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Pon= •

SPORIS: Reds lose to Astros 7-5, Bl

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Sundey, June 24, 2001

lllddlaport • CWIIpolla, Ohio • Point PIIMMI, WV

old fumrula usually goes:
• Younger investors - up to
~bour age 44
80 percent stocks to take
:advantage of long-term growth

Slnilh
1

ftun .... D1

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risk )VUf assets in a highly spec- opportunities

.ulalive Vl!lltwr.
When it comes ro stOck. !here
are m- genmi asset~ for
publicly tr.l!led companies:
latge ra1~ which are COil1p3llies

20 percent bonds and cash
• Mid-range investors - age
45 to 60
60 percent stocks for continued growth potentUI as they
near retiiement
40 percent bonds and cash to
begin to protect and retlin assets
• Older investors - age 60+
20-40 percent stocks
60-80 percent bonds and cash
Of course, this classic formula
has teetered in the lasr few
decades as people retilt' earlier
and live longer. If someone
either choose5 or is forced into
early retirement in his or her
mid 50s, that ~n may well
expect to have to make ;weu last
for .30 or even 40 years or ~ore.
Recent Department of labor
statistics suggtist that a man who
has already survived to age 50
has a life expectance of 82; for
women, the expectancy is even
longer. So the classic :IS'et allocations listed here aren't right for
every situation.lt probably is fair
to say· that you should at least
consider moving toward less
risky investments the older you
become, and you should exam.ine your asset allocation with
)Uur financial advisor every few
years to make sure it continues
to reflect your goals, risk tolerance, and time horimn.
*An investment in money
marketfunds is not a deposit of a
bank and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation or any
other government agency.
Although each fund seeks to
preserve the value · of your
investment at S1 per share, it is
possible to lose money by
investing in the funds. With
Certificates of Deposit penalties
may apply when withdrawing
prior to maturity.
(Bryre L Smith i5 an inmtment

with marbt capitalization CNer
S5 billion: mid-ap. companies
with $1 billion to S5 billion in
capitalization; and small-cap,
companies whose marbt capicalization is ~ a billion dol-

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Large-ap companies are
often well known. like blue chip
companies; generally they are
molt' stable tlw1 snialier companies. Small-caps tend to be less
welllmawn, frequendy )UUnger

companies whose ~ Qll
be a bit more mlatile, soaring
when things go up and rumbling when they Ull. Mid-caps
are the CIOSS-OIIer marbt which
shms feature&lt; with both smalland large-cap stocks.
1Wo subsets of investing are
known as "growth" and uvalue"
investing. Both of these styles
use a stock's price-to-earning'!
(PIE) ratio and price-to-book
ratio to identiJY desirable stocks.
Growth investors look fur com-

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_panies with higher-than-average
'earnings and the prospect fur
continued growth, regardless of
·changes . in the economy or
market conditions.
Gfl'Wth stocks usually have
high P/E and price-to-book
ratios, which means that these
stocks are relatively high-priced
in comparison with the companies' net asset values.
Value investors, on the other
hand, are the bargain hunters.
They look fur stocks that · are
temporarily out of fiM&gt;r compared to similar companies, and ·
therefolt' undervalued. Even
though value stocks are generally lower priced, valliC iJM,sting
is ~()[ about buying something
ljust because it's cheap, it fucuses
on finding good deals on quality companies. Consequently, tx«Utive with Smith Prutners at
value stocks 11m: matively low Advest Int. in its Gallipolis ojfia.)
PIE and price-to-book ratios.
Ap va. allocation
Many industry experts still
feel that the closer you are· to
~ment (and the further into
J'eti!t'ment you go) the more
your &lt;ISSeiS should shift away
tinm stocks, through bonds, into
cash.
That cjepends, of course, on
how mlich access to that cash
you expect to need. If you have
a fu!N-funded company or gov'
. that more
eFnment
pens1on
than · meets all your expenses,,
you may not need the same
~ of liquidity as someone
who has funded his or her own
retirement and must &lt;haw on
those aw!ts to live. But the age-

gin of the infected area.
Later, the liuit also becomes
blighted, bur remains 6nn and
C\'elltually drying out in what is
conunonly known as "mum. "
nues.
Unfortu112tely. there is little
that can be done right now to
'control the disease, ~ it
is important to start preparing
fur next year. Fint, foDow a recommended spray schedule of
insecticides and fungicides
beginning early in the season
(call the Extmsion office for a
spray schedule).
·
Secondly, minimize nitrogen
and other fertilizer applications,
as this _will promote tender
growth. Which will be more
susceptible to the blight bacteria. Third, prune out dying
material at least four inches
· above the infected area during
the dormant season, and at least
12-15 inches above the infected
area if pruning in the slimmer.
Pruniog in the summer
gready increases the chances of
sp~g the bacteria. Backyald
fruit growers who. intend to
prune during the summer,
should only do so if they are
willing to sterilize the pruning
equipment with a 10 percent
bleach solution between each
and every cut.
Furthermore, summer pruning of infected material is not
recommended at all for commercial growers. Fourth, use
St~t'ptornyacin 17 W to tlt'at
infected shoots and blos5oms.
Carefully read and follow all
pesticide labels.
Fire blight is incurable. Once
the tree has the disease, it
becomes a rmnagement i$.-&gt;ue
for the owner throughout the
life of the tree. Some may find it
necessary to plant new tlt'es.
Fruit bearing apple trees with
moderate resistance to 6re
blight include Jonafree, Melrose,
Red Delicious, and Priscilla,
while those that are higl]ly s\IS'ceptible include: Gala, Granny
Smith, Jonathan, Rome beauty
and F!olji. Crabapple varieties,·

.

which develop wwre fire
blight, include SiiYer Moon.
Snowdrift, Red Jade and V:111
Esseltine.
Fruit bearing pear varieties
with moderate resistance to filt'
blight include Keilfer and Magness, while varieties such as
Auroa and· Bartlett are highly
susceptible and should be
aroided. Onwnental pears such
as Bradford Pears
lt'latively
resistant to tilt' blight,~ a
significant number of the local
reports involve severe symptoms on Bradforil Pears, all of
which have a confirmed diagnosis fiom the plant and pest
diagnostic clinic at OSU.
For more information on
fire blight or to obtain a backyard management/spray ~
ule ·or a commercial fruit growers spray schedule, please call the
OSU Extension Office at 4467007.

are

.Ag DeW1
I..iftltOck inwn•....v:
Live- ·
-·J

Sheet "Reas," William Lyons,
state extension entomologist, ·
states that Seas pass duougll a
four-stage life cycle: egg, larva,.
J1D1
pupae and adult.
forms would be ammonium
A typical home flea popula~
nimte, ammonium sulfate and lion consists of SO perceqt
diammonium phosphate. One eggs. 35 percent larvae, "tO
half inch of l2infall or W2ter- percent pupae an.d 6ve pering after nitrOgen application cent adult.
would
help
minimize
It takes two to eight \veeks
wlatilization.
to complete their life cyde.
For those fanners consider- Only adult Seas bite animals
ing late summer or early fall for their blood. The larvae
seedings of meadows and pas- feed off adult flea feces, dead
tures, make sure to look at a skin, hair, feathen and other
recent soil sample. Is your organic debris. Thorough
field's pH between 6 and 7? cleaning of carpets, rugs, pet
What type of fall crop are you mats and furititure is a neces-:
planting? How has your soil sity.
nutrient values changed over
Newly hatched adult fleas
the past few yean. You would live less than a week if they
be surprised as to how much · don't feast on a blood meal.
of your planting stand prob- Once they have feasted, they
!ems m lt'lated to basic nutri- may live two to 12 months
· ent imbalances in your soil.
until the next meal. Insectici' ...
dal bombs only kill off adults
The second cutting of alfal- and larvae, so 60 percent of
fa is almost ready. Keep an eye the Seas in the home are unafout for potato lealhoppen. fected. You need to use insect
This small green leafhopper groWth
regulators
(like
appears normally in late June methoprene or pyriproxyfen)
in our area. Using a sweep net ~o prevent formation of new
you can measu~ the level of adults with adult insecticides.
infestation within your alfalfa
...
field.
Have you seen your fint
Economic thresholds of adult Japanese beede yet? This
insect populations vary with is the time to be on the lookage of the alfalfa 6eld, normal- out for the fint of those pesky
ly 5-10 leafhoppers per sweep beetles as they land on our.
necessirate some action. favorite rose, can112 or red leaf
Remember, losses mav be pium.
,
reduced by timely iniplemenSimple ~moval of the fint
ration of harvests, growing beetles by hand and drowning
potato leafhopper resistant them in water an.d soap soluwrieties and applications of tion may prevent
onslaught
insecticides when warranted. ofJapanese beetles. Like many
For further information ask other beetles, after the fint
for entomoiogy Fact Sheet 33, one arrives, it releases _•
"Potato Leafhopper on Alfal- pheromone which attracts

Kneen

Jivesto4

BY KEVIN KEU.Y
OVP NEWS EDITOR

PeterKe111e

Summer
concert
series this
week
BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

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Exports fall
for second
month in
a row

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WASHINGTON (AP)
Americans' demand for forr.ign-made TVs, toys and
dothes waned in April, helping to narrow the U.S. trade
deficit. Exports fell for the
recond month in a row.
The country's trade imbalance shrank to $32.2 billion, a
2. 7 percent decrease from
March's $33.1 billion deficit,
the Commerce Department
~t'ported Thursday.
Imports, hurt by sagging
demand because of the weak
U.S. economy, fell more than
e~orts did· in April, narrowing the trade gap. The twomonth drop in exports
reflected the impact of sluggish demand overseas.
"This is really a sign of
weakness all around," said
Paul Kasriel, chief economist
at the Northern Trust Co.
On Wall Street, growing
anticipation that the Federal
Reserve will cut interest rates
for a sixth time this year to
revive the U.S. economy
helped lifr 1stocks higher. The
Dow Jones industrial average
' closed up 68.10 at 10,715.43.

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Play the Ohio Lottery's $2 To~-Fiite• Golf&amp;: Cash instant game on sale April 19th.
You could win loads of Top-Fiite gear, a v~cation at Doral• Golf Resort&amp;: Spa, or cash prizes
of up to $1 0,000! This could be your only chance to become a scratch golfer.

............lii,Al

Hllh: 101
Low:IOI

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used

war on
insecls

MINORS WARNED- Powell's Super-Valu is one of the local businesses posting warning signs
to minors who attempt to buy cig&lt;!rettes. Here, Tony Hupp stocks the cigarette rack at the store,
where one such warning sign is posted. (Brian J. Reed photo)

Lotteries

FROM STAFF REPORTS

1

MIDDLEPORT - Are you looking
for an enriching summer experience for
. your child? Whether he is interested in
art or archaeology, the Civil War or
medieval times, the University of Rio
Grande Meigs Center's Kid's College
offers a numb'er of courses designed to
get him through the summer slump.
"Every summer, kids come through out

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DUBLIN (AP) - This
community is using a
mosquito-eating
fish
instead of spray as its secret
weapon in the war against
. the pesky insects.
"Mosquitofish, or Gambusia affinis, are guppylike fish that are especially
effective at eating mosquito larvae.'' said Todd K.leismit, community relations
spe~$~,.f9r the~ C?lun\::'
bu suburb. ·" It's a Iitdtd;lt
of an experiment."
Dublin received about
150 of the fish, which can
grow to be 2 1/2 inches
long, from Tole(io and
placed 25 to 35 in each of
two ponds in residential
areas tWo weeks ago, city
streets and utilities supervisor Bill Grubaugh said .
OffiCials hope the fish will
multiply and stop the larvae from maiuring into
adult mosquitoes.
"We're hoping they can
eat their weight" in larvae,
Grubaugh said. "We dido 't
want to put them all in
and have nothing held
back to monitor and try
and increase their numb ers."
The fish are part of a
plan to rely less on the use
of chemicals and are not
an immediate soluiion.
Kleismit said some resi- ·
dents hoped the city
would get away from the
use of chemicals.

Enrollment open for Kid's College

Details, A2

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he says he 's making more money at that than he
ever did as a miner.
" A lot of them many tell us they don't want to
go to school," he added. "We'll still help them find .
another job. The goal is to keep them in southern
Ohio. We have included the wives along with the
miners in the belief that it'll take two incomes to
make up for loss of the one."
The . min es, operated by . American Electric
p
b 'd'
SOCCO
ld
1
ower su Sl 1ary
, were so to onso
E
C
d h
·
·ill 1
nergy. onso1 announce t e mmes w c ose
.,
June 30, an~ rt.s not known .how man.y of the more
than 600 mmers on staffw1ll be retamed, 1f any.
Mmers came to the Salem Portal - closed for
several years and provided to CAA for use as a
PleaH - Miners, A3

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

,.Ca..,l,.,enwd.,.all..r---...,-'-'A"S · 'OHIO
,.c...la,..ss~ifi...ed.,.,._s_ _.___,8"'2"='·"-4 Pkk :s: 4+7;.Pidc 4: 3·9-1-s _
..,c~o...
m"'jc~s':-_____.8~5 ~Loltil: 21-2&amp;28-32-4244
.,.Ed~j~towrj.,.al...
s____'='A"-4 Klckr. 2·5-3-~1-7
Obituaries
A3 W.VA.
""'spo&gt;&lt;Wrts.......,,..._____
8_J._3_....
4.....
s IWir s: 2-g..a IWir 4: 3..s-!Hi
...w~.~e..altJth""e"'r'-------"A2.., c 2001 ohio Volley PubU.hing eo.

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into the workforce.
Through the efforts of Gallia-Meigs and AthensHocking-Perry CAAs, funding is available from
the U.S. Department of Labor to make education
available to miners and their wives. Miners initially laid off in 2000 have since started college degree
work .
It's the first kind of program that took a proactive stance before layoffs become widespread, said
Glenn Enslen, director of employment and com·
·
r A h
H ki
Pe
CAA
mumty serv1ces ror t ens- oc ng rry
.
"E
f tl
.
d
·
ff
very one o tese peop 1e 1s aSSigne to a sta
person that acrs as a kind of a mentor," Enslen said.
" I think this is an opportunity in disguise.
"We had a guy who was hid off and told m he
wanted to be a farrier (an expert in shoeing horses) ," he added. "We paid for his education and now

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Pl...... Concert. A3

2 SediHa- 12 ......

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benefils

Fish
u.nderage sm~king raid
nets
violation
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POMEROY With
summer officially here, residents will once again be
firing up their barbecue
grills, relaxing by the
swimming pool and venturing to the Riverside
Amphitheater to attend the
Pomeroy Blues and Jazz
Society's second annual
"Rhythm · on the River"
concert series.
Pomeroy Blues and Jazz
Society, better known as
PB&amp;Js, is an appreciation
society committed to the
sponsorship and promotion
oflive blues and jazz music
within the tri-county area .
Jackie Welker, Ptesident
elf PB&amp;Js, said · foll&lt;Wing
the tremendous success of
last year·s · concert series,
five free outdoor concerts
will once again be offered
to the public, starting June
29, and running every Friday night until July 27.
The series will end with
the introduction of the first
annual Big Bend Blues
Bash Festival on July 28,
featuring a number of
national and regional folk,
blues and blues-ri:lck performers.
"The Big Bend Blues
Bash is going to be the
biggest nmsical event of
the summer," said Welker.
"We're very lucky to have
secured some of the largest
names on the blues circuit
to come and perform at
our music festival."
The festival, which is a ·
ticketed event and costs $5
to attend, will include a
bevy · of talent, ranging
from
local
musicians
Blitzkrieg and the Dale

·Sentinel

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WILKESVILLE - Southern Ohio Coal Co.
employees facing the loss of their jobs at the end
of this week came to the company's Salem Portal
building Sunday to find out what educational
opportunities are available to them as they contemplate new careers .
A program initiated last year by two Community Action agencies working with area colleges,
vocational schools and .adult learning centers looks
to help displaced miners and their spouses get back

POMEROY Meigs
County vendors have apparently gotten the message that
it's ·not smart to sell cigarettes
to minors.
In l recent compli.ance
check only one of 3'5 vendors monitored sold tobacco
products to a minor. That is
compared to eight out of 30
vendors checked last year.
The compliance checks
. were completed through a
joint effort by the prosecuting attorney's office, Meigs
County Health Department
and the Gallia-JacksonMeigs Board of Alcohol,
Drug Addiction and Mental
· Health Services with funding from .tl!t:. OJ!io Deaar tment of Health .
'·
Checked this year were
five food stores, 26 convenience store/ gas stations, two
pharma'cies and two · other
businesses. Vendors were
selected randomly according
to instructions from the
Ohio Department of Health.
Compliance · checks have
been ongoing for four years.
Store owners and clerks who
sell cigarettes to underage
children are subject to various penalties/fines, said
Margie Skidmore, RN,
director of nursing at the
Meigs
County
J:lealth
Department.
All minors assisting with
the inspections were aged
14-15 years and received
training about how to conduct the checks. None of the
minors involved in the compliance che~ks used fake
identifications. When minors
were · questioned about their
age and ID, they answered
honestly.
Female, youth participants

Todlly's

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www.mydaily~entinl'l . com

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Classes &lt;1fered as·
SOCCO layC?ffs loom

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Ho....town Newsp1per

Miners check eel

Mngs Gour~ty~ &amp;tmsion agent
jot agriCIIlturt and natural
resources, Ohio State University.)

REWARDING .ROUND ·OF GOLF .
YOU.'LL EVER ·PLAY.

'

50 cenh • lum· 15 . lOOl • Vul ~I. No Bll

other Japanese beetles.lf using
Japanese beetle traps with ·
female pheromone attractants,
delay placing them out until
large numbers of beedes are
present and then place ·t herp .
~way· fiom the plants you are
trying to protect. (Hal Knun ls

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Melp County's

an

THIS COULf&gt; s·E THE MOST

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f1waF

stock owners - please c;beck
your mail this week for a short
livestock inventory caFd.
Soil and Water Conservation
District and OSU Extension
are asking the cooperatiot( of
livestock owners in completing
this postage-paid can! and mailing it back to SWCD. Spe&lt;;!6c
names of livestock ownen and
nwnben oflivestock. will not be
released to other agencies. "
This information will be used
to target agricultural and conseMtion programrniilg in Gallia County. A coDeee intern
working on this project will follow up in person with
ownen who do not complete
.
the canis.
1
Blue mold forecast: Blue
mold was con6nned in Brt!Wit
County on June 15. The Univenity of Kentucky suspects
that Gallia County was exposed fi "
to the same Memorial Weekend' a.
••• h
spore shower that probably
H
infected Brown Co nty
omeowners ave called
. A.. of Thursday, ublu~ mold.,. frequ~ntly this week about
had .. -,t been confirmed in Gal- Oeas m the1r homes. Many
lia County. Please call the office ., have set off insecticidal bombs
•or tobacco disease identi6ca- and vacuumed the house and
tion.(Jennifrr L Byrnes ·is Gallia · still have fleas.
.
Coun1y~ Exttnsion agent for agriPart of the problem 1s you
culture and tUltural resou.w, Ohio need to realize the life cycle of
State University.)
the flea. In Extension Fact

Monday

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door eager- faced and ready for fun;' said
Gina Pines, the center's director. "Rio
Meigs Kid's College is a lively and activity-driven world.'~
Kid 's College is open to children 8-14
at the Meigs Center oh Mill Street, Middleport.
" Our hi storical classes are designed to
be both educational and fun, with lots of
hands-on activity," Pines said.

The arts have traditionally been a popular topic at Kid's College, Pines said, and
this year's schedule offers a number of arts
classes. Creative children can express
themselves with "Jump Into Journaling"
and ., Poetry 1n Motion.''
Parents with an inquisitive kid or a
budding writer can send him to investi-

Pie•se ... Callep, A3

Attention
all Seniors!
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Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Well ness' is
offering free blood pressure and non-fasting glucose screenings!
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Mason County Action Group/Point Pleasant Senior Center
Wednesday, June 27 10 om - Noon

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

For more information, call
.i

1740) 446-5679

.~·

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-.ohlololtery.com

Lotteiy playors ore subject to Ohio laws and C0111mbllon rogulllfons. PlttM play mpOnolbly.

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�PageAl

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Moridey, June 25, 2001

Maad.y, JUM l5, 2001

·1'1.1Mc18y, June 21

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HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - Cornair pilots
are back at work. starting the retraining
and cerification process that will allow
them to fly when the airline starts carrying passengers again next week.
The nation's second-largest . regional
carrier has been shut down since pilots
walked out March 26. On Friday, members of the Comair chapter of the Air Line
Pilots Association ratified a new five-year
contract with a 733-40tl vote.
Some pilots will need to go through a
lengthy process - ground school, simulator training and flight checks - to regain
flight status. Comair is setting up orientation sessions, such as the one 22-year
Comair veteran Ed Larkin attended Sunday.

Some pilots found the homecomipg a
little awkward; Larkin Yid.
"When you come olf a three-month
period of living in a very s~ressful environment, there's bound to be sqme anxiety when you try to put that aside and get
back to the job at hand," ,Larkin said.
"Obviously, there was something of an
adversarial position that was there for
three months. Now we're trying to put
that behind us and help grow the company again."
Comair is a much smdler airline than it
was before the strike. It plans to put 10
planes in service July 2, with flights to 26
cities - a w cry fiom it's old operation in
which a fleet of 119 planes carried 25,000
passengers a day to 95 cities in the United

f1wn P'llp AI
Kulchar Band, to regional upand-comers TV Yellow from
Cincinnati and the Adam
Schlenker Band from Columbus.
National blues sensation
Kelly Richey will perform
with her ''Jimi Hendrix meets
Stevie Ray Vaughn" style of
guitar playing and ~vent
headliner, "the kings of rwang
and bang;'Teddy Morgan and
the Pistolas, will hit the stage.
The festival will also
in.clude artisans, crafters, and
food and drink vendors along
the Pomeroy parking lot,
beach volleyball, an antique
car and hot rod show, and a
battle of the bands competition, spo~red by Spencer
Music.
A handmade guitar in the
shape of Meigs County, built
. by Curtis Spencer, owner and
proprietOr of Spencer' Music,
will also be given away during
the festivities.
·
Welker said Court Street
will be blocked off during the
event and concert-goers can
quench their thirst and get
some shade while relaxing at
the Court Street Grill's out~
side beer garden.
"As always, proceeds from
all of PB&amp;Js ticketed · eventS
will go toward the society's
preservation and the funding
of various beautification projects in Pomeroy," added
Welker. ·
The society will kick the
summer concert series this
Friday with a performance by
singer/songwriter,
and
acoustic blues extraordinare,
Peter Keane, at 8 p.m. on the
Riverside Amphitheater.
. Keane, who is based out of
Austin, Texas, draws heavily

States, Canada, Mexico and the Bahamas.
Pmident Randy Rademacher said he
expe..u to haw 50 planes in service by the
end ofJuly, agd for Comair to return to
most of its former markets by December.
However, it could be late 2002 before
Comair attains its previous reach and fleet
size, he said.
As the company brings back workers
who were laid off, union and company
officials expect some tension. Pilot Sandy
Hammoris felt it when she attended an
orientation session Sunday.
"I love to fly, and I'm very proud to be
a pilot with Comair," Hammons said. "I
just think we still have some thin~ to
work out with Comair.We are professionals; we just have a long way to go."

"During the 18 years that I have s"pent in the Hamilton
attractions and any other possible renters to fill the calendar and generate money, said Don Klingler, executive sec- area , I did have sexual encounters with three different teen&amp;my Pl Cloudy Cloudy
- . r--..
fllln
fllntll
Snow
toe
retary of the Ohio Fair Managers Association.
age males," the statement said. "To the best of my recollec. .
"Like everything, it's getting more expensive to operate tion, these encounters occurred sometime between 1984
and maintain the.se grounds," Klil)gler said. "Unless you and 1987, and once in 1999.
.start raising gate fees to equal that 'of amusement parks "The encounters were not long lasting. None of the
which nobody wants to do - off-season use of the facili- young men were from this parish. These were the only such
ty is the only way."
encounters."
.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
through the region, more
There's
a
wide
disparity.
in
rental
income
among
county
The National Weather Ser- showers and thunderstorms
vice says a high pressure sys- will be expected through Fri- fairgrounds in northeast Ohio.
.
.
tem will remain in control of day.
DAYTON (AP) -An 8-year-old boy died and his father
·the region's weather tonight
High pressure brought
before an upper level low pleasant weather Sunday
was seriously injured in a house fire Saturday.
. .
COLUMBUS
(AP)
Pi.
man
with
a
history
of
desecratThe
boy,
J.J.
Newport,
was
pronounced
dead
at.
M1amt
brings the threat of showers evening. Thmperatures at 10
and thunderstorms to the p.m. Sunday were mainly in ing the gay-pride flag is one of two people charged with Valley Hospital. His father, Kevin Newport, 43, was m cntburning the banner during a parade.
. ical condition there Saturday night.
·
·
·
regio'il\Tuesday.
the 60s.
Forecast
Police on Saturday charged Charles Spingola, 45, and . Fire Lt. Mark Roth said the fire in .the two-story, wood
Skies will be partly cloudy
Today: Partly cloudy. High Thomas Meyer, 47, both of Newark, with ·open burning, a frame house began about 1:30 a.m . and could have been
overnight with lows from the
first-degree misdemeanor punishable by as much as six caused by a defective stove or food left unattended on the
mid-50s to the low 60s.
2 0
8 •6 ·
months in jail.
.
An upper level low pressure
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. High
A state appeals court last week upheld Spingola's convic- st~ve.
~
system will bring the threat of 83,low 63.
.
. tion on criminal damaging charges for tearing down a gay~
Neighbors said Kevin Newport yelled for help atter
showers and thunderstorms to
Wednesday: Partly cloudy. pride flag that was flying at the Statehouse two years ago at jumping from a second-floor window. He and other Witthe region Thesday; mainly in High 85, low 63.
nesses tried to get back into the house to rescue the boy
a similar parade.
the afternoon and evening.
Thursday: Partly cloudy.
Police said Spingola and Meyer set·fire to a rainbow-col- but were forced back by intense heat, Roth said.
Afternoon highs will reach the
64
6
High 8 ,low ·
ored flag they had been carrying as the last marchers in the
low to mid 80s.
Friday: Partly cloudy. High Columbus Pride Parade passed the Statehouse about 2 p.m.
As the upper level low drifts 87' low 64.
Saturday.
DAYTON (AP) -A jury on Saturday recommended a
death sentence for a man convicted of using a long-handled
heavy hammer to kill his ex-wife, another former husband
COLUMBUS (AP) -· The city has hired a temporary of hers and her 13-year-old daughter.
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Rev. Jim Willig, a well- operator for a public-access cable television channel, allowThe jury, after nearly two days of deliber~tions, returned
known preacher in southwest ·Ohio who wrote a book ing it to resume showing programs produced by communithe death sentence recommendation against Larry Gapen,
about his struggle with cancer, died Sunday. He was 50.
ty members.
52, on the aggravated murder count involving the girl and
The Roman Catholic priest was in demand as a speaker
Biomedical Media Group will be paid $3,300 a month to recommended life 'in prison for 11 other aggravated murin the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, where he gave his reflec- manage videotap_es ~urned into be sho~n on the channel.
det.counts.
.
tions at churches and on radio and cable television shows.
The contract could last between three and six months,
Judge John Petzold of Montgomery County Common
He was diagnosed with cancer on his liver and lungs in depending on how long it takes to find a permanent operPleas
Court gave prosecutors and defense attorneys until
July 1999. He continued to serve as pastor of a .church ator.
Wednesday to express whether the death verdict is consiswhile undergoin,; various treatments that couldn't stop the
Columbus Community Cable'Access, a nonprofit compa- tent with the life in prison verdicts.
' spread of the disease. .
ny which had operated the channel, couldn't reach agree~
Petzold will make the final decision on the sentence.
A book about his fight against cancer, "Lessons from the ·ment with officials in April on a new contract, causing proSchool of Suffering: A Young ·Priest With Cancer Teaches gramming on the channel to stop.
'
Us How To Live," was published recently.

0 ·~
--~-·fl!t·
,..

.

~

Showers possible Tuesday

House fire kills youth.

] Charged in gay flag buminc

Jury .recommends death

Public access shows return

Well-known preacher dies

State disputes creek study
MIDDLETOWN (AP) -The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency is warning the public to stay out of a polluted creek that runs past AK Steel and empties into the
Great Miami River.
.
The warning came in response to AK Steel's suggestion
that Dicks Creek· is safe.
The agency and the southwest Ohio steelmaker are
embroiled in a lawsuit over chemicals in the creek. The
state wants AK Steel to clean up the creek, while the steel- .
maker insists the chemicals are at safe levels and come from
different sources.
lh a court document filed last week,.AK Steel submitted
,. . a risk assessment study done by a Denver company that
· concluded chemicals are at low, safe levels in the creek. The
· company also issued a press release with the findings.

County fairs hunting revenues
CLEVELAND (AP) - More of Ohio's county fairgrounds operators now are raising money through ~entals,
: because the one-week or shorter fairs simply don't raise
enough to sustain operations.
The grounds are courting trade shows, auctions, holiday

Company

HAMILTON (AP) - 1\venty-four people have been·
arrested since newspaper ads appeared on Father's Day
naming 200 Butler County parents who were delinquent in
child-support and could not be located.
"We have received tons of tips at our office· and at the
sheriff~• office," said Daniel Cade, d,i rector of the courity's·
Child Support Enforc:ement Agency. "It's kept my staff, the
sheriff's office and the courts hopping."
·
The county used the same tactic a year ago, and it yielded 72 child-support arrests. The 24 arrests this year in the
first week since publication exceeds last year's pace.
"That's a very good number," Cade said. "We're really
pleased."
-

fight in court

Pleasant Valley Hospital

CLEVELAND (AP) -- The
company . hired to manage a
charter school and the school's
local board are locked in a
court fight for control of the
taXpayer-financed school.
The financially hard-pressed
Cleveland Alternative Learning
Academy . finished its second
year with its mosdy uncertified
teaching staff going unpaid and
its students going without adequate boob and supplies.
State Auditor Jim Petro ·subpoenaed records after school
officials failed to show up for an
audit.
The academy's troubles culminated Thursday when its
local controlling board went to
court to attempt to take control
of the academy from the firm.

Medical Office Building

CLEVELAND (AP) Prosecutors have indicted a
Cleveland police officer, accusing him of submitting a
bogus pay slip for four hours of overtime.
Patrolman Richard Thevenin, a 14-year veteran, will be
arraigned this week on felony charges of theft in office,
forgery and uttering,
"This whole thing is ridiculous," said his attorney; Patrick
·D'Angelo.
Prosecutors allege that Thevenin submitted an ov~rtime
', claim last September for testifying in a traffic case· when he
wasn't the officer who issued the citation, said Kim Kowalski, spokeswoman for the Cuyahoga County prosecutor's
office.

AEP-46 .
ArchCoaJ-22!.
Alao-40~

. I

m.

USB-23

Gannett~64

General EBU~c- 51'1.

AmTechSilCAlhland inc.- 38~
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Bank One - 36~
Bob EVIIll.:..18
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The Deily Sentinel • P1lge A3

LOCAL BRIEFS
Plan VBS
HARTFORD, W.Va.
Church of Christ in Christian Ynion in Hartford will
hold Vacation Bible School
Monday through Friday
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. each
evening.

School review
MIDDLEPORT
A
public meeting to discuss a
new best use plan devised
for Middleport's existing
school buildings will be at 7
p.m. Tuesday at FeeneyBennett Legion annex. The
public is urged to attend the
meeting and give input
about the future uses of the
buildings.

Lodce meets
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge 453 will. have a
special meeting at 7 p.m.
Tuesday with work in the
third degree. Refreshments
will be served.

Fellowship to
meet

Township Trustees will hold ·
their regular meeting at 7:45 .
p.m. July 5 at the township
garage following the. budget meeting.

I

Immunization
-dinlc set
POMEROY Me~s
County Health Department
will offer child immunizations Tuesday, from 9 to 11
. a.m. 'and 1 to 3 p.m. at the
Memorial Drive office.
Children's shot records are
to be taken and children
· must be accompanied by a
parent or guardian.

Arrested for
petty theft
POMEROY
Lesa
Counts of Racine was
arrested Sunday and charged
with petty theft as the result
of an alleged shoplifting .
incident at Dollar General
Store, said Police Chief
Mark Proffitt. She will ·
appear in court July 9 to
answer the charge.

Units answer
calls

DEXTER
Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship will .
meet at 1:30 p.m. Thursday
POMEROY Meigs
get an education in ·a field at Dexter Church of Christ.
Emergency Services units
I'm interested in, rather than Zion will have devotions.
answered the following calls ·
being stuck in something
for
assistance over the weekbecause I have to be."
end:
Thomas stressed that fedTUPPERS
PLAINS
CENTRAL DISPATCH
eral funds paying for his and
VFW
9053,
Tuppers
Plains
Saturday, 8:04 a.m., assistother miners' classes are not
will
meet
at
7:30
p.m
.
ed by Rutland unit, Meigs
a handout . .
at
the
hall.
Thursday
Mine 31, Randy Lieving, ·
"I've paid taxes ever since I
worked, so I'm getting a
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital;
belated education," he said.
"I feel · that I've earned my
5:52 p.m., Holzer Meigs
education."
Clinic, Joe Fetty, Pleasant
Dr. Denise Shockley, assisMIDDLEPORT A V:illey Hospital;
tant director at Buckeye missionary service will be at
10 p.m., Pleasant Ridge,
Hills, said families came to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Pomeroy, Sonya Powell,
her with definite ideas on Middleport Bible Holiness Holzer Medical Center;
new careers.
church, 75 Pearl St. Sam and
11:42 p.m., Middleport
"Most people have some- Annie Davis of Mexico will Police Department, Mary
thing in mind, some kind of be the speakers. Rev. Doug Todd, treated;
a techpical area," she said.
. Cox, pastor, invites the pubSunday, 7:31 a.m., River~
" I have given out a lot of lie.
·
side Apartments, Middlecourse catalogues today, and
port, Donna Powers, Pleassome have requested meetant Valley;
ing'S at the school to learn
10:01 p.ril.., Railroad St.,
more," Shockley said. "There
Middleport,
Elizabeth
have been a lot of questions · MIDDLEPORT - The Faulkner, Pleasant Valley;
and interest in health occu- 25th anniversary celebration
10:43 p.m., Railroad St.,
pations. Since health occu- of Middleport Wesleyan Middleport, Jade Lakin,
pations are our number one Bible Holiness Church will
refused treatment.
employer, that's not unusual. be Sunday. There will be
REEDSVILLE
"I've also encouraged dinner on the grounds folSaturday, 9: 18 a.m., Ohio
some of them to look into lowing the morning service
124, motor vehicle accident,
;
th.e teaching field," she and a special service at 2:30
David
Cline,
Tommy
added . "Their experience p.m.
McDonald, treated.
and knowledge would be an
TUPPERS PLAINS
ideal fit in filling the need
Sunday,
11 :40 a.m., with
for math and science teachChester unit assisting, brush
ers."
fire, Mary Jane Talbott propREEDSVILLE Olive erty.

gy.
"Kid's College is an exciting · and happening place,"
Pines said: "Student projects
fiOinPapA1
are always proudly displayed
gate the world of journalism. throughout the Rio Meigs
If the child is more of a read- ~enter through· the remainer than a writer, he might der of the summer, for all to
enjoy a journey through view.
"The children who partici"Adventures in Literature."
Is there a budding artist in· pate leave with a sense of
accomplishment and satisfacthe home?
"For the first time, we will tion that is easy to see. While
offer a series of visual art learning, they also have a
co11rses desigoed to stimulate great amount of fun."
Instructors include Cathy
your child's creativity and self
expression," Pines said. " 'Art Lentes, an award-winning
Basics,' 'Art II' and 'Art III' Meigs County poet, Univerof Rio Grande Professor
will take children through sity
Chris Pines, and Brian J.
various art forms and media Reed, staff writer for The
and , emphasize the impor- Daily Sentinel.
tance
of
traditional
Tuition is $25 per course,
Appillachian arts." ·
including all materials, and
Understanding computer need-based scholarships are
technology is increasingly available to students whose
, vital to everyone, and two pareQ,ts cannot afford the
computer courses, "Comput- tuition fees. Enrollment is
er Capers I and II," give chil- limited, and should be comdre.n a good experience with pleted as soon as possible by
, the ever-changing technolo- calling Pines at 992-3383.

•• set
Meet1ng

Missionary
senice

Celebration
planned

Trustees set
meeting

FBI looking into city activities
WARREN, Ohio (AP)
The FBI has subpoenaed city
records regarding a power plant
environmental cleanup, a hotel
demolition and utility lines for a
new bowing development, The
. Vindicator of Youngstown
· reported.
Law Director Greg Hicks said
some re~ords were sougl:it il:l
December. Agen~s returned last
week and "want w to go back
and make sure that we gave
them everything," Hicks said.

"lliave no idea what they are
looking for," Hides said. "We are
just cooperating and assisting in
;my way we can."
The housing development
was the subject of a taxpayer .
lawsuit. The Ohio Supreme
Court ruled last year that the city
erred when it helped a developer build streets and utilities.
The FBI . also has sought
recottls on a power plant that ·
was razed in 1999. Money was
wed for a cleanup handled by
the state and by city contractors. 1

.,().!

Dilly
.
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Acron from Ingels Furniture

,)

19

Dally IIIDck repor18 are
the 4 p.m. ctoelng
quolea ol tha pmiOua
day's 1ranlactlonl, provided by Smith Par1nell

Olll·v-

To und e-111111

Middleport

Shoney's-~

Wal-Mart- 80~

Ext. 12

Other ~ervlcea·

AND SUPPLY

minute!!

Mtmbtr, Germis Ho1piwl SyJtnn ·

•

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'•
•

Seara-41'1.

Worthington -12~

Oak HIH FlnanciJI-14~

Chinning Shops...;_ 5~
City Holding -10~

Rockwell - 38%
Rocky Boola - 4~
. RD Shell- 80

W~a-25

Kroger- 24'1.
Lands End - 41

Reader Services

use smokeless tobacco products; 65,000 children aged 18
or less become new, frequent
smoken each year; 12.5 million packs of cigarettes are
sold illegally to children in
Ohio each year.
Statistics show that over
. the past 10 years, the number
of children less than 18 who
become new, daily smokers
each year has increased by
more than 70 percent, she
said.
In Ohio, 19,500 people die
each year as a result of smoking, the tobacco industry's
advertising and marketing
expenditures nationwide are
S5.2 billion per year, and the
estimated portion spent each
year for Ohio advertising is
$218 million.
Research studies indicate
children are three times
more sensitive to the influence of tobacco advertising
than adults and are more
likely to be encouraged to
smoke by cigarette marketing than by peer pressure, she
said. Tobacco use kills more
people than AIDS, alcohol,
drugs, fire, homicide, motor
vehicle accidents and suicide
combined.
Skidmore · said vendors
who have questions .concerning the compliance
checks need to call the prosecuting attorney's office at
992-6371.

