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                  <text>Page 08 • itunba!' 1!tmltfl' -itrnlinrl

Smith

from PageDl

\

contributions" in excess of
the 1M limits of up to $500
in years 2002- 05, and $1,000
rrom 2006 on.While both 50year-old men and women can
take advantage of "catch-up
contributions," these changes
have been promoted as an
especially good way for those
women who left the workforce to raise children to keep
pace with retirement savings.
Education
Savings
Incentives - When Education IRAs were first introduced in 1997, the contribution limit per beneficiary was
SSOO. With the new legislation. the limit will be
increased to $2,000, starting
in . 2002. The eligibility
requirement for married contributors has also increased to
twice that of single taxpayers,
out
between
phased
$190,000-$220,000 of modified adjusted gross income for
those filing a joint return.
Additionally, · savings in an
. Education IRA may be used
for primary and secondary
school expenses, in addition
to post-secondary expenses.
Another college savings
_program, the state-sponsored
· 529 plan, has also benefited
from the new legislation. Distributions from 529 plans will
rio longer be subjected to federal income tax if used · for
qualified higher education
expenses.
Yes - that's correct- taxfree distributions! Since contribution limits are extremely

Sunday, Aug. 5, 20([1

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

high, and there is no income Rollowrs JH•1 IJi,tnbutlOII&gt;
limit on who is eligible to Historically, options available
conrribute, this will be the for rolling owr assets which
premier college funding vehi- have accumulated in employcle for many taxpayers. In er sponsored plans have been
addition, one may contribute limited. The new law allows
to both an Education IRA for full portability between
and a 529 plan for the same 401{k}, 403~ 457~ Money
beneficiary in tile same year. Purchase and Profit Sharing
Previously.
contributions plans when employees sepacould be made only to one
rate from service.
plan or the other.
Under the old rules, after
Employer
Sponsored
tax assets in qualified retireRetirement Plan Expanment plans and 45 7 plans
sion - Many changes have
been made to employer spon- were not eligible for IRA
sored retireme nt plans, such as rollovers. The new will pro-·
the popular 401 (k) plan, iri ·vide almost unlimited asset
order to increase retirement portability between IRAs and
savings among employers and employer-sponsored plans.
These changes will go into
their employees.
Like the IRA, these plan effect at the beginning of
limits will increase over a 2002.
Also, where circumstances
period of time. 401 (k) . 403(b).
outside
the control of the plan
457 and SAR-SEP saJary
deferral contributions will participant prevents a timely
in crease from $10,500 to rollover, the 60-day period to
S11,000 in 2002, and then complete the rollover may be
another S1;000 every year extended. As a result of these
until 2006 when it reaches changes, workers are more
$15 ,000 (indexed with infla- likely to be willing to save
tion starting in 2007).
within .these plans, knowing
The profit sharing annual they can be moved from
contribution limit will also go employer to employer.
up rrom 15 percent to 25 perWhile
the
Economic
cent. Participants 50 or older Growth and Tax Relief Recmay make "catch-up contrionciliation Act . of 2001
butions" in excess of these
encompasses many additional
limits starting at $1 ,000 in
changes to the tax law, it will
year 2002, and increasing
$1 ,000 per year until 2006 pro.vide taxpayers with dramatically enhanced retirewhen S5,000 is reached.
ment
savings opportunities.
The new legislation will
also focus on relieving some For more information on
of the current regulatory bur- these changes, speak .to your
dens that are a part of retire- financial advisor.
(Bryce L. Smith is an investment plan administration,
making them more attractive ment exe"'tive with Smith Partners at Advest Inc. in its Gallipo·
to small employers.
Increased flexibility for lis office.)

SPORTs: Reds getting back on track, B 1

Mond·

Kneen

The Meigs County Fair is club comm!lnity project.
almost upon us. The Senior
It looks great! This corn,Fair Board, presided over by ing week, watch as the fai from Page Dl
President Ed Holter, has grounds transforms itself inf9
planned and implemented a a village composed of com!Rory Lewandowski, Athens great week of activities. The munity minded individual$,
County Extension agent, will grounds have been spruced clubs, youth advisors, soci~l
di~c.uss marketing strategi~s-- up under the wat"hful-eye .of- groups, business peHons a
•
Biazier Farm is located at Virgil Windon and his assis- government agencies. Thanks
13095 Cowan Road, Shade. tants.
to all of you for participatiqg
From Pomeroy, take U.S. 33 . A special thanks goes to in the !38th Annual Meig;;
north to the outskirts of the Busy Beaver 4-H Club, County Fair. Hope to s@
Shade. Cowan Road (CR under the guidance of club you there.
:
102) is on the left just before advisors Edie Carr, Edna
(Hal Kneen is Meigs Courar
ty
s Exteusia.t agent for agricr.it.
Davis;
Theresa
and
Robert
Shade. Watch for the meeting
Williams, who painted the ture and natural resourcef, Olt!O
signs.
;
Junior Fair Show Arena as a State l.Jniversity.)

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.

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IVIiddlepott • l'orneroy, Ohio

Galli

COUNTY .
FAIR

businesses

Entries
almost hit
record

Search on for cause of
devastating downtown fire
OVP.NEWS EDITOR

2000 FOCUS WAGON

-

•·1.. • ''

"

Fire
BY KEVIN KELLY

Deals ·. are here!.

~~-

Hometown Newspaper

ALLIPOLIS"Anytime you
get a fire on this
block, it's going
to be tough."
That was the assessment of
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Chief
Bob Donnally ~fter firefighters
from Gallia and several Ohio
.and West Virginia counties
quelled a blaze Saturday night
that destroyed most of the
Lupton Block and damaged
three other buildings on the
300 block of Second Avenue.
The fire originated in Haskins- Tanner Co. and was
reported at 5:15 p.m., shortly
after the longtime clothing
store closed.
Before the blaze was

stopped, it damaged four other
businesses · - Catch of the
Day; Edward Jones Investments, Put-On Shop and the
Lynch Agency ·- and forced
residents of several apartments
to flee.
The fire was under control
by I 1 p.m., "but we still had a
lot of fire," Donnally said.
The
cause
remains
unknown, but the state fire
marshal was on the scene. Saturday night and was expected
to return today. A damage estimate was not immediately
available.
"The historical value of
these buildings is tremendous;• Donnally said. "Until
we get some more information, I'd be afraid to hazard a

number~
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Please see Fire. A:S

Small-cap stocks still outperforming their
larger company cousins after·all these years
BY DIAN VUJOVICH

Ever hear the old adage
about how great g.ifts come in
small packages? Sometimes
the same . is true on Wall
Street.
Look at the long-term performance numbers on common stocks, and you'll find
that small-cap stocks have
outperformed their larger
- company cousins Throughoutr·
the decades. In fact, according
to Ibbotson, the Chicagobased securities research company, from 1926 through
year-end 2000, large-company · stocks had an average
annual total return pf 11 percent,
while
small-caps
returned 12.4 percent. ~
•
But that's not news to John
Montgomery. He's portfolio
manager of a passively managed index fund named the
Bridgeway Ultra-Small Company Tax Advantage Fund,
.1(800-()61-3550). H e is a
"quant" guy, who takes smallcap fund investing one step
further : It's not small-cap
stocks this fund is interested
in, it's the really, really small
ones.
" Here's the deal," says
Montgomery, founder of
Houston-based Bridgeway
fund family. "If you believe in
the small-firm theory and
small-cap investing at all,
ultra-small stocks are the only
place to be because of the big
kick in returns."
When looking at the ultrasmall cap market over long
periods of time, it's not possi.ple to precisely define .market

cap sizes because they've
changed over time. What was
considered small"cap 50 years
ago is different today. So to
calculate returns, number
crunchers divide the market
into 10 deciles - the lOth
representing the tiniest companies. And , from 1926
through 2000, the average
annual total return on that
bottOI)J 1Oth percentile is 13.1
percent.
Getting the "big kick" kinds
of returns that Montgomery
speaks of also means taking on
more risks, such as those that
involve market-cap size, fund
management and market
cycles.
With that in mind, Morningstar reports that the
Bridgeway Ultra-Small Company Tax Advantage fund was
up year-to-date 12.13 percent
as of July 13. At year-end
2000, it was ahead 0.7 percent; in 1999, up 31.5 percent; and 1998, down 1.8 p ercent.
Hete's · more about the
Bridgeway Ultra-Small Company Tax Advantage Fund
(BRSIX):
Q: It's not easy talking with
quantitative guys about their
funds because everything_ is
numbers-driven: I can 't ask
what companies you like and
don't like, and why. Or about
the companies you've visited
because that's not what you
do. Plus, this fund is a passively man aged index ·one to
boot. Where 's the story?
A: (Laughing) Well, maybe
the story is in what I don't do.

But I am a quant guy, and I
like to do numbers and statistics. To drive that point home,
I have made exactly one company visit in my entire lifetime. So I don't do the normal
stuff. I feed numbers and statistics to computers.
Q: That means how well.
this fund performs depends
upon the-model you've-created and how flexible it is?
A: The only modeling that's
going on in this pqrtfolio is
trying to replicate the index.
We're not going out and trying to pick great companies.
We're trying to go out and
buy representative companies
of the index and then rely on
the asset class to take care of
the returns.
Q: Which index does this
fund try to replicate?
A: The Center for Research
and Security Prices Cap
Based Portfolio 10 Index,
(CRSP). It's run out of a center at the University of Chicago, so it's academic research
on security prices. They have
the same methodology of
looking at returns of stocks by
size as measured by the 10
deciles of the New York Stock
Exchange.
Q: H-o w many companies
are in that universe ?
A: Under 2,000. At the end
ofJune, it was 1, 970. They are
all U.S. companies, and the
index has screens. So we don't
invest in any foreign stocks,
no unit .investment trusts, no
closed-.end mutual funds or
real estate investment trusts.

Black inv~stors m?ke progress,
but equahty rema1ns elus1ve
ETTRICK, Va. (AP) The sun is shining and the
backyard barbecue smoking,
but the 16 men crowded
into a suburban living room
on a Saturday afternoon
aren't there to watch a big
ballgame.
They're caught up in the
sport of maki ng money.
"For Luce!lt to go back
up to the $42 we bought it
at, it has to go up to over
500 percent," pointed out
Will Huggins, who wants to
· sell the 151 shares of Lucent
Technologies Inc. owned by

the Expectation ln/eitment
C lub. "There aren't many
stocks out there that are
goi ng to be able to do that,
and I have my doubts about
this one." ·
" It's not the only stock
that is weak," obse rved
James Harvey. "We're in
rough shape on the technology side of our portfolio."
What's nota bl e about this
club isn't its investment style
- i t decided to hold Lucent
for more researcl; - but its
membership: all men and all
of them black. The group is

just one example of growing
efforts by black Americans
to get involved in the stock
market.
"The level of interest in
financial
independence,
economic · empowerment
and investing has just
exploded," said
Duane
Davis, founder of the Coalition o.f · Black Investors.
" Before you mi ght have had
a club here o r a church
there, but this is a real
groundswell . People are trying to make a difference."

.'

2000 MERCURY GRAND
MARQUIS

2000 EXPLORERXLT

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HUDDLED UP - Arefighters work together to fight the blaze
that tore through the town's historical district Saturday. (Bryan
Long photo)
·

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BY,KEVIN KnLY
OVP NEWS EDITOR

GALLIPOLIS - Trace Fortner sat on the sidewalk across
from his father's apartment with
his dog and pet turtle, counting
himself lucky he and his dad
escaped the fire that ravaged
four downtown Gallipolis buildings Saturday.
"It's kind of sad," he said as he
looked at the remains of what

17~SJJ•

Details, A2

BY KATIE CROW
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

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fje..,d..s'------"8""2:-"--4 Pick :s: 7-4-9; Pick 4: 4-7-&amp;s

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Editorials
A4 Kid!r. 7-8-2+8-8

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Plsa1e ue Aftermath, A:S

noon.

· Kickoff for the fair wiD

Please see Entries, A:l :

Council to pursue Syracuse school '

Low: tos

2 Sections - 12 Paps

*fl,tJJ•

Elementary, was visiting with his
dad over the weekend. Around 5
p.m. Saturday, he was napping
and his father was about to catch
some sleep when he beard sirens
headed in their direction.
"He came out and looked and
saw the place was on fire," Trace
said, referring to nearby Haskins-Tanner Co., where the blaze
originated. ·

.

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Sentinel

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.

had been solid, useful structures
he saw earlier in the day when
he went fur a walk.
On Sunday, he waited for his
father and firefighters to carry
out items fi:om the apartment
"I hoi'~ nothing got ruined,"
said Trace, son of 101.5 The
River personality Bill "Bobo"
Hicks.
Trace, who will be entering
eighth grade this fall at Fairland

Today's

tto;tn-

ttteMIII,•n••

SURVIVOR
-Trace
Fortner,
son of
101.5 The
River personality Bill
"Bobo'
Hicks,
reunites
with his
pet turtle
which sur·
vlved Saturday's Second Avenue
bl aze. (R.
Shawn
Lewis
photo)

Residents, business.own·ers
pick up pieces after fire

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AFTERMATH - This is the view of Hanskins- Tanner which suffered the worst of Saturday's
fire. The building Is a total loss along with the connecting structures as well. Hanskin- Tanner as been in the building almost 80 years. (R. Shawn Lewis photo)

POMEROY - At the
Saturday 4 p.m. deadline
for making open class
e ntries in the !38th
Meigs County Fair, 2,537
entries had been made at
the secretary's office on
the Ro ck Springs Fairgrounds.
·
The number was 20!
·more .t han in 2000 and
just 216 less than the
highest number recorded
in th e past 10 years.
In 1999 a total of 2753
were
made,
en tries
according to figures provided by Debbie Watso n ,
fair board secretary. The
· total did not incl ude draft
horse entri es.
.
The open class entril!)&gt;
represent only senior fai:
participation and do not
i,nclude the thousands of
entries in junior fair by
youth involved in 4- H
clubs, Girl and Boy
Scouts, grange, teen ins ti~
tute, FFA and F.C.C.L.A:
This year 35 children
registered to participate
in the Little Miss and·
Mister Meigs County:
Fair ~ch eclaf'e fOI"~B"ctn.
Monday on the hill stage.
A total of 1 ~3 childre(l :
were. registered for th e
preity baby contest at 9.
a.m. Saturday on the hill:
stage.
Other departments and
the number of entri es .
recorded were dairy, 8S; · .. ,
beef, 16; sheep, non e;
poultry, 11; farm crops, _·
378 ; hay show, 26; flowe r·
show, 946; domestic arts, ·
2 13; painting 60; photog~
raphy, 270; baking an~ :
can nin g, 255; grange, 4; ·
and antiqu e display, 102.
While
th e
M eigs
County Fair opens a:
wee k from today and·
conti nu es through Aug.
18, judging begins Satur. day. Amateur photogra"
phy, amateur painting,
baking and
ca nnin g,:
domestic arts, and the:
grange exhibits will all be:
judged on Saturday after-

o 2001 Ohio Volley Publ~hing co.

SYRACUSE Syracuse Village
Co un cil has voiced str~"ng support for
pursuing owner.ship of the Syracuse
Elementary School building and
grounds for use as a community facility
and related purposes .
T he building will be sought at no cost
from Southern Local Board of Edt1ca-

tion, counci l decided last week.
Mayor Larry Lavende r and Grants
Administmtor Robert Wingett met
with the sc hool board son}e time ago to
talk abo ut the village's desire to take
ownership of the property.
Wingett said residents have shown
imerest in acquiring the building and
have offered se rvic ,; to aid the project.
Work is con tinuing on improvements

to the tennis courts, .Wingett said. The~
renovation project cos t $28,000, with'
$2 1,000 in grant funds from the Ohio
D epartment of Natura l Resource~
NatureWorks program.
.
Now that the project is completed,
$4,200 remains in the grant fund, which:
the sta te requires be spent in the vicini-:
ty of the tennis courts.

Please see School, A:l

World Breastfeecllng Week Is August 1·7
"Breastfeeding: Simply the Healthiest Choice"

....."'

Holzer Medical Center salutes our certified lactation consultants:

._...

Cheryl Frazier, RN, IBCLC; and
Dellllle Perroud, LPN, IBCLC

s

lllltil llll

For more information about breastfeeding classes at HMC, call

(740) 446-5030

-

•

MEDICAL C
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

�•

I

: The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,Aug.7

.

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W.VA.
KY.

CINCINNATI (412) ~Plans to.expand
an existing black museum in Cincinnati and
preparations to open the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in 2004
are part of a nationwide surge in museums
focusing on black culture and history.
Curator Toil}'lm O'Neal of the Cincinnati Arts Consortium's African American
Museum said there has been increasing
interest in the 3,000-squaie- foot museum,
which opened in 1993.
· "The treasure in us is that a lot of people
have underestimated the contributions of
what African-Americans have done for this
city," O'Neal said. "But people are aware '
that we're here now:·
Rita Organ, president of the Association
of African-American MuseumS, which has
more than 200 members, says interest in

black nruseium seemHG·btl.growing a~ros£ urn, which..WDU!dJ~e. part..of the Smithsonthe country.
ian Institution, would be a repository for
"This is a serious wave," said Organ, also black history.
manager for exhibits and programs at the
A second project in Washington is the
Freedom Center. "We haven't seen a surge Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial, led by
like this ever. There's never been this many Alpha Phi .61pha Fraternity. The organizaprojects at one time functioning and uying tion has until November 2003 to break
·
ground for the ,project.
. .
to get established."
Experts say the growth is primarily the
In Indianapolis, organize~ are p~g
result of grass-mots efforts and a rise in cort- an interactivl: black history museum that
sciousness among blacks, aS well as attempts features arts, music and other cultural inforto correct past inequities and educate peo- · marion about the history of blacks in lndiple about a black experience that historical- ana.
ly has been sparsely represented in mainIn Louisville, Ky., the Muhammad Ali
stream museums.
Center, an interactive educational instituU.S. Reps. John Lewis, D-Ga., and J.C. · tion to promote peace, is scheduled to open
Watts, R-Okla., introduced legislation this in late 2003, and the Kentucky Center for
year to create a national black history muse- African American Heritage also is expected
urn on The Mall in Washington. The muse- to open in 2003.

0 ~-····

&amp;my Pt. Cloudy

Cloucly

Showe&lt;a T·li1Diml

Rain

Flumes

Coma birth

Hot a·nd sunny this week
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It will be hot and sunny
across the region today as
upper high pressure builds into
;the area . from the central
Plains, the National Weather
Service said.
Highs will be in the lower
90s. Lows will be in the upper
60s.
Partly cloudy skies are
expected for the rest of the
week, but the hot weather will

continue with highs from the
upper 80s to lower 90s.
Forecast
Today: Sunny. High 91, low
67.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. High
92, low 70.
Wednesday: High 91, low
70..
Thursday: Mostly cloudy.
High 88, low 68.
Friday: Mostly cloudy. High
85, low 68.

