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WASHINGTON (AI') - Owities administration ag=d 10 Tuesd2y 25
to run soci:ll serviCe prognms !hey sealed differences ewer legisblion
wilh p;amucnt money wjll, ~to allowing migious cbarities 10 compere
Jet pcii1Kipana opt OUI of anYfrdigious f0rgo11m1111ent money in 10 social ser·
a.pects of their programs. GOP nego- vice progt2ms.
President Bush has outlined his
tiaron agr=l. allowing IC3Ilcd kgislavision for !he· legislation on several
lion to rna11e furw:mi in !he House.
That was one of a handful of new occasions, !hough his adrninistntion
procections separaling church and slate had ne\lef detailed precisely haw !he
that House Republicms and !he Bush law should be written. Some of his

m.-

:ldvisen wue blhe to support the biD
introduced into the House, fearing' it
did not include enough safeguards to
win support of Democrats or, possiN}I
'to pass constirutional musrer in the
courts.
Those concerns ~shared by Judi-

•IY RiCII CAUAIWI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The firewOrks that delight
crowds during celebntions like
!he Fourth of July and New
Year's Eve create more than just
dazzling colors. They produce

smog, roo.
Scientists in India say fireworks can generate groundlevel ozone - a key ingredient
in lung-choking urban smog.
They reached !heir conclusion
after monitoring air quality
during a Hindu festival when
celein:ants flooded New Delhi's

streets to ignite sparklers.
Previously. !he interaction of
sunlight and air poUutants had
been the only known source of
ground-level ozone, which
poses a health rhreat 10 peQple
with respiratory problems.
But researChers fiom Jawaharlal Nehru UniVersity in
New Delhi found that the
flickering light emitted by
burning sparklen during the
Diwali festival , of lights in
November 1999 was enough
10 cause ' an atmospheric reaction that produced ozone.

~ wm: link," aid Souder.
"'
· Smsenbrmners concuns were "driNow. with the ~ in !Jan$
.addrelsed.

.

ving eYU)'OOe kiDd of mzot' aid Rep.
Mark Souder, R-Ind, a lot.gblne sup~of~~ money 10
~ligious chari~es. But they were
uuportant, he said
ciary Commitree Chairman James
"II\ betrer to err on the side of cauSensenbrenner,R-WIS., who refused to ~n dwt to plunge ahead and not be
IJlO\'e the legislation until !hey were able 10 get a bill passed or get sued on

Scientists studying pollution in India find
that fireworks prOduce ground-level ozone
They said the findings could
give air quality experts somerhing more to worry about,
particularly since big fireworks
displays often occur during !he
peak . summer ozone se:ason.
Their research appears in
Thursday's issue of the journal
Nature.
But fireworks are far fiom a
big concern in one of the
United States' most no!Oriously smoggy regions - !he Los
Angeles area . said a
spokesman for that area's air
quality district.

COLUMBUS (AP) -Vince
Engel and Fred Porcheddu have
lived rogether for 15 years, tile
p:ast few in a cozy home fined
with fine artwork .and 'plush
Asianru~

"We viewed ourselves as a
family and tiom !he outset we
wanted 10 builda family home:•
'Engel said of !heir Granville
home, about 25 miles e25t of
Columbus. "It's not an alternative lifestyle, it's a valid lifestyle.
Our living arrangement is jlist
another expression of family
"r.
w:e...
Engel and PoJ"Cheddu and
.orher gay co11ples on !he 2000

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consider the JiMsed biB on Thund;iy..::
At issue ~-= pOOtectioos both c;
·..m.n.. in religious. ~
partt-.-...:~
progmns and for churches !hat ""'&gt;"J
offer programs using govmunel#
~

money.

Star memorialized by fellow adolsE
•
LOS ANGELES (AP) injustice.
He forever changed televiO'Connor died Thursday
sion, breaking the sitcom of a heart attack. He was 76.
mold and creating a chanc- · Among the nearly 1 ,000
ter so memorable that mil- ' people at his funeral were
lions of people would know comedian Carl Reiner and
him always as "Archie his son actor-direciOr Rob
Bunker."
Reiner, who played the libBut to many of tlle hun- era! son-in-law famously
dreds of people who~ttend- dubbed "Meathead" by.
ed his funeral-Tuesday, Car-' O'Connor's Archie Bunker.
roll O'Connor was more
Comedian Don Rickles,
than that. He was also a actor Richard Crenna, "Dal"master theatrician:' a father las" star Larry Hagman, Marfigure and a man w~ used tin Sheen of "The West
his role 25 the buffoonish Wing" and former Gov.
bigot of television's "All in Jerry Brown also attended·
the Family" to fight racial the service at St. Paul tlte

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MANILA, Philippines (AP) confined while undergoing
couples
both
gay
and
het·
Census were given · !he option
Joseph Estrada on tests and treatment, to the
of reporting that !hey lived erosexual- incre:ased 90.4 perWednesday became the tint country's ~hief anti-corruptogether. Though Engel and cent since 1990, but they
former Philippine p~dent tion court, the SandiganPorcheddu were · comfortable account for only 5.1 percent of
to be arr.aigned on criminal · bayan.
ali
households.
identifYing !heir relationship,
charges, with thousands. of
Estrada, ousted fiom office
Of !he 229,089 unmarriedgay-rights advocates say orhers
riot police on alert to head in January by mass protests, is
were not and may be underrep,- couple households in Ohio,
off ~ible unrest.
.'
accused of misdeclaring his
resented in figures released !here were 9,266 male couples
In the latest episode m a assets in 1999. He also is to ~e
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living
together
and
9,671
Wednesday.
political drama surroun&lt;ljng arraigned in two weeks for
This is !he second census in female couples living rogether
the downfall of the once- the capital o~ense of plunder
which same-sex couples could in 2000.
immensely popular lead~r, he for allegedly taking millions
Of Ohio's largest cities,
disclose !heir living arrangerefused to enter a plea tO&gt; the of doUars in kickbacks and
the
most;
sameColumbus
had
ments. But 1990 statistics were
perjury charge. The court • payoffi during 31 months in
b:ased on a sample of responses sex couples reporting !hat they
entered a plea of' innocence offiee,
for Estrada.
. ,,
Television footage showed
and 2000 data were b25ed on a lived rogerher, 2,588. Columbus
also
had
the
highest
percentage
Estrada
was
taken
•
b
y
the
64-year-old Estrada,
count of aU households.
OveraU in Ohio, !he number of its households, 0.86 pereent,
mo10rcade from a military dressed in a traditional barong
hospital, where he has been shirt, waving and smiling as
of households wirh uninarried occupied by gay couples. ,

Apostle Roman Cathohc
Church in West Los Angelel.
"He was a master thearri:
ciao, Mr. Bunker
Cad
Reiner said as he arrived for
the funeral. "It's funny hoW
we keep calling him Bunker,
and we keep calling niy ~
'Meathead.' That's the kind
of an impact they had, eve!)
on a father."
~
O'Connor was know'O
mainly for his stage wott
and a few small movie role$
before playing Archie on tij.e
influential TV series thft
began in 1971 at)d lasted for
eight s~ons.
:"

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Miguel "Silky" Richardson,
46, was the ninrh condemned
inmate to be p\!t to dearh this
year in Texas, where a record 40
convicted killers were eJCecuted

and Howard Pawen, were
robbed and shot to death.
Richardson was arrested a few
days later in Denver during
anorher robbery.
l:ast year.
· The prostitutes testified against
"I feel so much love:· him at trial, one ofrhemdescribRichardson said as witnesses filed ing haw he made !he guards beg
in10 !he chamber.
for,!heir lives.
In Indiana, a man convicted of
In Michigan City, Ind., Jim
killing a couple during a home Lowery was scheduled 10 die.by
robbery was scheduled to be injection for 'fatally shooting
=ruled early Wednesday.
Mark and Gertrude Thompson,
Richardson was in a room at a • borh 82, in !heir Tippecanoe
San An10nio hotel with rhree County home in 1979. He had

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plice w.IS sentenced to prison for
1
40 years and released in 1999.
Lowery's death original dearh
sentence was overturned, but he
received !he death penalty again
in 1983.
Capital punishment opponenls criticized the decision to
execute Lowery while a state
commission still is studying Indiana's use of !he dearh penalty.
Lowery would be !he ninrh person put 10 death by !he state of
Indiana since 1981 and !he Blst .
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overaU.

Heart

.cancer and strokes
.not as deadly in the United s•s
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ATLANTA (AP) - Heart
disease, cancer and stroke the three leading causes of
death in the United States were slightly less deadly in
1999, ~overnment statistics
show.
But death rates from diabetes and lower respintory illnesses crept higher fiom the
year before, the National Center for Healrh Statistics said
Tuesday in a preliminary
report analyzing death certificates fiom 1999.
Heart disease, the nation's
top killer, ,continued its
decades-long · decline, falling
to 267.7 deaths per 100,000
people. The nte was 269.7 per
100,000 in 1998, according to
NCHS.
The cancer death nte which has been falling since

about 1990- was 202.6 per
100,000, down slightly from
204.4. Strokes caused 61.8
deaths per 100,000 people,
down fiom 63 .1.
"We're encouraged that.
fewer Americans are dying
from some of the leading
causes of death and concerned
that other causes are taking a
larger toO," said Health and
Human Services Secretary
Tommy Thompson.
The death rate fiom HIV
infection also continued to
drop, falling 4 percent from
the previous year, bur declines
appear to be leve!ing off after a
dramatic 48 percent decline in
1997 and 21 percent reduction in 1998.
.
,
HIV infection is the fifthleading cause of death among
25- to 44-year-olds and the

leading cause of death ,among
black men in that age group.
Health statistics continue to
point to a less active, more
overweight nation. Inactivity
can lead to obesity, which is
closely tied to diabetes .
The diabetes death rate rose
more than 3 percent to 25.2
deaths per I 00,000 people; the
disease · kills I 80,000 Americans each year.
b~ath rates for chroni~
lower respiratory illnesses rose
4 percent to 45.8 deaths per
100,000 people.
Alzheimer's, which killed
more than 44,000 Americans
iri 1999, moved into the top
10 causes of death for the first
time, at No.8. However, criteria for what constitutes an
Alzheimer's death we~ broadened in 1999.

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Daily Sentinel

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SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

~SPACE
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MAX
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feleny charges

wv

Plcturn mu1t be In !IV Fi'kllly
June 28, 2001. Plctui'IS can be
picked up after July 13th, 2001.•

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POMEROY
~· 'Fhree
.
. were 'sent!!nced
in Me~ County. Comlt)on Pleas Court
ori criiruoal ·charges Monday, and .a foUfth
ap~emd and will :be sentenced in JUly.
Pro,~cutorf Pat Story• sail\ three of the
defendants were sentenced on community ton.trt:&gt;l violatio~. artd the fourth on
nine crmunal counts.
.
. Pauli Clark; 36, Racihe, wall sentenced
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Setitjnel·
:a .. ....,_.,...., ..

Complete the fonn below and enclose a s~al'shot or w~llet sized picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture,
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclos~ payment with pictu~.
·
Send to: ·

The Daily Sentinel

.&gt;'(._jO"

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Low:U. ..
Details; A2 .

Lotteries

~ca~le~n~d.arL-------~ASw" OHIO
-·----• , .
!o.diJIIII:SSWifiseiildSl--·..:..•..:......li!B:;tt=:s~6 Pick ]: ~5-6; Pick 4: ~5-s-6
.~oCoi!&gt;W.mwjcs...__._....__ ___,B. . ._7 . , Lt~MD; 1-2·:50-38-39-40
,EYJditwo~rJSiawiSt__:..:.......:;..;._...JA:~::t4 ICidllr. 2-+5-5-5-9

ObitYa(ies

A3 W.VA. .

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.!o!SpllJgWrtsai.IJlii--..:.B~I.,-~2-,5.Ll·bL6 IWr I: 1"7.0 Dally 4.: l-5-8-l
.~:Wu.eilla1th~elilrL-_-,.-·--"A2,.
11

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large number of checks.
C lark was charged in an indictmeqt
returned in April. She entered pleas of
guilty fO the charges on May 7.
Each count ca~~ies a maximum possible sentence of one year in prison and a
fine of up tq $2,500. ·
Under Ohio law;Story said, the charges
of theft and receiving stolen property, as

.

Hlp:los '

Ta•llf•·

"·

on three · counts .of grand theft, three
c~unts of rec~iving stolen property and
three counts of forgery, aU fifth-degree
felonies.
·
· St.o ry said ·,that. chargesl~sulted from
an investi'glltion by this &lt;;&gt;ltlce and Adult
Services/Meigs County Qepartment of
Job and Family Services involving the.
theft of checks, f9rging of signature of 1he
checking account holder, and passing of a
.
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Q·:wo• Ohio VallO\' Publiohins eo.

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reach pagteement
on social programs
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PiuM-Grllllts,AJ

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FROM STAFF REPORTS

Meigs Local school buildings
to be vacated in 2003, when
!he disrrict moves classes into
its new school buildings.
A public hearing to unveil
preliminary plans for the
three buildings was held
Tuesday.
Mean while, Pomeroy will
usc its $6,000 grant to complete an engineering study of
a boat dock on !he Ohio
River, which would be used
to complement the pedesrrian walkway already planned
for the riverfront amphirheater area in Pomeroy.
The 1.7-mile walkway. to
be funded mainly rhrough an
Ohio Department of Trans-

,

_ :rhe Qrlgin~ of some of our I)'I08t ~pulli~ magic tri~cki,';l';;:;'l~-. revulf(l to a rapt audience ot children at -the ,.,
LitN'afY on Wedneaday aft8n\oo_n. Magician Spael'llliX ,
a epecial g~t at the library's l!torv. hour Wednesday, and
took ldda 011 a trip !iii'Otinllthe world In an imllginary flying
saucer. In visits·to China, Egypt, Japan, and othtjr deatina·
lions, Space Max revealed the origins - and a few magiclan's secretS- of some well~known tricks, including water
. alj;~ t~ck• and a 11umber of sleight of hand man~uvers.
~pe,ce · ~j~X·s apfMI&amp;fance was a perfect tie-In w1th the
therti( of Meigs ·County Dlt~tilci Puplic ' Library's summer
teai:lfng progrlim, ·"Where In the.Worid Are you,Reading?" A
number of 'activities are held In conjunction with the children's ~eading program, which continues throughout the
summer at the main library in Pomeroy,
well as the
br~che!l in·Middleport, R~ine and at Eastern ~leme!ltar:y
. School. (Brian J. ·Reed .pt)otos)
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The Daily Sentinel Baby
· · Edition is a Special Edition filled
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with · photographs of local
children - ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the Jlily 6th issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild,
Emma Johnson
Daughter of
o~ relative is.involved!
Frank and janet Johnson

R~

MIDDLEPORT - Two
grants for Middleport and
Pomeroy totaling $I 6,000 are
only a piece of a $4.4 million
pie tQ be divided among the
neediest communities irl
Ohio's Appalachian counties.
Those grants may be the
first of a number of planning
grants made available to
Meigs communities for the
planning and development of
facilities to aid in the county's
economic development.
Gov. Bob Taft announced
Tuesday that the two villages
will receive the ·grants to
assist in evaluating the development potential of Middle-

..•

he entered the courtroo!Jf.
He was accompanied by Qis
wife, Sen.-elect Loi Ejerci(o
Estrada, and two of his sons:
When the .former a~On
film star was seated in ilie
second-floor courtroom, his
expression turned mon; serf,;
Ol.!S. His face was Itt up
repeatedly by the tl3shes 9f
photognphers
franticallY
1
working to capture the hiitoric moment.
~
·Asked by a televisiqn
reporter bow he felt, Estrac!"
said: "I'm OK except for my
eyes." He has said he nee4s
surgery for a wonening eye
condition. ·
:

Cooling Thtirsday,,July 6, 2001
The

•

BY BRIAN J.

•

EXT,RA! EXTRA!·

HUNTSVILLE, TelCIS (AP) prostitutes when he was con- once worked for the couple as a
·
- A man was executed by fronted by rh~ security guanls caretaker.
injection Thesday for fatally responding to a complaint.
Lowery. 54.forced his -r into
shooting one of two hotel secuAs Richardson was being !he house and shot !he couple as
rity guards slain at a San AniOnio escorted to !he lobby; !he two weD as a caregiver who surviVed
hotel in 1979.
unarmed guards, John Ebbert to testify~ him. An accom-

port's three school buildings,
Middleport, and
the planned development of a boat dock in
Pomeroy among Pomeroy.
Middleport will receive
first communities · $10,000
to pay for !he development of a best use plan and
awarded
fe25ibility study for the three

.."·

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FOrmer pimp executed in Texas for killing .
hotel security guard during 19'79 ·robbery·

Melp eo.ty's

me JudiciarY Commiltee is e o:peaed 10

·Eslrada becomes first
Census shows more than 18,000
*~malpecl on
same-sex couple households in Ohio

•

SRORIS: High schoolers dominate NBA Draft, Bl

Wt.tch "-,, June 27, 2701

Pomeloy, Mlddlaport, Ohio

•

PluM -

Felony, AJ

COLUMBUS (AP) Republican leaders in the Legislature and Gov. Bob Taft
avoided a showdown over Taft's
vetoes in the state budget by
agreeing Wednesday 10 restore
about S26 million in funding to
certain social programs.
.
The Senate unanimously .
approved ihe package Wednes·day afternoon, sending it !he
House, where approval was
expected Thursday. Taft said he
would sign ihe legislation.
The money will come from
state surpluses of the federal
Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families fund and orher
resources. The money wa.&lt;
placed in a bill correcting errors
in !he $45 billion budget !hat
Taft signed on June 6.
While signing the bill, Taft
vetoed 49 provisions. The

House, which by law must
begin !he process to override
ve10es, abandoned that idea last
week after none of the chamher's 40 Democrats would
agree to join !he 59 Republicans in overriding any vetoes.
Sixty votes are needed to provide the rhree-6fths majority tQ
override in !he 99-member
House.
Among ihe programs resurrected by Wednesday's agree.ment was the Ohio Association
of Second Harvest Food Banks,
which will receive $4.5 million
in the second budget year.
Funding for ihe year beginning
next Monday already is in
place. Taft had vetoed !he item
because he felt !he federal funding source was uncertlin, especially in !he budget year that
begins ori July 1, 2002.

Seqate, looking at HMO legislation
.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - · After years
of struggle and ~o weeks of debate,
·Democratic advocates .of patients' rights
le@:i$~1ri~~~ hope to cement a series of
and build support for Sen'

Senate leaders scheduled a series of
votes ~hunday on ·issues ranging fiom
shi.e lding employers from lawsuits to
up~olding existing state laws on patients'
rights.
President Bush, meanwhile, has
a lot of work to do," Sen. embraced a bill crafted by House RepubEdl~ls. 0-N.C., a chief sponsor of licans that would allow some lawsuits,
said Wednesday as debate ·albeit fewer than Democrats would allow.
The Democratic bill the Senate has

been debating for the past two weeks
would guarantee access to emergency
room visits and specialty care and bestow .
orher rights on the 190 million Americans in private or' company health plans.
The measure also would allow patients
to sue their HMOs in federal or state
court if such coverage was denied and the
decision caused irreparable injury or
death.

111 Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
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Work·

Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (s):: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:________- - ' - - - -

Injury Management Service
of Holzer Medical (enter.

""""rlr
' ID tbe ad. •••
••• Tbe abow IDI'ormatlon wW be Uled
Phone Number:

Submitted by: - - - - - . , . . . , - - - -

-----.. -.. ------ -·---i•----·--- ---------------- ----.'
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HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY June ~9. 200 1!
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Injured 6n the job? Give us a call
-~. . 446·5733 or
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�PageAi

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

_Th....-y, June 28, 2001

Frlay, June 2t ·

,,.rn....

COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
Supreme Court str\lck down a state law
Wednesday that prohibits injured workers fiom collecting both workers' compensation benefits and awards fiom civil
lawsuits.
The law, in effect since 1995, allowed
the Ohio Bureau ofWorkers' Compensation to be reimbursed from awards that
injured workers received fiorn lawsuits.
The amount recovered was equal to
what the agency had paid out in worken' compensation as well as the worker's
future estimated value - wages and
benefits - had the injury not occurred.
But the coun ruled 4-3 that the law
violates the state constitution's protection against the government taking pri-:
vale property without just compensation

LOCAL STOCKS

1hundwy. ••• U. 2•1

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and guarantee of equal protection and
remedy to injured workers.
.
The same court majority has struck
down as uncomtitutional Ohio's schoolfunding system and legislation limiting
damage&lt; collected through lawsuits.
Justice Alice Robie Resnick, writing
for the majority, said a part of the state
law that distinguishes between lawsuits
that go to trial and those that are settled
presents constitutional problem! because
it gives more rights to people whose
cases go to ttial.
While the law was designed to prevent
injured workers from collecting money
twice and to enable the state to recover
costs, .parts of the law prevent an injured
work from collecting any money at all,
Resnick wrote.

Be: II.. ilng

The dedsion likely will affect only tl:ie
workers' compensation cases that wen~
to trial, said Jim Samuel, spokesman f9r&gt;
the Bureau ofWorkers' Compensation.
Settlements are reached in most cases. · i
"We're shocked at the decision, and
the reason is that this isn't a. new law. It's
been on the books for years;' Samuel.

said.

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"At this point, we do not immediatelY'
think .we will have to pay money back
because most of these claims were deaJr.
with as settlements, and in a settlement
all parties waive their rights to futuRaction in the case;' he said.
Jack Fynes, a Toledo attorney whose
client's case led to the high court's'
review of the Jaw, said he was surprise'd
by the ruling.

E lyn J Joh
¥e
• nSOn

02001

education.

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Wriaht replica plane flies ·

1o0

Friday's highs will exceed 90
BY THE ASSOCIATI;D PRESS
Friday... Partly cloudy. A
Temperatures in the area chance of showers and !huncould crack the 90-degree derstorrns in the afternoon.
mark on Friday as southwest- High 85 to 91. Light south
erly winds continue to bring' wind. Chance of rain 30 perwarm, moist air into the cent.
region.
Friday night ...A chance of
With increasing humidities, showers and thunderstorms
the chances of scattered show- until midnight, otherwise
ers and thunderstorms will partly cloudy. Low in the
improve, the Natidnal Weather upper 60s.
Service said.
Extended forecast:
Overnight . lows through
Saturday... Partly cloudy. A
Saturday were expected to be chance of sho~rs and !hunaround 65.
derstorms in the afternoon
Rain continues to be in the ·and evening. High 80 to 86.
forecasts ' for early next week, . Sunday... Partly cloudy. A
but the extended outlook chance of showers and !hunindicates sunny skies for the derstorms in the afternoon
July Fourth holiday . next and evening. Low in the mid
Wednesday.
60s and high 80 to 85.
Sunset tonight will be at
Monday... Mostly clear. Low
9:04, and sunrise on Saturday 62 to 67 and high 82 to 87.
is at 6:05 a.m.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Low
Weather forecast:
63 to 68 and high 82 to 87.
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Low
Independence day... Partly
in the mid 60s. Light and vari- cloudy. Low 63 to 68 and high
able wind.
80 to 85.

Yanlsale

Failed freshmen·get chance
CANTON {AP) - About a fourth of Canton's public
high school freshlnen flunked the year and will become
"transitional sophomores" instead of repeating ninth gra~e
under a new progtam.
This past school year, 74 freshman atTimken High Scho6l
and 161 at McKinley High School failed to earn credits
needed for promotion to 1Oth grade, said Adrienne O'Neill,
chief education officer for Canton City Schools.
Teachers in "transitional sophomore" classes
follow
the freshman curriculum but will use different methods. Tlie
exact methods still are being determined, O'Neill said.
When students gain the needed cred.its, they will lose the
transitional tag but will probably stay in the class.
·

Meet 'ft:esday

.:viii

Co:lted slated

Drive begins to restore prls.-n

Dole recoverlnaln hospital
CLEVELAND (AP) - Bob Dole, the 1996 Republican
presidential nominee, underwent an experimental procedure
to treat a ballooning blood vessel that could eventually have
·
burst.
Dole, 77, had the procedure Wednesday at the Cleveland
Clinic research hospital to treat an abdominal aortic
aneurysm. The aorta is the body's main. blood vessels.
"He maintained his sense of humor throughout his care,"
said Dr. Kenneth Outiel, one of three surgeons on the team
that inserted the stent graft.
Dole remained in satisfactory condition early Thursday,
spokesworna'l Marion Moseley said.. Dole is expected to be
released by Saturday and will be able to •'re'surile notmal
activities within -10 days. - - -· -- -- -- ~

Akron's tuition up second time ·
AKRON {AP~ - University of Akron trustees, acting for
the second rime in three months, voted to raise. tuition,
meaning a total increase of9.3 percent over last year. .
Truste.es voted We d nesday to approve a seconcl tuition
increase that, combined with the April increase, will raise
full•time undergraduate tuition from $4,4 01 to $ 4 ,810 a
year.
The April increase was approved before stare lawmakers
.
·
d the 6 percent annua11·urut
· on tu1Uon
· · mcreases.
·
e Imunate
University president Luis Proenza said the campus must
assure that "we can serve our students in spite of the . difficulties that the state of Ohio is facing" in funding higher

around 1976, said Jane Ellen Wile!, a secretary at ' St. James
Episcopal Chur~h. The age of the pews is not known, but
. they could be over 100 years old, Wiles said.
..-:

DAYTON (AP) -. A replica of the Vin Fiz, a 1911 Wright
Model EX airplane, flew a short distance in the first phase of
a flight to publicize the centennial of the Wright brothers'
invention..
The original plane was named Vin Fiz for a grape soft
drink company that sponsored its transcontinental flight.
Cal Rodgers, a student of. Orville and Wilbur Wright,
piloted the original Vin Fiz on a 49~day journey fiorn
Sheepshead Bay, N.Y. to Pasadena, Calif., in 1911. The flight,
despite . 19 crashes, showed the possibilities of the new
machine:
.
.
.
The V m F1z rephca traveled about 1,500 feet down a runway at Limerick, Maine, on Monday. It r~se 10 to 15 feet off
the ground, a~cord1?g to Ehzabeth Molmaro, spokeswoman ·
for the lnventmg ~hght: Daytod-2~03 group that 1s orgamzmg the 1OOth anmversary celebratton.

Kl.ds find new use for pews
. ZANESVILLE (AP) - Pews from a church founded .in
1839 are being turned into hbusing for birds and summer
projects for children. ·
·

Children ~!tending a vacation Bible school at C!!ritt'li
Presbyterian Church are assembling the birdhouses from kits
designed by Jim McCay. The retired civil engineer has been
~alcibng wo o dworking proje~ts for the Bible school students
10 yean.
10t a out
Th lti
. .
fio
·
e. ts c~ntam wood .m pews that once were used m
the Zton Eptscopal Ch~ch m n~rby Dresden.
· :
The pews have been m storage smce the old church closed

Grants

MANSFIELD (AP) - A $1.5 million community fundraising drive has begun to finance the .restoration of the former prison where the Morgan Freeman movie "Shawshank
Redemption" was filmed.
.
The drive was kicked offWednesday night by the Mansfield Reformatory Preservation Society, which owns the
Ohio State Reformatory that closed in 1990.
:
The kickoff Was attended by about I 00 people inside tht:
Central Guard Room inside the prison.
·
-.~
Board president Dan Seckel said the first restoration phase'
will include the Central Guard Room, where rhe "Shaw"
shank" dining hall scenes were shot, and the warden's quar"
tets.
· ·

fnNnPageA1

will

'Letter·oHetS tuilt admissldn ·JJ~:

LOCAL B-R IEFS

COLUMBUS (AP) -. Police have received an an.lnymmis'
letter from a motorist who claims to have struck artd kille-a:
a city police officer in April.
• •·
Police received the typed letter through the mail, but 'a~~·
not releasing the postmark. They do not know how much o(
the letter is valid.
.
'~
"This is a lead that somebody is saying 'I did it.' Hopeful~
ly, if there is a part of this that is true someone will recog-'
nize the truth in' it," police spokeswoman Sherry Jones said:
The writer of the letter, which police received in earcy
May and released Wednesday, claims to be a 19-year-olj:{
Columbus college student from New England. The letter 'is
full of spelling :ind grammatical errors.
·
' 1.