College

The Dail Sentinel

Suite 214
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

a

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h•Piip:A1

attempted 21 purchases with
one success. Male youth par.ticipants attempted 14 purchases with no success.
Health Department staffen
observed proper posting of
.
nuss.
notices and warnings within
Opening for Keane will be tht establishments.
local talent Union Blooze at 7
The compliance checks
p.m.
concerning the sale of tobacRounding out the remain- co products to minors are
der of the summer concert mandated -u nder Section
series are:
1926 of the Federal Public
• Baillie and the Boys, July Health Services Act and the
6;
SYNAR Amendment,
• Tarbox Ramblers, July 13;
States are required to con• Grady Champion;July 20; duct random, unannounced
• American Gypsy and Tony
inspections annually to
Tenaglia, July 27.
ensure compliance. States
Following Friday's perforwho do not uphold the law
mance, PB&amp;Js will be sponreceive a 10 percent decrease
soring the "Swingin' Golf
Scramble" at Pine Hills Golf in federal funding for substance abuse programs !lurClub on Saturday at 9 a.m .
The golfing event is a ing the first yeu (which
"bring 'your own team" for- increas.es by 10 percent
mat and the team's handicap year ·to . a maximum of 40
must total 4,0 with only one percent). The purpose of the
player's handicap at 10 or checks is to document youth
access to such products and
lower. ·
·
Entry fees are $40 per play- to reduce adolescents' ability
er and cash pots, mulligans to purchase tobacco items.
Skidmore said the Camand skin games are available at
paign
for Tobacco-Free Kids
an additional cost. Awards for
first, second and third place reports 34 perc:ent 9( high
will be given out and food school students smoke; 18
and refreshments will. be percent of high school males
made aVailable to all participants.
Live musical entertainment
will also be provided at various tee boxes on the golf
course.
. fiMP8pA1
For more information on
the Big . Bend Blues Bash, classroom site - to check
Rhythm on th~; River con- courses and their eligibility
certs, or the · golf scramble, for educational benefits.
contact Welker at 992-6524 Getting into the program is
or check out the Court Street no problem, Enslen said.
Grill website at www.court- . "Eligibility is based on,
streetgrill.com.
you were laid off. Period," he
said. "That's the only qualification:•
·Among the schools represented were Universlty of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College, Hocking College, Buckeye Hills
C:neer Center, Tri-County
man for filling top posts, said · Joint Vocational School in
in March that having a diver-· Nelsonville, Meigs County
sity of races, sexes and out- ABLE and Gallipolis Career
looks is important to Bush, College.
.
·
.although the president .has no
Paul F. Thomas of Middle"magt'c scorecard" of numberS· . port, who started at the
mines in December 1975,
he wants. Eighty percent of agreed with Enslen's beli~f
Bush appointees are white, 10 educational benefits are a
percent are black, 6 percent guide to a new career. He
are Hispanic and 3 percent are ' began taking classes. toward
Asian.
an associate degree in comFormer President Clinton, ' puter science through Rio
who promised to make his Grande's Meigs Center last
administration · "look like year.
:America," had a slightly less · "This is a fine opportunidiverse record in his initial . ty," he said. "No matter how
appointments. Of Clinton's . old 1 am, I want to further
first 157 appointees in 1993, my education. This opportu86 percent were white, 13 nity is great because I can
percent ·were blaclt, 4 percent
were Hispanic and one person
was Asian.

WASHINGTON (AP) 1\vo out of five of President
Bush's top appointees worked
in his father's administration,
and nearly three-quarters have
· th "d ra1
worked m e •e e government before, a magazine
reports.
. Four out of five of the top
appointees are white, and 42
percent worked for .the Bush
campaign, according to an
analysis of 300 top appointees
by the weekly National Journal.
The list includes people
Bush nominated or said he
would nominate to top White
House and executive branch
posts, including Cabinet secretaries and their chie&amp; of staff.
Clay Johnson, Bush's point

OXFORD (AP) -Tuition and general fees are going up
MILLVILLE (AP) - A priest who says he had sexual 8 percent at Miami University.
relations with teen-age boys on three occasions since 1984 •· Trustees on Friday approved a $512 dollar increase to
asked his parishioners to pray for him, and forgive him.
.,. $6,915 for the academic year. Out-of-state students will
A statement Issued by the Rev. Kenneth Schoettmer was pay $1,146 more this fall, or $14,589 dollars a year.
read at Mass on Sat~rday at Queen of Peace €acholic, Room-and-board charges also go up 6.8 percent.
Church. The Rev. W1lham Schwartz read ~he . statement . "Our duty is to make decisions that are in the best
because Sch?ettmer was too ashamed to do It h1mself, the longterm interests of Miami students," said Roger Howe,
statement sa1d.
" chairman of the university's board of trustees.

Complete '\%mens Hea/thcare

Raid

Two in five Bush appointees
worked (or his father .
·

Officer char1ed with theft

Priest asks for forclveness

Mark W. Nolan, MD ·

and board

'·

Father's Day_ad 1ets results

from the country blues tradition for his finger-picking
and acoustic semibility:
"Audiences
will
love
Keane's music because of its
captivating blend of classic
country blues and the smart,
urban romanticism of the
contemporary songwriter,"
said Welker. "It's definitely
orie show you don't want to

Concert

Comair pilots return to work

.Ohio weather

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

$53.82
$105.56

- - Melga County
13Weotca
$28.25. .
26Weotca
. $58.88
52Weolca
$109.72

The Middleport Youth League
would like to thank
Martin Marietta, Inc. of Portland
&amp; Pullins Excavating of Pomeroy
for their donations to help get
our.ball fields ready.
ALL AGES , ALL TIME S $4 .00

'

•
&lt;,

�PageAl

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Moridey, June 25, 2001

Maad.y, JUM l5, 2001

·1'1.1Mc18y, June 21

,.,

•

•I Columbll8 lea•111• I

.

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - Cornair pilots
are back at work. starting the retraining
and cerification process that will allow
them to fly when the airline starts carrying passengers again next week.
The nation's second-largest . regional
carrier has been shut down since pilots
walked out March 26. On Friday, members of the Comair chapter of the Air Line
Pilots Association ratified a new five-year
contract with a 733-40tl vote.
Some pilots will need to go through a
lengthy process - ground school, simulator training and flight checks - to regain
flight status. Comair is setting up orientation sessions, such as the one 22-year
Comair veteran Ed Larkin attended Sunday.

Some pilots found the homecomipg a
little awkward; Larkin Yid.
"When you come olf a three-month
period of living in a very s~ressful environment, there's bound to be sqme anxiety when you try to put that aside and get
back to the job at hand," ,Larkin said.
"Obviously, there was something of an
adversarial position that was there for
three months. Now we're trying to put
that behind us and help grow the company again."
Comair is a much smdler airline than it
was before the strike. It plans to put 10
planes in service July 2, with flights to 26
cities - a w cry fiom it's old operation in
which a fleet of 119 planes carried 25,000
passengers a day to 95 cities in the United

f1wn P'llp AI
Kulchar Band, to regional upand-comers TV Yellow from
Cincinnati and the Adam
Schlenker Band from Columbus.
National blues sensation
Kelly Richey will perform
with her ''Jimi Hendrix meets
Stevie Ray Vaughn" style of
guitar playing and ~vent
headliner, "the kings of rwang
and bang;'Teddy Morgan and
the Pistolas, will hit the stage.
The festival will also
in.clude artisans, crafters, and
food and drink vendors along
the Pomeroy parking lot,
beach volleyball, an antique
car and hot rod show, and a
battle of the bands competition, spo~red by Spencer
Music.
A handmade guitar in the
shape of Meigs County, built
. by Curtis Spencer, owner and
proprietOr of Spencer' Music,
will also be given away during
the festivities.
·
Welker said Court Street
will be blocked off during the
event and concert-goers can
quench their thirst and get
some shade while relaxing at
the Court Street Grill's out~
side beer garden.
"As always, proceeds from
all of PB&amp;Js ticketed · eventS
will go toward the society's
preservation and the funding
of various beautification projects in Pomeroy," added
Welker. ·
The society will kick the
summer concert series this
Friday with a performance by
singer/songwriter,
and
acoustic blues extraordinare,
Peter Keane, at 8 p.m. on the
Riverside Amphitheater.
. Keane, who is based out of
Austin, Texas, draws heavily

States, Canada, Mexico and the Bahamas.
Pmident Randy Rademacher said he
expe..u to haw 50 planes in service by the
end ofJuly, agd for Comair to return to
most of its former markets by December.
However, it could be late 2002 before
Comair attains its previous reach and fleet
size, he said.
As the company brings back workers
who were laid off, union and company
officials expect some tension. Pilot Sandy
Hammoris felt it when she attended an
orientation session Sunday.
"I love to fly, and I'm very proud to be
a pilot with Comair," Hammons said. "I
just think we still have some thin~ to
work out with Comair.We are professionals; we just have a long way to go."

"During the 18 years that I have s"pent in the Hamilton
attractions and any other possible renters to fill the calendar and generate money, said Don Klingler, executive sec- area , I did have sexual encounters with three different teen&amp;my Pl Cloudy Cloudy
- . r--..
fllln
fllntll
Snow
toe
retary of the Ohio Fair Managers Association.
age males," the statement said. "To the best of my recollec. .
"Like everything, it's getting more expensive to operate tion, these encounters occurred sometime between 1984
and maintain the.se grounds," Klil)gler said. "Unless you and 1987, and once in 1999.
.start raising gate fees to equal that 'of amusement parks "The encounters were not long lasting. None of the
which nobody wants to do - off-season use of the facili- young men were from this parish. These were the only such
ty is the only way."
encounters."
.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
through the region, more
There's
a
wide
disparity.
in
rental
income
among
county
The National Weather Ser- showers and thunderstorms
vice says a high pressure sys- will be expected through Fri- fairgrounds in northeast Ohio.
.
.
tem will remain in control of day.
DAYTON (AP) -An 8-year-old boy died and his father
·the region's weather tonight
High pressure brought
before an upper level low pleasant weather Sunday
was seriously injured in a house fire Saturday.
. .
COLUMBUS
(AP)
Pi.
man
with
a
history
of
desecratThe
boy,
J.J.
Newport,
was
pronounced
dead
at.
M1amt
brings the threat of showers evening. Thmperatures at 10
and thunderstorms to the p.m. Sunday were mainly in ing the gay-pride flag is one of two people charged with Valley Hospital. His father, Kevin Newport, 43, was m cntburning the banner during a parade.
. ical condition there Saturday night.
·
·
·
regio'il\Tuesday.
the 60s.
Forecast
Police on Saturday charged Charles Spingola, 45, and . Fire Lt. Mark Roth said the fire in .the two-story, wood
Skies will be partly cloudy
Today: Partly cloudy. High Thomas Meyer, 47, both of Newark, with ·open burning, a frame house began about 1:30 a.m . and could have been
overnight with lows from the
first-degree misdemeanor punishable by as much as six caused by a defective stove or food left unattended on the
mid-50s to the low 60s.
2 0
8 •6 ·
months in jail.
.
An upper level low pressure
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. High
A state appeals court last week upheld Spingola's convic- st~ve.
~
system will bring the threat of 83,low 63.
.
. tion on criminal damaging charges for tearing down a gay~
Neighbors said Kevin Newport yelled for help atter
showers and thunderstorms to
Wednesday: Partly cloudy. pride flag that was flying at the Statehouse two years ago at jumping from a second-floor window. He and other Witthe region Thesday; mainly in High 85, low 63.
nesses tried to get back into the house to rescue the boy
a similar parade.
the afternoon and evening.
Thursday: Partly cloudy.
Police said Spingola and Meyer set·fire to a rainbow-col- but were forced back by intense heat, Roth said.
Afternoon highs will reach the
64
6
High 8 ,low ·
ored flag they had been carrying as the last marchers in the
low to mid 80s.
Friday: Partly cloudy. High Columbus Pride Parade passed the Statehouse about 2 p.m.
As the upper level low drifts 87' low 64.
Saturday.
DAYTON (AP) -A jury on Saturday recommended a
death sentence for a man convicted of using a long-handled
heavy hammer to kill his ex-wife, another former husband
COLUMBUS (AP) -· The city has hired a temporary of hers and her 13-year-old daughter.
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Rev. Jim Willig, a well- operator for a public-access cable television channel, allowThe jury, after nearly two days of deliber~tions, returned
known preacher in southwest ·Ohio who wrote a book ing it to resume showing programs produced by communithe death sentence recommendation against Larry Gapen,
about his struggle with cancer, died Sunday. He was 50.
ty members.
52, on the aggravated murder count involving the girl and
The Roman Catholic priest was in demand as a speaker
Biomedical Media Group will be paid $3,300 a month to recommended life 'in prison for 11 other aggravated murin the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, where he gave his reflec- manage videotap_es ~urned into be sho~n on the channel.
det.counts.
.
tions at churches and on radio and cable television shows.
The contract could last between three and six months,
Judge John Petzold of Montgomery County Common
He was diagnosed with cancer on his liver and lungs in depending on how long it takes to find a permanent operPleas
Court gave prosecutors and defense attorneys until
July 1999. He continued to serve as pastor of a .church ator.
Wednesday to express whether the death verdict is consiswhile undergoin,; various treatments that couldn't stop the
Columbus Community Cable'Access, a nonprofit compa- tent with the life in prison verdicts.
' spread of the disease. .
ny which had operated the channel, couldn't reach agree~
Petzold will make the final decision on the sentence.
A book about his fight against cancer, "Lessons from the ·ment with officials in April on a new contract, causing proSchool of Suffering: A Young ·Priest With Cancer Teaches gramming on the channel to stop.
'
Us How To Live," was published recently.

0 ·~
--~-·fl!t·
,..

.

~

Showers possible Tuesday

House fire kills youth.

] Charged in gay flag buminc

Jury .recommends death

Public access shows return

Well-known preacher dies

State disputes creek study
MIDDLETOWN (AP) -The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency is warning the public to stay out of a polluted creek that runs past AK Steel and empties into the
Great Miami River.
.
The warning came in response to AK Steel's suggestion
that Dicks Creek· is safe.
The agency and the southwest Ohio steelmaker are
embroiled in a lawsuit over chemicals in the creek. The
state wants AK Steel to clean up the creek, while the steel- .
maker insists the chemicals are at safe levels and come from
different sources.
lh a court document filed last week,.AK Steel submitted
,. . a risk assessment study done by a Denver company that
· concluded chemicals are at low, safe levels in the creek. The
· company also issued a press release with the findings.

County fairs hunting revenues
CLEVELAND (AP) - More of Ohio's county fairgrounds operators now are raising money through ~entals,
: because the one-week or shorter fairs simply don't raise
enough to sustain operations.
The grounds are courting trade shows, auctions, holiday

Company

HAMILTON (AP) - 1\venty-four people have been·
arrested since newspaper ads appeared on Father's Day
naming 200 Butler County parents who were delinquent in
child-support and could not be located.
"We have received tons of tips at our office· and at the
sheriff~• office," said Daniel Cade, d,i rector of the courity's·
Child Support Enforc:ement Agency. "It's kept my staff, the
sheriff's office and the courts hopping."
·
The county used the same tactic a year ago, and it yielded 72 child-support arrests. The 24 arrests this year in the
first week since publication exceeds last year's pace.
"That's a very good number," Cade said. "We're really
pleased."
-

fight in court

Pleasant Valley Hospital

CLEVELAND (AP) -- The
company . hired to manage a
charter school and the school's
local board are locked in a
court fight for control of the
taXpayer-financed school.
The financially hard-pressed
Cleveland Alternative Learning
Academy . finished its second
year with its mosdy uncertified
teaching staff going unpaid and
its students going without adequate boob and supplies.
State Auditor Jim Petro ·subpoenaed records after school
officials failed to show up for an
audit.
The academy's troubles culminated Thursday when its
local controlling board went to
court to attempt to take control
of the academy from the firm.

Medical Office Building

CLEVELAND (AP) Prosecutors have indicted a
Cleveland police officer, accusing him of submitting a
bogus pay slip for four hours of overtime.
Patrolman Richard Thevenin, a 14-year veteran, will be
arraigned this week on felony charges of theft in office,
forgery and uttering,
"This whole thing is ridiculous," said his attorney; Patrick
·D'Angelo.
Prosecutors allege that Thevenin submitted an ov~rtime
', claim last September for testifying in a traffic case· when he
wasn't the officer who issued the citation, said Kim Kowalski, spokeswoman for the Cuyahoga County prosecutor's
office.

AEP-46 .
ArchCoaJ-22!.
Alao-40~

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USB-23

Gannett~64

General EBU~c- 51'1.

AmTechSilCAlhland inc.- 38~
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Bank One - 36~
Bob EVIIll.:..18
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The Deily Sentinel • P1lge A3

LOCAL BRIEFS
Plan VBS
HARTFORD, W.Va.
Church of Christ in Christian Ynion in Hartford will
hold Vacation Bible School
Monday through Friday
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. each
evening.

School review
MIDDLEPORT
A
public meeting to discuss a
new best use plan devised
for Middleport's existing
school buildings will be at 7
p.m. Tuesday at FeeneyBennett Legion annex. The
public is urged to attend the
meeting and give input
about the future uses of the
buildings.

Lodce meets
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge 453 will. have a
special meeting at 7 p.m.
Tuesday with work in the
third degree. Refreshments
will be served.

Fellowship to
meet

Township Trustees will hold ·
their regular meeting at 7:45 .
p.m. July 5 at the township
garage following the. budget meeting.

I

Immunization
-dinlc set
POMEROY Me~s
County Health Department
will offer child immunizations Tuesday, from 9 to 11
. a.m. 'and 1 to 3 p.m. at the
Memorial Drive office.
Children's shot records are
to be taken and children
· must be accompanied by a
parent or guardian.

Arrested for
petty theft
POMEROY
Lesa
Counts of Racine was
arrested Sunday and charged
with petty theft as the result
of an alleged shoplifting .
incident at Dollar General
Store, said Police Chief
Mark Proffitt. She will ·
appear in court July 9 to
answer the charge.

Units answer
calls

DEXTER
Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship will .
meet at 1:30 p.m. Thursday
POMEROY Meigs
get an education in ·a field at Dexter Church of Christ.
Emergency Services units
I'm interested in, rather than Zion will have devotions.
answered the following calls ·
being stuck in something
for
assistance over the weekbecause I have to be."
end:
Thomas stressed that fedTUPPERS
PLAINS
CENTRAL DISPATCH
eral funds paying for his and
VFW
9053,
Tuppers
Plains
Saturday, 8:04 a.m., assistother miners' classes are not
will
meet
at
7:30
p.m
.
ed by Rutland unit, Meigs
a handout . .
at
the
hall.
Thursday
Mine 31, Randy Lieving, ·
"I've paid taxes ever since I
worked, so I'm getting a
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital;
belated education," he said.
"I feel · that I've earned my
5:52 p.m., Holzer Meigs
education."
Clinic, Joe Fetty, Pleasant
Dr. Denise Shockley, assisMIDDLEPORT A V:illey Hospital;
tant director at Buckeye missionary service will be at
10 p.m., Pleasant Ridge,
Hills, said families came to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Pomeroy, Sonya Powell,
her with definite ideas on Middleport Bible Holiness Holzer Medical Center;
new careers.
church, 75 Pearl St. Sam and
11:42 p.m., Middleport
"Most people have some- Annie Davis of Mexico will Police Department, Mary
thing in mind, some kind of be the speakers. Rev. Doug Todd, treated;
a techpical area," she said.
. Cox, pastor, invites the pubSunday, 7:31 a.m., River~
" I have given out a lot of lie.
·
side Apartments, Middlecourse catalogues today, and
port, Donna Powers, Pleassome have requested meetant Valley;
ing'S at the school to learn
10:01 p.ril.., Railroad St.,
more," Shockley said. "There
Middleport,
Elizabeth
have been a lot of questions · MIDDLEPORT - The Faulkner, Pleasant Valley;
and interest in health occu- 25th anniversary celebration
10:43 p.m., Railroad St.,
pations. Since health occu- of Middleport Wesleyan Middleport, Jade Lakin,
pations are our number one Bible Holiness Church will
refused treatment.
employer, that's not unusual. be Sunday. There will be
REEDSVILLE
"I've also encouraged dinner on the grounds folSaturday, 9: 18 a.m., Ohio
some of them to look into lowing the morning service
124, motor vehicle accident,
;
th.e teaching field," she and a special service at 2:30
David
Cline,
Tommy
added . "Their experience p.m.
McDonald, treated.
and knowledge would be an
TUPPERS PLAINS
ideal fit in filling the need
Sunday,
11 :40 a.m., with
for math and science teachChester unit assisting, brush
ers."
fire, Mary Jane Talbott propREEDSVILLE Olive erty.

gy.
"Kid's College is an exciting · and happening place,"
Pines said: "Student projects
fiOinPapA1
are always proudly displayed
gate the world of journalism. throughout the Rio Meigs
If the child is more of a read- ~enter through· the remainer than a writer, he might der of the summer, for all to
enjoy a journey through view.
"The children who partici"Adventures in Literature."
Is there a budding artist in· pate leave with a sense of
accomplishment and satisfacthe home?
"For the first time, we will tion that is easy to see. While
offer a series of visual art learning, they also have a
co11rses desigoed to stimulate great amount of fun."
Instructors include Cathy
your child's creativity and self
expression," Pines said. " 'Art Lentes, an award-winning
Basics,' 'Art II' and 'Art III' Meigs County poet, Univerof Rio Grande Professor
will take children through sity
Chris Pines, and Brian J.
various art forms and media Reed, staff writer for The
and , emphasize the impor- Daily Sentinel.
tance
of
traditional
Tuition is $25 per course,
Appillachian arts." ·
including all materials, and
Understanding computer need-based scholarships are
technology is increasingly available to students whose
, vital to everyone, and two pareQ,ts cannot afford the
computer courses, "Comput- tuition fees. Enrollment is
er Capers I and II," give chil- limited, and should be comdre.n a good experience with pleted as soon as possible by
, the ever-changing technolo- calling Pines at 992-3383.

•• set
Meet1ng

Missionary
senice

Celebration
planned

Trustees set
meeting

FBI looking into city activities
WARREN, Ohio (AP)
The FBI has subpoenaed city
records regarding a power plant
environmental cleanup, a hotel
demolition and utility lines for a
new bowing development, The
. Vindicator of Youngstown
· reported.
Law Director Greg Hicks said
some re~ords were sougl:it il:l
December. Agen~s returned last
week and "want w to go back
and make sure that we gave
them everything," Hicks said.

"lliave no idea what they are
looking for," Hides said. "We are
just cooperating and assisting in
;my way we can."
The housing development
was the subject of a taxpayer .
lawsuit. The Ohio Supreme
Court ruled last year that the city
erred when it helped a developer build streets and utilities.
The FBI . also has sought
recottls on a power plant that ·
was razed in 1999. Money was
wed for a cleanup handled by
the state and by city contractors. 1

.,().!

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.
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Acron from Ingels Furniture

,)

19

Dally IIIDck repor18 are
the 4 p.m. ctoelng
quolea ol tha pmiOua
day's 1ranlactlonl, provided by Smith Par1nell

Olll·v-

To und e-111111

Middleport

Shoney's-~

Wal-Mart- 80~

Ext. 12

Other ~ervlcea·

AND SUPPLY

minute!!

Mtmbtr, Germis Ho1piwl SyJtnn ·

•

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'•
•

Seara-41'1.

Worthington -12~

Oak HIH FlnanciJI-14~

Chinning Shops...;_ 5~
City Holding -10~

Rockwell - 38%
Rocky Boola - 4~
. RD Shell- 80

W~a-25

Kroger- 24'1.
Lands End - 41

Reader Services

use smokeless tobacco products; 65,000 children aged 18
or less become new, frequent
smoken each year; 12.5 million packs of cigarettes are
sold illegally to children in
Ohio each year.
Statistics show that over
. the past 10 years, the number
of children less than 18 who
become new, daily smokers
each year has increased by
more than 70 percent, she
said.
In Ohio, 19,500 people die
each year as a result of smoking, the tobacco industry's
advertising and marketing
expenditures nationwide are
S5.2 billion per year, and the
estimated portion spent each
year for Ohio advertising is
$218 million.
Research studies indicate
children are three times
more sensitive to the influence of tobacco advertising
than adults and are more
likely to be encouraged to
smoke by cigarette marketing than by peer pressure, she
said. Tobacco use kills more
people than AIDS, alcohol,
drugs, fire, homicide, motor
vehicle accidents and suicide
combined.
Skidmore · said vendors
who have questions .concerning the compliance
checks need to call the prosecuting attorney's office at
992-6371.

College

The Dail Sentinel

Suite 214
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

a

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h•Piip:A1

attempted 21 purchases with
one success. Male youth par.ticipants attempted 14 purchases with no success.
Health Department staffen
observed proper posting of
.
nuss.
notices and warnings within
Opening for Keane will be tht establishments.
local talent Union Blooze at 7
The compliance checks
p.m.
concerning the sale of tobacRounding out the remain- co products to minors are
der of the summer concert mandated -u nder Section
series are:
1926 of the Federal Public
• Baillie and the Boys, July Health Services Act and the
6;
SYNAR Amendment,
• Tarbox Ramblers, July 13;
States are required to con• Grady Champion;July 20; duct random, unannounced
• American Gypsy and Tony
inspections annually to
Tenaglia, July 27.
ensure compliance. States
Following Friday's perforwho do not uphold the law
mance, PB&amp;Js will be sponreceive a 10 percent decrease
soring the "Swingin' Golf
Scramble" at Pine Hills Golf in federal funding for substance abuse programs !lurClub on Saturday at 9 a.m .
The golfing event is a ing the first yeu (which
"bring 'your own team" for- increas.es by 10 percent
mat and the team's handicap year ·to . a maximum of 40
must total 4,0 with only one percent). The purpose of the
player's handicap at 10 or checks is to document youth
access to such products and
lower. ·
·
Entry fees are $40 per play- to reduce adolescents' ability
er and cash pots, mulligans to purchase tobacco items.
Skidmore said the Camand skin games are available at
paign
for Tobacco-Free Kids
an additional cost. Awards for
first, second and third place reports 34 perc:ent 9( high
will be given out and food school students smoke; 18
and refreshments will. be percent of high school males
made aVailable to all participants.
Live musical entertainment
will also be provided at various tee boxes on the golf
course.
. fiMP8pA1
For more information on
the Big . Bend Blues Bash, classroom site - to check
Rhythm on th~; River con- courses and their eligibility
certs, or the · golf scramble, for educational benefits.
contact Welker at 992-6524 Getting into the program is
or check out the Court Street no problem, Enslen said.
Grill website at www.court- . "Eligibility is based on,
streetgrill.com.
you were laid off. Period," he
said. "That's the only qualification:•
·Among the schools represented were Universlty of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College, Hocking College, Buckeye Hills
C:neer Center, Tri-County
man for filling top posts, said · Joint Vocational School in
in March that having a diver-· Nelsonville, Meigs County
sity of races, sexes and out- ABLE and Gallipolis Career
looks is important to Bush, College.
.
·
.although the president .has no
Paul F. Thomas of Middle"magt'c scorecard" of numberS· . port, who started at the
mines in December 1975,
he wants. Eighty percent of agreed with Enslen's beli~f
Bush appointees are white, 10 educational benefits are a
percent are black, 6 percent guide to a new career. He
are Hispanic and 3 percent are ' began taking classes. toward
Asian.
an associate degree in comFormer President Clinton, ' puter science through Rio
who promised to make his Grande's Meigs Center last
administration · "look like year.
:America," had a slightly less · "This is a fine opportunidiverse record in his initial . ty," he said. "No matter how
appointments. Of Clinton's . old 1 am, I want to further
first 157 appointees in 1993, my education. This opportu86 percent were white, 13 nity is great because I can
percent ·were blaclt, 4 percent
were Hispanic and one person
was Asian.

WASHINGTON (AP) 1\vo out of five of President
Bush's top appointees worked
in his father's administration,
and nearly three-quarters have
· th "d ra1
worked m e •e e government before, a magazine
reports.
. Four out of five of the top
appointees are white, and 42
percent worked for .the Bush
campaign, according to an
analysis of 300 top appointees
by the weekly National Journal.
The list includes people
Bush nominated or said he
would nominate to top White
House and executive branch
posts, including Cabinet secretaries and their chie&amp; of staff.
Clay Johnson, Bush's point

OXFORD (AP) -Tuition and general fees are going up
MILLVILLE (AP) - A priest who says he had sexual 8 percent at Miami University.
relations with teen-age boys on three occasions since 1984 •· Trustees on Friday approved a $512 dollar increase to
asked his parishioners to pray for him, and forgive him.
.,. $6,915 for the academic year. Out-of-state students will
A statement Issued by the Rev. Kenneth Schoettmer was pay $1,146 more this fall, or $14,589 dollars a year.
read at Mass on Sat~rday at Queen of Peace €acholic, Room-and-board charges also go up 6.8 percent.
Church. The Rev. W1lham Schwartz read ~he . statement . "Our duty is to make decisions that are in the best
because Sch?ettmer was too ashamed to do It h1mself, the longterm interests of Miami students," said Roger Howe,
statement sa1d.
" chairman of the university's board of trustees.

Complete '\%mens Hea/thcare

Raid

Two in five Bush appointees
worked (or his father .
·

Officer char1ed with theft

Priest asks for forclveness

Mark W. Nolan, MD ·

and board

'·

Father's Day_ad 1ets results

from the country blues tradition for his finger-picking
and acoustic semibility:
"Audiences
will
love
Keane's music because of its
captivating blend of classic
country blues and the smart,
urban romanticism of the
contemporary songwriter,"
said Welker. "It's definitely
orie show you don't want to

Concert

Comair pilots return to work

.Ohio weather

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

$53.82
$105.56

- - Melga County
13Weotca
$28.25. .
26Weotca
. $58.88
52Weolca
$109.72

The Middleport Youth League
would like to thank
Martin Marietta, Inc. of Portland
&amp; Pullins Excavating of Pomeroy
for their donations to help get
our.ball fields ready.
ALL AGES , ALL TIME S $4 .00

'

•
&lt;,

�------=-By the end

lJdlly Sentinel
•t
The "-!I.

_The_o_aity_Se_ntm_·e_I

DEAR ABBY: I'm a 36-year-old
"super mom." I'm active in PTA,
shuttle our two. daughters and their
friends around town, play on a community softball team, go to a gym
twice a week, and work Wednesdays
in a small · sports equipment sto"'
owned by my in-laws.
My older daughter, ·"Jenny" (a
ADVICE
junior in .high school), stopped by ·
the store last Wednesday after school.
' .
A few minutes later a nervous-lookWeD, that wasn't the end of it. He
ing man entered. He asked me about ordered us into the back room, told
some ski equipment, and then us to lie face down, bound our hands
holding what he claimed was a gurr and feet with duct tape, gagged us
in his pocket - !femanded money and left.
from the register.
Despite heroic tugging and
Abby, if I had been there alone I squirming, neither Jenny nor I could
would have walloped him and run free ourselves. It was more than an
for the door, but I didn 't want to hour before a customer came in ,
take any chances with my daughter heard us moaning and found us
there. I told him to take what he trussed up in the !&gt;ack of the store.
wanted and leave.
Thinking back, I was more angry

111 Court St., Pon..oy, Ohio

740 812·21M • Fu: tta-2117

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publisher

Dear

R. Shewn Lewle

Abqy

Mllmlglng Editor
Dl.e J(jy Hill

Controller

NATIONAL VIEWS

Access
Cameras in courtroom foster
confidence in system

than scared during the time we by
bound. Mostly I was Yiorried that
Jenny would be traumatized for life.
I felt complerely helpless.
I could hardly believe what happened next. When we were freed,
Jenny wasn't traumatized. She
became furious - at me! She liter. ally screamed at me, "Why did you
let him tie us up. Mom?" Sh., apparently felt - and still feels - that we
could have used kung fu on him or
something.
Although I still think I did the
right thing, I feel guilty that my
daughter is disillusioned because her
mother .allowed someone to tie us
up without a fight. I have gone from
super mom to super schnook. Any
• ideas on how to win back my
daughter's admiration? - BOUND
.AND GAGGED. NEWTON,
PA.

Admiring

--

•

'''

•

Keep the flag -- and free speech ~flying high

1

.
.

POMEROY -

prompdy at noon. Practice will
be held all week In preparation
for July 4 parades. Need addi·
tiona! informallon, contact Toney ·
Dingess, director.

,.

'

BUSINESS MIRROR

.Spending numbers are best indicators of current times
. BY JOHN CUNNIFF
1930s, it alreapy consumed 13 cents of
NEW YORK- Were you to .choose each dollar by I 962.
Together wi~h income security
just one significant indicator of change
in America in recent years it could be (defined by the Tax Foundation to
this: In 1962, Uncle Sam spent one include such areas as retirement and
cent of eac.h tax dollar on health care; disability, nutrition aid and earned
income credit) these three items now
it is now about 22 cents.
r;&gt;ollars might not tell a complete make · up 59 percent of federal tax
·
story about change, but unlike most' spending.
subjective analyses they provide eviViewed in the .short term, the drama
dence that is clear and difficult to of such vast changes may be lost in the
refute. How people.spend money con- relatively mall annual increments.
. '
Added up, they produce somi' stunning
firms their changing interests.
Digging deeper into the one statisti- results. These -three spending categories
cal area of health care spending, for are now mandated.
It means that because
pending
example, you find clues to the aging of
the population, the rising concern over commitments made ·in earl er years, far
clean air and water, and "right" to less than half of the cate ories in fede~­
improved medical care.
a! budgets today are at the discretion of
But, while federal government voters and government officials.
The growth of mandated spending
spending on health and medical care
might show one of the sharpest · represents a flip-flop from th~ postwar
increases in the pas.t four -decades, it era, when entitlements were far fewer
remains in second place to another cat- and 70 cents of every federal tax dollar.
egory, that being Social Security.
was available for use as Congress and
Social Security accounts for 23 per- the White House saw fit.
cent of the 'budget, the greatest expenThe cuts in expenditures tell still
. ·•diture of any one category. But Social an~ther aspect of the changes.
Security is at;t old story. Begun in the
The decline and end of the Cold War

'

1\

.,

is reflected clearly in the sharp percent- ;
age drop in national defense expendi- : •
tures from 49 cents of every dollar in ;' '&lt;:
1962 to about 16 cents in fiscal year .~ ·/ •
2002.
.
And, after three decades or . so of·
budget deficits, the very recent devel- , .,
opment of surpluses has reduced inter- , ,
est payments from nearly 15 percent of. ; , .
the dollar to a projected ·1 I cents in fiscal2002.
.
~
While the interest numbers are clear, ·
the reasons behind the decline are nor ·
nearly so easily explained.
:
There is general agreement that the :
near decade-long economic expansion ~
produced a surge of revenu~s that
allowed debt payments to be reduced. '•
But why? Sound government fiscal :
policies? Or priva~e-sector innovation •
and entrepreneurship?
~
Cause and effect aren't nearly so eas- ;. ·
ily related in the short term as they are '
historically. As of now, political claims '
distort the reality, so all that can be said !
for now .is that it's one or the other or :
;
both .
(John Cu(illi/f is a h11siness analyst for
The Associaied Press-)
.
"'

i

,,.

,,

...

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
local School District, regular
board meeting, 6:30
p.m.
Wednesday.
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - Annual meeting
of Carleton College Board of
Trustees, Thursday, June 28, 7
p.m. home of president Bob
Wingett.
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Eastern

· Community Calendar Is publlahed as a tree service to
non-profit groups wishing to
11nnounce meetings and apeclal events. The calendar Is
HARRISONVILLE - The Har·
not designed to promote
rlsonvllle Senior Citizens will WEDNESDAY
sales or fund-raisers of any
meet at 11 a.m. on Monday at MIDDLEPORT- Meigs County type.ltema are printed only aa
the Town Hall. Blood pressure Family and Children First Coun- space permits and cannot be
check·ups will be taken.
ell, Wednesday, 9 a.m. at the guaranteed to appear.

-:l

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Meigs Marauder TUESDAY

Department of Job and Family
SeiVices offices, Middleport

Band summer practice to begin POMeROY - Ohio Valley Cru- Local Technology Committee,
Monday at Meigs Middle School sade for Christ meellng, Tues· Thursday, 6 p.m. Eastern Elein Middleport In band room day, 7 p.m. at the First Southern mentary School conference
beginning at 9 a.m. and ending Baptist Church, Pomeroy.
room.

Nat
Hentoff

TODAY IN. HISTORY

with her.
Rather than forcing a potentially
ugly confrontation, a more effective
way to shut the guy up would be to
follow an example related to me by
a coUeague from Italy:
A braggart once boasted to all
who would listen that he'd had sex
with the class beaury When someone would mention it to her, she'd
simply shrug it off by saying, "Yes, he
tried - but he was sooo small ..." NO BIG DEAL IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR N.B.D.: I&lt;I like to take it
a step further. Only a small-minded
person ·would try to make himself
look better by maki~~g ~nother person look worse. People who brag
about their sexual exploits are usually lying.
Dear Abby is written by Pauli11e
Phillips and daughter ]eatme Pl1illips.

MIDDLEPORT - Community
prayer walk and fasting 7 p.m.
Middleport meetings a MiddleD~partment
Store;
port
Pomeroy at the parking lot levy.
RUTLAND - Rudand Garden Prayer .will be lor women, chif·
club, Monday, 1 p.m. at the dren and families of the commu;
home of Chelcla Steams, New nlty.
lima Road.
RACINE ·Racine Village
· RACINE - Southern School Council, special meeling, MonBoard regular meeting, Monday, day, 7:30 p.m.J:opic lor discus6:30 p.m. at the high school.
sion, the ODN grant

\

·•

DEAR
BOUND ' AND
GAGGED: You acted appropriately. Real life is not a martial arts
movie where heroines take risks and
live beyond the closing credits. If
you had tried to "wallop" the robber, one or both of you might not be
alive today.
Don't be so quick to conclude that
your daughter "wasn't traumatized."
She is blaming you for what happened because she felt helpless and
humiliated. Both of you could benefit from some short-term post-traumatic stress counseling so that what
happened can be put in proper perspective.
DEAR .ABBY: This may be a bit
"racy" for your column, but consider it an alternative to your advice to
"Furious in Adrian, Mich.," the . 14year-old
whose
ex-boyfriend
wrongly claimed to have had sex

MONDAY'
POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Convnission,
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
office, 117 E. Memorial Dr.

