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Page B6 '• The Daily Sentinel

.. 1\Jonday, Jwy 4, 2005

ww"W.mydailysentinel.com

-Federer beats Roddick for third Wimbledon title.
'

"

'

Lleyton He win, including :rerve and forehand were goOd
"Today it seemed liked ' I
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Friday's seinit1nals.
enough to win the U.S. Open
was
playing
tlawless.
Federer
is
at
a
level
where
and reach No. l in 2003, and
Everything was working."
!lis competition lies not with he's added ple.nty to his ga~e ·
He finished with 49 winners
WIMBLEDON , England and 12 unforced errors, an
the Roddicks and Hewins, but smce ,then. unprovmg hts
- Roger Federer felt tense unlieard-of ratio. He out-aced
the greats of the past. The , backhand. ret~rns and volleybefore facing A·ndy Roddick Roddick II -7. He broke
Swiss star joined Bjorn Borg mg.
in the Wimbledon final and Roddi.:k four times.
:
( 1976c80), Pete Sampras
"It's tough knowing that
j ittel)' duririg it. his right arm
Rnddk k charged the ·. net
(1993-95, 1997-00) and Fred you're a better, player tha~
shakmg, his heartbeat rising.
Perry ( 1934-36) &lt;is the ooly you were two years ago, .
early. coming~ in 'behind se\0.·, Or so Federer says. .
meti in the •last 90 years to tri- Roddick said, "but not havu)g
.
h
k
h'
.
ond
serves,
chipping
and
We 11 ave to ta e ts wore1
·
umph at Wimbledon three a lot to show for it."
for it because there ·wasn ' t a churging,
usmg
dee.p
. 'To his credit , he never
approach shots. But it didn't
years in a row.
packed
it in, and with help )
hint of anything but \:ool cone take long for the No, 1,ranked .
Federer's grass-court win- :
fiden\:e from Federer while Federer to ca li brate his passfrom
a
backhand down the
ning streak is 36 matches. secline, Roddick broke for a 2-l
crafting a 6-2. 7-6 (2), 6-4 in g shot"' and he finished with
ond only to Borg's 41.
victory over Roddick 011 16 .
.
lead in the second set, then
"He's really quite a genius ," punched the air three tim'es.
Sunday to beco me just the
·
·
d
third man since 1936 to win
"I'm not gmng to stt aroun
said Federer's coach , Torty
Won ' t · see that' from
three cons•cuti've title~ at the and su lk and cry. 1 did everyRoche, "especially on grass." Federer. There's no way to tell
'
thine I ..could." the secondFederer is a little more than from his body language
All England Club.
sec&amp;d Roddick said. "I tried ·
a month shy of his 24th birth- whc(her he won or lost a
In a rematch · of the' 2004 goi ng 10 -his forehand anti
•
.
day, just like . Sampras was point. He walks .along the
Wimbledon final, Federer coming in. He passed me. 1
when he won the fifth of his baseline, perhaps nicking a
used a· full assortment of ere• tried going to hi s backhand
'AP photo
bead of sweat from his brow
alive strokes to paint his late st and &lt;.:oming in . He passed me. Roger Federer of Switzerland, kisses the winners' trophy after rec.ord 14 major titles.
Then there's thi's remark- or tucking strands of hair into
tennis rliasterp_iece on the Trieu staying back. He fi g- defeating Andy Roddick 6-2. 7·6 (2), 6·4 Jn the Mens' Singles
able statistic: Federer has won his white bandanna.
sport's most prestigious &lt;.:an- ured out' a way to pass tnc, Final' on, Centre Court at Wimbledon .Sunday.
21 straight final s: the previous
Inside,
though, he's churnvas and claim his fifth title in even though 1was at the basG- .
•.
I•
12,
shared
by
record
was
the last nine Grand Slams.
' line,"
Three-time
Wimbledon just talking him up when I say
mg .
.
.
''It's hard for him because I
Federer' s
perftmnance. ·champion Boris Becker said : he's the greatest talenr of all McEnroe and Borg ..
· "I knew the imfJS{Iance of
Poor Roddick. On grass the this one, so l was pretty tense
re;illy played a fantastic filled with "Hnw'd he do "We are watching greatness time, but l believe that." .
match - one of the best of that''" moments . left everyone unfold."
·
Playing the best brings out past three seasons, he's 32-0 going into it," Federer said.
my life." said Federer. the gushing. Even Federer made , John M~Enroe breathlessly Federer's best. He 's 9-1 e.gainst everyone else arid 0-3 "Then when l started to serve
for the match ... l really got
tirst man in 50 years to win, reference to how he 's "dom1- told NBC ,s vtewers: "People against Roddick and has won against Federer.
his first five major finals .
nating the game...
think I' m kidding or that I'm eight straight matches against
Roddick's record-setting nervous."
BY HOWARD FENDRtCH

BALTIMORE (AP) ,_
right - hander
The Cleveland Indian s
Kazuhito
placed right-handed reliever
Tad ano from
Tri" ple-A
· Ra fac I . Betancourt on the
15-day disabled list Sunday
Buffalo.
Tadai10 was 3with right shoulder inflammation .
3 with .a 4.13
A and one save in 20
·. The· thove ..
m·
games.
in • five starts,
retroa&lt;.:tive to
r~ day .
et·
rt i · --2 with a with the Bisons.
2.21 ERA in 29 relief · He· has not pitched with
appearances. He ha s not Clevelaml this season.
allowed a run in hi s last Tadano was 1-1 with a 4.65
mne mnmgs.
ERA. in 14 games with the
The Indian s also recall ed Indians in 2004.
~

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.&gt;o

crvrs • \ ul. :&gt;-l- No.

• Reds hold on to beat
Giants.
·s. PageB1

)

from Page ~I ·
patr of Post 128 errors
, knocked Feeney Bennen
starter Ken Amsbary from
the contest.
Brandon Fackler came in
with two·6uts in the sixth to
record the final out.
Mike Davi s started · one
last try at a rall y with a oneout double in the seventh.
Davi ~ Htter ~came awund to
score following a two-out
single hy Mooney 1.0 break
the . scor'ing drought an~ .
push the score to 4-1 .
·
Chadwell . ·went seven
innings. striking out eight
and walking two ·to pick up
the
,~ ictory .
Chadwell
allowed six hits arid an
e,arned run.
'Amsbary was saddled
'·with the loss afler to"i ng 5
2/3 innings. allowing four
earned runs imd ·seven hits'.
F&lt;Jckler fanned the
only bat, .

Ill g.

Mooney and Bluchton
led the way fur .Feeney "Bennett with a two hits
apiece. while Davis. a nd
Au,tin Kinj pr~JViqcd the
other flit s.
Springer and Barnhart
paced AtheQS with a pair of
safetie' each. with Greg
'po, ton. Phillip Hewitt and
Chris Pitts each adding a hit.
Feeney Bennett's record
. now f~lls to 14- 13 .overall
on the season. while' At hen;
improves to 12-14.
· Post 128 srill stands 7-~ in
District R·league action.
Feeney Bennett returns to
the · Athens
, diamond
Wednesday in a·rematch thaf
will ·count toward District 8
play. Game time at Thp
PI aim h scheduled fqr 7 ·
p.m. .

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM·

" Fight over Bork's 1987
nomination on senators
li'tinds.
S. Page A2"
• Tradition renewed .at
Mason's celebration of
Fourth.
S. Page A3
• Developers look to add
homes to Ohio's only
national park.
S. Page A5

Athe ns 4, Feene:y Bennett 1
F Bennett 000 000 I - 1 6 2:
Athens
101 002 x - 4 7 2
K~n Amsbary. 'Brandon Faolller (6) and ,
Terry Durs1 Tyler Chadwelt and Chris
Carp,nelll WP
C.hadwell LP AmsMry

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

83·4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

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

Obituaries

As

.

1

"Your Hometown Newspaper "

I ·Drt1p .thi:-- ~o.' (lupOn Clff in our office at I!-1 Coun. St.. _Pomeroy. Ohio with your p~ymenl _and receive- 01 FREE cpmic Ul~hrcllu.

t

I D I ha\ c ~~~~ hcxn a ~uh~ocrihc-r in th~o.· pa:-.1.10 d: y:-.. Enclo.)lcd i!'.my paym~~l of S59.1) for 0 month .. ~lf th~· D~,i/:· St•m;ne/.
I
;
·
' ·
·
.·
I D .I current!) ~uh:..critx· H.). lhL' Dailr Se!llim.'/. En~loscd is my payrncn~ "or sI I 5.R-t ror ·~ 1-ycar \Ub..niption .

Sports
Weather

B Section

The Middleport popl was
the place to be for the
you~g and young at hear.t .
on Monday. An estimated
400 people were admitted
to the historic pool for the
village's first Independence
Day pool party. A commit·
tee worked with pool man·
~ement to organize the
day-long lamily celebration,
which included swimming
and diving contests, games
for an ages, live entertainment and a sock hop. Cody.
Smith of Middleport, pic·
tcired right, was one of the
most successful hula hoop
competitors at the party.
Donated prizes including
gift certificates from tocal
restaurants. bicycles and
cash were awarded
throughout the day. The
Middleport Community
Association, vinage government, local businesses.
and volunteers an came
together to make the event
a success. Organizers
hope the pool party might
become an additional
attraction for the vinage's
July 4 celebration. w)lich
was canceled this year,

ExpiJation Date
Expiration ~ate

Card # _________
Card #

---------------------------·'

·

·

Fun, frogs and the Fourth in

© aoos Ohio Valle): Publishing Co.

I
I

.J
'I

'

.

Rac~ne

BY BETH SERGENT
thought '" me people might
BSERGENT@MYDAILYS ENTINEL.COM stav: at home bccau ~c of the
hc ;it whid1 reached wel l.into
RACINE - If \·mt wanted the 9fh. but 'he )ra' glad she

lemnnatle lH· ~. : hil..~k.cn bai·hc - wa:-. wron E! .
at
vc:-.ten.L.n ··:-. , :-Jumber'

don't
lie.
Independence Ceiebrat ion· in RACO's booth had ,old 186

CliC

Ra c in~ 'm1

h;tJ to )..!Ct there ~la~-..c:-. l'f lemonade in one
earl1 w'heal 1hc cn~11d' and and &lt;1ne-ha lf hnur' and f()()

the heat.
tacn,· in -a-hag fn•m ' p.m . to
Kathrvn Hart of the Racine 6 p.n) . The ~m,ney from the

1

-------------------------------------------------.--------------1

Visa'
MasterCar,d

This young man got cooled off and he lped send Racine resident Darien Dtddle to the Jr. Olym ptcs in New Orleans by paying to go down t~1e sl1p and slide at Star Mill Park.

A6

I·
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Phone -------------------------:--:-------------------------------------

For those contestants who did not bring their own. frogs were
available to rent at RAco·s frog jump. These children gather
around the frog tank to pick a winner.

(lilian J. Reeclf photoo)

--~---------------------~------~~· 1

0
0

.

Area ·
Cl'lllllluni t'
Org.anitatitl.ll ..,a iJ that ,hC

.

. Wood's
hope
that ·
Pom eroy cu;tomers will follow th e hranch to Mason or
New . Ha ven may happen.
Just a' Harper 'was considering closing hi s checking
account.
a new
customer
.
.
came m to open one.
Corporate re pres'entatives
fro m Ci ty Natio·nal Bank
we re contac ted for an official
etHHment on the Pomeroy
bran ch closmg but were out
of the office and could not be
reached· by press time .

The trick to getting your frog to move without touching him is
blowing o~ hi s back or poundi ng the ground as Jordan
Huddelston demonstrates with her frog. Mr. Bob. during
RACO's ·12th Annual Frog Ju~1p .

NamL'-.-------------------------------------~-,--~----------------------~
.Adtlrc..,..,

.

INSIDE

A3

1

' bran&lt;.:h. N1&gt;11e 1&gt;l the hr~1n ch's
employees .lm t ·th eir job
· \Vood wi ll l!ll tn V1 a~nn as··
will fellow ct~'tomcr ' scrvi&lt;.:e
mpre,c nta t ive
Marlene
Radfoi·d. While loan ollic&lt;.T
Jeff Martin will he transferred to the !';c\1' Ha\'cn.
W.Va. branch as '''"
Pomerov Branch Mana ~er
Lana Sniith in Ma y.
"It's sad ... \W•od 'a id.
''We're a small branch and
we know almost a.ll our &lt;.:u st\&gt;mers by their first name."

Beth Sergent;photos

Dear Abby

· · :

.

Page A5
• Roy Dowell
• James R. Cunningham
. • Richard F Fick

If you arc a c u~ent ~uh~cril'ocr. you can rcc~lve a free umbrella by ~1ilcnding your sUh~cription fnr I yt.·ar tt}r only $ 11 5.8-'.
(*Pa) m.:m mu~t ht' rnadl' in ptr!\on at th~ Daily_Sentinel. Ill Court St. Pomeroy. Ohi9 in order io rcl:ci\'c y(_mr Fi-l'c comic umbrella.
Quantities arc limited.

The Daily Sentinel

'

Harper said he liked Ci ty
National ·Bank and it 's
employees but di&lt;.l not want
to deal Wi th the bridge traffic
in order to get to th e Mason.
W.Va. bran&lt;.: h.
"We ho pe you don't. .. Ci ty
National Bank Custome r
Service
Repre sentative
Frances Wood told Harper.
'·We hope all our customers
follow us to Mason. "
·
Wood is one of three
e mploy~es th'at wili be trans·
ferred fn&gt;n) ti_Je Pomeroy

OBITUARIES

2 SELTJONS -

·

been at 236 E.. Mainc,Street
since 1998. More recent! v
the branch was clmed f(ir
se veral inonths after la st
September's floodin g and
reo1J'ened in January.
Customer Thotnas Harper
of Pomeroy who was visi tin g
the branch· last week said
that he just recel ved 400
che&lt;.:k s for ·hi s checking
a&lt;.:count 'at the hailk 'h11t may
.1wltch to a competi tor in
Pomeroy when those checks
are gone .

(

INDEX

:

""" ·"""·.;""'"'"''"' '"'"

}uly4 poolside

Details on Pac. A6

We'll deliver all the local happenings right to your home. Stop by our office
.and' subscribe to the Daily Sentinel for 6 months for only $59.15 and receive
a FREE comic umbrella*!

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. POMEROY Anotherempty storefront will soon
be part of downtown
Pomeroy when City. National
Bank closes. it 's · Pomeroy
branch office on July 29.
AccoUiits currently held at
the Pomeroy branch will be
consolidated into the bank 's
Mason, W.Va. office.
The Pomeroy branch has .

Bryan Walters/photo

Athens

Tt 'FSI&gt;,n

:!:!t

City National Bank to. close in· Potneroy

SPORTS .

WEATHER

Feeney Bennett starter Ken· Amsbary delivers a pitch during
the first inning of Sunday's 4·1 loss to Athens Post 21.
Amsbary allowed seven hits, two walks alid fanned two in the
setback.
· ter he fac·ed in hi' relief out·

doing more to
attract minorities, A6

\

Indians put ~etancourt Furyk.holds offWoods, finally gets a·victory
on DL; recall Tadano
go.