Luken, a former congressman who previously served as
mayor in the 1980s, said he
was surprised th:lt Fuller
entered the race. He said competition from the political
novice would not change his
straregy.
Fuller said the more politically experienced Luken had
not solved the problems of a
city scarred . by rioting ' and
tension after the fatal shooting
of an unarmed black youth by
a white police officer in April.
"If experience is such a
guiding force behind change.
we should be a lot farther
along than we are," Fuller said.
Luken said he acted correctly during the riots and their
aftermath.
Fuller, a ·registered Democ-

IDDLEPORT

9:30
.7:20 -9:30.

rat, moved into the city
Wednesday to establish residency.
The Republican Party. could
not persuade a candidate to
run, county GOP Chairman
Michael Barrett said Wednesday.
The lack of a GOPI chalIenger was thought to clear
the way for Luken, but if
Fuller makes the race, the
mayor would have to mount a

,

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Applications are available at the Meigs County Grants O«ice at 117 East
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, during the business hours of 9:00 a.m. to 5:00
p.m., Monday through Friday. More bd'onnatlon may be obtained by c:alllng
Jean Trussell at 992·7908.
·

•

Drru~~.D©
Credit Terms
Lay-A-Ways
Mon, Tues; Wed,
&amp; Frl9-5:30
Thurs 9-12,
Sat 9-2:30

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News Department•

: The main number Is 992·2156.
, Deparlment extenlions are:

GeMnl11111111ger

.

992-2635
'

,,

Ext.13

l or

Ext. 14

Other urvlc11

: AcM111olng

Ext.3

·. Clrculltlon

1Ext.4

: Cloulfled Ada

Em.
' .*•...-,

--7/.IIR!.M.-,,........ F:l;:'"'-·---.l.ocalond-----~~~,J . ~ I
-lf'lllll~aiiiiP
tllleu.am.,......_ ··-r ;,.;;,~
J a;
&amp;ooiUOISH- -·-=~,.:!'!!-1'11•IIGJor ..Aw._..J.! Ial-111 • I
· ::r!'~---=::=.~ond"'al-.
• ...........,...
lllf,...._MIII'Wlt_.._,...,,.ublkng•hk,..._...~
.__... . . . . ......., ...... .,

Ext. 12

: Newo

.'

Middleport, OH

~

'
(USPS 21NIO)
Olllo Volley Publlllllng Co.
Publilhod IMIFY llftemoon, Monday
lhrough FMay, 111 Court St ..
Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second·claaa
Our n\aln concem In all stories Is poatago paid at Pomeroy.
1o be accurate. If you know of an • Member: The Aaaoclaled Press end
8ffor In a story, calllhe newsroom lhe Ohio N - r Aaooclatlon.
- . Send llddreao corroc·
at (740) 992·2156.
Ilona ID Tho Dally Senllnel, 111 Court.
St.. Pomeroy, Ohio o45769.

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l4ll •••

.....

The Meigs Grant Qfflc:e has funds available to assist In the repair or
replacement of railing septic: systems ror owner oc:c:upled homes In Meigs
County.'
Very low Income households will receive a grant tor the project and low
Income households will receive a 50% ·.Grant and 50% .five year loan' at 3%
Interest.
·

FARMERS BANK

lllllor PM l-Ion lloquliocl
Hurry, Olllr ~Juno 30, 2CI01

Experience DISH Network!

SEPTIC SYSTEM REPAIR AND/OR REPLACEMENT

Call740-992-5458

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~~ll-~sc~a~le~c~am~p~a1~·gn~.~=~~====II=D=k=1=11=·=====-=1~1~4~4~·~11~111~1~1~111~,~~~~'

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC

'Duslees to meet

...., 4 festivities

Two former TV anchors·may face off in mayoral race
CINCINNATI (AP) anchorman.
Cincinnati's mayoral race
Fuller will run as a candidate
could be shaping up as a battle for the Charter Committee of news anchors as two former CinCinnati's independent third
television newsmen vie for the party - if he can get enough
office in the first direct elec- signatures by Thursday's ballot
1ion for mayor in 7~ years.
deadline.
Fuller said he was anchoring
Courtis Fuller announced
Wednesday that he would be a report about a contentious
running for mayor against city council cnmmittee meetincumbent Democrat Charles ing on the eve of the April
Luken. Fuller also resigned riots .when he first thought of
from Cincinnati television sta- runmng.
"I watched Charlie Luken
tion WLWT on Wednesday.
Luken worked as an anchor- walking out of that meeting
man at the station before and thought that if he had
returning to politics in 1999. taken charge, maybe that
"There must be something meeting wouldn't have gotten
in the water · over there;; out of hand," Fuller said.
Fuller, 44, said ofWLWT-TY,
Fuller believes there is a lack
the · station where talk show · of leadenhip 'i n the city. He
host and former mayor Jerry also wants to ensure a debate
Springer also worked as news on the issues.

.,

.
violated the terms and conditions of his community control. The state's motion was
AEP--48).
granted and Crow ordered M:h Coli- 22\
Craig to serve a sentence of NKzo-40\
ArnTaJISBC 39~
contained in the indictment one year in state prison.
AINand Inc. - 38
against Clark, · are allied
Craig was remanded to the AT&amp;T-20\
.POMER:OY Bertha Bing, 77, Bailey Run Road, offenses of similar import and c.ustody of the Sheriff.
BankOne-35
~meroy, died Tuesday, June 26, 2001 at her residence, follow- meige for purposes of senClifford "Boomer" Smith, BobE¥11n1-18~
Bog"/fai&amp;
48~
mg an extended illness.
tencing, which means tliat Pomeroy, appeared before Ownpion-3
She was born on Feb. 17, 1924 in MiddleJiOn daughter of Clark could be sentenced on Crow on a motion to revoke Chaining Shopa- s~o
the late William and Pearl Putney Hoflinan. She ~ a busines's theft or receiving stolen prop- community control filed by C&lt;ly Holdl11g 11
DuPonl-47'
woman, and a member of Zion Church of Christ.
Story, alleging that Smith had Fedoral Mogul- 2
erty, but not both.
. t&gt;he is survived by her son and daughter- in-law. Vernon W
Crow sentenced Clark to .violated the terms of his com&lt;in~ Darleen ~ing of Pomeroy; three daughters and ~ns-in-law: the maximum term of one m
.. unity control by using marJaruce and Enc Bower of Circleville, Kay and Bill McElroy of year on each count; and !Juana.
Methodist Church.
meet Monday, 7:30p.m. at Syral'ome.roy, a.nd Sharon and Terry Sayre of Gallipolis; a brother ordered that all sentences be
Warner presented evidence
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli will cuseVillage Hall.
a,nd Stster-m-la':Vo Fred and Pauline Hoflinan of Middleport; served consecutively, or one on behalf of the state that speak, and awards will be prea,nd 16 grandchildren and 26 great- grandchildren.
after the other, for a total ·sen- indicated Smith had failed a sented.
.
d
: She .was also preceded in death by her husband, Mount Ver- tence of six years.
Entertainers will include Big
Clark . was also ordered to
rug test. Knight represented
non Bmg; and two brothers, William Hoflinan and Perry HoffSmith.
Bend Cloggm. His will, MidPOMEROY - Bible school
man.
pay restitution to the victim
Crow ruled that Smith had night Cloggers, a Patsy · Cline
will be held at Mount Hermon
.Services will be 1 p.m. Friday in Ewing Funeral Home, in the amount of$15,000.
violated the terms and condi- impersonator, Swinging Seniors
Clark was remanded to the
United Brethren Chun:h,July 9P~meroy, w1th AI Hartson officiating. Burial will be in Meigs
and Bill Crane.
cu,tody
of
the
sheriff
to
be
tions
of
his
community
conMemory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral horne from
trol, granted the state's motion
The events are under the 13, fiom 6:30-9 p.m . "Polar
transported
to
the
Ohio
State
6-8 tonight.
.
Expedition" will be the theme.
Reformatory · for Women at and sentenced Smith to a year direction of the Middleport
Community Association. Ques- For more information, call 985Marysville.
in prison.
Assistant Prosecutor Linda
Joyce Farley, formerly of tions should be directed to 992- 4395.
MASON, W.Va. - Evelyn J. Johnson, 65, Mason, died R. Warner represented the Pomeroy, appeared before 5458, except for parade quesWednesday.June 27,2001 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
state in the hearing.
· Crow on Mon'day afternoon tions.
Local vendon will sell refreshShe was born on March 28, 1936 in Littleton·,W.Va., daugh- . Charles Willjam "Billy" on a motion to revoke comPOMEROY - 4-H Horse
ter of the late John Rayford and Genevieve Marietta Keenan . Craig, Canton, appeared munity control filed by the ments throughout the -rung.
Committee will have a yard sale
Lemley. She was a homemaker. ·
before Crow on Monday prosecutor alleging that she
Saturday at the commercial
· .Surviving are three sons and daughters-in- law, David G. and afternoon on a motion to had violated terms of her
building on the Rock Spring;
Tammy Johnson of Middleport, Donnie E. an&lt;;! Peggy Johnson revoke community control, community control.
POMEROY
.
A
personal
of New Haven, W.Va., and Terry A. and Vicki Johnson of Point alleging that Craig had violatFarley originally entered
fairgrpunds, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. ·
Pleasant, W.Va.; two daughters, Vicki L. Hysell. of Pomeroy, and ed several terms of his c.;m- pleas of guilty in 1996 · to injury lawsuit has been filed in
Jill E. Johnson of Mason; two sisters and brothers-in-law, Gar- rnunity control.
three counts of receiving Meig$ County Common Pleas
n~t and Carlos Beagle of Cumberland, W.Va., and Sharon and
Story. said that Craig's orig- stolen property, each a felony court byToddA. Perry, Pordai!d,
against Mark L. Miller, ParkersJe~ryYor~o ofWeirton, W.Va.; and 12 grandchildren and two ina! offense was breaking and of the fourth degree.
ALFRED - Orange Town·
·
·
entering in 1997, but .that he
Story said that she served burg, W.Va., and others, alleging
great-grandchildren.
injuries sustained in a June, .1999 ship Trustees' budget meeting
,She was also preced~d in death by her son, Danny Ray John- has been living under super- the first of three separate 18Tuesday at 7:3Q p.m., folloWed by
auto
accident.
s.~n.
vision in Canton.
.., month sentences before she
The suit demands judgment in · the regular meeting, at the home
The state alleged that Craig Teft Ohio to go to Indiana and
Services will be I p.m. Saturday in Fogcilsong" Tucker Funerof the clerk, Osie FoUrod.
. ¥ . Hom~, M:ason, with Pastor Jan Uvender officiating. Burial failed to comply with sub- was reportedly involved in an excess of$25,000.
Will be m Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point Pleasant. Friends stance abuse treatment as accident in Indiana when a
may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Thursday;
ordered and failed to maintain routine check discovered an
employment as ordered, that outstanding warrant from .
MIDDLEPORT- Dioad!ine
he tested positive for marijua- Meigs County.
na use on seven separate occaFarley allegedly absconded for entering the porch and entrycommunities £Or :various prosions, that he failed to pay from supervision and failed to way decorating contest in Mid- N~~
jects.
court-ordered ' sanction fees advise her probation officer of dleport is Saturday.
"We are working closely
The contest is sponsored by
and ~hild support obligations, her · employmeQt and resiwith these communities to
and that he failed to perform dence. Farley admitted the the Middleport Community
determine their needs and to
500 hours of community ser~ allegations as contained in the Association and funded through
pQrtation grant in the amount see what the state can do
the Riverbend Arts Council.
vice as ordered.
state's motion to revoke.
of $328,000, wiU extend from through these matching funds
· Warner presented evidence
Warner represented the Prizes will be gift cenificates for
Pjzza Hut on West Main to help with those · needs,"
including testimony by a pro- state, and Knight represented flowers next summer, ~50 for
Street to the new Waterworks Lunder said.
·
first; $30 fur second, and $20 for
bation officer from Canton. Farley.
Park on East Main Street, and
Lunder, who works as the Craig was represented by . Crow set sentencing for third.
include park benches, governor's regional communiThose who want to participate
Public Defender Charles July 23 and Farley was
water fountains and lights.
ty development representative Knight.
released on a $1,000 personal are asked to register ~~ Middle'The proposed marina facili-· in the Appalachian counties,
port Department Store by SaturCrow ruled that Craig had recognizance ·b'ond.
ty would include an extended attended Tuesday's public
day. The judging will take pbce
walkway and .l!ll ,a~ where hearing on the . feasibility
on Mond2y and the wiMers will
boaters could, purchase bait, stu&amp;y · for · Middleport's
be .armoll!1€eP at the July 4 cdefuel, refreshments and other schools, and said that project
bration.
~~;(&gt;visions, said Pomeroy Vil- could make Middleport a state
lage Council President John model for the constructive use
gled Banner," u America the
Musser.
of new school building$.
Beautiful:' sung by Sue Maison,
; The two grants are patt of
SYRACUSE
Sutton 1.,.......,..,;
The $10,000 grant which
MIDDLEPORT - July 4 and the invocation by the Rev.
$4.4 million in state funds for Middleport received was
festivities in Middleport to cen- Rod Brower of Heath United Township Board ofTrustees will
Aj:~palachian Ohio that Taft
combined with funds con- ter around the stage in Dave
recommended and the legislatributed by members of the Diles Park, will include a parade
tUre approved last year. The
Middleport Alumni Associa- and entertainment, and will conHOF JULY CELEBRATION
fUnds are used to match federtion to pay for architect clude with a fireworks display.
~r Appalachian Regional Stephen Gegner's best use
The parade will begin at 6
Commission funds.
plan.
p.m., and will travel fiom Ash
• "These
awards
reflect
l) p.m. - Parade
"This is an important pro- Street. Edison Baker will be the
commitment
to
Ohio's
ject for Middleport, and is a grand marshal.
,
7 p.m. Program
iQcteasing economic ~evelop­
The parade will move fiom
p.m. Entertainment
n]ent in Meigs County;' Tali: perfect example of what can
.
be
done
with
these
special
Beech
Street
to
General
stfd, "( ·c ommend the people
FIREWORKS!
planning funds," Lunder said. Hat:tinger and South Second
cif Middleport - and Pomeroy "This
is a very positive step in through town, past Dave Diles
Fun, Food, Fireworks!!!
f~r their efforts in improving
Park and will disband at King
the quality oflife for their cit- . developing the community."
Hardware.
"Considering
the
enthusii:!ens by securing . these
Trophies will be awarded to
asm of the community and
grants.
the
best walking unit, best float,
:The grants will be awarded the quality of the buildings
tkrough the Governor's Office that are subject of the study, best patriotic entry and best
of Appalachia. The projects this project could not only bicycle. The public is invited to
participate in the parade, but parwill be developed by the Gov- benefit Middleport and Meigs
ticipants are asked not to stop for
el·nor's Regional Economic County, but it could also serve
performances along the route.
Qevelopment Office and as a model for other small
Parade coordinator Paul GerItuckeye Hills-Hocking Valley communities facing a similar ard will
questions about.
~egional Development Dis- situation with old school
parade,
at
992-5815.
the
buildings," Lunder said, "and
t(ict.
Evening entertainment will
. :Eva Lunder of the Ohio that's what this program tries begin in the park at 7 p.m. TJ.
·
· Qepartn1ent of Development to do."
King will be the master of cereIf you're thinking about building a new home, Farmers Bank
"The Appalachian counties
said Tuesday that the $4 .4 milmonies. Feeney-Bennett Post
lion in state fimds will go to in Ohio have been ignored far 128,American Legion, will conhas a low interest loari that you won't want to miss! This
too
long,"
she
added.
the state's smallest and poorest
duci a flag ceremony. followed

Court strikes down injured work~rs law

Ohio weather

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

We'll help build your future!

Subacrlptlon ratea

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ne..dnr.Juu . . . . .

Kids' discipline sh~uld be lift to mom, .not her boyfriend

The Daily Sentinel
•

I .....41

111 Courlllt.. PorMiort Ohio
740 112-2111.• FIX: 812-2157

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II

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
R. Stllwn Lawle
Menlglng Editor

CharletW.Gowy
Publl.,._

Dllnl Klry Hll
. . Coi ..o.......

Charlene Hoelllcll
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N11 us/pH I«Un ... N r'&amp;hf U... , _ , " llf , - . _ raot ,.nn " ' 1.
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ll111n,

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·1

.,... _ _,

NATIONAL VIEW

Un
•

•

Out of tragedy came neu; sense.
ofpurpose for Oklahomans
• The Muskogee (Okb.) Dilly Phoeuix 1111d TimesDemocrat, on the McVeigh execu!Wn: April 19, 1995, was the
. worst day in Oklahoma's history.
·
Six years later,Timothy McVeigh finally has paid the ultimate
price for launching the deadli~st terrorist attack ever on U.S.
soil ....
Yet in ail this news coverage, we saw little mention of why
April 19, 1995, also was- paradoxically- the best day in
Oklahoma's history.
. .
.
.
On the day of the Murrah bombing and in the weeki and
even months afterward, Oklahomans came. together as they
never had before.
Countless emergency personnel from Oklahoma City,
throughout the state and, indeed, across the country worked
endless hours, sometimes at great risk, to .rescue survivors and
to recover the bodies of those who had died in the blast.
Countless medical and other professional healing personnel
tended to the injuries of the survivon, both physically and
emotionally.
Countless volunteers 'assisted tbgJe etforts in more ways than
could be listed here.... ·
· Oklahoma City's and Oklahoma's triumph over the evil of
McVeigh's horrendOus erime did not come Monday when he
was executed.
Instead, it already had come six ~an lll9 ...,- immediately in
the hours, days and weeki following the bombing, wh~n Oklahomans proved to thetruelves and to the rest of the. world that
good truly is more powerfUl than evil. ...
. ·
It is a story tha( will long outlive McVeigh. ·

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
•

er dumping him to ensure then: will
be no more emotional abuse of your
children.
DE,AR ABBY: . I recently got
baclt together with my ex. We only
broke up for a month. We had been
dating for dose to two years before
the split. We're doing great now, but
I'm starting to have some problems.

Whenever be waniJ to spend time
with his friends. I &amp;ak out and stm
crying. I don't know why ( do chis. I
know he needs some time with the
guys, but I alw3ys seem to llip .out
over it. It~ not like I think he~ doing
something he's not supposed to. (just
want him around constandy, and it
hurts my feelings when he taka off
to be with the boy1. I have alway~
had a problem with this, and I don't
know why. Other than that, wt haw
a great relationship. Any ideas? NEEDY IN MU..WAUXIE, ORE.
DEAR NEEDY: Your boyfriend
must ·care for you ~ much to to!erate your clinginess and crying jags
as well as he has. Wbateved the ~
. you could benefit greatly liom counseling to get to the root of thctJL l

urge }'OU to reso?w: this, because if
you don't. your insecurity and neediDea will drive your boyfriend md any other man who replaces him
- zwzy.
DEAR ABBY: My husband and
I haw been invited to a formal,
"white-tie" reception and sit-down
.dinner. I have 6nally found the perfeet gown. I'm planning on wearing
long. white glove that I've had for
many ;ears, but never had occasion
to wear•
What I'm unsun: about is what to
do with my gloves once I get there.
Can I wear jewelry over my gloves?
Should they be removed for dinner?
ShaD I leave them · off for dancing?
· I'm looking forward to being dressed
to tile nines, but don't want to over-

do it. Help! - AU. DRESSED
UP IN 1VUMINGTON, DEL
DEAR AIL DRESSED UP: A
woman can wear a bracelet over long
gloves, bur ring~ should never be
worn over gloved fingers. My fashion
expero agree that gloves should be
removed before sitting down at the
dinner tab!e. They can be put back
on for dancing afterward.
One more tip: If a woman wearing
gloves is part of a receiving line, it's
proper for her to keep them on.
However, any guest going down the
line should have an ungloved hand to
offer.
Here's hoping your formal affair is
a night to remember!
Dtar Abby is wrirttn by Pauline
Phillips and daughta ;~anne Phillips.
'..

COMMUNITY NEWS &amp; NOTES
RACO to sponsor .....
. . ••ump
Sterrett presided at the meeting with Hart and Proffiit giving
•••5
officers' reporo.
.
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

.Polls·show Bush, GOP weak on foreign policy issues
President Bush's poll numbers are hold- ·
ing up well despite a soft economy. but
support for his program and his party are
shakY, Qldicating that Democrats haw a
good chance of dominating the 2002
COngressional elections.
Most polls show Bush's job-approval
rating dipping slightly. but still in the lowto mid-50s. But the Democracy Corps
poll, run by former AI Gore pollster Stan
Greenbe.g, puts Bush's approval at 58 perCOWMNIST
cent.
The Greenberg results ·are especially
interesting because the respondents were Democratic candidates a 50-43 edge on
likely 2002 voters, not just general adults, the generic question. Last month a Zogby
as in most polls.
poll showed that Democrats have a 4The Democracy Corps poll indicates point lead, but also found that a plurality
that Democrats enjoy just a 2-point lead of adults are undecided.
oil the generic 2002 Congressional ballot,
Such generic results, of course, showed
but that it expands to 8 points when vot- no correlation whatsoever with the latest
en are given arguments for and against real-world Congressional election, won
B~'s tax cut, which deserves to be the by Republican Randy Forbes in Southern
:cel\terpiece Qf the campaign.
Virginia, by a margin of 52 to 48 percent.
.'JM enpe of ttys year's ·Congres- Bush and his party have plenty of time
sional budget action c~uld also play into to convince voters that their policies are
DemoCratic hands ifBush can be induced working, but the polls indicate grave
to ·veto popular education and health doubts at the moment. In the Greenbe.g
spending proposals because his tax cut poll, for instance, 70 percent ofvoters supported canceling rate cuts for the top 1
won't acconunodate them.
Asked a straightaway question about percent of taXpayers to create a prescripwhether they support Bush's tal[and bud- tion drug benefit for all seniors. Bush's
get plans, 54 percent of likely voters said plan contains money only for aiding lowthey do, according to the Greenbe.g poll. income seniors. .
However, when presented with a
On other questions, 65 percent of votRepublican candidate's case that Ameri- en would support canceling the top rate
cans are overraxed, that no changes should cut to ensure there is no borrowing fiom
be made in Bush's "biggest tax . cut on· the Medicare trust fund, and 61 percent
record;' and that Democrats want tu would do so to increase education spendrepeal parts of it and spend the money in ing by 5200 billion.
.
Washington, 43 percent pf ·voters say
Public polls conducted so far indicate
they~d support the Republican candidate. that Bush himself still enjoys a substantial
A rival Democratic candidate polls 51 advantage over potential 2904 Democratpercent arguing tliat Bush's tax cut is too ic riv:ih - 50 percent to 38 percent in a
big, that it benefits the top 1 jlercent of rematCh against AI Gore, according to a
taxpayers the most, and that break! for the Fox News-Opinion Dynamics poll, and
rich should be canceled to "increase 49 percent tu 43 percent in a Gallup Poll.
spending on education and keep the
The Fox poll showed Bush leading Sen.
Medicare trust fund solvent:'
Joe Li~berman, D-Conn., by 53 percent
A June 8 Gallup poll' of adults pw . to 32 percent. However, when Greenberg

Morton
Kondr.rlre

Today is Thursday, June 28, the 179th day of2001. There are
186 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On june 28, 1914,AustrianArchduke Francis Ferdinand and
his wife, Sofia, were assassinated in Sa~evo by a Serb nationalist - the event that triggered World Wac I.
On this date: .
In 1491, England's King HenryV!ll was born at Greenwich.
In 1778, Molly Pitcher (Mary Ludwig Hays) carried water
to American soldiers at the Revolutionary Wac B~ttlc of Monmouth, N.J.
·
In 1836, the fourth president of the United States, James
Madison, died in Montpelier, Va.
In ·1838, Britain's QueenVictoria was crowned in Westminster Abbey.
In 1919, the Treaty ofVersailles was signed in France, ending
Wot'ld War I.
In 1928, New York Gov. Alfred E. Smith was nominated for
•
president at the Democratic national convention in Houston.
In 1939,
Pan American Airways began regular trans-Atlantic
.
.
a1r· servtce.
In 1950, North Korean forces captured Seoul, South Korea.
•
In 1951, a TV version ofthe radio program "Amos 'N'
Andy" premiered on CBS. (While criticized for racial stereo. typing, it was the first network.TV seric:s to feature an all-black
cast.)
In ·1978, the Supreme Col!rt ordered the University of CalBY JoM RIM
ifornia at Davis Medical School to admit Allan Bakke, a white
.After a long weekend with their parents
man who'd argued he was a victim of reverse racial discrimiat Camp David. Jenna and Barbara· Bush
nation.
probably learned ~ thing or two about
Ten years ago: In Detroit, a white woman was attacked by a
responstbility and discrellon. (They probagroup of black women at a downtown firework! display in an
bly learned, too, that i~ they're going to
incident captured on amateur video. (Five women later pleadparty. they ought to do It someplace other
ed no contest to charges stemming from the assault.) TWo peothan Austin.)
.
ple were kiUed when an earthquake of magnitude 6 shook
Frankly, though, I am more interested in
Southern·California.
what their father might have learned. I
Five years ago: The Citadel voted to admit women, ending
hope he learned that the adolescent mind
a 153-year-old men-only policy at the South Carolina miliis different fiom yours and mine.
tary school.
Inside a teencager's head, the brain
One year ago: Seven months after he was cast adrift in the
becomes the Wue ~· Coyote of bodily
Florida Straits, Elian Gonzalez was returned to his native
organs. It separates tune mto two cateCuba. The Supreme Court struck down Nebraska's so-called
gories: now and not now. It fails to register
"partial-birth" abortion law. The Suprerne Court ruled the
that the ti!JUlel jup ahead is .the same one
Boy Sco~ts can bar homosexuals from serving as troop leadthat turned into a brick wall last time and
ers.
the time before that.
Today's ·Birthdays: Comedian-movie director Mel Brook! is
. Thus, in the adolescent ~· 'possih!e
75. Actor Pat Morita is 69. Senate Armed Services Chairman
consequences such as humiliatmg tabloid
headlines, court appearances and forfeitute
Carl Levin (Democrat, Michigan) is 67. Former White House
of
the family Neiman ~ card aren't
chief of staff Leon Panetta is 63. Rock musician Dave Knights ·
(Procol Harum) is 56. Actor Bruce Davison is 55. Actress · always ~no~gh ~ keep a kid fiom doin~
something stup1d. All that matters IS
Kathy Bates is 53. Actress Alice ~rige is 47. Football player
NOW.N.OW.NOW.
John Elway is 41. Record company chief executive Tony Mer"There's a lesson in here about academcedes is 39. Actress Jessica Hecht is 36. Rock musician Saul
ic ed~cation, ~ moral . e~ucation, ~d
Davies (James) is 36. Actress Mary Stuart Masterson is 35,
how
kids learn, says Joe DiPrisco, long::une
Actor John Cusack is 35. Actor Gil Bel,lows is 34. Actress
Danielle Brisebois is 32.Jazz musician Jimmy Sommers is 32. " educator an~ co-author with Mike Riera
of" Field Gwde to the Amencan 'Ieenager:
Actor Alessandro Nivola is 29.

matched Bush against a no-name, generic
Democrat, the two tied at 44 percent.
· There's a difference among polls, incidentally. on whether Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz., running as an Independent,
would draw more fiom the Democrat or
fiom Bush.
According to Greenberg, McCain
would draw 22 percent, giving Bush a 42A:.' over an
percent to 29-percent e"&amp;e
unnamed Democrat. Similarly, Fox
showed McCain winning 20 percent and
giving Bush a 44-percent to 28-percent
lead over Gore.
However, a Gallup poll showed that
McCain would pull Bush down by 11
points·and Gore by 6, leaving them in a
virtual tie.
Meantime, the new CBS-New York
Times poll shows that the public is skepti&lt;;al about most of Bush's domestic policies. By 64 percent tu 28 percent, adults
wduld rather have the ·budget" surplus
spent on Social Security and Medicare
than on tax cuts.
·
Regarding Medicare, by 62 percent to
35 percent, respondents favored a drug
benefit for all seniors, not just those with
small incomes. And by 50 percent to 11
percent, they favor allowing patients to
sue their HM~, even if it results in higher insurance premiums.
Beyond shaky polls on issues, Bush faces
the possibility this year of being forced to
veto programs the public favors. He has
VoWed to use his veto power tu hold
spending to a 4-percent increase. Democrats are determined to seek more.
Conceivably, a series of budget veto
fights could lead to a partial closing down
of the federal government, which would
' Bush
give Democrats a chance to portray
as a gentler version of ex-Speaker Newt
Gingrich, R-Ga. If that happens, 2002
could be a bad year for Republicans.