I
I

\
• The Gazette, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on TV cowrage and the
Supreme Court: The audio broadcast of the U.S. Supreme
Court's "Battle for Florida" (Gore vs. Bush hearing) last
• •'
• ;•
December was historic, suspenseful and informative. But a
,.,..
video broadcast would have been even more enlightening and
'
A
proposed
constitutional
amend·
During
a
previous
national
debate
;
i
memorable.
ment now before Congress would proabout whether the.r e should be "a flag : ;
So it is encouraging to see Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-lowa, and
hibit
the
desecration
of
the
United
exception"- as Justice Scalia called it : : :
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., introduce the Sunshine in the
States flag. It has been argued in favor of
- to the First Amendment, Dale Greer : :
Courtroom Act, a bipartisan bill 3llowing federal and appellate
the amendment that it does not punish ·
wrote in a letter to the Dallas Morning : ·; ~
judges, solely at . their discretion, to permit cameras in the
speech. The amendment - which
News:
·
: 'l
courtroom ....
would be the first constitutional restric"If the flag is a symbol of freedom and · ~
Grassley' .. , made a good case for openness iq the legislation's
tion of the First Amendment in our hisof our democracy, then it represents
unveiling ... before the Supreme Court: "The best way to
tory
would
punish
conduct;
not
ideas just as words represent i~eas, and
maintain confidence and a better understanding of the judicial
·speech, say the amendmc;nt's supporters.
in that case, we've got no more business
,
system, where the federal judiciary has tremendous power, is to
or
can't
do
•
This
analysis,
however,
ignores
the
telling
people
what
they
can
let the sun shine in by opening up the courtroom to public
core reason the United States Supreme
COWMNIST · with the flag than we do telling them .J
scrutiny through broadcasting. This bipartisan initiative is consistent with the plan the Founders of our nation set forth for
Court has twice ruled that flag-burning
how to ~hink."
· · ·-'
is indeed protected by the First Amend- ine no more appropriate response to
Greet' then envisioned what would ··:·
judicial proceedings with trials held in front of as many people
as who may attend." ...
ment as. it now stands. Speech is a key burning a flag than waving one's own." happen to a citizen in Iran or China- ' ..-.
· t he That is precisely what my wife and I did I would add Cuba - who burned or · "
Someday· will come unobtrusive, unedited TV coverage of
component of flag-burning w hen
flag is desecrated as .a n expression of during the Vietnam War. We were otherwise desecrated the flag of his
the U.S. Supreme Court. Wh~n it does, practically everyone
will wonder why it wasn't allowed sooner.
.
political protest.
.
against the war. Although the anti-war nation. "Do we really want," Greer said,
"to emulate countries such as these?"
I
• The Times-Picayune, New Orleans, on the p,roK!ess of
.,_In..the , fir~~~b11rning case, Texas v. sentiment of many of the people in our
I once ga~e a commenceme,nt address
global warming: President Bush was coy on the issue of global
Johnson (1989),' th&lt;; majority of the neighborhood had turned into a viruwarming during his campaign, but eventually his administraCourt ·ruled that when Johnson poured lent anti-Americanism, we flew the flag at a college in Pennsylvania, and comtion was going to have to pick a side on the most fundamental
kerosene on the flag and set it on fire in on the Fourth ofJuly to bear witr)ess to mended the Supreme Court for its
question in the.debate. Is the weather getting warmer because ·
a political demonstratien . outside the the fact that America is a place ·where decision in Texas v.Johnson. Outside the
of human activity, or isn't it?
1984 Republican National Convention we are all free to protest against the gov- building, an angry veteran of the VietThe administration took the right position. At the White
in ·. Dallas, his conduct was "direcRy ernment.
nam War confronted me to protest my
House's request, the National Academy of Sciences last month
related to expression."
Obviously, ·many Americans are view that the First Amendment protects
convened a panel of I I scientists ... to study the issue. The evi· Writing for · the majority of the enraged when the flag is desecrated, and flag desecration. I asked the veteran,
dence that greenhouse gases from power plants, factories and
Court, Justice William Brennan pointed they m.Xe no distinction if that act is who had been seriously woundhed in
vehicles are collecting in the atmosphere and raising temperaout that "to say the government has an done as part of a political protest. Vietnam, what our flag meant to im.
tures is more persuasive than ever, the panel concluded.
·
· encouragmg
·
"Freedom," he said. Then he paused,
mterest
m
proper · treat- Knowt'ng that, Justt'ce Brennan, 1·n ht·s
So National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice told
·
h ·
ma,;ort'ty opt' ru'on 1·n 'Iiexas v. Johnson, nodded his head slowly, said "Yeah!" and
ment o f t he fl ag ts not to say t at It may
"
walk d
reporters that President Bush "takes extremely seriously what
e away.
criminally punish a person for burning quoted from a 1943 opinion by Justice
we do know about climate change, which is essentially that
a flag as a means of political protest."
Robert Jackson, who later became the
UPDd!ATE: On Jhulyh 1d4• the ;'delms ·
there is warming taking place."·
amen
era1· -· •
Also joining Brennan in the majority Chi-ef U.S. prosecutor. at' the Nur•mberg
~
fi d ment -bl · w htC 1 ~emes
·1· · 1e th
The administration's statement should end a long controverwar-crimes trials.
un s to pu ic-sc oo 1act tiles
at - •
was Justice Antonin Sea1ia, w ho is
rd fEd
refuse access to the Boy Scouts on " .•
. sy that has hampered efforts to stop global warming. For years,
invariably described as the most conserIn West Virginia State Boa o
u- account of their exclusion of honwsex- . ,._
some business leaders and elected officials have been hesitant to
vative member 'o f the Court. During cation v. Barnette, Justice Jackson peneacknowledge even that global warming is occurring and is a
oral arguments in that' case,Justice Scalia trated to the very essence of what it is to uhals from leSadedr~dhip positidons - dpassed ·· ·
danger, because doing so would lead inevitably to calls for
rt'can 1·n a passage. 1 quote t e Senate. o . 1 a secon amen ment
~ b'dd.
d' · · ·
·
made it cIear t hat there is not "a fl ag be an Ame
more restrictions ....
r
every time I'm asked 10 speak at a · tor 1 mg tscnmmallon agamst any . ' •
exception tOr the First Amendment." school:
youth organization, including the Boy . , ;
Whatever the proper r~sponse to global warming is, denying
And
Justice
Anthony
Kennedy,
not
Scouts, on the basis of sexu·at orienta-. ·
its existence will not make it go away....
known as a liberal, in joining the major~
"If there is any fixed star in our con.
What's important is that, now that the White House has ,
stitutional
constellation,
it
is
that
no
ti~lln.a!Grohanps
that
adBmitht
homodsexuals
. "
h
ity decision, sai d that t e. fl ag expresses
.
.
.
wt
so ve access. 0 amen ments ,_.,
· - acknowledged the danger of global warming, there can be a
"the freedom which sustains the human offictal, htgh or petty, can prescnbe what · . fy h F' A
d
' 'I L
dialogue on how best to stop it.
-·
· ·1 salts t e trst men ment.
·
h Ub
h d
·
1
spirit." He continued, "It is poignant but s a e ort o ox m po tttcs, nattona ·
fundamental that the flag protects those · ism, religion, or other matters of opin(Nat Hentoff is a r1ationally retJowned
who hold it in contempt."
ion, or force citizens to confess by word authority on the First Amendment- a11d the .
Justice Brenn~n added, "We can imag- or act their faith therein."
Bill of Rights.).

"

Monday. June 15.1001

.LOCAL HAPPENINGS

• "1

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Today is Monday, June 25, the !76th day of2001. There
are 189 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 25, 1876, Lt. Col. George A. Custer and his Seventh Cavalry were wiped out by Sioux and Cheyenne
Indians in the Battle of the Little Bighorn in Montana.
On this date:
In 1788, the . state ofVirginia ratified the U.S. 'Constitution.
lr1 1868, Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, North
Carolina and South Carolina were . re-admitted to the
Union.
. In 1906, a love triangle came to a violent end atop New,
York's Madison Square Garden as architect Stanford White,
the' building's designer, was shot to death by Harry Thaw,
· the jealous husband of Evelyn Nesbit.
.
In 1.942, some I ,000 British Royal Air Force bombers
raided Bremen, Germany, during World War II.
In 1950, war broke out in Korea as forces from the communist North invaded the South.
In 195 I, 50 years ago, the first commerCial color telecast
took place as CBS transmitted ·a one-hour special from
New York to four other cities.
In 1962, the Supreme Court ruled that the use of an
unofficial, non-denominational prayer in New York State
public schools was unconstitutional.
In 1973, former White House Counsel John W. Dean
begin testifying before the Senate Watergate Committee.
In 1988, American-born Mildred. Gillars, better known
during World"'-W ar II as "Axis Sally" for her Nazi propaganda broadcasts, died in Columbus, Ohio,. at age 87.
(Gillars had served 12 years in prison for treason.)
In, I 995, Warren Burger, the 15th chief jpstice of the
United Stares, died in Washington at age 87.

Page AS

Daughter angry that Mom took holdup lying down

/ The ~y Sentinel

Chartell w. Govey

.....--.

,opal Diddle of Racine, left, and Pamela Schatz of Reedsville look over a quilt displayed at the
Senior Citizens Center during quilt day. The event not only Included a display of quilts by local
businesses, but featu;·ed a program on the value of quilts, both antique and new. Cynde Wood,
a quilt appr!Jiser, evaluated quilts for personal and Insurance purposes.

SSI recjpients can
expect small check
by end·of]uly

MIDDLEPORT -Ladies for the
lord, Tuesday, 10 a.m. Bible
study, Abundant Grace Church,
Middleport. Breakfast will be
served.

•

·'

BY VAUIIA THOMNDN
ATHENS SOCI41. SECURITI' OFFICE

adjusted monthly benefit by
the end of July. Beneficiaries
do not need to take any action
to receive their adjusted benefits .
For eligible beneficiaries
who have since died, their
one-time payment generally ·
wiD be made to an eligible
spouse or child.

Almost all individuals who
receive Social Security, Supplemental Security Income
and/or Title VIII Special Veterans benefits will receive a
one-time payment to com- ·
pensate for a consumer price
_index error made by the
r----:----:::-----,
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The error affected calcula9
tions for the cost-of-living
adjustment for the year 2009
and beneficiaries received a
2.4 percent increase instead of
a 2.5 percent.
T he payment should arrive
by the end ofJuly.
For most of the 45 million
Social Security and 6 million
·SSI beneficiaries, the amount
will be between SI 2 and $19
covering benefits paid from
January 2000 through July
200 I. The shortfall for the
majority ()f beneficiaries was
·$I per month.
, .Regular monthly benefits, if
1'affected, will be adjusted
Vine Street
beginning with . the payment .
Gallipolis
received in August.
&amp;:
Beneficiaries will receive .a
Downtown
written explanation of their
Middleport
one-time. payment and an
exp!.ilation
about . their

Healthy Start
Healthy Families

tc s

Prod. uce &amp;

Flowers

Is it easy to apply?
YES! You can call the Meigs County Department of
. Job and Family Services (formerly Meigs County
Department of Human Services) at 992-2117 or 1-800·
992-2608 to apply or you can have the application sent
to you. The Agency is open Monday Through Friday
from8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. and Thursday unti/6:30 p.m.

ALL FIATS AND
HANGING
BASKETS ONLY

'6.00

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

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

2 •••••••••••.••••••• $968
3················.;$1,220
4•····------------ $1,471
5--··············-$1,723

There is no face-to-face interview.
•

6-----------------$1,975.

Healthy Start
.,

FHEE

lf\~PEtTIO~

SHAVER .REPAIR

With Credible Insurance

Without Credible Insurance

(Physician &amp; Inpatient' health coveragt&gt;)

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

Family Size .

*Mopthly Income
Guidelines

Family Size

2 ••••••••••••••••• $.1,452
3 ••••••••••••••••• $1,829
4 .;.••••••••••••••• $2,207
s.................. $2,584
6--··············-$2,962

CLI I
F_RUTH PHARMACY

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

2 -----············ $1,935
~--·············--$2,43~

4 ········-········ $2,942
5-~---·········---$3,445

6--·············--$3,949
I

• Even If your family's Income Is higher, you may still be able ·to get free Healthy Start coverage for your kids.

· 992·211?

786 N. 2nd, Middleport
'

·'

·

Call now for more Information.
·I

1•800•992•2608
-.

I

�------=-By the end

lJdlly Sentinel
•t
The "-!I.

_The_o_aity_Se_ntm_·e_I

DEAR ABBY: I'm a 36-year-old
"super mom." I'm active in PTA,
shuttle our two. daughters and their
friends around town, play on a community softball team, go to a gym
twice a week, and work Wednesdays
in a small · sports equipment sto"'
owned by my in-laws.
My older daughter, ·"Jenny" (a
ADVICE
junior in .high school), stopped by ·
the store last Wednesday after school.
' .
A few minutes later a nervous-lookWeD, that wasn't the end of it. He
ing man entered. He asked me about ordered us into the back room, told
some ski equipment, and then us to lie face down, bound our hands
holding what he claimed was a gurr and feet with duct tape, gagged us
in his pocket - !femanded money and left.
from the register.
Despite heroic tugging and
Abby, if I had been there alone I squirming, neither Jenny nor I could
would have walloped him and run free ourselves. It was more than an
for the door, but I didn 't want to hour before a customer came in ,
take any chances with my daughter heard us moaning and found us
there. I told him to take what he trussed up in the !&gt;ack of the store.
wanted and leave.
Thinking back, I was more angry

111 Court St., Pon..oy, Ohio

740 812·21M • Fu: tta-2117

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publisher

Dear

R. Shewn Lewle

Abqy

Mllmlglng Editor
Dl.e J(jy Hill

Controller

NATIONAL VIEWS

Access
Cameras in courtroom foster
confidence in system

than scared during the time we by
bound. Mostly I was Yiorried that
Jenny would be traumatized for life.
I felt complerely helpless.
I could hardly believe what happened next. When we were freed,
Jenny wasn't traumatized. She
became furious - at me! She liter. ally screamed at me, "Why did you
let him tie us up. Mom?" Sh., apparently felt - and still feels - that we
could have used kung fu on him or
something.
Although I still think I did the
right thing, I feel guilty that my
daughter is disillusioned because her
mother .allowed someone to tie us
up without a fight. I have gone from
super mom to super schnook. Any
• ideas on how to win back my
daughter's admiration? - BOUND
.AND GAGGED. NEWTON,
PA.

Admiring

--

•

'''

•

Keep the flag -- and free speech ~flying high

1

.
.

POMEROY -

prompdy at noon. Practice will
be held all week In preparation
for July 4 parades. Need addi·
tiona! informallon, contact Toney ·
Dingess, director.

,.

'

BUSINESS MIRROR

.Spending numbers are best indicators of current times
. BY JOHN CUNNIFF
1930s, it alreapy consumed 13 cents of
NEW YORK- Were you to .choose each dollar by I 962.
Together wi~h income security
just one significant indicator of change
in America in recent years it could be (defined by the Tax Foundation to
this: In 1962, Uncle Sam spent one include such areas as retirement and
cent of eac.h tax dollar on health care; disability, nutrition aid and earned
income credit) these three items now
it is now about 22 cents.
r;&gt;ollars might not tell a complete make · up 59 percent of federal tax
·
story about change, but unlike most' spending.
subjective analyses they provide eviViewed in the .short term, the drama
dence that is clear and difficult to of such vast changes may be lost in the
refute. How people.spend money con- relatively mall annual increments.
. '
Added up, they produce somi' stunning
firms their changing interests.
Digging deeper into the one statisti- results. These -three spending categories
cal area of health care spending, for are now mandated.
It means that because
pending
example, you find clues to the aging of
the population, the rising concern over commitments made ·in earl er years, far
clean air and water, and "right" to less than half of the cate ories in fede~­
improved medical care.
a! budgets today are at the discretion of
But, while federal government voters and government officials.
The growth of mandated spending
spending on health and medical care
might show one of the sharpest · represents a flip-flop from th~ postwar
increases in the pas.t four -decades, it era, when entitlements were far fewer
remains in second place to another cat- and 70 cents of every federal tax dollar.
egory, that being Social Security.
was available for use as Congress and
Social Security accounts for 23 per- the White House saw fit.
cent of the 'budget, the greatest expenThe cuts in expenditures tell still
. ·•diture of any one category. But Social an~ther aspect of the changes.
Security is at;t old story. Begun in the
The decline and end of the Cold War

'

1\

.,

is reflected clearly in the sharp percent- ;
age drop in national defense expendi- : •
tures from 49 cents of every dollar in ;' '&lt;:
1962 to about 16 cents in fiscal year .~ ·/ •
2002.
.
And, after three decades or . so of·
budget deficits, the very recent devel- , .,
opment of surpluses has reduced inter- , ,
est payments from nearly 15 percent of. ; , .
the dollar to a projected ·1 I cents in fiscal2002.
.
~
While the interest numbers are clear, ·
the reasons behind the decline are nor ·
nearly so easily explained.
:
There is general agreement that the :
near decade-long economic expansion ~
produced a surge of revenu~s that
allowed debt payments to be reduced. '•
But why? Sound government fiscal :
policies? Or priva~e-sector innovation •
and entrepreneurship?
~
Cause and effect aren't nearly so eas- ;. ·
ily related in the short term as they are '
historically. As of now, political claims '
distort the reality, so all that can be said !
for now .is that it's one or the other or :
;
both .
(John Cu(illi/f is a h11siness analyst for
The Associaied Press-)
.
"'

i

,,.

,,

...

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
local School District, regular
board meeting, 6:30
p.m.
Wednesday.
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - Annual meeting
of Carleton College Board of
Trustees, Thursday, June 28, 7
p.m. home of president Bob
Wingett.
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Eastern

· Community Calendar Is publlahed as a tree service to
non-profit groups wishing to
11nnounce meetings and apeclal events. The calendar Is
HARRISONVILLE - The Har·
not designed to promote
rlsonvllle Senior Citizens will WEDNESDAY
sales or fund-raisers of any
meet at 11 a.m. on Monday at MIDDLEPORT- Meigs County type.ltema are printed only aa
the Town Hall. Blood pressure Family and Children First Coun- space permits and cannot be
check·ups will be taken.
ell, Wednesday, 9 a.m. at the guaranteed to appear.

-:l

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Meigs Marauder TUESDAY

Department of Job and Family
SeiVices offices, Middleport

Band summer practice to begin POMeROY - Ohio Valley Cru- Local Technology Committee,
Monday at Meigs Middle School sade for Christ meellng, Tues· Thursday, 6 p.m. Eastern Elein Middleport In band room day, 7 p.m. at the First Southern mentary School conference
beginning at 9 a.m. and ending Baptist Church, Pomeroy.
room.

Nat
Hentoff

TODAY IN. HISTORY

with her.
Rather than forcing a potentially
ugly confrontation, a more effective
way to shut the guy up would be to
follow an example related to me by
a coUeague from Italy:
A braggart once boasted to all
who would listen that he'd had sex
with the class beaury When someone would mention it to her, she'd
simply shrug it off by saying, "Yes, he
tried - but he was sooo small ..." NO BIG DEAL IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR N.B.D.: I&lt;I like to take it
a step further. Only a small-minded
person ·would try to make himself
look better by maki~~g ~nother person look worse. People who brag
about their sexual exploits are usually lying.
Dear Abby is written by Pauli11e
Phillips and daughter ]eatme Pl1illips.

MIDDLEPORT - Community
prayer walk and fasting 7 p.m.
Middleport meetings a MiddleD~partment
Store;
port
Pomeroy at the parking lot levy.
RUTLAND - Rudand Garden Prayer .will be lor women, chif·
club, Monday, 1 p.m. at the dren and families of the commu;
home of Chelcla Steams, New nlty.
lima Road.
RACINE ·Racine Village
· RACINE - Southern School Council, special meeling, MonBoard regular meeting, Monday, day, 7:30 p.m.J:opic lor discus6:30 p.m. at the high school.
sion, the ODN grant

\

·•

DEAR
BOUND ' AND
GAGGED: You acted appropriately. Real life is not a martial arts
movie where heroines take risks and
live beyond the closing credits. If
you had tried to "wallop" the robber, one or both of you might not be
alive today.
Don't be so quick to conclude that
your daughter "wasn't traumatized."
She is blaming you for what happened because she felt helpless and
humiliated. Both of you could benefit from some short-term post-traumatic stress counseling so that what
happened can be put in proper perspective.
DEAR .ABBY: This may be a bit
"racy" for your column, but consider it an alternative to your advice to
"Furious in Adrian, Mich.," the . 14year-old
whose
ex-boyfriend
wrongly claimed to have had sex

MONDAY'
POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Convnission,
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
office, 117 E. Memorial Dr.

I
I

\
• The Gazette, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on TV cowrage and the
Supreme Court: The audio broadcast of the U.S. Supreme
Court's "Battle for Florida" (Gore vs. Bush hearing) last
• •'
• ;•
December was historic, suspenseful and informative. But a
,.,..
video broadcast would have been even more enlightening and
'
A
proposed
constitutional
amend·
During
a
previous
national
debate
;
i
memorable.
ment now before Congress would proabout whether the.r e should be "a flag : ;
So it is encouraging to see Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-lowa, and
hibit
the
desecration
of
the
United
exception"- as Justice Scalia called it : : :
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., introduce the Sunshine in the
States flag. It has been argued in favor of
- to the First Amendment, Dale Greer : :
Courtroom Act, a bipartisan bill 3llowing federal and appellate
the amendment that it does not punish ·
wrote in a letter to the Dallas Morning : ·; ~
judges, solely at . their discretion, to permit cameras in the
speech. The amendment - which
News:
·
: 'l
courtroom ....
would be the first constitutional restric"If the flag is a symbol of freedom and · ~
Grassley' .. , made a good case for openness iq the legislation's
tion of the First Amendment in our hisof our democracy, then it represents
unveiling ... before the Supreme Court: "The best way to
tory
would
punish
conduct;
not
ideas just as words represent i~eas, and
maintain confidence and a better understanding of the judicial
·speech, say the amendmc;nt's supporters.
in that case, we've got no more business
,
system, where the federal judiciary has tremendous power, is to
or
can't
do
•
This
analysis,
however,
ignores
the
telling
people
what
they
can
let the sun shine in by opening up the courtroom to public
core reason the United States Supreme
COWMNIST · with the flag than we do telling them .J
scrutiny through broadcasting. This bipartisan initiative is consistent with the plan the Founders of our nation set forth for
Court has twice ruled that flag-burning
how to ~hink."
· · ·-'
is indeed protected by the First Amend- ine no more appropriate response to
Greet' then envisioned what would ··:·
judicial proceedings with trials held in front of as many people
as who may attend." ...
ment as. it now stands. Speech is a key burning a flag than waving one's own." happen to a citizen in Iran or China- ' ..-.
· t he That is precisely what my wife and I did I would add Cuba - who burned or · "
Someday· will come unobtrusive, unedited TV coverage of
component of flag-burning w hen
flag is desecrated as .a n expression of during the Vietnam War. We were otherwise desecrated the flag of his
the U.S. Supreme Court. Wh~n it does, practically everyone
will wonder why it wasn't allowed sooner.
.
political protest.
.
against the war. Although the anti-war nation. "Do we really want," Greer said,
"to emulate countries such as these?"
I
• The Times-Picayune, New Orleans, on the p,roK!ess of
.,_In..the , fir~~~b11rning case, Texas v. sentiment of many of the people in our
I once ga~e a commenceme,nt address
global warming: President Bush was coy on the issue of global
Johnson (1989),' th&lt;; majority of the neighborhood had turned into a viruwarming during his campaign, but eventually his administraCourt ·ruled that when Johnson poured lent anti-Americanism, we flew the flag at a college in Pennsylvania, and comtion was going to have to pick a side on the most fundamental
kerosene on the flag and set it on fire in on the Fourth ofJuly to bear witr)ess to mended the Supreme Court for its
question in the.debate. Is the weather getting warmer because ·
a political demonstratien . outside the the fact that America is a place ·where decision in Texas v.Johnson. Outside the
of human activity, or isn't it?
1984 Republican National Convention we are all free to protest against the gov- building, an angry veteran of the VietThe administration took the right position. At the White
in ·. Dallas, his conduct was "direcRy ernment.
nam War confronted me to protest my
House's request, the National Academy of Sciences last month
related to expression."
Obviously, ·many Americans are view that the First Amendment protects
convened a panel of I I scientists ... to study the issue. The evi· Writing for · the majority of the enraged when the flag is desecrated, and flag desecration. I asked the veteran,
dence that greenhouse gases from power plants, factories and
Court, Justice William Brennan pointed they m.Xe no distinction if that act is who had been seriously woundhed in
vehicles are collecting in the atmosphere and raising temperaout that "to say the government has an done as part of a political protest. Vietnam, what our flag meant to im.
tures is more persuasive than ever, the panel concluded.
·
· encouragmg
·
"Freedom," he said. Then he paused,
mterest
m
proper · treat- Knowt'ng that, Justt'ce Brennan, 1·n ht·s
So National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice told
·
h ·
ma,;ort'ty opt' ru'on 1·n 'Iiexas v. Johnson, nodded his head slowly, said "Yeah!" and
ment o f t he fl ag ts not to say t at It may
"
walk d
reporters that President Bush "takes extremely seriously what
e away.
criminally punish a person for burning quoted from a 1943 opinion by Justice
we do know about climate change, which is essentially that
a flag as a means of political protest."
Robert Jackson, who later became the
UPDd!ATE: On Jhulyh 1d4• the ;'delms ·
there is warming taking place."·
amen
era1· -· •
Also joining Brennan in the majority Chi-ef U.S. prosecutor. at' the Nur•mberg
~
fi d ment -bl · w htC 1 ~emes
·1· · 1e th
The administration's statement should end a long controverwar-crimes trials.
un s to pu ic-sc oo 1act tiles
at - •
was Justice Antonin Sea1ia, w ho is
rd fEd
refuse access to the Boy Scouts on " .•
. sy that has hampered efforts to stop global warming. For years,
invariably described as the most conserIn West Virginia State Boa o
u- account of their exclusion of honwsex- . ,._
some business leaders and elected officials have been hesitant to
vative member 'o f the Court. During cation v. Barnette, Justice Jackson peneacknowledge even that global warming is occurring and is a
oral arguments in that' case,Justice Scalia trated to the very essence of what it is to uhals from leSadedr~dhip positidons - dpassed ·· ·
danger, because doing so would lead inevitably to calls for
rt'can 1·n a passage. 1 quote t e Senate. o . 1 a secon amen ment
~ b'dd.
d' · · ·
·
made it cIear t hat there is not "a fl ag be an Ame
more restrictions ....
r
every time I'm asked 10 speak at a · tor 1 mg tscnmmallon agamst any . ' •
exception tOr the First Amendment." school:
youth organization, including the Boy . , ;
Whatever the proper r~sponse to global warming is, denying
And
Justice
Anthony
Kennedy,
not
Scouts, on the basis of sexu·at orienta-. ·
its existence will not make it go away....
known as a liberal, in joining the major~
"If there is any fixed star in our con.
What's important is that, now that the White House has ,
stitutional
constellation,
it
is
that
no
ti~lln.a!Grohanps
that
adBmitht
homodsexuals
. "
h
ity decision, sai d that t e. fl ag expresses
.
.
.
wt
so ve access. 0 amen ments ,_.,
· - acknowledged the danger of global warming, there can be a
"the freedom which sustains the human offictal, htgh or petty, can prescnbe what · . fy h F' A
d
' 'I L
dialogue on how best to stop it.
-·
· ·1 salts t e trst men ment.
·
h Ub
h d
·
1
spirit." He continued, "It is poignant but s a e ort o ox m po tttcs, nattona ·
fundamental that the flag protects those · ism, religion, or other matters of opin(Nat Hentoff is a r1ationally retJowned
who hold it in contempt."
ion, or force citizens to confess by word authority on the First Amendment- a11d the .
Justice Brenn~n added, "We can imag- or act their faith therein."
Bill of Rights.).

"

Monday. June 15.1001

.LOCAL HAPPENINGS

• "1

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Today is Monday, June 25, the !76th day of2001. There
are 189 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 25, 1876, Lt. Col. George A. Custer and his Seventh Cavalry were wiped out by Sioux and Cheyenne
Indians in the Battle of the Little Bighorn in Montana.
On this date:
In 1788, the . state ofVirginia ratified the U.S. 'Constitution.
lr1 1868, Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, North
Carolina and South Carolina were . re-admitted to the
Union.
. In 1906, a love triangle came to a violent end atop New,
York's Madison Square Garden as architect Stanford White,
the' building's designer, was shot to death by Harry Thaw,
· the jealous husband of Evelyn Nesbit.
.
In 1.942, some I ,000 British Royal Air Force bombers
raided Bremen, Germany, during World War II.
In 1950, war broke out in Korea as forces from the communist North invaded the South.
In 195 I, 50 years ago, the first commerCial color telecast
took place as CBS transmitted ·a one-hour special from
New York to four other cities.
In 1962, the Supreme Court ruled that the use of an
unofficial, non-denominational prayer in New York State
public schools was unconstitutional.
In 1973, former White House Counsel John W. Dean
begin testifying before the Senate Watergate Committee.
In 1988, American-born Mildred. Gillars, better known
during World"'-W ar II as "Axis Sally" for her Nazi propaganda broadcasts, died in Columbus, Ohio,. at age 87.
(Gillars had served 12 years in prison for treason.)
In, I 995, Warren Burger, the 15th chief jpstice of the
United Stares, died in Washington at age 87.

Page AS

Daughter angry that Mom took holdup lying down

/ The ~y Sentinel

Chartell w. Govey

.....--.

,opal Diddle of Racine, left, and Pamela Schatz of Reedsville look over a quilt displayed at the
Senior Citizens Center during quilt day. The event not only Included a display of quilts by local
businesses, but featu;·ed a program on the value of quilts, both antique and new. Cynde Wood,
a quilt appr!Jiser, evaluated quilts for personal and Insurance purposes.

SSI recjpients can
expect small check
by end·of]uly

MIDDLEPORT -Ladies for the
lord, Tuesday, 10 a.m. Bible
study, Abundant Grace Church,
Middleport. Breakfast will be
served.

•

·'

BY VAUIIA THOMNDN
ATHENS SOCI41. SECURITI' OFFICE

adjusted monthly benefit by
the end of July. Beneficiaries
do not need to take any action
to receive their adjusted benefits .
For eligible beneficiaries
who have since died, their
one-time payment generally ·
wiD be made to an eligible
spouse or child.

Almost all individuals who
receive Social Security, Supplemental Security Income
and/or Title VIII Special Veterans benefits will receive a
one-time payment to com- ·
pensate for a consumer price
_index error made by the
r----:----:::-----,
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The error affected calcula9
tions for the cost-of-living
adjustment for the year 2009
and beneficiaries received a
2.4 percent increase instead of
a 2.5 percent.
T he payment should arrive
by the end ofJuly.
For most of the 45 million
Social Security and 6 million
·SSI beneficiaries, the amount
will be between SI 2 and $19
covering benefits paid from
January 2000 through July
200 I. The shortfall for the
majority ()f beneficiaries was
·$I per month.
, .Regular monthly benefits, if
1'affected, will be adjusted
Vine Street
beginning with . the payment .
Gallipolis
received in August.
&amp;:
Beneficiaries will receive .a
Downtown
written explanation of their
Middleport
one-time. payment and an
exp!.ilation
about . their

Healthy Start
Healthy Families

tc s

Prod. uce &amp;

Flowers

Is it easy to apply?
YES! You can call the Meigs County Department of
. Job and Family Services (formerly Meigs County
Department of Human Services) at 992-2117 or 1-800·
992-2608 to apply or you can have the application sent
to you. The Agency is open Monday Through Friday
from8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. and Thursday unti/6:30 p.m.

ALL FIATS AND
HANGING
BASKETS ONLY

'6.00

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

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

2 •••••••••••.••••••• $968
3················.;$1,220
4•····------------ $1,471
5--··············-$1,723

There is no face-to-face interview.
•

6-----------------$1,975.

Healthy Start
.,

FHEE

lf\~PEtTIO~

SHAVER .REPAIR

With Credible Insurance

Without Credible Insurance

(Physician &amp; Inpatient' health coveragt&gt;)

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

Family Size .

*Mopthly Income
Guidelines

Family Size

2 ••••••••••••••••• $.1,452
3 ••••••••••••••••• $1,829
4 .;.••••••••••••••• $2,207
s.................. $2,584
6--··············-$2,962

CLI I
F_RUTH PHARMACY

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

2 -----············ $1,935
~--·············--$2,43~

4 ········-········ $2,942
5-~---·········---$3,445

6--·············--$3,949
I

• Even If your family's Income Is higher, you may still be able ·to get free Healthy Start coverage for your kids.

· 992·211?

786 N. 2nd, Middleport
'

·'

·

Call now for more Information.
·I

1•800•992•2608
-.

I

�•

The Daily Sentinel

..... ............
top

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate's
Republican. Trent
Loci, said Sunday that he sees "great potential" for controversial
research that uses stem cells fiom human embryos.
~t Bush is now ~whether to allow federal funding
foe tbe research, which scienli!u say holds tremendous promise but
which is contentious because the cells are derived fiom embryos lefrCll'la' 6om

fertility treatmeniS.

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - D emocrats
and R epublicans working on a patients'
biD of rights in the Senate are ret to
debate whether employers should be
held liable when their workers are
de nied m edical care.
For years, the question was whether
patients should have the right to sue.
Now, the question is not whether they
can sue - that's a given - but who
they can sue.
.
Democrats don't want to give employers who help make medical decisions
planket immunity from lawsuits. Many
Republicans fear that holding employers
liable will drive up the cost of health
insurance and ultimately force many
companies to drop coverage altogether.
"Do people have to ·provide this ben-

.

Some abortion opponents. including the Catholic Church,~ the
research amounts to unet:hial experimentation on an early life. Others, including sevm1 high-profile Republicans, say the benefits out~
weigh the harm, particularly because the embryos are gomg to be

~
anyway:
~-'-' fundin
Lott stopped
short of endorsing ft:ucr.u
" . .. g. d eclini'ng to state
his position. But he said he told Bwh that this IS an tmportant ISSue
that has potentially significant health benefits."

51ney: llash staR experier-.ad
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two out of five of President Bwh's top
appointees M&gt;tked in his fathers administration, and nearly threequarters have M&gt;rked in the federal government before. a magazme

efit? No. It's very expensive, in many
cases not even appreciated, so I'm afraid
the net result is a lot of employers would
drop health care;' Sen. Don Nickles of
Oklahoma, the ·Republican whip, said
Sunday in CBS"' Face the Nation."
" We shouldn't do harm. We shouldn't
increase the number of uninsured. We
shouldn't make health care so expensive
that people can't afford it;' Nickles said
A sponsor of tlie Democratic-backed
legislation, Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C .,
agreed that employers should be exempt
from liability. "unless they acrually make
individual medical decisions ... unless
they're in the business of ove.rruling doctors, which, of course, the vast m:Yority
of employers don't do."
Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, plans to

reports.
Four out of 6.ye of the top appointees are white, an~ 42 perc~nt
worked for the Bush campaign, according to an analysiS of 300 top authorities said. An autopsy was scheduled Monday.
appointees by the weekly Natioml Journal. . .

The list includes people Bush nommated or sa~d he would nominate to top White House and executive branch posts, mcluding
. Cabinet secretaries and their duelS of staff. Among the most notable
PITI'STON, Pa. (AP) -A flight 6om Columbus, Ohio, to Hartis Vice President Dick Cheney, who served Bwh's father as defense ford, Conn.,. made an emergency landing here Saturday because of
smoke in the cockpit.
said that 43 percent ofBush's nominees se,rved in his
America West EXpress Hight 6583 landed at Wilkes-Barre/ Scranfather's administration and 31 percent served in that ofRomld Rea- ton Jnternatioml Airport at about 10:30 a.m.The cause of the smoke
was not immediately known, said Benet Wilson, a spokeswoman for
ftlll·
Mesa Airlines, which operates the llight for America West.
·
The Canadair CL-600-2B19 regiomljet has room for 50 passengers, who were offered ground transportation· to Hartford, Wilson
WASHINGTON (AI?)- Police interviewed Rep. Gary Condit said. No one was injured.
.
.
a second time Saturday in their search for a missing Califorrua
"What really scared me is all of a sudden the oxygen masks came
woman he has descnbed as a" good friend."
.
down;'pa.,;enger Kathy Doherty told The Scranton Times.
. The hourlong meeting took place nlidaftern~n at an undisclosed
location, said Terrance W. Gainer, Wa.•hington s executive assiStant
chief of police.
"The congressman was responsive to our inquiries;' Gainer saic;l.
ROSEVILLE, Cali£ (AP) - Doobie Brothers drummer Mike
But Gainer said police did not learn anything dramatic_to help Hossack wa.• in serious condition Saturday after crashing his motorthem in their se:m:h for Chandra Levy, 24, of Modesto, Calif
cycle while riding to Lake Tahoe, where the rock band was scheduled to play.
·
·
.
·
Hossack, 54, sulfeted multiple fractures Friday afternoon when he
lost control of his motorcycle on Highway 88 about 50 miles east of
DENVILLE, NJ. (AP) -Westbound traffic on Interstate 80, a Sacramento. He was airlifted to a ~edical center and underwent
major truck and car artery out of the New York City area, probably surgery. His condition Was later upgraded 6o111 critical to serious..
won't return to normal for weeks bt!Cause of damage to a bridge, an
"He is expected to be fine;' said hospital spokeswoman Nora Baiofficial said.
·
ley.
.
A tanker truck carrying 3,200 gallons of gasoline and two other
The Doobie Brothers were scheduled to perform at Caesars Tahoe
trucks crashed ori the highway on Friday, spilling blazing fuel into a Saturday and Sunday. A spokeswoman for the resort did not immebrook running underneath the bridge and creatin_g enough h~at to diately return a phone call seeking comment.
crack the span's concret~ support beams. One dnver was senously
ilyured:
.
A temporary bridge could be open as soon as the truddle of the
week, but it will carry ouly two lanes of traffic and speed will be
LOS ANGJ.;.LES (AP) -Sharon Stone ,has said an emplqyee at
· restricted to 40 mph, said Department ofTramportation spokesmail the Los Angeles Zoo did nothing io ~elp her husban~ as he was
jim Berwk.
.
attacked by a7-foot-long J:(omo. A pennanent replacement will require new .co?crete beanJS an~ . do draggn.
. ~· ...,_
coUld take seVeral weeks, Berwk satd.
But zoo workers tell a diffe~nt
story
In a report released Friday. zoo
I
officials said . reptile-keeper Jay
WINTER HAVEN, Aa. (AP) - A 2-year-old girl was found Kilgore pried the jaws of the 55dead in a lake Sarurday, and police believe she may have been killed pound lizard named Komo from
by an alligator.
.
·
the foot of San Francisco ChronAlexandria Murphy was.reported missing after she wandered fiom icle executive editor Phil Bronher family's back yani.A sheriffs deputy found her body less than an stein.
hour later near the lake Cannon shore.
"Komo without warning bit
She had bites on her arms and right thigh and a broken lett arm Phil on his left foot and held on;•
- injuries consistent' with an alligator attack, said state Fish and Kilgore wrote in his account. "I
Wudlife Conservation Comnlission !J&gt;Okesman Gary Morse.
grabbed Komo by his neck and
However, the girl could have drowned, and then been bitten,

Codcpit smoke spurs lancing

~ysis

Congn!ssman meels police

Dnammer inju1ecl in aash

File damages doses span

Report mnhadids SIDne

,
DON'T HANG UP •
,.