LEMONT, Ill (AP) - No way Jim Furyk was three strokes ahead of Padraig ·it looked as if it might go in, Woods liftFuryk was lettmg go of thts victory. Not . 'HUrrington at the Barclays Classic with ed his putter in the mr and started backing
thiS time. Not even to Tiger Woods.
five holes to
but he made back-to- away.
'
After linishmg second th~ee times this back bogeys on 16 and 17. .
.
When the ball dropped, he threw both
year. . including a devastatmg l?ss last
Hamngton then holed a btg-breakmg arms in the air, screamed and pumped hts
weekend, Furyk answered Woods charge 65-toot putt on 18 for an eagle ~nd a one- tist twice. He was grinning as he fished
with three straight birdies and hung on to stroke wtn.
the·ball out of the cup, and he and caddie
win the Western Open on Sunday. It was
"Jimmy's one of the toughest guys out Steve Williams exchanged a high-live.
his IOth PGA Tour victory, but the lirst there,'' . Woods said. "Last week was an That put him at 13 under, and gave him a
since the 2003 Buick Open.
aberration."
share of·the lead with Furyk.
·
After tapping in for a par, Furyk took
And Furyk wasn't about to be in that
"It's ahvays fun to get out there ancl
off his cap and shook hands with third position again this weekend.
mix it up and feeling the adrenaline rush
round co-leader Ben Curtis. Furyk then
"It's nice to come in, after last week and trying to win the tournament,"
turned and pumped his lists to the ·cheer- especially with 'the disappointing second, Woods said. "That's why you practice.
ing crowd before sharing a long hug with to hang in there this week and play as That 's why you bust your butt all those
caddie FlutTCowan.
·
well as l diu," he said.
.
·
ho!Jrs.on the range and putHn~ green and
"You take the · combination of last
He got off to a rough start with bogeys chtpemg area, to get yourself m that posl'
week, surgery and not winning since on Nos. 2 and 3, and quickly found him- tion .'
·
surgery. you. put all . th.?t l?gether and it self four strokes hehind Curtis. But Furyk . When hi s score was posted on the
was an emotional wm. satd Furyk. who got himself going with a 23-foot birdie leaderboards. shouts could he heard ;:H
missed half of last year after having wrist putt on No.4. and climbed back into a tie over the course.
surgery.
at 1.2 under with a birdie on the par-3 No. · "! had half a dozen people telling me
" It was a lot of fun."
6.
Tiger's coming to get me," Furyk said. "It
Furyk· shot a 2-under 69, finishing the
Just as Furyk was tinding his groove, was funny more than, anything el~,&lt;;
tournament at 14-under 270. Woods (66) though. Woods was ptckmg up steam.
because l wan1~d to say, Yeah, l know. .
was two strokes back at 272, though he
Beginning the day live strokes behind
And he wasn' t t1ustered by it. He made
did. go over the $50 million mark for Fury(( and Cuqis, he surged into the lead birdie putts of 15, 17 and II leet to get to
career eammgs.
with birdie-birdie-eagle on Nos. 9-11. · He 15 under, and had a chance for anpther OIJ
Curtis faltered in his attempt to win for hit huge drives on No: 9 and I0 - 305 13. But his putt curled around the cup and
'the first tin1e since the 2003 British Open. and -354 yards, respectively - but his refused to drop.
shooting a 3-over 74. But ~e was still showing on the par-5 lith was his best of
No matter. This week, it was Woods'
third, only his second top- I0 finish since the day. ,
.
turn to falter. ·After a three-putt bogey on
Royal St. George:s.
!\didn' t look like it at the start, when he the pai'-4 13, he made another one fmmlEven with Furyk's injury, this was pushed his tee shofoff.to the right. Woods iar .to weekend golfers all over. Trying to
unusuall y long hetween victories. He'd. knew it was trouble, muttering as soon as get hi s tee shot out of the trap with an
won m least one tournament a year from the ball left his club. But he got a.lucky awkward stance. Woods banged it off th~
1997 to 2003, and won hi~ first major bounce. Two of them, actually.
lip and advanced it a few measly feet,
championship at the 2003 U.S .. Open at
The 'ball hit the cart path m1d bounced leaving it in the sand .
• nearlly Olympia Fields. .
back toward the fairway. He was on the
He put his next shot two feet from the
It wasn't as if. Furvk didn ' t have his gfeen with his second shot, even if it was pin to save bogey, but his hopes of winchances. He · was runner-up three times. 54 feet away from the cup. Hts putt rolled nmg a fourth ttlle thts year were all but
including that dismal finish last weekend. ever so slowly toward the cup and when over.

Law schools

Aruba judge Qrders ·twn
brothers freed in
missing te~n case, so~ of
justice official held, .A2

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Please .see Racine, AS

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•

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The Daily Sentinel
~

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?age~

NATION
~

&lt;_
Arubajudge.orders two brother~ freed.in missing teen case, sori of justice official held

By TtM MALONEY
TMAlONEY@MYDAilYREGISTER.COM

AP'Photo

Joran van der Sloat, second left, walks handcuffed with police near Palm Beach, Aruba, SundaY,.
van der Sloot was detained June 11, in connection with the disappearance of American teen
Nata lee Holloway who went missing May 30 on this Dutch Caribbean 'island.

time they saw her.
Van der Sloot's mother,
Anita van der S loot, said h.er
son told her he was alone with
Holloway -on a beach but that
he did not harm her.
Holloway vanished the
same day she was to catch a

flight home with the .other students celeb.rating high school
,graduation. Numero.us searches by Du~~h marines, Aruban
investigators and volunteer
rescue groups have f~iled to
turn up any trace of her.
Holloway Twitty arrived in

Aruba within hours of her
. daughter's disappearance and
has Iieen on the island ever
since, distributing fliers, mooitoring searches and appearing on national U.S . television
shows to keep up pressure on
invt:stigators.

Authorities find human remains in Fight over Borks 1987 nomination on senators' minds
Bv PETE
search for missirlg 9-year-old boy

who will both play important the country is better off with·
YOST
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
roles in determining whether · out. someone like Bork on the
O'Connor's replacement will Supreme CoUI1.
BY NICHOLAS K.
WASHINGTON - ln the be confirmed ..
"Can we imagine what .this
GERANIOS
. eyes of still-bitter conservaSpecter
is
Judiciary country would be like today if
ASSOCIATED PRESS ,WRITER
tives, Robert Bork is the sym- Committee
chairman. Judge Bork had gone onto the
bol of the Senate's advice-and- Kennedy, n committee mem- Supreme Court with his views .
COEUR D'ALENE. Idaho
consent power gone haywire.
ber. says he's ready to fight if about civil rights and other
- Authorit.ies said Monday
To
liberals · and
the the president chooses some- issues?" Kennedy asked on
they found human remains
Republican chairman of the · one who does not · fit ABC
during their search for a
Senate Judiciary Committee, Kennedy 's vision of a mainBork suggested he is still
missing · 9-year-old boy
Bark's confirmation hearings stream nominee.
being
demonized by senators .
• . whose sister wa&gt; found days
revealed extreme views that
him in 1987.
who
opposed
the
commitRepublicans
on
earlier at a Denny 's restauwarranted rejection of the tee are urging Democrats to
"I· think they recognized
rant with a registered sex
Supreme Court nominee.
give
ample
leeway
to
Bush's
they did and they have to
what
offender.
The memory of Bork's
keep justifying it. and they
Sheriff Rocky Watson said
tumultuous Senate hearings 18 choice.
have to keep misrepresenting .
"Ruth
Bader
Ginsburg
was
a
the. remains were found in
years ago· are &lt;Very much on'
me,"
Bork said of the Senators
western Montana and would
the minds of senators as they general counsel for · the
be sent to an FBI laboratory
call tor dignified conftrmation American Civi l Liberties who sent his nomination down
for DNA analysis. He did not
proceedings , fur whomever Union, yet she was over- to defeat. Bark appeared on
say whether the remains were
President Bush chooses as whelmingly contirmed" dur- CNN 's "Late Edition."
believed to qc those of Dylan
Senate Judiciary Committee
retiring Justice Sandra Day ing the Clinton administration,
Groene, and declined to
Sen.
John
Cornyn,
R-Texas,
members
' crystalized the
O'Connor's successor on the
answer questions.
said on ABC's "This Week." debate over O'Connor's suchigh court.
Officials said previously
Ginsburg
"wasn't asked about cessor. making c!ear that a
Bork himself weighed in
there was little hope Dylan ~
Sunday. So did two of his her earlier writings on whether hard-line conservative would'
was still alive. The DNA
AP Photo/Kootonol County lho~fl Deportment opponents from 1987, Sens. laws banning prostitution were trigger a furious b()ttle on
analysis was expec.ted to take
Capitol Hill that ·could touch
In this photo released by the Kootenai County Sheriff's Arlen Specter, R-Pa., and unconstitutional," he added.
three days.
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass,
Specter and Kennedy said . off a Democratic filibuster.
Dylan's 8-year-old sister. Department, Steve Groene, left, Is shown with his daughter 8·
Shasta, · was found Saturday year-old Shasta Groene oh Monday at the Kootenai Medical
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIliiiiiiiiiiilllll%%IIIIIIIIIIiii:I:IIIIIIIXIIIIXXI.
with Joseph Edward Duncan Center In Coeur d' Alene, Idaho. More than six weeks after she
Ill, more than six weeks afier disappeared from a home where family members were blud·
the children disappeared geoned to death, Shasta Groene was found safe Saturday,
from- the nome where their sharing a meal with a registered sex offender at a Denny's.
mother. her boyfriend and an restaurant In her hometown. Her brother Dylan, remains miss·
older brother were blud- ing and is feared dead, Kootenai County Sheriffs Capt. Ben
·
Wolfinger said.
geoned to death.
1
/
Authorities planned to
charge Duncan, 42 , of Fargo,
N.D., with kidnapping and Monday . ."We ' re taking that
being a fugitive· from justice. very slowly."
.
and have said more charges
Officials have said they
were possible ; federal and believe Dylan was still alive
·local authorities searched when he· and Shasta disapDuncan's 'Fargo apartment peared. Investigators said
but police did not know. if they had 'feceived some· t 00
authorities took any items or tips about Duncan and the red
if anything resulted from the Jeep. Cherokee he was dri·
search . A . judge ruled ving since photos were
Monday there was probable released Saturday. .
Based on those ·ttps and
cause to keep Duncan in jail
until an initial court appear- other mformauon, authonttes
ance ·Tuesday, when he wil l ... belteve Dunc:m and.• Shasta
be assigned an attorney.
remamed 111 . the Northwest
With Duncan refusi ng to the enure ttme, Wolfmge r
talk, authorities have been satd. He would not say tl
•
relying on statements from there was any evidence oth ~..
Shasta. physical evidence in ers were accompanytng ·
Duncan's Jeep and tips from Duncan . . . .
the· public as they searched
The gtrl s . lather. Steve
for Dylan .
Groene. said Sunday he was
Watson said· the remain s told not to ask the gtrl queswere found in western · tions about her . ordeal. He
Monta~a . but did not elabo- said Sha&gt;ta was doing well
rate about the &gt;ite or say what and had bee.n watf: hing ani·
led in vestigato" there.
mat.ed mo vtes and had a
" ln ve sti ~ators continue to· ~a mlla shake and pancakes
follow aU of the other leads tor breakfast.
.
in thi s complex case.
He t~aii ked tho se who
Wa tson ,aid."Thi s case con- · helped ftnd ht s daughter. and
ti nue., to he the· number one hel d out hope th at Dyla n
priori ty for all ~ge n c i es wo u_ld also b.e fr)uml.
·
in volved."
"S hasta ts dotn g ve ry we ll ·
, Ahout 60 ini·cstiga[()rs and we all are very hopeful
were involved in the case. · that Dylan will come home
Sheriff \
Capt.
Ben safe ly." he said. .
·
Wolfinge r said . earlier
The children were declare d
Monday that Shasta h ~d pro- mt sstng When authormes.
v.ided hel pful inform ation . am ved at thetr home May 16
but decl ined to sa-y what the and t o~nd the . bound and
girl was te ll ing o ft tcer&lt;;. .
bludgeoned bodtcs of thetr
" It \ a slow procc" with mother. Brenda Groene. -Hl,
Shasta :· Wolfinge r said brother Slade Groene. 13.

lt•s THAT TIME AGAIN!
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Proud to be apart ofyo~r 'lfe.

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Tuesday, July 5, 2005

Tradition renewed at Mason's celebration.of Fourth

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The Daily Sentinel

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Tuesday, July 5, 2005

.

BY PETER PRENGAr,1AN . van der S: has been prolonged although it would be difficult.
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
60 days beginning today."
The judge's decision was
Wern~t did mit explain the an no~ need several. hours after
ORANJESTAD. Aruba reasons for the judge's .deci- van der Sloat and Jhe Kalpoe
,
· brothers were brought to the
Two Surinamese brothers si&lt;in.
jailed in the disappearance of
An AP photographer saw courthouse in the capital,
· an Ala bam~ · teenager were the Kalpoe brothers · leaving OranJestad.
freed Monday on the orders of. the San Njcolas prison . Hnllowa~·s . mother,, her
a judge. bu! the. 17-year-old accomp;mied by a lawyer.
father. Davtd Holloway. ·anti
son of a top justice ofticial
'The day finally came." iine thetr respective spouses were
was ordered jailed for 60 of Sat ish Kalpoe·s lawyers. allowed to watt tns td e. t~e
more days . '
David Kock told The cotu:tho~se . but were prohtbtt·
son.
Associated Press hiter: ''I've ~d Iron! attend~ng the. hearThe justice official's
loran van der Sloot. and been saying this · for a long mgs, a tanuly tnend sat d.
Surinamese .brothers Deepak time: They have no basis to
Earlter Monday. ~tomeys
Kalpoe, 21 ,. and~ Sat ish keep my client in detention." for all th~ee y~mng_ men. n:tter-.
Kalpoe, 18. had been held , The office. of Attorney " ated thetr cltents clatlljs of
. · . . · . ..
.. . Innocence .
stnce June 9 on su sptcton tbey
had knowledge abo ut th e d ..
ts- General
. . Kann
. . Janssen
,
'd satd
. ,
"Th e t'urt her we get, the
. c1tent
.
had
aP.pearance
Of . 18 -year-o ld .prosecutors
.
.
h.1re dconst
. . .· ennu~ more tl. shows my
1mu
Nata lee .. . Holloway··
ot· .tppe.
a
t
e
ects.
t
on
to
h'
d
.
h
,
.
·I . . · ~h
K· 1 · · . Th
not mg to
o wit • any
1
e a poes.
ey crime" said Deepak Kalpoe's
Mountatn Brook , Ala. The re e.tse
three young men have .have three d~ys. to do so.
lawye'r. Ruud Oomen.
acknowledgetl tha[Jhey were
Holloway s mot!Jtr, Beth
Carlo w'ould not comment
":ilh Holloway the · night she ~ollow&lt;)y :rwtt_ty,.who leftotl~e on whether investigators had
·
cmuthouse .before ~he JUdoe s presented any new evidence
dtsappeared.
Holloway vanished in the dect,~ ton. could not be reached against his ' client. But he said
early hours of May 30. the·last Immediately.
a judge did approve, a motion
day of a five-day vacation on
Under Dutch, law that gov-. allowing attomeys 'to be prethe Dutch Caribbean i' land to erns Aruba, a protectorate of sent whenever van der Sloat
celebrate her high school the N ~th e rl:inds, detainees is interrogated. Carlo. said pregraduation with 124 other stu- can be. held 11·6 days be tore vious requests for a lawyer's
be1ng charged by a JUdge . v:m presence had been denied
dents. .
. "The detention of Deepak der Sloot has sttll not .been since the beginning of the
and Salish K. has not been charged formally,. ·-smd ht~ case.
prolonged." court clerk !sella lawyer. Antonio Carlo.
The Kalpoe 'brothers have
Wernet said, reading from a·. prosecutors have acknowl- told · police they dropped
prepared statement outside edged they nave no solid evi- Holloway and van der Sloot
the courthouse. "The suspects dence that Holloway is dead. off near the Marriott Hotel in
are ordered released imme(li- They said they could proceed the early mot'ning hours of
ately. The detention of Joran with a criminal case anyway, May 30 and that was the last

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The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155 • www.myda'itysentinel.com

MASON -A longstanding
· family tradition of returning
home to Mason for the
Independence Day celebmtion
was renewed here Monday.
. Families began the day by
ltntn~ the stdcwalks of the
town~ to observe the annual
parade. One little red-headed
boy, Ethan Hubbard, 2. of
. Jackson, Ohio, kept a close eye
on the goings-by. and wa' parttculatly impre"ed by the fire
trucks.
He also liked it when a Shriner
pulled up to the ct\l'b.to drop off
some candy.
.
,
"My' mom · (Ethati's grandmother, Minnie Honaker) lives
right behind here:· said watchful
. mother Vena Honaker. 'T m orig..
mally from here. but we live in
Jackson."
Atier the parade wa~ over, the
crowd slowly made it' way to the
park, where Mayor, Ray Cundiff
was waiting to get the progmm
under way .at noqn.
"I tliw1k you all for coming and
celebmting Independence Dav
with us:· tlte mayor announced.
"Be cwd'ul and enJOY yourself.
Don't get too overheated."
Just. helore Cundiff got things
started: kids and cousins were
pl&lt;tying in the park. One tried to
show m10ther how to throw a
Fris~.