(Morton Kondr~Uke is executive editor
Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

RACINE - Final plans for the frog jump and kiddie tractor
pull to be held at the July 4 celebration in Racine were made.
Tuesday by Racine Area Cornniunity Organization.
RACO sponsors the two events for the celebration, which is
•
annually staged by the Srar Mill Pack Board.
Dale Hart will be in cha.ge of the frog jump at 5 p.m. with
prize money being $100, 575 and $50 in the senior division; .
.and $40, $25 and S10 in the junior division .The kiddie tractor
pull will be at 1 p.m. with prizes in two weight classes. ··
The food drive for the Meigs Cooperative Parish held June 2
netted 667 food and paper'items and $437 in cash.
Members will work at the Meigs County Fair gates on Aug.
. 16-17. The fall festival was announced for Sept. 8. New brackets are being purchased for the banners which hang in Racine.
pavid Zirkle led the Pledge of Allegiance.

Karaoke contest to be featured

A sympathy card was signed for Mn. Michael Powell. Cards
of encouragement were signed for Chuck Salser, Thelma Cundiff, Herbert Pugh. Glenn and Anna Lee lbcker, Gene and
Linda Hudson, David Grindstaff, Alta Ballard, Bill Cornell, Don
R. Hill, Delbert Patterson, Bill Rice, Mary Stobart, Ruth
Smith, Vicki Boso, Chaty Cordero, Maria Delgatto, Douglas
Circle, June · Turner, Ethel Orr, Elizabeth Carpenter, Ellen
Arnott, Harold Hager, Raymond Proffitt, Pauline Wolfe, Carl
Weese, Edison Brace, Martha Stutler, David W. Grindstaff, and
Fred Smith.
Sterrett read an article from the book. "Leaking Laughs -·
From Pampers to Depends:' along with scriptures pertaining to ·
listening, atfection,laughter, cheerful dispos.ition, written note,
prayer, compliments, favors and solitude.
Next meeting will be at 7 p.m .July 1 at the church, with Ann
Boso and Peggy Hill conducting the program and Letha Proffitt, Jo Lee and Melissa Smith, the refreshments.

LOCAL EVENTS
FRIDAY
POMEROY- Fun, Food and
Fellowship at God's Neighbor·
hood Escape for Teens, 6 10
10:30 p.m. on Friday and Sat-

ine Rose family reunion, Sun·
day, 1 p.m., home of Jim and

programs, board games and

Barbecue chicken provided
along wi1h lllble service. Fami·

RACINE- A karoake contest presented by Golden Melody
· Productions will be a feature of the July 4 celebration at Star
·Mill Park.
. GALLIPOLIS - Andrew
The contest will get under way at noon with prizes being Frederick Williams, son of Dr.
·awarded every hour of competition for first, second and third Frederick Williams of Gallipolis
places: First-place winnen in the hourly contests will compete and the late Ruth R. Wtlliams,
· for the grand prize.
·
w.as named to the dean's list at
The age .categories are up to 15, male, a new bicycle; up to .Cedarville U~versity Dean's
:15, female, a new bicycle; 15 and over, male, $100, and 15 and
.over, female, Lloyd Middleton Doll.
·
: The parade will move out at 9:15 fiom Southern High
.School, a chicken barbecue will be held at the firehouse begin,,ning at 11 a.m., and there will be kiddie games in the park tiom'' 1
. 11 to 3 p.m.
·
'
'
Racine's signing team will perform at noon, the kiddie traCtor pull will get under way at 1 p.m. and the Big Bend Cloggers will perform at 2 p.m. The RACO frog jump wiU be at 5 ..
.:p.m. .
.
. Evening entertainment · will be provided by Country Grass
from 6 to 8 p.m. and Last Chance from 7 to 9 with the festiv' 'jcies to conclude at 10 p.m. with .a fireworks 'display.

Williams nanaed to dun's list

arcle to enter float in parade

Honor List for the ·2001 spring
q~. He is a music ministry
maJor.
To be named to the dean's
list, a student must earn a GPA
of3.75.

Appreciating the Teenager You Live With." risks might take the form of drinking mar"It's messy. Irs not easy. None of this is gari~ at a restaurant. for a kid shaped by
black and white. Bush probably did every- the environment of the inner city, the bad
·thing ~.e ·could as a father and this still hap- · decisions and stupid risks might take the
pened.
,
.
form of sellmg crack cocaine vandalizing a
_If Bush's own ~ughcer, a young woman school building, or beating ~p a classmate
With all the breeding. groommg and edu- as part of a gang initiation.
cation of the upper crust, can make this
The inner-city kid, by contrast, likely will
kind of mistake - . after having gone end up at juvenile hall With minimal counthrough a similar experience just a few seling services to help him inake better
weeks earlier - then maybe the president ·decisions in the future. If the kid is unlucky,
will realize that adolescent drug use, preg- he ends up in adult jail. Instead of counselnancy and crime won't be solved by imple- ing, he gets a solid education fiom his new
men~ tougher laws and simplistic pre- roonmutes, which will virmally ensure
ventlon programs.
long-term relationship with the penal sy&lt;"'Just say no' doesn't start to cover it;' tern.
Riera says.
In the 1990s, 41 states amended their
. In the blink of an eye, Jenna i~ one juvenile justice Jaws to make it easier to try
. offimse 'lWilf fiom a possible six-month jail childfen in criminal court. Last year,
term, thank! to a.tough undt:f\lge drinking according to one report, about 18,000 kid~
law her father SJg!led while governor of spent nme in adult prisons. About 3 500 of
Texas. Does this mean Jenna is a bad kid? them were tossed into the general' prison
Hardly. Would tbssing her in jail solve her population.
inability to ~ wiser decWons~ Of
No doubt B?"h, like any parent in his
course not; shes 19. So why1do we think 1t position, has learned a few things as a father
will solve the probletru of aCiolesceniS who these past few W~:eks. 1 wonder what he
are stillleg;illy children?
.
learned as a president.
J~e crime .~n ·is born _of a child . Ooan Ryan is a colum~ist for the San Franmakins bad deCISions and taking stupid asco Chronicle. Semi comments io her ill care of
risks. In ~e privileged environment of the this newspaper or send Iter e-mail at joanryansf
Bush twms, the bad deCISIOns and stuptd gate. com,) ·
.
. .

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER -Star

Grange n8 and Star Junior
Grange 878, regular session;

Saturday, poduck supper, 6:30
p.m. followed by regular meet·
ing 7:30 p.m. Harrisonville

Grange to visit
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Celebriltion

iy and friends. Rain will not
cancel.

MONDAY
RUTI.AND -Rutland Town·
ship Trustees, 5 p.m. Monday,
Rutland fira !&gt;lationlollowlng
annual budget hearing.

Community Celendllr Ia published n a frea aervlce to
non-proftt groupe wtahlng to
announce IIIMtlngs and_,.
clal-ta. The celancler Ia
not dealgnad to pronwlli

25th anniversary, Middleport
Wesleyan Bible Holiness
Churoh, Sunday. Dinner on the ..lea or fund-nil..,. of any
grounds loitowing morning ser· type. ltama alii prlnlad only
vice and special service at
u 1pace pennlta and cennot
2:30p.m.
be guaranllied to appaer.

E-MAIL US YOUR NEWS:

news@mydailysentinel.com

Healthy Start
Healthy Families
Is it easy to apply?

WITH

pool tables available lor teens.

Karen Werry, Coun Street
Road, morning Star, Racine.

"

RACINE -A float will be made by the Sonshine Circle of
·.·the Dorcas Bethany Church for the July 4 parade at Racine, the
· group decided recently.
Letha Proffitt, Linda Russell, Evelyn Foreman, Blondena
Rainer, Edie Hubbard, Lois Sterrett, and Kathryn Hart volun. teered to decorate it.
·
· Mary Cleek has made a quilt that will be presented to Seren.,''ity House in Gallipolis. A bake sale and auctions served th1s
. ' ~uminer were discussed. A picnic was planned for the August
. meeting at the McKelvey camp site.

RYAN'S VIEW

RACINE- Daniel and cather-

urday. Nutritional meals, 1'1011violenl video games, computer

,

4

Sometimes,fothers dQ·n't always know best for .kids .

:
\.

• DEAR ABBY: I have been criticized because "Dennis," my live-in
boyfriend. is strict with my two children, who are 8 and 9.
They are supposed to str.righten
the quilts on their beds before leaving for school. The other day, they
forgot. So Dennis tore their beds
apart. He dumped everything on the
floor so they would have to totally
remake their beds. My mother says
this is cruelty. What do you think?. DIVORCED MOM IN U.UNOIS
DEAR DIVORCED MOM: I
agree with your mother. It is your
home. You should administer discipline to your children, QOt your current live- in boyfriend. If there's any
more "dumping" to be done, consid-

YES! You can call the Meigs County Department of
Job and Family Services (formerly Meigs County
. Qepartment of Human ~ervices) 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. a11d Thursday until6:30 p.m.

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

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

2--················· $968
3 -----------~----- $1,220
4----------------- $1,471

There is !IO face-to-face interview.

s--···············S1,723

' '

6 -----------------$1,97 5

Healthy Start
'
With Credible Insurance

Without Credible Ins.,.rance

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

Family Size

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

2-·················$1,451
3--------·-·-----$1,829
4--···············$2,207
S········~·········$2,584

6 ----·--·-----··.. $2,962

Family Size

*Monthly Income
Guidelines

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

I

•

• Even If your fllmlly'a Income 11 higher, you m1y 11111 be abla to gat !rae 'Healthy Stllfl coverage for you'r klda.
.

992_2117

, Call now for more Information.

' _ •
.a
1 00 992 2608

�Tblndlly, June 21, 2001

Pomlrof,lllm"?part, Ohio

Bloodmobile collects more than 86 units

POMEROY
MAYOR'S
COURT

-

..-.:am,..,..,.
v· , . ., sao
.,.. GIIY
Pu••uv. M
. . . . ...,. ....... Raw,ll3,
~WJ••a.

...,... • ·: coMII dlwbl: Dcugllll B. Ell?ln, PGiiMJY, . . . nlloCdl'ft? ~Wit .:.an lVII, ~

LL, SPI. cllcadoo!r cardlct; .Mrod R.

\Malodll. PuliWO/, .........,,..,.
M

D lillie

conlnl?;

Vicky

"''""'.,· Rulllnd. $80. apeed;
.Mall&gt; A. Wllan, Pon•ot.
bll; GIMI A. Ne:tlllld. Long boaom,

sao. -

SSS. lpMd;

Conly L Y - .
PtwsJWUy, $83, speed; Redial A

Folliee. "-~~~'·sao. - • AI»
MY B. C..a:dlr. Annllb1. A!L, SID.
- t.PI. 188,11*¢ .-,D. ~

problem from prolonged use as you
describe. This problem arises because
the petroleum jeUy doesn't just stay in
· the nose but rather migrates to other
this, I'd ha-., ?rouble getting to sleep parts of the body.
because my no5e felt so dry, and I
Petroleum jeUy usuaUy drains out of
would wake . up each morning with the back of the nose with the normal
dried blood in my n~. Now; I have n=l secretions and is d1en swallowed.
neither of these problems, but I've While this is probably not a problem
begun to worry if this a good practice. for you because of the srnaU amount·
~: A dry and irritated nose involved, pelroleum jeUy in the dises:certainly is uncomforuble. This is com, .rive system can ~ce the number ·of
manly a nighttime problem,just as you vitamins that your body absorbs. Howdescribe, because the normal nasal ever, for those that use mineral oil - a
secretions drain differendy when we lie similar type of pe1roleum - as a. laxadown. Also, during the night we don't tive on a frequent basis, the risk is much
swallow and drink liquids - actions greater.
that help 1teep the nasal tissues moist.
The greatest risk fiom use of petroThe pettoleum jeUy you have been · leum jeUy in the nose comes fiom
using coats the delicate nose tissues and inhaling the material. This commonly
helps moisturize them in two rebted occurs when asleep, so the person is
wzys. It forms a barrier that keeps the unaware of it. The lungs can't easi!J
air from getting to the nose tissues, so it elil'Jlinate this foreign substance as die
dries them out. And, it retains the nor, digestive tract does. Instead, the lungs
mal moisture produced by them.
react to it, causing scarring and pneuIn general terms, petroleum jeUy is monia,like fluid accumulations.
safe to use. However, there is a potential
This lung damage usuaUy begins so

1

,__.......

t.at M. webb, laclceon, $85,
. , . . Jolhua A. Wilal. Pa••ov.
AltWj R.

F~:?lr 4o, $82, IIJ8ad; Mar·
ilne
• lMIQIII... $83, epaad;
SliMn D. Cheney, " ' " - · $82,

II*¢ Lila R. King. f'omerov, $80,
II*¢ Tee?
Sl:aaney, LucMJie,
$82, lpMd; Jane L llnigg, Jackiion,
113. ..,_:; Mrt D. Parlin, ~
port. $83, II*¢ Rogor D. LUka:t,
Malon. w.\Ia., $88, elqlinc? r.gill:a·
ton; Jll:ild A. Clay, ~. $112. 1
II*¢ , . _ D. Logan. Pornaov,
Sll1, .,_;; a.t.ry A. Ht.dd?o:ta1,
...... $71. lpMd; Jenmy fUcli.
mond. Pw•ov. - . nPIIc car..a
diVIDe; Miry L Ol?lr, VlniDn, $81,
.,.eel. $1 ?15, «*Pv!ng Llidlr IUiplll-

c.

lian; ~ M. ...... Pa••oy. $112.

II*¢ Ln!ll Dlclail, PG:•ov. $83.
l$)lec?; l.aOV B. Rcu?i Jr., LeiM,
W.\la., $83, II*¢ Jolhua M. Hay-

"*'• ... .., ad, .... nPIIc -

diVIDe; I !J · - R. Hlllwy, f:ec?a?ok•
town, $79, II*¢ WIIMi Hl:mon,
flalN. $87, epaad; l!alnda Hliya,
De:dlr', $84, tpMd.
Ju111 A. McGuln, LMIIIIVII, $85,
.-.ad oPalr d?IIMca; Ml:hw D.
"-ian; Coo,., S88, nPIIc i!Mce; Cynthia L ICOII, "-OV·
$83, epaad; Dlnnll K. Hlntl, $88,
II!PIIId llgl; ShaoiDn Sc:liok?llw,
... .., :ot, $1?15, '-l?ur1i 1o CO:Jipl!y.
'Miny L O..aijk»t, MI. A?1o, W.\la.,
$88, n?lcoonlialc!M&gt;I; Guy .......
login, ... ..-;.
Tho:nu 0. McKay, Mlddlljl Di1,
$700 and COlla, $300 IIIII* iC?Id
upcn oompllllol 1 of O!P School, 10
•
jiJIIIIJIPII iC?Id .., concur·
18111 1111?1 ochDo?, 1111 ...... IUiplllllon, 1wo yuw poballon, driving

Under 1M lnftuenoe; Dabonh K.
'lilln*y, Hllrllord. W.\la., $700 lild
00111, $300 IIIII* iC?Id upcn llU551)Iaton al OPP Schaal, 10 dly!i jell aus$11iidld to th- uuncu1111511 wtth
ochDo?, 1111 day liclnle IU8$IIi Ilion,
two ~ p:oblllon, c?liYing undtr the
lnlklence, $831ild COlla, lrlll?lcdiVIDe; Sailft s. Mlloll, Pa••oy,
1700 and ...ta, $300 IIIIPIIIC!Id
upcn co:nplal?Dii al O:P School,. 10
dlyB ld IUijlelidld 1o will
ochDo?, 1111 day ?lcenM IIJIPIIIIIioii,
two )'MM p:obllllai '· c?liYing undar the
~.$50 ond uuata, ACDA; Gary
w. Yaung, Guyavle, 1700 """ .....
$300 ..,.idle? upcn uonljll8tlon ol
oPP Sc:t)ool, 10 dlyl j81111U1$)15'1dec! 10
. , . wllh ochDo?, 180 day ?lcenM
IIJIPIIIIIai,

two ~ . . . -..

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~

...

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00111,

1100 l5ld 00111, no 0$)15- ?icenM;
ShiMon L ICholdanr, Mldrl?epu.~,
1100 l5ld CU81a, . p~ntaala'o ola coo,lnllltd subllancJo; Jon A. Mhr, Pl.
f'?euant, W.va., $200 and 00118,
dlyl )aiiiU8$)Ii'ldec?, two Y8IM
p:OIIIIIIotl, uncllnge OOi'illlii'il)t,
Vlnolfo1 Laudarmllt Jr., f'ornaOV,
S50 l5ld ...ta, child ~ RU8881?
E. Meadows, Pomeroy, $100 and
00111, public lntoldcatlon; K8111181h M.
Cotdlll, Pomeroy, ~ and OOtlls,
0fJ11i container In motor velolcla;
Joolnc?a F~. Middlapolt, ,..,.
DIIIV. "-???gg•l violation; Jellrey w.
Sopher, Pauomy, $18 n CCila, traf·
Ia OQiiJOI device; Kenvln N. Slater,
...... $25 """ - · 188t belt;
Jonathan E. RabeJ1I. Pantoov, 547
n 00811, tp:lld; Michael Bing,
Pomeroy, $47 and CU818, apeed;

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{ WASHINGTON (AP) jRules intended to prevent
•abuse of the food stamp pro,
~ram may be discouraging
:People who are eligible for
· ;benefits from getting them,
!acc?rding to the Bush adminis,
· baon.
"There is broad agreement
~that the program has grown
\too complicated;' said Eric
ffiost, the Agriculture Depart)ment's undersecretary for food,
}n~tptiol} and consumer sers
IVIces.
I Bast, whQ..Qv'ersaw welfare
~rogramt in Texas when Pre~i,
\dent Bush was the state's ~,
{ernor, also told a House Agr•,
}culture subcommittee Wednes,
that the rules are so com,
f
they are causmg
. states to
~lex
m13ke errors in payments.
He:, did not propose any spe,
ICific changes m the rules,
.'w hich require families to pro,
\vide detailed documentation
1
for expenses for shelter, child
are and medical expenses.

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on aid to religious Charities

WASHINGTON (AP) other religibus · groups to the White House Domestic
Council,
said
Legislation opening govern- compete for government Policy
ment programs to religious grants in 10 new programs Wednesday.
groups was set for · con~ider, without altering' the reli~ .--:ation in a House committee gious character of their !
with an agreement in hand organizations. They could
that . had the White House retain religious names, charand ~ey House Republicans · ters and symbols on build,
singing from the same hym, ing walls, and may consider
nal.
religion in deciding whom
· But opponenfs of the to hire.
But the programs they
entire effort were still com,
plaining, and the debate offer may only have sectaripromised to remain cons an components, including
tentious as Congress works religious instruction, wor,
to find new ways to serve ship, prayer or proselytizing,
Americans in need while only if they are distinct from
government,funded
maintaining the separation the
between church and state.
social service.
The House Judiciary
Religious groups that
Com!llittee was set to con, offer social services may
sider the iegislation Thurs, make worship services or .
day..
·
religious instruction avail,
After a break for the able to program partici,
Fourth of)uly, the Ways and pants. But under the deal
Means Committee planned reached between the White .
to take up related provisions House and top House
giving new tax breaks for Republicans, . participants .
charitable contributions, cannot be reqmred . to
and GOP leaders hoped to attend.
The . changes strengthen
see the bill on the House
1·304-773-5583
floor by the end of summer. the bill and "bring it in line
The bill would allow with the Constitution,"
'churches, s.ynagogues · and John Bridgeland, director of

HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

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Summer Clearance·

Households also are expected the forms are up to 36 pages
to report any changes in their long.
circumstances to ensure that
State officials say they· have ,
their monthly benefits are corn been forced to expand their
reel.
applications and recalculate
"Such burdensome require- benefits more often to prevent
ments may discourage working payment errors and satisfy
families trom participating in USDA auditors. States with
Reg. $411.95
the program. They also make higher than average error rates
the job of state agencies excep- are fined by the department,
tionaUy difficult:' Bast said.
while states with below,aver,
Food stamp roUs have fallen age rates are rewarded with
fiom 25.5 million in 1996 to additional funds. Last year, 18
17 million last year. Part of the states were fined and 11 others
drop is due to the strong econ- , were rewarded.
omy and restrictions that C9nUnder Bast, Texas had an
gress imposed on the program error rate last year of abuut 4 .
in 1996, but many peopl~ who per~ent, less than half the
are eligible for the benefits also naaqnal average 9f 9 pe~~t.
have dropped out, studies say.
Although . USDA; reqi!Jres
About 59 percent of eligible states f1? c_emfy the mcome of .
people participated in 1998, benefici31'Jes only once a year,
down from 74 percent in 1994, many s~tes reqwre the mcome
checks every three months, said
according to USDA.
Anti,poverty groups say the Robert Robe~on of the Gen,
long application forms and fie, ~ral ~cc~unang Office, the
Ave.
quent 0 ffi 6 e visits required mvesugauve arm of Congress.
from beneficiaries are partly to
r-~.,..;..--------------------------------------"1
blame for the .drop.. Some of

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Sports Physicals
I

,

Saturday, June 30

M!chall T. Fllllrnlra, Pantoov, S25

n -"'· -bill; Anclnw L. Raid,

7:00am ·

PonilltiJI', $50 lild COlla, tp:lld, $100

OUIII, no 0$)1iodo:tliclnle; Paul
L Flora, Pomeroy, $100 l5ld 00111,
;Mille ~iiOldoatlon, ~ lild 00818,
0$)151 oontdllnlr In whldt. 00111
DIIIV. two yuw podlatloo•, obl1ruc:t?ng
~ ~ $50 lild 00111, ....
dlyB jaliiUt$)liidld. two yuw poob.ton, cunliiJullng 1o • minor; Cynthia
A. Klein, Pomeooy, $48 and 00111.
ljllec!; Ryan J, Mlran. Racine, $50

n

(For Eastern, Meigs, and Soutllem High Sc;hool athletes)
.. Please bring your completed Sports Physical Cards!

