<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7458" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7458?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T10:20:47+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17868">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e975736a1b8d417869d59da9cba09958.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c55823dfc6741c9fc005ac27d26dd438</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="24319">
                  <text>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
;: ~ :~
38 35 .52t

2

GB
4

~~
5

~~ ~ :~~ l~ l~
wm
WLPciGB

46
40
38

29

.613

35

.533

6

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

.562

2
7 112
9 112
21 112

36
34

38
40

~.b:
w L

.486
.460

297

08

!; :

Pel
.&amp;11
.589

I 1/2

36

.500

B

36

..,1 11 112
.378
17

~ :
WLPciGB
55
38

19

.743
.493
.473

18 112
35
20
. 28 45 .384 26 112
37
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
-

•,o ro·nh ·Juno

Ifill t ·Vol

lh

•,;

---

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.

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
vtutnu diiY, June 27

CINCINNATI (AP) - Advocates and
opponents oflight-rail transit blew whisdes and shouted at each other Monday
during what became a Sftet debate wer
what public transportation means to the
region's future and economic health.
Activists who say a ligbt- rail system is
needed to reduce highway congestion and
pollution blew whisdes to drown out
elected oflicials who said at a news conference that they would oppose further
funding for the project. Several supporters
and opponents bter got into a shouting
match over the value of light rail.
"Millions of olir taxpayer dollars, which
could have been used to improve our
transportation inmstructure, have been
used to study, sell and promote this multimillion-dollar boondoggle," said Rep.
Steve Chabot, R-Ohio, who kept talking
through the whisde-blowing.
At issue is whether a light-rail system,
. by itself or in combination with expansion
of transit bus service, is the best way to

.1 COiut tb~ 111..- I

c •••- ~

T-

--

••••
• •
-

leo

BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

After he died, she decided to see whether he should have
gotten the Purple 1-Jeart. She checked .archives at the Xenia
Public Library, found her father's military records, then
Scattered showers and thunapplied for the award. It arrived earlier this month.
derstorms in the afternoon.
"When l received it, I cried," she said. "The only thing I
High in the mill 80s. South regret_is tljat I didn't get it when he was still alive." 1
wind 5 to I 0 mph. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Wednesday night ...Partly
cloudy. Low in the lower 60s.
WOOSTER· (AJ'Y ~The Wayne County O~ce of Rural
Extended forecast:
Land Preserva~ion · h115 begiln promoting a November tefe.r Thursday through Satur- endum on a tax increase to bep.efit farm preservation.
.

lt's getting downright hot in
the tri-county area. Forecasters
said high temperatures on
Wednesday will approach 90
degrees.
It also will be partly cloudy.
but little rain was in the forecast, the National Weather Service said.
Voters will decide. a 0.25 percent increase in the county
Showers and thunderstorms day... Hazy · and humid. A
chance of afternoon and sales tax to finance easements on rural lands barring futo.~re
are likely on Thursday with
.
·
highs generally in the mid- evening showers and thunder- non-farm development,
storms. Low 60 to 66. High 84
The agency's Amy Miller and members of the office's advi80s.
sory committee developed the framework for the program
Overnight lows will be in to 89 ·
the mid-60s, the NWS said.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A to purchase development rights.
"My goal is .to make it easy for farmers to stay here," said
Sunset tonight will be at chance of showers and thun9:04, and sunrise on Wednes- derstorms in the afternoon Chris Schmid, who also serves on the advisory committee.
day is at 6:05 a.m.
and evening. Low 60 to 66 and
W•tber forecast:
high in the mid 80s.
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Low
Monday... A
continued
KETTERING (AP) - A woman claims two city police
in the lower 60s. South wind 5 · chance of showers and !hunofficers broke her ne.c k fhile arresting her two years ago.
to 10 mph.
derstorms. A bit cooler. Low
Maudy Jackson, a former Kettering resident, filed a federWednesday... Partly cloudy. 59 to 65 and high 79 to 85.
allawsuit Monday against the city and police officers Jerome

Agency pushes pnservatlo_n levy

Woman sues KeHerlng pollee

KnHe-wielding man slain

Csizma and Scott Drerup.
·
The lawsuit claims the officers came to her apartment on
July 26, 1999, investigating a 9.11 hang-up call. She claims
they refused her request to leave, and a dispute. followed.
She alleges that Drerup threw her on the floor and put his
knee in her back and neck, handcuft'edl.net and pulled her up
by her hair:· On the way out to the cruiser, Drerup tripped
Jackson, causing her to fall and hit her head on the ground,
the lawsuit claims.

COLUMBUS (AP) - 1\vo police officers who had
responded to a domestic disturbance call Monday night shot
and killed a man who they said lunged at them with a knife.
The man was identified as Leonard Moore, 37. Police said
he had a history of domestic violence .complaints and had
been arrested three times since January 2000. .
The names of the officers wete not released. The number
·
. of shots fired also was not available immediately.
According to police spokesman Sgt. Earl Smith, the offiAKRON (AP) - A warrant has been issued for a man
cers said Moore made threatening moves toward them when who jumped $10,000 bond on charges that he killed his 3!Pey tint re_sponded to the domestic dlaturbance call. The month-old daughter by ·shaking her violently.
.
ofticen said they recreated outside the residence in an
The disappearance of Charles L. Funches, 20, of Akron,
attempt to dlfl'use the situation.
came after he got a uicond chance to stay out of jail earlier
this year from Summit County Common Pleas Judge Mary
Spicer.
·
Funches, who hasn't been seen since June 11, was schedCLEVELAND (AP) -Thirty-eight Cleveland teens have uled to appear before the judge on June 13.
won a free three-day cruise acron Lake Erie leading up to
She was expected to revoke his bond because he had testthe. city's tallahipa event in mid-July.
ed positive for marijuana. He didn't show up in court and a
The 188-foot, three-masted Concordia will sail July 9 warrant was issued for his arrest.
·
from Port Colborn e. Ont., headed for the Cleveland Harborfest.
' The barkentine is designed as a classroom. Teenagers tackle marine biology and mathematical problems, learning as
LORDS TOWN (AP) -A black bear weighing about 225
they sail for a semester or. longer at a cost of up to $26,400. pounds was captured and killed Monday after wandering
The trip is free for the Cleveland youths, with the cost into the children's wading pool area of a mobile home park
covered by the tall ship event sponsors.
near Youngstown. ·
The tagged bear, believed to be about 2 112 years old, was
~urple
the same one that was removed May 15 from the Munson
,
Township area of Geauga County more than 20 miles away.
~ENIA (AP) -The dau.g hter ,~fa U.S. soldter woun~ed
"Since this was the. second time we had to capture this
dunng World War I has r~cetved hiS Purple Heart after domg bear in a residential area and the fact that he exhibited no
some research and app~ymg to the governm~nt.
. . fear of humans, we felt ii would be irresponsible of us not to
Al.bert t:;'llley, w~10 d1ed ~n 1974, was hurt m the leg whtle have ·the animal put to sleep by a veterinarian," said Jeff Herserv~n~ With the mfantry m. France. He never talked about rick, district manager of the Ohio Di'l(ision of.Wildlife.
the InJury or the war, satd h11 daughter, Rosemary Cottrell.
·

Slaying susped Jumps bond

Teen• ready for Tall Ships

BlaCk bear put to death

Daughter accepts

'

'

••

••'

downtown and to help physically
people get around.

redut e highway ct gestion and help
commuters ges to jobs.
The South-.wst Ohio Regional Tnnsit
Authority. which openres the Cincinnati
area's public transit buses, is to decide by
late August whether to ask voters in
November for a sales tax increase. The
money could be used for ligltt rail or for
expanded bus service.
Light- rail systems are powered by an
overhead electricity line instead of an
electrified_third rail on the ground used in
heavy- rail systems.
Kathleen ~orris, a light-rail supporter
who listened to the debate on the steps of
the Hamilton County Courtholl5e, said
the region needs an alfordable, well-located rail link. It would ges inner-city people
who are looking for work out to the suburbs where the number of jobs and the
needs to fill them are increasing. she said
. Norris said she has used the light-rail
system in Portland, Ore., and saw it as a
way to attract suburban young people to

It's going to warm up again

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

TuMd y,Ju•l 21, HOI :

'

• ,
,..... ,.....

-

1\lelclay, Jw. 28, 2001

•

Obituaries

Opponents shout, blow whistles over light rail :

Ohio weather

...... PI.Cioudr Cloudr

'

Heart

disablei

"There are no great cities without great
downtowns:' said Norris, the development director for the Cincinnati Arts
As5ociation which manages the Aronoff
Center for the Arts, Memorial Hall and
Music Hall in or near downtown Cincinnatj.

Another supporter,Aian Garber, said the
issue is an ¢motional one because it is a
debate about the region's future. Cincinnati needs to take a bold and thoughtful
step. nther than just consider widening
Interstate 71 or other routes, said Garber,
a Cincinnati pharn12ceutical sales manager.
Todd Portune, the lone DerrK&gt;Crat on
the Hamilton County Commission, told
Monday's crowd that light-rail would I)Ot
serve all the suburban commuter areas including Dearborn County, Ind. which need better transportation into
Cincinnati.

RUTLAND - Mary C. " Nancy" Van Meter, 62, w.,ber
Street, Rutland, died Monday, June 25, 2001 at Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
Born Nov. 19, 1938 at Story's Run in Cheshire, daughter of
the late Charles A. and Evelyn Denny Schull!r, she was a
homemaker, and a member of Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church.
·
Surviving are three sons: Michael E. Van Meter of Beaver,
John M .Van Meter oflda Mae,W.Va.,and PaulA.Van Meter of
Rudand; a daughter, Debbie L. Gteen of Greenville; five grandchildren; three brothers, Jim and John Schuler, both of Rutland, and Chuck Schuler of Pomeroy; three sisters, Evelyn
"Nin" Haley of Moundsville, W.Va., Jane Eblin of Bidwell, and
Jean LaAeur of Nashville, Tenn.; and several nieces and
nephews.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Paul Eugene
Van Meter; twin daughters, Tina Marie and Clan Mae Van
Meter; and sister, Mary Schuler.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday in Birchfield Funeral
Home, Rutland. Burial will be in Adamsville Cemetery,
Mason, W.Va. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9
p.m. Wednesday.

LONG BOTIOM - Joshua ls:~iah Adams, 17, of Long Bottom, died on Monday, June 25, 2001 fiom injuries sustained in
an auto accident.
He was born on July 10, 1983 in Gallipolis, son of Harold
" Lanny" and Garcia McGraw Adams of Long Bottom.
He was a member of the Fellowship Church of the Nazarene
in Reedsville, a junior firefighter with the Olive Township Valunteer Fire Department, an employee ofWendy's in Pomeroy,
and attended &amp;stern High School, where he would have been
· a senior and a member of the Eastern Eagles Football team.
Besides his parents, he is survived by .a brother and sister-inlaw, William Ray and Jenne Adams of ReedsviUe; a sister and
brother-in-law, Christi and Pete Bartimus of Long Bottom; his
paternal grandmother, Hope Drake of Long Bottom; and two
nephews, a niece, and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
'He was preceded in death by his paternal grandfather,
Melvin Drake.
·
Services will be held at 1 p.m . on Thursday, June 28,2001 at
·the Fellowship Church of the Nazarene, with Pastors Teresa
Waldeck and Lynda Kuhn officiating. Burial will follow at
Meigs Memory Gardens.
.
· ·
Friends may call at White Funeral Home in Coolville on
Wednesday. June 27,2001 fiom 2- 4 and 6-8 p.m.
·

Harold F'ISCher
LETART, W.Va. -· Harold A. Fischer, Rt. 2, Letart, died
Monday. June 25, 2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by Fogelsong Funeral
Home, Mason, W.Va.

Funds

Problems

.

LOCAL STOCKS

.

· Airport often bNaks to.usen
I

1

1"

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

SEPTIC SYSTEM REPAIR AND/OR REPLACEMENT

.

'

..

• «;...... -

..

J

'

.
•

...
.
.

•

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

MEIGS

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC

Correction Polley
0

Is offering

.,

Sports Physicals

News Departments
o-ral moMger

Ext. 12

Hewl

Ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

·..:

(For Eastern, Meip, and ~them High School athletes) ·
bring your ~pleted Sports Phyaltai Cards!

re-

Other ~rvlces

Holzer Clinic Meigs
88 East Memorial Drive

Pomeroy,OH
(740) 992-6600

Our main concern In aft stones Ia
to be ac;curate. If you know of an
error In a story, calllhe newsrobm
at (740) 992·2156.
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extenlions are:

Saturday, June 30

·7:00am

meet

Licensing 2001

CINCINNATI (AP) -A film critic who reported that a
theater operator had edited a movie without permission
from the producer has been banned from the operator's theaters, the critic's employer said Monday.
Theater Management Corp., which operat~s th~, Esquire
and Mariement movie theaters in the C::incinnati. area ' has
banned film critic Steve Ramos from the theaters, according
to Cincinnati CityBeat, the weekly publicatiol), which
employs Ramos.
.
· Theater Management banned Rainos from attending film
critics' screenings, buying tickets to see films at the theaters
or from otherwiae entering the buildings, CityBeat said in a
statement Monday. The company also ordered CityBeat to
remove its distribution racks and papers from the theaters
and canceled advertisementa planned In· the paper, CityBeat
said.
Gary Goldman, president ofTheater Management, did not
return a call to his office Monday for a response. An ~de said
Goldman was away f'rom the office and no one else waa
authorized to apeak for the company.

HOLZER
CLINIC
'

' Trustees to

EMS runs

Critic banned from theaters

Toxic algae
closes lake

responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
RUTLAND A boil · 6:57 a.m., Ohio 7, motor
advisory has been issued for vehicle accident, Joshua
customers of Leading C reek Adams, Holzer Medical CenConservancy District, until ter;
12:41 p.m ., M emorial
further notice: Ohio I 24 from
Noble Summit to Ohio 7, Drive, Mary Hawkins, treared;
2:49 p.m ., Bearwallow
Bradbury Road from Ohio 7
Eastman,
to the top of Middleport Hill, Ridge, Albert
HMC;
and all adjacent roads; Snow7:49 p.m., Fisher Street,
den, Dead· Man's Curve and
W~ gner Roads, Ohio 143 Edna Russell, HMC.
POMEROY ·
from Ohio 7 to Kingsbury
6:57 a.m., Ohio 7, motor
Road, Bailey Run Road on
vehicle
accident, Edward Dill,
the Ohio I 43 side, Ball Run
'
Road, Wolf Pen Road, How- HMC.
RUTLAND
ell Hill, Hiland Road, Chil8:37
a.m., Overbrook
dren's Home Road and Burdette Road, Laurel Cliff Road Nursing Center, Genevieve
and all adjacent roads, Union Demosky, HMC;
3:02. p.m., U.S. 33, Brian
Avenue and Union Terrace.
The district experienced Watson, Pleasant Valley Hoswater leaks on the east end of pital;
7:49 p.m ., Main Street, ,
their water system, and the
,advisory was issued due to Caleb Stanley, HMC .
.
SYRACUSE
outages and low pre5sure .
2:58 p.m ., Third Srreet,
Tncy Riggenbatch, HMC.

Aid

Mlsslona~s IOing to China
CLEVELAND (AP) - . The Chinese government has
approved visas for a Christian minister from Ohio to teach
religion in a Chinese seminary, the first such approval in 50
years, according to Chinese religious officials.
Dr. Carolyn Higginbotham, minister at the First Christian
Church (Discipjes of Christ) in Zanesville, will serve for one
year beginning in August and teach the old testament at a
Christian seminary in Nanjing.
Antoinette Wire, a Presbyterian minister at the San Francisco Theological Seminary, has been approved to teach New
Testament studies at Nanjing.
.
Higginbotham, also an associate PI?fessor of religion at
Muskingum College in east-central Ohio, said Monday,
"This will be the first time as far as any of tis are aware in 50
·years that a foreigner has been able to teach explicidy as a
theological education."

Subscribe today.

the lake until further notice tionary measure," Thompson and birds.
. following the EPA's recom- said. "Fortunately, we haven't
However, he said it could
mendation.
seen anyone get iU from this." make people sick if they swalHe said the algae contains a
Jay Carey, spokesman for the lowed large amounts of the
toxin that could kill animals as Ohio Department of Health, water. Symptoms would
large as dogs.
said the algae is primarily include intestinal cramps, diar-·
"At this point, it is a precau- harmful to wildlife such as fish . rhea an~ vomiting. ··
JAMESTOWN (AP) - A
private lake near this southwestern Ohio community has
' been closed temporarily alter
a toxic algae was discovered in
the water, the Ohio Environmental ·Protection Agency
said Monday.
The Meigs Grant omce has funds available to ·asslst.ln the repair or
The Ohio EPA discovered
the blue-green algae in
replacement of failing septic systems for owner CK:cupled homes In, M.eigs
Coo, -T·
Shawnee Hills "Lake after
reports ~f a white substance
I
.
.
in the water.
.Very low Income households will receive a grant for the project and low
"There's a white fungi
income households will receive a 50% Grant and 50% -nve 'year loan at 3%
feeding on the algae," said
interest.
EPA
spokesman
Andy
Thompson. He said the EPA
recommended the lake be
Applications are available at the Meigs Coonty Grants Offi~e at 117 East
closed for a couple of days
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, during the business hours of 9:00 a.m. to 5:00
until the algae can run its
p.m., Monday through Friday. More information may be obtained by calling
course.
Jean Trussell at 992·7908.
.
Thompson said the property owners decided to dose

Issue advisory

Collection

'

-.

LOCAL BRIEFS

. TUPPERS PLAINS
Development. A representa3:10
p.m., HMC Clinic,
tive of the Ohio Municipal
Thomas Tucker, HMC.
League will present a threePOMEROY - Salisbury
hour prognm on village govf•omPepA1
Township Trustees wiD meet
ernment. Other members of
Holman also reported he council · were invited to July 3 at 6 p.m. at the town. ship hall at Rock Springs on
POMEROY -The names
in~ ofthe Meigs Mines and had been in contact with the
attend, but none were free.
Rocksprings Road.
of the grandparents of Carter
the subsequent loss in real Ohio Department of TransIn other business, council
Max Smith, infant son of
estate and personal proper!)' portation about a section of
asked Hill to contact Racine
Matthew and Lisa Smith,
tax revenue from Southern roadway washed out on Ohio
frana Page AI
Ball
Association
to
determine
were incorrecdy identified in
Ohio Coal Co., Meigs Local 124 at Wingett's Pond .
if
the
batting
cages
it
wants
to
POMEROY
Units
of
the birth announcement.
than $304,000, and most of taxpayers ~ould face an un- ODOT reported it will make
construct
at
the
park
could
be
the Meigs Emergency Service They are Doria Hill of St.
the properties represented by voted increase in property . repairs this summer.
placed
between
the
·
walking
answered I 0 calls for assis- John's, Ohio, and Mark and
the list are in the Meigs Local taxes, if revenue collected on
Council commended Holtrack
and
the
fields,
nther
tance on Mp~day. Units Darla Morrow of Butler, Ky.
School District.
current millage is insufficient man for his efforts in getting
Last week, Frank met with · to retire the bonds issued to the cemetery ready for the than between the track and
·
the Meigs County commis- construct the district's two Memorial Day holiday, and the ~iver.
Council also:
sioners and other county new school buildings now congratulated him for passing
• Approved dosing the vilofficials to discuss ·the coun- under construction.
the state examination for his
lage
office on June 21 and 22
ty's continuing loss of revMeigs County government water treatment operator's
for vacation of Clerk/Treaenue from a number of is listed time alter time on license.
sources.
the certification as having
Mayor Scott Hill reported surer Karen Lyons;
The decline is attributed to delinquent taxes, although that he and Council President
• Approved a flood loss prea drop in local sales tax rev- the county, by law, is not Robert Beegle will attend a vention ordinance;
enue, a declin.e in interest on required to pay real estate meeting in Jackson sponsored
• Adjourned until July 2,
the investl)lent of active and taxes on the property it by the Institute for Local subject to call of a special
Inactive public funds, and a owns.
Government and Regional meeting.
freeze in revenue paid to the
Frank said that those councounty, by the state, in local ty-owned parcels, along with
government revenues.
should go back to the peotaxes on mineral rights in the
One solution to the con- · names of companies longple of Middl~port so · that
tinuing cash flow problem, since out of business, should
they can be developed for
•Frank told the commission- be remitted from the; .aelin- '
the benefit of the ~ommuni­ People watch a video of the animated Yu-GH&gt;hl progre.m, dur·
f•omPapA1
Ing Ucenslng 2001 at New York's Javlts Convention Center,
ers, is to· l&gt;~gin earnest collec- quent tax certification so that
ty, rather than be torn The new mood of licensing, which has gained momentum over .
tion of a part of the county's
the certification gives county if suitable uses can be found. down," Childs said.
the past six months, was clearly evident at the start of Its ·
delinquent property taxes.
Architect Stephen Gegner ·· Councilman Roger Man- three-day annual licensing trade show, which features 4, 700
officials a more accurate picEach year, the county auditure of how much in taxes of Marietta will conduct a ley reported that Rumpke, properties .(AP Photo)
tor certifies to the prosetutor
are owed and who is JllOSt public meeting on Tuesday the village's refuse service
a list of tax payers who, for at
evening at the Feeney-Ben- provider, complained -that
likely to "pay up."
,,
least a year, have been delin•
"Some of the funds Olj the nett Legion annex on South residents were not bagging
quent in paying. their real
cle~rly · Fourth Avenue to show protheir garbage, and that bags
estate taxes. The county can cer.tification. are
uncollectable,'' Frank said, posed plans for the buildings were not placed at the street
ultimately assume the first
and to discuss his "best use
Rockwell- 36~.
Gannett-64
AEP-45 ~
lien position and foreclose noting that taxes on coal, salt plan,'' required by the state on trash day.
General Electric - SO~. Rocky Boots - 4~
Arch Coal - 23%
and
other
minerals
which
are
on these properties if other
All trash must be placed in AkZo-41
RDShell-60~
GKNLY-9~
·in order to pursue grant
Harley Davidson
Searl - 4&lt;&gt;'•
attempts .to collect are unsuc- deeded separate and apart funds for renovating the suitable containers, and must AmTectiSBC - 38,,
from land, to companies
Shoney'a-~
48~
Inc. - 38'·
cessful.
be left at curbside by the Ashland
Kmart-11).
Wai·Mart
- 49
buildings.
AT&amp;T
21
"Collecting some of these which are no longer in busiKroger
24,,
Wendy's-25
Bank
One
35,,
on
the
appropriate
resident
Members of Middleport
Worthington- 12~.
Lands End - 39%
Bob Evans - 18
-taxes, which have been on ness, have remained on · the High School Alumni Associ~ pickup day.
Deily stock rai)Oits are
. Ltd. - 15%
BorgWamer - 47~
certification
"for
years
and
the1certification for years and
the 4 p.m. closing
Mayor
Sandy
lannarelli
Oak Hill Financial Champlon-3
ation
have
contributed
sev' years,
• ts. an answer to some o f years," despite the fact that
quotes of the previous
14~.
Charming Shops- 5~·
eral thousand dollars toward and Street Supervisor Kenny City
the
owners
listed
are
nonOVB-25~.
day's transaCtions, proHolding
t1
our losses," Frank said-. "It
completion of the best use Madden discussed the new OuPorrt-46~
vided by Smith Part·
BBT-36
existent.
,
will be of particular help to
ners at Advest Inc. of
Peoples-19
MQQul Pomeroy Salt Works and a plan, and a state grant has docks which wili be placed Federal
Oalllpolls.
the Meigs Local School DisPremier- 7~
USB-22'•
number of old coal compa 7 also been used to pay for the at the levee area, and noted
trict.''
'
study.
that the new docks are
. Frank said the countf itself nies are included on the list.
not
been
Middleport
has
expected to be in place by
would benefit from only I 0 The Meigs County Board of
liable
for
any
costs
associated
July 4.
to 12 percent of the taxes Revision must ·take action to
with the study, Childs said.
Council also:
remit.
those
properties,
Fran,
k
collected, and that the local
Residents
with
ideas
• Approved payment of
school districts would receive said, and those properties in
about
the
best
future
uses
of
the county's name which are
bills , in the amount of
most of the collections.
the
buildings
Middleport
$30,070.68;
With the impending clos- also on the list.
High School; now used as
• Met in executive session
the M~igs Junior High
to discuss personnel.
School, Middleport ElePresent, in addition to
mentary School, and the
lannarelli
and Manley, were
Central Building - . are
WITH PURCHAJE OF A LANE• RECLINER.
urged to attend tonight's Council membersP Rae
IELf(TIED lTYLEI ONLY .
Stephen
meeting and participate in Gwiazdowsky,
Houchins, Bob Pooler,
discussions, Childs said.
992-2156
•.
"The voters of Middleport Kathy Scott and Bob
bought the buildings, and Robinson, and Clerk Bryan
.
we feel that the buildings · Swann.

.

.

Joshua Adams

a

Herrick said neighbors spotted the bear heading into the
wading pool area where children were playing· at a mobile
home park near the General Motors Corp. plant aloltgSide
the Ohio Turnpike. Adults made enough noise to hofd off
the bear until wildlife officers arrived.

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - lhe Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky International Airport expects to lose almost $800,000
because of relit concessions it is making to airport businesses ~hich lost money during the Comair pilots' strike.
Airport management is not contractually obligated to
grant the concessions. But it is offering them because businesses located in Comair's concourse lost a combined $1
million in sales a month during the three-month strike, airport spokesman Mike Mullaney said Monday.
"We felt very strongly that it was the right thing to; do,"
said Mullaney, the airport's director of commercial and business development, said of the concessions. "They were in a
difficult situation."
The concessions include credits toward rents that will be
paid for the rest of. this year and lowered minimum rent
obligations during that period, Mullaney said.

Mary Van Meter

The O.lly Sentinel• Pttge A 3

•

Advertlalng

Ext. 3

Clrculanon.

Ext. 4

Cla181fltd Ada

Ext. 5

To send e-mail

••

newsOmyd&amp;IIY88"11nel.com

''

On the Web
. www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

-

:.

~

CUSPS 213-110)

01110 Vlllly Publllhlng Co.

Publlohed evefY afternoon, Monday

through Friday, 1tt
Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Ne-

Court St ..
Soeond·cta..

paid it l'orneroy.
lloml*: The As80Ctatod Preao and

po8tagl

""'OhiO

-ion.

,....,,• ..,, Sen&lt;! """""'
ttono to The Dally Sentinel, ttl Court.
St., Pomeroy, OhiO 45769.

8y-Dr--

Subecrlptlon rates

OnoOno-

on.-,-

$2
. $8.70

$t04
Dolly
50 oonta
Sublefl&gt;era not -rtng to pay the
· carrier may remit In l!dvilnce dire&lt;! to
The Dally Sentinel. Crldlt wlllt&gt;e given
carrltf eoch - · No Mlbecriptlon by
mall pormlitod In areeo wh&lt;!re home
carrltf oorvtco ta aVIIItablo.

. .,...~
lnoldtllllp
1328-

.

$27.30
$53.82
,,05.56

5.2-. 1 .
---lfllgoCounty
13WI ..
529.25
28·w""'
·
sse.ea
52 w.....
$109.72

',

'

ALL AGES , ALL TIMES $4 00

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
vtutnu diiY, June 27

CINCINNATI (AP) - Advocates and
opponents oflight-rail transit blew whisdes and shouted at each other Monday
during what became a Sftet debate wer
what public transportation means to the
region's future and economic health.
Activists who say a ligbt- rail system is
needed to reduce highway congestion and
pollution blew whisdes to drown out
elected oflicials who said at a news conference that they would oppose further
funding for the project. Several supporters
and opponents bter got into a shouting
match over the value of light rail.
"Millions of olir taxpayer dollars, which
could have been used to improve our
transportation inmstructure, have been
used to study, sell and promote this multimillion-dollar boondoggle," said Rep.
Steve Chabot, R-Ohio, who kept talking
through the whisde-blowing.
At issue is whether a light-rail system,
. by itself or in combination with expansion
of transit bus service, is the best way to

.1 COiut tb~ 111..- I

c •••- ~

T-

--

••••
• •
-

leo

BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

After he died, she decided to see whether he should have
gotten the Purple 1-Jeart. She checked .archives at the Xenia
Public Library, found her father's military records, then
Scattered showers and thunapplied for the award. It arrived earlier this month.
derstorms in the afternoon.
"When l received it, I cried," she said. "The only thing I
High in the mill 80s. South regret_is tljat I didn't get it when he was still alive." 1
wind 5 to I 0 mph. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Wednesday night ...Partly
cloudy. Low in the lower 60s.
WOOSTER· (AJ'Y ~The Wayne County O~ce of Rural
Extended forecast:
Land Preserva~ion · h115 begiln promoting a November tefe.r Thursday through Satur- endum on a tax increase to bep.efit farm preservation.
.

lt's getting downright hot in
the tri-county area. Forecasters
said high temperatures on
Wednesday will approach 90
degrees.
It also will be partly cloudy.
but little rain was in the forecast, the National Weather Service said.
Voters will decide. a 0.25 percent increase in the county
Showers and thunderstorms day... Hazy · and humid. A
chance of afternoon and sales tax to finance easements on rural lands barring futo.~re
are likely on Thursday with
.
·
highs generally in the mid- evening showers and thunder- non-farm development,
storms. Low 60 to 66. High 84
The agency's Amy Miller and members of the office's advi80s.
sory committee developed the framework for the program
Overnight lows will be in to 89 ·
the mid-60s, the NWS said.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A to purchase development rights.
"My goal is .to make it easy for farmers to stay here," said
Sunset tonight will be at chance of showers and thun9:04, and sunrise on Wednes- derstorms in the afternoon Chris Schmid, who also serves on the advisory committee.
day is at 6:05 a.m.
and evening. Low 60 to 66 and
W•tber forecast:
high in the mid 80s.
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Low
Monday... A
continued
KETTERING (AP) - A woman claims two city police
in the lower 60s. South wind 5 · chance of showers and !hunofficers broke her ne.c k fhile arresting her two years ago.
to 10 mph.
derstorms. A bit cooler. Low
Maudy Jackson, a former Kettering resident, filed a federWednesday... Partly cloudy. 59 to 65 and high 79 to 85.
allawsuit Monday against the city and police officers Jerome

Agency pushes pnservatlo_n levy

Woman sues KeHerlng pollee

KnHe-wielding man slain

Csizma and Scott Drerup.
·
The lawsuit claims the officers came to her apartment on
July 26, 1999, investigating a 9.11 hang-up call. She claims
they refused her request to leave, and a dispute. followed.
She alleges that Drerup threw her on the floor and put his
knee in her back and neck, handcuft'edl.net and pulled her up
by her hair:· On the way out to the cruiser, Drerup tripped
Jackson, causing her to fall and hit her head on the ground,
the lawsuit claims.

COLUMBUS (AP) - 1\vo police officers who had
responded to a domestic disturbance call Monday night shot
and killed a man who they said lunged at them with a knife.
The man was identified as Leonard Moore, 37. Police said
he had a history of domestic violence .complaints and had
been arrested three times since January 2000. .
The names of the officers wete not released. The number
·
. of shots fired also was not available immediately.
According to police spokesman Sgt. Earl Smith, the offiAKRON (AP) - A warrant has been issued for a man
cers said Moore made threatening moves toward them when who jumped $10,000 bond on charges that he killed his 3!Pey tint re_sponded to the domestic dlaturbance call. The month-old daughter by ·shaking her violently.
.
ofticen said they recreated outside the residence in an
The disappearance of Charles L. Funches, 20, of Akron,
attempt to dlfl'use the situation.
came after he got a uicond chance to stay out of jail earlier
this year from Summit County Common Pleas Judge Mary
Spicer.
·
Funches, who hasn't been seen since June 11, was schedCLEVELAND (AP) -Thirty-eight Cleveland teens have uled to appear before the judge on June 13.
won a free three-day cruise acron Lake Erie leading up to
She was expected to revoke his bond because he had testthe. city's tallahipa event in mid-July.
ed positive for marijuana. He didn't show up in court and a
The 188-foot, three-masted Concordia will sail July 9 warrant was issued for his arrest.
·
from Port Colborn e. Ont., headed for the Cleveland Harborfest.
' The barkentine is designed as a classroom. Teenagers tackle marine biology and mathematical problems, learning as
LORDS TOWN (AP) -A black bear weighing about 225
they sail for a semester or. longer at a cost of up to $26,400. pounds was captured and killed Monday after wandering
The trip is free for the Cleveland youths, with the cost into the children's wading pool area of a mobile home park
covered by the tall ship event sponsors.
near Youngstown. ·
The tagged bear, believed to be about 2 112 years old, was
~urple
the same one that was removed May 15 from the Munson
,
Township area of Geauga County more than 20 miles away.
~ENIA (AP) -The dau.g hter ,~fa U.S. soldter woun~ed
"Since this was the. second time we had to capture this
dunng World War I has r~cetved hiS Purple Heart after domg bear in a residential area and the fact that he exhibited no
some research and app~ymg to the governm~nt.
. . fear of humans, we felt ii would be irresponsible of us not to
Al.bert t:;'llley, w~10 d1ed ~n 1974, was hurt m the leg whtle have ·the animal put to sleep by a veterinarian," said Jeff Herserv~n~ With the mfantry m. France. He never talked about rick, district manager of the Ohio Di'l(ision of.Wildlife.
the InJury or the war, satd h11 daughter, Rosemary Cottrell.
·

Slaying susped Jumps bond

Teen• ready for Tall Ships

BlaCk bear put to death

Daughter accepts

'

'

••

••'

downtown and to help physically
people get around.

redut e highway ct gestion and help
commuters ges to jobs.
The South-.wst Ohio Regional Tnnsit
Authority. which openres the Cincinnati
area's public transit buses, is to decide by
late August whether to ask voters in
November for a sales tax increase. The
money could be used for ligltt rail or for
expanded bus service.
Light- rail systems are powered by an
overhead electricity line instead of an
electrified_third rail on the ground used in
heavy- rail systems.
Kathleen ~orris, a light-rail supporter
who listened to the debate on the steps of
the Hamilton County Courtholl5e, said
the region needs an alfordable, well-located rail link. It would ges inner-city people
who are looking for work out to the suburbs where the number of jobs and the
needs to fill them are increasing. she said
. Norris said she has used the light-rail
system in Portland, Ore., and saw it as a
way to attract suburban young people to

It's going to warm up again

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

TuMd y,Ju•l 21, HOI :

'

• ,
,..... ,.....

-

1\lelclay, Jw. 28, 2001

•

Obituaries

Opponents shout, blow whistles over light rail :

Ohio weather

...... PI.Cioudr Cloudr

'

Heart

disablei

"There are no great cities without great
downtowns:' said Norris, the development director for the Cincinnati Arts
As5ociation which manages the Aronoff
Center for the Arts, Memorial Hall and
Music Hall in or near downtown Cincinnatj.

Another supporter,Aian Garber, said the
issue is an ¢motional one because it is a
debate about the region's future. Cincinnati needs to take a bold and thoughtful
step. nther than just consider widening
Interstate 71 or other routes, said Garber,
a Cincinnati pharn12ceutical sales manager.
Todd Portune, the lone DerrK&gt;Crat on
the Hamilton County Commission, told
Monday's crowd that light-rail would I)Ot
serve all the suburban commuter areas including Dearborn County, Ind. which need better transportation into
Cincinnati.

RUTLAND - Mary C. " Nancy" Van Meter, 62, w.,ber
Street, Rutland, died Monday, June 25, 2001 at Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
Born Nov. 19, 1938 at Story's Run in Cheshire, daughter of
the late Charles A. and Evelyn Denny Schull!r, she was a
homemaker, and a member of Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church.
·
Surviving are three sons: Michael E. Van Meter of Beaver,
John M .Van Meter oflda Mae,W.Va.,and PaulA.Van Meter of
Rudand; a daughter, Debbie L. Gteen of Greenville; five grandchildren; three brothers, Jim and John Schuler, both of Rutland, and Chuck Schuler of Pomeroy; three sisters, Evelyn
"Nin" Haley of Moundsville, W.Va., Jane Eblin of Bidwell, and
Jean LaAeur of Nashville, Tenn.; and several nieces and
nephews.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Paul Eugene
Van Meter; twin daughters, Tina Marie and Clan Mae Van
Meter; and sister, Mary Schuler.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday in Birchfield Funeral
Home, Rutland. Burial will be in Adamsville Cemetery,
Mason, W.Va. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9
p.m. Wednesday.

LONG BOTIOM - Joshua ls:~iah Adams, 17, of Long Bottom, died on Monday, June 25, 2001 fiom injuries sustained in
an auto accident.
He was born on July 10, 1983 in Gallipolis, son of Harold
" Lanny" and Garcia McGraw Adams of Long Bottom.
He was a member of the Fellowship Church of the Nazarene
in Reedsville, a junior firefighter with the Olive Township Valunteer Fire Department, an employee ofWendy's in Pomeroy,
and attended &amp;stern High School, where he would have been
· a senior and a member of the Eastern Eagles Football team.
Besides his parents, he is survived by .a brother and sister-inlaw, William Ray and Jenne Adams of ReedsviUe; a sister and
brother-in-law, Christi and Pete Bartimus of Long Bottom; his
paternal grandmother, Hope Drake of Long Bottom; and two
nephews, a niece, and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
'He was preceded in death by his paternal grandfather,
Melvin Drake.
·
Services will be held at 1 p.m . on Thursday, June 28,2001 at
·the Fellowship Church of the Nazarene, with Pastors Teresa
Waldeck and Lynda Kuhn officiating. Burial will follow at
Meigs Memory Gardens.
.
· ·
Friends may call at White Funeral Home in Coolville on
Wednesday. June 27,2001 fiom 2- 4 and 6-8 p.m.
·

Harold F'ISCher
LETART, W.Va. -· Harold A. Fischer, Rt. 2, Letart, died
Monday. June 25, 2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by Fogelsong Funeral
Home, Mason, W.Va.

Funds

Problems

.

LOCAL STOCKS

.

· Airport often bNaks to.usen
I

1

1"

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

SEPTIC SYSTEM REPAIR AND/OR REPLACEMENT

.

'

..

• «;...... -

..

J

'

.
•

...
.
.

•

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

MEIGS

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC

Correction Polley
0

Is offering

.,

Sports Physicals

News Departments
o-ral moMger

Ext. 12

Hewl

Ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

·..:

(For Eastern, Meip, and ~them High School athletes) ·
bring your ~pleted Sports Phyaltai Cards!

re-

Other ~rvlces

Holzer Clinic Meigs
88 East Memorial Drive

Pomeroy,OH
(740) 992-6600

Our main concern In aft stones Ia
to be ac;curate. If you know of an
error In a story, calllhe newsrobm
at (740) 992·2156.
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extenlions are:

Saturday, June 30

·7:00am

meet

Licensing 2001

CINCINNATI (AP) -A film critic who reported that a
theater operator had edited a movie without permission
from the producer has been banned from the operator's theaters, the critic's employer said Monday.
Theater Management Corp., which operat~s th~, Esquire
and Mariement movie theaters in the C::incinnati. area ' has
banned film critic Steve Ramos from the theaters, according
to Cincinnati CityBeat, the weekly publicatiol), which
employs Ramos.
.
· Theater Management banned Rainos from attending film
critics' screenings, buying tickets to see films at the theaters
or from otherwiae entering the buildings, CityBeat said in a
statement Monday. The company also ordered CityBeat to
remove its distribution racks and papers from the theaters
and canceled advertisementa planned In· the paper, CityBeat
said.
Gary Goldman, president ofTheater Management, did not
return a call to his office Monday for a response. An ~de said
Goldman was away f'rom the office and no one else waa
authorized to apeak for the company.

