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                  <text>wWw. mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 13, 2005

·'We love you Michael!':

Spurs take commanding 2-0.series lead
quarters. and on defense they
were helpless to &gt;top the prcd,ion anJ · shiftinc" of
Par~er. the pu.int guard from
SAN ANTONIO -- Two Ff:lll&lt;'c.
and Ginohili. ·.the
steps quicker, two games shopting
guaru . fr&lt;illl
·
ahead.
BY CHRIS SHERIDAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The San Antonio Sp.ttrwere· at their best Sunday
night in Game 2 of the NBA
Finals, speeding out to a big
early lead and frustrating the
Detroit Pistons the rest of the
·way in a 97-76victory for a
2-0 lead in the best -of-se ven
championship round.
Once again . the quickne,s
and creativity of Manu
Ginobili was the one thin~
-that stood out. But unlike in
Game I when Ginobili took
over all by himself in the
fourth quarter. thi s· time he
did it earlier, too. and
received plenty of help.
Ginobili scored 27 poi11ts
with seven assists, while Tini
· Duncan was his usual . efficieni self with 18 points and
II rebounds. Throw in Tony
Park~r being a speedy complement to Ginobili 's dashing
exploits, Bruce Bowen's 3point shooting from hi s
favorite spot in the corner,
along with Robert Horry' s
effort plays. and thi s one was
all but over by the time the
fourth quarter bega n.
The Pistons did. ma,nage to
pull within eight points ntidway through the final quarter.
but Ginobili s'topped them by
drawing Rasheed Wallace 's
fifth foul. then com ing up
with a steal. an assist and
several free throws as the ·
lead quickly went back to 20 .
Detroit guards Chauncey
Billups
and .
Richard
Hamilton did next to nothing
offensive!~ )'or the first three

Ar~cnt i na .

first half.
Well. this must have been
one of those rare o..:casions.
'" Prince and ffamilton were
h&lt;•th btll'k on the floor·well
before the lirst 4Uarter enued
"ith San Antonio ahead 30-

0pponents hall been tli'CI'- 1'1.
le ." than 8(, points
Ginobili had a particu!Jrty
a iwi~ s i the Piston' in the 'Pt'~t acular stretch midway
playoffs , but the Spur' had through the second quarter.
evcrytlting clit·king "' well executing thTec comple te ly.
that they reached that number different play~ that showwith 5:-+-llefl.
dseu the special way he sees
Only two teams in NBA the court.
history have come had from
First. he ran a give-and-go
2-0 dcriciis to win a champi- play with Parker in wh ich the
un,hip: wh'ich . cou ldn 't have two were never closer .than
been much of a rea"uring 15 feet and used nearl y half
thou ght for the Pi ston' when the court. Parker was a step
they "boarded their plane aficr or two past midcourt when ·he
the game and headed back to hit Ginobili with a pass far on
the right wing behind the 3Detroit
. Game 3 is Tue&gt;day ni ght at point line. and as Parker cut
the Palace of· Aubur n Hill s. .ha rd to the basket Ginnbili
and .the · Pistons arc a long hit hin1 in stride with a perway from where t.hey were a fect ly · placed one-handed
year ago when-they splir the bount:e pass fur ll layup .
Next. Ginobili ·drove t.he
opening two games in Los
Angeles before retur ning lane ;md drew two defenders
home· und · dosing out tbe before flipping the ball out to
Lakers .in fi\'e.
Horry for a wide-open 3Tiii s one got away from pointer. FiDally. he stopped in
them quickly.
the lane after com ing around
Tayshaun ·
Price. . and a pick. rev ersed direction to
Hamilton each picked up two lose Prince and made a quick
fmils by the midppint of the . cut to the basket.
second quarter. leaving
Parker hit him with a pass ,
Detroit coach Larry Browh and Ginobili· dropped in a
with a &lt;)ilet]lma: Should he layup for a 49-31 lead.
st ick to his longstanding rule
San Antonio led 56-42. after
of "two l'ell!ls and you're .· Harry stole the Pistons' lazy
out." which would leave the inbounds pass with 16 secbotlt of them o n the bench fo r onds left before halftime ,
the rest of the first half - or giving the Spurs enough time
should he bend'l
for one more possession that
In hi s pre-game meeting ended with two foul shots by
with reporters, Brown said Ginobili.
The Argentine guard had
he'd only break hi s sel fimposed rule if he felt the 12 points on 4-for-4 shooting
ga me was gett ing too far with five assists, while
away from his team in the Duncan was 4-for-5 for 14
a~ i ng

·

Billui1' &gt;c·ureJ ;ix points in
a 10-2 run that made it 8J .-n
before Ginohili made a l'c\\
more big play; to end the
threat.
So frustrateu were the
Pistons thtn , Brown and
Billups picked up simultane.
.
AP photo
ous technical fouls with 3:54 San Antonio Spurs' Tim Duncan (21) keeps his eye on the ball
left . Gitwbili hit' both shots to
during the second quarter in game two of the NBA finals in San
get the lead back ltp to 20.
Anton io Sund;Jy.

$597

home.

Barboursv•lle020 0 41 004....;..13100
Mason Co. 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0- 3 10 4 .
Alex Wh.n. Jus11n Fallowav (5). Jusr•n

Mason County hoped they
COUld get back intO the 7·3 Maynard t6) and Juslln Jarrell John
· h · h h
h
Ullom . Tyler Hern (6). DalE! Kestner !9) .
game Ill t e stxt w en I ey · and Zeb· Reed wP --,- Falloway LPbrought in pitcher Tyler . Ullom

and helps families obtain pay - ·
ment for the services required
for a child with special needs.
POMEROY - The stateBCMH defines special
funded insurance program, . needs as chronic cohdilions
the Bureau for Children with such as (but not limited to)
Medical Handicaps (BCMH) diabetes, cerebral pal sy, spina
helps families, like those in bifida, chronic lung disease,
Meigs County, attain medical cystic fibrosis, hearing loss,
care for their children with hemophilia, metabolic disorspecial health care needs in a ders, sickle cell disease, canvariety of ways,
.
cer, AIDS, severe vision di sBCMH's lielp includes orders, cleft lip/palate, scoliolinking familie s with quality sis, juvenile arthritis, and conproviders within its network genital heart disease.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

Public
Health
Nurse,
Leanne Cunningham. is the
Meigs County Coordinator
for. BCMH and oftert makes
·home visits to access patients
and provide guidance with the
program.
BCMH has three programs
available to help children who
meet the criteria.
The Diagnostic Program is
a three month periQd allotted
to rule out of diagnose.special
health care needs or establish
a plan of treatment with a

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II M ........

• Calendar of Events.
See PageA3 ·
• Top l~bOr olficial says
he's staying on oversight
bOard. ·
See ·Page AS
• Lawyer: Man accused of
mall plot arrested without
cause, forced to talk.
See Page A6
• State budget provision
would speed permits to fill
wetlands.
See Page A&amp;

Council.· No fireworks for Middleport July 4

Pomeroy man arrested in drug search

Volunteer work
.

'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINE L.CO M .

'

RACINE - A Pomeroy
man was arrested early
..Sunday after the search of
a Racine home where he
had been staying revealed
cocaine, marijuana and
drug paraphernalia .
Racine Marshal Curtis
Jones
said
Jeffrey
Ohlinger, 48 , of Pomeroy,
was arrested at the home of
his son, Clayton Ohlinger,
on Elm Street in Racine
and charged with possessi on of cocaine, possess ion
of marijuana with intenuo
sell, possession of drug
paraphernalia, and having
a firearm under disability.
He was transported to the
Southeastern
Ohio

INDEX. .
2

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SllCilONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

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

1
I

. Sports

' As

Middleport Police Officer
Tony King W(lS donating his
time to the village on
.Monday evening, washing
one of the :police depart. ment's cruisers.
· Brlan J. Rood/photo

.'

B Section
A6

Weather

@ 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

d~ys. Enclo&gt;cd.i&lt; rny paymcp&lt; of $59. 15 for 6 momh: of the Dailr Semine/.·

A~dress ---------------------------..:...-------------------------~---------

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8 AM · 12 Noon • . HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

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FREE SCREENINGS
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'

SPECIAL ATTRACTION FOR THE KIDS ' 9:30 am - II :30 am
Parties 'R U$ wiD be there with one of their inftatablest
-Peanut butter sandwiches- ond special """'"'
for !he
kids.
----

www .holzer.org

·.J

c-'---

~

For more ·

call

446-5679.

.,.

I

•·

:

"

MEDICAL CENTER

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"

Bone density • Displays from hospilal and community programs

Pho ne

D

Please see Drugs, A5

HFor the Entire Family'

.

.

Regiohal Jail · and was
expected to appear in
Meig s County Court on .
Monday afternoon.
Jone s .s aid no other
arrests
were . made .
although others were at the
home at the time of the
sear9h, and that the drugs
and drug paraphernalia
allegedly found in the
home were limited to the
bedroom whe~e Jeffrey
Ohlinger had been staying
for the pa st several days.
According ·to Jones , a
neighbor had called· at 3
a.m. Sunday to complain
about excessive noise from
the Ohlinger home . The
officer who .responded,
Brent Rose, observed drugs

21st Annual

I
.. I
I 0 l,currcntlrsubscribe"lo lhc Daily Seminei. Enclosed is 111}' payhl~lll or $ 11 5.84 for a I -year subSlTiplion .
I
Name---------------------~~--~--------------------------------------~~
I have not he&lt;n a suhscnlx:r in the past 30

Please see Children, A5

POMEROY -Complaints
that · officers from the
Pomeroy Police Department
allegedly harassed bar patrons
in the downtown area were
. discu ssed at last night 's meeting. of Pomeroy Village
Council.
.
Councilwoman
Mary
McAngus said the harassment
took the form of compliance ·
checks or · "walk-thrus" that
the ofticers do to ensure that
establishments that serve
alcohol are cemplying with
the law.
. McAngus
said
she
received several complaints
from both an owner and
patrons at an •mnamed bar
claiming that officers had·
.
Orlan J, Reed/photo
Tom Dooley, vice · president of the Middleport Community Associa\ion, discusses a proposal to use an area at Riverview done · four or five walk-thrus
Cemetery to discharge July 4 fireworks. Council rejected the proposal. and Dooley said last night the Association has voted to over the course of one
evemng.
s9rap the Ju ly 4 celebration if the fireworks area is not approved .
·
"Four or five times in one
evening is too much,"
McAngus said .
"I don't think it was four or
five
times," P.omeroy Police
BY BRIAN J •. REED
Riverview Cemetery to dis- ·which organizes the annual
Some residents have vocalChief
Mark E. Proffitt
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
charge fireworks for the cele- celebration, announced last ly opposed the proposal to
replied. ''We have to 'do ·combration. Councilman Jeff month
that
Hamburg move the fireworks area from · pliance checks. It's something
MIDDLEPORT -· There · Peckham made a· motion for- Fireworks Co. would no the river to the cemetery, .but'
we must do to keep things in
will likely be no July 4 cele· bidding the use of the .area for longer discharge fir,eworks Tom Dooley, vice president order."
the
Middleport
bration
in
Middleport, the fireworks display, and from a site behind Rejoicing of
"We have a responsibility
Community
Association,
s~id
because village council and Council President Stephen Life Church near the Ohio
from
the Department of
the Middleport Community Houchins
seconded
the River. Last night, Mayor he feels opposition to the pro- Liquor Control to do walkAssociation cannot agree on motion. Kathy Scott voted in lannarelli said the company posal is relatively small, and thrus," Mayor John Musser
where to discharge fireworks. favor of it, .and Shawn Rice confirmed safety problems that several thousand people concurred.
Middleport Village Council voted in opposition.
with the site for both fire : are expected to attend the
voted 3-1 Monday evening to
The
Middleport works company employees
Please see· Pomeroy, AS
Please see Fireworks, AS
Association, and the pu~lic . .
oppose the use of a site at Community

.

:0

medications. therapies, nied- ·
ical equ ipment and supplies.
lab tests. x-rays . This program
-requires both medical and
financial eligibility. All services must be ·related to the
child's eligible condition and,
if the child remain·s eligible, ·
services may be renewed each .
year until the child reaches
age 21.
.
The Service Coordination
.Program helps fa milies locate

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEATHER

: ·.

BCM H provider. Examples of
services included are tests, xrays, vtstt s to BCMHapproved doctors ... up to five
days in the hospital. public
health nursing services and
therapy cvaluatio'ns. There are
no finan cial requ irements for
this program.
The Treatment Program i.s
one year of treatment for a
medically eligible condition
by a BCMH provider.
Treatment service .examples
may in.clude docror visits.

OBITUARIES

.

Hern to replace stmter )ohn
·
'Ullom.
After the one hit and one
. from Page Bl,
'run given up in the sixth,
Hern struck out four batters
widened the lead to 6-2.
in the seven th and eight
As mistakes plagued innings to help quickly em)
Mason Couniy late in the those innings with no hit s
game, it seemed early that it and no runs .
'
However hi s luck would
would be ihe other way·
around. Brandon Fowler, the only last those innin·gs.
lead off batter for the home· _In the ninth .. four consecuteam, scored the first run of . tive · batters got on base
the game when · three · past ' 1 causing Mason County to go
ball throws brought him wtlh closer Dale Kestner.
~t
was
over,
home. Tile above ayerage · Be lore
distance from the plate to . Barboursvcl le wen t comthe back fence proved to be pletely ~hro~tgh . Its ltneup
a
challenge
for and htt lor lour more run s.
Barboursville all game long. etchmg the 11-3 game tnto
Post '177 answered in the the books.
.
second with a pair of runs
Post .177 had a handful of
scored with an RBI double sol td httter 111 the game wuh
from Nate Wood .
Adam Atkins hitting 2-for-5.
The early back and fourth Andrew Blain had a hit with
game again teetered toward 2 RB!s and a double. Cory
the home squad in the fourth Finley hit 3-for-4 with a
when an RBI from Kameron doubl e. and four others also
Sayre tied the game at 2-2. managed a hit in the game.
Sayre had a good day at the
Mason County matched
plate with four hits. an RBI its opponent' in hits. JUSt not
and a double.
in run s. Those hits came
After the four-run fifth from Seth · Phalen who had
from Barboursville. both lwo. Josh Whitlock had two
teams posted a run in the and a double Reed and
sixth. Mqre paM ball trouble Fowler also ·m;naged ·a hit
from Post ! 77 brought run - in the £a me.
ner Sayr~: to third and a hit
Mason Countv returns to
from Fowler brought h.tm action 5. p.m. t~day against
~orne, giVIng Mason County_ ' Fairmont at Point Pleasant
1ts la~t run of th!! game. .
High S~;hool in a double:
Chmn scored the run tn ·header ·
the sixth for Barboursville
'
·
when a . hit brought him Barboursville 11, Mason Co. 3

• Pistons worrying about
more than just the Spurs.
SeePageB1

Help for Meigs' chronically ill children

Serta
Plush Euro Top

-Flag

Cuts

SPORTS

Pomeroy Council·
.discusses alleged .
harassment·of
downtown bar
patrons by PD

.,· .

met and n~merou s autographed jerseys.
Local businesses also donated items for
si lent auction.
" We had everything from car washes to spa
from Page Bl
treatments to dinners," Leach said.
In addition to Barlrum, several other ath2003. The camp, founded by Marshall lete s and local celebrities made appearances
University alums and current NFL players or played in Saturday's tourney. Included in
Mike Bartrum and Troy Brown, is held during those was former Washington Redskin Eric
May in Huntington and helps teach the fun as well as former Thundering Herd
damentals of football to 'the youth on numer- Anderson.
players Tony Bolland, Curt Nethercutt, Eric
ous levels. ·
Anderson and Casey Hill ,
·
"We started working with Mike (Bartrltm)
Also playing were several. members of the
becau·se we actually worked · his camp and WOWK 13 news staff: Sandra Cole, Brooke
saw how great' he was with the kids and what Baldwin , Paul Heggen and Keith Monday.
a big impact he makes in their lives," . Already one of the largest and well-known
explained Lead~
·
events of it s kind in the region, the PVH Flag
The PVH Foundation will use a portion of Football tournament continues to grow. There
the proceeds to pay for a . new handicap were so much interest in this year's event,
entrance way to the hospital.
that the tournament field could have been
Bartrum was in attendance Saturday, taking · even I arger.
time to pose for a photograph with each team,
"There was such an olltpouring of support
and also donated several unique items for for the tournament thi s year," said Leach.
' Friday night's auction. Some of the more pop- . "We cou ld only .··acco mmodate 16 teams
ular items included a Donovan McN abb auto-. because of space, and actually had to turn
graphed football. a Philadelphia E~gles hel- away eight teams."
·

'

points and Parker was 5-for-7
for I 0 points at halftime.
Prince did not swre in the
half for Detroit. while Billups
and Hami lt'&gt;n combined for
just seven po i111s .
. San Antonio', lead re;1c·hed
23 points in the thi rd qua rter.
and ·Ginohi li made bi g plays
dch time Detroit threatened
to get within striking di s-·
lance : A quil'ivrc!t"a-.~. ) from
the left side mad,, it 76 - 5~.
and Ginnbi·Ji then ,Jl'" " 'd 1Hi l
to Bcno l! ,!,·ih for ,, -' that
ganw the Spur' a 79-6J lead
enwr i n!.! th~ h ..unh.

Roman Catholics
b'Bin priests for
life as CEOs, A6

Fans celebrate after
Jackson acquitted of
all_charges, A2

..,

,,

'

-

L

,

�•

lfle Daily Sentinel

'

.PageA2

NATION • WORLD-

·Tuesday, June t4, 2005

'We love you Michael!': Fans celebrate after Jackson acquitted of all charges
Bv JEREMIAH MARQUEZ

verdict wou ld send u :-.ignaj to

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

him:
"He need\ to ....l!row up
...
"

SANTA MARIA . Calif Jubilant fans of Michael
· Jackson erupted in chants of '
"i nnocent" and strewed confetti outs ide the' courthouse
Monday as the pop star was
cleared of child molestation
and other charges. One f•tn
freed a whi te. dove for each

Lifelong
fa n
Raflles
Vanexel. 29, .of Amsterdam.
Hollaml. said he "cried like a
little babv·· when the.verd icts
were read ..
" J. feel like -1 was reborn :·
said Vanexel. who clai med he
helped lift Jacksnn nnto an
SUV fo r his notorious rooftop

acquittal.

dance after ·hi s anai gnment.

''This. proves that justice
can prevail in Amernca:· said
Tara Sardella. 19. who came

"The best is yet to come for
Michael . This time arou nd,
the world owes him some-·

from Arizona two weeks ago

th ing."

CDC:

..

''}

t~

i"

AP Photo

Michael Jackson fan s show their support ·outside Neverland Ranch in Los Olivos. Calif., after
Michael Jackson was acquitted in his ·ch ild molestation case , Jackson was cleared of all
charges Monday after a bitter four-month trial.
.
''He's a person who comes
The · verdict was clo s~ ly arrit10d for the verdicts.
In Britain, Jackson's friend ,
off as off-the-wall , but I think watched around the world.
he means well and !think the Arab new s channels al- psychic Uri Geller - who
jury got it righ t," said Ron Jazeera and al-Arabiya cut to helped set up the TV interLavergne, 61, who was visit- live footage of the Santa view in which the singer said
ing New York from Ottawa.
Maria counhouse as Jackson he sometimes shared a bed

" It just points Out how farwe
still have to go in really dealing
effectively with this in this
country. Maybe passing the
million mark will drive home
that this thing is getting bigger
and it's not going away."
Health offiCials say the prevention failure in part has come ·
from an abandonment of safe
sex practices by gay and bisexual men - who account for
almost hal f. of HIV cases.
Experts think they may be
weary of STD preve ntion mes- .
sages. The majority of the others infected are high-risk heterosexuals and injection drug
users .
Advocacy groups also •say
there 's not enoug.h federal
money behind public aware'
ness campaign~ and other programs.
"Jn the earlier days of t~e
AIOS epidemic. we didn't
know how. to get AIDS under
controL I think now we do. but
we· re watching a textbook case
of not implementing a good
plan." said Julie Davids,
for
the
spokeswoman
Community
HLV/A IDS
Mobilization Project.
Valdiserri said the CDC still
is co mmitted to cutting the new
infection rate. One difficulty is
that despite increases in routine
HIV testin~~ - including wide
use of rap1d test kits that pro-

One million Americans were living wilh HIV at lhe end af..2003

and HIV prevalence remains extremely high among black men
Who have sex with men.
·
.
.
New HIV diagnosis by
HlV by transmlaalon method

.

race/ethnlcity

45%

51%
Black

27%

32%
White

Male

•••
with
15%
HispanM::

Living with

HlV by race

22%

male
and
injeCtion
drug use

Living with HIV by gender
~'Ito

47%
Black

White

SOURCE : Ctntn for 04MeH,Contrd •nd Pmentlon

aro und 1.2 million. expe rts
believe.
The new est imates indicate
. black s account for 47 percent
of HIV cases; gay and bisexual
men make up·.:!~ percent of
those li ving wittYthe virus that
causes AIDS. the health
ageQCY believes.
In 2003, .the rates of AIDS
·cases were 58 per 100,000 in .
the black population. 10 per
I 00.000 Hi spanics. 6 per
· 100,000 whites. 8 per 100.000
Am.erican
Indi an/Ala ska
native population, and 4 per
I00 ,000
Asian/Pacific
Islanders.
The CDC also warned those
demograpHics may soon
· change because heterosexual
blacks. wome~· and others
infected after having high-risk .
sex (such as with someone with
HIV.aninjection-druguserora
man who has sex with other
men) now account for a larger
proportion of those living with
HIV than those who are living
with full-blown AIDS. ·

vi dere~ultsi nminut es- man y .

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:

Taft appoints new director of
school construction program
. COLUMBUS (A P) - The
commission that oversees
school construction for the
state wi tl get a new director
· this month. Gov . Bob Tafi's
office said Monday.
Rick Hickman . ·60. current!~: a deputy director for
the - Ohio Department of
Administrative Ser. ice,. will
run day-to-day 'operations at
the Ohio School Facilitie'
Commis.ion begonning Jtlne
,

professor of medicine.
"The U.S. has had a clear
failure in HIV preve ntion," del
Rio said. The CDC hasn't been
given adequate resources to
tackle HIV prevention. he said,
and expens have focused too
much on whether it's better to
promote abstinence or condom
use to stop the spread of the
·virus .
"We 're debating too much
what to do and are not doing
enough," said del Rio.
Estimating the . number of
Americans with HIV has
always been difficult for health
officials, but this year's figure s
are believed to be the most
accurate ever thanks to · wi~er
case reponing.
In the 1990s, the CDC and
other agencies generally
agreed that between 600.000
and 900.000 people had the
virus, acc ording . to the
University of California-San
Franci sco's Center for HIV
Information . The number in
the mid- 1980s was probably
'

HIV tops 1 million c:ases In the U.S.

people hlive not been tested.
More than a quaner of the
people living with HIV have
not been diagnosed. the CDC
estimated, and some apparently don't want to know.
Valdi serri noted that nearly a
third of those who tested positi ve at CDC-&gt;;pnnsored sites
around the country did .not
return to learn their results.
A.n upcomi ng 'c ientific
paper from CDC officials says
the majority of new infections
pave been transmitted by those
with HIV who don't know they
are infected, Valdiserri said.
Rece nt outbreaks of HIV
and other sex ually transmitted di seases in major cities
ot'fer a hint that new infecserves as executive director of tions may be as high as 60.000
.· the National A~sociation of cas.e ' a yeai. said Dr. Carlos
People Living with AIDS.
del Rio . an Emory Uni,'ersity

.

f/

Mor~ than a million Americans now
living
with
HIV
.