City wants to help fight fat_
FINDLAY (AP) - Fearing that obesity ·among kids here is
becoming widespread, the city's health commissioner is organizing an effort to study the problem and develop ways to
reduce it.
Nationwide, one in five children is overweight, Health
Commissioner Stephen Mills said. That's double the rate of 30
~~~
.
.
· "It's probably the most common abnormality we see in routine physical exams in children,'' Findlay pediatrician Dr. Andy
Ritz said.
,
Obesity leads to other health problems s11ch as diabetes and
: high blood pressure.
·
Mills said the surge in obesity may be the result• of kids

·· spending more time watching television, playing video games
. · and using a .Gomputer.
· : Last year, Findlay's· health department used a $~,204· grant
· from the Findlay-Hancock County Community Foundation
:· to encourage Findlay schools fifth-graders to exercise and eat
· well.
Barb Wilhelm, a city public health mme, said fifth-graders
:were targeted because they spend increased amounts of time il'l
front of a television or computer, compared with kids of other
ages.

Martha Staats
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Martha Jane Staats, 78, of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died on Friday, Aug. 3, 2001, at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis, Ohio.
She was born Oct. 13, 19.22 in Hartford, daughter of the late
Ralph V. and Zelia Gower Gibbs. She was a homemaker.
Surviving are her husbandJames H. Staats and two sons and
daughters-in-law, James D. and Sandra Staats and Thomas H.
and Cathy Staats, aU of Point Pleasant; a daughter and son- inlaw, jane A. and Lloyd Moore ofWilliamstown; two sisters and
a brother-in -law, Ernestine Werry of Pomeroy, Ohio, and Pat
and Marcellus Waid of New Haven; two brothers and sistersin-law, Jl.,alph V. and Dorothy Gibbs of New Haven and Jake
and Edith Gibbs ofWorthington, Ohio; six grandchildren; and
three great-grandchildren.
·
She was prec~ded · in death by three sisters: Mildred Elias,
Imogene·Walker and Mabel Jamison.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant. Burial will follow at Graham Cemetery in
New Haven .
.
.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday from 6 to
9 p.m.

LOCAL BRIEFS
lhree injured

Department.
Robert Davis informed
RACINE -A one-car acci- deputies about the theft o( t\vo
dent Tuesday on County Road four-wheelers and one motor34 (Pine Grove) sent three peo- cycle from outside his residence
ple to an area hospital with on Rice Run Road.
injuries, the Gallia-Meigs Post of
The missing equipment is a
the State Highway Patrol red 1999 Kawasaki Lakota, a yelreported.
low 1999Yamaha Warrior and a
Transported by Meigs EMS green 1993 KX60.
to Holzer Medical Center from
In an unrelated matter, Steve
the scene of the 11 :SO p.m. acci- James, Portland, reported the
dent were driver Michelle E. theft of six tires and wheels from
Bell, 18, 3783 Yoba Ridge his trailer Wednesday night
Road, Coolville, and her two
James said a maroon 1980
passengers - Felicia A. Lehan, Ford truck with two males was
· 18, 29372 Bashan Road, seen leaving the area.
Racine, and Darrell E. Hill,
Anyone with information can
27925 Huckleberry Road, call the sheriff's department at
Coolville.
992-3371.
Troope~ said Bell was southbound when she failed to navigate a curve, drove off the right
side of the road and struck an
CHESTER
Chester
embankment.
Township
Trustees
will
hold a
The car was severely damaged, and Bell w.ts cited for fail- public meeting on Thursday at 6
p.m. at tl1e firehouse with repreure to control.
A Rudand~area man ~was sentatives of Adelphi Gable Go-.
taken to Cabell Huntington Customers with questions or
Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., by concerns about their cable serLifeAight following a one-vehi- vice are encouraged to attend.
cle accident earlier Tuesday on
CR 16 (Beech Grove) near
R.utland.
RACINE The 34th
Troopers said Charles Rath- reunion of the Samuel Alan
burn, 36, 34610 Side Hill Road, Eblin family will be held Sept. I,
was transported from the scene 4 p.m. at Star Mill Park in
of the 8:50 p.m. accident. Fur- Racine. Those attending are to
ther details were unavailable.
take their own table service arid
Zachary C. Davis, 18, 41517
favorite foods. Meat will be fur,
Cullums Road, Pomeroy, was
nished. Call 992-2272 or 992cited by the patrol for failure to
6396 for more information.
control following a two-car
accident Wednesday on Chester
Township Road 83 (Skinner).
Troopers said Davis was
POMEROY
Meigs
southbound at 8:20 p.m. when
County
Chapter
of
PERI
will
he failed to maintain control of
. the car he drove and collided meet at noon on Friday at the
with a northbound car driven ·Meigs County Senior Center.
by Helen J. Heaton, 50, 38627 Insurance representatives will
speak, and birthday cake will be
Skinner Road, Pomeroy.
Both d.rs were slightly dam- served.

Plane crash injures one
XENIA (AP) -A single-engine plane crashed as it was trying to land Sunday, injuring the pilot.
Charles E. Dinkier II, 40, of Cincinnati, was the only person
aboard and taken to Miami Valley Hospital, where he was in
critical condition with a severe head injury, the State Highway
Patrol said.
Dinkier was trying to land the 197 5 Aero tech Pitts S-2A
'biplane at Skydive Greene County in this city about 15 miles
east of Dayton when he crashed, damaging the plane's .front
propeller and wings. Authorities did not know where the plane
.
originated from.
The patrol reported witnesses said the pbne came m too fast,
touching the grass runway once, hoppmg and str1king _a
drainage ditch with its landing gear. The nose of the plane hit
the ground and partially tore off the propeller.
Officials from the Federal Aviation Administration will visit
the crash site Monday. The National Transportation Safety .
Board also was notified.
l~fFl"" if.'i
It was the second plane crash in the area in a week. Two
AleXis Michelle Cooper, 71bs. 7oi.., Is sliown &lt;lt University Hospital In Cincinnati. Alexis' mother, Chastity Cooper, 23, carried pilots were killed Tuesday when their twin-engine airplane
the pregnancy to full term despite being In a coma since an from a flying club at Wright-Patterson Air Fo~ce Base crashed
automobile accident in November 2000. Doctors said It Is one in a cornfield near Xenia.
of few known cases In the United States In which .a comatose
woman was able to carry a baby to full term. (AP Photo)

23:·

cable meeting

Janet Jackson concert ~nceled

CLEVELAND (AP) - Janet Jackson canceled a concert
Sunday because of the tlu, her' promoters said.
A statement from tour manager David Russell said the singer
.
apologizes to her fans for canceling the. show at &lt;?und Arena.
•
CLEVELAND (AP) - Frank Sinatra, 'N Sync, Elvis Presley,
The concert has been rescheduled for Sept. 5. T1ckets for the
Britney Spears.
\
. . show Sunday will be honored.
·
. ·
. . . \,, Those teen idols and many more will be the focus of a maJOr
CLEVELAND (AP) - . A fifth pmon has dJed from InJUrieS exhibit next spring at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
.~uffered in the July 29 explosion of an ant1que steam-powered Museum.
.
·
.
·
:tractor at the Medina County Fair. ,
.
"We're going to look at th e phenomenon ... from the past to
COLUMBUS (AP) - . More prescriptions than ever are
Bryan Hammond, 18, of Homerville dted at 2:55 p.m. Sat- the present,'' said Jim Henke, the-rock hall's ·chief curator.
being filled, but the number of pharmacists isn't keeping up
The teen-idol exhibit likely will reach from the 1940s when with the demand.
urday at Cleveland Metro H ealth MediCal Center, a nursmg
. supervisor said Sunday. Hammond had suffered. burns and Sinatra was young all the way to latest youth-oriented stars,
For that reason, some central Ohio stores, including CVS,
· shrapnel wounds.
including the Backstreet Boys and Christina Aguilera, Henke Big Bear, Kmart and Rite Aid, have been curtailing pharmacy
Hammond had been helping his employer, who owned the said.
hours in the past six months, usually in the evenings or on
The museum already has obtained memorabilia from several weekends.
tractor. His sister, Heather Hammond, said that her br~ther was
serving as a volunteer in the area of the explosiOn. She teen-idols, including David Cassidy, Debbie Gibson, New Kids
"I've been in the business 35 years and ... (until now) I've
'declined to provide additional details Sunday evenmg. .
on the Block, Neil Sedaka and Bobby Sherman.
never seen pharmacy closings because they didn't have the
. An obituary m The Medina County Gazette hsts L1berty
Memories and souvenirs from teenyboppers themselves will manpo')Ver,'' said Phil Lutz, pharmacist at the Big Bear super: Excavating as Hammond's . empl?yer. Tractor owner Chff be "a. big part" of the exhibit, Henke said.
.
market in Grove City.
· KovaciC owned the busmess, and hts fanuly has satd employees
The museum hopes the exhibit will draw several generatiOns
He supervises a staff of three pharmacists that fills 1,300 to
· ~here helped restore the 83-year-old machine.
of fans.
·
1,400 prescriptions each week. Since late winter, he and his
"There will be something for everyone," Henke said. "Kids staff have picked up customers from Big Bear stores in Cir- ·
; Hammond jumped in front of his fiancee, lB~year-old Katie
:Repp, to shield her from the hot water and shrapnel, she told will be able to come with fheir parents o(even,their grand- deville, Washington Court House and southwest Franklin
: C leveland televl!lon station WJW.
parents. Everybody had teen idols at some ~otnt.
County which had pharmacy hours cut.
. "He was there to protect me," said the Medina County
Op~rators say unscheduled closings are better and safer than
:woman, who was treated and released the night or the explohaving pharmacists work beyond their limits and possibly makston.
ing errors.
"Bryan died doing something he loved,'' she told the station.
COLUMBUS (AP) - No longer feeling the need to be
"He was part of that (Kovacic) family."
·
close to the center of state government, businesses are pulling
Hammond also was a member of the Chatham Volunteer out of the area around the Statehouse.
Fire Department.
Capitol Square, traditionally the spot to be for prestige -and
proximity, is losing companies that still wan~ to be downtown,
but in newer buildings.
"Being on the square is not essential to our business,'' said
COLUMBUS (AP) - Four hospitals-within-a- hospital in Tom Hess, a: partner in Buckingham, Doolittle &amp; Burroughs
~entral Ohio are among 63 facilities nationwide that provide law firm, which is moving next month from the Key Bank
To all of our customers here at
care for people facing lengthy recoveries.
building overlooking the Statehouse to the Arena . District.
. Select Specialty Hospitals are housed within - · but not "Having access to the square is essential, but not being on the
A&amp;D Auto Upholstery, Inc., Donnie
:linked to - Doctors Hospital North State University Medical square."
.
Jacks, my dad, passed away July 27,
.
..
' Center, Riverside Methodist Hospitals and University HospiEmpty offices can be found in high-rises all over the Cap!2001. We would like to extend our
tals East.
. to] Square area, More vacancies are expected when Scotts Co.
appreciation for all of your business
• ·T hey're designed to serve patients such as Harold England, a moves its offices to Marysville.
·.57-year-old Kentucky .resident with GuiUain-Barre syndrome, · Downtown Columbus' office-vacancy rate is 12.6 percent, 5
whil~ dad was here. Dad will be
· a rare neurological disord4r that ~an ca11se paralySIS and occur percentage points higher than just a year ago, according to realgreatly . missed, personally , and
;after certain viral infections and vaccinations.
estate firm NAI Welsh.
professionally. In carrying on his
: He was transferred to the Select Specialty Hospital at Ohio
T he firm expects the vacancy rate to increase to 20 percent
tradition, Henrietta ana I will
·State from a Cincinnati hospital.
this fall when seve ral new buildings - all searching for tenants ·
continue to do auto upholstery and
· "We chose this. He could have gone to other places closer to - are completed.
·
ho1~e, but this is where we want him to be,'' said his wife,
do our best to meet your needs. All
Downtown's new office buildings primarily are in two of
joyce, who praised the combination of physical, speech, occu- Columbus' entertainment districts - the Brewery District and
things here at the shop will remain
_pational and respiratory therapies that have helped brm~ het the Arena District, where the National Hockey League's
the same. Dad's honesty and up: husband from complete paralysis to being able to move hiS . Columbus Blue Jackets play at Nationwide Arena.
front approach to customers was
:arms and legs, and even talk.
important to him, we shall do the ·
The hospitals are operated by Select Medical Corp., a
Mechanicsburg. Pa.-based company with revenue of about
$ROO 1nillion ·l"'t year.
EU C LID (AP) - Euclid detectives say the body of a dead
' The company Web site says the goal of the hospitals is " pro- man was lying in plain view in the back seat of a car officers
viding quality care for appropriate patients who need a lon ger pull ed over Sunday afternoon.
·acute stay for their recovery or well-being."

Eblin reunion

New teen-idol exhibit announced

Fifth person dies from blast

Wanted: Ohio pharmaci$ts

PERl to meet

aged.

'

' .

POMEROY- Several theft
incidents are being investigated
by Meigs County . Sheriff's

AliA•t•

MIDDLEPORT -A special
presentation from the Dominican Republic mission triip will
be given at the Middleport
Church of Christ Sunday, 7 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel

ll,l•l$t#ff~ ' lift'

· car had body in back seat

Presentation

1hefts reported

Bus.inesses leaving capitol Square

Centers fill need for therapies

from Page AI

CHESHIRE - Fraru:t!S. C. Minor, Cheshi&lt;oe, died Sunday...
Aug. 5, 2001, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in
Pomeroy.
Arrangements are being handled by Fisher-Acree Funeral
Hotne and will be announced later.

Police were called to Hillandale Park in the southwest part
of this Cleveland suburb about noon because.of reports of people with rifles, Detective Mike Grida said. They turned out to
be paintball guns.
·
•
But while investigating that, report, officers pulled ov~r two
cars that were leaving the playground area, Gnda sa1d. An
unidentified body was lying in the back seat of one of the ca~.
The two male drivers were held in Euclid's jail, although no
charges had been filed Sunday.
Investigators found no wounds or obvious signs of tra':'ma on
the body, Grida said. Cuyahoga County Coroner Elizabeth
Balraj will conduct an autopsy Monday, he· sa1d. The veh1cle
also was towed to the coroner's office.
Detectives are" treating the case as a homicide unless the
coroner rules otherwise,- Grida said. ·
None of tl)e people playing paintball was detained, he added.

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we get some 'more information, I'd be afraid to hazard a
gl.les,~...at .thi~ point:' -- ~Because of efforts to stem
the fire from spreading, three
nearby businesses - · Gallipolis Pawn Shop. JC Penney Catalogue Center and
Stone Jar were spared
from flames, although Donnally said they did undergo
sonic smoke and water dam· age.
Stone Jar, owned by Sonny
Garnes, sustained moderate
smoke and water damage,
but the JC.Penney Catalogue
Center that makes up the
back half of the building, was
basically unharmed.
"JC Penney must be doing
something right," Donnally
joked during a tour of the
facility.
Following the alarm,
mutual aid calls were issued
and all of Gallia County's
VFDs - Centervill~, Crown
City, Greenfield, Guyan and TAKING A BREAK - This fireHarrison townships, Rio fighter takes a break after
Grande and Vinton ~­ . battling the blaze the ripped
responded, along with assis- through five businesses In
tance from Middleport, downtown · Gallipolis. (Bryan
Point Pleasant, Mason and Long photo)
Valley, W.Va., and departments from Vinton and Jack- buildings. "If this fire had
son counties in Ohio and gotten into Dollar General,
we'd have had to start calling
Cab.ell County, W.Va.
. In all, .19 departments in h elp from Chillicothe."
The fire produced thick
responded and more than 80
smoke
that spread through
firefighters were on sce ne in
temperatures topping out in Gallipolis City Park, ·south
and into the Ohio River. On
the 80s and high humidity.
Sunday, volunteers
and
Local volunteers and EMS
trucks remained on the
quickly left the Gallia Counscene, pouring water on
ty Junior Fair where they
smoldering hot spots.
were providing safety at the
Donnally estimated more
annual demolition derby.
than 1 million gallons were
Three firefighters were
used, both from Gallipolis'
taken by' Gallia County EMS
water plarit arid pumped out
to Holzer Medical Center
of the Ohio River at the
for treatment of heat exhausparkfront.
tion and were later released,
"The reason we did that
Donnally -said. One of th!'m,
was, we were sucking all we
Michael Soles, was transcould from the plant, and
ferred to Cabell Huntington
since the river ·provides an
Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.,
unlimited source of water, it
but was to have been
freed up water for the
released Sunday, The Associ tankers," he said.
ated Press reported.
Due to the demand for
Donnally said controlling
water, a main on upper Sec-·
the fire was difficult due to
ond Avenue burst, dropping
the age of the structures ·residential and commercial
- (:;upton Block, for example,
water pressure until it was
was built in 1894 - as well
repaired.
as common roofs and the
"That hurt us a bit in
iack of fire walls that caused terms of fighting the fire, but
the fire to spread.
it didn't devastate us," Don"It was a fire that spread nally said.
rapidly,'' he said. "These
Volunteers, including citibuildings contain a lot of old zens, firefighters' wives and
timbers in flooring, and families, HMC, Holzer Clinnone of them have fire walls. ic's Sycamore br~nch and
When the Lupton Block was others, rushed to · the scene
built, they didn't even know with food, water and other
what a fire wall was then.
necessities to aid firefighters.
"We've stressed it before, Burlile Oil Co. provided fuel
and we will again, for any for trucks, and · Milton
. new construction, you have (W.Va.) Fire Department
to have three things provided another tanker.
smoke detectors, sprinkler Foodland, Kroger and varisystems and fire walls," he ous restaurants in town sent
added.
food and drink to the scene.
In terms of difficulty, Don"I have no idea where to
nally said fighting the blaze, start, but I'd like to wholein his experience, was similar heartedly thank them for
to the November 1993 fire helping us out at the scene,"
that leveled the Womeldorff Donna'Jly sajp.
&amp; Thomas hardware building
"It was the whole city,
ai Third Avenue and Court actually, people who donated
Street.
food- you couldn't ask for
Saturday's blaze is one of better cooperation ."
several that have struck the
Structural concerns will be
downtown, including one at left to the experts to decide
Thomas Clothiers in 1979, once the structures are
three at the former Willis examined, .the chief said.
Tire Co. recapping plant
"We'd have to get some
(1983, 1987 and 1990) and structural engineers in here
' two on Court in the 1990s.· first. I'm worried about the
An apartment fire also struck Lupton building because
the Haskins-Tanner building parts of it don't look
healthy." ·
in 1993.
"They've all .got common
(Managi"g editor R. Sl1atvfl
walls and roofs,'' Donnally
said . of the business block · Lewis co fltributed to this story.)

School
from Page AI
Council discussed lights
and tables and benches as
possible projects.
Pau)a Counts, co-m.anager
of the London Pool, met
with council regarding the
opening and closing of the
pool. The pool will close

$29.25
$56.68
$109.72

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
\

•

Aug. \3-18 for the Meigs
Counry Fair, and will reopen
Aug. 19-2b, after which date
it will close for the season.
Council accepted the
mayor's report of $1 ,b4l for
July in fines and fees collected.
Also present were council
members Bill Roush, Mony
Wood, Eber Pickens Jr.; and
Katie Crow, and Sharon
Cottrill, clerk.

Roloo outoldo lllolgo County

13 weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Fire

Frances C. Minor

Inc.

02001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Deaths·

Mond•y. August 6, l001

Number of black museums increasing

Ohio weather

IND.

PageAl

Ohio

•

Monday, Aug. 6, 2001

TAKING ENTRIES - Dean Colwell of Chester Township is·
assisted by Lea Bonecutter, a fair board employee, in regis·
tering his dairy cattle in open class for exhibit at the 138t~
Meigs County Fair. This year a total of 88 dairy cattle were registered, making it the highest number since 1991. (Charlene
Hoeflich photo)
Fair king and qu ee n alon g
with lives tock pr inces and
princesses will be n:11ned in
ceremonies o n th t;" st.tge.
. fro... Page AI
Following th at relt giou &lt;
be Sunday evening when a services will be held by th e
parade will be held on the· Meigs County M ini ster ial
racetrack and the Junior Ass.ociation .

-Entries

call, and she's 72 years old."
Shipley said he n t&lt; hed downtown and atte; nptcd to enter
from Page AI
the shop, believi n ~ hi&lt; n1other
·was still inside. He then "'w her
It was then a "big ol' thing of standing across the ' treel,' where
black smoke" came up the st.1ir- she went after crowlin g out th e
well. Hicks and his son, like all front door.
of the apartment dwellers in the
"When you see that , nothin g ·
affected buildings, fled to safety. else matters," Lorew1s.1 id.
The Red Cross is helping
"You've b'D t to 1hink you
those burned out of their apart- were lucky that no one wa&lt;
ments find .shelter, Gallipolis hurt," Doug added." ! s•ueS&lt; th e
Volunteer Fire Chief Bob Don- · rest can be repbced."
nally said.
In addition to drawing nearly
For Ron Lynch of the Lynch 100 firefighte~ from both sides
Agency, it was a matter of get- of the Ohio Rlvcr, the fire
ring inside and seeing what attracted hundreds of onlookdamage there WJS to his office. ers, many of them saddened by
The upper t\vo stories of the the destruction of more Galbuilding housing his business lipolis laqdrnarks.
were gutted.
" It's a shame wh en we're tryLynch, who had been away ing to develop the town , wh en
·
from his office since Friday, was there's an effort to prcoo;erve our
malting plans to reopen in a buildings," said Bob Eastman ,
new location today.
president of Eastman 's Food"
"I'm looking to get some land stores, who located one of'
space, working there for about his newest operati ons in ·the
six months and get back in here downtown a few ye:m ago.
as soon as it's occupiable;' he
The fire came as property and
"said. "We~ dQD '~ plan.on missing ~ l&gt;usiness own ~, s ~ Jl}' in .th e
process of a reviohzation effort.
a beat:' ·
Some of his records were on
"One of the difficult things is
paper and othe~ were on com- · replacing historiml buildings in
puter, which are recoverable, he small towns," Eamn:m :1dded.
said.
"Here goes hi&lt;t&lt;,ry :~ga in. It's
Doug Shipley and his wife kind of sad," adcied educator
Loretta, who have operated the and coach Bob Willey, a !6-ycar
Put-On Shop since 1980 and Gallipolis reside nt who worked
had been located on the 300 at The Httb clorh 1ng &lt;tore 10
block of Second Avenue for the the business block ,,ficr hts
last eight years, were thankful graduation fium tlw University
that no one - including his of Rio Gramie.
mother Edith, who was in the
"It's kind of tougl ·, to lake
store when the fire broke out when you look 'OWl: there and
-were hurt.
see these building; condc•nJm·d,
He was home when his and these are on fire," Wilky
mother caUed, informing him added.
that ''I'd better get down here
"This is one of the thin~
and get down here and try to that's here one minul c' :md rile
get some of th.e merchandise next it's gon e.'' sai d K:m·n
out," Shipley said. "She was on Brownell. "And we dun 't "P!JI'C the tloor when she made the ciate it until it\ gone."

Aftennath

IN THE SHADOWS- These firefighters battle the blaze in Saturday's fire in downtown Gallipolis. While several firefighters .
work on the ground to extinguish the flames, these men were
on top of the building trying to put out the fi re that destroyed
five businesses. (Bryan Long photo)

WED THRU SUN MATINEES ·
$3.75 ADMISSION
TUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"
53.75 ADMISSION

IIIIDSDMIS
ORIGIIW. SIN
RUSH HOUR Z.

PUMITOIIHUI6
THE SCORE
LEGALLY ILONDE
JURASSIC PAll 01

IBA'!IIIU1I
CATS I DOGS
DliiOOIJTlll z
SCAlY MOVIE Z

....

---...
--""
~

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~

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---"

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6:50,9::11
&amp;:50;9:35
7:45,10:00
6:45,9:20
6:45,9:25
7:10,9:25
7:30,9:50
7:35,9:55
7:40,9:45
7:50
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NOTE: Drniwg Motl..ts our

doon

will"""'.,..., 1:30P.lff.

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $ 4 .00

THE

�•

I

: The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,Aug.7

.

I Manolleld

!sa•,r] •

0

\)

(/
. 1COiumbuo 172"198• I

•

0
W.VA.
KY.

CINCINNATI (412) ~Plans to.expand
an existing black museum in Cincinnati and
preparations to open the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in 2004
are part of a nationwide surge in museums
focusing on black culture and history.
Curator Toil}'lm O'Neal of the Cincinnati Arts Consortium's African American
Museum said there has been increasing
interest in the 3,000-squaie- foot museum,
which opened in 1993.
· "The treasure in us is that a lot of people
have underestimated the contributions of
what African-Americans have done for this
city," O'Neal said. "But people are aware '
that we're here now:·
Rita Organ, president of the Association
of African-American MuseumS, which has
more than 200 members, says interest in

black nruseium seemHG·btl.growing a~ros£ urn, which..WDU!dJ~e. part..of the Smithsonthe country.
ian Institution, would be a repository for
"This is a serious wave," said Organ, also black history.
manager for exhibits and programs at the
A second project in Washington is the
Freedom Center. "We haven't seen a surge Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial, led by
like this ever. There's never been this many Alpha Phi .61pha Fraternity. The organizaprojects at one time functioning and uying tion has until November 2003 to break
·
ground for the ,project.
. .
to get established."
Experts say the growth is primarily the
In Indianapolis, organize~ are p~g
result of grass-mots efforts and a rise in cort- an interactivl: black history museum that
sciousness among blacks, aS well as attempts features arts, music and other cultural inforto correct past inequities and educate peo- · marion about the history of blacks in lndiple about a black experience that historical- ana.
ly has been sparsely represented in mainIn Louisville, Ky., the Muhammad Ali
stream museums.
Center, an interactive educational instituU.S. Reps. John Lewis, D-Ga., and J.C. · tion to promote peace, is scheduled to open
Watts, R-Okla., introduced legislation this in late 2003, and the Kentucky Center for
year to create a national black history muse- African American Heritage also is expected
urn on The Mall in Washington. The muse- to open in 2003.

0 ~-····

&amp;my Pt. Cloudy

Cloucly

Showe&lt;a T·li1Diml

Rain

Flumes

Coma birth

Hot a·nd sunny this week
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It will be hot and sunny
across the region today as
upper high pressure builds into
;the area . from the central
Plains, the National Weather
Service said.
Highs will be in the lower
90s. Lows will be in the upper
60s.
Partly cloudy skies are
expected for the rest of the
week, but the hot weather will

continue with highs from the
upper 80s to lower 90s.
Forecast
Today: Sunny. High 91, low
67.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. High
92, low 70.
Wednesday: High 91, low
70..
Thursday: Mostly cloudy.
High 88, low 68.
Friday: Mostly cloudy. High
85, low 68.

City wants to help fight fat_
FINDLAY (AP) - Fearing that obesity ·among kids here is
becoming widespread, the city's health commissioner is organizing an effort to study the problem and develop ways to
reduce it.
Nationwide, one in five children is overweight, Health
Commissioner Stephen Mills said. That's double the rate of 30
~~~
.
.
· "It's probably the most common abnormality we see in routine physical exams in children,'' Findlay pediatrician Dr. Andy
Ritz said.
,
Obesity leads to other health problems s11ch as diabetes and
: high blood pressure.
·
Mills said the surge in obesity may be the result• of kids

·· spending more time watching television, playing video games
. · and using a .Gomputer.
· : Last year, Findlay's· health department used a $~,204· grant
· from the Findlay-Hancock County Community Foundation
:· to encourage Findlay schools fifth-graders to exercise and eat
· well.
Barb Wilhelm, a city public health mme, said fifth-graders
:were targeted because they spend increased amounts of time il'l
front of a television or computer, compared with kids of other
ages.

Martha Staats
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Martha Jane Staats, 78, of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died on Friday, Aug. 3, 2001, at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis, Ohio.
She was born Oct. 13, 19.22 in Hartford, daughter of the late
Ralph V. and Zelia Gower Gibbs. She was a homemaker.
Surviving are her husbandJames H. Staats and two sons and
daughters-in-law, James D. and Sandra Staats and Thomas H.
and Cathy Staats, aU of Point Pleasant; a daughter and son- inlaw, jane A. and Lloyd Moore ofWilliamstown; two sisters and
a brother-in -law, Ernestine Werry of Pomeroy, Ohio, and Pat
and Marcellus Waid of New Haven; two brothers and sistersin-law, Jl.,alph V. and Dorothy Gibbs of New Haven and Jake
and Edith Gibbs ofWorthington, Ohio; six grandchildren; and
three great-grandchildren.
·
She was prec~ded · in death by three sisters: Mildred Elias,
Imogene·Walker and Mabel Jamison.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant. Burial will follow at Graham Cemetery in
New Haven .
.
.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday from 6 to
9 p.m.

LOCAL BRIEFS
lhree injured

Department.
Robert Davis informed
RACINE -A one-car acci- deputies about the theft o( t\vo
dent Tuesday on County Road four-wheelers and one motor34 (Pine Grove) sent three peo- cycle from outside his residence
ple to an area hospital with on Rice Run Road.
injuries, the Gallia-Meigs Post of
The missing equipment is a
the State Highway Patrol red 1999 Kawasaki Lakota, a yelreported.
low 1999Yamaha Warrior and a
Transported by Meigs EMS green 1993 KX60.
to Holzer Medical Center from
In an unrelated matter, Steve
the scene of the 11 :SO p.m. acci- James, Portland, reported the
dent were driver Michelle E. theft of six tires and wheels from
Bell, 18, 3783 Yoba Ridge his trailer Wednesday night
Road, Coolville, and her two
James said a maroon 1980
passengers - Felicia A. Lehan, Ford truck with two males was
· 18, 29372 Bashan Road, seen leaving the area.
Racine, and Darrell E. Hill,
Anyone with information can
27925 Huckleberry Road, call the sheriff's department at
Coolville.
992-3371.
Troope~ said Bell was southbound when she failed to navigate a curve, drove off the right
side of the road and struck an
CHESTER
Chester
embankment.
Township
Trustees
will
hold a
The car was severely damaged, and Bell w.ts cited for fail- public meeting on Thursday at 6
p.m. at tl1e firehouse with repreure to control.
A Rudand~area man ~was sentatives of Adelphi Gable Go-.
taken to Cabell Huntington Customers with questions or
Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., by concerns about their cable serLifeAight following a one-vehi- vice are encouraged to attend.
cle accident earlier Tuesday on
CR 16 (Beech Grove) near
R.utland.
RACINE The 34th
Troopers said Charles Rath- reunion of the Samuel Alan
burn, 36, 34610 Side Hill Road, Eblin family will be held Sept. I,
was transported from the scene 4 p.m. at Star Mill Park in
of the 8:50 p.m. accident. Fur- Racine. Those attending are to
ther details were unavailable.
take their own table service arid
Zachary C. Davis, 18, 41517
favorite foods. Meat will be fur,
Cullums Road, Pomeroy, was
nished. Call 992-2272 or 992cited by the patrol for failure to
6396 for more information.
control following a two-car
accident Wednesday on Chester
Township Road 83 (Skinner).
Troopers said Davis was
POMEROY
Meigs
southbound at 8:20 p.m. when
County
Chapter
of
PERI
will
he failed to maintain control of
. the car he drove and collided meet at noon on Friday at the
with a northbound car driven ·Meigs County Senior Center.
by Helen J. Heaton, 50, 38627 Insurance representatives will
speak, and birthday cake will be
Skinner Road, Pomeroy.
Both d.rs were slightly dam- served.

Plane crash injures one
XENIA (AP) -A single-engine plane crashed as it was trying to land Sunday, injuring the pilot.
Charles E. Dinkier II, 40, of Cincinnati, was the only person
aboard and taken to Miami Valley Hospital, where he was in
critical condition with a severe head injury, the State Highway
Patrol said.
Dinkier was trying to land the 197 5 Aero tech Pitts S-2A
'biplane at Skydive Greene County in this city about 15 miles
east of Dayton when he crashed, damaging the plane's .front
propeller and wings. Authorities did not know where the plane
.
originated from.
The patrol reported witnesses said the pbne came m too fast,
touching the grass runway once, hoppmg and str1king _a
drainage ditch with its landing gear. The nose of the plane hit
the ground and partially tore off the propeller.
Officials from the Federal Aviation Administration will visit
the crash site Monday. The National Transportation Safety .
Board also was notified.
l~fFl"" if.'i
It was the second plane crash in the area in a week. Two
AleXis Michelle Cooper, 71bs. 7oi.., Is sliown &lt;lt University Hospital In Cincinnati. Alexis' mother, Chastity Cooper, 23, carried pilots were killed Tuesday when their twin-engine airplane
the pregnancy to full term despite being In a coma since an from a flying club at Wright-Patterson Air Fo~ce Base crashed
automobile accident in November 2000. Doctors said It Is one in a cornfield near Xenia.
of few known cases In the United States In which .a comatose
woman was able to carry a baby to full term. (AP Photo)

23:·

cable meeting

Janet Jackson concert ~nceled

CLEVELAND (AP) - Janet Jackson canceled a concert
Sunday because of the tlu, her' promoters said.
A statement from tour manager David Russell said the singer
.
apologizes to her fans for canceling the. show at &lt;?und Arena.
•
CLEVELAND (AP) - Frank Sinatra, 'N Sync, Elvis Presley,
The concert has been rescheduled for Sept. 5. T1ckets for the
Britney Spears.
\
. . show Sunday will be honored.
·
. ·
. . . \,, Those teen idols and many more will be the focus of a maJOr
CLEVELAND (AP) - . A fifth pmon has dJed from InJUrieS exhibit next spring at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
.~uffered in the July 29 explosion of an ant1que steam-powered Museum.
.
·
.
·
:tractor at the Medina County Fair. ,
.
"We're going to look at th e phenomenon ... from the past to
COLUMBUS (AP) - . More prescriptions than ever are
Bryan Hammond, 18, of Homerville dted at 2:55 p.m. Sat- the present,'' said Jim Henke, the-rock hall's ·chief curator.
being filled, but the number of pharmacists isn't keeping up
The teen-idol exhibit likely will reach from the 1940s when with the demand.
urday at Cleveland Metro H ealth MediCal Center, a nursmg
. supervisor said Sunday. Hammond had suffered. burns and Sinatra was young all the way to latest youth-oriented stars,
For that reason, some central Ohio stores, including CVS,
· shrapnel wounds.
including the Backstreet Boys and Christina Aguilera, Henke Big Bear, Kmart and Rite Aid, have been curtailing pharmacy
Hammond had been helping his employer, who owned the said.
hours in the past six months, usually in the evenings or on
The museum already has obtained memorabilia from several weekends.
tractor. His sister, Heather Hammond, said that her br~ther was
serving as a volunteer in the area of the explosiOn. She teen-idols, including David Cassidy, Debbie Gibson, New Kids
"I've been in the business 35 years and ... (until now) I've
'declined to provide additional details Sunday evenmg. .
on the Block, Neil Sedaka and Bobby Sherman.
never seen pharmacy closings because they didn't have the
. An obituary m The Medina County Gazette hsts L1berty
Memories and souvenirs from teenyboppers themselves will manpo')Ver,'' said Phil Lutz, pharmacist at the Big Bear super: Excavating as Hammond's . empl?yer. Tractor owner Chff be "a. big part" of the exhibit, Henke said.
.
market in Grove City.
· KovaciC owned the busmess, and hts fanuly has satd employees
The museum hopes the exhibit will draw several generatiOns
He supervises a staff of three pharmacists that fills 1,300 to
· ~here helped restore the 83-year-old machine.
of fans.
·
1,400 prescriptions each week. Since late winter, he and his
"There will be something for everyone," Henke said. "Kids staff have picked up customers from Big Bear stores in Cir- ·
; Hammond jumped in front of his fiancee, lB~year-old Katie
:Repp, to shield her from the hot water and shrapnel, she told will be able to come with fheir parents o(even,their grand- deville, Washington Court House and southwest Franklin
: C leveland televl!lon station WJW.
parents. Everybody had teen idols at some ~otnt.
County which had pharmacy hours cut.
. "He was there to protect me," said the Medina County
Op~rators say unscheduled closings are better and safer than
:woman, who was treated and released the night or the explohaving pharmacists work beyond their limits and possibly makston.
ing errors.
"Bryan died doing something he loved,'' she told the station.
COLUMBUS (AP) - No longer feeling the need to be
"He was part of that (Kovacic) family."
·
close to the center of state government, businesses are pulling
Hammond also was a member of the Chatham Volunteer out of the area around the Statehouse.
Fire Department.
Capitol Square, traditionally the spot to be for prestige -and
proximity, is losing companies that still wan~ to be downtown,
but in newer buildings.
"Being on the square is not essential to our business,'' said
COLUMBUS (AP) - Four hospitals-within-a- hospital in Tom Hess, a: partner in Buckingham, Doolittle &amp; Burroughs
~entral Ohio are among 63 facilities nationwide that provide law firm, which is moving next month from the Key Bank
To all of our customers here at
care for people facing lengthy recoveries.
building overlooking the Statehouse to the Arena . District.
. Select Specialty Hospitals are housed within - · but not "Having access to the square is essential, but not being on the
A&amp;D Auto Upholstery, Inc., Donnie
:linked to - Doctors Hospital North State University Medical square."
.
Jacks, my dad, passed away July 27,
.
..
' Center, Riverside Methodist Hospitals and University HospiEmpty offices can be found in high-rises all over the Cap!2001. We would like to extend our
tals East.
. to] Square area, More vacancies are expected when Scotts Co.
appreciation for all of your business
• ·T hey're designed to serve patients such as Harold England, a moves its offices to Marysville.
·.57-year-old Kentucky .resident with GuiUain-Barre syndrome, · Downtown Columbus' office-vacancy rate is 12.6 percent, 5
whil~ dad was here. Dad will be
· a rare neurological disord4r that ~an ca11se paralySIS and occur percentage points higher than just a year ago, according to realgreatly . missed, personally , and
;after certain viral infections and vaccinations.
estate firm NAI Welsh.
professionally. In carrying on his
: He was transferred to the Select Specialty Hospital at Ohio
T he firm expects the vacancy rate to increase to 20 percent
tradition, Henrietta ana I will
·State from a Cincinnati hospital.
this fall when seve ral new buildings - all searching for tenants ·
continue to do auto upholstery and
· "We chose this. He could have gone to other places closer to - are completed.
·
ho1~e, but this is where we want him to be,'' said his wife,
do our best to meet your needs. All
Downtown's new office buildings primarily are in two of
joyce, who praised the combination of physical, speech, occu- Columbus' entertainment districts - the Brewery District and
things here at the shop will remain
_pational and respiratory therapies that have helped brm~ het the Arena District, where the National Hockey League's
the same. Dad's honesty and up: husband from complete paralysis to being able to move hiS . Columbus Blue Jackets play at Nationwide Arena.
front approach to customers was
:arms and legs, and even talk.
important to him, we shall do the ·
The hospitals are operated by Select Medical Corp., a
Mechanicsburg. Pa.-based company with revenue of about
$ROO 1nillion ·l"'t year.
EU C LID (AP) - Euclid detectives say the body of a dead
' The company Web site says the goal of the hospitals is " pro- man was lying in plain view in the back seat of a car officers
viding quality care for appropriate patients who need a lon ger pull ed over Sunday afternoon.
·acute stay for their recovery or well-being."

Eblin reunion

New teen-idol exhibit announced

Fifth person dies from blast

Wanted: Ohio pharmaci$ts

PERl to meet

aged.

'

' .

POMEROY- Several theft
incidents are being investigated
by Meigs County . Sheriff's

AliA•t•

MIDDLEPORT -A special
presentation from the Dominican Republic mission triip will
be given at the Middleport
Church of Christ Sunday, 7 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel

ll,l•l$t#ff~ ' lift'

· car had body in back seat

Presentation

1hefts reported

Bus.inesses leaving capitol Square

Centers fill need for therapies

from Page AI

CHESHIRE - Fraru:t!S. C. Minor, Cheshi&lt;oe, died Sunday...
Aug. 5, 2001, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in
Pomeroy.
Arrangements are being handled by Fisher-Acree Funeral
Hotne and will be announced later.

Police were called to Hillandale Park in the southwest part
of this Cleveland suburb about noon because.of reports of people with rifles, Detective Mike Grida said. They turned out to
be paintball guns.
·
•
But while investigating that, report, officers pulled ov~r two
cars that were leaving the playground area, Gnda sa1d. An
unidentified body was lying in the back seat of one of the ca~.
The two male drivers were held in Euclid's jail, although no
charges had been filed Sunday.
Investigators found no wounds or obvious signs of tra':'ma on
the body, Grida said. Cuyahoga County Coroner Elizabeth
Balraj will conduct an autopsy Monday, he· sa1d. The veh1cle
also was towed to the coroner's office.
Detectives are" treating the case as a homicide unless the
coroner rules otherwise,- Grida said. ·
None of tl)e people playing paintball was detained, he added.