HOLZER
CLINIC
'

' Trustees to

EMS runs

Critic banned from theaters

Toxic algae
closes lake

responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
RUTLAND A boil · 6:57 a.m., Ohio 7, motor
advisory has been issued for vehicle accident, Joshua
customers of Leading C reek Adams, Holzer Medical CenConservancy District, until ter;
12:41 p.m ., M emorial
further notice: Ohio I 24 from
Noble Summit to Ohio 7, Drive, Mary Hawkins, treared;
2:49 p.m ., Bearwallow
Bradbury Road from Ohio 7
Eastman,
to the top of Middleport Hill, Ridge, Albert
HMC;
and all adjacent roads; Snow7:49 p.m., Fisher Street,
den, Dead· Man's Curve and
W~ gner Roads, Ohio 143 Edna Russell, HMC.
POMEROY ·
from Ohio 7 to Kingsbury
6:57 a.m., Ohio 7, motor
Road, Bailey Run Road on
vehicle
accident, Edward Dill,
the Ohio I 43 side, Ball Run
'
Road, Wolf Pen Road, How- HMC.
RUTLAND
ell Hill, Hiland Road, Chil8:37
a.m., Overbrook
dren's Home Road and Burdette Road, Laurel Cliff Road Nursing Center, Genevieve
and all adjacent roads, Union Demosky, HMC;
3:02. p.m., U.S. 33, Brian
Avenue and Union Terrace.
The district experienced Watson, Pleasant Valley Hoswater leaks on the east end of pital;
7:49 p.m ., Main Street, ,
their water system, and the
,advisory was issued due to Caleb Stanley, HMC .
.
SYRACUSE
outages and low pre5sure .
2:58 p.m ., Third Srreet,
Tncy Riggenbatch, HMC.

Aid

Mlsslona~s IOing to China
CLEVELAND (AP) - . The Chinese government has
approved visas for a Christian minister from Ohio to teach
religion in a Chinese seminary, the first such approval in 50
years, according to Chinese religious officials.
Dr. Carolyn Higginbotham, minister at the First Christian
Church (Discipjes of Christ) in Zanesville, will serve for one
year beginning in August and teach the old testament at a
Christian seminary in Nanjing.
Antoinette Wire, a Presbyterian minister at the San Francisco Theological Seminary, has been approved to teach New
Testament studies at Nanjing.
.
Higginbotham, also an associate PI?fessor of religion at
Muskingum College in east-central Ohio, said Monday,
"This will be the first time as far as any of tis are aware in 50
·years that a foreigner has been able to teach explicidy as a
theological education."

Subscribe today.

the lake until further notice tionary measure," Thompson and birds.
. following the EPA's recom- said. "Fortunately, we haven't
However, he said it could
mendation.
seen anyone get iU from this." make people sick if they swalHe said the algae contains a
Jay Carey, spokesman for the lowed large amounts of the
toxin that could kill animals as Ohio Department of Health, water. Symptoms would
large as dogs.
said the algae is primarily include intestinal cramps, diar-·
"At this point, it is a precau- harmful to wildlife such as fish . rhea an~ vomiting. ··
JAMESTOWN (AP) - A
private lake near this southwestern Ohio community has
' been closed temporarily alter
a toxic algae was discovered in
the water, the Ohio Environmental ·Protection Agency
said Monday.
The Meigs Grant omce has funds available to ·asslst.ln the repair or
The Ohio EPA discovered
the blue-green algae in
replacement of failing septic systems for owner CK:cupled homes In, M.eigs
Coo, -T·
Shawnee Hills "Lake after
reports ~f a white substance
I
.
.
in the water.
.Very low Income households will receive a grant for the project and low
"There's a white fungi
income households will receive a 50% Grant and 50% -nve 'year loan at 3%
feeding on the algae," said
interest.
EPA
spokesman
Andy
Thompson. He said the EPA
recommended the lake be
Applications are available at the Meigs Coonty Grants Offi~e at 117 East
closed for a couple of days
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, during the business hours of 9:00 a.m. to 5:00
until the algae can run its
p.m., Monday through Friday. More information may be obtained by calling
course.
Jean Trussell at 992·7908.
.
Thompson said the property owners decided to dose

Issue advisory

Collection

'

-.

LOCAL BRIEFS

. TUPPERS PLAINS
Development. A representa3:10
p.m., HMC Clinic,
tive of the Ohio Municipal
Thomas Tucker, HMC.
League will present a threePOMEROY - Salisbury
hour prognm on village govf•omPepA1
Township Trustees wiD meet
ernment. Other members of
Holman also reported he council · were invited to July 3 at 6 p.m. at the town. ship hall at Rock Springs on
POMEROY -The names
in~ ofthe Meigs Mines and had been in contact with the
attend, but none were free.
Rocksprings Road.
of the grandparents of Carter
the subsequent loss in real Ohio Department of TransIn other business, council
Max Smith, infant son of
estate and personal proper!)' portation about a section of
asked Hill to contact Racine
Matthew and Lisa Smith,
tax revenue from Southern roadway washed out on Ohio
frana Page AI
Ball
Association
to
determine
were incorrecdy identified in
Ohio Coal Co., Meigs Local 124 at Wingett's Pond .
if
the
batting
cages
it
wants
to
POMEROY
Units
of
the birth announcement.
than $304,000, and most of taxpayers ~ould face an un- ODOT reported it will make
construct
at
the
park
could
be
the Meigs Emergency Service They are Doria Hill of St.
the properties represented by voted increase in property . repairs this summer.
placed
between
the
·
walking
answered I 0 calls for assis- John's, Ohio, and Mark and
the list are in the Meigs Local taxes, if revenue collected on
Council commended Holtrack
and
the
fields,
nther
tance on Mp~day. Units Darla Morrow of Butler, Ky.
School District.
current millage is insufficient man for his efforts in getting
Last week, Frank met with · to retire the bonds issued to the cemetery ready for the than between the track and
·
the Meigs County commis- construct the district's two Memorial Day holiday, and the ~iver.
Council also:
sioners and other county new school buildings now congratulated him for passing
• Approved dosing the vilofficials to discuss ·the coun- under construction.
the state examination for his
lage
office on June 21 and 22
ty's continuing loss of revMeigs County government water treatment operator's
for vacation of Clerk/Treaenue from a number of is listed time alter time on license.
sources.
the certification as having
Mayor Scott Hill reported surer Karen Lyons;
The decline is attributed to delinquent taxes, although that he and Council President
• Approved a flood loss prea drop in local sales tax rev- the county, by law, is not Robert Beegle will attend a vention ordinance;
enue, a declin.e in interest on required to pay real estate meeting in Jackson sponsored
• Adjourned until July 2,
the investl)lent of active and taxes on the property it by the Institute for Local subject to call of a special
Inactive public funds, and a owns.
Government and Regional meeting.
freeze in revenue paid to the
Frank said that those councounty, by the state, in local ty-owned parcels, along with
government revenues.
should go back to the peotaxes on mineral rights in the
One solution to the con- · names of companies longple of Middl~port so · that
tinuing cash flow problem, since out of business, should
they can be developed for
•Frank told the commission- be remitted from the; .aelin- '
the benefit of the ~ommuni­ People watch a video of the animated Yu-GH&gt;hl progre.m, dur·
f•omPapA1
Ing Ucenslng 2001 at New York's Javlts Convention Center,
ers, is to· l&gt;~gin earnest collec- quent tax certification so that
ty, rather than be torn The new mood of licensing, which has gained momentum over .
tion of a part of the county's
the certification gives county if suitable uses can be found. down," Childs said.
the past six months, was clearly evident at the start of Its ·
delinquent property taxes.
Architect Stephen Gegner ·· Councilman Roger Man- three-day annual licensing trade show, which features 4, 700
officials a more accurate picEach year, the county auditure of how much in taxes of Marietta will conduct a ley reported that Rumpke, properties .(AP Photo)
tor certifies to the prosetutor
are owed and who is JllOSt public meeting on Tuesday the village's refuse service
a list of tax payers who, for at
evening at the Feeney-Ben- provider, complained -that
likely to "pay up."
,,
least a year, have been delin•
"Some of the funds Olj the nett Legion annex on South residents were not bagging
quent in paying. their real
cle~rly · Fourth Avenue to show protheir garbage, and that bags
estate taxes. The county can cer.tification. are
uncollectable,'' Frank said, posed plans for the buildings were not placed at the street
ultimately assume the first
and to discuss his "best use
Rockwell- 36~.
Gannett-64
AEP-45 ~
lien position and foreclose noting that taxes on coal, salt plan,'' required by the state on trash day.
General Electric - SO~. Rocky Boots - 4~
Arch Coal - 23%
and
other
minerals
which
are
on these properties if other
All trash must be placed in AkZo-41
RDShell-60~
GKNLY-9~
·in order to pursue grant
Harley Davidson
Searl - 4&lt;&gt;'•
attempts .to collect are unsuc- deeded separate and apart funds for renovating the suitable containers, and must AmTectiSBC - 38,,
from land, to companies
Shoney'a-~
48~
Inc. - 38'·
cessful.
be left at curbside by the Ashland
Kmart-11).
Wai·Mart
- 49
buildings.
AT&amp;T
21
"Collecting some of these which are no longer in busiKroger
24,,
Wendy's-25
Bank
One
35,,
on
the
appropriate
resident
Members of Middleport
Worthington- 12~.
Lands End - 39%
Bob Evans - 18
-taxes, which have been on ness, have remained on · the High School Alumni Associ~ pickup day.
Deily stock rai)Oits are
. Ltd. - 15%
BorgWamer - 47~
certification
"for
years
and
the1certification for years and
the 4 p.m. closing
Mayor
Sandy
lannarelli
Oak Hill Financial Champlon-3
ation
have
contributed
sev' years,
• ts. an answer to some o f years," despite the fact that
quotes of the previous
14~.
Charming Shops- 5~·
eral thousand dollars toward and Street Supervisor Kenny City
the
owners
listed
are
nonOVB-25~.
day's transaCtions, proHolding
t1
our losses," Frank said-. "It
completion of the best use Madden discussed the new OuPorrt-46~
vided by Smith Part·
BBT-36
existent.
,
will be of particular help to
ners at Advest Inc. of
Peoples-19
MQQul Pomeroy Salt Works and a plan, and a state grant has docks which wili be placed Federal
Oalllpolls.
the Meigs Local School DisPremier- 7~
USB-22'•
number of old coal compa 7 also been used to pay for the at the levee area, and noted
trict.''
'
study.
that the new docks are
. Frank said the countf itself nies are included on the list.
not
been
Middleport
has
expected to be in place by
would benefit from only I 0 The Meigs County Board of
liable
for
any
costs
associated
July 4.
to 12 percent of the taxes Revision must ·take action to
with the study, Childs said.
Council also:
remit.
those
properties,
Fran,
k
collected, and that the local
Residents
with
ideas
• Approved payment of
school districts would receive said, and those properties in
about
the
best
future
uses
of
the county's name which are
bills , in the amount of
most of the collections.
the
buildings
Middleport
$30,070.68;
With the impending clos- also on the list.
High School; now used as
• Met in executive session
the M~igs Junior High
to discuss personnel.
School, Middleport ElePresent, in addition to
mentary School, and the
lannarelli
and Manley, were
Central Building - . are
WITH PURCHAJE OF A LANE• RECLINER.
urged to attend tonight's Council membersP Rae
IELf(TIED lTYLEI ONLY .
Stephen
meeting and participate in Gwiazdowsky,
Houchins, Bob Pooler,
discussions, Childs said.
992-2156
•.
"The voters of Middleport Kathy Scott and Bob
bought the buildings, and Robinson, and Clerk Bryan
.
we feel that the buildings · Swann.

.

.

Joshua Adams

a

Herrick said neighbors spotted the bear heading into the
wading pool area where children were playing· at a mobile
home park near the General Motors Corp. plant aloltgSide
the Ohio Turnpike. Adults made enough noise to hofd off
the bear until wildlife officers arrived.

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - lhe Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky International Airport expects to lose almost $800,000
because of relit concessions it is making to airport businesses ~hich lost money during the Comair pilots' strike.
Airport management is not contractually obligated to
grant the concessions. But it is offering them because businesses located in Comair's concourse lost a combined $1
million in sales a month during the three-month strike, airport spokesman Mike Mullaney said Monday.
"We felt very strongly that it was the right thing to; do,"
said Mullaney, the airport's director of commercial and business development, said of the concessions. "They were in a
difficult situation."
The concessions include credits toward rents that will be
paid for the rest of. this year and lowered minimum rent
obligations during that period, Mullaney said.

Mary Van Meter

The O.lly Sentinel• Pttge A 3

•

Advertlalng

Ext. 3

Clrculanon.

Ext. 4

Cla181fltd Ada

Ext. 5

To send e-mail

••

newsOmyd&amp;IIY88"11nel.com

''

On the Web
. www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

-

:.

~

CUSPS 213-110)

01110 Vlllly Publllhlng Co.

Publlohed evefY afternoon, Monday

through Friday, 1tt
Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Ne-

Court St ..
Soeond·cta..

paid it l'orneroy.
lloml*: The As80Ctatod Preao and

po8tagl

""'OhiO

-ion.

,....,,• ..,, Sen&lt;! """""'
ttono to The Dally Sentinel, ttl Court.
St., Pomeroy, OhiO 45769.

8y-Dr--

Subecrlptlon rates

OnoOno-

on.-,-

$2
. $8.70

$t04
Dolly
50 oonta
Sublefl&gt;era not -rtng to pay the
· carrier may remit In l!dvilnce dire&lt;! to
The Dally Sentinel. Crldlt wlllt&gt;e given
carrltf eoch - · No Mlbecriptlon by
mall pormlitod In areeo wh&lt;!re home
carrltf oorvtco ta aVIIItablo.

. .,...~
lnoldtllllp
1328-

.

$27.30
$53.82
,,05.56

5.2-. 1 .
---lfllgoCounty
13WI ..
529.25
28·w""'
·
sse.ea
52 w.....
$109.72

',

'

ALL AGES , ALL TIMES $4 00

�...M
s

1

HMC •r¥1oyee of the 11•illa

w. GaWll

CIW1II•Iki.Ch
Q I 111111

zn

I

A..,_nl.eals

" 4ISI Editor
..... ICily . .
Coilllal1r

nalman.

Smaller
Instant communication makes
creative th¢ more common
• The Miami Herald, on Saddam Hussein and q,pyright
prot«tiim: ~t does it mean to say that the world is a
smaller place? For artist Jonathon Earl Bowser, it means
~t Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein can rip off his paint. ing with impunity.
Thanks to instant global communications Mr. Bowser,
who lives in Canada's smallest province, Prince Edward
Island, learned that one of his pain~, The Awakening,
graces the cover of a newly published Arabic novel widely believed to be authored by Hussein.
The book, "Zabibah and the King:' is the story of a cruelly raped woman said to represent the. Iraqi people and
an iron-willed king, Hussein, with allegorical allusions to
the Persian GulfWar. The .CIA is poring over it for psychological insights into Hussein.
.
A lawyer is poring through international treaties to
· determine whether Mr. Bowser has any redress for the .
copyright violation.... It is doubtful Mr. Bowser will ever
collect a dime.
·
: More troubling is the threat to his good name. For good
:teason, Mr. Bowser felt compelled to e-mail the CIA disavowing any connection to the dictator. The Cold War is
over, but fear lingers of what it spawned - "black lists"
: and government dossiers bulging with vengeful gossip
and misinformation, now so much easier and faster to
compile. Instantaneous communiqtions indeed make the
:world a smaller place but add nothing to people's sense of
:security.
·
·
·

•

•

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY Tl:IE ASSOCI.t.TEO PRESS

Today is Thesday, June 26, the 177th day of 2001. There are
188 days left in the year.

'

."
•
.

'

.

'
•

Today's Highlight in History:
On June 26, 1963, President Kennedy visited West Berlin,
where he made his famous declaration: "Ich bin ein Berliner"
:(1 am a Berliner).
On this date:
In 1870, the fint section of Atlantic City, N.J.'s Boardwalk
was opened to the public.
In 1900, a commission that included Dr. Walter Reed began
the fight against the deadly disease yellow fever.
In 1917, the 6nt trOOps of the American Expeditionary
Force arrived in France during World War I.
In 1919, the New York Daily News was first published.
In 1925, Charlie Chaplin's classic comedy. "The Gold Rush;'
premiered at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood.
In 1945, the c!Jar!er of the United Nations was signed by SO
countries in San Pranc:bco.
In 1948, the Berlin Airlift began in earnest after the Soviet
Union cut off land and water routes to the isolated western
·
sector ofBerlin.
In 1959, President Eiienhower joined Britain's Queen Elizabeth II in ceremonies officially opening the St. Lawrence Sea-

way.
In 1968, Chief U.S.Justice Earl Warren announced his intens
tipn to resign.
.In 1987, Supreme Court Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr.
announced his retirement, leaving a vacancy that was 611ed by
Anthony M. Kennedy.
Ten years ago: A Kentucky medical examiner announced that
test results showed President Zachary Taylor had died in 1850
of natural causes,- and not arsenic poisoning, as speculated by
a writer. (Taylor's, remains were exhumed so that tissue samples
could be ralten.)
Five years ago: The Supreme Court ol:dered the Virginia Military Academy to admit women, or forso state support. Former
White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum took the blame for ·
the FBI files controversy; White House security chief Craig
Livingstone resigned. President Clinton and leaders of the
world's other industrial powers gathered in Lyon, France, for
·
their annual economic summit.
One year ago:'fltival scientific teams completed the first
rough map of the human genetic code after a 10-year race. The
Supreme Court gave new. power to its landmark Miranda decisiort of 1966, ruling police still must warn the people they
arrest of their "right to remain silent" when questioned.
, . Thday's Birthdays: Actress Eleanor Parker is 79.Jazz musicians
film composer Dave Grusin is '67: Actor Josef Sommer is 67.
Singer Billy Davis Jr. (The Fifth Dimension) is 61. Singer
Georgie Fame is 58. Actor Clive Francis is 55 . Actor Robert
Davi. is 47. Singer-musician Mick Jones is 46. Actof Gedde
Watanabe js 46. Rock singer Chris Isaak is 45. Rock singer
Patry Smyth is 44. Singer Terri Nunn (Berlin) is 40.Actor Mark
'McKinney is 39. Rock singer Harriet Wheeler (The Sundays)
is 38. Rock musician Colin Greenwood (Radiohead) is 32.

Report:
has hurt U.S.
fann ·economy

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

fanning.
As employee of the month, Marshall received a S100 U.S.
Savings Bond, a reserved parking place designated in i1is name,
a complimentary meal in the hospital cafeteria, his picture diS;s

.Are Democrats anti-religion, or just plain anti-Bush?

played on the Employee of the Month wall near the employee
entrance, and his name engraved on th.e 2001 employee nf the
month plaque, also displayed on the Employee. of the Month

AI Gore got trounced last year 31;11ong
The fr:uners of the Constitution wrote
churchgoing Americans, and Congres:.
the Fint Amendment cbuse' fOrbidding
sional Democrats seem bent on keeping
the establishment of a religion in order to
the trend going by throttling President
foster the free expression of religion, not
Bush's fairhsbased ininative.
to suppress it.
Gore tried to improv_e his party's image
In the debate over faith-based initiaamong the faithful by picking Sen. Joe
tives, there are some legitimate questions
Liebennan, D-Conn., an openly devout
that need to be answered and language
Jew, as his running mate and by endorsing
wtitten into law to prorect ~nst abuse.
the concept of federal funding for reliBut it can ~ done, and Democats
gious groups to help solve social probCOWMNIST
should tty to find a way to do it.
terns.
Lieberman, for instance, is concerned
The Clinton administration too had
about a provision in House legislation on
advanced the concept, expanding funds
It's hard to teD whether Democratic faith-based programs that would expand
and authority fur faith-based groups to hostility is a case ·of rampant partisanship the proviso that religious groups particiwork on welfare reform, mental health or rampant seculariSm _ almost religio-- pating in social programs can favor memand anti--drug programs.
phobia.
hers of theit own sects in hiring.All6wing
Pethaps it's both.
such groups to require that employees
However, now that President Bush · is
trying to encourage Iarge-sc3Ie involveDemocrats were OK with Clinton and follow rhe teachingo; or tenets or ~gious
m~t in social p~ by re~ously . Gore allowing church-based charities to practices of the faith could lead tO the
~ted~~· an tmllatwe called char- participate in social welfare programs.
. exclusion of f;lys and lesbians, fur examttable ch~ce, most top Democrats can
Suddenly, though, whC!J Bush tries to pie.
do this, Democrats raise the specter that
He is also concerned about religious
find nothing good to say about Jt.
Last week, for instance, Sen. Patrick the constitutional stricture against an proselytizing by groups receiving federal
Leahy, D-Vt., opened his tenure as chair- established religion is in jeopardy, . and money. And he questioned whether all
man of the Judiciary Committee by there's a danger that Hare Krishnas will religious groups - Scientologists, Hare
~g he had "grave concerns about dominate the drug-treatment field. .
Krishnas,etc.-should !xi eligtl!le f.o parwhere charitable choice may lead us."
Leahy cited two cases in Texas in which ticipate.
.
~e cite~ .e-:e.ry J?Os~ible argument faith-based programs had mistreated chil- · John Dilulio, head ofBush's faith-based
agatnst the tmllattve, liberal and conserv- dren. He neglected to mention· the initiative; says that under exi$ting pro~tive, and m:ade it evident that he'~ kill it coundess cases of documented abuse by grams, religious groups form ~.
if he can. He seems to be speaking for state-run child welfare agencies, foster ·non-religious entities to do social welfare.
most Democrats.
care systems and correctional centers all
Another option is government Vouch. Even Lieberman, who has argued for over the country.
ers that citizens could take to religious or
the expansion of religion in American life
Moreover, Democrats have a deeper secular agencies as they wished - . the
and has supported or co-sponsored ~ry problem. They are aligned intellectually way students take their PeU grants to secpast charitable choice-like initiative, now and politic311y with liberal groups harbor- ular or religious colleges of their choice.
says Bush has failed to answer "bani ques- ing a deep fear of religion, for whom the
Both traditional religious groups and .
lions" about the plan's constirutionality. . prime characteristics of faith are preju- marginal sects, Dilulio says, should be
Lieberman told me he thinks there are dice, exclusionistn, judgmentalism and judged on the basis of whether they can
ways around the problems and that he theocracy.
perform social services well, just as nonwants to solve them, but his staff predicts
The idea that religion inherendy repre- religious welfare providers are evaluated.
that charitable choice is a goner in the sents love, healing, redemption, generosiLieberman asked a good question in a
now DemocraHiominated Senate.
ty and liberation is something many recent speech: Does society have more 10 .
The plan will pass the House this sum- Democratic politicians seem reluctant 1:0 fear from a rehabili~ated drug addict who
mer, so it has a chance to survive in a acknowledge.
gut clean through an explicidy religionTo the extent Democrats ' appreciate based treatment program, or from an
House-Senate conference. But then it
will be up to Lieberman to convince his religious values, they tend to consider untreated, unrehabilitated addict? It's a
Democratic colleagues to accept a com- them something to be kept private and question he should pose to his colleagues.
promise measure - a sure test of his secret rather than the . inspiration of · (Morton Kondracke is eXI!£Utive editor ".f
leadership. .
America's rounders, which they were.
Roll Call, the hewspaper of Capitol Hill.)

wall.

New trainee

Morton
Kondctcke

.
WASHINGTON -Texas Gov. Rick
Perry's (R) veto of a bill to ban capital
punislunent for the mentally retarded, a
measure signed by Gov. Jeb Bush (R) of
Florida, raises again questions of crime
and punishment in America. First we must
ask: How bad is. the picrure at the
moment? A report by Public Agenda in
New York points out tha~ by 1999 the
homicide rate had dropped tq its lowest
point in 35 years; theft and robbery were
down 9 percent and juvenile offenses had
. declined 37 percent in the previous five
years. Even so, the crime rate was still
twice that of 19.60.
Experts were flabbergasted and cast
about among themselves co discover the
cause of the falling figures. Was it tougher
drug laws and chtee-strikes-you're~out
rules for repeat offenders? Was it the huge
1994 federal crime bill with its millions of
dollars to hire new police? Was it the halcyon economy that brought geod times
even to depleted neighborhoods? Was it
demography, blessed by fewer crimep~ne young males ages 13 to 30?
The answer is all of the above, but
there's reason for worry since two of those
items are rapidly changing: The current
economy is certainly less bountiful, and
teen~agers, growing in number again, are
likely to reach 30 million l1y 2006. Given
these circumstances, it might not be the

Jack
Anderson
&amp;

· Do\lglaS
Cohn
COLUMNIST

moment co halt construction of prisons as
some suggest. It's true that an unpiecedented 2 million Americans are now
behind bars, 'Vhich undoubtedly cons
tripqted to the lower crime rate. However, a substantial portion of chose in state
and federal penitentiaries are there for
drug possession, a nonviolent crime.
The Texas Youth Commission has had
mildly encouraging results from its specializ~d programs. After the TYC
h
approac Was. adopted in 1997• re-arrest
within one year of release was 49 percent
as opposed to 60 percent before, in 1993.
As time went on, however, the results
grew less favorable. Re-incarceration
within three years was 51 .percent after
TYC and 53 percent before. So rehabili(Jack Anderson and Dorlglas Cohn are
tation is not as automatic as some suppose. columnists for United Features Sytrdicate.)
•

01!

'

•

IOfiU T11a.a
ASS0CWED PRESS WRIIER

WASHINGTON
Since the North American
Free Trade Agreement ~
enacted seven yean ago. the
pact has hurt farmers and
ranchers in the United
Stares, ~ and Mexico,
according to a report
released Tuesday by a con~wner group.
Public Citizen, a nonprofit
group founded by Ralph
Nader that has been a vocal
eritic of NAFfA since its
inception, issued the 55-page
report.
It comes as the Bush
administration is pressing
Congress to grant President
Bush "fast · track" trade
authority to help create the
Free Trade Area of the Americas, a trade pact that would
include almost every nation
in the Western Hemisphere.
.Administration officials
dismissed the basis of Public
Citizen's report, arguing that
free trade was a key to the

Gallla County Community Improvement Corp, recently recog- .
nized Gary Roach of The WISeinan Agency for his community
service to Gallia County and the CIC Board of Directors from
.1996 until 2001. (Contributed photo)

Mary Beaver, associate of applied business in medical office··
administration; Jennifer Bias, associate uf applied business in
accounting: Bernice Desgrange, associate of applied business ui
computer applications technology; Jack Estep, diploma in soliware applications; April Fisher, associate of aJiplied business in
executive office administration; Corrina Fisher, associate of
applied business in computer applications technology; ·
· Kimberly Haley, diploma in medical administrative assistant; ·
Jill Johnson, associate of applied b~ness in accounting: Sherri
Johnson, diploma in· software applicat:jons; Heather Patterson,
associate of applied business in accounting: Christina Simms,
associate of applied business in computer applications technology; and Angela Thomas, diploma in medical administrative
assistant.

Uvestock report

GCC graduates

GALLIPOLIS Spring quarter graduates at G~polis
Career Col)ege· include:

WASHINGTON (AP) Lured by low mortgage rates,
Americana mapped up u1ed
homes in May, pushing sales to
their second-highest level this

HnllalookatiWiall
IIIII, -101110iy JldjUIIIId.
NOO-

--====

~r.

·-- "'
· ""
~

Sales of previously occupied
homes rose by 2. 9 percent in
May to a seasonally adjusted
annual rate of 5.37 million,
after declining by 3.9 percent
in April, the National Association of Realtors reported
Monday.
200
OJ FMAMJJASONDJFMAM
Given that many economists
W2000
2001
were predicting sales would be
Nole:
ThfN
llgum
ra11ect
a mont
flat or fall last month, the betdttar.d eysttm for aa.Hylng
ter-than- expected
perforbul"-lrleked by the
mance left analysts marveling government.
at the industry's resilience in
the face of the economic slow- SOURCE: Dllpll1m0fllot~ AP
down that has gripped the
country since the second half when deciding whether or not
oflast year.
to make a bigsticket purchase,
On Wall Street, anxiety over analysts said..
the national economy helped
"Demand is still very high,
to send blue-chip stocks lower. interest rates remain close to
The Dow Jones industrial historic lows and many people
average closed down 100.37 at are confident about their own
10,504.22, its second straight economic future;• said David
Lereah, ".the association's chief
session of triple-digit losses.
The main reason the hous- econonust.
.,
ing market has remained stable · The average rate on . a 30during the slowdown 1s year fixed-rate mortgage m
because mortgage races have May was 7.15.perce':lt, up from
stayed )ow. Though rates crept 7.08 percent m April, but well
up in May from April, they are
down more than a ·full percentage point from May 2000.
"The unsinkable housing
market continues to prop up
the economy;• said economist
Joel Naroff ofNaroffEconomic Advisors.
·
For this year, .the 5.37~mil- ·
·lion rate was second only to
the pace of 5.43 million posted in March.
The choppy economy isn't
putting off home buyers for a
number of reasons. economists .
said. Mortgage rates remain
favorable and Americans .despite mounting· layoffS still have jobs, a key ingredient

UMW supports Bush's plan
FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) - Th.e United Mine Worken union
is hoping President Bush's energy plan, which calls for an
increase in coal production, will help ..boost membership.
Although the union endorsed Vice President AI Gore in
last year's presidential race, officials have praised Bush for his
plan, which calls for the building of 1,300 power plants.
Roberts said the resurgence of coal should make it easier
to organize miners. But critics point out that most coal is
being mined in the West, which is mainly nonunionized, and .
that companies have previously been successful defeating
unionization drives. ·

Upcoming speciail

below the 8.52 percent posted
in May 2000. Mortgage rates
hit a five-year high of 8.64
percent in midsMay a year
ago. Last week, 30syear morts
gage rates dipped to 7.11 percent.
To stave off recession, the
Federal . Reserve has slashed
interest rates five times this
year, driving down borrowing
costs to their lowest point in
seven years. Many analysts are
expecting a sixth cut on
Wednesday. Analysts, however,
are divided over whether the
reduction will be by another
halfspoint or a quarter-point.
A group of bank economists
predicted Monday chat aggres- .
sive action by the Fed and the
impact of a tax cut will allow
the country co dodge a fullblown downturn this year,
echoing the belief of other
economic forecasters.
"While some industries are
experiencing hard times, the
national econo111y as a whole
will skirt a recession and
resume a faster pace of growth
in the next year and a half,"
s:iid David Littmann; chairman
of the American Bankers Asso- .
·dation's economic advisory
committee.

c.
............. ·741-448-1044.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
TUESDAY
~
POMEROYalre.x Cru·
sadt lor Chrlat meatl , u...
day, 7 p.m. at Firat SOutham
Baptlat Church, Pomaroy.
MIDDLEPORT- Ladla1lor
thl L.otd, Tualldly, 1o a.m.
Blbla ·~· Abundant GI'ICI
Church. lddlepol1. Braakla1t
will bllll'\lld.
CHESTER..:.. Shade Rlvar
Lodge 453, 7 p.m. Tuesday,
with work In tha Third Degree.
Refreshments.
POMEROY - Immunization
clinic, Health Department, 1 to
3 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
MIDDLEPORT- Public meet·
ing on best use plan lor Middle·
port school buildings, conduct·
ed by Citizens Committee of
Middleport Planning Commls·
sion, Feeney·Bennen Post
annex, 7 p.m. Tuesday. The
public Is urged to attend.
RACINE -The Southam Athletic Boosters will hold an
emergency meeting at 7:30

p.m. on Tutlday In thl high
IIChool calatarla to dlacuaa the
lutura ollhl organization and
the 111ct1on o1 olllelra. Paranll
ollludanll gi'Mlal 3-12 parllcl·
paUng In dlllrlct athlllloa, along
with lntarallld oommunrty
mamblra, and all coach••
ahould all8nd.
WIDNIIDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Malga Coun·
~amlly and Chlldran Firat
uncll, Wednelldly, 9 a.m. at
Depal1me111 of Job and Family
Sarvlcea olllela, Middleport.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local School District, regular
board meeting, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday.

~m.

home of president Bob
lngeH. .

TUPPERS PLAINS- Eut1m
Local Tachnology CommiHaa,
Thurldly, 8 p.m. Eaatam Ele·
mantary School conlarance
room.
POMEROY- VFW 9053 Tuppara Plilnl, Thul'lday, 7:30
p.m. at the hall.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Celebration
25th anniversary. Middle Wea-.
leyan Bible Hollnass Church,
Sunday. Dinner on the grounds
following morning service and
special service at 2:30 p.m.

Community Celendar Ia
publllhed u a free aervtc:e to
MIDDLEPORT- Missionary
service, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. non·proflt groupt1 wlahlng to
announce meellnga end apeMlddlepol1 Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church, Pearl Street. . clal eventl.
The calendar Is not
Sam and Annie Davis of Mexl·
dealgned to promote aalea or ·
co to speak.
fund-railer• of any type.
Items are printed only a1
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE -Annual meeting 1pace permltland cannot be
guaranteed to be printed a
of Carleton College Board of
Trustees, Thursday, June 28, 7 specific number of daya.

Get Your .
Patriotic Decorations and
Office supplies NOW!

oon't wait
for the last
minute!!

OFFICE
SERVICE
.,AND SUPPLY
.

1111'-1111. ••

enormous economic growth,
of the last decade - and
could feed further economic
VI·tality.
"If you reduce world trade
buriers by a third, the world
economy will grow by S600
billion," said Jim Dyke,
spokesman for Commerce
Secretary Donald Evans.
· The report .notes that
commodity prices world· wide have plunged since
NAFTA was enacted in
1994. For · example, corn
prices feU 20 percent, wheat
prices dropped 28 percent
and cotton prices saw a 38
percent decline over the last ·
seven yean.
"We now have a sevenyear test run of NAFTA,"
·said Lori Wallach, director of
Public Citizen's Global Trade
Watch.
" There were a lot of
.promises;' she said. "But the
real· actual life experience
shows that instead of the
henc:fits· we were promised,
there have been problems."

..

No sale on July 4.
Call the office at 446-9696.

Sales 'Of used homes rose
2.9
last month

· hment in these United States
The great moral debate, in this report and
across the couritty, is capital punishment.
As Public Agen.da points out, it goes back
in America co 1636, when the Massachusetts Bay Colony listed 13 crimes punishabl e by death, including idolatry · and
witchcraft.
. In 1846, Micl\igan was tile first state co
abolish the death penalty for all crime·s
.except treason. In 1907, Kansas aban.s
doned it altogether with ~ight more states
doing the same over the next decade. But
ochers persisted: New York had already
introduced th~ electric chair in 1888.
Nevada turned to lethal gas in 1923 and
Texas to injection in 1982. The Supreme
Court ruled capital punishment unconstitutional in 1972 and constitutional again
in 1976 after certain discrepancies in some
states were corrected. It prohibited execut\on of offenders who were 15 ot younger
· at the tin1e of their crime in 1988 and
upheld the death for the mentally retarded in 1989. So Gov. Perry is completely in
accord with the law of the -land in permitring capital punishment for the mentally retarded in Texas. But is chis really the
way of a civilized society? Wouldn't life in
prison with no possible chance of parole
align itself more closely with the principies of an enlightened nation?

BY Cl

GALLIPOLIS FERRY- Brian Pagel of Pomeroy has been
·
employed as a manager trainee at 84
Lumber in Gallipolis Ferry.
Pagel is a graduate of Southern High
School and received a degree from
GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. market report from
Buckeye Hills Technology in 2001. He
is the son ofrimm Pagel and Lisa Hen- Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday. .
drix of Franklin, Wis.
Feeder Cattle-Steady
275-415# St. $90-$107 Hf. $85-$95, 425-525# St. $87-$105
fagel resides in Pomeroy with his
Hf. $83-$95 550s625# St. $87-$95 Hf. $80-$84 ·650~725# St.
daughters Jaeda, Jaylyn and Ashlyn.
As a manager trainee, Pagel is respon- $82-$87 Hf. S70-S77; 750-850# St. S71-S82 Hf. $69-$72.
.
· CowssSteady .
.sible for sales, estimating and inaterial
WeD Muscled/Fleshed $46-$50.50; Medium/Lean $40-$46;
takeoflj, performing insStore merchanThin/Light
$30-$40; Bulls $58-$63.
dising, and maintaining store and yard
Back To The Farm
appearance.
Cow/Calf Pairs $475-$835; Bred Cows $420-$720; Baby
Calves S60-S265; Goats $20-$70.

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND

Crime and

.

Marshall arne to HMC in August
2000, working 6nt in !he housekeeping
...,... -•
department, until his promotion in
.
October 2000 to his present position..
Before conung to HMC, Marshall ·was a janitorial supervisor
for four years at !nco Alloys International in Huntington. Previously, he was employed with Roman J. Claprood. wholesale
florist, also in Huntington.
..
Marshall and his wife, Beverly, a legal secretary. reside ·in
Crown City. They have two children who both live in Proctorville: Niles, 21, attends Marshall University majoring in
criminal justice; and Emily, 20, attends the Lawrence County
Branch of Ohio University majoring in elementary education.
An accomplished musician, he enjoys bluegrass music, playing
the banjo, guitar and mandolin. and had the opportunity to play
with Keith Whidey in the J.D. Crow Band. He also enjoys

NATIONAL VIEW

r
l

AGRICULTURE

Born

Ohio Valley Publl8hlng Co.

s Ja. 2111
•

Honored

GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth N . Manhall, ttaruport escort at
Holzer Medical ~ter, was named the Junr 2001 Employee of
the Month, according to LaMar Wyse. president and chiefexecuttve officer.
in Huntington. W.Va., MWWI
attended Chrsapeake Higb School and
Clark State Communiry College. Cmter for Human Retource Devdopment.
where he was awarded a professional
supervisory certi6cate in 1997.
He also served in the U.S. Navy tiom
January 1972 until June 1'176, at first as
an E-4 OO.unsmare, and then as a sig-

111 Court a, Pa Rll .... Olllo
7to IIJ 1111 • Fa: ltM117

Pull' 'w

1'1 sd I• I

. . . .

The Daily Sentinel

Clwlll

Page AS ·:

The Daily Sentinel

Across from Ingels Furniture

Middleport -

"

7 40·992·6376

•

�...M
s

1

HMC •r¥1oyee of the 11•illa

w. GaWll

CIW1II•Iki.Ch
Q I 111111

zn

I

A..,_nl.eals

" 4ISI Editor
..... ICily . .
Coilllal1r

nalman.

Smaller
Instant communication makes
creative th¢ more common
• The Miami Herald, on Saddam Hussein and q,pyright
prot«tiim: ~t does it mean to say that the world is a
smaller place? For artist Jonathon Earl Bowser, it means
~t Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein can rip off his paint. ing with impunity.
Thanks to instant global communications Mr. Bowser,
who lives in Canada's smallest province, Prince Edward
Island, learned that one of his pain~, The Awakening,
graces the cover of a newly published Arabic novel widely believed to be authored by Hussein.
The book, "Zabibah and the King:' is the story of a cruelly raped woman said to represent the. Iraqi people and
an iron-willed king, Hussein, with allegorical allusions to
the Persian GulfWar. The .CIA is poring over it for psychological insights into Hussein.
.
A lawyer is poring through international treaties to
· determine whether Mr. Bowser has any redress for the .
copyright violation.... It is doubtful Mr. Bowser will ever
collect a dime.
·
: More troubling is the threat to his good name. For good
:teason, Mr. Bowser felt compelled to e-mail the CIA disavowing any connection to the dictator. The Cold War is
over, but fear lingers of what it spawned - "black lists"
: and government dossiers bulging with vengeful gossip
and misinformation, now so much easier and faster to
compile. Instantaneous communiqtions indeed make the
:world a smaller place but add nothing to people's sense of
:security.
·
·
·

•

•

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY Tl:IE ASSOCI.t.TEO PRESS

Today is Thesday, June 26, the 177th day of 2001. There are
188 days left in the year.

'

."
•
.

'

.