ATLANTA (AP) - More
than a million Americans.~.tre
believed to be livi ng with the
virus that causes AIDS. the
government said Monday in a
report that niflects both a victory and a failure at combatting
the disease.
·
While better medicines are
keeping more people with HIV
alive, government health officials have failed to "break the
back" of the AIDS epidemic by
their stated ooalof2005. This is
believed Ill be the first time the
I million mark has been passed
since the height of the epidemic in the 1980s.
New medicines that weren 't
around in 1981 have allowed
.people infected with the virus
to live longer, said Dr. Ronald
Valdiserri, deputy director of
the CDC's National Center for
HIV, STD and TB Prevention.
"While treatment advances
have been an obvious godsend
to those living witli the disease.
it presents new challenges. for
prevention ," he said as the
National HIV Pre ve ntion
Conference got under way.
Among the challenges is reaching an estimated 25 percent of
those with HIV who don't even
know they have it. ·
That in pan is why the CDC
has been unable to fulfill the
2&lt;)0 I pledge made hy I he
agencY.'s Dr. Robe11 Jansse n to
''break. the back" of the epi. demic by cu tting in hal f the
estimated 40.000 new HIV
infections that have occurred
every year since the 1990s.
"It is clear that we have not
achieved that goaLWe have not
halved the rates of new infections," Yaldiserri said. "But we
do .think we are . making
progress:·
However. some critics think
the number of new annual
infections could be even higher
than 40.000.
"We're seeing more infections. that's the bad news. But
the good news is many of us are
li ving longer: · said Terje
Anderson. who was diagnosed
with HIV eight year' ago and
AIDS four years ago. He now

. the Hysell Run Community
Chur.ch of Hysell Run Road.
Pomeroy. beginning with a
1\oesday, June 14
potluck
dinner at noon, and·
SYRACUSE - A public
singi
ng
by
the Gracemen at c
meeting to discuss the fate of
the London Pool wilt be held p.m.
at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse fire
Sunday, Jun'e 19
station.
CA
RPE
NTER - , The
BEDFORD - The Bedford
Township Trustees will meet Gracemen Quartet .will be in
concert at the Mt. Union
at 7 p.m at thetown haiL
Baptist
Chu rch
near
Carpenter at the 10:30 a.m.
service.
' ·
MIDPLEPORT
Justified from Alabama wi ll
c
singing at 10: 30 a. m. on
Thesday, June 14
Father's Day .at
the
POM EROY - · Pomeroy Middleport Church of . the .
Merchants Association meets. Nazarene. A dinner honoring
'at 8:30 a. m. at City National all fathers will be served fol Bank.
lowi ng.

and now the nightmare is

·

to wait for the verdicts. "We · h1 Jackson 's hometown of
love yo u. Michael'"
Gary. Ind .. neighbors and resMore than 1.200 people had idents walked past the former
waited .outside for the ve r- family homestead to expre ~s
diets. and screams of joy rang · their su pport. Renee Tribble
out from the thro ng. Fan s carried a sign ·that read
jumped up and down. hugged · ."Framed/Not guil ty." Others
/ each other and threw confetti drove past blaring their horns.
"' I knew he didn 't do it .""
into the air in ce lebration. A
female fan released a white sa id Franklin Reese. who
dove as ·word of each acquit- ' pulled his pickup truck in
tal was heard.
front of Jack son's onetime
As Jackson left the coun - home. blaring the song "'Beat
room. more than a dozen It"' fro m the stereo.
white ballooo1s were released.
In Times Square, a few
The musician blew kisses and hundred people gathered to
waved to the exultant crowd watch the. verdic) on a big"
before
departing
for screen between Broadway
and Seventh Avenue on 43rd
Neverland.
"I'm shaking... said Emily Sireet., Shouts rang · out at
Smith. 24. of Lo n do ~ . · who each nut-guilty pronouncewas among the few lu cky · ment.
fan s who got counroom pass ''I thoug!ot he was going to
es. "I believe justice has been be found guilty. so I am happy :
.done today."
·
for him," said Jacqueline
Karen Mannin2. 50. of Las Ingram, 30. of WinstonVegas. who sat i n cou n fo r Salem. "I really · thought it
two months in support of the . was going to be , impossible
pop star. ·said she hoped the for Michael to get a fair trial."

The Daily Sentinel ·

1

:o 'lha-. not been a subscriber m

the past 30

:
1

"Your Hometown Newspaper"

J.Drop thi~ coupun off in our office at .Ill Court St. , Pomeroy. Ohio with )OU.f paymenl and receive a ~E

27. pending approval by the
seven-member commission.
Hi, salary ·has been set at
$ 106,515 per year.
He replaces Mary Lynn
Ready. who left in February
after 2 112 vear' to become
·deputy general coun,el for
Ohio State Lni,·er,ity.
The commi,;ion ha' 'pent
53.6 billion on public school
construction 'ince it&gt; inception 111 1998·.

·

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Tuesday,June14,2005

Public meetings

over."

In Germany, several news
channels em-Tied the verd ict
.- live. and the top-selling Bild
newspaper quickly posted the
headline "Acquittal''" on its
Web site.
Manin Stock, .the founder
of a Jackson fa n club in
Germany who s(ayed up past
II p.m. to watch the outcome,
said he was overjoyed. even
though he had expected hi s
ido l's acquittaL
•
"The whole trial was laughable and Michael was treated
inhumanely. I think people
were trying to throw him into
prison to get at his m ~:mey."'
· Stock said.
Around the counhou se in
Santa Maria, police had barricaded the streets. About 40
ofliccrs liolding batons and
riot helmets watched over the
swelling crowd.
. Authorities said seven people had been arrested outside
co urt ·since jury se lection
began Jan. 31. Most involved
misdemeanors by Jackson
fan s. .
At least two dozen fans had
maintained a daily presence
at the counhouse - often
·s.creaming at prosecutors and
TV reponers they considered
biased.

THE BEND
Meigs County Court News

Community Calendar

with children
was
·relieved.
"" I'm trembling. this is so
. important. He did not l~t
down hi s fans and all the people •that love him." said
Geller. '·He went throug h hell

110\\' . •

PageA3

. The Daily Sentinel

Clubs and
organizations

.

Wednesday, June 15
CH\OSTE R
- Meigs
County
Fu emen 's
Association meets at 7 p.m. at
Station 5 in Chester.
Refreshments.
. POMEROY - Blue 88, a
politicial action committee
working to reinvigorate the
Democratic Party in the State
of Ohio wilt be holding an
informational meeting . · 7
p.m.. Meigs County Library
conference room.

Other events
Sunday, June 19
TUPPERS PLAI NS
• Father's Day breakfast 8-11
a. m. at .Tuppers .. Plains
Firehouse. serving pancakes.
eggs and sausage. Donations
accepted.-

Birthdays

~•

Saturday, June ·J.S
MARIETTA
- Ethel
Carson will celebrate her 91st
birthday on June 18. Her
address is Arbors of Marietta.
Saturday, June 18 .•
POMEROY
Third Floor. 400 7th St..
Homecoming will be held at Marietta, Ohio 45750.

Church events

Made-to-order dream house
should fit owaer s needs
DEAR ABBY: "Paula in
Tu cson" wrote that ·she's
sliort, under 5 feet tall . and
phins to build her dream
home with cabinets customized to suit her height.
Howeve r, her mother is
· vehemently again.st it. · You
suggested the mother might
be worried that her home
'would be so uniquely customized it could adversely
affect the resale value. and
that she consider having the
shelves and cabinets made
adjustable as is sometimes
done for people with disabilities.
Please tell that woman to
stick to her guns. I have a
friend who did exactly what
Paula wants to do. Several
years later she had to move
becau se her husband . was
· transfern!d . They decided to
. place an ad in the Sunday
. paJ)er for an "Open House
for Short People." On
Sunday morning they were
shocked t&lt;i find cars lined up
on both sides 'of their street
: and prospective buyers ·fight• ing about who was there
first.
· They sold the house that
same day to the highest bidder. There are many shon
: people in this world who find
• most houses uncomfonable ·
: to live in. - FRIEND OF A
. . SHORT
PERSON
IN
: FLORIDA
. DEAR FRIEND: Your
. message was repeated by
several architects who were ·
: kind enough to write. Read
. · on:
.
DEAR ABBY: I have ~n
.: .a practicing architect for 40
: years, and I've built fa~ ilities ·
and
homes to
ADA
: (Americans With Disabilities
· Act) standards:
· A lot of. people build their
· dream house later in life. A
house built with stock cabinets 6 inches lower, sit-down
· counters, 3.6-inch doors and
: other design features that
- could later be wheelchair: accessible will allow enjoyment of their dream home. for
15 or 20 years longer than
otherwise. shou ld the person
late r become disabled.
·
Funher. such a house
would bring a premium price
on the resale market. In fact,
r m sure Paula's mother
would someday in the future.
as age takes its toll. be
. extremely happy to visit such
· a house. - ARCHITECT IN
:NEW JERSEY
DEAR
ARCHITECT:
Thank you for sharing your
expenise..
'
· DEA~ ABBY: Paula is
building her dream home at
· 43.. This could be her FRP
· : (finhl resting place ). It should
: be designed to suit her [leeds.
. : Forget about the resale value.
In 20 or moo:e years. when

-

Dear
Abby

someone buys it. it will .be
time to install a new kitchen,
and the new owners can have
standard-height cabinets and
countenops put in during the
remodeling.
As an architectural designer. I cannot tell you how
many people are preoccupied
with the resale value of their
homes, when, iri fact , they're
never going to move! Of
course. if there were something totally off the wall or
out of the norm, that should
be taken into consideration.
But the most important message here is, design and build
for your own needs, not
those of sol)le fictional future
buyer. HEATHER IN
WORCESTER, MASS .
.
DEAR HEATHER: I concede your point.
DEAR ABI)Y: Paula 's
mother needs a large slice of
MYOB, pronto' That woman
is a meddler who should stop
trying to run her adult daughter's life. If Paula .is paying
for the house, by golly, she ·
should have it exactly the
way she wants it. That mother sounds just plain jealous
HEATED IN
to me. HOUSTON
DEAR HEATED: · It's
interesting how we read ·
things through the filter of
our· own experience. I
thought . the mother was
being motherly.
Dear Abby is wrinen by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips .
Write
Dear Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

VISit us
online at
UU

Jtl&amp;ly I II · -

YoU.. online

IOUl'Cefor
news

POM EROY
Meigs pended . probation. DU L
Countv Court Judge Steven Tara B. Davis. Pome ro v. 530
L. Story recently processed and costs. sea t belt vioiation :
the fo llowi ng cases:
JasC&gt;n M. Eakle. Belpre. ,530
Patti K. ·Arons. Pomeroy. and c ost_~. speedin g: Darren
52 0. vio-&lt;rarti ng/backi ng; T. Ellis. Chesterhill. $30 ai1d
Crystal Baofey. Racine. $30 .cost::-. seat be lt violation.,·
and co~ t -". seat belt violation;
Beve rl y Gilmore. Albany.
Christopher Ball, Letart. $25 and .costs. 30 days in
5100. 30 Jays in jail. sus- jail. ·suspe nded. probinion.
pended. probation , use/pos- passing bad checks: Barry
session dru g parapherna. M. Hambri ck. Whitehall.
$100. 60 days in jail. sus- S30 and costs . .speedin g:
PI'Ilded. probation. obstruct- .Jane J. Hampson. Evanston.
ing ofticial business. $100. Ill. , $30 and costs. speeding;
60 days in jail. suspended. John C. Harmon . Sy rac use.
probation, making . fal se · $20 and t osts, stop sigp:
alarms; Rob e r~ E. Barber. Kenneth R. Hobbs. Pomeroy.
Stoc kport. $30 and costs. . $250. 180 da ys in jail , 179
seat belt violation: Mike G. suspended.
probation.
Barnhart, Guysvi lle. S30 and dooi1estic violence: Ricky A.
costs. seat belt vio lation: Jeffers.
Pomeroy,
$3 0,
Jerry R. Bond. Glouste r. $50 speeding: Tory L Jord an.
and costs speeding : Charles · Warrensvi ll e Height s. S30
M. Boso. Portland. $30 and· and costs. speeding: Joll M.
costs, speeding; Steve Boso, . Kappl e. Belpre. S30 and
Racine, $30 and ' costs. seat costs. speeding; Donna M.
belt vio lati on.
Kent . Ravenswood. W. Ya ..
, Fatima M. Boukhcmis. $50 and costs. no O.L. $30
Huntington.
WVa.,$50, and costs. scat belt 'violat ion;
·speeding; Phillip H. Bryan. Robl:rt
A.
Ki nna n,
Spencer. W. Vu., · $30 and MidtJleport, $25. failure to
costs. se at belt violation; control; David G. Lambert.
Lesli e A. Butler. Laurelville. Pomeroy, $3 12 and costS:
$30 and costs. speeding; ove rload;
Ronald
R.
Robert
E.
Calder. Lavender. Racine. $30. seat
Bloooi1 ington: ,Ind .. $30 and belt vio laton; Michael B.
costs. speed ing; James W. Manley. ' Racine. $20 and
Chambers.
Cottagevill e. costs .. fa ilure to contro l:
W Ya .. $30 and costs. speed- Roben J . Marshall. Racine.
ing; Adam L Chesbiough. $30 and costs. seat belt v.ioHaverford. Pa:, $50 and lation ; Mark A. McCoy.
costs, speeding; Keith A. Pinch. W.Va., $50 and costs.
Cline, Long Bottom, $20 speedin g.
and costs, left of center ;
Ashley N. Meek s. Athens.
Ricky D. Colburn, Pomeroy, Sl50. 30 ·days in jail, sus$20 and costs, no taillights pended. probation , reckless
on vehicle: Gregory S. Co.le. operation ; Shea K. Meeks.
Tuppers Plain s. $300 and Athens. S30 and costs,
Gebrietta A.
costs. 30 days in jail 27 sus- speeding;

POMEROY
- Gary
Moore . son of Wendy
Moore of Pomeroy and the
grandson of Steve and Kate
Lindsey of Pomeroy. visited
home after · completin.g basic
trainin g at Marine Corps
Recruit Depot in Parris
Island, S.C. on June 3.
Moore is a 2004 graduate
of Meigs High SchooL He
enli sted in ·the Marine
Corps under the Delayed
Entry program at Marine
Recruiting Substation in .
Parkersburg; W.Va.

Howard Miller
Grandfather Clocks

Reg.$1619
• Cherry or. Oak
• Cable Drive Mechanism

••oo• "~c'\.~\.

'!i$995

Mekonnen. Columhu;. 5511 S IOil and cost.s. I0 days 111
and cost.s. ;peedi ng; Darrel l jail. sthpended. probation . '
G. Mi chael. Middl eport . u~!.:l po -. . . e..,..,!on drug paraherS70. no tai llights on vehtcle: ( nl! : Judv A. Searle,. Rutland.
Dustin 'lvtillhone. R ee d &gt;~ · il k. heaJiight--. req pirec.l: Tri~·ia A.
$30 ;md cmts. scat belt vio- Se lmon. Portland . S30 •1nd
lation; Larry L. Mitch. CO"oh. ~e;!t belt · \:io lation :
Middleport. SI 00 ..10 da ys in David
\V.
Shambkn .
jail. suspended: probation. Portland . . S50. speedi ng::··
di&gt;orderly conduct. S200. Kevin B. Sharp. Reedsv·il le.
180 days in jail. suspended. . S200 and custs. 10 days in
probation.
drug abuse: jaiL ,uspended. probation .
Sandra E. Morgan. Pomeroy. no O.L.. S25 · and co-.t\v....
S25. open ,ontainer in motor probation. display plates I
vehicle. S25 and costs. Yal id . . ticker: Patricia F.
equipment vio lation; Max B.. Shepherd .. Kean ing. $50 and
Ottman. Newark. $50 and cosh. speeJ·ing; Michael C.
costs.. speeding; Josep h R. Shutts. Belpre. $30 . und
Pace. Clearfi eld. Ky.. S50 cosh. ~e at ·hell v iol ation.
and costs, speedi ng: Elmer Kimberlv H. Sigman. Malta.
P&lt;:1r~o ns .

Racine. S20 and

co~ ts. · se~ t

B.

b e lt - p as~enger:

RECLINER
SALE
Our entire
stock of
Flexsteel and
Berkline. ·

Re.~liners areOFF
REDUCED!

Electric Range

Patterns in Stock

$289

99
•

sq.

I!!·ll Ill Flanders I
Spring Base
High Back Chair
White - Black· Linen
Green

J/4 $gg.oo

12ft. Wide •15

$7

S30 and cost~. ~peeJing~
Katrina . L.
S n o d gras~.
Racine. S70. · I SO days in

Charlene A.
Patt erson.
Pomeroy, $ 100. probation. jm.l. . suspended. probatipn.
phy. cont. v·eh. into:X.. S70. DW I: Thoma s R. Stever&gt;.
180 days in jail. ;;uspended. Albany. 52.070. 30 days in
probation. no dri Ye r license; jai). sus pended. probati nn.
Dien L Pham. Athens . s·30 phy. cont. veh : intox.. S70.
and costs. speedi ng.
seven days in jail. suspendRoy L Pi erce . Racine. ed. probation. no dri ver
$10 and cost&gt;. failure to reg- .licen se.
ister: Kevin R. Piste lli .
And rew
C.' Stewart.
Rav enswood, W. Ya .. $30 Mebane, N.C .. ·s30 and
and costs, speedi ng; Johnny com. spetdio g: Dale B,
L Prince, Middleport , $150 Thompson·. Powell. $30 and
and costs. 30 days in jail, costs, speeding; Kyle· J.
suspe nded. probation: di sor- Trent. Huber He ig hts. S30
derly conduct. S150. 30 davs ani'! costs. speedi.ng: Jule 'S.
in jail, suspended. probation. Underwood. Powell. 550 and
violating protection orde r: costs. speeding; Missey R.
Roy E. Puckett. Madison.· Walker. Rutland. 530. seat
Tenn., S30 and costs. speed- belt violation. 525 . fa ilure to
ing; Allen L Raines. Ripley. transfer ownershi p; Jesse A.
W Ya.. $30 and costs. seat
belt violation : Hans Raj. Ward. S50 and costs. 30
Hi gh Poi nt . N.C.. S59 and ·days in jail, 27 suspended.
costs, speeding; Jason Rose, probation. driving under
New Ha ven . W.Va .. $20 and susp I revoc. $30 and costs.
costs . .failure to control: probation. seat belt Yiolation.
Nicole M. Rou.sh. Pomeroy. S25 and costs. pro bation.
assured clear dis tance. S70.
probation . dis play plates I
valid sticker: Ross S. Wel l.
Shade. S20 and costs.
assured clear distance; Brian
Marine boot camp con- M. White. Long Bottom. S20
sists of 12 weeks of in ten- and costs. left of center:
sive traini ng with emphasis William E. White. Long
on physical fitness. survival Bottom. $2 0 and costs. seat
belt-passenger: William R.
techniques on land and sea. Wil son. Racin e. 525 and
marksman ship, leadership costs. di sorderl y co ndu c t ~
. principles, self disc ipline Craig ~1. Wolfe. Middlepon.
and ethics training .
$30 and costs, seat belt vioMoore's nex·t duty station lation; Matthew S. Yonker.
will be at Camp Lejeune, Middleport. 5600 and costs.
N.C. for Marine · Combat 180 days in jaiL suspended.
probation. theft, 5600. 180
Training . He will then days in jail. suspended. probegin formal training in the bation. theft: Kenneth E.
field of security force s as a Zuspan. Middleport. 520.
. Special Operation s Marine. ?I improper passing .

VINYL FLOOR
COVERING

Sale

•

14 cu. ft. Frost
Free Refrigerator

· $349

·NOW ONLY

Also stocking:
Loungers
&amp; End Tables .

LIVING
ROOM SUITES
Sofas, Love Seats,
Sleepers

BuiH-in Dishwasher

$269

ALLRED'l."CED

Super Capacity Washer

$369

.25~oOFF

�•"

OPINION

•,

. The Daily Sentinel

'

In the past 14 years, the
need for comprehenst ve
health care reform has
become ever more compelling. As 'lhe Nauonal
Coalition on Health Care
Morton
reported last mopth, the
Kondracke'
number
of
uninsured
Americans is expected to
nse from at least 45 million
now to 51 million by 2006.
Health care costs are ris- ·James Carv tlle - Wofford
ing at double-digit rates, erased a 47-potnt dehcn and
puttmg a drag on economic won the spectal electiOn he
growth by ratsmg insurance was running in by I0 pomts,
rates, cuttmg mto corporate attracting the notice ot preshopeful
Btll
investment and profit, and identia l
Clinton.
consuming more of the dtsWofford joked that he
posable mcome of workers
recently
learned
from
and retirees.
And despite growing Harvard Prestdent Larry
attention being patd to the Summers that his 1991 sucproblem of poor quality m cess also attracted the
health care, NCHC's presi- nouce of Cuban tlictator
dent, Henry Simmons, cites Ftdel Castro, who told
esttmates that medical Summers, then a World
errors rank aslhe thud lead- Bank offictal, that "maybe
ing cause of death in now Amenca W)ll get umAmerica, just behind cancer versal health coverage ..
The United States doesn ' t
and heart disease.
NCHC, conststmg of 95 have it yet - and the
of the nation's largest busi- NCHC's models show that
nesses, unwns, pension the U.S. doesn't have to
plans, nonprofits, churches resort to Cuban-style soctaland
medical
groups, •zed medtcine to get 11.
The group's . options
released a new stud' showmg that any of four models include : I) a combined
of comprehensive reform employer and mdtvidual
could save the nation hun- mandate, 2) expanston or
dreds of btllions of dollars extsting public programs
over a 10-year penod, as such as Medtcmd to cover
well as improve quality and segments of the unmsured.
reduce the ranks of the 3) creation ot a new targeted government program ,
uninsured to zero.
In 1991 , Sen. Harris perhaps modeled on the
Wofford (D-Pa.) gained Federal Employee Health
political traction by point- Benefits Plan and 4) estabmg out that · since the lishment of a new publicly
Constitution guarantees all financed system.
"l emphasize,"" S11nmons
criminal
defendants a
lawyer, the Umted States said in a press conference
should also guarantee the on May 23. "that none of
right of sick people to see a these entail a governmentrun system. But to assure
,doctor.
Another line that resonat· that everyone gets covered, he said, was that the age. we believe that parttCI·
government paid 75 percent patton must be required and
of lhe heallh premiums of subsidies must be provtded
Senators and other govern- to those who are less afflument workers, and ordinary ent.''
NCHC officials say that
Americans deserved coveroplion 4, tnvolvmg the
age as good.
Partly on the strenglh of largest imtial government
the heallh issue -and hav- outlays and long-term saving his campaign managed ings, concetvably could
by the then-li ttle-known allow for pnvate insurance

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing· Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting t!Je
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
. of speech, or of the p_ress; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW
!"