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we get some 'more information, I'd be afraid to hazard a
gl.les,~...at .thi~ point:' -- ~Because of efforts to stem
the fire from spreading, three
nearby businesses - · Gallipolis Pawn Shop. JC Penney Catalogue Center and
Stone Jar were spared
from flames, although Donnally said they did undergo
sonic smoke and water dam· age.
Stone Jar, owned by Sonny
Garnes, sustained moderate
smoke and water damage,
but the JC.Penney Catalogue
Center that makes up the
back half of the building, was
basically unharmed.
"JC Penney must be doing
something right," Donnally
joked during a tour of the
facility.
Following the alarm,
mutual aid calls were issued
and all of Gallia County's
VFDs - Centervill~, Crown
City, Greenfield, Guyan and TAKING A BREAK - This fireHarrison townships, Rio fighter takes a break after
Grande and Vinton ~­ . battling the blaze the ripped
responded, along with assis- through five businesses In
tance from Middleport, downtown · Gallipolis. (Bryan
Point Pleasant, Mason and Long photo)
Valley, W.Va., and departments from Vinton and Jack- buildings. "If this fire had
son counties in Ohio and gotten into Dollar General,
we'd have had to start calling
Cab.ell County, W.Va.
. In all, .19 departments in h elp from Chillicothe."
The fire produced thick
responded and more than 80
smoke
that spread through
firefighters were on sce ne in
temperatures topping out in Gallipolis City Park, ·south
and into the Ohio River. On
the 80s and high humidity.
Sunday, volunteers
and
Local volunteers and EMS
trucks remained on the
quickly left the Gallia Counscene, pouring water on
ty Junior Fair where they
smoldering hot spots.
were providing safety at the
Donnally estimated more
annual demolition derby.
than 1 million gallons were
Three firefighters were
used, both from Gallipolis'
taken by' Gallia County EMS
water plarit arid pumped out
to Holzer Medical Center
of the Ohio River at the
for treatment of heat exhausparkfront.
tion and were later released,
"The reason we did that
Donnally -said. One of th!'m,
was, we were sucking all we
Michael Soles, was transcould from the plant, and
ferred to Cabell Huntington
since the river ·provides an
Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.,
unlimited source of water, it
but was to have been
freed up water for the
released Sunday, The Associ tankers," he said.
ated Press reported.
Due to the demand for
Donnally said controlling
water, a main on upper Sec-·
the fire was difficult due to
ond Avenue burst, dropping
the age of the structures ·residential and commercial
- (:;upton Block, for example,
water pressure until it was
was built in 1894 - as well
repaired.
as common roofs and the
"That hurt us a bit in
iack of fire walls that caused terms of fighting the fire, but
the fire to spread.
it didn't devastate us," Don"It was a fire that spread nally said.
rapidly,'' he said. "These
Volunteers, including citibuildings contain a lot of old zens, firefighters' wives and
timbers in flooring, and families, HMC, Holzer Clinnone of them have fire walls. ic's Sycamore br~nch and
When the Lupton Block was others, rushed to · the scene
built, they didn't even know with food, water and other
what a fire wall was then.
necessities to aid firefighters.
"We've stressed it before, Burlile Oil Co. provided fuel
and we will again, for any for trucks, and · Milton
. new construction, you have (W.Va.) Fire Department
to have three things provided another tanker.
smoke detectors, sprinkler Foodland, Kroger and varisystems and fire walls," he ous restaurants in town sent
added.
food and drink to the scene.
In terms of difficulty, Don"I have no idea where to
nally said fighting the blaze, start, but I'd like to wholein his experience, was similar heartedly thank them for
to the November 1993 fire helping us out at the scene,"
that leveled the Womeldorff Donna'Jly sajp.
&amp; Thomas hardware building
"It was the whole city,
ai Third Avenue and Court actually, people who donated
Street.
food- you couldn't ask for
Saturday's blaze is one of better cooperation ."
several that have struck the
Structural concerns will be
downtown, including one at left to the experts to decide
Thomas Clothiers in 1979, once the structures are
three at the former Willis examined, .the chief said.
Tire Co. recapping plant
"We'd have to get some
(1983, 1987 and 1990) and structural engineers in here
' two on Court in the 1990s.· first. I'm worried about the
An apartment fire also struck Lupton building because
the Haskins-Tanner building parts of it don't look
healthy." ·
in 1993.
"They've all .got common
(Managi"g editor R. Sl1atvfl
walls and roofs,'' Donnally
said . of the business block · Lewis co fltributed to this story.)

School
from Page AI
Council discussed lights
and tables and benches as
possible projects.
Pau)a Counts, co-m.anager
of the London Pool, met
with council regarding the
opening and closing of the
pool. The pool will close

$29.25
$56.68
$109.72

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
\

•

Aug. \3-18 for the Meigs
Counry Fair, and will reopen
Aug. 19-2b, after which date
it will close for the season.
Council accepted the
mayor's report of $1 ,b4l for
July in fines and fees collected.
Also present were council
members Bill Roush, Mony
Wood, Eber Pickens Jr.; and
Katie Crow, and Sharon
Cottrill, clerk.

Roloo outoldo lllolgo County

13 weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Fire

Frances C. Minor

Inc.

02001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Deaths·

Mond•y. August 6, l001

Number of black museums increasing

Ohio weather

IND.

PageAl

Ohio

•

Monday, Aug. 6, 2001

TAKING ENTRIES - Dean Colwell of Chester Township is·
assisted by Lea Bonecutter, a fair board employee, in regis·
tering his dairy cattle in open class for exhibit at the 138t~
Meigs County Fair. This year a total of 88 dairy cattle were registered, making it the highest number since 1991. (Charlene
Hoeflich photo)
Fair king and qu ee n alon g
with lives tock pr inces and
princesses will be n:11ned in
ceremonies o n th t;" st.tge.
. fro... Page AI
Following th at relt giou &lt;
be Sunday evening when a services will be held by th e
parade will be held on the· Meigs County M ini ster ial
racetrack and the Junior Ass.ociation .

-Entries

call, and she's 72 years old."
Shipley said he n t&lt; hed downtown and atte; nptcd to enter
from Page AI
the shop, believi n ~ hi&lt; n1other
·was still inside. He then "'w her
It was then a "big ol' thing of standing across the ' treel,' where
black smoke" came up the st.1ir- she went after crowlin g out th e
well. Hicks and his son, like all front door.
of the apartment dwellers in the
"When you see that , nothin g ·
affected buildings, fled to safety. else matters," Lorew1s.1 id.
The Red Cross is helping
"You've b'D t to 1hink you
those burned out of their apart- were lucky that no one wa&lt;
ments find .shelter, Gallipolis hurt," Doug added." ! s•ueS&lt; th e
Volunteer Fire Chief Bob Don- · rest can be repbced."
nally said.
In addition to drawing nearly
For Ron Lynch of the Lynch 100 firefighte~ from both sides
Agency, it was a matter of get- of the Ohio Rlvcr, the fire
ring inside and seeing what attracted hundreds of onlookdamage there WJS to his office. ers, many of them saddened by
The upper t\vo stories of the the destruction of more Galbuilding housing his business lipolis laqdrnarks.
were gutted.
" It's a shame wh en we're tryLynch, who had been away ing to develop the town , wh en
·
from his office since Friday, was there's an effort to prcoo;erve our
malting plans to reopen in a buildings," said Bob Eastman ,
new location today.
president of Eastman 's Food"
"I'm looking to get some land stores, who located one of'
space, working there for about his newest operati ons in ·the
six months and get back in here downtown a few ye:m ago.
as soon as it's occupiable;' he
The fire came as property and
"said. "We~ dQD '~ plan.on missing ~ l&gt;usiness own ~, s ~ Jl}' in .th e
process of a reviohzation effort.
a beat:' ·
Some of his records were on
"One of the difficult things is
paper and othe~ were on com- · replacing historiml buildings in
puter, which are recoverable, he small towns," Eamn:m :1dded.
said.
"Here goes hi&lt;t&lt;,ry :~ga in. It's
Doug Shipley and his wife kind of sad," adcied educator
Loretta, who have operated the and coach Bob Willey, a !6-ycar
Put-On Shop since 1980 and Gallipolis reside nt who worked
had been located on the 300 at The Httb clorh 1ng &lt;tore 10
block of Second Avenue for the the business block ,,ficr hts
last eight years, were thankful graduation fium tlw University
that no one - including his of Rio Gramie.
mother Edith, who was in the
"It's kind of tougl ·, to lake
store when the fire broke out when you look 'OWl: there and
-were hurt.
see these building; condc•nJm·d,
He was home when his and these are on fire," Wilky
mother caUed, informing him added.
that ''I'd better get down here
"This is one of the thin~
and get down here and try to that's here one minul c' :md rile
get some of th.e merchandise next it's gon e.'' sai d K:m·n
out," Shipley said. "She was on Brownell. "And we dun 't "P!JI'C the tloor when she made the ciate it until it\ gone."

Aftennath

IN THE SHADOWS- These firefighters battle the blaze in Saturday's fire in downtown Gallipolis. While several firefighters .
work on the ground to extinguish the flames, these men were
on top of the building trying to put out the fi re that destroyed
five businesses. (Bryan Long photo)

WED THRU SUN MATINEES ·
$3.75 ADMISSION
TUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"
53.75 ADMISSION

IIIIDSDMIS
ORIGIIW. SIN
RUSH HOUR Z.

PUMITOIIHUI6
THE SCORE
LEGALLY ILONDE
JURASSIC PAll 01

IBA'!IIIU1I
CATS I DOGS
DliiOOIJTlll z
SCAlY MOVIE Z

....

---...
--""
~

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6:50,9::11
&amp;:50;9:35
7:45,10:00
6:45,9:20
6:45,9:25
7:10,9:25
7:30,9:50
7:35,9:55
7:40,9:45
7:50
10:00

NOTE: Drniwg Motl..ts our

doon

will"""'.,..., 1:30P.lff.

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $ 4 .00

THE

�PageA4 .·

The Daily Sentinel

_Th_e_o_
· a_i_ly_s_en_ttn_._e_l__________

Monday. Aupllt 1. 2001

~man guilty

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740..992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

/ .df"':f to lht! ~it;w ~~n wrlromr. 71uiy Jhould bl! l~n rh11lf JOO words. All Wnt!n
arr subject to t!tliting arrd musf '" signrd attd includr oJdrtu tntd ldt!plume 1111mbu.

No umigntd lt!Nrrs witllw publish~d. Lerttn 1h1H11d In ill good tastf!, llddnssing
iJJUf!f, llol,Wnmtalilin·.

Tile opirriolfs e:rpnsstd intlrt column btlow art thr ('ilr!Stltsus u/ tlu Ohio Va{J,y
Publishing Co. 's nlitoriul boorJ, unleu othf'na"iw· nottd.

,.

NATIONAL VIEW
.,

DEAR ABBY: I am a happily
married woman with two beautiful
children and a terrific husband.
When I was younger, my parents
would not allow me to date until I
was 18. Even when I turned 18 I
still wasn •t allowed to date. So • I
devised a plan. I would lie to my
parents and sneak around. My
boyfriend at. the time - now my
husband of 10 years - has two sist~rs. I asked on,e of. them to help me
to see my boyfriend. My parents
always thought she was just a friend.
To this day, my parents still don't
know my husband has two sisters.
They think he has only one.
I can't believe I have let this lie
drag on for so .long. I was young and
foolish. I need to let them know
because eventually it's going to .

=fl~l'-

tilt!

if dating lie think
Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE

come out.
Mv parents · live out of state, so
when I call them and tell them,
maybe it won't be so bad. Can you
suggest a better way to tell them?
Now that I'm older I realize my parents were just trying to protect us
and keep us out of trouble. If only I
could wipe away this lie.
Please advise me.- GUILTY IN

·•

New FBI director has work cut
for him in straightening agetJCY. ·.
• The Salt Lake Tribune , on the new FBI
director: Veteran federal prosecutor and administrator R.oberr Mueller will have his work cut
out as the FBI's newest director. He will be
expected to revive tht: status ·and polish the tar'nished image of the federal government's premier law enforcement agency if the Senate confirms his appointment.
During recent years, increasing numbers of
American citizens have had reason to grow disenchanted with the FBI's sometimes seemingly
aimless direction · and gaffes ranging from
botched raids to embarrassments over production of documents to longtime spies in its midst.
Mueller's task will be difficult, but it is far from ·
impossible. He will need a strong commitment
to the rule of law, a sense of integrity that will •
not brook short cuts or ends over means, and an
. enduring expectation of the kind of qualitative
· work that once was a hallmark of the FBI's reputation ....
In short, Mueller will find more work than
glory in ran)rodding the FBI. It is hoped that
President Bush's confidence, and the nation's, in
: Mueller will not prove to be misplaced.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Aug. 6. the 218th day of 2001. There are
147 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:"
. O n Aug. 6, 1945, durin g World War II , the United States
dropped an atomic bomb on · Hiroshima, Japan. killing an estimated 140,000 people in th e first usc of a nuclear weapon in
warfare.
On thi s date:
In 1787, the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia
began to &lt;kb.ttc the articles containe d in a draft of th e United
States Con stitution.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Targets

of terrorism

and two reactions ·to violence ·

'
Since last September, despite
attempted cease-fires, drive-by shootings by
Palestinians have murdered more than
24 Isr.aeli settlers. There have been similar vigilante attacks on Palestinians by
settlers.
On July 19, in an act of terrorism that
shocked both Israelis and Palestinians, a
. taxi was fired on killing three Palestinians - including a 3-month-old baby
boy - and wounding other passengers.
COLUMNIST
The Palestinians were going home on
the West Bank after a visit with relatives.
Claiming responsibility for these Israeli authorities - not only the tordeaths was the Committee for Security ture of prisoners but also collective punon the Roads; a band of revenge-driven . ishment by the Israeli government,
settlers.
destroying homes and evicting families.
As the Web site, Gamla: News and For years I have supported the Peace
Views from Israel, reported from Now movement by Israelis, and the ereJerusal em, the killings of th~. Palestinians ation of an independent Palestinian state.
"were roundly denounced by all eleIn th ese months of mutual acts of vioments of the Israeli public" .- from lence, however, there has been a distinct
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to the Yesha .differenGe in the. reactions of many- Council, which represents the Jewish not all - Palestinians to the loss oflives,
settlers. Across the political and ideolog- as contrasted with the attitudes of most
icai divisions among Israelis, there was a .Israelis.
universal demand that the murderers be
Three days after a Palestinian suicide
taken into custody.
·
bomber killed 21 people in Tel Aviv,
The Yesha Council, speaking for the including himself, a Pa!estinian poll settlers, condemned this "criminal deed" reported on N ational Public Radio by the "foul murderers." The New York disclosed that 76 percen t of the Pales~
Times quoted Israeli President Moshc tinians survey,ed supported suicide
Katsav, who is on the right of the polit- bombings. And Hassan Hotari, the father
ical spectrum, urging the settlers'leadcrs of the 22-year-old suicide bomber, told
"to act firmly to prevent such horrific Reuters news service:
"I was extremely happy when I heard
deeds. No one has the right to take the
law into his own hands." And Israeli that my son' is the one who did this
Defense Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliez- operation. I hope I have many sons to
er: " Murder is murder and terror is ter· carry out the same act. And I wish
myself I had done it."
ror."
Si1ice September, there have been
Palestinians have legitimate grievances. Both in Israel and the United orher news reports of Palestinian mothStates, I h ave interviewed Palestinians ers who celebrated - actually celebratwho have detailed severe abuses by ed- the deaths of thei r suicide-bomber
.

Nat
Hentoff

sons m the conviction that their sons ,
will ascend to paradise because their
cause is so undeniably just.
Clearly, there is deep mutual hatred .
among Palestinians and Israelis. Again,
not all of those on either side. But there
is reason to wonder how many generations it will take before they can live in
the same area, even if they are separated
into two states.
And while there have been murderous
attacks by some Israelis - notoriously, "
settler Baruch Goldstein 's 1994 killing of
29 Muslims at prayer in Hebron's Tomb
of the Patriarchs - I cannot recall a ,
massive Israeli approval of a horrific act
against Palestinians by Israelis, similar to
the enthusiastic reactions of many Palestinians after the murder of Jewish
youngsters in Tel Aviv. After that carnage,
Palestinians danced in the streets of
Ram allah.
Again, while there are vigilantes on
.both sides - and leaders on both sides
have directed killings - Yasir Arafat,
while occasionally asking that all the
violence be stopped, has seldom condemned specific, strategic waves of violence by Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Palestinian Hezbollah and his own Fatah forces.
The wave of revulsion across Israel
after the drive-in murders of the Palestinian family on July 19 has yet to be
matched by Arafat or by many Palestinians when similar horrors are directed at
Israelis.
I keep remembering what a Palestinian journalist told- me in East Jerusalem
25 years ago: "Together, we and the
Israelis could create a flowering of the
Middle East."
r

(Nat Hwtoff is a uatiot1a/ly rerwumed
authority on the First Amendment and the
Bill if Rights.)

In 18116, th e Holy Roman Empire went out of existenc e as
Emperor Fran cis I abdicated.
In 1825, Uolivia declared its independence from Peru.
· In 18&lt;.10, convicted murderer William Kcmmler became the
first person to be executed in the electric chair as he was put
to death at Auburn State Prison in New York.
In 1914, Austria-Hungary decl are d war against Russia · and
Serbia declared war against Germany.
In 1926, Gertrude Ederle of New York became the first
Americ;m woman to swim the Engl ish Chan nel, in about 14
BY JOHN CUNNIFF
it's been time tested. And now the InstiIn addition, the Galveston model
1/2 hours.
NEW YORK - Though it's the most tute for Policy Innovation, a Lewisville, includes a life insurance policy that pays
In 1962, Jam aica became an independent dominion within
.discussed plan for reforming Social Secu- Tex. think tank, and resident scholar three times a worker's salary between a ·
the British Com mon wealth.
rity. letting workers invest so me of their Merrill Matthews Jr., think it deserves minimum of$50,000 and a maximum of '
In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Voting IUghts
payments in the stock market isn't the study.
$150,000. It pays double for accidental -·
Act.
·
only way to save the system.
Twenty years ago county officials in death.
In 197H, l'ope Paul VI di ed at Castel Gandolfo at age 80.
There 's another way, and it's already Galveston,Texas, opted to withdraw from
While stock market returns have aver· ·
In 1986. William J. Schroeder died after living 620 days with
been proved - and not in theory or the Social Security system (an option aged more than 10 percent over the past"
the Jarvik 7 artificial heart.
tests, but in the real world. And not in , ended in 1983) and accept a retirement six decades, that average includes huge
Ten years ago:The Justi ce Department joined forces with the . ·
Chile, whose plan is often cited as a sue- plan devised by Rick Gornto, a financial !!ains in some years and big losses in othami-abortion grou p Operation Rescue in fighting a federal
cessful example, but right here in the planner. Matagorda and Brazoria Coun- ers, a factor that opponents are bound to
judge's order to keep two abortion clinics in Wichita, Kansas,
. United States.
tics followed suit.
stress.
open. TV newsnun Harry Reasoner died in Norwalk, Conn.,
This alternative plan, already in use for
Currently, according to Matthews,
Matthews holds a doctorate in philsoat age 68.
20 years, is destined to gain a broader there are about 2,740 fulltime employees phy but his ntotives are pragmatic. The
Five years ago: Officials ann ounced the Air Force had punhearing now that the stock" market has contributing a percentage of their payroll stock market model, proposed by Presi- ·
ished 16 officers in connection with the crash that killed Comdemonstrated anew its tendency to go to tax to retirement savings. First Financial dent Bush, has worked in other counmerce Secretary Ron Brown and 34 others the previous April.
extremes, erasing billions of dollars of Benefits of Houston then pools the tries, and could here, he says, but oppoOne year ago: Workers at Verizon, .the nation's largest local
market value.
money and loans it out to the best bid- nents have ammunition.
telephone company, went on an 18-day strike over working
The so-called Galveston Model does- der at a guaranteed interest rate.
That ammunition has been provided
conditions and union representation.
stock'
lllarket
volatility
The
employees
bear
little
risk,
"They
by
the stock market itself, whose plunge
n't
worry
about
Today's Birthdays: Entrepreneur Sir Freddie Laker is 79.
because it doesn't invest in stocks. get their interest whether thestock mar- over the past year or so, coinciding with ·
Actress-sin ger Abbey Lincoln is 71. Actor-director Peter BonInstead, it lends the pool of money from ket goes up or down -: and they have the Social Security debate; has erased as
crz is 63. Actor Michael Anderson Jr. is 58.Actor Dorian Hareparticipants
to a top-rated finan cial insti- done so for 20 years," says Matthews.
. much as $5 trillion of stock valuations.
wood is 5 I. Actress Catherine Hicks is 50. Rock singer Pat
tution.
He cites these figures from First Fina~- Poor timing, he says.
McDonald (Timbuk 3) is 49. Actress Stepfanie K.ramer is 45 ..
In doing so, it obtains a better rate than cia! Benefits :
Therefore, he suggests, it ·would be
Rhythm-and-blues singer Randy DeBarge is 43. Country
you
or
I
or
any
other
small
investor
•
A
low-income
worker
($17,124
.a
wise
to consider the Galveston model to
singers Peggy and Patsy Lynn :ire 37. Country singer Lisa Stewmight receive. Over two decades the year) retiring at age 65 would get · $782 counter political . p·osturing and "risky
art is 33. Movie writer-rtirector M. Night Shyamalan is 31.
returns have ranged from 5 percent to per month from Social Security, but scheme demagoguery."
Si nger Gcri Halliwell is 29. Actre ss Sol.eil Moon Frye is 25.
15.5 percent, averaging out to 7.5 per- $1,285 from what is called the Alternate
"A model that is as safe at your bank;'
Thought for Today: " The life of every man is a diary in
cent t~ 8 percent a year.
Plan .
he says, "may be the only viable political
which he means to write one story, and writes anoth er; and liis
of
that
sort
aren't
what
might
•
The
highincome
worker
($5
1,263)
option."
Returns
j1ltmblest hour is when he compares the volume as it is with
be expected from prudent stock invest- at 65 will get $1,540 from Social Securiaohn Cimn!ff is~ business analyst for Tire
w hat he hoped to make it."- Sir Jam es Matthew Barrie, Scotm, nts, but the risk is vastly reduced. And · ty, versus $3,846 from the Alternate Plan. Associated Press.)
tish dramatist-author (1860-l &lt;.137) .
·

BUSINESS MIRROR

Consider this as an alternative to Social Security

''

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Bible School, Hope Baptist
Church, 570 Grant St., Middle·
port. "Truth Trackers," theme,
Monday through Aug. t 0, 6:30
to 9 p.m. Registration day, Sat·
urday, 3to 5 p.m. Free food and
games .
POMEROY - Pomeroy Ele·
mentary School, summer learn·
ing camp, through Friday, 8:30
a.m. untlltt :30 a.m. Students in
1·5 are invited. lnformalion at
992·27t0.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
ship Trustees regular meeting,
7:30 p.m. Monday, Syracuse

Village Hall.

it~

Monday, Aucust 6, 2001

time for the truth

NEW jERSEY
(hankly, 1 thtnk they owe you an
DEAR GUILTY: First of aU, apology for putting you in the posiplease stop feeling guilty. Dating is tion they did.)
one of the ways that young people
DEAR ABBY: You printed a letmature socially. Most teen-agers in ter from "Happy Granny in Waldo,
this country start dating by the time Fla." about when to talk to children
they are 16. There were valid reaso ns about sex. You said it reminded you
for your acting the way you did. You of a story: Seven-year-old Tommy
were fortunate that the first boy you asked his mother where he came
dated turn~d out to be a terrific hus- from. She gave him " the lecture," to
band. Your choice certainly wasn't which he responded, ''Oh. My
· friend Jimmy said he came from St.
based on experience.
The next time you speak with Lou'is."
your parents, ask when they plan to
My son's father died when he was
visit. Then tell them you have a sur- 2, so . I was left to deal with the
prise for them - they're going to mountain of never-ending quesmeet a new member of the family. tions. Beating around the bush was
Their introduction should be made unacceptable to my son. When he
face-to-face. You are all adults now. was 6, he asked how the baby had
You should no longer need your gotten into the stomach of a woman
parents' permission or approval. at church. I explained about planting

LOCAL EVENTS
The Community Calendar Is
published as a .free aervlce to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Ia
not · designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. llama are printed only
as apace permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

end

Page AS

seeds and flowers growing. He then
proceeded t? ask how the seed got
planted, who planted it, and what
part the daddy played in this. On and
on - until finally, after admonishing
my son not to share this information
with his younger fi·iends, I gave hifn .
"the facts of life" lecture in as much '
detail as he seemed to want.
As long as I live, I willnev~r forget
his shocked, mortified expression as
he· lifted his little face to heaven and
prayed, "Oh, God, isn't there any
OTHER way&gt;"- HAPPY MOM
IN NORTH CAROLINA
DEAR HAPPY MOM: From
tfie mouths of babes. I assume he got
over his shock as he grew older.

Dear Abby is writte11 by Pauline
Phillips and daugl1ter Jeatme Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

office building .

CARPENTER - Columbia
ROCKSPRINGS - Meigs
Township Trustees, Monday, lire Band Boosters, Monday, 6 p.m.,
stat1on , 7:30p.m.
at boosters' booth af lairgrounds. Bring cleaning sup·
RACINE - RExplore Jesus plies and be prepared for cleanLoveS themed vacation Bible ing booth .
school, Monday through Aug.
10, 6 lo 8:30 p.m. at MI. Moriah
TUESDAY
Church of God, Mile Hill Road,
POMEROY Salisbury
Racine.
Township Trustees, 6 p.m. ·
Tuesday, township hall, Rock·
RACifi!E - Racine Chapter springs
Road.
t34, O.E.S. Monday 7:30 p.m.;
one member to be Initiated; offi·
POMEROY Childhood
cers urged to attend; take covimmunization
clinic,
Tuesday,
1
ered dish for refres hments.
to 7 p.m. at the Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT - The Mid- Health Department office. Take
dleport Church of the Nazarene childUs shot records . Child
will hold a vacation Bible school must be accompanied by par·
Monday through Friday from ent/legal guardian.
6:30-8:30 p.m.
ALFRED ~Orange Township
.Trustees,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Big Bend
Farm Antiques Club, special home of Osie Follrod, clerk.
meeting, Monday, 7:30 p.m.,
WEDNESDAY
Rock Springs fairgrounds.
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
LETART - Letart Township ship Trustees, Wednesday at 5
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.

honored

Painting dasses
to be Offered
POMEROY - A twomonth class in painting will
be offered at the Senior Citizens Center starting Aug. 14
by Michele Garretson.
Cost for beginners is :S7 a
class to be held from I to "3
p.m. plus the cost of brushes. ·
Advanced painting classes .
will be held from 5:45 to 7:45 .
p.m. Those enrolled are to
take their own paint brushes,
paints and something to paint
on. The cost pf those classes
will also be $7.
Registration for th~ classes '
is being taken by Patty· Pick- ·
ens, 992-21 M.

