11t teld 1t1ickl toACc-tnint hi111 , !l~r mcn1ioned 1h11 his
mother .t.d ,.epft~hct l1lldc a lot of
IKrif~tt~ for him (b)' IOOiiinJ. rtc. ).
I hM-e lle:atd nothinJ or rilher tiacc'
hit mauiaae.
My q•nlion i5, •~ 1hcy

Don't- 1111tt 0111

TanJ ... wwt

MotofiPOrtl Patk, Millmcton.
Tenn. (0 .7$&lt;itie lnidll. 200

••••••••••••

OK,oaho.tloli041-

111okJ -

w

j'

I

. . ?'.Noone has ever
won the POM or the rece
mote tnan once; ...
Chewolets hNt won M out
of the 10 previous races.

1.(1)
· ·7"1
•• (4) Rulty
7.(1) ~..,_, lud••n~r
Alii,..... • r'rt m• uP
1.(7) - - 1.(1) _ . . . . _ .... ..-.t U:z,_

Jor

Braves 7,
Mlrllns2

Rully

GNC Uve -~ 250
-TiteMIMile, West Allis, Wit . (1.0.
mile back). 250 laps/miles
- : 2 o.m. July 1
DlfiRdlltJ
Jeff
Gtoon

....... july

• NASCAR Thl1 WHk writer Monte Dutton rankS the
top 10 ·driver~ heedln&amp; Into this weekencrs race . Latt
week 's rankin&amp; is In parentheses:

Carlos Lee's eighth-inning
home run against reliever
Jason Grimsley (0-3) gave
,Chicago its 12th vicrory in 13
KenJ.~y 'Ro~ ,0,~)0 J.h
. heinie ·fP111es.
Jon Garland (3-3) pitched hadn't lost in seven starts sine
three hidess innings in relief of May 6, gave up fo\11', ,runs an
starter Rocky Biddle fO get 10 hits i,n 6 ~-3 mil in~.
1

i

Jeff

c-.
100.999
2. 1994

lOP lfN

Ortiz (5-5) scattered nin~
hits and didn't have a strikeouf
the
to beat the Ran~rs
third time .this , season. Trot
Percival pitched the riinth for ·
his ,17th save. I . 1 ~,

i

-

3 p.m. 5&lt;1nc1oy

or sa

Wol-.

Dale:Jarrett

I
1

CLINic·

(l.NII-mile lnidll, 112
101&gt;1/218.248 mileo

tor

•

.....f$·3

·HOLZER.i

Se•• Point
Sonomll, CalK.

Tile ltaOtt liao
been IOJIIUy tecoofiCu&lt;ed
the seooncl time in recenl
. years.

Q (11)... NJOMI: Jefl
G&lt;een. C,_Oiel, 121.572
mph. July 1, 2000

PROfiLE

Anpts·c.

.

~.

------

7,1992

WOI-. fwd. 911.309 mpli,
Juno 23, 2000
._.~Ernie lrvan,

c:mt

.exas..

CMwOiet, 81.413 mph , June

-Dodle/-

350 .
Wllllrt:

Q ,,... -

Blue Jays 6, Orioles· 5
:
Pinch-hitter Brian Simmoq!;
drove in die tiebrealting n$
with an eighth-inning sacrifi~
fly as Toronto ended a fou(t
game skid.
::
Jay Gibbons homered . in ~
fourth consecutive game fqr
the Orioles, who were .denie~
a three-game sweep ·at
den Yards.
, i•
Paul Quantrill (6-1) got fi~
outs and Billy Koch workeh
the ninth for his 11th save. .!_

..,

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

WMIONCUP

-

2001 f'OI NT\ IT ANOINGI

Dante • Bichette homered
and drove in four runs as visiting Bosron beat Tampa Bay for
the eighth straight lime.
Bichette's .three-run homer
oft'Travis Phel~ highlighted a
six-run eightit inning that
enabled the Red Sox to pull
away. He also hit an lUll single oft' Ryan Rupe (4-6) in .
the fourth.
Rich Garces (2-Q) pitched 1
2-3 ·innings in relief of David
" ·~·'.
Cone tQ get the win.
Anaheim starter · Ramort
Ortiz pitched seven stronlt
innings in the Angelt' win a~

White Sox2.
Royals 1

·

• Caafl RIZBT.-.M Jtf 200
1p.m. • - - -- ESI'N

"••

Arizona rookie .reliever Erik
Sabel hit Eric Karros with· a
pitch :with the bases loaded, in
the ninth to force home the
deciding run for Los Angeles.
Hiram Bocachica singled off
Sabel (3-1) with one out, then
.
,
I
went to third when the right- SAMMY SALAMI -Chicago's Sammy sosa watches as his
1
f
1
V'
j
"
bander threw a pitch in the grand slam leaves the park Thursday. (AP)
dirt that eluded catcher Damian Miller. Sabel then issued
'
•
.
I
intentional walks to Shawn cushion.
you can't let them intimidate
Green and Gary Sheffield to
"! thought that was the you."
load the bases.
.
. game right there because it
Adrian Hernandez (!P-1),
- .
I
I
_Jell' Shaw (3-2) pitched the . gave them a Jitde breathing subbing for the injured Aitdy
I
mnth for the Dodgen. '
room and made us have to Pettitte, made his firsi major·
MEIGS
work a little harder to get back league start and the second
AMERICAN into it;• Yankees manager Joe appearance of his career.. He
I
Is offering: .
Torre said.
allowed
two
runs
one
LEAGUE
. ·I
New York, .which has lost earned- and four hilS in".if 2three offour games, fell 3 112 3 innings. He walked · mtee
Yankees lose again in
games behind first-place and threw two wild pitche,s.
Detroit
Boston
in the AL East.
"
Greg Maddux (7-5) aUowed
The New York Yankees need
"Their
winning
doesn't
only three hits in seven . more than just buUpen help.
6.'.~
'
June
innings as Atlanta beat Aorida.
One night after a potential . bother me as much as our losThe Braves snapped a three- deal for Montreal closer ing," Torre said. "If we can't
•
'"
.
game home lo~ing ~treak a~d Ugueth U~bina feU through, win games, we don't deserve
I
(Participants are asked to eat a
I
avotded droppmg mto thmi New Yorks relieven faltered to be any closer than we are." . Eric Chavez hit a three-run
·
In
other
AL
games,
it
was
bonier
off
Kazuhiro
Sasaki
(0,•
place behind the Marlins, · and the Yankees' hitters couldnormal lunch prior to te~ting.)
the ,ninth
whose season-high winning n't come through in the clutch Cleveland 4, Minnesota 2; 3) with two outs
streak ended at five.
in a 5-2 loss at Detroit on Oakland 6, Seattle 4; Boston 8, to give host Oakland the vicTampa Bay . 2; Chicago 2, tory.
A.J. Burnett (5-3) aUowed Thesday night.
Holzer Clinic Meigs
.. I
The A's beat the majon' best
five runs - three earned "I don't care how good of a Kansas City 1; Toronto 6, Bal88 East Memorial Drive ·
I
six hits in five innings.
team you are, you're going to timore 5; and Anaheim 4, team with the astonishing
homer from Chavez wh~!, had
'
Pomeroy,OH
have your ups and downs:• Texas 3.
just
one
hit
in
his
p;eVMtis
20
Bobby
Higginson
and
New York's Paul O'Neill said.
(740) 992-o060
"Obviously, this is not a good Robert Fick homered and at-bats.
time for us offensively:•
Juan
hit aTigers
two- r-M~a~rk~G:u~th~r~ie~(5~-:1~)~g~o~t~th~e~~~~~~::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~
run Encarnacion
triple as the
' 1
New York was 2-for- 17
1-'l
. .
'ol
.
Omar Daal (8-1) and his with runners in scoring posi- improved to 11 -4 against the
the
last
I
defense nearly squandered a tion and left 11 runners on
seven-run lead, but Philadel- base. The three-time defendChris Holt (6-5) gave up
Get the DISH,Network DigitallOO Plan;
.
I
1
phia held on to beat Pitts· ing World Series champions
Best of all, there's NO EQUIPMENT TO BUY!
· .FI:JRN/TURS.'&amp; ' I
·burgh, ending the Pirates' sea- had two errors and a wild two runs, seven hitS and five
i11 7 1-3 innings _to win
JC::IAJt::LRY. JNtC
.
son-high four-game winning pitch in -the fifth, helping the walks
his second straight sta(t. Matt
.:;; J J.:;;
1 • !\
•
Tigers take a 2-1 lead.
streak.
Anderson pitched the ninth
Relievers Randy Choate, for his sixth save.
The Pirates' own leaky
Credit Terms
defense - they had four Ramiro Mendoza and Mike
"That's a great team," Holt
Lay-A-Ways
• 0/tlllli.....,
erron, including the lint two Stanton each allowed one run, said. "They didn't win those
by Jason Kendall as an out- helping the Tigers open a 5-1 World Series by accident, but
Mon, Tues, Wed,
• lilt iiiJd7nl AC1 Ji .., I I U11
fielder - and Travis Lee's
&amp; Frl9·5:30
t Jww~r•
.~
double
helped
vmtmg
Thurs 9·12,
Philadelphia open a 7-0 lead
• Amflitl~,- 100 ~ IIIIIIIIMI
·Sat 9·2:30
ptlpiJ/It,.,.,., ..... .
in the sixth.
Bronson Arroyo (3~6) ·
• Md' 2lfd.toom,.,. ... ~ f5l!n
allowed six runs and seven hits
in five inninS'·

l

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j _}_,. :::,) ~ ""_,. J _J

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7 ,... 5.1'Tcwonlo 1
-7.N.V. V - f
?

-5.T-IIIy4

Dodgers 4.
Diamoriclbac:ks 3

Bonds has 532 career
homm,leaving him two short
of tying Jimmie Foxx for 1Oth
in major league hisrory. He
also had an RBI groundout
and has homered in his last six
games against the Padres.
His 59 homen against the
Padres are his highest total
against any team. It was Bonds'
30th at Qualcomm Stadium,
his highest total as a visitor at
any stadium.
Giants starter Mark Gardner
(3-5) allowed three runs and
six hits in 5 1-3 innings for the
victory. Kevin Jarvis (3-7)
allowed five runs and· six hits
in 5 1-3 innings.

"**'
,,
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A'ROUND THE DIAMO.ND
··-~~-. .._

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
sup_
port of these area
businesses who make
this page possible.

.,

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_lfll _ _ _
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The Daily Sentinel

T rm' p.J

Bonds breaks more records
during home run binge

'liD

Montreal fO its third 105&lt; in a
Bany BondJ is trying fO row, pitching sewn innings
keep his reconl-bruking and not allowing an earned
home run binge in perspec- run.
tiYe.
"I'm not chasing anybody,"
Bonds said after hilling his
38th homer to break two
major league records in San
Francisco's 8-6 victory at San
Wade Miller aUowed four
Diego on Wrdnesday night. hits in ~n innings to win his
"The season doesn't end in fifth smight home decision as
June...
Houston beat Colorado and
Bonds bit a twO-run shot in swqlt the three-game series.
the eighth inning oft' reliever
Miller (8-3) gave up two
Rodney Myers to brealc a tie runs, one Mlk and s1ruck out
with ~e Jackson (1969) six ro mnain undefeated at
and Mark McGWite (1998) ·cor Enron Field since Sept. 13,
the most homen before the 2000.
All-Star break.
Ron Villone (1 cJ) }!ilve up
Bonds also became the four runs and seven hits in
quickrst to 38, doing it in his five-plus innings ro take the
team's 71st game. Babe Ruth loss.
bit 38 in 88 games in 1928.
"It's all right. We're winning
now," Bonds said. "We're playing better baseball. It's a lot
more ~oyable when you're
Sanuny Sosa hit two home
winning games."
runs, including a grand slam, as
Calvin Mumy lud a career- Chicago snapped a 13-game
high four bits, including a losing streak at St. Louis.
~run homer. and scoml
Julian TaY31ez (5-4) allowed
tluee runs. He also had a triple two runs, eight hiu, wallced
and two singles.
three and struck out five in
In other NL games, Cincin- seven innings for the Cubs,
nati beat Milwaukee 11-3; who had not won at Busch
Atlanta defeated Florida 7-2; Stadium since Oct. 2, 1999.
Philadelphia topped PitaThe loss snapped a fiveburgh 9-5; New York edged game winning slleak for the
Montreal 4-3; Howron beat Cardinals, who had won eight
Colorado
7-2;
Chicago straight at hom~ and are 5-1
defeated St. Louis 9-4; and Los on their 12-game homestand.
Angeles edged Arizona 4-3.
The Cubs have won six of
San Diego catcher Ben their last 11.
Davis said Bonds dido 't even
Mike Matthews
(2-3)
gee his arms fully extended.
allowed three runs on six hits
"If anyone knows how to and struck out four in four
pitch to him, let me know:• innings.
Davis said. It seems like he is
so locked in right now, he hits
,alm~~t anything you throw

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All-·------

•..,
.,••

,

.,

(Sol•••

••

3
Sunda'J • Fox
·--~-

••

p.m, •

2 p.m. • July 1 • FX

I

final two oua of the ninth for the win. Keith Foulke pitchtti
the A's, who won for just the the ninth for his 16th save. :
· second lime in seven pnes.

1. (1) ~~~~2. (2) - 3. (I)
4. (I)

10. (-)

Crow's
Family
Restaurant
Featuring
Kentucky
.FrtedChlck.n

·Athletics

Free Blood Pressure'·&amp;
Diabetes Screeqi~g:

.

.
Friday,
22
2:00pm to 5:00 pm ·

Mariners 4 ·
in

'

?

I

228M•InSt.
Pomeroy, Ohio
or~veWt.,-w

Thru

••
•

992-5432

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

••
•
•
•

1-

.liNt,;
17

Pirates 5

:f:~~e:as~:SDettoit

Exper...Len~~
.
DISH Net WOTA.

•
I

St. At. 248
Chester 985·3308

•

NIKE • REEBOK· ASICS
EASTLAND- DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES- DOCKERS

·Mils 4,
Expos 3
Timo Perez and Robin Ventura homered in the fiflt
inning . against Javier Vazquez
(5-9), and New York won its
•season-high fourth straight
game.
AI Leiter (4-5) sent visiting

!!

I

_

........... , . . , . . _

106 North
Second

Avenue
Middleport, OH

OnlY 135.99/mo.

hlmtelf In position to win
enouah times. eventually he
w!Uwln.
Some would uy Ricky
Rudd tested that premise

2111 N. Second
\

992·5627

Middleport

~UI!ACIIutilon Ftt- rnt -~ ~

a1

mph, May 13, 2000

NetMN: A ChevrOlet t\81

won two or lhe previoUs
three events.

·V..Tum.
...... ,_......,
Dnf N A SCARnis ~.

J.n ••,..

710 -

11'/ / GIIrJnn t'n nllnu.-~ lo hiJI'o'

•..,,. rtlldial r.-1/JIIuns M#h Iris Jlrp·

/uthrr;

) Q},

BicklimJ, und ltis niiJih·

otlft'l' In ,, ._. Wln.rlnn ( ·Np

IJiJ~I'

llllf,er severely, but
eventually. at rainy weather
c~ared out of the Pocono
Mountains, Rudd &amp;at what
his record end his career
Hid he deserved! a ~o~lctory
In the Pocono 500. "
The numbers finally came
up rl&amp;ht for Ruc:k! 1 an&lt;:l

'E"""•

eomeone
nctlced it a

r time .

Until Frld , wne Rudd
won the pole, It hid been
28 ractt since he'd won
one. UnUI Sunday. when he

-

Dnr NASCAR Th i1 Werk.

Harvlck was clearly superior

to everyone else in the 300mller al the new Ktntucky
track, I'Oidin&amp; ott Gre&amp; Biffle

reputedly 1R1r ceuuon
rtaae down the stretch .
Harvic::k palled a stem
test. wlnnln&amp; on a saturday
nl&amp;ht before ttyina to Pocono
for Sunday's Cup event,

where he flnlthed 1~1h . It
was hit Hcond BGN ~o~ictmy
_of the season.

NASCAR

T~ll

tho-·-..-""

Karsyn (11), Zachery (6)

Week

Wltollo
•rt
•1 wouldn't UJ'I'm 100 percent,

PaM Wlrieton Cup ctwmpiof1 Dale
Jarrett'l run It the 2001 tiUe tlowtd ~
Injury, It hln&amp;ln&amp; ·in tne belt he can.
Jarren •uttered a rib lrtiury in a
qualifytn&amp; erath In late May et Lowe:t
Motor SPMd\~t), and tne discomfort 11 at
leatl partially responsible for the feet that
Jeff Gordon hal been able to wrest the
points ~aG away from Jarrett.
A thlrd:plaee flnlth at Pocono algneled
Jlffett 11 almost fully reccwered, snd he Is
only 3e pointt behind Gordon 11 the
clrcutt heads to the Welt coast for the
Start Point roed race.
- : Hlcl&lt;Oty, N.C.

but tt didn't bather me at au (at Pocono)
- I inlan not enoiJih 10 make any

dltference - and I don't have a tot ot
sorenesa after the race. this is really the
flrtt week that I haven 't had that, so I' m
at the point where it'i not a factor one
way or the other enymore:

- - - N i t o l p t a ..... a
uotoron t . - o Uko l!oltJ - ? ' It

helps tremendously. Before Ricky came
elona. for a number of years there,
~therln&amp; Information and doln&amp; different
thlna:s end tryln&amp; to stay ahead of the
&amp;arne WBI totally up to TOdd (Panott) and

our craw. Now we have someone we can
rely on. They tell ua thlnp, It's somethin&amp;
you can really believe In, and there's no ·
substitute for that. Ricky (Rudel) hae the
experience. ·... Todd end Michael
(McSwalm c:tnlcete well, and Ricky
and I communi te welt .~
•Huw doJ!I"'
Flltlnc RUCIII 1o
"...,.......' ~~ · m really excited for Alctcv
and tne entire team. 1think, jutt like mott
evel')'boct)l, we 're aniazed It's taktn thlt
IOn&amp; for them to win. It's Jutt been
clrcumstanctt, but If you kHP puttlna
yourult in that poJitlon tone 100\Jih, lt'J

Ato:44

7001 WIN\ ION lUP \(HW!Jlt
Sonomo, C.IK.

Joliet.
DIJIOnaIii.- · Flo.

July22
July29

l.oLdon, N.H.

~-.Po.

IIIlO Of THE

l'lro!o: Start (April 29. 1984, ot
Mertln"llle. Ve.), pole (Feb. 1. 1995, o!
Daytona Beach, Fie.), win (Au&amp;. 1, 1991,
at Brooklyn, Mich.)
--438racea,27 .
vlctorltl. 138 tot&gt;flve finishes, 200 top
10t, 12 poleJ, over SS0.3 million In
e~~rn1nca

C.: No. 88 UPS Ford Teuru1, owned b)'
Aobort Yltaa
CMW etMf: Todd P•rott
-:Kallay
C - : Jeoon (26), Netalee (13),

wm

luclllllot .loMI VI. , _ .......,
The 7eth liP of the Pocono 500 aew 1 c111sh lnvolvlnl
t710 two youn1 DodCe drl..,o, who dloqrHd on t110
cruclol mottor ol who hit w11om. 'Bucklhot Will P!llhlill
out to thl Mil, end he jUit turned It tNitll from thl WIN.

.-.~--

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IUlCH IIRMDI/If'O'W=
FLORENCE. My. ~ kevin

JOin&amp; to hlll&gt;POn."

••••••••••••

wr.nHot-

Ho hK me whon I woo 101111 unGtmeath him,' Letner
uld. 'K (Jonu' Cll) Wll puahln&amp; oo much,1he '01'
(Lallie~ 1101 In 1he beck Of me: Jon01 uld. ·K Wll
mo10 Olo rocinldeelthen enythln&amp; ... .-y·o fouK,'

WIN'aNot

-··-Dutton . . .

• -

Ricky Rudel hll

flnithld In the top 10 llx
ltrlljht 11Cfl.

NAIO#R T7t5ot
lila
.,._, "8oth lheao IUYI hl\'t hid thtlt llfiore of
C)robltml thil ~ltr. The Incident Wll jult thl lltllt In
en IWfuiHHOn ror the entire, three-c1r Petty
operetlon, Inti Lem1r mutt put totether a aolld a~tond
hllf to diSPIOYI the notion thlt he arrived In Wlntton
Cup tltfort he Wll tttdy.'

L wno noldt tne reco,d for most poles at
Mlchlpn International Speedway?
What pit crew won the annual competition at
Rockin&amp;ham, N.C., four rear&amp; In e row?
3. Who hOidt the recor~ for mott victories from the pole

a.

position?

• -John Andredl's
lilt win on the &amp;rounds of

Pocono Rtctwey wet in a

l9 411M Allld PJ1401~ 'IBS.;B6l

-

'ljOUeJMpoOD ~£) 'Z O't t.UIM UOtJitd PIIIIQ 'I

IO'kart.

IMIMINW

••••••••••
AROUND THf GARAGE

---

Urry Md:tt.ftmt~inuniOmttuc,
lure hi• slumpinf WiMton Cup INn
for driver Kevin Lcpqe,
The latH! announeement I• Jhlt
Dlvld lfft. ..... been with the tam
•m I• NIMiriblt', hu lfft hi• mw·
chltr dl.ltift by mutoal llretmtrlt
bnween him and McCIUN.
Sl:on. Eubfun.I'C'I:Cntly ~~~"

O.k Eamhlnlllnc., ~«ompanicd tht
tam 10 ROid Atlancl for I leiCIIUion

lnd Wid on hind ror lhe Porono ~­
Eg/Man lw 1101 yet bftn hired 1t1

mw ~hid IKJWt\w.

X
VEAH. ITS O!FFER£Nl\ ~

P•:ny, •• u•\111, bed • ~~ri

WI)'

of

dnnibl!J Poli:ono RKiway.
"ltialiltledilrertnl, and b'vealwtyt
llkld dliflll rt. wm a linlc difftra~~."
he 11id. " I mean. haw oftm IR' you
to nndan'tMI"with Jfttuma
fn it'. h) all'iangie. You don~ need 1
~ 10 npu-e tt.t I,IUI, The deal ia.
In Mack Cit I'll: Inil. you have road,
I:WfW racl111 and yuu hive OYIII rKifl8. '

Bulth Sftt; tlol't 11 Walkins Gbt, N.Y.
AllltOn will do her lir11 NASCAR Win11M Cup Srrin rvtnt July 29 at Pocono.
AI 1 AMna reponer fot TNT, lhe will
~on thepmonallltJKII of the livn
oft*'iverundothcl:penonaliliet,andwill
a/!11,1 do liw lmmie¥os lhrouaho1Jt lilt dl)'
fturn aromd lhe ltack .
'
X
Whmdocsthltktvelttrlln~toiJO'.'
SHEEPSKIN IN HAND· U and"Tfllt) wllll fnakn Potrno dllf'er·
.
.
' P'
ftll "
t'Dm1n11 drwer Rynn NC'\''rtllln ha~
·
romplrtcd the t OUrHI ne~t l!ll l')' to
X
cam hi~ dearce In vehicle- strucJure
t'AMILIAR FACE: Liz Allison. cnglnrerina; from Punlue U ni~ i ty in
widow of NASC:AR Slat Dlll't!)' Alii- \\at Lllf~. U .
ton. hll joined TNT'I Win~ Cup
NC"t~o' M\IIn . a fi:lrtrl:ropetl-wlullltllr.
and Bu~~:h Srrin ~351 teams.
look the courKs via the lntw'ld ul
AUII('III will join TNT'' NASCAR Calawba V!llley f ummunlt)' Colleie
brocKiri!l tram July K!'or rht NASC..,_R in llkkory. N.C. lie 1lltcndtrl Purdt ~

JOI'

I jiUI wanted a plact 10 ~t In)'
famlly"l ltrriblt a rir:f. M)' hosbaod
ia Na~y. and t nn wlltn hr i~ o"&lt;•c:r-

•••· I t1pe the race~ fot him and hi•
thipmalu . NASCAR i• 011e of the
thina• 11111 can ktep our fam •l)' m
!he u me roam. Wt havr: lhret bo)'t
th111rc 7, 9 11\d 10 ; nd tht)' ha\'t
~·ariou1 inlrrniS, bul NASCAR was
one of oor hif fam ily 1hi up.
We an: and aN-Jyt will be huJ~ · ,
Dalo Earnbardl fans, It ftels like·
part of our family it gOOt:i'. h n:IIU)'
hun•. Wr art nor the kind of people •
10 Jll vanik towa rd heme• or fcOIIil
Our older ramil)' mcm btrsand our
C'lod arc that for u1. And so lUI
l&gt;1lt EarnhanJt .
The racin11 community and rant
will havt a ion1 road senina ov~ r
chi t irwe ever do. lr i• such 1 ~oad
and unbt'lievab l~ lbin s . Nobody
wiJ / ever rJII hit tV~I· imprnaiv~
1hoH. J hopt they rdlrt hit;. numbn.
11 jutt sum. ria:ht. Our f1mil y will
now 1urn ou r antn tlons lo allll\e
nu of O.E.I . Our thouahts and
f"'l)'tl'l I tt and alw1y1 will be with
the Earnhudl family. May God bt
wilh them 1nd may ht rtn In peace .

