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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

''

www .mydailysetltlnel.com

Wednesday, June

15. 2005

High school football player
dies after collapsing at practice ·
PICKERINGTON (AP) A high 'rbool football player
collapsed after running sprints
at' condi tioning practice in hot
wcmher and died later at a
hospital. · the principal said
Tuesday.
OITicials at Pickerington
Central High School did not ·
know of any medical ·c.ondilions th at Kw ame ~ friyie had.
Principal Chuck Kemper said.
Before the 16-year-old col.
.
AP photo

Los Angeles Lakers coach Phil Jackson. right. gives Kobe
Bryant instructi.ons during a break .in the first ha lf of NBA
action against the Vancouver Grizzlies Saturday, · Dec. 11,
1999 in Vancouver, British Columbia. The Lakers reh ired
Jackson on Tuesday.
'

demanded a trade and super&gt;t.ar Br)'&lt;mt opted out of hi &gt;

Return

contTact ·to beco me a free

from Page Bl '
congratulate me on the job.
And I felt contident that he's
conlldent that we can go forward."
Bryant 'S reaction to a

pn~-·

agent the same day Jac·kson\
tive~.y ear run as coach ended:
The follllwing mollth.
O'Neal was traded to Miami·
while Bryant stayed with the
Lakers.
"I want to con£ratulate Phil
on returning

tO

coac h the

sible return bv Jackson Lakers:· o·-Neal said in a ·
· seemed lukewarm at besr statement released . througli
during the past several the Heat . "He is one of the
months. But Bryant released premier coaches. I wish him
a more positive statement the very best...
·
through his agent Tue sday.
O'Neal's representa tives
"When the Lakers began did not return repeated call s
the search for a new head and e-mails seek ing additioncoach, I put my complete ~!1 comment.
trust in Dr. Buss and (general
Tomjanovich succeeded
manager) Mitch Kupchak to Jackso0 n. &gt;;.igning a five-vear.
select the person they $30 million' contract. bu t-lastthought was best for the ed barely half a .season. citing
Lake rs'
organ ization ...
health reasons when he sudBryant said .."ln Phil Jackson. denly resigned Feh. 2.
they chose a proven winner.
With injuries playil)g a
That is someth i~ g I support:· major
role. the Lakers lost 19
Jackson's latest deal is for of their bst 21 ga mes under
three. years . Terms were not interim
coach · Frank
announced, but it 's believed Hambl eri to fini sh 34-48 and
he ' ll be earning between $7 out of the playoffs for just the
million and $10 million per second time si nce 1976.
year. making him the highest- · Jackson. who has never
paid NBA coach ever - a posted a· lo'sing record. has
fact conllrmed by Kupchak.
coached nine NBA champiJackson sa id he's been onship teams - six with rhe
approached . over the last Chicago Bulls and in his first
three weeks by fans and non- three years with the Lakers
fans aski ng him when he was
- from 2000-2002. Thin ties
coming back.
him with .former Bmaon
"One of the reasons why Celtics coach Red Auerbach
I've returned is the support for rhe most in league. his.tory.
has been so tremendous in
Jackson also has a record
this city," he said. ''It is a I7'5 postseason victories and
town that truly supports its
is tied' for lOth on the NBA's ·
team and has a tremendous all-time list with 830 wi ns in ·
amount of affection for it."
Jeanie Buss, the owner·s· just 14 seasons - nine wi th
Bulls and five with the
daughter and the Lakers · the
Lakers. He has a .723 reguexecutive vice president of lar-season winning percentbusiness operations, publicly
and a .717 postseason
lobbied for months for the age
winning percentage.
return of Jackson. her longThe Lakers were 287-123
time boyfriend.
in
the regular season and 64She got her wish.
2R
in the postseason under
"We're very pleased to
have Phil return to the La~ers Jackson. But this ligures to
hr s biggest challenge
. as our head coach," Jerry be
be'cau·se the current team
Buss said in a statement. "His ·doesn't appear to have what
record speaks for itself and
to return to elite stahis success in this sport is ittus.takes
any time soon.
unr.aralleled. Quite simply.
The Lakers are wel l over
Phtl is the · best coach in the
the · salary cap. restricting
business and probably the h . b. 1.
b . . h. h
greatest coach of all time:: . t err a .r rty, to nng 111 • rg ..
Jackson, who turns 60 in pnced ·lree-agent talent l_or at
September. hqs had health least two years . Therr detense
issues in the past and under- was abysmal last season:
went an arigiop las ty two they ~ad an unbalanced rosyears ago. He told ABC-TV ter wtth too many s mall forbefore the opening game of Wa(ds: they had vrnually no
the NBA Finals that he had a msrde presence: and they
series of tests showing he were suspect at point guard. :
· was "I 00 percent healthy.·•
m not .the pa~_acea for
Jackson's drsmrssal last thrs basketball club. Jackson
year set 111 motion a said. "It's going 10 take plenmakeoverof massive propor- · ty of hard work and dedications that proved disastrous tion over the course of the
for the Lakers . Dominant big summer ro change the face of
man
Shaquille
O' Neal thi s team."
·

lapsed Monday, his legs were
wobbly as he walked to a
water tahle an.d complained
he didn't feel well. Kemper
said. He died later in the day
at Children ·s Hospital in
Columbus.
He earlier had lifted weights
in practice ·at the school in
suburhan Ctllumbus. Kemper
"'iaid . The tem perature wa~
about 84 degrees Mondav.
ChiiJreil\ Hosp ital was

performing . an
~utopsy
Tuesday but would not release
information , citing privacy
concerns. The Franklin
County coroner's office said
the hospital did the autopsy
because there was no reason

to suspect anything but natural causes.
"We ' re hoping io learn
something soon,'' Kemper

said.
Afriyie, who was starting

CLEVELAND (A P) . Brown s ti ght end Kellen
Winslow Jr. had successful
surgery Tuesday to repair tiH:
right knee ligament he tore in
a motorcycle accident.
.
The club said Winslow 's
anterior cruciate ligament
was 'successfully repaired by
team Dr. Anthony Miniaci at
the Cleveland Clinic.
Winslow. who wi ll iniss the
2005 season. was already at
home recovering, the Browns
said. He wi ll begin a rehabil itation program immediately.
Typically. players with
'!Vinslow's type of-injury take
nine months to recover.
On Monday. Winslow disclosed for the tirst time that

.

in addition to the knee injury,
he lacerated his liver and kid.ney, bruised his right shtiulder ·and cracked a bone in hi s
upper right leg in the crash.
Winslow wrecked his highpowered motorcycle on May
I when he lost control trying
a stunt and hit a curb in a
· secluded parking lot near his

Finals game, putting together the type of poised,
performance
pumped-up
they hadn '.t displayed since
from PageBl
Game 7 of the Eastern
Conference tinals at. Miami.
4 ' 27 left gave Detroit its
Detroit had lost by 15 and
largest lead. 88-73, and the 2 1 points in the first two
Pistons held on easily from games of the series, but they
there.
. ditched the · downtrodden
Now. the Pistons will look demeanor that contributed
·to even the series at. 2-2 in
to their undoing in Games I
Game 4 on Thursday night and 2. .
·
and to ensure that the Series ,. Everything about · the
will be heading back to Pistons was different, from .
Texas.
their defensive intensity to
Hamilton
scored 24 · their dedication in terms of
points. including 10 in the getting
more
peopl e
th ird quarter ·when Detroit involved
·on
offense.
was
more
took the lead for good, and Hamilton
Chauncey Billups added 20 . assertive in shaking off the
But although the Pistons got pesky defense of -Bruce
most of their · points from Bowen. Prince was much
their backcourt tandem once more effective limiting
again, they were anything Ginobili, and Wallace
but a two-man team.
seemed especially motivatWallace had 15 point&gt;, II ed to put two very sub-par .
rebounds. live blocks and performances behind him.
three . steals, and ·Tayshaun
Wallace blocked five
Prince
and
Antonio · ·shots in the first quarter
McDyess each added 12 alone, and he had half of
points.
Detroit's offensive rebounds
Detroit became the llrst in the first half when Detroit
team to score 90 points had. a 24-12 ·edge in points
against the Spurs in 13 NBA · in the paint and an 11-0

Pistons

home. The 21-year-old was
thrown over the· handlebars
and spent ·nine days in the
hospi tal.
The Browns are expected
to ask Winslow to return a
portion of a $4.4 million
bonus • he got in Marc.h.
Winslow broke a ''dangerous
activities· clause in his contract which forbids him from
riding a motorcycle.
In an interview with 'the
Akron Beacon Journal ,
Winslow said he was aware
he . was breaching his con'tract.
•;rm .grown. I still have to
live my life," Winslow told
the newspaper. "I did know
the circumstances behind it,

but . I'm still learning. I'm
young-. You think you're
invincible. You think nothing's going to happen to you ..
. k.e. "
It was a mrsta
Meanwhile,
first-round
draft pick Brayton Edwards
missed his second day of
minicamp to atte nd an
uncle's funeral. Edwards was
expected to retu rn to
Cleveland on Tuesda)( night,
but Brown s coach Romeo
Crennel said the wide receiv,.
er from M.ichigan will likely
sit out Wednesday's workouts .
.
'Edwards strained muscle
and the team doesn't want
him to make .it worse by trying to do too much in one
day.

.advantage 111 fast -break
points.
He set the tone right from
the start, stealing the opening inbounds pass after he
was called for a jump ball
violation, then racing downcourt for a dunk and a threepoint play. ·
Wallace ended an eightgame streak of scoring in
sing le digits and a fiv.egame streak· with fewer than
10 rebounds.
Ginobili went down just a
few seconds later, bruising
his left thigh in a collision
with Prince ·just 21 seconds
into the game. Though he
wasn't sidelined for long,
the star of Games I and ·2
had just four points at halftime with four turnovers. he
finished with seven points
and six turnovers.
Tony Parker led the Spurs
with 21 points.
San Antonio opened th.e
second half with a 13-5 run
ending.· in an alley-oop
reverse slam by Wallace off
a pass from Hamilton, a play
that brought the fans out of
their seats and left rapper
Eminem waving a red, white

and blue towel from his seat
behind the Spurs' bench.
But the Spurs came right
back with a 9-0 run to regain
the lead 56-54 before th¢
Pistons closed the quarter ·
with a 16-9 run to take· a
five-point lead into the final
quarter.
·
"There are no games to
waste,'' Spurs coach Gregg
Popovich sa·id beforehand.
"We 've created an opportunity for ourselves, and it
would be great to takj:
advantage of it."
They didn't, and now it'sa
whole different series.
Notes: . Wallace 's , fiv~
blocks in the lirst quarter
tied Bob Lanier 's club
record for blocks in a quar."
ter. ... .Doctors used CPR to'
revive a man who had an
· apparent heart attack during!
the first half in the seatS
behind the north basket. The
fan . received a loud ovation: ·
as he was wheeled out on a
stretcher holding his thumb
up . ... Keyboardisl ant\
vocalist Stevie Wonde(
played ' the national anthem;
on a harmonica.

• l·n addition to the weekly trophy. the tour awards are presented at the tina! roundup.
It is never too late to joi n in
.from Page BI
the links fun and competition. All area youth 8-17 are
Patrick with a 56 to round out welcomed to come any or all
the top-5,
weeks .
In the ten-and-under group.
. Registration at 8:30 and
only two swi ngers showed . tee-off at 9 a.m. next Monday
up, so each won a trophy, and will be at · the Ri ve rside
both belted some beauties Couf\e in Mason.
along the· way. At the llnish
After nine hole s at
of nine holes. Jacob Leach of Ri,·ero;ide. the junior hitters
Gallipolis edged ahead for move
to
cliffside
in
first with a 55. while Hunter Gallipolis on Monday. June
Bellamy of Point was c lose 27 for rhe ~ame rimes and a
behind at 60.
third nine-hole round.
Libby Leach of Gallipolis
The young linksters do not
was the lone lady. as she play on Monday. July 4, but
played along this time with sw ing bi:ick into attion at
the guys to collect the first Pine Hill s in Pomewy on
place' trophy and the point Monday. Jul y II.
After th at. all the youth
lead for the young gal. .
Points are awarded each return to Hidden Vallev on
week for position of finish in Monda) . Jul y I~ lor the -l'lmli
each group . . then totaled . ~ine-holc roundup. awards.
through the four 'coring .ana priLes day . So. mark your
weeks to determine seasonal calenda" and enjoy the reschamps for .each age group ri' ities each \\.ed•.

Golf

'.

AEP, Mon Power to begin discussions about service transfer

SPORTS

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

• Post 128 rallies late
to beat Lancaster.

POMEROY - The Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
has directed Monongahela
. Power Co. ; which provides
electricity service to some
Meigs County residents. and
American t;:lectric Power to
begin discussions about tras-.
ferring Man Power 's Ohio
service territory to AEP.
· Mon Power provides elec-

~PageB1

tricity servic e to customers in

eastern Meigs County through
its Allegheny Power division ..

a

INSIDE
·• House committee set to
·recommend anti-terrorism
bill. See Page A2
• Pomeroy High School
class of '60 holds reunion.
See Page A3
• Health care seminar
offered. See Page A3
• Taylor celebrates fourth
birthday. See Page A3
• University Cinemas
to manage Athena.
See Page AS
• lhle graduates from
medical school.
·See Page AS
• House votes to limit
Patriot Act rules on lib(ary
records. See Page A6
• Senators considering
allowing in-person voting
before elections.
See Page AS

WEATIIER

::r

INDEX

·.

2 SECilONS- t6 PAGES

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.

Sununer Salon series
openS Friday at FAC, B8

I

his sophomore year, was outgoing and also played basketball, Kemper said.
"He liked to stop and tall, in
the hallway," he said.
Football coaches met with
counselors Monday night Wld
told Afriyie's teammates
about his death .. Tuesday
!110m1ng..
The school is providing··
counselors for the students,
Kemper said.

Winslo'Y to begin rehabbi.ng knee:
.

Nationwide agents
honored at sales
conference, A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics..

B7

Dear Abby
Editorials

A3
A4

Places to go

BS

Sports
.Weather

B Section

••

AS

© 2005 Oblo Volley Publiohlna Co.

The directive is the result of
Mon Power's refusal to llle a
rate stabilization plan with the
PUCO, as it had requested from
all electric utility companies in
Ohio. Instead, Moit . Power
instead llled
application to
initiate a trxed rate, marketbased standard service offer
that would ctetennine genera"
tion rates from the results of a
competitive bidding process.
A spokesman for State Rep.
Jimmy Stewart, R-Albany, said
Mon Power's proposal could
result in an increase of 40 to 70
percent on· monthly electric

an

Association
cancels
Middleport
July 4 plans
BY BRIAN

bills for their Ohio customers.
Rate iricreases prop~:~sed under·
AEP's nite stabilization plan
would
be
incremental.
Courtney Saunders cif Stewart's
,
office said Wednesday.
Stewart introduced House
Billl4 to improve stability, rate
certainty and predictability for
those living in south~m Ohio.
'·J also encouraged electric
utilities providing service to
Ohio consumers to me a Rate
Stabilization Plan with PUCO
and applaud PUCO for fol lowing through," Stewart said
Tuesday.

Mon Power 's proposal is
curren tl y under review by the
PUCO.
"Members of the Ohio
General Assembly have shared
concerns with us regarding ·
Mon Power's application. and
we share thos~ same concerns...
PUCO Chairman Alan R.
Schriber said. "We believe .that
(Allegheny Power's) cuswmers
may be facing nite shock and
f'dte instability under the company's current · proposal. We
remain resolute that a rate stabilization plan. is the best option
for Ohio's electric customers."

PCCO has directed Man
Power and AEP to immediately pursue potential terms, and
conditions for transferring
Mon Power's Ohio territory to
AEP. Under the Ohio Certified
Electric Territories Act, the ·
Commission may transfer a
portion of one electric.distribution utility's territory to another territory when deemed to be
in the public's interest.
The Commission directed
Mon Power and AEP to jointly llle a report detailing th!'
outcome of their discussions
within 14 days.

· ~. ~ft •.

J• .REED

BREED@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM
MIDDLEPORT - . The
Middleport
Community
Association has canceled all
of 't-s&gt;planrted July 4 festivities because there will be no
II reworks display.
·
On Monday evening,
Middleport Village ·Council
refused the Association permission to use an area at
'Riverview Cemetery to dis- .
charge July 4 • lireworks.
Hamburg Fireworks Co.,
Lancaster, can no longer use
a site along the · Ohio River
near Rejoicing Life Church
for the display because of
safety concerns.
Middleport's
attorney,
Raberta Hill, issued an opinion Wednesday that three
.cemetery trustees who were
appointed . in 2000 were no
longer valid trustees because
their terms had expired. Their
last meeting was in early
200 I . Those trustees, James
Acree, Bruce Fisher and
Robert Pooler, had planned to
meet yesterday to discuss the
use ·o f Riverview Cemetery
as a site for the fireworks display, but the meeting was
canceled at Hill's directive,
because any action the
trustees look would. not have
been valid.
. Mayor Sandy Iannarelli said
Tuesday Hill had indicated
that valid cemetery trustees
had ultimate authority over
the use of the Riverview
Cemetery property.
In ·a Letter to the Editor
submitted to The Daily
Sentinel on Wednesday,
Donald Vaughan, Jr., president of the Assqciation, said
the Association will proceed
with plans made on June 7 to
cancel all July 4 events, since
the fireworks display will not
be possible.
"Middleport's traditiomil
celebration will not take
place this year due (0 a conflict ·with the location of the
fireworks display," Vaughan
said. ··Prior to the council's
decision, the Association
voted unanimously that it
would not proceed with other
aspects of the July 4 festivities without fireworks. It
would be a disService to the

Ph·• see July 4. AS
•

Do Syracuse residents want London Pool or a park? J~ trial
·
BY BETM SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
·
SYRACUSE - "We thi~
we can get the. pool open.
Syracuse ~ouncilman . Kenny
Buckley satd to .the restdents
that gathered to discuss the fate
of the London Pool thrs week.
"But, can we afford to run
· ?" B kl
It.
uc ey as ked .
Although
the. Federal
·
Emergency
Management
Agency has agreed to pay .for
· · rep3.1fS
· of the poo~1 and
mtenor
the prolTilse qf donations of
equipment and money appear

to cover the repair of the pool's
concrete decking, village oflicials fear that there is no
money to operate the facility.
Last year the pool had an
operating deficit of $6,746.55
which had to be borrowed
.from the village's general
f d Bt ·
2001 _04 the
un 1·1 e$w3e0e000
n
'
poo ost
'
·
Reasons for the losses were
'd
be h ·. ·
f
t e n~mllg costs .0
sal t?
matena1s, espe.cra y repa1rs
ahn d poob
. 1 chemtca 1s alth oug h
t e rggest expense was
wages. The pool is mandated

to have a pool manger and a
specillc number o( lif~guards
.that must be rotated mto the
concession area·for breaks oui
of the sun. The fact that
Syracuse has a dwmdhng
youth population was also
mentioned as a cause.
"We can't do it another year,
not out of the general fund "
'
President of Council and
L .d
P 1 C
.
on on
oo
ommrttee
President Donna Peterson said.
p
·
d B kl bo h
eterson
anto open
uc and
ey have
t ,
want
the pool
Please see Syracuse, AS

'

BREC ·resto~ power after stonn
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
RIO GRANDE - A storm
front packing wind gusts and
lightning swept through
Buckeye Rural · Electric
Cooperative (BREC) service
territory in southeast Ohio
late Tuesday afternoon,
knocking trees on power lines
and tripping breakers at sutr
.
'.
stations.
·

Co-op linemen worked
through the evening and
restored power .to outage
areas by midnight.
Isolated outages occurred
across the nine-county BREC
territory, but major service
it:tterruptions due to storm
damage were logged in
Lawrence, Jackso.n, Athen~,
Vinton and Meigs counties.
The largest and longest omage affected 213 customers in

Jac.kson and. Vinton counties.
Storm winds blew a large tree
on a cross-country section of
electric line. Due to the location and extent of damage. the
outage lasted six hours.
A storm-related outage .in
the Wellston l!fea occurred
when BREC lost its transmission feed from American
Electric Power.
Please see BREC. AS

un eiW"ay
·

·STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL®COM
POMEROY Special
.Prosecuting Attorneys Scott
Longo and Erin Rosen completed their first full day of
presenting evidence to a jury
in the' rape case against
Raymond Ward, 33, of
Rutland , in Meigs County.
Common Pleas Court on
Wednesday.
· Ward, who is represented
by
Pomeroy
Attorney
Charles Knight, is charged
with 10 counts of rape and a
count of corrupting another
with · drugs , alleging he
engaged in sexual conduct
with a 12 year-old female in
2002. Other charges against
Ward. including charges of
unlawful sexual conduct
with a. minor. will be tried
later.this year.
•
Judge D. Dean Evans of
Gallia County is p.residing
over the case by assignment.
· Testimony will resume in the
case on Thursday morning.

.

�PageA2

.O HIO.

The Daily Sentinel ·

Thursd~y,June16,2oos

' ,

Analysts: 2nd District race will be nafiona1 indic~tor for Democrats

Report: Workers' comp
bureau lost nearly $4 million
with convicted money manager

BY LISA CORNWELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
'

CLEVELAND (AP) - The the newspaper reported.
Ohio Bureau of Workers'
However,
Hick s said
Compensation lost $3.86 mil- Tuesday that bureau officials
li on from an $80 million didn't know ahout Bond's
investment with a New York legal troubles until he was
money manager now serving indicted on a separate set of
a 12-year federal prison term charges in December 200 I. A
for bi lking clients, a newspa- jury convicted him in that
per reported.
case ..
The bureau let Alan Bnan
The agency took back $30
Bond, 43, continue handling million of its $80 million
$50 million of that invest- . investment with Albriond in
ment for at least 18 months January . 2000. but not
after Bond was indicted. The because of the first indic tPlain
Dealer
reported ment. Hi ck's said. Bureau
Wednesday.
officials didn't 'Want the
The bureau has·been under agency' s money to be more
fire since early April. ,. when than W to 15 pe rwnt of any
reports first s urfac~d :ibou t investor's total bu siness. she
the agency's unu sua l invest- said ..
ment in rare coins.
The bureau 'withdrew the
· A lawyer for Tom Noe. the rest· of its money by October
Republican fund-nii.ser who 200 I. recouping $76.14 milmanaged the $55 millio11 lion of' the original inves tcoin investment , has said up ment, Hicks said. '
to $12 million ofthos.e funds
Gov. Bob Taft sar d he didare missing. That prompted n'.t know about the Albriond
· before
Republicans up w Presider.H investment
Bush to return campaigr r Wednesday. Taft also had not
bee n informe d in October of
donations from Noe.
Last week. bureau officials the $215 million loss.
But Taft said he was confi acknowledged a $215 million loss from a hig h-risk dent he was beiri g informed
inveshnent with a Pittsburgh- · of any r1ew ly discovered
based firm. sparking a new losses as a new ri1ariagement
round of criticism from review team hires out side
Democrats.
experts to evaluate the
The bureau 's $14.5 billion bureau 's investments.
Meanwhile,
sheriff 's
insurance ·fund for injured
· workers invested $80 milli pn investigators in Colorado say
Bond's company, expensive bottles of wine .
with
Albriond
. Capital and artwork that may have
Management, in Jul y 1998. been bought with state
agency spokeswoman Emily money were stolen over the
Hicks said.
weekend from the home of a
Bond was indicted in New coin dealer.
York on Dec . 16, 1999, on
Noe had hired the coin
· charges of taking $6.9 mil- dealer. Michael Storeim, to
lion in kickbacks that wrzre ' invest in the state coin fund.
billed to his clients, inclu'd- Authorities in Colorado have
ing the NBA's Players ' been investigating Storeim
Pension Plan .and the Ohio and had took custody of
Police
and
Firemen 's 3,500 bottles of wine and
Disability Pension Fund . He hundreds of rare coins on
pleaded guilty in that case.
June 3. The wine was left in
Robert
Cowman,
the . a ldcked cellar at Storeirn's
bureau's chief investment home.
· .f.
officer at the time Bond was
Storeim has denied any
indicted, told The Plain wrongdoing in the coin case.
Dealer three weeks after the At least 121 coins owned by
indictment that the agency the state have been reported
· would leave its money with missing or stolen from his
Albriond despite the charges, office.

House committee set to ·
recommend anti-terrorism bill
Bv CARRIE SPENCER

. And~rson ,

Keeping Meigs County informed

~HJjunct

associate

professo·r of political science ·
University . of
at · the
Cincinnati. "Even if Paul
Hackett loses, 'it is very
important for the party ofor
him ro do well. It could be
AP Photo
seen as a sigr) of opportunities for Democrats in ·other Former state Rep. Jean Schmidt watches early return&gt;. Tuesday, In Cincinnati. Schmidt will face
Democrat Paul Hackett, a Marine reservist from Cincinnati who served a tour of duty in Iraq ,
GOP strongholds." ·
Hackett, a Marine reservist easily defeated four other candidates in the Democratic primary Tuesday. Schmidt, a Clermont
from Cincinnati who served a County Republican who defeated 10 GOP candidates , including former U.S. Rep. Bob McEwen ;
tour of duty in Iraq, easily Hamilton County Commissioner Pat DeWine, son of U.S. Sen. Mike DeWine; and state Rep.
·
defeated four other ca ndi -· Tom Brinkman of Cincinnati.
elates in the Democratic ,primary Tuesday. He will face appeals to independents and
"One of the things reach across party lines.
"Paul believes that the peoformer state Rep. Jean any disgruntled Republicans Republicans do best is to
Schmidt. a Clermont County worried about the economy cor1)e tog~! her aftc;r primaries ple of this . district are not
hatd-core Republicans or
Republi ca n who defeated I0 or Iraq, they might actually and\ mrte, · she sard.
Democrats. but
GOP candidates. · including have a shot at it ''" 'Said
hard-core
. She does feel she·benefited
former U.S. Rep. Bob Anderson.
from fellow candidates' neg- hard-core on American values" he said.
U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur, a ative campaigning.
McEwen: Hamilton Courity
Hackett .renlains a long .,
" Voters
consistently
Commissioner Pat De Wine;· Democrat from Toledo, said
shot,
·but his service in Iraq
son of U.S. Sen. Mike the race will have national thanked me for taking the
high rdad and not taking part and his membership in the
DeWine; and state Rep. Tom impact. .
Brinkm~n of Cincinnati.
"I think it's important in mud slinging,". said National Rifle J\ssociation
may appeal to Republicans
Thomas Luken, who served enough that I have asked to Schmidt.
A spokesman for the Ohio who are strong on patriotism
in the 1970s. has been the meet with (Democratic
Committee Republican Party acknowl- and the right to own guns.
only Democrat to represent National
the seven-county southern Chairman) Howard Dean and edges that the race will gar- said Gene Beaupre, a politiOhio district since 1951. Rob have talked with the ner a lot of attention b~cause cal .sc ience professor at
in
Portman held the seat from Democratic Congressional it is the only federal election Xavier · University
· Cincinnati.
1993 until President Bush Campaign Committee about at this tirrie,
"We are very confidem in · "The lack of a prominent
appointed him U.S. trade rep- what a credible candidate we
have,"
she
said.
·
"We
have
resentative in March.
·
our ability to hold on to the name on the Republican side ·
Democrats may view this never had a candidate like seat, and we believe Jean al so could help him if he can
race and the Aug. 2 special Hackett in Cincinnati, and we Schmidt is a formidable can- appeal to voters on issues like
election as a test to see how should be the most competi- didate with a great reco(d," the economy and the war,"
unhappy people may be with tive we have ever been for spokesman Jason Mauk said .. said Beaupre. "But if the
But Hackett's spokesman, Demor;rats want to win~ they
the direction of the state and the seat."
Schmidt remains very con- David Woodruff. said that,the will have to bring in a lot of
the country. Anderson said.
candidate's heavy resources, including
"It remains an uphill battle, fident of her party's support, Democratic
but if Democrats can pull out ·even after a divisive GOP pri- , views on issues such as patri- money. organization and
otism and the economy can strategy."
their base and .make good mary.
.

.State to submit plan to replace federal dollars for disabled schoolchildren
BY CARRIE SPENCER .