'
•

Today's Highlight in History:
On June 26, 1963, President Kennedy visited West Berlin,
where he made his famous declaration: "Ich bin ein Berliner"
:(1 am a Berliner).
On this date:
In 1870, the fint section of Atlantic City, N.J.'s Boardwalk
was opened to the public.
In 1900, a commission that included Dr. Walter Reed began
the fight against the deadly disease yellow fever.
In 1917, the 6nt trOOps of the American Expeditionary
Force arrived in France during World War I.
In 1919, the New York Daily News was first published.
In 1925, Charlie Chaplin's classic comedy. "The Gold Rush;'
premiered at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood.
In 1945, the c!Jar!er of the United Nations was signed by SO
countries in San Pranc:bco.
In 1948, the Berlin Airlift began in earnest after the Soviet
Union cut off land and water routes to the isolated western
·
sector ofBerlin.
In 1959, President Eiienhower joined Britain's Queen Elizabeth II in ceremonies officially opening the St. Lawrence Sea-

way.
In 1968, Chief U.S.Justice Earl Warren announced his intens
tipn to resign.
.In 1987, Supreme Court Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr.
announced his retirement, leaving a vacancy that was 611ed by
Anthony M. Kennedy.
Ten years ago: A Kentucky medical examiner announced that
test results showed President Zachary Taylor had died in 1850
of natural causes,- and not arsenic poisoning, as speculated by
a writer. (Taylor's, remains were exhumed so that tissue samples
could be ralten.)
Five years ago: The Supreme Court ol:dered the Virginia Military Academy to admit women, or forso state support. Former
White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum took the blame for ·
the FBI files controversy; White House security chief Craig
Livingstone resigned. President Clinton and leaders of the
world's other industrial powers gathered in Lyon, France, for
·
their annual economic summit.
One year ago:'fltival scientific teams completed the first
rough map of the human genetic code after a 10-year race. The
Supreme Court gave new. power to its landmark Miranda decisiort of 1966, ruling police still must warn the people they
arrest of their "right to remain silent" when questioned.
, . Thday's Birthdays: Actress Eleanor Parker is 79.Jazz musicians
film composer Dave Grusin is '67: Actor Josef Sommer is 67.
Singer Billy Davis Jr. (The Fifth Dimension) is 61. Singer
Georgie Fame is 58. Actor Clive Francis is 55 . Actor Robert
Davi. is 47. Singer-musician Mick Jones is 46. Actof Gedde
Watanabe js 46. Rock singer Chris Isaak is 45. Rock singer
Patry Smyth is 44. Singer Terri Nunn (Berlin) is 40.Actor Mark
'McKinney is 39. Rock singer Harriet Wheeler (The Sundays)
is 38. Rock musician Colin Greenwood (Radiohead) is 32.

Report:
has hurt U.S.
fann ·economy

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

fanning.
As employee of the month, Marshall received a S100 U.S.
Savings Bond, a reserved parking place designated in i1is name,
a complimentary meal in the hospital cafeteria, his picture diS;s

.Are Democrats anti-religion, or just plain anti-Bush?

played on the Employee of the Month wall near the employee
entrance, and his name engraved on th.e 2001 employee nf the
month plaque, also displayed on the Employee. of the Month

AI Gore got trounced last year 31;11ong
The fr:uners of the Constitution wrote
churchgoing Americans, and Congres:.
the Fint Amendment cbuse' fOrbidding
sional Democrats seem bent on keeping
the establishment of a religion in order to
the trend going by throttling President
foster the free expression of religion, not
Bush's fairhsbased ininative.
to suppress it.
Gore tried to improv_e his party's image
In the debate over faith-based initiaamong the faithful by picking Sen. Joe
tives, there are some legitimate questions
Liebennan, D-Conn., an openly devout
that need to be answered and language
Jew, as his running mate and by endorsing
wtitten into law to prorect ~nst abuse.
the concept of federal funding for reliBut it can ~ done, and Democats
gious groups to help solve social probCOWMNIST
should tty to find a way to do it.
terns.
Lieberman, for instance, is concerned
The Clinton administration too had
about a provision in House legislation on
advanced the concept, expanding funds
It's hard to teD whether Democratic faith-based programs that would expand
and authority fur faith-based groups to hostility is a case ·of rampant partisanship the proviso that religious groups particiwork on welfare reform, mental health or rampant seculariSm _ almost religio-- pating in social programs can favor memand anti--drug programs.
phobia.
hers of theit own sects in hiring.All6wing
Pethaps it's both.
such groups to require that employees
However, now that President Bush · is
trying to encourage Iarge-sc3Ie involveDemocrats were OK with Clinton and follow rhe teachingo; or tenets or ~gious
m~t in social p~ by re~ously . Gore allowing church-based charities to practices of the faith could lead tO the
~ted~~· an tmllatwe called char- participate in social welfare programs.
. exclusion of f;lys and lesbians, fur examttable ch~ce, most top Democrats can
Suddenly, though, whC!J Bush tries to pie.
do this, Democrats raise the specter that
He is also concerned about religious
find nothing good to say about Jt.
Last week, for instance, Sen. Patrick the constitutional stricture against an proselytizing by groups receiving federal
Leahy, D-Vt., opened his tenure as chair- established religion is in jeopardy, . and money. And he questioned whether all
man of the Judiciary Committee by there's a danger that Hare Krishnas will religious groups - Scientologists, Hare
~g he had "grave concerns about dominate the drug-treatment field. .
Krishnas,etc.-should !xi eligtl!le f.o parwhere charitable choice may lead us."
Leahy cited two cases in Texas in which ticipate.
.
~e cite~ .e-:e.ry J?Os~ible argument faith-based programs had mistreated chil- · John Dilulio, head ofBush's faith-based
agatnst the tmllattve, liberal and conserv- dren. He neglected to mention· the initiative; says that under exi$ting pro~tive, and m:ade it evident that he'~ kill it coundess cases of documented abuse by grams, religious groups form ~.
if he can. He seems to be speaking for state-run child welfare agencies, foster ·non-religious entities to do social welfare.
most Democrats.
care systems and correctional centers all
Another option is government Vouch. Even Lieberman, who has argued for over the country.
ers that citizens could take to religious or
the expansion of religion in American life
Moreover, Democrats have a deeper secular agencies as they wished - . the
and has supported or co-sponsored ~ry problem. They are aligned intellectually way students take their PeU grants to secpast charitable choice-like initiative, now and politic311y with liberal groups harbor- ular or religious colleges of their choice.
says Bush has failed to answer "bani ques- ing a deep fear of religion, for whom the
Both traditional religious groups and .
lions" about the plan's constirutionality. . prime characteristics of faith are preju- marginal sects, Dilulio says, should be
Lieberman told me he thinks there are dice, exclusionistn, judgmentalism and judged on the basis of whether they can
ways around the problems and that he theocracy.
perform social services well, just as nonwants to solve them, but his staff predicts
The idea that religion inherendy repre- religious welfare providers are evaluated.
that charitable choice is a goner in the sents love, healing, redemption, generosiLieberman asked a good question in a
now DemocraHiominated Senate.
ty and liberation is something many recent speech: Does society have more 10 .
The plan will pass the House this sum- Democratic politicians seem reluctant 1:0 fear from a rehabili~ated drug addict who
mer, so it has a chance to survive in a acknowledge.
gut clean through an explicidy religionTo the extent Democrats ' appreciate based treatment program, or from an
House-Senate conference. But then it
will be up to Lieberman to convince his religious values, they tend to consider untreated, unrehabilitated addict? It's a
Democratic colleagues to accept a com- them something to be kept private and question he should pose to his colleagues.
promise measure - a sure test of his secret rather than the . inspiration of · (Morton Kondracke is eXI!£Utive editor ".f
leadership. .
America's rounders, which they were.
Roll Call, the hewspaper of Capitol Hill.)

wall.

New trainee

Morton
Kondctcke

.
WASHINGTON -Texas Gov. Rick
Perry's (R) veto of a bill to ban capital
punislunent for the mentally retarded, a
measure signed by Gov. Jeb Bush (R) of
Florida, raises again questions of crime
and punishment in America. First we must
ask: How bad is. the picrure at the
moment? A report by Public Agenda in
New York points out tha~ by 1999 the
homicide rate had dropped tq its lowest
point in 35 years; theft and robbery were
down 9 percent and juvenile offenses had
. declined 37 percent in the previous five
years. Even so, the crime rate was still
twice that of 19.60.
Experts were flabbergasted and cast
about among themselves co discover the
cause of the falling figures. Was it tougher
drug laws and chtee-strikes-you're~out
rules for repeat offenders? Was it the huge
1994 federal crime bill with its millions of
dollars to hire new police? Was it the halcyon economy that brought geod times
even to depleted neighborhoods? Was it
demography, blessed by fewer crimep~ne young males ages 13 to 30?
The answer is all of the above, but
there's reason for worry since two of those
items are rapidly changing: The current
economy is certainly less bountiful, and
teen~agers, growing in number again, are
likely to reach 30 million l1y 2006. Given
these circumstances, it might not be the

Jack
Anderson
&amp;

· Do\lglaS
Cohn
COLUMNIST

moment co halt construction of prisons as
some suggest. It's true that an unpiecedented 2 million Americans are now
behind bars, 'Vhich undoubtedly cons
tripqted to the lower crime rate. However, a substantial portion of chose in state
and federal penitentiaries are there for
drug possession, a nonviolent crime.
The Texas Youth Commission has had
mildly encouraging results from its specializ~d programs. After the TYC
h
approac Was. adopted in 1997• re-arrest
within one year of release was 49 percent
as opposed to 60 percent before, in 1993.
As time went on, however, the results
grew less favorable. Re-incarceration
within three years was 51 .percent after
TYC and 53 percent before. So rehabili(Jack Anderson and Dorlglas Cohn are
tation is not as automatic as some suppose. columnists for United Features Sytrdicate.)
•

01!

'

•

IOfiU T11a.a
ASS0CWED PRESS WRIIER

WASHINGTON
Since the North American
Free Trade Agreement ~
enacted seven yean ago. the
pact has hurt farmers and
ranchers in the United
Stares, ~ and Mexico,
according to a report
released Tuesday by a con~wner group.
Public Citizen, a nonprofit
group founded by Ralph
Nader that has been a vocal
eritic of NAFfA since its
inception, issued the 55-page
report.
It comes as the Bush
administration is pressing
Congress to grant President
Bush "fast · track" trade
authority to help create the
Free Trade Area of the Americas, a trade pact that would
include almost every nation
in the Western Hemisphere.
.Administration officials
dismissed the basis of Public
Citizen's report, arguing that
free trade was a key to the

Gallla County Community Improvement Corp, recently recog- .
nized Gary Roach of The WISeinan Agency for his community
service to Gallia County and the CIC Board of Directors from
.1996 until 2001. (Contributed photo)

Mary Beaver, associate of applied business in medical office··
administration; Jennifer Bias, associate uf applied business in
accounting: Bernice Desgrange, associate of applied business ui
computer applications technology; Jack Estep, diploma in soliware applications; April Fisher, associate of aJiplied business in
executive office administration; Corrina Fisher, associate of
applied business in computer applications technology; ·
· Kimberly Haley, diploma in medical administrative assistant; ·
Jill Johnson, associate of applied b~ness in accounting: Sherri
Johnson, diploma in· software applicat:jons; Heather Patterson,
associate of applied business in accounting: Christina Simms,
associate of applied business in computer applications technology; and Angela Thomas, diploma in medical administrative
assistant.

Uvestock report

GCC graduates

GALLIPOLIS Spring quarter graduates at G~polis
Career Col)ege· include:

WASHINGTON (AP) Lured by low mortgage rates,
Americana mapped up u1ed
homes in May, pushing sales to
their second-highest level this

HnllalookatiWiall
IIIII, -101110iy JldjUIIIId.
NOO-

--====

~r.

·-- "'
· ""
~

Sales of previously occupied
homes rose by 2. 9 percent in
May to a seasonally adjusted
annual rate of 5.37 million,
after declining by 3.9 percent
in April, the National Association of Realtors reported
Monday.
200
OJ FMAMJJASONDJFMAM
Given that many economists
W2000
2001
were predicting sales would be
Nole:
ThfN
llgum
ra11ect
a mont
flat or fall last month, the betdttar.d eysttm for aa.Hylng
ter-than- expected
perforbul"-lrleked by the
mance left analysts marveling government.
at the industry's resilience in
the face of the economic slow- SOURCE: Dllpll1m0fllot~ AP
down that has gripped the
country since the second half when deciding whether or not
oflast year.
to make a bigsticket purchase,
On Wall Street, anxiety over analysts said..
the national economy helped
"Demand is still very high,
to send blue-chip stocks lower. interest rates remain close to
The Dow Jones industrial historic lows and many people
average closed down 100.37 at are confident about their own
10,504.22, its second straight economic future;• said David
Lereah, ".the association's chief
session of triple-digit losses.
The main reason the hous- econonust.
.,
ing market has remained stable · The average rate on . a 30during the slowdown 1s year fixed-rate mortgage m
because mortgage races have May was 7.15.perce':lt, up from
stayed )ow. Though rates crept 7.08 percent m April, but well
up in May from April, they are
down more than a ·full percentage point from May 2000.
"The unsinkable housing
market continues to prop up
the economy;• said economist
Joel Naroff ofNaroffEconomic Advisors.
·
For this year, .the 5.37~mil- ·
·lion rate was second only to
the pace of 5.43 million posted in March.
The choppy economy isn't
putting off home buyers for a
number of reasons. economists .
said. Mortgage rates remain
favorable and Americans .despite mounting· layoffS still have jobs, a key ingredient

UMW supports Bush's plan
FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) - Th.e United Mine Worken union
is hoping President Bush's energy plan, which calls for an
increase in coal production, will help ..boost membership.
Although the union endorsed Vice President AI Gore in
last year's presidential race, officials have praised Bush for his
plan, which calls for the building of 1,300 power plants.
Roberts said the resurgence of coal should make it easier
to organize miners. But critics point out that most coal is
being mined in the West, which is mainly nonunionized, and .
that companies have previously been successful defeating
unionization drives. ·

Upcoming speciail

below the 8.52 percent posted
in May 2000. Mortgage rates
hit a five-year high of 8.64
percent in midsMay a year
ago. Last week, 30syear morts
gage rates dipped to 7.11 percent.
To stave off recession, the
Federal . Reserve has slashed
interest rates five times this
year, driving down borrowing
costs to their lowest point in
seven years. Many analysts are
expecting a sixth cut on
Wednesday. Analysts, however,
are divided over whether the
reduction will be by another
halfspoint or a quarter-point.
A group of bank economists
predicted Monday chat aggres- .
sive action by the Fed and the
impact of a tax cut will allow
the country co dodge a fullblown downturn this year,
echoing the belief of other
economic forecasters.
"While some industries are
experiencing hard times, the
national econo111y as a whole
will skirt a recession and
resume a faster pace of growth
in the next year and a half,"
s:iid David Littmann; chairman
of the American Bankers Asso- .
·dation's economic advisory
committee.

c.
............. ·741-448-1044.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
TUESDAY
~
POMEROYalre.x Cru·
sadt lor Chrlat meatl , u...
day, 7 p.m. at Firat SOutham
Baptlat Church, Pomaroy.
MIDDLEPORT- Ladla1lor
thl L.otd, Tualldly, 1o a.m.
Blbla ·~· Abundant GI'ICI
Church. lddlepol1. Braakla1t
will bllll'\lld.
CHESTER..:.. Shade Rlvar
Lodge 453, 7 p.m. Tuesday,
with work In tha Third Degree.
Refreshments.
POMEROY - Immunization
clinic, Health Department, 1 to
3 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
MIDDLEPORT- Public meet·
ing on best use plan lor Middle·
port school buildings, conduct·
ed by Citizens Committee of
Middleport Planning Commls·
sion, Feeney·Bennen Post
annex, 7 p.m. Tuesday. The
public Is urged to attend.
RACINE -The Southam Athletic Boosters will hold an
emergency meeting at 7:30

p.m. on Tutlday In thl high
IIChool calatarla to dlacuaa the
lutura ollhl organization and
the 111ct1on o1 olllelra. Paranll
ollludanll gi'Mlal 3-12 parllcl·
paUng In dlllrlct athlllloa, along
with lntarallld oommunrty
mamblra, and all coach••
ahould all8nd.
WIDNIIDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Malga Coun·
~amlly and Chlldran Firat
uncll, Wednelldly, 9 a.m. at
Depal1me111 of Job and Family
Sarvlcea olllela, Middleport.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Local School District, regular
board meeting, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday.

~m.

home of president Bob
lngeH. .

TUPPERS PLAINS- Eut1m
Local Tachnology CommiHaa,
Thurldly, 8 p.m. Eaatam Ele·
mantary School conlarance
room.
POMEROY- VFW 9053 Tuppara Plilnl, Thul'lday, 7:30
p.m. at the hall.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Celebration
25th anniversary. Middle Wea-.
leyan Bible Hollnass Church,
Sunday. Dinner on the grounds
following morning service and
special service at 2:30 p.m.

Community Celendar Ia
publllhed u a free aervtc:e to
MIDDLEPORT- Missionary
service, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. non·proflt groupt1 wlahlng to
announce meellnga end apeMlddlepol1 Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church, Pearl Street. . clal eventl.
The calendar Is not
Sam and Annie Davis of Mexl·
dealgned to promote aalea or ·
co to speak.
fund-railer• of any type.
Items are printed only a1
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE -Annual meeting 1pace permltland cannot be
guaranteed to be printed a
of Carleton College Board of
Trustees, Thursday, June 28, 7 specific number of daya.

Get Your .
Patriotic Decorations and
Office supplies NOW!

oon't wait
for the last
minute!!

OFFICE
SERVICE
.,AND SUPPLY
.

1111'-1111. ••

enormous economic growth,
of the last decade - and
could feed further economic
VI·tality.
"If you reduce world trade
buriers by a third, the world
economy will grow by S600
billion," said Jim Dyke,
spokesman for Commerce
Secretary Donald Evans.
· The report .notes that
commodity prices world· wide have plunged since
NAFTA was enacted in
1994. For · example, corn
prices feU 20 percent, wheat
prices dropped 28 percent
and cotton prices saw a 38
percent decline over the last ·
seven yean.
"We now have a sevenyear test run of NAFTA,"
·said Lori Wallach, director of
Public Citizen's Global Trade
Watch.
" There were a lot of
.promises;' she said. "But the
real· actual life experience
shows that instead of the
henc:fits· we were promised,
there have been problems."

..

No sale on July 4.
Call the office at 446-9696.

Sales 'Of used homes rose
2.9
last month

· hment in these United States
The great moral debate, in this report and
across the couritty, is capital punishment.
As Public Agen.da points out, it goes back
in America co 1636, when the Massachusetts Bay Colony listed 13 crimes punishabl e by death, including idolatry · and
witchcraft.
. In 1846, Micl\igan was tile first state co
abolish the death penalty for all crime·s
.except treason. In 1907, Kansas aban.s
doned it altogether with ~ight more states
doing the same over the next decade. But
ochers persisted: New York had already
introduced th~ electric chair in 1888.
Nevada turned to lethal gas in 1923 and
Texas to injection in 1982. The Supreme
Court ruled capital punishment unconstitutional in 1972 and constitutional again
in 1976 after certain discrepancies in some
states were corrected. It prohibited execut\on of offenders who were 15 ot younger
· at the tin1e of their crime in 1988 and
upheld the death for the mentally retarded in 1989. So Gov. Perry is completely in
accord with the law of the -land in permitring capital punishment for the mentally retarded in Texas. But is chis really the
way of a civilized society? Wouldn't life in
prison with no possible chance of parole
align itself more closely with the principies of an enlightened nation?

BY Cl

GALLIPOLIS FERRY- Brian Pagel of Pomeroy has been
·
employed as a manager trainee at 84
Lumber in Gallipolis Ferry.
Pagel is a graduate of Southern High
School and received a degree from
GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Inc. market report from
Buckeye Hills Technology in 2001. He
is the son ofrimm Pagel and Lisa Hen- Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday. .
drix of Franklin, Wis.
Feeder Cattle-Steady
275-415# St. $90-$107 Hf. $85-$95, 425-525# St. $87-$105
fagel resides in Pomeroy with his
Hf. $83-$95 550s625# St. $87-$95 Hf. $80-$84 ·650~725# St.
daughters Jaeda, Jaylyn and Ashlyn.
As a manager trainee, Pagel is respon- $82-$87 Hf. S70-S77; 750-850# St. S71-S82 Hf. $69-$72.
.
· CowssSteady .
.sible for sales, estimating and inaterial
WeD Muscled/Fleshed $46-$50.50; Medium/Lean $40-$46;
takeoflj, performing insStore merchanThin/Light
$30-$40; Bulls $58-$63.
dising, and maintaining store and yard
Back To The Farm
appearance.
Cow/Calf Pairs $475-$835; Bred Cows $420-$720; Baby
Calves S60-S265; Goats $20-$70.

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND

Crime and

.

Marshall arne to HMC in August
2000, working 6nt in !he housekeeping
...,... -•
department, until his promotion in
.
October 2000 to his present position..
Before conung to HMC, Marshall ·was a janitorial supervisor
for four years at !nco Alloys International in Huntington. Previously, he was employed with Roman J. Claprood. wholesale
florist, also in Huntington.
..
Marshall and his wife, Beverly, a legal secretary. reside ·in
Crown City. They have two children who both live in Proctorville: Niles, 21, attends Marshall University majoring in
criminal justice; and Emily, 20, attends the Lawrence County
Branch of Ohio University majoring in elementary education.
An accomplished musician, he enjoys bluegrass music, playing
the banjo, guitar and mandolin. and had the opportunity to play
with Keith Whidey in the J.D. Crow Band. He also enjoys

NATIONAL VIEW

r
l

AGRICULTURE

Born

Ohio Valley Publl8hlng Co.

s Ja. 2111
•

Honored

GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth N . Manhall, ttaruport escort at
Holzer Medical ~ter, was named the Junr 2001 Employee of
the Month, according to LaMar Wyse. president and chiefexecuttve officer.
in Huntington. W.Va., MWWI
attended Chrsapeake Higb School and
Clark State Communiry College. Cmter for Human Retource Devdopment.
where he was awarded a professional
supervisory certi6cate in 1997.
He also served in the U.S. Navy tiom
January 1972 until June 1'176, at first as
an E-4 OO.unsmare, and then as a sig-

111 Court a, Pa Rll .... Olllo
7to IIJ 1111 • Fa: ltM117

Pull' 'w

1'1 sd I• I

. . . .

The Daily Sentinel

Clwlll

Page AS ·:

The Daily Sentinel

Across from Ingels Furniture

Middleport -

"

7 40·992·6376

•

�•

•

~

.

•• •

•

The Daily Sentinel

•

. WASHINGTON (AI') - - Senaton sho.ulcl grill President
Bush's judicial nominea about abortion and other controvenial
topics imtnd of tiptoeing around the issues and then priwtely
basing their decisions on a candidate's ideology, Sen. Charles
SclwrMr says.
Schumer. D-N. Y., cbainnan of the Senate Judiciary Committee's COUl15 panel. is expected at a hearing Tuesday to uy " it's
legitimate to use ideology" when considering judici.ol nomiDeft.. a source close to the senator said.
The role of ideology in judicial seleCtions, the focus of the
bearing. has been a running theme throughout the process since

WASHINGTON (AP) - House :and
Sen..John Edwardt,D-N.C.,a C&lt;Mp&lt;lllSenate Republicans a~e planning Ja.ge- sor of the Senate bill, said employers
scalt alterna!Ms to a patients' righls bill should be prorected. but not with the
pushed by the Senate's Democratic GOP appoadt that he says has "significant problems."
majority.
Democrats and Republicans agree on
Republicans senators are introducing
amendments, or changes. that would curb many ofthe same popu1ac measures in tbe
the lawsuit provisions sought by Democ- Democrat-baclted bill- guaranteed payrats for aggri~ patients in HMO. :and ments fur reasonable emergency room
visits. mandated hospital suys for breast
other health plans..
In particular, ·they want to keep canar patients and access to specialists
employers from being sued simply such as. gynecologists and pediatricians.
But the two sides differ on how patients
because they provided the health insurance. A vote was expected on the· issue should proceed in court if ~ go
wrong.
Tuesday. Demoaats and their supporters believe
Sen. Judd Gregg. R-NH. said that,
without such a limitation, "The pCICtical patients harmed by an HMO's actions
effect is that a lot of employers are going should be able sue in federal or state
court. where damage awards tend to be
to drop their insurance:·

Bush took office.

•

First, Bush ended the American Bar Association's role in the
White House's confidentW judicial screening process. Many
conset'ntives see the ABA as liberal-leaning and blamed its
mind n!lliew ofSupmne Court nominee Robert Bork's qualifiarions for his rejection by the Senate.

ColsgNss eyes China bade
WASHINGTON (AP) - China, a perennial source of contention on Capitol Hill, will have its day. or week., or month in
Congress again this year, thanks to anger over a military plane
collision in April. the detention of U.S. scholan and China's
inability to negotiate entry into the World Trade Organization.
The most symbolic fight of the summer is rNer whet,her Beijing should ·be tapped to host the 2008 Olympic games. The
mde issue is on the c.alendar because China is not yet in the
WTO, a requirement of its permanent normal trade status voted
last year.
In both cases, free-traders and those who believe in the benefits of engagement are &amp;ring off against those who feel China's
human rights record does not warrant the boon the Olympics
and open tr.ule bring.
"China's abominable human rights record violates the spirit
of the games and should disqualify Beijing from consideration"
as Olympics host, said Rep. Torn Lantos of California, top
Democrat on the House lnternatioual Relations Committee.
. He is chief sponsor of a resolution urging the International
Olympic Committee not to award China the gam~ when it
chooses a site July 13.

bility of a second raise next year and a health insurance plan
that maintains current co-payments for doctor's visits and p~
scriptions.
·
Gov. Gary Locke, who was elected with strong support fiom
organized labor, could sign the operating budget into law as
early as Tuesday.

BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) - · Nunes at two Twin
Cities hospitafs have voted to accept a new contract and end a
three-week strike.
More than 1,300 registered nurses at · Fairview Southdale
Hospital in Edina and the Riverside campus of Fairview University Medical Center in Minneapolis voted Monday to ratifY
.the proposed contract and return to work on Friday.
The hospitals were the last two of 13 in the Twin Cities to
approve their contract, which includes longevity bonuses,
restrictions on heavy lifting and a 19.8 percent pay increase over
three yean. The contracts also allows for a unionized "charge
nurse" to close a unit for up to two hours if staffing is insufficient.
The Minnesota Nunes Association would not release the
vote total saying only that the contract passed by a "healthy
. "
margm.

House GOP blushes off probe
WASHINGTON (AP) - House Republicans on Monday
brushed off a Democratic request to investigate the finances of
President Bush's political adviser. Instead they released an FBI
document quoting a Democratic donor as saying he once paid
$20,000 to ensure access to the Clinton White House.
The FBI interview report quoted former Little Rock restaurateur Charlie Trie, a figure in the Clinton era fund-raising
investigation, as.telling agents he paid the money to presidential
aide Mark Middleton in 1994. Middleton's lawyer denied the
allegation.
I The FBI document was released by House Government
Reform Committee chairman Dan Button, R-Ind., who
delayed giving an answer about whether he will investigate the
stock holdings of Bush strategist Karl Rove.
"Rep. Henry Waxman, the ranking Democrat on Burton's
committee, had asked Button whether he would look into the
Rove matter. The Associated Press reponed Bush's top strategist
met March 12 with Intel executives concerning federal
approvai•fot a merger at a time when Rove owned more than
S100,000 in comt'any stock.

.AFL·CIO looks to expansion

Tulli ,,JI

NEW YORK (AP) - A seamstress who stabbed her newhorn son to death with scissors has been found guilty of firstdegree manslaughter.
.
Yasmin Chavez, 27, hid her pregnancy under baggy pants
before giving birth to the boy in her sister's apartment on Feb.
27,2000.

DEDHAM, Mass. (AP) -The trial of a doctor accused of
killing his wife was abruptly suspended moments ·before lawyers
were scheduled to give closing arguments to the jury.
The judge's actions came Monday after a woman contacted
Dr. Dirk Greineder's attorney, saying she had seen a suspicious
man in her yard the day his wife was slain.
The trial was to resume Tuesday after Superior Court Judge
Paul Chernoff decided whether the jtiry would be allowed to
hear testimony from the woman and her boyfriend.
Greineder, 60, is accused of slitting his wife's throat in Qctober 1999 during their regular walk in the woods in Wellesley.
Prosecutors say ' he killed his 58-year-old wife, Mabel, because
he .was afraid she would expose his secret life of prostitutes and
Internet pornography.

NEW YORK (AP) _:_ The FBI is investigating allegations
that a former contract derk at a U.S. attorney's office in New ·
York was a mole for the mob. ·
The employee, who worked for the U.S. attorney's office in
New York's Manhattan borough more than a year ago, is .b eing
investigated for providing unauthorized information pertaining
to organized crime investigations, said Barry Mawn, head of the
FBI office in New York.
The employee worked for a stenographic service company
periodically doing administrative work at the U.S. attorney's'
office, Mawn said.
The Daiiy News reported Monday that the mole disclosed '
lists of gangsters about to be indicted. The information was
allegedly given to Federico Giovanelli, a con-..:icted high-ranking member of the Genovese crime family.

about the bill.

""'••

..••

N.Y. bans cell phone 11se in can ~
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - . The fine state ban on motorisiS tait7
ing on hand-held cell phones has gotten final legislaa!i
approval, but it may be months before yakking drivers are
,
ed like outlaws in New York.
l;
If Gov. George Pataki signs the bill, as he has said he wou(&lt;l
do, the han would begin Nov. 1, although driven caught usirlg
hand-held cell phones will be
issued only warnings during die
.
first month.
l:
And violaton could have their tickets dismissed until the e~
of February if they present the judge with a receipt showiqg
they bought a hands-free ceO phone system.
~:
The measure, adopted 125-19 in the state Assembly on Mol);.
day night, was approved by the Republican-controlled Sena~
last week. The governor will sign the bill inti&gt; law this we~
said spokesman Michael McKeon.
.! i

,,

......

-'
·"-

BOSTON (AP) -California authorities have aries~ a~
who has been on the run since his daughter gave police vi~
tapes that allegedly show him raping her teen-age friends. ::
Worcester, Mass., District Attorney John Conte said California State Park Rangers captured Peter M . G~gnon, 48, on Monday in Carpintera, Calif., about 60 miles northwest of
AnRtles.

.

r

'I'l.JF.soor's

.

=

ngat

2.

•
No. 4 Jennifer Capriati,

halfway to the Grand Slam,
overcame a slow start to beat
Maria Alejandra Vento of
Venezuela 6-3, 6-2.And No. 5
Serena Williams needed only
40 minutes to dispose of lefty
Rita Kuti Kis, 6-1,6-0.
On the men's side,_ topseeded Pete Sampras won his
29th sttaight match at the
tournament, beating Francisco Clavet of Spain 6-4, 7-6
(5), 6-4.
Andy Roddick, touted as
the next American star, won
his Wimbledon debut at age
18 over Ivo Heuberger of
Switzerland 6-4. 6-4. 7-6 [7~·
.
Other notable winners
included, on the men's _side,
founh-seeded Marat Salin of
Russia. and sixth-seeded Tim ·
Henman of Britain. Eleventhseeded Jan-Michael Gambill
of the United States lost to
Chris
fellow
American
Woodruff.

*Monthly Inoome
Guidelliles

Without Cfedible Insuranc~

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)
Family Size

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage) .

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

·Family Size

. , *Monthly Income
' Guidelines

2 ···-·---~---···· $1,935
3
..........;~' ........ $2,439
. .t
4 ·-~··········"'-·· $2,942
.5 ··-':"·······---.:.•• $3,445
'6 ~---------------- $3,949

2----------------- $1,452
3~--~-·-----~----- $1,829
4---··············$2,207
5---·············-$2,584
6················-$2,962

·..

~

.

I. '

• Even If your family's Income Ia higher, you miiY aUII bt able tJ.get frM Healthy Start coverage for your klda.

·

992•2117

4

can now for more lnfor~atlon.
'

1

'

1

COLUMBUS (AP) - T.J.
Downing, son. of the co-cap- .
tain of the 1977 Michigan
team that went to the Rose
Bowl, has 'accepted a football
scholanhip to attend Ohio
State in 2002.
Downing is a 6-foot-5, '
285-pound two-way lineman
for Canton GlenOak High
School:
Although a Michigan grad,
his fathFr, Walt Downing,
seems to be looking forward
to his son playing for archrival
Ohio State.
"I've been asked several
times, 'Do I see myself wearing the scarlet and gray?"' said
Downing, 1a conse~sus AllAmerican lineman for the
Wolverines before going on
to an All-Pro career with the
San Francisco 49ers.
"I tell people I'm going to
be rooting for wherever my
boy is, because among other
things he also happens to be
my best·friend.
"Just because I went to
Michigan and had a high level
of success there doesn't auto•
matically mean he'd follow in
" &lt;:
my
lOOtsteps. •
'
"TJ. is a very mature, very
good kid. He wants to cut his
own path."
·

3 ----~---········· $1,210 .

I

:&gt;

dsoosesOSU

.

With Credible Insurance

"+ ;: ~'

Sonof•iH
and blue

Healthy Start.
.
'

Sergio Garcia

1•80o-992•2608 .. _·
.

.

~

..

J , ... '

~ • If"

Young
starters

.

wins Buick Classic·

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.
(AP) - Finilly, mercifully, the
season has ended for the
Atlantic City Seagulls.
The worst team in U.S. Basketball League history lost
126-99 to the Maryland Mustangs on Sunday to finish, 028.
)
The team, which lost by an
averag~ of2:2.9 points a game,
is the first in the 17-year his7•
tory of the league to gn winless for a whole season. No
team has won less th311 25
percent of its games before. · .
An array of problems preduced a season· in which
fewer than 100 fans was standard attendance.

4···············--$1,471
s·····---~~---···· $1,723
.6····-·········---$1,975
.

w•

GET USED TO DISAPPOINTMENT - Indians relief pitcher Ricardo Rincon, center, waits for a new ball as New York Yankees'
Tino Martinez, reft, circles the bases after hitting a two-ruh pinch-hit home -run in the seventh inning Monday. (AP)

PI 11M ... HOllier, B:S.

USBL Selplls

2···················$968

There is no face-to-j~ce interview.

sent

WIMBLEDON, England
(AP) - Top-ranked Martina
Hingis, hampered by an
aching back, was eliminated
on Wimbledon's opening day
by an opponent ranked 83rd
in the world.
Virginia Ruano Pascual of
Spain stunned Hingis 6-4, 6-

Use the Chart Below to see If
you qualify:

.

NEW YORK (AP) -·
Tino Martinez doesn't sit
and watch very often and he didn't like what he
was seeing.
One day after the Yankees blew a three-run lead
to lowly Tampa Bay, Martinez watched from the
dugout as New York
squandered a 6-0 lead
against Cleveland.
Martinez, in the midst of
a horrible slump, reversed
the Yankees' .fm:tunes with
his first career pinch-hit
homer, a two-run shot in
the seventh inning that lifted NewYork to an 8-7 win
over the Indians on Monday night.
"Big win. Real big win;·
Martinez said. "We lost a
tough one yesterday, and
losing this one would have
been tough. Maybe this
will jump-start us and get
us going in the right direction."
TheYankeeshopeitalso
gets Martinez going. In
what might be his last season in New York, Martinez
had been in an 18-for-116
rut that dropped his average to .246.
But with the tying run
on second base, manager
Joe Torre didn't hesitate to

Wimbledon

'

Family Size

Martinez holner downs Tri

HIGHLIGHTS

Healthy PaiRUfes

YES! You can call the Meigs County Depanment of
Job and Family Services (formerly Meigs County
Department of Human Services) at 992-2117 or 1-800992-2608 to apply or you can have the application sent
to you. The Agency is open Monday Through Friday
from 8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. and Thursday unril6:30 p.m.

Page 81
Tuesday. JUM 28, 2001

Healthy Start .
Healthy Parrdlies

state employees end strike

1

judsti

thrusting scissors into his head and neck, police said.
. . -:;
· "That little guy never even got a name, let alone a chancef
Prosecutor Robert Holdman said Monday in closing atglf,ments. "Give him some honor in his death, give him sonj!'
-L"
t
~·~.
.,,

FBI eyes infonnation leak·

r

higher.
Republicans insist that patients complete outside appeals before heading to
federal court, rather than state Court.n..;.
abo would reduce rh,: Democrals' $5 mi£.
lion limit on punitive damages in fedeti!J
cases and piiMde a better shield ~
employers who offer health c~ ;;
Edwards, a trial lawyer who has ~
helping negotiate a compromise. ~
oppose!! to limiting patients to f~
courts. Edwards said sUch courts are di1£.
cult for patients to get to and ~ hoi
case bacld~
.::_
"It's not an accident that memben -f!(
the federal judiciary gy 'We shoul~
have all of these cases:" said ~
referring to letters from federal

..
She killed the full-term baby, her fine child, b)l repeate4

Is it easy to apply?

•

••

•

Judge abn1ptly s~spends trial

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) -Washington's largest state employee Union has ended a 10-week strike, saying a two-year spending plan adopted by the Legislature meets many of its goals.
The 46-member board of the Washington Federation of State
Employees voted Monday to call off its 'ampaign of rolling
walkouts and scattered picketing that began April 13.
The new budget includes pay raises of 3.7 percent, the possi-

'
-

T ·finish

WASHINGTON (AP) - The AFL- CIO is trying to add
two unions as members just months after suffering a major
blow when one of the nation's largest construction unions left
the labor alliance.
The United American Nurses, which has 100,000 nurses as
the labor arm of the American Nurses Association, is expected
to approve the AFL-CIO charter at Thursday's vote, said
spokeswoman Suzanne Martin.
The California School Employees Association, which represents more.than 190,000 public school workers in that state, will
vote on .an independent charter at its . annual conference that
starts July 30.Whether it will join the AFL-CIO is less certain.
The AFL-CIO already has agreed to accept the new affiliates
- a move that coincides with President John Sweeney's reelection bid.
·

..

l..MJI sp«ts britfs, Pagt B4
WNBA roundup, Page B4
Diamond Roundup, Page B6

I --2~

Authorities_nab fuglllve dad

Mom guilty of stabbing newbom

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

GOP lawmakers mounting attacks on HMO b.i~

ldealaiJ woaahs Schua;ser

••

Page

'

:w ~

ll

f'

~..,.

'

'""'

.Y. '- ·'

.