Fortunate
Appreciates Carleton service
Dear Editor:

Meigs County IS very fortunate to have Carleton School
and Metgs Jndustnes as part of Its .educational facilities. The
teachers and atdes go over and beyond in assisti ng the stu. dents 111 achi~ving thetr goal. I. have had the prtvtlege of
·attending the Amencan Cancer Soc iety 's Mini Relay for Life
at Carleton School the last co~ple of years and what a
rewarding experience!
- Steve Beha and his ""crew"" do an awesome JOb on events
'
-such as the relay. It you have never visited lhe school, I
would highly recommend lhat you take ttme out of your busy
schedule and see for yourself what a great fact lity '.this is and
the educanon gtve these fundamentally handicapped children. Thts would not be possible without the aid and asststance of the great people of Me•gs County in supporting this ·
·school. The lhings . that most people take for granted are a
maJor accomplishment for a majonty of their students. I just
recently attended my granddaughter's graduation from preschool at Carleton and 11 was a.very well-organized event.
Keep up the good work, Carleton.
JoAnn Crisp
Racine

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR .

Vice .President Dtck
Cheney is obvtously h1ghly
mtelligent, with a long
record of public service in
positions that allow him
access to whatever information he needs. Yet, on
CNN's "Lan:y King Live"
on May 30, Cheney said
detamees at Guantanamo
Bay have been "well treated, treated humanely and
decently." Can he really
believe that in view of
reports from our own servicemen and FBI agents
there?
And on May 25 , the pres·
ident's press secretary, Scott
McClellan,
denying
Amnesty
International's
reports of systemic abuses
of prisoners in Afghanistan,
Iraq and Guantanamo,
declared. "The Umted
States is leading the way
when it comes to protecting
human nghts and promoting
human d1gnity.'' Amnesty
International's rhetoric may
have been hyperbolic, but
the facts were there 111 this
,
and other reports.
Around this nation and
worldwide, not only are
human rights organizations
documentmg widespread
abuses - including physical and psychological torof
what
are
ture
euphemisucally
called
detainees - ' but more
reporters and editorial
writers , including here at
home, are expos1ng the
admimstrauon 's disintegrating cover-up of the
egregious lack of•accountability for these viol.ations
of our own laws and international treaties we have
signed.
A Feb . 17 Houston
Chronicle edit'o rial was .
greatly
disturbed
by
rei?Drt~ of terrorist suspects
bemg abused at the U.S.
!)a val base at G11antanamo

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today IS Tuesday, June 14, the \65th day of2005. There are
200 days left in the year. Thts is Flag Day. ,
. .Today's Htghhght in History: On June 14. 1777, the
Continental Congress in Philadelphia adopted the Stars and
Stnpes as the national tlag
On this date: In 1775, the Umted States Army was founded.
In 1841. the first Canadian parliament opened m Kmgston.
In 1846. a group of U.S 'ettlers m Sonoma proclaimed the
Republic of California.
. In 1928, the Republican National Convention nommated
Herbert Hoover for pres1dent on the first ballot.
• · In 1940. Gern:mn troops entered Paris during World War II.
In 1940, m German-occup1ed Poland. the Nazis opened
lhetr concentration camp at Auschwitz.

The Daily Sentinel
(usPs 213-960)

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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'

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E-mail:
newsOmydculysenhnel com
Web:

.,.Nw mydaJtysenttneJ com

lnolde Meige County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

.. ... .

.'32.26
'64 20

'1 27 1 1

Outatde Meigs CCKinty
.. . .. '53.55,

13 Weeks .
26Weeks .

52 Weeks .

.1107.10
'214.21

.

....

......

anything. But g1ven the traJectory of the cnsis. those
g.tins would be '"ped out,
would not, however, resem- less than a ve&lt;~r after thetr
ble Britatn 's (or Cuba's) enactment ~· ·
program. m which doctqrs
Even though a millton
are government employees. workers have taken advan·
As history shows, there tage ot one of Bush's signal
ce rtainly are political dan- i"dcas ' tax , beneftted
gers in trying to enact heahh savi ngs accounts wholesale reform of the all of Bu ~ h·s proposals
U.S. health care system would cover fewe r than 10
The
Clinton
proposal . mtllton of the nation's 45
champtoned by then -first million uninsured:.,
l,1dy (now Sen.) Hillary
S1111mon~ (jfgues. too. th'Ut
Rodham Clinto11 (D-N. Y.) Bush's emph,ISis on Soctal
and (lacked by Wofford, was Sccutity rcfotm ts ' short··
opposed by Republicans stghted '"We're not saying
,and the health insurance not to reform Socwl
llldU!&lt;ilry as too government- . Secunty.'' he told me. ·' But
heavy and was defeated tn a ns ftscal shorttall will cause
Democratic Congress
a 30 percent cut 111 benefits
That defeat. combtned 40 or 50 years from now
wtth a controversy that
"Rtght now. 111 2005.'' he
divided
Penn sylv ania's said, ""there we at least 45
Democratic party over the mtllion Amencans ·who
plan's coverage of abm ~ have zero percent health
tions. caused Wofford to benefits Zero perce nt'""
lose hts race for re-election
So far, even though the
10 1994 to then-Rep. Rtck NCHC includes such giant
S,llllOrttm (R).
entitles as General Electric.
""My election conv inced the AFL-CIO. AARP. severClinton th,lt thts should be a
al state pension systems and
maJor issue 111 his campaign ."" Wofford recalled. some big 111surance companies , its models ha'e yet to
'"and It conv inced Congress
that health care was a much be converted mto legi )l abigger, hotter iss ue than uon - qr even a stump
anyone esttmated and that speech
Sen. John Kerry (D·
they were g01ng to ha' e to
Mass .) and Rep Henry
do something about 11 ...
W,uiman
( D-Calt f.) are
But he added, '"My defeat
showed that thts was a hot sponsonng a plan to cover
nul that can burn you. too:· II million uninsured chilPolttically and on the dren. but that \., auld be on ly
merits, advocati ng compre- a step toward comprehenhenstve
health
reform SIVe coverage ..
It and when a pohtictan
should be a net benefit in
goes al l the way. there ·will
2006 - and 2008, too probably more for a be renewed controversy
over costs, government
Democrat
contro
l ,md an NCHC priJPtesident Bush and GOP
posal
for
""contamment"" of
health experts such as
Senate MaJonty Leader Btll insurance premiums, which
Frist (Tenn.) are wedded to might be labeled "pnce
an incremental approach controls.' '
Still, the problem IS real.
emphastzing tax breaks and
legal changes that would It"s lime that health care ·
enable tndtvlduals and reform IS senously debated
small companies to buy agam. And an election
thetr own msurance and pay campatgn is a good place to
do 11.
attention to the costs.
(Mort Oil Ko11dracke is
According to Simmons,
'"a number of those ideas exec!ltll•e edttor of Roll
would do something. It"s Call. the nell'spaper of
not that they wouldn' t do Capitol Hill.)

- though it mtght also
resemble Canada's govern ·
mem msurance system. It

Mr. Pre$ident: The cover-up isn't working

Letters to the editor ar~ welcome. They should
· be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
. addressing issues, not personalities.

Reader Services

Tuesday,June14,2005

Top campaign agenda: Health care riform

The Daily Sentinel·

.

PageA4

..

"!

... ...
._

~ ,

Keene, co-chairman of the
Washington-based
Constitution
Project 's
Liberty , and
Secunty
lmttatt ve. is also chairman
of
the
Amencan
Nat
Consenauve Umon.
Hentoff
No one would confuse
Keene with Michael Moore.
Thts Ltberty and Security
lnitlauve strongly recomBay, which "have been mends that Congress and
confirmed by memos from the president "establish a
commtssion.
FBI agents who observed biparti san
various forms of physica l mode led after the 9/l I
and psychological abuse :· Commission, to investigate
The ednorial also con- the tssue of pnsoner abuse .
demns the "renditions" by Spectfically. we recomwhtch
suspects
are mend that such a bipartisan
snatched a way to count~ie s commissiOn investigate the
well known for torturing vanous allegations of abuse
their prisoners as further of terrorist, suspects by the
confirmed m the State United States, and make
Department's annual ltsts recommendations to guide
of nations with the worst U.S. offictals in the future ...
That would include ortihuman rights records
As the Houston Chronicle ctals of future administraeditorial emphasizes: "Thts tions because the war on
practice, whtch the CIA terrorism has no discernible
calls rendition, is official end The more the creation
admtmstratlOn policy and pf such an independent
can't be blamed on low- commission ts delayed, the
ranking, overzealous opera- graver damage will be done
tives."
to our conduct of that war
On May 29, on .the Fox - and to George W. Bush's
News Channel. hardly a admtrable mtention 10 send
left-wmg operation, one of the liberating word. practice
' its regular commentators, and s pirit of democracy
"
conservative
Wilham around the world
Kristol, editor of "The
A pnmary reason I subWeekly Standard;' whtch I scnbe to the B.ntish daily.
Times
read carefully, charged ""No Fltlancial
officer has been prosecuted although l do not presume
for any of the abuses in to write about financtal
either Guantanamo or at deyelopments and problems
Abu Ghraib and it"s not any more than I write about
right. There has to be nuclear physics - IS the
accountabihry 111 the mlli- analyses of its columnist.
tary..,
Phthp
Stephens.
who
I ha'e supported the war emphasizes.
··G uantanamo. and secret
on Saddam Hussem 's hortific regtme from lhe begin- fact lilies elsewhere.· were
ning, as have many of the established to put suspects
other cnucs of this glaring beyond the reach of the
lack
of accountability U.S. constitution. The dis(including from those at the patch (known as rendttion )
top of lhe cham of com- of alleged terrorists to
mand). For instance, David reg1mes pracuced in tor-

ture and the clandestine
act"iltes of the CIA have
the same purpose In the
eyes of much of the rest of
the world the effect has
been to rob the U S of the
moral high ground. to
demean Its democracy and
to undermine it s mission of
spreadmg freedom.
"I have heard American
friends say such draconian
measures ~re proportionate
to the threat . But l am not
sure they appreciate how
badly · America's standing
and mnuence has been tarnished."
More Americans are
beginning to understand thiS'
- and they are far from JUSt
the
members
of
MoveOn.org, Air America
or the rest of the Howard
Dean crowd.
On Mav 7, 2004, Donald
Rumsfeld.
testifying
before the Senate and
Hou se Armed Services
Committee on the treat ment of detainees. satd :
'"Each of us has had a
strong 1~terest in getting
the facls out to the
American people We want
you to know the facts. I
want you to have all the
documentation and the
data you reqUire ."
By all means. let us ·•
mdeed have all the facts and
documentatiOn. But tt"s
become clear thiS won't
happen untt! Con~;res s
establishes a truly b•partt··
san commtttee of mqutry· to
do JUSt that. Now ts the ttme
- before we do anymore
damage to oursehes.
(Nat Henroff IS 11 IW/1011·
all\ reno'-'uzed alilhoru~ m1
the First Ammdment · and
rhe Brll ofRrghts and author
of manr boob. rncl11dilt ~
"The War on the Btl/ ,;1
Rtg!rts an~. the Gathamg
Resutance (Seven Sronl-\
Pres.s. 2003)

Tuesday, June 14, 2005.

The Daily Sentmel ··Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Top labor official says he's Bannai says cousin is
.staying on oversight board trying to hijack plant
COLUMB!_IS ! API tn\nl\"lltg

Ellen Foreman Arnott

'

NEW MATAMORAS - Ellen Foren1.1n Arno tt. Y I. of Ne" Ohll)':-. top org:amted l,thor Ill\ c ... tmcnt . . 111 rclrC coin ...
Mma·to,oras. p,.,sed away .tt 9 ~0 "m on Sunday. June 12. leadet satd ~lond.ty th.tt ,t nd it' $"15 millinn lt"s
2005. at Countty Ha ven Adult Clfc FauiH)' 111 Newport.
he's . . td \'J IH! on th~ hn.tnJ lrom .1 hedge fund l.t~t
Born Sept 25. 1·913. in West Vlf~llll,l she was the d,1ughter ' th ,u o\~r . . ec.., tht' ..,,~ue·:'\ :e~u .
uf the l,ne Charles &lt;~nd S,uah R'~'an· Foreman. She ,;;," a lllSUranre lunU for lllJU r ~d
LawJ'lukcr~ have promembet of the Racme United Mcthudtst Church and Orckt of work~rs
posed addtng two inve stEas~tn Star. Ham son' tile Ch,lptct.
AFL·CIO Presid en t Btll m~nt ex pert s to the com,
In .tdditton to her parents. she was preceded 111 de,1th by hct Bur g,, ~atd workers still mtss!On.
while
Burga
husband . . John Arnott .• md her ststers. Edna Ours. Estella need -.;omeone luoktn g ou t w~un-; a panel of Inve stClarke. and Elste Zahrndt
,
for them at ihe Ohio ment expe rt s to oversee
SurviVIng are her chtldren · Vtrgima (James S. Sr.) Rees of Bu rea u
of . Wm kers· bureau u.ve~tments. Burg a
Racme. Lots (Gene) Weaver nf Jacksonville. Fla. , and Kenda Compensat ion . Burg a. &lt;1 , also'' ca llin g foi' a nonpar(Bob ) Brown ot New Mmamoras: grandchildren: Jonathan Democrat. 1S one of five tis&lt;m mvesttgation •of the
(Mtssy) Rees. Ja y (Tind ) Rces , Beth (Jun) Clarke. Michael members of the buretlu's bureau·s investments
(Andrea) Weaver. Shelley (Dav td) Kendall , Tonya Pelphrey, Oversight
Commts&gt;ton.
Ant&gt;ther member ot the
Shannon Brown. and Ju st in (Robm) Brown, II great grand- which approves bureau board. Cleveland NAACP
children. a great grandc hild, a sister, Goldte Heiney , a sister- dec tsions.
1nc Iud 1ng d 1rector George Forbes.
in-law, Vtolet (Lawrence ) Bush: a brother-in-law, Kenneth mve stme nt s.
rcsi~ned last week when 11
Ours, and a longqme friend, Martha Wolle
"[ ha ve cho se n 110( ( 0 W,IS- revealed his daughter
Servtces will be held at 2.30 p.m. on Thursday, June 16. resign, but to stand and works for Pinsburgh-based
2005, at Letart Fall s Cemetery Chapel in Letart Falls with lt ght for the tmprovemenb MDL Capttal Management.
Rev, Mon is Wolfe olltctallng
nece ssary to correct the sit· the inve stment group being
Fnends may chll from 6 to 9 p.m. at Cremeens Funeral uauon and stop the abus· bl,11ned for the bureau's
Home 111 Racine
es: · Burga sa td.
$2 15 million los s.
The role of th e commisForbes said his daughsion , ha s been questioned let "s job had no influence
recently a's an Investment on the company's work for
Po"MEROY - John P. '" Jack" Raub. 70. of 107 Ebenezer scandal continues to grow the· bureau.
St., Pomeroy, passed away on Sunday. June 5, 2005, at St
Mary·s Hospttal in Huntington, W Va, followmg an extended
illness.
He was born Jan 10, 1935, m Pomeroy, son of the late
Joseph J. and Ge)lrude Kieling Raub. He was retired from the
AEP Phtllip Spot n Plant. He was a veteran of the U.S. Na'y
and a member of the American Legion. He was a member of
Sacred Heart Church 111 Pomeroy.
Suntving are three sistets Wmtfred (Orel) Proctor of
Hamilton. and Joanne Tattetson and Susanna Raub. bnth of
GALLIPOLIS
- Autt'm
POMEROY - "Dragons.
Pomeroy: and a brother. Ntcho las Raub of Cecilia. Ky.
Support
Group
meets
at
6:30
Dreams
and Danng Deeds'" is
Bestdes hts parents. he was preceded iJI death by hts sisters :
p.m.
on
June
21
at Holzer the theme for the summer readBertha Jungntckel. Catherine Wel sh. Dorothy Taylor. &lt;1nd
Medtcal Center Educauon and mg program at the Metgs
Rose Mary Raub.
Conference
Center Room C. Couuty District Public Library.
Servtces wt!l be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday, June 18. 2005,
lnfolll1ation
IS available by call·
ll1e program is open to young
at Sacred Heart Church wnh Re v. Fr. Walter E. Hemz offtct·
tng
4-16-8598
people. preschool age through
atmg Bunal will follow, &lt;lt Sacred Heart Cemetery.
young
adult , wtth programs,
Memorial contributions may be , made to Sacred Heart
prize
drawings.
story hours, a
Church, 161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. Oh10 45769.
readm~ club and more. An
Ad ult - Summer
Readmg
a~sory
Program is also being offered
A vanety of programs will be
REEDSVILLE · - Tuppers
RUTLAND - Destmy Lynne Mins\:tall. newborn daughter Plruns-Chester Water DIStriCt ha.' offered for ,111 ages Hours for
of Rebecca L Houser and J,unes Kevm Mmshall of Rutland. ISSUed a boil adVISOIY for CUS- story ume are 2 p m Mondays.
was born on Fnd,•y . .ll!ne 10. 2005 and passed away on tomers on Rice Run Road ui Racme Ltbrary: 2 p m. Tuesday.
Saturday. June I I. 2005 at Holzer Medtca l Center 111 Olive Townshtp unul 4 p.m on Eastern Ltbrary: 2 p.m
Gallipolis
.
Tuesday.
·
Wednesday. Pomeroy Ltbmry.
Besides her parents. she is survtved by a brother. Nat hamel
and
2 p.m.
Thursday.
Paul Minshall of Rutland : maternal grandparents. Frank and
Mtddleport Ltbmry.
Terrie Houser of Rutland: paternal grandparents, Juamta
Programs to be offered at lhe
Bryant of Pomeroy ,md J,tmes M Minshall of Portsmouth;
Pomeroy Library are 2 p.m.
and several aunts, uncles and couSins
June 15, Phil Luckevdoo, 2
Servtces wi ll be held at II am on Wednesday, June 15.
REEDSVILLE - Forked p m.. June 22, Safan Max and
2005, at Lallie I ClifT Ftee Methodist Church 111 Pomeroy with Run State Park plans a cruise- 111 Darwm the Dragon, 2 p m June
Pastor Glenn Rowe oftlciating. Bunal wtll follow at Rutland from 2 to 3 p.m. on June 18. ll1e 29, Tom Spamugh; I p.m. July
Cemetery 111 Rutland.
first 15 vehicles m get&lt; a free 13, Chautaqua; I :30 to 3:30
Memorial contributions may be made toward buri111 expens- dash plate.
p m , July 20, Parties R Us
es c/o Birchfteld Funeral Home. P.O. Box 188, Rutland. Ohio
A fatl1er/child fishing contest Bounce House.
45775.
Registration ts now open.
will be held from 6 to 8 p.m, at
tl1e spill way, with prizes awarded Programs will conunue lhrough
the residence except for for btggest, smallest and most July 20.lnformation is ava.tlable
the room which Jeffrey fish caught. Information IS avrul· by calling Pomeroy Library at
992-5813 or online at
Ohlinger had use'ct, but in able by calling 378-6206. •
www meigs.lib.oh.us.
Campsites
with
electrical
ser·
that room, we found drugs
from Page A1
The library welcomes chil·
and paraphernalia, includ- vice are still available for the
Ing severa l hypodermic weekend. Reservations are avml· dren of all abilittes. All proand paraphernal! a, and needles still 'loaded' for able by calling (866).644-6727. gmms are free of charge.
after other officers were use," Jones said.
ca lled to the scene, the
"This is probably the
under 21 years of age, a peryo~nger Ohlinger consent ·
worst drug case I've ever
manent resident of Ohio, and
ed to a search of hts home . mvestigated in Racine,
under the care of a BCMHAll other occupants who because there were used
approved doctor and have or
from PageA1
were in the home at the needles throughout the
possibly have a chronic medtime were removed from bedroom he had been
tcal
condition There are also
the residence, and a search us1ng," Jones said . " It 's an and coordmate services for some financial eligibtlity
resulted in the discovery increasmg problem in thelf child. This is a program ~equirements for certain proof the contraband , Jones Racine , involvi ng more whtch IS hmited to chtldren grams
satd.
rental properties all the with specific condttions and
Cunningham can stafi the
who are seen by a team of process by referring an eligiJeffrey Ohlinger has Lime··
'
at . hospllal s ble family to a BCMHbeen free on bond 10 a
"We ' re domg our best to' providers
approved
by
BCM
H for ser· approved doctor. She can be
pending drug case in so lve the problem, because
vtce
coordination
Meigs
County
Court. the people ot Racme aren't
· 1eached at the Metgs County
To qualify tor the pro · He,11tli Department at 992 Jones said.
gotng to tolerate thi·s ktnd
grams children must also be 6fi26
'"Nothing was found 111 of act" It)'."

John "Jack" Raub

Local Briefs

Support group

Ubrary offets pro-

meets

grams

Boil water
issued

Destiny Lynne Minshall

Plan Father's Day
events

Drugs

Children

'

satd.
'"The
Middleport
Cominunny Assoctation is a
credtble organtzatton wh tch
asststs a lot of orgamza!ions ·
from PageA1
111 the community and
Jul y 4 celebration in beyond it, and we would
Mtddleport because the cele- never do' anythmg that would
branon m Rutland IS sched- be dtsrespectful.""
The opponents to the
uled for July 2.
,
At
;t
Community cemeten site have said it is
Assoc1atton meeting last disrespe"ctful to those who
. week, members agreed that are buried there, while the
the Independence Day cele- Association maintams the
bration' shou ld be discontin- area considered for the fireued if there can be no fire- works display IS not near any
works display, because the gra,es.
:'A ny time there's a
display is the mam attraction
change, there w11l be opposiof the celebrauon.
"There are two tssues to tion at first ," Dooley said.
wnsider in determining a "There 's a stanst•c that five
stte for the fireworks,'" percent are going to be
Dooley told council mem- opposed to any proposal. Are
bers last night. "One of the we going to let ti'e percent
major issues is keepmg a of our population determ•ne
safetv radius in the area what •s gOOd for the oth\!r 95
where the f1reworks are set percent?"
Peckham expressed conoff. That' becomes an issue
because the company doesn't cern that members of the
provide security and we can "t public would be at the cemeafford to do that. When the tery, but Dooley satd only
river site is used, people are fireworks company employconstantly gomg through the ees and firefighters would be
barriers on Front Street.'"
penmitted. and the :u-ea
"The second tssue is that would be blocked off.
the man who has been setting
Council members said they
off our ftreworks for y~ars have recetved comments and
was mjured and has just leners
resident-s
from
returned to work and can "t opposed to the proposal. Of
work from the river location. 12 · people attending la$1
That's why we had to come night"s rfleeting. seve n spoke
up wuh an alternati ve site.""
out m support of the use of
"The cemetery site would . the cemeterv. and one spoke
be extremely safe." Dooley m
opposition.
when

Fireworks

!

lannarelh polled members of
the public attending · the
meetmg
Middleport Pool
Jannarclli reported that
attendance at Middleport
Pool has been good. and that
there have been no problems
with .lighting and profanity
as expenenced m the past
Average daily attendance at
the pool has been :28 smce
the Memorial Day opemng .
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker
reported that the pool had
taken in S I 0,000 to date , and
that the payroll for the season "expected at $15,000.
""[don ' t think"it will bring
in a lot of income but it
should be able to carry
itself;' Baker said. ;'We estimated that the pool would
bring in approximately
Sl5.000. but based on revenue to date. that figure
could be as much as $25,000
by the end of the season."
Other busmess
lannarelli read a letter in
support of Middleport's
application hr grant funding
for a downtown revitali zation proJe•t. from Meigs
Chamber
of
County
Commerce The \lllaQe ha'
applied for a S 15.oo0 grant
through
the
Ohto
Depariment of Dcveloptttent ·
and the Oft'tce of Housi nQ
and.
Community
Par.tnershtps
Counctl conducted a sec·

Bv TtM MALONEY
TMALONEY@MYOAILYREGISTER COM

dt.:li:.tncc or an

O.JJTl.: ... l

warrdflt

1..,,llr••·J

for hjm here 111 \ia.~Jil
County h! Judge Davtd W.