•

thank God for the all the men
and women who are giliflg
their servi ce to protect us."
Ma;on has heen ce lc b ra tin ~
_the fourth of Jul y in a ; imilar
fa sh i~l n for as long as anybouy
in the town can remem ber.
Cundiff said he remembers
when he wa ~ a boy growi ng up
in Mason. he rand hi., fri ends
would keep an eye ,·,ut for
when the men would h r i n ~ out
a big chunk of ice. ·
~
"That was our treat bac· ~
then." he said . " You 'd gel yo ur
·dad \ pocket kniiC or "'llle·
th ing to chip a hunk olf'that [Jig
block of icc.
"You talk aliout memmie,. lr
was itlst· unfor~e tt ahk . We• haJ
a lot.of good times."
·
E'verything about the Mason
Fourth of Ju lv cdehration is
about the same. " ith the cxccptiun that you · rc not gomg to
see a fireworks ' hm1 111 thi,
town . Back in the late ILJ~Il,.
current 911 Di rector Chuc·k
Blake was helping to set otTthe
fi reworks when one hkw up .
close to him and cau;ed c1seri ·
·ous injury to his hand .
Since then. nobodv has hctJ
the stomach for ·a "ti rc wurks
.show. .
"Other than that. cvc ry't hing
is the same:· CUiiditl sai d.
"Every year, we try In ntlldo
tJte celebration we had the year
before ."

Community Calendar
AP.Exclusive: Review substantiates
concerns at U_.S. AIDS research agency
Public

p.m., northbound road , · . ture~ and other ge neal oside park on U.S. 33. gy item s for displ ay.
Camp to furnish ham ,
RACINE _ Reunion
chicken , plates , napkins of the Charles antl
Wednesday, july, 6 and silverware. Bring
PAGEYILLE - Scipio drinks and covered dish. Fannie Beaver family
To.wnship Trustees regu- Door prize drawing. will will be held at Srar Miil
·
Park in Rac ine . Lun c h at
-l ar meeting 1:\'ill be at be held .
12 :30 p.m. Take a cov 6:30 p.m. at, Paigeville
ered dish.
Town Hall .
ALFRED
- Oranoe
Township Trustees, putSunday, july I 0
Sunday, July 10
lie hearing on 2006 budPORTLAND
POMEROY - Annual
get, followed by regular Spanish-language Mass reunion of relative s of
meering , 7:30 p.ni., at at
Our
Lady . of Daniel
'and . Phoebe
the home of the clerk, Guadalupe .
Mission , ·
Osie Follrod .
Harris , Farms on Ohio Lovett and William and
ALBANY - Columbia 124. Ministry of Sacred Mary Lovett will be held
at I p.n1. at th e Zi o n
Township Trustees will Heart Church, Pomeroy.
Church of Chri st. Ro ute
meet a.t '7:30 p.m. at the
fire station.
143. Some s urname s
'
include Lovell, Slack&gt; .
Bush, Boyd. Golds berry
Saturday, July 9
Riffle . Po tlu ck .
POMEROY The and
organi~ations annu.al reunion of rela- Pi c ture s will be ta ke n.
tives of Edgar and Addie Picture s · and oenealoe \'
"
, Sunday, July 10
Reed Blake wi II be held items di splayed0 .. An au' cPOMEROY - Modern at n'oon at the . Zion
Woodmen of . America Church of Christ on th:w will be held and
A n n u a I Route 143. Meat will be those attending are asked
Picnic/Hometown Hero furnished, the rest of to take an item for the
Potluck Dinner, 12:30 meal potluck. Take pic· auction.

meetings

Bv JOHN SOLOMON

.officials have said they were ually explicit and colorful
ASS OC IATED PRESS WRITER
termlnating Fishbein for , ·language, saying that no one
poor perfnrn1ance .
ever complained until "
WASHINGTON - The
Fishbein. an accqmplished Fi shbein did .
.government's AIDS research private sector safety expert.
The report broadly conagency ."is ll troubled organi- was hired by the NIH in demns the NIH' s Division of
zation" and its managers 2003 to improve the safety · AIDS .
have engaged in unnecessary of its AIDS research.
"It is clear that DAIDS is a
feuding. · sexually explicit
He· alleges that he was let troubled organization ," the
language and other inapprq- go because he ratsed c~tt · report concluded , saying the
•priate conduct that hampers cerns. about. several stud~e s Fishbein case "is clearly a
its global fi~ht against the and It led a torm&lt;tl complatnt sketch of a deeper is.ue ."
di sease. an tnlernal review against one of the division's
"To have the senior manfound .
managers alleging sexual agement ... behave in this
The · review for the harassment and hostile manner. spend incredible
National Institutes of Health workplace:
amount s of time feuding,
director's office, obtained by : In a senes of recent sto- and writing · numerous long
The Associated Press, sub-" nes, the AP ha~ reported: .
e-mails while . seemingly
_One of Nit! s AIDS study unaware of the need for
stantiates many of the coil -.
cerns that whi stle-blower Dr. in . Africa violated federal appropriate behavior decoJonathan Fishbein raised safety regulations.
rum and enforcement .. of
_Senior NIH managers good management practices
about the agency's AIDS
research division and its engaged 111 sexually expltctt ·and the rules of supervision
semor managers.
.
pranks and . sent explettve- and concerns about appearThe division suffers from laced e-matls to subordt- imce of reprisal clearly indi"turf battles and rivalrie s nate s.
cate a seriou s problem," the
between physicians. and
_NIH-funded researchers report said. ·
Ph.D scientists" and the situ- used foster ch~ldren to test
Fishbein's lawyer. Stephen
&lt;Ilion ha ~ been "rife for too AIDS drugs smce the late M. l&lt;ohn, said Friday he had
long," the report concluded.
1980s:
.
not seen the report obtained
An tnter~al report, wrmen , by the AP. but he hailed its
Nonetheless, the NIH formally fired Fishbein on on Aug. 9, _004, by a spectal conclusions
Friday. over the objections adviser to NIH cJ:rief Elias A.
·
·
of several members of Zerhouni but never maqe
Congres s.
The
top public, raised concerns that
Republican . and Democrat the · NIH' s efforts to fire
on the Senate Finance Fishbein at the very least
Committee are protesting , gave the "appearance of
saying the fi.ring was an reprisal.':
The report says no docu:
example of whistle -blower
puni shment.
mentation was 'ever previded
"Retaliation against an to Fishbein suggesting poor
employee for reporting mis· performance until after he
conduct or voicing concerns complained about the safety
is unacceptable. illegal and in one sensitive AIDS study
'
violates the Whistleblower and filed a formal complaint
Protection
Act."
Sens. alleging that the division's
Charle s Grassley, R-lowa. deputy director was acting
and Max Baucus. D-Mont.. unprofessionally with suborwrote the NIH late last week . dinates.
"Moreover, it would have
The report said after . for a chilling effe ct on other mall y complain ing about
~~
NIH employees who might conduct of the deputy direcS ~~- •'lG.
makes truthful but critical tor, Dr. Jonathan Kagan.
\1\G~, ~
comments apout the NIH, " Fi shbein was inexplicahly
1• ..,
the senators said.
forced to begin reporting to
Citing personnel privacy. Kagan. who then went ahead . ;..,_ _ _ _ _ _;:_____
.
NIH official s . declined to . With efforts to .fire Fi&gt;hbein .
.
t
'
h
St op by our 0 ffICe
address the senators' letter or . The report said Kagan ;md ::
e 'II de lVer a II th e IOC al happenmgs
.r'ght
I . . O ·YOUI" orne.
Fi shbein's
termination . the di'vision's director. Dr. :: and subscribe to the ,Jloint ,Jllrns~nt ~rgistrr for 6 months for only $59.15
except to say that his last day Edmund Tramont, acknowl- ··•
was Friday. In the past. NIH edged that Kagan "uses sex- ::
and receive a comic FREE umbrella*!
•4

Church events

Reunions

·Clubs and

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For the Record

Complaints

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·m:he lr\ofnt
.1\.egtster, 1 !l
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·~

• Alex Craig, Racine. on a
bench •viment for two counts
POMEROY
- Me igs of a g gr~ v a.ted assault and two
County Sheriff Robert Beegle counts of aggravated robbery.
reported th ~ following week• Thomas Fitch . Portland .
end arrests :
,on a charge of. domesti c vio• Mary J. Bable. Syracu ~e . lence.
on three.. counts of domestic
violence.
• Terry S. Browning. 24 . on ·
a charge of rape. He will
appear in Meigs Count y
POMER9 Y
-, Ro ge r
Court .
Ha ymcm ol Portland reported
• Gregory
Satterfie ld . the theft of fi rewood from hi s
Rac ine. on a pai'O ie viollttion. res·idence.
··
• Kerry Proffitt. Racine. on ' Deni se
· McKi bben .
a charge of domestic violence ·Pomeroy. reported Iter 200 I
and llccing. after allegedl y Yamaha Wol verine fourfailin g to stop for deputies . wheeler stolen from her from
durin g hi.s arrest.
y.ard . ·
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( ' 1\tymcnt mu ~t h..,· mad ~ In I"'I:T~ ~lll at ihe Pui lll PlcaMLIH N. cgi..,h:r.1r KJ ~·lai n St. . P 1lilll Plc:.h~ml. W V in order Ill rt't' L')\C ~t1ur !-rt't' ~·PllltL

'4

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Down below the hill . a table
was set up to begin taking registrations for the horseshoe
pitching tournament . The
sticky heat so pervasive this
summer was not so bad if you
.could find a nice, shady spot,
' with the river carrying just
enough of a breeze to enol you
off.
·
Up above, in the ;un. yollng
hays were · still th ro wing
Frisb'ce. though mayhe not so
accurately. One hit a truck. and
then another.
'
Just as the hoy'\ were looking
lO abandon their suddenly trou. blesome game. the Nmional
Anthem started. and even they
froze in place and took off their
hats.
Thete were plenty uf tlags
around to ~ alute .
· Rev. Ron Branch was introduced and said some nice
words about how Americans
were not so much different
than the children of Israel. both
in search of freedom ,
Of course, Americans have
their freedom now. but not
without a price. of which
Branch reminded the crowd.
He talked about how he was
watchin~ television and saw
the bodtes of dead Ame(ican
servicemen. killed in Iraq.
"Freedom is something that
.
Tim ~aloney/photo
God
lias given to us. and we
Ethan Hubbard , 2 . enjoys the parade Monday morning at Mason's annual Independence Day
thank
God for the freedom we
celebration.
have," Branch said . "We also

umbre lla . Qua nt it il'~

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

,Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich

' General Manager-News . Ed~or

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishmmt of religion, or prohibitin.~ the
free exercise thereoJ or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; .or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, 'and to petition
the Government for a'redress of grievances.
-The First Amendmlmt to the U.S. Constitution ,

TODAY IN HISTORY
-

Today" Tucsd.t~. July 5. the IS6th d.ty ot 2005 There are
179 days lelt tn the ye.tr
Today\ Htghltght m Htstoty
On July 5. IH65. Wilham Booth lounded the S.tlvation
Army m London.
On thts date. /
hr I XII. Venezuela hec.une the ltrst South Amcncan country to t.kcldtc mdcpendcnce fmm Sp.nn
In I X30. the French ocwpted the North Atru;an ctty of
Algtets .
In I'J:15. Ptestdent Roo,evelt stgncd the Natwnal Lab,or
Rel.tttons Act which provtded lor a Nat10nal Labor Relations
Bo.ud .• md .1uthomcd l.thor to orgamte for the purpose of collecttve h.ugamtng
In 1940, dunng World War II. Bntatn and the Vtchy government tn France h'roke dtplonwttc telattons.
In llJ46, the btklllt made tts debut during .m outdoor !ashton
show at the Molitor Pool 111 Pans
, In 1947. Larry Doby signed a contract wtth the Cleveland
lndtans. becommg the tirst black player in the Amencan
League
.
In 1954. Elvts Presley's fiN commerctal recordmg session
took pl.tl:e at Sun Records tn Memphts. Tenn .. the song he
recorded was "Th.11's All Rtght (Mama). "
In 1975 Atthur Ashe hec,tme the ftrst black man-to wm a
Wtmbledon singles title as he dei·cated Jmuny Connors
In 1975, the C.tpe Verde Islands otficmlly became independent alter 500 years ot Portuguese rule
In I 'l'll, .1 worlpwtde tmanctal scandal erupted as regulators
in etght conntnes shut down the Bank of Credtt and
Commerce lnternaltonal
Ten years ago. More than I00 Grate!ul Dead fans were
IllJUred when a deck on wh~eh they were gathered collapsed at
·a· campgmund ne,tr Wcntzvtllc. Mo.
Ftve years .tgo At the Un 11ed Nattons. Pres1dent Chnton
stgned an mternation.1l agreement to ban the forc ible recrutlment of youths·" so ldters 111 armed contltct, and a companion
accord to protect chtldren lrom being forced into slavery,
pros!IILIIton ~nd pornogruphy. The UN Secunty Council
imposed a dt&lt;~mond ban on Stcrra Leone\ rebels in a btd to
strangle thctr abtltty to tinance a ctvil war
One year ago In a s tmgtn~ rebuke, Mextcan Prestdcnt
Vtcentc Fox 's chtef of staff, Alfonso Durazo, res1gned. ,
· Tnday's Btrthdays Actress K.tthcrm~ Helmond ts 71
Actress Shtrley Kmght IS lllJ 'S tn ger-mustctan Robbte
Robertson ts 62 Juhe Ntxon EISenhower ts 57 Rock star
Huey Lewts ts ~5 Baseball pitcher Rtch ''Goose" Gossage IS
54 Country mustu.1n Charles Ventre I Rtver Road) is 53
S111ger-songwr11cr Marc Cohn IS ~o Actress Edte Falco ("The
Sopr,mos'') " 42. Rapper RZA is 36 Rhythm-and-blues
stnger Joe IS 32 Rock mustctan Bengt Lagerherg (The
Cardtgans) ts 32. Actot Dale Godbold(\ ts 30 Rapper Bizarre
(D 12) ts 27 Rock stnger Jason Wade (Lifehouse) ts 25.
Tbought for Today "The real drawback to 'the stmple life'
ts that n ts not spilple If you are hvtng 11, you posttlvely can
do nothmg else. There ts not 111ne " - Kathanne Fullerton
Gerould, American wnter ( I!179-1944 ).
·

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Le11en ro the cdr tor, me

elr ome. The\' .1/wu/d he /e.u than
300 1\'ordl Alllellt'" are \trl&gt;jeCI to edl/mg, mu1t be 1igned.
and mdude addte\'\ (lfld tl'leplrmll' numha No wni,~ned let·
le t 1 11 til he publt.l lted Lt•ftet 1 ,frould he 111 good ta.\le.
addll~ nm~ 1\HUJ.'
lli::.&lt;IIW/1\

11

not pt' l \oualttit·~ Letter'i nfrhanb to or~a­

a11d uuin•tdua/,

11

ill 1101 be acce ted for ublicatwn.

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PageA4 ·

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

~

' '

. .