· with II school districts, an
education center and the par.ents of a disabled child.
COLUMBUS
The
They had sued Director
state's welfare director will Barbara Riley in March over
seek federal approval for a the agency's authoritY. to end
temporary plan to continue the ·progfam, .whtle the ·
. physical, speech and psycho- · agency said it had no choice.
logical therapy for disabled The federal government
·children whose services were · intends to pull the $67 · milto end next school year lion that goes to schools after
because the program doesn't the budget year ends June 30.
·
meet cte dera! reqUirements.
The school portion was
The Department of Job and part of a larger program that
Family Services announced didn't mee~ rules
of
the plan in ·an agreement filed Medicaid, the joint state-fed, Wednesday to settle a lawsuit eral insurance for the poor
.

son's constitutional right not
to provide self-incriminating
information, said Carrie
COLUMBUS
an attorney with the
.
for state JO
· bs, con- Davis,
App Itcants
American Civil Liberties
tracts and certain licenses . Union of Ohio.
ld· not · b e aII owe d to
. wou
"It's requiring people to
·
f
·
· ns prove
re use to answer
questto
that they ' re not associ· tres
·
ated with a terrorist group
a bo ut posst'bl e terrorrst
under proposed changes to a rather than requiring law
en fo rce ment to try to prove a
terrorism bill.
A House committee recom- person is a member,'' she
mended the bill .for passage 9- said.
3 Wednesday, with .some
Criminal standards of proof
changes from the version the don't apply because the bill
Senate
unanimously doesn 't make it a crime not to
answer
the
question.
approved in March .
The bill would allow the ·Jacobson said. "They' re tryarrest of people ~ho refuse to ing to say a privilege is a
tell police olftcers therr right. You don ' t have a ri ght
name, address· and age- but to a public job."
the House versron tones
The · bill ·still says that a .
down detention provisions ' police officer may arrest anyfor people who refuse to one in a public place who
identify themselves at ai r- refuses to provide name . .
. ports and other transportation address and date of birt h
facilities.
when asked. even if they have
The bill , sponsored by Sen. done nothing wrong. Under
Jell Jacobson, a Dayton -area current . la w. police could
Republi can; requrres .' the arrest someone if they susstate to develop question- pee ted the . person had ·comnair~ s to determine if an mitted a crime, but they
applicant has_ supported orga- cqulcln't force the person to
nizations on the federal list identify himself.
- of known terrorists.
The Hayse version says if
The brll exempts those there is a security threat,
applying for driver's licenses. police may require identitlcaJacobson said affected licens- tiim from all those seeking to
es likely would include con- enter airports. train stations or .·
cealed weapons permits. haz- other critical transportation
ardous waste carriers and sites, and deny entry to those
school bus drivers.
who refuse . The Senate verUnder the Senate version, .sion had allowed questioning
answering "yes" to any ques- of similar people at or near a
tion is grounds for refusing si!e. regardless of threat staemp.Ioyment, a contract or the tus. and detaining those who
,
license. The House version refuse .
adds the phrase "or failure to
Civil rights groups' had
answer 'no,"' · meaning the ·asked If the original provision
question can't be left blank.
would be used for ethnic proThat , could violate a per- filing. Jacobson said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

-·

C\NCINNATI
A
Democrat has a better chance
of winning the hi storica lly
Republican
2nd
Congressional District than
past nominees because of his
military se rvice. a divisive
GO~. primary and hi s stand
o1f'?f;s ues that appeal to
Republicans. politrcal ana- ·
l)'s.ts said Wednesday.
\ .
'.' It 's definitely worth it to
the -Democrats to put in the
effort if only tel keep tl\e party
energized."
·sa id
Jane

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .

and disabled. Other parts of
the program .were replaced
and now meet the regulations. But because the school
portion was restricted to public school students, it dtdn 't
meet a requirement that ser.
vices be available to all
Medicaid recipients.
The temporary plan would
provide only medically necessary services: therapy to help
large muscle movements or
fine coordination, and . speech
therapy and psychology, air of
which are available to everyone on Medicaid. It also would

make rates inore consistent,
another federal concern.
The long-tenn plan would
attempt to replace other parts ·
of the fooner program, such as
transportation, nursing, social
work and school health aides.
The settlement calls for the
agency .to submit the temporary plan by August and a
long-term replacement plan
by September. The agency
said it would try to finish
both earlier. The plans would
need ·to be approved by the
Federal Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services.

•

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Community C~lendar .

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.,

Page .A J

Thursday, June t6, 2005

Wlfe escapes violent past for better life in the military

DEAR ABBY: My husband.
"Gene ... and I met a
Band members
include .. Awesome God... For more
week
before
my 30th birthday.
t
Heather Finlaw Snyder. for- . information. call 742-2568.
had
always
been a pqor
Gene
merly oF Meigs County. the
student and preferred a job
lead singer. B. J. Freese and
making money to learning.
Saturday, June 18
John Ferrell. All attend the
(He
never learned to read past
Dear
POMEROY -Mi lhoan Eastland Christi'an Church.
,.. '
Friday, June 17
a
kindergarten
le
veL
therefore
Abby
.Sunday, June 19
. family reunion will be held
.MIDDLEPORT - Parish he doesn't write well.)
: frm,n. II a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
CARPENTER
The Nurse Lenora Leitheit will .
We moved into our own
~ Ohro
Valley . Christian Gracemen ·Quartet will be in · conduct blood pressure
home
in 1999. We both want- Assembly Camp Grounds ai concert at the Mt. Union screenings from I0 to noon at
ed
children.
and our daughter
Ch urch
near· l'fometown
' Bedford (Darwin). Those Baptist
Market
in was born in 200 I. Our rela- school. G~iie knows l'rn not
attending are 10 take hot dogs . Carpefi,ier at the 10:30 a.m. Mid~dlepor"J.
tionship was great - tihtil comi ng back this time. We're
and buns for their own family service. ·
Saturday, June 18
: along wnh a vegetable or
MIDDLEPORT- Justified · MIDDLEPORT - Pops in we had someone else to care on speaking terms only .
. for. Becaus·e Gene was because of rhe chi ldren.
~ salad and a dessert. For more from Alabama will singing at the Park, a free breakfast
Abby. I lind myself won: information call Debbie 10:30 a.m. on Father's Day at . hoJloring fathers for Father's brnught up old-fashioned, he
decided
I
was
to
stay
at
home
dering
if. after my six years
' · Finlaw at 992-3921.
. the Middleport § hurch of the . Day. 8 to II a.m .. Dave Diles
and
care
for
the
hou
se
and
in
the
service,
I should try to.
·Nazarene. A dinner honoring Park. DonatiQns accepted but
Monday, June 20
kids
while
he
worked
and
reconcile
with
Gene. On
· POMEROY - Pomeroy all fathers will be served 1(&gt;1- not required. Sponsored by
provided for us.
some level. I know it would"
Chapter 186 OES will meet lowing.
Middleport
Community · Things gbt physical not n't work and it's wrong to
at 7:30 p,m. Potluck refreshPORTLAND -Spani sh Association.
long after our daughter even think about going back
. ments at 6:30 p.m. with Mass at Our Lady of
Sunday, June 19
arrived.
We'd argue and I'd to that life after being given a
: members to take a covered Guadalupe Mission, .6 p.m ..
TUPPERS PLAINS : dish. New officers to be old Harri s Farms market on Father's Day breakfast 8-11 try to leave. only to result in chance for a better one. But
· elected.
Ohio 124. Ministry of Sacred · a.m. at Tuppers Plains. my being choked. Or he\1 then.' I picture Gene with us
throw me aoainst a wall to in that better life. Would it be
Heart Church, Pomeroy. ·
·Firehouse,
serving
pancakes.
prevent me from calling 911. a slap in the face if, in the
Monday, June 20
eggs
and
sausage.
Donations
One time, he brok~ my nose. end. Gene · and I worked out
POMEROY - Vacation
accepted.
He was never violent toward ·our differences and forgot
Bible sehool will be held at
the
chililren - I had a son in about the past'? - . NEEDS
Saturday, June 18
the Enterprise U. M. Church,
2004
- · only toward me · ANSWERS IN MISSISSIPPI
POMEROY
through June 24, 9 a.m. to II
because of them. He said I
DEAR
NEEDS
. Homecoming will be help a! a.m. Call Arilv Gross at 992or
I
never
did
things
right
ANSWERS:
It
could
be a
the Hysell Run Community 5556 for more information.
Saturday, June 18
took
up
for
them.
_slap
in
the
face;
it
could
also
Church of Hysell Run Road,
MIDDLEPORT- Revival
MARIETTA ·
-Ethel
·
I
left
for
good
six
.
weeks
be
a
broken
jaw.
another
bro· Pomeroy, beginning with a service will be held at the old Carson will celebrate her 91 st
potluck dinner at noon, ar1d Betel Free Will Baptist birthday on June 18. Her ago. I have left many times ken bone - the possibilities
singing by Ihe Graeemen at 2 Church, 7 p.m. through June address is Arbors of Marietta, before; but went back because are endless. Althou gh your
p.m.
24. Evangelist will be Rev. Third Floor, 400 · 7th St .. of dependency. Thi s time . J husband "was n' t violent
have a lot of support, plus. I'm toward the children," by fail· .VINTON John . and Norman Taylor. There will be Marietta, Ohio 45750.
Debbie Cardwell to sing at special singing each night.
POMEROY . -· Kathleen enlisting in the Air Force. My ing to control his rage he
the Clark Chapel Freewill Ralpli. Butcher is the pastqr. Baily Scott will celebrate her• father served in the military EXPOSED them to violence.
Baptist
Church ,
Clyde The chuich is located on IOOth bir:ihday at a party to for 21 years; and is quitting Nowhere in your letter did
truck-driving job to care you mention that he has any
Ferrell,' pastor.
' ·
· Route 7 at Story's Run.
be held 2 to 4:30 p.m. on his
MIDDLEPORT - Haven.
CARPENTER - Vacation June 25 at the Forest Run for my children while I attend desire to change. Because
. a contemp@rary Christian Bible school will be held at United Methodi st .Church. basic training and tech your· 4-year-old daughter
band of Canal Winchester, the Mt. Union Baptist Church Her daughter, Mary Wise and
· will be at the Bradbury near Carpenter, 6:30 to 8 p.m. family, are hosting an open
Church of Christ, 7'30 p.m. through June 24. Theme is receptio~.
·

Clubs and
organizations

Other events

Church events

Birthdays

Taylor celebrates
fourth birthday

know' no different, she
thinks her daddy's behavior
is nmmal. It is urgent that she
learn it is NOT normal , and
it's your job to teach her thai
lesson by example,
You arc makinoe positive
.
strides in the right direction.
My advice is to keep marchmg
forward and don't look back.
DEAR ABBY: My fiance
and I plan to be married next
winter. Our chu rch holds 700
people. while the reception
hall holds only- 200. We
would loi·e to invite lots ot
people to the ceremony co-workers. acquaintances.
etc. - but have the reception
only for out-of-town guests,
close friends and Family due
to the limited space.
. Is there a proper wax to
exclude people from the
reception? I don't want to
insult anyone. - WEDDING '
BELLE IN FLORIDA .
DEAR WEDDING BELLE:
In a word, no. To invite 700
guests to a wedding and
exclude 500 of them from the
reception · wotlld bC insulting
and a social gaffe that would
take you years to Ii ve down.
Either limit your wedding to
200 guests or ti nd a larger
place to hold your reception.
Dear Abby is writte.n by
Abigail Van Buren, · also
kllow11 as Jearwe 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.

Pomeroy High School .
class of'6o holds reunion.

POMERO.Y -Members Baker,
Janice
Teaford
EIJ'en
Young
of the Pomeroy High School Zwilling.
class · of 1960 and guests Thoma, Judy and Jim Sisson,
gathered Memorial Day Paula and Jack Welker. ·
weekend at the Meigs
Attending alumni from out
County Gun Club for an of tow.n were Mike and
Stauser.
informal party preceding and Nancy
Brown
following the PHS alumni Reynoldsburg; ·· Ruth and
Howard Parker. Marietta ;
banquet. ·
The room was decorated in Ted and Linda Crow Beegle,
Charles
p.urple and white, and a table Worthington:
honoring deceased class- Downie
and
Barbara
mates was adorned with Laverick. Wol feboro, ·N.H.:
memorabilia.
Loriane and William Gibbs.
Attending were loql alun.1- Lexington, Ky. ; Marilyn and
ni Charles and Mary Kenny Leffle , Pitt sburg .
RACINE· &gt;Gracie Taylor, . Amberger Chancey, . Jean ' Calif.; Jane Smith, Tuppers
daughter of Becky and Chad Ellen Dabo Kelley. Shirley Plains;
Janet
Rummel,
.Taylor of Racine, celebrated Eblin Jeffers. Mark Grueser, Hamburg, Iowa; Donald
her fourth birthday on May
30 with a Dora the Explorer Jack Hart, Gary Moore. Spencer. Vincent ; Janice.
Larry and Reva Rea Bunce. Thomas Genies. Jackson;
·
party at her home.
Attending beside her par- Diane and Ed Bartels, Janice and Robert Springer.
ents, were her brother. Charl'es and Mary Burnside Marietta.
Friends
stopping
by
Jordon, Carolyn Salser, Joyce Houdashelt, Ned and Sharon
Submitted photo
Larry Taylor, Linda and Douglas Swindell, Jerry and throughout ·the day included
Jack Alphin, chairman on the Board of Farmland Mutual, left, and Ken Ridge, vice president of mar- and
Denny Evans, Michael, Barbara Eskew Fields, Larry Shirley Brown Har1J1an ,
keting agribusiness, recognizes Betty Staats and Andrea Stout, leading writers of farm insurance. Michelle, Andrew, Kayla Gruese_r, Vincent Knight. · Belpre; 'Robert Roberts and
Evans. Jamie Evans. Kenda Ruth and. ·Charles Riffle •. wife Nancy, Union Town ;
Richard
and
Marilyn Mike
Roberts;
Akron;
~mith, Bradley and Steven
George. Linda Starkey and Blackwood Poulin, Pauletta Fredrick Crow. Svracuse;
RIPLEY - Andrea Stout group. The Morton agency Nationwide, only43 qualitied : Bob Howers. Many cards and and Phillip Harrison. Barbara Allen and Betty · Hamm ,
in for
the
FAST
Track · gifts were sent by friends.
has
offices
and' Betty Staats, associate also
and Paul Roush, Norma Syracuse; Walter Laudermilt.
agents w.ith the Bill MQrton Parkersburg, Harrisville, and Conference.
Natiunwide® Insurance Agent Ravenswood. "'
· . Together with its affiliafed
in Ripley, W. Va. were recog"Farm coverage is a highly ·Companies Allied Insurance
Nationwide® .
nized at an agency sales con- specialized line of insurance," and
Hillard, Agribusiness, the Nationwide
: ference in Des Moines , Iowa, remarks ' Jerry
: as one of his company's lead- Exclusive Agency Sales companies are the largest
: ing writers of farm insurance. Officer. "Only agents special- ·'writers of farm business in the
Track Iy trained to focus on this country. They recently impleThe . "FAST
Conference" was held in unique type of business can mented the AgriChoiceSM
recognition of top-producing provide our fann customers farm policy that provides tai. agents in sales of new farms with important advice and lor-made coverages for fann. : business · during 2004. The counsel. Our FAST Track ers of various sizes· and types
: group comprises the Farm Conference recognizes the of operations.
Nationwide Insurance is the
· Agent Sales Team, and the agents who have made this
· endorsed inst~rance .provider
· 2005 conference was the commitment."
While more than 1,200 For the West Virginia Farm
inaugural event designed
'
specifically for the agent agents write farm business for .Bureau. ·
seru PetfKt Steeper
Serta

.Nationwide agents honored at sales conference

Plush Euro Top

Address------------------------------~--------~------------------~----1.

The Daily Sentinel

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

.Health care
•
semtnar
offired
POMEROY Snider,
· Fuller, Porter &amp; Associates
will hold a seminar to update
businesses and organizations
with group ~ealth care plans
: on health care benefits for
: 2005, 11:30 a.m·. to 12:30
p.m. Tuesday, June 21. at the
Wild horse Cafe.
The seminar will focus on
the question "Are you paying
too much?" Mark Snider and
: Jim Fuller of Snider, Fuller,
: Porter &amp; Associates and RDb
· Fratianne of United Healthcare
will lead the seminars.
"Join us for lunch to hear
. some solutions," said Snider.
: Lunch is provided for those
- attending the free seminary.
: Space is limited and those
: planning to attend are asked
: to RSVP toll free at (800)
. 451-6125.

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

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Charlene Hoeflich
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establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or flf the p~ess; 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

Canceled
July 4 celebration a ''rw shou/'
.

'

Dear Editor:
· The Middleport Community Association wants to inform
residents of an unfortunate development in the annual July 4
festivities. Middleport's traditional celebration will not take
place due to a conflict with the location of the !ireworks display.
·
A tremendous amount of planning goes into the fireworks,
parade, entertainment, food, etc. In the past, fireworks have
been set off on the riverbank. 'This takes coordination with the
U.S. Coast Guard due to heavy barge traffic. Several years
ago, the fireworks were delayed by almost. an hour to allow
the passage of a batge.
•
There is an increasing problem with pleasure boat traf!ic
near the fireworks site, and many spectators walking .through
the barricaded areas near the launch site. Due to these factors,
it became evident that the location needed to be moved for
safety reasons. .·
An alternative sire near Riverview Cemetery was selected
several ·weeks ago by the fireworks professionals and members of the July 4 Committee. Since the.cemetery and the area"l
surrounding it are owned by the village, the association
sought approval of village. council. At a recent council meeting, members of the association stressed the importance of the
fireworks .to the celebration and the importance of the celebration to the community. The same individuals attempted to
impress upon the council that this location was the only safe,
feasible spot for the fireworks. A small number of people
expressed concern about this location and a decision was
made by council to not allow access to the site.
The association voted unanimously June 7 that it would not
proceed with the July 4 festivities withou~ fireworks. All in
. attendance felt it would be a disservice to the planners, many
volunteers, and talented entertainers, to ask them to proceed
with the event without fireworks.
The Middleport Community Association offers an apology
to all who enjoy the Independence Day cehibration and support the fireworks. It is the association's goal that the coming
year will bring changes for the better, including the promise
of a renewed July 4 celebration.
All concerned · individuals are invited to attend the
Community Association's next meeting, at 8:30 a.m. on July
5 at Peoples Bank.

Donald "Dodger" Vaughan, President
Middeport Community Association

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editi'ng and must be:signed and include address
arul telephone number. No unsigned letters will
· be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities. ·
·

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Thursday, June 16,

2oos

Negativ~ (De4nism) hurts DemsJ rebound prospects
.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

PageA4

. .. '21 4.21

oppose. but a smart oppoPoll s indicate that th e
sition will al so get itself
public i&gt; di»ati,fied "ith
the performance of both
kt1own for proposing comthe ·
Republican-. led
pelling alternatives and
will avoid offending the
Congress and Pre sident
s~ ing voters it needs to
Bush. But the 'ability ·of
Morton
De·mocrat, to capitalize on
aurae! to become the
Kondrai::ke majority.
it is being hampered by
Dean claims to be trying
rampant Deani sm.
"Deani sm... the trade to exte nd the · Democratic
mark
beha.vior
of
P'arty's appeal t&lt;l red states,
but he can't possihly do so
Demotratic
National impeachment.
During debate on Bush's by declaring Repuhlicans
Committee
Chairman
Howard Dean , is the .ten- judicial nominees , various ''evil'' and saying th\ll they
dency to attract publicity Democrats accused him of don't work for a living .
As a presidenti:ti &lt;;andi. for name- calling attack s pursuing "absolute power"
on Republ'icans while and Sen. Charles Schumer, date , Dean attracted more
offering almost no positive 1'&gt;- N. Y. . attacked nomi- than a· ha~f-m illion new
·alternative's fur gove'rning . nee Janice Rogers Brown activists and contributors
Dean ha s been chided by by asking· "doe s she want, to the Dem'ocratic Party,
various Democrats for a theocracy'' What does but they weren't enough
over- the-top statements (Brown) want to be nomi- either to win him the presihe
"hate&gt;'' nated fo r'' Dictator' . Or · dential . nomination or get
that
Democratic non'iinee John
Republican s. that they're grand exalted ruler?''
It's · rare
for
top Keiry elected.
"evil." that many of thetn
As a · -Pe.\v Re searc h
don ' t work for a living. . Republican s to resort to
and that they ' re "the while such wretched . excess. Center poll showed, . 82
Christian party" - but House . Majority Leader percent of Dean's adherDeanish critiques are com- To'm DeLay. R-Texas, did ents call themselves iiberso in threatening retribu - al, compared to 27 perce nt
mon among Democrats.
Senate Minority Leader . tion toward judges who of all Democrat$, and 99
Harry Reid. D-Nev.,· has refused tp keep brain.!... 'percent opposed the Iraq
called Bush a "liar" and a damaged Terri -Schiavo war. compared to 68 perSenate ceht of aii ,Democrats.
''loser.·' He apologized for alive.
MajorityLeader
Bill
Frist.
Recent polls indicate an
saying "loser," but not for
R- Tenn.,
accused increasing trend on th.e part
. "liar."
Democrats
·of
·•assassinat.of the national electorate to
Sen. Hillary Ro&lt;;lham
agree that the war·was "not
Clinton, D ~ N . Y. , who's ing" Bu sh nominees.
But. by and large. it 's · worth fighting" -58 pershrew.dly ex tended her
appeal rightward from the Democrat's who lose their ·cent in The Washington
composure. Post/ ABC poll · - · but
party's liberal base. recent- rhetorical
Why?
AI
some
level, 1 there's no indication that
ly lapsed back into
Deanland. charging that lhink it ' s. becau se they Americans favor immedi"there never has been an reflect w.hal Democratic ate withdrawal, as do most
administration. 1 don't activists believe - that Dean adherents (though
believe in our history; Republicans, Bush in the not Dean himself).
Recent polls suggest that
more intent upon consoli- lead , really are evil, illdating · and abusing power motivated and dishonest. the public is deeply dissatto furtHer th~lr o·wn agen- Republicans, in the main, isfied with the job the GOP
just think Democratic poli - CoJJgress is doing, offering
da."
Democrats a real opportuMore th~m the Nixon cies are wrong.
·
administ~ation.
whose . Democrats al'so go over nity to gai'n traction.
In the
ABC poll ,
abuses - burglary, wire- the top, I think; .because
taps and attempted subor- . they are. fru strated at being . Congress approval was
nation of the FBI - have forced to play defense -only 41 percent. Only 31
just been revisited with the while the GOP is in control percent of respondents said
u·nmasking
of
"Deep - ·more ·or less - of all that Bush and the GOP
0
Sen. Clinton three branches of govern- were "making progress on
Throat"
knows better: She once ment and is setting the the issues that concern
you." And among those
worked for the House national agenda.
It
is
certainly
the
duty
of
who said no progress was
Judiciary Committe,!: as it
considered
Mixon's tl'te opposition party to being made, 67 percent

blamed Republicans and
only 13 percent blamed
Democrats . .
On the other hand, t.he
approval
rating
for
Democrats in Congress
was just 42 percent, the
same as for Republicans
and just I point better than
that for Congress as a
whole .
President. Bush's · rating
was 48 percent. 111 the latest Gallup poll. ~;lush's ·
approval was a 47 percent.
do"'n . I0 points since
January. Only 34 percent
approved of the way
Congress was- doing its
job, th e lowest since 1997.
But if Democrats think
that low approval of
Congress will significantly
increase their ranks in the.
next election, it's worth
noting that in the month s
up
to . the
leading
November
1994 GOP
· takeover,
Congress
approval ratings were in .
the mid-20s.
All this evidence sug'
gests that what the public
wants from Washington is
action on the issues . that
. concern. it most - the
economy, gasoline price s
· and Iraq . Bush has pQiicies
and proposals for dealing
:with the problems, even if
the public doesn't neces·
sari.ly like them.
To the extent that
Democrats do have alternatives, no' one knows
about them because 'they
spend so much time going
negative, and, going over
the top. If there's one thing
that turns off inoependents.
and moderates, it's. nega,
tive name,-calling. It may
work in the thick of a campaign, but Deanism is a
turnoff for party-building.
I Morton Kondracke is
execrli{ve editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

•
•

The sun is setting on dreams of empire
For the longest time ; all
. n~:wly trained Iraqi troops?
the Bush White House had
Here's what .one outspoken
t.o do to answer critics qf
American soldier told The
the war in Iraq was to
Washington Post, accordunfurl Old Glory.
ing to its recent news story:
The time for flag-wav "
'! know the party line.
Gene
ing, however, appears to be
You know, the Department
Lyons
ending . According to a
qf Defense, the U.S. Army,
USA Today/Gallup poll,
five-star generals, four-star
almost six in I0 Americans
generals, President Bush,
think the United 'States
Donald Rum~feld: The
should start bringing the ing: "I think the more accu- Iraqis will be ready m .
troops home ASAP. Only rate w:iy to approach this whatever time period,' said
36 percent, r.oltghly the right now is to concede that . l st Lt. Kenrick Cato, 34, of ..
hardcore Republican base, ... this insurgency is not Long Island, N.Y.... 'But
stay: going to be settled, the ter- from the ground. l can ~ay
want
them to
Majorities in several polls rorists and the terrorism in with certainty they won't
say the war wasn't worth Iraq is not going to be set- be r.eady before I leave.
the sacrifice and doubt that tled, _through military- And I know I' II be back in
Iraq was ever a threat to the options or military opera- Iraq, probably .in three . or
tions~ It 's going to be set- four years. And I don't
United States.
Would-be s.oldiers are t.led m .the political think they'll be ready
then ,"'
voting with their feet. process."
Maybe
if
everybody
who
In a stunning piece Of
Despite lowering standards
to include drug users and believes in that process journalism. the Washington
small-time criminals, Ar\IIY simply closes his eyes and . Post ' s . Antho~y Shadid,
recruiters keep significant- claps his hands, a solution who speaks ·fluent Arabic,
ly missing their enlistment to Iraq's centuries-old eth- and his co,lleague Steve
quotas. Marine recruiters nic and religious strife will Fainaru recently spent sevappear. eral days on patrol with an
aren't doing much better. magically
Meanwhi'le,
Gen
.
.
George Iraqi Army company and
There's even talk of a
·renewed draft, but th&lt;\t 's W. Casey, the top U.S. the Pennsylvania National
not going to happen. the Commander in Iraq, has Guardsmen charged with
kinds of student deferments complained to rep9rters training them. What they
·about what he called "the
that helped patriots like
Pillsbury
Doughboy" found was profound. mutual
President
Dick
Vice
contempt.
effect:
Pressing
the
insurCheney (and me) stay out gents hard in one area only
The Americans call the
of Vietnam wouldn't pass causes· outbreaks of vio- Iraqis "preschoolers with
muster today. But any lence elsewhere.
guns" and deride .them for
move to pluck · Young ·
cowardice'
. The Iraqis, ·who
Lt. Col. Frederick P.
Republican s out of the Wellman, who works with unanimously said they
nation 's high schools and the taskforce training Iraqi enlisted only for the
colleges would alter the troops, Was eve n bl unte.r. In money, predicted that the
balance of American poli- an interview with ·Tom .entire company would
tics overnight.
Lasseter of Knight-Ridder, desert on payda.y. On
Even the generals are one of the few journali stic patrol, they wea~ face
beginning to say they see organizations lo apply scarves · and masks so
no military solu.tion for the appropriate skepticism m nobody will recognize
Iraqi disaster. On Memorial · the coverage all· along, them and sing songs praisDay, Cheney claimed the Wellman said that tribal ing Saddam Hussein that
Iraqi insurgency was in its members' seeking reveng.e their American counter"last throes'' President for slain relatives keeps the parts can 't understand .
Bu sh has expressed simi lar insurgency growing.
"Look at the homes of
optimism.
"We can 't kill them all," the Iraqis," an .lraqi soldier
Brig. Gen. Donald he said. "When I kill one. I complained to a Post
Alston , · the
Army' s create· three ."
reporter. "The people ,have
spokesman In Baghdad.
And what about those been destroyed."
sees thing s differently, say"By whom?" he was

asked.
"Them," said the man,
identifiefl as Omar, pointing at the U.S. Humvees
leading the patrol.
Let's get back to basics.
Nobody ever asked . the
American · people if they
wanted an empire·. Instead,
the geopolitical daydreamers involved with the
"Project for a New
Am~rican
Century"
Cheney, Rummy, Paul
WolfOwi tz et al. - conceived a scheme to conquer
Iraq after the first Gulf War
to ensure · that the United
States remain the world's
lone "superpower."
The fi'rst President Bush
knew better, refusing to
march into Baghdad !est
chaos ensue. Knowing littl.e
geography and 'Jess history,
the second President Busli
was easily tempted into
rashness, using the 9/ II
attacks to concoct a bogus
threat largely out of his
advisers' fevered imaginations. Having dragged the
country into an unneces~
sary war, they ignored
allies and · military. professionals who warned that a
far larger force would be
needed to stabilize a large,
fragmented · nation like
Iraq .
They haven't demonstrated American strength;
drama'tized
they ' ve
American
weakness
halfw&lt;\y around the world.
Afraid 'to admit error, they
have no clue what to do
next.
(Arkansas
DemocratGa zette columnist Gene
Lyons is a national magazine award. winner and toauthor of "The Hunting of
the President" (St. Martir!'s
Press, 2000). You can email Lyons ar genelyorzS2@ sbcg lobal. net.)

..

' Thursday, June

.
'

16, 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

Local Briefs·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

University Cine~as to manage Athena..

. Set Little League tourney
POMEROY - Pomeroy Youth League will hold a Little
League tournament July 15-22 . All teams participating
wtll recetve T-sh1rts. The tournament is a benefit for
Dennis M~sser. who was injured in a tractor accident. The
entry fee IS $30 and two baseballs. Registration may be
completed by callmg 992"5322 . Only roster teams may
paructpate.

Terminate evening. clinics
POMEROY -Evening clinic offered by Meigs County
Health Department on the third Tue sday of each month has
been discontmued effective immediately.
The office will be open until 6 p.m. on July 5. A~ g. 2, Sept.
6, Oct. 4, Nov. 8, and Dec. 6.