DURAL.
nru.F

~~~~~•,·

Holzer Clinic Meigs
88 East Memotial Drive
Pomeroy,OH

""'n '''"

ci8o:dih1y co:Wcl 11y ln1olc-

lcdun~T. Hayman, $100.-.cl
uoatl, dleu:y conduCI; Chilltlna T.

l.otttry pl1yen 1rt ~~tel to Oh4o l1ws 1nd Commlsslon ,regue.tlon,. Plu11 pll)' respanslbfY.

Combe, Bidwell, S50 and uoala,

(740) 992-0060,
•

IPMd: Mlelitlll L. Richmond,
Poi I Itt IJI', COlla only, truli/rubbiah
VIolation.

I

homeless count because it is impossi.
ble to do and misleading."..
. Still, some city officials and local
shelters said they thought a specific
count of the homeless would be
released, especiaUy after many of the.
groups helped the bureau track the
homeless down.
"I'd ~ather have (the numbers) now.
It's almost been a year since we've
done it," said Candis Brady, commu,
nications director for the 7(J()..bed
Shelter for the Homeless in Midway
City, Calif. "It could help in getting
funding for programs."

\

lwo )'MM p:cbellaii, c?liYing ~the
lnllulnce, Ma?c J. Dalley, Mldo??apurt,

•,f,

Front Page," city editor
Matthau tricks his star
reporter, Lemmon.
In 1962, Lemmon switched
from lighthearted comedies to
intense drama. In "Days of
Wine and Roses," he pbyed
an alcoholic who induces his
new · wife (Lee Remick) to
join him in drinking sprees.
His performance earned ·his
first Academy nomination as
lead actor.
Of his seven Oscar nomina,
lions for lead actor, two were
for comedies and five for dra,
Lemmon
mas.
"Save the Tiger;' in which
Lemmon a supporting actor he played a dress manufacturer
Oscar.
· going along with shady busi,
Throughout his c:ireer, and · ness ethics despite the idealism
especiaUy in films with Walter of his youth, won him the
Matthau, Lemmon was often Oscar fot best actor of 1973.
cast as the weU,meaning feJ, The project was rejected by
low; a trifle square, who is studios
until Paramount
taken advantage of.
agreed to rmke it on a $1 miJ,
In "The Fortune Cookie;· lion budget.' Lemmon cut his
he is browbeaten into filing a salary to the guild minimum
false insurance claim by his of $165 a week to puU it of!:
brother,in,Iaw. "The O!id
Lemmon's coJlledjc style
Couple" portrayed Lemmon was based on his portrayal of a
as the fastidious Felix Unger, weU,meaning Everyman beset
who suffers from the slobbish by disasters. Such a guise
habits of his roommate, Oscar seemed to . come easily - he
Ma9ison (Matthau). In "The ~ was a self~ptoclaimed ~!ltz, ,

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!dar

188t bell, COlli only, failure 1o oonbol;
Kennal1 s. b:own, Pa:..uy, $700
l5ld 00811, $300 auapended upon
OOioll)letlon ol O!P Sdioul, 10 dayl jail
IIIII* iC?Id 1o co:ocurownt wlh
ochDo?, 180 day liclnle 1Ut$)1illlioii,

oo.~a,

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LOS ANGELES (AP) cJack Lemmon, the twOstime
Oscar winner . whose acting
talents ranged from . adroi~
comedies "The Apartment"
and "Some Like It Hot" to the
"dramatic intensity of"Days of
·Wine and Roses" and "Tues,
' days with Morrie," has died.
He was 76 .
Lemmon died Wednesday
.: night frpm complications
.related to cancer, said long,
_time
spokesman Warren
.Cowan. His wife Felicia, his
(two children and a stepdau,g h,
.ter were at his bedside at
; ysC/Norris Cancer Center,
Cowan ·said.
. "He is one of the greatest
actors in the history of the
'business," Cowan · told · The
Associated Press early Thurs,
$fay. "To say one word about
him would be to say he's a
lleautiful person. It's an opinion that is shared by every,
· body who knew him."
,.· The ·
Harvard,educated
lactor began in films with two
· ~stylish comedies and a musical
~with Betty Grable. Then in
l1955, his unique comedy style
1shined through as the hapless
~Ensign Pulver in "Mister
~Roberts," a role that won

1Administration
supports
easing
stamp
rules
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1

data should not be misconstrued as an
official homeless count, Gore said.
In response, Maloney caUed the
Census Buieau "the censor bureau."
Barbm Duffield, education director
for the National Coalition for the
Homeless, supported the policy. The
coalition , worked with the bureau
·before the census and urged against
any count that specified the homeless
population.
"People experiencing homelessness
should be counted irregardless of
housing status;' she said. "But we also
said there should not be a separate

Jack Lemmon dead at 76 House dives into legislation

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count of a population that is difficult
to track, said Edison Gore, a deputy
chief at .the Census Bureau.
The bureau had planned to release a
count of people living in shelters as
part of the wave of information. cur,
rendy being released.
Gore said bureau officials decided
against it after an analysis of early 2000
census results in January. Census offi$iaJs will instead release a . separate
report next year on Americans count,
ed in shelters.
The report would give the bureau
an appropriate forum to stress that the

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$700
and - · ol$300
upcn oanplttlon
O:P IIUI$)Ii'ldec!
School, 10
dly8 jiJII IUijiOf iC?Id 10 thnie concur18111 .... ochuol, 110 day ?lcenM ....
.......... two p:'ubaton, d:Mng
unc?tr the Influence; Kim lauda:mlll.
Pometoy, $700 lild 00111, $300 aus$)1iidld , upon completiOn of DIP
Sdioul, 10 daya )all liUSplinded 10
thnie UGIOU1'1$11 wiiP1 ICiiuul, d:Mng
unc?tr u. lnbnca,
00111,

, •

groups to plan budgea for shelters and
other homeless outreach progr.uns.
Democratic R~:ps. Carolyn Maloney
of New York and Dennis Kucinich of
Ohio and others said Wednesday
Bureau officials said the homeless
people they did find during an
exhaustive. three-diy count last year
were included in total population figures for states, counties and munici,
palities.
But those homeless Americans were
group quarters:'
not identified as such in the results
" A detailed homeless count is essen- because of a fear that it could be mis-- .
."tial for city officials and advocacy interpreted as an officw government

petroleum jeUy in the nose (or, in other ment for it is the use of a vaporizer or
cases, the chronic use of mineral oil for . humidifier in the bedroom to bring the
constipation or the frequent exposure moisture of the air up to a more CO!IIto the spr.ty lubricants used on machin, fortable and healthful level. Use of a
ery.)
non,prescription saline nose spr.ty ~
Eventually, when chronic shortness of provides safe although temporary relief
breath develops along with a cough, a . from the annoying dryness.
chest X,ray will be done. While the
A second cause is aUergies. Since you
lung images .may look abnonital, it is have been having your symptoms year
usu3Uy necessary to obtain a sample of round, it is likely that this is the cause of
lung tissue to identifY the specific type your dry nose. Most individuals who
oflung disease. Ifthe cause is petroleum have this condition are aUergic to house
jeUy, the diagnosis will be "lipoid pneu, dust, animal dander or feathers that may
monia,!' because lipoid is a doctor word be in your pillow. Sometimes it is pasmeaning an oiJ, based substance like sible to get satisfactory reliefby keeping
pe1roleum jeUy.
pets out of the bedroom, keeping the
So, to answer your question, it is bedroom meticulously dean and using
dangerous for you to be using petrole- synthetic pillows instead of feather or
urn jeUy in your nose every night. down ones. For others, treatment for
Question: Have you had patients with aUergies is needed to gain relief.
"Family Medici""" is a weekly column.
this "dr)l nose" problem before? What
do you recommend for this problem? · To submit questions, write to John C. IMJif,
Answer: The symptoms of"dry nose" D.O., Ohio Univmity College of Osteon
are typicaUy due to one of two COffin pathic Medidne, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
mon conciitions.Very dry air causes the Ohio 45701.

Llidlr the ln?'olanoe, ~ and
00111, upeniXrlfalner In i!10ior vehicle.
lMI?e L WhltttiiQIOil, ~ti??apot, ·

no U$)1ial0it HoenN, S25 n

WASHINGTON (AP) - Home,
less Americans were counted in the
200(l census. It is just unclear from the
·~ ults how many there were.
That has angered some House
"Demoet'2ts and city officials fiom
across the country. They are demand,
l ng that the Census Bureau say exactJ y how many homeless people it
"found last year, instead of grouping
'.them into a less specific category
;'caUed "other noninstitutionalized

GAlliPOLIS - Beatrice Morg:m.
CHESTER -Joseph Bailey.
SHADE - Charles Coole.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Karolyn
Webb
WESTVIRGINIA- Brenda Mer~itt and April Hart.
Retired .and senior voulnteer prognm worken assisting the Bloodmobile were Helen Bodimer,June Ashley,
Jane BIOWII, 'Jed ,Hatfield, Sampson
Hall, Carolyn Gf~!eser• Rita Bucldey,
Mary Lou Hawkins, Jerry Crawford
and Gerri Pullen.
The next sch~ed .?it will be
Aug. 15 at the Seruor Cltlzens Center
in Pomeroy.

THIS COULD BE THE MOST
REWARDIN.G .ROUND OF GOLF.
YOU'.LL.EVER·PLAY.

Those fined were:

The Dally Sentinel• Page A 7

Michael Duhl.

gradually that the individual doesn't nose to dry out at night. This is often a
relate the symptoms to the use of problem in the winter. The best treat,

Quastioo: For several yean, I've
been putting a small amount ofVaseline
in my nose each night to keep my DOSs
1rils from getting too dry. Before I did

• •

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MIDDLEPORT - Jennifer Garey,
Donna Hawley, Robert Barton. Anna
Browning, Michael Wilfong Sr.,
Michael WalfongJr., Donna Davidson,
Ussie .Jefl'en, Roger Manley Sr., and
Dtema Sigler.
SYRACUSE Darla Thomas,
Oris Smith and Carolyn Charles.
~ONG BOTIOM - Henry Bahr,
Urban Graf, Merilee Bryant and
Valerie Nottingham
RUTLAND - Marta Blackwood,
Terry Geotge. Iw Sisson, Robert Sis· son, Adrian Hubbard and Ralph Bales. .
REEDSVILLE - Carolyn Barton,
Deryl WeU. John Rice, Pam Schatz
and Betsy Nicodemus.
PORTLAND - Diana Duhl··and

Using petroleum jelly for nasal dryness can result in pneumonia

:.0. Ill d, 188, lpMd; Ol:iiiU;I?• L
,.,__ Puawuy,
lpMd; saw..
P. E:wPn. Pon..vy, . . . . . . . . nglehlon; , . _ Cuncll. Pl .,
II,
W.\la., Sill. cpen co:•lif In ma10r
...,.., ~ L flaulh. Poi. . d,
lpMd; D:Md A. 01, ,., 7 •
""· II*¢ laiy Gn-. ......
t85,
beclfllllll WJ $j lf~ ()aal A. ,_.
111. Pa••ov. $81, II*¢ T:w:ey s.
Mcu•o. Rullnd, $83, ~ 1Jobb11
J. ALp, Pa:•oy, $80, IIJ8ad; B:uce
W. HwiijJIIB), RUle, SIM. expi'ed

. ..a.:--;

Robert Rmlsburg. Michael Taylor,
Geof&amp;ey Wilson, Virgil W"Uidon, Barban Crow, Sampson HaD, George
Harris Jr., Harold Norton, · Debra
Mora, Patsy CofJ!eU, ~urie Waylmd,
Robert Tobin, Mary Spencer, Billie
Spencer, David Elliot, Phyliss With~n. Whitney Thomas, Barban Smith,
Niese! Duvall, Bryan Shank, Jean
Durst and Robert W. Smidl.
. RACINE - Charles Mugrage,
Barbara Dugan, Randall Arnold,
Riclwd Dugan. Gnce Holter, Harry
Holter, Jim Freeman, Doris Grueser,
Chris .Gilbride, James Lucas, Bruce
Humphrey, Patricia Ervin, Keith
AUen, Pameb Humphrey and Arthur
Roush.

Pomtiroy, Middleport, Ohio

Census policy on homeless draws aftidsm

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SWF HEI'ORIS

POMEROY -More than 86 onits
of blood wae donared during last
weeki American Red Cross Bloods
mobile visit at the Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy.
MulUple pllon donors were: one
pllon,James E. Lucas, Randall Amott
and Carolyn Barton;' two pllons,Jen,
nifer Garey; six gallons, Harry Holter;
16 pllons, Henry Bahr.
.
Donors by community were:
. POMEROY -Paul Mahr, Thomas
Hart, David King, Cyndi King, Gerald
Rought, Jackie Hildebrand, Phil
Ohlinger, Marvin Taylor, Betty
Coughenour, Jackie Coughenour,
Deborah Grueser, Roger Gaul,

POMEROY - A number
of individuals forfeited bonds
md othen were fined by
Maptnte L. Scou PowoeD in
Pomeroy's llla)'Or's coun.
Forfeiting bonds were:
IF ?wl L :..anart. fYn?. 113.

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TIIUI8d:iy, June 28, 2001

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•World

The Daily Sentinel

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Page~

The Daily Sentinel
DiiUIWtUI RDunduP, Page B2
Ohio boxer faces big RtWian, Page B5
WNBA roundup, Page B6

End expected soon (n string of interest rate ~.

co he1d-ta. held

WASHINGTON (AP) - Rival campaign finapce bills are
going bead-to-head in the House, with Democrats who want a
ban on "soft-money" donations trying to stop defections and
beat back a GOP-led contender.
The House Administration Committee u to vote Thursday
on the two main bills - the proposal by Reps. Christopher
Shays, R-Conn., and Many Meehan, D-Mass., whicli is dose to
a campaign spending bill that passed the Senate in April, and
another by the committee's chairman, Rep. Bob Ney, R~Ohio.
The House GOP leadership has promised a floor vote on the
U.ue in the week after the July Fourth recess.
While the Ney bill is certain to garner more support from
Republicans, who generaUy oppose the soft-money ban, it is
also tailored to appeal to the Congressional Black Caucus and'
other liberal Democrats who are dissatisfied with Shays-Meehan, traditionaUy the choice of Democrats.

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Feder- ous rate reductions this year were by a
al Reserve's latest recession-fighting half-point. Economiits viewed the Fed's
campaign could be drawing to a close as decision to go with a more moderate
policy-makers monitor whether their six quarter~point move as a signal that the
interest- rate reductions and Congress' centnl bank's aggressive credit easing
tax-cut refunds will revive 'the sagging may be coming to an end.
"I think they are winding it down,"
' economy.
With Wednesday's quarter-point cut, said Stuan Hoffinan, chief economiit at
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan and his PNC Financial Services Group.
colleagues have slashed interest rates by a ·Hofti'nan and ocher economists predict
total of 2. 75 percentage points this year, that the last reduction is likely to come
the most aggressive action in nearly two at the Fed$ meeting on Aug. 21 and that
decades.
it will be by another quarter-point.
Economists are hopeful that those Some analysts believe policy-makers
reductions will lay the foundation for an might op1 to cut again at their Oct. 2
economic rebound by the fourth quarter meeting and then move to the s1delines.
of this year.
A few think Wednesday's cut could be
·
WASHINGTON (AP) -'-'The Bush adminutration's revised
"At some point, a4er a farmer tills the · the final one.
blueprint for 2002 defense spending faces a skeptical Congress ' soil, fertilizes and so~ the seeds, he must
"The prospects for improvement are
quick to question some ofDefense Secretary Donald H . Rtirnsjust sit back and.watl:h what comes up," very good;' said Martin Regalia, chief
feld's priorities.
said economist Ken- Mayland, president economist at the U.S. Chamber of ComRurnsfeld was testifYing Thursday before the House and Sen- · of ClearView Economics.
merce. "The Fed has put this stimulus in
ate armed services committees, which authorize defense spendThe arrival, beginning next month, of the pipeline. We have tax cuts. It's time to
ing. A day earlier, he said the administration is asking Congress
tax rebate checks of up to $600 also are wait and see. People just have to have .a
for an extra S18.4 biUion for the 2002 budget year, which
expected to lift the economy - provid- little. bit of faith that this is going to
.
.
begins Oct. I.
ed people spend some of the money as work."
As part of that amended budget, Rumsfeld proposed shrinkanalysts predict. The checks are part of a
As a rough rule of thumb, the Fed's
ing the Air Force bomber fleer, retiring aU 50 Peacekeeper
$1 .35 trillion tax cut recently signed by interest-rate cuts take between six and
long-range nuclear missiles and closing an unspecified number
President Bush.
nine months to make their way through
of bases in 2003.
Until Wednesday, aU of the Fed's previ- the economy. Its first rate cut was on Jan.
He said the $18.4 billion would be the biggest defense budget increase for any year since the mid- 1980s, although he said
it would barely begin the military modernization .President
Bush has promued.

Defense budget faces sautiny

11ui ldwy. ,... 21.

3, 5o that reduction wouldn't show up in
economic activity until July at the earli'
•
est.
The .Fed's credit-:t!asing campaign iJ
aimed at reviving the national econol'llY&lt;
which has been stuck in low gear since
the se~ond half oflast year. The rate cu~
lower borrowing costs, a move designeci
to entice consumers to spend 311d bus..
nesses to invest, thus bolstering econom..
ic groWth.
The Fed provided no explanation why
it switched to a smaUer cut, other thaJl
. citing that "continuing favorable trends
bolster long-term prospects for produc.
,.
tivity growth and the economy.
•
However, economists suggested ilw:
the quarter-point cut might have been a
compromise between Fed officials con
cerned about overdoing the credit easing
and sowing the seeds of higher inflation
next year and those still worried' the
economy could tip into recession.
•
Wednesday's cut pushed the Fed's tar•
get for the federal funds rate, the inte~
that banks charge each other, to 3.75
percent, down from 6.5 percent where it
stood before the Fed began cutting rate$
on jan. 3.

HIGHLIGHTS
Cheeks named
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) ...:.
The ·Portland Trail Blazers
introduced Maurice Cheeks
as their new head coach, confirming what was accidentaUy
~ealed earlier it) the rtight.
. • Any doubt abqut whether
Cheeks.would get the job was
.erased when the team's firstround dr:ift' 'choice, Zach
Randolph, let the secret out
sliortly after being selected.
Varigus media outlets
rePorted that Cheeks, an assistaht with the Philadelphia
76ers the past seven years,
would pe named as the sue- ·
cessor to Mike Dunleavy.
Although the · Philadelphia
media was awaiting a conference call with Cheeks after
the d~aft's conclusion, the
Blaz
,
ers wou)d not confi rm
the htre.
But Randolph, a freshman
fotward .fu:lm Michigan State
selected at No. 19, ina!lvert~dy letA slip.
·

WASHINGTON (AP) - · The family of a convicted crime
boss paid Roger Clinton SSO,OOO and the check is being examined by a House panel investigating how the Clinton administration doled out pardons, according to a House official.
Rosario Gambino, a convicted heroin trafficker and reputed
mafia boss, did not receive a pardon from former President
Clinton. But the White House did request background information on Gambino from the Justice Department near the end
of Clinton's second term. a source familiar with the House
investigation said late Wednesday.
The New York Times reported on its Web site that the background request was connected to a possible White House pardon. The Justice Department sent the Clinton administration a
record of Gambino's criminal record, the newspaper said.
A source close to the investigation also told the Times that
Roger Clinton wrote a letter to Clinton's parole commission in
1999 on behalf of Gambino. Roger Clinton is former President
Clinton's half brother.

.U.S. 'hopes for appealletioa-.
I

·• · ·

, •:

Egypt scored on a penalty
kick in 76 th minute . and
added a goal in the 8814 to
advance tO· the quarterfinals of
the under-20 "tournament, a
24"nation showcase for some
of the game's most proin,·sit~~.
,_
.. ",
p~ayers.
'
·

.eoah.to$e . .
. .
{

(

I

o

.,
.t,.-,

surpry .

DECATUR, Ill. (AP) -A dark cloud oflabor strife that has
hung over this blue-collar city for yea{! got a little thicker with
the news that Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. will close its Decatur
plant after almost four decades.
·
The plant made most of the 6.5 million Firestone tires
recalled last summer. The company insists, however, that money
- not the recall - is the reason for closing the plant by Dec.
31, a move officials said would save $100 million a year.
Regardless of the reason, the closing is expected to put nearly 1,500 employees out of work.
·
"It's just another setback in the life of the armpit' of IUinois,"
said resident Jeff Senger, who works at Decatur-based Archer
. Daniels Midland Co., the No. 1 employer in ·the city, followed
by Caterpillar and then Firestone.
•

WWU vets to be honored

&lt;

•••••

PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) - Hershel WiUiams' most vivid
memo;y of lwo Jima is the sound .'?f mac,hine gun bullets
bouncmg off a steel flame thrower strapped to his back as he
crawled toward a Japanese .bunker.
·
~ 'It was just rat-ta-tat- tat," recaUed Williams, 77, ofOna, W.Va.
"There are some things about that action that are just like a
daydream. TheY"_ ~on 't even seem real to me."

_ ____
.......

'

.~~.·

NEW YORK (AP) -:- 1
~oxer .underwent .three hour's ,
of brain surgery after ·being
pun~)Jed .into a, ~onia just two
roundi after rin!\iiae physicians nearly stopped his liglitheavywdght fight.
Beethavean Scottland, 26,
was·in ·~tremely critical con4ition at BeUevue Hospital, ·
where his family was. keeping
,
vigil.
Scottland was knocked out ·
Thesday night in the1 tpth
round rif his fight with undefeated Geqrge Khalid Jones.
· Scottland, 0£ Norih Brent-·
wo.od, Md., was a late replace. mept wh10n the scheduled
lighter pulled out last· Friday
alter sull'eril')g a broken nose
dfu:ing ,training. 1, . •
' Afte~. he' was staggered in
the seventh round, Scottland
~ppeared
sliaken ·as he '
teturned to his corner.
:. After undergoing one protedure overnight at BelleVue,
ScottJand endured three
· jlours
of
neurosutgery
Wednesday. Doctors would
not prmtide any prognosis.

City faces new cala111ity

..... .-. ·- ..

We want ·to know about
your local sports happeijings.
Contact the Daily Sentinel
vi!! e-mail at sports@mydailysentinel.com or by fax at 992- ·
2157.
. 1
....

Miami·
takes
Johnson.

·~

blast·

.'

Indians.

BY THE ASSOCIAlED PRESS

As name after name was
caUed and the next generation of NBA players ~
announced, Ken Johnson
got more and inore ncrvous.
..- "I felt like I had this huge
weight dragging on me;' the
former Ohio State center
said. "I was standing up,
' sweating."
Wait until he has to run
sprints in a Pat Riley training camp.
Johnson, whose shot
blocking ability made him a
pro prospec~ was picked by
the
d~fensive-minded

.

NEW YORK (AP) - Tino
Martihez did his best to silence

'
'

some critics. .

Martin_ez, in a miierable
slump in possibly his last year
'
. '
with the Yankees, went 4-for-5
" I
• l
with a homer and five RBis as
.'
New York beat Cleveland 15-5
Wednesday.
Martinez, 19-for-121 enter"
ing the game, hit i two-run
double in the first, an RBI singl'e in the second, a two-run
homer in the fourth and a
double in the fifth. He also
scored three run$.
• ·But be was , testy after the
·~ lliJFY iibo•i'«ent q~
tions regarding his. status in
New York. Martinez's contract
is up at the end of the year and
the Yankees appear ready to
turn first base over to top
prospect Nick Johnson.
There have also been reports '
that New York is interested in
Ollkland first ·baseman . Jason
Giambi, which would cut into
Martinez's playing time.
But Martinez appears to be
breaking out of his slump. He
had a pinch-hit homer to help
the Yankees beat Cleveland 8-7
Monday, and he came up big
again in the series finale.
Shane Spence.r went 4-for-5
with a homer and four RBis,
Derek Jeter had three hits, and
Paul O''N eill hit · a two-run
double as New York scored
one more run than they had in
Mike Mussina's previous six
starts combined.
Mussina (8-7), signed to an
$88.5 inillion, six-year contract
in the offSeason, had been getting an average of only 3. 6 runs
of support coming in.
C. C. Sab:ithia (7-3) was done
in by his wildness - both to
the plate and first base. The )
three batters sabathia walked
aU scored, and his wild throw
to first on Chuck Knoblauch's
sacrifice led to two unearned
runs in the second.
· The Yankees jumped out to a
6-0 lead for the second time in
the three games. But the Indians nearly erased that deficit
again, getting a two-run homer
by Kenny Lofton in the thitd
and a two-nm single by Einar
Diaz in the fourth. Cleveland
scored. seven runs in the sixth
inning Monday before losing
\
on Martinez's homer.
This time, the Yankees
answered with five in the
fol1rth, highlighted by Martinez's 11 th homer.
New York added three in the
fifth, helped by an embarrass.'
ing double-error by lett fielder
.'
Russell Branyan and center
'
fielder Lofton.
. grencer jingled '!.,O left-cenl,il!l!l!l 'jjlt~ ~· ~ded, and
Branxrn couldn't pick up the
ball , allowing Spencer to reach
.I
second. Lofton then also failed
' f
I
' .
to pick it up, allowing Jorge
Posada to score from first on
the second error. .

.

't~je NBA ~on Wedries- ..·
&amp;y • .
' I( '1 ,

. go out ~d. oo:tvhar~t db
·liest, wliich is defend the
sccirer, rebound and bloc~
shots;' Johnson said.
A f'¥0-time Big Ten
defensive player of the year
and the conference's career
leader in blocks (444);Johnson was predicted to go in
the late first round before an
influx of high schoolers and
coUege underclassmen hurt
his chances.

COMING OUT PARTY -

starter Lance Davis pitches during the first Inning Bl!alnst
the c.ardlnals In St. Louis Wednesday. (AP)
·

1 Tl,.

Reds rookie blows

The Heat, however, pride
themselves
on
tough
defense. Joh'nsori's quick
feet, long arms and good
jumpipg ability should be a
nice complement to the
power games of Anthony
Mason -· if th~ free agent
resigns with Miami - and
Alonzo Mourning.
Other teams may have .
shied away from the 6-foo~11 Johnson because of his
questionable offensive skills
and 235-pound frame - ·
lighter than most NBA centers he'U play against in the
low post.
Johnson averaged only 8.3
points a ~e during his
Ohio State career.

pa$1 Cardinals, 3-1
'i!ST. LOUIS (AP) :...::. Lance Davis just kept
throwing his fastbaU; and the St. Louis Cardinals never caught up.
pavis pitched eigllt impressive innings for
hls· first major ·league win, leading the
Cincinnati Reds to ·a ·3~1 vidor); over St.
Louis on Wednesday night. The 24-year-old
rookie aUowed only one run and four hits in
his third big league outing.
·
·
"In my first two starts up here, I was
thr9wing a lot of bfeaking balls," Davis said.
"But that didn~t get me anywhere, so I
decided to throw just fastballs, and it
workFd."
Davis (1-0) walked one and struck out
five. ,Gall~d up from 'the minors June 15 after
going 7-2 at Triple-A Louisville, Davis said
he decided to change his approach after
talking with Reds manager Bob Boone.
"He asked me if I was throwing a lot

more breaking pitches than I had been at
Louisville, and I told him I was," Davis said.
The 'Jeft-hander retired his last 15 batters
after Albert Pujols doubled to lead off the
fourth. 'Danny Graves ·pitched a scoreless
ni'nt,h&lt;.for his 16th save in 21 chances.
"Lance was lethal," Boone said. "Using the
fastball was the key to the game."
Cincinnati catcher Jason LaRue helped
guide Davis along.
·
"I just poured fastballs in there where he
told me to throw them," Davis said. "LaRue
caUed a great game. We were dead on cue.
It's wonderful when you and your catcher
can get along like that." .
LaRue did more than just help Davis on
the mound. He homered off Dustin Hermanson in the second inning to put the
PleiH 1H

Reds, BJ

,.

·'

.Clark wiri.s
CHAR~ESTON; ' W.Va..

. ~,o

'West Virginia.Open title

(AP)
finish at 6-under par.
,
.
WestfaU, who owns Tygart Valley
Jonathan Clark started djjnking abou
his first West_Yirgirria Open golf c~an;-;•.'C?u~try Club in Grafton, shot a 5,7 .. ,
ptonshtp a btt too early.
&lt;. l .,... · nder 65.- the low score of the tour~ · .CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) · Clark watched a genero~s lead shrink ~ment - after starting the day at c;,ven R.iverstde Golf Course pro Ty Jl..oush
.down ·the stretch and he needed a 4-'~par.
.
·
finished 16th in the West Virginia
foot par putt on the 18th hole to hold' ·· Carter shot a 68 to finish third at 3- Open Wednesday.
off a charging Brad WestfaU for a one- under.
.
He _rlayed rounds. of 74, 76, and 73
shot victory Wednesday at Berry Hills - ·After making an 8-foot birdie putt on to finiSh at 223, which was 19 strokes
Couptry Club.
.
. .th~ par-4 15th hole, Clark's lead w~ off the leader. • .
·
.I
Hts son, GlenvdJe State CollegeFor Clark, whose prevtous ~est fimsh ., tbur shots.
wassecondtoJohnRossin 1999,it.was ,·'"I thought as long as I hit solid olf r bound Wahama graduate Trent
a satisfYing victQry, knowing he outlast- ~ots coming in, I'm going to win," Roush, ~layed round1 of 80, 76, and
.ed the defending champion Westfall 6/ark said. "But then after a while I 88 to finiSh at 244.
and the state's best ·amateur, Pat Carter. sta,ned saying, 'making pars isn't going L__ __;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
, "This makes me feel better that I can to be good enough."'
compete with these guys- each year,"
;£'hat's because WestfaU, a three-time a~';;~~~~!t~.~
He's gc
Clark said. "Finishing second is finish- Open champion, wasn't finished. He
Clark stayed aggressive by hitting dribirdied the llnal three holes, including a
ing setond. It's nice to win."
ver off th e short par- 4 17th , but he
A 27-year-old assistant pro at Sleepy 40-foot putt on the par-3 16th to close
two-putted for par while Westfall made
Hollow Country Club in Hurricane, the gap to three shots.
·
Clark shot a 3-undet-par 67 WedneSday
"That completely changed the tide
Pluu IH Open, BJ

..;

Pis nne ... Dnlfl. n

Yanks

"I'm just ·{tally ·happy
P: ·•·' • ~mowing
this is a team 1-j:an

:~B~NOS AllUS.~~ti~

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Stand-up comedian Paula Poundstone was arrested and charged with child endangerment and
committing a lewd act on a young girl, the district attorney's
·
office said.
Poundstone; 41, was charged with three counts of committing a lewd act on a girl under the age of 14, as weU as endangering two other girls and two boys, Deputy District Attorney
Gina Satriano said in a statement.
She. could face up to 13 years and four months in prison if
convicted on aU charges. Prosecutors expect to set an arraign'- ·
ment date Thursday.
Poundstone was arrested Wednesday at 3:10 p.m. and released
about four hours later after posting $200,000 bail.

•

·

:

na •(AP) _;_The.United Scltes
was eliminated from the FIFA
World Youth Championship,
playing uncertain defense in a
2-0 loss to Egypt.

Co111ic P.oundstone araested ·

..........:. . .

~· •.,~".f•J'." (·, ,' ·
' ~~

:a••

Indeed, this draft was aU about the
aUure of potential.
Three of the first four players chosen were .high school seniors, and the
college player of the year - Duke's
Shane Battier - wasn't taken until
the Grizzlies picked him sixth - one
spot after Golden State selected
Michigan State guard Jason Richardson, a sophomore.
In another trade, the New Jersey
Nets sent the rights to Eddie Griffin,
selected seventh ovetaU, to the Houston Rockets for the rights to their

j

·

BETHLEHEM, Pa. (AP) -1\vo brothers who ran a pair of
supermarkets were charged with making, nearly $800,000 by
redeeming coupons they bought on the black market.
Barry J?alank, 51, and his brother Lee Palank, 49, allegedly
obtained· 1.3 million coupons from an illicit broker, then
redeemed them as if customers had used them at their stores.
"Ultimately, you and I pay," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Paul
Sarmousakis.
' The Palanks were charged with mail fraud for aUegedly using
the mail to further their scheme, and with tax evasion, for
aUegedly failing to pay taxes on the revenues received.

l..~-·~----·-··-·---J'o.------•

't

· · Jiatw.litfi ·"'

.

2 charged in coupon sca111

H.S. in South HoUand, IU.
Curty and Chandler will make the
BuUs even younger than they were last
seasol_l when they had the greenest
roster in league history.
" I don't remember starting two
freshmen wllen I was a coach in college," BuUs coach Tim Floyd said. "I
guess I'm going to get a chance in the
NBA.
"We've gotten younger, and ifs
going to be very difficult to replace
Elton's 20 (points) and 10 (rebounds)
immediately next year. We recognize
this whole draft is based on potential
and who these guys could become."

.,.&lt;' • ·"
:,ai ·ll!·, ·---~
. . . ·. • · ond
M~
~eat )ate in the sec- .
~;a. -wiMIII!~ ~
·round {..9th pverall~ of
~

~

.

NEW YORK (AP) - Already
sehool player No. 1
}'oung and bad, the Chicago BuUs got
overall.
younger and worse - at least for the
FC Barcelona forshon term.
ward Pau Gasol went
In a stunning trade completed midthird t1&gt; Atlanta,
way through the first round of the
which will send him
NBA draft, the Bulls sent their best
to the Grizzlies as
player, Elton Brand, to the Los Angepan of a yet-tQ-beles Clippers in exchange for the draft
completed trade for
rights to 18-year-old center Tyson
Shareef
AbdurBrown
Chandler.
Rahim. No player
The Washington Wizards used the
from a foreign team
first pick on high school' senior had ever been drafted so high.
Kwame Brown of Glynn Academy in
The Bulls also selected a high
Brunswick, Ga., marking the first time school player with the fourth pick,
an NBA team has selected a high grabbing Eddy Curry ofThornwood

THuRsoo's

Panel eyes fa111ily's payanent

WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States wiU say it hopes
Lori Berenson~ appeal ·will be heard ..soon in Peru. It will say·,..;~
that humanitarian considerations should be taken into account.
What it hasn't ctid- and wo~'t say - is that Berenson is
innocent of charges that she collaborated with leftist guerriUas.
Former U.S. officials say they aren't sure she is innocent. ·
"I don't know how anybody could look at the evidence and
arrive at a different conclusion than she knew more than she's
admitting to;' said Dennis Jett, U.S. ambassador to Lima from
1996-1999.

Page Bl

'

Roush finishes 16th

.

..

..
.I
~

- ·-

'.

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

'

�Tony Batista"pays
the Blue Jays back

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PR£SS

I

Page B~

Baseball

·The Daily Sentinel

Toronto W:as hoping Tony Batista would rediscover his AllStar swing -' but nor for Baltimore.
Batista hit a tiebreaking two-run homer Wednesday for the
team that claimed him off" waivers two days before, lifting the
Orioles to 01.7-3 victory over the Blue Jays.
" We rolled the dice and we thought we could get him to
Triple-A, and maybe he could get straightened out, but it seems
as though he's got a little more intensity, and he's swinging the
bat pretty weii,"Toronto manager Buck Martinez said.
Batista, in the second year of a four-year $16 million' contract,
was hitting .207 for the Blue Jays with 13 home runs _before
they put him on irrevocable waivers. Last season, the third baseman hit 41 homer$ and drove in 114 runs.
In other AL games, New York routed Clevejand 15-5, Tampa
Bay outscored Boston 9-7, Kansas City edged Detroit S-4,
Minnesota beat Chicago .4 -1, Oakland defeated Seattle 6-3 and
Anaheim downed Texas 4-2.
-.. , don't know what's going on with the Blue Jays, but he
leads us in homers and RBis:• Baltimore starter Jose Mercedes
said. " How can you give up on a guy like that?"
_
Mercedes (4-8) won his third straight start. Mercedes, who
retired 15 straight during one stretch, allowed thiee runs on five
hits in 7 2-3 innings.
Batista altered his wide-open stance to a more traditional ·one
to throw off" his former team.
"They know . me, so I did something different, something .
crazy and it happened for me," said Batista, who went 3-for-4.
"In a couple of days, I'D go back to my old appr;oach."
Baltimore's Jeff Conine hit a two-run homer'in the third. and
David Segui added a rwo-run single for Baltiqlore.

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·
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Olloolt ISIJorb 5-3) .. -

•tr-llte
• •

•

Mil•-

- -• MCo&amp;,._.cu:Truall.CIIIICUNw.l'200
1 p.m. · 5aluillej • ESPN
• --.INCU..-210
2 p.m. ·, ~ • FX

Ramon Hernandez hit his first career grand slam and Terrence Long had a two-run homer as Oakland beat host Seatde.
Tim Hudson (8-5) got help fiom the Athletics'. bullpen,
which pitched 3 1-3 scoreless innings. Jason lsringlla!Uen got!,
his 14th save.
TheA's won minus slugger Jason Giambi. Last year'sAL MVP
sat out for the fi, 't time this season while nursing a sore -right
calf.

·

Marllns9,~

1

a.

... fQr¥ StoW.rt, 2,117
I. Slerllf'C MMin, 2,108
.. RuSI)' Wll*:o, 2,038

~OKER RlJri

.' .'
.

SAT. JUNE 30

,.

..
'

$10.00 ENTRY

'

STARTS @ MIZWAY
SIGN IN @ 12:00
LAST BIKE OUT @ 1:00
ENDS @ .GOODTIMES
NEED INFO. CALL 742·1513 OR 742-30110

,_.,.

Yout~

Buying or
StlliOII

1. (1) Jell2..(41 Tonr-t

Homo

...,....

Pllnnlnalor

4. (3) 1ltciiY I, (It Rulty "t' Ill cI

8.(9) - 7.(10)1k111br ~

10. (7) - . . . . -

7

Featuring
Kentucky

Fried Chicken
228 Mllln St.
PomlfOY, Ohio
Drtv•Thru Window

992·5432

.

MIINJ,;
See us for Your Sllh!Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply
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. . . . lop to.
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lola..,.-·_,
... ..... .

Got
~

ha?

-----

FROM LA ST WEEK

- Gordon said M wanted
Harvlck to serve aa a buffer
SONOM4, Callr. - How's
between him and Stewart,
this for an Improbable
who was closinl In - Gordon
ending? At Sears Point ,
raced Hllfvlck with everRaceway, a bunipin«·ano.
lncreasln&amp; tenacity.
&amp;riMin&amp; duel broke Out at
Even ~lie his own
the front of tne peck, and
spotter was uralni him to
TOO)' Stewart. whO .had
·let Harvlck &amp;o: 9ordon
nothlnJ to do with it, wound
continued to block, and
up wlnninll the
Harvlck, for his pert.
-OW&amp;e/S&amp;YeMerl 350.
continued to a~ - ~ ,,
Stewart was In preciselY
pressure and bLimp
the riJht place at precisely
Gordon's Fotd from beNnd
the rl&amp;ht time, and when a
. with hla Chevrolet. •
&amp;Iimmer of opportunlt~
In turn seven, a
presented Itself, he seized
reconfl&amp;ured part of the
the advantage brilliantly.
course, Harvlck and GOI'don
The race was,decided on
shoved each otner harshly,
the 102nd at 112 laps.
which &amp;ave Stewart.th·e
Robby Gordon had a
openln&amp; t)e needed.
&amp;~orlous triumph within his
Stewart's Pontiac .passed
&amp;rasp. Inserted for one race both of them, and he was
onl~ In the Ford owned by
off to his second victory of
fe llow Californian Jim Smith, .the year.
Gordon held about a
aecond-end-a·half advantage
CRAPTIMAN TRUCK
over Stewart, who Md
passed Jeff Gordon 1or
MILLINGTON, Tenn.second on lap 97.
Dennis Setzer won for the
Unfortunately for Robby
first time and &amp;ave
Gordon, rookie Kevin
Chevrolet its &amp;econd victory
Harvick, no shrinkln&amp; violet,
In a ro\N, by holdln&amp; off
wanted 'baCk on the lead lap points leader Scott Rigs In
after ateamlna out of the
the 200-lap, .150-mile race
pits with a fresh set of
at Memphis Motorsporta
_rubber. For whatever reason Park1

Htr ..IA Dtldt~

DIM'I Ik, Pa.

Hi- b.lif!loe lt111ea1u Fu.t is Jliuying thr JOIIml ojrl;r: mcilfiJ tmglnu
"' foJ/ WJ/11ntt&gt; ro Ri•·t· home vic11-erJ

Jfl mt flavor of wllut it /ee!b lib
lw 111 till roct.

r~t Jllort Qlflll'tr to your quts·
lhm Is thut tlw Bust'11 cun ~-e" not
sloM'ed h_v thr .fo:uUr: u.rrody11a111lr:
ll!s lr/ctlrms us the Cup ('totrs. rlr~
Intent, fa!' tltt C11p curs, 11'a.1 to
111uke passing IQ!Sier.
Not m.:~.tlng rhrs.:~me clwngeJ ;,
Bvsd sal'/ld tlwJI 1eam1 some

tour victorias,
Hocsiatcau: Las Veps
~~~t:22