•107 10
52 14 f1

Tuesday, July 5, 2005

President Bush should
have JUSt satd it 10 his
recent speech at Fort Bragg,
•
N C. "Amencan troops
will be in Iraq for years to
come We w1ll draw down
Morton
as lfaqt forces build up, but
Kondracke
we cannot leave until Iraq
ts secure. and that day IS
still far away"
Polls indtcall' that the
Amencan pul:)lic IS fully - when members ot Congress
re&lt;tdy tor that tough mes- and top U.S generals were
sage, whteh Bush &lt;~rguably wondenng aloud whether
.nnplied but dtdn 't forth - the U S. public had the
tenactty to sttck wtth the
nghtly state
The polls show that vot- Iraq mtsston.
At the same time, the
ers don't thmk the Unned
States should have tiecome Post/ABC poll should serve
mvolved Ill Iraq in the ftrst as a warnmg to the Bush
place But they beheve that, admimstration that it needs
now that we're there, we to be cardid with the pubFtfty-two
percent
shouldn't abandon the mis- he
believe that the admmistr~l­
StOll
tion
"mtenllonally mtsleo"
A new Gallup poll tound
the
cmmtry
helore the war.
that 53 percebt of respondents oelteve it was a mts- espectall y about weapons
take tnr the Umted States to ol mass destruction
Bush can 't be expeqed to
invade Iraq, up trom 46
fl.H-out
repudtate , Vtce
percent ttve months ago.
At the same time, 58 pe(- Prest dent Cheney's statecent satd th,ll U S. troops ment that the lruqt insut • had to stdy- a number that gency is tn tts "last throes,"
JUmped to 70 percent ,11ter but the admtntstraiHlll
BLtsh's speech at Fort needs to be stratghtfnrw.trd
Bragg. The percentage call - about the dtiTiculttes ahead
In hts speeL"h. Bush dtd
mg fot sett ing a tnnetable
for withdr.1wal dropped &lt;~cknowledge that progre"
from 42 percent to 35 per- in rcbutlding ·lraq anti tram ing tts, security Htrces has
cent
·
The Gallup results track been "Lmeven" .111d that
closely wtth those 111 a whtlc "we have m.tde
Washtngton, · Post/ABC progress .. we have a lot
News poll that showed that 1110re work to do. "
On the other hand. he
53 percent of U S a~ults
overstated
the amoun t of
believe that the war was not
mternat10nal
atd bemg sent
worth hghtmg, but that 60
percent behe~e that U.S. to Iraq and the level ot
troop levels need to be kept tnternauonal mtlttary p.u at present
levels or lletpauon
Sen . Joseph Btden (Del.).
mcreased. Only 38 percent
Democrat who cle&lt;~r l y
one
said they shou ld be
wants Bush and the United
reduced
State
s ,to su,·ceed m lr.tq,
The Post/ ABC po II also
showed that 5_3 percent ot also makes a good ~ase th.tt
respondents believe that the admmtstrauon ,ts overU.S. troops wtll have to stating the combat-rcddtremam tor "a lew years" or ness of lraqt seclmty lorces
and is suppressmg optmon
"five years or longer."
And, despite the fact that m the U.S. military th.u our
62 percent believe that the own troop levels need to be
United States ts "bog.ged increased.
On the tssuc ol hov. long
down" m Iraq, 53 perccllt
U
S troops need to be 111
satd they were overall
"optimtstlc" about the lr.tq, Bush q td that
"Americ,l will not le.tve
future ol that country.
All this IS good news- a before the JOb is done" and
reversal of the recent gloom that "we arc workmg tot the
prevatlmg m Washington , day when Ir~q can delend

itself and we can leave "
Some Democrats are
denlandtng that Bush set
down a ttmetable for withdrawal, whtch he nghtly
argued would oti'ty encour.age the msurgents to wait
us out.
Now,
some
other
Democrats h&lt;Lve changed
the tunc ,md arc d ~m andmg
that he set "benchmarks'· ·
for progress One suspects
that they want Bush to give
them ammumtton to ~riti ­
cize him tf performance ui
lra4 falls short.
Instead of yieldtng to
such dcmdnds, Bush could
have stated what seems
obvious' that U.S. troops
hkely will he needed fm
"years " And the adnimtstratton should be ISSulllg,
and puhlil:lzlllg. accesstble
metrtcs showtng progress
(or lack ol It) on secu111y
training . toretgn atd and
1eco nst ructJon

Ovet.lll .•ts " report to the
nation on what is h.1ppening
tn Iraq. Bush 's speech peri onilcd 1he use Iu I purpose
ol countering the mcessant
mcdid im.tges of death dOd
dcstructton wtth remtnders
ot pollltc.ll and milit.liy
progress - and ' of msut gcnt l.ulure
As he satd , the Insurgents
11.1 ve no post t1ve program
lor Iraq ,111d no true popul.tr
loll owtng. Thet r progtamts
one
o1
pure
te'lor
Meanwhile, an 1111enm government h.ts been elected, .t
cunst ttut 1on is hemg wmtcn. no Cl' tl wat has broken
out and rcca lcttr&lt;tnl Sun nts
,1re bemg brought tnto the
polttic.d process
In
response
to
Democt.lltc demands . Bush
dtd lay uut &lt;l stt ategy - not
an exit str.ttcgy. but a str.ltegy - tlldl ts pdlt poltttcal.
p.1rt military The poltttc.tl
pat t definitely has a
timetable leading to a permanent elected govet nmenl
next year
The most contrm erstdl
pall of Bush's speech was
his contmued linkage ot the
w&lt;~r 111 Iraq wtth the war on
len or. whtch Democrats
tnsiSI ts !tctlon. tf not "
nel anous ploy
Sen J.ty R..ocketeller, D-

W Va , tor ex.nnple·, said
that there never was a con nectton between Saddam
Hussein and AI Qaeda
Democratic
. National
Commtttce
Cha1rman
Howard Dean charged Jhat
Bush was trying to "garner
support for hts tailed polt ctes by pandering to lear.
rath er than mspmp g us
wtth a plan tot hope "
Bush ob'lously beheve ~
that the two wars are one,
but he has never been able,
to convinctngly art1cul.1te
the Ollglllili CtlllllCCtiOil
Sin ce th e US tnvaston .
l10wewr. lslumtc 1111iltants
ho~vc
be en pounng 11110
11 d4, m(Lking 11 an unmts t.tk.thlc front 111 the war on
tcno1 :
It's &lt;1 l.tll question
whethet . as 101 mer Army
Gc11 Wesley Cl.n k put 11 on
Fox News ul tcr Bush' s
speech. Bush l1.1sll't crc.1tcd
u t.tllymg potnt lot letrorJs ts .1nd .L tJ.Hillng ground Ill
haq , much .ts the S&lt;JVtCt
Unulll dtd 111 Afgh.t tu st&lt;lll.
.md whctllet h.ndcned terronsls won· t I.111 nul to do
d.1111.1ge Mound the wotld
Bush ' 'i

unw.tvcnng.

,lllSWCr IS that tl lJ .S . polt cy
prev.uls 111 ltaq ,md 11 the
Un11cd States succeeds 111
's p1 eadtng dcmnc t &lt;~CY else where 111 the Mtddle 'E.tst.
then lsl,llllK tcnonsm wtll,.
be dcleatcd und the United
States wil l be 1i10re sccute .
For sure. tcrr01 ism o~t the
momctit is mot e or less
conl tncd to lt.tq and
Afghantstan The United
States has not been hit since
2001
At the moment, t! the
polls are nght." nuqont~ ol
Ame11cans do belteve that
the war 111 lr.tq 1s a part of
the Wdt on tet rortsm and
that 11 l1o1s cnntllbulcd Ill
lJ S . secunty It means that
Bush has the support he
needs to plo~y out his str.negy. That\ good H ts ts the
only stl.tlegy for Wllllllll !J
that we l1&lt;1vc.
(Mol

KomiHu klJ

tOll

Neighbors turn out to welcome home Marine lawyer

f\

t'dlt&lt;•t o/' Roll
C"/1, the II&lt; ' " 'l'"i"' t of
Capt_wl Htll J

Pll' Cllfll 'l'

. .-

Desecrating the First Amendment

Roy Dowell
MIDDLEPORT- Roy W. Dowell, 61, Middleport, dted on
Saturday, ~uly 2, 2005, at the Vetl!rans Admmtstratton
Medtcal Center in Cmcmnatt.
He_ was born pn Dec. 16, 1942, in Southstde, W.Va., to
Sylv1a S~yre Dowell and the late Benjamin Dowell. •
Survtvmg, bestdes hts mother, are sons and daughters-inl~w: Dav_td (Cheryl) Ftsher, Rutland, Dwayne (Tabitha)
Ftsher, Mtddleport, Robert (Amanda) Dowell, Rutland, Josh
(Amanda) Dowell, Washmgton Courthouse, and Robert
(L~nn) Hoffman ; Columbus; a daughter. Angle ·Kerr,
Mtddl_epo~; 15 grandchildren, a great grandchtld; brothers
and stster-m-law s: Calvm (Cheryl) Dowell, Racine, Benny
(Ktm) Dowell, Middleport, Roger Dowell, Lancaster, and
R1chard (t\.ltssy) Cook, Rutland; sisters and brothers-m-laws:
Ruth Ann (Dave) Foxx, Letart, W.Va, Rhonda (Jim) Morris
~iddleport, Wilma (Rob) Bolm, Mtddleport, Carolyn Dowell:
Ctrclevtlle, Pat Dowell of Lancaster and Jean (John) Leach of
Lock~ourne: and several meces, nephews and cousms.
Bestdes hts lather, he was preceded in death by h1s wife,
Mary Sue Dowell, in 2001, a son, Roy Lee. Dowell, hts stepmother, Phyllis Dowell, and het step-father, Bern~rd Cook.
Services wtll be held at II a.m. on Wednesday, July 6, 2005,
at F1sher Funeral Home Ill Middleport. Burial will follow in
Met~s Memory Gardens tn Pomeroy.
·
Fnends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral
home,
A mllttary gravest de servtce wtll he conducted hy Amencan
Legion Feeney Bennett Post 128, Mtddleport
Onhne c1mdolences may be sent to. www.fishertuneralhomes.com

Deaths
James R. Cunninham
James R. "Fuzzy" Cunnin~ham. 84 , of Radne, dted
. Monday, July 4, 2005 at his restdence.
Funeral arramgements will be announced by the Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racme.
·

•

Richard F. Fick
Rtchard F Ftck, 81 , of Pomeroy. died at Holzer Medtcal
Center Monday, Jul y 4, 2005
. Vtsttatton wtll he Wednesday. July 6 I rom, fi to 9 p.m. at
Ewmg Funeral Home, Pomeroy Funeral serv tccs wtll . be
Thursday at II a m at the. funeral home , wtth bunal at the
Chester Cemetery.

Recovery g~adual, promising .
for soldier injured in Iraq
CLEVELAND (AP) More than a ye.lf after shrapnel from a roadstde bomb
nearly ktlled her Ill Iraq.
Jessica Clements' life ts slowtng returnmg to nonrnal
Whtle serving with the
Anrny Reserve in Iraq, a roadside bomb detonated next to
Staft Sgt Clements' convoy
on May 5, 2004
Now, after complex surgeries and months of physical
therapy, Clements ts back
home with her fiance hving m
a new house in North Canton,
about 45 miles south of
Cleveland.
Clements, 28, has relearned

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'

· Obituaries

Bush's Iraq speech should help sustain support for pol~cy

.

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, July 5, 2005

many basic skt lls, including
how to wnte and feed and
dress herself. but she says she
is still· a, year away from full
recovery. Relatively simple
acttvities such as cooking and
cleanmg leave her dramed.
"I thmk I am normal and
back to my old self. but then I
get frustrated," she satd.
Clements was the only one
inJured when the convoy came
under attack.
"She looked very bad," sa:td
Lt Col. Jeffrey Poffenbarger,
the Anrny's senior neurosurgeon at the hospital who treated Clements. "She looked like
she would dte."

COLUMBUS (AP) - He
first nottced the ktds on a corner waving American nags
As Manne LL Col. Tom
Sarko got closer to home.
there -were people lined up on
both sides of the road,' clapping anp takmg pictures of
the man wh() lint shed a tour
111 Atghamstan.
They cheered him ' and
waved signs that satd "We
Mtssed You , Mr. Sarka," and
"Thank You, Mr. Sarku"
So~neone yelled, "Can I
have your autograph?"
Fmally, Sarko a 40-yea~­
old father of six and normally
soft -spoken and reserved, got
out of the family minivan and
walked the rest of the way.

shaking hands and hugging
as he went
"I thmk people realtze that
Tom and Ursula made ll sacrifice. and we 're here to honor
that sacrifice," said neighbor
Megan Walker, 41
"Thts ts why I moved mto
thts neighborhood. because
people care sn much about
each other," said Andy
Brewer, 45 .
A lot of those stgns, the
ones that read '·You Are A
Hero," and "Welcome· Home,
Dad," are planted 111 the
Sarkos' yar9. The tamtly
planned to keep them up
through Monday. to honor
Tom: Then they'll have to go.
'The k1ds are startmg to get

'

the puntshments during
courts-mart tal
He deo1ll wttll everything
from dnnkmg - alcohol is
banned - to mvesttgatmg
detamee abuse He worked
12 to 14 hours a day. every
day. Rocket; htt the base a
lew t11ncs whtle he was there.
"! .didn't know that!" hts
wtle satd when he mentioned
11 on Sunday.
"Yuu'd have to run . to a
bunker." he s.ud
She stghed "That \ scary"
Sarko W&lt;ll go back to h1s
ctvili,m job as a 1,1wyer in the
sec untie s dll'ts ton ol the state
Department of Commerce in
two weeks

embarm'Sed ," satd Ursula
Sarko, 18
Sarko satd the family has
had an annual Independence
Day party lot ye.trs, but thts
July 4 seems dtiTerent
''I've always enJoyed 11. but
It seems a, lot more spectal
thts ttme," he satd.
He spent exactly 2()0 Jays
as chtel ol mtlttary JUsttce at
Bagram. the m,un U.S base
111 Afghatmtan He worked
for,all mtlltary branches '" a
kmd ot le.1d prosecutor tn the
country
If any ol 19,000 mllttaty
personnel dtd -somethtng
wrong. he .md hts deputtes
enher advtsed commanders
on puntshment s or argued lor

'

Developers look to :add homes Millions granted to help former
military base in Columbus
to Ohio~s only national park
.

CLEVELAND (AP)
Plans for new homes 111 Ohto's
only tl.IIIOnal park concem officidls who fear the Cuyahoga
Valley National Park will
become walled in by new
development that wtll destroy
ammal habttat and !lush more
polluted storm water mto the
Cuyahoga Rtwr.
Two housmg subdivisions
already are withtn the park's
boundaries. Now builders want
to put another 12-house development there, and subdtyistons
wtth nearly 350 houses are
planned on the park's fnnges
Desptte a destgnated fedeml
boundary. the Nattonal Park
Servu.:e does not own all the
land wtthm the park's perimeter The only w&lt;~y to stop the
proposed development would
he to buy the land, and park
oflictals s:ty they don't have the
money to do that.
"We would much preler the
property not be dc~elopeu,''
park Supenntendent John
Debo smd. "But short of buymg 11. we are not 111 control ..
"The tdea is totally dbhorrent
to me for a developer to come
and steal the herit,tge of everyone here," satd Daniel Sobotka,
56, who grew up near the park.
"The nattonal parks are our
Jewels and our hentage for our
chtldren.Jt's not for developers
to come 111 and bulldoze and
put 111 their subdivtston "
When Congress created the
park m 1974, 11 set astde $34.5
mtllion to buy land wllhm the
boundary. The ce1hng has been
nused several times, and Debo
srud the park has spent about
$130 million on land.
Developers Jun Kavalec and
Jeffery Linker, who own
Granite Development, are buy- ,
ing c1ght acres from Mary

Savtolt, who h.tffieen hvt
the westem edge ol the
decades.
The lots Will sell tor more
than $200,fMJO. and Kavalec
satd he already has recetved
several offers.
·
Butldmg houses 111 nattonal
parks IS beconnng 11101e common, satd Jov 0,1kes. the
Mtdatlanttc regional director
for the Nattonal P.trks
Conservation Assoctatlon, a
group that works to preserve
and enhance the national park
system. Such plans have been
stymtcd 111 the past
The Nattonal P&lt;1rk Servtce
spent $8.5 milhon l&lt;~st year to
prevent a developer !rom bUildmg 62 homes m. the Valley
Forge Ndtlon.tl Htstnncal Park
111 Pennsylvania
And last
week, .1 West Ytrg1111a county
plannmg commtsston reJected
plans lor 42 houses 111 the
Harpers
Ferry
National
Htstoncal Park
"It ts unposstble to overstate
the importance of the pubhc
standmg up .md ddvocating for
thetr parks, parttcularly when 11
comes to land acqutsttton."
Oakes said "Land acqutsttton
ts a low pnonty tor thiS admll1tstratton compared to park
maintenance and operations··
The pressure on Cuyahoga
Valley Nation.11 Park ts even
greater outstde tts borders.
Areas have been demed lor a
220-housc subdtviSJOn and
another with 119 houses 11em
the park.
.The development will allow
more stonrn water, whtch contains lawn chemtcals, ammal
feces and other pollutants. to
!low mto the Cuyahoga Rtver
because the ground that
absorbed it would be paved
over.