NIbert
POINT PLEASANT
Global' lndustnal Prodl!cts
"There '' no lusuticauon to
owner Bun~ Bannru tired d ~hot h\lle a \\'cliTdm:· Rmnw srud ··1
back at ht&gt; collsin. Jacob Bmson. Uon·r lhmk there IS any reason
Monday from lsrttel , t:allmg h1s l"ur anybody In thremen me perlawsuit agamsl him a bl~1tant :'\Onal\y... u1d my ab1htv to move
attempt to htJack hts plant
,rround tmd o~mtc mY business.
.. He ts nm'lmg cvcrythmg I
He ,,ud people m his C&gt;rgani·
do.'" Bannai said. ""It lllllst be wuon can mn the plant wi\hout
stopped ..
hun bemg there
On May 31, Global shut lis
'"It I need to be m the U.S. I
doors and laid oil' most of it&gt; IJ+ wtll be 111 the U S , or any other
employees. On June 2. Bannat place:· B'mnai satd. '"There 1s
fil ed for bankruptcy, agam nolhin!! to make me concerned.
lltree straight companies have They ~"isued th1 s arrest warrdllt
tiled for Chapter I l. the last two on a bunch of nothing.'"
owned by B'mmu .
Nibe11 found that by moving
Binson. who savs he mve, ted
millions' in the cotnpany. IS seek- $ 1 million in material from the
ing through a lawsuit to have the Ne" Ha' en plant that Banna.t
company placed In recetvershtp. hdd' tolated a March court order
He satd the company need' lorbtddmg h1m from selling any
"nurturing."" and wants the &lt;~&gt;sets ot the plant. ,
court's apprQval to open the , Banna~ said the buymg and
selling ol materials IS part of the
plant atld run 11.
""l· won't let that happen ... regular operations of Global,
Ban nat vowed Monday ·T II a11d that the selling of the materlight th~&gt; lhrough the legal ml back t'o h1~ mam supplier vtoapproach. as allowed by the hatcd nu court onlcr
legal system ··
..There is no JUstification to
Also, Bannai repeated hts issue the arrest warmnt," he said.

Pom~roy
from Page A1
""People say 11 isn ' t for
them (the police department )
to walk-thru so many tunes a
night," McAngus satd.
Councilman Jtm Stsson
agreed before statmg to
Prolfitt, "If busmess places
can't handle their own trouble
they can call you ..
"I don "t approve of the
walk-thrus," Stsson went on.
cttmg his fear that it would
hurt business downtown.
The unnamed bar and
patrons were not iderittfied by
McAngus who later asked
Proffitt if ht s department ever
dtd compliance checks at the
Eagles Club located m downto" n to which he replied

"y,s:·

clean up thts community then
this " the best way to start."
Musser sat d.
Other business:
Counctl gave Proffitt permiSSIOn to hire Brent Rose on
a call' m basiS as an officei for
the
Pomeroy
Police
Department Pr.offttt stated
htnng Rose would help keep
down overttme hours.
Wnght gave a list to
Proffitt of restdences on Mulberry and Union Avenue
that have high weeds and
grass
Clerk-Treasurer
Kathy
Hy sell reported that Village
Admmtst rator John Anderson
dectded that a village
dumptruck that had prevtous ·
ly been put up for bid would
mstead be sold for scrap in
order to get the maximum
amount of cash for it.
It was announced that a
part has beeh ordered to fix
the trafftc l[ght at East Main
and Sycamore Streets.
Re solution 18.05 was
passed, repaymg an advance
ot $9.232.75 to the general
fund after recei"ng the funds
from a grant from the Ohto
Department of TransportatiOn
fo r benches and trash receptacles for the walking path.
Also the general fund was
repaid for a transfer from the
street fund in the amount of
$2600.
Resolution 19.05 was
passed, entenng the .village
mto an agreement wilh lhe
Washington County Sheriff's
Office to house prisoners
arrested by the Pomeroy
Police Department. TOe vii·
Iage is under no obligation for
a prisoner quota and the rate
is S55 per day per prisoner if
the need arrises for housing.
Thts rate is $10 cheaper than
the Southeast Regional Jail m
Nelsonville.
Hysell
reportetj
that
Counctlman Todd Norton
satd the Beech Grove ceme·
tery gates were done. Council
then approved paymg for
concrete and rebar to reset the
gates.
All members of council
were present for the meeting
with the e~ceptions of Norton
and Counctlman Jaclue
Welker.

Proffitt mamtained that hts
department was followmg the
Oh10 Revtsed Code and that
he could not change the law.
"" I know that vandalism is
much less when we do walk·
thrus then yea rs t~go when we
didn't ," Musser sa id about
'"after hours" activt ty.
Sisson and McAngus did
complirnent the police department on the "good job" it was
"dom~; on eradicating drugs in
the v1llage.
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun and Geor~;e Wright
brought up complamts they'd
bolh received concerning dog
feces left on the walking path.
parkin$ lot and even downtown Sidewalks.
Musser said that residents
who do not clean up after
!heir ammals on vtllage property are subject to a $100 fine
and court costs.
Wright reported tltat he
and Sisson had met to dtscuss
htring a rental property examiner and collected a draft uf
an old contract that the previous examiner signed for ser·
"ces. The two men also
reviewed the existmg or~!·
ond readmg on an ordinance nance for the examiner and
retaming village ownership the regulations tor the inspec·
of an alley between Lmcoln tions.
I
and Pearl .Streets. near the
It was decided to send the
high school property which tlndings to vtllage attorney
the vi ll age hopes to sell. A Chris Tenoglia for revtew
thtrd reading was held on a
"If w(re ever gomg to
br6.,..ntleld grant application
through Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional
Development District The
funds , if awarded. would
provide a study of the CC!nditions at the Park Street
School site. That ordmance
.
l!ul, ?J~J
was approved:
Council also.
"L ·
• Approve\~ payment of
bill s 10 1he amount of
$23,077.
.
• Approved the mayor' s
report of fees and fines collected 111 the amount of
$.7.687 and reports from the
mcome tax. public works and
refuse departments.
• Approved transfers withIll the police department bud·
get m the amount of $1.000.
.·-,,;. -. \
and the mcome tax budget, in
lli+f• ·~
the amount of $379.04.
'. } _/
• Approved R.J. Gib.bs as a
Sponsored by:
part-ti me pol tee dispatcher.
Syracuse Volunteer Firefighters Assoc.
• Sci a public heanng at 7
Contact: lllrry Ebersbach 992-5-40
p m on June 23 for review of
the proposed 2006 tax budJosh Larsen (after 7 pm or leave voice mail)
get.
740-591-1853
Counctlmen Roger Manley
S30 entry fee + :Z balls
and Robert Robmson were
Entry Deadline: June 24, :ZOOS
excused. ' Present were
Drawing
and Coaches meeting:
Counctl Prestdent Stephen
June 25, :ZOOS at 10:00 am
Houchins. Kathy Scott. Jeff
Peckham and Shawn Rice

~ 2005 ~
Bill Hubbard
Memorial

LITTLE.LEAGUE
BASEBALL
TOURNAMENT
July 6- July 10

•

�.•.
''

~ageA6

' '

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,.June

14,2005 ·

The Daily

INSIDE: ·
Browns news', Page .82
.
U.S. Open golf preview, Page 86

Bl

Sentin~l

Roman Catholics train priests for life as CEOs Bv

JOE MILICIA

ASSOCIATED PRESS. WRITER

"'The Rev. Bill Rose figured it
was divine intervention when
he was put in charge of St.
. Rose·• Catholic Church in
Lima. Ohio.
But as the youngest pastor in
the Roman Catholic Diocese
of Toledo, he was m over hts
head. He inherited a debt and
had to lay otT workers and cut
co.~ts.
. ,.
It was ov~";whelmmg , the
38-year-old srud.
. In the 1950s, Rose would
have spent years as an app(enttce under s~veral pastors to
learn the sktlls of runmng a
·h N
·h h
f
pans . ow. wtt as ortage o
pne~ts, young clergymen are
being promoted much earlier.
Dioceses have resp&lt;inded by
training priests early in their
careers or while still in the
· seminary for the many roles
they will play as r;&gt;astor.
"It is tmperattve we give
them car,abilities to succeed as
leaders, ' said the Rev. Dave
Nuss, the Toledo Diocese's
director of vocations. "It's
more than accounting and payroll. It's about cultivating leaders."
Nuss routinely has priest's
meet with . local corporate
executives to glean their business savvy.
Mount St. Mary's Seminary
in Cincinnati has been providing an elective class on parish

Lawyer: Man
accused of mall plot
arrested without
cause, forced .to talk

finances since the mid- 19~0s .
one of the first se minaries to
begin doing so.
"Some of these guys are
going to be the CEO of multimillion-dollar operations ...
said Dennis Eagan. adding that
many of his fonner students
later call him to thank him for
teaching the class. ·
The Archdiocese ofChicaoo
provides workshops on rna~- ·
· agement and personnel jssues
for newly ordained priests. It
also matches new pastors with
mentors, a common program
in large dioceses, said the Rev.
Loui s Cameli, the · arc hdio·
cese ·.s director of ongoing for:
.

m·31 IOn.

A o s in astoral admin. . c ur e P
.
. tstrauon , at .S~. . Mary. s
S~mtnaf) and Un"er&gt;tty . '"
Balttmo~e covers everythtng
t_rom b~lanct~g a budget . to
tundr:ustng to butldtng matntcnance . ._
_
.
St Marys, the. ltrst Ctthohcr
semmary estabhshed . tn the
Umted States, tnuns pnests tor
about 20 dioceses on the East
Coast.
.
. The seminary places ~reat
tmponance on g_~tttng .Pnests .
ready to lead pan shes because
some beco':'e pastors within a
y~ar of ordm~tton. srud Betty
Ytsconage. vtce prestdent for
institutional advancement.
"The faculty sees this as
their primary miss ion ... she
said.

AP Photo

The Rev. ·Brendan McGuire poses inside the Holy Spirit Church in San Jose, Calif. McGu ire v·os
the executive director of'the Persona l Computer Memory Card International Associatto•, before ·
becoming a priest. He has brought business practices, like employee evaluations, to 1-'oly Spirit.
a parish of more than 4,000 people. Many men are deciding to enter the priesthood later in life,
and some have business backgrounds. which has helped broadenthe talent base inthe church.

Sister Christine Schenk,
execuli vc
director
of
FutureChurch, a Clevelandbased group nf.libentl-minded
Roman Catho lic reformers,
would. like to see every seminary require courses in human
resources, management and
community organizing.
"Most priests want to be a
priest because they want to be
mini stering to people, not
because they IV &lt;lOt \0 be a manaoer
.. Sche nk said. "Most
do
e '
.
management badly."
But the Rev. Edward Burns,
executive director of the secretariat for vocation s and priestly formation at the U.S.
Conference · of · Catholic ·
Bishops, said each diocese has
its own admin i strati~e style
and therefore should be left to ·
decide how to instruct priests.
Many seminarians spend a
fu ll year of study at a parish
·
befrire the y are ordained.
Many men are deciding to ·
enter the priesthood later in
life. and some have business
backgrounds, which has
helped broaden the t&lt;tlent base.
Decades ago. rriestSgenerally were on l~ inoJ intheir rr\id~_(l ., I. J., t _ e .u·.1LC. average 0:1ge
ui' '"' ordained priest was 37, .
to · the l) .S.
according
Conference of Catholic
Bishops.

agency rule-making process.
The Senate · also ex tended
public comment 10 30 days
instead of 15 - still shorter
than the current 45.
Rich Shank, state director
of The Nature Conservancy,
said it 's troubling th&lt;tt the reg- ·
ulatot1' changes were· inserted
in a huge spending plan with
little public debate .
"They've blind-sided a lot
uf people," he said. "I WO\IId
just a;· soon see this whole
thing put uff and handled separately."

Wednesday's game
Lancaster at F:eeney Bennett,

6 p.m.

Tlluraday '$ game ~
Mason Co. at Hillbilly Ha~dball
Classi_c (Elkins) , TBA ,
Friday 's games

Portsmouth at Feeney Hennen, 6 p.m.
Mason Co. a!
Classic (Elkins)

Hillbilly

Hardball

Saturday'• games
Feeney .Bennett at lancaster, 1 p.m. ·
Mason Co. at Hillbilly Hardball
Classic {Elkins), TBA
•

Sunday, June 19
Feeney Bennett at Pickerington, 2 p.m.
Mason Co. at Hillbilly Hardball
Classic (Elkins) , TBA

Legion Baseball

Post 128
surges .past
Parkersburg
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUN(i..COM

PARKERSBURG , W.Va.
- Feeney Bennett exploded
for I 3 runs during the· second and third innings en
route to a lopsided 17-6 victory over Parkersburg Post
184 during American Legion
Baseball action Monday.
Six runs crossed the plate
in the third before a single
out was recorded. ·
Ken Amsbary, in addition
to being the winning-pitcher,
helped .his cause at the plate
with a triple, three singles
and four runs batted in: Post
128 (5-4) amassed 15 hits
while snapping a two-game
slide.
Luke Haislop had two hits,
including a double, . with
three' RBis; Austin King singled three times and Matt
Mooney also had multiple
hits and three RBis. Josh
Eddy added a two-run home
run.
.
Joe Nutter had a big day in
the losing effort for Post 184
with a triple and three singles. His club had 13 hits, ·
but failed to come up with
the timely ones.
Amsba(y worked all seven
innings of · the mercy-rule
shortened. outing. Andrew
Alderman took the loss for
Parkersburg.
Feeney Bennett plays host
to Lancaster in 8th District
play Wednesday.

.

Sports Briefs

EHS athletes can
still get physicals

Local Stocks

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern athleies in grades 712 ·
who
missed the
physicals at
the
school
may sti II get
one at Dr.
K e I I y
Roush'. s
office, which
is located' at
tpe
l;lolzer
Sycamo~e
Branch . ..
Dr. Roush will be giving
the physicals throughout the
month of June by appointment, and there will be a $10
cost for the examination ..
Physical forms may be
'picked up in the Eastern
. High School office.
For additional information, please . contact the
office at (740) 985-3329.

ACI- 54
AEP-35.81
Akzo-39.35
Ashland Inc. - 68.70
AT6T- 19.21
BU-13.54

NewsChannel

. Tuesday, June 14
. Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noo11)
Expect a humid morning.
Temperatures will climb from
72 to 85 'by late this morning.
Skies will be partly cloudy to
mostly cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the southwest.
Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)·
Harley Davidson - 49.3.4
It should be a humid and
JPM- 35.50
cloudy afternoon. We are pre· Kroger - 16.51
dicting light rain . The rainfall
Ltd.- 21.69
should begin' around 4 p.m.
NSC -31.63 .
The rain shou ld reach · 0:14
Oak Hill Rnanclal - 27.96
inches by the ·end of this
OVB-26.20
afternoon : Temperatures will
BBT- 39.50
rise from 87 early afternoon
Peoples - 26.12
to the high for the day of 90 at
Pepsico - 55.57 .
2 p.m. as they drop back
Premier ~ 10.40
down to 84 later this afterRockwell - 50;10
noon. Winds will be 5 MPH
Rocky Boots - 31.73
from the southwest. ·
RD Shell -· 60.36
·· Evening (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)
SBC-23.91
It should continue to be
Wai-Mart - 48.28
humid and cloudy. Expect
·;-~encty'l 46.78
moderate rain . Rain should
Worthington- 16.75
reach 0.16 inches thi s
Dally stock reports are the 4 · evening . Temperaturj!S will
p.m. clollng quotes of the
diminish from 84 early this
previous day's tnwu actions, , evening to 74. Winds will be
provided by Smith Partoers
5 to 10 MP.H from the southlit Adwlst Inc~ of Gallipolis.
west.

· Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
· It looks like a . cloudy
overnight. It will be dry.
except for a sprinkle or two.
The rainfall will finish around
I a.m. with total accumulations for this event near 0.. 31
inches. Temperatures will
drop from 73 to today's low
of 67 by 6 a.m. Winds will be
5 to 10 MPH from the west
turning from the southwest as
the overnight progresses.

Wednesday, June 15
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It should be a cloudy morning . Temperatures . will
increase from 68 to 75 by late
thi.s morning. Winds will be 5
to 10 MPH from the southwest turning from the west as
the morning progresses.
Aftemoo/1 ( 1-6 p.m.)
It will remain · cloudy.
Temperatures will rise from
76 early this afternoon to 79
by 3 p.m. then drop down to
71 late afternoon. Winds will
be 10 MPH from the west
turning from the northwest as
the afternoon progresses.

'

Contact Information
Fax-1 ·740·446·3008
E·rTIIII- sportsOmyd{lllysentinetcom
Soorta Staff

Briel Sherman, Sportl Editor
(740) 446-2342, .... 33
bshermanOmydailylribune.com

Bryon

wo'*" Sf&gt;O&lt;t• Wrltor

(740) 44'6·2342, .... 23

bwalters 0 mydaitytri~ne .oom

Latry .i:Nm, Sportl Wrllor
(304) 675·1333, ... . 19
Ierum 0 mydailyreglster.com

,,

AP photo

Detroit Pistons Tayshaun Prince (22) Rasheed Wallace (36) and Be6 Wallace (3) react in the fourth quarter against the San Ariton1o Spurs in the fourth quarter in game two of the NBA finals in San Antonio Sunday.
'

Pistons worrying about .
more than just the Spurs
Bv ·lARRY LAGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. - The Detroit
Pistons are renowned for their resilience .
If the defending champions don't rally
from a 2-0 deficit against San Antonio in the
NBA Finals, however, ·they might be as well
known for their whining.
The Pistons complained incessantly about
the officiating during the Spurs' 97-76 victory Sunday night in Game 2, just as they have
at times during the regular .season and playoffs.
•
When cmich Larry Brown was asked if he
was concerned with his team's lack of composure, he offered up what he called a simple
statistic.
"We're 1-7 with one referee and Il-l with

.(Jackson
football
coach
•
resigns

2~~f~~~~~~~~~m

job from Andy Rice.
Bu,t the latest coaching ..
news didn't come as.a shock
- Layton had applied, but
was passed over, for the
school's athletics director
position,
Layton · averaged nearly
eight wins per season and
accumulated a 53-23 record
(including playoffs) during
his seven-yeai reign in
Jackson. He had his only losing season in 2002. when that
group went 4-6.
His teams made the playoft's .four times, including
trips to the regional sernifmal
the past two seasons. ·
The Ironmen claimed ordy
one Southeastern Ohio
Athleti~ League title during .
the Layton era, that corning
during his first year. Gallia
Academy was always the

~~!linJlw~oc~~: ~~h~

wins in the series
and have
'
won the league the last three
seasons.

F

NALS

sours SPrlm1hrouuh game two otftnals
The San Antonio Spurs have dominated the defending champs
Detriot Pistons, winning the first two games of the NBA Finals. Detroit

must win four out of five games for a successful comeback.

the rest," Brown said Monday.
Brow11 declined to elaborate, but postseason box scores show Detroit is 1-7 when
either Ron Garretson or Dan Crawford has
ofticiated its games and Il-l when neither
has been on the court .
Of course, the Spurs have had · a lot to do
with the Pistons' problems, too.
"if people · don't give us credit, we just
don't care," said Manu Ginobili, who has
scored 53· points in the series.
Spurs stars Tim Duncan and Ginobili
appear to be better than anybody Detroit has
while Tony Parker, Bruce Bowen and Robert
Harry have made numerous key plays against
the Pistons.
San Antonio is spreading the floor, sharing
Please see Pistons, Bl

N'BA

{2) Detroit

(2} San Antonio-

PISTONS

SPURS

~., .

.

PPG

90.5

40.0

RPG

42 5
17.5

J~,o
8.5

=~-:a

·..

A~(; .
SPG

- . -ii~- - -- J

. : .~~-- ····-

Tayshaun Prince

f

Finals statistics
72.5

San Antonio's Manu Glnoblll
goes up for a shot over Detroit's

7.0

!;

fG"/o

.083

Je:N

.447
...405

.§67

FT"Yo

.816

Team leaders

19.0 PPG Ginobili

Billups

26,5

R .waua·ce

B.O RPG

Duncan

14 .0

Billups

4.5 APG Ginobili

4.5

B.Wallace .545 FG% Ginobili

.667

Billups

1.00 FT"Yo Udrih

1.00

Billups

.143 3PT% Udrih

1.00

SOURCE: NBA

AP

"Manny' s going to hit," Boston
right fielder Jay Payton said.
"Everybody gets on him beca~se hi s
average isn't .320, but he's still hitBOSTON Manny Ramirez · ting some homers and driving in
stopped to watch his fly ball sail runs and Manny's going to have his
toward the foul pole. just as Carlton (usual) numbers at the end of the
year."
Fisk did 30 years eari·ier.
.And, jUst like Boston's Hall of
Ramirez has 1'3 homers and 49
Fame catcher who had stared from RBis. He went 2-for-5 to raise his
home plate, Ramirez raised his arms batting average to ;254 and is hitting
skyward, after waiting between fir st .339 in his last 14 games.
The Red Sox led 7-2 when
and second base, when his shot just
Ramirez capped a five-run, sixth
reached the stands for a home run .
Ramirez's three-run .drive to right inning with a high fly. near the low
field helped Boston to a 10-3 win right'field wall. Wily M.o Pena ran
over Cincinnati on a nigh t when the over but the ball appeared to hit -his.
Red Sox . celebrated Fisk's shot glove as he neared the fence . and it
against the Reds that hit the left- bounced· into the stands . Ramirez
field foul pole and gave them a 7-6 raised both arms in i tou'chdown
win in Game 6 of the 1975 World gesture when first-base umpire
Series.
Terry Craft gave the. home-run sigBoston lost Game 7 at home , the nal.
·
AP photo tearits' · last meeting until Monday,
Back on Oct. 21 ; 1975 , Fisk
Cincinnati Reds starting pitche r Eric Milton but the current Red Sox are on an watched his ball sa il to the opposite
wipes his face after giving up two runs on a offensi ve roll sparked by Ramirez 's
· Please see Reds, 81 ·
hitting revival.
single by Boston Red· Sox's David Ortiz.
BY HOWARD l!LMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BSHERMAN®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

JACKSON -· Winds of
change just keep gusting in
Jackson.
Highly successful and
popular football coach
Raitdy Layton resigned on
Monday and will accept an
administrative position at
neighboring Oak Hill.
Layton represents the third
significant coaching resignation at the school in recent
weeks. · Dustin Ford left the
boys basketball program for
a job in :he college ranks last

2005

Red So~ pound Reds

Bv BRAD $HERMAN

.