,.'
I

US TrcJCk che~mpionships, Pe~ge 83
'Loo!l sports announcements, Page 84
Ge~rcie~ leads Buick, Page B4
Die~mond Roundup, PCige 86

ManMy. June 21. 2011

Patients' rights debate focuses on employe~

~

•

The Daily Sentinel

offer an amendment this week to ~
employers full immunity. ,Sen. Olym~
Snowe, R -Maine, has been tryi.n g Jo
craft a compromise.
President Bush last week threatened:.·
veto, saying the Democratic bill woula
encourage costly lawsuits and drive ':f
the cost of health insurance.
,
Sen. John McCain, R~Ariz., w~o
siding with the Democrats on thts ISS~,
said Sunday he did not want to force t~
president's hand.
·
'
., ..
"The president knows that we neecJ?
patients' l&gt;ill of rights as weU as anyot!C',
and he doesn't want to have to veto, s~l
am cautiously optinlistic that we c
reach an agreement on ~ bill that he c;!p
sign," McCain told CNN's "Late E~•
t•
non.

Pcllim fear highter sank

,
Papa holwws lilal'lyn_

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) -Touching on painful memories, Pope JoT

Paul II paid tribute Sunday to Ukrainian Christians persecuted ~
ing the "dark times of the communist terror" ahd J~
the Nazis.
· -~
"Land ofUkraine, drenched with the blood of martyrs, thank yQ\1
for the example of fidelity to the Gospel, which you have given.g&gt;
Christians the world over:• John Paul said during his first Mass 911
1
Ukrainian soil.
. .
. .
: ~,
The pope invited the leaders of Ukrainian religiOUS deno~­
tioils to a meeting. Ukraine's donlinant Orthodox church, which&gt;is
linked to Moscow, pointedly skipped the session. But the leader
splinter Orthodox church, Metropolitan Filaret, showed up.
:
"We hope that your visit will contribute to the _developmento&lt;Of
the Orthodox-Catholic dialogue and not a deeperung of the rm(,:as
Moscow thinks;' Filaret said. "We pray for the unification of

murdered.,

of.a

.

All answers contldential

=

TAIPEI,Taiwan (AP)- Patrol boats were searching Sunday f9~
missing freighter and 23 Chinese crew members afrerTrop•cal Stq';*
Chebi skirred Taiwan's southeastern coast killing eight people,~
z
said
.
:~
The crew of the Belize-registeted "Kuangyuan" messaged by ra&amp;p
Saturday that the vessel was listing and taking wal!'f off ~e coast f
Tainan, southern Taiwan, before the crew lost contact, police sat~
On Sunday. patrol boats recovered three ~es ~m the ~ .
Tainan, the ~tate-owned radio reported. The radio sald two su. ·· ~~­
were also picked up.
·
·
: "'
Police believe the freighter, loaded with ore, may have sunk. ' :

'

Meat Equipme~t (Saw,
Chopper, Sl~cer, Scale
with Printer,
Tenteriz.er, Shelving)Coolers, free~ers,
Compressors

Telephone
. numbers selected on a random basis .

-..;
#

Except Cigarettes &amp; Meat

The five-minute survey will be conducted
June 25-29, 2001
· 5to 9·p.m.

·

yelled at him. He let go after an estimated one or two secon~
puUed Komo away 6om Phil and yeUed at Phil to get out of~
exhibit. After a delay of perhaps 10 to 15 seconds, Phil stepped ~t
of the exhibit."
·
:-

On All Groceries

THIS IS A COMMUNITY-BASED PROJECT WITH A GOAL' OF
DETERMINING WHAT TYPES OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES MEIGS
RESIDENTS WANT IN THEIR COMMUNITY.

Mo~y's

~

0

Please help us complete
the Meigs County Community Health
TELEPHONE SURVEY

Moncl.y. June 25.2001

...

•

'

HIGHLIGI-ITS
completes golf
slam
WILMINGTON,
Del.
(AP) - No one ever won a
career Grand Slam as quickly
as Karrie Webb, or made it
look so easy.
Webb delivered an early
knockout with three straight
birdies, then ignored a late
charge from Laura Diaz to
win the LPGA Championship by two strokes and
become the youngest woman
to complete the Grand Slam.
Webb, who closed with a 2under 69 at DuPont Country
Club, finished at 270 and
earned $225,000. Diaz closed
with a 68.
Webb has won her last four
majon; - including consetutive U.S. Opens - by a combined 25 strokes. The 26-yearold Australian became the
fifth wom;m to win the
LPGA's four majors. The others are Juli Inkster, Louise
Suggs, Pat Bradley and MickeyWright, who was 27,when
she won the career Grand
Slam in 1962.
Webb has won five of .the
last eight majors,. the most
donlinant stretch in women's
golf since Wright won five of
six from 196 t -62. The victory
was her 25th on the LPGA
Tour.

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY HEALTH COMMITTEE SURVEY
CONDUCTED BY OHIO UNIVERSITY RESEARCHERS

I

'

' •'
r

Rocker saves first for .Tri
KANSAS CITY; Mo. (AP) It
didn 't take long to sort out where
Bob Wickman stands with the Cleveland Indians ..
The answer is gone -· but not just
yet.
Wickman, no longer the closer with
the acquisition of John Rocker from
Atlanra on Friday, said he will look to
join another team after this season.
Rocker ·made his first appearance
with the Indians and earned his first
American League save in Sunday's 42 win over Kansas City.
Manager Charlie Manuel said that

'the
right-handed
Wickman will get
some save opportunities, and Wickman
·
said that he wants to
sray with Cleveland
through this season .
"I have pride in
what I do," said
Wickman, who has
Rocker
15 saves in 16 opportuniti~s this season. "1
can't say, 'I'm going to turn the baD
over to him,' because I. feel I can do it.
If I didn't feelliXe I could do it, then

Grand Prix
NURBURQRING, (}er-·
many (~P) . - Three-time
Formula One champion ·
Michael Schumacher won the
European Grand prix, taking
advantage of a 10-second
penalty that ended younger
broiber Ralfs chaUenge.
·
rrh~ German star started
from the pole in a Ferrari and
led .virtually all the way,
except for one lap after a pit
stop. It was his fifth win in
nine races this season and
brought his Grand Prix victory total to 49; two short of
Alain Prost's record.
Juan
Pablo
Montoya
matched his season best by
finishing second in a BMWWilliarns,4.2 seconds behind
Schumacher after 67 laps on
the 2.831-mile circuit. David
Coulthard was third in a
Mclaren-Mereedes.
Ralf Schumacher finished
fourth in the second Williams.
He was penalized for crossing
onto che track too soon after
a pit stop.

LOOK MA I'M. IN THE SHOW - Houston Astros pitcher Tim Redding, making his Major
League d~but, delivers during the first Inning against the Reds Sunday Houston. (AP)

tunes up for
Wimbledon

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -For the first time in a long
while, · Point Pleasant High School graduate John Bone. cutter touched the footbaU a mere five times in one
'
game.
But in a style befitting one of the top runners to ever
·play in Mason County, he made them count as he help
the North Bears squad to a 41-31 win in Saturday's
North-South AU-star Football Classic.
·
Bonecutter scored the North's first
touchdown in.the opening quarter on a
diving catch into the. south end zone at
Laidley Field. He outran a defender on
the post pattern and laid out for the 41yard longbaU from quarterback Pat Morrison, formerly of Lewis County. His
catch drew the score to 12-6 after the
South had scored on both of its opening
drives.
'----''-''"---' Bonecutter finished with 64 yards
Bonecutter receiving on· two catches. The second ·
one, a baU on the North sidelines in the
fourth quarter resulted in his being molly-whopped by a
South defender. The baU ·rolled from his hands, stirring
images of a shot he took against Logan last fall which left
him stunned and of a concwsion he suffered en route to
the state wrestling tour'ney last February. After short
pause, he jumped to his feet, much to the delight of the
North crowd.
"I just got the wind knocked out of me," he said of the
hit.
Bonecutter finished the game with 165 all-purpose

Follow all your favorite · .
sports in The Daily Sentinel.
We've got the teams, players
and the games you want to
see.

=

h

I ·

school
I

IlllOR!!!

,,

HOUSTON (AP) - Tim
"He looked good;' manager
Redding finally got a chance Larry Dierker said. "He
to live up to his season-long showed the velocity we heard
hype.
he had. He had some control
Though the rookie didn't problems but not serious contake the decision Sunday, his trol problems. Outside of bad
major league debut was still pitches on the two home runs ·
good enough to help the he gave up, he handled himself
Houston Astros beat the. _pretty good."
Cincinnati Reds 7-5 and split
Redding was generally
pleased, though he said he can
the four~game series.
Redding has been the talk do better.
of the organization since
"I felt good," he said. "One
striking out 170 batters in 154 good thing is there can only
2-3 innings at Class-A KissiqF be one first day. Hopefully the
mee last year en route to win- next time, the butterflies will
ning the
Florida State be gone. I don't think they'D
League's MVP award.
ever truly be gone because
The excitement grew this I'm a competitor. But I should
season when Redding went be less nervous next time.
10-2 with · a 2.18 ERA and
"I was pretty. nervous. Once
113 strikeouts in 90 2-3 I got in the game, I tried to
innings at Double-A Round · tell myself it was just another
Rock. He was caUed up to game. The mound's the same
Triple-A New Orleans last distance from home plate,
week . and pitched one game · there are eight players behind
there, allowing no runs in you. It's stiU the same game.
seven innings with eight It's just' a bigger atmosphere."
strikeouts.
His
teammates.
were
So . when Roy Oswalt impressed.
.
bruised' his forearm in Tues"I think he's capable of
day's game and had to miss a pitching here," outfielder
start, · the Astros caUed Red- Moises Alou said. "I don't
ding up. He gave up five fUllS know what's going to happen.
on six hits and two walks in 5 'I hope they keep him here. If
2-3 innings, but the Astros they send him back down, it
were still impressed.
might affect his confidence by
Redding, whose fastball giving him the impression he
runs from 95-to-98 mph, didn't do well . .
struck out seven and was in
command much of the game.
PluM 111 Dlbut,. B3

YOU'REWET-

BY DAN POLCYN

•••••

PIIIMIIIRodlw,IS

Bonecutter shines
in N/S grid _ga.me

Davenport

EASTBOURNE, England
(AP) - Lindsay Davenport
completed a strong tuneup for
Wimbledon, sweeping Spain's
Magui Serna 6-2, 6·0 Saturday to ~ a grass-court tournament at Eastbourne.

and a mixed greeting of cheers and
boos from the crowd of about 25,000.
Rocker struck out Carlos Beltran and
pinch-hitter Dave McCarthy and· got
A.J. Hinch to pop out to short right
field.
"It's nice to get my fin;t save to rake
the edge off and give the guys on my
new team confidence in my abilities,"
Rocker said in a statement issued by
the lndiariS.
Aside from a news conference Saturday night, the club has declared

Redding's debut
good enough to
drill·the Reds

•

OVP SPORTS STAFF

a

I

I'd probably sign right back with the
JndiarJS. I want to be a closer."
But Wickman, who pitched a perfeet eighth inning Sunday against the
right- handed hitters at the heart of
Kansas City's order, said he doesn't
want Cleveland's buUpen situation to ·
become a clubhouse controversy.
"IfJohn Rocker can help this team
win, more power to the Cleveland
Indians," he said.
Rocker, who arrived too late Saturday night to suit up for Kansas City's
3-2 win, started the ninth inning with
his trademark sprint to the mound -

· Schumacher
Wins European

YOUR
OPINION
COUNTS!

'RAC·INE, OH
SINCE 1860

Page Bl

PIAH ... Bonecutt.r. BJ

,I,

NASCAR driver
Tony Stewart,
· center, is
doused with ·
' champagne by
cre~chief Greg
Zipadelll, left, as
J.D. Gibbs, right,
president of Joe
Gibbs Racing,
tries to hold him
down after winning the Dodge
Save Mart 350.
(AP)

Stewart wins 350 road course
' Cahf.
.
SONOMA,
(AP) Tony Stewart waited until just
the right moment to sneak by
Robby Gordon .
With 11 laps· t~ go in the
Dodge- Save Mart 350 on
· Sunday. Stewart cunningly
slipped his Pontiac past Gordon , the then-leader who was
preoccupied with brushes by
rooki e Kevin Harvick.

career under partly sunny skies
on the hilly road course at
Sears Point Raceway.
Gordon, who started in seventh, was subbing for Ultra
Motorsports driver Mike Wallace in a Ford. He 'finished second in the event.
He and Harvick bumped
several times as H arvick tried
to make up a lap. Afterward,
ult was just enough room," both drivers groused about it.
" You're leading the race,
Stewart said.
'
He went on for his second what do you do?" asked Harwin ihis season and 11th of his vick, who finished 14th in his

•

Chevy. "You let the guy
behind you go. He's a lap
down and it doesn't mean
anyihing to you. You protect
your spot from the guy in secd ..
on.
But Gordon, who has never
won a Winston Cup race, was
unapologetic.
"I think when you're a race
car driver and you can put a
lapped car between you and
second place, you do 'it," he

PleeseseeStewut.IJ

�•

The Daily Sentinel

..... ............
top

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate's
Republican. Trent
Loci, said Sunday that he sees "great potential" for controversial
research that uses stem cells fiom human embryos.
~t Bush is now ~whether to allow federal funding
foe tbe research, which scienli!u say holds tremendous promise but
which is contentious because the cells are derived fiom embryos lefrCll'la' 6om

fertility treatmeniS.

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - D emocrats
and R epublicans working on a patients'
biD of rights in the Senate are ret to
debate whether employers should be
held liable when their workers are
de nied m edical care.
For years, the question was whether
patients should have the right to sue.
Now, the question is not whether they
can sue - that's a given - but who
they can sue.
.
Democrats don't want to give employers who help make medical decisions
planket immunity from lawsuits. Many
Republicans fear that holding employers
liable will drive up the cost of health
insurance and ultimately force many
companies to drop coverage altogether.
"Do people have to ·provide this ben-

.

Some abortion opponents. including the Catholic Church,~ the
research amounts to unet:hial experimentation on an early life. Others, including sevm1 high-profile Republicans, say the benefits out~
weigh the harm, particularly because the embryos are gomg to be

~
anyway:
~-'-' fundin
Lott stopped
short of endorsing ft:ucr.u
" . .. g. d eclini'ng to state
his position. But he said he told Bwh that this IS an tmportant ISSue
that has potentially significant health benefits."

51ney: llash staR experier-.ad
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two out of five of President Bwh's top
appointees M&gt;tked in his fathers administration, and nearly threequarters have M&gt;rked in the federal government before. a magazme

efit? No. It's very expensive, in many
cases not even appreciated, so I'm afraid
the net result is a lot of employers would
drop health care;' Sen. Don Nickles of
Oklahoma, the ·Republican whip, said
Sunday in CBS"' Face the Nation."
" We shouldn't do harm. We shouldn't
increase the number of uninsured. We
shouldn't make health care so expensive
that people can't afford it;' Nickles said
A sponsor of tlie Democratic-backed
legislation, Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C .,
agreed that employers should be exempt
from liability. "unless they acrually make
individual medical decisions ... unless
they're in the business of ove.rruling doctors, which, of course, the vast m:Yority
of employers don't do."
Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, plans to

reports.
Four out of 6.ye of the top appointees are white, an~ 42 perc~nt
worked for the Bush campaign, according to an analysiS of 300 top authorities said. An autopsy was scheduled Monday.
appointees by the weekly Natioml Journal. . .

The list includes people Bush nommated or sa~d he would nominate to top White House and executive branch posts, mcluding
. Cabinet secretaries and their duelS of staff. Among the most notable
PITI'STON, Pa. (AP) -A flight 6om Columbus, Ohio, to Hartis Vice President Dick Cheney, who served Bwh's father as defense ford, Conn.,. made an emergency landing here Saturday because of
smoke in the cockpit.
said that 43 percent ofBush's nominees se,rved in his
America West EXpress Hight 6583 landed at Wilkes-Barre/ Scranfather's administration and 31 percent served in that ofRomld Rea- ton Jnternatioml Airport at about 10:30 a.m.The cause of the smoke
was not immediately known, said Benet Wilson, a spokeswoman for
ftlll·
Mesa Airlines, which operates the llight for America West.
·
The Canadair CL-600-2B19 regiomljet has room for 50 passengers, who were offered ground transportation· to Hartford, Wilson
WASHINGTON (AI?)- Police interviewed Rep. Gary Condit said. No one was injured.
.
.
a second time Saturday in their search for a missing Califorrua
"What really scared me is all of a sudden the oxygen masks came
woman he has descnbed as a" good friend."
.
down;'pa.,;enger Kathy Doherty told The Scranton Times.
. The hourlong meeting took place nlidaftern~n at an undisclosed
location, said Terrance W. Gainer, Wa.•hington s executive assiStant
chief of police.
"The congressman was responsive to our inquiries;' Gainer saic;l.
ROSEVILLE, Cali£ (AP) - Doobie Brothers drummer Mike
But Gainer said police did not learn anything dramatic_to help Hossack wa.• in serious condition Saturday after crashing his motorthem in their se:m:h for Chandra Levy, 24, of Modesto, Calif
cycle while riding to Lake Tahoe, where the rock band was scheduled to play.
·
·
.
·
Hossack, 54, sulfeted multiple fractures Friday afternoon when he
lost control of his motorcycle on Highway 88 about 50 miles east of
DENVILLE, NJ. (AP) -Westbound traffic on Interstate 80, a Sacramento. He was airlifted to a ~edical center and underwent
major truck and car artery out of the New York City area, probably surgery. His condition Was later upgraded 6o111 critical to serious..
won't return to normal for weeks bt!Cause of damage to a bridge, an
"He is expected to be fine;' said hospital spokeswoman Nora Baiofficial said.
·
ley.
.
A tanker truck carrying 3,200 gallons of gasoline and two other
The Doobie Brothers were scheduled to perform at Caesars Tahoe
trucks crashed ori the highway on Friday, spilling blazing fuel into a Saturday and Sunday. A spokeswoman for the resort did not immebrook running underneath the bridge and creatin_g enough h~at to diately return a phone call seeking comment.
crack the span's concret~ support beams. One dnver was senously
ilyured:
.
A temporary bridge could be open as soon as the truddle of the
week, but it will carry ouly two lanes of traffic and speed will be
LOS ANGJ.;.LES (AP) -Sharon Stone ,has said an emplqyee at
· restricted to 40 mph, said Department ofTramportation spokesmail the Los Angeles Zoo did nothing io ~elp her husban~ as he was
jim Berwk.
.
attacked by a7-foot-long J:(omo. A pennanent replacement will require new .co?crete beanJS an~ . do draggn.
. ~· ...,_
coUld take seVeral weeks, Berwk satd.
But zoo workers tell a diffe~nt
story
In a report released Friday. zoo
I
officials said . reptile-keeper Jay
WINTER HAVEN, Aa. (AP) - A 2-year-old girl was found Kilgore pried the jaws of the 55dead in a lake Sarurday, and police believe she may have been killed pound lizard named Komo from
by an alligator.
.
·
the foot of San Francisco ChronAlexandria Murphy was.reported missing after she wandered fiom icle executive editor Phil Bronher family's back yani.A sheriffs deputy found her body less than an stein.
hour later near the lake Cannon shore.
"Komo without warning bit
She had bites on her arms and right thigh and a broken lett arm Phil on his left foot and held on;•
- injuries consistent' with an alligator attack, said state Fish and Kilgore wrote in his account. "I
Wudlife Conservation Comnlission !J&gt;Okesman Gary Morse.
grabbed Komo by his neck and
However, the girl could have drowned, and then been bitten,

Codcpit smoke spurs lancing

~ysis

Congn!ssman meels police

Dnammer inju1ecl in aash

File damages doses span

Report mnhadids SIDne

,
DON'T HANG UP •
,.

,.'
I

US TrcJCk che~mpionships, Pe~ge 83
'Loo!l sports announcements, Page 84
Ge~rcie~ leads Buick, Page B4
Die~mond Roundup, PCige 86

ManMy. June 21. 2011

Patients' rights debate focuses on employe~

~

•

The Daily Sentinel

offer an amendment this week to ~
employers full immunity. ,Sen. Olym~
Snowe, R -Maine, has been tryi.n g Jo
craft a compromise.
President Bush last week threatened:.·
veto, saying the Democratic bill woula
encourage costly lawsuits and drive ':f
the cost of health insurance.
,
Sen. John McCain, R~Ariz., w~o
siding with the Democrats on thts ISS~,
said Sunday he did not want to force t~
president's hand.
·
'
., ..
"The president knows that we neecJ?
patients' l&gt;ill of rights as weU as anyot!C',
and he doesn't want to have to veto, s~l
am cautiously optinlistic that we c
reach an agreement on ~ bill that he c;!p
sign," McCain told CNN's "Late E~•
t•
non.

Pcllim fear highter sank

,
Papa holwws lilal'lyn_

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) -Touching on painful memories, Pope JoT

Paul II paid tribute Sunday to Ukrainian Christians persecuted ~
ing the "dark times of the communist terror" ahd J~
the Nazis.
· -~
"Land ofUkraine, drenched with the blood of martyrs, thank yQ\1
for the example of fidelity to the Gospel, which you have given.g&gt;
Christians the world over:• John Paul said during his first Mass 911
1
Ukrainian soil.
. .
. .
: ~,
The pope invited the leaders of Ukrainian religiOUS deno~­
tioils to a meeting. Ukraine's donlinant Orthodox church, which&gt;is
linked to Moscow, pointedly skipped the session. But the leader
splinter Orthodox church, Metropolitan Filaret, showed up.
:
"We hope that your visit will contribute to the _developmento&lt;Of
the Orthodox-Catholic dialogue and not a deeperung of the rm(,:as
Moscow thinks;' Filaret said. "We pray for the unification of

murdered.,

of.a

.

All answers contldential

=

TAIPEI,Taiwan (AP)- Patrol boats were searching Sunday f9~
missing freighter and 23 Chinese crew members afrerTrop•cal Stq';*
Chebi skirred Taiwan's southeastern coast killing eight people,~
z
said
.
:~
The crew of the Belize-registeted "Kuangyuan" messaged by ra&amp;p
Saturday that the vessel was listing and taking wal!'f off ~e coast f
Tainan, southern Taiwan, before the crew lost contact, police sat~
On Sunday. patrol boats recovered three ~es ~m the ~ .
Tainan, the ~tate-owned radio reported. The radio sald two su. ·· ~~­
were also picked up.
·
·
: "'
Police believe the freighter, loaded with ore, may have sunk. ' :

'

Meat Equipme~t (Saw,
Chopper, Sl~cer, Scale
with Printer,
Tenteriz.er, Shelving)Coolers, free~ers,
Compressors

Telephone
. numbers selected on a random basis .

-..;
#

Except Cigarettes &amp; Meat

The five-minute survey will be conducted
June 25-29, 2001
· 5to 9·p.m.

·

yelled at him. He let go after an estimated one or two secon~
puUed Komo away 6om Phil and yeUed at Phil to get out of~
exhibit. After a delay of perhaps 10 to 15 seconds, Phil stepped ~t
of the exhibit."
·
:-

On All Groceries

THIS IS A COMMUNITY-BASED PROJECT WITH A GOAL' OF
DETERMINING WHAT TYPES OF HEALTH CARE SERVICES MEIGS
RESIDENTS WANT IN THEIR COMMUNITY.

Mo~y's

~

0

Please help us complete
the Meigs County Community Health
TELEPHONE SURVEY

Moncl.y. June 25.2001

...

•

'

HIGHLIGI-ITS
completes golf
slam
WILMINGTON,
Del.
(AP) - No one ever won a
career Grand Slam as quickly
as Karrie Webb, or made it
look so easy.
Webb delivered an early
knockout with three straight
birdies, then ignored a late
charge from Laura Diaz to
win the LPGA Championship by two strokes and
become the youngest woman
to complete the Grand Slam.
Webb, who closed with a 2under 69 at DuPont Country
Club, finished at 270 and
earned $225,000. Diaz closed
with a 68.
Webb has won her last four
majon; - including consetutive U.S. Opens - by a combined 25 strokes. The 26-yearold Australian became the
fifth wom;m to win the
LPGA's four majors. The others are Juli Inkster, Louise
Suggs, Pat Bradley and MickeyWright, who was 27,when
she won the career Grand
Slam in 1962.
Webb has won five of .the
last eight majors,. the most
donlinant stretch in women's
golf since Wright won five of
six from 196 t -62. The victory
was her 25th on the LPGA
Tour.

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY HEALTH COMMITTEE SURVEY
CONDUCTED BY OHIO UNIVERSITY RESEARCHERS

I

'

' •'
r

Rocker saves first for .Tri
KANSAS CITY; Mo. (AP) It
didn 't take long to sort out where
Bob Wickman stands with the Cleveland Indians ..
The answer is gone -· but not just
yet.
Wickman, no longer the closer with
the acquisition of John Rocker from
Atlanra on Friday, said he will look to
join another team after this season.
Rocker ·made his first appearance
with the Indians and earned his first
American League save in Sunday's 42 win over Kansas City.
Manager Charlie Manuel said that

'the
right-handed
Wickman will get
some save opportunities, and Wickman
·
said that he wants to
sray with Cleveland
through this season .
"I have pride in
what I do," said
Wickman, who has
Rocker
15 saves in 16 opportuniti~s this season. "1
can't say, 'I'm going to turn the baD
over to him,' because I. feel I can do it.
If I didn't feelliXe I could do it, then

Grand Prix
NURBURQRING, (}er-·
many (~P) . - Three-time
Formula One champion ·
Michael Schumacher won the
European Grand prix, taking
advantage of a 10-second
penalty that ended younger
broiber Ralfs chaUenge.
·
rrh~ German star started
from the pole in a Ferrari and
led .virtually all the way,
except for one lap after a pit
stop. It was his fifth win in
nine races this season and
brought his Grand Prix victory total to 49; two short of
Alain Prost's record.
Juan
Pablo
Montoya
matched his season best by
finishing second in a BMWWilliarns,4.2 seconds behind
Schumacher after 67 laps on
the 2.831-mile circuit. David
Coulthard was third in a
Mclaren-Mereedes.
Ralf Schumacher finished
fourth in the second Williams.
He was penalized for crossing
onto che track too soon after
a pit stop.

LOOK MA I'M. IN THE SHOW - Houston Astros pitcher Tim Redding, making his Major
League d~but, delivers during the first Inning against the Reds Sunday Houston. (AP)

tunes up for
Wimbledon

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -For the first time in a long
while, · Point Pleasant High School graduate John Bone. cutter touched the footbaU a mere five times in one
'
game.
But in a style befitting one of the top runners to ever
·play in Mason County, he made them count as he help
the North Bears squad to a 41-31 win in Saturday's
North-South AU-star Football Classic.
·
Bonecutter scored the North's first
touchdown in.the opening quarter on a
diving catch into the. south end zone at
Laidley Field. He outran a defender on
the post pattern and laid out for the 41yard longbaU from quarterback Pat Morrison, formerly of Lewis County. His
catch drew the score to 12-6 after the
South had scored on both of its opening
drives.
'----''-''"---' Bonecutter finished with 64 yards
Bonecutter receiving on· two catches. The second ·
one, a baU on the North sidelines in the
fourth quarter resulted in his being molly-whopped by a
South defender. The baU ·rolled from his hands, stirring
images of a shot he took against Logan last fall which left
him stunned and of a concwsion he suffered en route to
the state wrestling tour'ney last February. After short
pause, he jumped to his feet, much to the delight of the
North crowd.
"I just got the wind knocked out of me," he said of the
hit.
Bonecutter finished the game with 165 all-purpose

Follow all your favorite · .
sports in The Daily Sentinel.
We've got the teams, players
and the games you want to
see.

=

h

I ·

school
I

IlllOR!!!

,,

HOUSTON (AP) - Tim
"He looked good;' manager
Redding finally got a chance Larry Dierker said. "He
to live up to his season-long showed the velocity we heard
hype.
he had. He had some control
Though the rookie didn't problems but not serious contake the decision Sunday, his trol problems. Outside of bad
major league debut was still pitches on the two home runs ·
good enough to help the he gave up, he handled himself
Houston Astros beat the. _pretty good."
Cincinnati Reds 7-5 and split
Redding was generally
pleased, though he said he can
the four~game series.
Redding has been the talk do better.
of the organization since
"I felt good," he said. "One
striking out 170 batters in 154 good thing is there can only
2-3 innings at Class-A KissiqF be one first day. Hopefully the
mee last year en route to win- next time, the butterflies will
ning the
Florida State be gone. I don't think they'D
League's MVP award.
ever truly be gone because
The excitement grew this I'm a competitor. But I should
season when Redding went be less nervous next time.
10-2 with · a 2.18 ERA and
"I was pretty. nervous. Once
113 strikeouts in 90 2-3 I got in the game, I tried to
innings at Double-A Round · tell myself it was just another
Rock. He was caUed up to game. The mound's the same
Triple-A New Orleans last distance from home plate,
week . and pitched one game · there are eight players behind
there, allowing no runs in you. It's stiU the same game.
seven innings with eight It's just' a bigger atmosphere."
strikeouts.
His
teammates.
were
So . when Roy Oswalt impressed.
.
bruised' his forearm in Tues"I think he's capable of
day's game and had to miss a pitching here," outfielder
start, · the Astros caUed Red- Moises Alou said. "I don't
ding up. He gave up five fUllS know what's going to happen.
on six hits and two walks in 5 'I hope they keep him here. If
2-3 innings, but the Astros they send him back down, it
were still impressed.
might affect his confidence by
Redding, whose fastball giving him the impression he
runs from 95-to-98 mph, didn't do well . .
struck out seven and was in
command much of the game.
PluM 111 Dlbut,. B3

YOU'REWET-

BY DAN POLCYN

•••••

PIIIMIIIRodlw,IS

Bonecutter shines
in N/S grid _ga.me

Davenport

EASTBOURNE, England
(AP) - Lindsay Davenport
completed a strong tuneup for
Wimbledon, sweeping Spain's
Magui Serna 6-2, 6·0 Saturday to ~ a grass-court tournament at Eastbourne.

and a mixed greeting of cheers and
boos from the crowd of about 25,000.
Rocker struck out Carlos Beltran and
pinch-hitter Dave McCarthy and· got
A.J. Hinch to pop out to short right
field.
"It's nice to get my fin;t save to rake
the edge off and give the guys on my
new team confidence in my abilities,"
Rocker said in a statement issued by
the lndiariS.
Aside from a news conference Saturday night, the club has declared

Redding's debut
good enough to
drill·the Reds

•

OVP SPORTS STAFF

a

I

I'd probably sign right back with the
JndiarJS. I want to be a closer."
But Wickman, who pitched a perfeet eighth inning Sunday against the
right- handed hitters at the heart of
Kansas City's order, said he doesn't
want Cleveland's buUpen situation to ·
become a clubhouse controversy.
"IfJohn Rocker can help this team
win, more power to the Cleveland
Indians," he said.
Rocker, who arrived too late Saturday night to suit up for Kansas City's
3-2 win, started the ninth inning with
his trademark sprint to the mound -

· Schumacher
Wins European

YOUR
OPINION
COUNTS!

'RAC·INE, OH
SINCE 1860

Page Bl

PIAH ... Bonecutt.r. BJ

,I,

NASCAR driver
Tony Stewart,
· center, is
doused with ·
' champagne by
cre~chief Greg
Zipadelll, left, as
J.D. Gibbs, right,
president of Joe
Gibbs Racing,
tries to hold him
down after winning the Dodge
Save Mart 350.
(AP)

Stewart wins 350 road course
' Cahf.
.
SONOMA,
(AP) Tony Stewart waited until just
the right moment to sneak by
Robby Gordon .
With 11 laps· t~ go in the
Dodge- Save Mart 350 on
· Sunday. Stewart cunningly
slipped his Pontiac past Gordon , the then-leader who was
preoccupied with brushes by
rooki e Kevin Harvick.

career under partly sunny skies
on the hilly road course at
Sears Point Raceway.
Gordon, who started in seventh, was subbing for Ultra
Motorsports driver Mike Wallace in a Ford. He 'finished second in the event.
He and Harvick bumped
several times as H arvick tried
to make up a lap. Afterward,
ult was just enough room," both drivers groused about it.
" You're leading the race,
Stewart said.
'
He went on for his second what do you do?" asked Harwin ihis season and 11th of his vick, who finished 14th in his

•

Chevy. "You let the guy
behind you go. He's a lap
down and it doesn't mean
anyihing to you. You protect
your spot from the guy in secd ..
on.
But Gordon, who has never
won a Winston Cup race, was
unapologetic.
"I think when you're a race
car driver and you can put a
lapped car between you and
second place, you do 'it," he

PleeseseeStewut.IJ

�.•.

llond8y, J&amp;a'le 25, 2001

Ohio

t[rtbune- Sentinel-l\t

'

TRACK AND FIELD
EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -With a shot at
an unprecedented triple at the USA
.Championships, Regina jacobs decided
she had to go for it.
· "Why not?" Jacobs said. "I needed to
get some hard running under my belt.
Plus I wanted to do something historic."
And she did.
Jacobs became the first woman to win
the 800 meters and 1.~ in 17 years,
~en finished second in the 5,000.
· The 37-year-old Jacobs won her I Oth
1,500 tide Saturday, and used the same
strategy in winning the 800 on Sunday in
2:00.43, the fastest time by an American
this year.
Just as she did in the longer race, when
She stayed off the right shoulder of lionttunning Suzy Favor Hamilton until the
final 60 meters, jacobs ran off the shoulder of Hazel Clark until the final 80

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~: l..r·--=-lbM-·....,.,I ..r_Aroum.IEM's_FOR_IlfNI'
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HI!U'W.oom