'

14'

.,~ ~~

overwork

,

· , ~ISON, ·N.Y. (AP) - Whpther .he. likes i( or noC
Sergio Garcia is going to be judged against Tiger Woods.
After Garcia won the rain-delayed Buick Classic on Monday, he got several questions about Woods - who finished
,tied for 16th- and no~ one about Scott Hoch, who finished second behind G;~rcia by three strokes, or any other
golfer in this tournament.
"You are disrespecting the other guys," Garcia said. "You
are disrdpecting Scott Hoch, disrespecting
J.P. Hayes andVijay Singh and ~those guys
that have a better chance of winning than
him (Woods)."
,
It wa's Garcia's second PGA victory il)
five weeks. He also :won at the Colonial in
' May and was a contender at the U.S. Open
before fading in·the fourth round.
Garcia finished with. a record-tying total
of16-undet 268. Hoch was at 271 and Billy
Woods
Andrade, S~ewart Cink and J.P.!iayes were
•
at 273.
1
·This victory inevitably invited comparison to - here's
that name again - Wood~ Garcia won his second tour
event at age 21 years, 5 months. Woods f'On his second tournament in 1996 at 20 years, 9 months.
Garcia has been showing tantalizing signs of becoming a
serious rival to Woods since the Spaniard hit his famous treeroot slice shot punctuated by a scissors kick in the fairway at
the 1999 PGA. He finished second there to Woods and beat
him in the "Battle of Bighorn" last year in a head-to-head
made-for-TV match.
"To me, it doesn't matter if Tiger is in the field or not,"
Garcia said. "If l win and Tiger is in the field and he finishes second, it is even going to be sweeter, but if he is not in
the field, I still love. to win because if he is not playing the

PIIIM ... Garda, I I

SUCE - Sergio Garcia of Spain grins as he misses an eagle
putt at the 18th hole in the Buick Classic Monday. (AP)

Tinsley longs tO be a.Wizard
NEW YORK (AP) If Michael
Jordan and the Was4ington Wizards
deCide to keep the No. 1 pick in the
NBA draft,Jamaal Tinsley won't be too
happy.
If the! Wizards decide tq trade down
so they can choose the Iowa State point
guard in the middle of the first round,
Tinsley will be more than pleased to
suit up for a team that won only 19
games last season. · .
·
1
"Just ~eeing him looking at me, it ·
made me go even harder," said Tinsley,
who held a private workout for Jordan
late last month along with a few other
draft prospects. "Him teaching me
things like squaring up and how to
come off screens, someday I'll tell my
kids about it."
. Jordan is still an icon to the youngsters heading into Wednesday night's
NBA draft, eV-en if some of the youngsters aren't so young compared to the
'•

other draft-eligibles. .
Tinsley is a relative
old man in this year's
draft. At 23 , he is five
years older than several
of the big men who are
expected to be chosen ·
with the first few picks .
Among th em are
teen-agers Eddy C urry
Tinsley
(18), Kwamc Brown
(19) and 'J¥son Chandler (18), who are jumping directly
from high school to the. NBA, and
Seton ·Hall freshman fo!Ward Eddie
Griffin (19).
"I look at it like this: There are a lot
of 7 -footers and 6-11 guys, and big
guys ate always going to be picked
first," said Tinsley, the top- rated point
guard. "Teams are going to take a
chance."
That 'statement. couldn't be any more.

true than it is this year, with 75 underclassmen eligible to be drafted-. Last
year, a record 18 underclas.men were
chosen in the first round.
_Th e Wizards hold the first pick and
could become the fi rst team ro select a
high-schooler as the overall No. 1 pick,
bur Washington also could end up trading the pick to a team more eage r to
take a chan ce on a teen-ager.
"The one thing you ca n never get
enough of .in this league is talent ,"
incoming Wizards coach Doug .Collins
said. "Gettin g quality big men is en tical
if you're going to have success. When
you've won 19 gam es, you've got a lot
of holes. We've got to try to fill thos e,
and we're ·goin g to do th at by maximizin g th e No. 1 pick."
_
Tinsley, fo r o n e, wouldn't nnnd seeing the Wizards trad e down .
.
After bei ng involved .in a workout 111
Please see Draft. B:J

CINCINNATI (AP) The inexperience of Cincinnati's starting pitchers is
dumping plenty of extra work
on the Reds' bullpen .
"We're carrying a lot down
there in the bullpen . Thank
God we have seven relievers,"
reliever Mark Wohlers said.
"It's not a knock against the ·
young guys, but it's just a fact.
Our bullpen is pitching a lot."
The Reds
were
off
Monday
before opening a series
Tuesday .
night in St.
Louis.
They went
into Sunday's
Bob Boolltl 7- 5 loss ·in
Houston as
the major league leader with
265 relief innings pitched,
almost 19 ah ead of any other
teams . Cin cinnati's bullpen
added four more innings and
four more app earances to that
total on Sunday.
As the Reds fell out of contention in recent weeks, man agement began promoting
young pitchers from the
mino'rs to see what they could
do as starters against bigleagu e hitters.
·
The average age of the
R eds' rotation is 24.4 years.
right-hander
Excluding
Elmer Dessens, 29, and
injured right-hander Pete
H arnisch, 34 , it drops to 23.25
years.
The other four in the rotati011 with D esse ns - Jose
Acevedo, Lance Davis, Brian
Reith and C hris Reitsma .have 25 major~lcague starts
between them this year.
C incinnati manager Bob
Boone made 14 pitching
changes during the recent
four- game · split with the
Astros. Davis, Dessens, Reith
and Acevedo combined to
give him just 18 innings.
That included the ~eds'
Please see 'Pen. I I

�•

•

~

.

•• •

•

The Daily Sentinel

•

. WASHINGTON (AI') - - Senaton sho.ulcl grill President
Bush's judicial nominea about abortion and other controvenial
topics imtnd of tiptoeing around the issues and then priwtely
basing their decisions on a candidate's ideology, Sen. Charles
SclwrMr says.
Schumer. D-N. Y., cbainnan of the Senate Judiciary Committee's COUl15 panel. is expected at a hearing Tuesday to uy " it's
legitimate to use ideology" when considering judici.ol nomiDeft.. a source close to the senator said.
The role of ideology in judicial seleCtions, the focus of the
bearing. has been a running theme throughout the process since

WASHINGTON (AP) - House :and
Sen..John Edwardt,D-N.C.,a C&lt;Mp&lt;lllSenate Republicans a~e planning Ja.ge- sor of the Senate bill, said employers
scalt alterna!Ms to a patients' righls bill should be prorected. but not with the
pushed by the Senate's Democratic GOP appoadt that he says has "significant problems."
majority.
Democrats and Republicans agree on
Republicans senators are introducing
amendments, or changes. that would curb many ofthe same popu1ac measures in tbe
the lawsuit provisions sought by Democ- Democrat-baclted bill- guaranteed payrats for aggri~ patients in HMO. :and ments fur reasonable emergency room
visits. mandated hospital suys for breast
other health plans..
In particular, ·they want to keep canar patients and access to specialists
employers from being sued simply such as. gynecologists and pediatricians.
But the two sides differ on how patients
because they provided the health insurance. A vote was expected on the· issue should proceed in court if ~ go
wrong.
Tuesday. Demoaats and their supporters believe
Sen. Judd Gregg. R-NH. said that,
without such a limitation, "The pCICtical patients harmed by an HMO's actions
effect is that a lot of employers are going should be able sue in federal or state
court. where damage awards tend to be
to drop their insurance:·

Bush took office.

•

First, Bush ended the American Bar Association's role in the
White House's confidentW judicial screening process. Many
conset'ntives see the ABA as liberal-leaning and blamed its
mind n!lliew ofSupmne Court nominee Robert Bork's qualifiarions for his rejection by the Senate.

ColsgNss eyes China bade
WASHINGTON (AP) - China, a perennial source of contention on Capitol Hill, will have its day. or week., or month in
Congress again this year, thanks to anger over a military plane
collision in April. the detention of U.S. scholan and China's
inability to negotiate entry into the World Trade Organization.
The most symbolic fight of the summer is rNer whet,her Beijing should ·be tapped to host the 2008 Olympic games. The
mde issue is on the c.alendar because China is not yet in the
WTO, a requirement of its permanent normal trade status voted
last year.
In both cases, free-traders and those who believe in the benefits of engagement are &amp;ring off against those who feel China's
human rights record does not warrant the boon the Olympics
and open tr.ule bring.
"China's abominable human rights record violates the spirit
of the games and should disqualify Beijing from consideration"
as Olympics host, said Rep. Torn Lantos of California, top
Democrat on the House lnternatioual Relations Committee.
. He is chief sponsor of a resolution urging the International
Olympic Committee not to award China the gam~ when it
chooses a site July 13.

bility of a second raise next year and a health insurance plan
that maintains current co-payments for doctor's visits and p~
scriptions.
·
Gov. Gary Locke, who was elected with strong support fiom
organized labor, could sign the operating budget into law as
early as Tuesday.

BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) - · Nunes at two Twin
Cities hospitafs have voted to accept a new contract and end a
three-week strike.
More than 1,300 registered nurses at · Fairview Southdale
Hospital in Edina and the Riverside campus of Fairview University Medical Center in Minneapolis voted Monday to ratifY
.the proposed contract and return to work on Friday.
The hospitals were the last two of 13 in the Twin Cities to
approve their contract, which includes longevity bonuses,
restrictions on heavy lifting and a 19.8 percent pay increase over
three yean. The contracts also allows for a unionized "charge
nurse" to close a unit for up to two hours if staffing is insufficient.
The Minnesota Nunes Association would not release the
vote total saying only that the contract passed by a "healthy
. "
margm.

House GOP blushes off probe
WASHINGTON (AP) - House Republicans on Monday
brushed off a Democratic request to investigate the finances of
President Bush's political adviser. Instead they released an FBI
document quoting a Democratic donor as saying he once paid
$20,000 to ensure access to the Clinton White House.
The FBI interview report quoted former Little Rock restaurateur Charlie Trie, a figure in the Clinton era fund-raising
investigation, as.telling agents he paid the money to presidential
aide Mark Middleton in 1994. Middleton's lawyer denied the
allegation.
I The FBI document was released by House Government
Reform Committee chairman Dan Button, R-Ind., who
delayed giving an answer about whether he will investigate the
stock holdings of Bush strategist Karl Rove.
"Rep. Henry Waxman, the ranking Democrat on Burton's
committee, had asked Button whether he would look into the
Rove matter. The Associated Press reponed Bush's top strategist
met March 12 with Intel executives concerning federal
approvai•fot a merger at a time when Rove owned more than
S100,000 in comt'any stock.

.AFL·CIO looks to expansion

Tulli ,,JI

NEW YORK (AP) - A seamstress who stabbed her newhorn son to death with scissors has been found guilty of firstdegree manslaughter.
.
Yasmin Chavez, 27, hid her pregnancy under baggy pants
before giving birth to the boy in her sister's apartment on Feb.
27,2000.

DEDHAM, Mass. (AP) -The trial of a doctor accused of
killing his wife was abruptly suspended moments ·before lawyers
were scheduled to give closing arguments to the jury.
The judge's actions came Monday after a woman contacted
Dr. Dirk Greineder's attorney, saying she had seen a suspicious
man in her yard the day his wife was slain.
The trial was to resume Tuesday after Superior Court Judge
Paul Chernoff decided whether the jtiry would be allowed to
hear testimony from the woman and her boyfriend.
Greineder, 60, is accused of slitting his wife's throat in Qctober 1999 during their regular walk in the woods in Wellesley.
Prosecutors say ' he killed his 58-year-old wife, Mabel, because
he .was afraid she would expose his secret life of prostitutes and
Internet pornography.

NEW YORK (AP) _:_ The FBI is investigating allegations
that a former contract derk at a U.S. attorney's office in New ·
York was a mole for the mob. ·
The employee, who worked for the U.S. attorney's office in
New York's Manhattan borough more than a year ago, is .b eing
investigated for providing unauthorized information pertaining
to organized crime investigations, said Barry Mawn, head of the
FBI office in New York.
The employee worked for a stenographic service company
periodically doing administrative work at the U.S. attorney's'
office, Mawn said.
The Daiiy News reported Monday that the mole disclosed '
lists of gangsters about to be indicted. The information was
allegedly given to Federico Giovanelli, a con-..:icted high-ranking member of the Genovese crime family.

about the bill.

""'••

..••

N.Y. bans cell phone 11se in can ~
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - . The fine state ban on motorisiS tait7
ing on hand-held cell phones has gotten final legislaa!i
approval, but it may be months before yakking drivers are
,
ed like outlaws in New York.
l;
If Gov. George Pataki signs the bill, as he has said he wou(&lt;l
do, the han would begin Nov. 1, although driven caught usirlg
hand-held cell phones will be
issued only warnings during die
.
first month.
l:
And violaton could have their tickets dismissed until the e~
of February if they present the judge with a receipt showiqg
they bought a hands-free ceO phone system.
~:
The measure, adopted 125-19 in the state Assembly on Mol);.
day night, was approved by the Republican-controlled Sena~
last week. The governor will sign the bill inti&gt; law this we~
said spokesman Michael McKeon.
.! i

,,

......

-'
·"-

BOSTON (AP) -California authorities have aries~ a~
who has been on the run since his daughter gave police vi~
tapes that allegedly show him raping her teen-age friends. ::
Worcester, Mass., District Attorney John Conte said California State Park Rangers captured Peter M . G~gnon, 48, on Monday in Carpintera, Calif., about 60 miles northwest of
AnRtles.

.

r

'I'l.JF.soor's

.

=

ngat

2.

•
No. 4 Jennifer Capriati,

halfway to the Grand Slam,
overcame a slow start to beat
Maria Alejandra Vento of
Venezuela 6-3, 6-2.And No. 5
Serena Williams needed only
40 minutes to dispose of lefty
Rita Kuti Kis, 6-1,6-0.
On the men's side,_ topseeded Pete Sampras won his
29th sttaight match at the
tournament, beating Francisco Clavet of Spain 6-4, 7-6
(5), 6-4.
Andy Roddick, touted as
the next American star, won
his Wimbledon debut at age
18 over Ivo Heuberger of
Switzerland 6-4. 6-4. 7-6 [7~·
.
Other notable winners
included, on the men's _side,
founh-seeded Marat Salin of
Russia. and sixth-seeded Tim ·
Henman of Britain. Eleventhseeded Jan-Michael Gambill
of the United States lost to
Chris
fellow
American
Woodruff.

*Monthly Inoome
Guidelliles

Without Cfedible Insuranc~

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)
Family Size

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage) .

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

·Family Size

. , *Monthly Income
' Guidelines

2 ···-·---~---···· $1,935
3
..........;~' ........ $2,439
. .t
4 ·-~··········"'-·· $2,942
.5 ··-':"·······---.:.•• $3,445
'6 ~---------------- $3,949

2----------------- $1,452
3~--~-·-----~----- $1,829
4---··············$2,207
5---·············-$2,584
6················-$2,962

·..

~

.

I. '

• Even If your family's Income Ia higher, you miiY aUII bt able tJ.get frM Healthy Start coverage for your klda.

·

992•2117

4

can now for more lnfor~atlon.
'

1

'

1

COLUMBUS (AP) - T.J.
Downing, son. of the co-cap- .
tain of the 1977 Michigan
team that went to the Rose
Bowl, has 'accepted a football
scholanhip to attend Ohio
State in 2002.
Downing is a 6-foot-5, '
285-pound two-way lineman
for Canton GlenOak High
School:
Although a Michigan grad,
his fathFr, Walt Downing,
seems to be looking forward
to his son playing for archrival
Ohio State.
"I've been asked several
times, 'Do I see myself wearing the scarlet and gray?"' said
Downing, 1a conse~sus AllAmerican lineman for the
Wolverines before going on
to an All-Pro career with the
San Francisco 49ers.
"I tell people I'm going to
be rooting for wherever my
boy is, because among other
things he also happens to be
my best·friend.
"Just because I went to
Michigan and had a high level
of success there doesn't auto•
matically mean he'd follow in
" &lt;:
my
lOOtsteps. •
'
"TJ. is a very mature, very
good kid. He wants to cut his
own path."
·

3 ----~---········· $1,210 .

I

:&gt;

dsoosesOSU

.

With Credible Insurance

"+ ;: ~'

Sonof•iH
and blue

Healthy Start.
.
'

Sergio Garcia

1•80o-992•2608 .. _·
.

.

~

..

J , ... '

~ • If"

Young
starters

.

wins Buick Classic·

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.
(AP) - Finilly, mercifully, the
season has ended for the
Atlantic City Seagulls.
The worst team in U.S. Basketball League history lost
126-99 to the Maryland Mustangs on Sunday to finish, 028.
)
The team, which lost by an
averag~ of2:2.9 points a game,
is the first in the 17-year his7•
tory of the league to gn winless for a whole season. No
team has won less th311 25
percent of its games before. · .
An array of problems preduced a season· in which
fewer than 100 fans was standard attendance.

4···············--$1,471
s·····---~~---···· $1,723
.6····-·········---$1,975
.

w•

GET USED TO DISAPPOINTMENT - Indians relief pitcher Ricardo Rincon, center, waits for a new ball as New York Yankees'
Tino Martinez, reft, circles the bases after hitting a two-ruh pinch-hit home -run in the seventh inning Monday. (AP)

PI 11M ... HOllier, B:S.

USBL Selplls

2···················$968

There is no face-to-j~ce interview.

sent

WIMBLEDON, England
(AP) - Top-ranked Martina
Hingis, hampered by an
aching back, was eliminated
on Wimbledon's opening day
by an opponent ranked 83rd
in the world.
Virginia Ruano Pascual of
Spain stunned Hingis 6-4, 6-

Use the Chart Below to see If
you qualify:

.

NEW YORK (AP) -·
Tino Martinez doesn't sit
and watch very often and he didn't like what he
was seeing.
One day after the Yankees blew a three-run lead
to lowly Tampa Bay, Martinez watched from the
dugout as New York
squandered a 6-0 lead
against Cleveland.
Martinez, in the midst of
a horrible slump, reversed
the Yankees' .fm:tunes with
his first career pinch-hit
homer, a two-run shot in
the seventh inning that lifted NewYork to an 8-7 win
over the Indians on Monday night.
"Big win. Real big win;·
Martinez said. "We lost a
tough one yesterday, and
losing this one would have
been tough. Maybe this
will jump-start us and get
us going in the right direction."
TheYankeeshopeitalso
gets Martinez going. In
what might be his last season in New York, Martinez
had been in an 18-for-116
rut that dropped his average to .246.
But with the tying run
on second base, manager
Joe Torre didn't hesitate to

Wimbledon

'

Family Size

Martinez holner downs Tri

HIGHLIGHTS

Healthy PaiRUfes

YES! You can call the Meigs County Depanment of
Job and Family Services (formerly Meigs County
Department of Human Services) at 992-2117 or 1-800992-2608 to apply or you can have the application sent
to you. The Agency is open Monday Through Friday
from 8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. and Thursday unril6:30 p.m.

Page 81
Tuesday. JUM 28, 2001

Healthy Start .
Healthy Parrdlies

state employees end strike

1

judsti

thrusting scissors into his head and neck, police said.
. . -:;
· "That little guy never even got a name, let alone a chancef
Prosecutor Robert Holdman said Monday in closing atglf,ments. "Give him some honor in his death, give him sonj!'
-L"
t
~·~.
.,,

FBI eyes infonnation leak·

r

higher.
Republicans insist that patients complete outside appeals before heading to
federal court, rather than state Court.n..;.
abo would reduce rh,: Democrals' $5 mi£.
lion limit on punitive damages in fedeti!J
cases and piiMde a better shield ~
employers who offer health c~ ;;
Edwards, a trial lawyer who has ~
helping negotiate a compromise. ~
oppose!! to limiting patients to f~
courts. Edwards said sUch courts are di1£.
cult for patients to get to and ~ hoi
case bacld~
.::_
"It's not an accident that memben -f!(
the federal judiciary gy 'We shoul~
have all of these cases:" said ~
referring to letters from federal

..
She killed the full-term baby, her fine child, b)l repeate4

Is it easy to apply?

•

••

•

Judge abn1ptly s~spends trial

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) -Washington's largest state employee Union has ended a 10-week strike, saying a two-year spending plan adopted by the Legislature meets many of its goals.
The 46-member board of the Washington Federation of State
Employees voted Monday to call off its 'ampaign of rolling
walkouts and scattered picketing that began April 13.
The new budget includes pay raises of 3.7 percent, the possi-

'
-

T ·finish

WASHINGTON (AP) - The AFL- CIO is trying to add
two unions as members just months after suffering a major
blow when one of the nation's largest construction unions left
the labor alliance.
The United American Nurses, which has 100,000 nurses as
the labor arm of the American Nurses Association, is expected
to approve the AFL-CIO charter at Thursday's vote, said
spokeswoman Suzanne Martin.
The California School Employees Association, which represents more.than 190,000 public school workers in that state, will
vote on .an independent charter at its . annual conference that
starts July 30.Whether it will join the AFL-CIO is less certain.
The AFL-CIO already has agreed to accept the new affiliates
- a move that coincides with President John Sweeney's reelection bid.
·

..

l..MJI sp«ts britfs, Pagt B4
WNBA roundup, Page B4
Diamond Roundup, Page B6

I --2~

Authorities_nab fuglllve dad

Mom guilty of stabbing newbom

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

GOP lawmakers mounting attacks on HMO b.i~

ldealaiJ woaahs Schua;ser

••

Page

'

:w ~

ll

f'

~..,.

'

'""'

.Y. '- ·'

.

'

14'

.,~ ~~

overwork

,

· , ~ISON, ·N.Y. (AP) - Whpther .he. likes i( or noC
Sergio Garcia is going to be judged against Tiger Woods.
After Garcia won the rain-delayed Buick Classic on Monday, he got several questions about Woods - who finished
,tied for 16th- and no~ one about Scott Hoch, who finished second behind G;~rcia by three strokes, or any other
golfer in this tournament.
"You are disrespecting the other guys," Garcia said. "You
are disrdpecting Scott Hoch, disrespecting
J.P. Hayes andVijay Singh and ~those guys
that have a better chance of winning than
him (Woods)."
,
It wa's Garcia's second PGA victory il)
five weeks. He also :won at the Colonial in
' May and was a contender at the U.S. Open
before fading in·the fourth round.
Garcia finished with. a record-tying total
of16-undet 268. Hoch was at 271 and Billy
Woods
Andrade, S~ewart Cink and J.P.!iayes were
•
at 273.
1
·This victory inevitably invited comparison to - here's
that name again - Wood~ Garcia won his second tour
event at age 21 years, 5 months. Woods f'On his second tournament in 1996 at 20 years, 9 months.
Garcia has been showing tantalizing signs of becoming a
serious rival to Woods since the Spaniard hit his famous treeroot slice shot punctuated by a scissors kick in the fairway at
the 1999 PGA. He finished second there to Woods and beat
him in the "Battle of Bighorn" last year in a head-to-head
made-for-TV match.
"To me, it doesn't matter if Tiger is in the field or not,"
Garcia said. "If l win and Tiger is in the field and he finishes second, it is even going to be sweeter, but if he is not in
the field, I still love. to win because if he is not playing the

PIIIM ... Garda, I I

SUCE - Sergio Garcia of Spain grins as he misses an eagle
putt at the 18th hole in the Buick Classic Monday. (AP)

Tinsley longs tO be a.Wizard
NEW YORK (AP) If Michael
Jordan and the Was4ington Wizards
deCide to keep the No. 1 pick in the
NBA draft,Jamaal Tinsley won't be too
happy.
If the! Wizards decide tq trade down
so they can choose the Iowa State point
guard in the middle of the first round,
Tinsley will be more than pleased to
suit up for a team that won only 19
games last season. · .
·
1
"Just ~eeing him looking at me, it ·
made me go even harder," said Tinsley,
who held a private workout for Jordan
late last month along with a few other
draft prospects. "Him teaching me
things like squaring up and how to
come off screens, someday I'll tell my
kids about it."
. Jordan is still an icon to the youngsters heading into Wednesday night's
NBA draft, eV-en if some of the youngsters aren't so young compared to the
'•

other draft-eligibles. .
Tinsley is a relative
old man in this year's
draft. At 23 , he is five
years older than several
of the big men who are
expected to be chosen ·
with the first few picks .
Among th em are
teen-agers Eddy C urry
Tinsley
(18), Kwamc Brown
(19) and 'J¥son Chandler (18), who are jumping directly
from high school to the. NBA, and
Seton ·Hall freshman fo!Ward Eddie
Griffin (19).
"I look at it like this: There are a lot
of 7 -footers and 6-11 guys, and big
guys ate always going to be picked
first," said Tinsley, the top- rated point
guard. "Teams are going to take a
chance."
That 'statement. couldn't be any more.

true than it is this year, with 75 underclassmen eligible to be drafted-. Last
year, a record 18 underclas.men were
chosen in the first round.
_Th e Wizards hold the first pick and
could become the fi rst team ro select a
high-schooler as the overall No. 1 pick,
bur Washington also could end up trading the pick to a team more eage r to
take a chan ce on a teen-ager.
"The one thing you ca n never get
enough of .in this league is talent ,"
incoming Wizards coach Doug .Collins
said. "Gettin g quality big men is en tical
if you're going to have success. When
you've won 19 gam es, you've got a lot
of holes. We've got to try to fill thos e,
and we're ·goin g to do th at by maximizin g th e No. 1 pick."
_
Tinsley, fo r o n e, wouldn't nnnd seeing the Wizards trad e down .
.
After bei ng involved .in a workout 111
Please see Draft. B:J

CINCINNATI (AP) The inexperience of Cincinnati's starting pitchers is
dumping plenty of extra work
on the Reds' bullpen .
"We're carrying a lot down
there in the bullpen . Thank
God we have seven relievers,"
reliever Mark Wohlers said.
"It's not a knock against the ·
young guys, but it's just a fact.
Our bullpen is pitching a lot."
The Reds
were
off
Monday
before opening a series
Tuesday .
night in St.
Louis.
They went
into Sunday's
Bob Boolltl 7- 5 loss ·in
Houston as
the major league leader with
265 relief innings pitched,
almost 19 ah ead of any other
teams . Cin cinnati's bullpen
added four more innings and
four more app earances to that
total on Sunday.
As the Reds fell out of contention in recent weeks, man agement began promoting
young pitchers from the
mino'rs to see what they could
do as starters against bigleagu e hitters.
·
The average age of the
R eds' rotation is 24.4 years.
right-hander
Excluding
Elmer Dessens, 29, and
injured right-hander Pete
H arnisch, 34 , it drops to 23.25
years.
The other four in the rotati011 with D esse ns - Jose
Acevedo, Lance Davis, Brian
Reith and C hris Reitsma .have 25 major~lcague starts
between them this year.
C incinnati manager Bob
Boone made 14 pitching
changes during the recent
four- game · split with the
Astros. Davis, Dessens, Reith
and Acevedo combined to
give him just 18 innings.
That included the ~eds'
Please see 'Pen. I I

�.

,
• · 1\Judlly, June28, 2001

•.

•

•

•

tn;rtbune - Sentinel - .1\.t ster
CLASSIFIED

•

.• •

,.

.

Pom:uoy, Middleport, Ohio

.• .•
0

0

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

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

•
•
•

•

' decision to Jeave starter
Reith in on Saturday night
to absorb an eight-run ,

nine - hit beating before
fin.ally taking him out after
six innings.
R elief pitc h ers
Chris
Nichting helped give away
the game in the eighth
in nin g Sunday.
W ith o ne out, J ulio Lugo

•
•

In one week With us

who said that my swing was
doubled off Nichting and . rath er than the inning-endbad and I had to change it, I
Vizcaino singled, with Lugo ing double play th ey had
think
is going to have to eat
stopping at t h ird.
hoped to ach ieve. After an
all those words that they said."
,.........1
Wohlers came in and got in tentional walk to Lance
Garcia said. "I think its a pmJeff B agwell to hit a bounce Berkman , Moises Alou sintournament,
I
am
not
ty good swing."
er. But Lugo sco red when gled to score Vizcaino.
going
to
think.
'WeD.
Tiger
is
. Victor Garcia is a club pro
the R eds were able to ge t
not
here,
so
why
win?'
No.
It
Sergio and othen are trying
o nly one out on the play,
is not that w:ay.
to prepare for the Seniors
"It is just great to win."
Tour in the United States.
Garcia's proud parena , VicThere was nothing Wt-ong
tor and Consuelo, \'\[ere wait- with Garcia's swing M onday.
ing by the 18th green at th e Except for a 3-putt bogey on
YourUNKto
Westchester Country C lu b to the second hole, Garcia was
hug their son after h is last shot nearly Oawless from tee to
the perfect
Monday.
It was the fin t tim e green in a five-birdie, o n eJob...
his m other saw him win a p ro bogey round of 4--under 67.
tournam ent i n p erson , h e H is misses with the putter
said.
were all close.
For Victor, it was again a
G arcia nearly drove the
m atter
of
redemption. green o n the short par-4 sevThought to be har ming his e nth and made birdie from
son by staying as his swin g the rough to go back ah ead.
coach through Garcia's dry and he made another b irdie
sp ell o n the PGA to ur o n No. I 3 by sticking a 9-iron
between 1999 and last month, a foot from th e cup to go
G arcia said M o nday his father ahead o f H och by two . The
should now be recognized for Spaniard added a tap-in birdie
1---!74-JOIS
what he is: a great coach.
on the par-S 18th for his 3tD6
"I · think that everybody strokt victory•

JOBS

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

$6-$7/H

•

.........

w.___.,~11'10

..-.van~--.

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

ICCII)Ung IPPiicatlcino for &amp; wllo loam oncour111 and 2nd iohifoa. w. aged. (740)388-8331 IMve
bonoflte lhrlt in- nomo &amp;. . . -.
clucla Hllltft lnau(anca C",
• ..... _
bul)' Phy11_
40111. Ufe ,,_.,.., com- cienl Offtca Copy of Cenlftpallllvewrogoeondopponu- cation preierred Pfeaoe
nltleo lOt -ICelloont. " oend _.,.10 PI: Piea11n1
yau are a ..., ~ wf'o Chol Conl8r 2500 .Jelllnon
orjop working wllh lhrl llkl- Ave.' Pl. Pieuant, wv
orly, plouo apply In pti10II 25550. Fax lo (304)675bolluo•: H or call Diona 3713
HI~-. AN, Dlrecoor of
Nurlilg.
Domlno'a Pizza o1 Polnl

Advor-.

1- rwe!!l . . .
•---- -

. 1:1Dp.m.lhe....... lhe.

lelo-.

.,_,_11~ ~

.UJ =I

lllltiOn 1:00 pa.
"-· ·

MNI1IML fW!!!! M;
• 1:00,p.m.lhedl¥
....,.lhe8dle1Dna
lundey lllorllt.y

~::0~~
~..~ ~~
~~· Ohio
fl

-"'!'J:p.m.
:
r'

•M*ICB Pf&amp;QIM;
2dlp'*-lhe81111
._ 4
torun.w,
:30p.m.
llrlu
dllt I llorllt.y
..
'. • D I !,4,..:30:,;~·
- ~

-...-lo

-.-..ne,

(740)887-3158
EOE

AVONI All Areaal To Buy or
SOli. Sl&gt;iltey Spears, 304- Ful':'lme Position, Fumiture
675-1429.
Delrvtlf)l and WarehoUII.
Applr 0 Llfaetyte Furnllure,
Exporter reed Crew 818 Third A-. Clelllpo· for Setting ond Flnilllllng llo. No Phone Cllte.
SecUonal Houalng. Send
Prlc:lng lnlormallon and ax- Clot Money? Wo Do Como
parlance lo: Southofn WOt1&lt; with ua ond you will
PO Box 829, Jecl&lt;- loot Na- cable mar• aon, OH 45840
iceting ond auditing compa-

.;,..;;....;;.;,___--:--

-

r--------.I-·
. _______.-no..
i

=-~~;::PI~

ny WV. alnglng • dining ov:
aryona-

WE ARE
HI Rl NG II
lnfoclalon Ia
ly ddi
current a ng to
our Residential

-To You Thrtft stooppa
8 w.t Stlmaon, Alftane
740-5112-1942

To WOt1&lt;?
Full-time LP.N. -pan- www.wot1olutafyoorhome.co
time wllh Athonl aile w1111
m
pan-Ume lralltl to Oilier
ailn. Candida
. 11
poollion
po ow cumont Ohio "SecrNrtooiCCI
Y8t"' buoy medical olliee•
llcanaure and maintain a for
pm-cl1olca pNiooop/ly. Ex· Appllcallonl will be lllkon
co11ont ~ ond only on T - r ond woc~o
organiullcin al&lt;llla. Send naoday Juno 211 &amp; XT 1»9:00 a.m. ond 2:00
OIMII ond reaume ID: Per- aonnel, 398 Richland Ave- p.m. No pl1one callll. John
nue. Athena, OH 45701 w- MD,' Inc. Pleaoant
\Iaiiey Hoopllal aultll 112,
EOE.
Point Ple8lanl. wv.·
SCIIOol-beMd
Sooneono 10 laktl care "' mr
Social WIJIOthof In mr homo lull time
or pan line, 740-387-o302.
position available to provlda
oruancr
di11t11ion
for Bludonlo
In the18fVices
Maaon Taking appllcationa: cook,
grill cook, dl&amp;h wllher, wallCounly, WV ochooi IYI· reaa, Slop al Mlllio'o Realau·
lema: IUHOimant, caae rani, 39239 Bredbuoy Rd.
manogemonl, lnflage, ond Middlepoo1, Ohio tor appllcllreatment programe. Re- tion.
quireo a BA dogroe In huNEEDEDmen l8nriceO field, COII1&gt;ut· IJFiClENTLY
"'literacy, flexible-. pluma &lt;lonols, eam $&lt;15 10
lng, good communicallcin $60 lor 2 "' 3 ....... -.y.
........
be ociclai -. II- C.OI Sera-Tee, 740-582.
conae Mull
eliGibleCornpelitiw 661i1.

cover .

have valid drlv.,. llcanM cation
with
ioncl
own dependable orono- len 10
portation Dl aalot
"' '
·
rlance pral::eq, bu~
PREITERA CENTER

::.;:.?n.tr::;:,.~:;"d~g

toallng
mandatory.
(t104)27o-21132
Hair 11y111t and nail lechl
for lall growing
buay
1on 1
Croll

BlsNiiss

'I'R.uNJNG

I
.

Col....

Goltlprlllo c (C.-• Ciole To Homo) ,

Croii~~:J~7 '

H~~e/,eSpc

Reg 190-05- 12748·
liM
WANIID

Hunllngtorr, wv 25705
EOE/AA

To Do

.

~
till-·-·
............
__
.
....,..
.........
.....,
..........
., ....
....
...,,,......._ =-- - 1111'
or-1111'- .. ="
l'llr Hlllillnl A.- , , .

llllla ••

• bllldon

origin, 0&lt;

MMI~ to

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

Pl...........
r
1'

I
•

L

__
...........
......
..

TNinew 1 111rwt11r.ol

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

.......,0..

vtal•an' of thllllw.

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

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

....

•

..

.•

t ~::a It

AIln . . ICS 1$ $I II

""*

"'reaum.

·I

.'ll

Own ACompulor'l Put II

:.•=-~= ~~,=~benelltll.

~ .

I

Hl!LPWANim

""door-10-door- lor to- wwwpreo~an~
1141
cal cable company. Mull lor app~fcition ~aPflll·

Why walt? Start
ONo linglal tonighl1~

7811-21123.., 182i..

ment~ competitive pay, ex·
lble. Apply in pareon, 420
. VIand Slrael, Point Pl...

~=.,.--.....,,...--ant.
-:::

L-....!l~~~·_.J
l'a!Qw.s

II" HruW.oom I1'10

lin

• t1 1 on .......

r· IUlSwt
. . __
• • ........,

_,~

-

--•.1-8.--•--· . ,. ,
,.....,,On-

30141
Go\LUJIOUI. OPPORTU- IV 13411.00 ..., NITY 18 KNOC- In
IIIII ............. 6 room""""' 1 tllfl921134211

= ..::=&amp;...S:U:"•

'

Mlllll

•

co.-

T_.

I

- .... '""'

113,000, or ttl

ll.dUCtiont

._"ff

-ocim.

e.- •..._

=

r

-"'

I

==

Holzer.

I

r .,

r.

I

j

......- _,.., ====:. :. :.: :. .__..,"
l•••••••.,.l

I

•

I

flrn

I

•

""*"·

:::;:0:

r

..

I

:...":":an'f.

J

•

Ovtr15Wol'dl,

¥:J

2~PirWord

I '~~CUh/CI)eck Willi COpY ~"' I .
lnyltt The Entlra Nalghbgrbood
Tn Vnur Vrorrt !;111111

'·

Mall to:

The Daily Sentinel
Cla•slfled Ada

111 Court Street

CASHLOANSI
' Bad Credil OK
' Moal Ouaiify
'Fut Saovioa

Pomeroy, 01'1 45789

·confidentlaJ
•easy Payments

1-IIJ0.332·MI1

-1-ulffj:;j THE CLASSIFIEDS
Wht~n it comes to selling your car,
nothing gbes the distance like the
Classifiedsl Get the show on the road
by calling u's today.

898t

ll&lt;lech St. Middleport, 2
bodroorn fumlohad apan-

:':;.~!: ::Op0,.~

311adroom-lnSy,..
au., Oftio, ... 501 lolonlh
HIJD Approvecl (~)1755332 or (740)992-8119
rtlll&lt;1 ldo only
3 bedroom, CIA. In Clelllt»
:; ~-~~~·
,....,
In Racine, n1ao nofghbor·
hood '""" llllr Mill
•
Plrk. :Jr'oorro, f450 dopoalt.