Baptism service :·

MIDDLEPORT - Com~
mon Ground Mission recent-;
Joe ~truble has seen a lot of progress and a lot of changes in
ly held a baptistp service at .
the 41·1/2 years he served as a medic with Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services. Struble was recently honored the Middleport levee.
Pastor Leslie Hayman assistwith a reception on his retirement, and presented with a com- .
mendation and gilts from his friends in the EMS system. He is ed by Ma:rk N orman baptized
l t .. '
. Pictured with his wife, MaJty, and EMS f\gministrator Gene Carrie Harmon 0nd Emi
Bass.
:War; Emma Ashley, Ohio original brass cannons frOm the Lyons. (David Harris photo)
·
T he mission is a11 informal ·
Department Woman's Relief Civil War. Tuppers Plains VFW
Su11day -morning Bible study
---~ Corps; Amy Miller, president of:.- gave-a-modern-day rifle salute. - the Ohio Department Auxiliary The. ceremonies cl~sed with the
donated items will be held to which helps su pport missions .
' to the So~. of Uruon Veterans playmg of "Taps' and a lun- ·
•
•
help with th e cost of enter- world-wide and spo11sors a ·
of the C1vil War; Mae . Frost; cheon provided to the partici- .
tainment. Other items will be WJOS television P\ogram.
John S. ToWllsend Auxiliary of pants of the ceremonies by
auctioned off during the day.
PORTLAND - The third the Auxiliary · to the Sons of B ks G
C
d M ·
RACINE - Raci ne Fall
Entertainment will include
ro~ - rant ~P an
aJ. Festival Committee met h
·
annual wreath-laying ceremony Union Veterans of the Civil War
of Frost,· Chrt.stine Sa&lt;&gt;&lt;tetter, Darnel McCook Ctrc!e.
I
k
t e
Swinging
Seniors,
,..
recently at Star Mi I Par to Dwight Icen hower, Elvis
sponsored by the Sons ofUnion
Veterans of the Civ~ War and national junior vice president of
sh01Wfer
'begin planning for.. the festival
on Sept. 8.
impersonator.
Outdoor
the Ladies of the Grand Army the Ladies of the Grand Army ·
of the Republic was held at the of the Republic; and Nancy
The event will kick off Plumbing Co., Surefire Band
onument
I·n
Portland
C
P
.d
t
fth
Ohi
.
h
d
10
. h and Northwest Territory.
.
battle m
CH ICI\GO (AP) - Actor
o
Wit a para e at
a.m. wtt
Craft and food booths will
onaway, rest en o e
the lineup to take place at the
during the annual re-enactment Department Ladies of the
Chris Tu.cker says he'd li ke to
of the Battle of Buffington Grand Army of the Republic.
old ftre department anp.ex. be in operation throughout work with some of HollyIsland.
Others presenting wreaths
RACINE
&lt;;:ourtney Awards will be presented to the day. There will be so me wood's heavyweights like ·
Brooks-Grant Camp 7 Sons, were Joan Dowd of Mother Roush, Deborah Harris, Hillery winners in first, second and craft
demonstration. To
Robert De Niro, Denzel
of Union Veterans of Middle- Garfield Circle Ladies of the Harris and Shan tel Wein- third places of $50, S30 and reserve a space residents may
Washington, Steven Sp ielport and the Maj. Daniel Grand Army of the Republic; sheimer entertained guests with $20 .
call 949-2210 tor informaberg or Martin Scorsese.
Candidates for queen will tion.
McCook Circle 104 Ladies of Robert E. Grim, j'unior vice a luncheon recently at the
Tucker, 29, who stars in
the Grand Army of the Repub- commander-in-chief of the Roush hom,e honori!)g Kendrn be selected from the se nior
For information on enterlie were the host groups.
Sons of Union Veterans of the
class of Southern High tainment, Larry Wolfe can be the just released " Ru sh Hour •
Norris,of Columbus.
bride-elect of Andy sch oo,1 wit h th e crowmng
· to contacted at . 949-2836, and 2" is already commandi11 g
The ceremony opened Wit· h a Civil War·. Donald Darby., com- . Heck
for all other informat.ion, $20 million per picture but
bugler calling attention to the mander of the Ohio Depart·
take place at 11 :45 a.m.
"
f
The
decorating
motif
was
troops. Union and Confederate ment Sons of Union veterans o
Immediately
after the Dale Hart, 949-2656, is th e has his eye on th e next level:
re-enactors lined the area along the Civil War; Mark Eckley, "country kitchen," using red crowning, an auction of perso n to contact.
· dramas.
with many visitors. The Rev. conunander of the Ohio Com- ·gingham, yellows and blues as
Wilham Middleswarth of the mandery Military Order of the the accent colors. The table cenMeigs County Pioneer and Loyal Legion of the United terpieces consisted of Kerr canHistorical Society gave the States; Scott Britton of Gen. ningjars 6lled to the brim with
Benjamin D. Fearing Camp 2 blackeyed susans and tied with ·
invocation .
Fife and drum music were Sons of Union Veterans of the rafl]a ribbon.
Small kitchen canisters filled
provided by James Oiler and Civil War of Marietta.
Also .presenting wreaths were with vanilla candle wax and tied
Keith Ashley of Brooks-Grant
Camp, accompanied by some Ger.tld Crnwford of Brooks- with red gin.gharn ribbon .were
Grant Camp .Sons of Union given as favors. The guests ·
other Civil War musicians.
JetfThornton, Meigs County Veterans of the Civil War; Mar- played games and wrote advice
commissioner, was the principal ilyn Wolfe of Maj. Daniel cards while enjoying the lunspeaker for the day. He empha- McCook Circle Ladies of the ·cheon.
sized the work that the com- Grand Army of the Republic;
After the luncheon, the guests
mission is doing to obtain fund- Abbie Stratton, regent of were escor:ted to the family
"
ing for preservation of the bat- Return Jonathan Meigs Chap- room, where Norris opened her
defield area and complimented ter DAR of Pomeroy; Emily
gifts. The groom's gifi, a woodMargaret Parker. of the Meigs Ashl~y of Racine Subordinate
en toolbox filled with tools proCounty Pioneer and Historical Grange 2606; Frank Trnutman
vided by the guests, was on disSociety and Keith Ashley of the of Ewings Chapter Sons of the
Revolution of play in the family room as well.
Sons of Union Veterans of the American
Hostesses served cake and
. Civil War 'for their 14-year con· . Pomeroy; Ron Eastman of
tinuing struggle to save this Feeney-Bennett Post American punch to Donna Norris, DebLegion of Middleport; and the bie Roush, Charisse Knight,
national historic site.
Tuppers
Plains Post VFW.
Mickey Kucsma, Jan Norris,
Many dignitaries of local,
Ashley spoke on the need to Donna Hill, Ger.tldine Cross,
state, and national organizations
to' write to Gov. Marie Norris, Jenni Ooe)
continue
presented wreaths at the monuOFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 8:30·5:00, WED. 8:30-NOON
ment and dedicated them to the Robert Taft of Ohio to ask that Roush, Jan Hill, Jean Alkire,
Civil War troops both North he use his efforts to save the Megan Manuel, Jonna Manuel,
Buffington Island Battlefield. Andrea
and South who fought there.
Moore, . Sammi
also
announced
the
phio
He
Those presenting wreaths
Mugrage,
Connee Enslen,
were Thornton for the Meigs Bicentennial Commission's plan Della Cross, Di Cross, Mary ·
County Commission; John for a three-day cavalry ride Spore, Tracy Hupp, Baylee
Lavery, commander of the West across Meig;; County in Sep- Hupp, Peach Mugrage, ChrisVirginia Division Sons of Con- tember 2002, as well as next
tine Mamone, and the honoree.
federate Veterans; Ra chel Den- year's re-enacnnent in July.
The
arrival of the prospective
The First Ohio Light
nis, president of the . Ohio
Department Daughters of Artillery from the Ohio State- groom was the finale of the
Union Veterans of the Civil house fired a cannon salute with event.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Civil Was
veterans
honored at

Planninf for fall .
festiva beginS

Portland

PEOPLE

Bridal
held to honor

Chris Tucker

NOrris

Dill F.

Board Certified Internal Medicine

STRESS TEST
ECHO CARDIOGRAPHY
• DIABOIC MANAGEMENT
• CHOLESTEROL COUNSELING
• ·BLOOD PRESSURE
• THYROID DISORDERS
• DISEASES OF THE LUNG
• CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE

Accepting New Patients

•

�PageA4 .·

The Daily Sentinel

_Th_e_o_
· a_i_ly_s_en_ttn_._e_l__________

Monday. Aupllt 1. 2001

~man guilty

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740..992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

/ .df"':f to lht! ~it;w ~~n wrlromr. 71uiy Jhould bl! l~n rh11lf JOO words. All Wnt!n
arr subject to t!tliting arrd musf '" signrd attd includr oJdrtu tntd ldt!plume 1111mbu.

No umigntd lt!Nrrs witllw publish~d. Lerttn 1h1H11d In ill good tastf!, llddnssing
iJJUf!f, llol,Wnmtalilin·.

Tile opirriolfs e:rpnsstd intlrt column btlow art thr ('ilr!Stltsus u/ tlu Ohio Va{J,y
Publishing Co. 's nlitoriul boorJ, unleu othf'na"iw· nottd.

,.

NATIONAL VIEW
.,

DEAR ABBY: I am a happily
married woman with two beautiful
children and a terrific husband.
When I was younger, my parents
would not allow me to date until I
was 18. Even when I turned 18 I
still wasn •t allowed to date. So • I
devised a plan. I would lie to my
parents and sneak around. My
boyfriend at. the time - now my
husband of 10 years - has two sist~rs. I asked on,e of. them to help me
to see my boyfriend. My parents
always thought she was just a friend.
To this day, my parents still don't
know my husband has two sisters.
They think he has only one.
I can't believe I have let this lie
drag on for so .long. I was young and
foolish. I need to let them know
because eventually it's going to .

=fl~l'-

tilt!

if dating lie think
Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE

come out.
Mv parents · live out of state, so
when I call them and tell them,
maybe it won't be so bad. Can you
suggest a better way to tell them?
Now that I'm older I realize my parents were just trying to protect us
and keep us out of trouble. If only I
could wipe away this lie.
Please advise me.- GUILTY IN

·•

New FBI director has work cut
for him in straightening agetJCY. ·.
• The Salt Lake Tribune , on the new FBI
director: Veteran federal prosecutor and administrator R.oberr Mueller will have his work cut
out as the FBI's newest director. He will be
expected to revive tht: status ·and polish the tar'nished image of the federal government's premier law enforcement agency if the Senate confirms his appointment.
During recent years, increasing numbers of
American citizens have had reason to grow disenchanted with the FBI's sometimes seemingly
aimless direction · and gaffes ranging from
botched raids to embarrassments over production of documents to longtime spies in its midst.
Mueller's task will be difficult, but it is far from ·
impossible. He will need a strong commitment
to the rule of law, a sense of integrity that will •
not brook short cuts or ends over means, and an
. enduring expectation of the kind of qualitative
· work that once was a hallmark of the FBI's reputation ....
In short, Mueller will find more work than
glory in ran)rodding the FBI. It is hoped that
President Bush's confidence, and the nation's, in
: Mueller will not prove to be misplaced.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Aug. 6. the 218th day of 2001. There are
147 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:"
. O n Aug. 6, 1945, durin g World War II , the United States
dropped an atomic bomb on · Hiroshima, Japan. killing an estimated 140,000 people in th e first usc of a nuclear weapon in
warfare.
On thi s date:
In 1787, the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia
began to &lt;kb.ttc the articles containe d in a draft of th e United
States Con stitution.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Targets

of terrorism

and two reactions ·to violence ·

'
Since last September, despite
attempted cease-fires, drive-by shootings by
Palestinians have murdered more than
24 Isr.aeli settlers. There have been similar vigilante attacks on Palestinians by
settlers.
On July 19, in an act of terrorism that
shocked both Israelis and Palestinians, a
. taxi was fired on killing three Palestinians - including a 3-month-old baby
boy - and wounding other passengers.
COLUMNIST
The Palestinians were going home on
the West Bank after a visit with relatives.
Claiming responsibility for these Israeli authorities - not only the tordeaths was the Committee for Security ture of prisoners but also collective punon the Roads; a band of revenge-driven . ishment by the Israeli government,
settlers.
destroying homes and evicting families.
As the Web site, Gamla: News and For years I have supported the Peace
Views from Israel, reported from Now movement by Israelis, and the ereJerusal em, the killings of th~. Palestinians ation of an independent Palestinian state.
"were roundly denounced by all eleIn th ese months of mutual acts of vioments of the Israeli public" .- from lence, however, there has been a distinct
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to the Yesha .differenGe in the. reactions of many- Council, which represents the Jewish not all - Palestinians to the loss oflives,
settlers. Across the political and ideolog- as contrasted with the attitudes of most
icai divisions among Israelis, there was a .Israelis.
universal demand that the murderers be
Three days after a Palestinian suicide
taken into custody.
·
bomber killed 21 people in Tel Aviv,
The Yesha Council, speaking for the including himself, a Pa!estinian poll settlers, condemned this "criminal deed" reported on N ational Public Radio by the "foul murderers." The New York disclosed that 76 percen t of the Pales~
Times quoted Israeli President Moshc tinians survey,ed supported suicide
Katsav, who is on the right of the polit- bombings. And Hassan Hotari, the father
ical spectrum, urging the settlers'leadcrs of the 22-year-old suicide bomber, told
"to act firmly to prevent such horrific Reuters news service:
"I was extremely happy when I heard
deeds. No one has the right to take the
law into his own hands." And Israeli that my son' is the one who did this
Defense Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliez- operation. I hope I have many sons to
er: " Murder is murder and terror is ter· carry out the same act. And I wish
myself I had done it."
ror."
Si1ice September, there have been
Palestinians have legitimate grievances. Both in Israel and the United orher news reports of Palestinian mothStates, I h ave interviewed Palestinians ers who celebrated - actually celebratwho have detailed severe abuses by ed- the deaths of thei r suicide-bomber
.

Nat
Hentoff

sons m the conviction that their sons ,
will ascend to paradise because their
cause is so undeniably just.
Clearly, there is deep mutual hatred .
among Palestinians and Israelis. Again,
not all of those on either side. But there
is reason to wonder how many generations it will take before they can live in
the same area, even if they are separated
into two states.
And while there have been murderous
attacks by some Israelis - notoriously, "
settler Baruch Goldstein 's 1994 killing of
29 Muslims at prayer in Hebron's Tomb
of the Patriarchs - I cannot recall a ,
massive Israeli approval of a horrific act
against Palestinians by Israelis, similar to
the enthusiastic reactions of many Palestinians after the murder of Jewish
youngsters in Tel Aviv. After that carnage,
Palestinians danced in the streets of
Ram allah.
Again, while there are vigilantes on
.both sides - and leaders on both sides
have directed killings - Yasir Arafat,
while occasionally asking that all the
violence be stopped, has seldom condemned specific, strategic waves of violence by Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Palestinian Hezbollah and his own Fatah forces.
The wave of revulsion across Israel
after the drive-in murders of the Palestinian family on July 19 has yet to be
matched by Arafat or by many Palestinians when similar horrors are directed at
Israelis.
I keep remembering what a Palestinian journalist told- me in East Jerusalem
25 years ago: "Together, we and the
Israelis could create a flowering of the
Middle East."
r

(Nat Hwtoff is a uatiot1a/ly rerwumed
authority on the First Amendment and the
Bill if Rights.)

In 18116, th e Holy Roman Empire went out of existenc e as
Emperor Fran cis I abdicated.
In 1825, Uolivia declared its independence from Peru.
· In 18&lt;.10, convicted murderer William Kcmmler became the
first person to be executed in the electric chair as he was put
to death at Auburn State Prison in New York.
In 1914, Austria-Hungary decl are d war against Russia · and
Serbia declared war against Germany.
In 1926, Gertrude Ederle of New York became the first
Americ;m woman to swim the Engl ish Chan nel, in about 14
BY JOHN CUNNIFF
it's been time tested. And now the InstiIn addition, the Galveston model
1/2 hours.
NEW YORK - Though it's the most tute for Policy Innovation, a Lewisville, includes a life insurance policy that pays
In 1962, Jam aica became an independent dominion within
.discussed plan for reforming Social Secu- Tex. think tank, and resident scholar three times a worker's salary between a ·
the British Com mon wealth.
rity. letting workers invest so me of their Merrill Matthews Jr., think it deserves minimum of$50,000 and a maximum of '
In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Voting IUghts
payments in the stock market isn't the study.
$150,000. It pays double for accidental -·
Act.
·
only way to save the system.
Twenty years ago county officials in death.
In 197H, l'ope Paul VI di ed at Castel Gandolfo at age 80.
There 's another way, and it's already Galveston,Texas, opted to withdraw from
While stock market returns have aver· ·
In 1986. William J. Schroeder died after living 620 days with
been proved - and not in theory or the Social Security system (an option aged more than 10 percent over the past"
the Jarvik 7 artificial heart.
tests, but in the real world. And not in , ended in 1983) and accept a retirement six decades, that average includes huge
Ten years ago:The Justi ce Department joined forces with the . ·
Chile, whose plan is often cited as a sue- plan devised by Rick Gornto, a financial !!ains in some years and big losses in othami-abortion grou p Operation Rescue in fighting a federal
cessful example, but right here in the planner. Matagorda and Brazoria Coun- ers, a factor that opponents are bound to
judge's order to keep two abortion clinics in Wichita, Kansas,
. United States.
tics followed suit.
stress.
open. TV newsnun Harry Reasoner died in Norwalk, Conn.,
This alternative plan, already in use for
Currently, according to Matthews,
Matthews holds a doctorate in philsoat age 68.
20 years, is destined to gain a broader there are about 2,740 fulltime employees phy but his ntotives are pragmatic. The
Five years ago: Officials ann ounced the Air Force had punhearing now that the stock" market has contributing a percentage of their payroll stock market model, proposed by Presi- ·
ished 16 officers in connection with the crash that killed Comdemonstrated anew its tendency to go to tax to retirement savings. First Financial dent Bush, has worked in other counmerce Secretary Ron Brown and 34 others the previous April.
extremes, erasing billions of dollars of Benefits of Houston then pools the tries, and could here, he says, but oppoOne year ago: Workers at Verizon, .the nation's largest local
market value.
money and loans it out to the best bid- nents have ammunition.
telephone company, went on an 18-day strike over working
The so-called Galveston Model does- der at a guaranteed interest rate.
That ammunition has been provided
conditions and union representation.
stock'
lllarket
volatility
The
employees
bear
little
risk,
"They
by
the stock market itself, whose plunge
n't
worry
about
Today's Birthdays: Entrepreneur Sir Freddie Laker is 79.
because it doesn't invest in stocks. get their interest whether thestock mar- over the past year or so, coinciding with ·
Actress-sin ger Abbey Lincoln is 71. Actor-director Peter BonInstead, it lends the pool of money from ket goes up or down -: and they have the Social Security debate; has erased as
crz is 63. Actor Michael Anderson Jr. is 58.Actor Dorian Hareparticipants
to a top-rated finan cial insti- done so for 20 years," says Matthews.
. much as $5 trillion of stock valuations.
wood is 5 I. Actress Catherine Hicks is 50. Rock singer Pat
tution.
He cites these figures from First Fina~- Poor timing, he says.
McDonald (Timbuk 3) is 49. Actress Stepfanie K.ramer is 45 ..
In doing so, it obtains a better rate than cia! Benefits :
Therefore, he suggests, it ·would be
Rhythm-and-blues singer Randy DeBarge is 43. Country
you
or
I
or
any
other
small
investor
•
A
low-income
worker
($17,124
.a
wise
to consider the Galveston model to
singers Peggy and Patsy Lynn :ire 37. Country singer Lisa Stewmight receive. Over two decades the year) retiring at age 65 would get · $782 counter political . p·osturing and "risky
art is 33. Movie writer-rtirector M. Night Shyamalan is 31.
returns have ranged from 5 percent to per month from Social Security, but scheme demagoguery."
Si nger Gcri Halliwell is 29. Actre ss Sol.eil Moon Frye is 25.
15.5 percent, averaging out to 7.5 per- $1,285 from what is called the Alternate
"A model that is as safe at your bank;'
Thought for Today: " The life of every man is a diary in
cent t~ 8 percent a year.
Plan .
he says, "may be the only viable political
which he means to write one story, and writes anoth er; and liis
of
that
sort
aren't
what
might
•
The
highincome
worker
($5
1,263)
option."
Returns
j1ltmblest hour is when he compares the volume as it is with
be expected from prudent stock invest- at 65 will get $1,540 from Social Securiaohn Cimn!ff is~ business analyst for Tire
w hat he hoped to make it."- Sir Jam es Matthew Barrie, Scotm, nts, but the risk is vastly reduced. And · ty, versus $3,846 from the Alternate Plan. Associated Press.)
tish dramatist-author (1860-l &lt;.137) .
·

BUSINESS MIRROR

Consider this as an alternative to Social Security

''

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Bible School, Hope Baptist
Church, 570 Grant St., Middle·
port. "Truth Trackers," theme,
Monday through Aug. t 0, 6:30
to 9 p.m. Registration day, Sat·
urday, 3to 5 p.m. Free food and
games .
POMEROY - Pomeroy Ele·
mentary School, summer learn·
ing camp, through Friday, 8:30
a.m. untlltt :30 a.m. Students in
1·5 are invited. lnformalion at
992·27t0.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
ship Trustees regular meeting,
7:30 p.m. Monday, Syracuse

Village Hall.

it~

Monday, Aucust 6, 2001

time for the truth

NEW jERSEY
(hankly, 1 thtnk they owe you an
DEAR GUILTY: First of aU, apology for putting you in the posiplease stop feeling guilty. Dating is tion they did.)
one of the ways that young people
DEAR ABBY: You printed a letmature socially. Most teen-agers in ter from "Happy Granny in Waldo,
this country start dating by the time Fla." about when to talk to children
they are 16. There were valid reaso ns about sex. You said it reminded you
for your acting the way you did. You of a story: Seven-year-old Tommy
were fortunate that the first boy you asked his mother where he came
dated turn~d out to be a terrific hus- from. She gave him " the lecture," to
band. Your choice certainly wasn't which he responded, ''Oh. My
· friend Jimmy said he came from St.
based on experience.
The next time you speak with Lou'is."
your parents, ask when they plan to
My son's father died when he was
visit. Then tell them you have a sur- 2, so . I was left to deal with the
prise for them - they're going to mountain of never-ending quesmeet a new member of the family. tions. Beating around the bush was
Their introduction should be made unacceptable to my son. When he
face-to-face. You are all adults now. was 6, he asked how the baby had
You should no longer need your gotten into the stomach of a woman
parents' permission or approval. at church. I explained about planting

LOCAL EVENTS
The Community Calendar Is
published as a .free aervlce to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Ia
not · designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. llama are printed only
as apace permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

end

Page AS

seeds and flowers growing. He then
proceeded t? ask how the seed got
planted, who planted it, and what
part the daddy played in this. On and
on - until finally, after admonishing
my son not to share this information
with his younger fi·iends, I gave hifn .
"the facts of life" lecture in as much '
detail as he seemed to want.
As long as I live, I willnev~r forget
his shocked, mortified expression as
he· lifted his little face to heaven and
prayed, "Oh, God, isn't there any
OTHER way&gt;"- HAPPY MOM
IN NORTH CAROLINA
DEAR HAPPY MOM: From
tfie mouths of babes. I assume he got
over his shock as he grew older.

Dear Abby is writte11 by Pauline
Phillips and daugl1ter Jeatme Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

office building .

CARPENTER - Columbia
ROCKSPRINGS - Meigs
Township Trustees, Monday, lire Band Boosters, Monday, 6 p.m.,
stat1on , 7:30p.m.
at boosters' booth af lairgrounds. Bring cleaning sup·
RACINE - RExplore Jesus plies and be prepared for cleanLoveS themed vacation Bible ing booth .
school, Monday through Aug.
10, 6 lo 8:30 p.m. at MI. Moriah
TUESDAY
Church of God, Mile Hill Road,
POMEROY Salisbury
Racine.
Township Trustees, 6 p.m. ·
Tuesday, township hall, Rock·
RACifi!E - Racine Chapter springs
Road.
t34, O.E.S. Monday 7:30 p.m.;
one member to be Initiated; offi·
POMEROY Childhood
cers urged to attend; take covimmunization
clinic,
Tuesday,
1
ered dish for refres hments.
to 7 p.m. at the Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT - The Mid- Health Department office. Take
dleport Church of the Nazarene childUs shot records . Child
will hold a vacation Bible school must be accompanied by par·
Monday through Friday from ent/legal guardian.
6:30-8:30 p.m.
ALFRED ~Orange Township
.Trustees,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Big Bend
Farm Antiques Club, special home of Osie Follrod, clerk.
meeting, Monday, 7:30 p.m.,
WEDNESDAY
Rock Springs fairgrounds.
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
LETART - Letart Township ship Trustees, Wednesday at 5
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.

honored

Painting dasses
to be Offered
POMEROY - A twomonth class in painting will
be offered at the Senior Citizens Center starting Aug. 14
by Michele Garretson.
Cost for beginners is :S7 a
class to be held from I to "3
p.m. plus the cost of brushes. ·
Advanced painting classes .
will be held from 5:45 to 7:45 .
p.m. Those enrolled are to
take their own paint brushes,
paints and something to paint
on. The cost pf those classes
will also be $7.
Registration for th~ classes '
is being taken by Patty· Pick- ·
ens, 992-21 M.

Baptism service :·

MIDDLEPORT - Com~
mon Ground Mission recent-;
Joe ~truble has seen a lot of progress and a lot of changes in
ly held a baptistp service at .
the 41·1/2 years he served as a medic with Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services. Struble was recently honored the Middleport levee.
Pastor Leslie Hayman assistwith a reception on his retirement, and presented with a com- .
mendation and gilts from his friends in the EMS system. He is ed by Ma:rk N orman baptized
l t .. '
. Pictured with his wife, MaJty, and EMS f\gministrator Gene Carrie Harmon 0nd Emi
Bass.
:War; Emma Ashley, Ohio original brass cannons frOm the Lyons. (David Harris photo)
·
T he mission is a11 informal ·
Department Woman's Relief Civil War. Tuppers Plains VFW
Su11day -morning Bible study
---~ Corps; Amy Miller, president of:.- gave-a-modern-day rifle salute. - the Ohio Department Auxiliary The. ceremonies cl~sed with the
donated items will be held to which helps su pport missions .
' to the So~. of Uruon Veterans playmg of "Taps' and a lun- ·
•
•
help with th e cost of enter- world-wide and spo11sors a ·
of the C1vil War; Mae . Frost; cheon provided to the partici- .
tainment. Other items will be WJOS television P\ogram.
John S. ToWllsend Auxiliary of pants of the ceremonies by
auctioned off during the day.
PORTLAND - The third the Auxiliary · to the Sons of B ks G
C
d M ·
RACINE - Raci ne Fall
Entertainment will include
ro~ - rant ~P an
aJ. Festival Committee met h
·
annual wreath-laying ceremony Union Veterans of the Civil War
of Frost,· Chrt.stine Sa&lt;&gt;&lt;tetter, Darnel McCook Ctrc!e.
I
k
t e
Swinging
Seniors,
,..
recently at Star Mi I Par to Dwight Icen hower, Elvis
sponsored by the Sons ofUnion
Veterans of the Civ~ War and national junior vice president of
sh01Wfer
'begin planning for.. the festival
on Sept. 8.
impersonator.
Outdoor
the Ladies of the Grand Army the Ladies of the Grand Army ·
of the Republic was held at the of the Republic; and Nancy
The event will kick off Plumbing Co., Surefire Band
onument
I·n
Portland
C
P
.d
t
fth
Ohi
.
h
d
10
. h and Northwest Territory.
.
battle m
CH ICI\GO (AP) - Actor
o
Wit a para e at
a.m. wtt
Craft and food booths will
onaway, rest en o e
the lineup to take place at the
during the annual re-enactment Department Ladies of the
Chris Tu.cker says he'd li ke to
of the Battle of Buffington Grand Army of the Republic.
old ftre department anp.ex. be in operation throughout work with some of HollyIsland.
Others presenting wreaths
RACINE
&lt;;:ourtney Awards will be presented to the day. There will be so me wood's heavyweights like ·
Brooks-Grant Camp 7 Sons, were Joan Dowd of Mother Roush, Deborah Harris, Hillery winners in first, second and craft
demonstration. To
Robert De Niro, Denzel
of Union Veterans of Middle- Garfield Circle Ladies of the Harris and Shan tel Wein- third places of $50, S30 and reserve a space residents may
Washington, Steven Sp ielport and the Maj. Daniel Grand Army of the Republic; sheimer entertained guests with $20 .
call 949-2210 tor informaberg or Martin Scorsese.
Candidates for queen will tion.
McCook Circle 104 Ladies of Robert E. Grim, j'unior vice a luncheon recently at the
Tucker, 29, who stars in
the Grand Army of the Repub- commander-in-chief of the Roush hom,e honori!)g Kendrn be selected from the se nior
For information on enterlie were the host groups.
Sons of Union Veterans of the
class of Southern High tainment, Larry Wolfe can be the just released " Ru sh Hour •
Norris,of Columbus.
bride-elect of Andy sch oo,1 wit h th e crowmng
· to contacted at . 949-2836, and 2" is already commandi11 g
The ceremony opened Wit· h a Civil War·. Donald Darby., com- . Heck
for all other informat.ion, $20 million per picture but
bugler calling attention to the mander of the Ohio Depart·
take place at 11 :45 a.m.
"
f
The
decorating
motif
was
troops. Union and Confederate ment Sons of Union veterans o
Immediately
after the Dale Hart, 949-2656, is th e has his eye on th e next level:
re-enactors lined the area along the Civil War; Mark Eckley, "country kitchen," using red crowning, an auction of perso n to contact.
· dramas.
with many visitors. The Rev. conunander of the Ohio Com- ·gingham, yellows and blues as
Wilham Middleswarth of the mandery Military Order of the the accent colors. The table cenMeigs County Pioneer and Loyal Legion of the United terpieces consisted of Kerr canHistorical Society gave the States; Scott Britton of Gen. ningjars 6lled to the brim with
Benjamin D. Fearing Camp 2 blackeyed susans and tied with ·
invocation .
Fife and drum music were Sons of Union Veterans of the rafl]a ribbon.
Small kitchen canisters filled
provided by James Oiler and Civil War of Marietta.
Also .presenting wreaths were with vanilla candle wax and tied
Keith Ashley of Brooks-Grant
Camp, accompanied by some Ger.tld Crnwford of Brooks- with red gin.gharn ribbon .were
Grant Camp .Sons of Union given as favors. The guests ·
other Civil War musicians.
JetfThornton, Meigs County Veterans of the Civil War; Mar- played games and wrote advice
commissioner, was the principal ilyn Wolfe of Maj. Daniel cards while enjoying the lunspeaker for the day. He empha- McCook Circle Ladies of the ·cheon.
sized the work that the com- Grand Army of the Republic;
After the luncheon, the guests
mission is doing to obtain fund- Abbie Stratton, regent of were escor:ted to the family
"
ing for preservation of the bat- Return Jonathan Meigs Chap- room, where Norris opened her
defield area and complimented ter DAR of Pomeroy; Emily
gifts. The groom's gifi, a woodMargaret Parker. of the Meigs Ashl~y of Racine Subordinate
en toolbox filled with tools proCounty Pioneer and Historical Grange 2606; Frank Trnutman
vided by the guests, was on disSociety and Keith Ashley of the of Ewings Chapter Sons of the
Revolution of play in the family room as well.
Sons of Union Veterans of the American
Hostesses served cake and
. Civil War 'for their 14-year con· . Pomeroy; Ron Eastman of
tinuing struggle to save this Feeney-Bennett Post American punch to Donna Norris, DebLegion of Middleport; and the bie Roush, Charisse Knight,
national historic site.
Tuppers
Plains Post VFW.
Mickey Kucsma, Jan Norris,
Many dignitaries of local,
Ashley spoke on the need to Donna Hill, Ger.tldine Cross,
state, and national organizations
to' write to Gov. Marie Norris, Jenni Ooe)
continue
presented wreaths at the monuOFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 8:30·5:00, WED. 8:30-NOON
ment and dedicated them to the Robert Taft of Ohio to ask that Roush, Jan Hill, Jean Alkire,
Civil War troops both North he use his efforts to save the Megan Manuel, Jonna Manuel,
Buffington Island Battlefield. Andrea
and South who fought there.
Moore, . Sammi
also
announced
the
phio
He
Those presenting wreaths
Mugrage,
Connee Enslen,
were Thornton for the Meigs Bicentennial Commission's plan Della Cross, Di Cross, Mary ·
County Commission; John for a three-day cavalry ride Spore, Tracy Hupp, Baylee
Lavery, commander of the West across Meig;; County in Sep- Hupp, Peach Mugrage, ChrisVirginia Division Sons of Con- tember 2002, as well as next
tine Mamone, and the honoree.
federate Veterans; Ra chel Den- year's re-enacnnent in July.
The
arrival of the prospective
The First Ohio Light
nis, president of the . Ohio
Department Daughters of Artillery from the Ohio State- groom was the finale of the
Union Veterans of the Civil house fired a cannon salute with event.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Civil Was
veterans
honored at

Planninf for fall .
festiva beginS

Portland

PEOPLE

Bridal
held to honor

Chris Tucker

NOrris

Dill F.