Bob Evans - 23.29
Bor&amp;Warner - 54.93
Champion - . 4.09
Channing Shops - 9.19
City Holding - 34.50
Col-48.25
DG -20.35
DuPont - 46.86
Federal Mog.ii - .85
USB-29.23
Gannett - 74.57
==~I ~~~~c- 36.55

Today's game
S. Charleston al Mason County, _5 p.m.

1

State budget provision would speed pennits to ·fin wetlands

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
Somali immigrant accused of
conspiring . to help terrorists
blow up a shopping mall was
arrested without grounds and
pressured to answer investigators' questions, his attorney
said Monday.
Nuradin Abdi's answers.
including what he knew about
an admitted ai-Qaida member.
should be kept out of his trial,
attorney Mahir T. Sherif said.
. He,asked a U.S. District Cmin
judge June I to bar Abdi 's
statement,. Records on what
Abdi said are sealed.
Agents told Abdi Nov. ·28
they were arresting him for
violating immigration laws,
but did not specity which laws
and did not show him a warrant until three days later,
Sherif said.
·
Agents used Abdi 's 'statements to buijd a cao;e against
him, Sherif said.
"It was a warrantless arrest
·to start with, and after keeping
him for three days and ques- ·
.tioning him for three days. they
used his own statements to go
get a warrant," Sherif said.
Agents also threatened to
deport Alxli and his famil~.
pressuring him to answer thetr
.&lt;jUestions and .to sign away his
· nghts to refuse to talk and .to
have a lawyer present, he said.
.
.

Tuesday, June '14, 2005

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Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Motivational jewels: Crennel shoWs
off Super Bowl ring to his Browns
BY ToM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEREA - When .Romeo
Crenn.el
walked . into
Monday morning's team
m'eeting to open minicamp.
Cleveland
Brown s
the
noticed right away there was
something different about
their first-year coach.
He hadn 't lost any weight.
In tact, Crennel was at least
four ounces heavier.,
"I saw those diamonds
sparkling," sa id linebacker
Kenard Lang, sti ll awed by.
the sight of Crennel's
newest Stiper Bowl ring .
~'Those diamonds hit me in
'the eyes from all the way in
the back of the room . I
thought: I go t tci get 1i1e
one. "
Crennel's blinding blingbling came courtesy of the
4.&lt;J6.-ounce, 4.94-carat ·ring
that he and other members
of the New England Patriots
received on Sunday night in
a
ceremony
at
the
Brookline, Mass., mansion
of owne.r Robert Kraft.
The 14-karat white gold
ring that · was awarded to
Crennel features 124 diamonds and costs more than
$15.000. But for the
Browns , the significan ce of
Crennel's jewelry isn't in its
price tag. · ·
"When you see that,"
Lang said, lifting an empty
ring fin ge r. •·and yo u see
him , you know that man
knows someth ing about
winning. , You play football
for two reasons : for the "love

.Reds
from Page 81
foul pole, waved his arms
toward fair territory then
jumped when it wits ruletl a
homer. Before Monday 's
game, that pole was renamed
the "Fisk P.ole" in a brief
. ceremony that Fisk attended.
He also threw out 'the ceremonial first pitch to former

.Tuesday,Junet4,2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Browns tight end to
have knee surgery
BEREA (AP) - Cleueland Browns tight ·end Kellen
Winslow Jr. will undergo surgery Tuesday on the right
knee he inj ured while attempting stunts on his high-powered motorcycle last month.
·Winslow tore the anterior cruciate ligament in ·his knee
when he crashed his motorcycle into a parking lot curb
at 35 . mph. The 21-year-old was hospitalized for nine
,day_s after being thrown over the handlebars.
Browns coach Romeo Crennel said Winslow, who has
not commented publicly about the accident, will miss the
entire 2005 sea'Son - the first time the team has been
allowed to reveal that informa.tion because offederal privacy laws. ·
.
Wearing a brace on hi-s knee and a backward Cleveland
lndians' cap, Winslow watched intently from !,he sideline
as the Browns practiced today. Based on hi s experience
with other players, Crennel .said Winslow will likely
need nine months to recover from the operation: At ihe
iime of his accident, Winslow was .still rehabbing a broke.n right leg that he sutiered in his second game as a
,rookie, ·

the Browns ' roster, Crennel
has been trying to change
the culture around a
Cleveland team that has ·
been ravaged by injuries and
made just one •playoff
appear&amp;nce since 1999.
But rhetoric is one thing .
· It 's results thai matter. In
showin g off his ring,
Crennel took another s tep in
making hi s players believe .
they can .yin. ·
"I saw the spat·.~le - when
we came in I he room ," tight
end ·Aaron Sho;a said.
"That's motivation· right
there. I won a national
championship ring in college and I want a Super
Bowl ring in the wprstway."
Crennel was joined at
Sunday night's ring ceremony by Browns offensive
lineman Joe Andru~zi , lineb~cker Justin 'Kurpeikis,
offensive line coach Jeff
Davidson and defensive
assistant Cory Undlin. All ·
were with the Patriots l-ast
season.
For Andruzzi, ge.tti ng a
third Super Bowl ring was
similar to his first.
"This one is the biggest,
by- far," he said. "B ut not
only is this nic.e ·and big, it
exemplifies more. It 's about
the hard work you have to
put in . to be a champion.
That's what we're tryingto
do here."
Unlike Crennel, Andruzzi
pidn 't get a chance to bring
back the ring to show his

of the game and a Super
"I might wear it from time
Bowl ring ." ·
to time," he said. "Special
Said quarterback Trent occasions."
,
Dilfer: "It reminds you of
Crennel's. new objective is
the prize you're playing for to get his sixth ring -· ;md a
and what it takes to win- first one for Cleveland'
one ."
"You know ' in this busiCrennel can fill" up one ness what happens." he said.
hand with the five Super " 'Last year is las,t year, it's
Bowl rings he has won what have you .done for me
three with New England and lately 0 We ' re trying to do
two that · he earned as an something here and develop
assistant with the New York an attitude and a winning
Giants. But after his inspira- team. The rings are nice
show-and-tell, because you're able to,
tiona)
Crennel took off his ring accomplish it and feel good
and said it would soon join about that, but now there's a new team!n.ales.
four others in a safety new challenge."
"No," · he said with ·a
deposit box.
In addition to overhaufing laitgh . "My wife took it."

batterymate. pitcher Lu.is home," he sa id. "We've ju_st relaxed with that lineup."
played two pretty intense
Tiaill.
The Red Sox had 16 hits
"l don' t know if .embar- .series" at St. Louis and the one day after getting I 7,
rassed is the ri ght wor~. But Chicago Cubs where Boston their second most of the ·
you wonder whether yo u was 2-4.
year, in an 8-1 win over the
He allowed two runs in the Cubs. They also had a seadeserve it,'' Fisk said.
OG Monday night, Matt fifth on Felipe Lopez's RBI son-high seve n ex tra-base
Clement (7- 1) allowed three triple and Rich Aurilia's sac- -hits in · each game. Johnny
runs and six hits in eight rifice fly and one in -the Damon had three singles
innings with a season-high eighth on· Javier Valentin's after getting a double, triple
nine strikeouts and one walk second homer of the season. and homer on Sunday night.
in hi s first start since giving
"Even the worst pitchers
'' It was nice to have anoth·
up seven· runs in a 9-2loss at can ·give up six, seven runs er hitter in the lineup" after
St. Louis.
with that (Red Sox) lineup," playing without the desig" It 's nice to ge t bac·k Valentin said. "He can be nated hitter in the NL cities,

www.mydailysentinel.com
proininent roles.
"I'm
confident
we'll
respond, not because we
always do it, but we have to,"
from Page 81
Detroit's Lindsey Hunter
'
said. "There's no choice now.
the ball and making 1hots.
"We're not demoralized.
Defensively, the Spurs are They did what they were suptaKing away passing lanes posed to do. They won two
and easy shots with chest-to· games. Now. we have to see
chest pressure.
·
what we can do back at
Meanwhile, the Pistons home."
look lost on offense and overIf the Pistons pull off a
matched on defense as two of stunning comeback .and win
their starters - Ben Wallace . their fourth title, they . will
and Tayshaun Prince
join the 1977 Portland Trail
struggle at both erids of the Blazer&gt; and 1969 Boston
court.
'
Celtics as the only teams to
"We've never faced · any- overcome an 0-2 deficit in the
thing like this team,'' NBA Finals .
De.troit 's Antonio McDyess
"(t ·,· another chal lenge for
acknowledged.
.
us to be grerit," Hunter said.
Spurs . coach
Gregg
If the Pistons lose the next
Popovich expects to face a two games, .they will be just
much different team the rest the third defending champion
uf the series.
·
to get swe pt in the fina ls,
"They' re going to be fero-- joining the 1989 Los Angeles
ciou s," he said. "They're Lakers and the 1983 Lakers ,
going to b,c very physical and . according tu the Elias Sports
· aggressive."
Bureau .
The Spurs are t\yo wins
" It 's not about coming
away from their second title back, it 's about tinding ways
in three years - and third in .to win games, or we're go ing
seven - but know it still to spend a long summer trywon'.! be easy to stop the ing to fig ure out what
Pistons' quest to repeat.
could' ve been, or should've
Detroit will host Game 3 on happened," Wallace said.
Tuesday" and Game 4 on
Though the Spurs seem
Thursday and if necessary, unstoppable, they crumbled
Game 5.
·
last year and made things
"We can definitely win all . more difficult for themselves
three, but we still have to earlier in these playoffs in the
come back here," Prince said same shuation they're in now.
in San Antonio.
San Antonio lost four
With a collection of talent- straight to the Lakers in the
ed castoffs, the Pistons have -conference finals last season
consistently proven they're at after · leading 2-0 and were
their best in adverse situa- pushed to six games by
Seattle _this year after winning
tions.
They trailed Miami 3-2 in the first two games -of their
the conference finals before second-round series.
The Spurs can feel good
advancing and were behind,
Indiana 2-1 . in the previous about their chances of dealing
prosperity against
round. They rallied from a 3- with
2 deficit to New Jersey last Detroit because smce trailing
season and a 3-l hole against 17-4 in Game I, they 've
Orlando two years ago, with outscored the Pistons by 49
four current starters playing points.

Pistons

said Boston bench · coach
Brad Mills. who filled in
while
manager
Terry
Franci:Jna
attended
hi s
daughter's high school graduation.
Boston scored nine runs
off Eric Milton (3-8), who
matched his career-high for
runs allowed, set in 2002
_against Cleveland. He's
given up at least six runs in
six of his last eight starts.
"We made a few changes
mechanically. I felt a lot

~rthune

Help Wanted

(

•

NOTICES
In the Probate Court
of Meigs County, Ohto ·
Velma
Rue, .
Administratrix with
Annexed of the Estate
of Etlzaqeth Maude
Joachim
Burkett,
Deceased
Plaintiff

Vs

Frank L. COx, Jr., et al
Defendants
Notice by Publication
Case No. 33098
To: The Unknown
Heirs, Next ·at Kin ,
Spouses, Devisees,
Legatees ,
Administrators ,
E "xecutors ,
Successors
and
Assigns of Nicholas
Price,
Elizabeth
. Jones Price, Michael
Price~ Evan Price,
Maude Price, May
Price, Estella Price.,
Daisy Price, Peter
Joachim , Elizabeth
Sauvage
Joachim.
Catherine Joachim,
Elmer W.C. Joachim,
· Emma
Margaret
Joachim ,

Emma

Margaret
Emma
Morgan,
Margaret

Bachman,
Margaret
Emma
Ros8,

Charles P.J. Joachim,
Frank
. Theodore
Joachim, John Philip
JOachim,
Kennelh
Bachman ~~.
John
Bachman, Betty Jane
Bachman, Betty Jane

Wttklnson aka Betty
Jane Wttkl.ll, Edith
Morgan, Edith Cox,
James
Dougl••
Joechlm,
John
Randolph Joachim,
Garratt C. JOIIchtm,
Ruth
Joachim
Gardner, Phyttlo JOIIchlm, John Phtttlp
Joechlm, Jr., whOIII

i
Elizabeth
Maude
Jo8chlm
Burkett,
Deceased, Plaintiff,
Frank· L. COx, Jr., .et
al., Defendants. Th.l s
acllon
has
been
assigned Case No.
33098, and is pending
in the Probate Court
of Meigs County,
Ohio. The object of
the
Complaint
d8mands the Court to
determine who are
entitled by the l&amp;l!!,B of
1he Slate of Ohio to
the next state of
inheritance and deler·
mine the share to
which each is entitled ·
according to lh8
statutes
In .Such
cases .made and provided ·and for such
other relief as ihe
Court may determine.
You . are required to
· anSwer,the Complaint
within twenty-eight
(28) days aft!lf the last
publication of the
Notice, which will be
published once each
week tor six (6) succes,ive weeks. The
last publication wttl
be made on the 14th
day of June, 2005, and
the twenty..lght (28)
days for answer Will
commence an \ that
date. tn the case of ·
your failure to answer
or olherwlae r8spand
as requeated by the
Ohio Rules of Civil
Procedure, judgment
by default will be ren·
dared agalnal yau
and lor the retial
· demanded tn the
Complaint Deled thlo
2nd day of May, 2006
· (5) 10, 17, 24, 31, (5) 7,
14

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

r
I

r·-------,.1
GiVEAWAY

4 Beau tiful Kittens lo a
Loving Home (304)895·
3013

It
%~
.~w------·

~~D

Friendly. mala cal needs a
home. Aboul a year old. Has
not be9n n~utered or
de&lt;:lawed. Please call 740.
446-4488.

narnu 1nd ·add,.._

are unknown.
YCKI IN hereby noll·

fled that you hav~

been

n1med

Defandanta In thtl
action antltlod Velma
Rue, Adfl!lnlotratrlx
With Wttl Annexed of
the
Eetatt
of

•

Read your

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Respiratory Therapist
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepring resumes for a Re spiratory
Therapist. Must be a graduate of an
approved Respiratory Thempist Program:
Current West Virginia license required.

Excellent salary,holidays, heallh
insurance single/family plan, dental .plan,
life insurance, vacation. long-term
disability and retirement.
Send resumes to: Pleasant Vallcy ·Hospital,
c/o Human ResourceS.
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(304) 675A340

· www.pvalley.org
AAIEOE
Expll!'rienced M«h•nit

-10 hrs. Week
Paid Vacations
5.J.I&lt;H)" 1'\egotiabl €
Must haVe own tools
V~ iJJ dm·t'r-. lio!rt'&gt;t'
SoLith East Imports
740-5'12-24.97

FIN.DAJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

i
I
! Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
••

••

! Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Wili Run For FREE In

The Tri-County Marketplace! .
•

_41_5_8_ _ _ _ _.:__
Gi veaway: 3 kitlens to a
' good ll ome, 2 female/1
male, shorl ·hair, mulli-colorad . (304~75-6695

~~;:;::;:::~weight

r

~

I \11 '111,\11 \ I

GALLIPOLIS

" II&lt;\ HI ...,

Family in need, wanting yard
GiveaWay : Dry9r (needs
sale items to sale to · help
repa ir) . old sludent desk,
witll bills. Any help Is appreand navy loveseat (needing
ciated. Call (740)446·9327.
repair) . (740)368 -Sl)76. ·

'"~

YARD SALE--

Kitl ens 7 weeks old, lirter
trained, very playful, different colors (304)675:2349
please message
2 Family garage sale. Route
.
143
1/2 mile off 7,

POMEROYiMIDDI.E

r rroo: If.141h. ~~00 I
Found Recently ·und Bought
Siberian Husky puppy has
returned home to orlg1nal
sales w1th collar.. call 740992-5885

--

o-

s

Rut!and H
196 61
Yearbook.
Dick Williams
94(}.
367•7073

LOST: Quantum Spinning
Rod/Reel . at Fishing Rodeo
0611 1/05 at Krodel, belongs
to Grand-son. please call '
(304)67 4-0193

SHOP

Lost: Black and White Pll Bull
in Addaville school area.

CLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale ............................,,.....,.......... 725
Announcement .............................:.............. 030
Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ..............:; ................... 440
Auction and Flea Market .............................oeo
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ............................................ ,.....
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Bu lldlng Supplies ........................................550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Bu slness Opportunity .................................21 0
Business Training ....... .,,.,,.,.,, ..................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ................ ~.......... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 01 0
Child/Elderly Care ......................................._190
Electrical/Refrigeration ...... ,........................840 ·
Equipment 'or Rent ....................: ................480
Excavating ..........................:......................... 830
Farm Equipment..........................................61 0
Farms lor Rent,. ..................... :................... ..430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease .......................... ~..........................490
For Sale ...............:.: ...................................... 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ...........;...........,............. S80
Furnished f!ooms ......................... c............. 450
General Hauling...........................................850
Giveaway..................................................._
... 040,
Happy Ads ...................... "'""""'""'"""'"""050
Hay &amp; Grain.................................................640
Help Wonted .................................................110
Home tmprovemento.............,.....................810
H - lor Sale ............................................ 31 o
Household Goods ..........................:........... 51 o
House• lor Rent .................... ;.: ................... 410
In Memoriam ...................................:............ 020
Insurance .................................................... 130
Lawn l Garden Equlprnent ........................

-lor
-lor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Mobile Home Repair..,;.,.............................860

Mobile
Mobile

RenL ............................ 420
~
320

Money to LoM .............................................220
Motorcycles

a 4 Wh••lars..........................740

Muaicllln-.................................. 570
PanonaUI ...................................................005

Pets 1or Sale .....;.......:................................. sao

Pl.-ng. HMtlng:................:.................820

Plot ........ Sanr-.................................230
R-, TV I. CB lleplllr .... :.......................... 110
~ - .......................................... 310
Sc'-lo tnotructfon..................................... 150
Seed Plant a fwt111zer ................
l50
'
·
d
120
Sltu.llona Wwl .. _ ...........,._,... _............
Speca rar ~......................, ..........:···....- ••: :
Spaiting Goadl...........................................
suv•1 fer S...-............................................ 120
Truc:luo lor Sale ........................................... 715
Upt.cllllill') ;~ ............................................... 870
m

...........

s-.................................................130
WMttldtDBuy............................................. 010
F
- e..-...~..................... 120
w-.lld ~auyu.r
. , .. _..,.,...

Valls For

W.illdTo Do ............................................~~ 110
, 470

W&amp;illid 1D flint ..............~..............................
Y.rd S.. G 'lt2Diti....................................072

and learn
today!

se1.

YARD SALE-

MlscetllrllouL..:..........................................170
Mlscetllneoue MtrchMdloe........... ;..........540·

or 773-5081

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

IH\11 " 1\11

10

$59,000

•

2·3br Home, 1 1/ 2ba .
Hardwood Floors, Totally
Remodeled (304)593·2532

0' (859)2 45-7454
3 bedroom Ranch, 2 car
garage , in~ground pool.

Call

1962.

100 WORKERS NEEDED

Assemble crahs ,
wood items.
To $480/wk
Materials prO\Iided. .
Free information pkg. 24 hr
801-428-4649

AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or
Sflll
Shirley $pears, 304675·1429.
Barlender needed, weekend
lloui'S. Apply at Th'e Legion.
Mon-Fri. (304)675-3734

-

Drlvers Needed:

COL Drivers willing to drive
tor local ready-mi.ll-concrete
company. EXperience is
preferred but not ner;essary.
Driver musl be willing to do
pre-maintenance on !rucks
&amp; equipment, yarcl work &amp;
oth9f miscellaneous chores.
Experience operating equipment &amp; extra skills such as
welding-a piUs.
Call (304)937-3410
Due to recent changes in
coverage area ·Medi Home
Health Agency is seeking a
highly motivated. independent fu ll-l ime Registered
Nurse to manage/ service
clients out of our Gallipolis
olfice .. Must be licensed in
both Ohio and West Virg1nia .
We otter a competitive
salary, berlefits piickage and
40tK. E.O.E. Please send
reSume.to 352 Second Ave .,
GallipOlis. OH 45631 or call
1-800-481·6334.
Ann ·
Audrey Farley, AN.
- - - - - - -- Enert;~elic , effjclenl staff
member needed tor busy
chiropractic office. If quaJi fied send resume 10: 750
First Ave.; Gallipolis OH

_,llt80

.,1'.'0-H•ELP·
· -\\:•A-MID.
· _.1 ..r.'O.·•HELP--W•A•i'm·llOUTSIDE SAlf.S

WANIID

To Do

. TASC of s·oUtheas1 Ohio

Seeking

a

1'50

I I\\ \ 4 I \I

McClure's Restaurarrt now
hiiing all lOCations, tuH or
part-lit'ne. pidl up applieation al kleation &amp; bring back
between
10:00am
&amp;
1 1:00am. 'Monday ttlru

Saluo&lt;~ay.

2003 81avlon Anglebrook .
16x80 3BR , 2BA, large
delwm
country. kitchen
loaded wfcabinels, includes
all WhirlpOol appliances and
washer/dryer. total electnc
(740)367-7060 leave mes·
sage.
New 14x60, only $198.73
per mo. Includes complete
Set up and delivery, 740 385~2434

delivery and set up. 740· 2005 mOdels arr iving Now,
385·9948
Cole's
Mobile
Homes.
t5266 U.S. 50 East. Athens.
New 3 BR 2 Ba th .Sectional Ohio 45701 , (740)592~ 1972.
Home
On ly
249/mo: · where You Get Your
Includes · AJC , delivery &amp; Money"s Worth""

Overbrook
Rehabilitation
Center is currently accepting
Gallipolia Career College
application$ for part lime
(Careers Close To Home)
dietary cook and dietary
Call Todayl 740-446-4367,
aide. If you are interested.
1·800-214·0452
please come in and ' comwww.galltpOiiscareeroollege corn
plete your appl_
icalion at 333 Aocc;edlt&amp;O M&amp;moer .~rediting
Page St Middlepoet, Oh . Council lor IndePendent Colleges
ana Schoolfl 12748.
45760

e:o.e.

lltisiNFss
OPPOit'lliNin

•NOTICh

·

advertise ··any

preference, limitation or
discriminatiOn ~sed on
raee, e&lt;Mor, rellglon, sex
familial statue or natlon~~t
origin, or any intention to
maka any IMKfl
pnlfetllfiCe, limit.Uon or
discrimination."

ou do business with pe
e you know. and NOT 1
nd motley through th
ail until you have investi
ted the offerin .