.....

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Coltt NKil. N••L

• ••••••••••

Fan Tips

• .The HCOnd annual Racing
With Jesus Ministries Fund
Drive 11 a joint project of the
mlniJtrv and Catcttfence.com .
A urlea of auctions will be
held on eBay (ebay.com)
be&amp;lnnin&amp; In August and
runnln&amp; throu&amp;h Oct. 6.
Amon&amp; the drivers who
contributed collectible Items
last year were Rusty wauace,
Bobby Labonte , Jeff Gordon,
Jeff Burton , Oeie Jarrett ,

110 Court Street

Pomeroy, OH 45769 ·
Phone 992·1135
~- jmal@!rOQnol,ntt
-.potlomllnctupgradll.....

Jason Leffler, OliVe Mercls,

Robby Gordon, Geoffrey
Bodine, Robert Pre111~. Rick
Joe Bessey.

for four years before rtlocatin1 In
North Clf'Oiina to drh-e Jllock can for

._ .......

X ClEW OF Ill,.

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

•M!a-Molnln
Huual!oo • - ltol!llfl

RlakJ RIHid to llli

slxttl OOftHOidiV. top.

TOO MVCH INFORMATION•
In 1 current rtlme, O.le Earnhardt Jr.
rewalt !hie IMflinbon for 1ht ~ial hair
hi! tw bMI rK«rtly ~~.-earitlw .
Eimhatdt'l muJ~achc i1 patternt d
1fler tht one wom by ae~or Bllly
Crudup, from the fie~ional barld Still·
water In tlr tno~.·ir "A/111()51 Famou.&lt;L"

X
IN CONTROl.: Entn-inW the
Pucono ~. Jeff Gordon led 1he Win·
~ 1011 Cup Strks in poles tlJ. top-fiw
fi ni shes 191./aps led II,135 ) and aver~~~ ~lolt1in11 jlo!iitioot7.1\J,

10 flnlttt aftd hl1 first
vlnar,lnRDblrt

YNI' No. 21 Ford,
Molweln wes one of
M¥tfll orewmtn wtlio

lh"' to Join

moved with Rudel
when Itt
down
hll own

~

Yetta' operation In

JOOO.RIHidll
lltCIMint to oltoh
ft,. thiJ IIIIOft lftCI
he't now third In
polnta.

...

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Place Your Business's Ad here

Call The oa·i ly Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

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Crawford, Ricky Hendrick and

McClure strugllnc to bring his No. 4 race team back

NASCAATh•-

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--:Jack

l'vl~•· ll~.

the other, Dale Jarrett't, It

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Yllld INjal 01dit .... Mll12·- omliMt! llllfttl,

-

finally won a race, it had
been 88 races since his lest
victory. Rudd 'a car owner;
Robert Yates , field1 two
Ford Tauruses each week.
One , Rudd's, is No. 28, and

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lloiiiiJ Lo• IIIIa H'l -

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992-2635
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Biffle, fwd, 120.139 mpli,
Mer 7. 1999

in\·ol11cd wilh hit rac1nl a1 all'.' I

-,_tlulr. --""'.....

LONG POND. Pa. - The
contemporary raclna loatc
holds thlt H 1 driver puts

I
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7

St&gt;roloe

Mlftly hope loll.

..........

WIQTONCUP

I

7V.,..,

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

1~

Ridenour
Supply

: 1 p.m. Sltlurdlty
Dall • Celt :·
Jack

fROM lAST WEEK

'
'

Phillles 9,

_

_......,._ .......

~
July

See us for Your Stlh!Power Tools &amp;
Accelsories
•
•
•
•

laps/150mlles

For U\ona u I c.n mntrnbel", I
h.ne· ~n a fan of Jdf Gordon.
When I fi11t teld 1t1ickl toACc-tnint hi111 , !l~r mcn1ioned 1h11 his
mother .t.d ,.epft~hct l1lldc a lot of
IKrif~tt~ for him (b)' IOOiiinJ. rtc. ).
I hM-e lle:atd nothinJ or rilher tiacc'
hit mauiaae.
My q•nlion i5, •~ 1hcy

Don't- 1111tt 0111

TanJ ... wwt

MotofiPOrtl Patk, Millmcton.
Tenn. (0 .7$&lt;itie lnidll. 200

••••••••••••

OK,oaho.tloli041-

111okJ -

w

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I

. . ?'.Noone has ever
won the POM or the rece
mote tnan once; ...
Chewolets hNt won M out
of the 10 previous races.

1.(1)
· ·7"1
•• (4) Rulty
7.(1) ~..,_, lud••n~r
Alii,..... • r'rt m• uP
1.(7) - - 1.(1) _ . . . . _ .... ..-.t U:z,_

Jor

Braves 7,
Mlrllns2

Rully

GNC Uve -~ 250
-TiteMIMile, West Allis, Wit . (1.0.
mile back). 250 laps/miles
- : 2 o.m. July 1
DlfiRdlltJ
Jeff
Gtoon

....... july

• NASCAR Thl1 WHk writer Monte Dutton rankS the
top 10 ·driver~ heedln&amp; Into this weekencrs race . Latt
week 's rankin&amp; is In parentheses:

Carlos Lee's eighth-inning
home run against reliever
Jason Grimsley (0-3) gave
,Chicago its 12th vicrory in 13
KenJ.~y 'Ro~ ,0,~)0 J.h
. heinie ·fP111es.
Jon Garland (3-3) pitched hadn't lost in seven starts sine
three hidess innings in relief of May 6, gave up fo\11', ,runs an
starter Rocky Biddle fO get 10 hits i,n 6 ~-3 mil in~.
1

i

Jeff

c-.
100.999
2. 1994

lOP lfN

Ortiz (5-5) scattered nin~
hits and didn't have a strikeouf
the
to beat the Ran~rs
third time .this , season. Trot
Percival pitched the riinth for ·
his ,17th save. I . 1 ~,

i

-

3 p.m. 5&lt;1nc1oy

or sa

Wol-.

Dale:Jarrett

I
1

CLINic·

(l.NII-mile lnidll, 112
101&gt;1/218.248 mileo

tor

•

.....f$·3

·HOLZER.i

Se•• Point
Sonomll, CalK.

Tile ltaOtt liao
been IOJIIUy tecoofiCu&lt;ed
the seooncl time in recenl
. years.

Q (11)... NJOMI: Jefl
G&lt;een. C,_Oiel, 121.572
mph. July 1, 2000

PROfiLE

Anpts·c.

.

~.

------

7,1992

WOI-. fwd. 911.309 mpli,
Juno 23, 2000
._.~Ernie lrvan,

c:mt

.exas..

CMwOiet, 81.413 mph , June

-Dodle/-

350 .
Wllllrt:

Q ,,... -

Blue Jays 6, Orioles· 5
:
Pinch-hitter Brian Simmoq!;
drove in die tiebrealting n$
with an eighth-inning sacrifi~
fly as Toronto ended a fou(t
game skid.
::
Jay Gibbons homered . in ~
fourth consecutive game fqr
the Orioles, who were .denie~
a three-game sweep ·at
den Yards.
, i•
Paul Quantrill (6-1) got fi~
outs and Billy Koch workeh
the ninth for his 11th save. .!_

..,

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

WMIONCUP

-

2001 f'OI NT\ IT ANOINGI

Dante • Bichette homered
and drove in four runs as visiting Bosron beat Tampa Bay for
the eighth straight lime.
Bichette's .three-run homer
oft'Travis Phel~ highlighted a
six-run eightit inning that
enabled the Red Sox to pull
away. He also hit an lUll single oft' Ryan Rupe (4-6) in .
the fourth.
Rich Garces (2-Q) pitched 1
2-3 ·innings in relief of David
" ·~·'.
Cone tQ get the win.
Anaheim starter · Ramort
Ortiz pitched seven stronlt
innings in the Angelt' win a~

White Sox2.
Royals 1

·

• Caafl RIZBT.-.M Jtf 200
1p.m. • - - -- ESI'N

"••

Arizona rookie .reliever Erik
Sabel hit Eric Karros with· a
pitch :with the bases loaded, in
the ninth to force home the
deciding run for Los Angeles.
Hiram Bocachica singled off
Sabel (3-1) with one out, then
.
,
I
went to third when the right- SAMMY SALAMI -Chicago's Sammy sosa watches as his
1
f
1
V'
j
"
bander threw a pitch in the grand slam leaves the park Thursday. (AP)
dirt that eluded catcher Damian Miller. Sabel then issued
'
•
.
I
intentional walks to Shawn cushion.
you can't let them intimidate
Green and Gary Sheffield to
"! thought that was the you."
load the bases.
.
. game right there because it
Adrian Hernandez (!P-1),
- .
I
I
_Jell' Shaw (3-2) pitched the . gave them a Jitde breathing subbing for the injured Aitdy
I
mnth for the Dodgen. '
room and made us have to Pettitte, made his firsi major·
MEIGS
work a little harder to get back league start and the second
AMERICAN into it;• Yankees manager Joe appearance of his career.. He
I
Is offering: .
Torre said.
allowed
two
runs
one
LEAGUE
. ·I
New York, .which has lost earned- and four hilS in".if 2three offour games, fell 3 112 3 innings. He walked · mtee
Yankees lose again in
games behind first-place and threw two wild pitche,s.
Detroit
Boston
in the AL East.
"
Greg Maddux (7-5) aUowed
The New York Yankees need
"Their
winning
doesn't
only three hits in seven . more than just buUpen help.
6.'.~
'
June
innings as Atlanta beat Aorida.
One night after a potential . bother me as much as our losThe Braves snapped a three- deal for Montreal closer ing," Torre said. "If we can't
•
'"
.
game home lo~ing ~treak a~d Ugueth U~bina feU through, win games, we don't deserve
I
(Participants are asked to eat a
I
avotded droppmg mto thmi New Yorks relieven faltered to be any closer than we are." . Eric Chavez hit a three-run
·
In
other
AL
games,
it
was
bonier
off
Kazuhiro
Sasaki
(0,•
place behind the Marlins, · and the Yankees' hitters couldnormal lunch prior to te~ting.)
the ,ninth
whose season-high winning n't come through in the clutch Cleveland 4, Minnesota 2; 3) with two outs
streak ended at five.
in a 5-2 loss at Detroit on Oakland 6, Seattle 4; Boston 8, to give host Oakland the vicTampa Bay . 2; Chicago 2, tory.
A.J. Burnett (5-3) aUowed Thesday night.
Holzer Clinic Meigs
.. I
The A's beat the majon' best
five runs - three earned "I don't care how good of a Kansas City 1; Toronto 6, Bal88 East Memorial Drive ·
I
six hits in five innings.
team you are, you're going to timore 5; and Anaheim 4, team with the astonishing
homer from Chavez wh~!, had
'
Pomeroy,OH
have your ups and downs:• Texas 3.
just
one
hit
in
his
p;eVMtis
20
Bobby
Higginson
and
New York's Paul O'Neill said.
(740) 992-o060
"Obviously, this is not a good Robert Fick homered and at-bats.
time for us offensively:•
Juan
hit aTigers
two- r-M~a~rk~G:u~th~r~ie~(5~-:1~)~g~o~t~th~e~~~~~~::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~
run Encarnacion
triple as the
' 1
New York was 2-for- 17
1-'l
. .
'ol
.
Omar Daal (8-1) and his with runners in scoring posi- improved to 11 -4 against the
the
last
I
defense nearly squandered a tion and left 11 runners on
seven-run lead, but Philadel- base. The three-time defendChris Holt (6-5) gave up
Get the DISH,Network DigitallOO Plan;
.
I
1
phia held on to beat Pitts· ing World Series champions
Best of all, there's NO EQUIPMENT TO BUY!
· .FI:JRN/TURS.'&amp; ' I
·burgh, ending the Pirates' sea- had two errors and a wild two runs, seven hitS and five
i11 7 1-3 innings _to win
JC::IAJt::LRY. JNtC
.
son-high four-game winning pitch in -the fifth, helping the walks
his second straight sta(t. Matt
.:;; J J.:;;
1 • !\
•
Tigers take a 2-1 lead.
streak.
Anderson pitched the ninth
Relievers Randy Choate, for his sixth save.
The Pirates' own leaky
Credit Terms
defense - they had four Ramiro Mendoza and Mike
"That's a great team," Holt
Lay-A-Ways
• 0/tlllli.....,
erron, including the lint two Stanton each allowed one run, said. "They didn't win those
by Jason Kendall as an out- helping the Tigers open a 5-1 World Series by accident, but
Mon, Tues, Wed,
• lilt iiiJd7nl AC1 Ji .., I I U11
fielder - and Travis Lee's
&amp; Frl9·5:30
t Jww~r•
.~
double
helped
vmtmg
Thurs 9·12,
Philadelphia open a 7-0 lead
• Amflitl~,- 100 ~ IIIIIIIIMI
·Sat 9·2:30
ptlpiJ/It,.,.,., ..... .
in the sixth.
Bronson Arroyo (3~6) ·
• Md' 2lfd.toom,.,. ... ~ f5l!n
allowed six runs and seven hits
in five inninS'·

l

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7 ,... 5.1'Tcwonlo 1
-7.N.V. V - f
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-5.T-IIIy4

Dodgers 4.
Diamoriclbac:ks 3

Bonds has 532 career
homm,leaving him two short
of tying Jimmie Foxx for 1Oth
in major league hisrory. He
also had an RBI groundout
and has homered in his last six
games against the Padres.
His 59 homen against the
Padres are his highest total
against any team. It was Bonds'
30th at Qualcomm Stadium,
his highest total as a visitor at
any stadium.
Giants starter Mark Gardner
(3-5) allowed three runs and
six hits in 5 1-3 innings for the
victory. Kevin Jarvis (3-7)
allowed five runs and· six hits
in 5 1-3 innings.

"**'
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Son Fta....., (EJa&amp;-21f S.. D1ogo
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A'ROUND THE DIAMO.ND
··-~~-. .._

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sup_
port of these area
businesses who make
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atnd- ~ AI MMOI mtrtllll'IO 31..-illlb blloftO totlllr !llpiCIYt ownttt.

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·tltribunt - Sentinel -

MAJOR LE~GUE LEADERS

CLASSIFIED

NAnONAL
'lEAGUE

We Cove·.._..,
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One

BAT11HG-Aiou, Houolon. M3; LGon-

l.Gonzatez. .....

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Fiarido,

flord.

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81 ;

Colo
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57;
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Dlogo,M.
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80;

SSooa.

58:-.

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II'JCI

Top Dollar. U.S.
Siver, Gold Colno, Procl·
Why wall? Start mHiing ~~~. Dlamondl, Gold
Ohio 11ng1eo lonight t-800- Rongs, U.S. Cu"*"')',·
768-2fi23 "'" 1621
M:r:s. Coin Shop, 151 S.:·
;g:;:,:::;,::;.;,,;.;;;:;.;,·; ,..,-., ondA.....,,Gallljlllio, 140:
44&amp;-2M2.

1

IIDIW-

II"

King. Oalljlllllo

*"' w...........

::::,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...,.....,I, full.tlme
- . FUiritln
Dum family lrlbuts. July 1, 1.10
o.livery
lOam. ML Union church Pti-~1
lli!IJ'W.
Aj1p1y. UltO!yiH.-n,
ny WV. &amp;inging · dining ev·
AHilD
8S6 1111111 A-.e, Gdlpo:
eryonewelcome.
llo. Nol'honoCIFo.

"'ST~
-'

IMMEDIATE NEED: OW...

lor of Nulling (RN) lor ful.
Singers, All
Sando
&amp; Ages.
Vocal -tonn woo1cln
1 114
bod long
Quality clothing and house- Groups,
Slylell
caro 01010
fll:lllly,
Ex·

740-592·1842

hold

~ems.

$1 .00 bag safe MaiOI' Record Label Seek· -

bono111 Pld'llgo Jn.
Now Mloto. Coming Stato CMt SoMco
To
Huntington,
WV Rellrement. can oam up 10
(901)427-2639
or 15 clap vacation. 18' &lt;11yt
(901)427-11514
llidllooave *'&lt;113 dlyt poiCI
hollcla
lor ful.
Are you loddng lor lho 01)' liniO
Solooy 1o
por1unity IO Join a WinRii1G
wllh - "
team and ~pan o11a ence COntact Keith Slouff·

every Thursday. Monday
1ng
dvu Soturday 9:00-6:00.

."Notice' Red Bam al apple

g..,.e, has cloSed, due to
rood construction. Wll resume operation at a later
:cda:::.l•:::.·- - -...,-...,-Will tal&lt;e selecled anliqueo
to sale on con8lgnment in
our shop. Lim~ed space.
C811 (304)675·2144

O:J:",:'

con"'*""'"'"

fall growing ·-·· care n- ., Mmlnlotoator at Llll&lt;ln
duatry? Scenic Hlllo Nursing HOop.1a1, Laldn, wv 01
Center ls .,o,ffenng Nurse c)875-0860, Ext. 101 ,
Aide Tram_,~ Ci8SSH
• thru F•••u f•om
monlhiJ. It 11...a 75 houo Sam- &lt;tpm
Laldn·Hoopital
•
-·
11
couOM, luting lor 11 days. an EEOIM Employer
- y tllrough Filday 8:30
G "~"""Y
to 4:30. This is a groat opr
"~""
, ponuniiJIThenextclauwlll
begin In July. Stop b!' today
Are you·
. F... KiHens, 3 maies &amp; loranappllcationoroon!OCt
2 females. They were born Stephanie KOIT1j&gt;ilr, fnotiUC·
. . .king •
on Easter. (740)44&amp;-9582
tor, at (740}446-7150
neW CJI....r?
K·,ttens to """" •· -·, 7,A Anlll1!ion- Wool&lt; from hclma.
•740-245·9762
- •~•~ ~
51$7
·~ 1
245-9143 or
lnloCislon

r

I

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R

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YARD SAlE

YAKD So\1.&amp;

G~

~-. ~.;;,.::!;;,;;.,.:.

maker.c:orn
1-1188·387-3450

Co

AVONI All Mlaol To Buy or
5el. Shliloy Spearo, 30ot675-1429.

~oy

:.;.::::.::=-----

Huge Garaoe Sale- 552
da
Oobbl&amp;eSaD•iverd, Thu9rsctay5pm
, F•l·
lu ay, am'
y
lnlants &amp; Children's Cloth·
lng. lois of goodies. Every·
thing reasonably priced.

.

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~

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-SW!

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Rale••- -

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Viand Slreet, Point Piauant.

Management

I'

has the

rpora 1011
career for you,

1176

I
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=.·

u= ..·--

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vi-

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""""'"'" preloroecl. Poaltlon
-lrH call dulleo, l!l1d al·
tor hour oetupo. Sond ... ,

riG

oumeo to: JR12, 200 Main
Slroot Point Pleuant wv

o.-"""""""'

1·-·

1121101he, foGnl pooch, bock
and polio, quality
OftooR'ruNrry : iMiugliOUt. IAuot ... to ill&gt;'
rpoac1a1a.
f175,ooo. phone
c-·""75-4225
INOliCI!l
-,.
·
OHIO VAUEY PUBLISH· Leton FaHo 10iU01 from tile
INO co, oacommendtl lhet achool, lara- 2 fomil~
youdobUII,_wltllpeople3750
you know, and NOT to oond oquarO foal, 112 c:ornp1aW1y
money tii&lt;OI9l the mall until r•IIICid.t..t with buiH In
you hevt lnvMtlgllld lho kltohtn &amp; woacl flooring,
ollerlng.
ole &amp; lumac., largeo
-around pooch, 3 tooth·
Slart Vour Butln- To- ....,., _ , , call for
dey... f'o1ml Shopping C... OOmpiOte - · 440-748tor 8peoo Available At At· ~.
loo- Aolo. 8prfng Valloy
- . C811740~101. - · 3 or 4 bodloom,
._
, - MWiy . . . - . 1
[
....,.
crNAL
lOr,- yam, niOt otoo1«
!iJER\IIca
01 rentot:l, owntrl - n g
to out cout, 122,000,
TU
DOWN ON
741).741·8010, 740·742·
11117 2212.
NoFMUfliloaW.Winl
MlaEifiNB
1 Ill 512·1344
FOR SAtl

--toly

···c··
Ill

•dv-·

II

=l~g ,;,~x==

b!' May 31,

raomo11or ooluoed, ..._
_ , loot long, oo o10p In
·
and chKk uo out, w0·,. 2 bodtoom . - hcJma tor
daallng, Colt'o - l e ront, $3251 month, $300 doAlhono Ohio 0pon paoli. 110 poll, IWfononces
M-W. 9-7, Thln-f~.. 9-8, ~. (740}44B:f342 of·
..........
Sot ID-5.
--"'"..:.,."_·-==~=::
Now 18 ft. $&lt;iii9. per · 2 Bedooom, (74019112-2802
moot only $270. per . mon, D••utJfui River View caiiODW HI00-691-6m.
f-01' Or ......... n J - .
1 2 , ..,... ~--,
Now 2001 14•70 &lt;tO, Depooit, No Poll, F.,.
a..o BR, 2 Bdl. 11reec1y ter Trlllor Pail&lt;, 7~1 ·
001 up rNdy to movo In 0181 ,
$99S clown Still P« mon111
·
In Flacl..· good oonciHion
740:992:2 167
ilicot. ~.
2 bod:
.....,
~1350~
Now 2001 -·r ooom, -al...
r, ca.,..,
~
$148.48 per month . . Call pooll, $350 per mo. 1 Ka.... 740-385-4387,
wotor, gsll&gt;ila- &amp; -aa-,
available 7· 1.01, 740-1149- - - 3 br._2_111. 2217.
$998 00 clown only -·5
por oiton. call ,_ 1-aoo: MobiiO home In Racine
691-6m.
. or... no pels, 740·992·
5858
Now Monthl
Doublo3 Willa.
$1115
Por
Badloom,
2
ArAinMf.ms
Bath. FiM 0tt1very &amp; Sot·
roll RENr
uj&gt;. 1-688-9211-3420
Prlvato p........, And New
and
•-•--- •-rt·
2
p mont 1
~-. ""~ ·~ · •w•-- mN r·
(304)738-72iltl
- · oocurlty dotXIIit ,_,
SchuH mollliO hclma, bod- qu~~· 110 peta. 740:1111Z·
2
room, oxc•llont oonclltlon,
22 '
rengo, ret11gorotor, · 1 llodooom Aparlmtnt "-""
tloyor. air oondlllof&gt;:
Ronge NO In:
1ng, (740)4:4&amp;-11470
alucloll •• Pluo'n..-.• a
•..1111
..........,,
Siii(Jio Saotlon lot CINr· Rolorenct. HUO Appoovecl,
..,... All Moclllo Aoctuoacl. (740)441-1511
1 Room F=-= ! =
Galllpollo
(7~
GIJIIr:'11 OH 1115/mo'
110

A~~~Ot

~·4 1~;,,.,

s,_,

Noar

,.g.,...

=ti&gt;olt

I

s

a-.r

1

't

r.:,:t

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mon.

\

StruggJing to score runs
latel)\ the Indians got a spark
fiom an wtlikely source first-base coach Ted Uhlaender.
Uhlaender was ejected for
arguing with umpire Andy
Aetcher in the fifth inningjust
before the Indians rallied.
"I told him we needed that,"
·Burks wd. "Wen~ something like tlut to spark us.
Then I told him not to worry
labout it because I'm paying his

fine...