1*' 1111- -

"!':M·

~~~,ll'be
-0ge-Ot&amp;,
•~ 7 1~ 7~

r

2217.
Ia Your Raut t400? !jew
3 Elotlroom, 2 S,th Ranch
Slyio Horne From Rent To
Own. (7&lt;111)Ue 3683
Pilot Program Ronlera
304-'131-7295
'
·
L,--;ilill~

2 - . . , 111011111 homo lor
raut 13251 month S300 do-

pooft, no peoo, ;.,_,...

requiNd. (7&lt;40)448--83.42 at·

tor5pm.

""b:;;;;;;;;-;;;bji:;;;;;;;;;-;;;;
2 bedroom
homo, no

..... ·-· 111011111
monlh, lnc:l·~o
...~ ...,.,$100 d-olt.
wafor,
(740~-17
~
...---':'..:::..:.;;;.:.::·:.:..,_ __
2 Bod_,, ~~~aoe
lloaUIIful Rlvar VIew ldlll
For 1 Or 2 p~ Rlfera
~
p'
"'
-torT,.Ior Park,
•
Ill,
F
...
740-441•
0111
'
In AIOine _.... -~Ilion
' - ~_.,
no... ...........
• •~ '
- ·-..-"-·
• _.
room,
llr, aarpon, 13150
dlo
potlt, 13150 por mo. lnoludlo
wtttr, ga!Oige • oaw:f:·
avlllablo 7-1-0t, 740·
2217

\I ll&lt;! It 1\IJI"I

uma Rd., Rut-

.o "OUSDfOIJ)

land, Ohio, 740-7~·7403.
~- home and 1re11or

r

. . -. C0rmoen:1a1 atoreavaMable lot leaaa.
. -.

Pet&amp;.

F,..lahad 2 &amp; 3 Room
Aparlmento, Clean, No
Pete, No Smoking, Alferencot &amp; Do-ll
. .
•·· Required
UIIIUoo
fumi 0had.
(740)4411-1518
Furnloftad 2 -ocim aport·
rk
mont, acrou 1rom 1M' •
NC. no pell. - • a • .
depotil, t325 """""·
(740)~ (740)446·
Graciouo living. 1 and 2
badroom II VHoago Manor and Riverlldo
Aparomenle In Mlddiapon.
F,... S278-13411. COif 740992-5Qtlo4, Equal Houolng
Oppollunllleo.

.
"
·

_ _. - - - - - -

Nlca one bodroom unturnloiMod apanment. Range &amp;
retrtgeretor proYidad. Wator
&amp;gorbogopald. "-"r•
quiNd. Call 740'«84'345
altor llpm.
~-------

:

=n=

North ..,., lwo., _,.....,,

no ...... 740-992-0185. ,'
Now 'liakina Applk&gt;lca"-0

315 Will 2 lladi-Oom ;
' - Atlw'l•lto, • Wator Sewage, · Traoh,
1350/Mo., 740-446.01)()8.
Tara Townhouaa Apanmanoa, Veoy Spaclouo, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Fioore, CA, t
112 Beth; Fully Carpelad,
Aduh Pool &amp;Baby Pool, Pa·
tlo, Sfarl $385/Mo. No Pets,
Laaae Piua Sacurily Dopo&amp;il
Required, Dayo: 740-4463&lt;4e 1; Evonlnga: 740-36 7•
0502 • 740-446-0 101 ·
'rwin RlverTowers now ac- •
•
capllng
applicationo lor 1 BR.
HUD auboidlzad apt for ·
-rly ond diMbltcl. EOH. .
(304)6715-6879.
urtol,., 2 Bedroom,46e
,
1 •th Avo 8tovo &amp; Ratrtgaraoor Fumlllhad. wa1or Fumo
1 ho"
S3001mo,
~.
$150
Dopoalt,;

~

•"
.

•

~-- ~-k '"'
" Iorron,ono
I
..,.,..__
,,

lull hookup for a omall
calnplng lreilor, lamlly lypa , "
740-atil-811811.

"• '
•
•

:;;;.:.;·_____ _

••
•
•

Molllll home In Aoolno
area, no peto, 740·802·
1818.

'

Homoflto XL12,
8 Inch bar, $60; Cralleman
culling torch and woldlng
0UIIi1, 111 up 10 uae propeno, $-10. (740)992·2380

r

1

.•-•
•
•

HAY &amp;:Gtim

r

.1rz ~ 1

llloclc, brick, pipe&amp;, Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
wlndowo,llniall, otc. Claude Slraw, Yoar 'Round Delivery
wtn1era, Rio Gr-ancle,, OH &amp; Volume Dl-.nt Availo·
Caii74CJ.245-5t21.
bte.
Hartlage
Farm.
(304)875-5724.

1'Eis

I

=

i

R!II=:~.HOM

i

well

1

cared

A='

I

ror, condition, crulae, CO, auto,

I

t~~l
1993 Four Wlnda motor
home, 20 loot, ·laaa than
•.ooomli11. (740)446-t759
2001 Camp1r 25 112ft. lnnsbruck by GuW Slraam. Mov·
lng,

Never

u1ed.

Call

(3041875-5353
89 DOdge LER Campar
van, aaW conlelnad, garage
kept, low miles, 83 Herman
Road, Clnlanaoy. OhiO.
$8750, 740-709-4444 Leavil
8811
:::m::
::~ga::·c_,_ _ __

94 Duochman. 31 foot, wllh
oxpando room, (740)441 ·
1- ---,--953
:::.:.;.
Coleman Shananaoan popup camper, excoUonl con&lt;ll·
tion, (740)446-9470
-..1 1&lt;\ I&lt; I ...,
;;;:==;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

rio
~

H

OME
IMPRoVEME!IIfS

IAIEM!NT
WATERPROOFING
Urrcondltional iilotlme guar·
anlaa. Local reterenc&amp;s lurnillllad. EBiribllohad 1975.
Cell 24 Hrs. (7401 448·
0870, · 1-800·287-0578.
Aoga11 Walorproollng.

;;;::;;:;;===:;I

i;-

r•o

I

r:al

r

r

'

r

I

w!-

··'"l .......

.I

. -

......

ranged tar to his left on a
·grounder for the second out,
and Scott Brosiu s made a diving stop on Travis Fryman's
smash down the third- base
line to end it.
Randy Keisler took a twohit . shutout into the sixth
inning, but gave up four
straight hits as Cleveland
closed to 6-2.
' With runners on second
and third, Torre brought in
Witasick, acquired in a trade
fiom San Diego on Saturday.
When Witasick arrived on the
mound, shortstop Derek Jeter
introduced him to his new
teammates.
Witasick d idn't make a
favorable impressio n, g iving
·up RBI singles to Marty Cordova and Einar Diaz, a runscoring double to pinch- hitter Kenny Lofton and a
game-tying RBI single to
Omar Vizquel.
With two outs, Juan Gonzalez hit a slow roDer to third
that Brosius misplayed fo r an
error, giving the Indians ~ 7- 6
" l ead : ·
Chuck Finley, 17- 9 in his
career against New York ,
couldn't fool the Yankees this
time.
They strung together seven
straight hits with two outs
and nobody on in the second
inning to take a 5-0 lead and
didn't swing and miss at any
of the left-bander's first 47
pitches.

Buclgol Prtood Tranlml•

Iloilo All TrP88, Accesl To
Ovor 10,000 Tranamllliona,
Translor Caan, 740-2455877, Ceil:.339-3785. ·

M·F 1315 dilllilraclor, Ilk· (740).41..0218, (740)591 - linl, 49,000 mlllll , aaklng
HOME .
lng S5000 or trade, 304- 7110 .
$14,900. (740)37~2798
~
IMPRoVEMENrS •
T-n HI EWiciency 90% 773-5428·
73 VOik Baella $750. Runo
Buy "' Ill. Rlvartne Anli· Gao Fu.rnaooa, Oil Fumabul naado body work
.
C&amp;C Genaral Homa Malnt•
quao, 112• Eut Main on .... 12 Soer Heal Pump &amp;
LlvarocK
(304)885-3747
nonce- Palnling, vinyl sldSR t24 E. POtnoroy, 740- Air Condlllonlng Sraoomo
MorottcYan;
lng, carpentry, doore, wln992-a526 or 740-992·1539. FrH 8 Year Warranoy Bon· 87 Crolltilar 1 ownar. St200.
.
•.
&lt;Iowa, batho, moblfo homo
Ruaa Moore, owner.
nens Hating &amp;Cooling, 1· t month Old Guinoao and (304)67s--i
•
repair and more. For lrae
Ml'lCEIJ.ANEOUi
8 o o • 8 7 2 • s t 8 7 Baby Duokl, $3.00 oech, 88 Dodge ca..van. 3_0 En- 2000 BanahM~1 """""· eollmele call Chat, 740-992·
.
ttn:l
ChiCka
It .00
aach gino In ......,. w~0 &amp; run· wilh oxtrao now pipe&amp; now 8_32
_ 3·- -- -:--:-:::---1 www.arvb.oomA&gt;onnoll
Ml!RcH.\NDISI!
'740J2IItl-1121•
""""
•
sroo
'
oao'
· t w1•
.
wotartlno Spacial: 314 200 l
nina condition.
lop end. $5500.
304- Llvlngolon'o e a Bedroom Sulli PSI S2t.ll5 Por 100; 1' 200 1 Rag. t/2 Arabian, 112 (~)171!-1890
882·3678 or 304·542-~- tor Proofing, all bUtmanl
:\.~ngTtraao lor Ctinoae PSI 137.00 Per IOO!tl. All OUirtor Horae, Chaslftll • e2 BuiCK LISabro ilmllad, 2000 Kawlllki Prairie 400 ropolra dono, lroa ~·
Slyte ouMo. (304)812·2•30 Brua Compression F nge Whlfo Tobllno. 5yr old Sill· 82,000 mllao, loadad, 740- 4•4 ·2000 lb wam winch' mt••· llfo:~b gua~an ·
1
141'"' 318·
Verllaradllr Fltltll Villager ~~O:vANI INTIIII'III• lion (~)1 7 1!- 7071
·
IOto' of oxtrai $5252, 740: /aJ;)99~· 7 · oxpa Inc. '
Clreenliold paltlm, $80, a Jacl&lt;lon, Ohio, 1-800· 3 ynr. Old Blaok anguo regia985-3817
rotalll, tat, (740)448-e231 83~--·
tired bull, 740-742 •211315 · 1M Dodga Shadow. 2 DOor, 200.1 Honda like now, hard·
Eu:cnuCALJ
Whlotlor 8.75 ractar dlltctor AQHA yoo~lng ooit, lncon- Hillohback
S28QO. lr uoad, prtca noa . ~ Rm!GERATION •
(304)885-36315 or (304)895• _ 11,1100 lACK a Ton Air uaad ,.rely, m . baaloaliy tlvo lund. l lg and qulot, (304)882·a785
CondlllonOr, 2 Ton Coil, 1 now, hlo _ . , Othir Ill· (7&lt;111)-78
QMC So
SLS 3328 ovoninga
Rooldor1tlal or commercial
85
•• . Line Sot. lnolallecl. ,2.295. ..... 304-8711-4814
,..nomoi ml •
wiring. - aervloa "' ...
.. 11,000 Beok, 11295 Nil
111 ,000 ml • au num
pairs. MaotorUOanaad~ec·
. ' Prtoe. Freo Eatlrnelll. Call
IIAY &amp;: GIWN
whaelo,1ton-u cover, 740- p~:~~~r"1trtcl an. Rkllnour Electrical,
For Quolot On Other Slzoo.
149-13 8
WV000308, 304-875-1788.
. II You Don1 Call Ul,
e~. com, •• _2111 buahol, 01 115 Noon, Aulo, ~old Air,
• WI Both Loaal Moblla
""'
..
p
D
Locka A d
•: Homoo Dur 8paoialil9 1·
ts.OO per 100 pound owor ooro,
n
·. 740·448-8308 1-800·281·
~round In your aaokl. Mlrroro. 99,000 Mlloo,
,
Cedar bolrdo, ovor 200 40)24&amp;-50&lt;17
$2,000
080
CLEAN HOUSE
: 0091
doc,., lntartor and elderlof
(7&lt;40)251-123\
tll8t Clllotron 111' M1rcnro·
WITH THE
,
I _..._..lc
cabinalo 10!1 o1 Q "
If If
or 3.0 I, lnbolrdiOUiboard
, lllcl- a now lui~ .. ~,... · bulldln '
Ill '111 now u•• ly a a a. oquare 07Z-2•Whllo52,000mlloo, w/1992 RoadAunnlf trallor
, mlllnll HI, IIIII in plaotiC, 50%~ ~~:h..o)44 1 -0 27 g baill, .2/bate, 740-1192· loaded, $6200. 080 Clood ooth gocld coriditlon. 882· CILASSilFiEDSI
IIOrilloo $129, 30•·360. o~. 0 _;.
51315
Condilion (301)882·3622
2249 Prtco $&lt;1500u-.llllllllliiili:=liiili:~
0233

r

to pinch h i t Martinez for
Todd Greene.
" I know he has not been
knocking in runs the way
we're used to:'Torre said. "Btit
he's done this too much for
our club the last few yean for
me not to li ke him coming
up with runnep in scoring
position."
Indians manager . C harlie
M anuel countered by bringing in lefty R icardo Rincon
(1 - 1), but the plan backfired.
M artinez, 8-for- 39 in · his
, career as a p in ch hitter, hit a
2- 1 pitch into the first row of
the upper deck in right field
to. give the Yankees an 8°7
lead.
'Tve always h ad a to ugh
time as a pinch hitter because
b asicaDy I play every day,"
Martinez said.
Jay Witasick (1 -0) got the
win in his Yankees debut
despite allowing three Tuns jn
two innings. Mike Stanton,
pitching for the fourth
straight game, struck out both
batters he face d, and Mariano
Rive ra got four outs for his
2 4th save - with help from
three outstanding fielding
plays.
Rivera stopped Roberto
Aloinar's hard grounder w ith
his foot for the first out. Second baseman Enrique Wilson

1

1990 ~ pickup In excel- Ate You Looking For En·
lenl i:ondillcin, 74Q-992· ginos Or Tranamiaslons?
2529, 132 Butlemul, Porn- Give Mo ACroll At 740-«8oroy.
.
_o5_1_9·- - - - - -

1995 ChoYrolet Silverado,
4x4, 71,000 mllot,• lully
FOR SALE
loaded, leather, ono awnor,
boxed. Can _,.,,, ap- ~
(710
A
lexcollont condlllon, $14,1500
~ ~~~~M T~~ r:'s. ~=:iaii!Crlflco 3 Dachahunda, 1 rod ••
FOR~
(7401"8-6157
Spring and manreaa, Queen
malo, 1 red malo (oho~· ~
.
1995 F·250. 7.3 P.S.. 5
Box Spring and ma«resa Gnrbb't Piano· Tuning &amp; haired), 1 /ad (longhalrad)
$900 apead 4 10 gears mint
Table and Chairs, Wardrobti Rapal,.. Probllme? !'lOad lemalo, al 2 yrs. old. gooCI ~
=~~ 7.w. condloion, · 50,000 'actual
(740&gt;4*9742
Tuned? Cali Tho PianO Dr. for breading, musl 1811• 742 1028
'
mliM XLT packaga EYOt"/
7-25
.
~good-· 740-992•
•
·
optiOO excapl ca.,8o. PW,
For Sale: RecondRionad lndepaudent Harballfo Dlo- ~nag.
' .1 1185 Cavalier
Groal PDL, PM, AC, TiR, Cnriae,
::.:::· T~
tributor, C.OI For Pro&lt;IUCI Or AKC Ragiolerad Sheltand Shape, (301)675-S162
Now Tlrn, 011 Changed ...
anoo. 3407 Jac:klon Ave- Opponunlty. (740)44t-191!2 ShHpdog Puppin, $225 11189 Cflryaler Fifth Avanue, ~~D~=-~~~u~:
nuo, (~)875-7,388.
JET
Each, 1740)379-2838
In goad condition, price lorlor, White Leer Fibergla&amp;O
GooD USED APPLIANAERATION MOTORS
FuU bloodad Siberian Hu• $3,000. Cali (740)448-7810 Toppar,
$16,1500,
CU WUhorl, dry111, r• Rapelrad, New &amp; Robult In ky, · l-Ie. "'112 montftl 1990 Flrabird Formula 350 C740l418 4107
frlgerltoro, rangoo. Skaggtr Stock. Clll Ron Evana, 1• old, StOll OBO, . Croll tunoport, auto, air, 94,000 11187 Ch.vy 5-10, 4 c:ylinApplianceo, 78 Vlna Slreel, 800-537-95211 ·
C740l258-l852 ..enlngo.
mtleo, $2,800, 740·742- dar, 5-apood, Air Condlllcin,
Croll 740-446-7398, 1-688Mu.c.u_ 12357.
59,000 mllao, $5500 OBO,
818-01211.
MO•LE HOME OWNERS
INmlu!lo!Nrs
t9l4 Plymouth Aocl8lm, V· cal 740-448-3709
Lila modal Magic Chef,
.
~
6 auto, tinlad windows,
VANS&amp;:
lroot lroo ,.lrlgorslor, $100; Hugo lnventooy, Dlecounl
r~na
good
$1750
•WJ)s
90
Konmore waoher, S75; Priceo, On Vlnrl Skirting, lJoad
day warren- (7&lt;40)448-8588'
'
•
ThfH dryers, seo each, all Doo,., Wind&lt;&gt;Wo, .Anchore,
$1100. can '-'--'"'-=
·.:::.;.;,~-- ~
whlll, (740)446--8086 after Waler Haaltrl, Plumbing &amp;
111111 Lincoln Town car, 1987 Ford Aaro81ar, very
8pm.
Electrical Porto, furnaoo&amp; &amp;
Veoy clean, day· (7401"8· good a11ape &amp; runs good.
Hut Pumpe. BannetiS Mo68119, evening- (7401448· 740-441-9234 or 740.3158Moilohiln Carpal, 202 Clark blfo Homo SuP\&gt;1)', .740-448- =ft;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;.;;._., 31139
8508
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. 9418 www.orvb.comlben- 11
- - - : -- - - : -- FrH Eotlmatoa, 90 Day&amp;· noti
1997 Monla Cario, dark
Sarna Aa C&amp;aft, Flnardng
gr_,, auoomallc lranamla· 1987 Plymouth Voyager,
Avallbtt. Vlaa And Maaler· NEW AND UII!D ITEEL
slon, 3.t motor, 78.000 now tires. new ailemalor,
card,
1-877-830-9182 SIMI Beam&amp;, Plpa R-r
mlloo, $8,000. (7401245· runs good, neado brake
Fot Concrate, Angle, Chan- 18' oanlo tralilr In good 97112 (740)245-5229
work. $800, (740)24&amp;,-5848
7444
(740,_...._
~
ne1 Fiel Bar Slaet Qraling lhape. Hay ·apHr ond oct..
(740)4-48--4379
·
Main Stroot Fumlluro
Fo; Dralno,' Drlvowayo a aor Jack. (7&lt;1Q)44&amp;--251 4
Chevy
Aalro
van,
ex.
1994
(3041875-1422
Walkwlyo. 55 Clalion
11187 Mounoalneer, 4 wheel tend fully loaded 6l 000
515 Main Slraot, Poinl
Drumo Wllh Lid &amp; Ring, 1984 Long 510 tarm Trac· drive, excallant condlllon, 5 mile~ s7 200 304-862-27eo
P~aaoano
$7.00 Each. I.&amp;L 8crep Mot- tar, tr b -. 8' Rotollllor, iller engine, 58,000 mlin,
·' ·
. ala (740)448--7300
13750. (740)a5tl--8574
totally loadad, (3041773· 1997 Dodga Ram, Extend·
New &amp; Uucl Fumlture
- -,-C...----:- 5182 or (3011874-1523
ad Cab, 4x4 , loaded,
Now 2 Piece Uvtngroom Paco..vor Excol lllectrlc 85 MallOy Farguaon treeSt7,500. (740)446-1104
Suileo, $399. •lhry. Soli, can tor handlcappad, 1 yr. lor, live power, · 50hp, t999 Grand Prix QT, While.
.
Trade.
old, $700, 740-1182·5827
(740)448·1104 $4500
4 _doOr, 24,500 mllu, CD , 1999 ZR2 8·10, red, air
Charry sleigh bed, plitow ·j
top manreaa 1111, now. IIlii

=

= ; ,_ _ _ _ ___

..__ __

1Chalnoaw,

t=

l

0677

~~

~

r == r
1

"~--lllllliiiiiiii--"
Appllancoo: RocondRionad
WUhors, Doyoro, Ranges,
Relrtgnotore. Up To 90 Days
Guaranteactl We Sell Maytag Appliances, French
City MIY1"!1, 7&lt;10-448·7795.

Clean 2br. Apoulment ralar-

._ u.r:; -·
clapooi~ No
(304)675-5182 ·

Cell

ri6

Y1rd Sill Ada Only

=.,ooo~si.~

331&lt;40 -

fromPapB1

Reno-

Beautiful- R-ay

lact Kelly (740)448

Homer

For 15 Words
1 to3 Days

.

1182
:=Cell c':.:': ;;.Cflrtaly'o
:.:.:-0~1115:::..··~---Family· Uvlng,

(7&lt;40~98n o!.-ownlniorma- We're ·looiclng for an Actlvl- All Make Mowaro, Lawn
tion 1aave meaaage 11 no liot ANiatanl, aomeono Traclora, Tlllera Repaired .
Ouailly clallling and trcuaa...;..,.
wf'&lt;l II highly motlvaled, has Free pick-up, o.tivery Availhold llama. 11.00 beg 1118
·
good communication llklill able. 21 y811111 Experience.
ovary Tlluradly. Monday
staff. You could
,........,. Chltdren'a
and anjoya working wllh Croll Mike. (740)446-7604
llru Balurday 0:0()-ti:OO.
hel
h
CUt . . . _ .
people. Thle II a 36 hoor a
P US [8Cru
J)OIItlon and M1 prefer Ge0.g.. Ponable SaWmill,
volunt~ters on
Po11tion av.-ln Maaon, ..,_,. wllh OICptrlerain don1 haul your toga to lhe
Win ..... leiiCled antique~
rofll Co .. WV to provide caoa tong.o.mhollthcara,auch mlll)uotcali:lO&lt;I-675-1957.
IOIIIaonconoignmontln beh llol
our ohop. Llmhad apaoo.
a
non-p
managemont l8nriceO In lhrl u an STNA. High IChooi dl· Weed . Ealing Hlllaldeo,
Cal (304)675-2144
organlzatlons.
horne ond In lha community ploma or equivalency re- Ditches, Elc. Mowing,
Ia
oeverety omootonally die- qutred. Apply In peroon
IUrbecl chlklr'tn ond 811o1oo- 8:30- 4:00, - y- Friday Cieln-up, Removal Ot Un'
, _ al ~lk Of being p1ecer1 or call (740&gt;4*5001 ond ·wanted llama. Odd Jobs.
No Selllngl
GM!AWAY
tho homo. Aequlreo Ilk for Euioot Manit.
Crol- (740)4411-7804
No Fundl'llltlngl oulaklo
BA 1n Paychology Social
•
'
WOt1&lt; From Horne Pan Will - La- (304)875Kltloino to good homo, 740Work, or Counuilng, u
•
• 5129 Laeve Motia-.
You can eam up to wall
2-143., 740-2&lt;115-9752
ao oldenolvo tra'lll llrMI Full-time, S25- 175/hr.
"'
7
wilhlnlhrlcounoy. EKDollonl 7042
Pllid_Vacationo. l-8118-8 15- WMI power wash houaao
S71hourand
benetitl. Viollo..-- at
and lralera. call (740&gt;4*
www.preolera.org
0151alklorRonorcallcall
weekly bonuses.
lor applicallon. Send appll·
ohone (740)339-0950. 11 no
·
1M
ca.,...."' reauma- cover
We also offer:
~en';(o,
Ben_..t·a
ano-. ve . , . __
wn
' F~ll Bene!Hs
PREITEIIA cEN'IU
Incentives
• Weekly Paycheck
HR/ Ernptovrnont Spc
BlsNmi
3375 Routo eo E
' Car. . r
·, .._,__ __ ,
• Paid Vacation
Huntington. wv 25705
.""''""""""
• Retirement Plan
Potential
EOEIAA
Paid. Trainln..
INOTICEI
1
' Prof8811ional
.
• OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
"""'!' .. out _ .
'
-v·-""•~
Looklngtoranow
·building, 3 ecreo, counooy C o l a o - - ·
{;~
Atnioaphere
"MARKlT fRIIH"
lnfoCielon Ia
~,;,.=~ aetttng. 1740l37&amp;-21:M
50 Eall,
011.
~
career?
lookl 1
lily you know, and NOT 10 Mnc1 3 bedroomo, 2·112 ba)ho, Mull StU 1914 Liberty
lnfoCIIIon
ARBY'B Rntauranta oro
ng 01 qua
money through the mall until 1m..-1e poiUIIion, flo. 14x70, 3 -0011~1 beth,
110 Haatloy Road, HunMllllllgBIIIIInl
,_ -king pool-nal
peopla to coniiiCI you have lnvoaligalael 111e ducad, wu 1148,900, now
~ - Croll._,
r~~
Corpol'lltlon
·~=v~ ciiBIOmerland olforing.
~~.Qe:oar
40-385.-387.
Qll - . 3 Spocial EdlcuntnUy hal
planned unR expenalon Ia doi)OI'B In raprd to AAA GREETING CARD
Now 14ft-~- _,
tlon A_, ._.
laking place within lhe local CUI'I'IIfll Republican ROUTE 100 Super Loc'a. 3 Br homo for oaio, Socond only .1118. I* mon, call
lllo llarbin, mile. llama,
-1'111 poaltlona
E:e=~~
Party IUUM,
Local WOO weekly 800- ~ M~ 7 40-1182· now t-eoo-eat-em.
1f21.1127, 9:oo-t5:oo
I
,.._ dl"'o
277-11424
..
open
geouo, but noo required. Ex·
...n ualal, and
4 Bedroom Houaa In Rio New t4 Wfdt, 3 -.......
Juno 211tft-27tf1, 508 Cherry
cetlont Salarioa &amp; BenoiR
Protection of
-::---- - - - - Granda, Could Be. Uaad Only "8.150. Free Dolvefy
Aldge · R1o Cl.......
Fecktlgaa Av811oblel Plaaae
Second
Slart Your Buoinosa To- A&amp;
Rental Property. &amp;Sat up. 1-e88-82&amp;-2~
~
miCrow~-·
new
C.ll_
Us
Today
for
lax
you
raoume'
to
HloeA
nd
AI
hi
day
...
Pnmo
Shopping
Cron·
(
45--a1
~..
•, _ , ••-. _
74012
58
-~.,. gullar, ournllurw, 1111
83tl-9617 or emaiiiO:
me ment g 1. tar Spaco Available AI AI· ':=~-'-:-='-----:~-:-·~ 18 "
...,. ~
ntao, don~ -1
an lntetvlewl
carttolondOzoomnot.net
Teem• of
fordable Rail. Spn~ Vlilay 4000 oq. lt. churoh With par- molt only $270. per mon.
or mall t A1'1 201
~~
c 1740 446 101
call now 1-800-89t-e777
'
AUCOON AND
o:
ex-rlenced 1 • aza, 1
aonaga ond 7 acroo, Choe·
·
·
·
~ " ' f t' o u. - 1 888 475o7223
Slewart, Aveouo. o~tingrtL.tor, Ohio (opprox. 8 mllot N. New 2001 Fiootwood 14•70
~ ......... """"""'
axt. 11101
ton, KY 41183.
lrllnBI1tlhoroughly
ri\U•liSSIONAL
ol Pomarot'), equipment list tint BR, 2 Balli, already
_ _ _ _ _ _ __. McClure's Resoaurenl now
lnatruct new C.ll
SERviCE&lt;&gt;
avaHabie. beautiful ground&amp; oel ,up reedy 10 """" In
:.,P;:;'\'1".,:~~;, All people aam aariOus In- :'~~!. 3d:'~n·~~~
Center
. TllRNED DOWN ON
::.:,~ ~~=k:'.~ $1185
- . . 1198 per montft
740:992' 2187
oomplote auction aarvlca. come around your -uil tlcin allocation &amp;bring back
Repi'IIMntellvea
SOCIAL SECURITY /881? 1185-4485,
tJconaed l6ti,Ohio a Wnt eam ' 100 _weellly
Justlim"
'"' between
8:30am
&amp; during a paid 3().
.
New
No Foo Unieaa W. Wlni :::'-'---=-:---:--:-5 room &amp; battl, 2 porcheo, 11
•• _2001
•• -rFlootwoocl
_o__ ~
Cal
mailing OUr •-1ca~nla, 304-773-5785 Or
·.,.
10:00am,
Mon&lt;lily
thnr
Satd
1
1
•••582
••••
~ "~'"'
•~• ..7
ad offer 101 lroo (8661270. urda•
ly compl'lhana ve
~ -~
. A/C, ralrlgorator, oloctrtc Karena 740o3115o43e7.
~77o7u·
• 3194
,.
11111 1
~
stove &amp; oa• rumace.
n ng progrBm.
$27,800 ao 2424 Monroe - ctoublo- 3 br. a be.
n'ANim
Are you looldng lor lhe opAvonut, (~)675'13115 .
S1fH 00 _ , IJ(tly t295
10r--"::"--":"'.,
ro BuY
portunlty to loin a winning
WE AilE
• $7.00 per hour
HOMES ·
·
·
~
• 111m and become part o1 a
EXPANDING OUR
FOR SAul
1 Boauliful, aecl-.. while :; -e~ call ""'!' 10
1111 g-ng heollh
if&gt;.
ADVEtmiiiNG
• 401 K
'--..Oilililliiiio-pl oador log homo. 1.750
·
::;uoa~c:::,ar.p~: d..lry?ScanlcHIIIo~~~ng
BALEISTAFF
•Health benefits
bed
ho
remod- oquareiNI,Iongue&amp;grava New Doublo Wide.• 195
1
room uaacadlr throughout 1110 1.-.ldo, Per Monlh~ 3 Bodroom, 2
.... ' Diamon•o ' Cloi• Cenlor Ia offering Nuraa Are you a peraon that on·
·
"
"
1
11
paopt 1 "
• Paid vacation
elad, AIC, cloaa oo goff ftuga atone fl...,._, oov- Bath. Freo~ &amp; Sat·
Ringo . us Curroncr
·
Aide
Training
Ciaosoa
ora
maa,,
ngl
'-"
•d
ra
course,
cltr
pool
on
Mill
o~
"-k &amp; lront ....... , 1" up. 1~•••.
M·'·
~s· Coins'hop. 151 ~ 0 ~ monlhly. II Ia a 75 hour you 11 mot va- an on- • Seven Holidays
·~•
"""'
'
•
-·
1 bel
11 ?A rou
Creak. (740446-2200
foolslda
diCk, 7.6""'""
woorta&lt;1
ondAvenuo,Clalllpollo,740- ' COUrea,
11 aoro.
oy ngcrea""
.
acrot. 32x42 -1 ·
446-21o12
Mondor laotlnglor
through Fridar
8:30 looking
lor a ca- reth
wf a • Frld ay an d
.
_ ·.. _-. Prlvato p.........
,..,...,, And Now
.
to 4:30. Thlo Ia a greal op- long aalabllahed and
S
da
101 Pitaaent Ridge, Fomer· 24x&lt;le 4 olel horaa llabla. Doubl-, One Payment.
pt&gt;r1unilyl Thl noxt oiUI will growing company? Ara you
atur Yoff ;,. or,,11tand 1111 montloa ront 11811,000. Clark Chapel (3CU)738-7295
I ' II I 1 , \ d I '\ I
begin
In
July.
Soop
by
IOday
rn1-tct
In
e
potitian
11111
Call for an
P ua Heu~ly dopooll or will Road. (740)381-118118
, llohun mObile homo 2 bedI II \ I I ',
for an application., oonlaot ofttr~inauranca, 401-K plan
aell on land oonlraot (7401
•
::n;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Sl"""nlo K~r. inllnrc· and paid vacallon 11mo?
liitetvlew:
898-8783.
·
MoaiiJI HOMES lraom, oxaoltnl oonclltlon,
'llD u--W.··- lor,a1(740)44tl·71150
.,... .. ..,..
Areyouaperaon t"ol
·
"•• ~
range, OintrllalrOCifltlltlon.
lllrlgarator, WUhtr,
•• hiI
3 Bedroom Brick Aano~.
FQR........,
dryer.
experionce? 11 ao if
~
• 1 (740~~ 70
Attontion- WOI1C lrcm nome. will be benoliciol II nol, Wo
Living Room &amp;Dining Room Lot madtl cltaranoe. one ng,
,.....,...,
~
U&amp;175 Hour, PTIFT1. Moll wllilraln. For lntorvlew con• 1·888~237·5342 With Firtpioao &amp; Patio. 2000 -lo·" aa~ •• ·- II""'• ...,.,_ , ~ Cl
_ •••n-nvll'""
-··""
0~- www.ma 1looxmoney· aldorolion oon~ your rt·
Kitchen w/~llanoeo . Full tor ·2000 modll·- ~
..ngl·..
·"""a' ·'"''
Nr·
~-r.
- ••--·
"-"--'0....
11-~
" Itlttlf ~~~
Ext, 2301
Baoament
Roo Room,
- , . Pn~~~~
. - 11111/mo~-"1001'
~~.oom
oume w1m 1 COYII'
Fomny
Room ltn
wfWOOIJ
lum· prw ownad- alngloo mull •go ·
l'avmauto
81ngera, Bando • \looal ..t -·3157·3450
lng uo wt1y you are lho par., &amp; Big Serlin Large by Mar 31 , no ra111 tlblt Hu,Y Indo Juno altll, Olk·
Groupo, All llyiHI Agea. B
IOn
wl
natct
to:
D 1&lt;1 WI h J10 11 1· F1110ad offor relvaad, ,.... hamH WOOd•
. Golllpollo
1
Major RIOOfll Label SMII· am Up " 13150 In10 dly. . Cha~•• Govey PubHohar
Or Stop· By.· 1n~. ~
~ • D..... won~ 1111 long 10 atop In (7&lt;111)441 30113 1
lng Now Mloto. Coming Invite your lriondo
your Ohio Valloy Publilllllng
~ck •lrd, ~aVId ...,., and ohaok uo' out Wl'rt •
TO
Hunflngoon,
W&gt;i nomo far 1 Prolelalonol PIO·
(Tha Daly T~buno),
Molnlonanco Fret. dialing Oail'l •Mobile Take O.tr Paymonta, s
242 Thl r d AV8, outoldo
101).427- UH
or lura Porty. WI provldo
825 Tnird .rivo
2,200 SqFt Living Aroo , Hornae '4ohenl Ohio, 0Don lladroorit, a IIIII Olkwood.
1101)4127-11814
Clolhing and Jowoloy. Call
Claillpollo Ohio •Stl3t
Aouoh "•no, Choohlro, M·W. 9-7, Thlr,..FN., k., Cill
For
Dilallo
;.....;.__ _ _ _ _ ·(800)•ae.e383
_;.;;...:;;,;;.;;';.;;,;;;,_;.;;.;;.;_ .._ _ _ _ __. (740)3157..0221
Sat..1o-a.
(740)44H570
(

t

'

or 22 - Kllchori, teOOI Month,
1123,000. Corr'11oed. Downtown Clallpolio, eon-

~
..,.. 1123.000. - · 5
homo on qu- - - 118 Skttlnrr Y~ 14x70 - . S10,500. Ruflend, 8
~:r~
2 t.lhUe~ ICI'Ill8.5001
.
=· ~~cini";Z
(304)108-37•7
'
.JUet a tow o1 flo parco~~
and Iorge 11v1ng room. To Factory Clool 32xiO
'"'j
car garogo. and huge oov- $10,000 DiiCOUIII only nano1ng ~ prop111y
ered patio. lm_,. S1000.00 Down, o.tlvery, 1111!kup
aaaalonl Redo read lo - l8lup paid by FICIOry
·
$79,900. McClutre Raalty 1-t-em
· . Camp -For Rent On
Company, REALtoR 1· Flnll ..,..;; Ide ..,_ t&lt;.r-.. Rlvor, I ml,_
800-671-7533·
...,. -•··
11om POint Plnnnt.(304)~
"""·
(304)671!-1722,
Greal N~. Clood
1304)675-4144 Aller Spm.
Condlllcin, Noeda Handy- far ,... , _ oa1 l.ootll
lilly A N
man, Houael Church, uel l'llm
1
$50,000 Make Otler, In Ohio, wllh 10 Lots
(304)675-1618
e a -1
Houoelotoaloby- 10 rallng.---.gell
W.lnUI Creek 4 milellofl oil
1 118184 72811 for liP"
Sand Hill Rd. 2.2 acroo pair-d.
Capo Cod - 3 dornllfl, 3 INTRODUCTOin'
car garage, 3br. lomlly. . . 1'1101
.
room, lg counlry kllchen, (~ - · . 3
2
clntng and laundry room, 2 t.lh • e• . - w111111 Oft112 bafhl front ....- back -~ ' " -toll o1 ..:......_ 1 -3 - - clock, arid pa~~o"";""q•,. 1 1ty ~ w ~ 1:,.1 •t .,........ F""" • 1 -.. 4%
1
--· - 10 _ - · -·., - -~ ......,. Down. 30 y..,. 11 ·8.5%
:::._~;-~ 175000 .....:::;, faoi.-~~:=.C.:'!"_..! APR. Forlfollngo.tiOQ-319(';')67Hm' ' ... ~~
Ohio.•• 3323 Ext. 17011.
• 750 -~-...
Tllreo _ . , three bath 582·11172.
. 1092 &amp;~nett Drive, Vef'(
hou
.~·
Qood ~ 0apoo11 &amp;
1
A-- ~r'"F1on""
R - RoquiNd. No
0_!!.~~·•~- ve. · - •
Lfmllad Or No Credit? ao.- l'oto Call (740)44tlr4 118
MuH\Im. Two double go- -~lank ""'"'-Only
·
regaa. (~)675-5353
AI OOIIwoocl In .. 3 badrcom homo MIIIOfiYifto
Rou
- · WV 304-738-34011.
river lllow, ,........,..
3 Bedroom on
lo 2,
required, dopoaif roqutrecl,
(304)671!-8332
Lot modol - · no poll, 740-1182-em attor
3 Bedroom 1 bath. out- up 10 l8.8l! 5 wllh any~homo, 5pm.
·
·
otylo

saoa

C.Oi TOll Free:
1-8118-815-1835 .

polo ....,, S23.SOO

I -

992-21

••11e•eii.UC

UNSECURED LOANS U,
DEBT CONSOLIDATION up
h11oo.ooo. Crodll F•.-omo .,.._...,_

1

~ -lOti ., - 110.000. (304)175-7718

Classifieds

l.._t_APuiMI!Hrs_IUl_lb:Nrii i i _.

"1' Only- Lot- DcUIIe- Owner AOitlrtng- lhrllding . 1 and 2 bedroom apart4 lllclroom, 2 Batft, For - tn Clalilpolla, Ohio, - . ru.- ~ UllfurWu
154,11111,
Now On Route 7, Hu_ La~ nlohod. MCUr1ty depoolt ,.
$42,997· Prtco Clood Til Partclng Lot. Hal 4 - . quiNd, no pell, 740-9928-211-01 ,
Hurry To Ook· Alflo Lots Of floor &amp;p.co, l22Et;8';;;~;;;;;;;;;,-R;
woodGallloolla, Clood
,,_,._
Clll
(7.... 418 30113 . )~
r40)387- 7188
1 Bedroom Apartment. Re~,
-lrigerator, Range, NC In·
MWO Ill II-~
Lals&amp;: .
~-. -Piuln..-•&amp;
" '" "
--...,_,
ban"
Aclr..\GE
Rill aw. HUD Approved.
Single
and
MCtlonal
(740)441· 151e
~ 818~ 2 Loti. Zoned Corowo""clll, 1 Room Fumiohld Efllclon·
and
· Wllhln The Yltago Ot Rio cy, All._ Paid Sharad
Into
dlreC- Clrnlt. (740)2&lt;45 sese
a.iot,, 919 Seconci 'A...,..,
·
IIIUNEJI LAND
Galflpolfo, OH $125/mo.
~~7~1he
m....,~·
(740)418 3948
71•1•
,_
-·~• ree .....,. onty SHI51~
3 room fuml8hed apartmenl,
. GALUA CO.- Rio Cllando, -r-11, utiHtln paid. 94
111 - - Only $1115.00 p., . - . privele loll, 10 Locuot, $290/mo. plus daMonlh,e.~Fix4dt-..,..
w1111 pond, $25,500. - • 740-446-1340
•• ~
,......
Ralo WI!' Nor And Un- Koor · 8 - S21 ,000 BEAUTifUL
APART·
delpir&gt;ring 1~ or 5 ...,.. wllh pond, ...~ ~:r IUDGIT .PR'
~.ooo. ~. 11 ,...,. ~
80N
•
1914 Norrtt t4x78, S1t,500 o.- 2• ..,..
wilt\ Cll AT JACK
ES.
.......,, ... ,_-air, Iorge berne. 131,0001 Clay TATH, &amp;2 \ - Drive
2 -oorn, $15,900. 740- -llhip.Qnlal- on 13 11om $29710 $383. W8lk to
4411-0175
- · iao.ooo. Tycoon lhop &amp; movteo. Col _740~·-.- lekt aNa, 1• acrn, ~~. Equal HoUsing
1_~· -·.
·~ ...,.,_,
113 900
........ --•

-

For Free lnfoonation,

•••
••
,.

d:

...........
ue.a ..... •CUrrMt ..................... _
...,......,,..., _ _ _ _ _ I I . . . . . . ....

AI*Jtion: AN'o and LPN'o Cluo ACDL T~ wanlad. Planned .......,tftood of
Arcadia Nulling C.ru(o 2 1""11 ...,.,., a . Hu• -~~ 01110 a

IIOniMfor ........
Worll dToDoAdll

--•

Hl!LPWANim

.---

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

-

Slart lmmedialoiy!
Gonui1e ()pportunityf

•
•
•

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

,...
......... -,,
.,....._ • ..,.._ ... ,...._ .. r , .

• Start Your Ads WltPI A Keyword • Include Complete
o ..trlptlan • InClude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Add ress When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Oay•

..._,, ..,I'.IO_Hru
__
......a)JLoltl

Mailing Our Sales Broctluretl
Free Supplies, Postage!

•

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

Garcia

Dally
Sentinel

Easy llillllr
Rllftedlle
llu! fljlJpart
tllle IMI11!
Ptsllllds
qulddy!!

POUCIIIIC*Dv.~iy•'Z

The Dlllly~anllneloPage 8 3

Oak HiD (Va.) Academy. The.
top power forward prospects
include Chandler, of Dominquez H .S. (Calif.), ~nd Curry,
from
81
ofThornwood, IU.
in fiont of Jordan, Tinsley
"The depth in this year's
. walked away with th e feeling draft will b e at the power
that Jordan w as somewhat positions, center and power
enamored with him.
forward," said Marty Blake,
Tinsley's agent, Ray Broth- NBA director of scouting.
ers , overheard Jordan's stunned "The power forward position
response when Tinsley tried in partic ular is unusually
to block a shot by power for- strong, with the depth of good
ward R odn ey White, who left players at that position
C harlotte afte r his freshm an extending into the second
season and is e xpected to be a round ."
top 10 pick .
,
Followin g Washington in
Brothers qu oted Jo rdan as~ draft order are the· Los
saying, "I like tough guards."
Angeles Chppe rs, Atl anta
Not too long ago, a tough H awks, Ch1cago Bulls, Goldplayer· con side red the b est . en . Sure Warno rs, Vancouver
point gu ard in the draft Gnzzhes, N ew J ersey Nets,
wouldn 't dro p belo w the C leveland
Cavaliers
and
eighth or ninth pick.
D etroit Pistons .
Five years ago, guards ADen
The Boston Celtics hold the
Iverson, Ste phen Marbury, 10th, 11th and 21 st pi cks,
Ray Allen and Kerry Kittles whole Houston also has three
all went in th e to p 10. A year · p1cks m the first round: Nos.
later, point guards C h aun cey 13, 18 and 23 . Golden State
BiUups and Antonio Daniels has the fifth and 14th pocks;
w ent third and fo urth . In Orlando holds the 15th and
1999, Steve Francis am~ Baron 22nd selection s.
Davis w ent second and third.
N ewYork, Ind iana, MilwauThi s year, only Jaso n kee, M innesota , D enver and
Richardso n
of Michigan Dallas do no t h ave for st-ro und
State, T insley, J oe Jo hnson of picks, and the NBA champion
Arkansas and Joseph Forte of L.os Angeles Lakers do not
North Carolina are consid- have any picks in th e first or
ered sure th ings to be chosen second rounds •
somewhere in the first round .
The Bucks won't select
Only Richardson is certain .to until late in the second round.
be among the top 10.
• "We'D probably get the best
Among small forwards, player available, if we can get a
Duke's Shane Battier will good, big man down there,
undoubtedly b e the first fol!r- mayb e even a European guy, a
year college senior sele cted, project type of player, we'D
but Seton Hall's Griilin could look at that," sai d Ernie Grunleapfrog him in the ord~r o f. feld, Milwa ukee 's gen eral .r :
selection .
manager. " If somebo dy slips
T he
top-rated
cente rs who we think is good, we'D
include
hig h . sc hoolers look at that, too. But if we
Brow n , of G lynn Academ y could, w e'd prefer ge tting
(Ga.) and DeSagana Diop of some sort of a big man."

I

Draft Pap

•

�.

,
• · 1\Judlly, June28, 2001

•.

•

•

•

tn;rtbune - Sentinel - .1\.t ster
CLASSIFIED

•

.• •

,.

.

Pom:uoy, Middleport, Ohio

.• .•
0

0

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

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

•
•
•

•

' decision to Jeave starter
Reith in on Saturday night
to absorb an eight-run ,

nine - hit beating before
fin.ally taking him out after
six innings.
R elief pitc h ers
Chris
Nichting helped give away
the game in the eighth
in nin g Sunday.
W ith o ne out, J ulio Lugo

•
•

In one week With us

who said that my swing was
doubled off Nichting and . rath er than the inning-endbad and I had to change it, I
Vizcaino singled, with Lugo ing double play th ey had
think
is going to have to eat
stopping at t h ird.
hoped to ach ieve. After an
all those words that they said."
,.........1
Wohlers came in and got in tentional walk to Lance
Garcia said. "I think its a pmJeff B agwell to hit a bounce Berkman , Moises Alou sintournament,
I
am
not
ty good swing."
er. But Lugo sco red when gled to score Vizcaino.
going
to
think.
'WeD.
Tiger
is
. Victor Garcia is a club pro
the R eds were able to ge t
not
here,
so
why
win?'
No.
It
Sergio and othen are trying
o nly one out on the play,
is not that w:ay.
to prepare for the Seniors
"It is just great to win."
Tour in the United States.
Garcia's proud parena , VicThere was nothing Wt-ong
tor and Consuelo, \'\[ere wait- with Garcia's swing M onday.
ing by the 18th green at th e Except for a 3-putt bogey on
YourUNKto
Westchester Country C lu b to the second hole, Garcia was
hug their son after h is last shot nearly Oawless from tee to
the perfect
Monday.
It was the fin t tim e green in a five-birdie, o n eJob...
his m other saw him win a p ro bogey round of 4--under 67.
tournam ent i n p erson , h e H is misses with the putter
said.
were all close.
For Victor, it was again a
G arcia nearly drove the
m atter
of
redemption. green o n the short par-4 sevThought to be har ming his e nth and made birdie from
son by staying as his swin g the rough to go back ah ead.
coach through Garcia's dry and he made another b irdie
sp ell o n the PGA to ur o n No. I 3 by sticking a 9-iron
between 1999 and last month, a foot from th e cup to go
G arcia said M o nday his father ahead o f H och by two . The
should now be recognized for Spaniard added a tap-in birdie
1---!74-JOIS
what he is: a great coach.
on the par-S 18th for his 3tD6
"I · think that everybody strokt victory•

JOBS

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

$6-$7/H

•

.........

w.___.,~11'10

..-.van~--.

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

ICCII)Ung IPPiicatlcino for &amp; wllo loam oncour111 and 2nd iohifoa. w. aged. (740)388-8331 IMve
bonoflte lhrlt in- nomo &amp;. . . -.
clucla Hllltft lnau(anca C",
• ..... _
bul)' Phy11_
40111. Ufe ,,_.,.., com- cienl Offtca Copy of Cenlftpallllvewrogoeondopponu- cation preierred Pfeaoe
nltleo lOt -ICelloont. " oend _.,.10 PI: Piea11n1
yau are a ..., ~ wf'o Chol Conl8r 2500 .Jelllnon
orjop working wllh lhrl llkl- Ave.' Pl. Pieuant, wv
orly, plouo apply In pti10II 25550. Fax lo (304)675bolluo•: H or call Diona 3713
HI~-. AN, Dlrecoor of
Nurlilg.
Domlno'a Pizza o1 Polnl

Advor-.

1- rwe!!l . . .
•---- -

. 1:1Dp.m.lhe....... lhe.

lelo-.

.,_,_11~ ~

.UJ =I

lllltiOn 1:00 pa.
"-· ·

MNI1IML fW!!!! M;
• 1:00,p.m.lhedl¥
....,.lhe8dle1Dna
lundey lllorllt.y

~::0~~
~..~ ~~
~~· Ohio
fl

-"'!'J:p.m.
:
r'

•M*ICB Pf&amp;QIM;
2dlp'*-lhe81111
._ 4
torun.w,
:30p.m.
llrlu
dllt I llorllt.y
..
'. • D I !,4,..:30:,;~·
- ~

-...-lo

-.-..ne,

(740)887-3158
EOE

AVONI All Areaal To Buy or
SOli. Sl&gt;iltey Spears, 304- Ful':'lme Position, Fumiture
675-1429.
Delrvtlf)l and WarehoUII.
Applr 0 Llfaetyte Furnllure,
Exporter reed Crew 818 Third A-. Clelllpo· for Setting ond Flnilllllng llo. No Phone Cllte.
SecUonal Houalng. Send
Prlc:lng lnlormallon and ax- Clot Money? Wo Do Como
parlance lo: Southofn WOt1&lt; with ua ond you will
PO Box 829, Jecl&lt;- loot Na- cable mar• aon, OH 45840
iceting ond auditing compa-

.;,..;;....;;.;,___--:--

-

r--------.I-·
. _______.-no..
i

=-~~;::PI~

ny WV. alnglng • dining ov:
aryona-

WE ARE
HI Rl NG II
lnfoclalon Ia
ly ddi
current a ng to
our Residential

-To You Thrtft stooppa
8 w.t Stlmaon, Alftane
740-5112-1942

To WOt1&lt;?
Full-time LP.N. -pan- www.wot1olutafyoorhome.co
time wllh Athonl aile w1111
m
pan-Ume lralltl to Oilier
ailn. Candida
. 11
poollion
po ow cumont Ohio "SecrNrtooiCCI
Y8t"' buoy medical olliee•
llcanaure and maintain a for
pm-cl1olca pNiooop/ly. Ex· Appllcallonl will be lllkon
co11ont ~ ond only on T - r ond woc~o
organiullcin al&lt;llla. Send naoday Juno 211 &amp; XT 1»9:00 a.m. ond 2:00
OIMII ond reaume ID: Per- aonnel, 398 Richland Ave- p.m. No pl1one callll. John
nue. Athena, OH 45701 w- MD,' Inc. Pleaoant
\Iaiiey Hoopllal aultll 112,
EOE.
Point Ple8lanl. wv.·
SCIIOol-beMd
Sooneono 10 laktl care "' mr
Social WIJIOthof In mr homo lull time
or pan line, 740-387-o302.
position available to provlda
oruancr
di11t11ion
for Bludonlo
In the18fVices
Maaon Taking appllcationa: cook,
grill cook, dl&amp;h wllher, wallCounly, WV ochooi IYI· reaa, Slop al Mlllio'o Realau·
lema: IUHOimant, caae rani, 39239 Bredbuoy Rd.
manogemonl, lnflage, ond Middlepoo1, Ohio tor appllcllreatment programe. Re- tion.
quireo a BA dogroe In huNEEDEDmen l8nriceO field, COII1&gt;ut· IJFiClENTLY
"'literacy, flexible-. pluma &lt;lonols, eam $&lt;15 10
lng, good communicallcin $60 lor 2 "' 3 ....... -.y.
........
be ociclai -. II- C.OI Sera-Tee, 740-582.
conae Mull
eliGibleCornpelitiw 661i1.

cover .

have valid drlv.,. llcanM cation
with
ioncl
own dependable orono- len 10
portation Dl aalot
"' '
·
rlance pral::eq, bu~
PREITERA CENTER

::.;:.?n.tr::;:,.~:;"d~g

toallng
mandatory.
(t104)27o-21132
Hair 11y111t and nail lechl
for lall growing
buay
1on 1
Croll

BlsNiiss

'I'R.uNJNG

I
.

Col....

Goltlprlllo c (C.-• Ciole To Homo) ,

Croii~~:J~7 '

H~~e/,eSpc

Reg 190-05- 12748·
liM
WANIID

Hunllngtorr, wv 25705
EOE/AA

To Do

.

~
till-·-·
............
__
.
....,..
.........
.....,
..........
., ....
....
...,,,......._ =-- - 1111'
or-1111'- .. ="
l'llr Hlllillnl A.- , , .

llllla ••

• bllldon

origin, 0&lt;

MMI~ to

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

Pl...........
r
1'

I
•

L

__
...........
......
..

TNinew 1 111rwt11r.ol

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

.......,0..

vtal•an' of thllllw.

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

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

....

•

..

.•

t ~::a It

AIln . . ICS 1$ $I II

""*

"'reaum.

·I

.'ll

Own ACompulor'l Put II

:.•=-~= ~~,=~benelltll.

~ .

I

Hl!LPWANim

""door-10-door- lor to- wwwpreo~an~
1141
cal cable company. Mull lor app~fcition ~aPflll·

Why walt? Start
ONo linglal tonighl1~

7811-21123.., 182i..

ment~ competitive pay, ex·
lble. Apply in pareon, 420
. VIand Slrael, Point Pl...

~=.,.--.....,,...--ant.
-:::

L-....!l~~~·_.J
l'a!Qw.s

II" HruW.oom I1'10

lin

• t1 1 on .......

r· IUlSwt
. . __
• • ........,

_,~

-

--•.1-8.--•--· . ,. ,
,.....,,On-

30141
Go\LUJIOUI. OPPORTU- IV 13411.00 ..., NITY 18 KNOC- In
IIIII ............. 6 room""""' 1 tllfl921134211

= ..::=&amp;...S:U:"•

'

Mlllll

•

co.-

T_.

I

- .... '""'

113,000, or ttl

ll.dUCtiont

._"ff

-ocim.

e.- •..._

=

r

-"'

I

==

Holzer.

I

r .,

r.

I

j

......- _,.., ====:. :. :.: :. .__..,"
l•••••••.,.l

I

•

I

flrn

I

•

""*"·

:::;:0:

r

..

I

:...":":an'f.

J

•

Ovtr15Wol'dl,

¥:J

2~PirWord

I '~~CUh/CI)eck Willi COpY ~"' I .
lnyltt The Entlra Nalghbgrbood
Tn Vnur Vrorrt !;111111

'·

Mall to:

The Daily Sentinel
Cla•slfled Ada

111 Court Street

CASHLOANSI
' Bad Credil OK
' Moal Ouaiify
'Fut Saovioa

Pomeroy, 01'1 45789

·confidentlaJ
•easy Payments

1-IIJ0.332·MI1

-1-ulffj:;j THE CLASSIFIEDS
Wht~n it comes to selling your car,
nothing gbes the distance like the
Classifiedsl Get the show on the road
by calling u's today.

898t

ll&lt;lech St. Middleport, 2
bodroorn fumlohad apan-

:':;.~!: ::Op0,.~

311adroom-lnSy,..
au., Oftio, ... 501 lolonlh
HIJD Approvecl (~)1755332 or (740)992-8119
rtlll&lt;1 ldo only
3 bedroom, CIA. In Clelllt»
:; ~-~~~·
,....,
In Racine, n1ao nofghbor·
hood '""" llllr Mill
•
Plrk. :Jr'oorro, f450 dopoalt.

1*' 1111- -

"!':M·