Plan VBS
ATHENS - "Jeru salem Marketplace'' is the theme for
Vacat1on Btble School at Athens Church of Christ, 785
~es_t Union St., beginning at 6 :30p.m. pn Sunda:y and conunmng through June 24. Children two through grade 6 will .
participate in act ivit ies des igned 'to simulate life in
Jeru salem as Jesus lived' it. Hand s-on learning will include
Synagogue School and craft. . shops, including carpentry,
. pottery, basket weaving, bakery. herbs and spices . .and jewelry makmg. ·
.
· All children are welcome and can register the first night
they arrive in the marketplace . Transportation is available
by calling 593 -7414. Informat ion is avai lable at
athenscc.net. ·

ATHENS -. University
Cinemas of Athen'&gt; Ips been
chosen lo take on ry1anagemerit responsibilitie s of Ohio
Uni,·er:.ity\ Athena Theater
beginning July I.
The agreement is for two
years with a mutual option
for two additional years.
Local residents ' Emmett
Conway and Rick Frame
recently founded University
Cinemas of Athens.
In addition to •. its regular
movie
scheduling.
the
At)lena Theater will continue

to provide first-run and
unique independent film s.
run its successful partnership
with the Athens Film
Festival
and
midnight
movies ·in COilJUnction . with
the University Program
Council (U PC) and present
special film programs.
Ohio
University and
University Cinemas of
Athen s will be evaluatipg
and updating current projects and equipment to
assure the highest quality of
service to the Athena

Theater·, c' U&gt;to rners in the from William Ducrw n of
comi ng· years. The Athena LHKa,ter and re . . toreJ i1 to
Theater is cu rren t!' under the look and gr.llldcur ol It'
the management o( Clas\ic he)da) 111 the I'J~ ( h hetn rc it
Theatres In c. The manage- reopened· in 1- chnmr) 2002 .
ment group was ins.trumental The I H. MII-s~ u :t rc - foot facil "
in assisting with the reopen- it\ inc lu J e.., o n~.;· th~ att'l"
ing of the Athena Theater in up 'lairs I approxirnalel) 200
2002 and has provided the ...eat.., ) and h\o thi.,.'tlter~ Uuwn Athens community and Ohi o &gt;tai rs I about 165 \c al \ e"dl).'
University students man y
Sinc·c. it ha' reclaimed it &gt;
film entertainment option s at place a' an L'ptm,.n randmark
the 'Ath ena Theal et, Their a~ pan nf ~~ coopl?ratin: effort
a pcC .llC ill :• p ir~ .s Jun e 30.
betwee n the un i\er\i ti·, comOhio Un ive ···ity purchased munit y and bu~i-n e~~e.... to
the local land1 11&lt;trk in 200 I m&lt;liDtain the uptown\ ':itaii ty.

' .

HOSPITAL RNS HONORED

ODNR open house
ATHENS- The Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
Division of Forestry will hold an open hou se from 4 p.m. to
7 p.m., June 21 at the Athens District Office, 360 Easl State
Street. This will. be an opportunity for the public to discuss
and ask guestions about the Divi sion of Forestry 's programs
1n Hockmg, Zaleski , Shade R1ver, Gtlford, Sunf1~h. Blue
Rock, and Perry State Forests. Call 1-877-247-8733 for
more information .

Ihle graduates from medical school
POMEROY - Dr. Rayan
Elizabeth
(Young)
lhle
recently graduated from the
College of Medicine and
Public Health at The Ohio
State University, Columbus.
The Southern High School
graduate received her medical
degree and was hooded as a
medical doctor during graduation ceremonies at Mershon
Auditorium.
lhle graduated cum laude in
a class of 210 new doctoral
candidates. She received the
Glasgow-Rubin Achievement ·
Award· for graduating top
scholars, and honors from the
Department of Pediatrics for
outstanding performance in
the study and care of infants.
!hie's degree in general
medicine-pediati-id is followed by a four year residency at Indiana University
School of Medicint;.
·
lhle is the daughter of
Ramora
Boice
Young,

July 4
from Page A1
planners. the many volunteers. and the talented entertainers to ask them to proceed
with the event without the
fireworks display."
"The
Middleport
Community Association offers
an apology to all who enjoy
the Independence Day celebration and support the fireworks . .It is the association's

BREC
from Page A1
In Meigs County, a tree
blown on a BREC line produced a three- ~our outage.
It was feared that a tornado
had been spawned by a
severe thunderstorm in southern Lawrence County. The
number of BREC customers
affected by power outages in
· Lawrence County was low,

.Syracuse
·

from Page A1

been working for months to
secure· .funds to repair the
facility which it appears they
have done . However. the
question
now
remains
whether the pool can afford to
open once it is repaired.
.
FEMA wlll allow the . VIllage . to use 6S% of the
$57,259 awarded for pool
repair for other recreational
use such as building a park
where the pool now stands.
"We: can take the pool out
and· put playground ·equipment in, a picnic area wflh a
nice shelter · house and a
mild skate park area that.
will not cost the general

-

•.

SUbmttted photo

Holzer Med ica i.Center recently held. a RN certification dinner during Nurses Week 111 May. RNs at the Hospital who ho ld spec1al
certificates were honor.ed and served dinner. Aspecial guest speaker was also featured and door prizes were .given. Pictured ,
front row. left to right, Nancy Childs, Jackie Woodward, Linda Midkiff. Jo Ellen Perry, Sue Bowers, Cheryl Frazier. Mary Roach.
Ruth Ann Sattler. Annette Thomas and Peggy Caudill. Second row, left to right, Kathy Thomas, Tammy Toops, Phyllis Brown,
Penny Moore. Kristi Haskins, Irene Jeffers, Shelley Neekamp, Sharon Fields, Nancy Stevens and Carol Adams. Back row, left
to nght, Glenda Skinner. Lennie Davis, Sandy Troester, Sue Gilliam, Ruth Waibel. Shelia Cozart. Rhonda Lenegar. Jan Holcomb.
Joey Mil ler and Ellen Werry, Not pictured are Marcia Barrett, Christi Burns·, Lori Cremeans, Susan Fox-Kuhner. Susan Hall , Cathy
Icard, Jeanne Ingles .. Dana Johnson, Jackie Killen, Nancy Ohlinger, Jeanne Ours, Marsha Rodgers, Debbie Smith. Teresa
Stewart.' Sharon Stout and Pam Withrow-Dovyak.

COIN SHOW DRAWING WINNER· Antique car, tractor show set June 26

Rayan Ellzabtith (Young) lhle ·

Colunibus, and William
Young,- Pomeroy. She is the
granddaughter of the late Dr.
Raymond Boice, prominent
Meigs County physician and
surgeon, and the wife of Paul
lhle, also a former Meigs
County resident. The couple
reside in Columbus.
goal that the coming year will
Submitted photo ·
. bring changes for the better,
Jim Snodgrass, Peoples Bank of Middleport manager, left , preincluding the promise of
sents Terry Michael with some old money given in a drawing
renewed July 4 celebration."
Several residents took issue held as · part of a coin show with collector Robert Graham.
with the proposal to use the Graham displayed different types of money and gave the hiscemetery area for the fire- tory, an'd also gave free appraisals·. Other Winners were Jerry
works display, saying it was Yeauger, Colleen Dunfee. Raymond Russell, Grace Johnson,
disrespectful to those buried and Joyce McDaniel.
ther.e . The ' Association,
meanwhile, has maintained
that the area in quest-ion was
not near graves in t)le cemeand ·. Well ne ss
POMEROY- Without the Health
tery, ·and that the ·cemetery support ·of individuals and Program, Bonnie McFarland;
would be closed to the public .agencies participating in the Meigs Cooperative Parishduring the fireworks show.
recent mini-health fair·held at Parish nurse, Sisters of St.
the Mulberry Community Joseph Charitable Fund, Rev.
but co-op personnel found Center, the event would not Keith Rader, Sycond Harvest,
Jennifer Durham;~ God's
several spans of line that had have been so successful.
Lenora Leifheit, R.N.C N.E. T. - Dee Rader; Meigs
been damaged ,
a parish nurse. said that indi- · County Health department Suzanne
Priore
Tobacco prevention program.
spokesperson for . American viduals coming to the clinic Brenda· Curfman, cardiovasElectric Power, said no out- had free blood glucose, cho- cular
program.
Andy
ages were reported to ~us­ lesterol , body mass index and Brumfield; Meigs exten~ion ·
tamers in the Gallipolis area, blood pressure screenings . . Services - Family Nutriti9n
but about 100 customers in She expressed appreciation to Program. Linda King and
the Pomeroy area were the agencies and volunteers Joyce Brown; Meigs County
affected by an outage in the for their dedication of til)le Cancer Initiative, inc., Carol
given to the health and well- Adams; and volunteers, Alice
storm's wake.
Service to tho se cus- ness of Meigs Countians.
. Wamsley and Pam Davis ..
Assisting were Holzer
tomers was restored by 8
Medi'cal Center-Community
p.m., she said.

a

Mini-health clinic a success

'fund a·ny money to operate," the July 14 meeting of
Buckley said,.· "We don ' t Syracuse Village Council.
"This is just too big a
· want to let $38,000 go down
the drain that could've been decision to · just dump the
used for a park."
pool." Buckley said. "We
"As ' a parent of a four and wanted input."
five-year old, I would rather
Sutton Town ship Clerk ·
see a park," Councilman Kenny Wiggins suggested
approaching Sutton and
Mike Vanmeter said.
Syracuse resident William nearby Letart and Lebanon
Arnott expressed his support Townships to · see if they
for the pool and asked if would be able to financially
counCil would consider gaug- contribute; citing the use of
ing the community's interest the pool by residents in
on a parks and recreation those areas. ·
Whatever the surveys
levy to generate funds for the
pool's operating costs. . ·
reveal, the village will still
Arnott agreed t.o distrib- have tq come up with a 12.5
ute a survey asking resi- percent match for the. FEMA
dents if they would support , ·grant. The village must also
a levy for operating the · have all work completed on
pool and have them turned - whatever project they choose
in by July I-I so that the by April of 2006 or they will
results can be revealed at lose t~e FEMA money.
. .:- -

__

..., ,

RIO GRANDE - The Bob
Evans Farm in Rio Grande will
hosi the 29th annual Antique
Car Show and Antique Tractor
Exhibition on June 26.
Admi ssion is free to the
event , which lasts from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m.
· The car show is sponsored by
tlie Appalachia Old Car Cltib
and the tractor exhibition is
sponsoreq by the Southern Ohio
Agriculture Heritage Club.
Collectible cars from the
Model A to modern classics
will be on di splay for the public. First· and second place
awards will be given in each
of 22 car show classes 11nd
eight motorcycle classes.
Farm equipment, which will
be displayed 0r demonstmted.

includes steam engines. antique
tractors and other antique
power equipment. Trophies will
be awarded 10 the best restored
tractor or engine, best display,
oldest tractor. longest distance
traveled and judge's choice.
Visitors to the car show may
also enjoy the Bob Evans
Homestead Museum and
Underground Rail road Exhibit.
which both offer tree admission.
The Cran Barn on the farm
will be open , featuring a large
assortment of fine folk art and
one-of-a.kind items.
For
more information about the
farm or other Bob Evans Farm
events ·and, activities, those
mterested should call (gQO)
994-3276 or visit the Web site
at www.bobevans.com.

Thieves steal 'Star Wars' toys
from Burger King restaurants
COLUMBUS (APl
Burger King toys .are facing a
threat from "Star Wars" fans
showing their dark side.
Fans are prying open display cases to get to toys of
their favorite characters and
snatching posters off the
walls at some restaurants
here, just month s after almost
SpongeBob
a
hundred
~quarePaots balloons disappeared from Burger. Kmg
rooftops all over the country.
Thieves have taken on Iy
about a half dozen Darth Vader
balloons, siiitilar to the inflatable SpongeBobs · stolen in
December, company spokeswoman Adrienne Hayes said.
The Vader balloons have been
tethered down ' more secure! y. ·
''They warned me before it
started,someone mayJry to steal
my Darth Vader off the roof."

said Chris HaJTL.ilton. manager
at a Columbus Burger King.
" Su.t Hamilton wasn't ready
for thieve s to break into hi s
Plexiglas display case to steal
"S tar Wars: Episode Ill Revenge of the Sith" toys
during the promotion. His
restaurant is on its thi rd case.
Chris Bell. a mamiger at
another Columbus - Burger
King, said hi s restaurant also
had to order a new display
case after thieves broke _in. ·
Hayes said she · has not
received reports of toy theft aitd
did not know if it is widespread.
Belt said the toys are popular. and he frequemly gets ca'ls
from customers to find out.
which ones are available. Each
'week, restaurants receive shi pments featuring different characters in t.he 31-toy collection.

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•

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A6

1

Thursday, June 16, 2QOS

I

House votes to. limit Patriot
Act rules on library records
'

.

BY ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

·I

WASHINGTON - In a
slap at President Bush, lawmakers voted Wednesday to
bl ock
the
Justice
Depar-tment and th e FBI
from using the Patriot Act to
peek at library records and
bookstore sales slips.
The House voted 238- 187
despite a veto threat froni
Bush to 'block the part of the
anti-terrorism law that allows
the government to invest'igate
the reading habits of terror
·
suspects.
The vote reversed a narrow
. loss last year by lawmakers
concerned about the potential
invasion of privacy of innocent •library users. They narrowed the proposal this year
to permit the government' to
continue to seek out records
of Internet use at libraries.
' The vote came as the
House debated a $57.5 billion bill covering the departments of Commerce, Justice
and State. The Senate has yet
to act •on the measure, and
GOP leaders Qften drop provisions offensive to Bush
dur.ing final negotiations.
"This is a tremendous vic·
tory that restores important
constitutional rights to the
American people," · said

Bernard SancJer'\, 1-Yt .. the
sponsor of the meas'ure . He
sa id the vote would help
"rein in an · admini stration
intent on chipping away a\
the very civil liberties that
define us as a nation ." ·
Congress is preparing to
extend the P~triot Act, which
was passed quickly · in the
emotional aftermath i'Jf the
Sept.. II, 2001. terrorist
attacks. Then. · Congress
included a sunset provision
under which 15 of the law's
provisions are to expire .at the
end of thi s year.
Supporters of rolling back
the library and bookstore provision said that the law gives
the FBI too much leeway to.
go on fi shing expeditions on
people's reading habits. and
that innocent people could
get tagged as potential terrorists based on what they check
out from a library.
"If the government suspects
someone is looking up how to
make atom bombs, go to a
court and get a search warrant,"
said Jerold Nadler, D-N.Y.
· Supporters of the Patriot
Act countered that the rules
on reading records are a
potentially useful tool in
findin g terrorists and argued
that the· House was voting to
make libraries safe havens
for them .

AP Photo

People watch the Pacific Ocean for s igns of a ts una mi. fro m Vi;ta Point on U. S. 101 just south
of Crescent ciw. Calif. Tuesday..A major earthquake struck about 80 mil'e s off the coast of
northern Cal ifornia on Tuesday night, briefl y prompting a ts unam i warning along the Pac 1f1c
coast. There were no immediate re ports of damages•or injuries.

Wben.-it comes to tsunami warnings,
better safe than sorry, experts
say
.
..

'

.

· BY JEFF BARNARD
ASSOCI·ATED PRESS WRI TER

tems. 'tnd· see what needs fi x- I I co untri es .
" Based on everything that
ing should true di saster strike .
The quake actuall y did we saw in the Indian Oce.an. it
eenerate a ts unami of I cen- is critical to get the message
timeter - rou gllly the width out to peo ple.'' said J~y
of an adult's linge r. It wasn' t Wilson. the Earthquake ·aqd
. de tected by any equipment Tsunami Program Coordinator
· on shore, but rather an ocean in Oregon''s Offi ce . of
buoy Emergency Management.
press ure -measuring
In Crescent City, there were
located about 350 mires off
several reported car accidents
the coast of California.
"Thi s wa s the perfect as people jammed the roads.
tsunami ·- it was small and it trying to make their way out
te sted the sys tem ," said of town, said resident Calvin
Costas Synolakis, director of Maready. Others decided to
the Tsunami Research Center go down to the beach. to wait
at the Uni versity of Southern for the waves. ·'I don't know
California . "Now, people what was going through their
know how 'quickly they need heads," he said.
to respond.''
Six minutes after the quake
Officials ·in Oregon were struck at 7:50 p.m. about. 90
g·Iad the warning was issued · miles southwest of Crescent
so quic kl y, particularly City, tlie We st Coas t &amp;
gi ven the devas tation from a Al as ka Tsun ami Warning
tsunami triggered by a quake Center iss ued the fi rst warnnear Sumatra on Dec. · 26. ing, fo r the West Coast from
The ma ss ive wa ves killed the U.S. Me xico Border to
more than 176,000 people in Vancouve r Island .

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• . The Daily Sentillel • Subscribe todaY • 992-2155 • www.mydallysentinel.com

-

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

.. - ' .

·~

......
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'

Thursday, June 16, 2005
'

BY PATRICK QUINN

Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperat1ve
.members can receive a

·Proud·to be apart ofyour life.

D

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

,

BAGHDAD. Iraq - A mil itant strapped with more than100 pounds of explosives and
disgui sed in an army un iforp1
blew himse lf up in a crowded
· mess h&lt;\ll Wedne sday as bru , tal attacks across Iraq killed .
.. more than 50 people. In a
dramatic raid, Iraqi and U.S.
forces · freed Au strali an
hostage Douglas Wood, hel d
by insurgents for 4 7 days.
The swell in ~ i olen ce whicli cau sed the hi ghe st
daily death toll in more than
three wee k~ . - . appeared
.aimed at derailing stepped-up
effort s by Shiite politi cians to
bring the disaffected Sunni
Arab minority into the politi cal process. The two groups
are tryin g to write a ground breaking · ~on s titution and
gain necessary approv&lt;JI w
allow gove rnment: buildiilg
to move forward. ·
· AI-Qaida in Iraq claimed
responsibility for the mess
hall bomb ing at an army bilse
in Khali s, about 45 miles
north of Bag hd ad. The
attacker "was in vited to thi s
lunch. and we ask Allah th at
he tini shes hi s food in paradise: · al-Qaida said in an
Internet statement posted o n
a militant web site.
· ~ Jhe militant , wearing .an
arm y unifonTi ·and strapped .
with about I.I 0 pounds of
explosives, waited until soldiers 'gathered for lunch
before blowing him self up.
said Iraqi army Col. Saleh
Al-Obeidi. The blast killed
26 soldiers and wounded
another 26 belonging to the
AI-Salam .battalion of the
2nd Brigade of. the Iraqi
army in Diyala province, the
· army said.

.

AP Photo

An Iraq i policeman walks through the scene of a car bomb in Baghdad Wednesday. Eight Iraqi
policemen we re killed when a suicide bom ber ~ l amm ed into two police cars. Thirteen
bysta nders als'o were wou nded.
·

·:1·coul dn't recognize one
body fro m another. Body
parts we re scattered everywhere, because it was a huge
blast," al-Obe idi said. " It is a
fortified base. and we never
beli eved any incident would
occu r inside tl)i s base." .
Th e man apparentl y wa s
among a group of construction workers hired to ex pand
the mess hall's kitchen and
"thm 's wh y he was able to go
this far. " al -Obeidi said .
"The attacker picked the
right time to carry out the
attack, when two armv
groups were supposed io be
inside for lunch . He blew
him self up as soon as he
entered the hafl. avoiding all

the soldiers so they would not · hu d dlt~d berteath a bl anket.
recogni ze that he w a~ a arid residents of the home
insisted he was their ailing
strange r," al-Obeid i said . ·
. The ex plosives allegedly father. But troops. who were
were brought onto the base · actin g on a tip. would not be
Tuesday inside se vera l trucks deterred.
carrying constru ction materi. ·
Wood. who is married to an
als. he said.
American woman and lives
It was the second attack' in Alumo, Calif.. -.-:as hagin volving a suicide bomber in gard but smiling broadly as
two days. On Tue sday. a man he gave cameras a thumbs-up
wearing a similar belt loaded durin g a medical checkup at a
with explosives killed 23 U S. military facility.
people and wounded nearl y
" He has been blindfolded.
100 after blowing himself up handcuffed. he has not been
outside a bank in Kirkuk. Al- well
after:·
looked
Qaida's northern affiliate, the Au stralia's · counterterrori sm
An sar ·al -Sunnah Arm y, chief Nick Warner said after
claimed ·responsibility.
Wood was freed from a house
Wood , dressed in tradition ... in one o( Baghdad 's most
al Arabic garb, was· found · dangerous neighborhoods.

Also Wed ne,day in eastern
Baghdad. a suicide car
bomber slammed into t'"'
police cars on patro l. kill ing
10 people. includ ing eight
police office rs. and injureu
·another 23 . The , ui&lt;; iclc
bombe r dro \'e a Gc nnan lux.ury car into the police cd r ~ a~
. they wer'l!-, tuppcd at an intersection. police sai d. ·
Three mortar shelh fe ll on
Abu Ali Restaura nt . a we-ll kn ow n Bag hdau
kebab
eatery, killing fi ve Iraq is anu
woun ding eight. po lice said.
A nearby poli ce headquarter'
was the apparent .target.
police said.
.
Insurgents kidn apped and
killed two sc r1ior offi cers in
Kirkuk 's ant i-terrori st squad.
. along with their dri ver a,nJ
the son of one of the men.
The bodies · of all four were
found dumped streetside in
the no'rthern city wi th gunshots to their heads.
The tribunal that will put
Saddam Hu sse in o n . tri'd
released it&gt; &gt;econd vide\&gt;tape
in a week Weclne;.day. thi'
one show in g an in\·e st igat ing
j ud ge qu estio ni ng three
senior oflic ials of the former
dictator "s. regime -· inrl uding Saddam ·s half brother
Sabawi Ibrahim . · A tct pc
rel eased :&gt;.1 onuay shO\' e(,l
Saddam being quest ioned for
hi s alleged rol e in killin g of
• 50 Kurds.
Iraqi leg islat ors. meanwhile. see med close to ag ree ment on a demand by Sunni
Arab~ fo r more parti ci pat ion
in the effort to dmft a consti·tution.
A Shiite-dominated parli a:
mentary committee draftin g
Iraq' s new constitution
offered a co n1 p romi s~ to the
.country 's Sunni Arab minori ty in an efforr to break a

deadl ock 0 1 er Jemand, they
h:n·e a bi gge r -..a~ in Urawing
up the d1 anc r.
The offe r 'ugge;.ted th at 13
addi tio'n;J! Sunni Arabs join
the comm ittee in a parallel
bod y.

The' Sunni .-\rab com mu ni t\ • h£1 ~ ~ a ill it \~ anh 25 more
people to join their two ,leg.is-

lators al readv on the committee. am! the· two Sunni· Arab ,
repre,cn tc1tiw, rejected the
offer. But represent atives
from Sunili Ar,tb co mmu nity
will meet Thu r,dav to dis cuss
the proposal.
·
An a£rcement on the conqi tutin n 11 ou ld help de fu se
l!rowin£ ~ CL' tar i an tcn .~ i o n

be t11·een
the
majority
Shi ites. "h\&gt; cont rol tl]e governm ent. · and the Su nnis . .
The minority is. tho ught to
mak ¢ up th.e co re of an insurge ncy tha t has ki ll ecl 'at le&lt;tst
1.071 peopl e . since Pri me
Minister Ibra hi m al-Jaafari 's
£0\·ernment wa ~ annou nce d
April ~ 8. includi ng 5-+ ki.lled
on \1 a\ 23.
In 'other dcYelopments
Wedne,Jay:
• Two former Iraqi military
nflicer, with alkged links to
al -Qaida were arrested while
plan tin g roadside bombs. The
Interior Minist rv ident ified
. them . '" former- .Maj. Gen.
Abi d . Dawoocl Salman and ·
. hi , 'on. former Capt. ,Raid
Ab1li Dawood.
• .-\ lra4i ci' ili an wa' killed
and 'i\ po l i~e offi ce r&gt; were
injured 111 a gun baltle with
in ~u rg~nh
in Bag hdaJ 's
western Sayd i! ah neighborhOod.
• se,·en people. including ·
two · po licc offi cers. were
killed in the north ern tow n of
Tal Afar in cl ashes wilh
insurgents. Poli ce Brig. Gen .
NaJi Abu ulbh sa id.

'

'.

Aruban police search home of Dutch youth in disappearance ·of Alabama teen
BY PETER PRENGAMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

For savings and comfort in
every
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Choose Dual Fuel!!

,

.

PageA7

.Suicide bomber strikes Iraqi anny mess hall as attacks kill more than ·50 in Iraq ,

CRESCENT CITY. Calif.
- Coastal dwellers in far
northern ·california and
south ern Oregon knew to
take it seriously when .tsunami sirens sounded after a 7.2magnitude offshpre earthquake. and thou sands of people · were safel y evacuated
within minutes.
· Many here still remember
the 1964 tsunami that killed
15 people along thi s stretch
of the Pacific Coast.
And while there were no
destructive wa ves after
Tuesday night' s temblor,
BY MITCH STACY
and the hard science behind · she suffered from an eating experts Wedne sday praised
ASSOCiATED PRESS WRITER
them," Felos said.
disorder such as bulimia, the deci sion. tg arinou.nce a
Neverthele'ss,
attorney which can .disrupt the body . tsunami wan-ling for ·the
LARGO. Fla. -··. The David Gibbs III said chemistry with lethal effect. entire West Coast - better
autopsy of · Terri Schiavo Schiavo's parents. Bob and The main piece of evidenc·e safe ihan sorry, they said.
Emergency managers in
backed her husband's con- Marv Schindler, continu~ to cited for an eating disorder
coastal
communities also said
tention that she was in a per- beli eve she was not in a vege- - the low levels of potassithe
warning
gave them a
sistent vegetative state, find- tative state and questioned the' um in her blood in 1990 chance
to
te
st
out their sys· ing she was severely and irre- . conclusion that she was blind. could have been caused by
versibly brain-damaged and
The finding that she was the emergency tre!Jtment she
blind as well . The report, blind .counters a widely seen received at the time,
released Wednesday, also videotape released by her, Thogmartin said.
found no evidence that she parents of Terri Schiavo in .
While ·she had lost more
was strangled or 6therwise her hospice bed. The video than I00 pounds since high ·
abus'ed before she collapsed. showed Schiavo appearing to school, Schiavo never c.on- .
se~son
Yet medical examiners turn toward her mother 's fessed to an eating disorder,
could not say for certain what v~ice and smj]e. She moaned she did not take diet pills and
caused her sudden 1990 col-, and laughed. Her head moved no one had witnessed her
lapSe, Iohg th_ought to have up and down and she seemed purging focd, the medical
been brought on by an eating to follow the progres&gt;' of a examiner said.
disorder.
brightly colored Mickey
He also discounted the posCheck with us to learn more about the value, safety, and
The findings vindicated Mouse balloon.
sibility that she had overtotal comfort of a Dual Fuel system. We can even put you in
Michael Schiavo in his long
The parents said the video dosed on caffeine from drinkand vitriolic battle with his that showed she was aware of ing large amounts of tea in an
toucll with a qualified Dual Fuel dealer in your ~rea who can
. in-laws, who insisted her her surroundings,·but doctors effort to keep her weight
·
· condition was not hopeless said her ·reactions were auto- down.
give you all the facts, including long-term savings on energy
. and suggested that their matic responses and not eviThe cause of death was
. daughter was the victim of dence of consciousness.
ruled dehydration from
costs.
. violence by their son-in-law.
In Washington, White removal of the feeding tube,
For answers to any questions about Dual Fuel or high
: In its report, the medical House spokesman Scott but the underlying reason for
: examiner's office cast doubt McClellan said the autopsy her brain damage was offi- ·
efficiency electric heat pumps, call us today. ·
: on both the abuse and eating did nothing to change cially listed as "undeterr-----------------------------~
President Bush's position that mined."
disorder theory.
.
..
•
I
· The autopsy results on the Schiavo's feeding tube should
In addition , the autopsy
41-year-old woman were not have been disconnected. found no traces of morphine
made public more than two He had signed a bill, rushed in her system at her death,
: months after Schiavo died of through by Congress in although she had been given
: dehydration on March 3 I fol- • March, in a last-ditch effort to two doses in the days before
: lowing the removal of her ·. restore her feeding tube.
she died. The Schindlers had
I
: feeding tube 13 days earlier.
Thogmartin also said contended ·that , morphine
1.
The death ended an e~traor- . Schiavo would not have been might have been used to ·
'
.
dinary right-to-die battle that able to eat or drink if given speed their daughter's death.
. engulfed the courts, Congress f!')od by .. mouth , as the
The Schindlers fought their
: and the White House :
· Schindlers wanted after the son-in-law in court over their
: The autopsy showed that tube was removed. In fact, he daughter 's , fate for nearly
.I
· Schiavo'.s brain had shrunk to said. she might easily havl: seven years, battling to the.·
I
: about half the normal size for choked to death if such feed- end with conservatives at their
a •woman her age and that it ings had been tried .
side. Michael Schiavo said his
"Removal of her feeding wife never would have wantbore signs of severe damage .
. "This damage was irre- tube would have resulted in ed to be kept alive art'ficially
· versible, and no amount of her death whether she was in such a condition.
: therapy or treatment would fed or hydrated by mouth or
Courts repeatedly· rejected
· have regenerated the massive not ,"
Thogmartin
told extraordinary attempts at
·
: loss of neurons," said Pinellas-' reporters.
intervention by Florida lawPasco
County
Medical . The autopsy included 274 makers, Gov. Jeb Blish,
.
--------- . - --------------------~
· Examiner Dr. lot\ Thogmartin, external and internal body Congress .and the president
who led the autopsy team. He images and an exhaustive on behalf of her parents.
· also · said she was blind , . review of Terri Schiavo's
Experts said that the autop: because the "vision centers of medical records, police sy demonstrates how difficult
.
.
•.
· : her brain were dead."
reports and social services it is for people . to recover
· George Felos, attorney for agency records.
from severe brain damage.
Michael Schiavo. said the
Thogmartin said . that the
"People should understand
findings back up their con- autopsy pro-duced no conclu- that sometimes, for known or
tentions made "for years and sion on what triggered the unknown reasons, individuals
4848 State Route 325 South
· years" that Terri Schiavo had temporary heart stoppage that sustain m~ss ive brain injury
P.O. Box 200
: no hope or' recovery. He said caused her collapse and brain that for Which healing is not
: Michael Schiavo plans to damage . He said there was no possible ," said Dr. Karen
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
: release autopsy photographs · evidence of drug use, though We idenheim, the chief of
of her shrunken brain. ·
· he cautioned that Schiavo neuropathology at Montefiore
"Mr. Schiavo has' received was not tested in 1990' for Medical Center in New Yor-k.
so much cri.ticism throughout every conceivable substance ''Everything that could have
: this . case that r m ce rtain that could have been ' in her been done was done for this
: there 's a part of him that was blood.
.
lady for ''15 years, and this
'; pleased to hear these results
He said there was no proof case is very tragic."