Uhlaender remained puzzled about what he did wrong.
"I've said a lot worse to
umpires when I played and

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

l

AnnouotceoMn1,

far--

~.Loot&amp;

Found, YJII'CI-.,

-·

IIOmN
-ToDoAde
- I a Paid In

Fumlohtd. WI!·
., Furnlohocl, $300/mo,
1$!50
o.pooit,
(740)448-906t
fllgeratcr

Baa.
~--··

11:_,_,

-...z.

s.n

~ &amp;:3, .727. •.115: .......
Dloogo, 7·3, .7110, U1 ; 81.
............. .11112, 2.73; ~. .....
............1112,2....

r.

~air~..;.;:::.-.......-...,
SP.Ia
~
u-...,_...liii~ii.......,iiiiilo'-"
0111cot _.,, 537·112 2nd
Avenuo, (740)4ot6-01503 or

(740~158

;,-,;,--~---

One dock lito fOI' rent, one
full hookup for a omafl
camping toallor, family typo,
4().992. 8S6
'5 ·
7
~
.. ~
TO~R1!Nr

c

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

f~gtl'ltor

··

Houii!How
Gooo$

riO

•

5TOL£N B.IISE$-S.ozutd, · 23;
23: · 23; · Soanle, 22; Sori. -Yart,. -Yart,21
; -.Baltinl0t,
15; Nln liM. Mioo- f4; o.mon,

c-... DMroi1.

. .. &amp;:2• .100, 4.S.; - · .... - .
1-3, ,727, 3 ..:1; Burba, Clowland, ""'
.727, 1.23; Milton, M...._, 7·3,

- · Ook· .700. 3.73; - · Daldoncl, ""'· ,fl/l7,

- · 57; ..._. 3AI; - · Olltland, 7-4, .638. 3.44;

v..-, · - v..-, 7-4, .8311. 3.07:
~. -. 7-&lt;1, .838, 3.• 5.

AMERICAN
LEAGUE

STRfKEOUTS-PMootlnoz, Booton,
140; o.n-, Yoofc, 100; ... Yoofc, II; Colon, ~·
17; HOmo, - · 85; Zlto, ....._.,,
12:
Hucloon, Olltland, 111.
SAVES 8'Mk1, Sllnle, 26: MRivera,
Y011c, 21 ; Percival,~. 17;
F -. ChUao, 18;
Mln- . 111: Wfc:lcmon, c - . . .. t4;
.....,.__, Olltland, 13.

Ha-.

Saiiii'II!IY ...

HERE'S WHAT I THINK -

Indians flrst base coach . Ted
Uhlaender gives umpire Andy Aetcher an ear full after being
ejected for arguing a close call at first Wednesday. (AP)

•

It
1988 etwey cavalier, stoo
fOI' ports, loll of good ports,
bod motor 740-992-5532

chango-to
hoi

from Page B1

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

~

For Solo: Rooondltlonod
orators. Thom•
..,.., 3407 Jackoon ..,

IASEMINT
WAT!BPROOFING
Uncondlllonal liltllma guar·
ant... Local reference• fur·
nlohtcl, EotobUth..t 1175.
Call 24 Hro. (740) 448·
0870,
HI00·287:tl57e .
Rogo11 Watorprooflng,

1!11001

II=,

~

fourth.
Brandon Kolb gave up five
more ·in the fifth, including
three homers.
,
P,ilge B1
" When you start putting a
hit his first homer in exact- bunch of runs together, there's .
Iy a month. Not when · a sigh of relief," said Case)\
Michael Tucker and Pokey who also had a single and a
Reese also homered to finish . double. "We haven't had too
off a five-run fifth.
many games we could sit back
When the Brewers decided and enjoy."
The
only
enjoyable
to let third baseman Mark
Loretta pitch the . eighth moments for the Brewers
inning, Boone finally tould came in the eighth, when
relax.
Loretta pinch-hit and volun"Today was a fun day," he teered to pitch, something he
said. "I enjoyed it We'll really hadn't done since he was at
enjoy it - for a couple of Northwestern in 1993.
hours."
He did much better than
The way this season has Cunnane and Kolb. Throwing
gone, the Reds have leailleCf"' a fastbaU that topped out at 83
not to count on anything mph, he struck out two and
gave up a single and a walk in
good lasting very long.·
When Ken Griffey Jr., a scoreless inning, then saved
Barry Larkin and Aaron the baiL
Boone came off the disabled
"I had a lot of fun," he said. ·
Notes: The last Brewers
list last Friday, they counted
on a turnaroul\d. Instead, they position player to pitch was
lost the first five games of Rick Dempsey, who did it
their homestand, · stretching twice in 1991. ... Milwaukee's
their overall losing streak to a Richie Sexson hit a basesseason-high eight games.
loaded double in the eighth,
. A day of horrible pitching . extending his hitting streak to
by the Brewers - save for six games .... Chris Reitsma
(4 -6} pitched into the eighth
their third baseman, that is gave Cincinnati the huge for his first Cinergy win ....
nudge it needed to get out of Ken Griftey Jr. has hit safely
its rut. Will Cunnane (0- 3), in .all six games since returngiven his first start of the sea- ing fiom a torn hamstring (9son, gave up six runs in the for-21 with one homer) .

Buick

••

I

call 740-44..73118, ,....,
::11.;,;;1-0;,::;;;121=.-~-~~
,.
Lilli rncxt.1 Magio Olltl,
fooet fiM reflfgnlor, 1100;
'
Konmora ,.._, 1711
•···•
I
Mlddl
~
I
Thltl
110IDIII
- ·- all '
....... I.,
ope,,
Whlto, dryltl,
(740)445
beclroom lurnlohad ltllll· o mont, ulllllll peld, dotXIIIt :"'"::::;"·~::":':":'::-::::--;:::-:;:
&amp; oalww- no poll, 'Toll). i.touohen Ceopot,
Ciaott
101
IIIIZoC1111. '
'
Chlpoi JIIOad, " · Ohio.
' ' " Eotlmatea to Olyt
limo M c.~~: Flnanolng
llautlful. Roc•ntly Aono· AvaKablt. Vloa And Maatarvatoc1 2,000 lquara Foot, 3 01111,
1·577-530·8112
llldroom Pluo
(740)44e-74+4
Kllollln, MOO/
,
·
Downtown Galllpoflo, Con·
ttct Ktfly (740)4411 1111111
1i;;~;-'1

are:•

Monday

Guarin-I W. Soil t.taytao Appllancae, French
Chy Maytag, 740:4:4&amp;-ntlli.

llngll.

childhood dream to · pby
baseball. He's not trying to
hold anybody hostage."
It is possible tlut House
could join the Pirates this season, after teams can expand ·
theit rosten on Sept. 1 - . the
same day West Virginia opens
the season at Boston CoUege.
"There's an open door for
me to get there (the majors} if
I'm good enough," House
said.
House hasn't played football
since 1998, when h~ led
Nitro (w.Va.) High School to
a state championship. One· of
his former Nitro coaches,
Scott Tinsley, recently spent
more than a week with him,
working on House's passing.
House's interest in football
when
was
rekindled
Rodriguez replaced Don
Nehlen at West Virginia and
installed a spread passing
offense that favors a strong ·
thrower like House, who
passed for 10 touchdowns in
his final game and 14,457
yards in his career. .
"He (Rodriguez) knew
that I didn't use West Virginia
UniV!!rsity as a ploy or to try

..tlllon-4:30Thuradoy.
._,.,.. ...toja:t to

~~~~~""':!~~
~·,-·, ,_.,..,
RofrlgoaiOI'I, Up To to 0eyo

lilgaoaiOii,

dn!am and it's also been a

Pirates," House said.
House also beame confu,.,.j about his future when
the Pirates fired general manager Cam Bonifay last week.
"There is a lot of pressW'l!
on him for a 21-year-old kid
and with the change inwlving·Cam, he. w:anted to know
we were behind him and we
McClatchy wei
The Pirates have begun
piaying three-time All-Star
catcher Jason Kendall ~eral
times a week in the outfield, a
move believed to be · partly
driven by their belief House
could be their catcher in the
near future.
"He's made the right decision;· McClendon wd. "He
certainly has the athletic ability to hit here. His skills need·
to improve defensive!)\ but
hets not •ar away.n
House gave up his football
career after the Pirates drafted
him in the fifth round of the
June 1999 draft and gave him
a $266,000 signing bonus. He
hit .348 with 23 homers and
90 RBis last season at Class-A
Hickory and recendy had a
team record five consecutive
extra-base hits for Altoona.
House was picked. Monday
to play in the All-Star Futures
Game on July 8 in Seattle, the
only Pirates farmhand to be

from

··--··

Wllhon, dryare IIICI

fn•PII&amp;el1

and~ any money out of the

Reds

Million 1:00 p.m.,
Fo:W.y.
SENDNEL DEADLINE;
1 :00 p.m. tho d!IY
btfora 1110 I!d II to run.
Bundly • Monday
ecllllon 1:00 p.m.
Fo:W.y
BEGJ&amp;TER DEAQUNE;
2 deya btfllrellll ..t II
to run by 4:30 P,m.

(740rl 1141
3 r o o m - IPI"Mnt.
- .1,., totlllllal paid 14
Loouot S210/mo, Dlul'dflo
poa11 r4Q..44t.l34ci

The 2000 Buick Classic
champion, Dennis Paulson,
·said most of the best players
are in the field the week after
the Open because they like
the Westchester Co untry
Club.
"Everybody wants to play a
U.S. Open course going into '
the U.S. Open, but no one
wants to go get beat up two
weeks in a row, especially· the
week after the U.S. Open,"
Paulson said.
The strength of the field is a
"testament to the golf
course," Paulson said.
Woods
on Wednesday
laughed off a question that an

Achilles' _tendon problem
accoumed for 12th-place tie
at the ·U.S. Open at Southern
· Hills Country Club in Tulsa,
Okla. That broke a streak of
four . major championships
won by Woods, starting with
the 2000 U.S. Open.
"Only thing injured is my ·
pride," Woods said.
.
H e showed no .signs of
favoring either leg as he
played in Wednesday's pro-am
in a group that included :
Andrew Giuliani, the 15- ·
year-old son of New York :
Cicy Mayor Rudolph Giu- ·
liani.
The elder Giuliani asked at:
the last minute to insert his'
son in his place because the
mayor has a sore foot.
Andrew Giuliani was credited with an 85 . ·

summER

, MOIILI HOMI OWNIRI

~
"'"•-llliii

Choloty'o Famll~ Living,
33140 Now Lima Rd., Rut· land. 01110, 740·742-7403.
Main llttll Furilituoa
Aperlmontchome ono trailer
(il04}1 5-tQ2
7
oantllo, Commercill llor•
5 5 Mal St
Point
loonll avallablo lor loaoa.
1
n ,...,
V-toiiOW.
. PloUint
Furnlohed . 2 &amp; 3 Room
Now &amp; ~ Fumlturo
Aperm.nto, Clean, No 2 Pu Uvlngooom
Poll, No Smotclng, Roloron- SuiiH, 1319. Bu~, SOli,
coo &amp; Dapo.tt Roquload. T -.
Utllllloo
Furnlohod,
(740)4411-15111

Groalouo living. 1 and 2
bodooom oportmenlo ot VII·
logs Manor and Aiv•rolde
Aporlmonlo.. ln M~~:
From $278 3411.
~5084.to!'qual Houolng
vwvrtunil ·
·

HOME R~ 21 ;
.._..,.., T•xu, 20; CDelgaclo.
T.,.,., 20; · Clowland, 20;
G1auo, · ft; uo..1onoz. Cftic».
go, 18; · JaGiambl, Oatdond, 18;
. lllloono. . 11: Buries. ~
111; R P -. T-. 18,

llund!ly • Monday

• AQIIIIa._, 78 Vlno lltrMt,

I

City, 4; - .

-Ciljr. •: ~. Cio .. l&amp;ld.4.

58;
Ellaotiowz,
SolOW.,
.58;

dO, Now

House

4;

1 :DO p.m. tho dey
btfora the I!d Is to run.

...,_ _iiiliiiiiil-_.1
'
In counli)l, 0111o vlolntty, (710)+41-1115 aHer
......

'IriO

1

w.··

-

5;

.JGonu1oz,

1

never _got thrown out," said
Uhlaender, who played eight
seasons for the Twins, Indians
and Reds arid was never ejected. "Guess he didn't Want to
hear what I had to s;sy."
Finley had been sidelined
since June 2 with neck spasms.
He allowed two runs and four
hits before leaving with the
bases loaded in the fifth.
Westbrook came on and
struck out Brian Buchanan to
end the threat, but loaded the
bases in the sixth. This time,
Ricardo Rincon struck out
pinch-hitter Del!ny Hocking
to escape trouble.
"Our 'pen has been a big
part of our success," said
Manuel. "But we've got to be
careful not to tire them out
because they've helped us get
to where we are."
·
Notes: Indians RHP Chades
Nagy, a career starter now
pitchin~ in . long relief, say.
coming out of the buUpen is a
different experience. "When
the phone rings, I hope I don't
have a heart attack;' he joked.

ce-. - ·
· 1

DMroil,

a.lantl. ••.
PITCHING (10 - I I ) C h 110011:
Yorll, 9:1, .800. 3.811; ..,.,.,, Soool·

Ctovotoncl,

STRIKEOUTs-RDJabo_,, - . , .,
·
117; Sclllling, - - . 127; c:llago, 120; Pwt. .... ~ 112;

Sea'*'·
Soootrta, 8; JE....- .
Do!toal, 5; - . , _ T - 5; c
10,

TAIIUNE DEAN "f:

"-:==:·::l*;.,;;:)ti:;:7::•~73U7.:=:-:::
~~r;r.:O ~::::: 2\~~
GOOD UIID AI'PUANI-·
2;1~~~~a-tc~'Avlnue CU Wuhtni, d~, ,._

r

aocJt':icUIIIT't

r

~~-.,~:""'...:!-

"'!:e ':':0"%.

'r

down,"

2000';:;;....""';';.'Stl,

~IIOCH;;7~1~,7~1133;;i;;;i:'Q;;;j

Eam Up to 1350 In 1 day. " .• II"'ODAY to find
lnvHo ~our lrlendt to !lOUr ..... I'
homo tor a Profaulonal Pic·
ture Party. We provlao OUI more about the
Clothing and Jewelry, Call career opportunities
(800)428-8363
available at
Food v..tures Program Dl·
lnfoCiaion
reclor
Management
Appalachian Center lor ECO:
nomic Networlca (ACEMtl
Corporation.
IHklng a rnulll-&lt;&gt;rlonted
load« lor Ill FOOd V..IUIH
~rogoam. The FOOd v... 1-886-475-7223
turao Director will be r•
ext, 1911
sponolbla
7 iof ma~lng a
stoH of · The fol
ng IX·
parlellCI and olclllo oro '"'
qulrod; D.....,llralld managamont ololaffand OHOW·
cot; Extonolve flnanolal
lntoCIIIOn

......,.._,

down bad," Wickman said. "I
didn't want to do tlut again.
I'd be lying if! s:Ud it wasn't on
my mind. I let 40,000 fans

7

once. Comprehenoive ....,. """" raowly, 175. bllically .car and hugo C&lt;N·
lito. Grow Wl1h our c:ornpe- ..w; """ _,.1 other foa. ·patio. lmmedllla .,...
ny'o
b)' aendlng • r• luOM 304-17~~
-1
Reclueecl
to
•
,.,
Join •In
IIUilliiiO:
$711,800. McGuire Roahy
Wille S.wyaoa
· "ANIUI
1
1Compony, REALTOR 1·
NCI'Uitlng
P.O. Box 830
To
Do
voluniMrti far
London, KY 407.:1
Or
email
at
Great Nolgllbolllood, Good
Major Mllonltl
Ocnhl corn
All Make r.tow.ra, LAwn Condition, Handy·
helltll
-'
Trectoro, TlUon Ropllrecl, mon, HouNI Church,
arg8fllzltlone. You :-~:--=--:- fOM plct&lt;:up, o.u-y Avoll000
Mako
Ofl•r.
LAwn Cora- •
21 Ytlll ExperiooiOO. (304}175-1018
can help mt~lre a Lany'a
heRI -'&lt;in~~ pout-time ...., ·Cell MILl. (740}4&lt;18-71504
1-for oaiO b!' _,., 10
dm....ICI.
ptoyH for wHd oallng,
740-742·2803 loa,..,... ~- SowmiN, -~4m11Mt.!tofl
oage
don't haul your ' - Ill lho Send Hill Rd. U ac:r•
We offer up to
·
mill Juat COII304-015-ttl57. Cope Cod Wl1h 3 - · 3
$7/ho
1
kly · Ucanoe ""fllratory lllonplot
oar garea-. 3br. famlt~
ur P Ul wee
~tor~~-·
min•oom. ..
"' country ~~-.
bOnuaeaandafull
·
2
~
~~-·
· - ·2
lmum of rears-- oxdining lnd laundry ooom.
time shift wHh Friday
and Saturday off.

tedemption after TueSday's

"Last night, I let the team

Drive, Vwy BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Man
AT
IIUDOI!T
PN:
Slnglo
and
_
..
CU AT JAC- ES(740)ot4e,-41111
ln ... _
2 d lo
. homM, lhauundl
TATU, 52 W• ood Dilve
3 bidiC:Od helM ........ fnlm $2117 10 1383. 10
- ·line
7Z5I
- · lor c
Info. Jond
I 1 = ... rtVw vieW. ....1011 ohOp &amp; I!IO'IIa Col 741).
tlonl.
ooqulrad, clopoolt required, 4:4&amp;-2588. e~ Houolng
pay lor - " ' " ' " ond wo
~·
110
polo, 7of0.1192-e777 18 Wide. Only $1115JJO Per 5pm.
, nor
lOng
lllllllllhlcl
end
_
_ , . , . _ II ld -.g
... unlu!·
·-·· 7
1glowilog ~1ft liOU
r, •--on - . 8.99%Fbold
-wld!!l.
3 -wn In 5yla- _....,., Ringo &amp;
And
·Uf&gt;:
lo r?' 1•1or U cuoe, Ohio, s.501 ~ . . , _
i lllrl I I IE fin I poellon lhll
c:t.pil••lQ 1 881 V28 3121 HUD Appnwed (31)1,..,~ &amp; ~pilei. ~,.
plofMI. drop b)' ........... 401-l&lt;plon
..., II aullll IMA ..,,, or and Plld \IIICMiort tinl? lftiM, or 8111 ..... IliOn ID
1332 or (740)992-6110 qu~Md. c.11 740 ue 4345
at Ala liOii. -- -·
..I - 1 P o l m - - o n l y
... 11M
rp11onoe? H 10 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . ·~ 101'
(740) IIIIZ+472, E.O.E.
=;:;""'~"'A;;;;:-j:tiji;;;;;t:
In
Ohio,
with
. . be . . .WNnot,W.
11M MDL•
3 bodtwn. CIA, In Gdlpo: North 4th A... ........
L!lw o w l · rot1ng. ~ oavtngoll 11. $4001mo. pluo dopOoil, 2 ro0m olflency, utilnieo
. . hi\. For ~--- fXII't:
Ropo
!l!!lloa
paid, dopooll &amp; !Wfononces,
. . IICIC
Cal. 1 888 881 1258 lor apo 110 poll, 740 118 4313
Tllll:••
I
I
..WilhOOCM&lt;
llorl oond
......
lollCooilmunltr Hen 1•por lng . . why ,... . . . . . por· albdlllt$16 tor,... poii-.L
530 4111 AVMUe, 2 Bad- 110 polo, 740-IIIIZ:0186·
lloldliogl, Inc., of
room, 2 a.Jh, Equipped Taki!'Q_ ApplleatloMIIITIIOIIUCIOII
mooa now - · In ~
KNot...,, Central Air, No 35 Welt 2 llodooom T...,.
,, 'MDROIIMIIIW.Our
lliCkY tttan ...., pul&gt;o
inl!IUdoo
(Now) .a'x25', 3 bodtoom, 2 Pota. 142Mno.
Ohio Volley
lloiMir, lo -..g an ooqulrad, (740}4&lt;18-2158
W.tor
Sowaa-.
Truh,
CT'Dolly T-).
bolh,·
s·
...ao.
vv·
..... iiiid .....
*- - ""'' I'""' 10
$35MAo 740 448 0008
825'11*dAw,
nol
..
.
.
ol
good:
......., - . . , . r11o1ng
In
R8clno,
nice
r.olfiiiM·
·•
·
• ..... - ..... ~In
A &amp;; *t, ONa 48131
.... (Only) $31 .31 - . . In lho ;;;;:::;,;;:
I*MWJJIJI . .
hood;
lrom Star Mil Taro T - Apart•
fool w.·re dNIIng ~~ Pllk. 4 bedloom. $450 dtJ. fllilfrt&amp;, Very Spacious. 2
London, Colbln, Uo:lt..:t Work From Hom!!. Poll·
•• ' .as onan...,
l!l1d SonoooNt. KY · Mob1o
· Slala
FIAiollme, $25- $7l!lhr.
50
EutAlhono,
Ohio,Route
741). p0011, $150 per mo. lnclodol Badooomo, 2 floOI'I, CA. 1
Pilei \~~~CatioN: 1-.e7&amp;:
- · go1111g0 &amp; - · 112 , llllh, Fully Coopetod,
592·1872.
ldoal CA04'
will 7042
7:01-4)1 , 741).949- AduR Pool &amp; Bail)' Pool. PIof
rut out
lloMI!!;
-:-~-::-::--::--::::-=~ 2217
tlo ~- •-u~ No Peta
2
- • ,..,.
oalel IO(CJII
·~ A ......._
FOR ""&lt;MUO:
Umltod Or No Cnodit? GoYLouo
Pl..
I'
:c
.
' -·
-Socuilty
-· Depooit•
-~~ underllandlng' 01
TlwNJNG
Lo.-iooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioo_.l ....-Sara Flnoow Only lo Your -1400? Reqoliod, oaro: 40:44
7
the 1 - wilt be hllpful,
3 112 Mllel Out Sondllili AI ~ In 3 - ..... 2 Balli Flanch 34111; E""""'a-: , 740:387·
o
~
-~
~
..,.._...,...
vie, WY 304-7S3400.
Style Homo FRIITI Ronl To ...,.., ,~ ••• ~IOI
- a --- •-• 0 '"'I-~ ,_,(31)1,..,~,
Own.f140)448 3583
......., ~ . .
lniJ .,...a- 11 lrdudod. " (ear- c-. To Homo)
RfU. t.ot rncxt.1 de!lrti!Ce. ~~.::'!.....~~~...: CIIITodayl7404481387, ~u.:ou~ 111 upi0$8,825-anyhclma, Pilot P....,.m, RIOIIt.,. TWinAivorT-,_acj~-~";;;~1-800:214:0482,
lifo ~ .,... oanch chodl uo aut doaNng, - . aa..7311-72115.
cept1ng
1
I)Oiitlol• ond and
~-12748. o1y1o hcJma on qulet Cale'o MoiJio - · US Three SR. Mldcllot&gt;Oit. 1350
lf)l)licatlonl for 1 BR
outgoing · peooonallty, we
011-.lng modem kitchen 150 Exol. " " - 011·
por """"" ptuo depooll, HllO ..-eel apt. lor·
Wi111111&gt; 111111111nlll!U...,.,.,...,
._
cablnela
....
dllhLot
-~
~--one
Includes
·
ond
~
l!l1d · EOH.
..__ _ _ _ _ _
wllhor,
11oy bod, trltl'l 740-IIIIZ.0175
(304)117U879.
125
Salary l!l1d oommlllion . _ 975 - . detac:tor ooonw..
dining ·~ for 2000 modo! ~. 5
U!wlalol. 2 - . . . .....
_ , . bMecl on t&gt;ipOfl- r
·
lnd loiVe IMt1g ooom. o pre owned llinglol must go
1f.l41h Ave- &amp; "-""

~

r

~-

t disasrer:

Ir· .::.::r 1t

'
'
25550'
Loolclng for a...,.
"IIAIIKETFRUH'
LArge 3 Family, Inside Gs·
caiMr?
rage, Lots Of Now Buolneu
ARIY'I R-nto 0,.
Clothin~, Size 9-10 Thru 20,
now IHklng praiHolonal
Baby lothes, Household
04111CIItlatoo lor all lov.lo of
Wears. Some Furniture,
Mania-mont AggrOIIIve
Stale RO&lt;rte 325 S. Outside
pilnnecl unit OliPiiiOion 11
Alo Grande, Starting June
-.g.,._ wl1hln lho 1oc:11
5th: July 30th, g:aoam-5:30
lit·ototo .,... Experlonco 111
Moving SOle· Baicaoa Rack,
food Hrvlo• lo
DHk, Rec liner, Coffee Ta·
gooua; but not oaquloecl. Ex·
blo, Drftoer, Pootablo Dllh·
Salarlet • BanoiH
waoha&lt;,
Couch 4 LOVooeal,
PaoliagH
Avalllblol PINoo
740 441 11234
740 8
fax you .....,., to 1-eoe8 '
"
-38 '
1138-11817 or omallll&gt;:
608ovenlnoo.
01!1ooiandOzoomnot.not
Yal(f s.r• Mitchell Road,
M
;,:an A to:
.. 22nd buoinHI communltlll; In1n1gement illll1
"'I'
novatlvo prOblam-lolvlng
f
olrat-aloo: e...111111 0011&gt;
t.toeture·e Rllll~ront now
muniOIIIon ablllttoo In wilt·
hirtna Ill 3 '-tiOI'IO. lui or
, , ~ LoiMoclll _ . · Toka Ovor Poymonla, 3
1
lng. opoaklng, and publ~
port-limo, plcil up llltlllea•
llldooom, a llellt Ollcwoad.
diPOIImtnl lnclucllng 0011&gt; lloeltlon Annou- lion atlocallon &amp; b~ng llldooom, I IIIII, Call
For
Dtlalla
puler/aottwiro
aptlludl' Pottlngtlltt:June13,2001 bttwH"
l :iiOam
&amp;
Woo
UUt5,
Now (740)4411-3870
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY 9-5, Grent Writing tnd luncll'll.:
10:D0am, Monday thru lat•
1142,1117· Pofol Good Til 1
IIABY CLOTHES, WOOD ing olclllo' Sovvy nttworltlng
Heeclloftbtll CMoh
uroa~.
•11-01,
Hurty To OM•
CRAFTS, UTILITY TRAIL· 0nd 000 l'l!lo "" "I ""I'" Appilcallono are bllng ac1
bodroom
Wood•
n-l~
ng ~ '"• oapled fer lha poal!on 01 NNdod Exporllnoac:l Coaw ll..t. /110, OIOH Ill gall (740}441-30t3 Galllpolla,
EA. MISC .,' 144 N, 4TH
Stratoglo
planning
ond H d s~·'l C010 h ~ ••• lor hill~ and Flnlonl~ COUrtl C~ en MHI
AVE,, MIDD LEPORT, OH.
loamollload lmplo.,.ntoilon oa "'""'
•w ·~
··•
8 ''
'(7'"
·I' 70 n ... ~
D
history Praloronoe will be Unlv~t~lty at Alo Qranclt. looUonal Houolng. o C -. ....,
•• ~ljj;': ....:,~rn, Owner Rlllrlng. lulltllng
Thursday Juno 2111 and Fn· glvtn 10 oandldlltl WhO all- Thl•lo I Plrl•llmo poolllon, Prlolng I-lion ond 0"'
"':..
......
~on:
F,OI' 8alt In Galllpoltt, ONO,
10
day Ju .. 22nd, huge oalt, dltlontlly
htvo
pertonoo
·
Southam
3
ladrcom
on
Aoull
2,
ill
·
Onr
Route 7, Hu Liratoy1, clotnee, Ice cheat, oxportonot/tklllt: In thiiOOtl R-llbllllilt ollhe POll• Hornet, PO !loot ll2t, Jlalt- (304)e7..11332
18114 Norl'll 141171, tOtel Paoklng Lol. Hu 4 Ranlall,
45840
oomforter1, entenalnmtnt
• lllolrlc, Iillo now - l i l t , Aloo lola Of Flaoo
ltand, Sugar Run Road, procootlng and/or agrtcul· tlon lnotudo, buloro not lim· oon, OH
=~~ Toklng oPf)lloadona: oook, g.~~~·.:r..bllt~:V a btdoaom. •16,1100, 740- GOOd lnoorno. Call
!-ong Bottom, Pulllna rool· tuool ooctors; owning IIICI
managing a buolnoo and/or prnd ~Ia pervltlon grill-. dllh-, walt- oatllng (740)3n-IIM
441-0175
740 7-7111
dOilCI.
aooillfng omall bualno- •
,
IU 1
•
• ~ •·
· rooo, atop 11 Mllllo'o Rulauo
with ovorago ulu ol bo- ABadloloroclog'" • .,... oant 31238 Bradbury Ad 3 bedrooms 2•1/2 btlho, 25lc1030r4~J.On....,,~.,.
YARD SAU:o
twoan $tOOK lo $10 miiNon; l•rr~. Poavlouo coochlng M~ 0111o for llltli~ lmmtdllto PDIIIIIIon, ~ ly $345.00 .Por MOnth
ACRIACII
~ . Pr.PI:.F.AsANr
In nolplng otoH ct.votop lholr o•po~onct '*'-ry.
lion
duotel. wu 1!481100 , _ Ul% Flltad 1 - Rate,
.
full potential; managing a dl·
·
·
,
lt2$,QOO,
HOtzor. l.f111.121.3421
Camp Sltot FOI' Rtnt On
voroo 'urvlcoo portfolio." lnterutt&lt;f peroon ohoukl Own A Computor? Put it 740-44HII71
.
Gaol
32 ID KanAwha River, II mlloo
Moving sale 21504 JeffalliOn Thlols 1 oanlor pooltlon with Nnd 1 OHumo and I IOitor
To Wor1&lt;?
FIOiory
•
from Polnl PINOOnt.II0C1110
Avo. F~.·Sot 8·7
oxcellont btneflll, flex Hma of lnterMI bolooa lhe tlaad· www.WOtleOU!olyouillornl.oo 3 Br homo lor oaiO,
11o.oog., =u~ ~ cnl~.
(304) •
,
8755pm
1722
and a compotHive oalary In llno of Jut~ 18, 2001 .
m
Ave Mkfdloport 740fi2· 1 1000.
, ,,._,, (""'1875-&lt;11 .. Mot
Yard SolO Friday June 22 II· a dynamic natlonally-acPh)'llll Maoon, SPHA
:J3o48
IIICI MIUP pilei b!' factory T
'
·
5 4 1/2 miles oul Jeny _Run claimed
oc:onom~ Dlr. ol Human Aaoourcoo Wtod EtUng Hllloldoo,
l.-1-e777
Lcoltlng To Buy A Now
Rd. on Casey Ad,
development orgsnlzatlon. Unlvo~~ ~~
Goando Dltchoo, Ete. Mowing, 5 ~~ proporiJ
Final Dayo, Natlonwldt In- Homo? Don't HI.. Land?
Yard Sale Rovonowood Soncl roou.,. and lllrH
oof·
Rio
G~
OH
45874
Cltlln·up,
Removal
Of
Un·
(7.c\~~
vontooy
Rocluctlonl Wo Colli Huny Only 10 loto
10
nur Copas on Aaco and orenc:H b!' Junt ~ lhe
prniloont~o eclu
wantod ltomo. Odd JOOI.
•·
, (304)'131o-3ot01
· Loll, 31)1.738-72115.
Gibbs, June 21 , 22, 23 8·4 ::;lonA~l~~ 5otham: Fu number 740:2..·4900 Call Slewl (740)4411-71504 . 5 room &amp; beth, 2 ponlheo, Mull SOli 19114 Liberty
n,
no ·
um
' I&gt;JC rofngorator, eloclrlo
bodt
b!otll
t,~~~RKETAND
bus Road, Athane, Oh Someonetotoktcaroofmy Will Mow LAwna, (304)875- IIOVI &amp; IIU IUIIIOCII. 14X70' 3 b~l Herold'
rLr.l\ ,....,
•
45701, No phone calla molher In my home lulltl.,. 5129 Leave Mouago,
· 27 500 11 2o4l!4 Monroo
·
•
. HOU'IES
387·
plouo. ACEnet to an Equal or pan limo, 740-387:0302.
Avonuo (304)1175-I3II ·
40:
FOR RJ!Nr
Opportunity Employer com'
Now 14 ft $4lll dOWn
Rick Pearson Auction Com· . miHed lo quality lob croatlon Halp wantod to traval wHh URGENTLY
NEEDED· D•oter, 3 beclroom, tiro· , onl~ $11111. por
call I ·3 Beclroomo Fooac:loaad
pony, full time auctlonaer, In the region.
clrcuo, will help aroottonto. plaima donooa, Mrn $45 to ~lao•, private oocludad, now HI00-611Hm.
HOIII!Ii from $!99/Mo., %
complete auc:llon service , La"'" M 1
So 1c Mull havo vaiiG drlvoro II· teo for 2 or 3 houro -~· new d!ock, 2 ttocy, building
Down
Ynos at 4,_
110Llatlngo
8.35 ,
Licensed •66,0hlo &amp; West Fre'l E:t~m~es, rvco~i canoe. Apply at Maoon Call sera· Tee, 740·592· In bllclc, loullt.-, wllclilo, Now 14 WIGo, 3 Bodroom. APR For
V1rg1nla, 304·773·5785 Or (740)256-9383
County · Falrgroundo, Juno 1151 .
$42,000, 741).742·2218.
On~ $19,8150. FrH Dollvery
3
E•t.
, ' 800 19
1709
304·773·5447.
20th or 21st
&amp; Sot Up, 1-188-928:2428 332