~~~,ll'be
-0ge-Ot&amp;,
•~ 7 1~ 7~

r

2217.
Ia Your Raut t400? !jew
3 Elotlroom, 2 S,th Ranch
Slyio Horne From Rent To
Own. (7&lt;111)Ue 3683
Pilot Program Ronlera
304-'131-7295
'
·
L,--;ilill~

2 - . . , 111011111 homo lor
raut 13251 month S300 do-

pooft, no peoo, ;.,_,...

requiNd. (7&lt;40)448--83.42 at·

tor5pm.

""b:;;;;;;;;-;;;bji:;;;;;;;;;-;;;;
2 bedroom
homo, no

..... ·-· 111011111
monlh, lnc:l·~o
...~ ...,.,$100 d-olt.
wafor,
(740~-17
~
...---':'..:::..:.;;;.:.::·:.:..,_ __
2 Bod_,, ~~~aoe
lloaUIIful Rlvar VIew ldlll
For 1 Or 2 p~ Rlfera
~
p'
"'
-torT,.Ior Park,
•
Ill,
F
...
740-441•
0111
'
In AIOine _.... -~Ilion
' - ~_.,
no... ...........
• •~ '
- ·-..-"-·
• _.
room,
llr, aarpon, 13150
dlo
potlt, 13150 por mo. lnoludlo
wtttr, ga!Oige • oaw:f:·
avlllablo 7-1-0t, 740·
2217

\I ll&lt;! It 1\IJI"I

uma Rd., Rut-

.o "OUSDfOIJ)

land, Ohio, 740-7~·7403.
~- home and 1re11or

r

. . -. C0rmoen:1a1 atoreavaMable lot leaaa.
. -.

Pet&amp;.

F,..lahad 2 &amp; 3 Room
Aparlmento, Clean, No
Pete, No Smoking, Alferencot &amp; Do-ll
. .
•·· Required
UIIIUoo
fumi 0had.
(740)4411-1518
Furnloftad 2 -ocim aport·
rk
mont, acrou 1rom 1M' •
NC. no pell. - • a • .
depotil, t325 """""·
(740)~ (740)446·
Graciouo living. 1 and 2
badroom II VHoago Manor and Riverlldo
Aparomenle In Mlddiapon.
F,... S278-13411. COif 740992-5Qtlo4, Equal Houolng
Oppollunllleo.

.
"
·

_ _. - - - - - -

Nlca one bodroom unturnloiMod apanment. Range &amp;
retrtgeretor proYidad. Wator
&amp;gorbogopald. "-"r•
quiNd. Call 740'«84'345
altor llpm.
~-------

:

=n=

North ..,., lwo., _,.....,,

no ...... 740-992-0185. ,'
Now 'liakina Applk&gt;lca"-0

315 Will 2 lladi-Oom ;
' - Atlw'l•lto, • Wator Sewage, · Traoh,
1350/Mo., 740-446.01)()8.
Tara Townhouaa Apanmanoa, Veoy Spaclouo, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Fioore, CA, t
112 Beth; Fully Carpelad,
Aduh Pool &amp;Baby Pool, Pa·
tlo, Sfarl $385/Mo. No Pets,
Laaae Piua Sacurily Dopo&amp;il
Required, Dayo: 740-4463&lt;4e 1; Evonlnga: 740-36 7•
0502 • 740-446-0 101 ·
'rwin RlverTowers now ac- •
•
capllng
applicationo lor 1 BR.
HUD auboidlzad apt for ·
-rly ond diMbltcl. EOH. .
(304)6715-6879.
urtol,., 2 Bedroom,46e
,
1 •th Avo 8tovo &amp; Ratrtgaraoor Fumlllhad. wa1or Fumo
1 ho"
S3001mo,
~.
$150
Dopoalt,;

~

•"
.

•

~-- ~-k '"'
" Iorron,ono
I
..,.,..__
,,

lull hookup for a omall
calnplng lreilor, lamlly lypa , "
740-atil-811811.

"• '
•
•

:;;;.:.;·_____ _

••
•
•

Molllll home In Aoolno
area, no peto, 740·802·
1818.

'

Homoflto XL12,
8 Inch bar, $60; Cralleman
culling torch and woldlng
0UIIi1, 111 up 10 uae propeno, $-10. (740)992·2380

r

1

.•-•
•
•

HAY &amp;:Gtim

r

.1rz ~ 1

llloclc, brick, pipe&amp;, Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
wlndowo,llniall, otc. Claude Slraw, Yoar 'Round Delivery
wtn1era, Rio Gr-ancle,, OH &amp; Volume Dl-.nt Availo·
Caii74CJ.245-5t21.
bte.
Hartlage
Farm.
(304)875-5724.

1'Eis

I

=

i

R!II=:~.HOM

i

well

1

cared

A='

I

ror, condition, crulae, CO, auto,

I

t~~l
1993 Four Wlnda motor
home, 20 loot, ·laaa than
•.ooomli11. (740)446-t759
2001 Camp1r 25 112ft. lnnsbruck by GuW Slraam. Mov·
lng,

Never

u1ed.

Call

(3041875-5353
89 DOdge LER Campar
van, aaW conlelnad, garage
kept, low miles, 83 Herman
Road, Clnlanaoy. OhiO.
$8750, 740-709-4444 Leavil
8811
:::m::
::~ga::·c_,_ _ __

94 Duochman. 31 foot, wllh
oxpando room, (740)441 ·
1- ---,--953
:::.:.;.
Coleman Shananaoan popup camper, excoUonl con&lt;ll·
tion, (740)446-9470
-..1 1&lt;\ I&lt; I ...,
;;;:==;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

rio
~

H

OME
IMPRoVEME!IIfS

IAIEM!NT
WATERPROOFING
Urrcondltional iilotlme guar·
anlaa. Local reterenc&amp;s lurnillllad. EBiribllohad 1975.
Cell 24 Hrs. (7401 448·
0870, · 1-800·287-0578.
Aoga11 Walorproollng.

;;;::;;:;;===:;I

i;-

r•o

I

r:al

r

r

'

r

I

w!-

··'"l .......

.I

. -

......

ranged tar to his left on a
·grounder for the second out,
and Scott Brosiu s made a diving stop on Travis Fryman's
smash down the third- base
line to end it.
Randy Keisler took a twohit . shutout into the sixth
inning, but gave up four
straight hits as Cleveland
closed to 6-2.
' With runners on second
and third, Torre brought in
Witasick, acquired in a trade
fiom San Diego on Saturday.
When Witasick arrived on the
mound, shortstop Derek Jeter
introduced him to his new
teammates.
Witasick d idn't make a
favorable impressio n, g iving
·up RBI singles to Marty Cordova and Einar Diaz, a runscoring double to pinch- hitter Kenny Lofton and a
game-tying RBI single to
Omar Vizquel.
With two outs, Juan Gonzalez hit a slow roDer to third
that Brosius misplayed fo r an
error, giving the Indians ~ 7- 6
" l ead : ·
Chuck Finley, 17- 9 in his
career against New York ,
couldn't fool the Yankees this
time.
They strung together seven
straight hits with two outs
and nobody on in the second
inning to take a 5-0 lead and
didn't swing and miss at any
of the left-bander's first 47
pitches.

Buclgol Prtood Tranlml•

Iloilo All TrP88, Accesl To
Ovor 10,000 Tranamllliona,
Translor Caan, 740-2455877, Ceil:.339-3785. ·

M·F 1315 dilllilraclor, Ilk· (740).41..0218, (740)591 - linl, 49,000 mlllll , aaklng
HOME .
lng S5000 or trade, 304- 7110 .
$14,900. (740)37~2798
~
IMPRoVEMENrS •
T-n HI EWiciency 90% 773-5428·
73 VOik Baella $750. Runo
Buy "' Ill. Rlvartne Anli· Gao Fu.rnaooa, Oil Fumabul naado body work
.
C&amp;C Genaral Homa Malnt•
quao, 112• Eut Main on .... 12 Soer Heal Pump &amp;
LlvarocK
(304)885-3747
nonce- Palnling, vinyl sldSR t24 E. POtnoroy, 740- Air Condlllonlng Sraoomo
MorottcYan;
lng, carpentry, doore, wln992-a526 or 740-992·1539. FrH 8 Year Warranoy Bon· 87 Crolltilar 1 ownar. St200.
.
•.
&lt;Iowa, batho, moblfo homo
Ruaa Moore, owner.
nens Hating &amp;Cooling, 1· t month Old Guinoao and (304)67s--i
•
repair and more. For lrae
Ml'lCEIJ.ANEOUi
8 o o • 8 7 2 • s t 8 7 Baby Duokl, $3.00 oech, 88 Dodge ca..van. 3_0 En- 2000 BanahM~1 """""· eollmele call Chat, 740-992·
.
ttn:l
ChiCka
It .00
aach gino In ......,. w~0 &amp; run· wilh oxtrao now pipe&amp; now 8_32
_ 3·- -- -:--:-:::---1 www.arvb.oomA&gt;onnoll
Ml!RcH.\NDISI!
'740J2IItl-1121•
""""
•
sroo
'
oao'
· t w1•
.
wotartlno Spacial: 314 200 l
nina condition.
lop end. $5500.
304- Llvlngolon'o e a Bedroom Sulli PSI S2t.ll5 Por 100; 1' 200 1 Rag. t/2 Arabian, 112 (~)171!-1890
882·3678 or 304·542-~- tor Proofing, all bUtmanl
:\.~ngTtraao lor Ctinoae PSI 137.00 Per IOO!tl. All OUirtor Horae, Chaslftll • e2 BuiCK LISabro ilmllad, 2000 Kawlllki Prairie 400 ropolra dono, lroa ~·
Slyte ouMo. (304)812·2•30 Brua Compression F nge Whlfo Tobllno. 5yr old Sill· 82,000 mllao, loadad, 740- 4•4 ·2000 lb wam winch' mt••· llfo:~b gua~an ·
1
141'"' 318·
Verllaradllr Fltltll Villager ~~O:vANI INTIIII'III• lion (~)1 7 1!- 7071
·
IOto' of oxtrai $5252, 740: /aJ;)99~· 7 · oxpa Inc. '
Clreenliold paltlm, $80, a Jacl&lt;lon, Ohio, 1-800· 3 ynr. Old Blaok anguo regia985-3817
rotalll, tat, (740)448-e231 83~--·
tired bull, 740-742 •211315 · 1M Dodga Shadow. 2 DOor, 200.1 Honda like now, hard·
Eu:cnuCALJ
Whlotlor 8.75 ractar dlltctor AQHA yoo~lng ooit, lncon- Hillohback
S28QO. lr uoad, prtca noa . ~ Rm!GERATION •
(304)885-36315 or (304)895• _ 11,1100 lACK a Ton Air uaad ,.rely, m . baaloaliy tlvo lund. l lg and qulot, (304)882·a785
CondlllonOr, 2 Ton Coil, 1 now, hlo _ . , Othir Ill· (7&lt;111)-78
QMC So
SLS 3328 ovoninga
Rooldor1tlal or commercial
85
•• . Line Sot. lnolallecl. ,2.295. ..... 304-8711-4814
,..nomoi ml •
wiring. - aervloa "' ...
.. 11,000 Beok, 11295 Nil
111 ,000 ml • au num
pairs. MaotorUOanaad~ec·
. ' Prtoe. Freo Eatlrnelll. Call
IIAY &amp;: GIWN
whaelo,1ton-u cover, 740- p~:~~~r"1trtcl an. Rkllnour Electrical,
For Quolot On Other Slzoo.
149-13 8
WV000308, 304-875-1788.
. II You Don1 Call Ul,
e~. com, •• _2111 buahol, 01 115 Noon, Aulo, ~old Air,
• WI Both Loaal Moblla
""'
..
p
D
Locka A d
•: Homoo Dur 8paoialil9 1·
ts.OO per 100 pound owor ooro,
n
·. 740·448-8308 1-800·281·
~round In your aaokl. Mlrroro. 99,000 Mlloo,
,
Cedar bolrdo, ovor 200 40)24&amp;-50&lt;17
$2,000
080
CLEAN HOUSE
: 0091
doc,., lntartor and elderlof
(7&lt;40)251-123\
tll8t Clllotron 111' M1rcnro·
WITH THE
,
I _..._..lc
cabinalo 10!1 o1 Q "
If If
or 3.0 I, lnbolrdiOUiboard
, lllcl- a now lui~ .. ~,... · bulldln '
Ill '111 now u•• ly a a a. oquare 07Z-2•Whllo52,000mlloo, w/1992 RoadAunnlf trallor
, mlllnll HI, IIIII in plaotiC, 50%~ ~~:h..o)44 1 -0 27 g baill, .2/bate, 740-1192· loaded, $6200. 080 Clood ooth gocld coriditlon. 882· CILASSilFiEDSI
IIOrilloo $129, 30•·360. o~. 0 _;.
51315
Condilion (301)882·3622
2249 Prtco $&lt;1500u-.llllllllliiili:=liiili:~
0233

r

to pinch h i t Martinez for
Todd Greene.
" I know he has not been
knocking in runs the way
we're used to:'Torre said. "Btit
he's done this too much for
our club the last few yean for
me not to li ke him coming
up with runnep in scoring
position."
Indians manager . C harlie
M anuel countered by bringing in lefty R icardo Rincon
(1 - 1), but the plan backfired.
M artinez, 8-for- 39 in · his
, career as a p in ch hitter, hit a
2- 1 pitch into the first row of
the upper deck in right field
to. give the Yankees an 8°7
lead.
'Tve always h ad a to ugh
time as a pinch hitter because
b asicaDy I play every day,"
Martinez said.
Jay Witasick (1 -0) got the
win in his Yankees debut
despite allowing three Tuns jn
two innings. Mike Stanton,
pitching for the fourth
straight game, struck out both
batters he face d, and Mariano
Rive ra got four outs for his
2 4th save - with help from
three outstanding fielding
plays.
Rivera stopped Roberto
Aloinar's hard grounder w ith
his foot for the first out. Second baseman Enrique Wilson

1

1990 ~ pickup In excel- Ate You Looking For En·
lenl i:ondillcin, 74Q-992· ginos Or Tranamiaslons?
2529, 132 Butlemul, Porn- Give Mo ACroll At 740-«8oroy.
.
_o5_1_9·- - - - - -

1995 ChoYrolet Silverado,
4x4, 71,000 mllot,• lully
FOR SALE
loaded, leather, ono awnor,
boxed. Can _,.,,, ap- ~
(710
A
lexcollont condlllon, $14,1500
~ ~~~~M T~~ r:'s. ~=:iaii!Crlflco 3 Dachahunda, 1 rod ••
FOR~
(7401"8-6157
Spring and manreaa, Queen
malo, 1 red malo (oho~· ~
.
1995 F·250. 7.3 P.S.. 5
Box Spring and ma«resa Gnrbb't Piano· Tuning &amp; haired), 1 /ad (longhalrad)
$900 apead 4 10 gears mint
Table and Chairs, Wardrobti Rapal,.. Probllme? !'lOad lemalo, al 2 yrs. old. gooCI ~
=~~ 7.w. condloion, · 50,000 'actual
(740&gt;4*9742
Tuned? Cali Tho PianO Dr. for breading, musl 1811• 742 1028
'
mliM XLT packaga EYOt"/
7-25
.
~good-· 740-992•
•
·
optiOO excapl ca.,8o. PW,
For Sale: RecondRionad lndepaudent Harballfo Dlo- ~nag.
' .1 1185 Cavalier
Groal PDL, PM, AC, TiR, Cnriae,
::.:::· T~
tributor, C.OI For Pro&lt;IUCI Or AKC Ragiolerad Sheltand Shape, (301)675-S162
Now Tlrn, 011 Changed ...
anoo. 3407 Jac:klon Ave- Opponunlty. (740)44t-191!2 ShHpdog Puppin, $225 11189 Cflryaler Fifth Avanue, ~~D~=-~~~u~:
nuo, (~)875-7,388.
JET
Each, 1740)379-2838
In goad condition, price lorlor, White Leer Fibergla&amp;O
GooD USED APPLIANAERATION MOTORS
FuU bloodad Siberian Hu• $3,000. Cali (740)448-7810 Toppar,
$16,1500,
CU WUhorl, dry111, r• Rapelrad, New &amp; Robult In ky, · l-Ie. "'112 montftl 1990 Flrabird Formula 350 C740l418 4107
frlgerltoro, rangoo. Skaggtr Stock. Clll Ron Evana, 1• old, StOll OBO, . Croll tunoport, auto, air, 94,000 11187 Ch.vy 5-10, 4 c:ylinApplianceo, 78 Vlna Slreel, 800-537-95211 ·
C740l258-l852 ..enlngo.
mtleo, $2,800, 740·742- dar, 5-apood, Air Condlllcin,
Croll 740-446-7398, 1-688Mu.c.u_ 12357.
59,000 mllao, $5500 OBO,
818-01211.
MO•LE HOME OWNERS
INmlu!lo!Nrs
t9l4 Plymouth Aocl8lm, V· cal 740-448-3709
Lila modal Magic Chef,
.
~
6 auto, tinlad windows,
VANS&amp;:
lroot lroo ,.lrlgorslor, $100; Hugo lnventooy, Dlecounl
r~na
good
$1750
•WJ)s
90
Konmore waoher, S75; Priceo, On Vlnrl Skirting, lJoad
day warren- (7&lt;40)448-8588'
'
•
ThfH dryers, seo each, all Doo,., Wind&lt;&gt;Wo, .Anchore,
$1100. can '-'--'"'-=
·.:::.;.;,~-- ~
whlll, (740)446--8086 after Waler Haaltrl, Plumbing &amp;
111111 Lincoln Town car, 1987 Ford Aaro81ar, very
8pm.
Electrical Porto, furnaoo&amp; &amp;
Veoy clean, day· (7401"8· good a11ape &amp; runs good.
Hut Pumpe. BannetiS Mo68119, evening- (7401448· 740-441-9234 or 740.3158Moilohiln Carpal, 202 Clark blfo Homo SuP\&gt;1)', .740-448- =ft;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;.;;._., 31139
8508
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. 9418 www.orvb.comlben- 11
- - - : -- - - : -- FrH Eotlmatoa, 90 Day&amp;· noti
1997 Monla Cario, dark
Sarna Aa C&amp;aft, Flnardng
gr_,, auoomallc lranamla· 1987 Plymouth Voyager,
Avallbtt. Vlaa And Maaler· NEW AND UII!D ITEEL
slon, 3.t motor, 78.000 now tires. new ailemalor,
card,
1-877-830-9182 SIMI Beam&amp;, Plpa R-r
mlloo, $8,000. (7401245· runs good, neado brake
Fot Concrate, Angle, Chan- 18' oanlo tralilr In good 97112 (740)245-5229
work. $800, (740)24&amp;,-5848
7444
(740,_...._
~
ne1 Fiel Bar Slaet Qraling lhape. Hay ·apHr ond oct..
(740)4-48--4379
·
Main Stroot Fumlluro
Fo; Dralno,' Drlvowayo a aor Jack. (7&lt;1Q)44&amp;--251 4
Chevy
Aalro
van,
ex.
1994
(3041875-1422
Walkwlyo. 55 Clalion
11187 Mounoalneer, 4 wheel tend fully loaded 6l 000
515 Main Slraot, Poinl
Drumo Wllh Lid &amp; Ring, 1984 Long 510 tarm Trac· drive, excallant condlllon, 5 mile~ s7 200 304-862-27eo
P~aaoano
$7.00 Each. I.&amp;L 8crep Mot- tar, tr b -. 8' Rotollllor, iller engine, 58,000 mlin,
·' ·
. ala (740)448--7300
13750. (740)a5tl--8574
totally loadad, (3041773· 1997 Dodga Ram, Extend·
New &amp; Uucl Fumlture
- -,-C...----:- 5182 or (3011874-1523
ad Cab, 4x4 , loaded,
Now 2 Piece Uvtngroom Paco..vor Excol lllectrlc 85 MallOy Farguaon treeSt7,500. (740)446-1104
Suileo, $399. •lhry. Soli, can tor handlcappad, 1 yr. lor, live power, · 50hp, t999 Grand Prix QT, While.
.
Trade.
old, $700, 740-1182·5827
(740)448·1104 $4500
4 _doOr, 24,500 mllu, CD , 1999 ZR2 8·10, red, air
Charry sleigh bed, plitow ·j
top manreaa 1111, now. IIlii

=

= ; ,_ _ _ _ ___

..__ __

1Chalnoaw,

t=

l

0677

~~

~

r == r
1

"~--lllllliiiiiiii--"
Appllancoo: RocondRionad
WUhors, Doyoro, Ranges,
Relrtgnotore. Up To 90 Days
Guaranteactl We Sell Maytag Appliances, French
City MIY1"!1, 7&lt;10-448·7795.

Clean 2br. Apoulment ralar-

._ u.r:; -·
clapooi~ No
(304)675-5182 ·

Cell

ri6

Y1rd Sill Ada Only

=.,ooo~si.~

331&lt;40 -

fromPapB1

Reno-

Beautiful- R-ay

lact Kelly (740)448

Homer

For 15 Words
1 to3 Days

.