Dear NASCAR This Week,
Why 1re rate te1m1 only
I 1llowed dlree tela or tiret'f And
what happen• if allthrn nt1 are

- : Slort (Sept, 24,
(!IJOO,,Itl)v.ooo-), pole

I_,.J,oO!n(norooJ
C.....e II 1111:23

'"" flnlotoeo, 3 top-10s, 0
poles, almost U.S million
lnearnin,..
Clr: No. 97 Shorplo/
Rubberm.id Ford Taurus,
owned by Jack Rouoh
Crew oblef: Ben Lealie

·--•Stncoe

Haw -..oil of I

used and you arc atlll t~eJna?
Kan• K~trt•
Hop1lrlled.Pa.

.

--.
.
.
.
...
--JMII
--, .........-

JoM~lhii­

~~-0

that you want them to.
I R • • , . . rMicle ... It's quite a bit of e task.
, _ ..._, •The
Thus far, we've had an 'A'
ellpectatlona that (Jack,
effort from the team. We've
Rou1h pve ua was ~ lltUe onl)l had ,one l)lpe ·or failure,
bit dtfferent-thlln moat, I
at Martinsville. As far 11
suppOse, with haVI,_ Mark ~~ performance, I'd have to .
Mlrtln, JetT Burton and
rate myself 11 a · c :~
Mon Men-. who Juo£
wtoet - I t liM te ..nt tnrOUCJo hit
0 IJNI ruo at Lao ,......
R~tttos rookie see,on
11e1or lpndt .,, your
iHHM~wu trHk7 _
•To IO
liSt year. Thll II
completely different. AU
back there with e bl&amp;
the different raettrack8
I homecomlnl, tO f8C8 there
and dlfteren~s of
locally and to have all the
thln&amp;a you h
to do on ; family there was en
'lfie1e Winst Cup cars to unbelievable weekend. It
make them ndie the Wltj seeme&lt;J like 1wa~ a

••••••••••••
V'....Hot_
Wllo'aNoe

• H01'1 Tony Stewart has
el&amp;ht top-10 finishes In his
last nine races.
• NOr: Johnn~ Benaon
has finished outside of the
top 10 five races In a row.

lhl ............

- - - - - - · ·

,..~

zone. Nothln&amp; really

bothered mt and the car .
seemed to handle well. The
whole weekend went
smooth. We quaHtled ninth
and finished 11th. The only
thlna that went wron&amp; WIIS
ever~ took two tires at
the en&lt;J ancl we took four,
and that't how 1tlnithe&lt;J
11th. It wat an all-around
areat weekend. lt't &amp;reet to
do well when you went to
do welL We wanl to Cia well
every weekend, but It's just
8 matter of eettlnl the car
to handle well and have
everythln&amp;
well:

ao

.....,.....

1. What was the unusual asl)tlct
of Billy Wade's four victories?
·
2. WhO won a c;hamplonshlp driving the K&amp;f&lt;
Insurance Dodge?
3. Whet state has had the m'ost different
tracks hOst races?
\!::&gt;OlS «n::.IJlS
pue IBUO!lBN puBJ!) 'SJOSS9::l9P9Jd S\j pue
dn:J uoaSUIM Uj it~ LIIIM 'UUIIOJS:J ~lJON 't .J98SI
.(qQ08 ·~ ~!9A!U".JQjU00 P9JJnO:&gt;O .&lt;SlU ' l
SUMINV

'I?IC' I'I'Stritr/OtiS }'Oil l'l'jer

Kevln,Harvlck, Jeff G_reen have a,crew chief In common

·~Dolo

.. '

dl'l 71 - ..... ..,.,
oniJ DM

.......

It' MonltDutlon
NA5CAR lhts W!lek

oourae, Ill

-•
....... "'
-~nt

·coUPON

n

Up to $5e00 oft

4.

iMiiiiiiiiii"

lionoma,
"""""
loonhonll.. -~~~~

Richard Olltc:m..

IICIOOhiiZh I &amp;liLts wwe

thai liarvjcki BON crew chief. Todd
l.ll:rrier. h a!M:I Gtftn J Cl4)cmv dtlef.
"IY'I't il funny! A lot of ptOplt don 'I
koow thotl," GI\'CII said. '11u IW ioce
npl/l!lt eocb *oo Suturday lllld ~~
with each othc!r on Sunday on .'IIM!n

opoiorot-.-1n '

lttiiiMI-01
QO.n, N.Y.li"~

-

1.... , _ .... 1...,.

any preseription.

'

Lhnlt I per customer
per prescrlptl.,n

Mos1 people know- ~-~~ HIIIVick ill
lcadil1¥ the Busch Serio; poinlli !itltndinp while, Ill Ill:~ limrr. le:Jdinglhc
Wimton c~ rookie raceandCO!lllding
in Blllhc MtXS in lnh ~ Mas~al.1o
koow Jeff Gtml i• the rei81lina BON
c~ rnl ~ he i8 running~!e~Cfl
,Cup nKts in a Chtvrole.t owned by

'

'

Whallftllll

may nol 1\1\'t 1\'lllizcd i5

L~ Wilen Spencer\ Ford
bit. }'00 know.juK Qctting I1'10I'e tin~t · pilled. the yelk'lw fll.g finally l'Wl'll: 0t11
onlhll ponic\Jiar rirt, thJI: prwriru!ID' day ond M a r'e!\ull. srrncer loot :11!~
of~llll ~ular ~- SI.ILVIY rime
Coincid:IIC!:'!
)'ttl can gt.1 ftlO!e lnformution lind learn
X
rfiOrt eboul il lhrough the: ~kends.
so Fi\R, S(J GtKlll: Chi('IG31la.'l.~i
you 'It suifl!: 10 milw ~lfbr:th.T on is obvioosly b-.~1 111 the performI'IICt:da)l. I think."
IIIJX. of l'IP: of his~ hnepitls. Vt:tX
o.'l\llldrivtr Ster111g Martin Clllnt! lo Scats
PAYBACK'! Rcnltmbtr ~rnl 1\llm r.ri,ed founh in the Witl&gt;1on C~
'M'Ckit IIIJO when Jimmy Spmr;er spoke !)(lints WUlt.lings and S1.'-e11lt.'d to be the
about n.un1 NASCAR rules dwlgn'? ~ likely clri\.erlo give Dodge Its fil1il
Did )'00 Mlndcr if perillps the ruling \'ictoty since 1977.
bodymiWlt make things diffiCUlt fur the
"IM!'rcccrtainlypka.,antly ~,J,"
awpokmdti\"el"!
Cl!lllll.\\~tid. ''I think if)'I)U had~ in
lnlhef'ocm"lSOO. Em!Bodi~\Ford .luncoc July IAAI)"t~rlhlll we wm(.l0i1111
cwstcUtoa~ltonthc lnll:k. TIIt'carli&lt;il tolledun:lintl~[k'li111$co'llncthr~Jllle~ .
!!topped at the ln~de or the oou~ tOr nil \\-Otlkt 00\-elul n r-uty.

o;;casions. bullthl:nkk'!l helped me alit- · ne:rty tmt
lie

'"The good news is wc'Jie fourttJ in lhe

!JJiltll. llll!' lllllJ fleY.I!I is ~W'reall a OOnch
of mcen; nnd v.!!'re not happj with that.
cidJCr. lnruciog.if}Q,Ii! l[):h.)'lll.l Wlrllto

&lt; ';)

CD

X
SJIAWNA GETS JUICW: Tropi·
uln:ady the corpor.llc :ljUI'lOI' for
the ttle(:, annwnccd thi.\ ~ !hal it \\.ill
5p!JI1SOI' Shawru Robitt'01 's ~ 10
&lt;-••••&lt;
I" ' w,-•-•C•m
'" r- C II1 ' ""
,.,.,.. - 1, ,...,.,
,.....,:.,"i •&gt;•
new Chil:ngoL.'lnd SJ~· nnJuly 15.
Gll'lil

-

-~---~.---...
Of lftdlpl -.ntly OWftiCIW Clflll'ltlll ...MNIIH
ol TM ,.... . . . . . . . . . . Amliltll.

'r

l

D)

D"-· 0-.
CD

oa.
m!!,

ed in '"e "umber oftiru llrDf mQy
/)(! ust!d In rocr:s. rlr~r no.rtrlcllol!s

--·

QN C'Oiftmotr~V USrtJ QJ Q CIIJI•CIIf·

=DJ

filf!l ,rururr in flit Bu1clt Strill,
tlllt/111 ti!O.St t'UU'I, wlfld! IllY slrnrt-

f l)

rr, ll!'all!s just lravt tu pfatt tlrtlr

race Jlf'Q/tJlY bastd "" llrr aWJ//.
ttbllity oftlru

•••••••••••

FanTipa

• NASCAR Winston Cup
driver Mark Martin will host a
celebrlt)' •olf tournament to
benefit tne New Smyrna
Quarter-Midget Raclnt
Association on Jut~ 4 at
Spruce Creek COuntry Club
near Daytona Beach, Ae.
Those confirmed to
participate are Mike Skinner,
, Brett and Todd Bodine, Junie
Donlavey, Benny Parsons,
Oerrlke Cope and Barry
Dodson. Getorade will be the
event sponsor. Registration
is at noon, with a·shotaun
start' at 1 p.m. (EDT).
Sponsorship oj)porttmltlea
are still available for the aoH .
tournament. For more
Information on spona01ahip,
or partlclpatln&amp; In the
tournament, ptea·se contact
Joy Miller ot (904) 761-9495.

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45789
'Phone 992·1135
1 - jn nlhilinti,Mt

-~--

wiMin• the
Doq:ejlaveMart 310
at s.a,. Point Raceway,

• Aft..-

TiiiiY
ltew•rt

nldltwu
. -H tup

chance
-by
8MWCitlef

Q...
Zlpod0111
that p•wH the way for

lt•w•rt'a first f08d.
course Ylctory... On the

latt pit tlop, the CUYI
mede • m8)or chanc•
and the c•r retponded,"
SP•wart elld.

at
z0

~

CD

:::r
en

(Q.

3

1\)

tL

:I

I
1\) · •CD~
•
1\)

co
CJ1

992-2155

0

c

.NOCD
... :::s
~c=r.
CIICD:::l
c:T!!.

1+'111s/V11 Cup trurm orr 1101 ,.sfrlct~

Call The Daily ,Sentinel for details
.
Dave Harris or O,e bbie Call
'

~

iN!l»cn

...

'

CD

...
...-·--=--·
I»

/0, tlf

Place Your Business's Ad here

(Expll'el 07·n·Ol)

CD

:::l:c

/t!Qst Iff lf'imton Cup, arr joT pru,·t/ct utrtl qllalifylng, 1101 tJrt rau.

lx nimh. If )'JU'n= lifth. yw IWII 10 be
fourth. and if )'OO're. !hint )UJ want to bt
second . We're .ull happy with !hot. bu1
11\"'rl: ca1.1il11yootcul11.'11! with iL"

Wilh a 211th-pi.1C1.' fumh Smday. MMlin slipped to fi fth in the !olal'dings.

.,-

C!!. ~
m-

I can' t understand why the
8LtSCh cars were fuler at Talladega,
Ala, NASCAR is rnakin~t~the Cup
can look like tl'lr li"'e boyl.
Mr.1nd Mn.C•ry 1(1•1
C•ntn•,O•kt

wound up the Haaon with

t'lces, 0 W:t~ort... 2 ~op.

n

AROUND IHI GARAGE

19ft,
Eomh-

,.

lfJ

Dear NASCAR This Wtek.

Ro!Jbr GonltM n. KMin·HnMok

aot

Quo111yllll II&lt;Ord; Goeg

Biffle, Ford, 121.102 mph,
July 2, 1999
Rece rec:CM'd: ·Greg Biffle,
Ford, 106.714 mph , July 3,
1999
NotHI•: Chevrotets tuwe
broken the Dodge logjam
with victorie§ in the last two
races.

Dear Nr't.SCAR This Wc:r:k .
I am curio u1 10 know what il
means when thr:y pul "Cra nk 11 Up"
on the TV ~reen, wilh 1he red
li&amp;11t1 flas.hing. I see it every Wtc'k,
bu1 I dun'! krlow what it mtans.

Althouatt somewhat
O¥erahadowed by Kevin
HaMck, Kurt Busch has
turned needi in hll rookie
Mason In the Winston
Cup 8ei'lee.
Busch 11 firmly In
second place In the
Raybestoa ROOkie of the
Year points standln&amp;s. As
recently as 1998, h8 was
ratln&amp; on the West Coast,
where he became the
· younaeat driver ever to win
the Feetherllte SOuthwest
Tour chamPionship.
In February 2000, Busch
finished second In his very
flrat Craftsman Truck
Series race, at DaytOna.
He won for the first time
.at Milwaukee In July and

FIUD OF!HI W!IK
• Gordon ted the Seers Point race In the latter Jta&amp;es.
Harvlck had )uot piUad end wonted beo:k on tho loiid
lap. Gordon wouldn't let him J)llt, the two
totether
end tt\t lncklent wound up coatlnc GorOon the race. "If
that would hl'.'a been ln)t)Ody with ·~ 11nae, he woutd
hive known I had fresh tires on, he would have let me
eo, and he woukl heve won tfle race: Harvlck said.
NAICAII Tllla
toto
aplnt.: •Robb)l Gordon wantl&lt;l Hervlck between his ctr
and Tony Stewart, who was narrowlna the liP- But his
spotter and crew Chlef · wer~ tellln&amp; him to let Hervtck
&amp;0, and Gordon wouldn't lllttn. Hit stubbOtnntSI COlt
him the race:

Mile , west Allis , Wis. (1·mlle
track). 200 taps/miles
Mcen: 1 p.m .. Saturday
DefwnllllnC c'*np: Kurt
Busch

ltttln rn. O.r..lars

NASCAR This Week

••••••••••

puru-1oro-_.-.. tootypooi1Mtlool'o-"""11trou&lt;t-.n
rooo hlvo ""p~oy~&lt;
row ~(tol· pton,,... --to---~~~-

.I

3 's,N.C. . . . .

Your Turn

Winston Cup Series

.,

-'alii--._

Swisher A Lohse Phannacy

...

R••

Wallace, Chevrolet.100.999
mph, July 2. 1994
Nobble: No one has ever
-;::======~ won the pole or the race
BIJICH GRAND NATIONAL more than once . ...
What:.GNC Live Well 250
Chevrolets have won sii out
Where! The Milwaukee
of the 10 previous races .
Mile, We'st Allis. Wis. (1-mite
CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
track ), 250 lapS/mlles
When: 2 p.m., Sunday
Whet: GNC live Well 200
Defendln&amp; ctwmp: Jeff Green
Where: The Milwaukee

11)'-Duttoo

c...,

WINSTON CUP

Family
Restaurant

ltourltiN procluotl art offeNd through Ptuoo IHutltiH cerpornon and llniHftllll
1tour111. . lnoorparaiH (berth memiMn ltPC), both tubaldltriM of The Prudtntltl
lntu,.ll Comptny of AmtriOI, IOOittd It 711 II'Oid ltl'tft Ntwtrlc, N..l 07'1014m.
"Nttthtf 'rWtnflll rtor 118 Mitt proftMIOnlla rtncler ltfll or tu llllvtol. " - " ooneutt

.,
•

·

Cr~w's ·

(j PrudentlaJ
lrta. 1 - Hout... OpplltuntiJ.e.IO RIOODCMI1-M14117

mph , July 1 , 2000
NCOid: Mike

Kurt Busch

•. fll ........ ·- Ill Jollnny- J.... _nathla-

Dwntra ·

-In ...- ..

•

••••••••••••

I lip 75
In pointe
F1rlt raall CDMW vlctorJ
M
In • slump
I

3.(2) - -

HCMtH ,

Larry A. William•
· Fltld Supervltor
4421 Emerton Avenue, Suitt 205
Perklreburg, WV 2e104
(304) 422-11185 .

Qul11ylnl oocood; Jeff

Green, Chevrolet, 121.572

In parentheSes.

Whether you're changing jobs or entering retirement, your 40l(k)
distribution may be the single largest and most critical sum or
money you'll have to manage.

$1,000.00

Allison, Mercury. 173 . 47~
mph, July 4, 1980
Notable: Five of David
Pearson\ six Da~ona
victDfies were In the
summerti me event . ... Cale
Yarborough won it four times.

~ Ralrin,

drivers heading into this v.ttekend's race. Last week's rankin&amp; Is

401(k) distribution?