Board Certified Internal Medicine

STRESS TEST
ECHO CARDIOGRAPHY
• DIABOIC MANAGEMENT
• CHOLESTEROL COUNSELING
• ·BLOOD PRESSURE
• THYROID DISORDERS
• DISEASES OF THE LUNG
• CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE

Accepting New Patients

•

�Nation • World

•

5

The Daily Sentinel

11

-

New York tackles rats

en
f't
l&gt;t
od
ng
Dn
hl
ch '
:et

as
1d
ny

WASHINGTON (AP) - More than
l3.3 million immigrants settled in the
United States between 1990 and 2000,
pushing the country's foreign-born population above 30.5 million, a Census
Bureau survey reveals.
More than one in four immigrants
came from Mexico. And 9.8 million
school-age children - or 18 percent of
aU those between ages 5 and 17 -spoke
a language other than English at home in
2000; the' 1990 census placed the share at
14 percent.
Estimates from the wide-rangi ng·Census 2000 Supplementary Survey released
Monday come as lawmakers and advocacy groups debate how to shape policy on
immigration and bilingual education.
The statistics on language spoken at
home reflect youngsters who receive
most of their formal education in English, but speak a second language with

"As a result: urban rat control in many communities is
approached in a complaint-oriented basis, and that will not
solve the problem," he said.
Rats are more than a nuisance. During the 14th century, they
helpe~ spread the bubonic plague through Europe. And more
recently they have been known to carry diseases such as typhus
or leptospirosis, a potentially serious bacte'rial illness.
"A mouse in your house or a rat- they could potentially kill
you;' said Robert Corrigan, a R.ichmond, Ind., rodent specialist. "We are competing on this earth with rats."

M
m
'Ot

their families
Close to seven in I 0 of those children
spoke Spanish at home, and two-thirds of
that group rated themselves as speaking
English very ' well. Fluency declines as
people get older, as 50 percent of those
age 18 to 64 who spoke Spanish at home
described themselves as fluent in English.
Meanwhile, the total foreign-born
population made up about 11 percent of
the country's household population of
273.4 million. The results were in line
with earlier estimates.
William Frey, a demographer with the
Milken Institute think tank, said the survey data also lent support to 2000 census
figures showing rapid minority population growth in states beyond California
and New York.
Survey information was gathered separately from the 2000 census and provides estimates of demographic trends

•Code Reel II' worm reported

Onlookers 'helped him to shore, where he collapsed. He
wrote his room number into the sand before he passed out.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A new, destructive worm similar
Hotel officials then called Mrs. Thompson.
to Code Red, which infected computers around the world last
" He knew that was the only way they were going to find me
week, is spreading through the Internet, but authorities aren't
in time," his wife said. "He is so brave. To fight off a shark and
sure how much damage it has done.
then think to do that."
The new worm, dubbed Code Red II, moves faster than
Code Red but can still -be stopped by downloading. a software
patch for some Microsoft operating systems, security officials
said Sunday.
FORT WALTON BEACH, Fla. (AP) -A weakening TropCode Red II attacks the same Internet-connected computers
ical Storm Barry plowed deep er into the Florida Panhandle
that were vulnerable to Code Red in the same fashion. Instead
early Monday, lashing the Gulf Coast with heavy rain but sparof just defacing Web sites and trying to spread itself, however, ing residents from hurricane-force winds.
the ·new worm leaves a "back door" open on infected comput"The main thing we're concerned with now is the flooding,"
ers.
said Trisha Wallace; a meteorologist with the National Hurri"This makes the computer available to whoever wants to get
cane Cen-ter in Miami. "It is moving so slowly it'll just continin," said Russ Cooper ofTruSecure Corp., a computer security ue to sit and dump rain."
firm. "Anyone who finds one of these boxes can do anything
Hurricane warnings from Apalachicola westward to Fort Walthey want to it."
ton Beach were downgraded by the hurricane center to a tropCode Red II began spreading around the Internet on Saturday morning. Despite its name, Code Red II is not a "variant"
of Code Red, but a completely new worm. Still, it infects via
the same hole in some Microsoft operating systems.
"It won't affect machines that have already been patched,"
Cooper said." Anyone who took precautions against Code Red
should be safe against Code Red II."

s

Barry moves onshore

o•ill
ti14
a

'3
s.
;es .

45 .
to
es,
ill!

;es
;es
k- .

e.

•Delegation commemorates 'the bomb'
1

nIt-

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sunday was just another Sunday
for almost everybody in the world. But for Fumiko Amano, the
56th anniversary of the day an atomic bomb destroyed her
home in Hiroshima rekindled memories of"a kind of hell."
. Amano was joined by fellow survivor Keiko Hara in a ceremony at the Lincoln Memorial to remember those killed by the
bomb, dropped by the Urured Sc.res on Aug. 5, 1945.
"The primary reason for doing this is to keep alive the mem, ories of Hiroshima and Nagasaki," said John Steinbach, co-con. vener in Washington of the Gray Pan-thers, a multi-issue advocacy group. "The Hibakusha (atomic bomb survivors) are very
concerned that the world is going to forget Hiroshima and
Nagasaki."
Approximately 140,000 people died at Hiroshima and an
estim•ted 70,000 more perished in the second bombing in
Nagasaki three days later. The two bombings marked the effective end ofWorld War II.Japan surrendered within two weeks,
onAug.15,1945.
According to Amann and Hara - who were 14 and 5 years
old, respectively, when the bomb was dropped - the ceremony was not just about remembering those who died. Hara ~id
. she wants to spread the message that "we should abolish nuclear
weapons, because there is no way they can coexist with
humankind. I hope there is no more Hiroshima, no more
Nagasaki, no more Hibakusha!"

1

at,
sted
rm

1al ·
dyns .

•·

or
to

yke
:el
:I-

Senator sees 'good-old-boy'

in

WASHINGTON (AP) -The head of the Senate Judiciary
Committee said Sunday that belated revelations the Justice
Department rejec'ted recommendations to censure former FBI
Director Lol,lis Freeh are evidence of a persistent "good-oldboy" network at the bureau.
·
Stephen j. Colgate, a former assistant attorney general, said
that he decided against disciplinary action against Freeh in connection with the FBI's investigation of its 1992 siege at Ruby
Ridge because "I just didn't think it was necessary."
"Freeh was a small part of it," Colgate said in a telephone
interview Saturday with The Associated Press. "I stand by my

ur ·

ng
ut
el:

decision.'"

·

Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy ofVermont, chairman of the
Judiciary Committee, complained that the decision regarding
Ruby Ridge was "shrouded in secrecy."
"It appears from tltis that the 'good-old-boy' network has
been allowed to persist at the FBI," Leahy said in a statement.
"It serves to protect some senior FBI executives from the same
scrutiny and discipline applied to rank-and-file agents who are
not part of 'the club.'
"This double standard is unfair and demoralizing, but with
strong new leadership at the FBI and some hands-on congressional oversight for a while, I expect this par1 of-the culture to
change.''

Man attacked by a shark

Spending.
limits · _·
getting
dose to vote

WASHINGTON (AP) House supporters o(limiting
campaign
spending are
within reach of trying to
force a vote on the issue,
aided by IS Republicans
defying their OJ&lt;Yn leaders._
In just one week befote
Congress left for its August
recess, 205 House members
signed a discharge petition.-.
That is a rarely used procedure for bringing a bill to
the ·House floor when the
chamber's
leaders
are
unwilling to do so.
Supporters of the campaign finance legislation by
Reps. Christopher Shays, RConn., and Marty Meehan,
D-Mass., need only 13 more
signers to achieve their goal
of 218, a majority of the
House and the figure needed
to force action on their petition.
"I'm energized by the
remarkable progress in such
a short period of time,"
Meehan said. He noted that
it took six months to reach a
similar level in a 1998 petition· drive. ·
"We thought 185 would
be great" for the first week,
Shays said. "Over 200 is fantastic.'' He said he expected
four or five more Republicans to sign on and "when
we get back in September
we'll have our 13."
Over Congress' August
vacation, Meehan and Shays,
as well as the sponsors of the
parallel Senate bill, Sens.
john McCain, R-Ariz., and
Russ Feingold, D- Wis., will
.be calling colleagues they
feel are most likely to join
their cause. Groups such as
Common Cause and the
Sierra Club will also be try- .
ing to drum up support for
the biggest change in campaign spending_ rules in a
quarter-century.
Discharge petitions are
uncommon because of the
reluctance to go against
one's own party leaders . The
last successful discharge petition came in 1994, when
lawmakers
forced
·the
Democrats then in control
of the House to give them a
vote on a balanced budget
amendment to the Constitu-

MIAMI (AP) - · A New York man celebrating his &gt;yedding
anniversary in the Bahamas had part of his left leg amputated
after being attacked by a shark.
·Krishna Thompson, a 36-year-old Wall Street banker, was in
critical condition at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami on
Monday morning, said spokeswol{lan Victoria Zambrano.
"He ·was jus[ swimming .o ff the beach when something, a
shark, grabbed his leg and started pulling him down," Ave Maria
Thompson, Thompson's wife, told The Miami Herald for ty!onday editions. "He kept punching and punching. He has cuts on
his hands because of that."
The Thompsons had been celebrating their 1Oth wedding
anniversary during a vacation to Freeport, Grand Bahama. On
Saturday, Krishna Thompson went alone into the water.
After struggling with the shark, Mrs.Thompson said her husband managed to free himself and swam to shore using only his
right leg because the other was mangled.
tion.

'

expected to be reflected in additional
census data due out next ye•r.
The survey also covers topics such as
income and poverty, educational attainment, commuting times and fertility. It is
not considered a substitute for the official 2000 census figures.
Much of the recent attention on the
census fro!" Congress and the White
House has focused on figures that
showed the Hispanic population grew 58
percent during the 1990s to 35 million.
Hispanics now rival non-Hispanic blacks
as the nation's largest minority group.
The new numbers offer more evidence of the diverse makeup of America's youth and show the need to expand
bilingual education programs, said . Lis~
Na:varette of the National Council of Lt
Raza, the nation's largest Hispanic advo.;
cacy group.

ical storm warning early Monday.
At 5 a.m. EDT, the storm's center was about 20 _miles north
of Crestview, just south of the Alabama border. Barry was moving north at 9 mph and maximum sustained winds were near '
65 mph, with some higher gusts.
Forecasters expected Barry to steadily weaken as the storm
spiraled was over land. A tropical storm is designated a hurricane when its sustained wind sp~ed reaches 7 4 mph.
Rain concerns continued across the Gulf Coast, with flood
warnings issued for portions of Franklin, Liberty and Wakulla
counties in northern Florida.
Wallace said that heavy rainfall of eight to 10 inches could be
-expected in)lorthern Florida , southern Alabama and Georgia,
while flooding was likely in portions of those areas. Isolated tornadoes were a possibility in the Panhandle.
Barry is the second named storm of the 200 I Atlantic hurricane season. The storm already had dumped more than a foot
of rain on parts of florida before moving into the Gulf ofMex~

ico.

THURSDAY, AUDUIT 23, 2001 ·
• IDUTHERI • MEIDl • EAITERI

Inside:

un the P8dres, 10-9
MONDAY's

·HIGHLIGHTS Terry Glenn
skips practice
SMITHFIELD, R.I. (AP)
New England Patriots
wide receiver Terry Glenn,
suspended for the team's first
four regular-sel!Son games for
violating the NFL's substance
abuse policy, did not attend
practice Sunday.
uHe was not at practice and

he was supposed to be. It wa.&lt;
an unexcused absence," team

spokesman Stacey James said.
James said the team did not
know Glenn's whereabouts
on Sunday. He refused to
Comtnent on the consequences Glenn could face for
missing practice.

Bears still
uncertain at QB
CHICAGO (AP) -. An
overtime victory against the
Cincinnati Bengals did little
to determine who will start at
quarterback for the Chicago
Bears.
"It's still early in the competition and we will keep
going," coach Dick Jauron
said following a 16- 13 win
Saturday-night. ·
Shane Matthews played just
the first quarter and was 2-of4; Cade McNown ran the
team for two quarters and was
9-of-15 with a touchdown
pass, fumbled snap and a couple of batted- down p~ses; and
four!h-teamer Danny Wuerffel was 12-of-20 and set up
Paul Edinger's game-winning
48-yard field goal.
Jim Miller, another contender for the starter's job,
didn't play. He's been out
since hurting his hamstring
the first day of training camp.

RACINE - The Southern Athletic Boosters will
hold their mo~thly meeting
Wednesday in the high school
cafete ria at 6 p.m.
All sports parents, booster
members, community members, and interested parties
should attend the August 8
meeting.

Pakwins
women's Bntish

Open

ADVERTISING DEADLINE- J'HURSDAY, -AUGUST ~6, 2001- 5:00P.M.

The Daily Sentinel
'

SUNNING DALE, England
(AP) - Se Ri Pak eagled the
first hole 'and birdied the last
two to win the Women's
.. British Open by two strokes
and move within one victory
of the career Grand Slam.
.. Pak, a four-time winner this
year, finished with a 6-under
66 for an 11- under total of
277 at Sunningdale to add
golf's newest major to her
1998 U.S. Open and LPGA
Championship titles .
Mi Hun Kim finished second, giving South Korea its
first 1-2 finish in a major. Kim
closed with a 7 I.

•••••

Catch all the news on your
favorite sports teams - prep,
college, and pro - in The
Daily Sentinel.

Call Dave or Debbie at 992-2155
For More Information

.,

Page·ar
Monday, Aucust &amp;, 1001

·meet .

Q!__ _

The Daily Sentinel

Greene still the fasteSt, Page 83
Complete Brickyard results, Page 83
Diamond Roundup, Page 86

Southem
boosters to

.
I

Monday, August 6,1001

Survey offers·glimpse .into immigration

WASHINGTON (AP) - In New York City, officials held a
Rat Summit and appointed a rodent task force. Sightings of the
furry critters in Clticago h•ve shot up by more than 10,000. A
Houston exterminatm even witnessed--• police. officer- with-loaded pistol chasing a rat through • house.
An across urban America, rats are scurrying in larger numbers
and gnawing at the nerves of city dwellers, prompting federal
disease specialists to seek new solutions.
,
Health experts say the problem can be traced to a decision
rwo decades ago ro reduce federal funding for rodent control,
and more recently to ever-tightening city government budgets.
"The resurgence of the problem in recent years is connected
to cities having to make hard choices about what their priorities are," said Jerry Hershovitz of the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, or CDC, in Atlanta.

"

Page A&amp;

SAN DIEGO (AP) Todd Walker wasn't sure
how much longer he could
last.
,
With fatigue setting in,
Walker hit a bloop single in
the eighth inning that
brought in the winning
rijn, leading the Cincinnati
Reds to a wild I 0-9 win
Sunday over the San Diego
Padres.
After having played in all
14 games since being traded by Colorado to Cincinnati on July 20, Walker was
due for a rest. But the Reds
second
baseman
was
inserted into the lineup by
manager Bob Boone.
"I really was considering
giving him a day off,"
Boone said, "because he's
played every day here and
he played a lot with Colorado before.''

"I'm glad he didn't,"
Walker said. "I was fine
until the seventh, then I
was exhausted. It was a
tough day out there."
· Walker's hit helped
decide a game that lasted 3
hours and 39 minutes.
Cincinnati blew leads of
5-0, 5-3 and 8- 7. The
Padres wasted a 7-5 lead
after six innings and again
when they took a 9-8 lead

Please SH RHS, B3

NOT THE NFL, BUT CLOSE -Cincinnati 's Adam Dunn collides with Padres' catcher Wiki Gonzalez at the plate Sunday. Dunn
was safe on the play and Gonzalez was taken out of the game. (AP)

Maddox
retum a

Rainbow Warrior
holds on to lead
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Thirty-five laps into the Brickyard 400, Jeff' Gordon wasn't sure what was wrong with his
car. ~
It was sliding in the corners and struggling in the· straightaways, and he was losing positions fast on the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway oval.
Gordon's solution: Get in finnt of the traffic.
One hundred laps later, the three- time Winston Cup
champion cut inside Sterling Marlin on a restart and zipped
into the lead. Gordon never trailed again Sunday, going on to·
win by about I 0 car lengths over Marlin.
"The car just wasn't very good in traffic," said Gordon, the
race's first three-time winner. "I knew we were making
adjustments, and I didn't think the adjustments were doing
too much. I thought all we really needed was to be up front."
Officially, the victory margin of Gordon's Chevrolet was
0.943 seconds over Marlin's Dodge, but th e win appeared
much more impressive.
Gordon started 27th, farther back than any previo us winner in the event's eight-year history. The poor handling of hi s
No. 24 in the early going also forced Gordon, who celebrated ltis 30th birthday on Saturday, to rely on experience and
instinct to earn a win he didn't think possible at the start.
"I didn't feel good, not good at all," Gordon said, referring
·to his Hendrick Motorsports car. " I was falling back at times
.in the beginning and the car started to slip and slide around.
I didn't know what to tell them.''
Finally, Gordon told .Robbie Loomis, his crew chief, to
stop working on the car and that he would work on gaining
track posiclion.
Marlin, hoping to give Dodge its first victory since its
return to NASCAR's top series after a 16-year absence,
wound up matching John Andretti for the best fini sh so far SECOND HOME -Jeff Gordon celebrates after climbing
by the new Intrepids. He remained fo!Jrth in the standings, out of his car after winning his third Brickyard 400 at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Sunday, Aug. 5, 2001: (API
232 points behind the leader.

·success

LATROBE , Pa . (AP) - .
Tommy Mad&lt;jox heard alf.
the jokes that went with
being the MVP of the .
defunct XFL. Now, he might ·
get the last laugh.
·
Less than four months
after leading the Los Angeles:
Xtreme to the XFL championship, Maddox made a successful return to the NFL albeit in a preseason game. ·
The 29-year-old journey-man quarterback completed
six of 10 passes for 78 yards
and a touc own Friday,:
hel
th
ttsburgh Steelm rally past Michael Vick,
the No. 1 pick in NFL draft,
and the Atlanta Falcons 17"
16.
After starting quarterback
Korde]l Stewart and Kent
Graham led the Steelers to a
cori1bined total of 50 yards
and zero points, Maddox
made an immediate impact

when he en tered the game
in the third quarter. He led
the Steelers to a. touchdown
and a fi eld goal in hi! only
series.
"I know how it goes," said

Browns' reserve runners get looks
EDINBORO, Pa. (AP) - Running
backs Jamel White and Ben Gay could
be getting a longer look after productive efforts in a scrimmage agaimt the
Buffalo Bills.
White
accounted
for 51 yard&lt; on one
series, taking Tim
Couch r~ccptions for
18- and 17-yard gains,
and running 15 yards
with a handoff'. He
completed the series
by squeezing over the
goal line
I yard.
Davis
_"jamel White came
in and made things happen ," Couch
said.
The next series, the pro-Browns
crowd chanted, "We want Ben," and
then stood and cheered as Gay finally
was inserted into the action . The man
now being called "Legend" by team mates responded with a 14-yard run on

from

his first carry.
Gay also had runs of 5 and I yard,
and gained 13 and 10 on short passes
from Spergon Wynn . Each time Gay
was hit, he lunged forward for positive
yards.
"Jamel, Ben and Jam es dialed it up,"
coach Ilutch Davis sa-id, throwing Jackson 1nto th e mix. "There wa s definitely some electricity when those guys
were carrying the ball ."
Couc h was sharp, completing I 0-of14 passing for 119 yards, including a
25-yarder to Darrin Ch iawr ini . He
was denied a touchdown when hi s
throw eluded the grasp of Lenzie Jackson in the end zone.

..

Based on the sc rimm age to rnut, th e
Browns won by scoring five unconverted touchdowns -- four of them
coming during goal-line dr.ills - to
Buffalo's two.
The Bills offense as a whole, behind
quarterback Rob John son, appeared
more ready than the Browns to start
the sc rimmage, needing only I 0 plays
to score a wuchdown .
That wasn't th e case when the first
unit took the field again in the fourth
of five series, as Johnson was sacked five
times in 12 plays.
llills coac h Gregg ·Williams blamed
himself, saying he shouldn 't have sent
Johnson back out ati:er spending an
hour standing on the sideline.
The Brown.&lt; saw things differently..
Lineman Keith McKenzie said he
and his Cleveland teammates were
geared up for their second tim e out,
kicking themselves over their sluggish

Mike Sellers, the 275~pound halfback, was a factor blocking and receiving. He had three catches for 23 yard&lt;,
including one for a touchdown in a
goal-line drill . Sellers dropp ed one
Couch pass on which he could have
initial performance.
gone the di stance of 51 yards.
.
.

·

Maddox, who signed with
the Steelers on June 12. "It's
'What have you done forme
lately?' So I'm just going to
con tinue to try to get better
and better and play w.ell.
''I'm excited about going
out ahd playing well, but
now I'm just looking forward to the next game."
Maddox, who spen t time
with th e Denver Broncos,
Los Ange les Ranis, Atlanta
Falcons and New York
Giants, struggled early in ·
·Pittsburgh's training camp,
but became more co mfortable with the Steelers'
offense. in the days leading
up to the preseason opener.
Fans already re calling for .
him to sta rt the next game.
They can call all t~ey want _
to," Maddox said. "I know
why I'm here and what I'm
here to try to do.
·
"Kardell's going to be the
starter and hopefully he' ll
have a really good year."
:
- ~-·

f

�Nation • World

•

5

The Daily Sentinel

11

-

New York tackles rats

en
f't
l&gt;t
od
ng
Dn
hl
ch '
:et

as
1d
ny

WASHINGTON (AP) - More than
l3.3 million immigrants settled in the
United States between 1990 and 2000,
pushing the country's foreign-born population above 30.5 million, a Census
Bureau survey reveals.
More than one in four immigrants
came from Mexico. And 9.8 million
school-age children - or 18 percent of
aU those between ages 5 and 17 -spoke
a language other than English at home in
2000; the' 1990 census placed the share at
14 percent.
Estimates from the wide-rangi ng·Census 2000 Supplementary Survey released
Monday come as lawmakers and advocacy groups debate how to shape policy on
immigration and bilingual education.
The statistics on language spoken at
home reflect youngsters who receive
most of their formal education in English, but speak a second language with

"As a result: urban rat control in many communities is
approached in a complaint-oriented basis, and that will not
solve the problem," he said.
Rats are more than a nuisance. During the 14th century, they
helpe~ spread the bubonic plague through Europe. And more
recently they have been known to carry diseases such as typhus
or leptospirosis, a potentially serious bacte'rial illness.
"A mouse in your house or a rat- they could potentially kill
you;' said Robert Corrigan, a R.ichmond, Ind., rodent specialist. "We are competing on this earth with rats."

M
m
'Ot

their families
Close to seven in I 0 of those children
spoke Spanish at home, and two-thirds of
that group rated themselves as speaking
English very ' well. Fluency declines as
people get older, as 50 percent of those
age 18 to 64 who spoke Spanish at home
described themselves as fluent in English.
Meanwhile, the total foreign-born
population made up about 11 percent of
the country's household population of
273.4 million. The results were in line
with earlier estimates.
William Frey, a demographer with the
Milken Institute think tank, said the survey data also lent support to 2000 census
figures showing rapid minority population growth in states beyond California
and New York.
Survey information was gathered separately from the 2000 census and provides estimates of demographic trends

•Code Reel II' worm reported

Onlookers 'helped him to shore, where he collapsed. He
wrote his room number into the sand before he passed out.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A new, destructive worm similar
Hotel officials then called Mrs. Thompson.
to Code Red, which infected computers around the world last
" He knew that was the only way they were going to find me
week, is spreading through the Internet, but authorities aren't
in time," his wife said. "He is so brave. To fight off a shark and
sure how much damage it has done.
then think to do that."
The new worm, dubbed Code Red II, moves faster than
Code Red but can still -be stopped by downloading. a software
patch for some Microsoft operating systems, security officials
said Sunday.
FORT WALTON BEACH, Fla. (AP) -A weakening TropCode Red II attacks the same Internet-connected computers
ical Storm Barry plowed deep er into the Florida Panhandle
that were vulnerable to Code Red in the same fashion. Instead
early Monday, lashing the Gulf Coast with heavy rain but sparof just defacing Web sites and trying to spread itself, however, ing residents from hurricane-force winds.
the ·new worm leaves a "back door" open on infected comput"The main thing we're concerned with now is the flooding,"
ers.
said Trisha Wallace; a meteorologist with the National Hurri"This makes the computer available to whoever wants to get
cane Cen-ter in Miami. "It is moving so slowly it'll just continin," said Russ Cooper ofTruSecure Corp., a computer security ue to sit and dump rain."
firm. "Anyone who finds one of these boxes can do anything
Hurricane warnings from Apalachicola westward to Fort Walthey want to it."
ton Beach were downgraded by the hurricane center to a tropCode Red II began spreading around the Internet on Saturday morning. Despite its name, Code Red II is not a "variant"
of Code Red, but a completely new worm. Still, it infects via
the same hole in some Microsoft operating systems.
"It won't affect machines that have already been patched,"
Cooper said." Anyone who took precautions against Code Red
should be safe against Code Red II."

s

Barry moves onshore

o•ill
ti14
a

'3
s.
;es .

45 .
to
es,
ill!

;es
;es
k- .

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•Delegation commemorates 'the bomb'
1

nIt-

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sunday was just another Sunday
for almost everybody in the world. But for Fumiko Amano, the
56th anniversary of the day an atomic bomb destroyed her
home in Hiroshima rekindled memories of"a kind of hell."
. Amano was joined by fellow survivor Keiko Hara in a ceremony at the Lincoln Memorial to remember those killed by the
bomb, dropped by the Urured Sc.res on Aug. 5, 1945.
"The primary reason for doing this is to keep alive the mem, ories of Hiroshima and Nagasaki," said John Steinbach, co-con. vener in Washington of the Gray Pan-thers, a multi-issue advocacy group. "The Hibakusha (atomic bomb survivors) are very
concerned that the world is going to forget Hiroshima and
Nagasaki."
Approximately 140,000 people died at Hiroshima and an
estim•ted 70,000 more perished in the second bombing in
Nagasaki three days later. The two bombings marked the effective end ofWorld War II.Japan surrendered within two weeks,
onAug.15,1945.
According to Amann and Hara - who were 14 and 5 years
old, respectively, when the bomb was dropped - the ceremony was not just about remembering those who died. Hara ~id
. she wants to spread the message that "we should abolish nuclear
weapons, because there is no way they can coexist with
humankind. I hope there is no more Hiroshima, no more
Nagasaki, no more Hibakusha!"

1

at,
sted
rm

1al ·
dyns .

•·

or
to

yke
:el
:I-

Senator sees 'good-old-boy'

in

WASHINGTON (AP) -The head of the Senate Judiciary
Committee said Sunday that belated revelations the Justice
Department rejec'ted recommendations to censure former FBI
Director Lol,lis Freeh are evidence of a persistent "good-oldboy" network at the bureau.
·
Stephen j. Colgate, a former assistant attorney general, said
that he decided against disciplinary action against Freeh in connection with the FBI's investigation of its 1992 siege at Ruby
Ridge because "I just didn't think it was necessary."
"Freeh was a small part of it," Colgate said in a telephone
interview Saturday with The Associated Press. "I stand by my

ur ·

ng
ut
el:

decision.'"

·

Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy ofVermont, chairman of the
Judiciary Committee, complained that the decision regarding
Ruby Ridge was "shrouded in secrecy."
"It appears from tltis that the 'good-old-boy' network has
been allowed to persist at the FBI," Leahy said in a statement.
"It serves to protect some senior FBI executives from the same
scrutiny and discipline applied to rank-and-file agents who are
not part of 'the club.'
"This double standard is unfair and demoralizing, but with
strong new leadership at the FBI and some hands-on congressional oversight for a while, I expect this par1 of-the culture to
change.''

Man attacked by a shark

Spending.
limits · _·
getting
dose to vote

WASHINGTON (AP) House supporters o(limiting
campaign
spending are
within reach of trying to
force a vote on the issue,
aided by IS Republicans
defying their OJ&lt;Yn leaders._
In just one week befote
Congress left for its August
recess, 205 House members
signed a discharge petition.-.
That is a rarely used procedure for bringing a bill to
the ·House floor when the
chamber's
leaders
are
unwilling to do so.
Supporters of the campaign finance legislation by
Reps. Christopher Shays, RConn., and Marty Meehan,
D-Mass., need only 13 more
signers to achieve their goal
of 218, a majority of the
House and the figure needed
to force action on their petition.
"I'm energized by the
remarkable progress in such
a short period of time,"
Meehan said. He noted that
it took six months to reach a
similar level in a 1998 petition· drive. ·
"We thought 185 would
be great" for the first week,
Shays said. "Over 200 is fantastic.'' He said he expected
four or five more Republicans to sign on and "when
we get back in September
we'll have our 13."
Over Congress' August
vacation, Meehan and Shays,
as well as the sponsors of the
parallel Senate bill, Sens.
john McCain, R-Ariz., and
Russ Feingold, D- Wis., will
.be calling colleagues they
feel are most likely to join
their cause. Groups such as
Common Cause and the
Sierra Club will also be try- .
ing to drum up support for
the biggest change in campaign spending_ rules in a
quarter-century.
Discharge petitions are
uncommon because of the
reluctance to go against
one's own party leaders . The
last successful discharge petition came in 1994, when
lawmakers
forced
·the
Democrats then in control
of the House to give them a
vote on a balanced budget
amendment to the Constitu-

MIAMI (AP) - · A New York man celebrating his &gt;yedding
anniversary in the Bahamas had part of his left leg amputated
after being attacked by a shark.
·Krishna Thompson, a 36-year-old Wall Street banker, was in
critical condition at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami on
Monday morning, said spokeswol{lan Victoria Zambrano.
"He ·was jus[ swimming .o ff the beach when something, a
shark, grabbed his leg and started pulling him down," Ave Maria
Thompson, Thompson's wife, told The Miami Herald for ty!onday editions. "He kept punching and punching. He has cuts on
his hands because of that."
The Thompsons had been celebrating their 1Oth wedding
anniversary during a vacation to Freeport, Grand Bahama. On
Saturday, Krishna Thompson went alone into the water.
After struggling with the shark, Mrs.Thompson said her husband managed to free himself and swam to shore using only his
right leg because the other was mangled.
tion.