COLUMBUS (APJ - A would gtv e small husmessrmcr mt ltta ry hase 111 es o~cce ss to the runv.ay.
ut11bus could recetve
Mmeta satd the atrport
mill ton s ol doll.trs tn feder- generates more than $500
a l money to help expand tts mtlhon 111 econ omi c acttviatrport tor C(tmmerct.il use · ly each . year Cat go landU S.
Transportation mgs are up 25 percent from
Secretary
Norman
Y ia'st year
Mmeta made the olll110UnceIn recent yeats. atrport
ment Friday whtle VISiting
ofllcta ls butlt a pa ~ senger
Rtckenbacker A 11 pnt t
Mtne\a
sdtd termtnal tnr ch_.mer !lights.
Rtl'kenbacker is the on ly_
Rtckenbucker · is amon~ IS
Ohio
dtrport getllng a
former military - base~ to
Otilers ' are
tn
receive a grant. The atr - gr.tnt
California,
pmts will share.$34 mtllton Anzon.t. .
Flortda. Guam, Hawaii,
thts year.
Maryland.
"We ' te hopetul we wtl l Loutstana .
get around $3 mtllton ,, M tch1g .tn
New
York ,
year," s:ud Elatne Roberts . Tennessee and Texas
ch tef executtve ol the
Ohto also ts gettmg
Columbus Regtondl Atrpnrt another federal gran t to
Authontv, wht ch oversees help work~rs who wind up
Rickenh:tcker anu Port dtsplaced by the pcndtng
Columbus
rDLmd of tnllttary base cloRtckenb.tcker was a mth- sutes. th e U S Department
tary base unttl I \180 and ot Labor satd
Stnce has been developed
Ohto wtll ge t $1 mtlllol\
tnto a cargo dtstnbutton
center. More th&lt;tn I0.000 from ,1 $n mtllton pot
people work there or tn the betng shdfed by 35 sto~tes.
the Dtstrtct of Columbta
surrou ndm g Mea.
Atrport ufl ictalsJwpe to .1nd Guam , .111 ol whtcb
bases
on
the
use the gran t money to have
tmprove four hangars and Pentagon 's proposed liSt of
build a warehouse that closures and realignments

City National Bank
Pomeroy Branch closing

\

When
Jehovah's,
Witnesses' schoolcht ldrcn
refused to salute the !lag,
Supreme Court Justtce
Robert Jackson, wnttng
• dunng wartime m t 943,
satd no otftc1al can prescnbe orthodoxy m polltics, nationalism or relt.gton. or force American
ctttzens to "t9ni'onn to that
orthodoxyl""f'ut now, once
again, Congress IS debating
a conslltutional ame11dmen!
to the First Amendment to
cnmmahze lhe burning or
other phystcal desecratton
of the !lag.
During one of the previous congressional confrontauons on thi' issue .
when I was speak1ng at a
college in Pennsylvama, a
graduate asked my opinion
about tt. I quoted Colin
Powell.
opposing
the
ciMngc 1ln 1999. that the
Ftrst Amendment protects
not only freedom of speech
.md
expresSion
"wtth
wlitch we agre e ,or dtsagree, but also that \\lhich
we hod outrageous"
As I was leavtng. an
angry man . tdcnttfytng
htmselt as a Vtelnam War
veteran , bloL"ked my p.tth
h ln&lt;iked like .he was gmng
to t.tkc a swmg at me "Tell
me." I hastily satd. "what
does our ll&lt;~g symholtze for
. you ,..
"Freedom'" he shouted .
"Well." I satd nonbollt ge rently. "ts there any other
country m' the world withthe treedom ol spceL"h and
con sc ten ce we h:we ag.un st
the govcmnfent. and even
.1gamst the vtew s ol the
m:qon ty ol the people'?"
Slowl y.. he sort nl nod Jed . uncl enched hts fist,
'and walked away. I reltvc.:d
that· encounter on June 22.

'

V.t ) countered thai the flag
"ts more than a ptece lil
cloth !t ts the symhol .
one ol our ndtion'~ . mo"t

Nat

Hentoff

whtle watsJ'llng the Hou se
debate HJ R I0. the Flag
Desecrauon Amendment,
on C-SPAN (that citadel of
the First Amendment). At
the time, I was llstenmg to
Democrat Artur Davts ot
Alabama. a former asststant U S attorney and now
the
a
member . of
Congresstonal
Black
Caucus
Opposmg the amendmet\!, he told of how hts
grdndmother used to s.1y to
hun that. even afln the
Supreme Court ruled 111
Brown
v.
Board
ol
Educatton that segregation
Ill
public school s w'as
unconslttultonal , she would
sec . "ndmg through rural
Alabama, crosses bur111ng ..
But , added Congresstmm
Davis, " Those hurntng
crosses dtd nothtn g to slow
the progress ol JU sti ce So .
too. the people who would
hurn !lags. ltkc those who
burnt crosses, have lost
Our v.tlues have heen dc&lt;= p
enough to wnh stand, the
worst ideas."
And Bobby Sq nt I OVa.). speaktng of .myone
hurmng or desecrating the
fl ag. satd durin g the
dcb,ue · "How ndtculous 11
ts to protect the' very ' YI11·
bnl ol ht s ri ght to protest'
We don ' t need pnllcctl on
fro111 .an yo ne who doc s
that "
But Bob Goodlattc I~ -

,:.

. . -· ..

s.tcred symhols .. . uf our
core v.llues that bmd us as
a people ..
Moreover. as many supporte rs ol thts constttUit!Jll·
al &lt;~mendment tn and out ot
Congress tnstst. desecr.u tng a 11ag ts not speech pro\CCtcd_ by
the
First
Amendment It 1s conduct.
Answct ing that in Texas
v JnhnS&lt;m I 198'h 111 which
a ma)onty of the Supreme
Court declared uncnnstttuttonal a Texas law penaltztn g the huttlln g of the
Amertc.tn llag. w&lt;ts Justtcc
Antonm Scaha. Stud tht&gt;
proud upholde r ot · the
Framer~ · ori gmal Jnten ttons. who voted wtth the
maJotny· "(The go,crnme nt) m&lt;~y not proscnb·e
patlll'Ul.tr conduct becau se
11 h,ts expresstve ele ment s ·

one untfying symho l nt
nattnnhood .tnd nalwtul
unuy."
But 111 M.uch . 19lJ-t.
Congrcsston.ll Mcd.tl of
Honor
rcctptent
Bob
Kerr.cy. who lost a leg in
the Y.tetn.tm w.11 . testifted .
a~ a \t!ll.ttor ag.un't .111 e.u
It er tl.tg .1mendmen1 " Real
patrtl)ltsm
c.tnno!d- be
coerced . It must be a voluntary unsell ish hrave act to
s.tcnltcc lm others And
when Amenc.ms !eel coercton. espccto~lly from the
government. they tend to
rebel. So none ot us should
be su'rpn scu . that one
umntcnucd consequence of
enacting thi' l.tw will be an
tnc reascd oc currence ol
!lag desccr.ltton."
Should the current flag
o~mendm e nt become law
the glory ol our !lag mdecu the very sy mbol ot
who we dtsttnctt vely are in
this world - wtll he sadly
dnmni shed A c.tller to CSPAN dunng the House
debate exclaimed. speaking
a ga1n'1 the amendm e nt
"They say we a~e unpatn ottc bec,u"e we stand up
for the Ftrs\ Amendment' "
To rc~tse ' the B1ll ol
Rtght s by tnsertmg an
exL"eptton to uur most lun
damental ltherty-{' to tarnish tl1c Cons!tlutlon lot
those who come iter us

Justice Wtlh&lt;im Brennan.
who wrote the majorlly
dcctstlln , s.lld plainly.
"There ts tw tndtcatton either 111 the text of the
C'on .., lltUl!nn or 111 our Cases
tnterpretm g 11 - that a sepat .ttc tudt c tal category
e:xt sls lor I he Amencan tl.tg
.tlone
We decline. therelore . to ucatc for the fl&lt;~ g
an e xcept ton ti• the JOUst of
pnnctpl cs protected by the
Ftrst Amendment."·
Dunn g the current debate
o n the flall •.1mendmen1 ,
howe1cr. Marty Just",
excc.ut11 e dtrcctor of 1he .
Cttt zc ns Fla g Alhancc, &lt;I
puss ir nutc ad, ocate ot gtvlll g Cun g1es..., the pov. er to
prohtbll Jlag desecr,ltton . ·
told the Jul y '23 New York
Sun · Th e t lag ts our
Jhlt l nJM l trca... ure
•

It 's our

(Nat fl entnj(" a
all\

fl' IUH'

rtal w l i

ned authmlf\' on

1/u• fu ,·, Aml'lldmetrt and
tl11.- Bill nf Rt ~ Itt ' · a nd
a uf ho t

of · mmn

hoo k ,

ut dudm ~

'' /Ir e War orr tltc
Btl/ o} Rr gltt .1 cmd tir e
Gatlrl' l'fll ~

R t.'\ ntaru· t~ ''

(St•l e rr Stor-tel

!'"'"·

20011

Racine
from PageA1
food booth goes back into the
community
The celebration, whtch
had a theme of "Proud t'o be
an Amencan - Called to
Serve" appropnately began
wtth a !lag raising by the
Amencan Legion Post 602
wtth a parade that followed
Parade tloat winners were
Antiquity Baptist Church,
first place. $100. sponsored
by Home Nattonal Bank.
Carmel-Sutton Church, second place. $75 and Endunng
Freedom. thtrd place, $50,
both sponsored by the Racine
Volunteer Ftre Department.
The Southern High School
Marching Band won the
award for walkmg umt. $25.
sponsored by . Wooley Acres
Farm.
•
The btcycle awards wmners were Maddy' Quillen ,
first place. $15 . Hannah
Batley. second place, $1 0;
Breanna Bailey and Cody
Campbell. tie for third place.
$5. The btcycle awards we.re
sponsored by Dr Mel Weese
and Dr Doug and Tonja
Hunter
Awards for horse s in the
parade were sponsored by
Tem Carsey and winners m
the lndtvidual category were
Man ssa Johnsofl, tirst place,
Chessa Blower. second place.
Russen Beegle. thtrd place
Awards tor umts of horses
were. Mtchelle. Tedra and
Alex Sayre. ftrst place;
Amanda and Erin Foreman.
second plat e ; Bruce and
M1randa McKelvey. thud
place.
RACO sponsored the
811tique tractor aw .mis and
"'inners were. Paul Marr.
John Deere· LA. tirst place.
$50; Ryan Beegle. 40,
Ferguson . second place. $30.

Beth Sergontj photoo

Customer Servtce Representattve Frances Wood watts on customer Thomas Harpe r at Ctty Nattonal Bank·s Pomeroy Branch
The branch announced last wee k that tt wt ll be closmg on July
29 wtth a ll 1t s accounts bemg consoltdated t_nto the Mason,
W.Va branch .

Beth Sergent/ photo

+

The Btg Bend Cloggers dtd not slow down thetr cloggmg performance desptte the heat and fm
tshed thetr set at Star Mtll Park wtth temperatures reachtng the mtd-90's.
Roger B,eegle, 444 Massey
Harris. third place. $20.
The Star Mtll Park Board.
sponsored the an11que vehtcle
awards .and wm'ners were
M1ke Walker. 1957 Chevrolet
4-door. ftrst place. $25;
Rtchard Johnson.
1957
Chevrolet pick-up, second
place, $15; Howard Mullms.
an11que pollee car. thtrd ·
place. $10.
After the parade. the' pubhe gathered a\ Star Mill park
for a patriotic progmm and to
take a look at the Btg Bend
Farm and Anllques Club display
.
Chtldren also had plenty to
do at Star Mtll Park including
games. a bounee house and
water shde. Several of these
activtties
were
kiddie
fundrai sers to help , send
Racine
re stden~
Dancn
Dtddle
to the Jumor

Olymptcs 111 New Orleans
The ktds were also clamormg to be a part, of RAco· ,
12th Annltal Frog Jump
where several frogs tned to
make a run past the nng and
towards the nver but to no
avatl.
,
Stacy Warden. formerly of
Racine and now ofE ghn . Fla
where ,he serves 111 the
armed forces at Eghn Atr
Force Base. parttctpatcd m
the frog JUmp when ' he v. as a
chtld and thts year returned
wuh her tluee-year-old
daughter Chesney
Warden 11 on the lrog
JUmpmg contest 11hen &gt;he
was a chtld b ~· blo11 mg on
her trog and acctdent.lll y lutung t1 wnh the g um th.tt she
hall hec n d1e11 mg 111 her
mouth The gum g:l\ e the
frog IIKC'ntive..J.l'l '"in the l'''ntest lor Warden 11ho retut ll ~U

to show Chesney how to parIICtpate Ill the JU111p lmmus
the gum) as her gr,mdmother
Kay Watdeti of R.tcine
looked on
Nearly 70 !rags " ere col lected for the 1ump by Chn s
Wolle and Joe J&lt;~rrel.
Wmners for the fro g JUmp
were not av:nlabk .11 press
umc but will appeM l.11er thts
' week 111 The Dall y Sent111el
For tpo, c not at the frog
junip. St1lr Mtll P.~rk s shelter
house was lull as the &lt;.:ro wd
enJoyed perlormanccs by the
Btg Bend Cloggers who dtd
not slow down thetr cloggt ng
routme de &gt;ptte the heat
Rocky. Mount.un Bluegrass
then fnllm1 ed .md the Last
Chan1 B.md pl.iyed untt l a
tirC11nrk' dt splay Itt up the
vtllage .mu the rl\er bd"''
c ln :-. 111~ thl' Lh.tph.'T on ~m oth ­
cr Fourt h ol Ju l) "111 R.ll"tlle

Arcadia's Nursing
Department
'

had an Exceptional
Ohio Department ofHealth
Annual ~pection
Prm ing Once Agu111 .
Tilar Wt" are Srlil S111al/
E/1(/Ut:il 10 CW~' Ulld

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·PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

'l'uesday, Julys,

'

Law schools doing ·more to attJ;act minorities

·-

minority legal professionals
CLEVELAND (AP) affects
the·
Facing stagnantly low num- negatively
bers of minorittes in their nation's leadership be,cause
ranks. law schools across the of the high number of law- ·
country are reaching out to makers who come from !he
minority -students at a ranks of the American Bar
.younger age - some are Association. which is 89 pereven starting programs aimed cent white. The association's
at elementary schoolers.
members comprise : virtuall y
Between 2000 and 2004, all of the · nation's judges.
the number of minorjty law more than half of U.S. senaschool students hovered tors, nearly half of governors,
around 21 percent. And only a third of U.S. representatives
about 10 percent of practic- ~qlild about a fi fth of state leg·
·
ing attorneys are minorities, islators.
"The perception is that ·the
according to the U.S . Census
fairness brought to bear on
Bureau.
Case Western Reserve issues is limited because of
University School of Law is the people at the table.'' sa id
~mong those trying to tlesh Sarah Redfield, visiting facout its minority ranks. The \lhX
member
at
th.e
University
ol
the
Pacrlo
c
school just wrapped up a
two-week summer legal . McGeorge School. of .Law in
academy for high school stu- Sacramento. Cali f.
Reufield coord inates the
dents.
Projec t
at
"Historically, the legal pro- Pipeline
fession has lacked minonties McGeorge. The }ll-college
of all kinds in its early days. consortium aims to improve
It was an all-white-mao pro- the intellec·rual ahility and
fe!fsion," ·said
Barbara civ(c engagement of minority
Greenberg, executive director elementary school students,
of the Cuyahoga County Bar which could increase the
Association, which collabo- num ber of qualified minority
. rated with Case in organizing law school applicant~ .
The University of Akron
the academy. "The fact is that
we have a diverse population School of Law in 2002 startof people going through the ed Ca~ tp Law Sch.ool, which
legal system and we need . brings lawyers, police offi good, . diverse . attorneys to cers and judges to students
already spending their sum. .
help them."
Some say the dearth of mer at other camps.