Autopsy shows Schiavo was in persistent
vegetative state,·as husband had long claimed

0

The Daily Sentinel
.

.

·' If there are terrorists 'in
libraries studying how to fl y
planes, how to put together
biological weapons, how to
put
together
chemical
weapons, nuclea&amp; weapons ...
we have to have an avenue
throttgh the federal court system ·so that' we can stop the
attack bef? re it occurs." said
· Rep. Tom Feeney, R-Fla.
Last year, a similar provision was derailed by a 210210 tie
after
several
Republicans were pressured
to switch votes.
·
In the .meantime, a number
of libraries have begun di spos- .
ing of patrons '.records quickly
so they won't be available if
· sought under the law.
Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales told Congress in
April that the government has
· never used . the provision to
o,Q.tain library, bookstore,
medical or gun sale records.
But when asked whether
the admini stration would
agree to exclude library and
medical records from the law,
Gonzales demurred . " It
should not be held against us
that · we have exercised
restraini," he said. . . .
Authorities · have gained
access to records throu gh
voluntary cooperation from
librarians. Gonzales and FBI
Director Robert Mueller said.

"

NOORD,
Aruba
.Authorities
Wednesday
searched the home of a high" ranking Dutch judicial official
whose son was with . an
f.labama honors student the
night she disappeared. Police
• carried away the results of
, .their search in several garbage
bags and towed two cars.
' Earlier, the official, Paul
van der Sloat, asked a judge
. for permission to see hts 17:
· year-old son, Joran, who
• remains in police custody
" with two other young men in
~ the May 30 disappearance of
~. Natalee Holloway, 18 .
; Lawyers for the three ~ loran van der Sloat and broth• ers Deepak Kalpoe, 21. and
· Satish Kalpoe, 18 - also
: asked a judge to see the evi; dence against their clients. ·
: The attorney general's office
: said the court would rule
; Thursday on both petitions.
" That statement also said a.
helicopter would "conduct
"technical
investigations"
~ across the island Wednesday
: night. Calls to authorities
' seeking funther details ·were
• not immediately returned.
, Holloway was celebrating
' her graduation from Mountain
Brook. Ala., High SchooJ .with
124 other students and seven
chaperone.s when she vanished during the early hours
of May 30. Her U.S. passport
and packed bags were found
in her room.
Numerous · searches by
authorities. ·
volunteer
' islanders and tourists have' led
nowhere. No one has .bc;en
charged in the case.
· On Tuesday, FBI agents and
officers from the Miami -Dade
police department
used·
' German Shepherds to search a
· beachside mangrove swamp
next to the Marri ott Hotel
after a forme r detainee in the
· case said the three young men
: may have lied to polke about
. where they took Holloway.
• The •area, known as Malmok
beach. is a popular nighttime
: spot for lovers.
·
: The three initially said they
~ took Holloway to a beach qn
the northern part of the island
but dropped her off at her
Holiday Inn. where they chum
~she was approached by a
• security guard.
• ·
Wednesday's search of the
van der Sloat home lasted
, about four hours. Two white~ uniformed in vestieators from
Holland carried sUitcases into
the one-story. yello;v-1/eige
home, which includes an
attached apartment where the

youn g mail lives. They later'
returned the suitcases to their
white. unmarked car.
Investigators al,sq emerged
from the house carrying two
white plastic garbage bags
full of unidentified items. A
German Shepherd also sniffed
around the property outside
the capital; Oranjestad.
Authorities towed a blue
sport utility vehicle and a red
Jeep away from the house,
whtch ·is surrdunded by a low
stone wall and· fronted by an
expanse of trees and cacti.
"The search is part of the

in ves ti gation." said Mariaine
Croes, a spokeswoman for
Attorney 9eneral ·caren
Janssen.
Croe s said both cars
belonged to the family, but
she did not say why they were
taken away.
Janssen, who also went into
the house, declined to com·
ment
as · investigators
wrapped up their search at
about 4 p.m. Six police offi·
cers guarded the entrance to
the property.
·
"We are just looking for evi· dence at the house but have

nothing yet." police spokesman
Edwin Comemencia said during the search.
Government
spokesman
Ruben Trapenber~ said investigators were making progress.
"They're getting pieces that
they need to solve this puzzle,
put it together," he told
CNBC. "It is a question of
national priority for us."
Trapenberg
also
said
Aruban authoritieS' contacted .
police forces in neighboring
countries early in the investigation in case Holloway was
no longer on the island.

Earlier. Paul van der Sloat
filed a motion for permission
to see his son, Cornemencia
said, while Rul!d Oomen, the
lawyer re~resenting Deepak
Kalp6e, sa1d he filed a motion
to force the rrosecution to
hand over "al the evidence
against my client."
The three young men also
were in court.
The Dutch youth 's lawyer.
Antonio Carla , and · Janssen
refused to comment as they
left the courthou se.
Croes would only say that
four court proceedings took

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lo thr"ee transfen. Interest rate falls to 1.00% if balanc:e falls below $25,000. If balance ralls befow $1 ,000, the
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pluce in connec tion with the
case Wed nesday. She said ~he
jud ge woul d issue rul ings in a
few days.
Aruba follows Dutch law a's
a former colon y in the
:--letherla nd s Antille s, from
which it' seceded in 1986 to
become an independent member of the Kingdom of the
Netherlands.
The law say s authorities can
hold detainee s for up to 116
days without f iling formal
charges. The three young men
have been in custody since
June 9.

�'

..

•

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June t6,

''

•

INS:{DE

FARMERS FEEliNG PINCH Of. SOARING FARMLAND PRICES

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Reds lose again to Boston, Page 82
lrnl;ians rally past Rockies, Page 82 .
Rio baseball inks LHP Russell, Page 83
Yankees to build $800 million ballpark, Page 84

2005

.

Bv JOHN SEEWER

-

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TOLEDO - Just this past
winter, farmer Mike Adams
made a bid to buy his nei gh- .
bors' familand and expand
hi s own operation.
But like all of his mher
anempts to a dd land 'in recent
years, the price was too
steep, and he was outbid by
. another inve stor.
'
"You just can't go a ny
higher," Adams said. "It 's not
"(Orth jeopardizing what yoti
do have." ·
Farmland price s · in the
Midwest are skyrocketing.
fueled by outsiders looking.
for a secure investment , a
way to avoid taxes on land
sales or government-backed
subsidies
that guarantee
farmland owners a stead y
income.
.
AP Photo
' The ·result, though, is that
the s.o;rring cost of land is Mike Adams stands in the middle of his corn field in Union. Just this past winter. Adams made
squeezing out farmers who -a bid to buy his neighbors' farmland and expa~d his own operation. but.the price was too steep,
want to get bigger · and and he was outbtd by another investor. Farmland prices in the Midwest are skyrocketing, fueled
younger farmers just getting by outsiders looking lor .a secure investment or a way to avoid taxes on land sales, and gov,
ernment·backed subsidies that guarantee land owners a steady income.
started.
. In Illinois, farmJand values
rose by 20 percent last year. the
edge
of suburban
Some farmers have cashed Columbus.
in their land, selling to develHe 's watched neighbors
opers and moving to states sell their'land and move outsuch as Iowa where farmland of-state. and acknowledges
. is cheaper, thus driving up that he has discussed the idea
prices there.
with his family. "It's ·not as
"1.t gets almost · into a much as fun· as it used to be."
vicious circle," said Mike he said.
·
Duffy, an Iowa State econoPrices are having the same
mist who surveys land prices effect
throughout ' the
in the state.
Midwest.
One of the primary drivers
Investors. qJost of whom
of this is a tax law that
buy land to rent to farmers.
allows farmers to take their accounted for nearly two in
profits from a land sale and
·put that money into another five of all land sales in Iowa
farm while defernng the last year.
"Iowa farmers can't comtaxes on that initial deal.
pete
against someone from
It's an especially attractive
outside
the state looking for
option for farmers who a re
living on the edge of the land. " Duffy said. ·
nation's suburbs . and still The investors are more
want to stay in agriculture by likely to be doctors. lawyers
moving farther from develop- or other farmers rather than
someone coming froin . Wall
men!.
Street,
he said.
"Farmers are competing
Most farmland owners can
against one another for propbank
on a 4 or 5 percent
erty." said Joe Logan. president of the Ohio Farmers yearly profit; said Purdue
. Union. ·"They'fe bidding land University agricultural econ~
omist Craig Dobbins.
· up beyond its potential." .
Adams, who was born and, That's why demand for the
raised on the farm where he land is higher than the sup..
lives near Marysville, is on ply, he said.

Thursday,June16,2005
.
.

National Football LEaguE
Today's game
Mason Co. at Hitib ill y Hardball
Classic (Elkins). TBA
Friday's games
Portsmouth at Feeney Benf!ett. 6 p.m.

Mason Co . at Hillbi ll y Ha rd\)all
Classic (Elkins)
··
·

Saturday's games
~eeney Bennen at Lancaster. 1 p.m.
Mason Co. at Hillbi ll y Hardbait
Classic (Elkins). TBA .·
·

Sunday, June 19
Feeney Bennen at Piel(erington. 2 P·"!l·
Mason , Co. at Hillb illy. Hardb.all
CIBssic (Elkins), TBA

Sports BriEfs

·EHS athletes can
still get physicals
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern athletes m grades
7-12 · who
·.
mi ssed the
physicals at
the
school
may still get
one at Dr.
K e II y
Rou s h's
office, which
is located at
the
l'!olzer
Sycamore
Branch!
Dr. R'oush will be giving
the physicals throughout
the month of June by
appointment, and there will
be a $10 cost for the examination.
,
Pl)ysical forms . may be
picked up in the Eastern
High School office.
For additional information . please contact the
office at (740) 985-3329.

Bill Hubbard
Memorial

Senators considering allowing in-person·voting before elections
COI.:UMB US (AP) A after the November election.
bill that would revamp Ohio when voters had to wait hours
elections law would under- in line at some precincts.
go major changes i( ideas President Bush carried Ohio
being debated in the ·Senate by about 118,000 votes, with
are· adopted.
the state's 20 electoral votes
The
Senate
Rules securing his re-election.
Committee next week plans
Many states have adopted
to introduce its versi.on of a or are looking at alternatives
House-passed bill
that to the polling place, said
would allow voters to cast Doug Lewis. executive direcabsentee ballots without tor of the Election Center, a
providing a reason.
nonprofit organization for
However,
majority elections officials nationwide.
Republicans in the Senate are · If the absentee proposal is
thinking about removing that scrapped; voters would have
. provision because it creates to meet current criteria to
the opportunity for voter· vote absentee , including
fraud, Sen. Kevin Coughlin, .a being 62 or older or ·planning
Cuyahoga Falls Republican, to be out of the county on
said Wednesday. He spon- Election Day.
sored the Senate's version of Instead, senators are conthe elections bill.
side ring allowing · people to
The bill was introduced vote in person before Election

Local Stocks
ACI- 54.71
AEP. -35.88
Akzo -39.32
Ashlal!d Inc. - 69.62
ATBoT-19-30

BU -13.79
Bob Evans - 23-37
Bo;g'Narner - 54.06
Champion - 4.05
·charmln&amp; Shops - 9.50
City Holdln&amp;- 35.35
Col - 48_()3 ·

DG -20.29
DuPont - 46.83
Federal Mogul - .84
USB-29-48

Gannett -

73.91

General Electric - 36.32
GKNLY- 4.75
Harley Davidson- 49.53
JPM -35.71

Kroger- 17.49

Day to try to eliminate long elections," DeWine said,
lines in November, Coughlin
Of the two options, early
said. Voters could go to .their walk-in ~oting should be precounty board of elections to ferred, said Daniel Tokaji, an
cast their ballots.
. assistant law professor at
"I think that 's a reasonable Ohio State University who
compromise,'' Coughlin said. has been studying the 2004
Secretary of State Kenneth Ohio vote.
"A much better way to go
Blackwell urges the Senate to
keep the absentee ballot would be in-person earl.y votchanges in the bill because it ing,'' Tokaji said. "Other
provides voters wit~ more states including California
options, as does tho;; early in- and Florida have done so ...
person
voting
idea, successfully."
spokesman Carlo LoParo said.
Both LoPato and Lewis say
However, in-person voting problems with absentee ballot /
· could place an added burden fraud and early voting are
on already overworked elec- overstated.
lions employees , said Rep.
"We know that both of
Kevin DeWine, a suburban these provisions are in place
Dayton Republican who in other states and those
sponsored the House bill.
states are able to conduct
"It creates opportunities for elections without difficulty,"
a huge innux for boards of LoParo said.
.

Tournament
accepting
.entries

.
·.
~WJ I:"":=""'"'"'

...

•·································~················~·········· ········ ·•
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•••
•

Ltd-- 2i:95
NSC -32.14
Oak Hill Ananclal 27.58

OVB -26-69
BBT -39.76
Peoples - 26.24
Pepsico - 55.80
Premier 10.40
Rockwell - 50.33
Rocky Boots - 30.82
RD Shell - 61.01
SBC -.24.01
Wai-Mart - 49.85
..
Wendy's - 46.12
Worthington .- 17.24
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provlck!d by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc- .of Gallipolis.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel

ett

.
•

•
••
••
•

••
•·
••'

' •

II I 'VIN N

'
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ifn111111

I PRW

••
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·••
•

.l. .ia

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
will play host to a 14-andunder girls fast pitch softball
tournament, June 17-19, -at
Stanley Evans Field, the
home of the Redwomen softball team. Cost is $1\)0 per,
team .
. for additional information
or to register contact Rio
Grande head softball coach .
David Pyles at (304) 6757942 or (740) 245-7490.

.,

Contact Information

·,

Fu- 1-7.40-446-3008

..cllfloulder

Sporta Staff

-

Mea~..,.oo

Shormon, Sports Edhor

(740) 446-2:!42, ext. 33

'·

blhermanOmydaitytribune.com

-n-SporiSWrllor

••

(740) 446-2342. ext. 23
bwaltersOmydailytnbune.com

) 675-5275.

---------------------- .... ' ...............................................................
Subsctlbe today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com

Softball tourney
corning to Rio

E....,n- soonsOmydailysentinoJ .com •

••
••

••
•
•
..

'.

SYRACUSE - The 2005
Bill Hubbard Memorial Little
League Baseball Tournament
is currently accepting entries
for its tournament on the
dates of July 6 through July
10.
The event is sponsored by
the
Syracuse Volunteer
Firefighters Association and
there will be an entry fee of
$30 and two baseballs per
, team.
The entry deadline is June
24 and t~e drawing/coaches
meeting is slated for June 25
at 10 a.m.
For more information,
Larry
please · contact
Ebersbach at (740) 992-5400
or leave a voice rnail for Josh
Larsen at (740) 591-1853
after 7 p.m.

'

.

•

LMTy Cnlm, Spons Wri!o&lt;
(304) 675-1333, ext. 19

•

'

lcrumO~~. com

· Colts~ Doss receives .two-game
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Indianapolis Colts safety
Mike Doss was suspended
Wednesday by the NFL for
the 'first two regular-season
games after pleading no coiltest to misdemeanor gun
charges.
Doss was .sentenced to
community service last week
'in Akron, Ohio, where he was
arrested after firing a gun into
the air outside a r~staurant on
May 29.
··we support the policy and
the commissioner completely
and there.fore left it in his

hands. He has acted ... Colts
. presiden t Bill Polian said of.
the
decision
by
NFL
Commissioner
Paul
Tagliabue.
• "We hope this swift su re
action by the commissioner
sends a signal to · all ·con:
cerned, · players and fans
alike, that actions such as
·those engaged in by Mike
Doss will not be tolerated in
the NFL or with the Colts."
Under the league's suspensian. Doss may participate 'in
all preseason practices and
games but must sit out th.e

AmErican LEgion BasEball -

suspension

first two reg- is that he has and that he will
ular, seas6n · return to our ream as the
major contributor he has been
games . ~. -·
without pay in the past.
- Sept. 11
"The Colts 'c'o nsider thi s
at Baltimore matter closed."
Doss faced a felon _v
and Sept. 18
at
home
a g a i n s 1 . weapons charge and three
Jacksonville. misdemeanor charges after
He will be his arrest by Akron police.
Doss
eligible
to
He pleaded no contest last
return
on week
to
misdemeanor
Sept. I 9.
charges of carrying a con" We hope that Mike has cealed weapon and firing a
learned a positive, if co~tly, weapon within city limits. He
lesson from this experience," was sentenced to 40 hours
Polian said. "Our expectation community servtce, fined

S 1.000 and ordered . to
destroy the gun. A 180-day
jail senten&lt;;e was suspended.
Doss .later apologized to
the court. ihe city of Akron,
the Colts and his famil y.
"He just wants go to back
to playing football." said his
attorney, Jon Sinn.
Do7s. selected in the se~ono iotfnd of the 2003 draft
from Ohio State. has 150
qu·eer tackles and had three
career intercepiions over two
seasons.

FEEnEy BEnnEtt

Post 128 rallies back to beat Lancaster
· BY BRYAN WIILTERS&gt;.
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBWNE.COM

ROCKSPRINGS
Former Yankee great Yogi
Berra once stated that in
the game of baseball , it's
never over until it's over.
Wednesday at Meigs
High School, Feeney
Bennett (Post 128) made
the Hall of Fame ' catcher,
who has more World
Series rings than any· player . in · Major · League
Baseball history, look like
a very wise man.
Post 128 (6-4, 2-r) ral lied back from a six-run
deficit headed into the bottom of .the ninth to claim
Bv MARK WtWAMS
an impressive 8-7 victory
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
over Lancaster (8·9, 3-1)
in District 8 American
. OLATHE,
KS
Leagion Baseball action.
University of Rio Grande
In that pivotal last at, bat,
t.rack and field . competitors
Feeney Bennett made the
Matt Boyles and Amanda
most of five walks, two
Stickel
earned ·NAJA Scholar
hits and an error to comAthlete honors for the 2005
plete the
improbable
outdoor
season. Both runners
comeback
against
also competed at the NAJA
· Lancaster relievers Joel
Outdoor
National ·
Cathers
and
Dane
Championships last month.
. Swinehart, . with former
Boyles, a native of Tuppers
Eastern standout Ken
Plains. added another honor
Amsbary driying in both ·
to his illustrious career. He
Jeremy Blackston and
earned the honor for his stelLuke Haislop for the dralar work in the classroom .
matic game-winning run.
Boyles. a senior, majored in .
Afterward, Post · I 28
Business
coach Chns Stewart talked
Administration/Journalisin!R
·adiofTV.
about the eventful finale .
Boyles won the NAJA
....,.. "I'm absolutely happy
National Championship in
with this win," Stewart
the 5,000- meter race walk
said. ·"I have all the confiwith· a time of 22:07.65.
dence in the world in our
Stickel, a nati've of
offense and I knew, at .
Stoutsville, is a first-time
some point, we were going
winner of this adtdemic
to snap .out of it. We went
honor. Stickel; also a senior,
in to that last inning with a
majored in Middle Childhood'
· plan to make their pitching
Education. She ran in the
work, they brought in
women's marathon at the
relief thinking they'd shut
NAJA Outdoor Meet finish us down and everybody
ing
ninth with a time of
chipped in to bringing !his
3:15:32.01
in the grueling
victory home."
event.
Shaphen Robinson start·
To be eligible to earn
· ed things off in that ninth
NA)A Scholar Athletes
frame with a walk, then
· awards a student/athlete must
moved to second when
.
Bryan
Walters/photo
be a junior or senior and
Austiri King reached safeFeeney Bennett starter Mike Davis det'ivers a pitch during Wednesday's 8-7 v1ctory over .
achieve a minimum 3.5 grade
ly on an error.
.,
·
· '
. point average . .
Brandon Fackler walked Lancaster. Davis went' 6 2/3 innings in a n&lt;Hiecision outing.
to load the bases, then
Chris Myers followed with
a free pass that scored
Robinson to cut the
I
Lancaster lead to 7-2.
I
Former Gallia Academy
and Rjo Grande signee
. ~II proceeds /;t:lit:lit the Point Pleasant Girl :1· S(J/iha/1 Leu;:uc
stepped to the plate with
I
the bases loaded • and
nobody down and cleared I
t.he bases wiih a three RBI
triple . Clagg's tripl,e cut
the deficit to 7-5 .
Blackston walked with
one out to give Feeney
Bennett runners at the cor~
ners, and Haislop followed
with a walk to load the
bases for Amsbary .
~1
Cathers was replaced
with Swinehart at that
point. still hoping to hold
.on to the · slim two-run
edge.
·
' ·
Swinehart unloaded a
.
wild pitch that plated
•
I
Clagg and pu lied the con18$01
test· to 7-6, setting up
I
Amsbary 's heroics .
Amsbary drove a single
to shallow centerfield,
Co-sponsored by the
. .P,CK·IJP
I
which was misplayed, :
allowi~g both Blackston •
PLEASANT VALLEY WELLNESS CENTER .
•

Rio duo
earns
Scholar
honors

•• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
••
••
•
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•
•
•••
••
•••
••
.tJf/111J &amp;1'1, lOOI
••
·•••
••
••
••
. t/IARIMJN &amp;()RDNAIICl FIIUI
•
••
•••
••
•••
.•IICIIIJ I A.M. .
•
••
•
••
••
.•1/10 IIA TEAN
•••
•••
. ..
•
••
.
•
MJUI/t
•
••• ,LAYERS MUST IE II YEARS 01 AGE &amp;OIJER .•I!
••
••
•
NCRn Wit ,._, CEIITER :• .

COED SOFT811ll. TOURNAMENT

•

.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•
;

PIHse see Rallies, Bl

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Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com
,

Thursday, June 16, 2005

-.

·. www.mydailysentinel.com

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'

The Dailv Sent:i.hel • Page B3

'

Reds lose anothe-r · Indians rally to victory
game to Red.Sox
.

Thursday, June 16, ~oo 5
.
'

NBA P:inals -- San Antonio (2) g. DEtroit' (I)

A finals first: Three straight games
· decided by 15 points or more

.

•

'

CLEVELAND (AP) Aaron Boone rounded third,
looked up and saw a welcoming pany near the plate. This
wasn't October · or Yankee
Stadium or legendary, but for
the struggling Boone, . the
BOSTON tAPl The
moment was special. ·
Boston Red Sux found the
· Stuck in a seasmt-long
right combination \o spn a
slump. Boone homered leadsurge - home field and ste l-.
ing off the II th inning
tar pitching .
Wednesday night and th~
Bfunslm Arrovo ~Llt hi:-. first
Indians rallied for a·7-6 victowin at Fenwav Park si nce last
ry over the lowly ColorJdo
Aug. 26 with the . Red Sox
.Rockies to extend their winfounh straight strong perforning streak to a season-high
mance by a staner and they
five gallles.
the · .punchkss
swept
Boone fell behind 1-2
Cincinnati
Reds
6- 1
agai_nst Blaine Neal ( 1-2)
Wednesdav night:
before pulling . hi s seventh
The siarte'rs' "j ust have to ·
homer over the wall in leti.
give us a shot !0. win." Kevin
The ·shot wasn't nearlv as
Millar said. "O ffen sis·ely.
magical as Boone 's serieswe're. goi nQ· to score runs, .
winning homer in Game 7 of
especially at home." . .
the
2003 ALCS for the New
The Red Sox we nt 2- ~ un a
York Yankees, but it finally
trip to the St. Louis Cardinals
made him feel wel'come in
and Chicago Cubs in which
Cleveland,
where he has been
.they totaled 27 runs. Then
booed
most
of the season.
they returned home and won
· Boone. who entered the
.
APphoto
all three ·games against the
game
hining
just
.
.
184,
was
Clevelapd
Indians
'
Aaron
Boone
watches
his
solo
homer
off
.Reds, out~corin~ them · 23-4
mobb~d by his ~&lt;Jouncing Colorado Rockies relief pitcher Blaine Neal to give the
and outhinini! them 36-15.
teammates
when he t1nally Indians a 7-6 win in. the 11th inning Wednesday in Cleveland.
Boston is 20-9 at home, while
touched
the
plate.
Cincinnati dropped to 6-24 on
"That's the kind of beating "I was ahead .in the count but kft-hander's shortest outing in
the r()ad.
·you enjoy," he said. "You he put a good swing on it."
26 starts dating to last July 5.
"This is a tough place to ·
Sabathia needed just 23
don't mind it. It means you've - The Rockies dropped to 4play," Cincinnati infielder Joe
done something good."
25 on the road this season.
total pitches tb get thro!lgh the
Randa said. "You look at their
There hasn-'t been much for
W1th the lnd1ans down 6-.5, flrst two innings before · he
.
photo
offensive numbers here ·and
Boone who missed aJ1 of last Peralta,was behind 0-2_against seemed to lose his focus while
how well they play at home. Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Aaron Harang walks ~ack to
the.
mound
.
shortly
before
being
pulled
in
thjl
fifth
..
inning
.
season'
ilfter undergoing knee · Fuentes and fouled off two laborin~ through 36 pitches in
•They 've got one of the best.
surgery,
to feel good about this .r.P.ltches before drivmg h1s sev- the thtrd, when Colorado ·
agamst the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park in Boston
lineups in the game."
year.
. . 'ehth homer - and first since ·. scored flve times on six hits.
Boston '·s struggling rotation Wednesday Harang gave up five runs, all earned, on nine hits.
"!certainly
feel
better
about
·May 17-- the opposite way
_Casey Blake ~ave the
also is coming around.
He drove· in three runs with
They made the most of-their
where I am now than 1 did a over the wall in right-center to lndtans a 2-0 lead 111 the secBeginning with seven strong two doubles off Aaron Harang opportunities in the four-run
few
weeks ago," said Boone, tie it at 6.
ond wtth his eighth homer.
innings by Tim Wakefield in (4-5), leading Boston to a 6-0 fifth.
batting .371 in his last 10
Colorado
staner
Joe . Notes: The lndtans are 9-2
an 8-1 win in Chicago on lead before Cincinnati's 16The first four batters hit
games.
"I've
been
feeling
Kennedy.
whosedays
pitching
111 · mterleague play. --~ . The
Sun&lt;llty and continuing with inning scoreless streak ended safely - singles by Johnny
good
at
the
plate
and
1
feel
wtth
the
Rocki_es
_could
be
game_
was delayed 52 rrunutes
- Matt . Clement, David Wells when .Ken Griffey Jr.. scored Damon and Renteria, a two- .
I've been .swinging the _bat a numbered, was m hne to get by ra111_m the s1xth .... Rockies
and Arroyo. star-ters have in the seventh on· Arroyo's run double by Ortiz and a sinbetter." ·
the win before Peralta's clutch RF Lms Gonzalez made two
lot
allowed. just five runs and 17 wild !(itch. _.
gle by Ramirez, who took
The
surging
Indians
have
·
homer.
· nice catches, crashing into the
hits in 29 innings.
.
"Every time he comes up to second on the throw to the
:-von eight of nine and . Pitching for the first time wall ~o rob Ronnie Belliard in
"Everything in baseball's the plate I feel -he 's going to ' infield. After Trot Nixon
unproved to 16-7 since May s111ce June 6, . Kennedy got the hfth and shd111g mto the.
contagious." Boston manager drive in a run," Arroyo said of walked, Millar · loaded the
20.
..
- some unexpected early sup- comer to. rob Boone_ of extras .
Terry Fraricona said. "When Ortiz, who is second in the bases with a walk.
·
"It
feels
good,
especially
to
port from the Rockies, who m the second .... lnd1ans RHP
you 're going well, guvs are AL with 55 RB!s.
Jason Varitek struck out for
do
it
when
we're
staring
to
roughed
up C.C. Sabathia. Kevm M1)lwood was acttvatpicking each other up."'
·
Manny Ramirez and ~dgar the third time. but ··Bill
play much better as a team," . Kennedy has l:leen mentioned ed off the DL and. will ' stan
Arroyo (5,3) was 0-3 in his Renteria also had two hits Mueller lined a two-run sinBoone said. "I feel like we're in recent trade talks with sev- Thursday'_s series finale. RHP
previous seven starts after each. more than enough gle. 0 ver the head of' second .
catching our stride. I am, too." era! learns, . including the · Jason Davis was optioned to
going 9-0 in his 17 before offense to beat the Reds.
baseman
Ryan
Freel.
Bob Howry (4-1) pitched Dodgers and Athletics, who Triple-A Buffalo. ... If they
. that. On Wednesday. he struck
"We scored four runs -in Ramirez's RBI single made it
one inning for the win .and are 'both in the market for a . don't stan winning away from
out' eight, walked two and three .games ," Cincinnati . 6-0 in the sixth.
.
allowed six· hits and a run in -manager Dave Miley said.
Cleveland's
·relievers com- staning pitcher.
.
Coors Field soon, the Rockies
Arroyo allowed four' runseven innings.
:
binoo
for?
2-3
shutout
innings
The
left-hander
didn
'
t
dazcould threaten the record for·
"That's not necessarily a good ncrs through . six innings.
zle any scouts on hand. allow- fewest road wins in a season.
"It's the first time I've felt . thing."
Then Cincinnati , which . . with 13 strikeouts.
good throwing the ' ball " in ·The Reds did improve ai'ter scored at leasi I0 runs in four · ·
Jhonny Peralta hii a one-out ing five runs ·and seven hits in The 1963 New York Mets,.
four games, said Arroyo, who managing just one hit in of us five games - all at
homer in the ninth off five innings. .
regarded as one ()f baseball~s
had an effective fa-stball and Tu·e sdafs 7-0-loss to Wells.
Colorado's Brian Fuentes for
Garret Atkins · and rookie worst all-time squads. won
home - before the Basion
curve. "Any time you have
the Indians, who trailed 6-2 in · Ryan Shealy drove in two runs just 17 road games. .. , The
On Wednesday, consecutive - series, finally scored in the
two good pitches going into doubles by Renteria and Ortiz seventh. Griffey led off with a
the fourth but kept chipping apiece for the Ro.ckies.
Rockies,.who have nine play- ·
the game. it allows you to gave the Red Sox a I:0 lead in single, went to third oi1 Wily
away and improved to 18-0
The
Rockies
tagged ers on the disabled list .
pitch free -and easy.''
the thtrd, but they left runners. Mo Pen a's single and 'scored
when scoring at least six runs. Sabathia for six runs- tive in matched a club record by
David Ortiz's bat he!ps the 111 sconng posltlon 111 three of on a wild pitch on which
'·One pitch got away, that's the third inning -· and eight starting . stx rookies on
pitchers relax.
·
·
_the first four innings
Adam Dunn walked.
·
the hardest part." said Fuen_tes. hits in 3 1-.J innings. It was the Tuesday.
•