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Mull 8el 1tt4 Llltrty 8 -aom ~ In Syra· Niall ono bedroom unlur· , .
1,..70, 3 bldlaom/1 bllll, CUll, Ohio, $4501 Month nllhtd apartment. Range &amp;
_
. . Paldln
-.wOtlcoutofyo~~rllome.co
IIIOTICIJ
A I , . . - ........,. IIDOd ooadltlon. Clll HaRIId. HUD Approved (304)875' refflgonltor provided. W8tM
m
OHIO VAllEY PIJBI.ISH·
ln .... oww: tllo
?-.
11332 01 (740)1182-8119 &amp;Qalbagepeld. DepooitrelNG CO. 1-nmooldo thM
........ to .. Uti I ldo only
qufrod. Call 74Q-4.46.4345 ,
JBIIIW MAQUNI;
Planned P - olyoudo""'"--paapie ,.., .... li1AIItol1•
- 1 4 1 _ . , . . .__ , .
-tljlm.
1:00 p.m. . . day
Olllo • youlu»w,andNOTta- --•ii!OIIIto
only 11118. I* monfCIJI Sbldloom. CIA. in 23olltpo. - - - - - - - - . ...... lito run.
Full-timeL.P.N.Buodpart· ......,!lvol91111tmolluntll
....._...,
-1-1-8777.
Ill,__....,, plua dtpollt, Nort1o 4tloAve.. Middleport,
....... loloo. .
time
w1t1i
At1itn1
•
you
I1Jwe
~tid
tho
poolaa•
Jt
1
•
•
no peto. 7~ 448 4313
2 room olllency utilities :
alliSon.1:00 p.m.,
pert·tlmo 11ovel to olltrtng.
Ill _,. ela - o n
14 Wide, 3 -00111.
.
paid, dopoolt &amp; ..itenonceo,
l'ftday• .
ltiVIce tn.e. Candidate
- . - · . . . . . . . , - . Only 118,81!11. Froe Oollioay In Reine, nloll owighbo&lt;· no polO, 7ol0-992-o 165
8INTML peg •·
muot currant Ohio MA GREETING CARD -·Sel Up, 1 IU 121-2428 ._, loom Star Mill
.
·
1:00 pJII. . . day
llconoura and molntsln a ROUTE 100 . , _ lOC'I. Pook, 4 bldl00111, $450 de- Now Taki;'U"c!;,"tion&amp;.,.,. .... od lito run.
P«l'CCiooce
plillotopliy Ex
-._,..., -·•
11 ft. 14118. per paoli, $450 I* mo. ..,.._ 35 Wtol 2
Town- '
Comm
•
• local $2500 - l y 800_..,_
. .man.
1210. I* man.-·_....._ &amp; -~. ~.... •-~·ts, lncludea
lunJiarlllonday
C&amp;lltnt
unlcldon and m-9424
PI'*'*"' lied' fgnor
_..
__,_.l'll 1 ~m
"'""-...
·- ,_,_ ~,.,,..,,
organl:&amp;ltlon
llkllla.
Send
s
_,.,,
•"
_,_
..........
~
• •-7.01.01, 7oJ0.949. Water Sawago, Trash,
alliSon 1:00 p.m.
l'ftday
Ct7VOf and reaume to: Per.Final Dayl, Na!loi- 1,.. 2217.
$350/Mo., 7~.
"E'IITfR QfAN tfE;
aonnel, 38&amp; Richland A.,. Slat! Your Buolowu To- ThloMWijlpwwlllnol
Voni"'Y.
Roducllonlla Ylllll' Rent$t!OO? New Fu1nlohod 2 &amp; 3 Room
2daylbeNIIwalll
nue, Athena, OH 45701 day... Prime Shopping Can_,...,....,.
(304)73&amp;4108
3 llodnlom. 2 Batlo Ranch A~rtmonta, Clean, No
EOE.
lor Space :Avalfable N. Af·
•
~~
~ ••"Ia nm bJ 4:30 p.m.
10
=~------ !0111e1i1e Role. Spot11Q V..l t y ; a
IWIF- • for - • ·.._.. OJiil Style lion18 Ftorn Rent To Pets, ""Smoking, Referan·
Kon1&gt;er. liiltnoc·
.
- Plaza.CIII7~101
--loin
p:::::'"'Harbor Own.(740)448 3583
cos &amp; Dopoalt Required.
""""""' a ~.
llloolda)
1111 Nu•-.:;_
lllilorr4:30
101, at (740}146-7150
AVONI AIIAnlilal To Buy or
Soclel Worbr
'
viollllan or lilt lew. OW
" - 1 -"
Utllltleo
Fumlahed.
.. DMdl,_ I' 'btl ct to Al1tri1lon- WOII&lt; from homo. ~~ :.rlay Spoano, 304~r In 0111o, wi1li over Pilot Program, Rente11 (740J4'16- 151 9
1
ohat... duelo
1251$75 Hour, PTIFT. Mall
I!Oiitlon available lo PfOVidt
~ilolnWil-•
..,.,. , _ • - Naadad, 304-736-7295.
•
onlor. www.moll'--·· Clul A COL Tum wanted, truancy diversion ltrVIcta
.,..,,..lllhoitl odIn
rating. - I I W i g l f t
·
·Furnished 2 bedroom apart·
'
- - - '· illlktr.com
- · - · • 2 years _,....__
• ........___ ~
~.. for atudants In tho Muon
lhlo RO IP ''' Cali
1
888
1184
7258
for
liP'
1092
Sunoet
Drive,
Very
trom park,
n.IIINID DOWN ON
polutrnad.
.
Good Condition. ~ &amp; ment,
NC. noactou
poll. Rel8rences,
1-8111-387-3450
band &amp; wile lalm oncour· County, WV acliool tya"' • II .,.,.....
Reltrone81 Roqulrod. No .......,It, $325
month.
::---:-:-~:-:---- agad. (740)3811-«131 !Mve torno: -•mont, COli IOCI"LIKUIIITY 1881?
_...,_
2NTRClOUCTOIIY
Peto. C111 (740~118
-(740"","..•-8235 (740'.."·
Exm Up to $350 In 1 day. nome &amp; "'""""·
....._.....,, Hnkagl, and
No FM U - We Wlnl
l'lfoo
,....
,....
treatment programa. Re1-888-582-3345
(New) 48'ic25', 3 bodlaom, 2 3 bldloom homo Mlnomilo 05n
•
p--.... llnvlie YOII' , _ to your
~...............
homo for I , _ Pic· cw. riHdod buoy Phyel- qulrao a BA daiJM In ....
....••
vy· - · river - · Taro Townhouae Apart· ,,
..__ _ _ _ _ _.. ture Porty. We PfO'IIda cian1 Oillce. Copy cl Canifl· man Held, cornput·
not
-loll o1 gooct- required, dopooil required, menta, Very Spacious, 2
...... will!? Stsrt rnwtfng
=3 .-y, Clll :!,~0~~:.::: .. lltonicy; floltlblt ICIIodul·
-leis. (Onlyj $31.31 ,no polO, 740-9112-em after Badroorna,&gt;•2 Floota, C.&lt;.: 1 J~
""'
,....
lng, good cOmmunlcotlon
,
........,
- f a r - b y - 10 fool. We're dalllng COiel'l ISpnt
tf2 Bath, Fully Carpelod,
Olilo l!ingilo IOri/gtll 1-IJOO.
Cliol. Cenler
Jell....., oldlla. Mull bo WOtlc
&amp;IE
Wllnut C - 4 rn11eo left oil Mob11o - . State F1outo
Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
78f.2623eort 1821.
Ave. Pt. Pleasant, WV canoe eligible. Competitive~
·Sand ' Hill Rd. 2.2 acm 50 e.otAttotno, Ohio, 740MoanEJiOR..~ ltlo Sta $365/Mo N P
·1
25550. FIX to (304)675- ealary, excellent bo-.tRa. 1 bedroom lioult- ramod- CapeCodwi1113dormeno,3 592·1872.
...,.,,
• :.Maa;luoSacu,;iy~i
3713
~
Vlallour-at
eled /IJC cl- 10 ~f car garage, 3br. tamtly
Required, Days: 740-446·
www.preatera.org
l.
1'
1
room, lg cou......., kitchen
3481 · Evenings· 740 367
DomIno•1 PIua or p oint for appilcotlon.
Sand apjlll· ccourse, c ty poo on Ill dlniOQ and taund~ room
Double Wide. 1195 2 -.om mobile homo for · •
·
• •
Pttoaant now hlrlllQ driv- cation •• rooume wl8i Ct7VOf reek. (740l448-2200
1f2 bathe. front ........ , ·~~ Per Montlol 3 Bedroom, 2 ..,.,, $3251 month, $300 de- 0502 ' 740"'46-0101 ·
Dunn flmlly tribute. July '·
Great wane envi~
.-..... .,..,.~
poatt
peta. ret
!Dam. Mt. Union chulch PI~
P0
IBl , .,..
mont, competitive pay,llex· loner lo:
101 Pleuant Ridge Porneo· dtek, and palio, quollty · Both. Fr11 Delivery &amp; Sat· _,;: 1740~~~ Twtn RlverTowers now &amp;c·
ny wv. llnglng • dining ....
Apply In peraon. 420
PRESTE•• CENTER
oy tat and IUt rnooiu.. rent tlotOUghout. Must- to ap- up. 1.f188.128.3428
ter ..._,
cepttng
P.ld Tr.lnln. lble.
eryontweloomo,
Viand SlrMI. Point Pleaa~
pt.;. aacurity depoll1 or will praclato. St75,000. phone Polvote Prcparty And New ..,.. ...
applicallons for 1 BR.
ant.
H~~~
atll on lend contract (740) (304)875-4225
- · One Payment. _2_bod_roorn--mobllo--homo--,noHUD subsidized apt. for
New To You Thrill~
8111b87S3.
lntoelalon Ia
Full·tlme Poaltion, Fumlture
Huntington, WV 25705
(304)736-7295
pall, $235 month, lncludOI -rty and disabled. ECH.
8 Wtll Sllrnoon, Alhant
MolinE
lfop,u
wotor,
$100
deposit.
(304)675-6679,
740-592·1842
IOOk'RI lor quality Delivery and Warehouaa.
3 Bedroom Brick Ranch.
· RJR "··SchUlt mobile homo, 2.btd- (7~)448-3817
Apply • Lifestyle Furniture,
EOE/AA
LIYing Room &amp; Dining Room ~
~
• room, exc.llent condition,
people to c:o:Uet
Cuollty clotlilng and Uplllira, 2 BadrOoni, 466
. hold lorna. $1.00 bag ....
858 Third Avenue, GllllpoWE AilE
With Flrlj)lace &amp; Patio.
range, rwhfgomtor, . . - . 28oldocom. (740)992-2808 1f2 4th Ave Stove &amp; Rec:uatotn.n
..
d
ovay Thuroday. Monday
EXPANOINQ OUR
Kltchtn wl~nceo. Full '1' Only· lot Model DouiJie. ~or. conto12 ilk' condltlono Rlvor VieW . _ frigerator Fumlshed. Wa·
lhN Saturday 9:0C&gt;t:OO.
clonol'lln IWQI!rd to Ill. No Pliant Calla.
4
40
11470
AOVIRTIIINO
~wr.~:r~ =~
1nu. 17 )448for 1 0r2 Peoplo, Rat_. ter Fumlohod, $300/mo, ·
cunwnt Republlcltn Haw atyllat and na11Depoalt, •
-.led for tall g~owlng
IALEIITAFF
or &amp; Big Screen. Large $42 1187· Prlca Good Till . SIIIQII Section lot Cletor· - •.~. No PeiJi, Foe- 1150
(740)448-9081
WIM take - o d anttqueo
.P•rty l"uea,
buoy salon In town. Call :;. ~ ~;:i%:: OocbWl!hJacuzzl, Fenced e-2S.0 1
Huny To O.k·
All Modell Raducod. ter Trallor Pari&lt;, 740-441·
on ooollfgo....,~ In
C.ndlela!H,·and
(740)388.{)498 for lnforma· you 1111 .l.,.tld and en- In Back ·vard, Pa~ Drive, wood· '
Galllpolle, • Poymenta Fnxn 11118/mo- :.01;.:8;.:.1;_.- - - - - our .ohop. llmltld apace.
Uon, leave mouage Ia no joy belllQ creative? Art you ou1llde Malnlenanco Froo. (740}4411-0093
Huny Endo J,... 25111, O.k· In Raclow good condltlon,
Protection of
Call (304)675-2144
anawar.
iooldllQ ,., 1 caraor with 8 2,200 Sqft . Uvlng Area,
wood·
Gaillpollo nloe ~ 2 bad·
Second
ln-liorne CliMdren't
1 - MtobHshed
and Roush lano, Cheahlro,
~Ito Palm (740)44&amp;-3083
_
_,_ ca·--• $350• ~Amendmen1 Rlghla.
-··
'
(740)367..0221
....
·-"· -· ..... ,
- ~ One dock stte tor rent, one
GiVEAWAY
.
cMogrowing company?· Are you
.
Single
and
ooollonol Take Over Ptymenta, 3 pool1. 1350.par mo. 1 - full hookup lor a omall
T"maof
lntamttd In a .poo111on lllat 3 Bedroom on Routo 2, ihou- _blloW
Botto Ollkwood. - · garbage &amp; -age, campiOQ trallerc lamily typo, :
experienced
l&lt;lttarw to good 11ome, 7-10· Co.,
PooiUon
available
In
Mason,
ofltora
lnlurance,
401-K
plan
(304)875·5332
•etall
'
Call
1.
888
884
p~:!~;-~D~Itllllo
•
WV to provide coaa and paid vacation tim&amp;?
••· ~- ~
2217.- 7·1.01. 740-1148· 740-1182·5958.
245-9143 .. 7-10-245-8782
lntlnera thoroughly monagement
HoVIcesln tho Are you a paraon that has 3 'Bedroom 1 bath out· 72~ ·~ 1"'u ard dl"""
:..;._ _ _ _ _ __
\IIIH I I \\. I H-. 1
Mobile home In Racine
ln.truc:t MW can homo and In the community sales oJCpllrience? It oo H buli(slng, 3 'acres, .,;,.ntry tiona.
lo IMIVIIaiy emotionally dis- will ba benellclal If not, We aettlng, (740)379-2134
-14-K-70-So-ut_h_er_n_D_r_aa_m_
-5858·. no pets, 740·992·
llot.&amp;:Hou&gt;Gooos
Cen!M
luibod clilld•an and adolea- will train. F01 lnloMow confree Delivery frM Setup ..,:
Rtpl'lllnwu2 112
...,risk
ol being
placed •ld•ratlon
your 101~
re· 3Immediate
bedroom.. •
batto•.
ty · - 1-888·928-3426
tho homo.
Requlrea
....,. w1t1o asend
covtlletttr
Re- -'--------~
OWner Rlllrlng- lllllldlllQ
APlunMiHrs
.·
durlng • paid 30- -outalda
LQII- -pup Terri·
49
,lpoill,
JiOR
JbM
.Appliances: Reconditioned
or, looking. With brown day comprehenelve BA In Poychology, Social IOQ Ul why you ara 1lw per· ducad, was $! •900, now 18 Wide. Only $1215.00 Par FQnlll' SaioRoutltn Gall
7 ~ ~
Wori&lt;, or CouMIIIng, u oonweneodlo:
$129,000. Near · Holzer. Month,8.911%FI&gt;&lt;Odl~
l'iav- D
R
oy11 on a- Rd. R-.1
~1
o1
Cha" ~-· p bll-~ 7-91172
.,
_....._ Lot Haa 4 R
~-·· ryera,
angea,
tntlnlng
program.
oll-1304)875-3447
sa exton ve travel
.... ~oy. u ~~·
Rate With Nr And lin- A;,-~ Ot Floor ~· 1 and 2 bedroom apart· Refrlgralors, up Jo 90 Days
within !lie county. ~lent
Ohio Valley Publlllhlng
Br
homo
for
""'e
Second
dtrplnnlng
1-4188·928-3428
Good
___
eat't
ontnts.
fumlnd
unfur·
Guaranleadl
wo
Sell
Now
3
1·~·~·
btowflta. Villi our weboltol!
(The Dally Triburw),
'
Ma,.• •-11
• $7.00 per hour
www.pmtera.~ ,
825 Third Ave,
Ave. Mlddloport 7-10-992· 1994 No•rl.a 14K76, total ,.40)3117·7898
nllhtd, oecurity dapoolt re,_g "W ancoa, French
3348
0 401K
for apjJIIcallon. s..;d"apjlll·
Qalllpollo, ntoto 45831
· oleclrlc, Ike now cantrllllr, •
Lars &amp;
~\t· no pats, 740·992· City Maytag, 740·448-77 215.
cotlon 01 ,_.,.with cover
4 Bed~ Houae In Rio 2 bedroom, S1S,900. 7-10•
D a
c
o Health benefits
lttttr lo
W8're looking 1111' an Actlvl·
·~"
448-0175
MliiL\GI!
1 • ......::__ ..._rt-ment, Ra· flY od omplete, TWin
:
ties Aallalont someone . Granda, Could Ba UIOd
- · - " ....Bod Complete, Full Box
o Paid vacation
PREITEIIA CENTER
who Ia highly mOtivated, hat AI
Renlel Property. 11187 2br. Clayton Mobile
· lrtgorato•, Range, /IJC In· Spring olld maHrass, Queen
good communication akllll (740)245-5856
Homo Wllh loll o1 extrat. 2 Lata, Zonod Commercial, eluded, $:!89 Plua ilepollt &amp; BoK SptiOQ and maHross,
o Seven Holidays
HR/ Ernploymont.Spc
d
I
riel
llh
·
$10 000 (304)875-7788
Within The Vlllaat Of Rio Rei.....,., HUD Approved. Table and Chaira, Wardrobe
3375Route 60 E
an on oyo wo ng w 4000 eq. ft. church wltti pa•·
' ·
·
Qrondt. (740)2~
(740)44 1_1519
110 Healley Road, Hun· o Friday and
17401448•9742
Huntington, wv 26705
pecplt. Thlo lo 1_·36 hour a .,...ge ond 7 acroa. Chao· 28K60 3 Or 4ltdnxlm, Qn.
droda
ol Paper beck
-Art·
Saturday off
pooltlon and we prefer tor. Olilo (approx. 8 mlllo N. ty $346.00 Per Month
BIIUNIR LAND
1 Room Furnlolied Eftlclen- For Sate: Reeondl1ioned
Avon products,
5 Avon
EOEIAA
oorneono wl8i eKptrlenCIIn of Pomeroy), equipment 1181 8.119% Flxod 1 - Rate,
740-441-1482
r:y, All
Pold, Sherod· -"efw, dryers and relng·
, got Blrbloo, 3 Spacial EdiCall
for
an
iong·ttnn haolth care, ouch available. boaullful groundl t-8118·928·3428
lll1h, 919 Second Alltrlut, oratora. Tliompoons Apoll·
tion Avon ·Billet maaquorlooidOQ tor a •• an STNA. Hlgli ell- with 1f2 ecra atockod pond,
GALUA co.. Rio Orondo, Golllpollo, OH $125/mo. ance. 3407 Jaclcaon Ave·
lnteNiew:
ade Barbloo, mtac. ltema,
'MARKET FREIH'
ploma or equivalency ra· Striouo lnqulrila, call 740- 118 Skyline Woodfield 1,..70 txcluolwo, private Iota, 10 (740)448 3945
nue, (304)675-7368.
M!Soll/27. 11:()0.5:00
~a Rcanwr?
q~:_ed; A~LJ~ i&gt;OF tiOrl 885-4465,
2 Bedroom, 2 botto, Great IICIII w1t1o pond, 12S,500.
ARB •· -urante are 8:~ ~: 00 . -~Y· rlday
Condition
128,000 Ktor Road, e ecrn,l21,000 3 room fum- apartment, GOOD USED APPLIAN·
Juow 28tlo-27th, 508 Cherry
· ., 5 acroo with pond, downltalrs, uUihllo paid. 9&lt;1 CEI Washers, dryeno, raRidge Avenue, Rio Grandt. 1-888-237·5342 now Meldng prolttalonol or call (740}146-5001 and 5 room &amp; botto, 2 porcheo, (304)696-3747
candldateo
for
all
leveta
of
aok
101
Eula
.,
Martie.
NC,
ratngoralor,
elactrlc
I2S.OOO. Choahlra, 8 acroo, Loculi, $290/rno. pluo de- frigeraooro, ranges. Skaggo
TV'a, mlcrowavea, new
Man-ont. A~raulve
ltove &amp; gao furnace. Factory
Goof
32K80 $11 500 01 4
- • 7••••• 1340
Appllancao, 76 Vine Str06t,
clcthlng, guilar, flomhure, all
2301
ptano:;:d'"~nlt expO~olon 11 Worlc From Homo, Part· $27,500 at 2424 Monroe $10,000 Discount only
'
2 ..,.. wltlo ::.,......=··:.:.:;~::..;.;~=-- 0&amp;11 740·446-7398, 1·888·
1
niCI, don't mllll
taldng p1act within the ioCII time/ Ful·llme, $25· $75/hr. Avenue, (304)675·1365
$1000.00 Do...,, Del,lvtry, large bomo, $3 ,000i Cloy BEAUTIFUL " APART· 818.0128.
tri•ltslo arM. Experience In Paid Vacatlono. 1-1188-876end aetup paid by factory IOWnalilp, ~~ vlowo 011 !3 MINTS AT BUDGET PASfood aarvlct Ia advanta· 7042·
.
. Baautliul, aecluded white 1·JI00.691-tm
'
ecroo, 1 •000 · Tycoon Cl!l AT JACKION Et- Late model Magic Chef,
gaouo, but not required. EK·
cedar log home, 1,750
lake area, 14 acrao, TATI8, 52 Weat\vood Drive lroattree •tlrigarator, $100;
113•800•
BusiNI!Ss
aquaro foot, toOQuo &amp; grove
Fl
·
· liOill S297 to $383. Walk to Kenmore washer, $75·,
242 Third Ave. calleno Sail~•• &amp; Benefit
'I'IwNING
cedar throughout the inoldt, Now 2001 ..,.,..00 14K70
Th
Rick p......, Aucllon ComPackagoo ~valla~lel Please
huga atone ll•eplaca, cov· threo BR, 2 Batli, already IIEIGI CO.· Tuppers iJiiop &amp; movtea. Cal '740rae r;.ers, $50 each, all
pony, fuU ~.... auctioneor,
tax you reaume . to t-«lfl.
trod beck 1 lronl t&gt;&lt;H&lt;h 16 111 up ready 10 move In Plaine- SR881, 7 ..,.. witlo 448-21588. Equal HouaiOQ while, ( 40)446-9066. aller
compll!e auction aervlca.
·
8311·8617 or email to:
Olllllpotlo Ca
tege foot lida - · 7.8 wooded $865 down, $198 Ptr montli pole bam, ·$23,500 or 22 ~O.,ppo:~;;.:rtu:::nlty=.- - - - ~epm:"::',:---:---:c:-::l.lconled IHI8,0hlo &amp; Weot
COrtetlandOzoomnttrwt
(CaroorsC
To Home) ecrao 32K42 oloot ~
740·992·2187
acrao $:!3000 Carr Roed a..utlf 1 R
"~1-•- oa
Virginia, 304-n:l·S781S Or ~
....~? W",.,Do CO:: or moll to: Alby'o, 201 · Cali Todoyl740'448-43117, 24x41i 4 atsllhorM~~~:
8 oc~o S13.0oo, oo te votld ~Ooo ~~:Z F':':":i c;;;:;~oad:1!~~~~ g~~
304-n:l-54-47.
tool N~
S-rt•. Averooe, Worthing.
1-600-214-0452.
$169,000. Clari&lt; Chopol New 200I Fleaiwood only ..... $23,01!Q, Oonvlite, 0 llodroom Plua Storage, Frea Eatlmatos, 90 Daya
co
mar· ton,I&lt;Y 41183.
Rtg·i190-05· 1274B.
Road (740)388-968fl
$148.48 per montto. Call acrao, $10,1500. Rutlend·, 1 ~-· Kllchtn, ••~ "-lh, Sa
•- Cash F
WA!ffl!D
·--... and audltlllQ
Karana 740-385-43117.
••
.....
""""' ....
me • lnanclng
~
'IOBur
nyll-.rghlghlymollvat·
8CIIIov,5001
Domolciwn Gallipolis, Con- Avlllable. VluAnd Mealer·
a.~--aoiiiiiil--' od.I'IIPGnllble, llll·l!lrtera "Stcratarlai/CtlniCII po1111on ~~·
WANDD
GALUPOUt- OPPOAn.l· Now double wlda 3 bt. 2 ba. Juat a low of ""' percale IICt Koly (740)448 9981
card,
1-877·830·9162
Abooi
f01 door·t&lt;Hloor oaln for io- lor very buoy mtdiolll oHict.
To ])o
NIT\' II KNOCKING In $1188.00 dowo only 1295. ovllloblo. Call now for mope a-to St., Middleport 2 (740)448-7444
uto Top Dollar. u.s. col coble company. Mull Appllcotiono will be taken •
thla dellghtfu18 room ranch paf noon. call now 1-800- and llltingll OWnor ft. bedroom fumlahed lpOrt·
Main Soreet Furniture
SliYOt, Gold Coins. Proof· liovo vllld drfvero 11con11 only on Tutedlly and Wedatyle horne on quiet otroot. 891-em.
· nenclng wltli tllght , _ , . ment utllnllo paid dopooll
13041675 ·142 2
lila, Dlamonda, Golcl and own ~ble trano· noaday June 26 &amp; 27 be- All Mako Mowaro, lawn Offering modarn kitchen
markup,
•• .,....., 1 raf:...nc..
• 740
515 Maln Stroot,
Ringo,
U.S. Currancy,· portatlon, Direct- expo- ._n 9:00 a.m. ard 2:00 Traotora, Tlllero Repaired. wit~ now cablnots and dloh· Llmltad or No•Credlt7 GOY-ot81S
'
no
pill,
•
Polnl
1182
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec- (fence preferrod, Dut not p.m. No pliorw calla. John Frao pick-up, Delivery Avail· waoher, 3 bright· airy bad· omrnont Bank l'lna11111 Only ~ 1111a1 For Ront On :::--.-:--:' -::--::---Ploaeant
and Avenue, Olllllpolll, 740- ntCMIII)'. Trovol Roqulrod. Wade MD, lno. Ploaaant ablo. 21 Yoors Experience. rooms, formal dining arao At O.kwood In S.oboura- Kanowha Rlvtr, a mRte Chrloty'a Fomlly ·Living,
New &amp;Uied Furniture .
448-21142.
Bockgroundohtolcanddrug Volloy Hoopllel aulte 112, Cat1Mike. (740J4'16-7804
and large living room. To vllle,WV304·73fl.3409.
fromPolntl'loUont,olaalrtc 33140 New Umo Ad.. Rut· Now 2 Piece LMngroom
telling
mondotory. Point Pl-nt WV'
car garoge and huge COV·
'
only,
(3C)f)8711-1722, land, Ohio, 740-742-7403. SuhM •-• a
Sell,
I \I I' I I J '\ \ II '. I
(804)272).2832
'
G - Portablto Sawmill, ered patio. lmmodlata poe- , Lot illOdal ci-nco. IIV8 (304)875-4144 Af11r tljlm. Apaotment, hoine ond trailer' Trldt.' ...... ~uy.
f Jl\ HI ,
Someone Ia tako care of my don1 haul your iOgl lo !he ooelllonl
Roduoed
to up to $8,828 with ony homo,
Commerolal , _
McCiu . RIIIIU
mothl&lt;ln my home full time mill jutt coll304-t15·1g57. $79,900. McGuire Raolty chtolc Ul out dtoliOQ,
I
To
A New toonte IYOillblo lor loaM.
116
hlriOQ : 1' 3 ~~u:;c: 01 pert llnw, 740-3117.0302. Wood Elting Hllloldeo. ~Tr;':'r
RIIALTOR 1· ~t!t~t!,.~· US
Don,
~ V.O.noleo now.
A!mQvJ;li
ffi!Lp WANDD • peri·Ume, plclc up llflplloa· Toklng oppllcatlono: oook, Dllchoo. Etc. Mowing, - - - - - - - - :-~.....':-'--"=-Uon ot loolllon I bring beck grill cootc, dish waoher, wok· Cllln·up. Removll Of Un· Groot Nolghborhood Good Lol modtl Ci181111Ct, ono
Cloan l!bt. Apartment rolor· Buy 01 loll .. Riverine Anll·
'""'TAIIIIARCHbatwoon
8:3041m
&amp; ,.., atop at Mlllle'o Rtltlu· wanlod iltmo. Odd Jobo. Condlllon Ntedo Handy· 2000 -.not 18,826,
.,..., dopooll, No Pete. qun, 1124 Eoat Main on
, 2001 ,
mon,
Houool Church, for 2000 modellingloo. 8
(304)875·5te2
SR 12• E. Pomeroy, 740.
1 ~::;,oo.m, Monday lhno Sat· rant, 39239 Brldl&gt;ur,: Rd. Call Slave (740)448-7804
Slngera, Bondo a vocal
y.
Middleport, Ohio 101 apPiica·· Will Mow Lawno. (304)875· $50,000
Make
Offer, ~
~
1182-2!211 or 740·1182·1539.
1
Groupe, All Slyitll Agoo. EJCpllrlencod c - tlon.
5129 Loovo Mauaga.
(304)875·1818
~.
Ruu Moore owner
........ Record • -~ ""-· ... Sanlng and Finishing URGENT' ·y
NEEDED·
or rafUMd, GlreCIOUI living. 1 and 2
...,...
•
Will
h h
won1 lall long, oo atop In
bldrcom apartments at VN·
Ml"CFF
1 A.NEQUi
lng New Allllta. Comi11Q Sectlonol Houolng. Sond plo.,... donor1, oam ~5 to
power was
ouoeo Three bldrocm, throe both ond check uo out, we're 1 4 - - Forac~Jod 11ge ManQI' and Rlvtnilda
MER""•~""
7
To
Hunllnuton,
WY Pricing lnformallon and ex· NO for 2 013 hours wtol&lt;ly. and trallera. call 1 40)448· houoe on 1&gt;88 ecrao on dealing, COio'e Mobllto -From lfatiMo., ~% Aptirtrnenta In Middleport. t.~~~iiii~iiiil~i!IO'"""'iiilila.J·
(1101)427-2830
"'
to: Southern Coli Sera-Tee, 7•0·592· O!St Ilk lor Ron 01 cen coli GtAndvlew Ave. near, Farm Attoena Olilo, Open .Dowro, 3D YMra ot 8.5% . Fnxn 1278-$348. Call 740· l~opiilldtnt Hetbal~e Dla(1101)427-411514
, PO Bo• 828, Jack· 8851.
phono !740)339.()950. II no Muooum. Two doul&gt;le ga- M•W. 8-7, Thura-Fn., H, APR. FC&lt; Ullingl, 800-318- 982·110e4. Equal Housing lributor, Call For Product Or
oon, ,OH •5840 . '.'
""(
leeve meuage.
~goo. (304)675·5353
Sat. 10·5.
ss:3 .Eort. 1709~
,
Opportunlllas.
Opportunity. (7~) 441 _1 : 2
AI paaple ""'" - . In- · Attontlon: RN'Und LPN'I
:
~~~ Aroadla Nu.Wng .Conter'o
moiiOQ ou p;;t~mlt ...,.pOng llllllicatlono 101
od-..:.frM(IIIMI~ 111and2nd-. W8olltr
31a.
. - t benefl!a lila! In•
:-o-.;_-:------cludo Hultlo lnourance,
AM you 1oo1&lt;1ng for tho liP' 4011&lt;, Lift lnourance, compo!lunlty loJoln o winning pailtlvewagooandopportutMmlnd beCome part cia nllilo far advancement. If
fill goGIOfng cora In- you ora a 181m player w11o
duolry? 9con1c Hillo Nu.WOQ tnjoyl wor1&lt;1ng w1t1o tho oldCantor It oiiiHing NurM oofy, piNM apply In pa.-.
Aide Train"'" CI-t blllotn 9-4 01 caH 01ana
•'V
Hart.N RN Dl eel
f
monthly. II It a 75 hou•
'
,
r or o
·course. luting tor 11 deyt Nul'llng.
· Mondoyttoroug11Foldaye:30
-Nu.WOQCanler
to 4:30. Thlo It a Q!Miopo
e.ot Main Straot
portunilyiTiooowortclaoowill
Coolville, Ohio
begin In JYy. Stop by -Y
(740)867-3158
far an __,__Ikon or contact"
EOE

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6:

comPI·

· Then, she accelerated into the lead and
y.oon by 10 feet, becoming the first 800~ ,500 champion since Kim Gallagher in
1984.
: Marla Runyan spoiled Jacobs' chance at
three ,victories, winning the 5,000 in
15:08.03, the fastest time by an American
.this year. Jacobs was timed in 15:10.78.
; Jacobs won the 1,500 and the 5,00o at
last year's Olympic Trials, but did not
compete at the Sydney Games because of
illness. .
Jacobs ruled out running the 800 at the
World Championships, but said she had
not yet decided whether to compete in
. the 1,500 or 5,000 or both.
In cold 'conditions that included rain
and wind, Marion Jones won the 200 in
22.52 seconds against a 3.6 mph _headwind. It was the fourth straight national
200 tide for the world's best sprinter.
"My ego is not that big that I think I'm
invincible;• Jones. said. "I've never said
that. These women keep me on my toes."
The. victory earned Jones a place on

him in recent yean, winning in I 3.22.
the fastest in the world this year. His
time was even more remarkable because
it was run into a 7.1 mph headwind.

he wasn't protesting the third
strike call when home plate
umpire Rob Drake tossed .
him
.. He had thought the first
lrumPapll
pitch was outside.
"I didn't do anything anyRocker off-limits to media
until the Indians return to body else wouldn't do," said
Lofton, caught on camera
Cleveland on Friday.
. "I'd say he was pumped being lectured by Manuel
up," Manuel !iaid. "He did the after his ejection. "I just asked
the umpire, 'Can I ask you a
job."
So did starter Bartolo question?'That's all I was.trying to do. I just wanted to ·ask
Colon (6-6).
He struck out nine - one him a question about it, and
shy of his season high - in he threw me out of the
six innings. He gdve up four g:ime."
The Indians broke a 1-all
hits and four walks for his fint
win since beating Minnesota tie with Robbie Alomar's
RBI single in the fifth inning,
6-2 on June 7.
Jolbert Cabrera, who and added a couple more runs
entered the game after Kenny · on singles by Tim Laker and
Lofton was eje~ted in the fint Cabren in the sixth, all off
inning, w~nt 2-for-4 with a Royals starter Jell' Suppan (3double, a run scored and an 7).
Suppan gave up 10 hits and
RBI for Cleveland.
Lofton, called out on strikes four walks in 5 2-3 innings,
on three straight pitches, said striking out one.

Rocker

qail

Devers, the two-time Olympic
champion at 100 meters and the threetime world champion in the 100 hurdles, also had to overcome a · strong
headwind - 6.2 mph - in winning
her seventh .national hurdles tide in
12.91.
Jenny /\dams, winner of the .Jong
jum!l Thursday, finished second to Devers in 13.11.
·
Triple jumper LaMark Carter and
steeplechaser Thomas Chorny also
turned in American-leading performances this year. Carter won his third
title at 56 feet, 4 inches, and Chorny
took his first tide in 8:22.16.

when the South's F.D. Horton
broke off a 57-yard gallop
around the left offensive end.
'record-setting seventh ··career road- Tony had the best car there at the end."
Bonecutter was able to run
Ricky Rudd drove bis Ford to a
course victory as well as his fourth
from Pagell
him down from across the ·
straight win at Sean Point. He finished fourth-place finish, followed by Rusty
third after leading 32 of the I 12 laps in Wallace, who started his Ford alongside
from Pap II
yards, adding 101 yards on opposite corner and prevent
his Chevy, and remains the Winston Cup Gordon in the front row.
kick returns. He fielded one the breakaway score.
·Wallace, Gordon, Richard Petty and on a knee for no gain and
Bonecutter follows the
points leader.
said.
of fellow Mason
footsteps
Stewart, who started the race third, also . "All good streaks have to come to an Bobby Allison have six road-course vic- added a 19-yarder, but his 72tories apiece.
.
won this year in Richmond, Va. His first end, eventually;' he Shrugged.
. yard run-back in the third was Countian Josh Cordell, who
dominated last year's game at
Ron Fellows, a road-course specialist · the game's longest play.
Jeff Gordon has won six of the last
road-course victory came in just his fifth
. eight .. road coune ~ces,-.both at Sears driving for ,NEMCO Mmorsports, l~d
start on a serpentine layout. ·.
Bonecutter took the kick, defensive tackle.
In a game that did not feafor 20 laps after a caution on the 32nd plunged into the middle of
"I never ran a road nee in anything Point atWatkiris ·GJen, N.Y.
The three-time 'series champion, has lap. It was the first time he had led a the oncoming coverage unit, ture a great deal of defense,
other than go-carts;' he marveled.
Sears Point, one of two road coursc;s four poles this season along With three Winston C11p race since August 1999 in took a hit around his own 45, the quarterbacks from both
on the Winston Cup series, is currendy victories. He 1leads the circuit with 11 Watkins Glen, where the circuit races in staggered, and was finally run squads earned the MVP honAugust.
.
,,
undergoing a $35 million renovation. It top-five finishes.
down at the South's 17, set- ors. Morrison hit 6-of-15
Fellows finished 38th after wrecking ting up Adam Cantoni's sec- . passes for 157 yards to be
"We got a solid finish, and that's all I
was reduced this year to 10 turns for
· ond touchdown run of the named MVP for the North,
NASCI\R events, but lengthened to two was asking for," he said. "I know you guys his car on the 101st lap.
while his South squad counhad me winning the race before it start- · There were five cautions for 17 laps in game.
miles.
Polesitter Jeff Gordon was vying for his ed, but I didn't expect that.... I think the race, which featured eight leaders.
Bonecutter, who reports to terpart, John Grow, hit 7-of
16 tosses for 151 yards and
camp at West Virginia State on
three scores.
August 9, played mostly as a
Ravenswood native . and
- - - - - . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , defensive back in the game, Parkersburg High graduate
though. The North staff had
.told him that his playing time Josh Romeo finished the
would be greater if he were game with three catches for
.....
ioiiiii
81 yards and two TD catches.
Chalnuw, HomeSne Xl12, Solid Moplto Badi-.o Sul!a SIS Mauay FergUIOII trao- 1997 Monte Corio, doric 1997 Chevy S·10, 4 cylln· 1993 Four Wlnda motor willing to play corner in the
He scored a third touchdown
8 lncli bo $80 Crefllman looking Ia
101 Chintll tor, live power, '60hp, groon, outomatlc tranamle- der, 5-apoocl, All Condition, home, 29 loot, i..a lllan game.
in
the fourth quarter on a
cuttlng tO:.h 1~ . welding _S~tyle--:-ou_lte:::-.-'(304-::')882-.--7:·2:::-4311- (740)448-1104 $4800
alan, 3.1 motor, 78,000 59,000 mllea, S550q OBQ, 4,000 mlleo. (74014'16-1759
"I . still like scoring, but
:-:
~~~=..:.;;;;;.;..__ mllet, $8,000. (740)245· Call740-446-3709
one-yard sweep play in to the
~~: ~. "'40"'
~; Vera llrodley Polito Vllager IH 138 dleaal-. Ilk· 9782 (740)245·5228
Camper 25 11211. lma· defense is.fun too," s~id Bone:.~::...:.·-;.:.__;_(7_:~11192
_ _ _ G - pattorn, sso. lng $5000 or trade, 304rrao VANS &amp; . .2001
bruck by 'Gulf Stleem. 1\fov·
south end zone.
Cherry ale'"h bad, pillow Allella,.$81, (740)446-G231 773-5428.
1997 MoumolnMO, 4 - 1 I .
~WDs
1lng, Never uoed. Cali cutter.
Lawson finished with six
..
drive. txcollent condlllon, 5
(304)675-5353
On two .extra ppint
""' maltrnl Ill. - · Bill Waterline Spacial: 31~ 200
onglow,
58,000
mll81,
catches for 117 yards and a
boxod. Can OJIIIIraiO, ap- PSI521.96 Pot 100; 1 200
Llv&amp;iiOCK
totolly ioadad, (304)n3· 1987 Font Aeroaler. very 89 Dodga LEA Campo• attempts, the South offensive
pooK. value 11400. oacrlflca PSI $37.00 Per tOO; All ~
• 5182 01 (304)874-1523 · good ah8po &amp; none good. Van, Mil contained, garage
TD,
but he dropped several
$555, 304-3fl0.0233.
llrul Compt I Ilion Fittlngl
740-+41-9234 or 740-388· kept, low mllea, 83 Herman minds tried to take advantage
other good opportunities.
Gtubb'a Plono- Tunl~ 1 In Stock
1 month o1ct GulnMI and 1999 Grand P~x GT, White, 8508
Roaa. Centenary. Ohio. of the seven-inch height
""
RON EVANI EHTERP- Baby Ducka, $3.00 each, 4 door, 24,500 mlln, CD,
$8750, 7-10-709-&lt;1444 Laava
University High School
advantage held by former
~!:.":·C:1~m~~ El JaclcOon, Olilo, 1-800- Clilcke
$1.00 ' each well
. cared
~. 1887 Plymouth Voyager, rneaaage.
graduate Adam Cantoni fin537-9528
(740)258-9214
(7~)'14Hl216, 174015 • tim, new altamator, =;::::::::...--.--.--.-- Capital receiver Jimmy Law7~ 448 4525
Whilller . radar ctotaitor
7110
·
runt good, nMdo Drako 114 Dutchman, 31 foot, with
ished the game with 104 yards
9 75
St oao BACK 2 Ton Air ...~ ·--'" 1·75 .......... 1 Reg. 112 Arabian, 112
S 50 R
work. $600 (740)245-5848 expando room, (740)441· son over Bonecutter. On both
and two scores for the North.
•
Col
~ ·--···
. _ , a ~ Ho
c•-otnut &amp; 73 V&lt;olk- 7 ' uno (740)••• .:.79
9531
Bonecutter was
Condlllorwr, 2 Ton
1, t new Ilea IIV8ral other Ita· ua..er ""'· ••
but , noodo body worlc
.........,
-:"'---:-.-~-.--- occasions,
The combined 72 points
Lint Sat, lnatslled, $:!,2915, turai 304-675-42154
White Toblano, 511' olct Sill· 130416g6.3747
1994 Chevy Aatro van OK· Coleman Shenandolll pop- able to prevent the comple$1,0GO eacil, $1295 N t t l l o n (304)875·7071
and luly 1 d"" 81•000 up camper, excellent condl·
was
the highest total in the
1
Prtco. Frat ElllmotM. Call
BuwliNG
87 CovaMer 1 owner, $1200.
•
oa ~. • '
Uon, (740)448-11470
tion of the fade pattern to the
FOI Quolel On Other Slzee.
.,__ _
. 3 yra, old Biacl&lt; angua rogfa· (304)875-4649
miles $7,200. 304-882 2750
history of the 48-game series.
If You l)on1 ·Call Ut, ~
.,.,.......
• lortd buD, 7oi0-74lHI535.
6-3 target.
We Bolli Lolli Mobile
.
.
ACHA yoarttng colt, "' --- . 98 Dodge Caravtn, 3.0 e... 11187 Dodge Ram, EKtond- 1'111"--:~~--,
Bonecutter's all-state track It marks the third straight win
....,_
'"""" glrw In - - ' o•·- &amp; run- ed Cab, 4x•. loaded,
Block brick
~?~8 ~~9 1: wind0wa,ll.;.:.:;&amp;;;;j l~:O~~~g and qulot, nlng·· oro;;;.111 ~~ s700 $17,500. (740)448-1104
~·
speed also paid off in the mid- for the Bears squad.
'
00911
.Win.,.., Rio Gronda, OH
·
(304)875-5890
1199 ZR2 S·10. rod, olr,
• dle of the fourth quarter
-;;;~-;;;;;;;~;;;;d~ Coii740-241S-5121 . '
&amp; "-·-·
92 au'tct. LaSobre llmltad condition, cnolll, CD, outo,
.