AP Photo/The Plain Deater, C.H. Pete C-tand

Assistant Cuyahoga C9unty prosecutor Anthony Jordan, right seated, answers questions of students after a session breaks up in the Moot Courtroom at Case Western Reserve University
School of Law Friday in Cleveland. Facing stagnantly low numbers of minorities in their ranks,
law schools across the country are reaching out to minority students at a younger age- some
are evern starting programs aimed at elementary schoolers.
Shirley Simon, who heads children understan(l what dream of becoming a lawyer.
Camp Law . School, made · they n~ed to do to become a The 17 -year-old says she
weekly visits to predominant- lawyer.
·
wants to be an advocate for
Iy
black . . Schumacher
Amber Stinnen, a student children.
Academy this school year, at Shaw High School in East
"Being a lawyer gives you
teaching fourth- and fifth - Cleveland, attended the .Case a higher voice," she said.
graders about the law. She Western program this sum- "You c.an make ihings happen
said the early exposure lets mer in hopes of fulfilling her when you are a lawyer."

PERSPECTIVE: Environmentalists praise Taft vetoes
JOHN McCARTHY

er quality wetlands in Ohio,"
· ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITtR
he said.
Taft also said the ceramic
COLUMBUS- Gov. sob and brick exemption "could
Taft is beginning to leave a make · Ohio a dumpin g
legacy as an environmental- ground for this material .' '
ist, advocates say, but also is
Current law requires wetangering developers who see lands to be replaced within
the state as unnecessa~i l y the same watershed and subbogged down in regulation, jects ceramics and bricks to
lhe head of a construction . ·the same ' regulations and
~
dumping fees as other contrade group says.
·
Taft on Thursday vetoed struction debris.
two budget provisions added
The kudos for Taft come at
by the Legislature that envi- a time when his administraronmental advocates and his tion has been tainted by a
own
Environmental scandal over investment lossProtection Agency· director es ot: more than $225 million
had opposed.
at the state's injured-worker
.One would have allowed insurance program and his
developers to replace wet- own admission that he failed
lands they destroyed with to report golf outings to the
another one that could be Ohio Ethics Commission.
counties away. The . other
·Jack Shaner, a lobbyi st for
exempted brick and ceram- the nonprofit environmental
ics, such as slate, from dump' council, said Taft is proving ·
to be a steward of the en viing regulations.
The Ohio Environmental ronment with the vetoes and
Council and other advocacy · his backing of the "Clean
groups and EPA director .Joe Ohio" bond program that votKoncelik lobbied against" ers approved in 2000.
their passag.e.
'Taft heard the voices of
"The governor feels, and sportsmen, conservationists,
cenainly I share that belief, local public ofticials and his
that if•we're going to do sub- own EPA director and recogstantive change we should do nized that once you lose a
it in separate legi slation," wetlands, it 's gone forever,"
Koncelik said Friday. "The Shaner said. "Any tenn-limveto messages were right in ited governor starts to look
line. The governo~ and I ahead at his legacy. He's built
specifically · talked about a heck of a legacy already
this."
with hi s Clean Ohio fund ."
In · a message accompanyTaft has 18 months left in
"ing his veto o£"27 budget line. · his second four-year term, the
items, Taft said he would consecutive-term limit set by
direct the EPA to make wet- state law.
·
lands replacement more flexDevelopers shouldn't -"hold
ible.
. their breath waiting for Taft
"I support protecting high- and the EPA to" ease the
BY

state's reg ulatory system,
said Vince Squillace, executi ve vice pres.ident of th e
Ohio
Home
Builders
Association, a trade group.
"They never ex pressed any
willingness at all to work on
this issue in any . way ....
We've had thi s ongoing
debate about it ana we've
always gotten a bone-chilling
experience from the governor
on this." ·S quillace said.
"They always claim their
rules are not excessive, that
we're imaginin g there are
prob'lems. I really couldn' t
say the . governor is antidevelopment. but I don't
think he realizes the impact
environmental rules have ."
The horne builders won a
victory in February when Taft
allowed a law that dampened
the authority that townships
and counties have . over residential development in unincorporated areas to become
law without hi s signature. He
said he had concerns about
the plan but supported the
bill'~ original . purpose -·
allowing . charter school
pupils to take part in
extracurricular· activities in ·
the public sc hool di stricts
where they live.
Taft isn't necessarily looking for a legacy as an environmentalist, but he is proud
of his record. spoke sman
Mark Rickel said.
"The governor has had a
strpng record in prote~ting
the ·environment, including
leading the effort for the
Clean · Ohio bond issue,"
Rickel said. ·
'

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•

Butler County sheriff also
using women on chain gang
HAMILTON (AP) - The
women in the Butler County
jail'~ chain gang wear the same
black and white striped clothes
as the men. eat the same sa9k
lunches and use the same
portable .potty. They even
cover the same distance as the
men, five miles, and average
pickiJJg. up about 60 bags of
trash along roadsides.
Sheriff Ri ck Jones has
noticed a distinct difference
though.
'The men are glad to be outside, but the women are glad to
be working," he said. "They
seem to be more fit men than
the men ... more productive.
They aren't whining and complaining. The men are."
Jones, who took office six
months ago, began his chain
gang of ·men May 9. After
women inmates complained,
he added two crews for them
on June 29.
Lower level offenders such
as drunken drivers and drug
abusers already work in programs that don't require
chains. Chain gains - in
which inmates are shackled
together on 5-foot chains so
they won 't run off - are
designed ·for medium-security
inmates who have committed
nonviolent offenses and need
closer supervision.
Becky Coffey, 31, of
McGonigle, and Wendy
Yarbrough, 36, , of Hamilton,
sunburned after spending
seven hours outside on Friday,
have been out with the
women's gang both times jt

Thesday, July 5
Morning (7 a.m.-fioon)

from 84 early this eveni ng to
71. Winds will be 10 ·MPH
from the southwest turning
It will be a humid and from the northwest as the
cloudy morning. Light rain is ~v~ ning progresses.
expected. Expect 0.10 inches
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.) .
of rain by the end of this
There is a siight chance of
morning. Temperatures will- ·rain. Temperatures wi.ll stay,.
rise from 73 to 80 by late thi s ncar 68 with today 's low of
morning. Winds will be 5 65 occurring· around 6 a.m .
MPH from the southwest.
Aft~rnoon (1-6 p.m.)"
Skies will be mostly clear to
It should remain humid and . cloudy with 5 MPH winds
clpudy. There may be a brief from the west turning from
sprinkle. The rdin.i ~ pretlicted· the northwest" a&gt; the overnight
to end near
I p.m. progresses.
Temperatures wi.ll climb from
81 with today's high of 87
Wednesday, July 6
occurring around 5 p.m.
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noo11)
Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH
Temperature' will increa'c
from the southwest.
frqm 67 to 74 by hue this
Evening (7 ~: m.•Mid11ight) morning. Skie' will range
from o;u nny to "inostly cloudy
It should be a wet. humid with 5 MPH wind' from the
and cloudy evening. Expect
moderate rain. The rain is pre- northwest.
Aftet111io11 (1-6 p.m. )
dicted to start near 7 p.m. The
It \ going to be a humiu and
rainfall is expected to end
afternoon .
around midnight w.ith total cloudy
Temperature&gt;
will
hold
steady
accumulations for this event
0.44
inches. around 76. Wind~ will be 5 to
near
Temperatu~s will dimini sh 10 MPH from the northwe't.

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PLEASANT VAL.t..EY BOSPITAL 1$ now usins the
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synem th11 allowsbauic,re aoeurate, leainv ahif'di18f10Siic

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procedure. The s(x,peilprinwity beina usee~ in

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COLUMBUS (AP)- In a
move· that could boost the
accountability of undercover
officers who enforce the
state's liquor laws, the Ohio
Investigative Unit may install
satellite-tracking devices in
the cars of its agents.
The agency is asking companies that provide the technology to submit estimates,
said Scon Pohlman, asststant
deputy director. The ·agency
has 1.1 0 cars and more .than
I00 undercover officers .Pohlman said the technology could enhance ·Safety. by
being able lo pinpoint where
an agent's carts at any lime.
But the agency also .could
use global positioning s7stem
-technology to track cars locations to ensure that officers
are doing their jobs.
That notion didn't sit well
with Jim Pasco, who heads
the National Fraternal Order
of Police in Nashville, Tenn.
"If you can't tru&amp;tthe police
officers who work for you,
then that's an indictment on
the management who hires
and trJirls them," Pasco said.
He said the -devices could
have a chilling effect on officers, who need to 'go where
crime takes them without fear
of second-guessing.
"It's such a ludicrous idea, I
think they ought to put a GPS
on the person who came up
with it,' Pasco said.
·
In the fast two years, the
actions o some officers have
been called into questioned.
In 2003, agents ~rovided a
· real person 's identtty . so that
an informant could use it to
· get a job as a nude dancer for
an undercover sting.
The state legislature later.
changed ' the Oh-io Revised
Code to clarify that police
can't use someone's identity
that way.
·
Last August, agents hand-·
cuffed a Columbus parkinglot attendant after he asked
them to pay a $5 parkin~ fee,
then forced him into thetr car
and drove him around for a
half-hour before releasing
him. The agents were later
disciplined and forced to give
up one day's pay.
Last week, a Clevelandbased agent was charged with
theft in office, accused of
lying about how much ov~r­
ttme he had · worked ; the
Columbus Dispatch reported.
The agent, who has pleaded
not guilty, was fired.
The idea to use satelitte
technology was first suggested in· a June 3 memo by &lt;&gt;utgoing
head · of
the
Investigative Unit, Ed Duvall
Jr.
Technology experts say
law-enforcement agencies
across the country more often
use GPS to track suspects
than to keep track of officers.
"U sually, a law 0enforcement agency will buy the
tracking devices to install in
vehicles used as bait to track
car thieves and locate chop
shops," said Michael Brower,
president of · Fall Creek
Consultants in Felton, Calif.

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fllee~nd mutder

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II ihe Polat Plleie-lltt 0. I I pUle l•tiJ I II by Rlfll I McOe..,., 0()
and AatbGIIy J, Mclllla•..,.. MD.

For more inforination pletU&lt;W II cr, {304} 675-5275.

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Olympic committee bidding, Pqe B2
Roddick on the outside looking In, Page B6'

2005

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ewsChannel

has been used.
'~ It's hot. It's hard work.
We're still wrestling with
learning how to walk with the
chains," said Coffey, in jail" on
a probation violation related to
a drug abuse charge.
"They don't show us any
special privileges because we
are women. They work us
hard," said Yarbrough, who
has six months to go on an 11month sentence for a probation
violation tor drug abuse and
petty theft.
Jones said interest in the
gangs is picking up. He is
thinking about adding crews
and giving women a chance to
work more than once a week.
He acknowledges that the
practice is controversiaL
"Not many sheriffs are doing
it," he said.
Chain gangs originated a
century ago, mostly in the
south. They were disbanded by
the 1950s because of corruption and prisoner abuse.
Other sheriffs have attempted to bring back the idea, but
· none have stuck other than in
Arizona . where Sheriff Joe
Arpaio has used male and
female chain gangs for the past
decade in Maricopa County.
In neighboring Cincinnati,
. Hamilton County ·Sheriff
Simon Leis is not considering
adding chain gangs to the rQadside work details he already
has for. minor nonviolent
offenders, spokesman Steve
Barnett said. He also allows
inmates to clean offices and
wash cruisers.

The Daily
Sentinel
.
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'INSIDE

.-·

•

,•

'

Tues&amp;y, July 5, 2005

A~trong eyes yellow jersey.at Tour de Frarice
---,lTC&lt;:JO';!'UR~DE~Ff':RA
~N"'C:_o:EJ~c~A'?'GE~
4 JI-- ~ ---~-SO_m
_;-.--,

BY JEROME PuGMIRE'
ASSOCIATED PRESS

I

Today'a game
Mason Co. at S.outh Charleston, 5 p.m.
Wedneaday'a gilme
Feeney Bennett al Athens. 7 p.m.

Thu·raday'a game
Parkersbvrg 15 at Mason Co .. 6 p.m.
Friday's game
Feeney Bennell at Mason Co., 6 p.m.

Asprint in the vallev

T0URS, France - Lance
Armstrong .pedaled beside
the overall leader of the Tour
de France and admired his
taste in fashion. The six-time
champion wants to, be
decked out in yellow again.
and he might not have ·to
wait long.
"Regardless of how many
I've had in my clay, it"s still a
AP photo
jersey I cherish." Armstrong
Six-time
Tour
de
France
winner
and.
leader
of
the
·
Discovery
said.
Armstrong was ·content to Channel cycling team, Lance Armstrong of Austin, Texas, center,
ride safely in the main pack rides between..._two teammates during the third stage of the Tour
again Monday. He finished de France cycling race Monday.
in 87th place in the third green fi elds and dozens of leader David Zabriskie of the
stage while Belgium 's Tom vineyards.
Uniteu Stales and will he
-.Boonen sprinted to victory
There wiJI,be nothing cau- · looking to ga in more grnu nd
for the second straight day . . tious about the key time tri~l on his ' rivals. and r~e rhap s
the route marked by tower- Tuesday. Armstrong is a
ing gray castles, endless mere two seconds. bchi~d -Piease·see Armstrong. 86

FIN ISH

~'~--~

The sho rt but crucial team time trial
· stage fo llow,s the famous Loire River

northeast from Tou rs to Blois.

\,

·.

.. .....

F A NJ:lE i'

Stage 4

1·,.

Ji
· ,~/";

Tues .. July 5 . .

Time trial
Stage length: 41.9 miles
Average duration : 78 m1nutes

Saturday's game,
Bennett .al Parkersburg 15, 1p.m.
Roane at Mason County, 2 p.m.
F~ney

Sports BriEfs

STAYING COOL ON THE OHIO RIVER

Hall of Fame
coach Hank
Stram dead at 82
NEW ORLEANS (AP) Hank Stram, who took the
Kansas City Chiefs to two
Super Bowls and was
known for his inventive
game plans, died Sunday at
a hospital in suburban New .
Orleans, hi s son said. He
was 82.
Stram had been in declining health for several years
and his son attributed death
to complications from diabetes . He died at St.·
Tammany· Parish Hospital,
near his home in Covington,
across Lake Pontchartrain
from New Orleans. He had
built the home there during
his two-year stint as head
coach of the· Saints.

OVPseeking
football stringers
'·

.~

'

Contact Information
Fax- 1·740-446·3008

.

E-mail- sporlsOmyda11ysentmel.com

Soorts Sttf!

\,

,Bred Sherman, Sports Editor
0401 44&amp;2342. ext. 33
bshermanO mydaitytribune com
Bry~~n Waite,., Sports Writer
I 1740) 446·2342 . eKt 23

' bwalters@mydailytribUne.com

Larry crUm, Sportl Wrtter
(3041675·1333. ext. 19
Ierum 0 IT'rydallyr&amp;glster. ~om

I

'

.,.,:'

...