1

AUBU~:-1 Hll!lLS . Mich.
(APJ - One of these days.
bOJh the San Antonio Spurs
and the Detroit Pi sto ns will'
bring their "A" game io the
: s ·tt
· f
.
'
· · SubmiHed photo
NBA Finals on th e ,same
• I 1ng Ill ront from left are Mark Litteral (stepfather), Lesley Liherat (mother), Brandon Russel l
night
. n hasn' t happened vet.
and Jerry Russell, Jr. (father). · Stading from left is Chris Porter (Wheelersburg Assistant
but there arc still as .man): as
PnnGJpal), Dust1n Sampson (Wheelersburg pitching coach), Michael Estep (Wheelerst?urg head
·four
chances left for the
coach), Brad Warmmont (RIO Grande head coach), Tom Sutton (Rio Grande assistant ·
to click at the same
teams
coach/Wheelersburg AIJ:Jm) and Mark .Knapp (Wheelersburg Principal) .
time.
,.
Detroit 's 96-79 victory in
Game 3 on Tuesday night
was the 'third straight lopsided fin;tl score. making thi s
senes a h.tstoncal oddity.
Never' before in the finals
have the first three games
been decided by 15 points or
more.
"It just seems like there's
BY MARK WILLIAMS
Russell. _a south!m\t, is continue to draw the best
four- or five-minute. stretches
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
coming off a brilliant season players . from southeast Ohio
of
game s where ·teams ate
for the Pirates posting a 7-0 and Brandon is one of those
taking control , but the uames
RIO GRANDE _
The mark with a 1.63 earned run players."
:will get closer.'' Spurs "'guard '
: UniverSity of Rio Grande · average
while
earnmg '"He dominatedthat league
Brent Barry said.
: Redmen baseball program is Southern Ohio Conference and that's a · good league,"
The NBA can only hope
. st1!1 1n the process of adding .(SOC) Player of the Year bon- Warnimont
so.
added.
new talent to the roster for the ors. He was I st Team AllOvernight televi sion · rat"Wheelersburg
has
rep'
u
lation
AP photo
2006 season. The latest to ·SOC and Ist Team all-district.
ings
from the United States San Antonio Spurs' Tim Duncan passes the ball during. the
for
producing
outstanding
talcome into the fold hails from Russe'll registered 76 strikeWere dqwn J I percent from team's practice session iri preparation for Game 4 of the
one of the premier programs outs this· past season. He also ·em and provides qutstanding
. Game 3 of the Lakers- NBA Finals against the Detroit Pistons in Aubur-n Hilts , Mich .
· m s_outheastern Ohio. Rio was also named to the coaching knowledge."
Pistons series a year ago. and Wednesday. The Spurs lead the best-of-seven..series 2,1.
"He has great potential and
Grande
is
pleased
to Mizuno All-Ohio te&lt;~m.
the rating for Game 2 was off
· announce the signing of left- · "We feel he can come in an we ' re . happy to have · hin1 ,''
3~.5 percent from last year.
pressure . tMn they have in . Bruce Bowen sank four 3handed pitching prospect have an impact right away." Warnimont said. "We feel his
Not since the Spurs played this series to date: Detroit 's pointers and played a teamBrandon
Russell
of said Rio Grande head coach best baseball . is ahead 6f
the New Jersey Nets two lttst nail-biter was Gaine 7 of high 41 minute s. . but hi s
Wheelersburg.
Brad Warnimom "We want to hint''
year~ ago have ratings been the Eastern Conference defensive pressure .didn't
this dismal, but at least the final !\' against Miaini. while seem ,to bother Hamilton . as
series has become a little San Antonio hasn ' t played a much as it did in (he first two
more compelling now that close one since finishing off games. Tony Parker rilso had
the prospect of a sweep has the Phoenix Suns 101-95 in a decent game with 21 poims
been removed from the equa- Game ·s of the Western and ·four a"ists. but his two
.
tion.
·
Conference final's on June I . . mi ssed free throws . durino
·'Well. we're still down 2The deciding sequence of Detroit's 11-0 run kept th~
BY lARRY CRUM
innings before either team and posting four sttike outs
I, so we're not sitting up Game 3 came when Detroit Spurs from breaking· the
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM
WOUld make noise.
in the five innings On the
here jumping for joy.'' _ had an 11-0 run early. in the Pi stons· momentum when
Putnam was first with [he mound.
Pistons
forward Rasheed fourth quarter to turn a close the game was beingdecided.
POINT
PLEASANT. . scoring, with Mik~ Burdette
The visiting squad had
Wallace said.
· game into a rout.
Detroit got 24 points i'rom
· W.Va. _ On -open\ no night' l~admg otf -the mnmg w1th a tljree hits in the game, with
Game
4
is
Th\lrsday
night,
·
Chauncey
Billups
started
Hamilton,
20 from Billup s
of_ ihe Babe. Ruth League. stngle. _He was folloa';ed on Hogan, Burdette and Derick
and
Game
S·is
Sunday
before
the
run
with
a
jumper
and
a
and
15
points.
II rebounds.
Pomt Pleasant dropped a pair base b) Andrew Hoean and Moore posting those hils.
the series shifts back to San layu-p sandwiched around a five blocks and three steals
of close games to the Putnam later 1n the tnmng Derek - . Statistics for game two
Antonio next week . But steal by Antonio McDyess, from Ben Wallace. whose
County squa(l 3-2 · in game Moore.
.
_
were not available as of press
that'llonly happen if the. and Richard Hamilton ended energetic play in the opening
one .and 2-1 in game two. ·
After. a handful o( costly time, however the team did
Pistons can manage to win at it with a jumper after the minutes of the · game set the
Point held' the lead late in errors, all three base runners hold a -one run lead until
least one of the next two Pistons · grabbed two offen- ·tone for the Pistons ,
. both games until mistakes came home and gave Putnam. Putnam came back and .won
games, and the Spurs seemed sive rebounds on one possesThe Spurs certainlv didn't
· caught them off guard . and t~e 3-1 edge 1~ the game. _ game two 2' I.
.
bring the same amount of
eager Wednesday to prove sion.
awarded the visiting team
Ponll ans\\eJed wtth tts
The games were the first of
that the iF perform~nce in
The run gave Detroit an juice. which is why the comwith the wins. The double own sconng m the th1rd with the year for the Point
. Game 3 was a hiccup.
84-69 lead, and it wasn't plexion of the series looks a
header paired the two squads f:urt Gnmm com111g home Pleasant Babe Ruth League
''At this point, 1 think the long before Brown was send- whole lot ditferent than it did
for five innings each game to · off of an RBI trom Chns Team. Currently, the team
. team that plays the &amp;rnarte't ing out Darko Milicic. jok- when the teams left Texas.
. start the season . ·
·.
Casey.
.
has nine games on the sched-.
is going to win," -Pistons for- ingly referred to as the
Ginobili was hampered by
In game one, Point got off
As Putnam was _h eld score- . ule for the summer months.
ward Tayshaun Prince said.
''Human Victory Cigar." for a bruised thigh after he col.to a good start getting Chris .less throu~h the rest of the;,
Point next plays a seven
He also could have men- the final min~te of the game. _lided with Prince less than 30
Cooper 011 base with a walk. _game. Pmnt ])ad one more inning game 4:30 p.m. at
tioned that the team that
"We d1dn t have very seconds into the ~arne.
Cooper would then. steal sec- chance to change the out- Point Pleas-ant High School
· brings the higher level of many people play we~l." aggravating a similar'injury
ond, putting . him in scoring come of game one:
. on Sunday, June 19 to face
energy will w·in. That's cer- . S[lurs coach Gregg Popovtch he suffered against' the Suns
position for the home team.
In the mnth 111nmg, Justm Putnam. They the"n travel to.
tainly been the case over the sat d. · "I thou~ht we sue- in the conference finals. On
The following batter, Cullen ~ot on base. followed Barboursville for a seven
first three games . and both cumbed to thetr pressure. It Wednesday he said he was
Ricky wvant, then stepped to by Chns Casey. but netther. inning _match up 6 p.m.
teams are puzzlect' as to why wasn't like they played a feeling better. and he did not
· h ·1 •
could get the needed runs as Tuesday before they return
the intensity level hasn't good quarter here and a good expect the injury to hinder
1
k~t ate rnd ha~J~erefd ~ Putnam pitcher Zach Moody home for another seven
been more constant.
· quarter there. For 48 min- him in Game 4.
. Sing e to ng t te • sat down the final two bat- inning matchup with Putnam
"I don'tknow, usually ~ou utes. they_ 'play"ed like a team
But no one could say with
b~mg;n6 Tooder arohund/or ters, se-aling the 3-2 win.
5:30 Thursday. •
do
el\.pect
games
witli
'the
that.?tdn
t
want
to
go
down
any
certainty ·":hether the
t e ea In t e Irst
Wyant had a good day at
The team is coached by
two
teams
that
are
left
to
be,
3-0.
Spurs
will be better prepared
inning.
the plate in game one, going Reece Dalton and is comyou know: real competitive,"
The list of Spurs players mentally for the ne·x1 game .
. 0n Putnam County's open- 2-for-3 with an RBI,- with . posed players from . the Point
Who
underperformed in just as no one could quite
Pistons
coach
Larry
Brown
. mg at bat. they got runners Cullen and Casey posting the_ Pleasant area.
said.
Game
3 included Tim explain how two _teams that ·
on f1rst and second, but only other hits for the Point
Putnam County 3,.Point Pleasant 2
If there is a down-to-the- Duncan (5 -for-15 shooting), were expected to ["lay each
pttcher Chns Copper stepped · Pleasant team.
PutnamCounty 003 00 330
wire
game on the horizon, Manu Ginobili (7 points and other close have managed to
u~ ancl got the. home team out · Starting pitcher · Copper .Point Pleasant 1 o 1 o o - 2 3 3
both
teams
will have to reac- six turnovers) and Nazr produce three games without
Mark Cook. Zach Moody (3) and Andrew
wnh no harm.
was credited with the loss, Hogan.
Chris Cooper and Chris Casey. WP
quaint
themselves
with play- Mohammed (4 points and· a sCintilla Of final-minute
It would be two more pitching a ~omplete game - Mark Cook _LP- Chris Cooper.
ing under' a great deal more three fouls in 18 minutes).
drama.
'

..
..

~ Redmen,.baseball signs ·_
-.~ Wheelersburg_ southpaw _.

-·Babe
Ruth
League
getS
under
way
.

·

.

1

.

.

·A tough test awaits golfers at Pinehurst
'

'

.

.

.

• PINEHURST, N.C. (AP)- greens (luring the first three . round that No. 7 is going to be one hell of a test." . · would run at 11.6 on the 472-ya'rd fifth hole ·as one
: BaJls that land in the rough days of practice at Pinehurst. · . unplayable."
..
It all begins to unfold Stimpmeter, and that greens that · could get become
- can't be seen 5 feet away.
USGA officials say they
Nothing about Pinehurst No. Thursday with high expecta- would only be cut twice to impossible to hold if it gets
: Shots that land on the domed have learned from their mis- 2 is easy.
tions built on what happened make sure they were at that too dry.
greens at Pinehurst No.2 don't . takes. Try convincing the play- . It starts off in the tee box, in 1999. Stewart closed with speed.
Meeks only hopes · the
where shots ·must stay in the three C!)lcial putts, two for par
stay there very long. The U.S. ers of that.
Still, the USGA already players have not lost confi. Open is supposed to be the
"Without rain-. and it does- fairway to have any chance of and one for birdie, and his dra- has targeted the green on_ the dence in the USGA .
·'
: toughest test th golf, and Vijay n't .look like we're going to get ge.tting on the green. Pinehurst . malic win became ·even more
: Singh found it to be every bit any - we have potential for added an irrigation system in compelling when he perished
· · of that.
18 holes that coul~ be :like No. the rough and a..new blend 9f in a freak plane accident four
: But it was only ~'ednesday, 7 at Shinnecock. Mtckelson grass . that is more dense. months later. Mickelson car· and that's what troubled him. . said. "Very conceivable."
meaning t~e only way to flnd ried 'a pager with him all week.
'_'If you~re ·not careful, you
Pinehurst No. 2 was regard- the ball is marshals placing threatening to leave if his wife
went into labor with their ftrst
can make bogeys on every ed as one of the best U.S. Open tiny red flags next to them.
child,
Amanda, who turns 6 on
hole with good shots." Singh setups when Payne Stewan
And then the fun begins.
: said. '.' It's · very fair at the won in 1999. making a 15-foot
Perhaps no other major Tuesday. ,
That year · showed that
: moment, but it's very, very dif- par putt on the last hole to beat championship course is more
,. ficult. But it could get oh the Mickelson by one shot and fln- deflneQ by the greens, which Pinehurst might identify the
: edge very quickly - if they ish as the only player onder are shaped like turtle shells. best .players more than any
·don't watch it, it's going to get par.
.
. ·Any shot too long or too short other U.S. Open course.
ovei the edge in a heartbeat." . Can the USGA possibly · or too much to the side will Woods and Singh finished two
' The U.S. Open begins mess up . this . wonderful roll off and w_ind up as much s~ots behind. David Duval ,
Thursday, and several players Donald Ross cr:eat10n?
as 30 yards away. From there, · then the No. I player in the
; still coulftn 't stop thinking
"Oh, they have potential to 'players can choose anything world. was among the early
·
"
: about last year. ·
bufn," Scott . Verplank said. from a putter to a fairway leaders Sundav,
"It determines ·who's think"
The USGA refused to water "This should be a good year. metal to get the ball onto the
ing the best, who's the r;nost
- the greens or account for dry, This is an odd year, right? And putting surface.
patient,
who's more deterblusteiy warmth that baked out every odd year, they seem to
"The ball tends to sweep into
.
the pins at Augusta," Padraig mined," Davis Love Ill said.
Shinnecock Hills and turned do a good job."
Love. was one of the few
the flnal' round into a fiasto. . The only exception might Harrington· said. "Here. it's
who
thought a score under par
&lt;i ./ ·
· Sponsored by: _
. Tee shots woJJldn't stay on the have been Southern Hills in always running away from
was available.
: par-3 seventh green until ofli- 200 I, when the 18th green did ·_them. This is very tough."
Syracuse Volunteer Firefighters Assoc.
Then again, players always
- cials had no choice but to hose not hold approach -shots and
Mickelson predicted that
Contact: Latry Ebersba.ch 992-5400 .
: it down every other group.
the USGA had linle choice but · "quite a bit over par'' would be predict high scoring on the eve
Josh larsen (after 7 pm or leaVe. voice mail) ·
· No one could break par on to mow the grass a little high- the winning score. · Singh. of the U.S. Open, even though
.
74G-59H85:S
·
wouldn't go that far, although it has been 27 years since over
· the last day, and 28 players er.
S:SO entry fee + 2 balls
·
·
"At least they told every- he said that, without . rain . . it par won the U.S. Open.
couldn' t lireak 80.
Entry Deadline: June 24, lOGS
Tom Meeks, in charge of
It must have been a welcome lxxly that green would be a lit- would be difficult to break par.
Drawing
and Coaches meeting: .
"I think this is the hardest setting up the U.S. Open for ,
: sight for Singh, 1iger Woods. ' tie slower." Verplank said.
'· Phil Mickelson and the rest of "Last year. they didn't post U.S. golf course I've played the last time in his role as
,J une 25, 2005 all 0:00 am
the !56-man field to see a anything in the , locker room from tee to green and around senior director of rules and
At the
Fire
maintenance crew water the before we went out for the lasi the greens." Singh said. "It's competition. said greens

2009

Bill Hubbard

,· .

· .

_

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.·

.

. Bryan WaHers/photo

Feeney Bennett's Luke Haislop celebrates after scoring the winning ruri during Wednesday's 87 come-from-behind victory over Lancaster..
·
·

Rallies

time.''
In the previou·s eight
innings. Feeney Bennett
· from Page 81
managed just one run and
four hits against Lancaster
and Haislop to score to Com- starter and former Fi sher
plete the improbable · out- Catholic ace Tyler Welch.
. Welch re cor~e d five strikecome.
Although it was · Amsbary outs during his eight innings
that came up with the game- of dominance on the mound.
winning hit, the former Eagle with his lone run illlowed
as
acknowledged Clagg's bases coming 1 une-arned
Blackston
scored
after
reachloaded triple as the key to pulling out the triumph dur- ing on an error.
For Post 128. Meigs aluming that nine-batter rnning.
:'EverybOdy kept getting on nus Mike Davis return from
base early and their rel ief summer vacation w go 6 2/3
pitching struggled ." sa id innings with three strikeouts
Amsbary, "Clagg came up in a no-decision.
with the big hit that got
Mei g's' Brand.on Fackler
everybody up. I just hap- came in during that seventh
pened to be the one in the inning to wo rk out Of trouble
(batters) box at the ·right and went the rest of the way

.'

Memorial
LITTLE LEAGUE
BASEBALL
TOURNAMENT .
:.:t~ July 6 - July 10

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.v

�''

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Thur.sday, June 16,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

Thursday, June Hi, 2005

..

Yankees to announce.$800 mjllion ballpark
'
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK- The House
th at Ruth Built will be
replaced by the House that
The Boss Built, if all goes
according to plan .
The New York Yankees
scheduled a news conference
for Wedn,esday to announce
plans for a new $8QO million
ballpark, which wou ld be
built adjacent to the current
Yankee Stadium and could be
ready by the 2009 season.
"I think it will be sad,"
Yankees manager Joe Torre
said Tuesday. "They'll have
limos and vans to take the old
ghosts over to the new stadium."
Just hist weekend, New ·
York Ci ty and the Mets
announced plans fo r a new
$600 million ballpark nex• ()
Shea Stadium.
·
The team has. spent years
planning the new stadium ,
which will ha ve a capacity of
at least 50,800 - ap proximately 6,000 seats fewer than
the current ballpark .- but .
could be expanded to llbout
54,000. It would be constructed in Macombs Dam
Park, to the north ofthe current stadium, and finan~ed by
the team.
Yankee . Stadium, which
opened in 1923 to a Babe
Ruth home run , is the thirdoldest park in use in .the
major leagues, younger onl y
than Boston's Fenway Park
( 1912)
and
Chicago.'s
Wrigley Field ( 1914). Yankee
Stadium was renovated
extensively in 1974-7 5. but
the team has long desired a
modem ballpark .with more
\uxury suites and wider .concourses. Since moving into
Yankee Stadium. New York.
has won a record 26 World
Series titles . .
The stadium plan call s for
the new ballpark to resemble
the original Yankee Stadium
in many of its details. and the
dimensions of the playi ng
· field would be identical to
the current ballpark. It would
have 50-60 suites; up fro m 18
in the current stadiljm.
Yankees owner George
Ste.inbrenner, New York Gov.

George Pataki and New York
Ci ty
Mayor
Michael
Bloomberg planned to attend
a Wednesday news• conferen,e announcing the stadium .
Steinbrenner , spokesman
Howard Rubenstein said. The
Yankees hope to start construction in 2006 and move
into the new .ballpark · in
2009, an ambitious timetable,
give n the delays that frequently occur in construction
in New York.
·
Approval fro m the state
Leg1slature and City Council
is necessary. The state would .

contribu te about $70 million
to increase parking from
7.000 spaces 10 I 1.000. and
the city wou ld rep lace the
los t park land as part of the
deal. A new commuter train
station and expanded ferr y
terminal also is part of the
plan.
The Met s' new ball park
would .be use.d for ,the 20 12
Olympics the Internat ional
Olympi c Commi ttee votes
Jul y 6 to award the even t to
New York . That plan was
drawn up after last week's
collapse of the proposal to

c,m, Cmanly. OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ·ONLINE
To Place
Sentinel
1\egtster
(740) 992-2156 '(304) 675-1333

Offtee llofif'~

Word Ads

Oe-acllfir~

Items

•

\\\01 '\t I \II\,...,

rL--------.J
Gf\1-:AWAY

5mi

r
I'

~au:

• Include Phone Number And Addl'f!SS When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Dayll

1

Found· Female BaaQfe.
vicln1ty, of Lincoln P i~e
2 Beautiful Female Kittens be1~etm Ingalls &amp; Noms
. 6wks old to good Home Northup Rd . ·(740)446-74, 17
(304)882 ·3218
leave message.

~

All Display: 12 Naan 2
Bu•lne•s DayiS Prior To
Publication
S'-'nday Display: 1:00 p.mT-hursday for Sundays

5km

4 kittens , litter trained. 1
Black, 1 tan &amp; white, 1 black

3114
5 kitt~ns need good homes.
2 black, 3 tiger,' 6 wks. old.
(740)441-9668 before 9:30. ·
CKC

Registered . female

l wrl ghttmlc .1:1et

Gallipolis Ca'r eer College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 74;0-446-4367 . . $59.000. New Haven 2.800
sq. ft. Log Cab1n as 1s. w/3-5
' 1·800·214-0452
acres Call Mike (513)314www gall1pol:scaroorco11ega com
Accrad,!eC Member Accred 111n~ 2754

DIRECTV
FREE Home
entertainment
System
FREE Equipment and Install
up to four rooms. , 45 cha nnels $29.00 a month .. As~
how to get F'A.EE HBO
and STARS. , ·BOO·

o,oo-

antiques. Ia~ old things ..1 mi.
on 279 from Centerville. Call
(740)68,2·7 t 63. 1f rain i.hS1de .. IIO

family
sale
2260 Th urs., June 16 and Fri. ,
June 17, 9:Q0-5:00. 2 miles
·Male Pit Bull 16 months Old Centenary Rd . Fri. Sat. Sun . N. of ~olzer Hospital on St.
9-6.
to QIYeaway. Call (740)388At. 160. Name brand baby.
'0532.
59 Hilda Drive, Fri!Sat. Side children and 'adult clothes.
by side refrigerator, chaise plus-size womens clothes.
Reg. Walker Coon Hound. lounge, dishes . clothes , shoes , mfant car seat, baby
740-949-2083
shoes
·
IIams. disiies, video games,
VHS movies, kit.chen bar
and stools. longaberger.,
toys, books, flower arrange4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725. mefil, tcio:s, window bl inQs,
Announcement ..............-............................. 030
weedealer. sheets. bed
Antiques .... ,... ,.......... ,........ ,....... ,,,.,.. ,.... ,., .... 530
spread, towels . throw _pil·
Apartments lor Rant.. ................................. 440
lows, and misc. items.

3

. CLASSIFIED INDEX

STATE OF . OHIO V.
Commissioners ·at price.
KEVIN DALTON
their . office at the
NO bidder may with·
ATHENS
COUNTY Courthouse, dr- hia bid within
COMMON
PLEAS Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 llolrty (30) days altar
CASE NO. 04CR-o78
until
1:00
pm . the actual date of tho
NOTICE OF JUDG· Thursday, June 30,
opening thereof. The
MENTTO:
2005 and then at 1:15 Meigs
County
ELIZABETH pm at said office Commissioners
GLOECKNER
151
opened and read
reserve the right to
MULBERRY ' AVENUE ·aloud the following:
reject any or ail bids.
POMEROY, OH 45769
Construction of 2793 Miele Davenport
In eeeordenee with
Linear feet ·of aide- Meigs
County
Section 2923.32 of walks lor the VIllage Commissioners
the Ohio Revised
of
Middleport. (6) 9 , 16
Code
Ellubeth Speeilieationa
ara
GloKkner Ia hereby provided in bid packnotified
that, on et.
Public Notice
February 14: 2005, the Specifications, and
AUWia County Couct bid forma may be Probate Court of
of Common Plel&amp; aaeured Ill the omce Meigs County, Ohio
111-..cl an Order .ol of Meigs County . In . Ra: Change ·of
Forfltlture In fllvar o1 Commlaslo.nars , natne of Artann Jothe Stille of Ohio
Courthouaa , Lyn Bing to Arlann
111111net
property Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Jo.Lyn Sizemore.
known as 899 Petit Phone 740-V92·2895.
c... No:
Roed, AlbMy, OH end A ~It ol 0 dotllre Notice of Hearing on
1522 Loulu AY*!ue, will be required lor Change o1 Harne
Albany, Ohio. The MCh.let of plana and ~pplleant
hereby
court
hiS
been • -ilieattona.
gives nolic1 to all
edvl.
that Each bid muat l&gt;e lntereeted persons
l!tlzabath Gloecllnar ICCOmJIIInied
by lnd to Michell Bing,
eilller a bid bond in
eddrel&amp; . unknoWn,
1 polllltlal elelm
to pereela of the 1mount . of 100% llllllthe applicant hal
of the bid amount . filed In epplleetion
Nil OlolckNr · •Elizabeth
haroby witlo I IUreiy lllltafae· lor Change of Harne
gl¥*1 · Notice • pur· tory to the - ·· aid- In the Probata Court
·- t o 2123.32(EM1) Meigs
County· of Meigs county,
10 111111 lillY taka Commll&amp;!onere or by Otoio, requellllng the
IIOpO to pr..rva her
certified
check, etoanga, of ·nome of
ko... MI, II llriy, In the · ceah..., ehack, or let·
Ariann Jo.Lyn Bing to
ter
of
credit
upon
•
·
Aiienn
Jo-Lyn
Nil
- Order
· A copy
of
the
· of IIOivent bonk In · the SIDmora_ TIMo hear·
F-ure may be
amount of not lela ing On the eppJiciatlon
obtained from Rol)ert
then 10% of i1oe bid will be 111111 on · the
F.
Smllll,
Ohio - n t In 11- of the 18111 lily of July 2005
Depolrtment
of afore~ald
U.igs 1111 :36 o' e!oek p.m. in
rn.ur-, 2100 Stei'- C
u n t
the Probata Cour1 of
Court, ColumbUs, OH Commiaioneno. Bida Meigs County, toc.l·
432315-1017.
- I I be OMied and ed II 100 E. .t
Robert F. Smith
marked 11 " Bid lor Second
Street,
Speclll ProHcutor
ol Courthauoe,
2nd
the
Village
AU..a
County Middleport Sld.wotk Floor, Pomao oy, otoio
PToNcutors Olllce .
Projact Bid" end 457ft.
o.ted At Columbus, mailed or delivered Wandy Sizemore'
Ohio IIIia 18111 lily of to: U.iga County ' 14 Rlllroad St
Mly, 2005.
Commiuionera 1 Midd'-port, ·
ott
(5) 111, 21, C&amp;) 2, II, 16, Courlhouae , 45710.
23, 2005
Pomeroy, Ohio 457118. 6116
•
Attention of b l - .
Ia eallecf to 111 the
Public Notlcjl
requirements
co~
Public Notice
talned in the bid
NOTICE TO CONCourt of
pecl&lt;al, Jlll!'lieulariy to
the F - 11 Labor
TRACTORS
MilOs County, otoio
. . - poopoaata ·lor SlandiJda Proviaionl .In Re: Change of
the conatructlon · of
and
Oavia-B.c:on name of Joupll Lee
_
.... lor the vii· W~ge~.¥1riouolnaw· Garrttt
Bi ng
to
lep of Midcueport, ance requiriiiTient&amp;, Joseph Lee GarreH
..... County, Ohio, varloua equat per·
SIH!IIore.
will be reealved by lormanea bond lor CIMNo:
the llel9• County 100% of the eouba:t Notice of HMrlng on

y.