'

expected to be reflected in additional
census data due out next ye•r.
The survey also covers topics such as
income and poverty, educational attainment, commuting times and fertility. It is
not considered a substitute for the official 2000 census figures.
Much of the recent attention on the
census fro!" Congress and the White
House has focused on figures that
showed the Hispanic population grew 58
percent during the 1990s to 35 million.
Hispanics now rival non-Hispanic blacks
as the nation's largest minority group.
The new numbers offer more evidence of the diverse makeup of America's youth and show the need to expand
bilingual education programs, said . Lis~
Na:varette of the National Council of Lt
Raza, the nation's largest Hispanic advo.;
cacy group.

ical storm warning early Monday.
At 5 a.m. EDT, the storm's center was about 20 _miles north
of Crestview, just south of the Alabama border. Barry was moving north at 9 mph and maximum sustained winds were near '
65 mph, with some higher gusts.
Forecasters expected Barry to steadily weaken as the storm
spiraled was over land. A tropical storm is designated a hurricane when its sustained wind sp~ed reaches 7 4 mph.
Rain concerns continued across the Gulf Coast, with flood
warnings issued for portions of Franklin, Liberty and Wakulla
counties in northern Florida.
Wallace said that heavy rainfall of eight to 10 inches could be
-expected in)lorthern Florida , southern Alabama and Georgia,
while flooding was likely in portions of those areas. Isolated tornadoes were a possibility in the Panhandle.
Barry is the second named storm of the 200 I Atlantic hurricane season. The storm already had dumped more than a foot
of rain on parts of florida before moving into the Gulf ofMex~

ico.

THURSDAY, AUDUIT 23, 2001 ·
• IDUTHERI • MEIDl • EAITERI

Inside:

un the P8dres, 10-9
MONDAY's

·HIGHLIGHTS Terry Glenn
skips practice
SMITHFIELD, R.I. (AP)
New England Patriots
wide receiver Terry Glenn,
suspended for the team's first
four regular-sel!Son games for
violating the NFL's substance
abuse policy, did not attend
practice Sunday.
uHe was not at practice and

he was supposed to be. It wa.&lt;
an unexcused absence," team

spokesman Stacey James said.
James said the team did not
know Glenn's whereabouts
on Sunday. He refused to
Comtnent on the consequences Glenn could face for
missing practice.

Bears still
uncertain at QB
CHICAGO (AP) -. An
overtime victory against the
Cincinnati Bengals did little
to determine who will start at
quarterback for the Chicago
Bears.
"It's still early in the competition and we will keep
going," coach Dick Jauron
said following a 16- 13 win
Saturday-night. ·
Shane Matthews played just
the first quarter and was 2-of4; Cade McNown ran the
team for two quarters and was
9-of-15 with a touchdown
pass, fumbled snap and a couple of batted- down p~ses; and
four!h-teamer Danny Wuerffel was 12-of-20 and set up
Paul Edinger's game-winning
48-yard field goal.
Jim Miller, another contender for the starter's job,
didn't play. He's been out
since hurting his hamstring
the first day of training camp.

RACINE - The Southern Athletic Boosters will
hold their mo~thly meeting
Wednesday in the high school
cafete ria at 6 p.m.
All sports parents, booster
members, community members, and interested parties
should attend the August 8
meeting.

Pakwins
women's Bntish

Open

ADVERTISING DEADLINE- J'HURSDAY, -AUGUST ~6, 2001- 5:00P.M.

The Daily Sentinel
'

SUNNING DALE, England
(AP) - Se Ri Pak eagled the
first hole 'and birdied the last
two to win the Women's
.. British Open by two strokes
and move within one victory
of the career Grand Slam.
.. Pak, a four-time winner this
year, finished with a 6-under
66 for an 11- under total of
277 at Sunningdale to add
golf's newest major to her
1998 U.S. Open and LPGA
Championship titles .
Mi Hun Kim finished second, giving South Korea its
first 1-2 finish in a major. Kim
closed with a 7 I.

•••••

Catch all the news on your
favorite sports teams - prep,
college, and pro - in The
Daily Sentinel.

Call Dave or Debbie at 992-2155
For More Information

.,

Page·ar
Monday, Aucust &amp;, 1001

·meet .

Q!__ _

The Daily Sentinel

Greene still the fasteSt, Page 83
Complete Brickyard results, Page 83
Diamond Roundup, Page 86

Southem
boosters to

.
I

Monday, August 6,1001

Survey offers·glimpse .into immigration

WASHINGTON (AP) - In New York City, officials held a
Rat Summit and appointed a rodent task force. Sightings of the
furry critters in Clticago h•ve shot up by more than 10,000. A
Houston exterminatm even witnessed--• police. officer- with-loaded pistol chasing a rat through • house.
An across urban America, rats are scurrying in larger numbers
and gnawing at the nerves of city dwellers, prompting federal
disease specialists to seek new solutions.
,
Health experts say the problem can be traced to a decision
rwo decades ago ro reduce federal funding for rodent control,
and more recently to ever-tightening city government budgets.
"The resurgence of the problem in recent years is connected
to cities having to make hard choices about what their priorities are," said Jerry Hershovitz of the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, or CDC, in Atlanta.

"

Page A&amp;

SAN DIEGO (AP) Todd Walker wasn't sure
how much longer he could
last.
,
With fatigue setting in,
Walker hit a bloop single in
the eighth inning that
brought in the winning
rijn, leading the Cincinnati
Reds to a wild I 0-9 win
Sunday over the San Diego
Padres.
After having played in all
14 games since being traded by Colorado to Cincinnati on July 20, Walker was
due for a rest. But the Reds
second
baseman
was
inserted into the lineup by
manager Bob Boone.
"I really was considering
giving him a day off,"
Boone said, "because he's
played every day here and
he played a lot with Colorado before.''

"I'm glad he didn't,"
Walker said. "I was fine
until the seventh, then I
was exhausted. It was a
tough day out there."
· Walker's hit helped
decide a game that lasted 3
hours and 39 minutes.
Cincinnati blew leads of
5-0, 5-3 and 8- 7. The
Padres wasted a 7-5 lead
after six innings and again
when they took a 9-8 lead

Please SH RHS, B3

NOT THE NFL, BUT CLOSE -Cincinnati 's Adam Dunn collides with Padres' catcher Wiki Gonzalez at the plate Sunday. Dunn
was safe on the play and Gonzalez was taken out of the game. (AP)

Maddox
retum a

Rainbow Warrior
holds on to lead
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Thirty-five laps into the Brickyard 400, Jeff' Gordon wasn't sure what was wrong with his
car. ~
It was sliding in the corners and struggling in the· straightaways, and he was losing positions fast on the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway oval.
Gordon's solution: Get in finnt of the traffic.
One hundred laps later, the three- time Winston Cup
champion cut inside Sterling Marlin on a restart and zipped
into the lead. Gordon never trailed again Sunday, going on to·
win by about I 0 car lengths over Marlin.
"The car just wasn't very good in traffic," said Gordon, the
race's first three-time winner. "I knew we were making
adjustments, and I didn't think the adjustments were doing
too much. I thought all we really needed was to be up front."
Officially, the victory margin of Gordon's Chevrolet was
0.943 seconds over Marlin's Dodge, but th e win appeared
much more impressive.
Gordon started 27th, farther back than any previo us winner in the event's eight-year history. The poor handling of hi s
No. 24 in the early going also forced Gordon, who celebrated ltis 30th birthday on Saturday, to rely on experience and
instinct to earn a win he didn't think possible at the start.
"I didn't feel good, not good at all," Gordon said, referring
·to his Hendrick Motorsports car. " I was falling back at times
.in the beginning and the car started to slip and slide around.
I didn't know what to tell them.''
Finally, Gordon told .Robbie Loomis, his crew chief, to
stop working on the car and that he would work on gaining
track posiclion.
Marlin, hoping to give Dodge its first victory since its
return to NASCAR's top series after a 16-year absence,
wound up matching John Andretti for the best fini sh so far SECOND HOME -Jeff Gordon celebrates after climbing
by the new Intrepids. He remained fo!Jrth in the standings, out of his car after winning his third Brickyard 400 at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Sunday, Aug. 5, 2001: (API
232 points behind the leader.

·success

LATROBE , Pa . (AP) - .
Tommy Mad&lt;jox heard alf.
the jokes that went with
being the MVP of the .
defunct XFL. Now, he might ·
get the last laugh.
·
Less than four months
after leading the Los Angeles:
Xtreme to the XFL championship, Maddox made a successful return to the NFL albeit in a preseason game. ·
The 29-year-old journey-man quarterback completed
six of 10 passes for 78 yards
and a touc own Friday,:
hel
th
ttsburgh Steelm rally past Michael Vick,
the No. 1 pick in NFL draft,
and the Atlanta Falcons 17"
16.
After starting quarterback
Korde]l Stewart and Kent
Graham led the Steelers to a
cori1bined total of 50 yards
and zero points, Maddox
made an immediate impact

when he en tered the game
in the third quarter. He led
the Steelers to a. touchdown
and a fi eld goal in hi! only
series.
"I know how it goes," said

Browns' reserve runners get looks
EDINBORO, Pa. (AP) - Running
backs Jamel White and Ben Gay could
be getting a longer look after productive efforts in a scrimmage agaimt the
Buffalo Bills.
White
accounted
for 51 yard&lt; on one
series, taking Tim
Couch r~ccptions for
18- and 17-yard gains,
and running 15 yards
with a handoff'. He
completed the series
by squeezing over the
goal line
I yard.
Davis
_"jamel White came
in and made things happen ," Couch
said.
The next series, the pro-Browns
crowd chanted, "We want Ben," and
then stood and cheered as Gay finally
was inserted into the action . The man
now being called "Legend" by team mates responded with a 14-yard run on

from

his first carry.
Gay also had runs of 5 and I yard,
and gained 13 and 10 on short passes
from Spergon Wynn . Each time Gay
was hit, he lunged forward for positive
yards.
"Jamel, Ben and Jam es dialed it up,"
coach Ilutch Davis sa-id, throwing Jackson 1nto th e mix. "There wa s definitely some electricity when those guys
were carrying the ball ."
Couc h was sharp, completing I 0-of14 passing for 119 yards, including a
25-yarder to Darrin Ch iawr ini . He
was denied a touchdown when hi s
throw eluded the grasp of Lenzie Jackson in the end zone.

..

Based on the sc rimm age to rnut, th e
Browns won by scoring five unconverted touchdowns -- four of them
coming during goal-line dr.ills - to
Buffalo's two.
The Bills offense as a whole, behind
quarterback Rob John son, appeared
more ready than the Browns to start
the sc rimmage, needing only I 0 plays
to score a wuchdown .
That wasn't th e case when the first
unit took the field again in the fourth
of five series, as Johnson was sacked five
times in 12 plays.
llills coac h Gregg ·Williams blamed
himself, saying he shouldn 't have sent
Johnson back out ati:er spending an
hour standing on the sideline.
The Brown.&lt; saw things differently..
Lineman Keith McKenzie said he
and his Cleveland teammates were
geared up for their second tim e out,
kicking themselves over their sluggish

Mike Sellers, the 275~pound halfback, was a factor blocking and receiving. He had three catches for 23 yard&lt;,
including one for a touchdown in a
goal-line drill . Sellers dropp ed one
Couch pass on which he could have
initial performance.
gone the di stance of 51 yards.
.
.

·

Maddox, who signed with
the Steelers on June 12. "It's
'What have you done forme
lately?' So I'm just going to
con tinue to try to get better
and better and play w.ell.
''I'm excited about going
out ahd playing well, but
now I'm just looking forward to the next game."
Maddox, who spen t time
with th e Denver Broncos,
Los Ange les Ranis, Atlanta
Falcons and New York
Giants, struggled early in ·
·Pittsburgh's training camp,
but became more co mfortable with the Steelers'
offense. in the days leading
up to the preseason opener.
Fans already re calling for .
him to sta rt the next game.
They can call all t~ey want _
to," Maddox said. "I know
why I'm here and what I'm
here to try to do.
·
"Kardell's going to be the
starter and hopefully he' ll
have a really good year."
:
- ~-·

f

���Page

84 • The Dally Sentinel

Mondey,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

Monda~Aug.6,2001

AUSI. 8, 2001

~··

.

Pomeroy, ~lddleport, Ohio

..

The Dail y Sentinel • P~ge_ 8 5
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1f,at. ~~

NOTICES
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CASE NO. 01 --cv-*7
Beneftclal Ohio, Inc.
dbalanaftclal
Mortgage Co. o!Ohlo
Plalntll1

premlseo, lor the
amount owing; that ·
tho Defendants equity
of redempllon be
foreclosed; that all the
parties be requlrad to
answer as to their
lntoroot, -In ,aid ',

~CAN
·~

Q

V
.,

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KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
IIIRROR'TlCHNOI.OOY
- KE£111 TH!--

GRAVEL

SAND

BLOCKS OUTtU%

LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

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fACTORY DIRECT

METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR l REWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

WINDOW
SYSTEMS

1-800·291-5600
• PomeroYz.2J;!
fREE .. HOllE UTIIIATII • "HEINO tl IElJlVIIIG• •

33795 HiltmJ RJ.

. 'Rutland, Ohio

Whoae leat known priorities determlnedi
addreaa Ia unknown, that said premlaea be

Chester, Ohio

7.o-t85·4281

(740) 742-8888

flrat ravine Weat of the unknown: and upon

aald Southaaat corner
of uld aactlon
daacrlbad aafollowo:
Beginning at tho
Eaat corner of hall
acre lot oold and
conveyad to Jonah
Raeoe of Mlnorovlllo;
thence North 35" Eall
62 112 teeli thence

mOde

Paris, whose name•
North ss· West one and addreaaea are

hundred and oeventy· unknown
tour (174) feet: thence
You ora hera by
South '35 (ale) Wast notllled that you have
named
alxty·two and on•hall been
(12 112) to tho North Dolendanto In the
comer of uld Jonah action entitled Gayle
Reese lot; thanca H. Prlca, 11 al.,
South llfty·rlve (55') Plalntll1o, vo. Lillian
degraeo Eut ona W. Dennla, et al.,
hundred ooventy·four Defendanto. Thlo
(174) to the place of action hu bean
beginning, oxcoptlng; anlgnod Cue No.
the coal tha!eln and 01.CV·I14, an.d 11
the right to mine the pending In the Court
of Common Plaaa of
10me.
PARCEL NUMBER: Melgo County, .Ohio.
111-00760, t6-00749
The object of tho
PROPERTY
Complaint demanda
ADDRESS: 32045 lhatthetltleln and to
Welohton
Road , the oil and gao be
Mlnerovllla, OH 45769 qulatad In the
Alto known ao Plaintiff, Gayle H.
32045
Welohtown Price and Edna Price,
Road, Mlnorovlllo, end lhot tho oil and
Ohio 45781, and that gao lntareoto of tho
there remolna due and Delandanll
be
owing $24,838.74 with declared abandoned,
lntereot at 15 .492 or In tha allarnatlva,
percent per annum that tha Court
from July t, 2000, end partition the on end
coo to: thot tho goo lnterall and/or
delendanto named In order tho oame aold
the Complaint may with regard to the
hava an lnte..,ot In following deocrlbed
nld
property· raole-o:
tharalore, . Plalnllli . Tho following
domando thet 11 be deacrlbad real eatata
In tho
found to hova a good olluata
oI
valid end oubolollng Town I hIp
lion on uld pramiHI Labonon, In the
lgr the omount owing: County of Malgo end
lha• tho Dolandant~ Stela of Ohio, viz:
equity of rldamptlon Bounded northe~y by
be
volld
ond tho Ohio Alvar, eaot
aubolotlng lien on tald ~!m~~~ w•:.~:• ,:'~

0

\

commence "n that
date. In the caae or

S• c o nd

Ave.,

'MIII92-1121
lllfl'll

H8-11112-1121

;
--,__.-..-

\
r

'a

Cellular

.·,.

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

·:•,

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
A,~

/

YOV OUT OF
S'IG~T Oil
OuT Of
MINI&gt;?

,, ,

,'

THE BORN LOSER

"'

PRffii~E '(OJ "'~

M.'( ~WITH
Tl\t. EJ"P..D'(ff..':&gt; 1':&gt; /1..

TU"_tv

WON'\ Y-'f.£.N/\ 7

'u;..,-.... 11~'

1-IOG-Z5JI.ll07'7
Residentiol Commercial New C~on
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• -!ipecialbJ.. In Sheet Mtlll Dudwwll
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your lallure to anower that the Ilona and/or
Flat Work,
or otherwlao roapond lntaroota In or on llld Replacemenu, 'Wolka
ao raquaated by tha property, 11 any, be
ond Drives • Stencil , All Makes '1\"actor &amp;
Ohio Ruloo of Civil · marohelled and tho C.-.lel'lft Eldmotes
Equipment Ports
Procedure, ludgmant · real aotata title Servtn1 Ohio ond w.v,
by default will bo qulotad end oold
wv lll3t71l
Factory Authorized
..,ndaracl agalnll you . property oold In tho .__..-.;.;.;;;..;.;.;;;._ _,
ca.e.JHParts
and for tho rallof lorecloouro action · · · - ,
domandad In the and all omounto duo r:~='=~='=''l
Dealers
Complaint.
· Plaintiff be paid from
1000 St Rl. 7 South
Dated thlo 8th day the procaado of tho
o1 July, 2001.
tale.
Coolville, OH 45723
Hauling &amp;
You""' r.qulred to
748117.0111
Marlene Harrloon
anoworthe Complaint
Marlena Harrlaon, within twenty·alght
Clerk ofCourto
(28) days otter lhl
toot publication of
thla NoUce, which will Haullna • Umestone
By; Monico F,.man
ba publlohad once
VOUB ·
• Gravel Sand •
.Deputy Clortc
each - k for llx (8)' ToJIIOII • Flll Dirt
IUCCIIIIVI WalkO.
CONCRETE
•Mulch
7123 • 30• (&amp;) 8• 13 • 27
Tho tall publlcotlon
will be m - on tho Bulldozer Services
CONNECTION
Public Notice
13th day of Aug,
2001, and tho twenty·
'IV
Quality Driveways,
alghl (28) daya lor ~.,;,_.;.._ _ _ _..
Patios, Slcfewalka.
IN THE COMMON
an ower
will
PLEAS COURT OF
commence on that
25 years experience
MEIGS COUNTY,
date. In tho caoo of
FrH Estimates
OHIO
your follu"' to aMwer
or otherwloo roopond
740.742·8015 Jr
at roqu1111d by tho
BARBARA PAYNE,
Ohio Rulao of Civil
1-877-353-7022
EXECUTRIX
Procedure, ludgmant
OFTHEESTATEOF
by dafoull will be
LUCILLE U.
rendared aaalnat vou
KING AKA LUCILLE
and lor tho rallof
. KING, DECEASED
demondod In tho
PLAINTIFF
Complolnt.
CASE NO. 01 .CV·102
Doted thla 8th day
of Juna, 2001,
·v•
Marlene Horrloon,
RANDY E. KING,
Clerk of Courto
EXECUTOR OF THE
(7) I, Ul, 23, 30, 2001
ESTATE OF ROLAND
(8) 8, 13, 2001

PARft

WICK'S

4\Exc:i

{7Jfl) 992-3470
Advertise

Lie. #00·50 ·

·Howardl.

Wrltesel
Home
Malntenanc•

Rooting •

.:PEANUTS

•

'1'~Ail, OUR TEAC~ER EXPECTS

US TO READ FOUR BOOKS
THIS
.. WEIRD, ·I-IUH?

WELL, JUST REMEMI!ER, WHEN
I{OU'RE READIN6, TME LI61-1T

SHOULD COME FROM OVER
'(OUR LEFT

5140ULDER ..

MAKE THIN&lt;:.!&gt;
60 MOR:E

.

calmly discarded

JU5T

EXCU5E I NEED,
CIHICK ...
TI-lE LAMPS
IN OUR HOUSE ARE ON
TI-lE WRONG 5117E !

a

hearf loser from hand,
leaving East endplayed. With only
clubs in his hand , East
had to . cash the

~ ""
".'

Yes, East missed his
chance. He had to
throw· the. heart king

•

•

••
I

•••

....

'

Tire Barn
Pomeroy

.'
•
•
•'
'

J'

21'l11 mopd

'"
,,.

.--------... .

,

Advertise in -·
this space
-·
$100 per
mon
·.
'

•

•

Spout
F,., &amp;tlmlltH

3 Guma
4 Muolclan
John 5 Part ola
atop
6 lola ond
loto
7 Conductor
Eugene 8 Almanac

19 More

work

acore

extensive

expert

27 Neighbor of

Md.
32 Wooden
tub
34 Hilton Head
and Block
35 Como

~ul1fx

_

known lor
111 down
45 Gorilla

20 Ms. Dahl
Folley
22 Anchored 47 Muslcol
23 Mainly
Homo
24 Vln1111r
48 Juno
25 Bribe to a
honoree
disc Iockey 49 President

entry

monlh

Lincoln

50 Singing

s yllable
52 "Aofar·- know"
53 Pl. ol AT&amp;T
54 Kind ol

forth

curve

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from Quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each •tter k1 the cipher stands tor another.

Today's clue: N equals P

'X

Hill'• _Self
Sttr111 ·. .
'•

21870 llllhln ROlli
Aeclna, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217
Slztt5'x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

7:00AM ··8:00 PM

'

.''•

under his partn~r's ace
. at trick one. Then
West can play two
more rounds of the
suit with effect. It w as
a tough play to make,
but not impossible , as
perhaps you saw last
Wednesday.

zvc

UJV

LI DH

PZC

NRZYHA

AHHV

ll D H

RHAA

L IV H B

0 XE P

XU

E P Z V

X

DIYTHUHRRHD.'

OZA

' AZEYPHR'

RHDIB

NZ X M H

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Humor is just a nolher defense
against the

"I loved
'I

universe. ~-

!~ogene .

Mel Brooks

I really did. -

Sid Caesar

n••

.........,.._• .

T~~~:t;~Y S©"\\J11A-~£~S® ~:!:
_ld;ltd by CLAY 1. ~OUAN _;;,__ _ __

0 four
Rearrange letters cf
scrambled words

l

otherwtse, dec arer
would have finessed
dummy's 10 on the

.SMOOTHLY.

"!!!!!~!!.!:.!...;=:~~:;:;;=:!:;;":~=~::J

HOURS: lion

21 Edible

13 "lookl"
t B Sedative

38 Plrillll duck 9 Bond
40 HebreW
1o Language

clttb jack. W est covered with the king;-

•

•

740.992·5344

1 UK brood·
c11ters
2 Do farm

Iuber
30 - of Wight
31 Homeric
tplc
33 Artlat•o
workshop
38 Actor
Kruger
37 Pertect

Hamman jump ed to
game b ecause h e expected partne r' s val ues to be outside
hearts .
W est led the h eart
ace , whi c h w o uldn't
have been my c hoice .
(A spad e or di amond
lead b eats the contract
with b es t d e fe n se.)
West continued with
a second heart to hi s
partner' s kin g. Ea st
switc hed to the diamondjack.
. Hamman
b e gan
with nine tricb: five
spades (three tops and
a ruff in ·eac h hand) ,
three diamonds and
one club. Since heart
ruffs in the dummy
were clearly unavailable and diamonds
weren' t .3-3, the b attle was on for a second club trick.
Hanunan won with
the diamond a c e ,
drew• tfllnfp$ "' ending

queen, then give a
trick to dununy's 10.

Fully ln•urwd

in this
space
on
for
and
CUIUiig edge•••
plumbing.
•so per Raadtha
Terry Lamm
992-0739
month ClassUiad Ads

'

JUST To

,,' I

44087 Wlpple Road

26 Buddy, out
Weal
28 Auction-Hr'l word

second round. After
taking West's king
with dummy's ace,
Hamman played three
rounds of diamonds.
tr=!L..;;.:...-------" However, instead of
·r uffing the ' last, he

.,

Gutters- Down
949·1405
591·5011

~OUI'-.

GLOVE.!

THAT.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Pomeroy Eagl•
Club Bingo
On Thursday•
At 6:30p.m~
• Main Street
Pomeroy, Ot oio
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverull
Starburst
· Progressive top line

ON

RE~I&gt;IMG

.,..~

~

ExtUS£

LIKE

~OU ' RE

1·~75-1114

7A"--992-1671

l'u1

r::;;::=--""":;:;--:---;--, in hand, and led the
YOU WROTE

J&lt;Hwd n. s~up .-1 7lunt!'

Roc ky R Hupp , Agent
Box 189
Middleport Ohi o 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40)K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

l'M•I

o·l!':.....--..I.:..U.:.:....-....1 - South, D o b H amma n,
is a b ig fan of fo urcard nujors. . T h e n,
North's th ree hearts

lla-'

Stop l Compare
ES
FREE ESTIMAT

PM U

l'~t'"

_..., . ~

ELITE JIIECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

• Complete
Remodeling

P~tu

&lt;-•-~Ji ~~"!::- ~- --~ '' byF~~~~-d~~l~ ~idding.

'

'New Homes
, Gara-

Enl

La st wee k's colum ns we re ins pir ed

•,

East Stale Street Phone (140)593--6671
Athens, Ohio

Pa11

balanced minimun1,

Advertise in
this space for s100 per
.
month
"'

.
'r-"""'-----,

'

"

!

..'·

fREE ESTIMATES
(3114J 614-6100

N•Mh

, ,

39 Selflah one
43 Duck

mum pass w ith at least
four-card spade support: Despite h avin g a

I

• Conaoleum

Wul

11 Composer
Rorem

was a cue-bid ' ~ai se
announcing a max i-

111111111 &amp;

• Hardwood floorlna

•

DOWN

fe1ture

Two bites

~

'·
'-

WV0282120

lhDw

• Optnin g le1d: ¥ A

1·888·521..()916

FIUUDIIID

Middleport,
OH
45780, which 11 more
fully doocrlbod In
dead (ICordod In
Voluma 281, Paga CONTRACTORS, INC.
355, Malgo County ' ·Raclna, Ohio 45n1
Deld -Aiocordo, and
740-985-3948
cotta of thll action;
and that the land CONCRrn/BLO(!(/BRICK
lnetallment contract
be forecloaed and

~

55 Sc:rotch
56 Filla
57 College
hotahoto
56 Hiking
potho .\

15 Computer
In "20111"
t7 Fu, e.g.
18 Egga ;
21 Evlloplrll
23 Atlll

KQ I0 4
1 e• 3
II. Q I

zY

Pan

,.

motorcycle seats, boat covers, Cll!pCts, etc.

Complete Home ·
Repair
Remodeling
New Additions
Garages

··ROBERT BISSELL
, CONSTROOION

thla Notice, which will

S.ulh

••

COmACDIIll

.
lOUth by tho Ianda of E. KING, DECEASED,
,J amaa Larkeno and
ET AL.
Andrew Roooo and
DEFENDANTS.
weal by Ianda of
NOTICE BY
Spe,ncer Smith and
PUBLICATION
others 51 ac"'l 75
To: Llu D.
one hunclrod1ho of on Robinson aka Llu D.
acre, and tlv• acraa
King, whoM laat
part of 100 aero lot known add,....l o"'
No. 140, Sec. t4 &amp; t5,
Elberton,
and 8 acroo 50 one
Gaorgla, and 1053
hundredlho ac..,a, 23SR 588, Galllpollo,
112 acral and 14
OH 45831, preunt
ecrea parte of 100
add..,.. unknown,
ac"' lot No. 14 t, Sec.
and
14 &amp; 15 and 11-40/100
the unknown hairs,
acrea, pert of Sec. 21, next of kin, daYI1881, ·
840 acre lot No. 2 1.
lagateea,
All of tho above Iondo
admlnlllratora,
In Townahlp No. 3,
exocutora, personal
Ronga No. 11. .
repreeentatlvao,
It
baing tho apouee, and anlgno
Intention to lncluda,
of Llu D. Roblnoon
deacrlba and convoy
aka Llu D. King,
heroin oil "'ol aotote
whoa&amp;
locoted In M~lgo
odd..,...l ""'
County, Ohio, owned
unknown.
by
Vlrglnlo B.
You are hereby
Williamson at tho ·notlflad that you hovw
tlmo of her docoou b 1 en
n 1m 1 d
and bequeathed by Defendontl In lha
her to Lillian W. action
entllltd
Donnie ond Paul Barbara
Payne,
Wllllamoon.
Executrix of the
. ltlng the eame Eototo of Lucille M.
"'"I eotate conveyed . King, .deceuod,
to Clinton A. Smith Plolnttff, va. Randy E. ·
by Lllllon W. Dennie, King, Exacutor of the
ot al., by dud Eatoto of Roland E.
recorded In Daod King, doceaaed, et
Book 144 Pogo 826 of al., Dolendanta. Thlo
the Mtlga County action hat baen
Deed Recorda.
aaalgned Caoo No. 0
Excepting 1.238 1 -CV-102, and Ia
acre conveyed to tho pending In tho Court
Stale of Ohio b y - ol Common Pilot of
recorded In Volume Melgo County, Ohio.
102, Pogo 275, Mtlgo · The object of tho
County
Olflclal Complaint damando
Rocordo.
judgmant agalnot the
Rolorence D.. d: Dofendanta, In tho
Volume 115, Page 45 aum of $8,817.18, 11
1,MelgoCountyDHCI of October 1, 2000, ·
Reconlo.
with Interest at tho
Auditor'• Parcel :rote of 8.07% per
Noo.: 07·00803.000 annum, until fully
and 07-oo804.000.
paid; In order to
You ara r.qulred to loroclooe upon a
anowar tho Complaint breach ad
Ian d
within twanty·elght lnotallmanl contract
(28) daya altar the upon real aototo
tall · pubtlcotlon of . located at 127 S.

the unknown helro, ba publlohed once
next of kin, d&amp;vll88a, each week tor olx (8)
legateoo,
opouHo, auccenlvo waeko.
ouc-aoro
and _The loot publlcotlon
aulgno of Lillian w. will be
on tho
Dennlo, Samual S. 27th day of Augull
Dennlo,
Ill,
Paul 2001, and tho twenty·
Wllllam~on, Agnaa B. eight (28) dayo for
Wllll!_m_!on, and Bello 1 n 8 w 1 r
wIll

.•

51 Conceive

varlaty

+ On$

3 2

42 Shell
44 Mo. Sumac
45 Patriotic
org .
46 f'Woleum
45 Seeing ·-.
ooclally

15 Holtld 1

'

J 1e 9 I

Vulnerable. Neither

n•••

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

t

Dealer. West

convenible &amp; vinyl lops, Four wheeler seats,

Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

• Js ,

.. ,.