1182
:=Cell c':.:': ;;.Cflrtaly'o
:.:.:-0~1115:::..··~---Family· Uvlng,

(7&lt;40~98n o!.-ownlniorma- We're ·looiclng for an Actlvl- All Make Mowaro, Lawn
tion 1aave meaaage 11 no liot ANiatanl, aomeono Traclora, Tlllera Repaired .
Ouailly clallling and trcuaa...;..,.
wf'&lt;l II highly motlvaled, has Free pick-up, o.tivery Availhold llama. 11.00 beg 1118
·
good communication llklill able. 21 y811111 Experience.
ovary Tlluradly. Monday
staff. You could
,........,. Chltdren'a
and anjoya working wllh Croll Mike. (740)446-7604
llru Balurday 0:0()-ti:OO.
hel
h
CUt . . . _ .
people. Thle II a 36 hoor a
P US [8Cru
J)OIItlon and M1 prefer Ge0.g.. Ponable SaWmill,
volunt~ters on
Po11tion av.-ln Maaon, ..,_,. wllh OICptrlerain don1 haul your toga to lhe
Win ..... leiiCled antique~
rofll Co .. WV to provide caoa tong.o.mhollthcara,auch mlll)uotcali:lO&lt;I-675-1957.
IOIIIaonconoignmontln beh llol
our ohop. Llmhad apaoo.
a
non-p
managemont l8nriceO In lhrl u an STNA. High IChooi dl· Weed . Ealing Hlllaldeo,
Cal (304)675-2144
organlzatlons.
horne ond In lha community ploma or equivalency re- Ditches, Elc. Mowing,
Ia
oeverety omootonally die- qutred. Apply In peroon
IUrbecl chlklr'tn ond 811o1oo- 8:30- 4:00, - y- Friday Cieln-up, Removal Ot Un'
, _ al ~lk Of being p1ecer1 or call (740&gt;4*5001 ond ·wanted llama. Odd Jobs.
No Selllngl
GM!AWAY
tho homo. Aequlreo Ilk for Euioot Manit.
Crol- (740)4411-7804
No Fundl'llltlngl oulaklo
BA 1n Paychology Social
•
'
WOt1&lt; From Horne Pan Will - La- (304)875Kltloino to good homo, 740Work, or Counuilng, u
•
• 5129 Laeve Motia-.
You can eam up to wall
2-143., 740-2&lt;115-9752
ao oldenolvo tra'lll llrMI Full-time, S25- 175/hr.
"'
7
wilhlnlhrlcounoy. EKDollonl 7042
Pllid_Vacationo. l-8118-8 15- WMI power wash houaao
S71hourand
benetitl. Viollo..-- at
and lralera. call (740&gt;4*
www.preolera.org
0151alklorRonorcallcall
weekly bonuses.
lor applicallon. Send appll·
ohone (740)339-0950. 11 no
·
1M
ca.,...."' reauma- cover
We also offer:
~en';(o,
Ben_..t·a
ano-. ve . , . __
wn
' F~ll Bene!Hs
PREITEIIA cEN'IU
Incentives
• Weekly Paycheck
HR/ Ernptovrnont Spc
BlsNmi
3375 Routo eo E
' Car. . r
·, .._,__ __ ,
• Paid Vacation
Huntington. wv 25705
.""''""""""
• Retirement Plan
Potential
EOEIAA
Paid. Trainln..
INOTICEI
1
' Prof8811ional
.
• OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
"""'!' .. out _ .
'
-v·-""•~
Looklngtoranow
·building, 3 ecreo, counooy C o l a o - - ·
{;~
Atnioaphere
"MARKlT fRIIH"
lnfoCielon Ia
~,;,.=~ aetttng. 1740l37&amp;-21:M
50 Eall,
011.
~
career?
lookl 1
lily you know, and NOT 10 Mnc1 3 bedroomo, 2·112 ba)ho, Mull StU 1914 Liberty
lnfoCIIIon
ARBY'B Rntauranta oro
ng 01 qua
money through the mall until 1m..-1e poiUIIion, flo. 14x70, 3 -0011~1 beth,
110 Haatloy Road, HunMllllllgBIIIIInl
,_ -king pool-nal
peopla to coniiiCI you have lnvoaligalael 111e ducad, wu 1148,900, now
~ - Croll._,
r~~
Corpol'lltlon
·~=v~ ciiBIOmerland olforing.
~~.Qe:oar
40-385.-387.
Qll - . 3 Spocial EdlcuntnUy hal
planned unR expenalon Ia doi)OI'B In raprd to AAA GREETING CARD
Now 14ft-~- _,
tlon A_, ._.
laking place within lhe local CUI'I'IIfll Republican ROUTE 100 Super Loc'a. 3 Br homo for oaio, Socond only .1118. I* mon, call
lllo llarbin, mile. llama,
-1'111 poaltlona
E:e=~~
Party IUUM,
Local WOO weekly 800- ~ M~ 7 40-1182· now t-eoo-eat-em.
1f21.1127, 9:oo-t5:oo
I
,.._ dl"'o
277-11424
..
open
geouo, but noo required. Ex·
...n ualal, and
4 Bedroom Houaa In Rio New t4 Wfdt, 3 -.......
Juno 211tft-27tf1, 508 Cherry
cetlont Salarioa &amp; BenoiR
Protection of
-::---- - - - - Granda, Could Be. Uaad Only "8.150. Free Dolvefy
Aldge · R1o Cl.......
Fecktlgaa Av811oblel Plaaae
Second
Slart Your Buoinosa To- A&amp;
Rental Property. &amp;Sat up. 1-e88-82&amp;-2~
~
miCrow~-·
new
C.ll_
Us
Today
for
lax
you
raoume'
to
HloeA
nd
AI
hi
day
...
Pnmo
Shopping
Cron·
(
45--a1
~..
•, _ , ••-. _
74012
58
-~.,. gullar, ournllurw, 1111
83tl-9617 or emaiiiO:
me ment g 1. tar Spaco Available AI AI· ':=~-'-:-='-----:~-:-·~ 18 "
...,. ~
ntao, don~ -1
an lntetvlewl
carttolondOzoomnot.net
Teem• of
fordable Rail. Spn~ Vlilay 4000 oq. lt. churoh With par- molt only $270. per mon.
or mall t A1'1 201
~~
c 1740 446 101
call now 1-800-89t-e777
'
AUCOON AND
o:
ex-rlenced 1 • aza, 1
aonaga ond 7 acroo, Choe·
·
·
·
~ " ' f t' o u. - 1 888 475o7223
Slewart, Aveouo. o~tingrtL.tor, Ohio (opprox. 8 mllot N. New 2001 Fiootwood 14•70
~ ......... """"""'
axt. 11101
ton, KY 41183.
lrllnBI1tlhoroughly
ri\U•liSSIONAL
ol Pomarot'), equipment list tint BR, 2 Balli, already
_ _ _ _ _ _ __. McClure's Resoaurenl now
lnatruct new C.ll
SERviCE&lt;&gt;
avaHabie. beautiful ground&amp; oel ,up reedy 10 """" In
:.,P;:;'\'1".,:~~;, All people aam aariOus In- :'~~!. 3d:'~n·~~~
Center
. TllRNED DOWN ON
::.:,~ ~~=k:'.~ $1185
- . . 1198 per montft
740:992' 2187
oomplote auction aarvlca. come around your -uil tlcin allocation &amp;bring back
Repi'IIMntellvea
SOCIAL SECURITY /881? 1185-4485,
tJconaed l6ti,Ohio a Wnt eam ' 100 _weellly
Justlim"
'"' between
8:30am
&amp; during a paid 3().
.
New
No Foo Unieaa W. Wlni :::'-'---=-:---:--:-5 room &amp; battl, 2 porcheo, 11
•• _2001
•• -rFlootwoocl
_o__ ~
Cal
mailing OUr •-1ca~nla, 304-773-5785 Or
·.,.
10:00am,
Mon&lt;lily
thnr
Satd
1
1
•••582
••••
~ "~'"'
•~• ..7
ad offer 101 lroo (8661270. urda•
ly compl'lhana ve
~ -~
. A/C, ralrlgorator, oloctrtc Karena 740o3115o43e7.
~77o7u·
• 3194
,.
11111 1
~
stove &amp; oa• rumace.
n ng progrBm.
$27,800 ao 2424 Monroe - ctoublo- 3 br. a be.
n'ANim
Are you looldng lor lhe opAvonut, (~)675'13115 .
S1fH 00 _ , IJ(tly t295
10r--"::"--":"'.,
ro BuY
portunlty to loin a winning
WE AilE
• $7.00 per hour
HOMES ·
·
·
~
• 111m and become part o1 a
EXPANDING OUR
FOR SAul
1 Boauliful, aecl-.. while :; -e~ call ""'!' 10
1111 g-ng heollh
if&gt;.
ADVEtmiiiNG
• 401 K
'--..Oilililliiiio-pl oador log homo. 1.750
·
::;uoa~c:::,ar.p~: d..lry?ScanlcHIIIo~~~ng
BALEISTAFF
•Health benefits
bed
ho
remod- oquareiNI,Iongue&amp;grava New Doublo Wide.• 195
1
room uaacadlr throughout 1110 1.-.ldo, Per Monlh~ 3 Bodroom, 2
.... ' Diamon•o ' Cloi• Cenlor Ia offering Nuraa Are you a peraon that on·
·
"
"
1
11
paopt 1 "
• Paid vacation
elad, AIC, cloaa oo goff ftuga atone fl...,._, oov- Bath. Freo~ &amp; Sat·
Ringo . us Curroncr
·
Aide
Training
Ciaosoa
ora
maa,,
ngl
'-"
•d
ra
course,
cltr
pool
on
Mill
o~
"-k &amp; lront ....... , 1" up. 1~•••.
M·'·
~s· Coins'hop. 151 ~ 0 ~ monlhly. II Ia a 75 hour you 11 mot va- an on- • Seven Holidays
·~•
"""'
'
•
-·
1 bel
11 ?A rou
Creak. (740446-2200
foolslda
diCk, 7.6""'""
woorta&lt;1
ondAvenuo,Clalllpollo,740- ' COUrea,
11 aoro.
oy ngcrea""
.
acrot. 32x42 -1 ·
446-21o12
Mondor laotlnglor
through Fridar
8:30 looking
lor a ca- reth
wf a • Frld ay an d
.
_ ·.. _-. Prlvato p.........
,..,...,, And Now
.
to 4:30. Thlo Ia a greal op- long aalabllahed and
S
da
101 Pitaaent Ridge, Fomer· 24x&lt;le 4 olel horaa llabla. Doubl-, One Payment.
pt&gt;r1unilyl Thl noxt oiUI will growing company? Ara you
atur Yoff ;,. or,,11tand 1111 montloa ront 11811,000. Clark Chapel (3CU)738-7295
I ' II I 1 , \ d I '\ I
begin
In
July.
Soop
by
IOday
rn1-tct
In
e
potitian
11111
Call for an
P ua Heu~ly dopooll or will Road. (740)381-118118
, llohun mObile homo 2 bedI II \ I I ',
for an application., oonlaot ofttr~inauranca, 401-K plan
aell on land oonlraot (7401
•
::n;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Sl"""nlo K~r. inllnrc· and paid vacallon 11mo?
liitetvlew:
898-8783.
·
MoaiiJI HOMES lraom, oxaoltnl oonclltlon,
'llD u--W.··- lor,a1(740)44tl·71150
.,... .. ..,..
Areyouaperaon t"ol
·
"•• ~
range, OintrllalrOCifltlltlon.
lllrlgarator, WUhtr,
•• hiI
3 Bedroom Brick Aano~.
FQR........,
dryer.
experionce? 11 ao if
~
• 1 (740~~ 70
Attontion- WOI1C lrcm nome. will be benoliciol II nol, Wo
Living Room &amp;Dining Room Lot madtl cltaranoe. one ng,
,.....,...,
~
U&amp;175 Hour, PTIFT1. Moll wllilraln. For lntorvlew con• 1·888~237·5342 With Firtpioao &amp; Patio. 2000 -lo·" aa~ •• ·- II""'• ...,.,_ , ~ Cl
_ •••n-nvll'""
-··""
0~- www.ma 1looxmoney· aldorolion oon~ your rt·
Kitchen w/~llanoeo . Full tor ·2000 modll·- ~
..ngl·..
·"""a' ·'"''
Nr·
~-r.
- ••--·
"-"--'0....
11-~
" Itlttlf ~~~
Ext, 2301
Baoament
Roo Room,
- , . Pn~~~~
. - 11111/mo~-"1001'
~~.oom
oume w1m 1 COYII'
Fomny
Room ltn
wfWOOIJ
lum· prw ownad- alngloo mull •go ·
l'avmauto
81ngera, Bando • \looal ..t -·3157·3450
lng uo wt1y you are lho par., &amp; Big Serlin Large by Mar 31 , no ra111 tlblt Hu,Y Indo Juno altll, Olk·
Groupo, All llyiHI Agea. B
IOn
wl
natct
to:
D 1&lt;1 WI h J10 11 1· F1110ad offor relvaad, ,.... hamH WOOd•
. Golllpollo
1
Major RIOOfll Label SMII· am Up " 13150 In10 dly. . Cha~•• Govey PubHohar
Or Stop· By.· 1n~. ~
~ • D..... won~ 1111 long 10 atop In (7&lt;111)441 30113 1
lng Now Mloto. Coming Invite your lriondo
your Ohio Valloy Publilllllng
~ck •lrd, ~aVId ...,., and ohaok uo' out Wl'rt •
TO
Hunflngoon,
W&gt;i nomo far 1 Prolelalonol PIO·
(Tha Daly T~buno),
Molnlonanco Fret. dialing Oail'l •Mobile Take O.tr Paymonta, s
242 Thl r d AV8, outoldo
101).427- UH
or lura Porty. WI provldo
825 Tnird .rivo
2,200 SqFt Living Aroo , Hornae '4ohenl Ohio, 0Don lladroorit, a IIIII Olkwood.
1101)4127-11814
Clolhing and Jowoloy. Call
Claillpollo Ohio •Stl3t
Aouoh "•no, Choohlro, M·W. 9-7, Thlr,..FN., k., Cill
For
Dilallo
;.....;.__ _ _ _ _ ·(800)•ae.e383
_;.;;...:;;,;;.;;';.;;,;;;,_;.;;.;;.;_ .._ _ _ _ __. (740)3157..0221
Sat..1o-a.
(740)44H570
(

t

'

or 22 - Kllchori, teOOI Month,
1123,000. Corr'11oed. Downtown Clallpolio, eon-

~
..,.. 1123.000. - · 5
homo on qu- - - 118 Skttlnrr Y~ 14x70 - . S10,500. Ruflend, 8
~:r~
2 t.lhUe~ ICI'Ill8.5001
.
=· ~~cini";Z
(304)108-37•7
'
.JUet a tow o1 flo parco~~
and Iorge 11v1ng room. To Factory Clool 32xiO
'"'j
car garogo. and huge oov- $10,000 DiiCOUIII only nano1ng ~ prop111y
ered patio. lm_,. S1000.00 Down, o.tlvery, 1111!kup
aaaalonl Redo read lo - l8lup paid by FICIOry
·
$79,900. McClutre Raalty 1-t-em
· . Camp -For Rent On
Company, REALtoR 1· Flnll ..,..;; Ide ..,_ t&lt;.r-.. Rlvor, I ml,_
800-671-7533·
...,. -•··
11om POint Plnnnt.(304)~
"""·
(304)671!-1722,
Greal N~. Clood
1304)675-4144 Aller Spm.
Condlllcin, Noeda Handy- far ,... , _ oa1 l.ootll
lilly A N
man, Houael Church, uel l'llm
1
$50,000 Make Otler, In Ohio, wllh 10 Lots
(304)675-1618
e a -1
Houoelotoaloby- 10 rallng.---.gell
W.lnUI Creek 4 milellofl oil
1 118184 72811 for liP"
Sand Hill Rd. 2.2 acroo pair-d.
Capo Cod - 3 dornllfl, 3 INTRODUCTOin'
car garage, 3br. lomlly. . . 1'1101
.
room, lg counlry kllchen, (~ - · . 3
2
clntng and laundry room, 2 t.lh • e• . - w111111 Oft112 bafhl front ....- back -~ ' " -toll o1 ..:......_ 1 -3 - - clock, arid pa~~o"";""q•,. 1 1ty ~ w ~ 1:,.1 •t .,........ F""" • 1 -.. 4%
1
--· - 10 _ - · -·., - -~ ......,. Down. 30 y..,. 11 ·8.5%
:::._~;-~ 175000 .....:::;, faoi.-~~:=.C.:'!"_..! APR. Forlfollngo.tiOQ-319(';')67Hm' ' ... ~~
Ohio.•• 3323 Ext. 17011.
• 750 -~-...
Tllreo _ . , three bath 582·11172.
. 1092 &amp;~nett Drive, Vef'(
hou
.~·
Qood ~ 0apoo11 &amp;
1
A-- ~r'"F1on""
R - RoquiNd. No
0_!!.~~·•~- ve. · - •
Lfmllad Or No Credit? ao.- l'oto Call (740)44tlr4 118
MuH\Im. Two double go- -~lank ""'"'-Only
·
regaa. (~)675-5353
AI OOIIwoocl In .. 3 badrcom homo MIIIOfiYifto
Rou
- · WV 304-738-34011.
river lllow, ,........,..
3 Bedroom on
lo 2,
required, dopoaif roqutrecl,
(304)671!-8332
Lot modol - · no poll, 740-1182-em attor
3 Bedroom 1 bath. out- up 10 l8.8l! 5 wllh any~homo, 5pm.
·
·
otylo

saoa

C.Oi TOll Free:
1-8118-815-1835 .

polo ....,, S23.SOO

I -

992-21

••11e•eii.UC

UNSECURED LOANS U,
DEBT CONSOLIDATION up
h11oo.ooo. Crodll F•.-omo .,.._...,_

1

~ -lOti ., - 110.000. (304)175-7718

Classifieds

l.._t_APuiMI!Hrs_IUl_lb:Nrii i i _.

"1' Only- Lot- DcUIIe- Owner AOitlrtng- lhrllding . 1 and 2 bedroom apart4 lllclroom, 2 Batft, For - tn Clalilpolla, Ohio, - . ru.- ~ UllfurWu
154,11111,
Now On Route 7, Hu_ La~ nlohod. MCUr1ty depoolt ,.
$42,997· Prtco Clood Til Partclng Lot. Hal 4 - . quiNd, no pell, 740-9928-211-01 ,
Hurry To Ook· Alflo Lots Of floor &amp;p.co, l22Et;8';;;~;;;;;;;;;,-R;
woodGallloolla, Clood
,,_,._
Clll
(7.... 418 30113 . )~
r40)387- 7188
1 Bedroom Apartment. Re~,
-lrigerator, Range, NC In·
MWO Ill II-~
Lals&amp;: .
~-. -Piuln..-•&amp;
" '" "
--...,_,
ban"
Aclr..\GE
Rill aw. HUD Approved.
Single
and
MCtlonal
(740)441· 151e
~ 818~ 2 Loti. Zoned Corowo""clll, 1 Room Fumiohld Efllclon·
and
· Wllhln The Yltago Ot Rio cy, All._ Paid Sharad
Into
dlreC- Clrnlt. (740)2&lt;45 sese
a.iot,, 919 Seconci 'A...,..,
·
IIIUNEJI LAND
Galflpolfo, OH $125/mo.
~~7~1he
m....,~·
(740)418 3948
71•1•
,_
-·~• ree .....,. onty SHI51~
3 room fuml8hed apartmenl,
. GALUA CO.- Rio Cllando, -r-11, utiHtln paid. 94
111 - - Only $1115.00 p., . - . privele loll, 10 Locuot, $290/mo. plus daMonlh,e.~Fix4dt-..,..
w1111 pond, $25,500. - • 740-446-1340
•• ~
,......
Ralo WI!' Nor And Un- Koor · 8 - S21 ,000 BEAUTifUL
APART·
delpir&gt;ring 1~ or 5 ...,.. wllh pond, ...~ ~:r IUDGIT .PR'
~.ooo. ~. 11 ,...,. ~
80N
•
1914 Norrtt t4x78, S1t,500 o.- 2• ..,..
wilt\ Cll AT JACK
ES.
.......,, ... ,_-air, Iorge berne. 131,0001 Clay TATH, &amp;2 \ - Drive
2 -oorn, $15,900. 740- -llhip.Qnlal- on 13 11om $29710 $383. W8lk to
4411-0175
- · iao.ooo. Tycoon lhop &amp; movteo. Col _740~·-.- lekt aNa, 1• acrn, ~~. Equal HoUsing
1_~· -·.
·~ ...,.,_,
113 900
........ --•

-

For Free lnfoonation,

•••
••
,.

d:

...........
ue.a ..... •CUrrMt ..................... _
...,......,,..., _ _ _ _ _ I I . . . . . . ....

AI*Jtion: AN'o and LPN'o Cluo ACDL T~ wanlad. Planned .......,tftood of
Arcadia Nulling C.ru(o 2 1""11 ...,.,., a . Hu• -~~ 01110 a

IIOniMfor ........
Worll dToDoAdll

--•

Hl!LPWANim

.---

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

-

Slart lmmedialoiy!
Gonui1e ()pportunityf

•
•
•

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

,...
......... -,,
.,....._ • ..,.._ ... ,...._ .. r , .

• Start Your Ads WltPI A Keyword • Include Complete
o ..trlptlan • InClude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Add ress When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Oay•

..._,, ..,I'.IO_Hru
__
......a)JLoltl

Mailing Our Sales Broctluretl
Free Supplies, Postage!

•

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

Garcia

Dally
Sentinel

Easy llillllr
Rllftedlle
llu! fljlJpart
tllle IMI11!
Ptsllllds
qulddy!!

POUCIIIIC*Dv.~iy•'Z

The Dlllly~anllneloPage 8 3

Oak HiD (Va.) Academy. The.
top power forward prospects
include Chandler, of Dominquez H .S. (Calif.), ~nd Curry,
from
81
ofThornwood, IU.
in fiont of Jordan, Tinsley
"The depth in this year's
. walked away with th e feeling draft will b e at the power
that Jordan w as somewhat positions, center and power
enamored with him.
forward," said Marty Blake,
Tinsley's agent, Ray Broth- NBA director of scouting.
ers , overheard Jordan's stunned "The power forward position
response when Tinsley tried in partic ular is unusually
to block a shot by power for- strong, with the depth of good
ward R odn ey White, who left players at that position
C harlotte afte r his freshm an extending into the second
season and is e xpected to be a round ."
top 10 pick .
,
Followin g Washington in
Brothers qu oted Jo rdan as~ draft order are the· Los
saying, "I like tough guards."
Angeles Chppe rs, Atl anta
Not too long ago, a tough H awks, Ch1cago Bulls, Goldplayer· con side red the b est . en . Sure Warno rs, Vancouver
point gu ard in the draft Gnzzhes, N ew J ersey Nets,
wouldn 't dro p belo w the C leveland
Cavaliers
and
eighth or ninth pick.
D etroit Pistons .
Five years ago, guards ADen
The Boston Celtics hold the
Iverson, Ste phen Marbury, 10th, 11th and 21 st pi cks,
Ray Allen and Kerry Kittles whole Houston also has three
all went in th e to p 10. A year · p1cks m the first round: Nos.
later, point guards C h aun cey 13, 18 and 23 . Golden State
BiUups and Antonio Daniels has the fifth and 14th pocks;
w ent third and fo urth . In Orlando holds the 15th and
1999, Steve Francis am~ Baron 22nd selection s.
Davis w ent second and third.
N ewYork, Ind iana, MilwauThi s year, only Jaso n kee, M innesota , D enver and
Richardso n
of Michigan Dallas do no t h ave for st-ro und
State, T insley, J oe Jo hnson of picks, and the NBA champion
Arkansas and Joseph Forte of L.os Angeles Lakers do not
North Carolina are consid- have any picks in th e first or
ered sure th ings to be chosen second rounds •
somewhere in the first round .
The Bucks won't select
Only Richardson is certain .to until late in the second round.
be among the top 10.
• "We'D probably get the best
Among small forwards, player available, if we can get a
Duke's Shane Battier will good, big man down there,
undoubtedly b e the first fol!r- mayb e even a European guy, a
year college senior sele cted, project type of player, we'D
but Seton Hall's Griilin could look at that," sai d Ernie Grunleapfrog him in the ord~r o f. feld, Milwa ukee 's gen eral .r :
selection .
manager. " If somebo dy slips
T he
top-rated
cente rs who we think is good, we'D
include
hig h . sc hoolers look at that, too. But if we
Brow n , of G lynn Academ y could, w e'd prefer ge tting
(Ga.) and DeSagana Diop of some sort of a big man."

I

Draft Pap

•

�I

n.nllay, .June 21, 2001

1he O.ily SenUnel • P8ge B 5 ~

. --

Pomeroy, lllddleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

H-

•

•

I

All'S I IIIII PI I n V....... IQ. SinGle Wldel.
Double Wida, lloel'~t Declc8. PV'I, and
Cll~lr'l. awL••••'II poole and fllrm.equipnlnl
I've ...... Mhed ....,. from filling llllllon
I*IWijjlola,PV'und"""*tlaCOijX)iiiU

5W1oa • Nfto c.n.o
I

. . . , •·•

............ and lndullrial ~
•'IILIM. IUdiM bl*' J.z•'a. bJIQohoel; and
5
Jlilll SOIIIt 112 101'2

"

:•;••;•~lleJ;;•
I Clllll~~~i81p~you~cal~me=.r;..-;;:00~.~
· or ....... ·~H~

MOIIJMEITAL UFE IISURAIIG CO.
H

J'~ ~ ,

R H1 :) ,
B~.t

,

~_i

"I........

~rJ

J•,.r;

' ' ' rJ ::,!lfl

t

~~rjr·&lt;"~t

Rooting· Home

&gt;JI~-}

Locllll43 5214
Mediclle SuppiCDICIIt; Ufe Insurance;
Burial md Final &amp;pensca; Cancer &amp;
Dental. RetiJan.:nt.
Pe111ion 1/t 40IK Rollovers;
Mortp&amp;C; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

Gutllfso Down
•c...ms..~~•

.........

Spout 'PI

Tbplll• Fll Dirt
• Mllldl

,_ E ['

948-1405
511-5011

-:::.

FREE ESTIMATES

Free Es'!rYJtes

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

740 -9 92 1101
or 992 -2 753

...,.._c .,
7Aft_ _ •7'.:e!~
- - --'----1

~

Eir4l

,......
Fed«f Aw~M~bed
c--mr.ru

CAN HELP

~

D
ttllltiStllt. TBwlh
OH«Jm
I

PROJECT?

•

..ft"!" .,

CH..-.

ft
~~

, . I(J:.t•l

GRAVEL
SAND
UMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC .CULVERT
METAL CUI,.VERT
GEOTEXTILE

A~AR

I~Dalcrl

• New """•0.,..
• Colllpllle
Rima illllng
Slop&amp; Coli.....
FREE ESTWA1ES

•c.Nf

• Hal dwoocl floal'llll

•Cell*'

fll££ ESnMIU
Pboae BMJ 674-6100

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

---l'irll

74_0892s1871

oluiiPootiiM

·!(ENSJNGTON

&amp; REWIRE

WillOWS HEAT

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

IIIIIIOR 'I!CIIIIOLOGY.
KEEPI THE
at.•an• HEAT
OUT AND WWI&amp;i
TillE HEAT II

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

of Common
of Melga
Pomeroy,

ILOCKS OUTII.K
OF D*I*GING

ULTAAYIOI.E1' RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT

PIIICINCI

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

NOTICE BY

-·--TU·-·-·

1..aoo-;291·5600 • Pomero~.2~
remodeling;
drywall, room

additions, and
plumbing.

Terry Lamm

Katie.Smith leads Lynx victory.

I

•

..

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

'

4

•

Lynx 55, Mystics 51

SETH'S
LAWN
'SERVICE

points in her first start since coming off
the injured list.
Vickie Johnson scored a 23 points for
New York (8-4).
Crystal Robinson added 11 points.
Tari Phillips, the league's eighth-le~ding scorer, 'bad only two points and
missed all six of her shots from the field
for New York .

..·.

I!LITE MECHANJCAL CON'I'IU,CTpRS

.

landscaplnq
Shaunse!h

'

I
I

F

(140)985:-3563
(7 40) 541-3820

/I~Haod'll&gt;StupA~

1·30U75-7124

W
1
8
5

..
4
3
2

1

-

POt.

01

4
5

.887
.500

112

a .m

8

e

2 t/2

3 112
3 112

.ol()()

.o!OO
8.333
8 .200

10

4
5112
7

.081

Col•••
WLPctGI
WIJU II

8
9
8

I .889
3 .750
3.887
.500

112
2
2112
3 t/2

5
5

.444
.444

4
4

7

.384

5

7 . 5

.583

8
•
4

4

e

•..,.•.

Hill'• Sell
28670 Bltllln Road
Racll1e, Ohio

45771

740-94$1-2217
SlztiS' X 10'
to 10' x 30'

Houre
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Dannlo--

POINT PLEASANT, W,Vamumo
- · Florl·
Cia ........,. bukelball coach Doo·
nil Jonoa will be tooldlng tho 15111
Annuol Donnie Joneo Balltelbail
Clomp In Point Pleuant on July 2·
5.
.
~ art1 available al local
bull- or by calling 875-4402.

,..._ ...

...,., t.ll trparll
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Eaolern
~I alltltt.,, gradel ooven
lltn&gt;ugh 12, plal'lnO fall opor11 (loot·
. bal. vclloybd. goll and chtter1oadlna)lhauldll]llat8&lt; 10 play on June
2t or JIN 9, fiom 5:30 1o 8:30 p.m.
al tho ltlgtl- olllce.
A ~ or legtrl guenjlan muot
10001ttp11ty
all ·one
-·
SIUCIJtnll
who Clm&gt;l aftend
ol tho
regii-

Jrallon pomctJt lhould conJact lhe
II 985-338 bet'Mion
7:3) a.m..and 2:30 p.m. 10 make
olhlra~ .
.
ltlgl -

.

lnaurecl
Spedallzeln new
conltrudlont
ftmodellna, plumblna,
olectrlc.ol, " - main·
ttn•a«t and repair
porc:heo, &amp; deck&amp;.

c--.

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

Owner
Charles R. Dill

PhGM 992•7445
(II
591·9254

Profe$$/onal Work at
· A(fortlable Rates
Geiterai/Spedallud Typing
Temporary Ofllce Assistance
Mailing Labels/Envelopes
Cassette TrallllCrlpW'n
Numerous Business Support Services
25 years Secretarial Experience

-,·.oam.

Mlo- 55, WaiNogJon 51
Seolllo 115, UJ.n 47
~··oam.
PCI1Iond 11 ~. 7 p.m.
~,:::; 81~~· 7:30p.m.

.

._......
p.m.

UJ.nal!llml, 1
Dotrol1al CharloJJe, 7:30 p.m.
M Orlenclo, 7:30p.m.
. Porlland allndlana, 8 p.m.
Waahlngton at Houston, 8:30 p.m.

c-....

Top • Removal • Trim
I

I

.

loutltorn
-"
" Ia .Alll18]1c
RACINE
- The
Soulhem
Booltera wtll hold an em&amp;IQii ICY
maellng Tuolday al 7:30p.m. in 1111
high ochool caloln to dlscuM lhe
lu1Urt1 ol lhe organlzallon and lhe
etoct1on o1 onlcara.
&amp;tucfenll grade~ 3-12
participating In dlalrlcl alhlollco
along with lntereeted comrnunlly
membera, ptlyara. and allcoaotoas
.lhoul&lt;f allend. Especially Plntnll whit players In any aport
grades 7-12 shoUld atland.

p.,..,.. "'

PIW-1
FormoPhyoicallorma
-RACIN~
- Sparta

for all ~~~~- plannlna on partlolpatlng In any oponfng octlvlly
gradel 7· 121n tho Soulhem Loc.a
Sc:hool Olllrlcl can be picked up In
tho high ochool olflce beiMen B
a.m.-3:30 p.m. Clltlly.
Thil year a new fonn Ia required lor
all Ohio High Sc:hool Allllatlc "-olatlon lludenl-alltletn.
Phyole41 Cllttea will be announced

later.

21 Paclllc

PaM

32=:::.

, .

3 llalloly.n
4 GiDu

·
=
=0
35=.

33 Expmlan
ldN
34 Foreot-

suit
BY PilaU' AlDIR
We have started to
look at the secondround actions by
someone
who has
BARNEY
made a takeout double ·
NO, LOWEEZ.Y !! I
with at least 17 highTO BORRY A BOW
card points. What
does it mean if the
doubler mentions a
new suit on round
two? It shows some
17-19 points and . at
least a five-card suit. It
describes a hand too
strong for a simple
~vercall on the ·first
round -- like South's
here . .
Now a chunk for
the experts in the
audience. North has a ·
.maximum eight points
for his initial nonjump
bid. So, when South
shows such a strong
hand, North should
insist on a game contract. However, before
heading to five _diamond5, he should stop
off to check out three
THE BORN LOSER
no-trump. He does
lT'::. ~0\ .
I'LN-It@ f'OC~TI~T FOR
l KNO'N, l WOLD~ that by cue-bidding
\o.IAAT l
'1'~-MJW::.f\~T
Tf\t.ffiTIF.E U':&gt;T NL
two spades. This an~iEO­
NL TilE U\l~~ I
ft~~i~.)O~T
nounces both game
aspirations and a desire
~lN£.1
t-15/tK 1-Y-D Tl\t.
~~.,.;.WEE~!
·to get into three noTlfl£
trump if South has a.
spade stopper. When
South cannot bid notrump , North settles
for five diamonds. But
if you, sitting North,
prefer just to raise diamonds, go for it!
East takes two spade
SPRING, WE llRIL.L · HE SUMMEF. IS A REFUND
IN 'FALL. ITS TIME
FOR A SRAIN THAT 'S
TEST AND QUIL .
FOR llA(K-TO· SCHOOL .
tricks; then exits with
OVERTAXEP.
THE SUSJECT :
.,._LRE:\t&gt;Y&gt;" PROTE.S.T WE.
THE'Y SORE SEEM
something,
let's say a
U$EL.ESS FAC'l!&gt; ..
LONe;. TO 1'\E.
heart.
Declarer cannot afford a trump loser .
The percentage play is
low to the queen.
This wins whenever
East has king-doubleton or West holds a
singleton jack. True,
PEANUTS
as East opened the
bidding, there is a
stronger case than
usual for 'finessing the
10 on the first round.
If you would have
done that, unlucky!
When West drops
the jack under South's
queen, declarer crosses
back to dummy, presumably in clubs, takes
a second diamond finesse, cashes the diamond ace, and claims.

o.pat-

(lhopMI)

28 SrMII

Openina~ A 2

...

2

ldeptaJ

""' .... t• .u..r••
••

,__

$Mille

251eu ••

••

' 21 Actor

DOWN
1 Booton or

lallndlt

V........; Eai.·Wat
••,.. Htf'UI FAll

-

22Hub
. 23 Une 1111 •

24

wllhoul-

7Falnt

monunwd 12 Spanish

•

by an

37 Youth orv.

38 ....

-.-VIper
41 FaMto
42
43 Help • illlijj
45T_ _ .
oldillaaY

~

:;:t'-

41 =and
47 Art cleco

'UIIolh
ratio
41
211 diiiU-·50

·- hurrlbugl".

Palla

30-

52-de

31 - o11
(angry)

53

19 Ethiopian

IIIII

oxplcMion

~)

au..

IIIII

37~

proximity

llowera?
26WOI'Ic

.,_

D anlei-

=-~

25 Silent

I lllr'll doll!
• Feat poorly
10 Horlan af11 Kind"'

36S1011e

France

st-e .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher ayplograms are created lrom quolallonl by famouo
people, poland .,..eeont Each Iotter in lho cipher Sllndllor anotllor.

Toctay's cl&lt;m: H equals Y
ADZDW
' PAOKPWTSPCAO

...

PA

BCW

SFDH .

,.

NDUTAN

RC

ICAP

DAPTRDUDASO;

PUUDNPTSD

UTWWPTRD

TJSPCA.'

SC

BWTAJPO

XWDANTA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Horses don'l Nn any beHer lor me
than anybody elae; I just lind oul how lhey want to be rtdden.'
- WIHlt Hartack
·
·

E M0 C B E
2
r

I

I I I I' 1 I

I~ I I I I I
N UC 0 E
I~ I! I I I I~
K

UQ AC

"People don't wahl to take responsibilily fortheir·own actions," .
the high income lawyer told a rerorter... ''But," he added, "don't- ·-

RETPEN
16

I II

in~

-- -Complete lho chuckle quoted
by fill
;n lhe mining wordt
you develop frOJTI step No. 3 below.

I I'

-0

SCitAM:LETS ANSWERS
Sprung- Clang- Valet- Fracas- SPLURGE

My college roommate came back from a v1s1t ,home
with boxes of new clothes. She says she couldn t help
herself because she shops on lhe SPLURGE of the
moment.

Stump 6rinding

P/1
CONTRA&lt;TOIS, IlK.
R.alne, Ohio 45771

740-985-3948

yous
kllHkBm
COtfflECDQH

CONCREif/BLOCKIIRi(J( . Quality Drlvawaye,
• Foo«en, Wallo, Stepo
Patios, Sldewalka,
Flat Work,
25 yeats experience
Rtplacemenll, Walkl
Free Estimates·
and Drl'"• • Slen&lt;il

lltypeso
Roofs,
Specialist

1

MILL END .
FABRICS
Machine Quilting
EARNHARTt3

pillow panela

. 740-992·3873
Pomeroy Eeglta
Club Bingo
On.Thurtdaya

At 8:30p.m,
Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Paying $80.00
par game
$300.00 Coverall
Starbursl
Progressive top line
r Lie. #00·50

Wctlnt"~d.ay . June

Sti, king to

Call Bob

740-949-1405

74CH42·8015.or
t-&amp;n-353-7022

Cell#
614-747-1715

Bring In your repair work

Call tJa First Or We Both Lose!

we'll get you going for
spring

Ask fbr .Mike Hindle
179 or 446·9800

· Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.

New equipment arriving dally

-'ILLC:R

Set Manning, Wayne or Jim
· or 1 RIAL DIAL on 1 new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
Sales &amp; Service
204 CoQdor St.
Pomeroy

27.200 1

c ntcrpri ~cs

or

l'll-

di.:avors for which yo u've alr,·ady laid a mlitl foumbtion is
where you'll find your ra,i nbows in the year ahead. M nvc
on to new projects slowly :tnd
cautiomly.
C ANCER Qunc 21-July 22)
-- Without a positive attit ude
today ami a to tal commitment,
you could w::~ffic and give up
at th e lint sig n of resistance.

Cellular

· Jeff Warner Ins.

992·2975

•

992-5479

llc Hrm and cxpcctJ nt about
your objecti ves. Can..:cr, tn~at
yourse lf to a birth day gift.
·Send for you r Astro-G uph
predictions for the year ahead
by '. m oili n~ S2 and SASE to.
Astro-Graph, c/o this ncw~pa. ­
por. P.O. Box 1758, Murray

Hill Station, New York. NY
10156. De sure tu Stilt&lt;: ·your
Zodiac ~ign.
LEO Q11ly 23-At•g . 22) -Watch yount!lf toda y tha t you
(\()n 't weaken and rekas.: con ..
fidcnti al in(ormation yo u have
abom a fri end thilt cou ld make
him or h~.·r lonk bad. YOu'd
du more d:unagc than yo u
lllilY rc:~\i:tl!' .

.
(Au ~.

23-S&lt;rt. 22)
t.:omcs tu bei n ~
·::~~kl•d to ;mte up yom ~hare in
a ~rou}, i,nvnlwmcnt. 111ilkc
VIRGO

~- When it

ccruin everyone is givi ng the
same. Your portio n might be
more generous than othe n.
LIURA (Sc;•t. 23-0ct. 23) - If yollr objectivcli todi!y im-,,
pede those of yo11r fellow associates, they 1;ould ;~tccmpt to
delibeutcly usurp your progress. Stri ve to work 011 somethin~ that would benefit everybody .
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov.
22) -· A s1tu~tion similar to
one with which yOu h ad to
con te nd, and didn't usc the
best judgment, might rc;~.r its

,ugly head again today. This
time you should kitow wh~·t to
' do.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23D cc. 21) -- A difficult-todeal-with finn could get on
yonr back today over a financi al obli~ari o n . Don't do anything at thi s tinle to make
your ~ ituation wonc.
C A11RI CORN (Dec . 22·
J•m. \!I) .... Yeti c:nu ld disc:ovc r
toctrly th at som eone yo u
thlHtght .w:a in ill'C&lt;'nt wit h
yo ur idci!s i~ not. Do wll:tt you
rn 11 to rc ~olw lh c i~~ u c.· s. be ~ i
..: au ~~.: . uudlcc:kcd, the ci.i~ ~
agrccmc m niay tLCt ugly .
·
AQ U Al~IUS Qan. 20-Fdl .

-.

I·

'

• ••

• Bucket Truck

1

PackOII will not be 18nt home IIIII All ~ra partlclpellng In oportlilYMr. SluCIJtnll wiN not be pe""lllad .12 shoUld a1ao oome to t11o meeting
10 pertlclplto on beginning Clay II 10 diiCUII upoomlng IWII11a with
paperworltlo not completed.
tllolr raopoctJve oooches.
Phyole411 will be conducted al HoiZ• Addlllonaily, On lhe agenda will be
or Molgt Clinic on June 30 117 a.m. tho alaotlon ol ofllcora. lhe dlocua·
Phyole41 lonna will be dlotribut«&lt; at lion o1 lila county lair boollt, lair.
reglalrotlon. They aro new lonna, parking, allllallc event concHIIoni,
which parento muot complate and and lht poulbll dlsbencllng of lhe
sign before the athlete can 188 a organlralioll dlla 10 iacl&lt; o1 In_,,
doctor.
'

or 740-867.0038

Tree Service

Slclamoi oiO 85, Cllorlolte 82, OT
Howb1 !17. PorJIInd 57

LOC.AL SPORTS BRIEFS

.

FreeMtl1111te1,

JOlES'

WVI0317ll

•

CONSTRUC110N

a."..... 14, Miami as

Orlondo 87, 'Now YOIIc 54

t.aoo.150-to77

s.Jes Senkt lnltlll18tloa
Spec!•llrl.. ln S1ae8 Metal Dudw•k .
"T,_.• Soalel II Senlce For
GaUia, Muon. 11M Meiss
LieenRd Md JIIIIIJftd
WV G05176

74().667-32~4

Crete Free EotlmSenln1 Ohio and W.V.

•.

3D

Now York 82, La. Angeleo 69

L

'

Residoatlal Coa111JeJclal New COftl!lnicllora

lunclly'a oa,_,

Is iiCali. . .IGii

'

il&amp;tW· .

WASHINGTON (AP) Katie
Smith scored 22 points as Minnesota
extended Washington's losing streak to ·
seven games.
Smith hit an NBA-distance 3-pointer
and a pair of free throws in the final 2:32
to help seal the win for Minnesota {4-5).
Storm 65, Starzz 47 ·
Chamique Hold5daw led Washington
(2-8) with 23 points on 8-for-19 shootSALT LAKE CITY (AP) - . Lauren
ing. The Mystics shot 26,2 ~ercent, t~e · Jackson had 14 points and ,nine
second-worst performance m franchtse .rebound5 as Seattle won for the third
·
time in four games.
history.
Miracle 6'J, Liberty 54
Rookie Semeka Randall hit eight
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Nykesha straight free thrQws in the final 1:36 and
Sales scored 14 of her 18 points in the finished with 12 points for Seattle {7-5).
fint half as the Orlando Miracle beat
Na~lie Williams led the Starzz (4-5)
New York 67-54 Monday night, snap- with 14 points and 13 rebounds.
ping the Liberty's seven-game winning
Jennifer Azzi had 13 points and four
streak
assists, and Marie Ferdinand added 10
· Taj McWilliams-Franklin added 15 points as Utah lost its fifth home game
points and nine rebound5 for Orl~ndo of the season.
(4-6), which' won its third straight game.
Guard Shannon Johnson scored 10

••
,

(alibr.)
20 Mo. SUmac

AQ llt1

moo...

bl9 or small Jobs;
-small

WNBA

•

....

992·0739
(418)
.
(418) 227:4581 (FAX)
(5) 22, 21, (I) 5, 12, 11,
21

9 A K I'

·IOIRT IISSBl
CONSTIUCIIOII

EXPRESS

PUBLICATION

I(.

t I J

Pall

r-s"!'

17 E. . . . , 55 ......,
5I Dog'a
11 " ' ilalh, a.g.
lllgn
51-

2

•

•

lnlo
51 Upper
·
54 Cone«..

(2 wda.)

• •••

1111 . . . . . . . .

18 ·CONSTRUCTION

AD Mak&amp;t'lnd« a

11 -80110 I~

.....--2. . .,..

a

1'

::=-"

45
41 Coo•~•~

15llfrvlctll

6 AKQ..II

~

RIVERSIDE
STORAGE

I .

·-...

•• IJ
ill
W', •• • ' -

l elao-Degrnn~andndc_.,

,.c.

•••

Pin I ' - • VloJI

...

!

13 Cljll
•' • 44 IUflbf
· - llaat"

......... IIIC.

.._.