~~~~fr.~?;•.Ju

,·'~

·----- ............................. .

-.

nibe

;:

r--::--........-..., •·•

Aldeohllt Ex
Day and a.wmoon
. •
124 Klneon Olive, June 22 poolenoe pretomod but not
&amp; 23. sam·Spm, table saw, necesuoy. Pleue apply at
hand saw, small toots, misc. Arcadia Nurolng Cantor,
East Maine Siooot, Coolville,
5 lamily, June 22 &amp; 23, 8· 0111o or call Maoy Root, dlot·
4pm, Bulaville Pika, al 7.5 aoy oupervlaor at 74CHI87·
mlfe mar1&lt;er, boat, table, 4 3 t 58 EOE.
chairs, end tsbleo, kids to
plus ~zo ctolhlng. Misc.
Domino's Pizza o1 Point
Pleasanl now hl~ng dilv·
Gaoage Sale· 550 Ja~ ers. Greal wootc ...,..,.
Frida•&lt;. 22nd B&amp; SoiUI·
t cornpe'"'dOlive,23d
~pe~. fie420•·
ay
r . eoys· ean1es, men
lblo. ,Apply
In••pe10011,

Mise,

1I"'· llruWAHIDJ

Ilm.PWAMUI

Ovwbo... Cor'lllr lo , _
IXPJ!tlti)IIQ OUR
1-.ptllog 014+ IloilO lor
ADVIII'IIIINQ
lull u... ond pert MI.IIQUI'
LPNS lor ~ond " : Ala ) &lt; l U I - ......
nilll'f.,_
Poy
p.op.7 Ala
.,._,, ~C..Chl: , _ gredo II
.40 II« )Dp
~ . . . ihOIIU ' 1 IRi ..,.
_..,uc, bolllnd Burgor llouf. ~ II ~-?,.,,...

F"'"' . - _ . EnofgMic, p!IIClUal, pooitM
10 In
ofllco. No _...
..,. ,.. 1111ry, Apply 1n

•

New To Vou Thrift Shoppe
9 West Slimson, Athens

............. _. ...........

Dflct'lptlon • lftdude A PriCe • Avoid AbbrnlltiCMt

rI-....!~

ANNc:luNo:Mmrs

7

- ·Son,_,

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

i-~

c

s..
~ UooAlool,AIIMU,IO.
Ill: - · Colo
71 ; LGonulu, .....ta.80;...,.,
HITS S!:nokl,
Aoba&gt;o. 811;
II: BAYES ... n. Son ffllncloco, 21 ;
SUttle,
112;
LWa!Lw", ~. 117; Pujofo, SL
- · - . 11; . . .. .... Anp: St-n. TORII1IO, 17; MAaml,.t,
~ 12; - · s.n Diogo, 58.
1M, 111; - . l'l1illllllltiU 17; · 111; ARodriguez. Toxu, 81;
~-.-..-.
- . 15; Ora-. Clnclnnalf, - ·· - · 119; JGonulu,
Son frencioco, 114; l'lijolo, SL Looulo, t•: 8\\"iiQuer,
Houlton. 14; Hoffman, o.v.&amp;and, 18; MJS...,.y, KaRIIU
Ill; - . Colcroolo. II; - . . , Col· s.n Diogo, 1• .
City, M .
orttiO, 116; BGIIH, ""-rgb. 14;
DOUBL£5-MJSaMo ..r, Cllv.
,_.._.14.
31 ; o,_, Toxu. 23: JaGlombl, o.kDOUBI ES 1 -. ~. 25:
lind, 22; ECho-. o.Jt1ancL 21 ; SlewIII, T - . 20; ~. Soattt.. 20;
- · ~.
· 22; BGIIoo,
21 ; - PitJo.
.•
GIO,., AoiOIIOim, 11; UooiCiool, TORII1IO,
Pl'hlfldolpthlltclolplllo, 21; · ~.
11.
:; 21 : - . Sllnf-.21.
TRIPLE~u1onan, Mlnneeote, 11;
;:

To Place
Your Ad,
Call

PERsoN.wi

- . . . ~. 7: BAm~ - . .- ;
" - , I; V1na, 81. ~ I ; Scaul4, Seatlle. .35%; JGonulR.
RoiN. PI a t t hfa. s: OCaiNwra. Cloo ... ld, .M5: .'Hl! Till, 0 II IlL
Montrttal, I ; Won oct, A11ZoM. 4; .lMO; - - . , _ e.,. .3315;ctl - . 332: Ollollld - .
HOME RiJ'IS
s.n Faa: ' • .332:P'l . C..· ..;.~~~, ..s3z.
31: lGonuiN. 30; - . RUNS a -te - T - 86; Suzu.
cO....
. -St.l-,21
· 25; - ;.._.
CN!:8go.
23; 111. 1o4; MJS
••· ~. City.
58:~-. 53; ... I '
21; ...... St.~:n
T - 10; CGu liM• Mioo- 411;
STtUN BASES I"--· - . 1181: .. · ~ Ollollld, 23; - . . . ............... 21; - . ..
~ JGonultz,
~. 17; Go ........ ~
-.4 .
Clo
17;f-."-.
R11 M 10,
·
73;
.....
11; - (tO
· -o-,. " Smiling.
·
PITCHING
u •J
Wfl&amp;lioll,
MzoN. 11·2. ..... 2.7t: HaliijJICWO.
·
87;
~. 11-2, .111, 3.08; - ·
Houston, 11-3, .727, • .17; T_,.,
T-.
81 ;
TRIPI "S

I

- . - . .310; A&amp;.wlia, Son " ' .355; l'lijolo, SL lAM, .3o15; Hoi:
ton. Casa ...,, .341; a.:tm.a. ttcJw..
lOri, .3311; fJo¥1.
Flarido, .337.
RUNS II t a,
Colcroolo, 73;

Else can!

r

The IWiy' s.ntlnel • ,... 8 5

•

Relldenllal or commerc1al
wiring, ntw seMce or re,
palr1; M:i1ter Llc•nlld • lec-

trlc6an. Ridenour Electrical,
WV000306, 304-675·1786.

rlr-------I
AlmQuEs

..__ _ _ _ _ __.

~

110 Help Wanted

•

'

S6-S7/HR

·fasg Indoor
work flexible
hours full/part
time hurry!
Positions
NOW HIRING, ALL POSITIONS
Full/part time • day/evening
Apply after 4 pm
at any Gino's location.

Buy or oall. Rlverlno AntiquH, 1124 Eaat Main on
SR 124 e. Pomoroy, 741).
992-2528 or 740-992·15311.
~uu Moont, ownor,

JOBS

fllllng qulddgll
88-974-JOBS
COG
management, uc

!

�Pou

Of, WMrpalt,Ohlo

• l'llur.-y, .u.. 21, 21001

·tltribunt - Sentinel -

MAJOR LE~GUE LEADERS

CLASSIFIED

NAnONAL
'lEAGUE

We Cove·.._..,
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One

BAT11HG-Aiou, Houolon. M3; LGon-

l.Gonzatez. .....

-. M;

Fiarido,

flord.

. . _,
.._.,,

81 ;

Colo
tU ;

F·
. -. s.n
57;
-

~.
$on
Dlogo,M.
t? It ..
Cala IIIIo,
80;

SSooa.

58:-.

SSooa. Chk:ago.

Includes Ftee Yard Sale Sign!
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Ovet 15 words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Qlsplay Ads
An Dllplor: u -

2

lluiiHU O•p Prlot To
PubliCation

s u - 01-: 1:oo p.m.
Tllurtay for Surwt..,.

HOW IQ. WRITE AN, AQ

• St.rt Vour Ads With A Keyword • Include CompleC.e

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

• Include Phone ftumber And Addrat:s When •Hded

• Ads Should Aun 7 DIYI

II'JCI

Top Dollar. U.S.
Siver, Gold Colno, Procl·
Why wall? Start mHiing ~~~. Dlamondl, Gold
Ohio 11ng1eo lonight t-800- Rongs, U.S. Cu"*"')',·
768-2fi23 "'" 1621
M:r:s. Coin Shop, 151 S.:·
;g:;:,:::;,::;.;,,;.;;;:;.;,·; ,..,-., ondA.....,,Gallljlllio, 140:
44&amp;-2M2.

1

IIDIW-

II"

King. Oalljlllllo

*"' w...........

::::,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...,.....,I, full.tlme
- . FUiritln
Dum family lrlbuts. July 1, 1.10
o.livery
lOam. ML Union church Pti-~1
lli!IJ'W.
Aj1p1y. UltO!yiH.-n,
ny WV. &amp;inging · dining ev·
AHilD
8S6 1111111 A-.e, Gdlpo:
eryonewelcome.
llo. Nol'honoCIFo.

"'ST~
-'

IMMEDIATE NEED: OW...

lor of Nulling (RN) lor ful.
Singers, All
Sando
&amp; Ages.
Vocal -tonn woo1cln
1 114
bod long
Quality clothing and house- Groups,
Slylell
caro 01010
fll:lllly,
Ex·

740-592·1842

hold

~ems.

$1 .00 bag safe MaiOI' Record Label Seek· -

bono111 Pld'llgo Jn.
Now Mloto. Coming Stato CMt SoMco
To
Huntington,
WV Rellrement. can oam up 10
(901)427-2639
or 15 clap vacation. 18' &lt;11yt
(901)427-11514
llidllooave *'&lt;113 dlyt poiCI
hollcla
lor ful.
Are you loddng lor lho 01)' liniO
Solooy 1o
por1unity IO Join a WinRii1G
wllh - "
team and ~pan o11a ence COntact Keith Slouff·

every Thursday. Monday
1ng
dvu Soturday 9:00-6:00.

."Notice' Red Bam al apple

g..,.e, has cloSed, due to
rood construction. Wll resume operation at a later
:cda:::.l•:::.·- - -...,-...,-Will tal&lt;e selecled anliqueo
to sale on con8lgnment in
our shop. Lim~ed space.
C811 (304)675·2144

O:J:",:'

con"'*""'"'"

fall growing ·-·· care n- ., Mmlnlotoator at Llll&lt;ln
duatry? Scenic Hlllo Nursing HOop.1a1, Laldn, wv 01
Center ls .,o,ffenng Nurse c)875-0860, Ext. 101 ,
Aide Tram_,~ Ci8SSH
• thru F•••u f•om
monlhiJ. It 11...a 75 houo Sam- &lt;tpm
Laldn·Hoopital
•
-·
11
couOM, luting lor 11 days. an EEOIM Employer
- y tllrough Filday 8:30
G "~"""Y
to 4:30. This is a groat opr
"~""
, ponuniiJIThenextclauwlll
begin In July. Stop b!' today
Are you·
. F... KiHens, 3 maies &amp; loranappllcationoroon!OCt
2 females. They were born Stephanie KOIT1j&gt;ilr, fnotiUC·
. . .king •
on Easter. (740)44&amp;-9582
tor, at (740}446-7150
neW CJI....r?
K·,ttens to """" •· -·, 7,A Anlll1!ion- Wool&lt; from hclma.
•740-245·9762
- •~•~ ~
51$7
·~ 1
245-9143 or
lnloCislon

r

I

i:::;::;::~·I
R

r

YARD SAlE

YAKD So\1.&amp;

G~

~-. ~.;;,.::!;;,;;.,.:.

maker.c:orn
1-1188·387-3450

Co

AVONI All Mlaol To Buy or
5el. Shliloy Spearo, 30ot675-1429.

~oy

:.;.::::.::=-----

Huge Garaoe Sale- 552
da
Oobbl&amp;eSaD•iverd, Thu9rsctay5pm
, F•l·
lu ay, am'
y
lnlants &amp; Children's Cloth·
lng. lois of goodies. Every·
thing reasonably priced.

.

lluovl1.22:

S'

,.'"
~

t

I

Mo.Jtlhe
-SW!

G:t --...
..........
_
...............
.........
...........
....... ............
,.,
,.,-__
...
---,-.... ---0·=,.

.

-.a

•Wile I

contact-_,

---to:

7

. . . . .

, .

1

,

._,

po-. -

~~

__
_.,......., -....,.,.,....

I

.....

_.....,_

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a.ortoa~=

1

~ Oopooit &amp;
-- - ,~. No

Good

AI_. ...............

._.

*"'

1092 -

I

riO

Iili ..__

1

Rale••- -

I

Viand Slreet, Point Piauant.

Management

I'

has the

rpora 1011
career for you,

1176

I
_.~
=.·

u= ..·--

-

vi-

0

no

•*·

""""'"'" preloroecl. Poaltlon
-lrH call dulleo, l!l1d al·
tor hour oetupo. Sond ... ,

riG

oumeo to: JR12, 200 Main
Slroot Point Pleuant wv

o.-"""""""'

1·-·

1121101he, foGnl pooch, bock
and polio, quality
OftooR'ruNrry : iMiugliOUt. IAuot ... to ill&gt;'
rpoac1a1a.
f175,ooo. phone
c-·""75-4225
INOliCI!l
-,.
·
OHIO VAUEY PUBLISH· Leton FaHo 10iU01 from tile
INO co, oacommendtl lhet achool, lara- 2 fomil~
youdobUII,_wltllpeople3750
you know, and NOT to oond oquarO foal, 112 c:ornp1aW1y
money tii&lt;OI9l the mall until r•IIICid.t..t with buiH In
you hevt lnvMtlgllld lho kltohtn &amp; woacl flooring,
ollerlng.
ole &amp; lumac., largeo
-around pooch, 3 tooth·
Slart Vour Butln- To- ....,., _ , , call for
dey... f'o1ml Shopping C... OOmpiOte - · 440-748tor 8peoo Available At At· ~.
loo- Aolo. 8prfng Valloy
- . C811740~101. - · 3 or 4 bodloom,
._
, - MWiy . . . - . 1
[
....,.
crNAL
lOr,- yam, niOt otoo1«
!iJER\IIca
01 rentot:l, owntrl - n g
to out cout, 122,000,
TU
DOWN ON
741).741·8010, 740·742·
11117 2212.
NoFMUfliloaW.Winl
MlaEifiNB
1 Ill 512·1344
FOR SAtl

--toly

···c··
Ill

•dv-·

II

=l~g ,;,~x==

b!' May 31,

raomo11or ooluoed, ..._
_ , loot long, oo o10p In
·
and chKk uo out, w0·,. 2 bodtoom . - hcJma tor
daallng, Colt'o - l e ront, $3251 month, $300 doAlhono Ohio 0pon paoli. 110 poll, IWfononces
M-W. 9-7, Thln-f~.. 9-8, ~. (740}44B:f342 of·
..........
Sot ID-5.
--"'"..:.,."_·-==~=::
Now 18 ft. $&lt;iii9. per · 2 Bedooom, (74019112-2802
moot only $270. per . mon, D••utJfui River View caiiODW HI00-691-6m.
f-01' Or ......... n J - .
1 2 , ..,... ~--,
Now 2001 14•70 &lt;tO, Depooit, No Poll, F.,.
a..o BR, 2 Bdl. 11reec1y ter Trlllor Pail&lt;, 7~1 ·
001 up rNdy to movo In 0181 ,
$99S clown Still P« mon111
·
In Flacl..· good oonciHion
740:992:2 167
ilicot. ~.
2 bod:
.....,
~1350~
Now 2001 -·r ooom, -al...
r, ca.,..,
~
$148.48 per month . . Call pooll, $350 per mo. 1 Ka.... 740-385-4387,
wotor, gsll&gt;ila- &amp; -aa-,
available 7· 1.01, 740-1149- - - 3 br._2_111. 2217.
$998 00 clown only -·5
por oiton. call ,_ 1-aoo: MobiiO home In Racine
691-6m.
. or... no pels, 740·992·
5858
Now Monthl
Doublo3 Willa.
$1115
Por
Badloom,
2
ArAinMf.ms
Bath. FiM 0tt1very &amp; Sot·
roll RENr
uj&gt;. 1-688-9211-3420
Prlvato p........, And New
and
•-•--- •-rt·
2
p mont 1
~-. ""~ ·~ · •w•-- mN r·
(304)738-72iltl
- · oocurlty dotXIIit ,_,
SchuH mollliO hclma, bod- qu~~· 110 peta. 740:1111Z·
2
room, oxc•llont oonclltlon,
22 '
rengo, ret11gorotor, · 1 llodooom Aparlmtnt "-""
tloyor. air oondlllof&gt;:
Ronge NO In:
1ng, (740)4:4&amp;-11470
alucloll •• Pluo'n..-.• a
•..1111
..........,,
Siii(Jio Saotlon lot CINr· Rolorenct. HUO Appoovecl,
..,... All Moclllo Aoctuoacl. (740)441-1511
1 Room F=-= ! =
Galllpollo
(7~
GIJIIr:'11 OH 1115/mo'
110

A~~~Ot

~·4 1~;,,.,

s,_,

Noar

,.g.,...