I

Quolllyl_, roconl: Bill
Elliott, ford, 210.364 mph,
Feb. 9, 1987
Race Neord: Bobby

IWvin H~Mcft, 2':q6 Scott RiiCI. 1'.1535
Grei!Bifte, 2,.29&lt;1 '-.._.~, 1..682
Jeff Gr.en, 2.231
Jack ~. 1.493
.JMon Klfler. 2.222
~ Hent:lrictl, 1.452

• k.scAA llils Weei&lt; writer Monte Dutton ranks the top 10

onn,a~yow:

an IRA* to help avoid unnecessary penalties or
taxes. We'll also guide you through a vast array
of investment options that may not be available
in a 40J(k) plan. And we'll oirer ongoing advice
to help ensure that all of your retirement assets
are working together.
For mo~ smart retirement solutions,
call me today•

Del Inc ctc.rnp: Jeff
BurtOn

.... ~lin , 1,988 Ted Mu....,., 1,420
1,975
11'11'111-l&lt;vapil, 1,420
7. .klhnny BeniOI'I, 1.922 Jeff Pwvl,, 1.921
Terry Cook, 1.388
.. 80bb;' l..aOonta, 1,906 .Jmm1e ..lotlMort, 1.830 Rick Crawfont, 1,355
e. ~ll H,twick, 1,894 [Jtvrl Sa.ver, 1 ,824 Rancl)' TOlsma, 1.28'2
10. Slaw Park, 1,858
CNd Lllllt, 1.810
Dennll S.lzet', 1,244

Looking ~r advice

l·

Oon:b-l, 2,351
t:lllle Jetten. 2.225

• I. Ricky Rucld, 2.206·

:1

··

At Prudential, we can help·make sure you use the
money wisely, possibly by directly f?lllng It over Into

miles
When: Green flag drOps at
8 p.m .. July 7

.....,..~

-- - -

~ leff

NATIONAL LEAGUE

''

...... - · -

2001 PO INT S STANDING S

I

Jesus Sanchez pitched two-hit billlo"r ~ight shutout inrti~gs
in his first -start of the season.
:
Sanchez began the year at Triple-A Calgary, going 6-1. J:Ie
helped himself with two hits, driving in a run and scoring o~e.
Bengie Molina, activated from the '":!isabled list before the CAWNG IT A DAY -san Diego Padres' Tony Gwynn watches . Charles Johnson and Mike LoweD each drove in three runs,as
game, hit an RBI single during a four-run raUy in the eighth his home run against the Arizona Diamondbacks In this {IPrll, 'the host Marlins won for the 1Oth time in 13 games. ·
'
inning that sent the host Angels over Texas.
1999 file photo. Gwynn Is expected to announce Thursday,
Jarrod Washburn (6-4) won his fifth s~ght decision, allow- that he .will retire at the end of this season, his 20th with, the
Jason Schmidt pit,hed a four-hitter and hit his first ca~er
ing two runs and seven hits in eight innings.
.
San Diego Padres. Gywnn Is a Gold Glove outfielder, an eight·
home
run to lead Pittsburgh over Milwaukee.
_,
time NL batting champ, the owner of over 3,000 career hits.
The Pirates beat the Brewers for the third straight night;at
(AP file)
PNC Park.
;
Derek Bell, hatting only. 153, hit a leadoff" homer in the PittsSchilling wins again, Gwynn reaczy to
burgh sixth. Schmidt, an .086 career hitter, homered on the
.announce retirement
don't know if he has told the whole team. But we talked, aod next pitch.
AU those home runs aren't hurting Curt Schilling.
he said he was going to announce his retirement."
Schilling
gave
up
four
more
longballs
Wednesday
night,
yet
Schilling (1 2"2) struck out 10 and walked one in his fifth
'
still became the majors' first 12-game winner-by pitching the complete game of the season.
Arizona biamondbacks past the Houston Astros 7-5.
"I'm not walking people," he said. "~alks tend to be the
Moises Alou homered twice off" Schilling, and Jeff" BagweU things raUies center around, and I didn't just want to do that
and Lance Berkman also connected at Bank One BaUpark.
today."
Schilling has given up 23 home runs, most in the majors. But
Jay BeD hit a grand slam in the second inning that put the,
the. last 14 he's aUowed have been solo shots.
Diamondbacks ahead for good at 5-2.
"It's a cliche, but it seems like good~pitchers have a tendency
David DeUucci also homered for the Diamondbacks, who
to give up some solo home runs, especiaUy Curt because he's
going to challenge with his fastball:' Arizona manager Bob
Brenly said.
San Diego star Tony Gwynn was expected to announce ·
Thunday that he'D retire at the end of the season. The eighttime NL batting champion has been sidelined most of the year
because of a strained right hamstring.
"He told me he was going to 'announce it, I think when we
get back home," P,adres teammate Rickey Renderson said. "I

Pirates 6, Brewers 2 (

_

_ , PePSI 400
-..,Daytona
International Speedway (2.5mile track), 160 oop•/400

7:30p.m. ' July 7 • NBC

:·

Joe McEwing hit a two-run homer, and New York overcame
Sammy Sosa's two home runs at Wrigley Fie!~ .
;
Todd Zeile and Lenny Harris hit RBI singles as the Mets rallied in the eighth inning. The win kept the Mets from beihg
swept ,by Chicago for die tint time since 1992.-"
.' '

no--..

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

WINSTON CUP
--===,=--

TOP TEN

Mets 5, Cubs 4

11"0

NAICMlMI . . .

·

Paul Lo Duca delivered again, drivihg in two runs to lead Ips
Angeles over San Francisco at P:tcific BeU Park.
. .
:
The Dodgers beat the Giants for the second straight nigllt,
with Lo Duca going 6cfor-10 with eight RBis in the !11'0
games.
Barry Bonds hit a two-run double for San Francisco.

1 1U

Wille:

-·----

•

1Widllllt,··N.Y. Ya !J I 11, Cll I . . Mil
llaltlmorw7, Toronoo3
T-lloy9, - . 7
4, C1olcogo- so. 1
City 5, Detmit 4
.
Anaholm4, T - 2
Oaldouod e. SNII1o 3

Dodp1s 7, Giants :S

TWins 4, White Sox 1

Angels 4, Ralinrs 2

page·

.•

Chipper Jones drove in three runs as surging Atlanta moved
past slumping Philadelphia into first place .in the NL East. .
The Braves won their sixth in a row, completing a three-game
sweep at Veterans Stadium. They trailed the PhiUies by eight
games on June 1.
:
Adanta, which has won nine straight division tides, had not
. been in first place since a win on opening day.
.
i

Athletics 6, Marinen :s

'

40

-...... (Ponoon 4-5) al TorOjllo
(Midoollol: 5-4), 12:35 p.m.
.k
Chicago- so. (0.5-7) at .....
1:0Sp.m.
'
Ooolrolt
8-7) 111 ¢ity
(Durllin H~ 2:05 p.m.
'
0 I' od (Zio 4-t) .. (Seta el1J,
8:35pm.
•
Boy (Kennadr 2·1) 1111 (~ 7-5~ 7:116 p.m.
•
T-(Oiow8-2)1111Anoloolm(RIIll&gt;2!7l.
10:05p.m.
i

Braves 1o, Phillles 4

Kyle LOhse scattered three hits over seven innings to earn his
first major league victory as Minnesota beat Chicago to· move
back into first place in the AL Central.
Lohse (1 -0) aUowed a run, struck out six and walked none.
He didn't aUow more than one baserunner in any innirig.

'

31

a.

'

Jeff" Cirillo hit an RBI single in the bottom of the ninth
inning, and Colorado beat San Diegu in another Coors Field
.
·
slugfest.
Cirillo, Ben Petrick, Todd Walker and pinch-hitte!;( Ter'ry
Shumpert homered for the Rockies. Mark Kotsay had follt blts
for the Padres, including a three-run homer. ·
·
Colorado won for only the second time in 10 games;

Endy Chavez snapped an O-for-21"':1'ump with an RBI single,
capping a two-run rally in the_bottom of the ninth that lifted
K3nsas City over Detroit.
·
Carlos Beltran had four hits and ·scored the tying run on
Brent Mayne's sinpe off"Todd Jones (3-5).
·

.

T"""*&gt;

.5412
.liM
.481

'•

Roc:ldes 1o, Padres 9

Royals 5, nnrs 4

-

L

31
33

encourages
your
.
support of these area
businesses who make
this
possible.

ended Houston's four-game nning streak.
Berkman and Alou homered in aU three games of the seri~s.

Brent Abernathy hit a go-ahead RBI single in the eighth
inning· as Tampa Bay beat Boston for the fint time in 12 tries
this season.
Steve Cox and Greg Vaughn each hit three-run homers for
the visiting Devil Rays.

'

w

45
43

-n.or-,'w-

The Daily Sentinel

•

. Devil Rays 9, Reel Sox 7

'

•,

~ 10, Son Diogo 9

(M:Ioia 3-8),

--- -........ .- :::...
Aseal&amp;ae .......

Arizona7, .....-.s
112
2
10
13

.5412
.526
.520

:rt .526
:rt .520
40
41

a.

.-so

Pd

,

n •ndey. . . . - . 2001

lDO .olngoleo 7, s.n F 1 • - 3

.3112

Wi_Pd

o46

~e.JM

Mldchport, Ohio

�'

Thursday, June 21, 2001

June 21, 2001

tEribunt - Sentinel -

. .
·. rew ..., UIEII IYaL

CLAS .SIFIED

osx.M

11115 Food :114 ..., l*:lwP. s.o 0oo , .
w1
'SIMI 1111m1. ..... ~ S17000B0(740)387.ae32 - - _ ~ ~
• For Concnota k9a a.on.
. - · - ·-·
-·
: no1. All
Sleol ·Gmina 11115 Food F·JOO ~ ~
1211)233:• •F"'
~ ~•vs &amp; lOop. - 2tp. - · -.g -~-~
V'al aya. New 55 Gllon $6500 or hda for a.y
• DruoM Will Ud &amp; RlnQ, 4X4 tn.Dl6lHaa
•· : 17.00
Eadl.
l&amp;1 Sera!&gt;
Mol· . ·~i;;;;~~--­
a~s Opon
Monday,
l.-y,
11188 Sivwado, 4114, $31115;
If Fojdoy, e.m. 111M 5-10, $36115; 1891 Aro You ~ Fe&lt; En' 4;30pm. CloMd ThuiD~. Goo T.-. 4•4. $11195; g;.,. Or T - - . , .1
&amp;
SUnda~. !~ 5-10, - - cob, Giwl Mo Ac.l A17-

seeoo.

Bar.'

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

:-Wedo-,

:satu""'
Y
, (740)"6-7300

-795. COOK IIOTOIIS 0518.

(7~103

=;;i;i~i;;iT,;;;;;;;:
:::•All

:· PIIysration 2 w/3- 1 1881 Ford F-150 Truc:l&lt;.
~~ To-rr .Too
:CMI., $485 Y11uo + (7..,...,••.ft 1
•·
· taX tor $400. h 'I ~ con- ..~ 21
Over 10,
T~

1895 F-250, 7.3 P.S., 5 Tranolor Co-. 740-245· 4.10 goora. mint 51177, Cei: 3311-37M.
COtldition, 10.000 11C1uaJ
- . XLT Pll"'ago. Evely

' - · (740)388-8415 :-m go.

Rll~ 110111!

··•

OWNERS

option el&lt;COjll Clll*. PW,
: TIIj)plll H Etllcloncy 90% POl, PM, N:, Til, Cruioo,
'Gat F . - Oil Futr10Oil Changed ov- 1978 ... OiMillloiod
12 SMr
PIJI11l &amp; ~~~:..,~ ...,_ $1800. (304)875.• AJr CondHionlnQ Syotomo lertoo: ~ lMr Flbolgloa 8555 or (304)874-4821
FIOO 8 Year w.rrtnly Ben- lioppe
'
•ts
- Hoafing &amp; Cooling, 1· 740 448
r, 4907 • ,500, 11184 motor - · 1893

:cos.

Sentinel

QCribunt

Place
c~rv:.::v

Or Fu: To

441 30118

Oflioe 11o~~
Display Ads.
All DllpiiY : 12 Noon 2
8usln111 Days PJ1or To
Publlcttlon

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

Sunday Display: 1:00 ,
Thuraday ror Sunday•

r.~ I~r .~~

II"
.

HluW-

.ll'iO

;...n.m

Or Fu: To

.1r•~

HluWANiin

lblls
I'ORSAIE

..!":'.::!
-:::~.·. ~··

·~ ..oms. 1.00 g .... •- on'~~
o1"'.:!: -""""Tho--wll men...-llelci.C""""•·
avooy Thuradoy Monday .......
•• -·- ~· ,... ••.••,.
·~~. _ ..,....
lh Saiurda .00-e·oo
AYII1UI
&amp; Court~ a. blgln In July. Slop by IOdly tt lltttllcy, , . . _ IChedul9

2 ~eocptrleta. .U:
(Ciou to caldwell Truck· bind &amp; wilt 111m _ , .
lnQ). Sold oelt - · MW aged. (740)318 8331 =-~I:=- name &amp; number.
............., ...,.
"....._,. 10 teka..,. o1
_...... - -•~ etc.
-rty man In llli I!Orne.
Klttono: 12 weeks old, Bomet111ng lor OVIf'IOOt (740)"6-4051
wormed, black/whitt, and llroller clothee ctblnell•
tabby. Very poople lolondly, IYPOWiiteno e:i Hermon Got Monoy? w. eo eome
Iiiier lralnod. 675-2841
AO.d, c.fttOMf'l. Friday· Work w1111 .. lnd you will
AND
Solunlly, t~t~n-o~pm,
10o1 - - .,..
Froe puppies to goocii!Orne
Border Collie &amp; Aullralw;
Sheppard, CIH (740)3889033aftarBpm.

I..n4r

i

.

1 lliuradl~, friday &amp; Sltur!loy, ,h rn-4pm, 15&amp; Hut&gt;-·~ old 1___ ,_ ~-- ..... Avenue. lpplle.-,
F;:-';i
lho
•;,;
TV,
. air CQodllloooer,
0
liken to ohellor 304· - . giiN ...... etc.
675-2897
Two llmiiiM ~ 1 ~

1~1~

7-.o&amp;72

Roq -1274B.