3t E•ldlla ol

1 llcJdt IIIIU
ctw ..
7 GlldJid D11 41 IIIII c I

SMITH'S
CO tiS TRUCTiOIJ

BISSELL

•

·-

ACROSS

..
.·

l

19) -- Avoid co- workers [od.'\y ·
who would rat her be boss than
willing helpers, sho uld you. re.q-uirc so 1pconc to assist you

wi th &lt;1 crit ic.1l ta~k . They
wotlid be a severe handi cap

ami bollix chc job. l'IS&lt;::ES (Feb. 2U-March 20)
-- It's admir;~bh: to bdicve in
others , but placing yo ur f;~ith

totl:!y in ;m individual who has
_proven to let you down in th~
face\ of trouble is sheer folly . A
repeat pcrformam:e is likely .
ARIES (Morch 21- April 19)
-- T:.ctless mhjudgments
w h en deJiiug Wit h perso ns
whose coopcra ti Oil ym1 need
today cou ld cost you 5uppo rt.
Eve n if the ntattcr is urge nt to
yo u, fed others out first, rather

than ,plun gin g in.
TAUI~US (Apnl 2U · M'Y
20) -~ Someone 11bout w hom
you criticized in the r ~'~t may
be in the pcuiticm to rt'turn the
faV(Jf

today. Should he or she

g~ t

L'Vcn. let this be a k~uln to
you.
·

GEM INI (May 21 -JIIn&lt; 20)
-- Any cmle.w or thilt wquld
IMJ' yuu a lo t of t: a!!ih fOr a
~~~all return is a WQstC of time
and .,.·!Tort . Cnncc11li'IUC on act1vnics today th:u at le;n.t pO!•
sc ~s· ~omc kind of p&lt;~yoff.

�I

n.nllay, .June 21, 2001

1he O.ily SenUnel • P8ge B 5 ~

. --

Pomeroy, lllddleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

H-

•

•

I

All'S I IIIII PI I n V....... IQ. SinGle Wldel.
Double Wida, lloel'~t Declc8. PV'I, and
Cll~lr'l. awL••••'II poole and fllrm.equipnlnl
I've ...... Mhed ....,. from filling llllllon
I*IWijjlola,PV'und"""*tlaCOijX)iiiU

5W1oa • Nfto c.n.o
I

. . . , •·•

............ and lndullrial ~
•'IILIM. IUdiM bl*' J.z•'a. bJIQohoel; and
5
Jlilll SOIIIt 112 101'2

"

:•;••;•~lleJ;;•
I Clllll~~~i81p~you~cal~me=.r;..-;;:00~.~
· or ....... ·~H~

MOIIJMEITAL UFE IISURAIIG CO.
H

J'~ ~ ,

R H1 :) ,
B~.t

,

~_i

"I........

~rJ

J•,.r;

' ' ' rJ ::,!lfl

t

~~rjr·&lt;"~t

Rooting· Home

&gt;JI~-}

Locllll43 5214
Mediclle SuppiCDICIIt; Ufe Insurance;
Burial md Final &amp;pensca; Cancer &amp;
Dental. RetiJan.:nt.
Pe111ion 1/t 40IK Rollovers;
Mortp&amp;C; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

Gutllfso Down
•c...ms..~~•

.........

Spout 'PI

Tbplll• Fll Dirt
• Mllldl

,_ E ['

948-1405
511-5011

-:::.

FREE ESTIMATES

Free Es'!rYJtes

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

740 -9 92 1101
or 992 -2 753

...,.._c .,
7Aft_ _ •7'.:e!~
- - --'----1

~

Eir4l

,......
Fed«f Aw~M~bed
c--mr.ru

CAN HELP

~

D
ttllltiStllt. TBwlh
OH«Jm
I

PROJECT?

•

..ft"!" .,

CH..-.

ft
~~

, . I(J:.t•l

GRAVEL
SAND
UMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC .CULVERT
METAL CUI,.VERT
GEOTEXTILE

A~AR

I~Dalcrl

• New """•0.,..
• Colllpllle
Rima illllng
Slop&amp; Coli.....
FREE ESTWA1ES

•c.Nf

• Hal dwoocl floal'llll

•Cell*'

fll££ ESnMIU
Pboae BMJ 674-6100

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

---l'irll

74_0892s1871

oluiiPootiiM

·!(ENSJNGTON

&amp; REWIRE

WillOWS HEAT

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

IIIIIIOR 'I!CIIIIOLOGY.
KEEPI THE
at.•an• HEAT
OUT AND WWI&amp;i
TillE HEAT II

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

of Common
of Melga
Pomeroy,

ILOCKS OUTII.K
OF D*I*GING

ULTAAYIOI.E1' RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT

PIIICINCI

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

NOTICE BY

-·--TU·-·-·

1..aoo-;291·5600 • Pomero~.2~
remodeling;
drywall, room

additions, and
plumbing.

Terry Lamm

Katie.Smith leads Lynx victory.

I

•

..

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

'

4

•

Lynx 55, Mystics 51

SETH'S
LAWN
'SERVICE

points in her first start since coming off
the injured list.
Vickie Johnson scored a 23 points for
New York (8-4).
Crystal Robinson added 11 points.
Tari Phillips, the league's eighth-le~ding scorer, 'bad only two points and
missed all six of her shots from the field
for New York .

..·.

I!LITE MECHANJCAL CON'I'IU,CTpRS

.

landscaplnq
Shaunse!h

'

I
I

F

(140)985:-3563
(7 40) 541-3820

/I~Haod'll&gt;StupA~

1·30U75-7124

W
1
8
5

..
4
3
2

1

-

POt.

01

4
5

.887
.500

112

a .m

8

e

2 t/2

3 112
3 112

.ol()()

.o!OO
8.333
8 .200

10

4
5112
7

.081

Col•••
WLPctGI
WIJU II

8
9
8

I .889
3 .750
3.887
.500

112
2
2112
3 t/2

5
5

.444
.444

4
4

7

.384

5

7 . 5

.583

8
•
4

4

e

•..,.•.

Hill'• Sell
28670 Bltllln Road
Racll1e, Ohio

45771

740-94$1-2217
SlztiS' X 10'
to 10' x 30'

Houre
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Dannlo--

POINT PLEASANT, W,Vamumo
- · Florl·
Cia ........,. bukelball coach Doo·
nil Jonoa will be tooldlng tho 15111
Annuol Donnie Joneo Balltelbail
Clomp In Point Pleuant on July 2·
5.
.
~ art1 available al local
bull- or by calling 875-4402.

,..._ ...

...,., t.ll trparll
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Eaolern
~I alltltt.,, gradel ooven
lltn&gt;ugh 12, plal'lnO fall opor11 (loot·
. bal. vclloybd. goll and chtter1oadlna)lhauldll]llat8&lt; 10 play on June
2t or JIN 9, fiom 5:30 1o 8:30 p.m.
al tho ltlgtl- olllce.
A ~ or legtrl guenjlan muot
10001ttp11ty
all ·one
-·
SIUCIJtnll
who Clm&gt;l aftend
ol tho
regii-

Jrallon pomctJt lhould conJact lhe
II 985-338 bet'Mion
7:3) a.m..and 2:30 p.m. 10 make
olhlra~ .
.
ltlgl -

.

lnaurecl
Spedallzeln new
conltrudlont
ftmodellna, plumblna,
olectrlc.ol, " - main·
ttn•a«t and repair
porc:heo, &amp; deck&amp;.

c--.

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

Owner
Charles R. Dill

PhGM 992•7445
(II
591·9254

Profe$$/onal Work at
· A(fortlable Rates
Geiterai/Spedallud Typing
Temporary Ofllce Assistance
Mailing Labels/Envelopes
Cassette TrallllCrlpW'n
Numerous Business Support Services
25 years Secretarial Experience

-,·.oam.

Mlo- 55, WaiNogJon 51
Seolllo 115, UJ.n 47
~··oam.
PCI1Iond 11 ~. 7 p.m.
~,:::; 81~~· 7:30p.m.

.

._......
p.m.

UJ.nal!llml, 1
Dotrol1al CharloJJe, 7:30 p.m.
M Orlenclo, 7:30p.m.
. Porlland allndlana, 8 p.m.
Waahlngton at Houston, 8:30 p.m.

c-....

Top • Removal • Trim
I

I

.

loutltorn
-"
" Ia .Alll18]1c
RACINE
- The
Soulhem
Booltera wtll hold an em&amp;IQii ICY
maellng Tuolday al 7:30p.m. in 1111
high ochool caloln to dlscuM lhe
lu1Urt1 ol lhe organlzallon and lhe
etoct1on o1 onlcara.
&amp;tucfenll grade~ 3-12
participating In dlalrlcl alhlollco
along with lntereeted comrnunlly
membera, ptlyara. and allcoaotoas
.lhoul&lt;f allend. Especially Plntnll whit players In any aport
grades 7-12 shoUld atland.

p.,..,.. "'

PIW-1
FormoPhyoicallorma
-RACIN~
- Sparta

for all ~~~~- plannlna on partlolpatlng In any oponfng octlvlly
gradel 7· 121n tho Soulhem Loc.a
Sc:hool Olllrlcl can be picked up In
tho high ochool olflce beiMen B
a.m.-3:30 p.m. Clltlly.
Thil year a new fonn Ia required lor
all Ohio High Sc:hool Allllatlc "-olatlon lludenl-alltletn.
Phyole41 Cllttea will be announced

later.

21 Paclllc

PaM

32=:::.

, .

3 llalloly.n
4 GiDu

·
=
=0
35=.

33 Expmlan
ldN
34 Foreot-

suit
BY PilaU' AlDIR
We have started to
look at the secondround actions by
someone
who has
BARNEY
made a takeout double ·
NO, LOWEEZ.Y !! I
with at least 17 highTO BORRY A BOW
card points. What
does it mean if the
doubler mentions a
new suit on round
two? It shows some
17-19 points and . at
least a five-card suit. It
describes a hand too
strong for a simple
~vercall on the ·first
round -- like South's
here . .
Now a chunk for
the experts in the
audience. North has a ·
.maximum eight points
for his initial nonjump
bid. So, when South
shows such a strong
hand, North should
insist on a game contract. However, before
heading to five _diamond5, he should stop
off to check out three
THE BORN LOSER
no-trump. He does
lT'::. ~0\ .
I'LN-It@ f'OC~TI~T FOR
l KNO'N, l WOLD~ that by cue-bidding
\o.IAAT l
'1'~-MJW::.f\~T
Tf\t.ffiTIF.E U':&gt;T NL
two spades. This an~iEO­
NL TilE U\l~~ I
ft~~i~.)O~T
nounces both game
aspirations and a desire
~lN£.1
t-15/tK 1-Y-D Tl\t.
~~.,.;.WEE~!
·to get into three noTlfl£
trump if South has a.
spade stopper. When
South cannot bid notrump , North settles
for five diamonds. But
if you, sitting North,
prefer just to raise diamonds, go for it!
East takes two spade
SPRING, WE llRIL.L · HE SUMMEF. IS A REFUND
IN 'FALL. ITS TIME
FOR A SRAIN THAT 'S
TEST AND QUIL .
FOR llA(K-TO· SCHOOL .
tricks; then exits with
OVERTAXEP.
THE SUSJECT :
.,._LRE:\t&gt;Y&gt;" PROTE.S.T WE.
THE'Y SORE SEEM
something,
let's say a
U$EL.ESS FAC'l!&gt; ..
LONe;. TO 1'\E.
heart.
Declarer cannot afford a trump loser .
The percentage play is
low to the queen.
This wins whenever
East has king-doubleton or West holds a
singleton jack. True,
PEANUTS
as East opened the
bidding, there is a
stronger case than
usual for 'finessing the
10 on the first round.
If you would have
done that, unlucky!
When West drops
the jack under South's
queen, declarer crosses
back to dummy, presumably in clubs, takes
a second diamond finesse, cashes the diamond ace, and claims.

o.pat-

(lhopMI)

28 SrMII

Openina~ A 2

...

2

ldeptaJ

""' .... t• .u..r••
••

,__

$Mille

251eu ••

••

' 21 Actor

DOWN
1 Booton or

lallndlt

V........; Eai.·Wat
••,.. Htf'UI FAll

-

22Hub
. 23 Une 1111 •

24

wllhoul-

7Falnt

monunwd 12 Spanish

•

by an

37 Youth orv.

38 ....

-.-VIper
41 FaMto
42
43 Help • illlijj
45T_ _ .
oldillaaY

~

:;:t'-

41 =and
47 Art cleco

'UIIolh
ratio
41
211 diiiU-·50

·- hurrlbugl".

Palla

30-

52-de

31 - o11
(angry)

53

19 Ethiopian

IIIII

oxplcMion

~)

au..

IIIII

37~

proximity

llowera?
26WOI'Ic

.,_

D anlei-

=-~

25 Silent

I lllr'll doll!
• Feat poorly
10 Horlan af11 Kind"'

36S1011e

France

st-e .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher ayplograms are created lrom quolallonl by famouo
people, poland .,..eeont Each Iotter in lho cipher Sllndllor anotllor.

Toctay's cl&lt;m: H equals Y
ADZDW
' PAOKPWTSPCAO

...

PA

BCW

SFDH .

,.

NDUTAN

RC

ICAP

DAPTRDUDASO;

PUUDNPTSD

UTWWPTRD

TJSPCA.'

SC

BWTAJPO

XWDANTA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Horses don'l Nn any beHer lor me
than anybody elae; I just lind oul how lhey want to be rtdden.'
- WIHlt Hartack
·
·

E M0 C B E
2
r

I

I I I I' 1 I

I~ I I I I I
N UC 0 E
I~ I! I I I I~
K

UQ AC

"People don't wahl to take responsibilily fortheir·own actions," .
the high income lawyer told a rerorter... ''But," he added, "don't- ·-

RETPEN
16

I II

in~

-- -Complete lho chuckle quoted
by fill
;n lhe mining wordt
you develop frOJTI step No. 3 below.

I I'

-0

SCitAM:LETS ANSWERS
Sprung- Clang- Valet- Fracas- SPLURGE

My college roommate came back from a v1s1t ,home
with boxes of new clothes. She says she couldn t help
herself because she shops on lhe SPLURGE of the
moment.

Stump 6rinding

P/1
CONTRA&lt;TOIS, IlK.
R.alne, Ohio 45771

740-985-3948

yous
kllHkBm
COtfflECDQH

CONCREif/BLOCKIIRi(J( . Quality Drlvawaye,
• Foo«en, Wallo, Stepo
Patios, Sldewalka,
Flat Work,
25 yeats experience
Rtplacemenll, Walkl
Free Estimates·
and Drl'"• • Slen&lt;il

lltypeso
Roofs,
Specialist

1

MILL END .
FABRICS
Machine Quilting
EARNHARTt3

pillow panela

. 740-992·3873
Pomeroy Eeglta
Club Bingo
On.Thurtdaya

At 8:30p.m,
Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Paying $80.00
par game
$300.00 Coverall
Starbursl
Progressive top line
r Lie. #00·50

Wctlnt"~d.ay . June

Sti, king to

Call Bob

740-949-1405

74CH42·8015.or
t-&amp;n-353-7022

Cell#
614-747-1715

Bring In your repair work

Call tJa First Or We Both Lose!

we'll get you going for
spring

Ask fbr .Mike Hindle
179 or 446·9800

· Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.

New equipment arriving dally

-'ILLC:R

Set Manning, Wayne or Jim
· or 1 RIAL DIAL on 1 new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
Sales &amp; Service
204 CoQdor St.
Pomeroy

27.200 1

c ntcrpri ~cs

or

l'll-

di.:avors for which yo u've alr,·ady laid a mlitl foumbtion is
where you'll find your ra,i nbows in the year ahead. M nvc
on to new projects slowly :tnd
cautiomly.
C ANCER Qunc 21-July 22)
-- Without a positive attit ude
today ami a to tal commitment,
you could w::~ffic and give up
at th e lint sig n of resistance.

Cellular

· Jeff Warner Ins.

992·2975

•

992-5479

llc Hrm and cxpcctJ nt about
your objecti ves. Can..:cr, tn~at
yourse lf to a birth day gift.
·Send for you r Astro-G uph
predictions for the year ahead
by '. m oili n~ S2 and SASE to.
Astro-Graph, c/o this ncw~pa. ­
por. P.O. Box 1758, Murray

Hill Station, New York. NY
10156. De sure tu Stilt&lt;: ·your
Zodiac ~ign.
LEO Q11ly 23-At•g . 22) -Watch yount!lf toda y tha t you
(\()n 't weaken and rekas.: con ..
fidcnti al in(ormation yo u have
abom a fri end thilt cou ld make
him or h~.·r lonk bad. YOu'd
du more d:unagc than yo u
lllilY rc:~\i:tl!' .

.
(Au ~.

23-S&lt;rt. 22)
t.:omcs tu bei n ~
·::~~kl•d to ;mte up yom ~hare in
a ~rou}, i,nvnlwmcnt. 111ilkc
VIRGO

~- When it

ccruin everyone is givi ng the
same. Your portio n might be
more generous than othe n.
LIURA (Sc;•t. 23-0ct. 23) - If yollr objectivcli todi!y im-,,
pede those of yo11r fellow associates, they 1;ould ;~tccmpt to
delibeutcly usurp your progress. Stri ve to work 011 somethin~ that would benefit everybody .
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov.
22) -· A s1tu~tion similar to
one with which yOu h ad to
con te nd, and didn't usc the
best judgment, might rc;~.r its

,ugly head again today. This
time you should kitow wh~·t to
' do.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23D cc. 21) -- A difficult-todeal-with finn could get on
yonr back today over a financi al obli~ari o n . Don't do anything at thi s tinle to make
your ~ ituation wonc.
C A11RI CORN (Dec . 22·
J•m. \!I) .... Yeti c:nu ld disc:ovc r
toctrly th at som eone yo u
thlHtght .w:a in ill'C&lt;'nt wit h
yo ur idci!s i~ not. Do wll:tt you
rn 11 to rc ~olw lh c i~~ u c.· s. be ~ i
..: au ~~.: . uudlcc:kcd, the ci.i~ ~
agrccmc m niay tLCt ugly .
·
AQ U Al~IUS Qan. 20-Fdl .

-.

I·

'

• ••

• Bucket Truck

1

PackOII will not be 18nt home IIIII All ~ra partlclpellng In oportlilYMr. SluCIJtnll wiN not be pe""lllad .12 shoUld a1ao oome to t11o meeting
10 pertlclplto on beginning Clay II 10 diiCUII upoomlng IWII11a with
paperworltlo not completed.
tllolr raopoctJve oooches.
Phyole411 will be conducted al HoiZ• Addlllonaily, On lhe agenda will be
or Molgt Clinic on June 30 117 a.m. tho alaotlon ol ofllcora. lhe dlocua·
Phyole41 lonna will be dlotribut«&lt; at lion o1 lila county lair boollt, lair.
reglalrotlon. They aro new lonna, parking, allllallc event concHIIoni,
which parento muot complate and and lht poulbll dlsbencllng of lhe
sign before the athlete can 188 a organlralioll dlla 10 iacl&lt; o1 In_,,
doctor.
'

or 740-867.0038

Tree Service

Slclamoi oiO 85, Cllorlolte 82, OT
Howb1 !17. PorJIInd 57

LOC.AL SPORTS BRIEFS

.

FreeMtl1111te1,

JOlES'

WVI0317ll

•

CONSTRUC110N

a."..... 14, Miami as

Orlondo 87, 'Now YOIIc 54

t.aoo.150-to77

s.Jes Senkt lnltlll18tloa
Spec!•llrl.. ln S1ae8 Metal Dudw•k .
"T,_.• Soalel II Senlce For
GaUia, Muon. 11M Meiss
LieenRd Md JIIIIIJftd
WV G05176

74().667-32~4

Crete Free EotlmSenln1 Ohio and W.V.

•.

3D

Now York 82, La. Angeleo 69

L

'

Residoatlal Coa111JeJclal New COftl!lnicllora

lunclly'a oa,_,

Is iiCali. . .IGii

'

il&amp;tW· .

WASHINGTON (AP) Katie
Smith scored 22 points as Minnesota
extended Washington's losing streak to ·
seven games.
Smith hit an NBA-distance 3-pointer
and a pair of free throws in the final 2:32
to help seal the win for Minnesota {4-5).
Storm 65, Starzz 47 ·
Chamique Hold5daw led Washington
(2-8) with 23 points on 8-for-19 shootSALT LAKE CITY (AP) - . Lauren
ing. The Mystics shot 26,2 ~ercent, t~e · Jackson had 14 points and ,nine
second-worst performance m franchtse .rebound5 as Seattle won for the third
·
time in four games.
history.
Miracle 6'J, Liberty 54
Rookie Semeka Randall hit eight
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Nykesha straight free thrQws in the final 1:36 and
Sales scored 14 of her 18 points in the finished with 12 points for Seattle {7-5).
fint half as the Orlando Miracle beat
Na~lie Williams led the Starzz (4-5)
New York 67-54 Monday night, snap- with 14 points and 13 rebounds.
ping the Liberty's seven-game winning
Jennifer Azzi had 13 points and four
streak
assists, and Marie Ferdinand added 10
· Taj McWilliams-Franklin added 15 points as Utah lost its fifth home game
points and nine rebound5 for Orl~ndo of the season.
(4-6), which' won its third straight game.
Guard Shannon Johnson scored 10

••
,

(alibr.)
20 Mo. SUmac

AQ llt1

moo...

bl9 or small Jobs;
-small

WNBA

•

....

992·0739
(418)
.
(418) 227:4581 (FAX)
(5) 22, 21, (I) 5, 12, 11,
21

9 A K I'

·IOIRT IISSBl
CONSTIUCIIOII

EXPRESS

PUBLICATION

I(.

t I J

Pall

r-s"!'

17 E. . . . , 55 ......,
5I Dog'a
11 " ' ilalh, a.g.
lllgn
51-

2

•

•

lnlo
51 Upper
·
54 Cone«..

(2 wda.)

• •••

1111 . . . . . . . .

18 ·CONSTRUCTION

AD Mak&amp;t'lnd« a

11 -80110 I~

.....--2. . .,..

a

1'

::=-"

45
41 Coo•~•~

15llfrvlctll

6 AKQ..II

~

RIVERSIDE
STORAGE

I .

·-...

•• IJ
ill
W', •• • ' -

l elao-Degrnn~andndc_.,

,.c.

•••

Pin I ' - • VloJI

...

!

13 Cljll
•' • 44 IUflbf
· - llaat"

......... IIIC.

.._.

3t E•ldlla ol

1 llcJdt IIIIU
ctw ..
7 GlldJid D11 41 IIIII c I

SMITH'S
CO tiS TRUCTiOIJ

BISSELL

•

·-

ACROSS

..
.·

l

19) -- Avoid co- workers [od.'\y ·
who would rat her be boss than
willing helpers, sho uld you. re.q-uirc so 1pconc to assist you

wi th &lt;1 crit ic.1l ta~k . They
wotlid be a severe handi cap

ami bollix chc job. l'IS&lt;::ES (Feb. 2U-March 20)
-- It's admir;~bh: to bdicve in
others , but placing yo ur f;~ith

totl:!y in ;m individual who has
_proven to let you down in th~
face\ of trouble is sheer folly . A
repeat pcrformam:e is likely .
ARIES (Morch 21- April 19)
-- T:.ctless mhjudgments
w h en deJiiug Wit h perso ns
whose coopcra ti Oil ym1 need
today cou ld cost you 5uppo rt.
Eve n if the ntattcr is urge nt to
yo u, fed others out first, rather

than ,plun gin g in.
TAUI~US (Apnl 2U · M'Y
20) -~ Someone 11bout w hom
you criticized in the r ~'~t may
be in the pcuiticm to rt'turn the
faV(Jf

today. Should he or she

g~ t

L'Vcn. let this be a k~uln to
you.
·

GEM INI (May 21 -JIIn&lt; 20)
-- Any cmle.w or thilt wquld
IMJ' yuu a lo t of t: a!!ih fOr a
~~~all return is a WQstC of time
and .,.·!Tort . Cnncc11li'IUC on act1vnics today th:u at le;n.t pO!•
sc ~s· ~omc kind of p&lt;~yoff.

�•

•

-

•
•

.. •
•

SPO

. ••• The Daily Sentinel

•
.• • •• .•
•

•• •

.• ••

• ••

..

•

Maddux, Braves win
at Philly, cut into lead

a1

--........
-

Mllp C01111t(1 ·

~

BY mE ASSOCjiATED PRESS

Florida

Wilb every game, Greg Maddux and !he Atlanta Bra~ are
puaiilg !heir early season problems behind them.
Maddux enjoyed an easy night at Veterans Stadium, and the
Clicago
Bmres beat Philadelphia 9-4 Monday to cut the Phillies'Jead in
Sll.oUio
!he NL East to 1 112 games.
w ., ...
"We've done it long enough to know what happens in April
Clndlll_.
doesn't necesgriJy dictate what's going to happen tonight or
tomorrow," Maddux said. "We're talented. We have a lot of talent on our team, and our manager deserves a lot of credit.' ~
The Braves, who have won nine straight division titles, are
15-8 Ibis monlb.
The Phillies, who held an eight-game lead on June 1, are 714 since that point.
Atlonlai,N.Y.-4
· "It's June, not July or August. We've hit a little lull," manager
Moolllooll1.~4
. . . . . . 6.~Cta3
Larry Bowa said. "We have a very young team. This is not a
- 7 . Cli"*•ult 5
one-year plan. When I took the job, I said we'd improve and
Colonodo 7 , - 8
Phlladllphia 9, F1ortda 3
we'll improve. I guarantee it.
San Otego 6, Loo AngoiN 1
"I'm not worried about Atlanta or Aorida. I'm worried about
St Louie 7, San F...- 3
lloudaw'e a....
John Burkett tomorrow night. That's all I care about right now.
Monlrool 3, F1ortda I
This game is over and they beat us good. Every game is impor-,.e.,.
-•
Allanta 9, Phlodolphlo
4
tant to me no matter who we play. We can't look down the
Chicago c.D 2, N.Y. Mots 1
road. We're not in that situation yet.''
Brian Jordan hit a three-run homer that highlighted a six-run
third inning. Maddux cruised to his fourth straight victory, and·
said. "It's not going to be a fun place to be if we keep losing.'.~ .
!he Braves won their fourth in a row overall.
Red Sox starter David Cone (3-1) allowed five runs on ~.:
"The runs helped. I made a couple good pitches, but the runs Javier Vazquez survived a Oying bat that nicked him, pitching hita and five walks. Derek Lowe, the fifth Red Sox pitcher, go1
definitely helped;' Maddux said. "You get :r big lead anp your Montreal over Aorida at Pro Player Stadium.
the last six outs for his 13th save.
•
~
Luis Castillo led off the Marlins' first and shattered his bat,
approach changes. I had better days. My location wasn't good,
Ryan Rupe (4-7) took !he loss, giving up nine runs on ei~~
with the barrel hitting Vazquez on !he right side and right arm. hi
but I was effectively wild When I missed, I missed badly."
a
'
Vazquez still managed to cover first base on the play and catch
a toss for the out.
Jeff Kent went 4-for-4, and San Francisco beat Los Angeles
Corey Koskie homered and had"'four RB!s, leading Min;
Vazquez was ·cut, but stayed in the game after being examined
for its 10th win in 11 games at Pacific Bell Park.
by a trainer. Vazquez pitched seven innings in ending his four- nesota to victory at Detroit.
Kent homered and drove in three runs. Barry Bonds went 0- game losipg streak.
. Joe Mays ~9-5) allowed two runs on six hits, walking no on! ·
_
·
for-2, but walked for the lOth straight game.
m seven mrungs.
•
Chan Ho Park struck out 10, but he had his four-game winBob Wells pitched 1 1-3 innings, and LaTroy Hawkins got thf
Robert Machado homered for the first time-rhis season, help- last two outs for his 17th save.
.
ning streak stopped.
!
ing Chicago beat New York at Wrigley Field.
~~
Machado, called up from Triple-A last week, broke a t-all tie
Wade Miller pitched seven scoreless innings, and Houston when he connected in the seventh inning.
Jay Gibbons hit a three-run homer as visitmg Baltimore be.q
downed Arizona at Bank One Ballpark.
~
Julian Tavarez pitched seven impressive innings and hit an Toronto.
The NL West-leading Diamondbacks were shut out for just RBI single for the Cubs.
Gibbons, a former Blue Jays farmhand, has homered in eaciJ
the second rime this,Jeason.
· of the four games he's played against his forrner organization. ~
Lance Berkman and Moises Alou hit consecutive home runs
Melvin Mora and Jeff Conine each had three hits for the OriJ
in the seventh as the Astros won their third in .a row.
·oles, who ended Toronto's four game-winning streak.
,.::
J Willis Roberts (6-6) won for the first rime since May 24. :!·
Joey Hamilton (3-5) gave up seven runs on 11 hits in 5 2~~
D-~s
Ben Davis hit a tiebreaking, two-run homer in the eighth
·
·
•
The Devil Rays, who own the majors' worst record, lost 12~ innings.
inning, and San Diego won at Coors Field.
Todd Walker went 4-for-4 for Colorado with two home runs 8 in Fenway Park to fall to 0-10 this season against the· Red
~~
Sox.
and two doubles.
Ramon Ortiz be,at Texas for !he fourtlr rime in as many staf1t
"I think we're in the kind of situation right now where ·we're Ibis year, and Anaheim rocked Kenny Rogers for eight runs. ~
Kevin Jarvis ·beat his old team as the Padres won their fourth
just trying to play a good, solid ballgame;• Tampa Bay catcher
in a row. The Rockies have lost seven of eight.
Every batter in the Angels' lineup had at least one hit in a 1~
Mike DiFelice said. "Sometimes you go out and try too hard hit attack against !he team with baseball's worst pitching thi&amp;
·and things don't go your way."
·
season.
~
Brian Giles and Aramis Ramirez hit consecutive homers, and
The Red Sox lead the AL East by two games Qver New York
~ael, P~eiro hit his 2~ homer and drove in lbree tu •
Pittsburgh downed Milwaukee at PNC Park.
even though they're just 14-14 ~gainst the n:s! of the divisiQn. for visiting Texas.
· ·
Rookie David Williams won his first career ' start for the
Greg Va11ghn, Randy Wi~n. DiFelice and ·Brent Abernathy
prriz (6-5) allowed five runs on eight hits - including AI~
Pirates. Reliever Mike Lincoln, called up from Triple-A homered for the Devil Rays. Abernathy, recalled from the
Rodriguez's
22nd homer - in seven innings. He topped tht
Nashville, pitched three hitless innings.
·
minors earlier in the day, homered for his first major league hit. F,angers - and Rogers - for the secqnd time in fiVe days.
"\Ve're ·paid to win ballgames. It's not fun losing;• Abernathy
~
·~

~o &lt;t•nl\ • '""'' l I lOU I • liol '&gt; 1 No 211

Middll•nort
• Pon H' roy , Oht'o
f""

Middleport could set
· betuhmark for other
communities

.......,.._

.

·

'IWins 6, 'dnn 3

;:

.Cubs l, Mets 1

Astros 6, Diamondbacks o

Orioles I, Blue

!

l

AMERICAN LEAGUE
.. Reel SOx 11;
8

Padres 6, Rockies 4

·l

11,Ranftn 7

·Pirates 6, Brewers 4

i;

0

'.

''

( ;t )_/f.] )~·&lt;_!l 'SI
1-l;lnks ( )ur'ILtil
A1nong the 'l()p

:1(

l

I )l'Stiltlti()}h
i 11 t

hc World .

'

Golfers
the
who

aren't

We love it when people say
world and The New York Tiines
nice things about us.
called us' "... some of the best
Golf Digest recently listed
public golf on earth."
·Golf Magazine listed THE ·
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
Trail among the top 50 golf
SENATOR course at our new Capitol
destinations in the ·world!
Hill location among its top new
And in its current Places to
courses ~n the country and THE
Play ratings, Golf Digest gave ·
LEGISLATOR course in the top ·25
most ·of the Trail's 2l courses
· newcomers. And wait until you
4 stars-and some even got 4'/z •
. ~e' THE JUDGE!
Not bad when you consider that
So, we hope you11 understand
5 stars only go to those once-in- . when, like aU good golfers, we
a-lifetime courses. And aU of the
like to brag about our scores.
Trail's courses got top honors for
Call today to book your golf
service.
and hotel package and get ready
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed for one of the best golf trips iri
us among its top 10 trips in the
the world.

.'
. '

I

.,'

~

,.... . .
'

.' ''
...

l.

I

only · ones

'

I

'

,,.
'

love

about

to

brag

their

- +·

HAMPTON COVE

scores.

. SILVER .LAKES

OXMOOR VALLEY

GRAND NATIONAL

HNNIIPilll

AN Nino~

.a;,.iJ06M•

O,.libiA.W.m

~HOLEI

~HOU:I

IS4 HOL.II

N HOLlE•

.. .,''
'

' ",,••
'

l

'I

..

CAMBRIAN RIDGE

.. ..
' .

HIGHLAND OAKS

G,.e,.•illl

v.....

38 HOL.i:l

3e HOLIB

MAGNOLIA GROVIE

MNit.
M HOL.II

...

~

t'

.

I

CAPITOL HILL

&gt;UNVEILS PUNS - Architect Stephen Gegner of MSrletta
unveiled his conception of how Middleport's three school
buildings might be used after they are vacated by the Meigs
· Local Dl~?trlct. A public hearing held last night Is the latest step
In a Middleport communit&gt;'Wide effort to save the buildings
and use tham constructively. (Brian J. Reed photo)
.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport could
set a new standard for constructive and
creative uses for abandoned school buildings, a governor's representative said.
Eva Lunder, the governor's regional
community development representative
for the state's Appalachian counties, was
among those attending a public meeting
Tuesday where tentative plans for developing Middleport's elementary schools
were unveiled.
Lunder said the village has access to the
right facilities, and has the right goals in
mind to set an example statewide of how

a

!14 HOLII

Fireworks fans told to 'use.common sense
BY TIINY M. lacH
SENTlHEl. NEWS 5rNf

POMEROY- 'f!!e up_coming Fourth of July holiday has
many Meigs. counrians rushing
to stores in order to purchase
smoke bombs, Roman candles,
bottle rockets, and various other
types of fireworks for festivities
to celebrate our nation's inde-

.
,,

UJIVIII. rljgo!fal/11

'

PI•••-....... AJ

Meigs board
eyes tighter
revenues
BY CHARLINE HOEFUCH

pendenc~.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

However;cascading streams of
bright lights and loud explosions, which often a"ompany
fireworks, can easily divert one's
attention· ~ limn the· real
. possibility' of injury or death.

" Sliite ~'Manhal'f(olleifR.

Rielage has warned aD Ohi02115 ·
. to be aware of the inherent dangers of fireworks and to avoid
discharging fireworks in Ohio,
which is against state law.
"Ohioans should follow two
sets of laws when it comes to
fireworks; the laws of Ohio and
!he lilws of common sense::said
Rielage. "Ohio Jaw says most
fireworks are illegll to discharge
in !he state, and common sense
53.)'5 even legal fireworks can be
dangerous without extreme
· caution."
Citing Ohio's laws, Rielage
noted that trick and novelty fireworks such as sparlden, party
poppers and smoke bombs are
!he only fireworks that can be
wed by aJI)'One in Ohid.
While 1.4 G (consumer) fire-works such as firecrackers, bottle
rockets and roman candles can
be sold in the 52 licensed fireworks srores in Ohio, added
Ridage, !hey cat)JlOt be discharge in the state and must be FIRIWO~KI FUN- Haley English,
of Jeff and Janie English, Pomeroy, enjoys watch·
taken out of state wilbin 48 lng the bright colors of a sparkler
her home on High Street. Parents must be cautious
·hours (or 72 for non-residents when lettln&amp; children play with fireworks thll Fourth of July because of possible inj~rles that can

PIMH-flnwDIIII.AS

occur. (Tony M. Leach photo)

HIP:io•'

Tadl(l

Sentinel
Calendar ·
da5$jfieds

Comics
Editorials
Objtuarjes
SpOrts
Weather

.

...-.=
...
Delllls, A2

'

Lotteries

OHIO
84·6 Pld&amp; J: 5-4-8; l'lcU: 2·7·3.0
A4

ludl.,. 5: 1,·3-6-18-33

.
A3 W.\M.
81·3,5·6 Dlllr 5:6-1-5 o.IJ, •= 6-7-&amp;9
A2 e&gt; 2001 Ohio v111oy Publilhlna eo.

erty taxes. Those taxes generate more than $500,000 a year
for Meigs Local Schools.
·Meigs Local's declining
enrollment is another factor
since state funds are contingeiu on number of students.
Built into tile rorecat .are unnegotiated salary increases of
3 percent, along with increas- .
es in other expenses of operating the buildings. Superintendent William Buckley
noted that the Clisrrict operates on 20 mills in local taxes
and that about 80 percent of
the district's revenue comes
fiom the state.
The collection of delinquent taxes on property in the
district will help, said Buckley.
This week, Meigs County
Treasurer Howard, Frank
asked Prosecutor Pat Story to
begin action to collect
$304,000 fiom 17 property
owners. Since most of the
property is located in the
Meigs Local School District
about 75 percent of the
amount collected will come
into the school treasury.
Temporary appropriations
of $38,395,651 for district
operatioru for the 2001-02
year were approved by the
board.
The amount, it was pointed
out, includes more than $19

PlMII-MIIp,AJ

White House intensifies effort·to sell energy plan
'

•

AS

87

"

POMEROY - A bleak
outlook on funds available to
operate Meigs Local Schools
after !he next two years \vas
revealed in ~ fi:~ar finantial foreas~ pres· d atThesday night's meeting of the
Meigs Local Board of Education.
As required by law, the
board approved a the five-year
forecast to be sent to the state
Board of Education. That
forecast, on the basis of current income, predicted inadequate money on which to
operate the schools beginning
in fiscal year 2003. By fiscal
year 2005, it showed a shortfaD ·of more than $3 million.
The decline, according to a
schedule presented by Treasurer Mark Rhonemus,
begins 'with fiscal year 2003
when the shortfaD will be
$11,794, in 2004 when it will
be $1,437,147 and in 2005
when it will go to
$3,223,236.
He said the financial health
of the district will depend on
.what action the state takes on
pending legislation on school
funding.
Part of the problem stems
fiom the closing of the Meigs
Mines and the loss of real
estate as well as personal prop-

W~iiNGTON

Tv. radio and newspaper their own TV interviews.

The Bush
a~tion is moving to jump-start its
energy•·plan, which is bogged down in
Con8teft and has failed to win widespread
public ~pon despite high gasoline prices
and WCJt~Cm electricity shortages.
~ush glans to tout conservatio~ and alternatlve-ei'ief!iY comP,onents of his plan on
Thursday during a speech and tour of !he
Energy D~Warttnent.
·
·
· Vice President Dick Cheney will conduct
(AP) -

interviews in coming
days, focusing on the
energy strategy. Mary
Matalin, a top Cheney
adviser, is also taking the
administration message
to the airwaves with
appearances on talk
radio, and
House
Republicans are booking

Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore, the Republican National Committee chairman, plans
to travel to Arizona and California this
week to promote administration efforts on
energy.
"We think it's rime we went on the
offensive to show just how much the
Republicans and the president have done to
help those feeling the energy crunch," said
White House spokesman Jim Wilkinson.

Help?

HolZer Extra Care offers private-duty home care, personal
care, homemaking and,companionship in your.home or
place of, residence. We serve Gallic, Jackson and Meigs
coUnties, Ohio and Mason County, West Virginia.

Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail.378 hole3 of world-class golf on eight site3

The best use plan is designed to prove
to the school board and the Ohio School
Buildings Commission that the buildings
can and will be used constructively if
transferred to the village.
The plans are merely concepts of how
the buildings might be used, and are to be
presented to the school board next
month to demonstrate the village's commitment to constructive use of the buildings.
No plans for use have actually been
approved on any level, ~d last night's
meeting was designed to solicit public
input on the best uses for the building.
Once the buildings are vacated by the
district, they must be put to good we
within a year or be ·demolished under
requirements of the state building fund,
which provided funds for the district's
new buildings.

'

Ne8cl

. l'ow#oiU.

1.800.949.4444
.. .

8Y IIRwl J. REED

21ert'a.l-11 .....

'I•

old school buildings can best -be used.
Marietta architect Stephen Gegner
unveiled his preliminary drawings of haw
Middleport's schools might look as a jail
and municipal building. a commercial
storage facility and a community college
branch or training center.
Middleport has begun discussions with
the Meigs · Local School District abour
the village's resuming ownership of
Meigs Middle School. Middleport Elementary School, and the structure known
as the Central Building, once they are
vacated by the district in favor of new
buildings now under construction.
A citizens committee appointed by the
Middleport Planning Commission, using
funds collected from members of Middleport Alumni Association and a planning grant through the governor's office,
hired Gegner to complete feasibility
study and best use plan for the buildings.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Expos 3, Malflns 1

Giants 5, Dodgers l

\1\.WW rny d ,JI 1\'\4' ntlnt• 1 &lt;Om

ns for schools unveiled

.._.

\

Wedenesday

: Reds, Indians winners, B1

For more information; call (7401 446·9650
. or toll-free (8~0) 920·8860

·.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENl'ER

· Discover the Holzer Difference.

'

,,
'

,.
'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="453">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9898">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24321">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24320">
              <text>June 26, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="328">
      <name>adams</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3372">
      <name>fischer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1495">
      <name>schuler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1037">
      <name>van meter</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