·,

Mon-Fri 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

2

A Q.I IO$

.
•
f

Truck seals, car seats, headliners, truck toups,

Ohio

IIIII MOI

6 2

E1lil

.. I( g

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

,JIM.' S
WOODSHED

Advertise your
message

Wut
¥

OU.LITY

barred from aSBertlng
any Interest therein;
that all Ilona on aald
premises
be
marshaled and their

Ia ha"'by notllled that sold
••
upon
Banellclal Ohio, Inc., execution and the
db a
Bonellclal procoedo of told oale
t.lortgogo Co. of Ohio be epplled according
flied a Complaint lor . to law, and for such
Money, Forecloaure other relief aa Ia Just
~~qultablo.
and other Equ I10 bl e 1 Delondanto llrot
f!allal on March 29, herelnabova
2001 ' Caoe No. 01 .CV· mantloned ora further
057 ' on the property .n otllltd that they ora
daacrlbad 11 lollowo:
EXHIBIT A
fOqulred to anawor
Slluatad In the _sold complaint on or
county of Malgo, In the belore 9/24101, which
State of Ohio ·and In lncludao l~nty ..lght
the Townahlp of (28) dayo fr.om the lost
Sallabury (Pomeroy dote of publlcotlon, or
VIllage) end bounded judgment may bo
and dea'crlbed 11 r • n d 1 r • d
a1
followo:
· d&amp;manded therein.
PARCEL 1:
The
FRANK &amp;
following rial eotata , WOOLDRDGE CO.,
situated In the County
L.P.A.
of Melgo In tho Stale
by Gregory D.
of Ohio' and In the Wooldridge (110040984)
township of Salisbury,
by D. L. Moina, Jr
and bounded and ,
(10001391)
deacilbed 11 follows: ' Attorney• lor Plalntll1
Tho following real 800 South Paart StrHI
estate In Sacllon No. Columbua, Ohio 43208
8t4-221·11182
.Eight In Townahlp No.
Two and Range No. ,(7) _23, 30, (8) 8, 13, 20,
Tlilrteen near tho 27,2001
South Eall corner of
aald Section on the , . Public Notice
North Weal old&amp; of the :
·
·
llrll revlno Well of the' IN THE COMMON
S.E. cornar of oald PLEAS COURT OF
Section and daacrlbad
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
81 followe:
Beginning ot the
GAYLE H. PRICE,
Ellllf comer or 0 lot
ET AL.
oold ond convayod to
Ebenezar Watklno of
PLAINTIFFS
i.ltnarovllle; thonca
_ North 35' Eoot 82 112
·••·
feet: thence North 55"
·wool 174 feet; thence LILLIAN W. DENNIS,
ET AL.
South 35" Wool 62 t/2
foot to tho North
corner of -sold . DEFENDANTS.
Ebenezar Watklno lot;
NOTICE BY
tha,.. South 55' Exit
PUBLICATION
174 feet to tho place of
beginning.
To: Lillian W. Dennie
Excepting the coal and
Samual
S.
thareln and the right Dennis, Ill whou lall
to·mlna the oame.
known addreoa Ia 52
PARCEL 2:
Eeaex Rd., Cheotnut
The following real Hill,
MA
02187,
addi'HIIo
aotata altuated In the P"'tant
Cdunty of Melgo, Stata· unknown;
Paul
oi Ohio, and In tho Wllllamoon
and
town of Pomeroy and Agnao B. Wllllamoon,
bounde d
a n d who11 lall known
daacrlbed ao lollowo, . add,.o lo Texas,
viz:
preHnt
add"'•••
Sactlon No. 8 In unknown;
Betta
Townahlp No. 2 and Porto, whooe loot
Ran go No. 13 nearthe known add rea a Ia
Southeaot corner of 4022 Meadow VIew,
11ld section on the Suitland, MD 20748,
Northwut old&amp; of lhe preHnl
addreoa

•

•A t

• K n
.....
"' ,

PRICIIIQ

74()..992-5232

Timothy T. Klaln etal
Defendants
Timothy T. Klein and .
Un k nown S pouao 0 I
Timothy T. Klein

••

OP D..t•GING

High&amp;! Dry
SeU-Storage
Po!IUI'O,)\

•

(poet.)

1 Poklatan'a
llenulr 7 Frequently
12 Short lackel
13 Makt Swill
-- . otuk, e.g.
14 Ended

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

-·

SINMERTlll! H!AT
OUT AND Ytii I!R
TIME HEAT IN

HELP

premises or be forever ·

v.• ·

·'

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

41 Balcre

the

be ·
low ro form four simp le words.

I

1--r-U--,Sr:-L,....T.,.I_Nr:;--i
z
~==-:;::·:::·::;;::~-~~-

.I

I I' I I I
---'
F UL
F I
8

I' I

1-·- . , . . . . - - , - , . . . . . , . . . - - , - : : - . ; ·

I
I

j•

If

L-..J..--l-..L.......L--1

I NNOO
1s
.

·

.

1
.

16
.

1
.

. fm

Married man to counselor: "I try·
to make my. marriage more exci t- :

I

AN y T I 0
~~P ·
1-:--r---r:-;;--,--:r--i
7
18

I.

I. I_ .I. e

but my wife always - • · - · · -

Comp lete the chuckle quoted
by fill1ng 1n tho missing words
L-...L-.L-....1.-.1--l-.J you de velop fro m ~tep No. 3 below .

.

.

PRINT NUMBERE D
'I:J LETTER S IN SQU ARES

,ft

SCRAM·Lm ANSWERS
Heckle - Bogey • Jerky · Outwit - GO to WORK
"Every morning ," the ad executive mus e d , "I look
through the list of the richest people in the cou ntry . If I'm
not on it, I know I must GO to WORK."

'
T uesday. Aug. 7, 2001

In wh .1tcver yo u· do m the
yc.u ahe.1 d. chances are things
will be do ne o n yo ur part o n
a giandc r ~ c a le th an yo lJ'vc
do ne the m in the past. T his
will take you to nc\v heig hts.

LEO (July 23 - Au g. 22) -Shou t it loud and dear today
if yo u have something won hy
to ann oun ce that you know
others would be in terested
hearing, They'll • II be read y
to jump on board. Tryi11p; to
patc h up a bro kc1l romanc e?
Th e Astro-Gra ph Ma tch make r ca n hel p yo u u nderstand what to' do .t(, ma_kc th e

relationship work. Mail S2.75
to M atchm aker, c/ o this
m•wspapcr, P.O . . Box 1758,
Murra_y H ill St:ai on, N ew
York, N Y 10 l ;6.
VJR.GO (Au g. 2'1-Sept. 22)
-- There is somcth inl:i: yo u can
do today that coulJ produce
benefhs for you as well .u for
others , albeit it you might
h ave to do so witho ut draw ing any attention to yourself.
Don 't hesita te .
LlllRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) - O nct' yo u get on a roll today , othcn who are d ow ha J
bcttt.·r ste p as id e. Y uu w o n' t
mind anyhody jumping on

·

board , but tf;ey·u have to be
pretty ~ harp tn do so .

SCORI'I O (Oct. 24-Nov .
22) -- Positive _mea sures can
be t:1kcn today to fu rther your
perso n al am bi ti OIU . You
won't have co keep a low
profi le o r bt.• fearful of rcvc ;~ l ­
ing yo ur in tentions . All .will
be in support.

SAGITT ARI US (Nov . 23D cr . 21 ) -- Express yoUr ideas
to th e fullest wdav to ·t hose
who yo u k now w~ ul d be rc Cl'ptive. N o t o nly will they be
am e nab le to your th oughts,

they'U bl' impre ssed as well.
C AP R ICO R N (Oec. 22Jan , 19) .. When establishing
you r obj ective~ today, don 't
be afraid to elevate them furthe r. Yo u will perform remarkably well wh en you p ush
yourself a bit hi gher th an
usual.

AQ UARI U&lt;; (J on . 20- Fcb

neither t ime nor mo tion m
pe rfo rmin g yo ur. ;t~s i gm n e r 1 ts
tOday. You r mo dus op erandi
will be extremely cfticic m :md
· productive .

AR.IES (March 21-April

I ~)

-- Al thol1 gh yo u r innate ins tin ct ~ are to oprra tt.• mdepcndcn t fro m oth e r~ . ~om c ­
timcs two heads n c hl'ttcr
t han one. T his cou ld be o ne
or'thosc days w hen w o rking
i n tandem i~ better.
TAU itUS (Apnl 20-Moy
2ll) - - From an u1 Hclli sh desire to do whar you o n to

help others tod .1r. you . .: uu ld
end up f l'Ct' i v!n g rewards fo r
whi ch "\'Ott d idn't ask n or cx pc (; t. Acn·p t t hem : yo\., '11
have dese rved tllt'!ll .

GE MINI (M,, y 2 1-Ju nc 20)
-- A p e rsn n who you
wou ld11't mind meetin g up
w ith ;~ gam h:~s somc tb111g inrctcm ng to di sc u1&gt;s w id1 you
and m:~.y coru act yo u tuday . It

cmdd rum out ro be ~, very.
tO rtu it o u ~

get- togethe r.

llJ) -- Today is the timr to
put all yo ur cards on the table
if there is an imp on;uh agreeme n t yn u need tn negotia te .
C hance s arc a q~1 i c k uil der standmg will be reached.

22) -- .T here's a good chance
you co ul d be showere d to day
with rn orc mat c n;~ l op po rtt!niti l' S t han u~ u al. Yo u won' t

l'I SC ES (Fob. 20-Morc h 20)

ha ve any troubl e knowing

- - Yo u 're not apt to

wa~ tc

CAN CER (J une 21 -July

what to do w ith t hem

�Page

84 • The Dally Sentinel

Mondey,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

Monda~Aug.6,2001

AUSI. 8, 2001

~··

.

Pomeroy, ~lddleport, Ohio

..

The Dail y Sentinel • P~ge_ 8 5
BRIDOIE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHII.!.iP
ACROSS

A LDER

YOUNG'S

WOLFE HOME
· MAINTENANCE

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room AddHion8 A

Free Estimates
&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,
Eloclrlcll, Plumbing
All Home Needs

R-llng

·-a.._
a

• Garages

• Patkt and Porch DecU

• Addntona
• Dock•
• Home Repllrl

• Electrical

Plumbing

• Roollng&amp;o.rtteno
• Ylnfl -ne a Pointing
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

--

Racine
Mower
- Clinic

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.
New H - • Villyl
Sldlaa• Ne,. G....,..
• RtpllctlltDI

Murray, MTD,
Echo, Oregon
Open
Mon-Frl 9-4:30
Sat. 9-12:00

Wlodows•a-.
Addltlolll • Roolllll

OOMII£IO.\l .. l!liiiiiii1Al
FREE ESTIMATES

740.949-1521 . 740-992-7599
Owner:

Free Estimates
740-992-1101
or 992-2753

Charlie Wolfe

(740) 949-2804

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

1f,at. ~~

NOTICES
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CASE NO. 01 --cv-*7
Beneftclal Ohio, Inc.
dbalanaftclal
Mortgage Co. o!Ohlo
Plalntll1

premlseo, lor the
amount owing; that ·
tho Defendants equity
of redempllon be
foreclosed; that all the
parties be requlrad to
answer as to their
lntoroot, -In ,aid ',

~CAN
·~

Q

V
.,

I

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
IIIRROR'TlCHNOI.OOY
- KE£111 TH!--

GRAVEL

SAND

BLOCKS OUTtU%

LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
fACTORY DIRECT

METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR l REWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

WINDOW
SYSTEMS

1-800·291-5600
• PomeroYz.2J;!
fREE .. HOllE UTIIIATII • "HEINO tl IElJlVIIIG• •

33795 HiltmJ RJ.

. 'Rutland, Ohio

Whoae leat known priorities determlnedi
addreaa Ia unknown, that said premlaea be

Chester, Ohio

7.o-t85·4281

(740) 742-8888

flrat ravine Weat of the unknown: and upon

aald Southaaat corner
of uld aactlon
daacrlbad aafollowo:
Beginning at tho
Eaat corner of hall
acre lot oold and
conveyad to Jonah
Raeoe of Mlnorovlllo;
thence North 35" Eall
62 112 teeli thence

mOde

Paris, whose name•
North ss· West one and addreaaea are

hundred and oeventy· unknown
tour (174) feet: thence
You ora hera by
South '35 (ale) Wast notllled that you have
named
alxty·two and on•hall been
(12 112) to tho North Dolendanto In the
comer of uld Jonah action entitled Gayle
Reese lot; thanca H. Prlca, 11 al.,
South llfty·rlve (55') Plalntll1o, vo. Lillian
degraeo Eut ona W. Dennla, et al.,
hundred ooventy·four Defendanto. Thlo
(174) to the place of action hu bean
beginning, oxcoptlng; anlgnod Cue No.
the coal tha!eln and 01.CV·I14, an.d 11
the right to mine the pending In the Court
of Common Plaaa of
10me.
PARCEL NUMBER: Melgo County, .Ohio.
111-00760, t6-00749
The object of tho
PROPERTY
Complaint demanda
ADDRESS: 32045 lhatthetltleln and to
Welohton
Road , the oil and gao be
Mlnerovllla, OH 45769 qulatad In the
Alto known ao Plaintiff, Gayle H.
32045
Welohtown Price and Edna Price,
Road, Mlnorovlllo, end lhot tho oil and
Ohio 45781, and that gao lntareoto of tho
there remolna due and Delandanll
be
owing $24,838.74 with declared abandoned,
lntereot at 15 .492 or In tha allarnatlva,
percent per annum that tha Court
from July t, 2000, end partition the on end
coo to: thot tho goo lnterall and/or
delendanto named In order tho oame aold
the Complaint may with regard to the
hava an lnte..,ot In following deocrlbed
nld
property· raole-o:
tharalore, . Plalnllli . Tho following
domando thet 11 be deacrlbad real eatata
In tho
found to hova a good olluata
oI
valid end oubolollng Town I hIp
lion on uld pramiHI Labonon, In the
lgr the omount owing: County of Malgo end
lha• tho Dolandant~ Stela of Ohio, viz:
equity of rldamptlon Bounded northe~y by
be
volld
ond tho Ohio Alvar, eaot
aubolotlng lien on tald ~!m~~~ w•:.~:• ,:'~

0

\

commence "n that
date. In the caae or

S• c o nd

Ave.,

'MIII92-1121
lllfl'll

H8-11112-1121

;
--,__.-..-

\
r

'a

Cellular

.·,.

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

·:•,

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
A,~

/

YOV OUT OF
S'IG~T Oil
OuT Of
MINI&gt;?

,, ,

,'

THE BORN LOSER

"'

PRffii~E '(OJ "'~

M.'( ~WITH
Tl\t. EJ"P..D'(ff..':&gt; 1':&gt; /1..

TU"_tv

WON'\ Y-'f.£.N/\ 7

'u;..,-.... 11~'

1-IOG-Z5JI.ll07'7
Residentiol Commercial New C~on
Salts Serrice IMtallatlon
• -!ipecialbJ.. In Sheet Mtlll Dudwwll
'Trone" Solei It S....lce For
Galfl•, M_, ollcl Molp COWid•
Llcenled ond ,.....,....
WV 005176

TREE SERVICE
TDD•TriM•ReiiiOVIII
Buclllat Set~:e

P/B

• Footen, Walls, Stepa.

DIPIYIAG

your lallure to anower that the Ilona and/or
Flat Work,
or otherwlao roapond lntaroota In or on llld Replacemenu, 'Wolka
ao raquaated by tha property, 11 any, be
ond Drives • Stencil , All Makes '1\"actor &amp;
Ohio Ruloo of Civil · marohelled and tho C.-.lel'lft Eldmotes
Equipment Ports
Procedure, ludgmant · real aotata title Servtn1 Ohio ond w.v,
by default will bo qulotad end oold
wv lll3t71l
Factory Authorized
..,ndaracl agalnll you . property oold In tho .__..-.;.;.;;;..;.;.;;;._ _,
ca.e.JHParts
and for tho rallof lorecloouro action · · · - ,
domandad In the and all omounto duo r:~='=~='=''l
Dealers
Complaint.
· Plaintiff be paid from
1000 St Rl. 7 South
Dated thlo 8th day the procaado of tho
o1 July, 2001.
tale.
Coolville, OH 45723
Hauling &amp;
You""' r.qulred to
748117.0111
Marlene Harrloon
anoworthe Complaint
Marlena Harrlaon, within twenty·alght
Clerk ofCourto
(28) days otter lhl
toot publication of
thla NoUce, which will Haullna • Umestone
By; Monico F,.man
ba publlohad once
VOUB ·
• Gravel Sand •
.Deputy Clortc
each - k for llx (8)' ToJIIOII • Flll Dirt
IUCCIIIIVI WalkO.
CONCRETE
•Mulch
7123 • 30• (&amp;) 8• 13 • 27
Tho tall publlcotlon
will be m - on tho Bulldozer Services
CONNECTION
Public Notice
13th day of Aug,
2001, and tho twenty·
'IV
Quality Driveways,
alghl (28) daya lor ~.,;,_.;.._ _ _ _..
Patios, Slcfewalka.
IN THE COMMON
an ower
will
PLEAS COURT OF
commence on that
25 years experience
MEIGS COUNTY,
date. In tho caoo of
FrH Estimates
OHIO
your follu"' to aMwer
or otherwloo roopond
740.742·8015 Jr
at roqu1111d by tho
BARBARA PAYNE,
Ohio Rulao of Civil
1-877-353-7022
EXECUTRIX
Procedure, ludgmant
OFTHEESTATEOF
by dafoull will be
LUCILLE U.
rendared aaalnat vou
KING AKA LUCILLE
and lor tho rallof
. KING, DECEASED
demondod In tho
PLAINTIFF
Complolnt.
CASE NO. 01 .CV·102
Doted thla 8th day
of Juna, 2001,
·v•
Marlene Horrloon,
RANDY E. KING,
Clerk of Courto
EXECUTOR OF THE
(7) I, Ul, 23, 30, 2001
ESTATE OF ROLAND
(8) 8, 13, 2001

PARft

WICK'S

4\Exc:i

{7Jfl) 992-3470
Advertise

Lie. #00·50 ·

·Howardl.

Wrltesel
Home
Malntenanc•

Rooting •

.:PEANUTS

•

'1'~Ail, OUR TEAC~ER EXPECTS

US TO READ FOUR BOOKS
THIS
.. WEIRD, ·I-IUH?

WELL, JUST REMEMI!ER, WHEN
I{OU'RE READIN6, TME LI61-1T

SHOULD COME FROM OVER
'(OUR LEFT

5140ULDER ..

MAKE THIN&lt;:.!&gt;
60 MOR:E

.

calmly discarded

JU5T

EXCU5E I NEED,
CIHICK ...
TI-lE LAMPS
IN OUR HOUSE ARE ON
TI-lE WRONG 5117E !

a

hearf loser from hand,
leaving East endplayed. With only
clubs in his hand , East
had to . cash the

~ ""
".'

Yes, East missed his
chance. He had to
throw· the. heart king

•

•

••
I

•••

....

'

Tire Barn
Pomeroy

.'
•
•
•'
'

J'

21'l11 mopd

'"
,,.

.--------... .

,

Advertise in -·
this space
-·
$100 per
mon
·.
'

•

•

Spout
F,., &amp;tlmlltH

3 Guma
4 Muolclan
John 5 Part ola
atop
6 lola ond
loto
7 Conductor
Eugene 8 Almanac

19 More

work

acore

extensive

expert

27 Neighbor of

Md.
32 Wooden
tub
34 Hilton Head
and Block
35 Como

~ul1fx

_

known lor
111 down
45 Gorilla

20 Ms. Dahl
Folley
22 Anchored 47 Muslcol
23 Mainly
Homo
24 Vln1111r
48 Juno
25 Bribe to a
honoree
disc Iockey 49 President

entry

monlh

Lincoln

50 Singing

s yllable
52 "Aofar·- know"
53 Pl. ol AT&amp;T
54 Kind ol

forth

curve

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from Quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each •tter k1 the cipher stands tor another.

Today's clue: N equals P

'X

Hill'• _Self
Sttr111 ·. .
'•

21870 llllhln ROlli
Aeclna, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217
Slztt5'x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

7:00AM ··8:00 PM

'

.''•

under his partn~r's ace
. at trick one. Then
West can play two
more rounds of the
suit with effect. It w as
a tough play to make,
but not impossible , as
perhaps you saw last
Wednesday.

zvc

UJV

LI DH

PZC

NRZYHA

AHHV

ll D H

RHAA

L IV H B

0 XE P

XU

E P Z V

X

DIYTHUHRRHD.'

OZA

' AZEYPHR'

RHDIB

NZ X M H

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Humor is just a nolher defense
against the

"I loved
'I

universe. ~-

!~ogene .

Mel Brooks

I really did. -

Sid Caesar

n••

.........,.._• .

T~~~:t;~Y S©"\\J11A-~£~S® ~:!:
_ld;ltd by CLAY 1. ~OUAN _;;,__ _ __

0 four
Rearrange letters cf
scrambled words

l

otherwtse, dec arer
would have finessed
dummy's 10 on the

.SMOOTHLY.

"!!!!!~!!.!:.!...;=:~~:;:;;=:!:;;":~=~::J

HOURS: lion

21 Edible

13 "lookl"
t B Sedative

38 Plrillll duck 9 Bond
40 HebreW
1o Language

clttb jack. W est covered with the king;-

•

•

740.992·5344

1 UK brood·
c11ters
2 Do farm

Iuber
30 - of Wight
31 Homeric
tplc
33 Artlat•o
workshop
38 Actor
Kruger
37 Pertect

Hamman jump ed to
game b ecause h e expected partne r' s val ues to be outside
hearts .
W est led the h eart
ace , whi c h w o uldn't
have been my c hoice .
(A spad e or di amond
lead b eats the contract
with b es t d e fe n se.)
West continued with
a second heart to hi s
partner' s kin g. Ea st
switc hed to the diamondjack.
. Hamman
b e gan
with nine tricb: five
spades (three tops and
a ruff in ·eac h hand) ,
three diamonds and
one club. Since heart
ruffs in the dummy
were clearly unavailable and diamonds
weren' t .3-3, the b attle was on for a second club trick.
Hanunan won with
the diamond a c e ,
drew• tfllnfp$ "' ending

queen, then give a
trick to dununy's 10.

Fully ln•urwd

in this
space
on
for
and
CUIUiig edge•••
plumbing.
•so per Raadtha
Terry Lamm
992-0739
month ClassUiad Ads

'

JUST To

,,' I

44087 Wlpple Road

26 Buddy, out
Weal
28 Auction-Hr'l word

second round. After
taking West's king
with dummy's ace,
Hamman played three
rounds of diamonds.
tr=!L..;;.:...-------" However, instead of
·r uffing the ' last, he

.,

Gutters- Down
949·1405
591·5011

~OUI'-.

GLOVE.!

THAT.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Pomeroy Eagl•
Club Bingo
On Thursday•
At 6:30p.m~
• Main Street
Pomeroy, Ot oio
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverull
Starburst
· Progressive top line

ON

RE~I&gt;IMG

.,..~

~

ExtUS£

LIKE

~OU ' RE

1·~75-1114

7A"--992-1671

l'u1

r::;;::=--""":;:;--:---;--, in hand, and led the
YOU WROTE

J&lt;Hwd n. s~up .-1 7lunt!'

Roc ky R Hupp , Agent
Box 189
Middleport Ohi o 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40)K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

l'M•I

o·l!':.....--..I.:..U.:.:....-....1 - South, D o b H amma n,
is a b ig fan of fo urcard nujors. . T h e n,
North's th ree hearts

lla-'

Stop l Compare
ES
FREE ESTIMAT

PM U

l'~t'"

_..., . ~

ELITE JIIECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

• Complete
Remodeling

P~tu

&lt;-•-~Ji ~~"!::- ~- --~ '' byF~~~~-d~~l~ ~idding.

'

'New Homes
, Gara-

Enl

La st wee k's colum ns we re ins pir ed

•,

East Stale Street Phone (140)593--6671
Athens, Ohio

Pa11

balanced minimun1,

Advertise in
this space for s100 per
.
month
"'

.
'r-"""'-----,

'

"

!

..'·

fREE ESTIMATES
(3114J 614-6100

N•Mh

, ,

39 Selflah one
43 Duck

mum pass w ith at least
four-card spade support: Despite h avin g a

I

• Conaoleum

Wul

11 Composer
Rorem

was a cue-bid ' ~ai se
announcing a max i-

111111111 &amp;

• Hardwood floorlna

•

DOWN

fe1ture

Two bites

~

'·
'-

WV0282120

lhDw

• Optnin g le1d: ¥ A

1·888·521..()916

FIUUDIIID

Middleport,
OH
45780, which 11 more
fully doocrlbod In
dead (ICordod In
Voluma 281, Paga CONTRACTORS, INC.
355, Malgo County ' ·Raclna, Ohio 45n1
Deld -Aiocordo, and
740-985-3948
cotta of thll action;
and that the land CONCRrn/BLO(!(/BRICK
lnetallment contract
be forecloaed and

~

55 Sc:rotch
56 Filla
57 College
hotahoto
56 Hiking
potho .\

15 Computer
In "20111"
t7 Fu, e.g.
18 Egga ;
21 Evlloplrll
23 Atlll

KQ I0 4
1 e• 3
II. Q I

zY

Pan

,.

motorcycle seats, boat covers, Cll!pCts, etc.

Complete Home ·
Repair
Remodeling
New Additions
Garages

··ROBERT BISSELL
, CONSTROOION

thla Notice, which will

S.ulh

••

COmACDIIll

.
lOUth by tho Ianda of E. KING, DECEASED,
,J amaa Larkeno and
ET AL.
Andrew Roooo and
DEFENDANTS.
weal by Ianda of
NOTICE BY
Spe,ncer Smith and
PUBLICATION
others 51 ac"'l 75
To: Llu D.
one hunclrod1ho of on Robinson aka Llu D.
acre, and tlv• acraa
King, whoM laat
part of 100 aero lot known add,....l o"'
No. 140, Sec. t4 &amp; t5,
Elberton,
and 8 acroo 50 one
Gaorgla, and 1053
hundredlho ac..,a, 23SR 588, Galllpollo,
112 acral and 14
OH 45831, preunt
ecrea parte of 100
add..,.. unknown,
ac"' lot No. 14 t, Sec.
and
14 &amp; 15 and 11-40/100
the unknown hairs,
acrea, pert of Sec. 21, next of kin, daYI1881, ·
840 acre lot No. 2 1.
lagateea,
All of tho above Iondo
admlnlllratora,
In Townahlp No. 3,
exocutora, personal
Ronga No. 11. .
repreeentatlvao,
It
baing tho apouee, and anlgno
Intention to lncluda,
of Llu D. Roblnoon
deacrlba and convoy
aka Llu D. King,
heroin oil "'ol aotote
whoa&amp;
locoted In M~lgo
odd..,...l ""'
County, Ohio, owned
unknown.
by
Vlrglnlo B.
You are hereby
Williamson at tho ·notlflad that you hovw
tlmo of her docoou b 1 en
n 1m 1 d
and bequeathed by Defendontl In lha
her to Lillian W. action
entllltd
Donnie ond Paul Barbara
Payne,
Wllllamoon.
Executrix of the
. ltlng the eame Eototo of Lucille M.
"'"I eotate conveyed . King, .deceuod,
to Clinton A. Smith Plolnttff, va. Randy E. ·
by Lllllon W. Dennie, King, Exacutor of the
ot al., by dud Eatoto of Roland E.
recorded In Daod King, doceaaed, et
Book 144 Pogo 826 of al., Dolendanta. Thlo
the Mtlga County action hat baen
Deed Recorda.
aaalgned Caoo No. 0
Excepting 1.238 1 -CV-102, and Ia
acre conveyed to tho pending In tho Court
Stale of Ohio b y - ol Common Pilot of
recorded In Volume Melgo County, Ohio.
102, Pogo 275, Mtlgo · The object of tho
County
Olflclal Complaint damando
Rocordo.
judgmant agalnot the
Rolorence D.. d: Dofendanta, In tho
Volume 115, Page 45 aum of $8,817.18, 11
1,MelgoCountyDHCI of October 1, 2000, ·
Reconlo.
with Interest at tho
Auditor'• Parcel :rote of 8.07% per
Noo.: 07·00803.000 annum, until fully
and 07-oo804.000.
paid; In order to
You ara r.qulred to loroclooe upon a
anowar tho Complaint breach ad
Ian d
within twanty·elght lnotallmanl contract
(28) daya altar the upon real aototo
tall · pubtlcotlon of . located at 127 S.

the unknown helro, ba publlohed once
next of kin, d&amp;vll88a, each week tor olx (8)
legateoo,
opouHo, auccenlvo waeko.
ouc-aoro
and _The loot publlcotlon
aulgno of Lillian w. will be
on tho
Dennlo, Samual S. 27th day of Augull
Dennlo,
Ill,
Paul 2001, and tho twenty·
Wllllam~on, Agnaa B. eight (28) dayo for
Wllll!_m_!on, and Bello 1 n 8 w 1 r
wIll

.•

51 Conceive

varlaty

+ On$

3 2

42 Shell
44 Mo. Sumac
45 Patriotic
org .
46 f'Woleum
45 Seeing ·-.
ooclally

15 Holtld 1

'

J 1e 9 I

Vulnerable. Neither

n•••

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

t

Dealer. West

convenible &amp; vinyl lops, Four wheeler seats,

Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

• Js ,

.. ,.