__

Thl• newspllpef witt not
knowingly .eeept
ad¥trt1Nmeute for rHI
nt.te which Is in

,_..,

vtol.tion of the law. Our
Informed that IMI
Chft!Unga. lfdvet'tiMd In
' thla 1•• p prr .,...
on an equ.t

.v..,_

oppottuniC, ·.....

t..,--iooFOiiRiioliSii.'-Lfliiii:-.,t
Pioneer Far mstead . 4 bed·
room . reconstructed hewed
Log House , modorn tacili·
ties.
2
hewed
log
Outbuildings ,
57
acre
Christmas
Tree
Farm.
25,000 more/less trees. 27 ,
ac res mature hardwood
tree mach 1nery, minerals,
county wate r, 112 m1te paved
road frontage . $265 .000
(304)675-4138
www landandfarm com

UTIS&amp;
112 Ac. lot Tycoon Lake on
Eagle Rd . Co. Wate r (not
lake
front)
57 .500 00
(740)247-t 100 or (304)532·
6271 ce ll

Rio Grande
Investment Property walk to
University {2) Apartment 2 acres more or less. all util·
buildings . (3) two BR units 111es . paved road, 2 m1les
$129.000. Ca ll (7 40)245- from ·Chester.
516,000 .
9413 .
(304 )483-7550
.

www.orv .com
Home Listings.
List your hpme by ca ll. ing

1740)4416-:3620
View photos/Info online.

Fair Housing Ac:t ol1968
which makes it illegal to

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH

F&gt;\R,·t-;

ACRFAGF:

All reel estate acfvertising
In this newsl)llper Is
· subtect to the Feder ..

NG.CO. recommends tha

i

Rio Grande
3·4 8R , 2 1!2 8A . LA , DR.
8 USL"'I'Ni
wood ·, floors. basement.
AND 8ULOI'&lt;GS
garage, carpor\. over I BOO
sq . ft. $t25,000. Can
Judy
Kay"s
Restaurant
(7 40)245·9413 .
- - - -- - - - · w/upsta1rs apartments, 740·
416·1808. 740·247-1 100.

.G)

Experienced Timber CuD&amp;!".
Call (740)682·7318 aher
epm.
Caesars Pizza · is
accepting resumes for au
managamenl positions at
our
Gallipolis location.
Please fail: resume to 1-866:471-2196.

. FOR SA1 .E

In searcll of private. seclu d·
ed wooded parcel 1·10
acres with small home or
cabin with utilities . Must be
Within 30 minutes dnve t1me
of Rio Grande. Doesn't have
to be fancy, f i:~~e r upper ok !
Have
already
been
approved for 100% financing
ancl look1ng for immediate
possess(Qn ~ Ca ll (740)441·
1395

38R , 18A Ran ch style
house. located 6 miles past
Holzer hOspital on At. 160.
(740)388·g263

I will care lor your loved one
3br, 2ba, pool , garage, storFull Tinie /40 1n my home. Ca ll (740)388· ·age bldg. appliances inc!ud·
hours Case Manager to . 0118 .
ed, 5 mites from 33 on
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
work 'in the Meigs Office r-"T;;;';;:'llt;ti;;r.;;;;-, Rt .68 1. (740)592-0426
is accepting· resumes tor a Bachelors degree with a
LOW·MOISture
full t1me outside s~les repre- minimum of 1 year exper1·
4 Bedroom home. 2 blocks
Carpet~Cieaning
sentative to toin our sales
from schOol. goOd neighborence in treatment social
Brand New Method
team and to manage an
hood. 648 4th Ave . ,Call
work, or relaled sening preDry in 1 Hour
established" account list
1740)388·8164.
ferred . LCQC-111 and/or LSW
No. Steam-or-Shampoo
while calling on new preferred .
Job
duties·
Free-Estimates
7 Homes· under $14000.
accounts. The sUccessful include, but are not limited
•••Clearly Clean .. •
Will deliver. 740~385-4367
candidate will be a diSCito. assessment and case
(304)675-Q022
plined. selfmotived team
managemoot with non-vic .
Attention!
player that underslands the
Office /House
Cleaning , Local company offerillg "NO
lent, substance abuse-relat·
impo rtance of developing ed offenders. ExceUenl ben- Experienced, wJReference ,
DOWN PAYMENT" pro strong, mutually beneficial elils , pacKage. Salary IS ceady to Clean tor You call
gramS tor you to buy your
business relationshipS with dependent
on Amy (304)6 75. 3508
home instead 9f renting .
our accounts.
' 100% hna.ncing
credential/licensure. educaOhiO Valley Engine Repair
tion and expenence. Submit
' less than perfect Cr9dit
Lawn mowers. sma ll engine
The ideal candidate wi ll
accepted
resume and cover lener by
repa1r. Sales and serv1ces
ha11e sale expenence. For
4pm Mondav, June 20th to :
• Payment could be the
2B 1 Grate Road. Patriot. OH
confidential
·interview,
same as rent.
Judith SmitMh lld , Clinical
45658.
please send cesume and
Mortgage
Locators .
Director.. P.O
Box 88.
cover tetter to Gallipolis
(7 40)992-7321
Gallipolis, OH 45631 or lax Pretty , Na il In
Mason
Daily Tribune Attn: Jim
!0 (740)446•7894.
"Special" tor summer. 15%
Freeland, 825 Th ird Ave.
oft . Beginning on June 21st
GallipoliS, Ohio 45631 ..
· "July 51h . 304·773·5£00
REPRES ENTATIVE

Part-T1me
Cook/Helper
needed for 100 bed skilled
nursing lacility. Interested
~plicants should appl-y to:
Rocksprings Rehi:lbihlation
Cenler. 36759 Rocksprings
Fload.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769. Extendicare Health
Services. Inc. 1s an equal
45631 .
opportun ity employer th.a t
encourages
workp lace
EstabliSI'Ied Heating-cooling
diversity.· ~F DN
Company ir:~ G.ama ~ County
l~ng for
experienced
lnstiJiers IUld technicians It
intefested send UHiwfle tO:
CLA Box 566 c/o GallipOlis
Tribune. P.O. Box 469,
Galtlpolie, OH 45631 .

little

MOilll.F. HOM&gt;:~

HOMES
FOR SAL[

setup.-740-385·7671
3·4 Bedroom . House, 1 112 - - - - - , - , - - - - , - - - ,
Bath , Mayo Dr. in New .
New 3 BR Home OnlY
Haven. Tolally Rem"ode!ed 189/ mo. Includes ale, dehv- .
583.500 (304)862·3 13 1
ery aM set up 74 0- 385.
38R in Oak Hill. Owner 4367
financing available. 55,000
down . $386.71 per month .
(740)256·1686 or (740)645·
2793.

An Excellent way to eam
money. The New Avon. ...
Call Marilyri 304-882 -2645

Hln-463-6247
ext 2454

10

(740)256· New 3 BD 2 Bath Home SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
.
Only 198lmo Includes a/r;, Stock models at o ld prices.

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths,
·Kitchen
has
some
Appliances. Bas~ment has
Family Room , B.A. ancl Full
Bath. 301 t Parnsh Ave.
(3 04)675-3260 "

r garage. fe nced in
ack vard . 11:Z acre.
lose to town , 5132,500
4505 or call

~7~40:44;5-;8:3:25;· ;:::;~
A

i

a

MOBtLEI'Oitc J:l~tEs
JtUL

1979 . Honiette 12;.c50 2
Bedroorn/1 Bath . gas, !/&gt;elf
cent- air conditioner.&lt; Will
rent for 5265.00 a month or
sell for $3.495.00. 740-3854019 .

2.38· ac. beautiful wciods
Green Tw p. Gall 1pohs c1ty
sct10ols. $42.000. can be
sold aS 2 par cels 1+ac..
$22 .000
per
parcel
'(740)441-9516.
.85 ac res about 6 mil es
south Of Oak Hill. Ca ll
(740)682·7318 after 6pm .
. Land availab le m Gallia.
Jackson , Me1g s and Vin ton
Co. 'Large number of tracts
Ranging from one· to fifty
acres. Land cof) tracts wtth

good cred 1t. (7 40 )669-0143.
Lookin g tor , Pi-Nate Large
lot, 200x300 tor my Mobile
Home . 14:~~65 . all Electric.
1tyrs old good shape, or t
acre country setting . place
for pelS in Ga ll1 a Co , OH .or
Mason Co., wlal! hOokups,
Will pay $ 150/monlh. Reply
to PO Box 61 1. A1pley. WV
25271

r

1995 Clayton doublew1de,
24x52, 3br. 2ba. central air.
total electric, $18 ,000 080.
I Buy Homes- Local person.
(304)675-2907
buys homes. "confidential. .
1997 14;.c65 Prem1e r 2 bed· . Qu 1ck -cash . J1m. 740•992·
room. 1 bath . all ElectriC 6300. Na caJis after 9.
EKC. Cond .~ lots of extras
$11 ,000 (304)675-7 588 or

(304)553o3715
RNILPN 'S--Qverbrook. ceo·
ter Is curr ently ac cepting
applications fer LPN'S and
AN' S. 7A-7P and 7P-7A
Shrtts are avaJiabje. If you
are interested, p lease come
111 and fill out an applica!ioo
8.t
333
Page
Street,
Middleport . or cBil and
speak
with
Hollie
Bumgarrier. I:.PN, Staff
Development EOE
STNA"S

O..rt&gt;- Cemer

Exoerier-.ced Home Health

2 Houses i 1} 4 bedroom.
1998 Clayton 16ll80, vinyl
(1) 3 bedroom . 5900 &amp; S800
siding, 3BA. 2BA, covered
pl us depos1t
(7 40)256·
tront porch &amp; back deck.
8152 .

Care giver, w tll sit w1ttl
Elder fy. Contact Kristina
Harbour (304)578-2495

(740)446-3316.

Extenor
Painting .
E.. perltinced . Aeasdnab!e
rates. References. For Free
Est1mates call 740-645·

2636

'

-Geor--ge-.-----sawmo---,,

--~~:-:-:::-:::-:Nigh I Shift Cook.. 35-40 hr ~~~...eotllory• """"""
,,_.;_.., nSgTNA~SI•·_ don't haul your logs lo the
ofde "'"'""
I..G.lluot&lt;&gt;
IU ..,,,,..
m1!1 jUst calt 304:-675-1957.
18 orO
per w k '
r. Q~-up 7A-7P. nd 7P-7A, and 3AappliCation at lJII)I ueen,
·
p
JP- ·
Stliftll are avail·
HL Constnx:tioo

No
hone able. lf vr'&gt;ll are interested, Metal Roofing &amp; Sh1nglea.
, ....
----~:-:-:-:-::::- please ·come 1n an~ fill out Concrete
work, Decka.
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's at1 application at 333 Page Patn!ino Interior &amp; Exterior.
Calls!!

Street. Middleport.

Barns.
Please Pole
[304)1195-3720

Garages

NoPhonecalls. EOE

.. ·- .. - -.

TURNED DOWN OH
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

No Fee Unless We Win !
1-888-582-3345

,M iddleport.

•
~··.

Call Mike (5 13)3 t 4-

acres
2754

.$90.000.

YardS ... POIW..,.,..dt'I ..................:.:..... 074J Meded. Apply al 1354
_............... 071 JacksOOPikli.Gatl!polis.

'y~Sifi-Pt.PIIIIInt ............

New Haven 2,800

sq fl.. Log Cabin as is, w/ 3-5

Call

Are you .looking tor a
stable job?
G1ve uS a call!
You cou ld earn up to
$8/hour plus bonuses. We
also offe r paid training.
holidays, and 11aCations.
Full or pari time shifts
available .
Call today !

be rePorted on the flr.t day of

HOMfli
mRSALE

4

lihing
(740)388-0321 .

v

fi7,4

~ject, o~ cancel any ad at any time. Error~ must

-~~-~-~-c-i~-~-o-~~-~~-ryL-.-~-~0-o--~-92-· "t""'--Y-ARD--S-,ALE--..., ::~:i:~ b::: :~:~:;ess

U wa8tock. .....................................................530
Lo.t aiod Found .........................;.,; ............. 010
Lots I Acreege ..........................,................. 350

Leading to the arrest &amp;
cof')_viction of the person
or persons cutting my
horse, causing -physical
harm ln the West
Columbia area. Contact.
WV State Police

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlahlng reaervee the ri9ht to edit,

Now you can have borders and graphics
"'-'
added to your classified ads ·
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Tribune-Sentinel-Register wllllMI reeponelblelor no mo!"11tl'lan the coat ol the space occupied by the error and only thellrtt inH!1ton . We
any loaa or 111.penae thll't ntl!ultalrom the publication or omlesion of an advlll1:1aement. Correction will be made In the flrat8vallable edition. • Box
are alwaya confidential." • Current rate card appltee. • A.ll real eatahl advertiaam11nta are aubjec;t to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • This
accepta only help wanted ada meeting EOE atilndarde. We will not knowlng"ty IKa:;eptany adverthslng In violation ol the taw.

Absotule Top· Do ll ar: U.S.
$itver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold Rings , U.S.
Currency,-M .T.S. Coin Shop.
151
Second
Avenue ,

7

eeo

$1,000 REWARD

All Display: :12: Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursda.v for Sundays Pa1&gt;er

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ad&amp; With A Keyword • Inchtde Complete
Description • InGtude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed .
• Ads Should RLin 7 Days

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

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
:ln Next Day's Paper '
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
_Friday F _
o r Sundays PaPe"r

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

no

••

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday

'

·:

. Oeacltfire.s'

O,fftee 11o~~

:.

Reaeh 3 tounties

:",

To Place
l\egister
\lr:ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740) .446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To
992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

r·--·-·~~-·--·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·--·-·-·1

I

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
N.o One
Else. Canl

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

(740)6454942 .

Haip Wanted

: Sentinel - 1\.e ister

CLAS.SIFIED

stronger," Milton sa i·d. "It's,
been 14 starts already. I figured I' d have things worked
out by how."
Edgar Renteria hit a tworun double in the third and
Boston made it 5-0 in the
fourth on RBI singles by
Jason Varitek and Damon
and a run-scoring double by
Bill Mueller. Leading 5-2 in
the sixth, Boston got a tworun single from David Ortiz
and ·Ramirez's homer off
Matt Belisle.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

The D,aily Sentinel • Page 83

•

No Down Payment even
wittt less than perfect cred1t
on this 3 bedroom, 1 bath
nome in Middleport, Corner
lot. carport. wrap· arour"jd
porch . fenced 1n yard. baa.
ment. payment same as
rent, 740-992-63011

3
BA
Ranch
Home
room. eJicellent co ndition . w/attached Garage m Camp
Asking $48.000. Needs Conley area of Pt. Large
lanced yard · in great ne1ghmoved. (740)367-.7245.
bcrhood. $675 mth . Depos1l
2000
Fleetwoo d.
front and References reQuired
Kitchen mode! with skirting Call t ·304-531 · 1197 or 1 ~
and central a1r. 'Will deltver. 304·273-11,2
Very clean. 1-800-837-3238
3BA bnck. 2 5 battls. 18f9e
92 Southern Elite M. H., 14 eat-1n kitchen. Close to ctty ,
X '!0. Good Condition . 2 lim1ts. no pets. Aeterence1
rfiQUI red.
C811
bedroom, 2 bath . some depOSit
or
apj:jllances .
$9 .000 .QO. (740)•46-4404-am
must be moved 740-949 - (740)245-tStJ...pm No calls
afttr 9pm.
2011

.,

�•

.,
Page B4 • The D~ilyJ Sentinel
i:rlrno="-"
.. ;::":-OIJSES
;;;;;:"'
. =:;APAill~ IF.NI"S
,

FOR RENT

ll)K
Ntct~2BR ,

5 bedroom , 3.5 beth. Stone
Ranch home w1th in-Qround
pool Large beautiful home
and sett1ng on Route 160
$1 000/month Lawn mamte.. nance
mcluded
'call
: (740}446-3481 .

Nice 2 bedroom home in the
COUr1Uy. No tCIS ide pets.
740-698-7244

Batll. Ad ult Pool 8 Baby
Pool. Pat10. Stan $385/Mo.
No Pets. Lease ' Plus
Secunty DepoSit Required.
. (740)446-348t
Twin Rivers Tower Is acceptIng applications for waiting
hst tor Hud-subsized , 1- br.
apartment . call 675-6679
EHO

MORnE HOME'i
FOR

Jb.:NT

SPA fACTORY OUTUT
Top Quality, Wafranty,
Wholesale, Financuig,
Dellvenes.
2 localiOflS
Milton F)ea Mar1&lt;et
&amp; -:'."":~~d Kentucky
(606)922 -7185

Wolft·Tannlng Beda

Huge selectioo
14x70 expando 3 bedroom
Immediate Delivery. .
1 1/2 bath $4 75• deposil.
Financing ·
includes water, sewe r 8 Valley Apart ments 1n' M.3son ,
1-800-894·6997
currently accepting
: trast1 - pickup- (740)446- WV
{740)446-6579.
appl1caltons. Apply at 501
~ 4824
Shawnee Tra il in Point Yeates appliance dolly. afu·
16x70, 3BR. 28A . utility- ·Pleasant
ApplicatiOns mmum. H.D., $80 firm.,
room , CtA &amp; hear . all etec- accepted
on Tuesdays. !304)675-2902
tric. 1.5 miles from town. HUD assisted
(304)675 exceller1\. condit1on . water 4900
BlllLDING ·
-paid, no pets . references .
: reqwed . S450/mof11h &amp;
• $450/ deposit.
(740)446:- 6565 after 5pm .
2 Bedroom Mobile .Home
$375/r:non . Lohted
in
Gallipolis
Ferry
Call

(~}675-342[3

'" 280 total electriC CA (1n
' country)
S350/month .
• $350/deposit
referencej
. required . No pets. Ca ll
(740)245-949 1. no ca lls
alter 9pm .
_ 2br. $300 o·epostt &amp; $350
Rent (304)882-3970
Beautiful nve r view in
Kanauga . Ideal for 1-2 people . No pets. please
Applicat1ans being taken
~all (740)441-018 1.
¥obile · H'ain,es sites 1n the

r

SPACE

r
I. ________
SuPPI...I.ES .

_.J

'
nJRRI:..""Vr
Block, brick;, sewer piPes,
windows. lintels, etc. Claude
Downtown Oflic8 Space- 5 Winters. Rio G randei, OH
room suite $650./mo: 1 room Call 740-245-5121.
office- 5225/mo.: 2 room r.....;,;:::;;;:;:;;:,:.:;.:,._ _..,
SL.l1fe
S250Jmo · Security
PE.Ts
deposit reqUirE!d . You pay . ~.·--oiFiliOiiRiiiSII
ALE
IIiilllli.,.l
ulilities. All spaces very nice.
Elevator Call {740)446-3644 2 female Pekingese, AKC,
sable w/black ·mask, 6 wks
lo1 appomtmenl
Old.
Adorable !
$300 .
For Lease: Olf1ce or retail (740)446-1000 leaye messpaces 1n very · good condi- sage.
tion . Downtown Gallipolis.
4 Sale Small Beagle Hound
Approx . 1600 sq. ft. each . I
01 2 baths. Lease price puppies M &amp; F. ITKlte into.
7AM --7PM. 740-742-0528
negotiable to encourage
l:)usmess
Call
new
(740)446-4425 or {740)446· AKC Btue tick (Beagles)pup-

~3~93~6:...-~----.,

r
h

4x4
FORS..u.E

W.4.11r.TI-ll

ID RFJo.'T

pieS. GOOd Hunting stock
$"100.00.
Au stralian
Shepheard
puppies.
Beautifu l
blu e
merles
$150.00 740-742-2728

Series John Deere Utility
Tractors 0 0% llxedf 36
mooths UsedUtthtyTractors
0
4 9°o Variable/ 60
months.
Carmichael
EQuipment. (740)446·2412

r

I 'm

r

MOWKL"\'cuN

ENERGY EFFICIENT

· Home Creek Enterprises

·

Ohio

I

Advertise ·
in this
.
space for$ 1'04
per month.

GRAIN

·94 . Harley Davidson Ultra
Mixed Hay 4·Sa te $1.50 Classic, 10,000 miles. blue.
excellent condihon . $13.500,
balaJ li:'l675·5072

I

. 1740)949·2217

\11'&gt;..'\_{,\ld&lt;l'&gt;. l nrl l

1s

H p Craftsman lawn Alpha Sport 50 4-wheeler.
Excellent conditiOn , $850
OBO. Call (740)388-04 t3.

Tractor. 42~ cut~·used very
little, $500 00 Phone 740992-7689-after 6:00
--------John Deere Aiding Mvwt!rs
starting at $1,399. Financing
available subject to John
Deere Credit approval. Your
payments could be as low
as $39 mqnth w1th $0 down.
Carmichael
Equipment
(740)446-24 12

Goldwlng. 1998. GL-1500.
~ ~ ,000 rili les. 500 miles on
tires , excellent condition .
ready to ride. $7 ,000.
(740)441-5447 or (740)446-

Ze ro Turn Z-Trak Mowers 9902
from John Deere "available at
4.9%
fixed
rate
fro
BoATS &amp; MomRS
Carmichael Equipmenl with ~
FORSALE
John Deere Credit approval

r

ROGER HYSELL
GRRRGE

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

Concrete Removal

or

3 miles west
Pomeroy. OH .
on Stale Rt. 124

I.

992-5682

and Replacement

. An TYpes or

Concrete Work
25 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
lnsun-d

www carea.com
II ~\ ' "l 't

II&lt; I\ lit "

cabin, excellent condition.
(304)675-2316

Ta~e

.r10

Al.TIU.\
fUR li:'.LE
~.o--tttiiliiiii""iiiiiiiio-.,.1

:- Homes
·t Septic Systems

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1t for youl

-~ Roofing

Site
r Preparation

1'

n1shed, security deposit Furniture . Sate: Mollohan's
requ1red , "no "pets, 740-992- Sola and chair starting at Schnauzer puppies (minis$399. Call !740)446-7444.
" 2218.
ture). AKC ," 4 colors, vet
checked,
$400
each:
1 bedroom house fcir rent in Mollohan Cai-pet. 202 Clark Pomeranian puppies, AKC,
Cha pel Road. Porter. Ohio. 2 female. ligl1t brown. $400
:Gallipolis. air
I -2 bedroom apt. in Point {740)446 -74 44 1·877·830· each; (740)696-"1085
.
Pleasant for rent. {740~ - 9162. Free Estimates, Easy ·ijilir.;.;,...;~.;....;.;.;.,-.,
financing , 90 days same as
F'Runs &amp;
2200.
cash. Vtsa/ Master Card. __
VEGE'li\BW
tBR APt. in Spring Valley. Drive- a- little save alot.
Cabbage for sal e at S1.00
Clean &amp; allordable. W/0
hookuPs. S290 per month+ Thompsons Appliance &amp; per head. 79 Spruce St.
dep.
(740)388-00H or Repair-675-7388, For sale. Gallipolis. Phone (740 )645 _
re-condttioned BlJtomat1c 0501 _
(74Q)3J9-o362 .
washers &amp; dryers. refrigeraI \ I, \I..,, 1' 1'1 II'
2 bedroom newly renovated tors. gas and , electric
,\ I I\ I .... II u h
Apts for rent . Dowhlown ranges. air conditioners. and
Ga!~polis. River &amp; Park view. wringer washers. Will do
$360-$600/mo. Some utili- repatrs on major brands in
lies · paid.· Now · accepting shop or. at your 11ome
applicatiOns. Can {740)709Used Furmture· Store, 130 0% Fixed Rate up to ·36
1690 (local call)
Bulavi11e P1ke, WaShers, drymonths on New Jol1n Deere
Available
immedialely ers. refrigerators. ranges.
Compact TraCtOrs &amp; 110 TLB
Beautiful. clea~l. and spa- mattresses.
dressers.
at Carmict1 ael Equipment
cious 3 bedroom · town- couches. dinenes. reclillers.
(740)446-24 12
house . Witt"! storage/play- grave mo~uments , rn.uch
room. Downtown Gallipolis. more.
(740)446-4782 565 New Holland ·Baler &amp;
S610/ month. No utilities Gallipolis. OH Hrs. lt -3 (M- 4590 M &amp; W Round Baler.
paid. No pets. Call (740)446· S)
Net/Plastic Wrap· or String.
9!l61.
both like new call {304)6755724 or (304)675·557a
BEAUTIFUL
APART·

Pumero~·.