=ti&gt;olt

I

s

a-.r

1

't

r.:,:t

~~

mon.

\

StruggJing to score runs
latel)\ the Indians got a spark
fiom an wtlikely source first-base coach Ted Uhlaender.
Uhlaender was ejected for
arguing with umpire Andy
Aetcher in the fifth inningjust
before the Indians rallied.
"I told him we needed that,"
·Burks wd. "Wen~ something like tlut to spark us.
Then I told him not to worry
labout it because I'm paying his

fine...

Uhlaender remained puzzled about what he did wrong.
"I've said a lot worse to
umpires when I played and

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

l

AnnouotceoMn1,

far--

~.Loot&amp;

Found, YJII'CI-.,

-·

IIOmN
-ToDoAde
- I a Paid In

Fumlohtd. WI!·
., Furnlohocl, $300/mo,
1$!50
o.pooit,
(740)448-906t
fllgeratcr

Baa.
~--··

11:_,_,

-...z.

s.n

~ &amp;:3, .727. •.115: .......
Dloogo, 7·3, .7110, U1 ; 81.
............. .11112, 2.73; ~. .....
............1112,2....

r.

~air~..;.;:::.-.......-...,
SP.Ia
~
u-...,_...liii~ii.......,iiiiilo'-"
0111cot _.,, 537·112 2nd
Avenuo, (740)4ot6-01503 or

(740~158

;,-,;,--~---

One dock lito fOI' rent, one
full hookup for a omafl
camping toallor, family typo,
4().992. 8S6
'5 ·
7
~
.. ~
TO~R1!Nr

c

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

f~gtl'ltor

··

Houii!How
Gooo$

riO

•

5TOL£N B.IISE$-S.ozutd, · 23;
23: · 23; · Soanle, 22; Sori. -Yart,. -Yart,21
; -.Baltinl0t,
15; Nln liM. Mioo- f4; o.mon,

c-... DMroi1.

. .. &amp;:2• .100, 4.S.; - · .... - .
1-3, ,727, 3 ..:1; Burba, Clowland, ""'
.727, 1.23; Milton, M...._, 7·3,

- · Ook· .700. 3.73; - · Daldoncl, ""'· ,fl/l7,

- · 57; ..._. 3AI; - · Olltland, 7-4, .638. 3.44;

v..-, · - v..-, 7-4, .8311. 3.07:
~. -. 7-&lt;1, .838, 3.• 5.

AMERICAN
LEAGUE

STRfKEOUTS-PMootlnoz, Booton,
140; o.n-, Yoofc, 100; ... Yoofc, II; Colon, ~·
17; HOmo, - · 85; Zlto, ....._.,,
12:
Hucloon, Olltland, 111.
SAVES 8'Mk1, Sllnle, 26: MRivera,
Y011c, 21 ; Percival,~. 17;
F -. ChUao, 18;
Mln- . 111: Wfc:lcmon, c - . . .. t4;
.....,.__, Olltland, 13.

Ha-.

Saiiii'II!IY ...

HERE'S WHAT I THINK -

Indians flrst base coach . Ted
Uhlaender gives umpire Andy Aetcher an ear full after being
ejected for arguing a close call at first Wednesday. (AP)

•

It
1988 etwey cavalier, stoo
fOI' ports, loll of good ports,
bod motor 740-992-5532

chango-to
hoi

from Page B1

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

~

For Solo: Rooondltlonod
orators. Thom•
..,.., 3407 Jackoon ..,

IASEMINT
WAT!BPROOFING
Uncondlllonal liltllma guar·
ant... Local reference• fur·
nlohtcl, EotobUth..t 1175.
Call 24 Hro. (740) 448·
0870,
HI00·287:tl57e .
Rogo11 Watorprooflng,

1!11001

II=,

~

fourth.
Brandon Kolb gave up five
more ·in the fifth, including
three homers.
,
P,ilge B1
" When you start putting a
hit his first homer in exact- bunch of runs together, there's .
Iy a month. Not when · a sigh of relief," said Case)\
Michael Tucker and Pokey who also had a single and a
Reese also homered to finish . double. "We haven't had too
off a five-run fifth.
many games we could sit back
When the Brewers decided and enjoy."
The
only
enjoyable
to let third baseman Mark
Loretta pitch the . eighth moments for the Brewers
inning, Boone finally tould came in the eighth, when
relax.
Loretta pinch-hit and volun"Today was a fun day," he teered to pitch, something he
said. "I enjoyed it We'll really hadn't done since he was at
enjoy it - for a couple of Northwestern in 1993.
hours."
He did much better than
The way this season has Cunnane and Kolb. Throwing
gone, the Reds have leailleCf"' a fastbaU that topped out at 83
not to count on anything mph, he struck out two and
gave up a single and a walk in
good lasting very long.·
When Ken Griffey Jr., a scoreless inning, then saved
Barry Larkin and Aaron the baiL
Boone came off the disabled
"I had a lot of fun," he said. ·
Notes: The last Brewers
list last Friday, they counted
on a turnaroul\d. Instead, they position player to pitch was
lost the first five games of Rick Dempsey, who did it
their homestand, · stretching twice in 1991. ... Milwaukee's
their overall losing streak to a Richie Sexson hit a basesseason-high eight games.
loaded double in the eighth,
. A day of horrible pitching . extending his hitting streak to
by the Brewers - save for six games .... Chris Reitsma
(4 -6} pitched into the eighth
their third baseman, that is gave Cincinnati the huge for his first Cinergy win ....
nudge it needed to get out of Ken Griftey Jr. has hit safely
its rut. Will Cunnane (0- 3), in .all six games since returngiven his first start of the sea- ing fiom a torn hamstring (9son, gave up six runs in the for-21 with one homer) .

Buick

••

I

call 740-44..73118, ,....,
::11.;,;;1-0;,::;;;121=.-~-~~
,.
Lilli rncxt.1 Magio Olltl,
fooet fiM reflfgnlor, 1100;
'
Konmora ,.._, 1711
•···•
I
Mlddl
~
I
Thltl
110IDIII
- ·- all '
....... I.,
ope,,
Whlto, dryltl,
(740)445
beclroom lurnlohad ltllll· o mont, ulllllll peld, dotXIIIt :"'"::::;"·~::":':":'::-::::--;:::-:;:
&amp; oalww- no poll, 'Toll). i.touohen Ceopot,
Ciaott
101
IIIIZoC1111. '
'
Chlpoi JIIOad, " · Ohio.
' ' " Eotlmatea to Olyt
limo M c.~~: Flnanolng
llautlful. Roc•ntly Aono· AvaKablt. Vloa And Maatarvatoc1 2,000 lquara Foot, 3 01111,
1·577-530·8112
llldroom Pluo
(740)44e-74+4
Kllollln, MOO/
,
·
Downtown Galllpoflo, Con·
ttct Ktfly (740)4411 1111111
1i;;~;-'1

are:•

Monday

Guarin-I W. Soil t.taytao Appllancae, French
Chy Maytag, 740:4:4&amp;-ntlli.

llngll.

childhood dream to · pby
baseball. He's not trying to
hold anybody hostage."
It is possible tlut House
could join the Pirates this season, after teams can expand ·
theit rosten on Sept. 1 - . the
same day West Virginia opens
the season at Boston CoUege.
"There's an open door for
me to get there (the majors} if
I'm good enough," House
said.
House hasn't played football
since 1998, when h~ led
Nitro (w.Va.) High School to
a state championship. One· of
his former Nitro coaches,
Scott Tinsley, recently spent
more than a week with him,
working on House's passing.
House's interest in football
when
was
rekindled
Rodriguez replaced Don
Nehlen at West Virginia and
installed a spread passing
offense that favors a strong ·
thrower like House, who
passed for 10 touchdowns in
his final game and 14,457
yards in his career. .
"He (Rodriguez) knew
that I didn't use West Virginia
UniV!!rsity as a ploy or to try

..tlllon-4:30Thuradoy.
._,.,.. ...toja:t to

~~~~~""':!~~
~·,-·, ,_.,..,
RofrlgoaiOI'I, Up To to 0eyo

lilgaoaiOii,

dn!am and it's also been a

Pirates," House said.
House also beame confu,.,.j about his future when
the Pirates fired general manager Cam Bonifay last week.
"There is a lot of pressW'l!
on him for a 21-year-old kid
and with the change inwlving·Cam, he. w:anted to know
we were behind him and we
McClatchy wei
The Pirates have begun
piaying three-time All-Star
catcher Jason Kendall ~eral
times a week in the outfield, a
move believed to be · partly
driven by their belief House
could be their catcher in the
near future.
"He's made the right decision;· McClendon wd. "He
certainly has the athletic ability to hit here. His skills need·
to improve defensive!)\ but
hets not •ar away.n
House gave up his football
career after the Pirates drafted
him in the fifth round of the
June 1999 draft and gave him
a $266,000 signing bonus. He
hit .348 with 23 homers and
90 RBis last season at Class-A
Hickory and recendy had a
team record five consecutive
extra-base hits for Altoona.
House was picked. Monday
to play in the All-Star Futures
Game on July 8 in Seattle, the
only Pirates farmhand to be

from

··--··

Wllhon, dryare IIICI

fn•PII&amp;el1

and~ any money out of the

Reds

Million 1:00 p.m.,
Fo:W.y.
SENDNEL DEADLINE;
1 :00 p.m. tho d!IY
btfora 1110 I!d II to run.
Bundly • Monday
ecllllon 1:00 p.m.
Fo:W.y
BEGJ&amp;TER DEAQUNE;
2 deya btfllrellll ..t II
to run by 4:30 P,m.

(740rl 1141
3 r o o m - IPI"Mnt.
- .1,., totlllllal paid 14
Loouot S210/mo, Dlul'dflo
poa11 r4Q..44t.l34ci

The 2000 Buick Classic
champion, Dennis Paulson,
·said most of the best players
are in the field the week after
the Open because they like
the Westchester Co untry
Club.
"Everybody wants to play a
U.S. Open course going into '
the U.S. Open, but no one
wants to go get beat up two
weeks in a row, especially· the
week after the U.S. Open,"
Paulson said.
The strength of the field is a
"testament to the golf
course," Paulson said.
Woods
on Wednesday
laughed off a question that an

Achilles' _tendon problem
accoumed for 12th-place tie
at the ·U.S. Open at Southern
· Hills Country Club in Tulsa,
Okla. That broke a streak of
four . major championships
won by Woods, starting with
the 2000 U.S. Open.
"Only thing injured is my ·
pride," Woods said.
.
H e showed no .signs of
favoring either leg as he
played in Wednesday's pro-am
in a group that included :
Andrew Giuliani, the 15- ·
year-old son of New York :
Cicy Mayor Rudolph Giu- ·
liani.
The elder Giuliani asked at:
the last minute to insert his'
son in his place because the
mayor has a sore foot.
Andrew Giuliani was credited with an 85 . ·

summER

, MOIILI HOMI OWNIRI

~
"'"•-llliii

Choloty'o Famll~ Living,
33140 Now Lima Rd., Rut· land. 01110, 740·742-7403.
Main llttll Furilituoa
Aperlmontchome ono trailer
(il04}1 5-tQ2
7
oantllo, Commercill llor•
5 5 Mal St
Point
loonll avallablo lor loaoa.
1
n ,...,
V-toiiOW.
. PloUint
Furnlohed . 2 &amp; 3 Room
Now &amp; ~ Fumlturo
Aperm.nto, Clean, No 2 Pu Uvlngooom
Poll, No Smotclng, Roloron- SuiiH, 1319. Bu~, SOli,
coo &amp; Dapo.tt Roquload. T -.
Utllllloo
Furnlohod,
(740)4411-15111

Groalouo living. 1 and 2
bodooom oportmenlo ot VII·
logs Manor and Aiv•rolde
Aporlmonlo.. ln M~~:
From $278 3411.
~5084.to!'qual Houolng
vwvrtunil ·
·

HOME R~ 21 ;
.._..,.., T•xu, 20; CDelgaclo.
T.,.,., 20; · Clowland, 20;
G1auo, · ft; uo..1onoz. Cftic».
go, 18; · JaGiambl, Oatdond, 18;
. lllloono. . 11: Buries. ~
111; R P -. T-. 18,

llund!ly • Monday

• AQIIIIa._, 78 Vlno lltrMt,

I

City, 4; - .

-Ciljr. •: ~. Cio .. l&amp;ld.4.

58;
Ellaotiowz,
SolOW.,
.58;

dO, Now

House

4;

1 :DO p.m. tho dey
btfora the I!d Is to run.

...,_ _iiiliiiiiil-_.1
'
In counli)l, 0111o vlolntty, (710)+41-1115 aHer
......

'IriO

1

w.··

-

5;

.JGonu1oz,

1

never _got thrown out," said
Uhlaender, who played eight
seasons for the Twins, Indians
and Reds arid was never ejected. "Guess he didn't Want to
hear what I had to s;sy."
Finley had been sidelined
since June 2 with neck spasms.
He allowed two runs and four
hits before leaving with the
bases loaded in the fifth.
Westbrook came on and
struck out Brian Buchanan to
end the threat, but loaded the
bases in the sixth. This time,
Ricardo Rincon struck out
pinch-hitter Del!ny Hocking
to escape trouble.
"Our 'pen has been a big
part of our success," said
Manuel. "But we've got to be
careful not to tire them out
because they've helped us get
to where we are."
·
Notes: Indians RHP Chades
Nagy, a career starter now
pitchin~ in . long relief, say.
coming out of the buUpen is a
different experience. "When
the phone rings, I hope I don't
have a heart attack;' he joked.

ce-. - ·
· 1

DMroil,

a.lantl. ••.
PITCHING (10 - I I ) C h 110011:
Yorll, 9:1, .800. 3.811; ..,.,.,, Soool·

Ctovotoncl,

STRIKEOUTs-RDJabo_,, - . , .,
·
117; Sclllling, - - . 127; c:llago, 120; Pwt. .... ~ 112;

Sea'*'·
Soootrta, 8; JE....- .
Do!toal, 5; - . , _ T - 5; c
10,

TAIIUNE DEAN "f:

"-:==:·::l*;.,;;:)ti:;:7::•~73U7.:=:-:::
~~r;r.:O ~::::: 2\~~
GOOD UIID AI'PUANI-·
2;1~~~~a-tc~'Avlnue CU Wuhtni, d~, ,._

r

aocJt':icUIIIT't

r

~~-.,~:""'...:!-

"'!:e ':':0"%.

'r

down,"

2000';:;;....""';';.'Stl,

~IIOCH;;7~1~,7~1133;;i;;;i:'Q;;;j

Eam Up to 1350 In 1 day. " .• II"'ODAY to find
lnvHo ~our lrlendt to !lOUr ..... I'
homo tor a Profaulonal Pic·
ture Party. We provlao OUI more about the
Clothing and Jewelry, Call career opportunities
(800)428-8363
available at
Food v..tures Program Dl·
lnfoCiaion
reclor
Management
Appalachian Center lor ECO:
nomic Networlca (ACEMtl
Corporation.
IHklng a rnulll-&lt;&gt;rlonted
load« lor Ill FOOd V..IUIH
~rogoam. The FOOd v... 1-886-475-7223
turao Director will be r•
ext, 1911
sponolbla
7 iof ma~lng a
stoH of · The fol
ng IX·
parlellCI and olclllo oro '"'
qulrod; D.....,llralld managamont ololaffand OHOW·
cot; Extonolve flnanolal
lntoCIIIOn

......,.._,

down bad," Wickman said. "I
didn't want to do tlut again.
I'd be lying if! s:Ud it wasn't on
my mind. I let 40,000 fans

7

once. Comprehenoive ....,. """" raowly, 175. bllically .car and hugo C&lt;N·
lito. Grow Wl1h our c:ornpe- ..w; """ _,.1 other foa. ·patio. lmmedllla .,...
ny'o
b)' aendlng • r• luOM 304-17~~
-1
Reclueecl
to
•
,.,
Join •In
IIUilliiiO:
$711,800. McGuire Roahy
Wille S.wyaoa
· "ANIUI
1
1Compony, REALTOR 1·
NCI'Uitlng
P.O. Box 830
To
Do
voluniMrti far
London, KY 407.:1
Or
email
at
Great Nolgllbolllood, Good
Major Mllonltl
Ocnhl corn
All Make r.tow.ra, LAwn Condition, Handy·
helltll
-'
Trectoro, TlUon Ropllrecl, mon, HouNI Church,
arg8fllzltlone. You :-~:--=--:- fOM plct&lt;:up, o.u-y Avoll000
Mako
Ofl•r.
LAwn Cora- •
21 Ytlll ExperiooiOO. (304}175-1018
can help mt~lre a Lany'a
heRI -'&lt;in~~ pout-time ...., ·Cell MILl. (740}4&lt;18-71504
1-for oaiO b!' _,., 10
dm....ICI.
ptoyH for wHd oallng,
740-742·2803 loa,..,... ~- SowmiN, -~4m11Mt.!tofl
oage
don't haul your ' - Ill lho Send Hill Rd. U ac:r•
We offer up to
·
mill Juat COII304-015-ttl57. Cope Cod Wl1h 3 - · 3
$7/ho
1
kly · Ucanoe ""fllratory lllonplot
oar garea-. 3br. famlt~
ur P Ul wee
~tor~~-·
min•oom. ..
"' country ~~-.
bOnuaeaandafull
·
2
~
~~-·
· - ·2
lmum of rears-- oxdining lnd laundry ooom.
time shift wHh Friday
and Saturday off.

tedemption after TueSday's

"Last night, I let the team

Drive, Vwy BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Man
AT
IIUDOI!T
PN:
Slnglo
and
_
..
CU AT JAC- ES(740)ot4e,-41111
ln ... _
2 d lo
. homM, lhauundl
TATU, 52 W• ood Dilve
3 bidiC:Od helM ........ fnlm $2117 10 1383. 10
- ·line
7Z5I
- · lor c
Info. Jond
I 1 = ... rtVw vieW. ....1011 ohOp &amp; I!IO'IIa Col 741).
tlonl.
ooqulrad, clopoolt required, 4:4&amp;-2588. e~ Houolng
pay lor - " ' " ' " ond wo
~·
110
polo, 7of0.1192-e777 18 Wide. Only $1115JJO Per 5pm.
, nor
lOng
lllllllllhlcl
end
_
_ , . , . _ II ld -.g
... unlu!·
·-·· 7
1glowilog ~1ft liOU
r, •--on - . 8.99%Fbold
-wld!!l.
3 -wn In 5yla- _....,., Ringo &amp;
And
·Uf&gt;:
lo r?' 1•1or U cuoe, Ohio, s.501 ~ . . , _
i lllrl I I IE fin I poellon lhll
c:t.pil••lQ 1 881 V28 3121 HUD Appnwed (31)1,..,~ &amp; ~pilei. ~,.
plofMI. drop b)' ........... 401-l&lt;plon
..., II aullll IMA ..,,, or and Plld \IIICMiort tinl? lftiM, or 8111 ..... IliOn ID
1332 or (740)992-6110 qu~Md. c.11 740 ue 4345
at Ala liOii. -- -·
..I - 1 P o l m - - o n l y
... 11M
rp11onoe? H 10 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . ·~ 101'
(740) IIIIZ+472, E.O.E.
=;:;""'~"'A;;;;:-j:tiji;;;;;t:
In
Ohio,
with
. . be . . .WNnot,W.
11M MDL•
3 bodtwn. CIA, In Gdlpo: North 4th A... ........
L!lw o w l · rot1ng. ~ oavtngoll 11. $4001mo. pluo dopOoil, 2 ro0m olflency, utilnieo
. . hi\. For ~--- fXII't:
Ropo
!l!!lloa
paid, dopooll &amp; !Wfononces,
. . IICIC
Cal. 1 888 881 1258 lor apo 110 poll, 740 118 4313
Tllll:••
I
I
..WilhOOCM&lt;
llorl oond
......
lollCooilmunltr Hen 1•por lng . . why ,... . . . . . por· albdlllt$16 tor,... poii-.L
530 4111 AVMUe, 2 Bad- 110 polo, 740-IIIIZ:0186·
lloldliogl, Inc., of
room, 2 a.Jh, Equipped Taki!'Q_ ApplleatloMIIITIIOIIUCIOII
mooa now - · In ~
KNot...,, Central Air, No 35 Welt 2 llodooom T...,.
,, 'MDROIIMIIIW.Our
lliCkY tttan ...., pul&gt;o
inl!IUdoo
(Now) .a'x25', 3 bodtoom, 2 Pota. 142Mno.
Ohio Volley
lloiMir, lo -..g an ooqulrad, (740}4&lt;18-2158
W.tor
Sowaa-.
Truh,
CT'Dolly T-).
bolh,·
s·
...ao.
vv·
..... iiiid .....
*- - ""'' I'""' 10
$35MAo 740 448 0008
825'11*dAw,
nol
..
.
.
ol
good:
......., - . . , . r11o1ng
In
R8clno,
nice
r.olfiiiM·
·•
·
• ..... - ..... ~In
A &amp;; *t, ONa 48131
.... (Only) $31 .31 - . . In lho ;;;;:::;,;;:
I*MWJJIJI . .
hood;
lrom Star Mil Taro T - Apart•
fool w.·re dNIIng ~~ Pllk. 4 bedloom. $450 dtJ. fllilfrt&amp;, Very Spacious. 2
London, Colbln, Uo:lt..:t Work From Hom!!. Poll·
•• ' .as onan...,
l!l1d SonoooNt. KY · Mob1o
· Slala
FIAiollme, $25- $7l!lhr.
50
EutAlhono,
Ohio,Route
741). p0011, $150 per mo. lnclodol Badooomo, 2 floOI'I, CA. 1
Pilei \~~~CatioN: 1-.e7&amp;:
- · go1111g0 &amp; - · 112 , llllh, Fully Coopetod,
592·1872.
ldoal CA04'
will 7042
7:01-4)1 , 741).949- AduR Pool &amp; Bail)' Pool. PIof
rut out
lloMI!!;
-:-~-::-::--::--::::-=~ 2217
tlo ~- •-u~ No Peta
2
- • ,..,.
oalel IO(CJII
·~ A ......._
FOR ""&lt;MUO:
Umltod Or No Cnodit? GoYLouo
Pl..
I'
:c
.
' -·
-Socuilty
-· Depooit•
-~~ underllandlng' 01
TlwNJNG
Lo.-iooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioo_.l ....-Sara Flnoow Only lo Your -1400? Reqoliod, oaro: 40:44
7
the 1 - wilt be hllpful,
3 112 Mllel Out Sondllili AI ~ In 3 - ..... 2 Balli Flanch 34111; E""""'a-: , 740:387·
o
~
-~
~
..,.._...,...
vie, WY 304-7S3400.
Style Homo FRIITI Ronl To ...,.., ,~ ••• ~IOI
- a --- •-• 0 '"'I-~ ,_,(31)1,..,~,
Own.f140)448 3583
......., ~ . .
lniJ .,...a- 11 lrdudod. " (ear- c-. To Homo)
RfU. t.ot rncxt.1 de!lrti!Ce. ~~.::'!.....~~~...: CIIITodayl7404481387, ~u.:ou~ 111 upi0$8,825-anyhclma, Pilot P....,.m, RIOIIt.,. TWinAivorT-,_acj~-~";;;~1-800:214:0482,
lifo ~ .,... oanch chodl uo aut doaNng, - . aa..7311-72115.
cept1ng
1
I)Oiitlol• ond and
~-12748. o1y1o hcJma on qulet Cale'o MoiJio - · US Three SR. Mldcllot&gt;Oit. 1350
lf)l)licatlonl for 1 BR
outgoing · peooonallty, we
011-.lng modem kitchen 150 Exol. " " - 011·
por """"" ptuo depooll, HllO ..-eel apt. lor·
Wi111111&gt; 111111111nlll!U...,.,.,...,
._
cablnela
....
dllhLot
-~
~--one
Includes
·
ond
~
l!l1d · EOH.
..__ _ _ _ _ _
wllhor,
11oy bod, trltl'l 740-IIIIZ.0175
(304)117U879.
125
Salary l!l1d oommlllion . _ 975 - . detac:tor ooonw..
dining ·~ for 2000 modo! ~. 5
U!wlalol. 2 - . . . .....
_ , . bMecl on t&gt;ipOfl- r
·
lnd loiVe IMt1g ooom. o pre owned llinglol must go
1f.l41h Ave- &amp; "-""

~

r

~-

t disasrer:

Ir· .::.::r 1t

'
'
25550'
Loolclng for a...,.
"IIAIIKETFRUH'
LArge 3 Family, Inside Gs·
caiMr?
rage, Lots Of Now Buolneu
ARIY'I R-nto 0,.
Clothin~, Size 9-10 Thru 20,
now IHklng praiHolonal
Baby lothes, Household
04111CIItlatoo lor all lov.lo of
Wears. Some Furniture,
Mania-mont AggrOIIIve
Stale RO&lt;rte 325 S. Outside
pilnnecl unit OliPiiiOion 11
Alo Grande, Starting June
-.g.,._ wl1hln lho 1oc:11
5th: July 30th, g:aoam-5:30
lit·ototo .,... Experlonco 111
Moving SOle· Baicaoa Rack,
food Hrvlo• lo
DHk, Rec liner, Coffee Ta·
gooua; but not oaquloecl. Ex·
blo, Drftoer, Pootablo Dllh·
Salarlet • BanoiH
waoha&lt;,
Couch 4 LOVooeal,
PaoliagH
Avalllblol PINoo
740 441 11234
740 8
fax you .....,., to 1-eoe8 '
"
-38 '
1138-11817 or omallll&gt;:
608ovenlnoo.
01!1ooiandOzoomnot.not
Yal(f s.r• Mitchell Road,
M
;,:an A to:
.. 22nd buoinHI communltlll; In1n1gement illll1
"'I'
novatlvo prOblam-lolvlng
f
olrat-aloo: e...111111 0011&gt;
t.toeture·e Rllll~ront now
muniOIIIon ablllttoo In wilt·
hirtna Ill 3 '-tiOI'IO. lui or
, , ~ LoiMoclll _ . · Toka Ovor Poymonla, 3
1
lng. opoaklng, and publ~
port-limo, plcil up llltlllea•
llldooom, a llellt Ollcwoad.
diPOIImtnl lnclucllng 0011&gt; lloeltlon Annou- lion atlocallon &amp; b~ng llldooom, I IIIII, Call
For
Dtlalla
puler/aottwiro
aptlludl' Pottlngtlltt:June13,2001 bttwH"
l :iiOam
&amp;
Woo
UUt5,
Now (740)4411-3870
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY 9-5, Grent Writing tnd luncll'll.:
10:D0am, Monday thru lat•
1142,1117· Pofol Good Til 1
IIABY CLOTHES, WOOD ing olclllo' Sovvy nttworltlng
Heeclloftbtll CMoh
uroa~.
•11-01,
Hurty To OM•
CRAFTS, UTILITY TRAIL· 0nd 000 l'l!lo "" "I ""I'" Appilcallono are bllng ac1
bodroom
Wood•
n-l~
ng ~ '"• oapled fer lha poal!on 01 NNdod Exporllnoac:l Coaw ll..t. /110, OIOH Ill gall (740}441-30t3 Galllpolla,
EA. MISC .,' 144 N, 4TH
Stratoglo
planning
ond H d s~·'l C010 h ~ ••• lor hill~ and Flnlonl~ COUrtl C~ en MHI
AVE,, MIDD LEPORT, OH.
loamollload lmplo.,.ntoilon oa "'""'
•w ·~
··•
8 ''
'(7'"
·I' 70 n ... ~
D
history Praloronoe will be Unlv~t~lty at Alo Qranclt. looUonal Houolng. o C -. ....,
•• ~ljj;': ....:,~rn, Owner Rlllrlng. lulltllng
Thursday Juno 2111 and Fn· glvtn 10 oandldlltl WhO all- Thl•lo I Plrl•llmo poolllon, Prlolng I-lion ond 0"'
"':..
......
~on:
F,OI' 8alt In Galllpoltt, ONO,
10
day Ju .. 22nd, huge oalt, dltlontlly
htvo
pertonoo
·
Southam
3
ladrcom
on
Aoull
2,
ill
·
Onr
Route 7, Hu Liratoy1, clotnee, Ice cheat, oxportonot/tklllt: In thiiOOtl R-llbllllilt ollhe POll• Hornet, PO !loot ll2t, Jlalt- (304)e7..11332
18114 Norl'll 141171, tOtel Paoklng Lol. Hu 4 Ranlall,
45840
oomforter1, entenalnmtnt
• lllolrlc, Iillo now - l i l t , Aloo lola Of Flaoo
ltand, Sugar Run Road, procootlng and/or agrtcul· tlon lnotudo, buloro not lim· oon, OH
=~~ Toklng oPf)lloadona: oook, g.~~~·.:r..bllt~:V a btdoaom. •16,1100, 740- GOOd lnoorno. Call
!-ong Bottom, Pulllna rool· tuool ooctors; owning IIICI
managing a buolnoo and/or prnd ~Ia pervltlon grill-. dllh-, walt- oatllng (740)3n-IIM
441-0175
740 7-7111
dOilCI.
aooillfng omall bualno- •
,
IU 1
•
• ~ •·
· rooo, atop 11 Mllllo'o Rulauo
with ovorago ulu ol bo- ABadloloroclog'" • .,... oant 31238 Bradbury Ad 3 bedrooms 2•1/2 btlho, 25lc1030r4~J.On....,,~.,.
YARD SAU:o
twoan $tOOK lo $10 miiNon; l•rr~. Poavlouo coochlng M~ 0111o for llltli~ lmmtdllto PDIIIIIIon, ~ ly $345.00 .Por MOnth
ACRIACII
~ . Pr.PI:.F.AsANr
In nolplng otoH ct.votop lholr o•po~onct '*'-ry.
lion
duotel. wu 1!481100 , _ Ul% Flltad 1 - Rate,
.
full potential; managing a dl·
·
·
,
lt2$,QOO,
HOtzor. l.f111.121.3421
Camp Sltot FOI' Rtnt On
voroo 'urvlcoo portfolio." lnterutt&lt;f peroon ohoukl Own A Computor? Put it 740-44HII71
.
Gaol
32 ID KanAwha River, II mlloo
Moving sale 21504 JeffalliOn Thlols 1 oanlor pooltlon with Nnd 1 OHumo and I IOitor
To Wor1&lt;?
FIOiory
•
from Polnl PINOOnt.II0C1110
Avo. F~.·Sot 8·7
oxcellont btneflll, flex Hma of lnterMI bolooa lhe tlaad· www.WOtleOU!olyouillornl.oo 3 Br homo lor oaiO,
11o.oog., =u~ ~ cnl~.
(304) •
,
8755pm
1722
and a compotHive oalary In llno of Jut~ 18, 2001 .
m
Ave Mkfdloport 740fi2· 1 1000.
, ,,._,, (""'1875-&lt;11 .. Mot
Yard SolO Friday June 22 II· a dynamic natlonally-acPh)'llll Maoon, SPHA
:J3o48
IIICI MIUP pilei b!' factory T
'
·
5 4 1/2 miles oul Jeny _Run claimed
oc:onom~ Dlr. ol Human Aaoourcoo Wtod EtUng Hllloldoo,
l.-1-e777
Lcoltlng To Buy A Now
Rd. on Casey Ad,
development orgsnlzatlon. Unlvo~~ ~~
Goando Dltchoo, Ete. Mowing, 5 ~~ proporiJ
Final Dayo, Natlonwldt In- Homo? Don't HI.. Land?
Yard Sale Rovonowood Soncl roou.,. and lllrH
oof·
Rio
G~
OH
45874
Cltlln·up,
Removal
Of
Un·
(7.c\~~
vontooy
Rocluctlonl Wo Colli Huny Only 10 loto
10
nur Copas on Aaco and orenc:H b!' Junt ~ lhe
prniloont~o eclu
wantod ltomo. Odd JOOI.
•·
, (304)'131o-3ot01
· Loll, 31)1.738-72115.
Gibbs, June 21 , 22, 23 8·4 ::;lonA~l~~ 5otham: Fu number 740:2..·4900 Call Slewl (740)4411-71504 . 5 room &amp; beth, 2 ponlheo, Mull SOli 19114 Liberty
n,
no ·
um
' I&gt;JC rofngorator, eloclrlo
bodt
b!otll
t,~~~RKETAND
bus Road, Athane, Oh Someonetotoktcaroofmy Will Mow LAwna, (304)875- IIOVI &amp; IIU IUIIIOCII. 14X70' 3 b~l Herold'
rLr.l\ ,....,
•
45701, No phone calla molher In my home lulltl.,. 5129 Leave Mouago,
· 27 500 11 2o4l!4 Monroo
·
•
. HOU'IES
387·
plouo. ACEnet to an Equal or pan limo, 740-387:0302.
Avonuo (304)1175-I3II ·
40:
FOR RJ!Nr
Opportunity Employer com'
Now 14 ft $4lll dOWn
Rick Pearson Auction Com· . miHed lo quality lob croatlon Halp wantod to traval wHh URGENTLY
NEEDED· D•oter, 3 beclroom, tiro· , onl~ $11111. por
call I ·3 Beclroomo Fooac:loaad
pony, full time auctlonaer, In the region.
clrcuo, will help aroottonto. plaima donooa, Mrn $45 to ~lao•, private oocludad, now HI00-611Hm.
HOIII!Ii from $!99/Mo., %
complete auc:llon service , La"'" M 1
So 1c Mull havo vaiiG drlvoro II· teo for 2 or 3 houro -~· new d!ock, 2 ttocy, building
Down
Ynos at 4,_
110Llatlngo
8.35 ,
Licensed •66,0hlo &amp; West Fre'l E:t~m~es, rvco~i canoe. Apply at Maoon Call sera· Tee, 740·592· In bllclc, loullt.-, wllclilo, Now 14 WIGo, 3 Bodroom. APR For
V1rg1nla, 304·773·5785 Or (740)256-9383
County · Falrgroundo, Juno 1151 .
$42,000, 741).742·2218.
On~ $19,8150. FrH Dollvery
3
E•t.
, ' 800 19
1709
304·773·5447.
20th or 21st
&amp; Sot Up, 1-188-928:2428 332