......,te

Change of Name
tion to the main floor
Applicant
he;eby, · a~ elso a 12' x 14'
glvea notice to all approach at each end
interested persons
and orie 6' x 6'
and to Michael Bing, entrance. All concrete
address
unknown, will be 6" of 4,000psi
lllet the applicant has mix. Approx- 190 cu.
flied an application · yds. +1·. Include as
!Or Change of Name part of your bid plas·
in the Probate Court tic vapor barrlar and
of Meigs county, wire mesh througha
Ohio, requesting the
out Also include all
chango · of name of
labor, forming , and
Joseph Lee Garren
materials. All eon·
Bing to Joseph Lee crete must have a
Garrott Sizemore_ The cure and seal applied.
hearing on the appll· Expansion aaw·cuta
cation wtll be held on
will need to be ·a max'
the 18111 dey of July imum of 20' In each
2005 at 1:45 o' clock direelion.
Provide
p.m. in the Probate 1/2" asphalt expanCourt
of
Meigs lion, at all perimeter
County,_ · located at openings
100L.I .
100 East Second Questions call (7401
Street, Courthouse, 511-41975. All bids duo
2nd Floo'r, Po,maroy, July 5th noon. Mail
bids to 42455 Woods
Oh.i o 45769.
·Road, Coolville, Ohio
WandySizemore
14RaltroldSl
45723.
Mlddlaport,
OH 1115,16,17,1 9,20
45710. '
1111
Public Notice
Public Notice
The Home National
Bank will IIUCIIon the
following item• on
Saturd.ly, June 18,
2005, Ill 10:00 a.m. Ill
the Benk'a Plrking
lot: 1999 POntioc
Sun l i r e
1G2JB5248X7581388
1994 Ford Ranger
1FTCR10A3RUA6743
g
The Home Netionai
S..k reMnes the
right to r~ any and
Ill bids. All vehicles
.,. aotd, as is wf1ere
'-· wttto no warranties
exprealed or Implied.
Fqr an •ppolntment
to - · cell 949-2210,
Ilk lor Sheila.
(8) 15, 16, 17

West Virginia State Farm
Museum

Living History Days
WOODYARDS MINI MALL
A large load • Name brand
tools for Auction Sat. 6 ~30 pm
Also.new furniture and rugs for
.store

G'-•Y ............................................,.........040

Happy Ada..............,.....................................oso ·
Hay a Grain ..................................................640

Center Memberships
Buy 2 month$ get 1 free or
Buy 5 months get 1 free
For more info please call

ATIN: ALL STAR
CHEERLEADERS
Take YourTalent
To the Xtreme
· the
OHIO RIVER XTREME

Rutland
Townahlp Tru•lnl
will . hold 1 public
mMiing On the budget lor y•r 2001 on
July 5 ,Ill 5 prn Ill the
Rutland Fire Stillion
willlthe regu'-r meeting to follow. Public Ia

Sb&amp;l

FIND
AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS
I

Public Notice

JOIN NOW: 446-3100
Teams forming" for graqes K-12

••

Peraona~• oooo• •• ••••••••••n••••••••• ooo ooooOoOo OO" o ••-•• •• • 005

Patllor Sloie ............................:............... --.. 510
Plumbing Hellllng.............~ ...................... 820

a
ProfesiiOnOII semc:.................................. 230
Radio. TV a CB Replllr-.............................. 110.

II&lt;MI Eatat. Wllllad ................,.................... 310

SchoOia tnlltniCtlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant A Ferlll-............................,. 650
!1i1u1a- Wllllld .................." .................... 120
Space lor Rent ..............~.............................. 410
Spor1lng Gooda ........................................... 520
SUV'alor Sill.........................~............ ,.......720
Truc:ka lor $111 ............................................ 715

'

·f

Upllolatary ..............................................-.... 1170
For s.te..." ....~.........:.......-...............,...730

I

vn

&amp;~rirncN ~tch&lt;~n ic,

MOTICETOBIDOERS
TIMo Meigs County
Agricultural Society
will be taking aeaied
bids lor concrete
work on a I1IIW 140' x
72' building. In lddi-

..MlaceliaMOUIIhrclolndiM
._1.-.. . . . .. . . . . . ........................
. .:. . . . . . . . . 840 ,
Mobile Homo Aapollr.............: ......................BIO
Mobile Hamel lor Rent .. :..............:............. 420
Mobile Home~ lor Slole ................................ 320
t1o1oney to l.olll ...............-.............................220
Motorcycieo a 4 . ..........................740 .
Muaicet lnatrull*lla ................................... 570

All Star Cheer program, coached by
Rick Napier of Hurricane, WV

...•,,

Help W1ntect ................................................. 110.
Home l m p r o -..............:....................810
Homes lor Selo .............., ............................. 310
Ho!Mehold Goodl ............................ :.......... 510
Houle81or Rent ..................-....................... 410
In Memortam ................................................ 020
lnauranee .........................,........................... 130
Llwn a Gerden Equlpment ........................ 680
Llftatoek ...................;...........:...................... 630
Loaflnd Found ...........................................060
Lota a AerNQe ............................................ 350
170

Gallipolis' newest competition

'

Help Wanted

:840

June 1Bth &amp; 19th

The

wek:Oi'ne.
(6) 16

Auction and Flea Market............................. oao
Auto Parts &amp; Aeeaasorles .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Autoalor Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sele ......... ;................... 750
Building Supplies .......................................:550
' Buaineaa and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity ................................. 21 o
Business Tralning ........................... -........... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Cemplng equipment ...................................780
Carda of Thanks ..........................................01 0
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Eiec:trieai/Aelrigeration ..............................
Equipment lor Rll1t ................~ ....................480
Excavating .............., ................... ,, ............... 830
Farm Equi prn111t .... ,_ ...............~- ..................61 0
Farms lor Rent ............................................. 430
Fermalor Sele ............................................. 330
For Leaae .... :....... :........................................ 490
For Sale .. ,.....................................................585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruiho &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Fumtshed Rooma ........................................450
General Haulliig ..............................:............ 850

Wlnted 1o Buy ..... - ..................................... 090
Wlnted 1o Buy· F., Sll!lpllea ..... -............ 620
Wlnted To Do .............................................. 1.10
Wlntedlo AM!t .. - ...............,...... ~-.-- ........... 470
YIJd Sill- Gellipol'-.................................... 072

-411 hp;. V..eek
P.ud \ 'acdt1Cns
~lar. '\egotJable
\tust ha' ~ o wn toob

v.uld

J.nH'r5 hcm!&gt;e
South llillmporti

Y.O S1l1 POIMioyJMiddll ....- ...•....• --.. - ... 074
Yen! s.te-Pl rio
oi ................................ 076

7-10-592-2497

,,
~-- ------.------------~---.:...

'

.

1.,-------,.J
1

HEl.P W-\1\'TD.l

110

I ,1

u~-w·~~
nu..r """".u..o

110
1,

HELPWA~

Bartender needed. weekend
Offlc'e Assistant
TASC of SOutheast Ohio
hours. Apply at The Leg1on.
Mon-Fri. (304)675·3734
A last. paced non-profit Seeking a Full Tlme/40
organization · is seekJrQ a hOurs Case Manager ·1o
self motivated persen to work in the Meigs Office
Drivers Needed :
approximate ! ~ 32 Bachelors degree with a
COL Drivers willing to drive war~
lor local ready-mix-concrete hours/ week . This pOSition m1nlmum of 1 year e)(penwill include light secrttarial ence in treatment. social
. company. Experience is
preferred but not necessary. duties. Typing anel c;;orrlpuler work. or related setting preDriver must be willing to do skil's necessary. Send a !erred. LCDC-111 and/or LSW
pre -maintenanCe on trucks restime to: The French Art preferred .
Job
dut1es
Colony. P.O. Box 472. include. but are not limited
&amp; equipment, yard work &amp;
other miscellaneous chores. Galiipo!is, Ohio 4563 ~ by to. aSsessment and case
4
Experience operating equip- June 30th
YARD SAl.£·
management wilh non-viol'o\tEROYIMiooi.E ment &amp; extra skills such as - - - - - - - - - lent, substance abuse-relat·
welding a plus.
OUTSIDE SA.LES
ed offenders. Excellent benCall
(304)937-34
10
REPRESENTATIVE
Garage Sale. &lt;Ju·ne 17 &amp;18.
efits package .' Salary IS
Fi'll'e Poir1ts area. Wipple
dependent
on
Road . Rain or sh1ne. .. _ Due to recent cHanges iry The Gallipolis Daily Tribune credential/liCensure. educa,
coverage area Medi Home is accepting resumes for a tion a,nd expenence. Suomi!
June 17th '&amp; 18th, lots of Health Agency is seeking a lull time outside sales rePre- resume and ·cover letter by
new items &amp; "Wariety for highty moti'll'ated. independ- sentative to pin our sales 4pm Monday. June 20th to .
everyone, T.hmk Cheap! Off ent full-t1me . Registered team .and to manage an Judith SmiUachild, Clin ical
At. 7 onto 143, 2 1/4 miles. Nurse to . manage/ser'll'lce established account list Director, P.O. Box ea.
clients out of our Gallipolis while calling on new Gallipolis, OH 45631 or tax
office. Must be licensed In accounts. The successful to (9'40)446-7894
~th Ott10 and West Virginia. candidate will be a disciWe offer a competitive pJined. selfmotived team
Moving saJe+4 famil-; yard sala~. benefits package and player that understands the
Teachmg PositiOn--· The
sale. Clothes. furniture, 401K. E.O.E Please send Importance ot de'll'elopjng .
appliances. Sat. 6/18105 resume to 352 Second Ave., strong, m~tually beneficial Meigs County Board of
Ratardation
&amp;
. 7am-3pm. Taylor Ad ., Camp Gallipolis'. OH 45631 or can business felabonships with Menti:al
,-800-48 1-6334 ·
Ann·: our accounts.
Developmental Oisabilit1~s
· Conley pt, Pleasant
Audrey Farley, AN .
- - - - - - - - - ' The ideal candidate · wi ll
Hair Stylists
have sale experience . . For
Don'i miss thiS great oppor- confidential
' ·Interview,
tumty wllh Fiesta Hair please send resume and
Salons ! we currently have cover letter to Gallipolis
openings for lull and part- Oail'f Tiibune Ann : Jim
ttme tlcenMd Hlllr Styllm . Freeland, 825 Third Ave .,
Vard Sale 2925 Maple Ave. ' ' our salon 1n Maeon.We: Gallipolis, Otrio 46631 .
MeadOwbrook Friday June offer guaranteed hourly
17th
wages, r.- p.y ac~~l• with Overt:lrook ·Rehabilitation
up to 52% eervtce com- Center Ji . currently accepting
Yooni-Sole
miniOn, retail and tanning applications for pa,rt time

has the following positiOns
avai lable:
·Multiple
Olsabllities Teacher. Must
haye current valid . Ohio .
Department of Education
certificatiof'\Jilcensure and
h8'We or De eligible to obtain
Intervention Specialist validatkln m the area ' of
Moderatelfn tensive educetion al • needs.
Special
Education
Preschool Teacher. Part

commlss+Ons ,
dental , vision and II fa Ins.,
advanced educatiOn. and
muc'n more. Call 1
327 •
700, for more information.

time position
Clays per
week)~ Must . nave current
Ohio
Department
of
Educerlon certificationl1icen¥
sure and have or be eligible
to
obtain
Intervention ·
Specialist vatidatlon in the
area ot Early Cl'llldhaod.
Send resume by June 24 to ~·
Carleton · Schoof.
1310
Carleton Street, P.O. Box
307. Syracuse. OH 45~9

Friday and Sa1urday June
17th an&lt;f 18th, 8:am·?
1435 Jerry'o Run Rei,
'
Applellnlve

medical.

.an.

ct ietary cook and dietary
atde. If you are interftled,
please come in and complete your ·application at 333
Page St. Middlepoet. 01'1

45760 E.O.E.
Little Caesars Pizza Is
1960--61 RUtland H 5 accepting resumes for all
Year9,ook. Dick Will iams management poeittons at
our Gallipolis
location.
~367-7073
Pleas&amp; fax resume to t.a66Absolure Top Dollar: U.S. .47,·2 196.
Silver and Gold Co ins.
Proofset5. Gold Rings, U.S.
CCJrrency,-M T.S Cotn Shop.
151
Secona ·. Av~nue .
Gallipolis, 74o-4&lt;46-2842
I ' II'!

II~ 1

-.j j, \

110

1,

II ', I

II 1

~

t1Ei1 WANIID

1DO WORK EllS NEEDED
Aaaem""' crafts.
WQOd 1tems.

· To~

Matenals provided.
Free information pkg. 24 hr
801428-4649
An Excellent way to eam
money. The New Avon.

Call f.:latltyn 3()4.882-2645
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. S/11r1ey Spe.,., 304675-1429.

- -- - - - - - McClure's ~staurant now
hirin g all loCabons, full or
part-time, pick up applicat!On at lOcation &amp; bnng Melc
between
1O:OOam .
&amp;
11 :OOam. Monday · thru
Saturday.

RNILPN'S--Overt:lrook cen·
ter Is currently accep,ting
applk:atlons fljr LPN'S and
AN'S. 7A-7P and· 7P-7A
Shifts are available. If you
are Interested, please come
m a:nQ fill out an application
at 333 Page Street .
MidCIIeport, or call and
speak
with
Hollie
Bumgarner. LPN . StaH
Development. EOE
_ __:__ _ _ _ __

(3

L--""
(:304~4~l6i7_:5-002:;:o:'!2!-_.J
Office/House
Clean in g.
El!perienced. w/Reference.
ready to Clean tor You call
Amy 1304)675·3508

----~---­

STNA'S Ovemtook Center
is .currently .accepting ai)P'i·
Needing certified tan techni- cations lor full-time STNA'S.
cian . part time . (304)675- 7A~7P. nd 7P·7A, and 3A3P· ~-·
shifts are avail13526. '
able. If you ·are interested. years good driving
ence. $7.00/hr. Pre-empla,-·
Nigl'lt Shift Cook. 3S-40 hr please come 1n and fill our
ment Drug Testing. Send
per wk, , 8 Of older, pic:M-up an application at l33 Page
resum'l ,
to
Buckeye
'ap!Jiication at Dairy Queen. Street. Middleport Please CommUnity SeN1ces.. PO
No Pt.lone catls. EOE
Mkldleport.
No
Phone -~------- Boll 604. Jackson OH
Calls!!
StyliSts needed at Fantastic 45640. Deadline for appl1·
6/21 /05.
Equal
Same ne-N location in !he cants:
Now Hinng S~.fe On'lers.· · Wai·M&amp;rt . Plaza. Sign on CWortunity employer
Apply in Person at your loc'al bOnus, Free CEU hours,
paid vacation , tull &amp; part
Dom1no·s Must be over 1~
time help needed.' Coma &amp;
·Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's worlc in our friendfy fami~
needed. Apply
1354 .atmo~ere . Call (7.a)4467267 or stop in.
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.

All elect central a1r. new
Windows 2 ~r old hot water
tank. Ret &amp; stove S2 500
(740!38S-8743

Viill do light Carpenter Work.
Clean Garages. Buildings
and Haul Away Junk
(304)675:6728

All real estate advertising
In tt\ls newspaper Is
aubject to the Federat
F.-r Housing Act of 1968
which makes It illegal to

II'\ \ '\I I\ I
"ii;r;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

ltdvertiae "any
prefer ence, llmitlltion or

B~

discrimination baed on
rKe, color, religion , aex
famlll-' atatus or national
origin, or •ny Intention to

OProKnJNITY

~==:::;::;

1980 rno'blle hOme 3 bedroom 1.5 bath . exce ll ent
cond1t10n . Call (740)446·
2948 or (740J446-32t.O
1995 Clayton doubiew1de .
24x52 · 3br. 2ba . central a1r
total electnc. St8.000 080
(304)675·2907

m.ke any suc h '

•NOTIC E•

preterenca, limitation or
di.Criminatlon. n •

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH

NG CO. recommends ttta
u dO busmess Mm pea
le you lulow, and NOT 1
end money through th
ail unlll you have m\lestJ
atect the oHenn

T~•

new-,.per will not
llnawlng.ly IICe•p~

.ctvertiMment.s for· real
ot.te which is In
v!ofatlon of tM lew. Our
, . . . ,••,. hereby
Informed thlt all
dwellinp itdv.rt!Md In
this ~paJ*' .,. ·
l'l•ll•bl• on an .-qu•l

Mot\'E\'

~~;::;TO::Lo:A::~==~

opportunity bll....

** ~ OT J C E * *
Duplex. each With 3 BR, LA
· OR . Kitchen. Bat!" &amp; Porch
House '3 BA. LA.: Kitchen .
Both 1n Pomt
Pleasa nt.
(304)675-2495
after 7;00pm ·

Divis1on o
lnancial
Institution·
ice of Con su me
ffairs BEFORE·you refi
ance your 'home o
ta1n a loan. BEWAR

Bath.

Great

Houses

at

Great

1997 14x6 ~ Pi em1er 2 beclroom. 1 bath. all ElectriC
Exc Cond. Lots of extras
511 .000 [304 )675·7588 or
(304)553·37 15
t997 Doublew1de. 3 bedroom . 2 oath t ... acre
{304 )675-1019
. 2000 28x80 Patr1o1 4 ceoroom . excel•enl cond1t1on .
As~ mg
$48.000
Needs
mO\oeO (7;10)367·7245
2'003 Cayton Angtebroo lo; .
16x80 38Fl. 28A large
delu•e country k1tcnen
lo·ade-d w catHnets . •nc•uc"s
all Wh1r1poc l aoohances and
washer aryer total electnc.
(740)367-7060 lea"e mes-

Pr~tes ! We have 2 homes tn sage
· The Gallipolis anel Autlana - - - - r.u-tn-.-,.-E--,-M'-H-,-,
10
92 5 0
areas WE FINANCE' NO

CLOSING
COST
NO )( 70 Good Conel1tion 2
POINTS I
Co ntact NICk Oedrc om .2 batf'l sore
Huffmar
@
S9 000 00
1_800 _333 _ appliances
must :Je"mcvea 740·949 ·
6910

.2011

I

~peri- ::~~===~~~

al

A10 Grande
lnyestment Pr oper!~ walk to
Umvers1ty (2) Apartme nt
bU1Id1ngS, (31 two BR Linns
S129 000 Call (7 40)245·
94t 3

1975 Schultz mob•le home

Pretty Nail
In
Mason
"Special" tor summer, 15":.
off Beginn.ng on June 21st
-July 5th. 304-773-.5600

r

If-,,.:!:.,

\320

Ohio Valley Eng 1ne Aepa 1r
Lawn mowers, small engine
repair. Sales and services.
281 Grate Road , Patnol. OH
45658 .

fl•o

(7 40\~45-9413

4 Bedroom home. 2 blocks
from school, good neighborhood. ·648 4th Ave Ca ll RNerYICW Property 6 miles
(740)388-8 164.
below Gallipolis St. At . 7 4
bedroom . 1 1.'Q bath . L
Anention!
l&lt;itchen. L L.A .. lull baseLocal company otfenng ~No ment ut1l1ty room . garage 3
DOWN PAYMENT' pro· storage bldg .. work shop.
grams for you to buy your (740)446-12t1
home 1nstead of renting .
1\ loon..£ Hm IES
• 100°o f1nancmg
' · Less than pertect cred1t
FOR SALE
accepted
' Payment could be the J97Q 12•65 2BR , tBA .
same as rent
Meds little work. Askmg
Mortgage
Locators. $800 OBO Needs to be
roved 1740)379·2930
(740}992-7321

Brand New Method
Dry In 1 Hour
No Steam-or-Shampoo
Free-Estimates
...Ciearty Clean ...

I·

Rio Grande
3·4 BA 2 1.2 BA LR. DR
wood floors . basement.
garage. carport. over 1800
sq . ft
S125 .000
Call

3-4 Bedroom. House. 1 1/2
Bath , Mayo Dr. in New
Haven. Total ly Remodeled
$83,500 (304)882·3131

Carpet·Cieaning

WANTED: Part·bme po.srtlOn
available lo assist indivldu-·
als With mental retardation
at a group home 1n BidWell.
35 hrstwk: 1,1pm-8am Thurs;
11pm-9am Fri : Sat. 7pm9am Sun. Must 1'18\le fltgh
school diplomaiGED, valid
driVer's 'license ·and three

--------3 Bedroom~ . 2 B'alhs
Kitchen
has
some
Appliances. Basement has
Family Room . 8 A and Fu ll
Bath. 301 1 Pa rnsh Ave
(304)675-3260

LOW-MOISture

r

Wedge Res. on AI 87 ThursSat 9:00am-? , · New S1nger
Sewing Machine, Toys, Qu ill
Tops. Bicycle. Clothes. ·lab
Coats, Formals, Car Seat.
Stroller and muct'l more.

t962 .

JBR . 16 A Ranch style
house. looated 6 miles past
Holzer hospitaJ on At. t sp.
DailyiWeekly/Monmly. 740· 1740)388 _9263 _
985·3639or74o-416·1823 . -~-----3br 2ba, poor. garage. stor·
Georges Portable Sawm1ll,
age bldg . appl1a.ncss inclu9·
don't ~ aul your logs to the
ad. 5 miles from 33 on
mill JUSt call 304-675-1957
Rt.661 . (740)592·0426

www.comlcs.com

© 2005 by NEA, Inc.

3 bedroom Ranch . 2 car
garage , 1n-ground · pool
$90.000 . Call (740 )256·

DHK . Cleal"'ing .
&amp;
Powerw&lt;ish1ng, Can't Keep
Up Your "To Do~ list too Big?
Let Us HELP You 1 We'll
Clean-A-Up &amp; Get-A-Done
We
do
All :
Res idential/Business .
1 n s i 0 6 1 0 u 1 s 1d e .

Sale 18·19·20·21, · 1

15:00. sears, doll, furnitu re:
Klnens to a loving home.
WormOO and litter trained
740-.742·2301 after 4:3()

No .Dow n Payment even
with less tha n.. perlect, cred1 1
on th1s 3 bedroom . 1 ba th
home 1n M 1ddt~port. Corner
lot . car por t. wrap. around
porch . fenced 1n yard, basement, payment sa me as
2-3br Home.
t l 2ba. rent. 740-992-6300
Hardwood Floors. Tota lly
Remodeled (304)593-2532
or (859)245- 7454 .

COuncil ltlr lnoependent College!
and Schools 121oiB.

Friendly male 'cat needs a

Multi-lamily· Beautiful prom
dresses. scrubs,
name
brands. oHice fumiture,
books, comfor ters. houseetc.
FriSat.
wa res.
Summerwoods Dr.. Bidwell.

Hom:-;
FOR SAI.E

HO\!F.'i

310

&lt;1

flJR SAJ.E· '

large garage sale 6 miles
below Gallipolis St. At. 7.
Thurs. &amp; Fri. 8:30·5:00.

LOST: Quantum Spinnin~
ROct!Aeel at Fishing Rodeo
06111 /05 at Krodel. belongs
to Grand-son. please call
(304)674-0193

10 '

HI \I Is I \II

· SalooLS

"

Moving sale: 13922 St. At
160,
V1nton ,
Friday·
Saturday.
9am-5pm.
Furnilure and misc.

fJ;..

added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics-50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

·· INsrRucnoN

Garage Sale At. 7 by
Holiday Inn . ·saby items.
clothes. girls bike Rain or
shine. 6117 -6118
,.

Cocker Spaniel: 1 year old.
home. About a year old . Has
(4), 6 week old kittens.
· (740)446·0375. leave mes- not been neutered or
declawed. Please call 740sage.
446-4488:
Free to good home. St.
Bt;~rnard/Shepherd mix. Call
(740)446-2948 or (740)4463210.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Huge garage sale
Antiques, fur niture. co llectibles, plus size clothes,
lots more. Don't miss this
one! Ale 7, Gallipolis. look
lor signs by Tripplets Car
Wash . Thurs-Sat.

&amp; white. 1 calico. 74Q-992-

0

r'-------"
};~~

VISA

POLICIES : Ohio V.lt.y Publl.tllng reHf'Oiaa the right to edit, reject, or cannt any ad at any lima . Errors must be reported on the first dey of publication and
Tribune-Sentinel-A-slater will be raapanalble tor no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and onlyth~ fir1t inMrtion. We shall not.btl li•bl•
•.ny lg.. gr expenHihat rnutta h'om th, publication or omluion gf an adver1iseinent. Correction will be made In tha firat available edition . • Box nu mber
ara alway• coolidential. · • Cur,.nl raw card appfle1. • All rnl eatata advertinmtntl are aubltct to tl'le Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • This ,.,.,., ..
accepte only help wanted ads
EOE stand.lrda. Wa will not knowingly accept any advertlling in violation glthe law.
·

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descilptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

nse ...

•

Now you con hove borders and graphics

".

Di:s;play Ads

Dally In-Column; 1:00 p.m.
Mond.ay-Frlday for Insertion
In Newt: Day's Pape.r
Sunday In-Column: 1;00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT!

GET YOUR CLAsSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

• All ads must be prepaid'

N.

OH

Else Can!

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

,.

Co~nty

Noone'

N.Y.

)

MtigJ

Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Countia Like

b1t'ild a retractable-roof stadium in Manha!tan for the
NFL's Jets and. the Olympics .
The Yankees and New York
City's governmen t agreed
several weeks ago to a memoral\dum of under&gt;tandiag
fo r the new Bronx ballpark.
The Jeam wil l pay for the stadium on its own. arid the cost
of paying off the bqnds used
to rai se the motley ivill be
deducted from the Yankees'
loca lly generated re'venue .
That will lower the Ya nkees'
AP photo
revenue sharin g payments to
proposed
Yankee
This
is
an
architecural
rendering
of
the
the commissioner's office.
Stadi um in the Bronx bo rough of New York.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

o

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

rtbune - Sentinel - 3aegt~ter
C L A·S S IF I E D '1
we cove

Major LeaguE; Baseball

BY RONALD BLUM

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

r

~

.,.._..,...._L;J

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR1TY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Win+

1'888-582-3345

I•

In search of pnvare. sectud- ~-------­
ed woooed parcel t-10 For sale or tease or traae- sma 11 , nome o_r 12x50 traJier on me ri"We r m
acres Wlu,
cacm With utlh!les Must be MaSon , 2 ·br. ba(., fro nt
w1th1n 30 mtnu tes onve taT'Ie porcn. covered shatter boat
of A1o Grande Doesn't nave dOCk &amp; 3 Jet Sk1ramos . niCe
to oe tancy. fixer upper ok ' beach . w1il a•so trade tor
HaYe
already
beer. camper of eoua l va lue
17401742-3080
apprOved for 100"~ financm~ $15 OOQ
cell
416·3080
and lookmg lor '1 mrne&lt;:hate
posse~l

1395

Calt -( 740)441----------

Rooney VIll age II 3 BR 1 car
garage DR
LA, large
k1tchen . deck on back. 1
acre -w- 570.000 Must: see
to apprec1ate (7401245-

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
Stock 'Tiodels at c10 ~mces.
2005 models amv•ng Now
Cole 's
Mobrl e
Homes
1 5266 US 50 East Atnel'ls
Oh10 45701 (740)592-19 7 2
-where Vou Get 'four

9917

Money! Worth-

'

'

�\

•

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Thursday, June 16, 2005

www.mydailysentinel,com

=AP.=FOR=&gt;U1 1 =RE=~,== . :;I"irai1" ! 1\-~ =IER=Cil=c\NIJ=IS.E==.;-1::·O:::EQuJ::F~A.::.=.•~:I:::~, .....4..~,-~:;mi iEi iEIRi ·ia~--_.J
m

Thursday, June Hi, 2005
ALLEY OOP

:r:::::.!:AR!:SAu,::M:S:.:. ::1iira:;::::il
Pioneer Farmstead, 4 bedroom, reconstructed hewed

1br

Apar1mem lor rent .
Downsta~rs 1n 700-Biock.
References
Vtand
Sl.
required available June I
(304)675-3654 ,
between
11am-7pm

Log House , mOdern facill·
2
hewed
lpg

ties,

Outbuildings.
57
ac;re
Ghristmas
Tree
Farm.