1

•r-----..,
~-nQI.'L';

r

74tl --t Ht-2823

trailer. many extras. very
clean 304-.675-5563

7.W-59J ...a6-.U

r~5

~

·r

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

.Townhouse
apartments.
an&lt;:11or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)44 1-1 111
tor application &amp; 1nlormauon .
For rent 1 and 2 bedroom
• apartments Spnng Valley
'Reterences
and
• area.
:deposit
requ ired
Ph.

. 1740)446-2957
Furnished upsta~rs . 3 rooms
· &amp; bath, Clean. ref. ~ dep.
reqUired. No pets. (740}44&amp;
1519. '
• GraciOUs tivmg. 1 and 2 bed, I'OOtl'l apartmems at'Viilage .
: Manor
and
Riverside
• Agartr\)ents in MiocHeport
• From $295-$444 Call 740. :192· 5064 E~ua l Houstng
Op~rtumt1es.

Anhques . t124 East Main ~~. n. $11 ,ocio.· (J0.4)67560
on SR ·124 E. Pomeroy. 740- ""'
992-2526 · Russ Moore, Gas 4020 Jotu1 Deere tracowner.
":~~-----..., tor.
condition.
( I8 good
:\'hscru...\ NEOl .S
304 95- 3274 or (3Q.4)895· MI-;RLltANlll5E ' 1 30
_ 7_5_ _ _ _ _ _

condition:

$6,800. (740)379-9885.

.

new condition . (740)33902 18.

Army 5 Ton Semi Truck,
multi·luel. KiSer Jeep Corp. 84 Palamino told dawn,
56000 .OO,,.Army 21/2 Ton sleeps. 6. good condi tion.
Truck, Kiser Jeep Corp., $1.600. (740)245-5593.
. Mum ·Fuel. $4000,00 740Coleman Camping Trailer
John Deere 10ft. No T11 Ohll ::94~9-{)t)2(J
r:;;;;;_'"'!''"'!'_ __, 12FT. 2 Kihg Beds. $5.500
3- -30X 100 Wooden Truss lor
Rent~
Carmtchael . rp;
call fo r Details (304)675Green Houses complete to EQU1prri~mt. (740)446-2412.
·
1731
.
be torn ctown S2.000.00 for
,iF,;OR_S_ALE
__
_.J
John Deere cOmmercial
ENeryt111ng
3 Dog Fnck
Trudl: Camper. AC. TV
Saw Mt ll gas power unit Worksrte Products In Stock!! 1998 Ranger 4x4. 5 spd, 3l, Antenna, wired lor Cable,
S4 .500 00
Woods- 750 Compact Excavator 27C . ·AM/F M cassette, A/C, off like new SCi .500 (304)675Back: Hoe lor tractor 350· 500/Sk.id Steers "37 1. road package. n.e w paint, 3353
32 8/TraciOr $5 ,500 OBO. Call after
$2.500 00 1991 A- Frame J20.
32S,
..,I I{\ H I ..,
pop-up camper s2ooo.oo. Loader Backhoe 110TLB. 4:30pm (740)2!56--6:257 .
740-949-21 15 leave num- Check out our rental rates.
bar. 11, 'rm not at home.
Great Financing ,l....ailabfe- _1999 Bravada. teatner. full
- - - ' - - - - - - - Carmichael
Equipment .. power. Alkl'J' wt"leels, new
Apt. SIZe washer &amp; dryer. (140)446-2412.
tires ,
56.299
·, oBO.
7
Buck stove fireplace 1nsert Large round baler. model ( 40)645-2n9.
IIASOI£NT

r

1.,--··

C;all (740)645-1485.

o:t"\J!o""emeer.

&lt;JVc.r

good conci-

---~J-ET_ _ _ _ :::li&lt;l::;n,_.1:::7~
40:::1:::7'::2:.:·2:::09:::.:.,1-. AERATION MOTORS
, New Holland 630 round
Reparred . New &amp; Aebutlt trl baler. Massre Fergusori
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- RaKe. -2 round feeders ,
SD0-537-9528.
'
(.740)441-4288
$4,000 .
Must ·Sell!'

'I'D
C.•slnlctiaa
A ll Your H ome ·

Improvement Needs
• Siding • Windows
• Decks • Pon.:htis
• Ce.ramJc Tile &amp;

4x4

2000 D
.
oelge Dakota 4x4
truck, 130,000 miles. $5000.
·Only serious offers only,
please. (304)5 76-2742
95 Dodge truck, ,b 4, automalic .
$3.000.
Call
(740)388.001 t

WATERPROOFING
Uncooditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local referaoces fur·
-nist1ed. Established 1975 . .
Call · 24 Hrs. (740) . «60870. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

2 NT

5~E?

·-· ~

TOLl&gt; YOU

• K itchen'&gt; • Bat11s

"No Job To Small'·

Racine. OH
740-247·2162 or
740-416-35011

starting al 27 horse - 57 ho rse
with shuttle transmiss ion .
4_- wd, remote hydraulics 3 yenr wa.-ranty
****A lso 8\'Uila ble**:"*

BARNEY

• Task Muste r Tractors .26 horse~ J8 horse,
4wd q·year wnrranty) ·
.
• Farm Pro Tractors.20 horse· 30 horse 1.
loaders, fini sh 01owers, tillers
1
Mill' ARR! Vr\L 'ZTR Dixon !Zero Turn ·
Radius Mower ) ~0 in('h l"utting width lo ~0.
inch cutting width .3 ~·ea r wa rrant~·
T&amp;D TRr\ croR SALES &amp; EOUPMENT
right in lhe heart of Chester

I AIN' T GOT T IME
FEI&lt; '&lt;OU 80'&lt;5'

I

NONSENSE, so

\

DANG, JAME'&lt;-- WE
W A STED OUI&lt; TIME '
COMIN; UP WIF ALL
THEM BACKUP

I

I ' M ONL'&lt; GONNA
ASK '&lt;A
THIS

FIBS

. r-

ONCE...

9!!5-IJil.l

OP E"
!\lon-Fri.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER ·
SERVICE

••
'

Ad dllian1 &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages . .
• ElectriCal &amp; Plu mbin g
. • Roofing &amp; Gr.mert
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pall[) 1nd Por&lt;:h Deck&amp;
We do it all except
fu rnace wo rk
• Aoom

P'\ UNI&gt;E.iS\1\ND 11-\E:R.C Nl&gt;-"&gt; 1\"l
(OMI't:.RUK( !1\E.E:XIMG
I~£.(,NO(.I) IW&gt; OU IZ t-IE v.l

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

f--.);:::-,_ Dt.Lur;c,

...

1&gt;0 YOU ~LL'i 11-\INK.Ii'::,
WI~ IQ KE.EI?I"£.1 ~

n\E.

DW.K 1\00U\ :,uov\I\TI[R5 7

'0&gt;'\SIH\ ...

I
I

W11 0067l'5

25 Years Local Ell

...

""1

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

.

M.l~

PREEN. WOUL\) YOU
KINDLY\"-!(£. \1-\0RI--IIWPLf
TO TI-\E:. COI'\ffRt:.kCE ROOM.
t'J'\OT\l~OO

Tf\f

LIGI-\T;'l 1

~
~

lenee

•~

Blghand Dry

•

Storage
BIG NATE

I WONr&gt;ER IF
IT WCXJLD BE

Hupp

Janel Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

!-l yrs

Expe ri ence
1 mo

HOWARDL

1

WRITfSfl 6 SONS
ROOFING

! A il ty pes of roofi ng:
1 Shingle. FlaL Metal New .\Repair
: Seamless Guncr~ow nspout - Sid ing

!

' *fill hi'

liS*

949-1405

;~~~~~~~=
STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
wotk

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

10x10x10xl0
992-3194
or 992-6635
•Middleport's only

Self-Storase·

IMPORR
Athens

KOSHER

FOR.

PRINCIPAL
TO CALL IN
S ICK
ON
PRA N K DAY"

•

St. Rt.68 1 Darwi n, OH
740-992-70 13 or 740-992-5553
Re..toe-kiri!J l.a le .\bd&lt;-1 Sa I•
and li fter .llarkRt Parts
See Brem or Brian Wha ley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sm. 8:30 -Noon

PEANUTS
f\E'( PI LOT, CAN WE
FL'{ IN TH E RAIN?

,·

-·
•

·-• SUNSHINE .CLUB
SEPTIC TANK PfJMPING $95,00

Stop &amp; Compare

PILOT?

Sun .' Ciosed

• New Homes

,741-992-1m

PORTABlE TOILET RfNTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMfNT TODM
992-3251 OR 591-8757

• Affordable Rates
• Rele1erices
Available
• Free Estimates

Hi'S WtAKWir£, NIA~ ...
~Y BE AliJJH!I? IY'XRIJI. 1IU)

. .\AXLW &lt;,OJ (AilE R:R Al..()fflil&lt;
BOTTLE. Cf IIJI ~

..•

\

•

~

•

"Insured·

Call Gary Stanley
74D-742-ll93

• Leave a message
YOU'P 1'1-iiNK I 'P BE

H111·s Sel f
Storage

OL.P!:R AND WISER
BY NOW

29670 Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio

45n 1

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

Call B.D. ConsL
ror all your home
rt'pair needs, roofing,

Hours

rn:e eslitn• tes"

740-949-2217

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM
111411

mo. ~

High cost of

siding,_add-ons..

remodeling etc.,.
(740) 992-2'179

leave mciSa

~

got you

' 17· 17-17.
$265 ton (While Suppy Last)

• Mushroom ·compost .
Available

The

Dail~

Sentinel

992-2155

18 spreader buggies available for use ·'

Ajrway p~re renovators and seeders
ava1lable to re n t

Licensed agronomist on staff a..,.ailable for
consulting.

SHADE 'R IVE R r\G SERVI CE

35537 SL Rt. 7 ~orth

•

•

·

S3 5 - 1,000 lbs Approx. weight

Pomeroy. Ohio

Nf)n h
Pa.ss
3 \IT

East
Pas s
All pass

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPAC~
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available AI

B.\l'\1 Ll '\IBER
Scorpion Tractors
" Taking Th• Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
M i.d-Size 4Wheell'lrive Trac-tor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engine'

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester· 985-3301

r

The re IS one b1zarre -10ok1ng play that
often works . if you are · daring and can
look unconcerned .You are South. in three
no-trump. West leads the cluiJ 10 and
East follows SUit wtth the two. Haw would
you plan the play?
Soutn's two-no-trump overca ll in tile .balancing pos"ition shows a hand worth a
two-no-trump opE!ning , or perhaps one
slightly weaker in high cards it it oonta1ns
a decent stx-card minor. Nortl1 makes an
aggressive raise . hoping his partner will
benef~ from knowing wh ere the missing
honors are located.·
You can see eight tricks: one heart, three
diamonds and four clubs. But tile' heart
finesse rates .to oe losing because West
would almost certainly have led a spade
if he had all thre.e top honors. And West.
when 1n with the d1amoM ace, might
guess· to shift to spades ·How can you
deflect ·him?
At tnck two. lead a low diamond to
dummy's 10. Then call for the spade ftve
and put up your 1ack!
West will wtn with the queen, but what will
he do next? He might try a "desPeration"
sllitt to the heart king! But even ' il.West
plods on Witt1 clubs, you can lead the diamond queen to drive out WeSt's ace. win
the nexf club, and cross to dummy witll a
diamond . What w1l l West discard? Maybe
the spade three. Then. you cash your
remaining diamond and club w1nners
before exiting witt1 a spade 16 endplay
Wes t. At trick 12, he wilt" have to lead
away from the heart king into your acequeen .
Anernatively. 11 West. placing his parlner
with something in hearts, pi tches the
heart jack , you can drop his _
king .

AstroGraph

43 Besl
inedlclno?

45 Highway
46 Principle
47 Typa ql
· power pl•n1
50 Milan' s lenc
52 Poket', e.g.

53 Shenered
56 Tolstoy tttie
word

58 No •
to a lassie
-59 Sisler

60 Classifted
· items

GRI~WELLS
'bU EHld'l'l~ YoUO:: ~UMMt.~

1Utl(?

"61\\\ ...

)

&gt;Maria.

~· "'""''- tol?

THOSE..,_, -

by Luis Campos
Ce~IT)o

C.pr.er crypl::qtams are Cfealed It~ ()uO!aoon$ ~ tarrros p!OPie. MSt.and IJll98fl!.
EiiCf• len!!f 1'1 !he cpr.er SlilndS for i!l10!hllr
·
'
TOOay"s Clue· M equaJs Y

AFUY I KM

EIZGKO

" EST
K WS 0 Y

AS J Y

BWS

ZABZMO

I YZT M

TYCYGT

F K ."

SGAM

ZGT

FK,

KS

E R Z IT

TZG F YA

KS

ZI Y

ZG T
BYUOKVI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·one fiila l one. ancl then I slop .. there are other
lhings I need to clo in life .· - Lance Armstron~ . on the Tour de France
·
(') 2005byNEA . Inc. 6·14

'O(tn:t~lA-'Gt.trs·

::::

~,---..:...- r.litttllt,- CLAY ·a. PCUAH - - - - - - ' - .

O RlfQ rrange
,

In the year ahead, you"re likely to be
far more ambitious than you have
been in the pilst, which is commendable. However. don't a1m lor goals lor
which you're 111 prepared or incompetent. Be rea listic about you r ch ances.
GEMI N I {May 2,-June 20)- There 's
a strong probability that you 'll be tolal- ·
ly impractica l when 1t comes to handlinj;j your ·funds t~day. Un fortunately,
th8re will be a high price to p ay tor
being so lax and una·ccountab te
cANCE R (June 21-Jul y 22)- Th ere
1s a very tine line between bein g p rowessively ..assert ive and ju st plain
pushy. Recognize w h en yo u're goi ng
over that mark today so you don 't· risk
making the w rong p erson angry.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Judge yo ur
alJdiance w"isely today or else you
could inadvertently be tar too blunt
with persons wi th whom you neaP to
be sensitive. It coul9 cost you ar1
important friendship.
VIRGO (Aug .. 23 -Sept. 22) Be
hopeflJI regarding circ umstan ces ttlat
involved a material ou tlay. but don 't be
so foolishly optimistic that you ignore
common sense praclices needed to
make a sound investment.
LIBR A (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) It's
aly.&lt;ays foolish to a llow your ego or
pride to take precedence. ove r your
commori sense. an d today w ill Qe no
excePtion . Either coul d ca use you to
do things th at might make you look
foolish .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOv. 22) Nobody is perfect and there's a good
chance you cou ld make your share of
m i st~kes today. Should that happen .
don 't compound things by a«empting
to blame others lor .your mishaps.
SAGITTAR IUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 21) ll"s nice to be inv1ted to partrcipate in
wha·t triends think IS a gOOd investment . but don't be so flanered 'by an
invi tation that you !ail to $tudy the proposal from all angiSs first
•
CAPA.ICOAN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1 9) - In
car9e r situation·s today. protect yoursell against th ose who have a habit ol
jumping fn and taking cred1t for the
accomplishlnents of others. Someone
may be eyeing qne ol your deeds.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Ott1ers will take you literally today, so
be careful You don "t come oH as being
knowledgeable abou't something th at
you "re not. It could hurt those who fol low yow directives.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Rea.tistically size !-IP those you deal
w1th today. You could e)Cpect perform ances from others for which they tack
the sk~lls to deliver and end up Kicking
yourself.
ARIES· (March 2t-A.prlt 19)- Try to
btln~ Y,Our interests and desires in
harmony with your partner's today, or
you could lind yourselves inore at
odds with one another than usual.
Don't be too rigid in yOlJr thinking .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- Thera's
a 'i»&gt;od chance that you might a nempt
to · palm ott a task you resen t doing
on to someon, else . The problem Is
th is peraon lsn't llkety to do a good job
and you'll tMI held accoun ta bl e .

SOUPTQ NUTZ

WAT~.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

!MAT DAILY
PUll Ill

·~'Birthday :

Wednesday, June 15 , 200 5
By Bernice Bede O a ol

Whaley's Auto
Parts

ROBERT
BISSEll
CDISTIICnDI
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Pass

G

'

See
Rocky ''RJ"

5x10, lOx tO, .
10x15, 10x20,
10x30

MANLErS
SELF STORAGE

\\'est

42 o riVt ng
hazard

'

New Dealer tor Montana Tractors

f' n"tndl_\· l'act~.

"- • Garages .
• Room Add. • Roofing

J 7 2

Another shot
·.at the weakes.t

Wt Nt-l"ut•u

S~C.UiliTY.

· 30 Yn. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronni e Jon es

W. :\lain Pomeror
IS NOW d PEN AT

3

FRANK &amp; E~RNEST
D~PAilTM~NT
OF I'IOM~LANl&gt;

f"om1erly at 108

~

Opening lead: • 10

H'llrdwood FJooring

1997 F150 4 wheel drive.

AT
BUDGET ~-------,J Case 480-C Back Hoe With . 4.6 V8, au1omatic. EXcellent 34' "03" Jay~ Eagle 1-12'
AT JACKSON Buy or sell. Riveflne cab and heJlter. good oondiHigtl miles. Price slide out. Lots of extra!i. like

2

pcalcr: West'

A

Phone
(740) 992-5232

L,w-..illli.liiiii.-.,J.1 't987

Honey mot or home
g
sleeps 6-8 people. low
1991 Ford Ranger, body fair, mites.
good
condition.
runs fai r.. S950 (304)675- S1 t ,OOO. Call (740)2458714
9124 .

j

•

Vulnerable; Both

z

My e rs Tree
Se-rvice

MOIORHOMES

_

•

10 9 .H !i 5 ~

¥ 'A Q
• Q J 9 8
• A K QJ

Top ·.• Removal • Trim
· stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Sam t Grtar Lo11· Prices
tm d Smiling

Ohio

20oo Baylin er 21. ft . cuddy wl
1997
Buick
LeSabre
Limited, 75 thousand miles. 2003
22ft.
sweetw ater
leatl1er
tnt..
Loaded, Pontoon
boat.
40hp.
Garage Kepi .
$5,995 Jol1nson mOtor, power-trim,
Hoosier trai(er wlladder.
(304)675·1731
c::.:c:.:.:~.:.:.::.:_____ spare tire/bracket. AM/FM
2002 Kia Rio, 30.000mi., 4 ste reo/CO. many extras.
door. automatic, air, looks Asking $10,995. (74.0) 44 6·
good, ru ns good. $3.650. 2016 or (740)339-0324. ·
Phone (740)446·4 122 or
(740)645-5 102.
Year 2000, PontoOn Boat 24
toot, Sweetwater, 50 HP
B8 Celebrity 4 door, 6 cylinMe rcury. POwe r Trim, 4
der, runs great. $500. Call
Stroke Engine, Big Foot
17.W)441 ·9291.
Outdrive, Lounge Seats,
98 Toyota Corolla autmnatic Priv8cy
Room.
Depth
4 cyl. 37 mg ail, FM, new Finder, Hour Meter, Good
tires,
st1arp.
aski ng Radio. Has only 50 hours on
$4300.00
Boat, GArage kept in winter,
,
Like New Paid over $18,000
Red Honda Civic witt1 sun· Will sale lor . $ 13,000
root. Good Condition. stan- .(3()4)173-5944
·
dard. 133,000 miles'. Pay · ~-;:;,;~;;;;;;.,_~-.,
off·$5800.00. 740-985·3839
CAMPERS .&amp;

A 2·

•

Tree Service

The Parish Shop

K 9 84

¥1 0 9 864

South

JONES'

Pomero)"

. • Utilities
:Pole Bams

•

J tft

The Mul hern ·
Co mmunlt)··Cl'~ter
260 Mullx&gt;.-r:o· An•.

r Backhoe.

K. t 065
7 4
E.:asl

t

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

f n!t Eslim ates

t n 0 ) 44 6·2 4 12 1985 2ott Rinker cuddy

7 5 3 2

•
•

4

Home • Auto • Life • Reti rement
• IRA • 401 K Roll overs • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

Free Estimate s

Brand new v8nce/Hines 2
in10 1 Chrome Pipes. , F1t
Fatboy · 2000
and
up
(304)882·3218

•

¥ K J

South

BOy. low miles. $18.000
OBO, (740)949-3004

HAY&amp;

•

6 5

,\ Q 3

•

Plains, OH
1I';.;~~T~u~lppers
45783

Residential • Commercial

Full-sized lUxury van . seats
7, mecllank owned. beau !l~
lui , 1993. _77.000 m1le s

J(l

We~l

41800 SR # 7

t-4obile Homes • Metal Roofs
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•

~ Dozer
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RENT

Tuesday, June 14, 2005
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,·11

leH•rs of the

f our scrambled words be·
low to form l ou r simple word s

AMFR O L

TI P 0 L

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A fellow writes ads to· make
people think they've longed for
r - - - - - - - - , something all their life thai they
K Lt R 8 E E
have never heard of · ---- ·!
.

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you deveiOQ l rom step No. § below.

PRI NT NUMBERED liTTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

6 ~~~~~~~N~~~E l!IIUS

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SCIIAM.I.ETS ANSWERS '- 1 ' - o ,

. Jumble

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Foist- Fresc o- CUSTOMER
Slore manager to shopper. ' I won't casn checks because all too often the check comes back and the CUSTOMER doesn't.'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

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'.

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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

----~-----------------~·-----~~----~----------------~-------------------

I

105T ,H

Pw.
Y-* -401

Pinehurst No 2
Anvthing shan ltl8t rolls
orr ltle green Will leave a
ciemanding up-and-dow!l
to escape with par

•

i.