Stewad

t-

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I

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r'u

I

Bed- I full orttoopacllc
n~tY """'"
meno- 811, atltlln plaatlc, Cadar bOinlt, over 200
ooorlflct $129, 30•·380· doors. tnter1of and 0233
wlndowl, caDinata, Iota of Ear oom, 82.251 ~. 01

-------- ='::S. ~~~\~ :~o~nd
11~ y~a.::. ::u.:
(7~)248-6047

AERATio\rMQTOAS
oltor
.
·
Rapllrod, Now &amp; RlbuiR In · iiiiir~];i~~,~~~~~~-;~
Stook. Call Ron Evano, 1·
IKiifl, equore
12Jblito, 7•0· 112·
80Jl.S37·1528.

r

...

·':oti8-. .0JiORiliAi ~i osi ia_.l rr.z--~-~--.,:

I

B2 OOO mllet toadod 74G- tint, 49,000 mllel, aaklng

94 g_1318·

'

'

114 ......._ShadoW 2 Doo&lt;
2600
==788
• '
:
96 GMC Bonomo SLS,
81 000 mlltl aluminum
wt.H1o
tonnuu oovar, 1-10114V'ISI 8

$14,800. (740)3721-2798

j1421

l

MOTOIICY&lt;US

BASEMENT
WATEIII'IIOOFING
Uncondlllonal IHellmo guar·
l anlee. local rolerencaolur·

~=======:--.-------------In Memory

~:~2r~:''"r7~, ':!:: 1

0870,
1·600·287-0578.
·2000 Banohee Q!MI ohlpt, Rogers Walerproo!IOQ.
with txirlll, new piflll, new
top and. S5500. oeo 304· •nr---::~~-.,
982·3878 or 304·542·29114.

.,.~

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.,_.,.
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summER

f:or 15 Words

1 to3 Days
Yard

20e Per Word

I '· Cub/Check With Copy;¥' I

r

.

r

Sale Adl Only

Over 15 Word1,

lr------,I.

1

,:;'1 ,1ir.:"'

=-

J;neters• .

the U.S. team for the world championships at Edmonton, Alberta, in August .
At the last worlds in 1999 in Seville,
Spain, Jones pulled up with a severe back
injury in the 200 semiDnals.
Then, she was attempting to win gold
medals in the 100, 200, long jump and
400 relay. She won the 100 and finished
third in the long jump before getting
injured.
This time, she likely will try for four
again - in the 100, 200, 400 relay and
1.600 relay.
Jones won Sooday's nee by about eight
feet over runner-up LaTasha Jenkins
(22.88). A day earlier she had won her
semifuu1 heat in 22.23, the fastest time in
the world this year.
Seilala Sua became · a double-winner
with her victory in the women's shot put.
She won with a career-best 58-11 I 12,
which edged Connie Price-Smith's 58-8
I 12 and broke her nin.,..year winning
streak. Sua also won the ,discus Thursday.
Price-Smith, a 19-time natioml champion, announced her retirement at age
39. She was the last to sweep the shot put
and discus in the same year, accomplishing the feat from 1992-94.
In the pole vault, Olympic silver
medalist Lawrence Johnson won at I 9-2
1/4, then missed three times at an American record 19-10 114. Olympic gold
medalist Nick Hysont placed third to
qualifY for the world meet.
A surprise in the eyent came when
American record holder Jeff Hartwig
no-heigbted for the second year in a
row at the outdoor nationals. He failed
to·clear his opening height of I 7-8 1/2.
At the Olympic Trials last year, he did
the same thing and missed the Sydney
Gaines.
Allen Johnson, the 1996 Olympic
gold medalist and two-time .world
champion in the 110 hurdles, showed he
has overcome the injuries that plagued

.'

533

I

Debut

Jacobs Wins two of three distance.~ events

We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And . Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Cant

In one week With us
~ribune

breaking baiL He might
have gotten a little tired in
the inning that we got to
him but he had quality
sruff, that's for sure."
Cincinnati also started a
"l think they should give
fresh-faced
rookie, Jose
him another chance. I know
he can do better than he did Acevedo was making his
second
major
league
today."
The Astros were noncom- appearance and pitched
mittal on Redding's future. four innings, allowing five
"It was just a five-inning runs - four earned -:- on
outing," Dierker said. ''We'll five hits and four walks. He
have to talk about it later. I snuck out four.
Octavio Dote!
(4~4)
can't say what we'll do."
two
scoreless
.The Reds thought highly pitched
innings for the win. and
of Redding, too.
"I thought he was good," Billy Wagner pitched a
third baseman Aaron Boone scoreless ninth for his 14th
said. ' ~ He was pretty impres- save in 15 tries.
Chris Nichting (0- 1)
sive ·out there. He had a
very good fastball and took the loss.

'

CLASSIFIED

To Place

The Dally Sentinel• . , . 83

Pomeroy, MIMeport. Ohio

•

Invite The Entire Nelghborbogd
To Your yard Salel
Mall to:

The Daily Sentinel

··= ' I

Classified Ada
111 Court Street

.··------------··.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
'

/..

.,

.,

�.•.

llond8y, J&amp;a'le 25, 2001

Ohio

t[rtbune- Sentinel-l\t

'

TRACK AND FIELD
EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -With a shot at
an unprecedented triple at the USA
.Championships, Regina jacobs decided
she had to go for it.
· "Why not?" Jacobs said. "I needed to
get some hard running under my belt.
Plus I wanted to do something historic."
And she did.
Jacobs became the first woman to win
the 800 meters and 1.~ in 17 years,
~en finished second in the 5,000.
· The 37-year-old Jacobs won her I Oth
1,500 tide Saturday, and used the same
strategy in winning the 800 on Sunday in
2:00.43, the fastest time by an American
this year.
Just as she did in the longer race, when
She stayed off the right shoulder of lionttunning Suzy Favor Hamilton until the
final 60 meters, jacobs ran off the shoulder of Hazel Clark until the final 80

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~: l..r·--=-lbM-·....,.,I ..r_Aroum.IEM's_FOR_IlfNI'
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.

Mull 8el 1tt4 Llltrty 8 -aom ~ In Syra· Niall ono bedroom unlur· , .
1,..70, 3 bldlaom/1 bllll, CUll, Ohio, $4501 Month nllhtd apartment. Range &amp;
_
. . Paldln
-.wOtlcoutofyo~~rllome.co
IIIOTICIJ
A I , . . - ........,. IIDOd ooadltlon. Clll HaRIId. HUD Approved (304)875' refflgonltor provided. W8tM
m
OHIO VAllEY PIJBI.ISH·
ln .... oww: tllo
?-.
11332 01 (740)1182-8119 &amp;Qalbagepeld. DepooitrelNG CO. 1-nmooldo thM
........ to .. Uti I ldo only
qufrod. Call 74Q-4.46.4345 ,
JBIIIW MAQUNI;
Planned P - olyoudo""'"--paapie ,.., .... li1AIItol1•
- 1 4 1 _ . , . . .__ , .
-tljlm.
1:00 p.m. . . day
Olllo • youlu»w,andNOTta- --•ii!OIIIto
only 11118. I* monfCIJI Sbldloom. CIA. in 23olltpo. - - - - - - - - . ...... lito run.
Full-timeL.P.N.Buodpart· ......,!lvol91111tmolluntll
....._...,
-1-1-8777.
Ill,__....,, plua dtpollt, Nort1o 4tloAve.. Middleport,
....... loloo. .
time
w1t1i
At1itn1
•
you
I1Jwe
~tid
tho
poolaa•
Jt
1
•
•
no peto. 7~ 448 4313
2 room olllency utilities :
alliSon.1:00 p.m.,
pert·tlmo 11ovel to olltrtng.
Ill _,. ela - o n
14 Wide, 3 -00111.
.
paid, dopoolt &amp; ..itenonceo,
l'ftday• .
ltiVIce tn.e. Candidate
- . - · . . . . . . . , - . Only 118,81!11. Froe Oollioay In Reine, nloll owighbo&lt;· no polO, 7ol0-992-o 165
8INTML peg •·
muot currant Ohio MA GREETING CARD -·Sel Up, 1 IU 121-2428 ._, loom Star Mill
.
·
1:00 pJII. . . day
llconoura and molntsln a ROUTE 100 . , _ lOC'I. Pook, 4 bldl00111, $450 de- Now Taki;'U"c!;,"tion&amp;.,.,. .... od lito run.
P«l'CCiooce
plillotopliy Ex
-._,..., -·•
11 ft. 14118. per paoli, $450 I* mo. ..,.._ 35 Wtol 2
Town- '
Comm
•
• local $2500 - l y 800_..,_
. .man.
1210. I* man.-·_....._ &amp; -~. ~.... •-~·ts, lncludea
lunJiarlllonday
C&amp;lltnt
unlcldon and m-9424
PI'*'*"' lied' fgnor
_..
__,_.l'll 1 ~m
"'""-...
·- ,_,_ ~,.,,..,,
organl:&amp;ltlon
llkllla.
Send
s
_,.,,
•"
_,_
..........
~
• •-7.01.01, 7oJ0.949. Water Sawago, Trash,
alliSon 1:00 p.m.
l'ftday
Ct7VOf and reaume to: Per.Final Dayl, Na!loi- 1,.. 2217.
$350/Mo., 7~.
"E'IITfR QfAN tfE;
aonnel, 38&amp; Richland A.,. Slat! Your Buolowu To- ThloMWijlpwwlllnol
Voni"'Y.
Roducllonlla Ylllll' Rent$t!OO? New Fu1nlohod 2 &amp; 3 Room
2daylbeNIIwalll
nue, Athena, OH 45701 day... Prime Shopping Can_,...,....,.
(304)73&amp;4108
3 llodnlom. 2 Batlo Ranch A~rtmonta, Clean, No
EOE.
lor Space :Avalfable N. Af·
•
~~
~ ••"Ia nm bJ 4:30 p.m.
10
=~------ !0111e1i1e Role. Spot11Q V..l t y ; a
IWIF- • for - • ·.._.. OJiil Style lion18 Ftorn Rent To Pets, ""Smoking, Referan·
Kon1&gt;er. liiltnoc·
.
- Plaza.CIII7~101
--loin
p:::::'"'Harbor Own.(740)448 3583
cos &amp; Dopoalt Required.
""""""' a ~.
llloolda)
1111 Nu•-.:;_
lllilorr4:30
101, at (740}146-7150
AVONI AIIAnlilal To Buy or
Soclel Worbr
'
viollllan or lilt lew. OW
" - 1 -"
Utllltleo
Fumlahed.
.. DMdl,_ I' 'btl ct to Al1tri1lon- WOII&lt; from homo. ~~ :.rlay Spoano, 304~r In 0111o, wi1li over Pilot Program, Rente11 (740J4'16- 151 9
1
ohat... duelo
1251$75 Hour, PTIFT. Mall
I!Oiitlon available lo PfOVidt
~ilolnWil-•
..,.,. , _ • - Naadad, 304-736-7295.
•
onlor. www.moll'--·· Clul A COL Tum wanted, truancy diversion ltrVIcta
.,..,,..lllhoitl odIn
rating. - I I W i g l f t
·
·Furnished 2 bedroom apart·
'
- - - '· illlktr.com
- · - · • 2 years _,....__
• ........___ ~
~.. for atudants In tho Muon
lhlo RO IP ''' Cali
1
888
1184
7258
for
liP'
1092
Sunoet
Drive,
Very
trom park,
n.IIINID DOWN ON
polutrnad.
.
Good Condition. ~ &amp; ment,
NC. noactou
poll. Rel8rences,
1-8111-387-3450
band &amp; wile lalm oncour· County, WV acliool tya"' • II .,.,.....
Reltrone81 Roqulrod. No .......,It, $325
month.
::---:-:-~:-:---- agad. (740)3811-«131 !Mve torno: -•mont, COli IOCI"LIKUIIITY 1881?
_...,_
2NTRClOUCTOIIY
Peto. C111 (740~118
-(740"","..•-8235 (740'.."·
Exm Up to $350 In 1 day. nome &amp; "'""""·
....._.....,, Hnkagl, and
No FM U - We Wlnl
l'lfoo
,....
,....
treatment programa. Re1-888-582-3345
(New) 48'ic25', 3 bodlaom, 2 3 bldloom homo Mlnomilo 05n
•
p--.... llnvlie YOII' , _ to your
~...............
homo for I , _ Pic· cw. riHdod buoy Phyel- qulrao a BA daiJM In ....
....••
vy· - · river - · Taro Townhouae Apart· ,,
..__ _ _ _ _ _.. ture Porty. We PfO'IIda cian1 Oillce. Copy cl Canifl· man Held, cornput·
not
-loll o1 gooct- required, dopooil required, menta, Very Spacious, 2
...... will!? Stsrt rnwtfng
=3 .-y, Clll :!,~0~~:.::: .. lltonicy; floltlblt ICIIodul·
-leis. (Onlyj $31.31 ,no polO, 740-9112-em after Badroorna,&gt;•2 Floota, C.&lt;.: 1 J~
""'
,....
lng, good cOmmunlcotlon
,
........,
- f a r - b y - 10 fool. We're dalllng COiel'l ISpnt
tf2 Bath, Fully Carpelod,
Olilo l!ingilo IOri/gtll 1-IJOO.
Cliol. Cenler
Jell....., oldlla. Mull bo WOtlc
&amp;IE
Wllnut C - 4 rn11eo left oil Mob11o - . State F1outo
Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
78f.2623eort 1821.
Ave. Pt. Pleasant, WV canoe eligible. Competitive~
·Sand ' Hill Rd. 2.2 acm 50 e.otAttotno, Ohio, 740MoanEJiOR..~ ltlo Sta $365/Mo N P
·1
25550. FIX to (304)675- ealary, excellent bo-.tRa. 1 bedroom lioult- ramod- CapeCodwi1113dormeno,3 592·1872.
...,.,,
• :.Maa;luoSacu,;iy~i
3713
~
Vlallour-at
eled /IJC cl- 10 ~f car garage, 3br. tamtly
Required, Days: 740-446·
www.preatera.org
l.
1'
1
room, lg cou......., kitchen
3481 · Evenings· 740 367
DomIno•1 PIua or p oint for appilcotlon.
Sand apjlll· ccourse, c ty poo on Ill dlniOQ and taund~ room
Double Wide. 1195 2 -.om mobile homo for · •
·
• •
Pttoaant now hlrlllQ driv- cation •• rooume wl8i Ct7VOf reek. (740l448-2200
1f2 bathe. front ........ , ·~~ Per Montlol 3 Bedroom, 2 ..,.,, $3251 month, $300 de- 0502 ' 740"'46-0101 ·
Dunn flmlly tribute. July '·
Great wane envi~
.-..... .,..,.~
poatt
peta. ret
!Dam. Mt. Union chulch PI~
P0
IBl , .,..
mont, competitive pay,llex· loner lo:
101 Pleuant Ridge Porneo· dtek, and palio, quollty · Both. Fr11 Delivery &amp; Sat· _,;: 1740~~~ Twtn RlverTowers now &amp;c·
ny wv. llnglng • dining ....
Apply In peraon. 420
PRESTE•• CENTER
oy tat and IUt rnooiu.. rent tlotOUghout. Must- to ap- up. 1.f188.128.3428
ter ..._,
cepttng
P.ld Tr.lnln. lble.
eryontweloomo,
Viand SlrMI. Point Pleaa~
pt.;. aacurity depoll1 or will praclato. St75,000. phone Polvote Prcparty And New ..,.. ...
applicallons for 1 BR.
ant.
H~~~
atll on lend contract (740) (304)875-4225
- · One Payment. _2_bod_roorn--mobllo--homo--,noHUD subsidized apt. for
New To You Thrill~
8111b87S3.
lntoelalon Ia
Full·tlme Poaltion, Fumlture
Huntington, WV 25705
(304)736-7295
pall, $235 month, lncludOI -rty and disabled. ECH.
8 Wtll Sllrnoon, Alhant
MolinE
lfop,u
wotor,
$100
deposit.
(304)675-6679,
740-592·1842
IOOk'RI lor quality Delivery and Warehouaa.
3 Bedroom Brick Ranch.
· RJR "··SchUlt mobile homo, 2.btd- (7~)448-3817
Apply • Lifestyle Furniture,
EOE/AA
LIYing Room &amp; Dining Room ~
~
• room, exc.llent condition,
people to c:o:Uet
Cuollty clotlilng and Uplllira, 2 BadrOoni, 466
. hold lorna. $1.00 bag ....
858 Third Avenue, GllllpoWE AilE
With Flrlj)lace &amp; Patio.
range, rwhfgomtor, . . - . 28oldocom. (740)992-2808 1f2 4th Ave Stove &amp; Rec:uatotn.n
..
d
ovay Thuroday. Monday
EXPANOINQ OUR
Kltchtn wl~nceo. Full '1' Only· lot Model DouiJie. ~or. conto12 ilk' condltlono Rlvor VieW . _ frigerator Fumlshed. Wa·
lhN Saturday 9:0C&gt;t:OO.
clonol'lln IWQI!rd to Ill. No Pliant Calla.
4
40
11470
AOVIRTIIINO
~wr.~:r~ =~
1nu. 17 )448for 1 0r2 Peoplo, Rat_. ter Fumlohod, $300/mo, ·
cunwnt Republlcltn Haw atyllat and na11Depoalt, •
-.led for tall g~owlng
IALEIITAFF
or &amp; Big Screen. Large $42 1187· Prlca Good Till . SIIIQII Section lot Cletor· - •.~. No PeiJi, Foe- 1150
(740)448-9081
WIM take - o d anttqueo
.P•rty l"uea,
buoy salon In town. Call :;. ~ ~;:i%:: OocbWl!hJacuzzl, Fenced e-2S.0 1
Huny To O.k·
All Modell Raducod. ter Trallor Pari&lt;, 740-441·
on ooollfgo....,~ In
C.ndlela!H,·and
(740)388.{)498 for lnforma· you 1111 .l.,.tld and en- In Back ·vard, Pa~ Drive, wood· '
Galllpolle, • Poymenta Fnxn 11118/mo- :.01;.:8;.:.1;_.- - - - - our .ohop. llmltld apace.
Uon, leave mouage Ia no joy belllQ creative? Art you ou1llde Malnlenanco Froo. (740}4411-0093
Huny Endo J,... 25111, O.k· In Raclow good condltlon,
Protection of
Call (304)675-2144
anawar.
iooldllQ ,., 1 caraor with 8 2,200 Sqft . Uvlng Area,
wood·
Gaillpollo nloe ~ 2 bad·
Second
ln-liorne CliMdren't
1 - MtobHshed
and Roush lano, Cheahlro,
~Ito Palm (740)44&amp;-3083
_
_,_ ca·--• $350• ~Amendmen1 Rlghla.
-··
'
(740)367..0221
....
·-"· -· ..... ,
- ~ One dock stte tor rent, one
GiVEAWAY
.
cMogrowing company?· Are you
.
Single
and
ooollonol Take Over Ptymenta, 3 pool1. 1350.par mo. 1 - full hookup lor a omall
T"maof
lntamttd In a .poo111on lllat 3 Bedroom on Routo 2, ihou- _blloW
Botto Ollkwood. - · garbage &amp; -age, campiOQ trallerc lamily typo, :
experienced
l&lt;lttarw to good 11ome, 7-10· Co.,
PooiUon
available
In
Mason,
ofltora
lnlurance,
401-K
plan
(304)875·5332
•etall
'
Call
1.
888
884
p~:!~;-~D~Itllllo
•
WV to provide coaa and paid vacation tim&amp;?
••· ~- ~
2217.- 7·1.01. 740-1148· 740-1182·5958.
245-9143 .. 7-10-245-8782
lntlnera thoroughly monagement
HoVIcesln tho Are you a paraon that has 3 'Bedroom 1 bath out· 72~ ·~ 1"'u ard dl"""
:..;._ _ _ _ _ __
\IIIH I I \\. I H-. 1
Mobile home In Racine
ln.truc:t MW can homo and In the community sales oJCpllrience? It oo H buli(slng, 3 'acres, .,;,.ntry tiona.
lo IMIVIIaiy emotionally dis- will ba benellclal If not, We aettlng, (740)379-2134
-14-K-70-So-ut_h_er_n_D_r_aa_m_
-5858·. no pets, 740·992·
llot.&amp;:Hou&gt;Gooos
Cen!M
luibod clilld•an and adolea- will train. F01 lnloMow confree Delivery frM Setup ..,:
Rtpl'lllnwu2 112
...,risk
ol being
placed •ld•ratlon
your 101~
re· 3Immediate
bedroom.. •
batto•.
ty · - 1-888·928-3426
tho homo.
Requlrea
....,. w1t1o asend
covtlletttr
Re- -'--------~
OWner Rlllrlng- lllllldlllQ
APlunMiHrs
.·
durlng • paid 30- -outalda
LQII- -pup Terri·
49
,lpoill,
JiOR
JbM
.Appliances: Reconditioned
or, looking. With brown day comprehenelve BA In Poychology, Social IOQ Ul why you ara 1lw per· ducad, was $! •900, now 18 Wide. Only $1215.00 Par FQnlll' SaioRoutltn Gall
7 ~ ~
Wori&lt;, or CouMIIIng, u oonweneodlo:
$129,000. Near · Holzer. Month,8.911%FI&gt;&lt;Odl~
l'iav- D
R
oy11 on a- Rd. R-.1
~1
o1
Cha" ~-· p bll-~ 7-91172
.,
_....._ Lot Haa 4 R
~-·· ryera,
angea,
tntlnlng
program.
oll-1304)875-3447
sa exton ve travel
.... ~oy. u ~~·
Rate With Nr And lin- A;,-~ Ot Floor ~· 1 and 2 bedroom apart· Refrlgralors, up Jo 90 Days
within !lie county. ~lent
Ohio Valley Publlllhlng
Br
homo
for
""'e
Second
dtrplnnlng
1-4188·928-3428
Good
___
eat't
ontnts.
fumlnd
unfur·
Guaranleadl
wo
Sell
Now
3
1·~·~·
btowflta. Villi our weboltol!
(The Dally Triburw),
'
Ma,.• •-11
• $7.00 per hour
www.pmtera.~ ,
825 Third Ave,
Ave. Mlddloport 7-10-992· 1994 No•rl.a 14K76, total ,.40)3117·7898
nllhtd, oecurity dapoolt re,_g "W ancoa, French
3348
0 401K
for apjJIIcallon. s..;d"apjlll·
Qalllpollo, ntoto 45831
· oleclrlc, Ike now cantrllllr, •
Lars &amp;
~\t· no pats, 740·992· City Maytag, 740·448-77 215.
cotlon 01 ,_.,.with cover
4 Bed~ Houae In Rio 2 bedroom, S1S,900. 7-10•
D a
c
o Health benefits
lttttr lo
W8're looking 1111' an Actlvl·
·~"
448-0175
MliiL\GI!
1 • ......::__ ..._rt-ment, Ra· flY od omplete, TWin
:
ties Aallalont someone . Granda, Could Ba UIOd
- · - " ....Bod Complete, Full Box
o Paid vacation
PREITEIIA CENTER
who Ia highly mOtivated, hat AI
Renlel Property. 11187 2br. Clayton Mobile
· lrtgorato•, Range, /IJC In· Spring olld maHrass, Queen
good communication akllll (740)245-5856
Homo Wllh loll o1 extrat. 2 Lata, Zonod Commercial, eluded, $:!89 Plua ilepollt &amp; BoK SptiOQ and maHross,
o Seven Holidays
HR/ Ernploymont.Spc
d
I
riel
llh
·
$10 000 (304)875-7788
Within The Vlllaat Of Rio Rei.....,., HUD Approved. Table and Chaira, Wardrobe
3375Route 60 E
an on oyo wo ng w 4000 eq. ft. church wltti pa•·
' ·
·
Qrondt. (740)2~
(740)44 1_1519
110 Healley Road, Hun· o Friday and
17401448•9742
Huntington, wv 26705
pecplt. Thlo lo 1_·36 hour a .,...ge ond 7 acroa. Chao· 28K60 3 Or 4ltdnxlm, Qn.
droda
ol Paper beck
-Art·
Saturday off
pooltlon and we prefer tor. Olilo (approx. 8 mlllo N. ty $346.00 Per Month
BIIUNIR LAND
1 Room Furnlolied Eftlclen- For Sate: Reeondl1ioned
Avon products,
5 Avon
EOEIAA
oorneono wl8i eKptrlenCIIn of Pomeroy), equipment 1181 8.119% Flxod 1 - Rate,
740-441-1482
r:y, All
Pold, Sherod· -"efw, dryers and relng·
, got Blrbloo, 3 Spacial EdiCall
for
an
iong·ttnn haolth care, ouch available. boaullful groundl t-8118·928·3428
lll1h, 919 Second Alltrlut, oratora. Tliompoons Apoll·
tion Avon ·Billet maaquorlooidOQ tor a •• an STNA. Hlgli ell- with 1f2 ecra atockod pond,
GALUA co.. Rio Orondo, Golllpollo, OH $125/mo. ance. 3407 Jaclcaon Ave·
lnteNiew:
ade Barbloo, mtac. ltema,
'MARKET FREIH'
ploma or equivalency ra· Striouo lnqulrila, call 740- 118 Skyline Woodfield 1,..70 txcluolwo, private Iota, 10 (740)448 3945
nue, (304)675-7368.
M!Soll/27. 11:()0.5:00
~a Rcanwr?
q~:_ed; A~LJ~ i&gt;OF tiOrl 885-4465,
2 Bedroom, 2 botto, Great IICIII w1t1o pond, 12S,500.
ARB •· -urante are 8:~ ~: 00 . -~Y· rlday
Condition
128,000 Ktor Road, e ecrn,l21,000 3 room fum- apartment, GOOD USED APPLIAN·
Juow 28tlo-27th, 508 Cherry
· ., 5 acroo with pond, downltalrs, uUihllo paid. 9&lt;1 CEI Washers, dryeno, raRidge Avenue, Rio Grandt. 1-888-237·5342 now Meldng prolttalonol or call (740}146-5001 and 5 room &amp; botto, 2 porcheo, (304)696-3747
candldateo
for
all
leveta
of
aok
101
Eula
.,
Martie.
NC,
ratngoralor,
elactrlc
I2S.OOO. Choahlra, 8 acroo, Loculi, $290/rno. pluo de- frigeraooro, ranges. Skaggo
TV'a, mlcrowavea, new
Man-ont. A~raulve
ltove &amp; gao furnace. Factory
Goof
32K80 $11 500 01 4
- • 7••••• 1340
Appllancao, 76 Vine Str06t,
clcthlng, guilar, flomhure, all
2301
ptano:;:d'"~nlt expO~olon 11 Worlc From Homo, Part· $27,500 at 2424 Monroe $10,000 Discount only
'
2 ..,.. wltlo ::.,......=··:.:.:;~::..;.;~=-- 0&amp;11 740·446-7398, 1·888·
1
niCI, don't mllll
taldng p1act within the ioCII time/ Ful·llme, $25· $75/hr. Avenue, (304)675·1365
$1000.00 Do...,, Del,lvtry, large bomo, $3 ,000i Cloy BEAUTIFUL " APART· 818.0128.
tri•ltslo arM. Experience In Paid Vacatlono. 1-1188-876end aetup paid by factory IOWnalilp, ~~ vlowo 011 !3 MINTS AT BUDGET PASfood aarvlct Ia advanta· 7042·
.
. Baautliul, aecluded white 1·JI00.691-tm
'
ecroo, 1 •000 · Tycoon Cl!l AT JACKION Et- Late model Magic Chef,
gaouo, but not required. EK·
cedar log home, 1,750
lake area, 14 acrao, TATI8, 52 Weat\vood Drive lroattree •tlrigarator, $100;
113•800•
BusiNI!Ss
aquaro foot, toOQuo &amp; grove
Fl
·
· liOill S297 to $383. Walk to Kenmore washer, $75·,
242 Third Ave. calleno Sail~•• &amp; Benefit
'I'IwNING
cedar throughout the inoldt, Now 2001 ..,.,..00 14K70
Th
Rick p......, Aucllon ComPackagoo ~valla~lel Please
huga atone ll•eplaca, cov· threo BR, 2 Batli, already IIEIGI CO.· Tuppers iJiiop &amp; movtea. Cal '740rae r;.ers, $50 each, all
pony, fuU ~.... auctioneor,
tax you reaume . to t-«lfl.
trod beck 1 lronl t&gt;&lt;H&lt;h 16 111 up ready 10 move In Plaine- SR881, 7 ..,.. witlo 448-21588. Equal HouaiOQ while, ( 40)446-9066. aller
compll!e auction aervlca.
·
8311·8617 or email to:
Olllllpotlo Ca
tege foot lida - · 7.8 wooded $865 down, $198 Ptr montli pole bam, ·$23,500 or 22 ~O.,ppo:~;;.:rtu:::nlty=.- - - - ~epm:"::',:---:---:c:-::l.lconled IHI8,0hlo &amp; Weot
COrtetlandOzoomnttrwt
(CaroorsC
To Home) ecrao 32K42 oloot ~
740·992·2187
acrao $:!3000 Carr Roed a..utlf 1 R
"~1-•- oa
Virginia, 304-n:l·S781S Or ~
....~? W",.,Do CO:: or moll to: Alby'o, 201 · Cali Todoyl740'448-43117, 24x41i 4 atsllhorM~~~:
8 oc~o S13.0oo, oo te votld ~Ooo ~~:Z F':':":i c;;;:;~oad:1!~~~~ g~~
304-n:l-54-47.
tool N~
S-rt•. Averooe, Worthing.
1-600-214-0452.
$169,000. Clari&lt; Chopol New 200I Fleaiwood only ..... $23,01!Q, Oonvlite, 0 llodroom Plua Storage, Frea Eatlmatos, 90 Daya
co
mar· ton,I&lt;Y 41183.
Rtg·i190-05· 1274B.
Road (740)388-968fl
$148.48 per montto. Call acrao, $10,1500. Rutlend·, 1 ~-· Kllchtn, ••~ "-lh, Sa
•- Cash F
WA!ffl!D
·--... and audltlllQ
Karana 740-385-43117.
••
.....
""""' ....
me • lnanclng
~
'IOBur
nyll-.rghlghlymollvat·
8CIIIov,5001
Domolciwn Gallipolis, Con- Avlllable. VluAnd Mealer·
a.~--aoiiiiiil--' od.I'IIPGnllble, llll·l!lrtera "Stcratarlai/CtlniCII po1111on ~~·
WANDD
GALUPOUt- OPPOAn.l· Now double wlda 3 bt. 2 ba. Juat a low of ""' percale IICt Koly (740)448 9981
card,
1-877·830·9162
Abooi
f01 door·t&lt;Hloor oaln for io- lor very buoy mtdiolll oHict.
To ])o
NIT\' II KNOCKING In $1188.00 dowo only 1295. ovllloblo. Call now for mope a-to St., Middleport 2 (740)448-7444
uto Top Dollar. u.s. col coble company. Mull Appllcotiono will be taken •
thla dellghtfu18 room ranch paf noon. call now 1-800- and llltingll OWnor ft. bedroom fumlahed lpOrt·
Main Soreet Furniture
SliYOt, Gold Coins. Proof· liovo vllld drfvero 11con11 only on Tutedlly and Wedatyle horne on quiet otroot. 891-em.
· nenclng wltli tllght , _ , . ment utllnllo paid dopooll
13041675 ·142 2
lila, Dlamonda, Golcl and own ~ble trano· noaday June 26 &amp; 27 be- All Mako Mowaro, lawn Offering modarn kitchen
markup,
•• .,....., 1 raf:...nc..
• 740
515 Maln Stroot,
Ringo,
U.S. Currancy,· portatlon, Direct- expo- ._n 9:00 a.m. ard 2:00 Traotora, Tlllero Repaired. wit~ now cablnots and dloh· Llmltad or No•Credlt7 GOY-ot81S
'
no
pill,
•
Polnl
1182
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec- (fence preferrod, Dut not p.m. No pliorw calla. John Frao pick-up, Delivery Avail· waoher, 3 bright· airy bad· omrnont Bank l'lna11111 Only ~ 1111a1 For Ront On :::--.-:--:' -::--::---Ploaeant
and Avenue, Olllllpolll, 740- ntCMIII)'. Trovol Roqulrod. Wade MD, lno. Ploaaant ablo. 21 Yoors Experience. rooms, formal dining arao At O.kwood In S.oboura- Kanowha Rlvtr, a mRte Chrloty'a Fomlly ·Living,
New &amp;Uied Furniture .
448-21142.
Bockgroundohtolcanddrug Volloy Hoopllel aulte 112, Cat1Mike. (740J4'16-7804
and large living room. To vllle,WV304·73fl.3409.
fromPolntl'loUont,olaalrtc 33140 New Umo Ad.. Rut· Now 2 Piece LMngroom
telling
mondotory. Point Pl-nt WV'
car garoge and huge COV·
'
only,
(3C)f)8711-1722, land, Ohio, 740-742-7403. SuhM •-• a
Sell,
I \I I' I I J '\ \ II '. I
(804)272).2832
'
G - Portablto Sawmill, ered patio. lmmodlata poe- , Lot illOdal ci-nco. IIV8 (304)875-4144 Af11r tljlm. Apaotment, hoine ond trailer' Trldt.' ...... ~uy.
f Jl\ HI ,
Someone Ia tako care of my don1 haul your iOgl lo !he ooelllonl
Roduoed
to up to $8,828 with ony homo,
Commerolal , _
McCiu . RIIIIU
mothl&lt;ln my home full time mill jutt coll304-t15·1g57. $79,900. McGuire Raolty chtolc Ul out dtoliOQ,
I
To
A New toonte IYOillblo lor loaM.
116
hlriOQ : 1' 3 ~~u:;c: 01 pert llnw, 740-3117.0302. Wood Elting Hllloldeo. ~Tr;':'r
RIIALTOR 1· ~t!t~t!,.~· US
Don,
~ V.O.noleo now.
A!mQvJ;li
ffi!Lp WANDD • peri·Ume, plclc up llflplloa· Toklng oppllcatlono: oook, Dllchoo. Etc. Mowing, - - - - - - - - :-~.....':-'--"=-Uon ot loolllon I bring beck grill cootc, dish waoher, wok· Cllln·up. Removll Of Un· Groot Nolghborhood Good Lol modtl Ci181111Ct, ono
Cloan l!bt. Apartment rolor· Buy 01 loll .. Riverine Anll·
'""'TAIIIIARCHbatwoon
8:3041m
&amp; ,.., atop at Mlllle'o Rtltlu· wanlod iltmo. Odd Jobo. Condlllon Ntedo Handy· 2000 -.not 18,826,
.,..., dopooll, No Pete. qun, 1124 Eoat Main on
, 2001 ,
mon,
Houool Church, for 2000 modellingloo. 8
(304)875·5te2
SR 12• E. Pomeroy, 740.
1 ~::;,oo.m, Monday lhno Sat· rant, 39239 Brldl&gt;ur,: Rd. Call Slave (740)448-7804
Slngera, Bondo a vocal
y.
Middleport, Ohio 101 apPiica·· Will Mow Lawno. (304)875· $50,000
Make
Offer, ~
~
1182-2!211 or 740·1182·1539.
1
Groupe, All Slyitll Agoo. EJCpllrlencod c - tlon.
5129 Loovo Mauaga.
(304)875·1818
~.
Ruu Moore owner
........ Record • -~ ""-· ... Sanlng and Finishing URGENT' ·y
NEEDED·
or rafUMd, GlreCIOUI living. 1 and 2
...,...
•
Will
h h
won1 lall long, oo atop In
bldrcom apartments at VN·
Ml"CFF
1 A.NEQUi
lng New Allllta. Comi11Q Sectlonol Houolng. Sond plo.,... donor1, oam ~5 to
power was
ouoeo Three bldrocm, throe both ond check uo out, we're 1 4 - - Forac~Jod 11ge ManQI' and Rlvtnilda
MER""•~""
7
To
Hunllnuton,
WY Pricing lnformallon and ex· NO for 2 013 hours wtol&lt;ly. and trallera. call 1 40)448· houoe on 1&gt;88 ecrao on dealing, COio'e Mobllto -From lfatiMo., ~% Aptirtrnenta In Middleport. t.~~~iiii~iiiil~i!IO'"""'iiilila.J·
(1101)427-2830
"'
to: Southern Coli Sera-Tee, 7•0·592· O!St Ilk lor Ron 01 cen coli GtAndvlew Ave. near, Farm Attoena Olilo, Open .Dowro, 3D YMra ot 8.5% . Fnxn 1278-$348. Call 740· l~opiilldtnt Hetbal~e Dla(1101)427-411514
, PO Bo• 828, Jack· 8851.
phono !740)339.()950. II no Muooum. Two doul&gt;le ga- M•W. 8-7, Thura-Fn., H, APR. FC&lt; Ullingl, 800-318- 982·110e4. Equal Housing lributor, Call For Product Or
oon, ,OH •5840 . '.'
""(
leeve meuage.
~goo. (304)675·5353
Sat. 10·5.
ss:3 .Eort. 1709~
,
Opportunlllas.
Opportunity. (7~) 441 _1 : 2
AI paaple ""'" - . In- · Attontlon: RN'Und LPN'I
:
~~~ Aroadla Nu.Wng .Conter'o
moiiOQ ou p;;t~mlt ...,.pOng llllllicatlono 101
od-..:.frM(IIIMI~ 111and2nd-. W8olltr
31a.
. - t benefl!a lila! In•
:-o-.;_-:------cludo Hultlo lnourance,
AM you 1oo1&lt;1ng for tho liP' 4011&lt;, Lift lnourance, compo!lunlty loJoln o winning pailtlvewagooandopportutMmlnd beCome part cia nllilo far advancement. If
fill goGIOfng cora In- you ora a 181m player w11o
duolry? 9con1c Hillo Nu.WOQ tnjoyl wor1&lt;1ng w1t1o tho oldCantor It oiiiHing NurM oofy, piNM apply In pa.-.
Aide Train"'" CI-t blllotn 9-4 01 caH 01ana
•'V
Hart.N RN Dl eel
f
monthly. II It a 75 hou•
'
,
r or o
·course. luting tor 11 deyt Nul'llng.
· Mondoyttoroug11Foldaye:30
-Nu.WOQCanler
to 4:30. Thlo It a Q!Miopo
e.ot Main Straot
portunilyiTiooowortclaoowill
Coolville, Ohio
begin In JYy. Stop by -Y
(740)867-3158
far an __,__Ikon or contact"
EOE

Adv•-.

Own A~ Put It
'Ill Wor1t?

..--·--•to

_.....
s.-

r

r

a

:f.

--liolollr

(=

2500

II·

riO

.........::

FOR

e· wll-•·

I

-.

Adult

j

Benefit•
.Incentive•
.CarHr \
t ent

2 ,..,.

I

i

=::=:a a:;

to-

lora-

t

t

-ton.

u-· :Oiilo,

.r

r'o
I ....----·-•

r

I

r

Uti-

Ext.

Or Stop By:

C

I

""'""'

"-------.J

1

6:

comPI·

· Then, she accelerated into the lead and
y.oon by 10 feet, becoming the first 800~ ,500 champion since Kim Gallagher in
1984.
: Marla Runyan spoiled Jacobs' chance at
three ,victories, winning the 5,000 in
15:08.03, the fastest time by an American
.this year. Jacobs was timed in 15:10.78.
; Jacobs won the 1,500 and the 5,00o at
last year's Olympic Trials, but did not
compete at the Sydney Games because of
illness. .
Jacobs ruled out running the 800 at the
World Championships, but said she had
not yet decided whether to compete in
. the 1,500 or 5,000 or both.
In cold 'conditions that included rain
and wind, Marion Jones won the 200 in
22.52 seconds against a 3.6 mph _headwind. It was the fourth straight national
200 tide for the world's best sprinter.
"My ego is not that big that I think I'm
invincible;• Jones. said. "I've never said
that. These women keep me on my toes."
The. victory earned Jones a place on

him in recent yean, winning in I 3.22.
the fastest in the world this year. His
time was even more remarkable because
it was run into a 7.1 mph headwind.

he wasn't protesting the third
strike call when home plate
umpire Rob Drake tossed .
him
.. He had thought the first
lrumPapll
pitch was outside.
"I didn't do anything anyRocker off-limits to media
until the Indians return to body else wouldn't do," said
Lofton, caught on camera
Cleveland on Friday.
. "I'd say he was pumped being lectured by Manuel
up," Manuel !iaid. "He did the after his ejection. "I just asked
the umpire, 'Can I ask you a
job."
So did starter Bartolo question?'That's all I was.trying to do. I just wanted to ·ask
Colon (6-6).
He struck out nine - one him a question about it, and
shy of his season high - in he threw me out of the
six innings. He gdve up four g:ime."
The Indians broke a 1-all
hits and four walks for his fint
win since beating Minnesota tie with Robbie Alomar's
RBI single in the fifth inning,
6-2 on June 7.
Jolbert Cabrera, who and added a couple more runs
entered the game after Kenny · on singles by Tim Laker and
Lofton was eje~ted in the fint Cabren in the sixth, all off
inning, w~nt 2-for-4 with a Royals starter Jell' Suppan (3double, a run scored and an 7).
Suppan gave up 10 hits and
RBI for Cleveland.
Lofton, called out on strikes four walks in 5 2-3 innings,
on three straight pitches, said striking out one.

Rocker

qail

Devers, the two-time Olympic
champion at 100 meters and the threetime world champion in the 100 hurdles, also had to overcome a · strong
headwind - 6.2 mph - in winning
her seventh .national hurdles tide in
12.91.
Jenny /\dams, winner of the .Jong
jum!l Thursday, finished second to Devers in 13.11.
·
Triple jumper LaMark Carter and
steeplechaser Thomas Chorny also
turned in American-leading performances this year. Carter won his third
title at 56 feet, 4 inches, and Chorny
took his first tide in 8:22.16.

when the South's F.D. Horton
broke off a 57-yard gallop
around the left offensive end.
'record-setting seventh ··career road- Tony had the best car there at the end."
Bonecutter was able to run
Ricky Rudd drove bis Ford to a
course victory as well as his fourth
from Pagell
him down from across the ·
straight win at Sean Point. He finished fourth-place finish, followed by Rusty
third after leading 32 of the I 12 laps in Wallace, who started his Ford alongside
from Pap II
yards, adding 101 yards on opposite corner and prevent
his Chevy, and remains the Winston Cup Gordon in the front row.
kick returns. He fielded one the breakaway score.
·Wallace, Gordon, Richard Petty and on a knee for no gain and
Bonecutter follows the
points leader.
said.
of fellow Mason
footsteps
Stewart, who started the race third, also . "All good streaks have to come to an Bobby Allison have six road-course vic- added a 19-yarder, but his 72tories apiece.
.
won this year in Richmond, Va. His first end, eventually;' he Shrugged.
. yard run-back in the third was Countian Josh Cordell, who
dominated last year's game at
Ron Fellows, a road-course specialist · the game's longest play.
Jeff Gordon has won six of the last
road-course victory came in just his fifth
. eight .. road coune ~ces,-.both at Sears driving for ,NEMCO Mmorsports, l~d
start on a serpentine layout. ·.
Bonecutter took the kick, defensive tackle.
In a game that did not feafor 20 laps after a caution on the 32nd plunged into the middle of
"I never ran a road nee in anything Point atWatkiris ·GJen, N.Y.
The three-time 'series champion, has lap. It was the first time he had led a the oncoming coverage unit, ture a great deal of defense,
other than go-carts;' he marveled.
Sears Point, one of two road coursc;s four poles this season along With three Winston C11p race since August 1999 in took a hit around his own 45, the quarterbacks from both
on the Winston Cup series, is currendy victories. He 1leads the circuit with 11 Watkins Glen, where the circuit races in staggered, and was finally run squads earned the MVP honAugust.
.
,,
undergoing a $35 million renovation. It top-five finishes.
down at the South's 17, set- ors. Morrison hit 6-of-15
Fellows finished 38th after wrecking ting up Adam Cantoni's sec- . passes for 157 yards to be
"We got a solid finish, and that's all I
was reduced this year to 10 turns for
· ond touchdown run of the named MVP for the North,
NASCI\R events, but lengthened to two was asking for," he said. "I know you guys his car on the 101st lap.
while his South squad counhad me winning the race before it start- · There were five cautions for 17 laps in game.
miles.
Polesitter Jeff Gordon was vying for his ed, but I didn't expect that.... I think the race, which featured eight leaders.
Bonecutter, who reports to terpart, John Grow, hit 7-of
16 tosses for 151 yards and
camp at West Virginia State on
three scores.
August 9, played mostly as a
Ravenswood native . and
- - - - - . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , defensive back in the game, Parkersburg High graduate
though. The North staff had
.told him that his playing time Josh Romeo finished the
would be greater if he were game with three catches for
.....
ioiiiii
81 yards and two TD catches.
Chalnuw, HomeSne Xl12, Solid Moplto Badi-.o Sul!a SIS Mauay FergUIOII trao- 1997 Monte Corio, doric 1997 Chevy S·10, 4 cylln· 1993 Four Wlnda motor willing to play corner in the
He scored a third touchdown
8 lncli bo $80 Crefllman looking Ia
101 Chintll tor, live power, '60hp, groon, outomatlc tranamle- der, 5-apoocl, All Condition, home, 29 loot, i..a lllan game.
in
the fourth quarter on a
cuttlng tO:.h 1~ . welding _S~tyle--:-ou_lte:::-.-'(304-::')882-.--7:·2:::-4311- (740)448-1104 $4800
alan, 3.1 motor, 78,000 59,000 mllea, S550q OBQ, 4,000 mlleo. (74014'16-1759
"I . still like scoring, but
:-:
~~~=..:.;;;;;.;..__ mllet, $8,000. (740)245· Call740-446-3709
one-yard sweep play in to the
~~: ~. "'40"'
~; Vera llrodley Polito Vllager IH 138 dleaal-. Ilk· 9782 (740)245·5228
Camper 25 11211. lma· defense is.fun too," s~id Bone:.~::...:.·-;.:.__;_(7_:~11192
_ _ _ G - pattorn, sso. lng $5000 or trade, 304rrao VANS &amp; . .2001
bruck by 'Gulf Stleem. 1\fov·
south end zone.
Cherry ale'"h bad, pillow Allella,.$81, (740)446-G231 773-5428.
1997 MoumolnMO, 4 - 1 I .
~WDs
1lng, Never uoed. Cali cutter.
Lawson finished with six
..
drive. txcollent condlllon, 5
(304)675-5353
On two .extra ppint
""' maltrnl Ill. - · Bill Waterline Spacial: 31~ 200
onglow,
58,000
mll81,
catches for 117 yards and a
boxod. Can OJIIIIraiO, ap- PSI521.96 Pot 100; 1 200
Llv&amp;iiOCK
totolly ioadad, (304)n3· 1987 Font Aeroaler. very 89 Dodga LEA Campo• attempts, the South offensive
pooK. value 11400. oacrlflca PSI $37.00 Per tOO; All ~
• 5182 01 (304)874-1523 · good ah8po &amp; none good. Van, Mil contained, garage
TD,
but he dropped several
$555, 304-3fl0.0233.
llrul Compt I Ilion Fittlngl
740-+41-9234 or 740-388· kept, low mllea, 83 Herman minds tried to take advantage
other good opportunities.
Gtubb'a Plono- Tunl~ 1 In Stock
1 month o1ct GulnMI and 1999 Grand P~x GT, White, 8508
Roaa. Centenary. Ohio. of the seven-inch height
""
RON EVANI EHTERP- Baby Ducka, $3.00 each, 4 door, 24,500 mlln, CD,
$8750, 7-10-709-&lt;1444 Laava
University High School
advantage held by former
~!:.":·C:1~m~~ El JaclcOon, Olilo, 1-800- Clilcke
$1.00 ' each well
. cared
~. 1887 Plymouth Voyager, rneaaage.
graduate Adam Cantoni fin537-9528
(740)258-9214
(7~)'14Hl216, 174015 • tim, new altamator, =;::::::::...--.--.--.-- Capital receiver Jimmy Law7~ 448 4525
Whilller . radar ctotaitor
7110
·
runt good, nMdo Drako 114 Dutchman, 31 foot, with
ished the game with 104 yards
9 75
St oao BACK 2 Ton Air ...~ ·--'" 1·75 .......... 1 Reg. 112 Arabian, 112
S 50 R
work. $600 (740)245-5848 expando room, (740)441· son over Bonecutter. On both
and two scores for the North.
•
Col
~ ·--···
. _ , a ~ Ho
c•-otnut &amp; 73 V&lt;olk- 7 ' uno (740)••• .:.79
9531
Bonecutter was
Condlllorwr, 2 Ton
1, t new Ilea IIV8ral other Ita· ua..er ""'· ••
but , noodo body worlc
.........,
-:"'---:-.-~-.--- occasions,
The combined 72 points
Lint Sat, lnatslled, $:!,2915, turai 304-675-42154
White Toblano, 511' olct Sill· 130416g6.3747
1994 Chevy Aatro van OK· Coleman Shenandolll pop- able to prevent the comple$1,0GO eacil, $1295 N t t l l o n (304)875·7071
and luly 1 d"" 81•000 up camper, excellent condl·
was
the highest total in the
1
Prtco. Frat ElllmotM. Call
BuwliNG
87 CovaMer 1 owner, $1200.
•
oa ~. • '
Uon, (740)448-11470
tion of the fade pattern to the
FOI Quolel On Other Slzee.
.,__ _
. 3 yra, old Biacl&lt; angua rogfa· (304)875-4649
miles $7,200. 304-882 2750
history of the 48-game series.
If You l)on1 ·Call Ut, ~
.,.,.......
• lortd buD, 7oi0-74lHI535.
6-3 target.
We Bolli Lolli Mobile
.
.
ACHA yoarttng colt, "' --- . 98 Dodge Caravtn, 3.0 e... 11187 Dodge Ram, EKtond- 1'111"--:~~--,
Bonecutter's all-state track It marks the third straight win
....,_
'"""" glrw In - - ' o•·- &amp; run- ed Cab, 4x•. loaded,
Block brick
~?~8 ~~9 1: wind0wa,ll.;.:.:;&amp;;;;j l~:O~~~g and qulot, nlng·· oro;;;.111 ~~ s700 $17,500. (740)448-1104
~·
speed also paid off in the mid- for the Bears squad.
'
00911
.Win.,.., Rio Gronda, OH
·
(304)875-5890
1199 ZR2 S·10. rod, olr,
• dle of the fourth quarter
-;;;~-;;;;;;;~;;;;d~ Coii740-241S-5121 . '
&amp; "-·-·
92 au'tct. LaSobre llmltad condition, cnolll, CD, outo,
.