Craflmat1c II Bed. Queen Ll)rge round ba ler. model 2002 Yamhha 660 Rapto1
S1ze. Excellent Condi1ion. 605-D Vemeer. good condi· yellow/black
w/match1ng
Control lion. {740)742-2091
.HeaVMassage
KBC helmet.
Excellent
Condition $3,.700 (304)675$1.000 13041675·3990
New 5003. 5005, &amp; 5020 1011
.
Dog Kennel 12'x24'&gt;C6' w1th Series John Deere Utilily
dog house. $250. Phone Tractors C Og'O fixed/ 36 2004: Harley Dav1dson· Fat
(740)441 -0668 after 6pm
months. Used UtiliTy Tractors Boy. low miles. S 18,000
0 4 .9% Variable/- 60 080, 1740)949-3004
Doll House's for sale wrth or months
Carmichael
without Furniture (304)882· Equtpment. (740)446·2412
2005 Harley Davidson Fat
2436
Boy. 560 miles. Windshield .
New John Deere Round
JET
Balers 0 1.9% Filled Rate Backrest. Ft Pouch. $16.000
AERATION MOTORS F!nanc.ng tor 48 Months or (304)773-5001 or (304)773Repaired . New &amp; Reburlt In New Model 457 Standard 5759

25,000 more/less trees. 27

acres mature hardwood. 1BR Apt. m Spnng Valley
tree machinery. ni'inerals. Clean &amp; ·affordable. W/ 0

county water, 1.'2 mile paved hookups 5290 per month+
(!40)388-0017
or
road frontage . $265.000 dep

(3041675·4138

(7401339-0362.

WrNW.Iandandfarm .com

2 bedroom newly renovated

r

Apts for rent Downlown
Gallipolis A1ver &amp; Park vu3w.
~
$360·$600/mo Some utili- Stock Call Ron Evans. 1·
ties pa1d Now accepting 800-537-9528
Jud.y Kay 's Restaura nt
· wl upstairs apartments. 740- applications . Call (740fi:'09·
1690 (loca l call\
~K;:in_g_s-:i-ze-::W:-a:-le-,b-.-:d-w-,t-:-h-o-ut
416-1808,740-247-1 100.

8USINE$
Al\D BliiL1liNGS

r

Available
immediately mattress. Chest of Orawefs,
Bea'utiful , clean , and spa- and Table with 4 chai rs ,

L&lt;rrs&amp;
ACilEAGE

.
cious 3 bedroom
townhouse.
With
storage /play' : lot Tycoon Lake on
112 Ac
room . Down Iown GaII .1poI'ts
Eagle Ad. · Co. Water (not 561 {}1month , No utilities
t8ke
front) · $7,500.00 paid . No pets. Call (740i446-

17401247·1100 o• 13041532·

9961 .

62,71 cell

(3041675 -2570

_N_E_W_A_N
_D
_ U
_S_E_D
_ S_TE
_E_L
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For , , Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains .
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;~
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Sa turday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
2.38 ac. beautifu l woods MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Green Twp, Gallipolis c1ty PRICES AT JACKSON
sChools. $42.000. can be ESTATES, 52 Westwood
sold -as 2 parcels 1+ac .. Onve from $344 to $442.
$22 ,000
per
parce1. Walk to Shop &amp; mo\lies. Call
17401441·9516.
740-446·2568.
Equal
Out of my collection , just
land available In Gallia. Housing Opportunity.
now decided to sell. lver
Jack!on, Meigs and Vinton CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Johnson Champion 44ga_:
Co. Large number ol trac1s. ED &amp; AFFOADABL.EI
lver ;Johnson Champion
Ranging from one to fifty Townhouse
apartments. 32ga.; J. Stevens 24g~ .:
acres. LaM contrac ts with and/or small houses FOR H&amp;A single barrel 12ga
g'ood c•edit. l7401669·0 143. RENT. Call 1740144 1·1111 HoW many guns. like these
you seen. all are
Looking tor , Private Large lor application &amp; Information. have
.e&gt;Ccellent and brig'. 3 of these
lot, 200&gt;C300 for my Mobile For rent : 1 and
bedroom
Home , 14x65. il.ll Eleclric. apartments Spring Valley guns have been 1n storage
11yrs old good shape. or 1 . area .
References
and since 1955· $1.795. Buy all
guns.
firm , serious
acre country sel1ing , place deposit
required .
Ph. 4
inq1,.1ires only. Th ese guns
for pets in Gallia Co.. OH or (7401446·2957.
are rare ! (740)533-3870.
Mason Co., w/all hookups,
will pay $150/month. Reply Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
Pate Barn . 30x50x1 OFT
to PO Box 611, Ripley, WV room aparti}IMts at Village
$6795. includes Painted
Manor
.
and
Riverside
25271
'
Free
Delivery
Apartments In Middleport. Metal,
www.nationwidepolebarns:c
REAL EsrATE
From $295·$444. Call 740-

2

I

i

~---WiliiANIIDiiiiiiiii.iil._ . , . .

,

992-5064 . Equal, Housing
Opportunities.

'
I Buy .,omea- Local person
Nice 2BR, 1 bath wtattach~d
buys homes , Conlid ential.
gar. $400 per mo. 'no pets.
Quick cash . Jim, 740-992Deposi,l
&amp;
references.
6300. No calls after 9.

(7401446·2801.

IH \I \I"
North
Third
Avenue.
Middleport. One Bedroom
furnished apt. No Pets.
Previous rental ref
740992·0165

Hou&lt;;E&lt;;
FOR

RENT

2 Houses: (~) 4 bedroom. Pleasant Valley Apartment
111 3 bed•oom. $900 &amp; SBOO Are now ta~ing Applications
plus deposit. · (740)256· for 2BR. 3BA &amp; 4BR ..
Applications
are
taken
8152.
Monday thru Friday, from
3
BR
Ranch
Home ·9:00 . A.M .-4 P:M. Office is
wlattached Garage in Camp Located at 1151 Evergrean
Conley area of Pt. Large Drive Point · Pleasant, WV
fenced yard in great neigh- Phone No. is (304)675borhOOd. $675 mjh. Deposit 5806 EH .O
and References req~ired .
Call 1-304-531-1197 or 1· Tara
Townhouse
3o4·273-1 1 t 2
.
Apartments . Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, C/A. 1 112
5 bedroom. 3.5 bath , Stone Bath. Adull Pool &amp; Baby
Ranch .h$me with in-ground Pool, Patio, Start $385/Mo.
pool Large beautiful home No Pets, Lease Plus
and setting on Route 160. Security Deposit Required.
$1 ,000/month. Lawn mainte- '(740)446-346 1.
nancB'
included.
Call
(740)446-348_1
Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting
Attention!
list for Hud·subsized, 1- br,
Local company offering "NO apartment, call 675-6679
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- EHO
grams for yOu to buy your c·Wi--"':':~~--,
home instead of renting.
SPACE
• t CXlo/o financing
.
t"'R RENT
• Less than perfect credit

t'ftD

L

Lw--oiiiiiiliiiiii.i-_.1

accepted

Downtown Of1ice Space- 5
• Payment could be the room suite S650/mo: 1 roo~
same as rent.
office- . $225/mo.: 2 room
Mortgage
Locators. suite $250/rtlo. Security
1740)992·7321
deposit .required . You pay
Between city schools. 6 utili ties_ All spaces very nice.
rooms &amp; bath , range &amp; ret, Elevator. Call {740)446-3644
·
• turn. gas heat, new carpet. for appointment.

mo. $425 deposit + For Lease: Office or retail
utilities. l740144 Hl596 . ·
spaces in very good condi-

$425

Nice 2 bedroom home in the lion . Downtown Gallipolis
count,Y. No inside pets Approx . 1600 SQ. ft. each. 1
or 2 baths. Lease price
740-698-7244

(304)675·2902

\ 111(1 11\ \ llhl

r~=m;lr ~
14x70 expando 3 bedroom,

r

"~---oiiljiiiir-~

r

Call 740-245-5121.

jiiii:.;,..--.;~~---,
PETs

FOR SALE
2 female Pek ingese. AKC.
sable wlblack mask. 6 wks
old.
Ado1able l
5300.
(740)446-1000 leave massage.

ol824·.

1740I«e- Sola and cllalr otar11"'l al
$399. Call (740)4-4S-744-!.

1..,--·FOiiiiRiiSiiiA
OiLiiiio
E. _ ....

.
AQHA mare, impressi"Je 1985 20ft Rinke r cuddy
bred, 8 yrs old, very well cabin, excellent condition .
broke. great for kids. $1 ,100. (304)675-2316
(740)256·6824.
Ask about our AOHA
Member Discounts on new
John Deere Equ1pment.
Equipment
Carmichael

1740)446·2412

r

. ~i.!
~~---riiiiiiiiiilio--'
Mixed

1

$3.500. (7401992-6914 ..

2000 Bayliner 21 ft . cuddy w/
trailer, many extras. ve ry
clean 304·675·5563

John Deere Aiding Mowers
starting at $1.399. Financing
available subject to John
Deere Credi~ approval. Your
payments could be as low
as $39 month with SO down.
Carmichael
Equipment

r

.

. MUIOR Hor.n.s

$11 .000 . Call

~=-=--::-:-::::-'-::--::-­
AKC Bluetick (Beagles)puppies. Good Hunting stock
$100.00.
- Australian
Shepheard
pupp1es.
Beautiful
blue
merles
$150.00 740-742-2728

•--oiVIIitr-ia:rAiiiNiiilSiiro....

'-~I I~\

13041675-1731

F
---,

~·

.

10

H I"

BASEMENT

Call 24 H". 17401 446·
0870 . .Roge'S Basement
Waterproofing .

country) '
5350/month.
A"'ri~
$350/deposll.
references
required No pets. Call
(740)24.5-9491 . no calls Buy
or
sefl
Riverine
after 9pm.
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 7~
Beautiful r~ver v1ew 1n 992-2526 . Rus~ Moore.
KanBU98. 1deal tor 1·2 peo- owner
.
pie. No pets. please ·
.

4590 M &amp; W Round Baler,
Net/Plastic Wrap or String, 2004 Ford E&gt;Cpeci. XLT, 5.4
both like new call (304}6?S.. Triton V8 , 4x4. power.
cru1se, titt . mccellent condt5724 or (304)e75 _5578
tion
$23,900
080.
Case 480-G ,Back Hoe witl'l {740)24.$-9162.
catl and heater, good condilion . 511 _000 _ (304) 675 _ 95 Dodge truck. 414. automalic.
$3,000
Call
6460

r
0

I

1995

r

·1::--::::-:--:--:--- :..17!111401'-1388-00;.;;;,.;,;,1~1~--..,
l\ftlloiA."'IJJS[ • Gas 4020 Jotm Deere trOC·
V!Wi
Yamaha.

2~

· condition . ~

4· 13041895-3274 or 13041866-

~

FOR ~a• ...

.,.....,

Whee·ler. good condition 3075
1999 [)odgu 1'5 passenger
5(000.
Cl1erry Finish
1 ana 2 bedroom apart- Dres&amp;er. cost S899 sell for John Deere tO ft. No Til Drill church van . 18,000 mileage,
Fjeni .
Carmichael good condition , $16,000.
ments. fumshed and unfur- S200. Game Boy Advance for
EQUipment. (746)446-2412. Gall (7401388-8564.
nJ5hed. secunty depos1t

SP. $40 1304)675-2606

requred, no pers, 740-992-

John Deere Commerc1al
Apt SIZe washer \&amp; dryer Workslte Products In Slack!'
BUCk stovl} fireplace 1nsert Compact E.~ca... alor 27C .
1 Dedroom Cottage 1n town.
Call (740 )64 5- 1485
350. SOOfSk1d Steers 371 ,
no pets, depoSit &amp; ret
Baby oeo Tw•n G•r1s Cloth· 320
325.
32Bitractor
'"""'ed (7 40)446-2"68
1ng, rntant ttlru sr2e 2, other Loader Backhoe 110TLB.
Furmshed upstav·s. 3 rooms kids clottung. Blcycle. Dryer c~ out OI,Jr rental rates
&amp; balh. Clean. •el ' &amp; dep AnriQue Ice Box . Home _ Great F1nancrng Available-'*'"red No pelS 1740)446- Interior Portable Refndg Car miCh ael
Equ1"ment.
1519. '
(304 )458-1875
(740)446·2"-12.
2218.

•

96 Ford Windstar. Power
windows.
power
locks.
crUise 1 rear A/C. 160.000
miles 52.600. (740)256-

8152.

n .ooo

56.9!19 (7401446-9961

fMPLoY..MfNT

I

COUN$t=Lo~

/

liNDA'S PAINTING

•· Site
r Preparation
r Dozer '
r Garages

4wd (J year.warrant~· ) .
• Farm Pro Trartors 20 horse - 30 horse
loaders. finish mowers. lillers
NEW ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon 1Zero Turn

985-l.JS.I

\lulber'r~

260

An•.

and Smili11~

" Pole Barn.s
Pom~ru~,

Friel1dly Faui.

(WEN
Mun-Fri.
9am.to ~ prn

Ohio

7~0-992- 7~53

. 7.W-.J 16-182J
. 7-t0-~9 1 -~641

IT AIN'T RAINED THIS
HARD .S INCE Tf:f SPRING
OF '32 WHEN OUR
CABIN WASHED .
AWAY AN' ,!loLL
WE HAD WUZ
TH' CLOTHES

T&amp;D . TRACfOR SALES&amp;_ EQUIPMENT
·
·riW.t in the heart ol' Ch~ler

Ce nter

PH: 9'!2-4183

IV\yers Tree
Service
•lnsured-Frt'e
f:•dmales

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutlers
• Vinyl Siqlng &amp; Painting
• Patio ~t!ld Porch Oecks
We do U all except
fumace work

992-6215 wv 0361'25
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local Ex rience

(740) 992-5232

See

..VI ~ tar. E\J):nm.~

.Sx.IO. lOx I 0,

.Rocky "RJ"
H"'pp

1-\0W ECXPE.t&gt;\~\\1(\f\\~

GEJ.\E:K\C. f'ORI&lt;\ '(OU

Pl1£.sc.R\I"\I~

(.QUI...\)

10x30
Janet .Jeffers

-·

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

'mo

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

HOWARDL
WR!TfSEl 5 SONS
ROOFING .

"Middleport's only
Sell-Storage"

Flat. Metal-

TH'

ROBERT
'BISSEll
CDIImiCnDII
• 'New Homes

• Complete
Remodeling .

TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL

740-982-1&amp;n

CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp;quality

Stop &amp; Compare

work
• Affordable Rates
• References ·
Available
• Free Estimates

!

'i'

,I'
•••

GE.t-\E.RI C. ~1-.1'1 tJ

trouble keeping hiS contract ol three nolrump alive hare. What would you do after
West leads the heart ~irig?
South saw these· nine easy
tricks: one spade. one heart. five diamonds and two clubs. So, he won :he
third trick with his h~art ace, cashed the
· diamond ace. and (ed the diamond two to
dummy's queen. When East d iscarded,
South cursed. He had to go down
~Didn't you see East drop the diamond
jack? Surely that is a singleton," protested
t-Jorth.

Just great

8 1040 agcy.
9 Sugar Ray

29 Taxis

answer

30 Cereal

51 Bear's fo&lt;lt

grain

.52 Donne 's
"done"

32 Hive
dwell"r

34 Gear ·
3T Shocking
·3a Numerica l

53 Belore,
in combos
54 St. Louis
time

pr.efiK

41 Prolesl
songwriter

43 Split lo·join

1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celeooty C-rPI\e: ~ograms a~e Clt&gt;atoo lrom QUOtations ov laiTIOUs people. DUI ano l)lesent
Each 1ener 1ntoo oore1 stards tor anor.e~

Today's r:lue· 0 equals Y

" TOHL

.

~why ?" asked South.

AVWRZLXT

"He · m1ght even

falsecard from J·10-ll."
True, but SoutQ should have been more
careful with the c~rse card. After cashing
the diamond ace. he must lead the diamond nine .to dummy's queen. Then .
wher) East discards·. declarer can return
to hand with a spade or club and play· a
diamond to dUmmy's eight.

IMPORTS
Athens

.

...'-'----•
JUST BECAUSE ITS T+I E
LAST t&gt;AY OF ":.,("HC&gt;i)L,

NO F.XtUSE=' F'oR ..

TH!\T·s

•

;: 5&gt;QUA.WK·.1

;,·

DAY
tJoN5EN'S.E~

PRANK. t&gt;AY

Whaley's Auto
Parts
Sl. R1.68l Darwin. OH

7-10-992-70 U or 740-992-5553
lleolfot"ki~ l~fe .\lorlel So luwe
tiiH'I 1\liPr .llarkel fhriJ&lt;

PEANUTS"

See Brent or Brian Whaley ·
M-Fri 8:30-5':00
Sal. 8:30-Noon

HS'{~ W~ERE ' RE YOU 60)

WITH M'&lt; DOG :

Sun. Closed

lttuUan
Melt• Co. lnldut•!l!

THIS 15 Ti-&lt;E STUPID AU CONTRAIRE!
PILOT Wi-10 LEFT 1 AM T~E FAMOUS
ME IN THE RAIN !
SERGEANT OF T~E
FOREIGN LEGION i

Friday, June 17, 2005

By B•rnlc:• B'Kt8 Oaol
Because y~u are likely to greatly
expand your horizon in the year
ahead. you cou ld now attempt to do
things you never would have previously dared. Numerous posit ive
aO\Iances are apt to occur from your
involvsrnents.
QEMINI (May 21-June 20) The
probabilities are that you'll be placing
more ·emphasis on your personal
interests today than on those of others, but there's nothing wrong with
that. l!'s your turn to do for yourself.
CANCER (June 2 t ·July 22) N othirig w1 11 be more grat1tying to you
today than doing things ~o make oth·
ers happy. You w ill lind th at feeling
gOod about yourself Is more co mpen-'
, . - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - , . sation in Itself tha n you expected 't o

JE TROlJVE PARIS TRE5 BEAU!

1 ~~~K PARIS 15 VERY"'·"""""'

(

&amp;

BUCKEYE Sanitation
SEPTIC TANK PIJMP/NG $95.00
PORTABlE TOilfT RENTAl
. CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TOTJA Y
992-3251 OR 591·8757

AstroGraph
"'*"" 'lllrthdiiY:.

•

BIG NATE

· SUNSHINE CLUB

' ~';;:~'!July

23·Aug. 22)

-Yo u could

get involved in a ne...y project today
that a friend may have been touting . It
wl!l be something you feel has much
potential and you could actually be
the one who wilt kick It off
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Lady_
Luck is apt to laver you today In ·
arrangements 'that have a direct bearing on vour finances or career- - or
both In ta c t . opportunit ies may
abound, so seek out the best.
LIBRA (Sept_ 23-0ct. 23) It's an
excellen t day for you to take a more
prom1nent role in .a project in which
you 've been involved . When you
begin to adv9nce your position, it 'll
sweep you r cohorts along with you ..
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -You're
likely to be
tough customet to
deceive today. However. If you dO
catch someone sa iling off ' co ur~ .
you'll iake control and tUrn him dr her
around again, mov'1ng in the right
directiOn.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Friends and associates will find you a .
delightful pe rson to be around today
because of your willingness tb be
cooperative, Any conceSsions you
• make will be equally matched in
return .
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Whal you accomplish today will be
observed and acknowledged by persons who could make things a lot eas· .
ier tor you·. Thus, your ambiUons have
excellent chances of being fulfilled

a

a-1, ttl'S, 1 WAS MARCI£D
fOR 0\/'-12 Fl F1'l' YEARS

"Insured"

740-742-22~3

• Leave a message

v

\'IRZO

TGR

OZNLX· T
TADZ

Z X V R T P 0 XH

OLKKOU

•

ZXVArPOXH

WRZO

AVCK 0

Z NL

ZNL

T AOZ ,

v

0 L KK0 U

T GA.

AWJVTTO

rumbling ."- John Sayles
,
"Who lives by hope d1es tast1ng • - James Howell

[cl2005 by NEA. Inc

6·16

'::~:~;~' S©\\~1A-lG£t;vs·

::!:

- - - - - . . : - _ ; ldit•4 llrr CLAY l . POLlAN--~~--llt~rrc ng• l•"•~s of
0 four
sctam bled words

W

th1
be·
ro fotm four sitl'lplt words.

I I' I I I

WEAHIL
2

1

-=-,~
I!
I
I'
I
·
r. . . .
--.ris_,.U_Y_.nO-;Rrl./ ..

My sister conc lu ded \hat
t he people who ar~ nosy
usually have no business of

O-H~-~-,-R-:-0-,8-R-,....:,~ ~-C-o~p;,~.-

.-'7.-,

1•

•he chuckle

qvo10d

•
_
_
•
•
•
by fdl irHJ in rhe miuing Wordt
'---L-.1---J.-...L.-L-....J you develop from si•Jl No. J belo...,..

f)

PRINI NUMBER!O .
WTEiS IN SOUAR!S

_8_. .;.~;,;;;:.::~:.:.:~:..M&amp;-t!-'o_aJ..j....i.--L-I.-.J..,-.:-:_-'--'-j""'j
SCRAM-LnS ANSWERS 6- l &gt;- o &gt;

Burlap - Chalk- Threw- Stooge - KEEP in TOUCH
Shyly he said,
"People who want to stay away from temptation usually
want to KEEP in TOUCH .·
.
.
. I caught my husband eating cake.

ARLO &amp; JANIS
I fH I~K IF l HAD IT TO DO

M.i&lt;, I'D LIVU !&gt;1.1\Pt.tHIFC:

f,IOW.

Hill's Self
Storage

· GARFIELD
,---~------=:-'\- 1

27... WI-I EORE DO

•

29670 Bashan Road

-no~e

YfAFr5

oo?

Racine, Ohio

I

1

I

45n1
740.949-2217

Call B.D. Const.
for all }'our home
repair nnds. roofing,
siding. add-ons,
remodeling etc.,
frtt estimates

Stue 5'x10' .
. to 10'1130'
Hours
7:00AM-8:00P.M

(7~h

I 1411 mo. pd

992-2979

leave meSs&amp; e

'

ADVERTISE

Now Available At

17-17-17,.
$265 ton (While Suppy Last)

• Mushroom Compost

Available
$3S - I ,000 lb&lt; Approx. weigh!
18 spreader bug'gies available for use
• AiMay pasture renovators and seeders

available·to rent.
·

SHADE RIHR AG S[R\' ICE
3553? S1. Rl. 7 Norlh
l'om•roy. Ohio
7-MJ..YHS-3113 I

.•

0

IN THlS
SPACE
•
FOR $52 .PER MONTH

High cost of fertilizer got you

(onsulting.

in essays

watercraft

24 lion family '48 Building
25 PIN
additions
prompter
49 Tick oft
50 Question27 Sense .,
orgall
naire

1707.

Cali Gary Stan ley

HAS
.SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

money
5 Obsei'Ve
secretly
6 Gusto .

A wily Scot who knew this wOuld have no

1-'AI/E. Bo\.JGI-\1
IK:::.\Ef'.-\) COi' H\t.
t-\1\f'\E. ~t-\1&gt;?

FO!':.
1--J \L.&amp;.gfm.C:'S

22 Agile
23 Slim

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Hope leeds the soul but leaves your bellv

IOxlS, 10x201

MANLIY'S
SElF STORAGE

WUZ

GOO'D OL' 'DAYS!!

II

lt-\f£CI\Ot-\

Phone

Racine. OH

SIGH':' ... THEM

\:') I

diSI.'OUDt
7.10-992-262 1

• Garal!e~
• Room Add . ~. Roofing
· • Kitchen~ • Bath:-.

j

THE BORN LOSER
I"'IOU 'NO~'\ &amp;C:LIEciJIO. ~--, r;-f-\Ec'l 1&gt;1\'Jto\\ 1-\."..IJ[ Po, (1-\£1\I"E.R"'I ~1-\\':l Gl 11-\E. CI~EAI"ER

V.C. YOUNG Ill

• St'nior Citizen

A ll Your H'-1me .
Improveme nt Need~

1

BACKS!!

Storage

Construction

AN' WE SHIVERED
IN THAT CAVE
FER THREE
'DAYS 'TIL
TH' RAIN
STOPPED

ON OUR

Hlgb and Dry

TD

CALENI&gt;A~

BARNEY

Radius Mower) 30 inrh l'utting width to SH
inch cutting width 3 ~· rar warrant~·

C&lt;Jntm unit~·

TAICING .

.(.OMPANY.

****Also a\·aiJabiC*"'u
·
• Task 1\'lasler Tractors 26 horse · 38 horse. ·

Stun e Grear / ..till' Prit'f',(

·~ Utilities

:A

with shuttle transmission

4-wd. remote h\'draulics 3 ,·ear warranty

IS NO\\' OPEN AT

Fo~

\ 45 RefreSh·
ments
47 Name

moisture

Market

Certa1n cards· ha~ nicknames attached
to them. for example, the diamond seven
is known as the beer carq . Anyone who
, wins the laSt trick W1th thi~ card when it is
not a trump, and is either ma~ing or
breaking the contract, gets beers for himsell and his partner from the opponen1s.
Less pleasant is the diamond nine. whk;h
is known as the Curse of Scotlalid-: The
reason is uncertain.. The Bridge
Magazine in England uncovered six possiOie origins. Of these , I prefer the explanation that it is derJved from the nine
lozenges that were on the coat of arms of
the Earl of Stair, who was nated for his
connection with the Massacre of Gl~ncoe
anti the union of Scotland with Erigland 1n

A DAY OFf?

New~~~~~:!.o:7~~r~!~~~ !~~tof

Let me do it for youl

· East
All pass

Curse you, MacDuff,
nine times

rtMT'$ i~fl~IILE! Wt-IAT ~INI&gt;
..-....
Of ru51t1E5S fltlE5
YOU

CARPENTER
SERVICE

~ol1h

:1 ~T

· a perch

3 Prec.i ous
4 Common

34 W~ird
35 Physique,
stat ,
slangily
10 Border
36 Dog In Oz
11 Scenery
39 Curve
chewer
40 Put in a
, 12 .Bird song
lawn
16 Delhi
42 Slrongly
address
advise
18 Coffee
44 Bigfoot's
maker
kin
20 Marine
46 Hesitant
birds
51 Cottonwood 21 Exude!t_..

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

3D Yrs. Exp, • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

F'ormer l~ 11t lOS
W. 'lain Pomero)'

We st ·
Pass

1 Made cloth
2 Found

7

inner self

Opening lead: • K

Bucket Truck

YOUNG'S

Licf.nsed agronomist on staff d\lailable for

Full-s.rzeo luxury van . seats
7. mechaniC ownftd. beauti·
lui. 1993,
miles. ~

South
2 t'T

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding _

The Mulben·)'

~Bac khoe

STANLEY TREE

...THE ·

33 Jung's

Vulnerable: :-&lt;orth'· Soulh

Tree Service

The Parish Shop

• Garages

4:30pm (740)256-6257.

-::-::-:--::------ $13.900 ~" Call (7~01256565 New Holland Baler &amp; 1618 or (740)256-6200.

JONES'

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

~Roofing

949-1405

4x4
•---~iiORiiiiiiSW;iiiiiior-,.l

6152.
iit'li:;..
______.,

~
FOR RENT

r Homes
r Septic Systems

•F... EIIIIIMH•

Cnevy, 350 onglno, new ti•es
&amp; paint l&amp;ha•p). l"'de lo•

,\ 9 2

DOWN

16 Mail out

Dealer: South

New or ,Repair

For sale cr trade- 1987 -S-10

A 53

•

54 Sheep
herder
I Fordo
55 Tend the
1 river
aquarium
6 Mrs. Bunker 56 011
11 Hlda \2 wds.)
problems
12 "200 "
57 Brown
author
songbirds

17 Poslllve
19 Hedge
·shrubs
23. 1040 pro
26 Plump and
· juicy
28 DC figure
29 Box
31 Yokum lad

t\ J -t

•

ACROSS

sight

South

A

Puzzle"

15 Part of MGM

"'Q J 10 n

... 3

Crosswo-rd

13 Zoo
58 Kid around
building
with
14 Central j)ark

Ofi-1&amp;-0j

B6 5

• ' 2
• KQ8• 3
... 7 6 2
Wf'st
East .
A Q ,U 72
&lt;!oK t03
• KQJ 98
• l0 7 ~
•
Jl) 7 ii 5
• J

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
•IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

fn..'t" •:stim atts

Downspoul - Siding

280 rotaJ electric, CA (in

good

David Lewis
Insured

Seamless Gutter -

2000 Dodge Dakota 4114
.__ _iiliiioiiii...... truck, '130,000 rri'lleS, $5000.

tor,

Concrete Work
2S Yea~ Experience
740-992-6971 ..

992-5682

S~inglc.

ne

~

3 miles west of
Pomeroy. OH ·
on State Rt. 124

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee: Local references furnished. Established 1975.

1998 Range• 4x4, 5 spd, 3L,

MISCE!J ANtXllS

I.DVIS
CONCRf:'I'E
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

AU Types or.·

740-247-2162 or
740-4 16-3508
14- y rs. Experience

.