~~~~fr.~?;•.Ju

,·'~

·----- ............................. .

-.

nibe

;:

r--::--........-..., •·•

Aldeohllt Ex
Day and a.wmoon
. •
124 Klneon Olive, June 22 poolenoe pretomod but not
&amp; 23. sam·Spm, table saw, necesuoy. Pleue apply at
hand saw, small toots, misc. Arcadia Nurolng Cantor,
East Maine Siooot, Coolville,
5 lamily, June 22 &amp; 23, 8· 0111o or call Maoy Root, dlot·
4pm, Bulaville Pika, al 7.5 aoy oupervlaor at 74CHI87·
mlfe mar1&lt;er, boat, table, 4 3 t 58 EOE.
chairs, end tsbleo, kids to
plus ~zo ctolhlng. Misc.
Domino's Pizza o1 Point
Pleasanl now hl~ng dilv·
Gaoage Sale· 550 Ja~ ers. Greal wootc ...,..,.
Frida•&lt;. 22nd B&amp; SoiUI·
t cornpe'"'dOlive,23d
~pe~. fie420•·
ay
r . eoys· ean1es, men
lblo. ,Apply
In••pe10011,

Mise,

1I"'· llruWAHIDJ

Ilm.PWAMUI

Ovwbo... Cor'lllr lo , _
IXPJ!tlti)IIQ OUR
1-.ptllog 014+ IloilO lor
ADVIII'IIIINQ
lull u... ond pert MI.IIQUI'
LPNS lor ~ond " : Ala ) &lt; l U I - ......
nilll'f.,_
Poy
p.op.7 Ala
.,._,, ~C..Chl: , _ gredo II
.40 II« )Dp
~ . . . ihOIIU ' 1 IRi ..,.
_..,uc, bolllnd Burgor llouf. ~ II ~-?,.,,...

F"'"' . - _ . EnofgMic, p!IIClUal, pooitM
10 In
ofllco. No _...
..,. ,.. 1111ry, Apply 1n

•

New To Vou Thrift Shoppe
9 West Slimson, Athens

............. _. ...........

Dflct'lptlon • lftdude A PriCe • Avoid AbbrnlltiCMt

rI-....!~

ANNc:luNo:Mmrs

7

- ·Son,_,

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

i-~

c

s..
~ UooAlool,AIIMU,IO.
Ill: - · Colo
71 ; LGonulu, .....ta.80;...,.,
HITS S!:nokl,
Aoba&gt;o. 811;
II: BAYES ... n. Son ffllncloco, 21 ;
SUttle,
112;
LWa!Lw", ~. 117; Pujofo, SL
- · - . 11; . . .. .... Anp: St-n. TORII1IO, 17; MAaml,.t,
~ 12; - · s.n Diogo, 58.
1M, 111; - . l'l1illllllltiU 17; · 111; ARodriguez. Toxu, 81;
~-.-..-.
- . 15; Ora-. Clnclnnalf, - ·· - · 119; JGonulu,
Son frencioco, 114; l'lijolo, SL Looulo, t•: 8\\"iiQuer,
Houlton. 14; Hoffman, o.v.&amp;and, 18; MJS...,.y, KaRIIU
Ill; - . Colcroolo. II; - . . , Col· s.n Diogo, 1• .
City, M .
orttiO, 116; BGIIH, ""-rgb. 14;
DOUBL£5-MJSaMo ..r, Cllv.
,_.._.14.
31 ; o,_, Toxu. 23: JaGlombl, o.kDOUBI ES 1 -. ~. 25:
lind, 22; ECho-. o.Jt1ancL 21 ; SlewIII, T - . 20; ~. Soattt.. 20;
- · ~.
· 22; BGIIoo,
21 ; - PitJo.
.•
GIO,., AoiOIIOim, 11; UooiCiool, TORII1IO,
Pl'hlfldolpthlltclolplllo, 21; · ~.
11.
:; 21 : - . Sllnf-.21.
TRIPLE~u1onan, Mlnneeote, 11;
;:

To Place
Your Ad,
Call

PERsoN.wi

- . . . ~. 7: BAm~ - . .- ;
" - , I; V1na, 81. ~ I ; Scaul4, Seatlle. .35%; JGonulR.
RoiN. PI a t t hfa. s: OCaiNwra. Cloo ... ld, .M5: .'Hl! Till, 0 II IlL
Montrttal, I ; Won oct, A11ZoM. 4; .lMO; - - . , _ e.,. .3315;ctl - . 332: Ollollld - .
HOME RiJ'IS
s.n Faa: ' • .332:P'l . C..· ..;.~~~, ..s3z.
31: lGonuiN. 30; - . RUNS a -te - T - 86; Suzu.
cO....
. -St.l-,21
· 25; - ;.._.
CN!:8go.
23; 111. 1o4; MJS
••· ~. City.
58:~-. 53; ... I '
21; ...... St.~:n
T - 10; CGu liM• Mioo- 411;
STtUN BASES I"--· - . 1181: .. · ~ Ollollld, 23; - . . . ............... 21; - . ..
~ JGonultz,
~. 17; Go ........ ~
-.4 .
Clo
17;f-."-.
R11 M 10,
·
73;
.....
11; - (tO
· -o-,. " Smiling.
·
PITCHING
u •J
Wfl&amp;lioll,
MzoN. 11·2. ..... 2.7t: HaliijJICWO.
·
87;
~. 11-2, .111, 3.08; - ·
Houston, 11-3, .727, • .17; T_,.,
T-.
81 ;
TRIPI "S

I

- . - . .310; A&amp;.wlia, Son " ' .355; l'lijolo, SL lAM, .3o15; Hoi:
ton. Casa ...,, .341; a.:tm.a. ttcJw..
lOri, .3311; fJo¥1.
Flarido, .337.
RUNS II t a,
Colcroolo, 73;

Else can!

r

The IWiy' s.ntlnel • ,... 8 5

•

Relldenllal or commerc1al
wiring, ntw seMce or re,
palr1; M:i1ter Llc•nlld • lec-

trlc6an. Ridenour Electrical,
WV000306, 304-675·1786.

rlr-------I
AlmQuEs

..__ _ _ _ _ __.

~

110 Help Wanted

•

'

S6-S7/HR

·fasg Indoor
work flexible
hours full/part
time hurry!
Positions
NOW HIRING, ALL POSITIONS
Full/part time • day/evening
Apply after 4 pm
at any Gino's location.

Buy or oall. Rlverlno AntiquH, 1124 Eaat Main on
SR 124 e. Pomoroy, 741).
992-2528 or 740-992·15311.
~uu Moont, ownor,

JOBS

fllllng qulddgll
88-974-JOBS
COG
management, uc

!

�Thut'Sdey, June 21, 2001

...... 8 I • T'he o.lly Sa 111M1

Pomeroy, Middleport, ~

'TIIurldey, June 21, 2001

The Dally Saalluel• Pllge B 7 •

AALIJ~x~vroo~o~p~--~----~----------------~~~==~~:::::-------~======~;;~~;;;;;;;; :
NEA Cro11word Pu nle
PHILLIP

•

·-Pr-e
H

0-\.Uc:AI'

The One Man Corporation
R•M
WIIIIWIII, Single Widae,
Doublll Wld.ls, Boat's Decks. RV's, .nc1
camper's, SWimming pools .rid farm.equipment1'118 p r - . -.ed things from filling otation
podclng lois, RV'a .nc1 to a corporal&amp;
L.aar-Jet

1 11110- Oegleiae automobile .ncltruck mccor·s
aa wall aa dlelal.ncl lnduslrial oquipmenl
engm., such as bulldozer's, baellhoes; .ncl
~- H 1can help yoo call me after 5:00.
Jlllll Scan 112-3002
or email at
·
net

WICifS

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

1Medi&lt;:are Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;

Dental, Retirement,
IPc:nsioon &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mongage; Major Medical
~ .
L":.:;:Nu::,:rsi:::,ng::Ho::::;me::,_·"""'":"'_,.:::,:::Jitp::::.t.::IU=il!t::;l [

r1J

c§
Haullag • UllleSIOH
• Gra•el Sand •
Thpsoll • Fill Dirt
• Mule~
Bulldozer Servlcet

(740} 992-3470

Howardl.
Wrltesel
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout
FTH EIIIIIIIIH

949-1405
591-5011

NOTICES ..

DIPIYIU
Nlft
All Makft Tractor &amp;
Equlpme•t Puts
Factory Authorlud
Caae-IH Parts
Dealtn
11100 St Rt 1 South
Coolvll,., OH 45123

ALDER

SMITH'S
CONSTRJCTION

BISSELL
IUILDIIIS INC.

wno
0 I
.. A I[ It t

t KI I 5 I

0' 7!UI .. II!IIIIIIML
FREE ESTIMATES

•

GRAVEL
SAND
UMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

, .
1.

BARNEY

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
K£EPS THE ·
SUIIMERllME II!AT
OUT AND WINTEA
nME HEAT IN

BLOCKS OUTIU'!I.

OF DAIIAOINII
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT ·
PRICING

~~)992·5072

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

I

I

1-&amp;Q0-291-5600 • Pomero~

Scipio Townahlp
truateae will hold
their regur.r monthly
meeting combined
with the ai\null
budget meeting on
July e, 2001 0 8:30
p.m. 0 Pagevllla
Town Hell.

{?

Terry Lamm

THE BORN LOSER

992-0739

P'"~,1F Wt:: ru:w flinl.. t!J..E.~T""'
aMI TO Til£ ~~~T,Io.le.'D
1-\P..Vf: TO ~~ ~ 1'1.'.1Qlf:) eKI(.

(6) 21,2001
- 1tc

Tl\!lif:ff-~ 7

Public Notice
The
Scipio
Townehlp trueteee
will accept aealed
bide on the following
property.
The
following
. deacrlbed real elllllle
ettuete In Town 7,
. Range 14, Section 14,
Fraction 7, Scipio
Townehlp, Melga

County, .

• Trucke •

• Boete •
· -"' • Equlpmenl

Trellere

• DrlvitWJtye
degree1ech '

. Jeff Statham
Cell 740•591•2782 7401591•0477
Home 740•985•4218

Ohio,

bounded •• lollowa,

Advertise

-11:

Tt. following lot of
·tend alluate In the
of
-village
Harrteonvllla; County·
and State aforellld,.

in this
space
for
550 per
month

Utah Jazz player charged
with statutory rape

ELITE MECH-'NICAL CONTRII.CTORS

'

BlGNATE

1-3114-675-78%4
l-800-lS0-!1077
Residential Comma-till N.,. C~lon
Sal.. Senlce lnsliollalion
Specializl"'l In Sheet !\tela\ DuctwOrk
"Trane• Salce &amp; Senlce For
Collia, MIL'IOn, llild Melp CoWIIIM
Ucensed 1nd Insured
WV 005.1 7'

FAKE?!
rT'S
RI&lt;OHT
· HEII.E
IN

BL...tK
ANt&gt;

WHITE'

PEANUTS

General/SpeclaUzed Typing
Temporary Ofllce Assistance
MaiUng LabelsiEnvelopes
Cassette Transcription
Numerous Business Support Services
_ 2S years Secretarial Experience

I MISSED 't'OV WI-lEN
l WAS AWAV AT CAMP..
DID AN'&lt;TMIN6 EllCITIN6
I-lAPPEN W!-IILE !
WAS 60NE?

ll tYpeso
Roofs,
Sp.ecialist.·-r.iiiiiiriiWiiiiiiiiii::-::=:1

..........