Stewad

t-

r

j

I'''"

I

r ...

r'u

I

Bed- I full orttoopacllc
n~tY """'"
meno- 811, atltlln plaatlc, Cadar bOinlt, over 200
ooorlflct $129, 30•·380· doors. tnter1of and 0233
wlndowl, caDinata, Iota of Ear oom, 82.251 ~. 01

-------- ='::S. ~~~\~ :~o~nd
11~ y~a.::. ::u.:
(7~)248-6047

AERATio\rMQTOAS
oltor
.
·
Rapllrod, Now &amp; RlbuiR In · iiiiir~];i~~,~~~~~~-;~
Stook. Call Ron Evano, 1·
IKiifl, equore
12Jblito, 7•0· 112·
80Jl.S37·1528.

r

...

·':oti8-. .0JiORiliAi ~i osi ia_.l rr.z--~-~--.,:

I

B2 OOO mllet toadod 74G- tint, 49,000 mllel, aaklng

94 g_1318·

'

'

114 ......._ShadoW 2 Doo&lt;
2600
==788
• '
:
96 GMC Bonomo SLS,
81 000 mlltl aluminum
wt.H1o
tonnuu oovar, 1-10114V'ISI 8

$14,800. (740)3721-2798

j1421

l

MOTOIICY&lt;US

BASEMENT
WATEIII'IIOOFING
Uncondlllonal IHellmo guar·
l anlee. local rolerencaolur·

~=======:--.-------------In Memory

~:~2r~:''"r7~, ':!:: 1

0870,
1·600·287-0578.
·2000 Banohee Q!MI ohlpt, Rogers Walerproo!IOQ.
with txirlll, new piflll, new
top and. S5500. oeo 304· •nr---::~~-.,
982·3878 or 304·542·29114.

.,.~

.. •.,IJ

~.t. :lf&lt;9t~·
.,_.,.
"'* llo.bwi
P-IS.,,,
,._~.

ilriMM

~

summER

f:or 15 Words

1 to3 Days
Yard

20e Per Word

I '· Cub/Check With Copy;¥' I

r

.

r

Sale Adl Only

Over 15 Word1,

lr------,I.

1

,:;'1 ,1ir.:"'

=-

J;neters• .

the U.S. team for the world championships at Edmonton, Alberta, in August .
At the last worlds in 1999 in Seville,
Spain, Jones pulled up with a severe back
injury in the 200 semiDnals.
Then, she was attempting to win gold
medals in the 100, 200, long jump and
400 relay. She won the 100 and finished
third in the long jump before getting
injured.
This time, she likely will try for four
again - in the 100, 200, 400 relay and
1.600 relay.
Jones won Sooday's nee by about eight
feet over runner-up LaTasha Jenkins
(22.88). A day earlier she had won her
semifuu1 heat in 22.23, the fastest time in
the world this year.
Seilala Sua became · a double-winner
with her victory in the women's shot put.
She won with a career-best 58-11 I 12,
which edged Connie Price-Smith's 58-8
I 12 and broke her nin.,..year winning
streak. Sua also won the ,discus Thursday.
Price-Smith, a 19-time natioml champion, announced her retirement at age
39. She was the last to sweep the shot put
and discus in the same year, accomplishing the feat from 1992-94.
In the pole vault, Olympic silver
medalist Lawrence Johnson won at I 9-2
1/4, then missed three times at an American record 19-10 114. Olympic gold
medalist Nick Hysont placed third to
qualifY for the world meet.
A surprise in the eyent came when
American record holder Jeff Hartwig
no-heigbted for the second year in a
row at the outdoor nationals. He failed
to·clear his opening height of I 7-8 1/2.
At the Olympic Trials last year, he did
the same thing and missed the Sydney
Gaines.
Allen Johnson, the 1996 Olympic
gold medalist and two-time .world
champion in the 110 hurdles, showed he
has overcome the injuries that plagued

.'

533

I

Debut

Jacobs Wins two of three distance.~ events

We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And . Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Cant

In one week With us
~ribune

breaking baiL He might
have gotten a little tired in
the inning that we got to
him but he had quality
sruff, that's for sure."
Cincinnati also started a
"l think they should give
fresh-faced
rookie, Jose
him another chance. I know
he can do better than he did Acevedo was making his
second
major
league
today."
The Astros were noncom- appearance and pitched
mittal on Redding's future. four innings, allowing five
"It was just a five-inning runs - four earned -:- on
outing," Dierker said. ''We'll five hits and four walks. He
have to talk about it later. I snuck out four.
Octavio Dote!
(4~4)
can't say what we'll do."
two
scoreless
.The Reds thought highly pitched
innings for the win. and
of Redding, too.
"I thought he was good," Billy Wagner pitched a
third baseman Aaron Boone scoreless ninth for his 14th
said. ' ~ He was pretty impres- save in 15 tries.
Chris Nichting (0- 1)
sive ·out there. He had a
very good fastball and took the loss.

'

CLASSIFIED

To Place

The Dally Sentinel• . , . 83

Pomeroy, MIMeport. Ohio

•

Invite The Entire Nelghborbogd
To Your yard Salel
Mall to:

The Daily Sentinel

··= ' I

Classified Ada
111 Court Street

.··------------··.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
'

/..

.,

.,

�.

Mondlly, June 25, 2001

,_..,, June 25, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

AtLEYoor
•

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTimJ

BISSELL
IIUIL.DIM INC.
New~·\'laJI

Sldlaa • N"' Ganps
•Rz;'
t

•

...

....•••

Rr·&lt; k•, R '"iupp Aqenl

Box 'R9

Loce1843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical

•Mulch

FINEdnllll

~Senlca

949-1405
591·5(111

992-3470

Public Notice

10 x10 530.00
10 X 20 $50.00

·

(I) 25, 2001
1tc

•-

I

.

PHYII:AL FORMS AVAILABLE

RACINE - Sporll Phyalcal form•
for Iff - · plamlng on portlcl·

,,

740-~·1871

· KENSINGTON

I

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHHOL.OOY ;;
KEEPS THE .

I
l

·~

lhe hfWI - dal~.
olllee v
a.m.-3:30p.m.
Phyllcal dalea will bo announced

law.

1185-33211 between
7:3o a.m. and 2:30 p.m. lo make

small
landscaplnv
Shoun Seth
(740) 985~3563
(740) 541-3820

-n

DONNIE -E8 CAMP
POINT PLEASANT, W,VO - Flon·
da asalatanl
oooch tJon.
nl&lt;t Jonot will be t.&gt;klfng the 15!11
Annual Donnie 8alllelbofl
C.Omp In Poln! PfMoant on July 2·

at lhe hJW~oc- offlee.
A porant or legal guardian mUll 5.
accomp.ony all atl11otoo. SludMII ,o\ppllee- 1n1 available at local
who cannot alllnd one of the res;.- b o l l - or Ill' calling 875-4402.
tratlon ponO&lt;Io ohould contacl lhe

\

Limi~W..R ·

•

. TerryLamm

' -.:j

HOW 00 YOJ JU~T ~IT

.992·0739

1J.IEgf. WHILE. M C:HX.i.
1~1\'E.~D.iTIO~I'D

lt-.\"2'

Tr•llere
1o~~~~~
Drl-y.
• Equipment cluned clegrNUd

Jeff Stethem

Hlll't Sell

Wltothlr y..•.. trying lo
tau wolglrt, •fllllllomont
yottr dlollor moxlmum
nutrition, or ,.., look your

Ster•e•

...!Itt wltll . . boll

211170 B11h1n Road
R•clne, Ohio

.............. prcducto,

Hotllllllo lnllmM...., hll
110t1111hlng for ""'Y-·
Call YOIIt'lnclojlondont

Htr'*lft dlolrlbutor,
JIL Ettlltfhlu
(740}Hf.31:!1

Wt con poro-lla a

.provram lot ,.,,

45771

740.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' )130'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

....

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

~----1

CeH 740•!111•2782 740•1191o0477
Home740•9811•4218
Loweat

Lose Weight Now
Ask Me How

3-D
CONSTRUCTION
FrHeaUmatea,
lnaured
Speclalluln new

··~75·7124
1-800-250·!1077
Resideatial . Ccimmerdal New Construdlon
Stoles &amp;nice Installation

Speclallzl.. In Sheet Mttal Ductwork
"Trane' Sales &amp; &amp;nice Jlor
Gallia, Moson, a'nd Melp Counties
Liunstd and ln....-.d
· WV 005176

teauee, and repair
porcbtl, II deekl.

Owner
Charles R.

Dill

. Phoae992-7445
c.l
591·9254

,......_O_F....F--IC~E~EX~P....R~ES~S~.., . '
BUSINESS SERVICES ••· Professional Wort at
· Affordable Raw

.,·,

2422

IIBCilllam

'

IT'~ BEAUTIFUL, BUT UJI-I'(

• Bucket Truck

YOUR

COIRUCTORS, INC.

CQHCBi!~

740-986-3948

CON~REIF/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footen, WIIII,'Steptp~
Flat Work, ·

RepiKenienta, • Wolltl
and Drivn • Stendl
Crete Free Eallmaln
Senlna Ohio al!d W.V.
WVI0317U

MILL END
FABRICS
M•chlne Quilting

EARNHARTI3
pillow penels
740-992·3673

Pomeroy Eaglee
Club Bingo

On Thurldllya
At 6:30P.M.
• M1ln St,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Cov-H
SSOO.oo Sterburst
Progreulve top II

Uc.IHJQ.50

IMONDAY

Tree Service
• Stump Grinding

P/B
Rtoelne, Ohio 41771

'

""'

• Top • Removal • Trim

u

CQNNECJ!QN
·Quality Drlvlwaye,'
Patlol, Sldmlk
..
'
26 yea11 experlerice
Free Estimates

ll typeso
RoQfs,
Specialist

614-747-1715

Bring In your !lJNIIr work
we'll get you going for
Spring
Every Spring Tun ..up .
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
N•w "fUif"!'ent arriving dilly
Sit Man~lng, Wayne or Jim
or • REAL DEAL on 1 new lawn tl'lctor,
lawn mover or weld trimmer.

GRf\VELYTRACTOR
' Salea &amp; Service
204 Cqndor St.
Pomeroy

992-2975

54=

55

"'-lea"

DOWN
1Portant
2 TIlk Wildly
3 Small

11151nglng

llb(.

voice

-

Pan

20 caring
23 Playful

Opcn lnc~u•, •K

part

51 Towel word
57 "God~

vote

~ .,
I

13 Recent
(pret.j

18
20

21

quantlly

4V..tage

22

40 Mono
rational
ilothar
41 London
" PreMiltl"
gallery
Before thlo 42 Slngar
Ume
SUmac
Bearllke
43 Gypay ~
Egg-ahapad 44 Quote u an
Aclreu
authority

I

, Monday, June h 2001
An o bjective that was im ~
portant to you lolSt year that
didn't conie ;about should not
be written off: You're going
into a new cycle, and, with
continued, penistent effort, it
could happen.
~
CANCER (June 21-july 22)
,- Asking for trouble -by worrying about things that may
never happ en could plague

~

· Bankruptcy?
Problems?
"We Can Help'U

you again today. Your chances

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!

for success will be negated if.
you don 't an ticipate the out-

Ask For Mike Hindle

jor c~anges afe ahead for C:in-

come of events

positiv~ly .

Ma-

ctr in the comi ng year. Send

·800-272·6179 or

------...··

for your

Astro-Gr:~.ph

predic -

tions by mailing $2 and ·SASE
to A$tro-Graph , c/o thh
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758.
-Murray Hill Station, New
York , NY 101 56. Be sure to

•
;,

••
~

•••

state your Zodiac sign .
. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ·Unlc:n you w;~,tch your back
to&lt;1ay, someone who never returns what he or she borrow1
could sneak up on you and,

''

••
•
·••'
I

· Jeff Warner Ins. ..,~
••
992-5479
•
I

•----------t,r

I

c

I

I

1"'

1 ...,.,,r-1 0

JUNE 251

''•• .

, Cellular

15 Army
command
(2 _ ,
11 l=lber
clulter
17 Negative

""'

.

740-949-1405
740-742_..S015 or
Cell#
t-&amp;n-353-7022

=1•'11

• J
171U

6

What, according to
5 SliVer or
21Rowlng
23
RNglln
naod
24
a Turkish proverb, is
27 Chaima&gt;
t O'Hara
Glrr
45 A -for
"black as hell, strong
vehiCle
25 Spflllha
......
30S-32 Nanlucllal, 7 Perfect
beano
47 Singing
as death, sweet as
• Small
e.g.
27 Brewer'o
Brotherl
love"?
34AclrHa
container
grain
48 C.OU
8 Sunrlu
Last week, we
Dahl
28 Start lha
feature•
direction
35 ThNtor
pobr pol 50 Curly leHer
looked at normal takedlalrlcl
11 Hawaiian
29 Fragrance 52 Wall St.
out doubles, when the
31·-Abner"
31 Moot moist
expert
37 Belndabt 12 e::'on
33 Uon'o den 53 Coclldge
doubler is short in the
dlatrlct
to
38 Small lizard · nickname
opener's suit and has
HE THINKS MY BUTTER 'N' E&amp;&amp;
at least three cards in
MONEY'S HIDDEN IN THAR!!
each of the unbid
suits. The normal
hand shapes are 4-4-3"
2, 4-4-4-1 and 5-4-40, with 5-3-3-2 possible if the five-card suit
;;;;:
is a minor. However,
if the doubler has a
good 17 high-card
points or more, he can
have any distribution.
He shows his extra
power on the second .•
round.
·
· ...
Look at North's
raise to two spades.
How m:~,ny points
0
I
I
does it promise?
The answer .comes
CELEBRITY CIPHER
from the logic of the
by Lule Campos
game. South's miniCelebrlly Clphor etyptograma ora created from quotations by flrnotJI
people, paot and p,.HOI. Each leHor In tl1o cipher alandalor another.
mum one-spade bid
Today's cJUII: S equals C
showed 0-8 points. If
N ol'th knows game is
'LGKBUB
XGI'Z
KOI
PIF
impossible,
he passes.
.
IT W\:) 50 1-\uc.t\ JlJNK lt-1 One spade must be a
NUZZUK
JGK
TU
ZLPI
Ii', :iOMf.OI.l£ I~ U(o,f(£
. sane contract. To bid
PIFNGXF
UVBU;
H
DOBZ
TO 1-\ISI~ IT~ /'1.
again, North is saying
that game might still
JHIX
GOZ
LQC
ZLUF
CPIZ
be achievable. So, he
must have at least 17
ZG
NU
KHXXUI . '
CHVVHU
points, making a comLPKZPSY
bined 25 feasible.
Tlie raise· to two
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I saw what happened to Elvia Pre~ley
spades shows 17-19
which Ia why 1 never wanted to be a star In the first place. Goldie Maw.n .' •.
•
'
pointr •(wit~ four-cata ··
support).
.----~=--:;:-, ~r--:::=-=====~-, South's h:lnd, which
~
5HE's LIKE ~
. ht
-V
ELEPHANT IN
eva Jua t es t o etg
I
so MANY WAYS.
points (counting one
Rearrange l.tttrl of
I '
for the doubleton), is
four ocrombled warda
low 1o lorm four olmple wcr·da.'
worth game.
West leads the heart
PURNGS
king.
Knowing
from
1---....--1
I -.-I.......
12...,.1-..,.1--1 ' \~
West's opening bid
. that the diamonds
A L N 'G
probably won't split
3
4
L.:....:.;;_.;;,_.:_,..-"'-:..:.i..:.:.::.lll 3-2, South is faced
.
1
I
I
1
with four losers: one
spade, one heart and
My'from a visit home with boxes
came
--.-L_Ar-T-r.-E_v,--1·-·.~:· .back
two diamonds. He
15
·of new clothes. She says she
must get rid of a dia· 1..---1
, -.1..--'-.L,..
· ..1
couldn't help herself because she
mond by · taking the
,.......,....,.-:--::--:--:---;shops on the - - -- - • -'of the mo-.
club finesse, either imSCARA F
lment.
mediately or -- pref1--ri,t;....;lr-;.~,.;.;...;.,-_
Complete the chuckle quoted
. erably -- after drawing
~y filling in the missing words
L.-l--...L._.J-..1.---L---J you develop from step No. 3 below.
trumps. His 10 tricks
will be three spades,
A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
one heart,. two dia- · Cll'
IN THESE SQUARES
·
monds, three clubs
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
;;_.._.._..J and a heart ruff in the
GET ANSWER
dummy.
As it is a Turkish
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
proverb, you probably
Cuddle- Valve- Error- Packet - COVERED
.
deduced that it refers
"Don't
worry,"
the
salesman
g~inned
.
"ever;:thi~g
1s
to coffee.
under a warranty." "That means one thmg, the
man replied, "whatever happens isn't COVERED I"

,CaiiBob '

'

•

I.,

CAN'T I UNDERSTAND
~I-IAT T&gt;IE'{'IZ.E 51N61N6 '?

Geiteral!Speclallzed Typing
Temporary Omce Asslstence
Mailing Labels/Envelopes
Cassette Transcription
Numerous Business Support Services
· 25 years Secreterlfll Experience

.

740

,f;

I

co.strudlon,
remodeiiDCo plumbln11o
eledtlcal, bome mal•

ul7t Into

0

74CH67-3224 or 740-867.0038 ::.

high IIChool at'

other arrangomen1a.
Packela will not be home thll
r-. Sludento wrn not be """"llted
10 portlclpo!w on beglmlng day H
paperwork II not compfotod,
Phyoicelo will be conduclld al Holz·
or Mtrgo Cllnfc on Juno 30 117 a.m.

-·••

SETH'S
LAWN
SERVICE

bl9 or small Jobs;

.....

.
....
....
.....
.....
" •• ·.....
·w...

1

,

J ~~~~,.,.,,.

...••

plumbing.

992·6215 .

paling In any 1portlng actlvily
C::
7•12 In lhe Soulham Lacal
Dlotrlot can be plcklld up In

'i

ILoctlll Slrlel, Pl.

drywall, room
additions, and

tee~• Plttmlling

Free Estlmales

p.olllclpallng In dlatrlct athlellca
EAITI!RN FALL 8PORT11
with lnla-ed communlly TUPPERS PLAINS - Ea...,.
"""· pllyn, and all oooches Locif athletet. gradea r.even
lhould attoncl. All play011 p.ortlc:l· ttvougn 12. playing f&amp;IIIPO!Ia (foot·
poting In opons 9-12 lhoukl aloo ball, volleyball, golf and cheertoacf.
""""' 1o the meerrng to dlocu• lng) should ~or to play on June
upcoming evenll with their _ . . 25 or Juno 9, from 5:30 1o 8:30 p.m.

llvl oooochM.

• Complete
Remodeling
,. :
Stop &amp; Compare · •••
FREE ESnMATES ·~

remodeling,

V. C. YOUNG Ill

\

=

• G1ntg18

~

• Aoollt111 l Guttora
• VInyl lldlflll • PalniiiiiJ

'

&lt;A oftlctio.
Paronte &lt;A l1uden1l ~ 3-12

.

SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
nME HEAT IN
BLOCKS 01/TIIA
OF DAMAGING
ULTIIAVIOLET RAYS .
fACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Rem alilting

LOCAL
SPORTS BOARD
.....
high ICim coloteriiiO diocu• lhe
lUlu,. &lt;A lhe orgonlzalloo and lhe

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMAU

·---·
·---·---Doclta
---

HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) - Tiger career after three rounds was at Pebble
Woods said he faced a daunting task Beach l~st year, when he was 1five
after a poor 4-over par opening "'und in behind.
the Buick Classic.
Garcia did not seem inclined to give
He was right.
Woods or anybody else an opening.
Woods was eight shots behind Sergio' He played the tight, hilly and thickly
· Garcia heading ·into Monday's final roughed Westchester Country Club
round of the rain-delayed Buick Classic. with caution Sunday, taking chances on
"It doesn't look like Tiger is playing as the shorter, easier holes _while keeping
well as he was;• Garcia said after a 5- the ball in play on the more dangerous
under 66 Sunday gave ' him a three- ones.
Coming o'ff birdies on Nos. 5 and 6,
round total of 12-under 201.
That was two strokes better than Scott Garcia nearly drove the green on the
Hoch, and three in front ofJ.P. Hayes.
short par-4, 326-yard seventh. With a
Garcia wasn't exactly ruling Woods good lie in the rough, he lobbed a
out during the fil)al round of the tour- wedge from about 20 yards onto the
nament, which was disrupted by down- green and the ball rolled into the cup for
.
pours Thursday and Saturday. But Garcia an eagle.
"It was for sure a lot of happiness as I
did not seem unduly concerned about
· .the prospect ofWoods making a charge saw it going in," the 21 -year-old
Monday.
.
Spaniard said.
'
Birdies at 9, 17 and 18 offset bogeys at
"I mean, he can still shoot a good
round and finish well, but it's not in my 12 and 16, which Garcia blamed on
•
mind right now," Garcia said. ''I'm more "loose" shots.
focused on Scott Hoch and J.P. Hayes."
H,,ch, who played with Garcia on
Woods started off good Sunday, going Sunday, said it is a mistake to think of
4-under over the first nine holes to draw Garcia as playing in the same swashwithin two shots of Garcia and Hocb, buckling, grip-it-and-rip-it style as .felwho were tied after the second round at low Spaniard Seve Ballesteros.
.7-under and had not yet started.
"He hits it much better ihan Seve
. But Woods faded on the second nine did," Hocb said. "He didn't miss many ·
at the Westchester Country Club. He . shots. He is the exact opposite of Seve."
missed greens with iron approaches on
Garcia has the PGA tour's best overall
Nos. 11 and 17 for bogeys and fa iled to drive rating.
Garcia is seeking his second PGA vichit the green in two on· the par-5 18th
with a 6-iron. He parred a hole he was tory, following a win at Colonial five
thinking of making eagle on.
weeks ago. One of his near misses came
Woods' 3-under 68 left him at 4- last year at the Buick Classic, when he
under for the tournament and tied for briefly had a three-stroke lead, but
12th. He had climbed back into con- squandered it on .the last nine.
tention with a second-round 66 after
Last year, Garcia drove into the tree.s
on No. 11, tried a too-ambitious shot
the 4-over 75 in his opening round.
Woods said he'd have to shoot a phe- toward the green, landed in the deep
nomenal score and hope those above rough and eventually took a double
him on the leaderboal)i will lose ground bogey en route to a third-place finish .
Garcia made aiiJlost the identical ho.ok
to give him any chance of winning.
"When you're this far behind, you're off the tee as in 2000, but this time he
going to need a little bit of help;' Woods said he could swing without hitting a
said.
branch. He hooked a S-iron to about
Woods' biggest comeback of his PGA 20-feet from the pin and made par.

riiHifng Tu&lt;oodoy at 7:30 p.m. In lhe

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

•'

•New Homes

Exclusive·
Mohawk Dealer
•Can&gt;et
• lllrdwoocl floorini
• Cotllolealll
fRff ESTIMATES
Phone (304J 674-6100

---

••••

0

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Garcia leads at Buick Classic

Boceltrl will hold an emergency

METAL CULVERT
GEQTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

.....

·youNG'S

a

IOUTHIRN 1008TEII8
RACINE ~ The Soutl]em ~letlc

EXPRESS

.....

42 Not+uftl

40 F -

red 48 GeiU.J*P
41 Del-,
. divider
Iowa
14 T..,la
51 Wllehlnglon

KJ l

• 'J J
• J 1.

=

...........

3t Fertlllar

1 Chooaa
loom....
. 10
12 llaed

1

Dealer; West
Vulneral»c: Both

·ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

~40) 992·5072

public Nollce
On
June
27, · 30r.t.
beginning at t:OO a.m.,
Anyone I~ In
a viewing of the lheu road chang••
following rci•de In c a n
me •
Scipio T-nahlp will Commlulonara altha
be held: · Townehlp Scipio VoluniMr Fire
Ro•d 21$ (Bowers Department at 11:00
Road) beginning at a.m. Wednaadey, Juna
Townahlp Road 3 27, for tha viewing.
(Woodyard Road) for Tha haarlng Ia ... lor
0.111 Mile (Vacation); Thuradey, June 28, at
Townahlp Road 74 10:30 a.m. at the
(Ooclor Jonea Road) Commlulonar'a
rlghloof-way beginning Office at their .regular
at tha Oead End (0.23 -lng.
·
mile eaat of .Junction 81111 25, 2001

·'

-...,...n

JuotP. . UK

I

(under PomeroyMason Bridge)

Townahlp Road 3)
thence eaaterly to
Scipio Townehlp Road
53 (Gibaon Road), II
eny rtghl-of.way exl...
(V-.on); 0.13 mile of
. Townehlp R011d, to be
• lmown . . Qrwn Roed,
loc•t•d entirely ·In
Section 30 Mel having
a rtghl.gf _ , width or

...Ung.

GRAVEL
SAND
UMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

••

RIVERSIDE
STORAGE
The
II and
Townahlp
wUI hold IMir Annual
Budget MHIIng ·on
Mondey, July 2, 2001
et 5 p .M. at the
Ruttencl Fire Station,
l.o llowlng by regular

CAN HELP

Spout

'lbpooll• FIJI Dirt

•N~ngHome

WE

Gutters- Down

'GravdSud'

~---,

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

Rooting • Home
llllntenanc:e-

f.ltddlcporl 01110 -15760

•

K Q It I
Q If I I
Q If 5

•
•
•

eJ

t A

:

• IIIII I
• • J J
• .K 7 I -1
• AI

740 -992 -1101
or 992-2753

.------ - -

Howardl.·
Wrltesel

ACROSS

. .111 ..1

6 KQJf

Free E&lt;;tnnates

(NO SUNDAY CAllS)

...
. ..

PHILLIP
ALDER

~

AddllloM • Roon.a

740-992·7599

•
~

NEA Crossword Puzzle

~,j

• wa.dcnrs • Roe.