·,

Mon-Fri 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

2

A Q.I IO$

.
•
f

Truck seals, car seats, headliners, truck toups,

Ohio

IIIII MOI

6 2

E1lil

.. I( g

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

,JIM.' S
WOODSHED

Advertise your
message

Wut
¥

OU.LITY

barred from aSBertlng
any Interest therein;
that all Ilona on aald
premises
be
marshaled and their

Ia ha"'by notllled that sold
••
upon
Banellclal Ohio, Inc., execution and the
db a
Bonellclal procoedo of told oale
t.lortgogo Co. of Ohio be epplled according
flied a Complaint lor . to law, and for such
Money, Forecloaure other relief aa Ia Just
~~qultablo.
and other Equ I10 bl e 1 Delondanto llrot
f!allal on March 29, herelnabova
2001 ' Caoe No. 01 .CV· mantloned ora further
057 ' on the property .n otllltd that they ora
daacrlbad 11 lollowo:
EXHIBIT A
fOqulred to anawor
Slluatad In the _sold complaint on or
county of Malgo, In the belore 9/24101, which
State of Ohio ·and In lncludao l~nty ..lght
the Townahlp of (28) dayo fr.om the lost
Sallabury (Pomeroy dote of publlcotlon, or
VIllage) end bounded judgment may bo
and dea'crlbed 11 r • n d 1 r • d
a1
followo:
· d&amp;manded therein.
PARCEL 1:
The
FRANK &amp;
following rial eotata , WOOLDRDGE CO.,
situated In the County
L.P.A.
of Melgo In tho Stale
by Gregory D.
of Ohio' and In the Wooldridge (110040984)
township of Salisbury,
by D. L. Moina, Jr
and bounded and ,
(10001391)
deacilbed 11 follows: ' Attorney• lor Plalntll1
Tho following real 800 South Paart StrHI
estate In Sacllon No. Columbua, Ohio 43208
8t4-221·11182
.Eight In Townahlp No.
Two and Range No. ,(7) _23, 30, (8) 8, 13, 20,
Tlilrteen near tho 27,2001
South Eall corner of
aald Section on the , . Public Notice
North Weal old&amp; of the :
·
·
llrll revlno Well of the' IN THE COMMON
S.E. cornar of oald PLEAS COURT OF
Section and daacrlbad
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
81 followe:
Beginning ot the
GAYLE H. PRICE,
Ellllf comer or 0 lot
ET AL.
oold ond convayod to
Ebenezar Watklno of
PLAINTIFFS
i.ltnarovllle; thonca
_ North 35' Eoot 82 112
·••·
feet: thence North 55"
·wool 174 feet; thence LILLIAN W. DENNIS,
ET AL.
South 35" Wool 62 t/2
foot to tho North
corner of -sold . DEFENDANTS.
Ebenezar Watklno lot;
NOTICE BY
tha,.. South 55' Exit
PUBLICATION
174 feet to tho place of
beginning.
To: Lillian W. Dennie
Excepting the coal and
Samual
S.
thareln and the right Dennis, Ill whou lall
to·mlna the oame.
known addreoa Ia 52
PARCEL 2:
Eeaex Rd., Cheotnut
The following real Hill,
MA
02187,
addi'HIIo
aotata altuated In the P"'tant
Cdunty of Melgo, Stata· unknown;
Paul
oi Ohio, and In tho Wllllamoon
and
town of Pomeroy and Agnao B. Wllllamoon,
bounde d
a n d who11 lall known
daacrlbed ao lollowo, . add,.o lo Texas,
viz:
preHnt
add"'•••
Sactlon No. 8 In unknown;
Betta
Townahlp No. 2 and Porto, whooe loot
Ran go No. 13 nearthe known add rea a Ia
Southeaot corner of 4022 Meadow VIew,
11ld section on the Suitland, MD 20748,
Northwut old&amp; of lhe preHnl
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Timothy T. Klein and .
Un k nown S pouao 0 I
Timothy T. Klein

••

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OUT AND Ytii I!R
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premises or be forever ·

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PROJECT?

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L-...L-.L-....1.-.1--l-.J you de velop fro m ~tep No. 3 below .

.

.

PRINT NUMBERE D
'I:J LETTER S IN SQU ARES

,ft

SCRAM·Lm ANSWERS
Heckle - Bogey • Jerky · Outwit - GO to WORK
"Every morning ," the ad executive mus e d , "I look
through the list of the richest people in the cou ntry . If I'm
not on it, I know I must GO to WORK."

'
T uesday. Aug. 7, 2001

In wh .1tcver yo u· do m the
yc.u ahe.1 d. chances are things
will be do ne o n yo ur part o n
a giandc r ~ c a le th an yo lJ'vc
do ne the m in the past. T his
will take you to nc\v heig hts.

LEO (July 23 - Au g. 22) -Shou t it loud and dear today
if yo u have something won hy
to ann oun ce that you know
others would be in terested
hearing, They'll • II be read y
to jump on board. Tryi11p; to
patc h up a bro kc1l romanc e?
Th e Astro-Gra ph Ma tch make r ca n hel p yo u u nderstand what to' do .t(, ma_kc th e

relationship work. Mail S2.75
to M atchm aker, c/ o this
m•wspapcr, P.O . . Box 1758,
Murra_y H ill St:ai on, N ew
York, N Y 10 l ;6.
VJR.GO (Au g. 2'1-Sept. 22)
-- There is somcth inl:i: yo u can
do today that coulJ produce
benefhs for you as well .u for
others , albeit it you might
h ave to do so witho ut draw ing any attention to yourself.
Don 't hesita te .
LlllRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) - O nct' yo u get on a roll today , othcn who are d ow ha J
bcttt.·r ste p as id e. Y uu w o n' t
mind anyhody jumping on

·

board , but tf;ey·u have to be
pretty ~ harp tn do so .

SCORI'I O (Oct. 24-Nov .
22) -- Positive _mea sures can
be t:1kcn today to fu rther your
perso n al am bi ti OIU . You
won't have co keep a low
profi le o r bt.• fearful of rcvc ;~ l ­
ing yo ur in tentions . All .will
be in support.

SAGITT ARI US (Nov . 23D cr . 21 ) -- Express yoUr ideas
to th e fullest wdav to ·t hose
who yo u k now w~ ul d be rc Cl'ptive. N o t o nly will they be
am e nab le to your th oughts,

they'U bl' impre ssed as well.
C AP R ICO R N (Oec. 22Jan , 19) .. When establishing
you r obj ective~ today, don 't
be afraid to elevate them furthe r. Yo u will perform remarkably well wh en you p ush
yourself a bit hi gher th an
usual.

AQ UARI U&lt;; (J on . 20- Fcb

neither t ime nor mo tion m
pe rfo rmin g yo ur. ;t~s i gm n e r 1 ts
tOday. You r mo dus op erandi
will be extremely cfticic m :md
· productive .

AR.IES (March 21-April

I ~)

-- Al thol1 gh yo u r innate ins tin ct ~ are to oprra tt.• mdepcndcn t fro m oth e r~ . ~om c ­
timcs two heads n c hl'ttcr
t han one. T his cou ld be o ne
or'thosc days w hen w o rking
i n tandem i~ better.
TAU itUS (Apnl 20-Moy
2ll) - - From an u1 Hclli sh desire to do whar you o n to

help others tod .1r. you . .: uu ld
end up f l'Ct' i v!n g rewards fo r
whi ch "\'Ott d idn't ask n or cx pc (; t. Acn·p t t hem : yo\., '11
have dese rved tllt'!ll .

GE MINI (M,, y 2 1-Ju nc 20)
-- A p e rsn n who you
wou ld11't mind meetin g up
w ith ;~ gam h:~s somc tb111g inrctcm ng to di sc u1&gt;s w id1 you
and m:~.y coru act yo u tuday . It

cmdd rum out ro be ~, very.
tO rtu it o u ~

get- togethe r.

llJ) -- Today is the timr to
put all yo ur cards on the table
if there is an imp on;uh agreeme n t yn u need tn negotia te .
C hance s arc a q~1 i c k uil der standmg will be reached.

22) -- .T here's a good chance
you co ul d be showere d to day
with rn orc mat c n;~ l op po rtt!niti l' S t han u~ u al. Yo u won' t

l'I SC ES (Fob. 20-Morc h 20)

ha ve any troubl e knowing

- - Yo u 're not apt to

wa~ tc

CAN CER (J une 21 -July

what to do w ith t hem

�'

Baseball

•

The Daily Sentinel

=4

By the time Kenny Lofton
'
crossed home plate for the final
run, about half the fans had ~ . Visiting Anaheim rallied for
already left Jacobs Field, and two runs to tie the game in the
five All-Stars were out of the
sixth inning after Ted Lilly hit ·
game.
Scott Spiezio, breaking the tie
Checking out early w.s on Bengie Molina·s two-out
understandable Sunday night. A double in the eighth off
comeback like this comes Ramiro Mendoza (7-3).
The Yankees led 2-0 in the
around only about every 76
years.
.
. · ·fifth when Derek Jeter was hit
The
Cleveland
Indians
t1ed
1eft han d by R amo n
. . l
rd b
. a near h's
1
ITUJOr eague reco ·, econung Ortiz (10-7). Lilly responded
the first by h.mmg
. Sptezto
. . m
. th e h e1met
team
with the first pitch of the sixth
smce
mnmg.
Home plate umpire Eric
1925 to
overCooper warned both teams,
come a and there were no other hit
12-run batsmen the rest of the way.
deficit
.to win, defeating the Seattle
Mariners 15 ~ 14 in 11 innings.
· " I can't explain it," Lofton
said. "It was unbelievable. I've
Rolando Airojo (3-3) gave
never been in a game like that
up one run in six innings,
in my life. My voice is gone
Doug Mirabelli had three RBis
fiom hollering so much."
and Manny Ramirez hit a 455Cleveland trailed baseball's
foot homer off a light tower in
best team 12-0 after three
left field at Fenway Park.
innings and 14-2 after five. But
the Indians rallied with three
runs in the seventh, four in the
eighth ,and five in the ninth
before winning it on Jalbert
Mike Sweeney went 4-for-5
Cabrera's single in the 11th.
with
two homers and five RB!s
Cleveland ·became the third
team since 1900 to make up 12 as Kansas Ciiy avoided a threeruns in a game and win. The game sweep at Minnesota.
Royals starter Paul Byrd (4others~ re the Chicago White
Sox (1911) and Philadelphia 4) .allowed two runs and seven
hits in six-plus innings. Joe
Athletics (1925).
"It's the turning point of the Mays (12-9) gave up 11 hits
season," said Cabrera, who and four runs in 6 2-3 innings.
came in when manager Charlie
Manuel pulled All~Star Roberto Alonur.
·
Ichiro Suzuki, Edgar MarCory
allowed
tinez, John Olerud and Juan
three
hits
in
eight
innings
to
Gonzalez also had early nights
as Manuel and Seattle counter- lead surging Oakland over
part Lou Piniella figured the slumping Detroit.
-T he Athletics have won five
game was in the bag.
of
six and 20 of27 to get with"It's just one of those things
that happen," Piniella said. "It's in 2 1/2 games of wild c:trd
. almost impossible to do, but leader Boston. Detroit has lost
live straight, scoring exactly ·o
rhey did ir."
one
run in each game.
John Rocker (3-4) struck out
. the side in the 11th as the lndi-· ans snapped a three-game~los­
~
ing streak to move within a
half-game of Minnesota in the
Jose Cruz Jr. homered twice
AL Central.
and
Esteban Loaiza (8-9) won
Jim Thome hit two homers,
and Russell Branyan and Marty his third straight decision as
Cordova also homered for Toronto beat Baltimore.
Cruz went 3-for-4 with
Cleveland.
Lofton singled with one out three RBis for the Blue Jays,
in th_e II th off Jose Paniagua who swept the three-game
(3-3), and Omar Vizquel sin- series at Sky Dome. Cruz hit a
gled. Cabrera's bat shattered as two-run homer in the thittl
his hit dropped into left field, and a solo shot in the fifth off .
and third-base coach Joel Skin- Josh Towers (6-7).
ner waved home Lofton.
Vizquel's bases-loaded triple
off Kazuhiro Sasaki completed
Cleveland's five~run ninth and
tied it.
Pinch-hitter Russ Johnson's
The Mariners (80-31) had safety squeeze bunt with one
their four -game winning streak out in the ninth inning broke a
stopped, and for one of the tie and helped give Tampa Bay
only times this season, things the win at Chicago. .
The Devil Rays rallied for
didn't go their way.
"We don't like losing if it's two runs in the ninth after
this way or 1-0," reliever Norm blowing a 4-1 lead an inning
Charlton said. "We don't earlier when Jeff Liefer hit a
expect to lose."
three-run homer off Victor
Zambrano (4-1).

VI

,]

Pittsburgh 5, Colorado 4

National Laague

san Francisco 8, Philade'phia 4

E•st

w
Attanla
Philadelphia
Florida

NewYM

60

L
48
51

58

55

83

51
61
Montreal
47 85
Cantral
w L
Chicago
83 47
Houston
62 49
St. Louis
56 54
Milwaukee
47 62
G.lncfnn~tl
46 M
Pi11sbur~h
43 67
WH1
w L
LOSAnge!H
83 49
Arizona
62 49
San Francisco 62 50
San·O!ego
54 57
Colorado
46 65

GB

Pet.
.568
.540

Arizona 2, N.Y. Mots 1
Clnclnnotl 10: son Diogo I
LOS Angeles 3, Chicago Cubs 2, '10
innings

3
7
.504
.455 12 112
.420 18 112

Monday'• Gamu
No games scheduled

GB

Tueaday'a Games

Pet
.573
.559

1 112
7
.509
.431 15 112
.418
17
.391
20

Royals.10,
Twins 5

Athletics 4,

~r~s~

Blue Jays 5, -

Monday, August &amp;,1001

GB
P&lt;l
.562
.559
112
1
.554
.486 a 112
.414 18 112

Saturday'• Games
Atlanta 14, Milwaukee 2
N.Y. Mets 4, Arizona 2
Los Angeles 3, Chicago Cubs 1
Philad~phla 12, San Francisco 2
Houston 4, Montreal 1
PiHsbufllh 6, Colorado 3
St Louis 3, Florida 0
san Diogo 2, Cincinnati o

Toronto
Bahlmore
Tampa Bay

Kansas City 10, M i - 5
C-nd 15, Seottle 1•, 111nnlngs

.

E""1

w
67

L

"

47
59
45 67
37 74
central
w L

63
53

"

Pet.
·.600

.573 3112
.473 14 112
.-102 22 112

.333

30

P&lt;l
.568

GB

i96

-y··-

Gl

Oakland (Hiljut Hlj at Deltolt (Hoi! 7-9),
1:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Sohoonewels 8-6) at N.Y. Yank... (Hnchcocl&lt; Hl), 1:05 p.m.
18mpa Bay (Wallace 0.2) al Chlolgo .
WMo Sox (Wright Hlj, 2:05 p.m.
Texas (Beii4· 1J al Bos1on (Nomo 11-5),

SPORIS: Germaine leads Rams win, Bl

St. Louis 3

Atlanta 12, Milwaukee 8
Housloo 4, Montreal l

..

·-~··

.......

_

Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper
-

so cents • August 7, 2001 • Vol. 51.

8
16
19

GB
19
23
31

- l e (Abbon 11-2) 01 Cleveland
(Nagy 4-4~ 7:05 p.m.
Baftimoro (Johnson 9-6) at Kansas Ctty
(GOOfliO D-2), 8:05p.m.
TIJeoday'a Games
N.Y. Yanlceos (Mussina 11·9) at Tanw

www.mydaily~Pntinel . wm

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

No . 144

Bay (Stunze 6-9), 7:15'p.m.

Clonland (Sabathla 1~) 01 Min....,.
1a ( - HJ), 8:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Maduro D-3) at Kansos Ctty
(Suppan 5·9), 8:05 p.m.
Oelroit (Penyjohn ~) at Texas (Myen.
H), 8:35p.m.
Toronto (Halladay 1·1) at sealtle (Pineiro
2·0), 10:05 p.m.
Boston (Seberhagen 1-1) at Ookland
(Mulder 13-6), 10:05 p.m.
-'
ChicaQo White Sox(K.Wells 6-7) al Ane·
helm (Rapp 4·9). 10.05 p.m.
.

Dirt moving at Ravenswood on schedule
BY BRIAN J. REED

Don T-illis, project managt;r for
the first phase, said Monday that the
dirt moving process is right on
schedule, but that the laying, of pipe
for the project is about a month
behind.
Tillis said that the. pipe work is
behind schedule because of changes

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

GREAT BEND - About 3.1
million yards of dirt will be moved
before the first phase of the
Ravenswood Connector project is
completed, and 10 percent of that
dirthas already been haul ed away.

in the project plans made recently,
designed to save both contractor
and ODOT money.
"The change in the plans were
made by Beaver Excavating, the primary contractor on the project, and
should allow for a cost savings,
which will be split between the

contractor and OOOT."
The seven-mile project is expected to be finish ed by June 30, 2003.
About 60 peopl e are working for
Beaver Excavating at the site; others
are working for a number of sub~
contractors who are on and off the
site on a regular basis, Tillis said.

Hernadets hitting and pitching lead .Giants to victory
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

in the fourth and sixth inning,.

1t wasn't Livan Hernandez's
pitching that the San Francisco
Giants were talking about.
"t.ivan can have all the accolades;' said Rich Aurilia, who
matched career,highs with four
hits and five RB!s. " It's nice to
know we've got a gily at the
bottom of the order who can
get on base and put a charge in
the
ball."
Hernandez
went
3-for-3
and
scored
two runs as the Giants beat
Philadelphia 8~4 Sunday. Hernandez, who scored two runs,
has eight hits in his last nine atbats to raise his average to .286.
Hernandez (10-11) pitched
6 2-3 innings to win for the
fourth time in five starts as the
Giants won for the 1Oth time
in 11 games.
He started a three-ruQ . rally
in the third inning with a double - culminating in a ridicu~
lous flqp slid~. He added singles.

D-backs 2,
Mets 1
Curt Schilling won his major
league-leading 16th game as
Arizona edged visiting New
York.
. Junior Spivey's two-out
homer in the eighth inning off
Rick White (3-2) broke the tie.
Reggie Sanders also homered
for the Diamondbacks.
Schilling (16-5) gave up six
hits in eight innings and struck
out 13 to win for the fourth
time in five decisions. He won
despite allowing his major
league-le:iding 30th homer, a
solo shot to Matt Lawton in
the seventh inning.

Astros 4,
-~1

Mo!Ses Alou homered, and
Ron Villone (5-4) allowed one
run in 4 2-3 innings in relief of
the ihjured Wade Miller to lead
Houston over Montreal.

Braves-12,
Brewe1s8

lead Pittsburgh to victory at ·
Colorado.
Reliever Mike Lincoln (1-0)
Andruw Jones had a pair of worked 1 1-3 hid~ss innings as
the Pirates won two of three
~-run singles for Atlanta
rookie Ben Sheets lost his fifth from the Rockies. Mike Fetters
got a save for the second
straight decision . .
Sheets 00-9) allowed 10 straight day.
runs - nine earned - and 11
hits in 5 1-3 innings.
· Dave Martinez went 3-for-4
with two RB!s, and Chipper
Eric Karras' two~out single
Jones and BJ. Surhoff scored
in the ·bottom of the 1Oth
three runs apiece for Atlanta.
inning drove in the winning
run · for Los Angeles after
Sammy Sosa homered in th~
ninth to tie it for Chicago.
Karros was hidess in four atRyan Dempster (13-9) won
bats
with three strikeouts
his fifth straight start on the
road as Florida beat St. Louis to before his hit offTom Gordon
(1-1).
split a four-game series.
The first•place Dodgers
Detjl.pster's seven road wins
this season is one short of the remained one-half game ahead
combined road-win total of of Arizona and one game uJ5
on San Francisco in the NL
Florida's five other starters.
West. Chicago had ill; lead in
the NL Central trimmed to I
1/2 games over Houston.
Terry Mulholland (1-0), the
Adam Hyzdu homered and sixth Los Angeles pitcher,
Jack Wilson scored ~twice _j()~ earned the victory.

,

FROM STAFF REPORTS

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of Education hired Sheryl Roush as
the new high school guidance
counselor during its regular
meeting last week.
Roush, who has served the
dis~rict as a business teacher,
will replace the retiring John
R edovian.
The board also approved
hiring Gwen Hall as an edu~
cational aide, on a one-year
contract; J.E. Kirkpatrick and
David Hawthorne as assistant
football coaches, Je~'ica Brannon as an assistant junior high
volleyball coach, Stephanie
Evans as . varsiry volleyball
assistant coach; and Dorinda
Thompson as substitute cook
and custodian.

as

Dodgers],
Cubs2

Marlins 5,
cardinals 3

••

Rockies 4

GRAND TOUR - Annie Chapman, .a Pomeroy merchant, guided a group of genealogy enthusiasts
around Pomeroy last week. Chapman has been instrumental lh the conversion of the courthouse
"shoppers lounge· into a comfortable and convenient visitors center. (Brian J. Reed photo)

VISITORS CENTER OPENED
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS s'T~FF

OMEROY -The majestic Meigs Counry Courthouse has long been a
communiry centerpiece for
tourists, but now, the building will provide a needed service to
them as well.
The landmark :'shoppers' lounge,"
which for • years has provided a
restroom and lounge area for visitors
to Pomeroy, has been converted into a
visitors center, and that center was
dedicated Friday and immediately put RIBBON CU'niNG - Representatives of the Pomeroy
·Merchants Association and Meigs County Tourism
to use.
A group of some 40 genealogists Office ·opened Pomeroy's new courthouse visitors
center on Friday, In the landmark "shoppers lounge.'
.from around the country interested in
Cutting the ribbon were Mindy Morris, Brenda Roush,
learning more about their Meigs
Terri Haynes, Bill Quickel, Annie Chapman and Mary
Powell. (Brian J. Reed photo)
·
PINH- Vlllton, AJ_

Devil Rays 6,
White5ox4

1

Sunznur SpeeU.l. ..3 consecutive
days unlimited greens fees .•• $99
per person• Hotels not included .
Available May [5.September 15
Dlle.J nal tiu·/m)e Capitol- Htlf. O.twimJr
l'trl/ey or Laktw•.wd. GrtrnJ N11timuzl not
urcluJeJ after Au,qu.ll J I.
.

Top of tbe Trai/... 3 days, 2 nights,
Hampton Cove, Silver Lakes, Oxmoor
Valley ...
starting at $178 per person
Heart ofA/4banza ... 3 days, 2 ~ights,
'tol Hill, Grand National, Cambrian
Riclge ... starting at $172 per person

Southern S;.,ing ... 3 days,
two nights, Highland Oaks.
Magnoli a Grove ... starting
at $171 per person

Toclay's

2 Sections - 12 Pllps

Calendar
Classjfjeds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Weather '

'r:;.
&lt;

Sentinel

Sports

AS

.

'

,I

.

•

•

Hllh:IOI

WASHINGTON (AP) -The idea is
to get health insurance to more low~
income Americans, but liberal advocates
worry that a Bush administration plan for
Medicaid may shortchange those who
already have government-funded .insurance.
And they complain that there are no
guarantees that states wiD use the money
they save from cutting some benefits to
insure more people.

Lotteries

OHIO
82-4 Pick :S: 2·3-7; Pick 4: 2.0.9-3
BS lludwye 5:5-11-18-25-30

A4
A3 W.VA.
B! .3·4.6 Dally 3:.4-9-9 Dally 4: 6-1-(}-7
A2 c 2001 Ohio Valley Publshill&amp; Co.

.

'Prices are per person, based on double occupancy

E-mail : reservations@rtjsolf.com
For 1 complete ltate vat~tlon guide ca111.800.ALAIAMA or vlsltwww.touratabama.ort

_lawsuit against
govemment
COLUMBUS (AP) Every minute employees at
Fairfield Medical Center
spend filling out government
forms is a minute taken away
from patient care, the Lancaster hospital's fiscal chief
said Monday.
The • paperwork burden
should ease under a setdement the Ohio Hospital
Association has reached with
the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services
over billing information the
federal agency has demanded
in Medicajd and Medicare
. cases, OHA .spokeswoman
Mary Yost said.
Under the setdement, to
be made final in a few weeks,
H HS "fill stop requiring
hospitals to submit reports
tracking compliance with
billing rules, Yost said.

Meanwhile, the hospitals
will not try to recover S31
million they had paid in fines
for services the government
alleged were billed in error.
The hospitals just want to
get on with the business of
helping their patients, said
Sky Getrys, interim vice
president for finance at Fairfield Medical, 31 miles
southeast of Col).tmbus. The
compliance reports took up
too
much
time
and
resources, he said.
"The government comes
in and uses some very heavyhanded tactics," Gettys said.
" I spent about a month,
probably, to get that report
out this year, probably a good
100 hours. ... Each hospital
spends an hour of paperwork
time for every hour of emer- .

Pleue -

Lawsuit. AJ

The Bush administration unveiled the
plan over the weekend, touting it as a way
to bring health insurance to some of the
40 million uninsured An1ericans without
spending any new money. States may trim
services or increas,e. premiums foi' some
Medicaid participants; in return, they mn
use the extra funds to offer basic insurance to the uninsured.
But officials .at the. Dep·artment of
Health and Human Serlces said Monday

that states will' not necessarily be required
to spend money on the uninsured, and
advocates worry that states facing right
budgets could pocket the savings.
"Contrary to the way this is adverti1ed,
states could reduce benefits and offer
either 1/0 or a very small coverage expansion so they save state dollars," said
Leighton Ku , a Medicaid expert at the
liberal Center for Budget and Policy Pri-

PI..H s• Medlald. AJ

Look for the Holzer Medical Center Mobile Unit
during the Fair,

•

unlimiUd ~lly ft Will! sttll. Cart f~ charged for
Ill rounds. Sub,ifct lO'.van.bnity, Some rntrictipnt
JNy •ppty, Uirts and WK •re not indudl!d in prier . .
Valid Miy 15- Stpttmber 15. 2001.

Hospiq]$ to drop

It's Mason County Fair Tllne!

StJmmer $p@dal does not lnc:ludt hotth.
Mid pre~edMI hott~. Summer Special inclllde'

.

Medicaid plan might willleave ·_poor worse off

Low: 101
Details, A2

a.y anJ Beyon3...3 days, 2
nights, Stay at histori c Grand
Hotel. play Magnolia Grove,
and Lakewood .... sta rting at
$213 per person

The board accepted the resignation of Grant Newland as
bus driver.
The board approved student fee lists for high school
and elementary school, and .
approved an increase in school ·
lunch prices for $1.50 for students and S2.50 for adults.
The board approved the
followihg vendors for supplies: Broughton's Dairy, dairy
products; Heiner's Bakery for
bread and bakery products;
Warehouse Tires for tires and
tubes; G&amp;M Supply for oil,
grease and antifreeze; and
Englefield for gasoline and
diesel.
The board's next meeting
will be held on Aug. 15 at 7
p.m. at the administrative
office in Tuppers Plains.

.

Pirates -5,

CHOOSE FROM OUR PACKAGES OR DESIGN YOUR OWN!
I

The project takes the super-two
highway from the Ritchie Bridge at
the Ohio River to the intersection
of Ohio 124 and County Road 35
(Portland).
Phase Two of the proje'ct is also
under cons tru ction near Five
Points.

Bush named new
Eastern counselor _.

Orioles 4

CARDIAC KIDS -Cleveland's Kenny Lofton, center, celebrates after scoring the winning run In the 11th Inning against
the Mariners Sunday. (AP)

Tuesday

5:05p.m.
112

Sundly'e Gemee
Oakland 4. Detroit 1
Toronto 5, Baltimore 4
Boston 6, Te~eas 3
Anaheim 4, N.Y. Yankees 3
Tampa Bay 6, Chicago While So• 4

Sunday'l Games
F.lo~da 5,

---

,_,..,. I.Nguo

St. Louis (Kite 11·7) at Montreal (Vazquez \.Minnesota
· 53 48
10.10), 7:05p.m.
Clevel82 48 .564
Anzona (Lopez 0.2) at Florida (Clemen! Chbtgo
54 55 .495
6-7), 7:05p.m.
Detroit
46 63 .422
Los Angeles (Adams 7-4) al Pittsburgh Kansas Clly
67
(McKnlghl 1·1 ), 7:05 p.m.
WHt
S.n Franclaco (Schmidt 7-6) at Cincinw L Pet
nati (Davlo !;-1), 7:05 p.m.
Seattle
so 31 .721
San Olegc&gt;"(Jones 7-13) al Philadelphia Oakland
61 50 .549
(Ouci&lt;wo~h D-0), 7:05p.m.
Anaheim
57 54 .513
Milwaukee (Haynes 7-13) at N.V. Mets Texas
49 62 -"1
(Chen 4-5), 7:10p.m.
Houslon (Mik:t&lt;i 2-ll) at Atlanta (Maddu•
Saturday'• Games
14-6), 7:35 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees 5, Anaheim .o4
Colorado (Neagle 6-6) at Chicago Cubs Boston 10, Teqs 4, 1St game
(Tapanl 8-6), 8:05 p.m.
~ton 6, Texas 2, 2nd game
seattle a, Cleveland 5
Toronto.2, Baltimore 1
Oakland 10, Detroit 1
Minnesota 6, Kansas City 2
Chicago While So• 8, Tampa Bay 6

Red Sox6,

Rangers 3

B&amp;.

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Cabrera's hit caps Tribe's
record 12-run comeback
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

- ~age

FOR RESERVAI70NS &amp; rEE 17HES

1-800·257-3465
www.rtjgolfco'!l

I

August 7 • 11

· MEDICAL CENTE

Free screenings and health information will be provided. ,
Schedules will be posted daily. For more information, call
(740) 446·5679

..

. Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer .org

•

• .• .

\ ;.,

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