11 Spenlall

title
2Ginfrlngeon

23 Unclolhed

21

Sfunll
~:.rtS

DOWN
1 Inert

·2

C~eton

=......,,

'D
plllnt 3
30 GenUiof
Mia
4 Urp
32Portlencl't 5~ol

12 Bomb
31 lnhablr.nle
33-edgo
13 Melege ..... 31 Ust-enollnjj
11 Willie
lbbr-

-bllll11 40 TIIUI
20 Dllchollund .1 Chun:h
doee
c-...
21 Clrllln
42 411compound

22 Soup dllh
23 Knoll In
cotton -

~

'3 Actor

lleldwln

44 Ball

6:;..,.....,

~~~I

I

'~~::~' S@~4UlA-~t~trs·
0

/'"

admiration and rcl-ipccl of your

thei r estee m is that you nrc
lomlly free of guile und pre·
ten se . Get a jump on life by
understanding the it,fluc:nccs
1hut"ll govern you in 1he year
uhcnd . Send for your AslroOrnph predictions by mailing
52 10 Aslro-Oruph. c/o thi s
ltcwspuper. P.O. ~ox 1758.
Murray IIIII Stulion, New
York. NY 10156. Be sure to
stolle your ZodiiiC sign .
LEO (July 23·Aug . ~2l -Situotiom thut othl!rs cu n' t

. see m to get 11 handl e on lodny
will I"' ousil)• dealt "ilh by
vou. lhis i!i h~~..:aui\\:', unlike
i hcm. yom fucus will bl! ()11
~u..: ...- ~ss.

1wt failure.

VIRGO IA u~ . 2.1·Sopt. 22 )
·- Co1 h.:c rn fnr tho s~.· \'I'"'U lo\'c
is u..Jmiruhlc. but w iHit i.~ o..'\'1!11
more pnlh('wmthy is th11t
ymlll unselfishly put .ll1cir

;

,.
I

f

f--,,r-,l•.s--r,-T,-r:,,rl Q

peers. Wlm t helps you win

Hindle

\

"TI ~,'

projects l~lll are close to your
hcat1 . Success is guaranteed
because or how n::mch of your·
&gt;elf")IOU ·n pul inlo them.
CANCER .(June 21-July 22 1
-- The wuy you conducl yourse lf loday will win you lhe

J«;!ff Warner Ins.
992-5479
,I ••

AIIIUI

.

57 The ones

BY Pttn.LIP ALDER
2.4W. Cout
ufiW*d
coli.
41 llurrowlng
In answer to your
25 Clock IKe
lllimlll
panner's takeout douftuld
7 Sel'D Glen! of
47 CUillrd
35 Appowhed
(save)
flllry .....
lpple
ble, if you jump in a
36 Actor
8 About
28 Fltnf
41 P1rehed
suit with 9-11 total
MIMo
(2wdt.l
director
50 Poor mark
37 Porte
I BoJoel 52 SUpan.tlva
points, what do you do
aummer
Spino
29 No Ho, - or
ending
with an even stronger ·
3t Levell
11 Therefore
buts
53-deglle
I JES' BET
hand? You cue-bid the
MAINST MYSELF
opener's suit. If the
AT SOLITAIRE II
opener bid one club,
you cue with two
clubs; if the opener
bid one diamond, you
cue with two di!J·
monds; and so on. ·
This cue-bid is
purely a point-showing bid. It makes no ·
comment about distribution .(except that you
judge
your hand
.l fft4 L.IICi .l JUST
unsuitable for a two/ PA6ff0 ,.y
no-trump or three-!IO·
"lEST If
trump reply). After the ·
cue-bid, both panners
lJSfl&gt; IY"
bid naturally. The doul&gt;ATE.
bler bids his longest
I
I
suit, or four-card suits
CELEBRITY CIPHER
in ascending order.
if
by Lui• Campoa
Thi~ continues until an
CtlobriiY Cipher coyp!Ograma oro ctUiod from quotallonl by tlmout
eight-card or better fit
people, putartd preMnl. Each Iotter In tho cipher- for another.
Today's clue: Z equals M
is (hopefully!) found.
"Then with 'a biiOf luck
'ONEODUJEUVNJ,
MA
OWW
one partner knows
UOJ
QNUR,
DR
UOJ
MTJ
how high to aim.
Here , after your
F 0 D E 0
0 E ·U R
U0 J
Z MRU
cue-bid, North bids the
I
first four-card suit he
RWMFWP,
VVU
UOJ
ZMRU
comes to as he mounts
RYNJWP,
MT
UOJ
RMVW . '
the bidding ladder.
I
And when South
JNTJRU
XDZTJU
sho~s spades; North
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Space Ia the stature at Qod." knows where to go .
Joseph Joubert
West starts with the
"The a1tronaule ... Rolarlona In ouler space.• - Gore VIdal
L _ _::::::!:.__ _~~-_J.. heart ace: four, jack,
three. He continues
WGID
lAM I
SHE's HIDEOUS!!
§rr::E::-H:---~===:::::::-, With the heart king;
1Wito4
~r CLAT I. POLLAN-----SHE'S NAST'I'! SHE's g HEll'...
five, two, six. Next
Rearrange J.Hers of ttle
FOUL! SHE'S A
ft UH . ·
comes the heart 10:
f04Jr ocromblod word1 btTOT""L SOW! SHE... 1 ~t;
queen, spade three, low to form four simple words.
,.:.5;.;.H;:E;.;...;;.·;;;u_H;;....;.;.·;· ...._ SAVIN&amp;"?
hean seven. East
MEYROB
switches to the diamond eight.
2
The
diamond
finesse •• which is sure
to lose given Wesr's
ONYUG
opening bid -- is a
"----'-'-'1-.U.-UJ mirage. For the con. tract to succeed, the
T RA PY
rr---::.,--__;_-----~---, club finesse must win.
My sisler and I attended a fa1--,lr.:"--ri-"TI~
s
"""'~._
mous
actors one man show. The
TI-IERE [ WAS AT
And if it does, your
......
.....
_
.
.
.
_
.....
__
.....
_....
next
days
review confirmed our
TWO T"OUSAioiO FEET
diamond queen can be
pinion that one of him was--- OVER ST.JUVIN .. SUDDENLY
discarded on dummy's
SPRDOY
A FOKKER TRIPLANE
third club.
.Complefe lhe chuckle quoted
APPEARED A~OVE ME!
So, win with the
•
•
•
.
by filling in the missing words
diamond ace, draw L-..L-l;....-'---L-1-.J you develop from step No. 3 be low .
trumps from hand, and
·run the club jack.
When the finesse
works, repeat it, then
unload that trouble·
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
some diamond queen.
Jobber. Queen - Mimic - Nearby· REMEMBER
"This TV season reminds me of chicken soup. " my
husband grumbled . "It goes down easy but it's not a meal
to REMEMBER."

Friday. June 22. 2001
Prollress cun be mudc in the
)'ear ni1oad wilh a number of

Cellular

'

I

twin

I I PI .

Proressfonal Work at
AffOrdable Rates

I

,.:=cy ::......

I

JONES'

.

Publ_.• 54 a ....

I' I I I 1

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

Ask For

1s

,,.

FRESNO, cailf. (APj - Utah Jazz known Stevenson and Anderson for four
rookie DeShawn Stevenson admitted hav- years.
740·667-3224 or 740-667.0038
ing sex with a 14-year-old girl in a teleStevenson faces up to three years in
phone conversation with her mother, prison if convicted.
Stevenson could not immediately be
according to court records.
The 20-year-old Stevenson surrendered reached for comment. No one was home
to police Tuesday night and was charged at his parents' house where a purple Jazz
with statutory rape. He was released on flag was hanging.
Tree Service
$5,000 bail.
Anderson, who has an unlisted number,
• Top • Removal • Trim
Stevenson, a backup guard who went also could not be contacted.
• S'tump 6rinding
directly to the NBA fiom high school last
At a news conference Wednesday in Salt
• Bucket TNC:k
year, is charged along with former high Lake City, J~ officials said they didn't
school teammate DeShawn Anderson, 19. know enough about the case to take
· VOUR
A hearing was set for July 6.
action. Jazz vice president Kevin O'ConThe girl told police the two and anoth- nor said nobody in the organization has CONTRACTORS, INC.
CONCRETE
er former teammate took her and a 15- spoken with Stevenson.
Racine, Ohio 45771
CONNECTION
year-old girl to a motel June 6 after buy"Should he have been in a position that
740-985-3948
ing a bottle of brandy.
. supposedly he was in? No. Do we know CONCRETF/BLQCK/BRlCK
Quality Driveways,
According to the report, both girls said what that position was? No. So to support • Footers, Wolla, Stepo•
PaHoa, Sidewalks.
they got drunk on alcohol served by hi111 or to say he wJ wrong, I don't want
Flat Work,
Call~ob
1..
Stevenson. The 14-year-old said she had to say either one until we know more," Replacemeata,' Wallcl 25 yaara experience
Free EsUmai@S
740-949-J40S
consensual sex with Stevenson and later O'Connor said.
and Drlvto • Stencil
CrOte Free Eollmalto
passed out, while the 15-year-old said she
Stevenson's agent, Rob Pelinka, would ServlniOhloaadW,V. '740-742·8015 or
Cell#
had consensual sex with Anderson, · the not comment. Stevenson's lawyer in the ·
. wv 11031712
SPECIAL FINANCE DEPi\RTI~ENT I
6i4-747-1115
report said. Also in the room at the time case, Roger Litmaw. did not immediately .._.....;;..;..;-.;.-_ _, 1-877·353·7022
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?
was Richard Millsap, a former high school return calls fiom The Associated Press.
"We Can Help"ll
.MILL END
teammate of Stevenson and Anderson,
Stevenson played in 40 games for the
Bring In your Jtpalr work
FABRICS
Call Us First Or We &amp;th Lose!
whom the IS-year-old said did not par- Jazz as a rookie, averaging 2.2 points ~nd
Machine
Quilting
We'll get you going for
'ticipate in the sex.
0.7 rebound,. He was placed on the
~e
EARNHART 113
Everyone left the motel together and injured list March 2 with tendinitis in his
spring ·
pillow
panel•
·
the girls were dropped off at the IS-year- right knee and was reactivated April 11 .
l
79 or 446-9800
74()..992·3673
Every Spring Tune-Up
old's house. The 14-year-old's mother,
This is the second time Stevenson has
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
who was worried because her daughter run into legal trouble in Fresno since he
was late, found her at her friend's house was drafted in the first round by Utah last Pomeroy Eagles
New equipment arriving dally
See Minnlng, Wayne or Jim
and picked her up. The mother called year, the 23rd pick overall.
Club Bingo
or
a
.REAL
DEAL on 8 new lawn tractor,
police after her daughter told her what
On the night he was drafted, he was
On Thursdays
lawn mover or weed trimmer.
had happened.
,
involved in a brawl at a high school aU-star .
At6:30 P.M.
The mother later confronted Stevenson basketball game in neighboring Clovis.
"': Lawn# , :Gard
qulplnent ;
Main St.,
in a telephone call that was recorded, the
Stevenson, who did not play in the June
b
our
Bll•lnw
not
a
aide- line.
Pomeroy, OH
police report said, and Stevenson admitted 28 game, said he was jumped by five men
Paying $80.00
GRAVELY TRACTOR
he had sex with the woman's daughter after signing auiographs. He pleaded
pergama
Sales &amp; Service
and said Anderson' had sex with the other innocent to charges of fighting in a publk
$300.00 Coverall
204
Condor
St.
Pomeroy
girl. Stevenson also admjtted providing the place.
·
$500.00 Starbufal
alcohol.
Stevenson is sche'ditled to be in court Prrogre•slve top line
992-2975 .
The 14-year-old and her family have Monday for a trial in that case.
Lie. 1100.50

P/B

PaM

:V

jl

FREE .. HOllE EITliiATEI • "'UJNQ IIIIUEWtQ" •

remodeling,
drywall, room
additions, and
plumbing.

Public Notice

••
4.

r:v.

tory

'

,.-.
41LIU
(ofpeoplil
_..,.,
14 Wlklasaof
Mor"...,.
lod8
51 8lgnlly

34=

METAL CULVERT

10'x10S3000 ;
10' X 20 S50.00

I'IU
PIM

,._.. EaM
Dtll.
Pall

Cue-bid

7~992-1871

NO JOB TOO LAROE OR SMAU

Wfll
I t

Oponin&amp; load' • •

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compart
FREE ESTIMATES

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

(under PomeroyMason Bridge)

......

12

.,«

lhird
45 TV

41

17 Type of

""

•Complete

GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

6 Ill 4 I

o-kr:Wnt
Vuinrr~We: Eut·Welt

•New Hollin
•GII1Iflel

CAN HELP

•+ •u1 4 2

• II: Q II I 1 f
.. l I I
• A Q

·ROIEIT IISSELl
CONSTRIKTION

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

RIVERSIDE
STORAGE

.....

I I

740 -9921101
or 992-2753

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

I

I(

Free Est1m.Jtcs

740-992-7599

,•..,......

......

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t J It
6 A Q II

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42 Flr8t,

18 ...... Holel

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~

Sldl8a. New~

• a rt

ACROSS 40 "' rl I
INIIMdc

Nft'a-•V..,.

•

'-Your
'Birthday
nel'ds above \·our own toduv

wh~.:nc\ ·rr ~·ol1 're I'C4lliri.!J t~
mnkc a l' hok.'~?.
LIBRA !Sept. 2.1-0ct. Di-

- Your grL'atc:-.L &lt;.~s :--ct tud;.Jy is
your &lt;.1bility to know how. to
take nd"antagc of ~: hangcs that
p·o1&gt; up instead of righting
th~m. TI1i ~ ad aptability is wlmt
make:-&lt; you su., h a suCcess.
SCORPIO !Ocl 24-Nov.
221 -- Be prepared 10 leam up
with a kinll fr iend to ac&lt;:om·
pli&gt;h somelhing thai he or she ·
ne eds tnkcn c:.uc .of today.
Remember thai lhey were of
con~illemble assistuncc to you
in lh~ past II ' II be a happy
t\t,;counting.

SAGITIARIUS !Nov. 23Dec. 21) -· Somelhing that you
may h10ve been fearful of onighl
1urn our ·ro be any1hing bul
. unpl eosunt today. lnstead of
worse ning your situation. il
could co mplct.:ly eliminute
problems .
CAPRICORN !Doc. 22-Jun .
191 -- llave socia l· arrangemen~ ~ in plncc todny with un
nd~·~ murou s friend whose com·
pu11y yo u cnju)'· Chances urc
you'llnc:ed to soothe your r~sh
l i.! ~ s !&gt;ipirit und will wnnt sum ~
action.

AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19) --Worki ng on projec&lt;s of
intcr~s t could provi_
de )' Oll with
a wond...-rful scns~ or fulfill ment today. It c.m be your
fa\'oritc hobby or :-.omcthi ng
that bcautific:O: you!' SUITOUIHJI!lg"S .

PI SCES (f'ch. 20-M;m:h 20l
.• Som~.: lhing or mutual benefit might rc suh loday by g~llin~
tog~: thcr wi lh a d ~ar fr ilmll
who vou mav not have ~ee n for
uwhik· . You hoth ha\· ~ mw.:h ttl
~hun.· wit h nne mwthcr.
AR IES (Mardi 21-April 19)
-- The he .~ t chum; ~~ vou huve
today f()r inc.-casing Your earnin~ potential is to spend your
time on something you really
enjoy·doing . This will moti\"nte
you like nothing else would .
TAU RU S (April 20-Muy
20) ·- You' II have a good, nutural rupport with people today,
.cusi ly communicating with
anyone with whom you
become involved. The nice
manner in which you treat
them i!ii whut mnkes this possi·
ble.

.

GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
,- Thi.&lt; could be u fortunule duy
for you wilh people offeri ng 1o
help you in uny wuy Ihey cnn,
inc luding monetarily. Aclutllly.
they're lrying to retiprocule for
your paS! kindness .
\'

1·

I

�Thut'Sdey, June 21, 2001

...... 8 I • T'he o.lly Sa 111M1

Pomeroy, Middleport, ~

'TIIurldey, June 21, 2001

The Dally Saalluel• Pllge B 7 •

AALIJ~x~vroo~o~p~--~----~----------------~~~==~~:::::-------~======~;;~~;;;;;;;; :
NEA Cro11word Pu nle
PHILLIP

•

·-Pr-e
H

0-\.Uc:AI'

The One Man Corporation
R•M
WIIIIWIII, Single Widae,
Doublll Wld.ls, Boat's Decks. RV's, .nc1
camper's, SWimming pools .rid farm.equipment1'118 p r - . -.ed things from filling otation
podclng lois, RV'a .nc1 to a corporal&amp;
L.aar-Jet

1 11110- Oegleiae automobile .ncltruck mccor·s
aa wall aa dlelal.ncl lnduslrial oquipmenl
engm., such as bulldozer's, baellhoes; .ncl
~- H 1can help yoo call me after 5:00.
Jlllll Scan 112-3002
or email at
·
net

WICifS

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

1Medi&lt;:are Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;

Dental, Retirement,
IPc:nsioon &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mongage; Major Medical
~ .
L":.:;:Nu::,:rsi:::,ng::Ho::::;me::,_·"""'":"'_,.:::,:::Jitp::::.t.::IU=il!t::;l [

r1J

c§
Haullag • UllleSIOH
• Gra•el Sand •
Thpsoll • Fill Dirt
• Mule~
Bulldozer Servlcet

(740} 992-3470

Howardl.
Wrltesel
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout
FTH EIIIIIIIIH

949-1405
591-5011

NOTICES ..

DIPIYIU
Nlft
All Makft Tractor &amp;
Equlpme•t Puts
Factory Authorlud
Caae-IH Parts
Dealtn
11100 St Rt 1 South
Coolvll,., OH 45123

ALDER

SMITH'S
CONSTRJCTION

BISSELL
IUILDIIIS INC.

wno
0 I
.. A I[ It t

t KI I 5 I

0' 7!UI .. II!IIIIIIML
FREE ESTIMATES

•

GRAVEL
SAND
UMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

, .
1.

BARNEY

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
K£EPS THE ·
SUIIMERllME II!AT
OUT AND WINTEA
nME HEAT IN

BLOCKS OUTIU'!I.

OF DAIIAOINII
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT ·
PRICING

~~)992·5072

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

I

I

1-&amp;Q0-291-5600 • Pomero~

Scipio Townahlp
truateae will hold
their regur.r monthly
meeting combined
with the ai\null
budget meeting on
July e, 2001 0 8:30
p.m. 0 Pagevllla
Town Hell.

{?

Terry Lamm

THE BORN LOSER

992-0739

P'"~,1F Wt:: ru:w flinl.. t!J..E.~T""'
aMI TO Til£ ~~~T,Io.le.'D
1-\P..Vf: TO ~~ ~ 1'1.'.1Qlf:) eKI(.

(6) 21,2001
- 1tc

Tl\!lif:ff-~ 7

Public Notice
The
Scipio
Townehlp trueteee
will accept aealed
bide on the following
property.
The
following
. deacrlbed real elllllle
ettuete In Town 7,
. Range 14, Section 14,
Fraction 7, Scipio
Townehlp, Melga

County, .

• Trucke •

• Boete •
· -"' • Equlpmenl

Trellere

• DrlvitWJtye
degree1ech '

. Jeff Statham
Cell 740•591•2782 7401591•0477
Home 740•985•4218

Ohio,

bounded •• lollowa,

Advertise

-11:

Tt. following lot of
·tend alluate In the
of
-village
Harrteonvllla; County·
and State aforellld,.

in this
space
for
550 per
month

Utah Jazz player charged
with statutory rape

ELITE MECH-'NICAL CONTRII.CTORS

'

BlGNATE

1-3114-675-78%4
l-800-lS0-!1077
Residential Comma-till N.,. C~lon
Sal.. Senlce lnsliollalion
Specializl"'l In Sheet !\tela\ DuctwOrk
"Trane• Salce &amp; Senlce For
Collia, MIL'IOn, llild Melp CoWIIIM
Ucensed 1nd Insured
WV 005.1 7'

FAKE?!
rT'S
RI&lt;OHT
· HEII.E
IN

BL...tK
ANt&gt;

WHITE'

PEANUTS

General/SpeclaUzed Typing
Temporary Ofllce Assistance
MaiUng LabelsiEnvelopes
Cassette Transcription
Numerous Business Support Services
_ 2S years Secretarial Experience

I MISSED 't'OV WI-lEN
l WAS AWAV AT CAMP..
DID AN'&lt;TMIN6 EllCITIN6
I-lAPPEN W!-IILE !
WAS 60NE?

ll tYpeso
Roofs,
Sp.ecialist.·-r.iiiiiiriiWiiiiiiiiii::-::=:1

..........

11 Spenlall

title
2Ginfrlngeon

23 Unclolhed

21

Sfunll
~:.rtS

DOWN
1 Inert

·2

C~eton

=......,,

'D
plllnt 3
30 GenUiof
Mia
4 Urp
32Portlencl't 5~ol

12 Bomb
31 lnhablr.nle
33-edgo
13 Melege ..... 31 Ust-enollnjj
11 Willie
lbbr-

-bllll11 40 TIIUI
20 Dllchollund .1 Chun:h
doee
c-...
21 Clrllln
42 411compound

22 Soup dllh
23 Knoll In
cotton -

~

'3 Actor

lleldwln

44 Ball

6:;..,.....,

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'~~::~' S@~4UlA-~t~trs·
0

/'"

admiration and rcl-ipccl of your

thei r estee m is that you nrc
lomlly free of guile und pre·
ten se . Get a jump on life by
understanding the it,fluc:nccs
1hut"ll govern you in 1he year
uhcnd . Send for your AslroOrnph predictions by mailing
52 10 Aslro-Oruph. c/o thi s
ltcwspuper. P.O. ~ox 1758.
Murray IIIII Stulion, New
York. NY 10156. Be sure to
stolle your ZodiiiC sign .
LEO (July 23·Aug . ~2l -Situotiom thut othl!rs cu n' t

. see m to get 11 handl e on lodny
will I"' ousil)• dealt "ilh by
vou. lhis i!i h~~..:aui\\:', unlike
i hcm. yom fucus will bl! ()11
~u..: ...- ~ss.

1wt failure.

VIRGO IA u~ . 2.1·Sopt. 22 )
·- Co1 h.:c rn fnr tho s~.· \'I'"'U lo\'c
is u..Jmiruhlc. but w iHit i.~ o..'\'1!11
more pnlh('wmthy is th11t
ymlll unselfishly put .ll1cir

;

,.
I

f

f--,,r-,l•.s--r,-T,-r:,,rl Q

peers. Wlm t helps you win

Hindle

\

"TI ~,'

projects l~lll are close to your
hcat1 . Success is guaranteed
because or how n::mch of your·
&gt;elf")IOU ·n pul inlo them.
CANCER .(June 21-July 22 1
-- The wuy you conducl yourse lf loday will win you lhe

J«;!ff Warner Ins.
992-5479
,I ••

AIIIUI

.

57 The ones

BY Pttn.LIP ALDER
2.4W. Cout
ufiW*d
coli.
41 llurrowlng
In answer to your
25 Clock IKe
lllimlll
panner's takeout douftuld
7 Sel'D Glen! of
47 CUillrd
35 Appowhed
(save)
flllry .....
lpple
ble, if you jump in a
36 Actor
8 About
28 Fltnf
41 P1rehed
suit with 9-11 total
MIMo
(2wdt.l
director
50 Poor mark
37 Porte
I BoJoel 52 SUpan.tlva
points, what do you do
aummer
Spino
29 No Ho, - or
ending
with an even stronger ·
3t Levell
11 Therefore
buts
53-deglle
I JES' BET
hand? You cue-bid the
MAINST MYSELF
opener's suit. If the
AT SOLITAIRE II
opener bid one club,
you cue with two
clubs; if the opener
bid one diamond, you
cue with two di!J·
monds; and so on. ·
This cue-bid is
purely a point-showing bid. It makes no ·
comment about distribution .(except that you
judge
your hand
.l fft4 L.IICi .l JUST
unsuitable for a two/ PA6ff0 ,.y
no-trump or three-!IO·
"lEST If
trump reply). After the ·
cue-bid, both panners
lJSfl&gt; IY"
bid naturally. The doul&gt;ATE.
bler bids his longest
I
I
suit, or four-card suits
CELEBRITY CIPHER
in ascending order.
if
by Lui• Campoa
Thi~ continues until an
CtlobriiY Cipher coyp!Ograma oro ctUiod from quotallonl by tlmout
eight-card or better fit
people, putartd preMnl. Each Iotter In tho cipher- for another.
Today's clue: Z equals M
is (hopefully!) found.
"Then with 'a biiOf luck
'ONEODUJEUVNJ,
MA
OWW
one partner knows
UOJ
QNUR,
DR
UOJ
MTJ
how high to aim.
Here , after your
F 0 D E 0
0 E ·U R
U0 J
Z MRU
cue-bid, North bids the
I
first four-card suit he
RWMFWP,
VVU
UOJ
ZMRU
comes to as he mounts
RYNJWP,
MT
UOJ
RMVW . '
the bidding ladder.
I
And when South
JNTJRU
XDZTJU
sho~s spades; North
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Space Ia the stature at Qod." knows where to go .
Joseph Joubert
West starts with the
"The a1tronaule ... Rolarlona In ouler space.• - Gore VIdal
L _ _::::::!:.__ _~~-_J.. heart ace: four, jack,
three. He continues
WGID
lAM I
SHE's HIDEOUS!!
§rr::E::-H:---~===:::::::-, With the heart king;
1Wito4
~r CLAT I. POLLAN-----SHE'S NAST'I'! SHE's g HEll'...
five, two, six. Next
Rearrange J.Hers of ttle
FOUL! SHE'S A
ft UH . ·
comes the heart 10:
f04Jr ocromblod word1 btTOT""L SOW! SHE... 1 ~t;
queen, spade three, low to form four simple words.
,.:.5;.;.H;:E;.;...;;.·;;;u_H;;....;.;.·;· ...._ SAVIN&amp;"?
hean seven. East
MEYROB
switches to the diamond eight.
2
The
diamond
finesse •• which is sure
to lose given Wesr's
ONYUG
opening bid -- is a
"----'-'-'1-.U.-UJ mirage. For the con. tract to succeed, the
T RA PY
rr---::.,--__;_-----~---, club finesse must win.
My sisler and I attended a fa1--,lr.:"--ri-"TI~
s
"""'~._
mous
actors one man show. The
TI-IERE [ WAS AT
And if it does, your
......
.....
_
.
.
.
_
.....
__
.....
_....
next
days
review confirmed our
TWO T"OUSAioiO FEET
diamond queen can be
pinion that one of him was--- OVER ST.JUVIN .. SUDDENLY
discarded on dummy's
SPRDOY
A FOKKER TRIPLANE
third club.
.Complefe lhe chuckle quoted
APPEARED A~OVE ME!
So, win with the
•
•
•
.
by filling in the missing words
diamond ace, draw L-..L-l;....-'---L-1-.J you develop from step No. 3 be low .
trumps from hand, and
·run the club jack.
When the finesse
works, repeat it, then
unload that trouble·
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
some diamond queen.
Jobber. Queen - Mimic - Nearby· REMEMBER
"This TV season reminds me of chicken soup. " my
husband grumbled . "It goes down easy but it's not a meal
to REMEMBER."

Friday. June 22. 2001
Prollress cun be mudc in the
)'ear ni1oad wilh a number of

Cellular

'

I

twin

I I PI .

Proressfonal Work at
AffOrdable Rates

I

,.:=cy ::......

I

JONES'

.

Publ_.• 54 a ....

I' I I I 1