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

•JUDO•

-

•
'

C'MIIIZ'Mliiiii!SIDIIIIIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

The Dally Sentinel• Pap !5

•

without warning, outmaneu ~
ver you into giving him or her
a loan.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
~- The way to chalk up points
roday iJ to be .as truly con~ ·
cerned about others as yo u are

yo~'re' involved today

of yourself. If you choose 'to
be too self-serving, the oppo site will be true.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cr. 23) · - Refuse to be a vi ctin~ of
your own f:mltY' memory today simply because it's ·more
conv enient. Remember the
past and don't n:peH an old
utiuake rhat created complicatio ns for you previously.
SCORPIO (Ocr. 24-Nov.
22) -- Should you have to associate today wi th a person
who makes you fed unr.:omfort;ible, be on yo ur best behavior. If you show signs of
dislike, ir could cast a· sh:~dow
over the entire event . .
SAGiTTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- When negoti&gt;ting
today. tak~ care not to push
your poinu over the line. You
could risk turning 3 good deal
into a bununer by forcing others to rebel.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19} -- Som~[imes the ·
trappings of pow~r ?r ~utw.ud
appearanc~s c:~n mtiiUldate us .
Today, should you 'be conframed w ith 5\ICh a fear, remember they :ac bu{ figme11ts
of your imagination .
AQUARIUS Qan. 20·F,b.
J 9) ~- Th o~c wir h w hom

are apt

to ctoj usi the oppositl' in· r'c ~

bellion, should you attempt to
manipulate or co ntrol them t()
· ·serve your. purposes. flc respectful of their nct·ds.
PISCES (Feb. 20-M,ch 20)
~~ Standing your grOund can
be admirable, but sheer stubbornness has no redeeming

v.aluCs . If you're unable ro di~­
tinguis h between the two today , a lot of wasted energy

w1ll be expended.
ARIES (Morrh2 1-Aprii11J)
-~ In deference of ple.1surahlc
purslliu today, you could neglc!'ct respons1hi litiL'S t h~t re.
qui re your ancqtion. Try to
do a few tasks, because tomorrow will mean :1 hc:lvier
workload .
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) ~- Y'pu'rt: likely to nunt: .
your extrav:agant whints today
and totally 1gnon: 'Vhat it
could mean to you l:~ter. Unfoimn.ately . you will be an ~:~n ­
happy camper down the line
when you find ~·ourself broke .
GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
•• It'll b~ t:ntirdy itp to your
.:mit ude todaY as to whether
you find this 3 good or bad
day. If yOu' re too fo cused o n
your w;~nts, you'll probably
opt for the latter.

·'

·I'

�.

Mondlly, June 25, 2001

,_..,, June 25, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

AtLEYoor
•

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTimJ

BISSELL
IIUIL.DIM INC.
New~·\'laJI

Sldlaa • N"' Ganps
•Rz;'
t

•

...

....•••

Rr·&lt; k•, R '"iupp Aqenl

Box 'R9

Loce1843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical

•Mulch

FINEdnllll

~Senlca

949-1405
591·5(111

992-3470

Public Notice

10 x10 530.00
10 X 20 $50.00

·

(I) 25, 2001
1tc

•-

I

.

PHYII:AL FORMS AVAILABLE

RACINE - Sporll Phyalcal form•
for Iff - · plamlng on portlcl·

,,

740-~·1871

· KENSINGTON

I

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHHOL.OOY ;;
KEEPS THE .

I
l

·~

lhe hfWI - dal~.
olllee v
a.m.-3:30p.m.
Phyllcal dalea will bo announced

law.

1185-33211 between
7:3o a.m. and 2:30 p.m. lo make

small
landscaplnv
Shoun Seth
(740) 985~3563
(740) 541-3820

-n

DONNIE -E8 CAMP
POINT PLEASANT, W,VO - Flon·
da asalatanl
oooch tJon.
nl&lt;t Jonot will be t.&gt;klfng the 15!11
Annual Donnie 8alllelbofl
C.Omp In Poln! PfMoant on July 2·

at lhe hJW~oc- offlee.
A porant or legal guardian mUll 5.
accomp.ony all atl11otoo. SludMII ,o\ppllee- 1n1 available at local
who cannot alllnd one of the res;.- b o l l - or Ill' calling 875-4402.
tratlon ponO&lt;Io ohould contacl lhe

\

Limi~W..R ·

•

. TerryLamm

' -.:j

HOW 00 YOJ JU~T ~IT

.992·0739

1J.IEgf. WHILE. M C:HX.i.
1~1\'E.~D.iTIO~I'D

lt-.\"2'

Tr•llere
1o~~~~~
Drl-y.
• Equipment cluned clegrNUd

Jeff Stethem

Hlll't Sell

Wltothlr y..•.. trying lo
tau wolglrt, •fllllllomont
yottr dlollor moxlmum
nutrition, or ,.., look your

Ster•e•

...!Itt wltll . . boll

211170 B11h1n Road
R•clne, Ohio

.............. prcducto,

Hotllllllo lnllmM...., hll
110t1111hlng for ""'Y-·
Call YOIIt'lnclojlondont

Htr'*lft dlolrlbutor,
JIL Ettlltfhlu
(740}Hf.31:!1

Wt con poro-lla a

.provram lot ,.,,

45771

740.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' )130'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

....

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

~----1

CeH 740•!111•2782 740•1191o0477
Home740•9811•4218
Loweat

Lose Weight Now
Ask Me How

3-D
CONSTRUCTION
FrHeaUmatea,
lnaured
Speclalluln new

··~75·7124
1-800-250·!1077
Resideatial . Ccimmerdal New Construdlon
Stoles &amp;nice Installation

Speclallzl.. In Sheet Mttal Ductwork
"Trane' Sales &amp; &amp;nice Jlor
Gallia, Moson, a'nd Melp Counties
Liunstd and ln....-.d
· WV 005176

teauee, and repair
porcbtl, II deekl.

Owner
Charles R.

Dill

. Phoae992-7445
c.l
591·9254

,......_O_F....F--IC~E~EX~P....R~ES~S~.., . '
BUSINESS SERVICES ••· Professional Wort at
· Affordable Raw

.,·,

2422

IIBCilllam

'

IT'~ BEAUTIFUL, BUT UJI-I'(

• Bucket Truck

YOUR

COIRUCTORS, INC.

CQHCBi!~

740-986-3948

CON~REIF/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footen, WIIII,'Steptp~
Flat Work, ·

RepiKenienta, • Wolltl
and Drivn • Stendl
Crete Free Eallmaln
Senlna Ohio al!d W.V.
WVI0317U

MILL END
FABRICS
M•chlne Quilting

EARNHARTI3
pillow penels
740-992·3673

Pomeroy Eaglee
Club Bingo

On Thurldllya
At 6:30P.M.
• M1ln St,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Cov-H
SSOO.oo Sterburst
Progreulve top II

Uc.IHJQ.50

IMONDAY

Tree Service
• Stump Grinding

P/B
Rtoelne, Ohio 41771

'

""'

• Top • Removal • Trim

u

CQNNECJ!QN
·Quality Drlvlwaye,'
Patlol, Sldmlk
..
'
26 yea11 experlerice
Free Estimates

ll typeso
RoQfs,
Specialist

614-747-1715

Bring In your !lJNIIr work
we'll get you going for
Spring
Every Spring Tun ..up .
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
N•w "fUif"!'ent arriving dilly
Sit Man~lng, Wayne or Jim
or • REAL DEAL on 1 new lawn tl'lctor,
lawn mover or weld trimmer.

GRf\VELYTRACTOR
' Salea &amp; Service
204 Cqndor St.
Pomeroy

992-2975

54=

55

"'-lea"

DOWN
1Portant
2 TIlk Wildly
3 Small

11151nglng

llb(.

voice

-

Pan

20 caring
23 Playful

Opcn lnc~u•, •K

part

51 Towel word
57 "God~

vote

~ .,
I

13 Recent
(pret.j

18
20

21

quantlly

4V..tage

22

40 Mono
rational
ilothar
41 London
" PreMiltl"
gallery
Before thlo 42 Slngar
Ume
SUmac
Bearllke
43 Gypay ~
Egg-ahapad 44 Quote u an
Aclreu
authority

I

, Monday, June h 2001
An o bjective that was im ~
portant to you lolSt year that
didn't conie ;about should not
be written off: You're going
into a new cycle, and, with
continued, penistent effort, it
could happen.
~
CANCER (June 21-july 22)
,- Asking for trouble -by worrying about things that may
never happ en could plague

~

· Bankruptcy?
Problems?
"We Can Help'U

you again today. Your chances

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!

for success will be negated if.
you don 't an ticipate the out-

Ask For Mike Hindle

jor c~anges afe ahead for C:in-

come of events

positiv~ly .

Ma-

ctr in the comi ng year. Send

·800-272·6179 or

------...··

for your

Astro-Gr:~.ph

predic -

tions by mailing $2 and ·SASE
to A$tro-Graph , c/o thh
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758.
-Murray Hill Station, New
York , NY 101 56. Be sure to

•
;,

••
~

•••

state your Zodiac sign .
. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ·Unlc:n you w;~,tch your back
to&lt;1ay, someone who never returns what he or she borrow1
could sneak up on you and,

''

••
•
·••'
I

· Jeff Warner Ins. ..,~
••
992-5479
•
I

•----------t,r

I

c

I

I

1"'

1 ...,.,,r-1 0

JUNE 251

''•• .

, Cellular

15 Army
command
(2 _ ,
11 l=lber
clulter
17 Negative

""'

.

740-949-1405
740-742_..S015 or
Cell#
t-&amp;n-353-7022

=1•'11

• J
171U

6

What, according to
5 SliVer or
21Rowlng
23
RNglln
naod
24
a Turkish proverb, is
27 Chaima&gt;
t O'Hara
Glrr
45 A -for
"black as hell, strong
vehiCle
25 Spflllha
......
30S-32 Nanlucllal, 7 Perfect
beano
47 Singing
as death, sweet as
• Small
e.g.
27 Brewer'o
Brotherl
love"?
34AclrHa
container
grain
48 C.OU
8 Sunrlu
Last week, we
Dahl
28 Start lha
feature•
direction
35 ThNtor
pobr pol 50 Curly leHer
looked at normal takedlalrlcl
11 Hawaiian
29 Fragrance 52 Wall St.
out doubles, when the
31·-Abner"
31 Moot moist
expert
37 Belndabt 12 e::'on
33 Uon'o den 53 Coclldge
doubler is short in the
dlatrlct
to
38 Small lizard · nickname
opener's suit and has
HE THINKS MY BUTTER 'N' E&amp;&amp;
at least three cards in
MONEY'S HIDDEN IN THAR!!
each of the unbid
suits. The normal
hand shapes are 4-4-3"
2, 4-4-4-1 and 5-4-40, with 5-3-3-2 possible if the five-card suit
;;;;:
is a minor. However,
if the doubler has a
good 17 high-card
points or more, he can
have any distribution.
He shows his extra
power on the second .•
round.
·
· ...
Look at North's
raise to two spades.
How m:~,ny points
0
I
I
does it promise?
The answer .comes
CELEBRITY CIPHER
from the logic of the
by Lule Campos
game. South's miniCelebrlly Clphor etyptograma ora created from quotations by flrnotJI
people, paot and p,.HOI. Each leHor In tl1o cipher alandalor another.
mum one-spade bid
Today's cJUII: S equals C
showed 0-8 points. If
N ol'th knows game is
'LGKBUB
XGI'Z
KOI
PIF
impossible,
he passes.
.
IT W\:) 50 1-\uc.t\ JlJNK lt-1 One spade must be a
NUZZUK
JGK
TU
ZLPI
Ii', :iOMf.OI.l£ I~ U(o,f(£
. sane contract. To bid
PIFNGXF
UVBU;
H
DOBZ
TO 1-\ISI~ IT~ /'1.
again, North is saying
that game might still
JHIX
GOZ
LQC
ZLUF
CPIZ
be achievable. So, he
must have at least 17
ZG
NU
KHXXUI . '
CHVVHU
points, making a comLPKZPSY
bined 25 feasible.
Tlie raise· to two
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I saw what happened to Elvia Pre~ley
spades shows 17-19
which Ia why 1 never wanted to be a star In the first place. Goldie Maw.n .' •.
•
'
pointr •(wit~ four-cata ··
support).
.----~=--:;:-, ~r--:::=-=====~-, South's h:lnd, which
~
5HE's LIKE ~
. ht
-V
ELEPHANT IN
eva Jua t es t o etg
I
so MANY WAYS.
points (counting one
Rearrange l.tttrl of
I '
for the doubleton), is
four ocrombled warda
low 1o lorm four olmple wcr·da.'
worth game.
West leads the heart
PURNGS
king.
Knowing
from
1---....--1
I -.-I.......
12...,.1-..,.1--1 ' \~
West's opening bid
. that the diamonds
A L N 'G
probably won't split
3
4
L.:....:.;;_.;;,_.:_,..-"'-:..:.i..:.:.::.lll 3-2, South is faced
.
1
I
I
1
with four losers: one
spade, one heart and
My'from a visit home with boxes
came
--.-L_Ar-T-r.-E_v,--1·-·.~:· .back
two diamonds. He
15
·of new clothes. She says she
must get rid of a dia· 1..---1
, -.1..--'-.L,..
· ..1
couldn't help herself because she
mond by · taking the
,.......,....,.-:--::--:--:---;shops on the - - -- - • -'of the mo-.
club finesse, either imSCARA F
lment.
mediately or -- pref1--ri,t;....;lr-;.~,.;.;...;.,-_
Complete the chuckle quoted
. erably -- after drawing
~y filling in the missing words
L.-l--...L._.J-..1.---L---J you develop from step No. 3 below.
trumps. His 10 tricks
will be three spades,
A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
one heart,. two dia- · Cll'
IN THESE SQUARES
·
monds, three clubs
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
;;_.._.._..J and a heart ruff in the
GET ANSWER
dummy.
As it is a Turkish
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
proverb, you probably
Cuddle- Valve- Error- Packet - COVERED
.
deduced that it refers
"Don't
worry,"
the
salesman
g~inned
.
"ever;:thi~g
1s
to coffee.
under a warranty." "That means one thmg, the
man replied, "whatever happens isn't COVERED I"

,CaiiBob '

'

•

I.,

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~I-IAT T&gt;IE'{'IZ.E 51N61N6 '?

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10 portlclpo!w on beglmlng day H
paperwork II not compfotod,
Phyoicelo will be conduclld al Holz·
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EAITI!RN FALL 8PORT11
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poting In opons 9-12 lhoukl aloo ball, volleyball, golf and cheertoacf.
""""' 1o the meerrng to dlocu• lng) should ~or to play on June
upcoming evenll with their _ . . 25 or Juno 9, from 5:30 1o 8:30 p.m.

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SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
nME HEAT IN
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OF DAMAGING
ULTIIAVIOLET RAYS .
fACTORY DIRECT
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Rem alilting

LOCAL
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high ICim coloteriiiO diocu• lhe
lUlu,. &lt;A lhe orgonlzalloo and lhe

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMAU

·---·
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---

HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) - Tiger career after three rounds was at Pebble
Woods said he faced a daunting task Beach l~st year, when he was 1five
after a poor 4-over par opening "'und in behind.
the Buick Classic.
Garcia did not seem inclined to give
He was right.
Woods or anybody else an opening.
Woods was eight shots behind Sergio' He played the tight, hilly and thickly
· Garcia heading ·into Monday's final roughed Westchester Country Club
round of the rain-delayed Buick Classic. with caution Sunday, taking chances on
"It doesn't look like Tiger is playing as the shorter, easier holes _while keeping
well as he was;• Garcia said after a 5- the ball in play on the more dangerous
under 66 Sunday gave ' him a three- ones.
Coming o'ff birdies on Nos. 5 and 6,
round total of 12-under 201.
That was two strokes better than Scott Garcia nearly drove the green on the
Hoch, and three in front ofJ.P. Hayes.
short par-4, 326-yard seventh. With a
Garcia wasn't exactly ruling Woods good lie in the rough, he lobbed a
out during the fil)al round of the tour- wedge from about 20 yards onto the
nament, which was disrupted by down- green and the ball rolled into the cup for
.
pours Thursday and Saturday. But Garcia an eagle.
"It was for sure a lot of happiness as I
did not seem unduly concerned about
· .the prospect ofWoods making a charge saw it going in," the 21 -year-old
Monday.
.
Spaniard said.
'
Birdies at 9, 17 and 18 offset bogeys at
"I mean, he can still shoot a good
round and finish well, but it's not in my 12 and 16, which Garcia blamed on
•
mind right now," Garcia said. ''I'm more "loose" shots.
focused on Scott Hoch and J.P. Hayes."
H,,ch, who played with Garcia on
Woods started off good Sunday, going Sunday, said it is a mistake to think of
4-under over the first nine holes to draw Garcia as playing in the same swashwithin two shots of Garcia and Hocb, buckling, grip-it-and-rip-it style as .felwho were tied after the second round at low Spaniard Seve Ballesteros.
.7-under and had not yet started.
"He hits it much better ihan Seve
. But Woods faded on the second nine did," Hocb said. "He didn't miss many ·
at the Westchester Country Club. He . shots. He is the exact opposite of Seve."
missed greens with iron approaches on
Garcia has the PGA tour's best overall
Nos. 11 and 17 for bogeys and fa iled to drive rating.
Garcia is seeking his second PGA vichit the green in two on· the par-5 18th
with a 6-iron. He parred a hole he was tory, following a win at Colonial five
thinking of making eagle on.
weeks ago. One of his near misses came
Woods' 3-under 68 left him at 4- last year at the Buick Classic, when he
under for the tournament and tied for briefly had a three-stroke lead, but
12th. He had climbed back into con- squandered it on .the last nine.
tention with a second-round 66 after
Last year, Garcia drove into the tree.s
on No. 11, tried a too-ambitious shot
the 4-over 75 in his opening round.
Woods said he'd have to shoot a phe- toward the green, landed in the deep
nomenal score and hope those above rough and eventually took a double
him on the leaderboal)i will lose ground bogey en route to a third-place finish .
Garcia made aiiJlost the identical ho.ok
to give him any chance of winning.
"When you're this far behind, you're off the tee as in 2000, but this time he
going to need a little bit of help;' Woods said he could swing without hitting a
said.
branch. He hooked a S-iron to about
Woods' biggest comeback of his PGA 20-feet from the pin and made par.

riiHifng Tu&lt;oodoy at 7:30 p.m. In lhe

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Garcia leads at Buick Classic

Boceltrl will hold an emergency

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·ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

~40) 992·5072

public Nollce
On
June
27, · 30r.t.
beginning at t:OO a.m.,
Anyone I~ In
a viewing of the lheu road chang••
following rci•de In c a n
me •
Scipio T-nahlp will Commlulonara altha
be held: · Townehlp Scipio VoluniMr Fire
Ro•d 21$ (Bowers Department at 11:00
Road) beginning at a.m. Wednaadey, Juna
Townahlp Road 3 27, for tha viewing.
(Woodyard Road) for Tha haarlng Ia ... lor
0.111 Mile (Vacation); Thuradey, June 28, at
Townahlp Road 74 10:30 a.m. at the
(Ooclor Jonea Road) Commlulonar'a
rlghloof-way beginning Office at their .regular
at tha Oead End (0.23 -lng.
·
mile eaat of .Junction 81111 25, 2001

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Townahlp Road 3)
thence eaaterly to
Scipio Townehlp Road
53 (Gibaon Road), II
eny rtghl-of.way exl...
(V-.on); 0.13 mile of
. Townehlp R011d, to be
• lmown . . Qrwn Roed,
loc•t•d entirely ·In
Section 30 Mel having
a rtghl.gf _ , width or

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The
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Mondey, July 2, 2001
et 5 p .M. at the
Ruttencl Fire Station,
l.o llowlng by regular

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without warning, outmaneu ~
ver you into giving him or her
a loan.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
~- The way to chalk up points
roday iJ to be .as truly con~ ·
cerned about others as yo u are

yo~'re' involved today

of yourself. If you choose 'to
be too self-serving, the oppo site will be true.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cr. 23) · - Refuse to be a vi ctin~ of
your own f:mltY' memory today simply because it's ·more
conv enient. Remember the
past and don't n:peH an old
utiuake rhat created complicatio ns for you previously.
SCORPIO (Ocr. 24-Nov.
22) -- Should you have to associate today wi th a person
who makes you fed unr.:omfort;ible, be on yo ur best behavior. If you show signs of
dislike, ir could cast a· sh:~dow
over the entire event . .
SAGiTTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- When negoti&gt;ting
today. tak~ care not to push
your poinu over the line. You
could risk turning 3 good deal
into a bununer by forcing others to rebel.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19} -- Som~[imes the ·
trappings of pow~r ?r ~utw.ud
appearanc~s c:~n mtiiUldate us .
Today, should you 'be conframed w ith 5\ICh a fear, remember they :ac bu{ figme11ts
of your imagination .
AQUARIUS Qan. 20·F,b.
J 9) ~- Th o~c wir h w hom

are apt

to ctoj usi the oppositl' in· r'c ~

bellion, should you attempt to
manipulate or co ntrol them t()
· ·serve your. purposes. flc respectful of their nct·ds.
PISCES (Feb. 20-M,ch 20)
~~ Standing your grOund can
be admirable, but sheer stubbornness has no redeeming

v.aluCs . If you're unable ro di~­
tinguis h between the two today , a lot of wasted energy

w1ll be expended.
ARIES (Morrh2 1-Aprii11J)
-~ In deference of ple.1surahlc
purslliu today, you could neglc!'ct respons1hi litiL'S t h~t re.
qui re your ancqtion. Try to
do a few tasks, because tomorrow will mean :1 hc:lvier
workload .
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) ~- Y'pu'rt: likely to nunt: .
your extrav:agant whints today
and totally 1gnon: 'Vhat it
could mean to you l:~ter. Unfoimn.ately . you will be an ~:~n ­
happy camper down the line
when you find ~·ourself broke .
GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
•• It'll b~ t:ntirdy itp to your
.:mit ude todaY as to whether
you find this 3 good or bad
day. If yOu' re too fo cused o n
your w;~nts, you'll probably
opt for the latter.

·'

·I'

�J

SPOilS: Yankees drop Tribe 8-7,

The Daily Sen~el

Cardinals keep Bonds·in the
park; Braves, Brewers ~n
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mark McGwire's teammates
'
sIowed down B:ury B on ds
run at Big Mac's record for
one night.
Bonds Oied out four times
. and walked once Sunday night
as the St. Louis Cardinals beat
the San Francisco Giants 7- 3.
fj
Bonds was 1- or-9 with one
homer and six walks in the
·
B h
t hree-game senes at usc
Stadium, where McGwire
broke Roger Maris' home run
record and h1t No. 70 m 1998.
Bonds flied out four times to
left - one a foul ball - and
remained at 39 homers.
"He's their most dangerous
hitter," Cardinals manager
"'ony
La Ru••a sa1'd "He got us
1•
once and it was a big blow, but
.
. .
h
w~ end e d up wmmng t e
game he got us in.
·
· "He 's a very,
very tou gh ou t
and everything he's doing is
legitimate."
McGwire is the fastest ever
.. . . 90
.
to 40, d omg It m
games m
1998, and this was the Giants'
75th game. Bonds already has
hit more homers before the
AU-Star game than any player
in history, and the Giants have
13 games remaining before the
break.
Morris (10-4) allowed two
runs and seven hits in si.Jc
innings. He worked out of a
bases-loaded jam in the sec· ond and sixth innings, and
stranded two runners in the
BY

N

•

third and fourth.
Morris has won seven
straight at home and is 8-1
there with a 1.61 ERA. Dave
Veres got the last out for his
lith save in 12 chances.
Jim Edmonds' two-run double off Russ Ortiz (8-5) gave
· the Cardinals a 3~2 lead in the
filth and he had an RBI single
in the third.

Braves 8, Mets 4
Br1·an Jo•dan hit a ·tiebreak'
ing three-run homer in a seven th-inning rally that be""n
,· with Rafael Furcal'~ bunt double, as Atlanta swept the threegame series at Shea Stadium.
Furcal went 4-for-5 for the
first four-hit game of his
career, score d th ree runs an d
stole a pair of bases.
Jason Marquis (2-1) got his
first career win as a starter.Javy
c
Lopez a1so hom ered .or
Atlanta, which outhit the Mets
15-9.
Brewers 6, Cubs 3
&lt;"
Ben Sheets beat Chicago ,or
the third time in as many
starts, and Milwaukee hit three
homers to complete a threegame sweep at Wrigley Field.
Sheets (9-4), who pitched
the gold-medal winning game
for the 2000 . U.S. Olympic
team, won his fifth straight
decision despite giving up two
homers to Matt Stairs.
Expos 11, Pirates 4
Peter Bergeron had four hits
and Mike Mordecai .had two

,__.._,.

Padres 6, Dodgen 1

Ent

AmltlceooiAigue

W

L

Pet.

Philadelphia

42 31 .575

GB

A1!an1a

40

34

-

39

.540
.5'Z1
.434
.395

112
3 112
10 112
13 112

Chicago

:~.:..
Hoooton

~=
Arizona

San Francisco

33
30

35

43
46

~~ Pel
43 30 .589
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38 35 .52t

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5

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35

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Los Angelos
38 .5t3 1 112
COlorado
37 38 .493"
e
11
San Diego
35 40 .467
lkonoloy'a
Atlanta e. N.Y. Mots 4
Montroolll • PittsbtJ1?14
Milwaukee 6, Chicago CubS 3

Enl

8ootun
New York
Toronto

Baltimore

Tampa Bay

~-=

g:,:r

Ka,nsas City
Seattle

Anaheim

oakland

Tel181

W
43

L
30

Pet.
.589

08

41

32

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7 112
9 112
21 112

36
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39

Adam Earon (8-J) pitched a
three-hitter for his first complete-game .victory as San
Diego swept · the three-game
series at Los Angeles.
Phil Nevin homered and
drove in three (Uns, and Bubba
Trammell hit a cwo~run single
for the Padres.

AMERICAN
LEAGUE

Devil Rayt S,Yanbe1 4
The Devil Rays, who at 2252 have the majors' worst
Hou- 7, Clncl_. s
e - 4, te.n- City z
record, were 0-44 when trail~~~ 3 ;
~~;.,:; 3
ing after seven innings. That
San Diego 6, Los AngelOS 1
MootciOIV'• GooMt
changed when they scored
8-4llatllelrolt(HoltB-5l· · four times in the eighth to
St. Louls 7, SanFranciocoS
M-.-(Mayo
lloncl&lt;ty'o GooMt
1:05 p.m.
....,_(Vazquez 5-9) at Florida (Burnett Tampa Bay (Rupe4-6) at Booton (Cone 2· beat the New York Yankees 51), 7'05 p.m:
7:05p.m.
s-st.
4 at home.
, Atlanta
(Maddux 7·5) at Phiadelphia Baltimore
(R~ ~)at Toronto (Hami~
(DaaiB-1), 7:05p.m.
toll 3--4), 7:05Pm.
The Devil Rays kept New
Milwaukee (LIMliU~ 3-1) at Pittsburgh C - (Finley 4-4) II N.Y. Y.,._ vc k L..
•
'th'
(Williams 2-2), 7,05 p.m.
(-1·2), 7,05 p.m.
ror num movmg WI m one
N.Y. Meta (Lalter 4-5) at Chicago Cuba · Texu (Rogo,. 3-4} at Anaheim (Ortil5- game of first-place Boston;
8' 05 p.m.
(Tavarez
5-4),
wh1'ch lost 5-2 at home to
San Diego
(Jarvis
s-n at Colorado (Cha· 51· 10'05 p.m.
con 4-4), 9:05p.m.
Toronto, in the AL East. The
8 · 3 l at Arizooa (Bati~ta 4~~:
~M~ier
Yankees lost for just the third ·
3
Los Angeles (Park 8-4) at San Francisco
time in 34 games they've taken
(Gardner 3-5}, 10:15 p.m.
.
th ·gh h
L....,,.,...,__,.--.,..,..-,..-------.,....,..---...,..,....,.......,..--...l .a Iead mto
e e1 t .
of his three hits in a seven-run ended a season-high six-game
Blue Jays 5, Red Sox 2
sixth inning for visiting Mon- losing streak.
Homer Bush's tiebreaking
treal.
Walker, who was 1-for-6 single in the eighth inning led
Troy Mattes (1-0) got his against Johnson (9-5), didn't Toronto over Boston and gave
first major league victory.Joe start because of a sore lett the Blue Jays their first threeBeimel (3-3) gave up seven hamstring but came off the game sweep at Fenway Park in
runs and 12 hits in five-plus bench to deliver the key hit' in nearly 12 years.
innings.
. the sixth inning.
'1\rins 14, Tigers S
Rockies 7,
Phillies 9, Marlins 3
Cristian Guzman hit his first
Diamondbacks 6
Bobby Abreu went 3-for-5 grand slam an~ drove in a
Pinch-hitter Larry Walker with three RBis and . an career-high six runs to lead
hit a two-run single off Randy inside-the-park homer for visiting
Minnesota
over
Johnson as host Colorado Philadelphia.
· Detroit.

a.mn

Minnesota won
second time in 10 g;unes ancl
snapped Detroit's four-gaiD!
winning streak. The Tige•
committed four errors and ha.1
two passed balls.
r
Eric Milton (8-3) overcall)e
consecutive homers to Ro~
Fick, Juan Encarnaoon and
Shane Halter in Detroit's five:run second inning to' win his
third straight decision.

Bruce Chen (J-4) gave up
two runs and three hits in live
mmngs.

MLB STANDINGS
New York
Montrool

.,
for just thJ

lkonoloy'aGooMt
Toronto 5. 8ooton 2
Minneoota 14.Delrolt 5
Tampa Bay 5. N.Y..Yank- 4
ChiCago Wllilll Sox 6, Baltimore 2

White Sox 8, Orioles 2
Chicago finally got back tq
the .500 mark, defeating rook;
ie Josh Towers (5-2) at Bal~·
more.
~
Royce
Clayton,
Josl ·
Canseco and Ray . Durhad
had two hits and two RBG
apiece for the White So~
whose 14 hits matched a sea·son high.
::i'

1

Marinen. 7, Angels 3 "'
Bret Boone hit his 20th
home run as host SeatdF
avoided its first series sweep
the season.
~:t
Boone also had an RBI si
gle in a four-run first in!ling't
increase his American Leagu ~
leading RBI total to 78. ~·
tied David Bell's club recorO ·
for homers in a seasqn by
second baseman and. alsll
broke Bell's record of 77 R.Bii:
in 1999.
··:
Rangers 9, Athletics
Rafael Palmeiro and Rube •
Sierra
hit
back-to-bacl'
homers in the fourth as Te~
won at .Oakland.
·
Ivan Rodriguez alsp home;;
red as Texas. took two of thre~
from the A's behind a gootl' .
start from Rob Bell (1-0). ·&lt;

5" :.

Tuesd~

B1

•

Mllpc:ounty's
-

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Ifill t ·Vol

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---

Middleport • Pomeroy • Oh1"o

No llh

\/t.WW fll'y'f 1dl 1y\t • nhtH' 1 torn

Teen
FROM STAFF REPORTS

Edward D. Dill, 35, Pomeroy, was taken
to HMC. He was later treated and
released, the pa~l said.
Troopers said Dill, driving a 2000 Ford
E-250 van, was northbound, two-tenths
of a mile south of Ohio 7. Adams, operating a 1987 Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck,
was 50uthbound when the pickup went
off the right side of the road.
The vehicle ·then went out of control,
slid left of center and collided witli Dill's

POMEROY - h two-vehicle crash
Monday on County Road 7 A killed one
driver and sent the other to an area hospital, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reported.
Joshua I. Adams, 17, Long Bottom, was
pronounced dead at Holzer Medical Center after he was transported fiom the
scene of the 6:55 a.m. accident, troopers
said.

County
hunts
revenues

van . The van struck the pickup broadside
and the van then struck a guardrail,
according to the report. Both vehicles
were severely damaged and towed fiom
the scene.
The accident rer;;ains under investiga.
tion, troopers said..
It marks the second fatal crash of the
year in Meigs County investigated by the
patml, and is the fourth in the GalliaMeigs Post's coverage area, troopers said.

·Moving ljght along

Delinquent
tax accounts
targeted
I

'IIY IIIWI J. REED

Prices Good Tuesdav,
Boneless, Skinless

Chicken

,Breast _ __

~ENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY Meigs
Comity Treasurer Howard
Fr~nk' hopes that an
increase in delinquent tax
collections will help alleviate the county's dire
financial straits.
Ftank said he has provided Prosecutor Pat Story
with a list of 17 delinquent uxpayers, and. has
asked
that• Story
proceed
.,_.
lo;
,;... I
~"'--.&lt;W'th' C9!lectlont"''n those
tax aGGounts, including
foretlo~ute , actions and
sheriff's sales, if necessary.
The ·Jist of 17, Frank
••
said, represents the 17 taxpayers with the highest
delinquent balances. The
17 accounts total more

2JINLY
ArmourTra

lunch
Meat

PIIIM ... AIIL'Al

'
.i

.

.

I

.

Flavorite

ranula--

Sugar

FROM STAFF REPORTS

..........

12pil

'
2 .......
- 12 ,.,..

Low: lOs

. Details, A2

Lotteries

calendar
' • A5
!oodCimillifiWIII..d----=-B...J2t:lil. OHIO

'

looJLIIISSuwtS&lt;eYisl.-,~-.lil-":4:::t pjd&amp; 3: 6-9-:0; Pick 4: !H ·1-4
C:~oow.mLillljcs..___,_._.....liBI&amp;S • I J1 5: 2·7·13-20-22

Valley Bell

Doritos

2croMilk

Reg.$3.29
..

Editorials
M
~o~bw~~~awri~esL· ---~A3w. w~
...
sR~O.._rts
_ _ _........
B....
1.,;
3 -4;::r.oll ,§ · Dilly J: Hi·2 Dilly 4: 1-6-7·7
...w.,e.,a.,th....e._r_____.cA2
c 2001 Ohio valley Publlshtn1co.
16

Limit 3 Please

REED

Pleue ... Problems, AJ

Longtime members of the Ohio
Valley Area Libraries Board of
Trustees. representing the
Meigs County District Public
Library, received commemorative clocks from OVAL Director
Jimmy Epling, far left, on Monday. Pat Holter served as Meigs
County's representative for 17
years, Charles Blakeslee for 10
years, and Wanda Eblin for
more than 20 years . Krlstl
Eblin, director of the Meigs
County District Public Library, Is
also pictured, far right. (Brian J.
Reed photo)
,

Unfriendly court rulings could cost millions
COLUMBUS (AP) - Michael Linko
was;·driving home from a business trip in
.1996 when a pic~up truck swerved into
his lane, causing an accident that killed
Lirtko, his passenger and another driver.
tinko was driving a company car that
was r,sured through his employer, SaintGob'iirt Industrial Ceramics Inc., but the
driver of the pickup· truck had only limited \hsurance coverage.
FOiii&gt;wing the accident, that driver's

insurance company paid out SlOO,OOO to
the beneficiaries of the three people
i&gt;illed.
·
Linko's widow, Pairicia, sued her husband's insurance company for additional
damages, saying she was entitled to
underinsured m'otorist coverage under a
policy held by Saint- Gobain.
The company disagreed, saying SaintGobain's corporate parent 'had rejected
underinsured coverage as patt of its poli-

· cy.The case wound its way to the Ohin
Supreme Court, which ruled 4-3 in
Linke 's behalf in December. It said she
was entitled to the coverage.
This ruling and a similar 1999 Supreme .
Court decision opened the door for
dozens of other lawsuits seeking uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage, critics said . The Ohio Insurance
Institute estimates the claims eventually
could
. run as high as $1.5
. billion.

.

I

Dlcllletes! ·"Walk With Usl"

298 SECOND STREET.·
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE June 26 &amp; 27

For more information, call

.

(740) 446·5080
'

I

J.

Service honored

"Walk With Us'; is a low·impact diabetes self-management
program that can help you feel your best. Join us at .
Gall~~is ~ity P~rk (or Wai·Mart Pharmacy Entrance
~~ it rams or 1s. colder than 50 degrees) every
Wednesday in June at 10:00 am.

.

BY BRIAN

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
MIDDLEPORT - . Police presence in General
Hartinger Park will increase and troublemakers
expelled due to an increase in vandalism, fighting
and othe r problems.
Police Chief Bruce S\vift discussed increasing
problems at the park with Middleport Village
Council when council met in regular session
Monday evening.
"Our officers have been at the park a lot so far
this summer,:· Swift said. "Most of the problems in
Middleport right now are with kids."
. Swift said vandalism to picnic shelters in the park
mcludes damage to recently-completed improvements, and that the fathers of two juvenile offenders have agreed to make repairs to one ·of the shelter, and the boys will appear in juvenile court,
" If a child is o ld enough to go to the park by
himself, he should be responsible enough not to
destroy park property," Swift said .
On Monday, four juveniles were arrested for
underage consumption and disorderly conduct, as
the result of a fight he said stemmed from another
fight on Sunday.
"Our only choice is to have a higher presence in
the, park during the summer months, and to expel
those adults an'd children who cause problems,"
Swift said.
Several have already been banned from the park
and ci.ted to mayor'~ court or juvenile court.
Swift said his tight budget doesn't allow for overtime, and that officers on duty are responsible for
patrolling the park as well. It is , he said, .the third
.year that serious' probkms with fighting and vandalism have been a concetri.
Swift also noted that budget constraints will likely prevent the scheduling of additional police officers for July 4 festivities.
In other business, council met with Bill Childs,
chairman of the citizens ' committee addressing the
future of Middleport's three school buildings. The
Meigs Local School District has expressed a willingness to revert the building's back to Middleport

ment of Natural Resources.
Neigler also reported that four of the fire
department's members will take fire training at
a Pomeroy fire school.
T.C. Ervin of the Meigs County Health
Department met with council to distribute
information ahd to explain ~arious programs
offered bf. j:he health department.
Council will try to arrange for a free village
cleanup ,for later in the fall, if finances allow.
Street Commissioner and Water Supervisor
John Holman reported that 2,681 ,600 gallons
of water were pumped in May, and that
2,517,300 were pumped in April.
PluM ... Funds, AJ

IIIP:IOI

Sentinel

•

Police chief, council
consider remedies

.

'
RACINE - . Village Council approved
matchjng funds for an $8,000 state giant for
the fi e department ·during its recel)t regular
meeting.
·
s;ouncil amended itS annual appropriation ·to
include a match for the fire department grant,
through the Ohio fire ·marshal. The grant will
b~ used to purchase self-contained breathing
apparatus.
Fire Chief David Neigler reported that the
department will replace several air botdes that
, have reached their 15-year life lil!lit.
The department will also seek grant funds
through a 50/50 program of the Ohio De~art~

.4/$Q

United

Meigs Local School District's new elementary .
school will be built. H~IIIIY equipment was brought In earlier this month by the contractor. George lgel
, and Co. Qf Columbus, to remove trees, do necessary excavation to level the area. put In drainage and
sewage systems, and construct a roadway loop arouhd the perimeter In preparation for the building
construction later this summer. (Char111ne Hoeflich PhQtolf
·

·Rlcine:Coundl approve$ funds

Save

·. Fresh
Chiquita
Bananas

· ThBre's i)lanty of action ilt the site near Rutland

Problems on
the rise at
Hartinger Park

.

;

Sponsoracl by the HMG Diabetes Education Department.

.

'}

•

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

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