katlng lnd auditing - ·

nyle~~-.•

-corn -

In Rio
G,.,.,., Could Be Utied
WANI'ID
Ae
Rental Property.
To Do
(740)245 5858
741 Ce.-ry Rood, 3 BR,
- .potllol.org
All Mako -·Lawn 2 Bolio, Family Room With
1« oppllcallon. Send opp11- TractOra, Tllero Aepolrtd. Flnlplaoe, Hugo 2 Clr Go·
cellon~,_ With COYOf
~~~"": rage. (740)448-115&amp;
-IO.
Ce1 Mlka. (740)4411-7104 . lleautHul, IOCiuded wllhe
PluttoCttlter
cedar log homl. 1,750
HRI ~ 9pc Bruit! hOOinal mowing, 0111 oquare 1101, tongUe &amp; gmwo
(740~45-1840
· cedar lhnlughout 11-. - ·
3375 Rou!IIOE
Hooollngtoo~ WI/ 21701
huge 1110ne .....-. oovGeorgooo Porllblo Sawmill,
&amp; 1rortt P«ch. 11
!C!/M
don1 ~ logo 10 11-. fool aida deck. 7.8 mil full
304-87&amp;-!987. ...... 32K42 garogo.
T&amp;A
24x48 4 IIIII 1ior1e - ·
Riollng$IO.OOuquora,oK 1189,000. Clork Chapel
~ oii!Orne ~•r,IIM - . ("14(1)388 9911

4

1« ., _ _ , or ccontiCI ing, aood communication
Slepltenlt Kimper, lf'IIIIUOo - . Muot Ita_. WOikN-1 1"'
""· at (740}M0-7150
..,. Olllglble. Compoollliw
.
aellty.
••celltnl
banelllll.
Clue ACOL TNm W1n14C1 VIlli 011' II

1

·

·.Waterline Special: 314 200
.•PSI $21 95 P&lt;or 100· I" 200
.-PSI $37.00 Per {oo ; AI
;~~ru~ Compo mion FHfingo
Jn Stock
-RON EVANS EH11ERPRIS..
:£$
Jaclclon, Ohio, 1-1100:.537-9528

Private .Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Da.y s • Each Item Priced
No
Ads
Animals

·

-;,-·c;.·

c-.

=

11*1-

···c··
Ill

Ir'o

Ull - I Palm Halllor
dealer In Ohio, With over
98% cuotomor aedolaction
ra~ng. Guarantaed aevlngoll
Clll1 888 BBA-7258 lor ap-

,_goragilopener. CIA.
City Schools. Aolorencetl
Deposit lleqtJited. No Poia.
15251 ......... lnctudoa WO•
tor. (740)448-6t14

polntooiOI~.

IJmilod Or No

CtedR? Gov-

-~Balli&lt; Financ:e Only

Barbouroville, WV 304-736-3409.
New 14 ft - 1489. down
only $189. per mon. call
,_ t-800-69t-em.
New 14 Wide, 3 Bod room.
Only$19,850. Froellelivory
&amp; Sat Up. 1-888-928-2428
New 18 ft. wide $489. per
mon. only Sll70. per man.
cell.-i-900-89t-8m.
AI 08kwood In

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Gooos

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SCIIu~ mobile home, 2 bodroom, excellent condition,
oange, ralrlgoraror, washer,
dryer. cantril air cond~lonlng. (740)448·9470

Ir-

r:

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'I

Huafemale. 4-t/2 months
old,
$100 OBO,
(740)258-1652
avonlngs.Call
Full blooded Siberian

ky,

puppioo

3615

Gl

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•
nlolltd. Elllbllolltd 1975.
Call 24 Hra. (740) 0870,
I-800-28H578.
" - Wttla&lt;J&gt;Ioof•IQ.

I

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'

·------,1
j

BoATS &amp;

Mar01ts

roRSAIE

16' Baas Tracker,

I

BHP

lor aele (304)895.

D~lh

$2800,

Finder, Trailer,
(740)357-7893

I \ H \I -.,I I 'I'\ II "

,\ l I \ I -.. I I I( ..._

ria

-

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444 .lntematlonal, 40HP,
Tractor with front end load-

or, 740 379-9381

110 Help Wanted
I Aog. 112 Arabian, 1/2

I

=.s

j

'

1891 Fora 8nJnco 4K4 full •
size, IIIICeilent .,....d;!lofi inaida and out. gorego i&lt;Opt. L-~=~=~WI
Coli (740)245-5510

Long Haired Chihuahua Johnoon, Trolling Motor,

Quarter Horse, Chestnut &amp;
While Toblano, 51'1' old Stal-

lion (304)675:7071

1- year old Walker Morgan
qelding, Black with blaze

and 3 lOCks; 7 year old
Moogan Mart. Bay. all Good
liallhontel, (740)339-1949
Goats 1« Mle. 4 Nannl01, I
Silly, $30 eech or al $125,
(740)339·1949

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1 ~ condi1997 ford Aeroallr. very
~ al1apa &amp; runa OOOd. lion, (740~70
40-«Hl234 or 7~388'-I I&lt;, It I '

·~-

Twlnsburc

takes on a Siberian

NEW YORK (AP) - Nicobi Valuev, who stands 7-foor- 2
and w6ghs 320 pounds, w:u in the city Tuesday - and it had
norhing to do with rhe NBA draft.
The native of Sr. Petenburg. Russia, who once p~ basketball, W2l at a news conference ro announce his 12-round
fight against George Linberger, a 6-3, 265-pound school
reacher liom Akron; Ohio, Saturday niJhr at the Trump Taj
Mahal in Atlantic City. N .J.
Asked about his biggest asset as a fighter, Valuev (26-0, 22
knockouts) s.aid through an int6preter, "I will reveal it in the
ring Satutilay night."
His secoqd best asset?
"I eat very weU."Valuev said.
Promoten joe O 'Donnelr and Louis Fugazy said the fight
would be rhe 6nr of six bouts in the United Stats for Valuev.
Something must have been lost in rhe translation because Valuev didn't appear ro tealiu that.
Saturday's fight will be the second in the United Scares for
Valuev, who also has fought in Germany, England. Australia,
Japan and the Czech Republic. in addition to his homeland.
On May 31, 1997, he stopped Tef'R'U Nelson in the second
round at rhe Taj Mahal on rhe undercani ofVince Phillips'
lOth-round victory over Russian Kostya Tszyu for the IDF
junior welterweight tide. ·
·
It was thete that Don Elbaum, matchmaker for O'Donnell
and Fugazy, fint s.aw Valuev. ,
·
'

Reels
fnwn . . . B1
Reds ahead for goOd.
"It felt good to help Lance
get the win;' LaRue said. "He
threw maybe 10 off-speed
pitches, rhe rest wete fastballs.
He did an unbelievable job
spotting his fastball."
Davis used high fastballs to
strike out Mark McGwire the
first two times he faced him.

.

.

" It's exciting. I got the luck
of the chaw;• Davis said. "The
guys told me he swings at the
fastball up and in." .
Hermanson (6-1} has lost
six of his last seven decisions
and is 0-8 career against the
Reds. He gave up two runs
on seven hits· in seven innings,
tetiring his last 12 batteR.
Alex Ochoa doubled in the
fint inning and scored on
Sean Casey's double for a 1-0
Cincinnati lead. Cardinals left
fielder .Craig Paquette broke

" He hils like a mule," Elbaum said.
"Does he mov~ like one?" someone won~ .
Valuev returned to St. Petersburg after his U.S. debut, whiGh
was his ninth pro fight.
·
.
"At the lim~ I said to my$Clf, 'It will be time to come back
h= one day and fight for a tide," Valuev said.
The odds of that happening for Valuev, who will tum 28 on
Aug. 21 , have ro be considered long.
·
Valuev, who said he had only 15 anuteOr fights, turned pro in
1993.
The J4.yearsOid Linberger has a 19:6-1 record since turning
pro in 1992.
"He eirher scores a knockout or gets knocked out," Elbaum
said. Linberger has scored 17 knockouts and has been knocked
out four times. Two of those KO I&lt;Mses have come in his last
four fights .
Linberger teaches at rhe lWinsburg Alternative· Center for
unruly students and formerly taught in aeveland public ·
schools.
·
He was an offensive lineman at the University ofToledo and
played one year with rh~ World League of American Football
and three seasons with Arena Football.
Linberger said has been attracted to boxing since his childhood and has memories of his father taking him to Don King's
camp irt Orwell, Ohio, northwest of YoungstoWn to watch
Roberto Duran train.

in at first and misplayed
Casey's drive, which sailed
aver his head.
The Cardinals tied it in the
second on an RBI single by
Mike Matheny.
LaRue's sixth home run
gave the Reds a 2·1 lead, and
rhey added a run off Steve
Kline in rhe eighth when Ken
Griffey Jr. drew a leadoff walk.
and scored on Dmitri Young's
triple.
The Cardinals gave plenty
of credit 1o Davis, but noted

that they had never seen him
pitch befote.
·
"You can watch aU the ·
videotape you want. It's not
the same as seeing ·the guy in
person," Placido Polanco said.
St. Louis manager Tony La
Russ.a said that shouldn't matter.
"We hadn 't seen him
before, but I don't think that
counts for anything; • La ·
Russa said. "Th~ young man
pitched a great game."

"When I heard, I was jwt shocked. I sat
Stem, who has proposed a minimum
back
and said, 'Are you sure?"' Chandler
age of 20 for incoming NBA playen,
wo~e a smile of his own as he watched said. "It's really ironic, bur it's a great
Brown become the youngest player ever opportunity for two high school playen
f1omP1pB1
co hear his · name announced first at an . to learn and grow together. Hopefully,
we can start a new dynasty."
three fint-round picks: Arizona for- NBA draft.
Cleveland used the eighth selection on
ward Richard Jefferson (No. 13 overall), · Brown originally planned to attend the
Stanford center Jason Collins (No. 18) University of florida before changing his high school senior DeSagana Diop of
and Pepperdine guard Brandon Arm- mind when he learned he might be cho- Oak Hill Academy (Va.), a 7-footer origsen among the top five. As a high school inally from Senegal.
strong (No. 23).
The
Nets- Rockets
trade
was
· Also, Cleveland traded the rights co $Cnior, he averaged 20.1 points and 13.3
announced
at
the
end
of
the
first
round.
North Carolina center Btendan Hay- rebounds and was select~d player of the
"I talked wirh Steve (francis) and Cutward, the 20th overall pick, ro Orbndo year in the state of Georgia.
tino
(Mobley) and they're very excited,"
"I guess I just made history. It's great.
for center Michael Doleac.
At tint glance, the biggest winnen qf I've never been so overwhelmed and Rockets coach Rudy Tomjanovich said.
nervous in my life," Brown said. "I'm "We think it's a real good fit, and we
the night appeared to be the Clippen.
•
After taking Chandler wirh the No. 2 now the representative of aU high school couldn't be happier."
I, JI,I'i"• .th~Y,, ilJ111lc;,~rdy_ ~4. ~im , and se~!'r:'• ~~ .~ ~ave to show ,it ,wasn't a · ,In trades involving second- round
.
.
picks, the Magic fulfilled their obligation
fol'ward Brian Skinner to Chicago for nust.ab.". ~ -,
The Wizards considered trading the to send a future first- round pick to DenBrand, rhe No. I overall pick in 1999.
"It's very rough losing night after pick, but team president Michael Jordan ver by trading Onur Cook, who they
'night. I just want to be on a team that has locked in on ·a player with enormous selected 32nd overall, to the Nuggets.
Also, the Hawks Clealt Maryl~nd fora. shot at winning some games and potential in a draft considered top heavy
ward
Terence Morris (No. 34) to Housimproving;• Brand said. "The fint two with big men.
years were very rough for me and I don't · "We were entertaining.possibilities, but ton for a future No. 1 pick, and Seattle
want to be in that situation ever again. nothing could change our minds as to · sent the draft rights to Bobby Simmons
The Clippers are a rising team. I'm what he could do for the Washington (No. 42, DePaul) to Washington for che
rights to Predrag Drobnjak.
excited; rhey have a lot of young, great Wizards," Jordan said.
High school senior Ousmane Cisse of.
18,
has
been
a
starter
on
one
Chandler,
talent."
Brown, a 6-foot-11, 240-pound center of the nation's top high school teams Montgomery, Ala., went 47th to Denver,
stood up and hugged his family before since his freshman season. Earlier this and Cincinnati point guard Kenny Satwalking on stage, smiling broadly and year, it was believed he and Curry might terfield dropped all the way to 54th,
CLA~SifiEDS shaking commissioner David Stern's be drafted first and second overall.
where he was taken by Dallas.
Now,
they
will
be
team~tes.
hand.

Draft

r

0::

CAll

I.~

JiORibM
. waahorB,dtyeraandratng.
.
. :;:,~raa..i,';'~l::,
~=· 1~'r'~;~ nuo, (304)675-7388.
·
Gallipolis,
no
polo. GOOD USED APPLIA"·
(740)416-1409
CES Washers d
,,.
lrlgerato11 range
' sry~':;.:.
2 BR. All EIICtrlc, No Pets. Appllancoi 76 VIM Stre:i
$300
plus
dopoolt Call 7~7398 1.agg:
(740)387-os 11
· 818.a 128
·
;;:"..:..:;:.::..,
· - - - -.;.
3 bedroom, CIA. $325/mo • Mollohan c.,.,.1. 202 c"'oi
deposit, rolorencas, no Chapel Roa&lt;l, Porttt, Ollie. .
pets, Evergreen, near 110. Frea Estimates, 90 DaY'
(740J4*8! 89
Same All Cuh, Rnancin7oo
A·-"-~- ••-·
·w
Beaulllul 2Riv« VieW Ideal .;:d.""'· ·~~~~:;
For I Or Paople, Ralaren- (740)446-1444
.
Oopooll, No Pola, Foo· .:.._;:_.:....;,,;.:..:_ _~~~r8 ,rranor Parte. 740·441· Main Street7 Furniture
1:1:111""·~-----,
(304)6 5·1422
APAlnMENrs
515MalnStroet, Point .
n-Pleasant
Ji011 ....,...,

::00· 01'":..,-:- WE ARE

- ""'" ,. __,...,_. _..._ ••

bruc1&lt; by G&lt;M Stroom. -

ling,
Ntvt~t UMd.
(304)875-5353

v;
'"
...

Appliances: Reconditioned
Wuhell, Dryas, Ranges;
Relrigratono. Up To 90 Days
Guaranteed! We Sell New
Meytag Apjollances, French
Pilot Program, Renter~ CHy Maytag, 740-446-7795.
Needed. 304-736-7295
Day Bad Complete Twin
Small 2br.COHigovoryqui· Bod Complete Fuit Box
01 w!lh dock. $325 +Capos· Sprl~ mett;ou Queen
~ and roterenceo. No Pets. ao
·
Historic Dlotolct (304)675- T~ and"gt&gt;!~ ;J:::J".J:.;
8876
1740........,42 '"'

HIRI NGII

r------"1 -·

lie • .2001 eo.,_ 25 112ft. lmo-

·------,1.

For yow MW ltome, COlli New 3 BA IbM with at·

•'!'••-

=

==

:r

Single Parent ProQram,
ed, raeponoiblo, ...-llltllra
Special Financing Available,
1« ---tor~
·
. .....,
(304)755-7191 .
oel ctblo -ny. MUll
••
::,0~ &amp;
31M- ~~~~=·
Goa~ Single Sactlon Lot Cloer·
...... ilotttM
--A. Hou-·· Chu • once- All Reduced.
lnd ~ ~Weld Eating Hlllaldoo, ,_,
P-ments From $1991
cos.
- - - - - - - lola oH 11u11 '"~a'i~
Dllcltel, Etc. -lng, =:5-le::lk• Olltt, HuRy Ends June ZSth, ~:
Found: Black lnd WhHe,' olot.... lo furnltura'. we r11CIIIf.!,0:,..~· ,;,~~
Cteeri-uP. Ft-.! 01 lJn.
wood· ·
Gallipolis
bolibtd 1111 llrrter looking ...... ~ dll.1 miiiO lrom ~~.....":
=..-(7oW)4~~ HOUIII Church lor ulo. (740)"6-3093
dog on Slate Route 810. Route 7 on Route ~11. Flrol
-.,
Good CondHion. Groat
Waenng yellow collor.
Route 790 on
Nelghbootoood. Polnl . , _ Take OYer Payments, 3
70 1(~- __ mlndttory.
(740)448-5508
!S~~~~F:rlcloy:.!• Hair
104)2··~~
wm
- h houae• _ Allclng seo 000 . - Badtoom. z Bath Oolcwood.
New &amp; used Fumnuro : .
011y1111 nd nail llchl
I
lnd lrallera. .cell (740)448- all• {304)875- 1j118
Cll
For · Ootallo 1 and 2 . bedroom apan- Now
2 Piece Uvingooorn
Loll lomale lawn oo1or box·
nelded lor a 1111 grow~
nfoclllon Is
~arr:~cd~
(740~70 .
manta, lumlolltd and unlur- Suites. $399. Bu~. Soil,
tt, b1ac1c lice, _,
touty aeion In town. ~.
cunenUy adding to · - moo•· Throe bodooom, -bath ·~- new t• .. ~- nilllod, security dopooll no- T,_.
·.
~~Ia r = '
(744)381 0498 tor ~our Rellidentlal
---~.....
houH on 1.118 acroo on ;";;;"'- - · . - - qulred, no pets. 7~892882·2483cir800-213-7249
don, ?II ogo I no
Grendvltw """· neor, Fonn rno.ith on~ at Ot~ 2218.
ANnQuE&lt;; •
2228 Mount vomon Ave- - ·
staff. Yoo could
Mulilum. Two go· Nitro w. 304-758·
·
LOST·
Yellow
....
Whlto
nu.
•.
IMn
njrto clothing,
lA-~
·
.
.
OfrolmlNrryJiu!iiNa&amp;
C304)87&amp;-5383
.
8888.
Drive
a
lillie
a
1
llodroom
Apanment,
Remale cat with bent toll
•
·~-·~ -•
help US recruit
.
•
lrlgoralor, Range, /loiC In· Buy or sell. Rlvonne Antl-.
Whlto Rood. Ell! ~ ~':tu'..m;.re· ....... Frldly
CoH . . _
volunteers on
Moau: lbmi
eluded, Sll89 Plus Dapoalt &amp; - · 1124 East Main on
Cllooeh Aoacl ..... $50 noPosition--'~ In"·-~
roRSAU!
.
lk&amp;N6
Roloronce. HUD Approved. SR 124 e: Pornooroy 740ward tor return call
· · - - · · behalf of non-profit
INOTICII
ANDBviLDINGs
!7401441- 151 9
892-2528 « 740-892:1539.'
·
4 Fomlly Yard 6 llelo 108 Co .. W'l to pnMde cue
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- "I" Only-Lot'-•-• ~~.
· ·.
1 Room Fu-~•~ Efflc'-- Ruae Moore, owner.
(740"'•••
7
,_-vo 3
E'"'""" Rd. Fll- "1, &amp;-•- ---'""'In~
orn•nlzatlons
lNG "" !ICOIM!I!K»
~ 11!11 - 2"-~
ft·~·
4 Boda-~
All U"lP8 kl Sha~·
.uu.July3
I!Ornelnd In II-.-""'"
~·dobullneaewllll......, Wtut $54,895,
·-... , -···
rental property lor • cy·
" Second
· •AVllnUO
rod
M!SC'F!LANJOCX.S '·1
Now Sualneu
Bath, 919
ll!
""'YIIIIBole Front&amp; Mo to
omotlonally dloo
No&amp;elllngl
yaulcnow,llndNOTIO- $421117·
Price Good1111
Middleport. Desire Gall.....,is
OH "1251
'
~ YARD &amp;IE
...,
· . turltad
end money lhtoU()h the 1'11111 untl
' 1
quick 8811. Priced below ap- 7 ..., •
•
mo . ...~-.iitiiiiiiiiiiiil-..;1.
~· Follow illg111. June e1 rlok o1 baing pilolcl
No Fundntlelngl you .,... lnviOIIglllld 11-. B-2~ • Hurry To Ook· prailal, at $55,000. Bnngo ! 40)446-3945
·:
~=;~;::=::: 29lh-30ih I JUly 2nd-3rd. .,.,_ 11-. I!Orne. RequirM
ol!etlnQ.
.
. wood(740"~ono• Gaillpolll, $1,000/mo. rente! Income. BEAunFUL
APART· $1,000 BACK 2 Ton A.or
II!
loll oiNew &amp; " ' - - · BA In PoyoholoQy, Soclol
1j1
....,-...(740)330-1028
IIIHTS AT BUDGET PRI- Conditioner, 2 Ton Coil, J
Y.\110
Cllelp. Toys, c:IOt1ilng 11-31&lt;. WOlle, "' COunMIIng, ..
ou can eam up lo """ GREETING CAAD "Witallllll-Cll AT JACKSON ES.. Une
sat. Installed. Sll,295."
GAUJftlUS
new co lklmntr, loll ol .... ao tltltnolve troval
S71hour end
ROUTE 100 Su-r Loc'o.
~·
Owner :Rellrlnt.u'!Bulldlng
"'" ' 1·000 Back, $1295 Nor
,m
...::ilo:.::IIOo::::mo.::,:H:.;:.: ____ wllllln 11-. ""' ..... Elieelltnt
L
~
-•
F Silo In Gal
TATES, 52 Westwood unvo Prlca. Frie Estimates Cllf
Yliit"'
weekly bonusee.
OCII $2800
800- Single and -nal or
• 0111o, lrom $297 Ia $383. Walk 10 For &lt;luolio On Other SiZes .
1711 Chtllnut June Yard Sole Thur•Fol-811.
our-••
2n·8424
toornu,- below On Route 7, Heo Large lhop I movies. Clll 740- II You Don't cal ua·
29&amp;30, wardrobe,· -. 2221 ~ Fun'lllurll,
We also "ffer·.
Corryout lnd doiiVIIry Pluo rellll.
Clll 1 888 88A- Plrltlng lot. HU 4 Rentalo, 446·2588. Equal Housing Wt Bolli Looel Mobliti
clothlnQ, toy•. appllancn,
baby cellon ., ,_.;.. with :!;
y
lranchlle. F!nlnCinQ · - · 7258 I« Info - dlroclola l~m~ ~n Opportunity.
Homes Our Speciality t~ry. 11in or shine.
•
rugo
- 1 0·
• Full Benefits
blo I« quaMed lndMdual. Ilona.
(740)387-7888
Beautiful· Recontl~ Reno· 740-448·8308 1·800-291'
AtJCDONAND
•Weakly Paycheck Coll31· .~or Nail. l-800- 14•70 Soulhttn Dream.
.
voted 2,000 Square Foot, 3 0096
;
~~~,a~~ IC:~t
Fu!A M.uuiEr
H,t'&amp;~Spc .
• Paid Vacation
.,._,
lree 08llvtty lree Setup onIms &amp;
Bedroom Plus Storage, 14 000 BTU Air condlll
.
clothing sizes lnlant 2T·6T. ~
~ 10 E
Sllrt Your Bullneae To- ly $9998 l-888-9211-3428
Acai:AGE
N'tw Kitchen, $100/ Month, (74o)416-u24
one!,
3378
• Retirement Plan day Prime Sttopj)hog eon. 18 Wldt Only s198 00 p
Downtown Geillpollo, Con· :;.,.;,=::..:.:.:::___~
4, s, womons clollling, cer AICk . . _ Auclloot cam- Hunllrogtooo, wv 28708
10110, tons ol toys, mloc. peny, lui limO a~r.
p le
Itt ·a.,... loA A~ Month 8- Fixed
112 ocrw lot on Oshel ooad tact Kelty (740)448 9961
Black Flberglaae Clntuoy
Items, 3719 Sulavlllo Pike. oornpiato · - ·
EDEIM
• . ro sslonal
· - · - · Spring l/allty Roll Wllh Air And Un· No lingle wldes. 17000. Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room C.argo Cover. Fils Chevy
~ H&amp;.OIIIo' WIOI
Atmc8ph8re
Pllza, Call7~101. fderlllnnlng 1-888-11211-3428 87&amp;-n58 aftoo5pm.
Apartment•.. Clean, No sa. S350. (740)446-2350
30 Smlthtll, Juno 29 &amp; 30, 1/lrglnla, 304-n:J-5788 Or 1&lt;1-. Help. Apply in pot·
PliO, No Smoking, Reloren· Cernet
Lots I« sa · •
9am- 5pm. Loll or children 304-773-&amp;447
. 1011 Holiday 1m Golilpolll
lnfoCielon
[
l"'wii&amp;JIW. 11884 Norrlo 14x78, lotal 2 Lots, Zoriod COmmercial, coo &amp; Depoolt Required. togeth:7 1 P ldelo. 5
clothes. Rain cancels.
·
'
'
·
~
SiaMcls
. - · llkt new centr11 air, Within Tho Yilago 01 Rio Utilities
Furnished Cemetery n 1i rov ~
8452ndAvenue;Juno 29th [
w~ . ~;:..-ln19alli·
M8rlll'""*'l
~1~· $!5.800. 740- Grancte.(740)Z45--5858
(740)446-1519
. Roed. (440:7-= u:
&amp; 30111. Bam·Bpm.
......;.
10
• blo IOIIOI:Iullng, groet ·
CorporitJon
TIIIINID DOWN ON
•
90 Acrte US Rl.35 End of Fumlsliod 2 bedroom apart· ca 11 AI
12
Folday &amp; Setuoda~ 8-Spm
1111, 0011111111t1v1 wagoe, shift
curNnlly hH
IOCIAL IICURITY ,..7 1895 Clayton 14KIO, 3br., 2 new Four Lane In Honder· mont, across from pari! ton""~ Wi~~4· 2 1
9-112 miles down :its, tum -uta Top Ooiltr. u.s. dlftoremlol, wage expert)'Ia FN ~We Wlnl
~go bulldng on oon. CHy Water,llnd Mineral NC. no pets. Relorencas: (74iJ)zse-e871
Yeao:·
left on Bladen Road Firat - · Gold Colno, Proal· .,.,., liod boHWnll poeltfOrlll
' 1-tl88-e82-3345
-875-8746
~. $175,000 (304)937· deposit, $325 month. '::"'=:..::.:..:.._ __
._on left Girts,..;._, oets, Dlarnondt, Gold - ? Don1 ml• t111e op.
Optnl
(740)448-8235 (740)448- Chalnoaw, Hornel~o XL 12,
1898 15K90 Mobile Home 2518 or (304)545-6491
lnd men clOthing ond ~ Alnga, U.S. Cuoro..,Y,· pcii1Unlly 10 begin or Oonlln'
Vinyl Siding. Shingled roor'
05n
6 Inch ber, 110; Cralllman
morel
M.'r.S. Coin ~!lop, 151 Soo- ue In excHing ooroor II
'
Central Air, Cllhldral cell; Clmp Sltei For Rent On Gracloua living. I and 2 cutting torch and welding
ond ........... Glllpollt, 7~ Conw.
c8II uI TOday for ',
-lng lhrt&gt;ugh out !hiM bod· l&lt;lnawho River. 8 miles bldroom apartmontti at VI~ oudlt, 101 uP to UM P""'
Folday, Juno 29 &amp; Seiunllly, 4411-11842.
We arw I
• long. rom1. , 2 .lull batha, MUll from Polnl Pl....nl, electric Ia- Mil- and Rlve-••o pone, $&lt;10. (740)892•2369
June
....,
-~an
..... o....
~
·- In Middleport.
·~ Creftoman Rldi(IQ Lawn
tenlhlo30.mile9am·5pm,
all SR110.TWo
on
- oera
IIIII llj)OCiall•n
In
· lntervlew1
move, ce11 1111e r '~'"•
.•, .
(30416 75·I 722, Apanmonto
Routo 554 IOwlrd Clloll1ite.
AIZIIei_.l cerw. We hOYt
M roll-~ 740)H 8 8308
(304)178-&lt;4144 Alter 5pm. F'oom $278-$348. CIP 74(). Mower, Polco $100, uk lo):
Womene, men, teen brand
lhl following oponlngo: 2
1 Ill t75-7223
lnlllllnawlpllllllil
LOOking To Bu~ A New 992·5084. Equal Houolng Jr., (740)258-1102
name clothing, comtOIIttl, 1' 111
FultTirne LI'N'o, llp.rn.IO
ext: 1101
"""'""' 111 . . , . _
-doulllo-3br.2bl. Home? Don, Have Land? -"Opportunlt=::'-'-:.:."''::.·_ _ __
Nlnlondo 84, ••~•. muoh
.....- ~ · · 71.m. lll·ln, Pon-Tirneflll·ln
flirHoullrltA&lt;ilol1"' 1898.00 ~ ani• · -5. W.DoiiiHurry0n"' 10 ,_,_ :eN
FourCimettrylolloiOhlo
ICif 111 sh~ 'Inti 3p.m .. IO
wliiOhmeloooftlilatlllto
-"" • ...
·• ~ o.w Taking Aj)plk:otlono- VaNey Memorial Go"'eno.
moro.
, .
1lp.m. on":,·~
.,...,... •ony
por mon. cell , _ t-800- Lalt. 304·7'38-7295.
;!.W10~,.!n~roomlnciT~ Ali&lt;lng s.so a lot. &lt;7..0)388Frlday, Setuiday, SUilday, 4
-aT~ (AIZhelnttt'l) unit. ~or moro
WI All!
ptollo•IOI, IIOII llanO&lt; B9l-1777.
""" "--·
~ 9023
lamlly yard ule ot18 Air·
1001
lnlormatlon atop by lnd
I!XPANDINCIOUII
• .,.,.11' "' •-on -Double Wide. $195
Wottr Sewage,
Truh, :;.::..__....,..- - - - "·
740
port ROOd (clou to Krogora) S l - llondl &amp; Vooll piok up on lill)licatlon or
ADVIRTIIINO
,_, - · IWIIIIOri. Per Month I 3 llodroom, 2
$350/Mo.,
-448-0008. Filmed Mlrroll, TruckfO&amp;il
Doyl and ~no ciothn, com- Grou'71 All Styltl/ Agoo. cell - n l e Kerropei 11
lALII ITA,
-1111- « - loth. F- OeliYorY &amp; Sat· r~~~
' HOU!IES
Tara TownhouM Apart· :1'~~ ~pr:~e: ~~¥:i
putatdesk. andmayoxtrao. ~ -Label llealo· (740~50-~.
Art you o peroonlhil en· OJiglft,orony-t!IOIIIO up.1-181·228-3426
-n-monto, V.f'l Speolouo, 2 Ealllm Avonuo, Gallipolis·1
8-epm.
~nil=: Corn~ Neld 7 Ladlto IO 8111 Avon. joyl ~ plopit? Aro
-.ony- · Private P-rty And New
r~ """"'
llodroom1, 2 Fiooll, CA, 1 (740)446-4423
·
Gtrago silo· Sun Valley (901 )427-at:lt
or Coli (740)448 3356
you~MII
-.--~!!?"end en- poiii•IOI,IIot IMP an« Coo bl ldo One
1/2 Bath, Fully Clopeted,
.
Dolvl. Setunlll~. June 30th- (901)421.,ee14
.
~..... · - - oa you
-mlnotllan.•
(~),;:7ioe Pl~ment. 1 -3 llod11Xin11 Fo.- Adu~ POOl &amp; Baby POOl, p1• Grubb'• Plano·· Tuning &amp;
pall Clnoma wotch tor
· .
"-!enciod crow -...
•With a
-From 1199/Mo., 4% tio, SIOn $365/MO. No Pets, Ropalro. Problems? N'oed
llgno, lurnlturo:
ACIOitiConl
CounMior lor Sealng oncl Flnlohlng ~ng "oomlllblilhed• and 1lllo ''"" I'P" wiN not
Down, 30 Yuro ot 8.5% LoaM Pluo SICunty Depoalt Tuned? Coli The Plano Dr.
-Working with maltt llootlonol Houllng. Sond
pooty7 "ra you
-•'llr-'
1807 2br. CIIYton Mobile APR. Fe&lt;. Lllllnga, 800-319- Floqulrtd, Dayl! 740-4411- 740:448-4525
Go: =Mia- rain 1•11 ysaro oontact Andy Pricing lnlormatlofl ond ex· nle(IOIId In I POiillon that llhaauowtlerarrall HarM With loll o1 tlllrU. 3323 Ext. 1709.
3481 ; Evenlngt: .740·387· lndependant HtobaiHa Dill'
«lline. 2447 Iaviiie Pike Thompaon . II (740)83310: Soulhtm :::rinlutlnca,401·Kpian
--loin
S10,000. (304)678-n88
3 Bedroom, 211atto HOUM. 0502, 7~101 .
lrlbutor,CIIForProductQt
Golllpoiil (2.4 miiM from 3140
.
, PO b1121. Jack.
peld VICIIIon time? ¥1 I tlonal ... ltii.Our
Opponun'"'. (740)441-t•••
Routo 110) satuoda~. June
Art you a lhel 1tu
... ......,.
2e.eo 3 01 411odroom, On- (740)245-9128
·
.. ,
1011 OH 48840
30, Sunda~. July I. Bam-??
•
•
lllol ~oco? II 10 II
1-lhltlll
ly $345.00 Plr Month
Twin RlvorTowora now ecJET
. AERATION MOTORS •
Some anllqueo. twin bo• Domino• Pimo now llklnQ PltMed' P.,.nl- al will Ita banellclel II not, We -llrige -~~~ 111 11.89% Flxld 1 - Rote, C.,. 2br. ljOUH roloron·
ceptlna
opMng &amp; mattrou, old ==.!!,.J;:'"~ &amp;onlllllot Ohio INka 1 wftltroln. F«lnteovlowoonthlonaw popn...
1-1188-828·3428
oe1, depo1H, No Polo. · i!fica11ootlfor18R. Rapairtd, New &amp; Robul~ In
tounkl, lumlturo. -lng::= only Full-lime L.P.N. llaeld pen- oldorotlon Mncl your r• ....lllttoon•-'"'
(304)875-8112
~ ~--ed-""EOHior Stock. Cali Ron Evins, !·
tiltelto, blonkell, comtott•
- with Alhenl one With IUme wlllla covor letl4rtoll.....89 SkYline w - 14•70
·-·, ··~
~.
. 100·537-9528.
aro, piiiOwl, kltdien ltakiiiQ Amulng 0ooortun1tv1 WOIIt pen•Hmo travel to othtr lng uo why you ... the por2 -...... 2 both. Greet lo Your Rent $400? New
(304)875-8879.
d-. polO &amp; pane, kltoritn lrom llorn4t; PT/r!T lroe ......Ice liltl. Candidate lOll
lo:
COndftlon
128 000 3 -...... 2 lleth lleme, Iron, bo9lcs, llpel, · 1-t00-259-2898
mutt POIIOII CUrren! Ohio ~ Govoy, Publisher
(304)895-3747
•
8tyte Home From Rent To
ANIDl
·KirnbaH plono 1800 00
.plcluro lroonaa. · www.clololwoot)-.net Moenoure ond. molnllln o Ohio Vllley Publishing
AIIAZINo Lillie"' No CretJ. Own. (740)441 3883
ro ltENI'
handmilde wedding gown
4
wecldlng·drtll, many mO&lt;e
pro.oholce phlloloptoy. I!Jt.
(The Dally Tnbune),
H8ioiCial O..~on- IR with IIJiChld
veil w/ peono &amp; oequlnl 11zo
ltemo. ·Movlng, evorythlng CMA neodocl buoy P"Ytt·- COmmunication lnd
525ThlrdAvt,
lbmi
Flninclno. j
I
· Houu In Coun!ly Ohio VI- 7-81100.00. 304-875-1831
mUll go. Cheapllll
oltnel Oll ooprafooa,, Copv ol Clt!lll- Orglnlzellon 11!1111. Send GoiHpolll, Ohio 45831
- .,,. ~
ng, {304)755- Ael.!~:-a~~ ~~~i clnlly (740)441-1155 liter MOlLE HOME OWNE-,
ooton
.errlld. flltue- lnd rtiUme to: p..,.
"""~
.
PloQuio
....,... 5pm
HouHhold ltemo &amp; clolhtl, t e n d - to Pt. t0M01 398 RIOhiOIIII /loveFacto,Y C1oo1 32x50 ~·ted. 14101 monlll. In1
All pooplo um Mrlouo In• 1 bedooorn ~ ramod· •,10,000 Dlocount only ~- 1 :\erH!tr:=,
~~=•. n0::"~1~y; ~::'~~~~
0.:m~~~·~~·m~
vesao~~Jn~
f
(304 7 nueeoi!. Atheno.· OH 45701 ~
oround your -ult eled, AIC, clou to goH 1000.00 Down. Dtllvtoy, (740)4411-8! 14
o..... Wingowo,-Anchorl,
25
rtUI , Hlpolll, eli 45831
· IX to
Je 5· URGENTLY
NEEDED Hm $100 - y luot 1Gr courae, oily pool on Mill ,oncl - p.J:..kl by FIOIOry
Water Haet~ro, Plumbing &amp;
Juno 29th &amp; 30th, 8am· 3713
piUmt donort
mailing our POll caida llmh· ~. (740)448-2200
1-100-891 m
3 --~~ In ~ro·
Electrical Ports, Fumocoa &amp;
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ed alter toll liM (881)270Flnll Oeyo
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Hut Pulllj)l'. Bennetts ~
nem , and mlocelleneoua. $all .......... ' - ' " · ~ ~- e! or 3 hOura ~. 3!84 www.mallordarrnarkat· 3 112 MIIH Oul Sandhll
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GM'AWA:Y
Soturdooy, June 30th, tem" - - - - - - · ?? 848 !..ell Fori! Rood

Dodge Piclc-up, 8' utiiHy

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Includes Free Yard Sal-e Slgnl
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Moving ,rlcloy &amp; Ale you - . ; 1c1r 111e op.
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Dunn larnlly tribull, July 1, 110, JUit a.-.•o 111m
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740-592·1842
~ lhloudl Frlcloy 8,3jj lrtatmont progr11111. Ft• !!!:~ ~lio~ duced, - 1149,900, ,_
~~ clolhl$ng llndba._ Setunlll•, J - 30th. ~. 10 4:30. Thlo 1o 0 -1..,. qulrM • BA dlgrM In ..,. g;:-y;.:...~
1129.000. Nell Hol•tr.
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7216
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To

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Heat

The Deily Sentinel• Page 81

Ohio

I.

HAY&amp;
GRAII'I

summER
JOBS

FIND

WHAT YOU

NEED IN

·The
$6-$7/HR Daily
· Easy Indoor Sentinel
work nexlble
hours full/part
CALL

time hurrg!
Positions
fining quickly!!