Brad Sherman/photo
'
..,
While temperatures were near ~riple dig its, many took to the ir watercrafts on July Fourth tQ coo l off on the Ohoo River. Pa.ul Simon:· pictured
left , is one of those - piloting hi s Jet sk i ori the Ohio River Monday.
· ·

Major league BasEball

'

Oh,io Valley Publishing
seeking .
is
.c urrently
stringers to help cover
high school football games
this fall.
Applicants ' mu st have a
strong understanding of
football . the' abilify to keep
accurate statistics and
basic word process in g
computer skills .
Some travel may be necessary ; willingness to
cover a va riety of teams
and previou s wriW!g experience are plusses.
All
tho se interested
should
contact
Brad
Sherman. OVP . Sports
Editor at (740) 446-2342
ext. 33 . If there is ' no
· answer, leave a message
along with your contact
information.
Writing samples can be
sent to bsherman @mydai lytribune .com: fax.ed to 1740-446-3008 ; or dropped
off at our Gallipolis office
at 825 3rd Ave .

..

.,

Reds .hold on
to beat ·Giants

Tribe
sweeps.
Detroit
'

BY JANtE McCAULEY
ASSOCIATED PRE'SS

SAN FRANCISCO
With the game on the line.
Ken Griffey Jr. faced the
worst suti he had seen in his
17 major l_eague se~sons , a~d
hrs mnth-mmng nusplays on
LaRue hit a two-run homer ·
center field certainly had the in the third following his secReds learing another hean- ond-inoting " ocrilice lly. then
· lined a uouble tn ri ght in the
breaking road defeat.
Then. with the tying ru11 on sixth wi.th the hascs loaucd.
base following consecutive LaRue had six RB!s" in his
doubles. Matt Belisle calmly · previous .l4 games.
. got the "linal t"ree outs, pre.. , never wotTied . I know I
serving Cincinnati'~ 11 - 10 can do what I:m, doing:· he
victory over t~e San • ,aid. '
He wasn' t the only one to
Fmncisco Giants on Monday.
"It's one of those things tlrJt produce &gt;o mc hig h_its.
if you keep playing ·atld keep
Wily Mo Pena hot a threebattling, ihings are going to nm homer m the l&lt;)llnh that
happen." said Griffey. who hit' ex tended hos career-best hithis 51 7th career hot\Je ntn in ttng streak ll&gt; I0 games lor th~
the third . ·"Fortunately, espe- Reds. wlro opened a . "&lt;CWncially in the ninth with the ~ame . r~;.'d tnp with ali
two balls hit. at me, we got a ll)tpres~I\C power d"pl,oy.
break and they weren 't able to
Gnflcy hot h" 16th ht&gt;I)Jer
·
·
·•
of
the season le;~dm g o!l the
score the tymg run
·d ·
·
· 1· (. '·" 1·
. } son LaRue· hit .a tiebreak- rim · movmg Wit ltn our 0
. a.
·.
tym~· Wtlhe McCovey and
!ng t!ue~-run double alld h~- TedWilliams for l~th on the
1shed woth a career-hogh sox career list.
RBis. and hos bog day helped
"All 1 can say "· wm~·:·
the Red~ end a lour-ga me Reds in terim n1.111.tger Jerry
road losmg streak and wm Narron &gt;aid. ""ltsPn LaRue
uway. from G~at American
'
·
Ball Park for just the third
Please see Reds, 86
time in their last Ill.

CLEVELAND . I APt
Tr;l\ i' Hafner hit his third
IH1me run of the
day. Cntll Cri sp
added
.an
in, iJe-t he · park
homer and the
'llfg_lllg

C I e ,. c I a n d

Indi ans . , poiled tlt.e major
l~ ap u ~
dchul pf Justin

Please see Tribe, 81

lnd,.an

Nofr-ho()k

Hafner 0 K with
All-Star slight

.

AP photo

Cmconnato Reds closer Matt Bel1sle lets out a yell after he&lt;
got the San Francisco Giants' Jason Ellison t,o ground out
wit11 the tyong run at tlmd base and prese rve the Reds' 11·
10 won Monday 111 San
Francisco.
'
.

CLEVl;LAND iAPl - It 's
tw late for Tra1·is Hafner to
eel "Vote For Pronk"" T-shirts
printed th i, year.
The Clc\cland Indians" designated hiller said Monday
that he· didn't care about camp;ng ning for the AL :&lt;\ll-Star
team all\ wuv.
· "" It w;&gt;ultf be nice to go, I

Please see Notebook; 86

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Page B2 • The Daily Seritinel

..

· www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, Julys.

.'Tuesday, July 5, 2005

www.mydallysentinel.com

2005

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\e
c ·LASSIFIED

Bid camp~igning ·is an Olympic sport for·2012 Games.
BY STEP.HEN WtLSOij
ASS(IATEf»PRESS

roy&lt;tlty &lt;tnd sports st.trs were
trotted out Monday tu pto4
mote the c.;~ndtddtcs
" I thmk It's very tlutd.
satd IOC Vt&lt;e prestdent Jun
Easton. ~he ' htghest-t&lt;tnkmg
Amencan OJ! the commtttee
"Bec&lt;tuse there are so many
good ct ttes there ts no slam
dtutk 111 thts th1ng . Even
though some of the Clites
thmk they're w&lt;ty ahead , I
don'tthmk "'
A pntentl.tlly ugl) sp.l!
between P,uts and London
dn&gt;se ,1ftet two expert consult,mts lor the Bnttsh btd cnttctzcd the Stade de FrdtKe.
c:onstdered .t ccnterptece of
the French capital·~ proJect
Under !OC rules, btd cttles
are prohtbned from cnttctzmg each other
J1m Sloman and Rod
Sheard, Australian consultants for London , were cnttcal ot the stghthnes tor spectators at the French stadtum,l
butlt for the 1998 soccer

World Cup
'
Pans offictals decided not
to complam to the IOC ethtcs
commtsston, and the IOC
satd 11 wouldn't pursue the
matter
,
Earlter, J:'lew York Mayo(
M1chael Bloomberg gave a
Fourth of July pep talk for h1s
c1 ty. tl ,mked by a row of
boostcts that 111Ciuded a
won1.1n 111 a St)ltue of Ltberty
cost ume
Sen
Hillary
Rodh,tm
Clinton
and
Muhammad Ah are due m
town Tuesday
Bloomberg satd he hopes
to convmce undecided voters
tl;tat holdtng the games m
New York would be an economtc
boost
tor the
Olymptcs and mternallonal
sports federattons.
"Amenca ts the btggest
sports market m the world It's a market that they have to
approach," he satd.
·
Bloomberg also satd :New
York 's II th-hour change m
stadtum plans was evtde)lce
of the city's restlience After
a state panel rejected a proposed new stadmm m
Manhattan last month, btd
offtctals swtftly cam·e up
Y&lt;tth a new plan for a stadmm
111 Queens

"That's what great teams
do
they
adapt,"
Sloomberg satd "No one
starts out wnh a game. plan
and slavtshly follows It to the
end."
Bnll sh Pnme Mtmster
Tony Blatr and Pnncess
Anne held separate news
conferences to state the case
lor iakmg tht: Ofymptcs back
to London for the ftrst ttme
smce 1948 England soccer
c.tptain Davtd Betkham and
w1fe V1ctona, &lt;~ former Sptce
Gtr! , shpped tnto town to
back the btd
M.1dnd Mayor Alberto
Rutz -Gallardon and soccer
star
Raul
Gonzalez,
Beckh&lt;tm 's teammate at Real
Madnd, talked up the
Spamsh capital's chances.
Yun
Moscow
Mayor
Luzhkov and French Sports
Mtm ster
Jean-Francots
Lamour dtd the same for
thetr ctttes French Prestdent
Jacques Chtrac arnves
Tuesday
"Whoever wins, it's fOing
to be a prestigiou s cny,' IOC
president Jacques Rogge
sat d. "I· rn often questiOned
,who might be the wmner and
I'm always mchned ' to say
the
wmner
ts
the

lnternanonal
Olymptc
Committee."
But Rogge ts less enthused
by the stream of sports
celebnties JOintng the fivenng show
'Tm 'a very sober man," he
said. "Yes, I hke to see
Olymptc champions I don't•
think the whole candidate
process must be one of glitter
and stars "
'
Battle, the New York btd's
tntemat10nal relattons dtrector, was wtdely credtted wtth
helpmg 'sway IOC members
to vote for Atlanta m tts wmnmg campatgn for the 1996
Olymptcs He satd the ftve
ctltes thts ttme are so strong
there ts no compelltng case
for IOC members
"They pon't have any
chmces that they probably
couldn 't live wtth," he satd
"In a way there's not a lot of
pressure on them to feel like
they've got to make the right
chotce. I don't thmk there are
any wrong chotCes To me
there is the potential of a Itttie btt of whtmsy"
In the lobby of the adJOtn·
mg hotel, Ketth Mtlls, the
chtef executtve of the
London btd , paused between
phone calls and chats wllh

IOC members.
"As you· wander around
this hotel , 11 does seem to me
there must be a better way of
selectmg a host ctty," he 'satd
"Inevnably, when you've got
f1ve such larg~ cates and so
much is at stake, you can see
why tt's so frenellc "
Mills was surpnsed at how
many members are Sttll undectded. That puts more pressure on the ctlles to lobby
unttl the end and · gtve an
tmpresstve performance m
Wednesday 's 45-minute fmal
presentauon s to the IOC.
"It's very tempnng to be
overconftdent," Mills sa id
"We ta~e absolutely nothmg
for granted . Strange thmgs
happen m Olymptc t:lecttorls,
and anythmg cou!Q happen
thts ume, too "
,
Under the IOC votmg system, the ctty recetvmg the
fewest votes ts ehmmated
.after each round unni one
candtdate obtams a winmng
maJonty Ptclimg up votes m
the second and thtrd rounds
could be cructal
"Bemg a good second
choice is a pretty tmportant
place to be," Mills said

One batter earher, Detron
center fielder Nook Logan
tned to make a leaptng catch
ot Cnsp ·s dnve aga111st the
wall, but the ball ncocheted
toward the tntleld Rtght
helde r Magglio Ordonez
ptckeu the ball up and threw
11 but Cnsp beat the relay
thtow to the plate
.. •
The lnd1.ms have won mne
of II and 21· of 28 The
Ttgers lost for •the I Oth nme:
m 12 games
.
Catcher Vance Wtlson was
etected by plate umptre Chns
Gucctone 111 the mnth llll)tng
ot the second game ,Jtter
bemg called out on stnkes for
the second out Wtl son and
T1gers
nMn,Jger . A·Jan
Trammell had protested
stnke two, and alter being
called out. Wtlson turned and
pomted h1s fmger at
Gucctone's face whtle yellmg
.tt htm
Thud base umpire Angel
Hernandez anempted to pull
Wtlson away trom Gucctone,

but thetr feet became entan- four and throwmg several
gled and the two tumbled to pttches that regtstered 99
the ground
mph on the radar gun.
Matt Mtller, Bob Howry
' Left off the AL All-Star
and Davtd Rtske each, team Sunday. Hafner scored
worked one mmng to com- three runs and went 4-for-5 to
plete the stx-httter
support the stx-htt pitchmg of
The Indtans sent nme men Scon Elarton (5 -3) 111 the first
to the pl.lte and scored three· game as Cleveland improved
runs oft Verlander (0-1) m the to 25-1 when sconng stx or
ftrst mmng
more runs
.
Vtctor Martmez extended
"When they took the (All'
h1 s hmmg streak to a career: . Star) vote. I dtdn 't have a
htgh 15 game~ wtth a two-out very good case." satd Hafner,
RBI double and scoted on a who has seven homers in 10
double by Ben Broussard games and 17 RBis in his last
Jh9uny Peralta added an RBI nine games Since June I, he
smgle and Verl.mder walked ts hmmg 379 with 12 homers
two str,nght to load the bases and 37 RBis 111 29 games
,betore getung out ot the 34Elarton pttched hts fourth
pnch mnmg
career complete game and
T)le nght-hander, the No 2, first smce a two-htt shutout
ptck m the 2004 draft, was a of the Chtcago Whtte Sox on
cornbmed I0-2 wtth a I 43 Aug 29
ERA and 122 strikeouts .i n · "ObvJously when you have
101 mnings at two levels in ·_ a •'doubleheader and your
the mmor leagues this. year.
starter goes all the way, that's
He gave up four runs and a btg ptckup for everybody
seven htts 111 5 1-3 mnmgs, on the team," lndtans managwalkmg three, stnkmg out tr Enc Wedge satd.

Elarton gave up a one-out
smgle. by Carlos Gutllen in
the first, then rettred 17 in a
row before Gutllen beat out
an mfield smgle 111 the seventh Chns Shelton and
Rondell White followed w th
singles to rum tbt_r_tght- nder's shutout btd
While htt a two-run homer
111 the' nmth, but Elarton hung
on to go to 5-1 wtth a 3 32
ERA m hts last mne starts He
struck out stx without a walk
Hafner put Cleveland ahead
1-0 agamst fason Johnson (57) wtth an RBI smgle 111 the
hrst mnmg, sconng Coco
Cnsp, who doubled.
Broussard and Ronme
Belhard drove in third-mnmg
runs and Chweland broke 11
open in the fourth on an RBI
smgl~ by Peralta and threerun homer by Hafner, a 471foot shot to center, to make 11
7-0
Hafner htt hts 16th homer
off Doug Creek m the stxth
for the stxth multthomer

game of hts career
Johnson gave up seven runs
and II htts m 3 1-3 mmngs,
hts shortest start since Apnl
I 3 at Mmnesota - when he
got only one out and was
roughed up for tive runs
Notes Detrou destgnated
INF Jason Smith tor asstgnment to make room for
Verlander
Cleveland
optiOned RHP Kazuhno
Tadano to Buffalo to make
room tor Davts
Cleveland
ts 34· I H ( 654) smce May 9
and has won 15 of tts last 21
home games . Hafner has 29
RBis m hts last 18 games .
lndtan s 3B Aaron Boone
mtssed the first game to be
wuh wtfe Laura, who dehvered the couple 's first chtld. a
boy .. Johnson tell to 0-3
with a 7 68 ERA m I0 career
games, mcludtng eight starts,
agamsr the lnd~ans . The
doubleheader drew 60.468
fans and more than II 0.000
hot dogs were sold at a special pnce of $1 aptece • ·

•'
SINGAPORE - Charlie
Ballle. a veteran Olympic
lobbytst and key memller of
New York's 2012 bid team ,
surveyed the sw&gt;rl of poh uck tng, gl.1d handtng and
schmooz1ng and 'hook h••
head
• " lr's almost a frenetiC and
frenz1ed atmosphere," he
sa1d Monday as the ltve-Cily
camp.ugn moved 11110 the
fmal 48 hours 'Thts IS the
most competlllve mid htghprohlo race they've ever h&lt;td
It was tust bound to rcdch
thts cnllcal mass ·
The lntcnmttOIMI Olymp1c
Comm1ttee votes Wednpd.1y
to dec1de whether P&lt;~r1 s.
London. New York. Madnd
or Moscow wtll ho ~t the
2012 Summet Games Pans
has long been constdered the
favorite, wttl&gt; London th e
mam challenger But many
IOC members say the race
rema111s open
With many of the I 00 or so
members apparently snll
undectded, the btd ct!les are
makmg a late franitc push tor
support PQllllcal leaders.

fromPageBl
Verlander wnh a 6-0 \ tctory
over the Detroit Ttgers to
swee p a day-mght doubleheader Mondav
Hafner homered twtce .md
drove 111 ft\e runs 111 the fust
game, leadmg the Ind1ans to &lt;1
9-3 VICtOry
Jason Davts (4-2), called
up from Tnple-A Buff.tlo to
m.tke tile st.ut m the mghtcap, allowed tour htts, stn1ck
out f1ve and walked two 111
stx mnmgs to tmprove to 2-0
thts season agamst the Ttgers
It was hts ftrst b12 lea~ue wm
sm~e a 7-0 tnurnph -at San
Franctsco on June II.
Hafner was 6·for-JO Y&lt;tth
three homers and stx RBis 111
the doubleheader He added a
457·foot shot m the ctghth
mnmg of the second game oft
Fernando Rodney