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

Ask For

1s

,,.

FRESNO, cailf. (APj - Utah Jazz known Stevenson and Anderson for four
rookie DeShawn Stevenson admitted hav- years.
740·667-3224 or 740-667.0038
ing sex with a 14-year-old girl in a teleStevenson faces up to three years in
phone conversation with her mother, prison if convicted.
Stevenson could not immediately be
according to court records.
The 20-year-old Stevenson surrendered reached for comment. No one was home
to police Tuesday night and was charged at his parents' house where a purple Jazz
with statutory rape. He was released on flag was hanging.
Tree Service
$5,000 bail.
Anderson, who has an unlisted number,
• Top • Removal • Trim
Stevenson, a backup guard who went also could not be contacted.
• S'tump 6rinding
directly to the NBA fiom high school last
At a news conference Wednesday in Salt
• Bucket TNC:k
year, is charged along with former high Lake City, J~ officials said they didn't
school teammate DeShawn Anderson, 19. know enough about the case to take
· VOUR
A hearing was set for July 6.
action. Jazz vice president Kevin O'ConThe girl told police the two and anoth- nor said nobody in the organization has CONTRACTORS, INC.
CONCRETE
er former teammate took her and a 15- spoken with Stevenson.
Racine, Ohio 45771
CONNECTION
year-old girl to a motel June 6 after buy"Should he have been in a position that
740-985-3948
ing a bottle of brandy.
. supposedly he was in? No. Do we know CONCRETF/BLQCK/BRlCK
Quality Driveways,
According to the report, both girls said what that position was? No. So to support • Footers, Wolla, Stepo•
PaHoa, Sidewalks.
they got drunk on alcohol served by hi111 or to say he wJ wrong, I don't want
Flat Work,
Call~ob
1..
Stevenson. The 14-year-old said she had to say either one until we know more," Replacemeata,' Wallcl 25 yaara experience
Free EsUmai@S
740-949-J40S
consensual sex with Stevenson and later O'Connor said.
and Drlvto • Stencil
CrOte Free Eollmalto
passed out, while the 15-year-old said she
Stevenson's agent, Rob Pelinka, would ServlniOhloaadW,V. '740-742·8015 or
Cell#
had consensual sex with Anderson, · the not comment. Stevenson's lawyer in the ·
. wv 11031712
SPECIAL FINANCE DEPi\RTI~ENT I
6i4-747-1115
report said. Also in the room at the time case, Roger Litmaw. did not immediately .._.....;;..;..;-.;.-_ _, 1-877·353·7022
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?
was Richard Millsap, a former high school return calls fiom The Associated Press.
"We Can Help"ll
.MILL END
teammate of Stevenson and Anderson,
Stevenson played in 40 games for the
Bring In your Jtpalr work
FABRICS
Call Us First Or We &amp;th Lose!
whom the IS-year-old said did not par- Jazz as a rookie, averaging 2.2 points ~nd
Machine
Quilting
We'll get you going for
'ticipate in the sex.
0.7 rebound,. He was placed on the
~e
EARNHART 113
Everyone left the motel together and injured list March 2 with tendinitis in his
spring ·
pillow
panel•
·
the girls were dropped off at the IS-year- right knee and was reactivated April 11 .
l
79 or 446-9800
74()..992·3673
Every Spring Tune-Up
old's house. The 14-year-old's mother,
This is the second time Stevenson has
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
who was worried because her daughter run into legal trouble in Fresno since he
was late, found her at her friend's house was drafted in the first round by Utah last Pomeroy Eagles
New equipment arriving dally
See Minnlng, Wayne or Jim
and picked her up. The mother called year, the 23rd pick overall.
Club Bingo
or
a
.REAL
DEAL on 8 new lawn tractor,
police after her daughter told her what
On the night he was drafted, he was
On Thursdays
lawn mover or weed trimmer.
had happened.
,
involved in a brawl at a high school aU-star .
At6:30 P.M.
The mother later confronted Stevenson basketball game in neighboring Clovis.
"': Lawn# , :Gard
qulplnent ;
Main St.,
in a telephone call that was recorded, the
Stevenson, who did not play in the June
b
our
Bll•lnw
not
a
aide- line.
Pomeroy, OH
police report said, and Stevenson admitted 28 game, said he was jumped by five men
Paying $80.00
GRAVELY TRACTOR
he had sex with the woman's daughter after signing auiographs. He pleaded
pergama
Sales &amp; Service
and said Anderson' had sex with the other innocent to charges of fighting in a publk
$300.00 Coverall
204
Condor
St.
Pomeroy
girl. Stevenson also admjtted providing the place.
·
$500.00 Starbufal
alcohol.
Stevenson is sche'ditled to be in court Prrogre•slve top line
992-2975 .
The 14-year-old and her family have Monday for a trial in that case.
Lie. 1100.50

P/B

PaM

:V

jl

FREE .. HOllE EITliiATEI • "'UJNQ IIIIUEWtQ" •

remodeling,
drywall, room
additions, and
plumbing.

Public Notice

••
4.

r:v.

tory

'

,.-.
41LIU
(ofpeoplil
_..,.,
14 Wlklasaof
Mor"...,.
lod8
51 8lgnlly

34=

METAL CULVERT

10'x10S3000 ;
10' X 20 S50.00

I'IU
PIM

,._.. EaM
Dtll.
Pall

Cue-bid

7~992-1871

NO JOB TOO LAROE OR SMAU

Wfll
I t

Oponin&amp; load' • •

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compart
FREE ESTIMATES

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

(under PomeroyMason Bridge)

......

12

.,«

lhird
45 TV

41

17 Type of

""

•Complete

GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

6 Ill 4 I

o-kr:Wnt
Vuinrr~We: Eut·Welt

•New Hollin
•GII1Iflel

CAN HELP

•+ •u1 4 2

• II: Q II I 1 f
.. l I I
• A Q

·ROIEIT IISSELl
CONSTRIKTION

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

RIVERSIDE
STORAGE

.....

I I

740 -9921101
or 992-2753

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

I

I(

Free Est1m.Jtcs

740-992-7599

,•..,......

......

I l 4

t J It
6 A Q II

.• M"' al ... , I

·-

42 Flr8t,

18 ...... Holel

A A..III

• 4

w-...·a-

e

lrllllwll

•

I Idol

,

WE

1 ,.,.
~

Sldl8a. New~

• a rt

ACROSS 40 "' rl I
INIIMdc

Nft'a-•V..,.

•

'-Your
'Birthday
nel'ds above \·our own toduv

wh~.:nc\ ·rr ~·ol1 're I'C4lliri.!J t~
mnkc a l' hok.'~?.
LIBRA !Sept. 2.1-0ct. Di-

- Your grL'atc:-.L &lt;.~s :--ct tud;.Jy is
your &lt;.1bility to know how. to
take nd"antagc of ~: hangcs that
p·o1&gt; up instead of righting
th~m. TI1i ~ ad aptability is wlmt
make:-&lt; you su., h a suCcess.
SCORPIO !Ocl 24-Nov.
221 -- Be prepared 10 leam up
with a kinll fr iend to ac&lt;:om·
pli&gt;h somelhing thai he or she ·
ne eds tnkcn c:.uc .of today.
Remember thai lhey were of
con~illemble assistuncc to you
in lh~ past II ' II be a happy
t\t,;counting.

SAGITIARIUS !Nov. 23Dec. 21) -· Somelhing that you
may h10ve been fearful of onighl
1urn our ·ro be any1hing bul
. unpl eosunt today. lnstead of
worse ning your situation. il
could co mplct.:ly eliminute
problems .
CAPRICORN !Doc. 22-Jun .
191 -- llave socia l· arrangemen~ ~ in plncc todny with un
nd~·~ murou s friend whose com·
pu11y yo u cnju)'· Chances urc
you'llnc:ed to soothe your r~sh
l i.! ~ s !&gt;ipirit und will wnnt sum ~
action.

AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19) --Worki ng on projec&lt;s of
intcr~s t could provi_
de )' Oll with
a wond...-rful scns~ or fulfill ment today. It c.m be your
fa\'oritc hobby or :-.omcthi ng
that bcautific:O: you!' SUITOUIHJI!lg"S .

PI SCES (f'ch. 20-M;m:h 20l
.• Som~.: lhing or mutual benefit might rc suh loday by g~llin~
tog~: thcr wi lh a d ~ar fr ilmll
who vou mav not have ~ee n for
uwhik· . You hoth ha\· ~ mw.:h ttl
~hun.· wit h nne mwthcr.
AR IES (Mardi 21-April 19)
-- The he .~ t chum; ~~ vou huve
today f()r inc.-casing Your earnin~ potential is to spend your
time on something you really
enjoy·doing . This will moti\"nte
you like nothing else would .
TAU RU S (April 20-Muy
20) ·- You' II have a good, nutural rupport with people today,
.cusi ly communicating with
anyone with whom you
become involved. The nice
manner in which you treat
them i!ii whut mnkes this possi·
ble.

.

GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
,- Thi.&lt; could be u fortunule duy
for you wilh people offeri ng 1o
help you in uny wuy Ihey cnn,
inc luding monetarily. Aclutllly.
they're lrying to retiprocule for
your paS! kindness .
\'

1·

I

�•

•

•

•

....,.Ill• The Dlllly SenUnel

•

•

Reds, Tribe win again, 81
LPGA

Bonds matches All-Star HR Webb,
Sorenstam building
respectful rivalry on Tour ·
pace three weeks ea

Friday

•

a~

WILMINGTON, Del (API
- Annita Sorenswn :md Karrie Webb have won the lint
two major championships on
the LPGA Tour this year. The
similarities don't end there.
Tbe past six seasons, each has
won the money tide three
times and each has won the
Yare Trophy three times for
having the lowest scoring average.
Respect is handed out in
equal doses, coo.
When Soren.stam became
the first woman to shoot 59
earlier this year in Phoenix, she
found a note in her locker the
next day trom her chief rival.
"She had an afternoon tee
time that day. so I didn't run
into her;• Sorenstun said of
Webb. "But the note was very
classy. Then at Nabisco, she Wa5
one of the first to congratulate
me there, and I thought thar

youngest -

~

LPGA's career Gand Slam. :
Mickey Wright w.as 27 ~
SAN DIEGO (AP)
(1%9) and Mark McGwire
Bonds is leaving it to ochers whos not going to let &gt;4Yenisshe won the final leg of tbl
Swinging aW2'f in one of his (1998).
to put it in vo:spective.
ing signs and wnpires get in the
LPGA's four majors in 196
&amp;write launching pads, against
He didn't take long to break
"He's swinging me bat anveU W2'f of his qu&amp;.
The othen ,_ LoUise Suggt:
a team that's now served him lhe nurk. connecting for a two- as he ever has, and we know
On a 2-1 pitch hom Adam
Pat Bradley :md Juli Inkster. •
the most gopher balls, B•rnr run shot in the eighth inning firsthand," said San Diego man- Eaton in the fifih inning Tueslnksret; completed the sbnl
Bonds knew it was a ho;;;~ against San Diego on Wednes- ager Bruce Bochy. who often day, Boock hit a high. arcing
'two yean ago at DuPonr
before at least one of the day night.
.,.... asked why the Padres both- sh04: to right-center field that
Coimtry Oub when she cap!
umpires did.
The scary dUng is, Bonds still ~;itching to Bonds at aU.
banged off an advertising sign
tured the U.S. Women's Opel)
Bonds' landmark 37th homer has 17 games to add to the
"Hes just an incredible td- that hangs a few feet above and
:md
LPGA Championship in a
Tuesday night against San nurk. including one more his ent," Bochv 12id.
just behind me fence. The baH
span of21 days.
Diego wasn't a classic sh04: deep favorite punching bag. lhe
"He is the same Barry;' Giants bounced back onto the field as
Webb has won the U.S:
into the seats. His trot around Padres.
· manager Dusty Baker uid. "You right fielder Mike Darr made a
Open two yean in a row; bUE
the bases was slowed because
Bonds' 59 career homers wouldn't know what's happen- leaping grab for iL
since last )"ear's Open was
the umps had to confer before against San Diego are his most ing. He s just being Barry."
Second base umpire Paul
p~ in July, this is her finl
lhey agreed the baH had indeed against any opponent. and his
But he's 3lso the same Barry E~el at first indicated no
ct2ck at completing dte sbm.: .
left the y.~rd, and waved him 30 at Qualcomm Stadium are Bonds who earlier this year homer. But Bonds pointed to
"The tournament has ~ ·
home.
lhe most ever by a visiting play- became the 17m member of the the sign, and as he puUed into
been
important to mC:' Webb, '
And it almost got lost in the er.
exclusive 500-homer dub. Now second, twirled his right index
said. "But now being the ~
wackiness and ugliness of a 15- . Bonds didn't speak with 'up to 532, hes two short of fin~. i:ht signal for a homer:
major event I hawn't won fur
tying Jimmie Foxx for 1Oth on
Aftrr the umpires huddled for
inning game that finaUy ended reporters after lhe game.
the career GWtd Slam ... tha~
· at 12:22 a.m. Wednesday with
Beforehand, . he se~med the career list.
a moment. Ernmd sent Bonds
in the back of my mind. It~
the Padres beating Bonds' San unimpressed wilh his prowess,
He's the same Barry Bonds home. TV replays showed the
a
focus of mine at the start Of
francisco Giants 4-3.
which has him on pace for 87 who was bypassed in &amp;vor of baH bouncing oft' the sign.
~ year."
But it was big.
homers, a total that would bury teammate Jeff Kent fur last years
It was Bonds' sixdl homer
was
very
classy,
too.
Sorenstarn is trying to get
. Bonds matched the major McGwire's 1998 record of70. NL MVP Aw.inl and will be against me NL West-rival Padres ·
"That shows what kind of her game back 'on tr.ack, ~
league record for home runs
"We haven't done anything eligible for free agency at me this year and that's with Bonds
before the All-Star game, pulling yet," Bonds said. "We haven't end of lhe season.
sitting out two of the teams' 11 person she is;' the Swede that it has wandered very &amp;r. :
added. "She's competitive, but
Like Webb, she had ro de4
into a tie with Reggie Jackson won anything yet."
And the same Barry Boock games.
she 3lso recognlUs when Other with all the attention ~
people do weU."
weeks ago at Pine Needl~
It is difficult to deny a riyal- when she tried to capture 1hF
ry ·exists. Both qualified for the second leg of a single -season ·.
HaU of Fame last year, although GWtd Slam. Instead, she finthey have to put in their ished 14 strokes behind.
,
mandatory tO years on tour. . " I was disappointed the way
Webb has won one more I finished;' Sorenstam iaid. ·" I
major, Sorenstam won one prepared right. I was patient all
more
playh-of-the-year week. Things just didn't go my
honor.
way. This is what matters right
Webb doesn't mind the now, and if I do really good this
comparisons as long as the week, I'U forget about the
rivalry is kept in perspective.
Open - soon:·
"To me, a rivalry is when
A victory by Sorenstanl
two people slag .each other oft' would put her in. position to
in the press and don't like each Win the career Grand Sbrn.
other very much and have no The other major besides the
respect for one another;' the LPGA Championship that she
26-year-old Aussie 12id. "That's hasn't w&lt;in is the British Opeti,
not the case. I have the utmOst which will be played the first
respect for Annika's game. I week in August right after
know how good a player she Sorenstam and Webb square off
is:'
.
on national television.
The rivalry could be in the
And they won't be the only
spodight again when the contenders at DuPont.
LPGA Championship gets
While Webb goes after the ·
under way Thursday at DpPont Grand Slam and Sorenstam
Country Club.
·
tries to win her second major
While Sorenstam has won of the year, Inkster will pursue
five times this year, including a record unmatched in
that 59, most of the attention is women's golf the paSt: 62 years
SEE WHAT 1 JUST DID 1- San Francisco's Barry Bonds watches his 38th home run of tiM) season head for the right field seats on Webb as slie tries to become - three straight victories in a
the fourth woman - and lhe major champiomhip.
as San Diego Padres catcher Ben Davis and umpire Ed RapuaAa look on Wednesday. (AP)

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LIKE

A

DEERE

OYP NEWS STAfF

ASON,
W.Va.
The
Old
House
Doctor staff
from Barboursville are hard at
work repairing Mason's Virgil
Lewis home.
Grant monies received from
the state, the Benedum Foundation .and the Great
Kanawha Resource, Consetvation and Development are
funtling the project.
- Mason County Conunis-'l
• won owns 'the house
wrote the · .it for·...;;:;:.-.
$6,096 received hom the.sl;lte
. for renovations. . .
":We're re5toring the fmnt
p9rch and will be addressing
the foundation on the north
side:' said johnny Nance, trom
the House Doctor said. "Then
·we'll repair or replace any
decay.ing or rotting WQOd."
A fresh paint job is also
planned for the historical
home once the eight · to I 0
.layers of old paint are
~moved.
.
· "It'll get a paint job once
we get down to a solid surface,'' Nance said. "If you
. don't get down to a solid surface, there's no reason : to
repaint it, which is why every
tim~ they painted the house it
would fail."
, .Mason City Historical
Sociery is currendy trying to
raise funds to restore the roof,
~maged duriJJg a recent
storm.
The Old .House· Doctor
anticipates completioh of its
phase of repain on the Lewis EVERY NOOK AND CRANNY Lewis of the Old House Doctor wbrks to ensure that not
home within three to four one spot will be missed In the
of the porch of the Virgil Lewis home. Once the eight
weeks, depending on weather. to 10 layers of old paint Is rennovedthe porch will be repaired and receive a fresh coat of paint.

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___Ii8l.L!-:.il3 o.lly J: 1- HI D.tly 4: 1&gt;+4·9

,~We.IJililnthu:e!ii!rL:-____.£.A2
16

RUNS

will result in an increase in sales taX revenue," Frank said, "but the losses will
have to be made up somehow."
The rate of interest paid on the county's short-term and long-term investments is also on the decline, Frank 12id.
Area bankers have told hirit that the
downward trend is likely to continue
into 2002. Frank said that the county will
receive about 4 percent interest on its
investments, compared to 6 and 7 percent paid in recent years.
Frank estimated 2000 revenue trom
interest on investments at 5200,000, and
said that figure will be down considerably this year.

.

• a~S~t~!)O.u.rtsiL-_...:-._

NOTHING

tion of their counties.
"It doesn't look very promising this
}ear. or next year, because of the state of
the economy;• Frank said. "Sales taxes are
down, iiuerest rates are down, and as the
various county agencies continue to
spend their money, there is less to be
included as a part of a county investment
program."
Frank·said revenue hom the county's 1
percent sales tax was down by S12,650
for the first quarter of2001, compared to
the lint quarter of last year.
•
The loss ofJerry Bibbee Ford in Middleport and Pamida in Pomeroy, which
both dosed earlier this year, are partly to
blame for the losses, but the generally
limper economy is also to blame, Frank

·V. irgil Lewis home in Mason·gets facelift

2 S1dla111- II ...... .

www.JohnOeere.com

,

POMERO\' - It is a dangerous combination for Meigs CoUJity government:
a projected loss in sales taX revenue, a
reduction in interest on investments and
a weakening national economy. ·
County Treasurer Howard Frank met
with the Meigs Counry commissioners
and other officeholders during Thunday's regular commissioners' meeting to
discuss the state of the county's finances,
and to determine what measures, if any,
. can be taken to lessen the impact.
State law now requires county treasur-

1111M1ET Pll(IW 011 -Peggy Yost of the Meigs County TreaSOO!I"s Office held a list of pWIIc fUnds white Treasurer
Howard Frank, center, discussed contlnulng b4 qcet problems
. during Thursday's meeting of Meigs County commissioners.
Frank said diminishing Interest rates iln the Investment of
the$8 funds will place an additional burden on the county's
finances. Commissioner Jim Sheets Is also plcti.lred. (Brian J.
Reed photo)

.

Hurry to your John Deere 'dealer's store.

ers to update their boards of county said.
commissionen on the financial condi"I don't see anything in the future that

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SENTlNEl NEWS STAfF

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'• 0 &lt;Pnh ·June 22. 2001 ·Vol . 51, No . 2l7

. ...,.. a
·Sentinel

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~

NEW
- Pomeroy Councilman Larry Wehrung,
left, and Street Supervisor Jack Krautter stand beside the
street department's newest equipment - two pick-up
trucks and a 1999 dump truck. (Tony M. Leach photo)
'

~·NeW.

·~

•

•

••
a1d

I

work

BY ToNY M. lEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFf'

POMEROY - Addition
of two new work vehicles for
the Pomeroy Street Department will increase. producuvtty and reduc_e ttme consqamts, Councilman Larry
Wehrung satd.
'd h
""' h
we rung. sa1 1 e street
department s recent purchase
. k
f GMC d Ch
0
a?
. evy pte 1
·up trucks .w1l assist workers
h
m acccssmg areas
w ere
.
much Iarger ve h1c1es normaUy couldn't trayel.
"These new trucks will
aUow workers to perform
various projects on smaller
roads and alleyways," said
Wchrung. "It used to take
time to maneuver equipment and manpower into
these areas, but that shouldn't
be a problem any longer."
The trucks, obtained from
a state purchasing program

that offen smaUer communities quality equipment at a
better rate, cost $2,500
aptece.
"The street department
does a wonderful job and we
hope that the addition of
, these trucks helps them con·
· h
d' · , · ·d
tmue m t at tra mon, sat
Wehrung.
·
"Th
h' 1
h
e ve tc e pure ase was
a wise decision and it's nice
c · h
&lt;Or t e publ'1c to see where
. money IS. gomg
· .. he
the1r
dd d
•
a e ·
Wehrung said the department also purchased a new
garage door for $1,500,
allowing the larger vehicles,
namely a massive 1999 dump
truck, access to the village
garage.
"We Can ·now bring the
dump truck inside the building to either fill up with 1salt
PleaH ... VehldH. A3

Prpfidency.exam opponents file suit to stop tests
"
C@LUMBUS
(AP) - . Opponents of
st~te ,proficiency tests filed · a lawsuit
Thursday t&lt;l stop the state from penalizing ~~dents and districts on the basis of
low test scores.
The seven parents and educaton who
are plaintiffs in the laws uit say the tests
hurt students whose schools don't have
enough money. Ohio's Constitution
doesn't allow the state to punish students
based on the size of a school's budget,
. '

said Joshua Cohen, a lawyer for the
group.
1
The suit is "challenging the use of
proficiency test scores to deptive students of diplomas or hold students
back;' Cohen said. "We believe that the
Ohio Constitution prohibiL~ the state
from using proficiency test scores to
·penalize students or school· districts
unless or l)ntil the state corrects its funding problems ."

Under the current system, students
who .don't pass one of five ninth-grade
proficiency tests can't graduate.
The state school board, Ohio school
Superintendent Susan Tave Zelman, and
Attorney General Betty Montgomery
are listed as defendants.
"Our attorneys will be looking at it
and will analyze the argument they're

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