\

Par 4
· Yards 336

Par

4

Purse

TBA ($6.25 million tn 2004)
156 players, including etghl amateurs ,

6

t•

9

Par: 3.
Yards ;220

Par 3
Yards 175

flank the Irani·,
punishtng anvone
whO oomes -up short.
A st913p slope and
two m01e bunkers
are beyond the twotiered green, which
is wide and shallow,
and slopes from left
to right

i4

r
7

rr ;
l.

l

The only par 5 on the
front should be a gOOd
birdie· opporwnlty if ·
ptavers can avoid the · !
-large fairway bunker on
!he left. Those _wbo can't
reach in two wtlllay up
in a flat area between
two bunkers about 90 ·
yards from the green

!,i
T• •

8

Po&lt;4

Par 4
Yards 467

•

!·

This played as the .
toughest hole In the 1999
U.S. Open wllh an
average score ot 4.55.
Donald Ross considered
the approact1 to this green
rhe most difficult shol on
the coul'$e because il
has to b:e hit wilh ·a long
11'00 and the ball ebove
the feet. Any
approach miss ing to
the left wi ll leAve a
tough par save .

*. /;

. ·

The sharpest dogleg on
the courSE , with a
cluster of bunl\ers on
th e ftghl torner. Mosl
ptavers atm lor tile
middle 0:1111e fairway
b&amp;yond the bunkers.
Big llltters m1ght be
tempted to cut the
comer. The green has
one deep bunker on the
nght anti two smaller
bunkers to the left

;

This ,hole's average score
In 1999 was 4.5. Most
players favor tf:lc right side
of the fairway to allow tor
the right-to-lett slope. The
green slopes dramalicallv
from back to front. so tile
middle ol the grocn is thl3
besttar~et. Anything lelt·or
long will lind a collection
area as much as 20 yards
away. This is where John
Daly swatted a moving ball
with his putter and wound
up making 11

i i
l

i

4

1C

II

.t

.

'.

f

Tile green Is difficult
to llold, so an
accurate tee shot in
the tauwev 1s cructal.
A deep swale runs
ac"ross Hie green
from the left and can
kick an approach
shOt to the left. Adrive
just left of center th at
avoids two bunke rs
oflers the best angle
to tills green.

j

•

Y1rd1 :203

I

•

H

.\

I I

I

•

'

j

I l
I

'
j

Yards 378

· i Players should have no
i trouble cleari ng the .
: lairwav bunkers on the
!nght, a~hough many will
go with a tong Iron off
·th e tee . The green is
about 20 teet above the
i fa irway and prolacted
iby numerous bunkers .
)Anything that lands
short could roll back to
i the fairway.

i
i

i

ASSOCIATED t' ~tS S

PINEHUR ST, N.C.
Four day s ago, Conrad Ray .
was getting ready for the
summer · golf camp at
.Stanford University, where
he just finished his first year
as the golf coach.
Monday morning, he was
on the first tee .with Tiger
Woods, getting ready for the
U.S. Open.
·"What a crazy week it's
been," Ray said on the prac tice range at Pinehurst No.
2, where he got into the 156man ·'field as the first alternate when Darren Clarke
withdrew 'tast .week.
The week is just getting
.started at the major champi. on ship known ~s the ·tough. est test in golf, famous for
its narrow fairways and
brick- hard greens that
require as much patience as
sl!otmaking and putting.
Ray was just thrilled to be
part of the show.
A former . teammate of
Woods at Stanford who
never made · it past the
Nationwide Tour, this was
his 12th .time to try to quaJi ..
fy for the U.S. Open, and he
figured he had misse(l again
when he made par in a playoff and wa s eliminated at
the 36-hole sectional quali fying last week at Tarzana,
C~lif.
·
But when Clarke with drew to be with his ailing
wife, Ray became, the first
alternate .
''I thought it was one of
my kids on.the team play ing
a joke on me ," he said. .
The first people Ray
called were hi s parent s.
Then he called Woods .
They were teammates for
two years at Stanford and
tried to :keep in touch over
the years . Ray· last saw hirn
at the Stanford-Cal basketball game in February. He
said Woods put i·n a good
word for him when Ray
applied to replace longtime

Cardinai golf coac h Wally
Goodwin.
"I ·said, ' Hey, the brpkedown coach is in. Can we
play?"' Ray said . " He ca lled
last night and said to meet
him on ' the first tee at 7
a.m."
Euan Walters of Australia
filled out the threesome, the
first group off in th ree days
of practice.
Most pl ayers already
know what to expec t from
the 1999 u,_
s. Open .
Pinehurst No . 2 is
renow ned for th e domed
greens th at Donald Ross
de-signed, the streng th of the
golf course . John Daly was·
among those who praciiced'
Monday and had a large
crowd following, perhaps
remembering when Daly got
so fr ustrated that he swatted
a moving ball with his putter on the eighth hole and
made an 11.
The cond iti on of the
course was a concern on two

j

4

• i ••
•.
; I

•
•••••
•• .

'

cons ider that when· you ' re
hitting your second shot. "
Ray soaked it all in..
.
The . 30-year-old played·
with Woods and Walter in
the mornin g, then spent the .
afternoon ·squeezed between
Bob Tway and Ted Purdy on·
the practice range, getting
full serv ice · from a Nike
Golf rep who was helping
him with a new driver ·and
shaft.
Ray.isn 't sure how the rest
of the wee k will unfold . .He
has spent more lime recruiting than practicing over the
last two mo.nths. Stanford
went from last in the Pac-10
to 18th at the NCAA championship .two weeks ago.
Hi s day job as Stanford's
coach presented one dilem. ma during qualifying. Ray
was in an eight-man playoff
for three spots in local qualifying , joined by one of the
players he had been recruiting for his 2006 class.
"There's all these NCAA
rules. I' m a young coach, ·
and I didn't know if I could
talk to him," Ray said . " I
gave him a quick handshake
on the first tee and walked
to the other side of the fair- ·
way. We . both birdied and
got through . I found out
later I cou ld talk to him , just
not about Stanford."
He planned to play a practice round Tuesday with J.J .
Henry and Matt Kuchar. two
other guys he played against
in co lle ge, and will be
grouped the first two days
with Graeme McDowell and
Steve Allan .
"I've made it to sectionals
a few times. but t_o get to the
big dance is pretty cool,"' he
said .
After calling his parents
to celebrate and calling
Woods to arrange a practice
round, Ray had ·ohe last call
to make .
''It was · to the women 's
golf. coach at Stanford," he
sa id. "to thaQk her for handling those golf camps for

fronts.
The grass suffered at
Pinehurst because of a cool
spring. and USGA officials
had to put sod around the
slopes of some of the
greens. Most of it has blended in , although Scott
Verplank no ticed some
brown patches. and sa id it
could be a factor depending
on the shot.
"If you have a burnout , or
a dead spot between you and
the hole. you might have to
de cide whether to go over it
or through it. and that could
definitely affect what you ' re
going to do," Verplan k,sa id.
"And if you get on that spot
and get a dirt lie, you've got
to deal with it."
David Toms noticed some
of the tee s that had been
moved back. making it more
difficult ,to find the correct
line off the tee . As for the
greens? Tough as ever.
"The misse s are going to
be the key,"' · Toms sa id.
"Where are yo u going to be
if you mi ss'&gt; You have to me.''

A hole !hat has been
conve rted to a par 4 lor
tno U.S Open, and
another hole that averaged !
4_.5 shots In 1999 TilN;;
•
leafurl:tS the only waler on
the course _ a poncl JUSt
otlthe lee !fl at OO.es not
come Into play. The bunker
clown the left side of ttle
fairway shoutcln't be a
problem. but players must
avoid two bunkefS to the
right of the landing
area. Payne Stewart
noted a 25-loot par .
putt lo tie Phil
MiCkelson lor the
lead in 1999 ..

17

.
.

j :

Par 3
Yards 190

~-~: 1.
41

:

..
.

.,~

'
'

18

Po• 4
Verda 442

4
The closing hole is.
slightly uphill anc:l
bending lett to right.
Players must avoid the
long, deep !_airway
.bunker-down the right
side of the tee, leaving a
short iron Into the green.
A bunker guart;1s the !rant
ot the green, and it's
tougtllo save par from
beyond the green
·

Yard1 468

Teammate of Tiger,
longshot at U.S. Open
BY DOUG fERGUSON

•
·

l

14 •..

Par 4
V'ards ·476

A new tee has added
25 yards loan alr~ady
difficult hole. The
fairway appears wide,
but it IS bordered down
lhe right siOe with
hardpan sand and wire
gra ss. Most players
will favor lhe left side
ol the !airway l or the
best look al the green
The sale ap prmtch is
lo the right-center of
the green.

.t.
•

Por 4
Yards 492

This picturesqus par 3
is guarded by l ive
bunkers and plareda
plvota·l role i,n th e
outcome of the '99
U.S. Open . Stewart hit
his tee shot In~ 3 teat
101 birdie, while Phil
Mickels on missed an
S·looter lor birdie and
Tiger Woods missed a
5·footer for par. The
front po'rtion of me
green slopes
considerably from
right to left_

13 ••.•

Yards 607

Tht:l btg hillms ·can gel
hom e in lwo, but most
will opt to stay away
!rom a bunket on th'e
left side at tile laitway.
abo'ut 110 yards !rom
the green. The putting
surface has a subtle
slope from left to right
and is guarded by two
bunkers. There is a
dramatic tall off behind
the green

4
Yards 449

.

:
:

~·r .~
·• 1o " ·-.s

Par 4
.Yards 404

12 ...

,.

;

Two cloop bunkers

-i

TM preva iling wind
IS 1n to the players"
face. A significant
stope in front ollhe
green will repel
shots that laM short
A deep bunker is tell
of tt1e green '

Par 5
. Y1rd1 565

Y1rds 472

35·35--70

Field

bun~ers.

.-5 ·

Third--round coverage
June18 -19. 12 ·30pm to7p.m .,
NBC Sports

Formaf '72 holes of strol\e play. 18 holes
of stroke .play on June 2() rf needed

ThiS has a narrOw
fllirway, giving plavars 1
an option . They can
·
either lay Lfl between ihe 4
bunkers on the left and ~
a waste area oo the right •
and .still have a wedge
'to the green: or thev can
hit _driver and try to clear
all the sand . The well·
crowned green is sloped ·
bad: to front and·
pro1ecled by three

.

Pinehurst No.2 • June 16-19

First· and second· roun~ covera9e
(all t1mes Eastern )
June 16·17, tO a.m. to 3 p m. ESPN, 5 p.m
.
to 7 p.m... ESPN

..

3

This has one of
the most
saverelv
crowned gre~ms
oolhEI coorse, so
it might prove
dtfficutt keeping
me tee shot on
the green. T)le
false front repels
anytlling ihat
lands short and
deap bunkers will
gobble up
anvthing that
misses to the
'
right.

Length 7.21 4 yards

on the right.

~

asters Champion Tiger Woods leads a
group of top golfers from around the world
to Norm Carolir1a's Pin &amp;hurst No. 2 golf course
in !his year's U.S Open. The course will Share
the title for longest course in O.S Open htSiory
wtlh Bethpage Black

15' ...

16

at an &lt;HJgle and is
protected by e bunker

•

C H A M. P I 0 N S H l P

Ptr 4·

'

3

G 0 l F

'(arda 469

A subUe dogleg to tne
right. The ideal tee
Sl'lotla\lars me left
side, even though it is
guarded by tour
bunkers This offers
the best approach to
the green . which sits

41

0 'p E N

Pineh

OlAthe true test of

,

S

M

This i5 a gentle we!o:lme
to lhe U.S. Open. a lalrty
srral(jhtforward hole. A
good driVe lea\'itS i'ihon
iron ir1to the green, but 11
won't take long to tlgure

·2

L1

Players should avoid a
bunker on the left side ·
ot the fairway. The
green has dangerous
swales Oehind 1!. so
anything long could
wind up as manv as 25
yards away from the ·
hole. The swale on the
right will kick the ball
away from tne green
and into a deep bunker.

•

Tuesday,Jurie14,2005

SOUACfS : PGA : Pnlnutsf

"""ew-Press
Asaocialad

Quigley wins playoff
· in rain-shortened
Champions Tour event
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP)- After
waiting all day to play one hole of golf, Dana
Quigley played it to per:fection ..
Quigley made an 11 -t()()t btrdte putt on the
first playotr hole Monday to beat Tom
Watson and Gil Morgan in the rain-shonened
Bayer Advrunaoe Classic. _. .
·
Watson the hometown tavonte who also
lost to Q~igley in a plaxotf in the season. opening event in Hawmi, had a chanc_c l&lt;J
win 'in re~u lation. But he left a long bttdte
putt hangmg on the lip on his tina! hole,
bringing a groan from the big gallery. . .
Watson played 12 holes Monday. fimshing
off a 6-under 66 to join Quigley_and Morgan.
who fini shed their rounds betore. ram suspended play Sunday. at 11-under 133. Rain
washed out play Saturday, reducing the tournament to 36 holes for the third time in four
years.
·
. ·
Quigley. playing his 261sl· stratght
Champions Tour tournament, hit a 6-Jron to
· II feet on the 442-y;ttd 18th in tl\e .playoff.
Watson and Morgan each two-putted for par
after leaving their approach shots tiluch farther away.
.
'
"I really, really tried to birdie ll]at hole.
And that was the hardest that hole had played
.all week with the wind the way it was,"
Quigley said. "I hit two of my best shots of
the week right there.•·
The 58-year-old Quigley has been on the
roll of a ltfetime: winning $761.200 in his
last six events and never 11nishing lower than
seventh. He beat Watson in sudden death to
win the.MasterCard Champion~hip .
"For me to be on this ride, with such a positive· mental outlook, it's something I think
all players try to achieve and very few get to
this position where I am," said Quigtex, a tOtime winner on the Champions Tour: 'It's an
amazing way to play IJOifwhen you're never
worried about anythmg. It's just unbelievable."
·
·
For Watson, it was another close, disappointing attempt to win in his hometown. He
also lost to Qutgley by one shot in regulation
'in 2000, when Quigley sank a 12-foot putt on
N~l8.
.
"It was a familiar scene," Watson said. "He
111ltde the pun again. He's 2-for-2 against me:
I've got to do something about that boy."
Watson staned the final round on the back
nine and was 8 under through six holes when
play was slopped. He birdied the par-3 17th,
then holed a short p·utt for a birdie on No. 3
to pull within a stroke of Morgan and,
Quigley.
He caught them with a 12-foot birdie putt
on the par-41itth hole ..
Jack Nicklaus, who designed the course
and had suggested this could be his 11nal
tournament action on U.S. soil, shot a 73
each day.

News and
information for
senior citizens of
_...., •the Tri-County...

!

Defense attorney now
defendant, accused Qf
trying to hire hit man, A2

en ne
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
; , q !'\1~·\ ,,J_. )--t, ·

' " ·•- o-

Meig~

SPORTS
• Pistons charge past San
Antonio. _See Page 81

'

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Ellen Arnott, 91
• Wash Kinney Cavins, 65

INSIDE
· • Youth sentenced for
shooting police officer.
See Page A2
• WHS class of 1955 ·
.gathers for annual picnic.
See Page A3
• Go international ·
program offered at OU.
See Page A3
• Dance to be held.
See Page AS
· • Report State pumped
money into high-risk fund.
See Page A6

Details on Pace A&amp;

INDEX
2 SECTIONS-

Senior Citizens make
flP 65%·of the total
population of (he
Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contact your •.
Advertising
·Representative. ·

eaet .
.

·

\\1ll'"I'
Sil\'
·"
•

ll'\1

• •

- "'&gt;&lt;1-,l

\\\\\\ ,nn d .nh-.t· ult Lh t l1 1111

l,l • - •

Board approves more funds for .Salisbury renovation

the Board voted to spe nt ge nerated by the permanent · the window s and . maybe
another $26,354 on tl)e pro- improvements . levy which ·even enough to pave the area
ject. That money, according to wen t off the tax· ballot in in back of the building for
POMEROY - Further ren- . Superintendent
William December.
parking and the Toad around
ovation .of the Salisbury Buckley ·will go toward
1\ total of $355 ,000 had the build ing."
building which is being con- installing 34 more new win- been set aside from the ' levy
Buckley said he would like
verted into space for Meigs dows in the bui lding to for the renovat ion. When the to (\o away wit h parki ng in
Local School District admin- .include several classrooms to bids came in earlier this year 'front of the bu ilding and turn
istrative offices . has ~een be used for storage, the gym- , the amount was well below that into a grassy area . He
approved by the Meigs Board nasium, and the kitchen area. ' - $260,508.
noted that work is progressof Education.
The work will be paid 'for · Said Buckley, ''There 's ing nice ly on the school rcnAt Tuesday night's meeting from the balance of funds money to replace the rest of ovation and he expects the

old canopy leading from the
front door to (he area where
studen ts were discharged
from buses to be torn down ·
this week.
,.
Orug testing
Th e expansion - of student
dru g testing to include others
besides ath letes was discussed
and it was decided to have a
Please see Board, A2

Cemetery
trustees to
consider
fireworks
request

O'Bleness
.
connng to
Meigs in July

BY CHARLENE HOEFLLC.H '

HOEFLiCH @MYO~ILYSEN T INEL . COM

'

'

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGE NT@M~OA ILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - O'Bieness
Hospital. based in Athens,
will be moving into Pomeroy
in Jul y with it's Meigs
Medical Clinic.
. The Meigs Medical Clinic
BY BRIAN J. REED
will
be located at 113 East
BREEO@t.lYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
Memorial Drive, Suite A, in
the Medical Arts Building.
MIDDLEPORT - J ul y 4
The suite has sat empty for
lireworks may sti ll light up
hear ty four years and was
the sky in Middleport, if the
previously occup ied by the.
three trustees of Riverview
Veterans Memorial Rural
Cemetery permit the use of
Beth Sergenl/pho!o Health Clinic.
the area for the display.
Yesterday's business-minded luncheon of the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce was visited by
The suite is being renovatThe
three
cemete ry (from left) Vice-president of Community Relations for o:Bieness Hospital Lynn Anastas, Chamber
ed
by 0' Bleness though the
trustees, James Acree, Bruce CoQrdinator Erin Roush and Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center Administrator Melissa Wamsley.
bui lding is o.wned by the
Fi sher and Robert Pooler,
Meigs County Commission.
will · meet at II a.m. on
"We consider this a major
Wednesday in counci l chamstep
in getting 0' Bleness into
bers to consider the
the county and part'nering up
Middleport
Community
for more health care opportuAssociation 's request to use.
Meigs
County
an area of the cemett;ry to
BY BETH SERGENT
Rocksprings Rehabilitation ·wamsley spoke about the nities ."
Mick
discharge tireworks on Jul y BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM Center Administ rator Meli ssa enemies of adherence, which Commi ssioner
Davenport
said.::We've
been.
. 4. The trustees, Mayor
. Wamsley gave a speech about can be employers losi ng focus
working
with
them
for'
awhile
POMEROY - Yesterday's increasing adhere nce to a of their ·goals arid · negative
Sandy
lann arelli
said
to get opportunity to bring
business-minded
luncheon of business strategy.
Tuesday, ha ve jurisdiction
assu mptions abou t their busi- them in and get them estabover the property and have the Meigs County Chamber
"Most successful compali shed in the cou nt v and.
sole authority in determing of Comme(ce focused on the nies do only a few things but ness or employees.
"Find
your
one
thing
and
hopefully
this wi ll . lead to
whether the tireworks can be importance of sticking to a do them well ," Wamsley told
discharged there. lannarelli business strategy.
the audience. . · .
.
Please see Chamber, A5
.PI!!ase see O'Bieness, AS
said she contacted Raberta
Hill, the village's attorney, to
verify the trustees' authority
·to determine the use of the
cemetery property, .after village council refusec) perm is- '
sion to use the area.
At Monday eveni ng's regBY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Market and that an additional
HOEFLICH@MYOAILrSENTINEL .COM
ular meeting of Middleport
14 tlats had been purchased
Village Council, the four
bv the Merchants Association.
members in attendance voted
POMEROY - Ways of He also reported· that several
making •the town more attrac- . volunteers had turned out to
3- 1 to forbid the use of the
cemetery to discharge 11retive, tourist friend lv and invit- assist with the plantings. .
works. Councif President
Musser also noted that 14
ing to shoppers ·were di sStephen Houchin s, Kathy
cussed at Tuesday mo11)ing 's basket s to hang on the' periScott and Jeff Peckham
meeting of the Pomerov od lights along .Court. · and
voted in favor of a ·motion
Merchants Assoc iation.
· Main Streets are being preforbidding the use of the
John Musser. president. pared and donated by Bob's
cemetery property for the
reported on favorable . com- Market , and that several othdisplay, ·and Shawn · Rice '
ments he has received on the ers are being purchased by
merchants ' t o
voted agai nst it. Council
flower beds between Main individual
han'g
in
front
of
their stores.
members Roger Manley and
Street and the parking lots and
Erin· Roush, director of the
· Robert
Robinson
were
in the planter along the river
Meigs
County Chamber of
excused from the meeting.
and around , the stage. He
Commerce, reported on the
Hamburg Fireworks Co.
noted that 20 .1lats oftlowers
of Lancaster has .refused to
.
h~d been donated by Bob's
Please see Appeal. A5
'use the
area
behind
Rej oic,ing Life Church
which has been the discharge site for . years.
because it is dangerous to
BY PAUL. DARST
Virginia. The June 2 and 3
empl_oyees and to spectators
POARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
operation led to II fe lony
who cross barricades set up
cases, 13 drug cases and 19
there. Several residents have
GALLIPOLIS- A two-day warrant cases, said Lt.
expressed concern that using
crime sweep that spanned both Richard Grau, commander of
tile area at the cemetery is
sides of the Ohio River result- the Ohio State Highway
disrespectful to those buried ·
ed in 141 arrests and confisca- Patrol's Gallia-Meigs Post.
there and their families. but
tion of drugs and cash.
"We think this was very
the Association has main ,
Brian J. Reed/ photo
The multi-agency, multi- successful." he said. " It led to
tained that the area in ques- Workers from Morton Buildings in Greenville were enduring 9(} state task force involved
tion is hot near any graves. degree weather Tuesday afternoon to continue building Bun's police units in ·Galli a and- big things and there are better
, If the area is approved for Party Barn, a new drive-through carryout store on East Main
things to come."'
Meigs counties in Ohio and
Pluse- F.lrewo.U, A5 Street in Pomeroy.
Mason County in West
Please see Sweep, A5

Chamber discusses business strategy,
health care· facilities~ and Smoke-Free Ohio

an

.Under construction- Association hears about

importance of village appeal

WEATHER

July 8, 2005

State Supreme Court
weighs visitati9n rights~of
grandparents,A6

12 PAGFS'

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

Editorials

A3
A4

Obituaries

A5

Sports
Weather

BSection
A6

.© 2oos Ohio Valley PubllAhllls Co.

Two-day sweep yields over 140 arrests

.

• 49allipolis
jlBailp Qtrtbune
'
• t}otnt t}leasant l\egister
• Tbe Daily Sentinel

446-2342
675-1333
992-2155

Advertising Deadline -June 27th. 2005

·
,,

..

•

,.

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