Two Berkline recliners in . Compact Tractors &amp; 110
at Carmiet:tael Equiprtient. 2003
Jeep
Liberty
good condition . (740)446- {740 ,446 _2412
Renegade. Loaded. 4114.

r

Repair

lrtJPROVEMEl\Ts

Lo•.,;oiiiiliiirioiliiiiiiiiriiiorl

1997 F150 4 wheel drive,
4.6 VB, automatic. Excellent
condition . High miles. Price

Creek Rd., S3CXl .per mo..
(740)742·3080,
ce/1~~1&amp;3080

ta~~en.

Auto &amp; Truck

"No Job To Small "

front pOrch, niCe yard, locat· repairs on major brands in 0% Fi&gt;Ced A._.te up to 36 Only serious offers only,
ed in Hartford on Sliding :shop::-'_o::r_a-:-1::-you_,_,_ome:---::- months on New John Deere please. (304)576-2742

"Pill;caoons oe.ng
Call 1740)«1-()181.

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE

All types of roo ling :

$6.600. 17401379-9685.

41800 SR #7
Tuppers Plains, QH
All!._
45783

Free

HOME

AM/FM cassette , AJC, off
road J;~ackage, new paint,
$5.500 OBO. Call after

rg.='IE1«

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

Pomeroy. Ohio

TRUCKS
FOR Su..E

A

. AI\;)~

• Oc-ch • Porche!-&gt;
• Ccr.:r.mic Tik &amp;
Hardv. ood Flooring

Truck · Camper. AC, TV
Buick
LeSabre Anterna. wired lor Cable.
Limited, 75 thoUsand miles like new $6 .500 (304)675Leather
Int.,
Loaded. 3353,
Garage Kept.
$5.995

15

:'o'orth

740-667-0700 1-S88-HUPP234

1997

-::--::--::--::--::::----.,-:-Sweet Potato Plants. $3.00

F•o~
-"ftt••

ENERI;Y EFFICIENT

• Siding • Windm~ !.

paid, no pets. reterences cash . Visa/ Master Card.·
requirtd . 5450/.month &amp; Drive- a- little save alot.
$450/dopos~.
17401446·
6566 after 5pln.
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For salt,
automatic
2 Be&lt;lroom Mobile Home re-conditiOned
S3751mon.
Located
in wa&amp;hers &amp; Ar.. ....... •eln·gera·
Ga lllpot 15
'
Ferry.
c all tors. gas ~···and electric
675 34
(30£)
ranges, air conc:litioners, and
• 23
2 br, t2x60 trailer has bath. wringer •wast1ers. Will do

r•o

Residential • Commercial

33795 Hiland Road

..,1 .

lor 25. 740-992-796()

Mobile .~ames • Metal Roofs
Flat 01 Low Sloped Rpof • Carports .
·
Barns • Porches

Calll7401245·5812.

boat or· sell fcir $3,000,
Cabbage for sale at $1 .00 (740)742·3080,
cell-416·
per head. 79 Spruce St. 3080
Gallipolis. Phone {740)6-45-- ;iiir;...--~~-..,.

0501 .

"Tbe Wlll'lll's Bell Roer

1r

Army 5 Ton ·Semi Truck,
multi-fuel, Kiser Jeep Corp.
S6000.00 .. .Army 21 /2 Ton
Partor Pump Organ-manu- Truck , Kiser J&amp;ep Corp.,
factured by Putman Organ Multi Fuel, $4000.0()' · 740Co. Light Oak. $395. 7~ ~9-ll020

FRurrs &amp;

and Financial Services

0218.

1998 Buick LeSabre, 46,000
Miniature Pincher 1 male. actual miles. One owner.
lett .. Black/tan. tail docked, ellcellent cond1tion . Phone
dewclaws
· removed , 1740)446·0941.
wormed . Ready now. $300.
Red Honda Civ~_ with sun(740)388·8124.
:--::-~-::-:-::---­ roof. Good Condition, stanPu re bred. all while blue dard . 133 ·000 miles. Pay ·
eyed Siberian Husky. 740- off·$5800.00. 740-985-3839

i

Rocky Hupp Insurance

1740)245·

7AM-·7PM. 740-742·0528

NEA

..

9124 .

0350.

'

Phillip
Alder

1987 Honey motor home
sleeps 6,8 people. low'
miles. good
condition.

1985 Pontiac T1ans-Am.
34' "03~ Jayco Eagle 1·12'
5spd, 305 H.O.. only 55,000
slide out. Lots of extras. Like
miles , viper blue, Hops.
new condition . (740)339e11cellent shape. (740)446-

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
16x70, 3BR , 2BA, utility- Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
room, CIA &amp; hear. all etee- {74o) 446 • 7444 1•877 _830 •
tric, 1.5 miles from town, 91 62. Free Estimates. Easy
e:.cellent condition . water financing. 90 days same as

•--------,.t

I

The Daily Senlinel • Page B7
BRIDGE

1987 20 ft. Pontoon Boat
with
trailer and 150hp Motor
4-Sale $1.50

Hay'

1992 Honda Civic EX 4 _84 Palamino fold down.
door. fully load&amp;d.
rims. sleeps 6, good c;ondition.
· e&gt;Chaust. cold air intake, tint , $1 ,600.1740)245·5593 .
auto'matic. $2,506 080.
Coleman Camping Trailer
---::--:--::--:-::-:---:--::- .17401446·6304.
12FT. 2 King Beds, $5.500·
4 Sale Small Beagle Hownd
puppies M &amp; F. more info. . 1995 Mazda Mi,ata. 86,000 call for Details (304)675mile s, GOnvertible, $1,500 1731

i

pk:llup-

ro~.TS&amp;l\·
taroRSI
DUA

1952 Plymou th 4dr. for
Restoration ,
no
Rust .
Eng1ne runs. Body Original :
Block, brick, sewer pipes.
no . Dents. 31 ,000/ miles
windows. lintels, etc. Claude
13041576·2532
Winters. Rio Grande. OH

112 balh $475+ deposit.
992 197
lncludn water, sewer &amp; Furniture Sale: Mollohan's iii-4;;;;• "::'......":"--,

traon

l

BUILDING
StiwuEs

r

call-304-n3-5600 ·

Ll\~~
.:.:t1...,...,_,n.

2288

r

(304)67!&gt;4469

r

SWeetwater
2003 22ft.
Pontoon
boat.
40hp.
Johnson motor. power-trim.
Hoos1er trailer w/ ladder.
on\ 19371559-6385
spare tire/bracket. AM/FM
17401446-2412.
SPA f..\.croRY. Otrrtn
stereoi CD. many extras.
Top. Quality, Warranty,
Zero Turn Z· Trak Mowers Asking $10.995. (740)446·
Wholesale, Rnancing,
lrori1 John Deere available at 20 16 or 1740)339·0324 .
Deliveries.
4.9%
fixed
rate
fro
2 locations ,
Carmichael Equipment with Year 2000, Pontoon Boat. 24
Milton Flea Market
John Deere Credit approval. toot. Sweetwater, 50 HP
&amp; Ashland Kentud&lt;y
( 7 4 0 ) 4 4 .6 - 2 4 1 2 Mercury, Powe r Trim, 4
_j_60§1922·7185
Stroke Engine. Big Foot
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. ..............- .. . . . .
Outdrive, Loun·ge Seats.
11~\\ ... 1'411~ 1 \Ill I\
WoiH Tarmlng Beds
Room ,
Depth
Privacy
Huge selectiOn. '·
Finder, Hour Meter. Good
Immediate Delivery.
Radio, Has only 50 hours on
Financing
Boat. Garcige kept m wrnler.
1·600·894·6997
like New Paid over S 18.000
(740)446·6579.
· 1948
Chevrolet.
Five Will sale for
S13,000
•
Passenger Coupe.
wv (304)773·5944
.
Yeate_s apphance dolly, .alu- Sticker, New Tires. Good
(304)576minum . . H.D.. $80 firm . , Paint ~sharp"
CAlliPERS &amp;

negotiable to . encou rage
Pomeroy
101
Pleasant new
business.
Call
Ridge . 3 Qedrooms , gas 1740)446-44~5 o• 17401446- 667·3493
heat
Available July t . 3936.
Schnauzer puppies {miniaS450.000eposit.. $400.00
ture). AKC. 4 colors. -vel
per month. 740-698-6783
WANIED
checked,
$400
each;
roRENT
Pomeranian puppies, AKC .
Two Bedroom House; F'oint
2 female. light brown. $400
Pleasant, large Basemen.t, Looking for hOuse to rent each: (740)696-1085
$425 a month with 5250 IQcally. Mason or meigs co.
Oepos~

Round Baler Q~ly :$13,250
94 Harley Davidson Ultra
cash . Makes 4X5 Bale .
Classic. 10.000 miles. blue.
Ca1michael
Equipment. e&gt;Ccellent condition . $13.500,
~(7_4_01:._4_46_·_2_4_
1 2_ _ __
(7 40)94~·221 7
Special ' Purchase- ,' John
Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 Whe""l G?ldwing, 1988, GL-1500,
~ 81,000 miles. 500 miles on
Rakes/ John Deere Disk
''
Mowers. Call for price tires, e&gt;Ccellent condition ,
Carmicha91
Equipment. ready to fide. $7,000.
{
)
_
_
(740)44t-5447 or (740)4,46740 446 2412
·~.:.;.;.;;.;~;...-_ _
9902.
.

www.mydailysentinel.com '

Scorpion Tractors
"Taking Tht Sting Out Of
Hard Work !"
Mid-Size -I Wheel Drive Tractor

IF ONL.Y t COUL.D'
1'URN BACK THE
HAND'S OF 1'1ME ...

0

AND 1'AKE AL.t. ·
THOSE. NAPS
Al-L. OVER

AGrAIN .

0

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)- Your
ability to absorb 1nformat10n or knowl edge could be rather ramarkable
today. but what is even more gratify·
ing' is that what you' ll learn no~ could
be something of exceptional value to
you .
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc::h 20) -

stance.

GRIZZWELLS

~·\ em ME ~. l!lllc;&gt;C'Y.:
! LIKE ~\~ED
-~1"":"-¥,

The

re!'!.ulls tor which you 're hOp1ng shou ld
work out in accordance wilh your
highest expectations today and brrng
much happiness to those wno are
standing by your side
ARIES (~arch 2t-April 19) Sunshine should now start to filter in
and flood a situation thai previously
has been a bit drab. Pat yourseH on
the back because the brig.htemng will
be due to your efforts, not happen-

0~, YO(;)

K)JOW-A ~I FE.

WITI-!OUT 00 IWJY WOJZIIIt'O.

rr ;e.uo.:, ·
"so OIOI/IOLI5

L.OOKIUC. l?ACK,
DOE.?I.JT ITt

.

TAURUS iAprll 2Q-May 20 ) - Your
material prospects lopk more encour·
aging than usual today, OSPGC;Ially i~
situation• Where you offer some •type
of sarvtc. to othenll . Compensation
will b8 proporUonate to your efforts.

SOUP TO NUTZ

~~A5

,Y.~ A"J

lllE

NElCf 6iU'f

with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
.
.

St. Rt: 124 Chester 985·3301

••

,

•

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�.,

.'
.,

.

J .
.

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Page B8 • The

Daily 5entinel

..

Maitufacfured Homes ···
edition inside
today's Sentinel

..

Thursd~~June16,2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

.

Workers' comp,
won't rebate employer
premiums, AS . -

.

.

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L

GALL!PdLIS - . · Back by .
· ·
popular demand is the third
annual Summer Salon Series,
·hosted by the French Art
Colony (FA C) and the Ariel
Theatre.
The sefies will, be · held
once a month · during · the
summer months of June, July
and August. The series, held
at the FAC', offers a chance.
to enjoy both the visual and
performing ' arts, as well as
gustatorial delights.
The series kicks. off this
Friday at 6:30 p.m.
·
This very casual evening
provides a relaxed · atmosphere where people can mingle, view the. exhibit, listen
to great music and enjoy
hors d' oeuvres and drinks.
Featured
·artists
for
Friday's series are the
Phoenix
Quartet . (Jay
Sheridan and Scott, Barb and
Alena Mic.hal) playing the
Submitted photo
ever-popular "Eiile Kleine
Nachtmusik': by Mozart • . Jay Sheridan. violin, and Scott ·Michal, cello, of .the PhOenix Quartet will be performing at
Lora Snow and Bill Baker Friday's Summer Salon at the French Art ·Colony at 6;30 p.m.

Barbershop
hannony to
.fiill An·el
Sa.turday
•ght
m
GALLIPOLIS
The
TrebleMakers · of the Frenc~
City Chapter, a member oi'
the · Barbershop Harmony
. Society Organization (formerly SPEBSQSA) invites
you to the world of .barbershop harmony on Saturday,
Ju'f1e 18 at the Ariel Theatre.
The 12th annual s how, set
for 1:30 p.m., offers new
entertainment and experi"
ences for the audience.
Tickets are $10 per person.
There . will be a second mini-

~how at the Holiday Inn,
where food . and beverages
will be available for $10 a
tickei.
.
Local. guest harmonizers
· . apl'{aring on the ·Ariel stage
will excite you with their talents. The bmnd new Sweet
Adeline Int. Chapter-French
Colony Chorus will · appear.
Making their debut is the
Richardson Family, made up
of ftve girls and their mother
singing in barbershop style.
The new . French City
Chapter quartet, Back Porch
Four, will . brighten yqur.
evening with traditional barbershop arrangements.
. Round.in.g . out the local
color
will
be
the
·
TrebleMakers
Cho~us,
"Under Construction" and
"Double Treble" (who may
involve · you in singing "Let
Me Call You ·Sweetheart.")
Special guest quartet is
Good 2 Go·. They offer an
exciting blend of four voices
and are true musicians ·at
heart. Jn fact, the lead singer
has perfect pitch so that the
quartet does not need a pitch
pipe.
Combined, the group has
over a quarter of a century
of experience harmonizing in
barbershop style: Be a part
in welcoming these gentlemen of harmony to the area
.and to the Ariel for an ideal
evemng of family entertainment.

Vi~aldi

performing
the
. "Doubl.~ Oboe Concerto" as
well as several oboe and
English horn solos. Adding
to · the potpourri evening will
be Kathy Grant and .Andy
Walker. playing Appalachian
liddling tunes.
During the June series, the
FAC will be featuring · the
artwork of Dave Snyder of
Rio yrande. Snyder ·offers a
very ~tverse. style ot art an~
hts dtspla~ ts one you don t
want to mtss.
Mark your . calend.ars for
the J uIY 22 an d A ug. 19
Summer Salons, both held at
6:30 p.m. at the FA C.
Tickets for the individual
senes are $10 each or the
entire 'series can be pur· chased for $25. Those wishing to purchase · tickets can
call the FAC at 446-3834.
Tickets will also be available
at the door.
For information. call the
FAC at 446-3834 or the
Ariel at 446-ARTS (27~7). ·

(ELTIC .FESTIVAL SATURDAY AT RIO
Rio GRANDE_· An internationally-known
Welsh
musician will perforni at the
annual Celtic Festival this
Saturday at the University of ·
Rio Grande/Rio Grande ,
Community College.
Sponsored by the Madog
Center for Welsh Studies at
Rio ·Grande, the Tri- Valley
Celtic Society and the Ohio
Arts Council, the . Celtic
Festival begins at 10 .a.m.
Saturday. The festival will
feature music, food, special
workshops and fun activities
for people . of all ages and
bac)&lt;giounds.
·
. The activities a\ the Celtic
Festival will include ·the
Parade of Tartans, the always.
entertaining bonniest knees
contest, the Welsh sheepdog
demonstration, · storytelling
and
·children's
games.
Vendors will offer food,
drinks. and a variety of Celtic
items.
Among the workshops that
will be offered at ~he Celtic
Festival will be sessions that
focus on topics such as
genealogy, the Irishlanguage,
speaking Welsh, the history
of the Celts, .and Scotiish
dancing.
One other ~ighlight of the
Celtic Festival will be the
Scottish Ceilidh, to be held 6 . ject over the last decade and
to 10 p.m. in the Student he has performed to appreciaCenter Annex. This event will tive audiences around Britain.
feature Ce ltic music and
Earlier this year, Morus
dancing, as . well as a Celtic released his first solo album,
pub and free food.
"Traffig," which has consisThroughout the day, musi- tently been in the Top 10 for
·
·n ~
·d
Welsh music over the last
ctans ·wt per orm on m oor
and Outdoor Stages O n the Rio several weeks. His songs are
Grande campus. One espe- played on the mdio throughcially noteworthy . musictan out Wales, and he has been
this year · is Gwilym Morus, described as "the next big
who· will perform in the after- thing in Welsh music."
noon.
On his solo album, Moros
Morns has been involved in blends ethnic rhythms and
. numerous music and arts pro- folk instrumentations to ere-

Gwllym Morlis
ate his unique brand of music.
He u.ses traditional music.and
style and has become avery
popular Welsh musician.
Dr. Timothy .Jilg, · director
of the Madog Center for
Welsh Studies at Rio Grande,
said he is proud to have
Morus performing at the
Celtic Festival, and is anxious
to see the crowd reaction to
the musician.
Jilg stressed that all of the
musicians at the Celtic
Festival do an excellent job,
and that he is very happy to

.

'

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g
't'n Pt'n
·es set
·

.

we..·eke·fl.d.
.

,CQf
11

·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.10 Cl.:vrs • \ 'oL .1-t . "" · :!cH)

BY NICOLE fiELDS
NAELDS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

.

' SPORTS-

NEW HAVEN _Whether
it's raining or the sun is shining and two•people or a crowd
of
gather, there will be a
weekend of outdoor gospel
music to satisfy just about
anyone.
. . .
The 23rd annual Smgmg m
the Pines event is scheduled
to be'gin at 6 p.m. friday, June
17 at Union Campground in
New Haven. Singing will continue Saturday, June 18,
beginning at 1 p.m.
·
·"You can share in a time of
worship, furi, fellowsh.ip and
enjoying the · good gospel
· music as we sing, pray and
rejoice together,"· Kenneth
Bledsoe, chairmah of the
event, said. "There is an
atmosphere here that is rare in
an outdoor gospel sing."
Bledsoe added that there
usually are more than 70
groups representing all types
of gospel music. Singers from
as far as Alabama wil.l be featured during the two-day ·
event Singers and groups also
are coming from IJJinois,
Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio,
Pennsylvania · and West
Virginia.
Bledsoe's wife, · Evelyn,
said she and her husband have
been involved with the event
since it first began in 1983.
She said planning for the
annual event begins early .
when they send letters to
groups that could potentially
sing at the pines, and then she
and other event organizers
pray and ask God to send the
groups He wants to sing that
year. .
·
~ ·
Evelyn added that details of
the event typically travel fast;
and singers who are invited
oftelfAell someone who tells
someone else who passes the
· information along to someone
_
,•
else.
"That's why we sing until
two ... three o'clock in the
morning," · she sai.d with :!1
laugh. "We sing until the very,
last group goes on ·and ~
crowd's all gone."
.;;;
Evelyn add.ed that the ev~
will conclude Saturday niglft
with a performance from tl1l1
Pine Knots, which is a group
of local volunteers and eveql
organizers that entertain at the
end of .the event.
·
For .more infon'nation, call ·
895-~845. .

BY BRIAN J. REED
aREED@MYDAI LYSENTIN EL.'COM

POMERO'(
Meigs
County
Commissioners
approved a· community plan
for homelessness prevention
at· their regular meeting on
Thursday. The plan . is.'' a
. requirement for funds a threecounty committee hopes to
receive for a new emergency
· nien's shelter in the Veterans

'

. .

.

.

Memorial Hospital building.
Fair Housing Administrator
Jean Trussell presented the.
G a II ia- J a c .k son -11:1 e i g s
Continuum
of
Care
Community Plan for commissioners' ·approval. The plan
was written by a committee
representing 16 public agencies, . including .· woodland
Centers , Meigs
County
Council on Aging, Serenity
House, elected officials and

Departments of Jobs and
· Famiiy Services.
While the Gallia-Jack'sonMeigs Cont inuum Cif Care is
designed to addre~s a lack of
suitable housing for the poor
. in the three counties, it has .
identified the development of
an emergency shelter for single m.en, transitional housing
and supportive services for
transportation . and mental
and emotional disabilities

and the creation of adaitional wh ich closed in 2004 ..
housi~g units as primary
The committee also hopes.
short-lerm goals. ·
· in · t~ree to five years, to ·
Trussell, who serves on the secure funding for the conContinuum
· of
Care structiQn of additional oneCommittee. said the commit- bedroom housing units, and to
tee will apply for grant funds · . address obstacles faced by the
through the Ohio Department poor and homeless populaof Development to create a tion, including job training
six-bed emergency shelter in .
.
~
and
transportation
tssues.
the extended care wing of the
·
According to th.e commumhospital building, to replace
the Meigs Men's Shelter
Please see Shelter, AS

Officials
Maintaining ~dependence· with a driver's license
• •
Press IDissing .
boater search POMEROY
•

.

.

.

•

BY BETH SERGENT
. · BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Independence, like age, is a
state. of mind. A big part of a
person's identity is often tl!eir
GALLIPOLIS - · Search independence and for some
and rescue teams from senior citizens their indepenaround the· region contitiued dence is dependent on mainlooking this ·morning for a taining a driver's license.
Robert Hill of Syracuse is
boater
m.issing
since
76-years
old and has been
Wednesday night.
Thomas
Angel,
32, · driving since he was 14
Gallipolis, was the only- one while his wife Etta Mae has
of the six people traveling in · b.eeri driving since she · was
a 20-foot boat who failed to 13. The couple has been mar- .
make it back to shore. after it ried 58 years.
· "When you grow up on a
started taking qn water. ·
Gallia
County
9-l-l farm you know how· to
received the initial call about drive," Mrs. Hilf said.··
Mrs. Hill went through a
incident .at 9:54 p.m., said
Steve Wilson, 9-1-1 directoL period of about a year where.
· The unidentified caller said she C()Uidn't drive following
·
that the boat was about )lalf- a ·stroke.
way across the Ohio River, , "That was terrible," she
meaning it was in . West sail!; "was I glad when I
Virginia's
jurisdiction. . could go on my own to get
Dispatchers alerted Mason my hair fixed again."
Mrs. Hill is now driving
County and Gallia County
Beth Sergont(photo
again after being chauffeured . Senior drivers Etta Mae Hill, William Oliphant .and .Rot&gt;ert Hill pile intb the ·Hill's Ford' Taurus. All
authorities, Wilson said.
The search area Thursday around by her husband who has three maintain their drivers license which allows them independence and the freedom to go where
was centered along the river not altered his driving habits as they want to go when they want to go. In Ohio seniors are treated like-anyone else and renew their
behind . McDonald's . on
drivers license every four years, though a mandatory vision test is required for everyone.
Please see License, AS
Eastern · Avenue. The com. mand center was set lip along
the parkfront at the Gallipolis
·
City Park.
Angel's family and friends,
including those who were on
with drugs. He allegedly
BY BR.IAN J. REED ..
the boat with him, waited for
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
engaged in sexual conduct with
news about the se~rch all day
his niece, who was 12 years old
Thursday at the parkfront.
POMEROY -The jury .in at the time of the alleged
One of his friends desc.ribed
the trial of a Rutland man on offenses in 2002. The state's
how an evening of pleasure
multiple charges of mpe had · evidence centered around stateboating turned into a disaster. ·
not reached a verdict as of ments from the alleged victim
."A bearing went out in the
Thursday .e:vening .
and her family. who accused
motor and it tore a hole in a
Ray Ward, 33, is charged Ward of smoking marijuana
boot and the boat started takwith 10 counts of rape and ·a
.ing on water," said Ryan
count ·of corrupting another
Please see ~ury, AS ·
Glover. another passenger on
.
.
the boat. "We jumped out. A
couple· of us tried to pull the
boat and (the other passengers) kept rowing to try to
Challene Hoeflich/~•
· make it to shore.'\
. They did not realize at frrst The Enterprise United Methodist ChurGh building, constru&lt;;ted
· how serious the leakage was, in 187 4, shows little exterior damage. but inside there is
Glover said. When the boat extensive damage to both the structure . and the furnishings.
started·sinking faster, the four What caused the upper part of the structure to collapse has
passengers who remained yet to be determined.
inside jumped out and swam
for the Ohio shore, he said.
."There were a couple of
fishermen on the shore with
lights,'' he said, "The told us
to swim to them, and they
called 9- r-L"
Bv .CHARLENE HOEFliCH
of the hazardous potential for
At first, it appeared that HOEFLICH@MYDA!tYSENTINEL.COM further structural failure.
everybody had made it .
While the· church from the
ashore, Glover satd. They
POMEROY - The United outside show&amp; little damage,
soon realized, however, that Methodist Church which has Don Hunnel, administrative
'Angel was missing.
operated as 'a hOuse of worship board chairman,' said there is
"I ·went walking up the . in ·the Enterprise community extensive damage inside ·not
river," Glover ·said. "I for more than 130 years is onJy to the actual structure,
,
Beth Serpnt(plloto
thought maybe he clune m · closed becauSe. of .some exten- but to the furnishings, includ- Since the announcement that O'Bieness Hospital Will be opening
someplace else."
sive damage, the cause of ing the organ and pews.
up it's Meigs Medical Clitjic in the oli:l Veter&lt;;~ns Memorial Rural
Teams · from the Point which has yet to be determined.
One of the o;:hurch members Health Clinic; workers have been busy remodeling the facility.
Pleasant and Gallipolis volun- .
Red and yellow caution tape said the ceiling Ulfters at the top ,Jerry Powell of Larry Sanks Construction in Pomeroy is pictured·
painting trim in the buuding that is scheduled to open in July.
· w.rapping the structure warn~
,..... -. . Boater, A5
Please - Church, A5
BY PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS .
. • Margaret A. (Lawson)

Boyce, sa

INSIDE
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
o Beegle addresses
retired teachers at
luncheon. See Page AS
• Senior Center offers
exercise to alleviate
arthritis. See Page AS
• Riverview Garden pub
has patriotic program.
See.Page AS
o Meigs County Court
News. see Page A8

WEAmER

have all of them performing
here.
The Celtic Festival is
wheelchair accessible, and
the events are open to people
of all ages. There is a fee to
enter· the festival, but it is
nominal and the· day is worth
much more than the price of
admission.
For more information on
the festival, call Jilg at (800)
. 282.7201 orlog onto the Rio
Grande · Web
site ' at
MIDDLEPORT Tlie
www.rio.edu. and click on the
Community
Middleport
Welsh flag.
Associ&lt;ttion will again this
year sponsor "Pops in the
Park," a program geared to
bringing together adults and
· Local bands performing · donations will also be accept- another Rpgerstock began. children with their dads for a
include Country Roads and ed.
The event · was renamed free breakfast frorn 8 to II
Joey Wilcoxon. There will' , When asked why organizer Riostock and Mrs. Neal chose a.m. Saturday in Dave Diles
.
also be a hog roast, soup Abby Neal decided to make the American Cancer Society ' Park.
beans, $1 drafts and various this an annual event she said, because·of the number of peaThis is the third year for the
other activities. Admission is "Because. Rio Grande is an pie she personally knows who program. The emphasis is on
$10 per ·person.
awesome place to live. We are affected by the disease.
·~having fun with Dad along
A luminary lighting will love our people."
·
The only requirements . to .the river," said Tom Dooley,
take place at 10:30 p.m.
R.ogerstock began as a way attend R10stock are a valid association president. ·
·
Luminary bags can be pur- for friends to help out a local state ID, the cost of admission,
The menu will include bischased for $1 in memory or in family with medical. ~xpenses. extra money for. drinks and cuits and gravy, pancakes and
honor of loved ones affected It w.as a huge success. bring- games~ an? a desire to have a sausage, and coffee and .
by cancer. Locks of Love. mg tn over $3,000 and talk of great ttme.
·
orange juice.

Pops In ;
the.Park .

Jury still out in rape trial

Remodeling for O'Bleness

Detail• on Pap AS .

INDEX

Second 'Riostock' set for this Saturday .
RIO GRANDE- Sll!urday,
June I8 kicks off the second
annual charity concert in Rio
Grande, formerly known as
"RcigerStock:"
Renamed
"RioStock:
Rockin' the Cure," all proceeds from this year's event
.will be donated to the
American Cancer ~ociety.
Hosted by Jimanetti's Pizza of
Rio . Grande. RioStock will
run trom 5 p.m. to midnight.

.

Three-county plan first step in seeking homeless shelter funds

• NBA Finals continue.
SeePage 81

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""" · "'~"·•il ) "'"'""· l· ·""'

FKIIl ' ' , ,Jl ':\JJ ·: t-. :!oo.:;

2 SECilONS- 16 PAGES

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A6

B4-6
B7

A3
A4
A2-3

As
B3

As
B section

AS

Cause of church damage
remains undetermined

•I

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•

CQnvrbnt I cqtiona; :
1/4.Mile NOrtJt.:
PomeroyJI'ason Br:ldge :
Maeon, WY 25260 ;
Phone (304).773-5323 ;

Twp

2400 EMtem Ave.
(Acrou from K...rt)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45131
(740) 446-1711

•

••

OH 11 Baclnanl"
•

www.bolzer.org

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