992-2155

for Carter, a seven-time
But he made up for that
bogeyed rhree holes on the
elsewhere. The longest hitter West Virginia Amateur chamback nine.
1-888-974-JOBS
Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
"When Par's · leading, he of the final group, Clark left pion who has never won the
Straw, Year 'Round Deflvery
doesn't make many mistakes;· hiniself with shorter approach Open , his hopes were dashed
COG
flomPqeB1
a. Volume Discount Avails·
state's
ble.
Heritage
Farm.
Clark said. "I even told my shots. He hit 16 of the 18 one more time. .in the
.
Wanted
111118Gement, llC 110
(304)875-5724.
· an 8-footer to pull another caddie,. he going to hit fair- greens. compared with 14 for most compelltJve tournashot closer.
ways and greens, and if we're Westfall and I 0 for Carter. ment.
''I'm not ashamed to shoot
On the par-5 18th, Westfall going ro win, I'm going to Clark also led the final group
~PLEASANT VALLEY needed
68 by any means . I'm just
with nine fairways hit.
a two-shot swing to have to make birdies."
·
Auros
~
HOSPITAL
sorry
I didn't win, but I'm not
"Where I was )litting 5
force a playoff.
Clark seized the lead for
~SAlE
Clark hit his second shot good on the par-3 11th hole. iron, he's hitting 8 iron and 7 disappointed in the way I
t985
Cavalier,
Great
into a greenside bunker while Clark sank a 6-fooc birdie iron," Westfall said. "This played," he said.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
3hlpo, (304)675-5162
Cross Lanes' Bill Sharpe, a
Westfall's ball stopped just putt to go 4- under after course is going to favor him
currently bas openings for a
1987 cavalier Z·24, claon,
short of the green, 75 feet Carter three-putted from 10 because it's so long off the member at Berry HiUs, finVnt and drtves ver; well,
full·tlme Radiology Tech.
ished in fo urth place at even
tee."
away from the pin. He had lit· feet to fall to 3-under.
~ looking, $2100. OBO
.;eli (740)388-0 113
Excellent pay and benefits.
Carter f~ll out of con- par. Craig Berner, an assistant
. tle chance for an easle.
"When he three-putted
1894 COrsica, bod)' In e•·
"When he hit that second that liole, it really made a tention for good when he hit pro at Edgewood Country
Send resume to:
lOIIent shape. •nglno needs
shot, I said, 'well, par is about turnaround for me and gave ,trees on his .second shots on Club in Sissonville, was fifth
NOri&lt;. Must 10111 $500 OBO
Pleasant Valley Hospital
:740)416-8471
both the 13th and 14th holes. at 3 over and Barry Evans, the
all' I rieed,"' Clark said.
me some hope;• Clark said.
c/o
Human
Resources
host pro at Berry Hills, fin ·
.1»94 Pl~mouth AcClaim, V·
Actually, it was Clark who He bogeyed both.
Nonetheless, Westfall putted
3, auto, tinted wlndowa,
2520 Valley Drive
"That was pretty much the ished at 7 over.
to within 3 feet and eventual- had the most trouble with his
·uno .. Qood• $1750.
Clark will defend his title
:?40)448-8588
putter. One day after needing tournament for. me," Carter
Pt. Pieasant, WV 25550
ly made. birdie.
next
year on his home course.
"The one tlling I told my just 25 putts on Berry Hills' said. "This has been a strange
1898 Lincoln town car,
or fax to: (304) 67S-6975
~ory clean, day· (740)4411caddie, J. said, 'Listen, I just slick, banked greens, Clark week. I'm normally a straight
'1889, evening· (740)448·
AAIEOE
hitter."
want to make sure I give him had 31 Wedne!day.
3939
a
good'
test,"
Westfall
said.
1997 Monte Cano, dari&lt; .
227
Mike Good, Charleston 76-71 ·80
W.Vo.Opert_..
;teen, automatic tran•m•
"And really, I did."
229
Stova
YanHom,
Morganlown
75-n-78
CHARLUTON.
W.V..
(AP)
Aoeulll
from
11-.
final
round
slon, 3.1 ~otor, 79,000
228
Mike
White,
Dunbar
77-75-78
Clark's third shot our of the -~ olllto-- Virginia Open alii-. UOO·yord,
mllel, 18,000. (740)245·
228
Klrlc sanorllald, Bluolllld n-74·77let'Y Hilt Coumrv Club:
~712 (740)245-5229
bunker stopped 20 feet from ...,.ro
228
Harold Pal'"". Hurricane 78·75-75•JonetlllnCiori&lt;,H...-714M7
204
229 Marte
Rtld,
Poca
n-74-76
1989 Grand PnK GT, WhRo,
205
the pin and his putt came up llnod WM!Ioll. Morgontown 70-70-65
229
J01hua Clmbak, Charleston 77-71-81
· 4 door, 24,500 mills, CD,
207
Pal
Corter. Huntington 72-87-88 · 4 feet siJ.ort of the hole, fore· Bill Sharpe, CfOII LanM 74-87-89230
Justin Dalton, Madison 81 ·72· 77
Well
cared
for.
210
230
· For 15 Words
Jaok Forbes, Morgantown 73-80-77
(140)441-Q218, (740)591 ·
213
ing · him to make a knee· Craig Bttntt. Chl-70-71-72230
Ruuoll Reid, Wh.Sui.Sjinn~4-n-79 C'
217
7110
Sorry
Evone.
Chi77·71-88231
1to3 Days
knocker to win.
B11d Tweol, Huntington 78· n 219
Many CIHd, Huorlcane 74-74-71 231
73 VOik Beetle $750. Runo
Larry
Spotloe,
PhMippi73-78.1Q
219
Yerd llelt Adt Only
It squashed Westfall's bid to MIOhlll V-. C=nvlllo 73-70-78
231
bUt noedo body work
Jo~ l&lt;lulrnsn, Vienna 69-83· 79
- .
220
Ayon Whllen. Bl
711-72-72 231
(304)685·3747
Todd
Wtatlall,
Homooasu.
Fla.
73·74-84
become just the fifth golfer. to 220
Sptnoky, Huntl~ 72·78-70
232
Dl~d Hanson, Bndgoport 76·78·76
Over
15
Word1,
220
win four or more state ·Open Tlm
'
93 Dodge Spirit, 54.000 ...
232
·73-70
Joe Zimmerman, Morgantown 79·78·75
220
Bob
•
Bl
72-70-71
IIOIPerWord
lull mlltl. $2300 ol trade.
232
Jim Sorlleh, Hunllngton 79-78·77 titles. Sam Snead .holds the Brait Connon, ~- 77·71-73
221
(740)441·1838
232
David Lawrence, Huorlcane 75·75-82 ·
222
WII~.Chl-79-72·71record with 17.
233
Torry
Hou.
Manlnobuog
61-74·76
.222
Q4 Dodge Sha-. .2 Door.
I l l =..· Hunti~ 70-74-78234
Dick Roblnoon, Huntington 77-80-77
Clark won $5,000 and :Jr.
:w
Hatchback
12800.
Iovitt Jbt Entlrt NtlpbbOrhggd
234
Anthony
BUmalde,
Fairmont
77·77·80
223
J mBlmo, BacldeY n-74-72 . (304)882·2755
Westfall earned $3,200.
235
Kevin Grov•. Parkersburg 15·81·79
223
To Yoyr \)rd s•l
Jolin Aoeo, frMmen 74-73-78 235
Richard Moore, Spencer 78-79·80 9'4 Dodge Shildow, 5
220
The final threesome made Chlrlee -:'&amp;:· ..... 711-74-75238
speed, air, $1000; Yomaha
Scon Oavld11Qf1, Vienna 81 ·78·79 I
22!
Mall to:
17 birdies combined. As the .lmOotmrnott. Vlnn-111-~238
motor acooter, new llree,
David Lane, Coal City 77·79-80
228
237
~·Janel.
St-rt.
-71-75-79
Jon Stricker, South Chlneston 81 ·78·60
11000.' (740)441.0161
225
tound continued, however, Jill
Kenovl
-74
237
Phillip
Reale
II
,
Glanville
78,76-81
225
Tomblin, Mlin 75-73-n
9,'7 z,24 White 62,oo0 mlleo,
bogeys helped change the 'hod
237
Albert Hromulak, BMdgopon 80-73-84
225
8ooft Geotgo, Fayottovllle 74-73-78
CI.Hiflad Adl
240
Ja,rad Jonoo, Kanova 78·79·83 228
·
$8200.
OBO
Good
Jellrey
Hutchl.-o,
Orylork
74-78-78
. Condition (304)882-3822
241
Patrick Kl010i, Pari&lt;erot&gt;uog 74-83-84
111 Court'Straet
228
O..Whltten,Hu-73-73-10Carter
led
Clark
by
one
241
Don
SchUiingtr,
Morgantown
75·80-88
228
Jill Whitman, Dunbar 71·73-12
VOlvo CIBUic. 1980 Sport~
Pomaroy,
OH
45789
244
Trent
Roulh,
M110n
10-7148
227
Aeron
GIUI,
~
75-81·71
Sedan, a•cellonl condHion.
stroke after nine holes but he
244
Todd Ullman, VIenna 81 ·75-88
227
Mloliltl-. ooktrlbUog 75-73-79
f2500 OBO. Mull oool
. (304)875·1616

Open

.

,.

saoa

-

=-•=

.-1 .,.n -

-

The Daily Sentinel

-

•

I

�' ~.-...... 21, 2001

Pomeroy, lllddltpart, Ohio

The Daly Sentinei•,PWge 8 7 -

z -··

J:AUEY OOP
NBA Cro..word Puzzle

P 'tow•PI
n'•''llhlug,~Widee,
Ooullle WidM, ao.ra Dedls, PY's,-

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lletiremelll,

IPcmi&lt;JII &amp; 401K Rolloven;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nwsing Home

,.....,.Dirt
"Gnftls-11"

r1/

COIIIUCJIIIS, lit

in this

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"We

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ea. Help"!!

t'lol Wtft,

Call u. Flnt Or We loth Land

RIJ'

Ask For Mike Hindle

CreteFlwF"''

1

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'

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WVII:Il712

or448-9800

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RIVERSIDE
STORAGE

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EXPRESS

I

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UMes:

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PLASTIC CULVERT r
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REBAR &amp; REWIRE

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7~992·1171

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

ANY

WHAT A DA"'' ELVINEY !! I NEED
SOME PUCE IN' OUlET II

. I

MIMI YORE GOSSIP '?!

WIIIJOWS HEAT
ALloR TI!CIIIOI.OCIY
ICEEPS TilE

IU?E HIW HEAT
OUT AND HIEH
TIE HEAT II

10x'OS30 0C
10 X 20 S50 OC

for
•so per
month ~40) 992-5012

B1 OCKll OUT It~

Of o•v•QI"t
lll.liiAVIDLET RAYS
FAC'IORY DIRECT

FRANK &amp; EARNES'f

PRICING

,.,.,, 1'10'1/, TOV.I$T$ IN

IPA,e! TttfY

OVetlCAMf Ttlf 6flAVITY ·ANI&gt; T~f
Alfll.fS'SNfS$,,:1 TOLl&gt; YOV vlf

YOUNG'S ·

l'lffl&gt;fl&gt; IAttlel&gt; Wlflfl

CARPENTER ·

SERVICE

• Room ltdtllllo • •
Fl'an , " •

Jen~~

tiCII•-.e
·-~

•E!
• Aaaftng I Gulllr1l

a'Zritions, and
pl_!lmbing.

• VInyl_,. • PPIIIIolnllll&lt;llllllal
·PII!!o-PofcloDecb
Free Estimates

Terry Lamm

992-6215

992·0739

---

V. C. YOUNG Ill

~· THE BORN LOSER
't'eN-\ -r
~Y!&gt; "-11-\0?

; P" Q\,
&lt;

,
t

SETH'S
LAWN
SERVICE'

ICE CREAM SOC:IAL
Bashan Fire House
County Road 28
5 pm to ?
9 Flavors ollce Cream
Sponsored by Bashan Ladles

~

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bit or small lobi;
11111111

BUJ'E MBCJWOCAL CONJ'RACTORS

la~119

Audiary

il

i!. . . .

ShaunSelh
(740)985-3563
(740)541-3820

mW

New~

s.Jeo. Serola ........dan
S,ITI n !ciDSIIIItMifalhrtuOik
......._. Snlll a Senlft For

l

wv 11517,

0 .024

oriHI.

241,
, ••• 13 or Melga
D .. d ..
County
Ruada.
T

..........

l'ro(essfonal Work at

at a eumy

lly Philip II.
Pegletered

(I) 21, 21, ZG01

~·~1

TDD•Trl•••e•nall

Cleveland
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

Rockers 65, Miracle 41

.......

TREE SERVICE

WNBA
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -Andrea
Stinson scored 23 points and Dawn Staley added a season-high 11 assists as the
Charlotte Sting ended their franchise,
record seven-game losing ,streak with a
74-50 win over the Detroit Shock on
Wednesday night
Allison Feaster scored 12 points for
Charlotte, which improved to · 2~ I 0
with the win. Clarisse Machanguana
added 10 points and nine rebounds.
Astou Ndiaye~Diatta scored 13 points
for Detroit, which has lost five straight
'to drop to 3-8.

.

games.
Marie Ferdinand, a native of Haiti .
who played high school basketball a few I
miles away at Miami Edison, had 16 •
points for Utah (5~5) .
Miami (5-6), which began the season
4~0, was led by bench-playen Marla •
Brumfield, who scored 12 points, and•'
Kristen Rasmussen, who had II. No l
Miami starter scored in double figures '
for the second straight ·game.
·
Utah misseed six of nine free throws
in the extra period, but Miami was ·
awful from the field, missing 10 of 11
shots. ,
·

THE FRIENDSIIIP OF A eO't'

Generai/Sped•H:r.ed Typlua:
Thmponry Ollke A11lstance
MIIUoa Labeiii/Eavelopes
c-tte Transcriptloa .
Numei'OUI Bus1De111 Support Services
25 yan Secretarial E11perleace

AND HIS D06 IS A
BEAUTIFUL TMING..

'
•,.

•

• Stump Srinding

l

'

• llucktt T~
Home
Remodeling
New Additions

Garages

flEE Em11111
WIMWH-mt

MILL END
FABRICS

Machine Quilting
EARNHART 13

pillow panola
740-992:3873
Pomeroy Engles
Club Bingo
On Thul'lldaya
At 8:30p.m.

Patios, Sidewalks.
25 yea11 experience
Free Estimates

740-742-8015 vr .
1-877·353-7022

Utypeso
Roofs,
Specialist
Call Bob

Cell#
61~-747-1715

Bring In vour repair work·
· we'U get you going for
spring
Every Spring Tune~Up
get a FREE Blrde Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dally
See Manning, Wayna or Jim
· or a· REAL DEAL on 1 new lawn t111ctor,
11wn I110VII' or WMd trlminlr. ·

Maln Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Paying $80.00
per game

.

$300.00 Coventll
Starburst

GRAVELY TRACTOR
Salee a. Service
204 Condor St. .

Progressive top line
Lie. #00-50

Friday. June 29, 2001
Don't put ~ny limitations on

Advertise.·
in this space
for $100 per
month

you rself or your crt:ative en , tcrpriscs or endeavors in the
year ahead, because what you
envision could prove to be extremely lucky for all involved .
C AN CER Uun e 21-J uly 22)
-- The f:u.n ily is always you r
top priority that will prove
lucky for all tpday. Your input
will be extremely fortun ate for
you and those you love when
dealing in the dpm estk real m.
Get a jump on life by under- .
standing the influences that'll
govern you in the year ahead.
Send fo r your Astro,Graph
predictions by mailiug $2 to
- Astro-G raph , c/o this ne-wspaper. P .O. Dox 1758, Mumy

l
•

.

'

1

\

•'

•

•

Cellular

10156. De sure to nate yo ur
Zodiac liWt.

••

Watch for good news to come
you r way today p~:rtaining to
something in whi ch you ju~t
recently bcc3 m e interested.
It'll be the typ e of b reak for
which we all ho pe.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep r. 22)
-- Opportunities ca n be fo und
today, both career-wise and fi m.ndal.ly, so be more on your

LEO (Jnly 23-Aug. 22) --

. '·

992~5479

992-2975

Hill Station, New York, NY

t

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Jeff Watner Ins.

Pomeroy

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Silence .is sorrow'a beat food.' James R, Lowell ·

"The cruelest Ilea ate often told In silence." StevensoD. . •

Rober1 Louis

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_ .
~3;-r.,,:--1,r-"'"--r--1
'--'-·'""'·'---'---'--'
W 0 R G L ~:~,

1-"T!r-1l'I!""'""'T---1·
15 16 I I
'---'--'-·__.____._1--t
U S L .N E S

I.

17_

I_ I_e I_

"How many" years have you
been marned, my cousin asked
his. mom . Laughing she said
!"Long enough to have four coatS
of paint in -- , the -,.,-"
A Complete lhe chuckle . quoted
. V by filling in the missing words · ·

A PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCRA.M-LETS ANSWERS

Lamely- Slush - Fruit- Wiring- LAUGH
"I am certain," granny sighed, "when you confide in

.someone don't believe them when they promise not to
LAUGff"-

·~Cs 'than mual. Each may de.
vclop ~ ingularly,, but co uld
eventually be intertwined.
LILIRA (Se pt. 23-0ct. 23) - You won't have to ~ettlc for
second best today. Yom positive, cnthusiistic ou dook will
supply all the impetus required
. to help you ad vance your 5elfinterests.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov.
22} -- Luck cmdd be o n your
side today by makin g it ppssj ..
blc for you to profit fro m an
arrangement that was not initiated by you. However, you'll
· furnish the needed missi ng ingredicnl.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23,
!Jcc. 2 1) -· Rc gord lf" of
whether yo u' re dealing with a
group ur a person on a o neon-o ne basis, yo ur innuence
over them will be much
stronger tha n you may realize.
Use it to cveryqne's adv~m ..
"f!t' .
C APR ICORN (Dec . 22, Jan. 19) -- Cleorly define whar
you wish to accomplish today
and then go after your goals.
Snbsuntial rew ards are in the
offing fm wcll-~5tablishcd, re:~.Hstic objective! .

A QUA RIUS
20- Feb.
19) - - Frie ndly s mn pctition
w ith good friends bring ou t
yo u r finer quali ties t od;~y.
You 'U be ' desirous of winning,
but sh ould you lose. you 'II
demonstra te how to d o so
~i th grace.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Not only w ill you ge t td
work with the reso urces of 11
co unte rp art today, but this

joillt venture will prove fortunate for bO[h. Yo ur cohort
will realize you're the lu cky
penny in the mix .
ARIES (March 21 - April 19)
-- Lady Luck may step in an ~
act as your bargaining asenJ
today. She will influence mat-

ters to not only brncfit yo u,
but those with whom you're
negotii\ting ~s wcU.
·
TAU1\US (Ap ril 20-May
· 20) -- Stick with any financi•l
situation that you're involved
with today until you g&lt;'t the
resul ts to which you aspire.
Even if it m~ :ms working
overtime. it' ll be worth it.
GEMINI (May 21-Ju ne 20)
-- You don' t need any Secrets
to be th e most popular pcr.ion
in your peer gtollp today. Using your warm , na tu ral compcllillg penonality will draw
others to you .

.

••

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740-949-1405

24 ,..,.•• filii 41 Cry ole
25IMIII
27
47 Ut.lo ....

you develop from step No. 3 below.

If East plays the club
queen at · trick one .
declarer gets home by
ducking. He wins the
second club as cheaply
as possible and plays a
diamond. West can
win with the king, but
has no club left to
play. and declarer still
. has a club stopper.

740-687-3224 or 740-867-oosa

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IT TOUCIIES ME DEEPLV TO
l(~:~~~~:~~~:~~r1?N 6
IN

JIID'

WVil282120

Fire 68, Fever 65

ORLANDO, Aa. (AP) - The EastINDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Jackie
ern Conference-leading Ro ckers built a Stiles scored .26 points, including two
21~point first-halflead and cruised over free throws with 31.6 seconds remainthe Miracle.
ing, to lead Pordand ove~; ln4iana.
In maintaining their perfect 7-0
Rita Williams scored 17 of her 20
record against Eastern Confl!rence points in the second half to lead Indiana
opponents, the Rockers (10~3) got 12 back from a 19-point deficit.
points and five rebounds from Chasity
Gordana Grubin scored 17 points and
Melvin, and 10 points each from Kelly Schumacher had 12 for the Fever
rWaute(S and Penny Taylor. Cleveland's (4~7), which lost for the first time in
r' relerves outscoreq the Miracles' subs three games. ·
41 -9 . .
Comet. 76, Mystict 63
Cleveland, which came into the game
HOUSTON (AP) -Tina Thompson
limiting opponents to a league-best scored 24 points as the Comets beat the .
54.8 points per game and 35.6 field goal Mystics.
shooting percentage, improved on both
Thompson was I O~for-20 from the
those numbers against Orlando (4,7), field and grabbed a team-high eight
which managed to hit only 15 of 57 rebounds. ]aneth Arcain added 19
· shots for a season-low 26.3 percenuge. points, 13 in the first half, for ·the .
Starzz 68, Sol 63, OT
Comets (9- 1) .
MIAMI (AP) Margo Dydek
Chamique Holdsclaw led Washington
scored a season-high 24 . points and (2-9) with 21 points, including 12 in
grabbed 11 rebounds as the Surzz ·the second half as the Mystics batded
handed the Sol th~ir sixth loss in seven, back after trailing by as many as 2 L

I

i.--------~--'---.

Af(ordGble Rates

altove

21= 42rr.._

31

o»

31 WWI-

coo •'1*1 ... noey
211 Tledllloolll 41 Talrt

35:...w:
ca••-•
37c...

If your right-hand
opponent opens· one
of a suit and you overcall one no-trump,
you show a strong notrump with 16-18 ·
points. Fine, but if
you are even stronger,
you must double first
and bid no-trump on
the second round. A
minimun1 rio-trump
rebid promises about
19- 21 points, and a
jump in no-trump
would indicate 22-23
points. In all cases,
you wiD have at least
one stopper in the
opener's suit.
· Here, South correctly rebids one notrump. (Note that five
diamonds has no play.)
And North has an easy
jump to game.
·
West did well .t o
lead the club eight.
Many would have
been tempted by the
spade nine, after
which the contract
would have cruised
home.
There is an important defensive princi. pie : When you are
' crying to establish a
lt suit in which the ope
'::i ponents have two
/i. stOpJ'ers, make them
.:§ burn up the · finf, as
quickly as pos5ible -and trick one isn't too

~

11 llap.'e

329! .. . .
34 I.......,

To defeat this contract, East .must not
bO&lt;;&lt;&gt;UNIJt:u ~~~ play the club queen; .
he should overtake
with the nine. De,
clarer will win with ·
~~~~~~~ the jack and lead a
sneaky diamond eight.
~rS~~~;;~ 'nut
if west is
his .
toes, he will shoottain
with the king and re_ ..........,.......,....., turn his second club.
This establishes East's
r--,.----'----.:::----. suit while he, East,
I SAW TIIAT!
still has the diamond
ace as an entry. The
defense collects two
d h
diatnonds an t rec

F

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POMEROY - When the
2001 National independence
'!
Day parade moves down
Constitution Avenue in Washington on Wednesday, an
entry tiom Meigs County
will be in the lineup: ·
Meigs County Tourism
Board is spomoring the entry
in the parade which marks the
225th bi~thday of America. It
will give national exposure to
the county on 69 television
stations delivered to 30 million households.
Tourism director Karin
Johnson, her husband, Scott,
and their son, will be carrying
, a red, white and blue 20-foot
Meig1 County banner just·
ahead of Myron and June
I!uffield in their colorful
cus calliope wagon pulled
~ team of horses,
.. Mei8t County.pffi~~il'
sip will 2iso be wed on the
wagon.'
Any Mc:igs countians traveling to Washington for the celebration are invited to wear
red, white -and , blue and
become a part of the entry.
Myron Duffield will play
the calliope for the two hours
it takes for the parade to travel the two-mile route tiom
Seventth to 17th streets passing between the White
UP 80EI·A SIGN- Mei11!S County 'promotional signs will be used on the circus calliope wagon
House and the Washington
of Myron a.nd June
for Its tdp down Constitution Avenue on July 4.
Monument, continuing down
Washington's famous . Mall as experience, honors, past
and ending in sight of the adjudication results and festiLincoln Memor~.
val ratings.
·
More than 400,000 spectaThe committee's goal is to
tors are expected to line the get quality representation
street . to 'w atch the parade, tiom aD parts of the U.S. with •
which this year has more than entries ·s howing a cross secton
70 entries including bands, '!f American culture and ,
military an4 specialty, units, diversity.
(
giant helium balloom, Ooats
The Duffie~d~, who_quali- ·BANNER- This red, white and blue banner promoting Meigs
andVIPs.
fied to pamctpate m the County will be carried down Constitution Avenue in WashingA National Selection Com- parade l:sst year wit~ thdr cir- · ton, In front of Myron and)une Duffield's circus calliope wagon
mittee determines who par- cus caDtope, were mvued to :In the 2001 National Independence Day Parade. Displaying the
ticipates based on submitted return this year.
banner here are, from the left, County Commissioners Jim
videotape, photos and bioSheets and Mlck Davenport, and Duffield. (Charlene Hoeflich
graphical information, as well
P1811M . _ Pllrllde. ~
photos)

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Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sunday 11-5
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740-992-6611 •1-800.-733..3334

304-675-5200
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ue . . Piup

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BID OPENING - Construction bids for the new Meigs Local
Elementary School set for Ohio 124 near Rutland were
opened Thursday afternoon by Mark Rhonemua, district
treasurer, left, and Jeff Engram of The Quandel Group, the
project management firm. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

exceed
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
-

• SEm'INEL NE""f' STA_FF

'+

POME~~.OY
Buu for
construction contracts on
the new Meigs Local Elementary School opened
Thursday afternoon exceeded the estimated cost of
$10,138,927 by more than
10 percent; making it probable that part or all of the job
wiD have to be rebid.
The total of the bids made
were
$11,094,923,
not
including plumbing (estimated at $603,689) for
which there were no bidden . The varian&lt;ft on the
bids received was $955,996.
The state allows up to a 10
percent overage on the estimates, said Superintendent
Bill Buckley, who said that it
is his "best guess" that at least
part, if not all, of the job will
have to be rebid which will
delay the entire project by
several weeks.
"It's reaDy disappointing to
all of us," said the superintendent, who noted that the
site work is moving right
along in preparation for the

CO.:Istrustion to begin.

a

Hlp:IOI
LIM: HI
Details, A2

wiD be reviewed again today ·
and a firm decision made. He ·
noted that advertising for
new bids wiU take anothet
30 days and that could push
that actual start of construction into faiL
The apparent low bidder
on the general trades contract was RWS Building Co; •·
of Columbus. The company'$
bid was $4,377,000.The estimate was $3,445,522.
Other apparent low bid· ·
qen were:
'
• masonry; C&amp;R Masonry,
(estimate, $2,018,649) with ,.:i
base bid of$2,01\,9()();
'~
• windows, General, (estimate,
$213,445)
bid
$450,710;
• food service, Louis Polster, (258,336 estimate) bid
$186,290;
• casework, Universal;
($340. 790 estimate) with a
bid of $239,000;
• heating, ventilation and
air conditioning, Geiger
Brothers, ($1,728,688 estiPIMH HI ilds, AJ

Qpen house for new school is July 8

Lotteries

w.~

DIIIV ~: 3-0-4 o.ur 4: a-Ha
c 2001 Ohio volley Pullllshi"' eo.

BY TONY M. LEACH
f.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

'ftC!NE ---; With construction on
So tli~tn Local Schools' K-8 elemen- .
tary building nearing .completion, officials are finalizing pla~s to showcase the
new' facili~y to the p11blic.
Superintendent James Lawrence said
individuals will have an opportunity to
inspect the new school during an open

house ceremony sc heduled for July 8.
The ceremony will open with a flagraising by Racine Am erican Legion at 2
p.m., ·followed by invocation given by
the Rev. Brian Harkness of Racin e
United Meth ddis t Church. •
Opening comments by Lawrence will
precede . a brief speech given by
Michaela Kucsma, principal of the new
Southern Elementary. Deborah Harris,

chairman of the Parent, Teacher and
Community Committee, will then
deliver tour procedures to all those in
attendance.
Following the ribbon cutting cerl!mony, school represen tatives will be on ·
hand to guide tours of the new buildirig
and to answer questions from the public. Refreshments will also be available

Pl•se HI School. AJ

, .' When we enter this world, we're surrounded
by lave, comfort and care. Don't we
deserve the same when re leave?
For rnor~ infor~ationj~ services
Holzer Hospice provides, call
(7o40l446·5074 Gallic County
(7401 9.9 2·3043 Meigs County

ll-5
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Ho.lce Services

·Thomas

Mon.-Sat. 8-7 •

______-aA3~

~sp"'oa.rts~_ _ __....e.,.J._..6

555 P1rk St., Middleport, Ohio

I

er Jim Sheets.
Davenport said the contract
includes a clause that allows open
negowtions during ·the contract
period.
.
In 1997, as a part of Ohio's welfare
reform program, coun~ · coriunis­
sioners across Ohio were given more
control over ho\v welfare funds were
used, with a goal of breaking the
cycle of dependency on welfare, and
putting cash welfare recipients into

I'

Calendar .
A5
OHIO
, JoCo~~lalllss~ffi.llledlillllls---'-:-'--"-aB26:-4::s Pldl :s: 4-0-l ; Pick 4: 9-4-0-5
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A4

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Timbers

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county's we!Ure-to-work progr.lms.
That contract reOects a cut of
$150,000 in special project funding
which , in the past, has been used' for
the development and tourism programs. $175,000 of the contrnct
remains in place.
"We're not at aD happy with the
negotiation process;· Commissioner
Mick Davenport said. "But if we did
not enter into this contract, we
would have been _penalized."
. "They told us what they would do.
and that was that." said Commission-

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

ELK

Prenllum Kits-

ber of Commerce.
~ting and promotion for the
county's tourism office are also
administered through the economic
development contract.
At their regular meeting Thursday,
the commissionen approved a tWoyear partnership agreement between ·
the county and the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services for
administration of the Ohio Works
First program and the Prevention,
Retention and Contingency program, which provide funds for the

BY CM•IN HGIPUCH

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Meigs will get day· in sun at national parade

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~I. No 21 CJ

live Sunday, due to state funding cuts.
· For the past four yean. Meigs
County commissioners have used
funds tiom the Temporary Assistance
· to Needy Families program to pay
BY BlilUI J. RaD
the salaries of Economic DevelopSENTINEL NEWS STAFF
ment Director Perry Varnadoe and
POMEROY -An initiative to
.o ther expenses associated with his
use state welfare-to-work funds to office.
fitrthet" econom4: development and
Last year, $325,000 tiom two
job creation in Meigs County, con- TANF program sources were com. sidered both cre2tive and innovative mitted to economic development
when fint implemented four ycm efforts, administered through a conago, will take a significant cut elfec- tract with the Meigs County Cham-

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Garage
Packages

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HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

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