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removal (740)441 D514

r

Development Act of
1974, as amended,
Section 288 of Tttle
llol the Cranston
Gonzales
National
Affordable Housmg
Act
(NAHA),
as
amended : and/or Title
IV of lhe Stewart B
Pomeroy, OhiO will be
McK1nney Homeless
held at the tterk's Asststance Act, as
amended, to be used
0HIC8.
,
for lhe followtng proJKathy Hysell
ecl(s)·
VIllage Clerk
CDBG
Community
Pomeroy, Ohio
01stress
(7) 5
Neighborhood
FacllitlesfCommunlty
Public Noltce
Center
NOTICE TO PUBLIC V1llage of Middleport
Depot
OF NO SIGNIFICANT Freight
Rehabilitation Project
IMPACT
ON THE
ENVIR.ONMENT Source ot Funds:
CDBG
(FONSI)
Multi· Year Project
• COMBINED NOTICE
Meigs
County Village ol Mlddlaport,
Me1gs County •
Commissioners
Me1gs
County Esttmated total costs
of the Project
Courthouse
$83,500
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
It has been deter·
(740) 992-2895
TO ALL INTERESTED mined that such a
PERSONS
AGEN· Request for Release
1
of Funds will not conCIES, AND GROUPS:
The Meigs County stitute an a't:llon sigaflecllng
nificantly
CommiSsioners, prothe quality ol the
poses to request the
Slate of Ohto to human envtronment
and accordingly the
release Federal funds
County
under Section t04 (g) Me•gs
Commissioners have
of Tille I of lhe
Housmg
and decided not to prean
Community , pare

Environmental Impact
Statement under the
NatiOnal
Environmental Polley
Act of t969, as
amended

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Is hereby
given that on July 11,
2005 lrom 6:30 pm to
7:00 priJ a pubhc
meeting
on
the
Budget and Revenue
Sharing for the year
2006 for the VIllage of

•

WANTED Posllton ava t!able to
ass tst an mdt\ldual with mental
retardation 111 Metg s Count} 28
' h~s./wk 2 30-Spm Mffu. 2·-6pm
Wffh/F. Must have htg~ school
dtploma/GED. valtd dnver's
ltcense, three years good dnymg
expenence and'adequate
automobile msurance 57 .25/hr.
Send resume to. Bucke ye
Commumtv Servt ccs, P.O Box
604, Jackso~, OH 45640. Deadlin e
.·
for appltcan~: 7/8/05 Preemployment drug testtng Equal
.

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Environmental

Help Wanted .

Help Wanted

.

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Review
Record(s)
(ERR) for each of the
ProJect(s)
hsted
above have been con·
ducted by the Meigs
County
CommiSSIOners The
ERR(s) documents
the
environmental
reviews of the proJecl(s) and more lulty
sets forth the reasons
why such statement
Is not requtred. The
ERR(s) are on f1le and
avatlable for the public s examtnat•on and
copy1ng
upon
request, between the
hours of 9 00 a.m. to
4 00 p.m. Monday
thru Friday (axcept
holidays) at the office
of the Metgs County
Commlsstoners,
Court House, 100
East Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
No further environmental review of such
project is proposed to
be conducted, pnor
to the request for
release of Fe,deral
funds
The Me1gs County
CommiSSIOners plan
to undertake the proj·
ect(s) descrtbed with
the Fed~ral lunds
cited above Any per·
son, agenc1es, and/or
groups, who have any
comments regardmg
the envtronment or
who disagree w1th
this finding of No
Significant
Impact
dec1s1on, are Invited
·. to
submit written
comments for con•id·
eratlon to the Meigs
County
Comm1sa1onera ,
"' Courthouse ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
by 4·30 p m on July
I 8, 2005, which Is at
least t 5 days altar tha
publtcatton of thts
combmed notice
NOTICE OF INTENT
TO
REQUEST
RELEASE OF FUNDS

{NOURROF)
TO ALL INTERESTED
PERSONS,
AGEN·
CIES,
AND/OR
GROUPS
On or about, but not
belore, July 19, 2005
the Meigs County
Commissioners, will
request the State of
to
release
Ohio
Federal funds under
Secllon 104(g) ol Title
I of the Housing and
Community
Development Act of
1974, as amended;
Secllon 288 of Title
llol
the Cranston
National
Gonzales
Affordable Housing
.Act
(NAHA),
as•
amended ; and/or Title
lol the Stewart B.
McKinney Homeless
Assistance Act, as
amended , to be used
for the project(s)
described above.
The Meigs County
CommiSSIOners
is
certifying lo the State
of Ohio,. that Malgs
County
and
Jeff
Thornton, 1n higher
offlctal capactty as
President ,
Me1gs
County
Commtss•oners, con·
sent to accept to the
JUriSdiCtiOn
Of
Federal courts If an
act10n ts brought to
entorce respons1bil1·
ttes 10 relalion to
env,lronmental
rev1ews ,
dectstonmaklng and act1on ,
and
that
these
responsibilities have
been satisfied
The legal effect of the
certification Is that
upon Its approval, the
Meigs
County
Commissioners may
uae
the
Federal
funds, and the State
of Ohio will have oal·
,loflad lis responsibiliunder
tha
ties
National
Environmental Polley
Act of 1969, ao
amended
The State Qf Ohio Will
accept an objection
to Its approval of the
• release ol funds and
ac~eptance of the
certiflcatton only If it

1s on ·one ol the two
followmg bases • (a)
the certtflcatlon was
not, In fact, executed
by the c County ol
Meigs chiel executive
officer or other officer ·
of the county of
Meigs approve~ by
lhe State of Oho, or
(b) lhal the environmental review record
for the prolecl lndi·
cated qmisslon of a
requ1red
dec1s1on ,
finding, or step appll·
cable to the project in
the
environmental
rev1ew process
Wntlen
obJections
must be prepared and
submitted 10 accordance
w1th
the
requtred procedure
(24 CFR Part 58), and
must be addressed
to Sate of Oh1o ,

•
n

Offtcer, Community.
Development
DIVISion ; P 0 . BoK
1001 ,
Columbus,
OhiO 43266..()1 01
ObJections lo the
Release of Funds on
bas1s , on the than
those stated above
will not be consid·
ered by lhe Stale of
Oh1o No ObJections
rece1vecl after August
5, 2005 (which Is t 5
days after it is anticipated that the State
will rece1ve a requ'est
for release of funds),
will be considered by
the State f Oh1o
. 7/5

p

YARn SALF·
G &lt;\1 .UI~)IJS

***********
G11llia County

•

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4x4's For Sale ......................................... 725
Announcement ......................................... 030
Antiques ................................................. 530
Apartments for Rent.. .. . • ... •...... . 440
Auction and Flea Market .. .. ..
.. 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories.. .. . .... . . 760
Auto Repatr . .. .. .....................-... 770
Autos for Sale ........................................ 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale. ......... .............. . 750
Building Supplies .... .... .... ............ .. .... 550
Business and Buildings .. • . . ... 340
Business Opportunity...... • ... .. ..
210
Business Training .. .. . .. .. . . .14b
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .•.............: ....• 790
Camping Equipment ........................... . 780
Cards ol Thanks ............................, ........... 010
Child/Elderly Care .............. ............. ..... t90
Electrical/Refrigeration ... .. ..
.. .. 840
Equlpmen~lor Rent ..... ... . .. . .. .. . 480
Excavattng 1 . .. ..... . ... . .. . • .. . 830
Farm Equipment .. .. .... ... . ........... 610
Farms for Renl
................................ 430
Farms for Sale '........................................... 330
For Lease..... ..... .............. .... ... ... . .490
For Sate . .. .. .• ....... .. . . .. . . 585
For Sale or Trade .. ..
.. . ... . .. 5~0
Fruits &amp; Vegetables . . .. ....... ... .. .. 580
Furn1shed Rooms . . . . .................... 450
General Hauling ... .. . ............. ..... ... ... 850
Giveaway ............................................... 040
Happy Ada ........................ ... .. :..... ........ 050
Hay &amp; Grain. .. .... .. .... ... ....... ... ... 640
Help Wanted .............. ......... _. . ........ 110
ttoma Improvements ................................. 810
Homes lor Sale ........................................... 310
Household Goods ................................... 510
Houses for Rent ................................... 410
In Memoriam ........................................... 020
Insurance . ................................................ 130
Lawn &amp; Gordon Equipment ........................ 660
Llvaotock ......................................................830
Lost end Found .......................... .......... ... 060
Loll &amp; Acreage . .. ...................... ,,.............. 350
Miscellaneous. . .... ..... ...................... ..... 170
Ml,callanaoua Morchandloa ......................
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 860
Mobile Home a for Rent... ......................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sate .............. ! .............. 320
Money to Loan ...................................... 220
Motorc~clea &amp; 4 Whaelers .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ................................ 570
Personate ... ..... . ................................. .. 005
Pete for Sale .................... .. : .. .. . .... ·'· 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing .............................. 820
Professional Services... .. .................... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .....................o ....... 160
Real Ealate Wanted ............ :. ...................... 360
Schoolstnatructlon ..........................150
Seed , Plant I Fertilizer . ..... ...... . ... .. . 650
Sltuattono Wanted .. .. ... ,. .. .. ... ...... .. .120
Space for Rent . . • ... ....,............ ........ 460
Sporting Goods ... .. ......................... ... .520
SUV'a for Sate. ............. ... ... . . . . ... .720
Trucks for Sale................ ........ .. . .. 715
Upholstery .. .... . .. .. ..• . .. •. ... . 870
vans For Sale ... .• .. ... • .. .. . .... . 730
Wanted to Buy ... . .. ..... .. •.................... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ................ 620
Wanted To Do. ..... ............. ......... .... ... 180
wanted to Rent ......&lt;
....... ... .... .. .. ... ..470
Yard Sale· Gall!pollo.... .. .... •. .... ... ... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle .... .... ..... 074
Yard Sale· PI Pleasant..
............. 076

54o

~unba~ 't!ttme~ -~.entfnel

I

I \11'1 0'1 \11 ' I

CLASSIFIED INDEX

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need to do ...
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SAVINGS

Assemble crafts
wood 1tems
To $480/wk
Materials provtded
Free tnforma11on pkg 24 hr
801-428·4649

DRIVE

Outreach,
275 State Street.
Hag sale $4.00

If so, you qualify for a

Environmental

8th &amp; 9th 7am dark Ketlh

Lost 100 lb Red &amp; Black
German Shepherd m DaiWtn
area weanng 2 red collars
740 992 6001

YARil SAl f.

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310

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100 WORKERS NEEDED

FOUNil

Found Ladtes watch at
Galltpolis McDonalds on
Sunday June 26 (740)446
9390

Dally rn-Column: 1 :00 p.m.
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Relay for Ltle Yard Sale· JUty

Free Clothrng household
anc::l mtsc ttems Tables Absolute Top Dollar US
loca ted on AI 7 (Add son ) Stiver and Gold C01ns
An.ttque
&amp; Prootsets Gold Rtngs US
between
• Marathon stores
Currency M T S Cotn Shop
151
Second
Avenue
U)';] AMl
Galltpolls 740·446·2642

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Free several truck toads of Fttch restdence on At 124 tn
Locust
oak Portland Ratn or Shtne
maple, cherry yours lor

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·Tribe

M'•li!S County

•

Borrow Smart Contac
he OhiO Otvtslon o
Fmanctal
lnstl tut ton
ol • Consume
fl19e
flatrs BEFORE you rel1
ance your home o
btam a lOan BEWAA
I requests lor any larg
dvance paymen l s o
ees or Insurance Ca l
he Otftce of Consume
flairs ll!.lll free at 1 866
78·0003 to learn tl th
mortgage
bro ker
o
ende r
tS
proper l
teensed (ThiS 1s a publ•

An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
AVONI All Areast To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429
Restdent
CNA s
&amp;
lnterv1ews A-_re
Assistants
Now Bemg Conducled F01
CNA &amp; Resident Assistant
POSitiOnS
II You Are A
Ca rmg
En thus•asiiC
Dependable Person Then
We Want You To Jo•n Our
Team
Come On 011er &amp;
Check Us Out I Compel1\ ve
CNA
Wages
Pa1d
Vacattons Pa1d Meats And
Ma,ny
Other
Benefits
Ra11enswood Care Cen ler
1 11 3
Washtngton
St
Ravenswood WV (across
RitCh ie Bndge Rt 2 North
Last Busmess on nght) ~
References Aequued
ngra
arge Co w111 be accept
ng apphcat10ns at th
ept for Employmen
e rv 1ces 1844 Carte
venue
Ashland
entucky on 7112/200
hrough 7/ 14/2005 fro
OOam t1ll 3 OOpm MUS
AVE 2 years heav
abor work exper enc
1e tarmmg loggmg con
lruct on etc ) Generou
a1ly wage and exceflen
eneftl package EOE

IFN
Dental Hyg1ent st needecl
Send Resume to PO Bo11 45
Pt Pleasanl or tax resume
304·675 6553
Dnvers Needed
COL Dnvers willing lo dnve
tor local ready m1x conc rete
company Exoenence s
preferred but not necessary
Onver must be wllttng to do
pre mamtenance on ~rucks
&amp; equipment , yard work &amp;
other miscellaneous chores
E11penence operatmg equ p
men\ &amp; e11tra ski ll S such as
weldmg a plus
Call (304)937 3410
Durable Medtcal Equ pmenl
Con,pany
seektng
a
Mar}age r Knowledge of
DME and Marketing helpful
but will tram the nght person
Salary
based
on
Expenence Please send
re sume wtlh cover letter to
PO BOlt 707 Galltf.IOIIS OH
45631 0707
Full·tlme and part·ttme postliOns available Must have
dnvers license expenenc:e
1n operating scrubbers and
butters Commercial Floor

Care (740)367 0255
Management Position
local Hardware Sto r~t
Managemenl sk llls/exper i·
ence
necessary
Compettt1ve
wage
Insu rance Vacahon etc
Send resume to ..
81dwell Hardware
c/o Oh10 Valley
Supermarkets
PO Box 772
Galllpols OH 45631

EOE
\ McClure s Rastsurant now
hmng all local ons full or
part time, pick up apphca
110() al 1oc,at1on &amp; bnng back
between
10 ooam
&amp;
11 OOam
Monday thru
Saturday
Now H lrmg All Pos1llons
Apply at Court Street Gnll
Pomeroy Oh
a

1me epnee
a
!he Ga lltpoiiS Oatly
Tnbune Mus! have
val1d drtver s
1tcense M1mmum wage,
aprox 30 tJrs week
Stop by the Trtbune
Ofltce located at 825
Third Ave to fill out an

..._ .....OIOiihciiiaiillloiiin__•

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0
0

~
.'?a.. ..

f'ROFl:§IONAL

SF.Rvtn:.s
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 15517

~

No Fee Unless W e Wmt
1 888 582 3345

www COmiCS com

© 2005 by NEA, Inc

REPR ESEN T/\ Tl\o E

The

Ga111po1t s
Tnbune
1s accep ttng
res umes lor a lull lime
outs•de sales represents
t1ve to )Otn our sates learn
am:lto manage an estab
hshed account l1st wh1le
catttng on nE:~w accounts
The successful cand1date
w•ll be a d sc•pl1ned se ll·
mot ved team player that
unders tands th e 1mpor
of developing
l ance
strong mutually benef1·
car busmess relation
sh1ps wtth our accounts
The idea1 candtdale w111
have sale expertence For
conrlden tlal • mlervtew
please send resume and
co11e r lener to Gathpohs
Datly Tribune All n J1m
Freeland 825 Th1rd Ave
Gallipolis OhiO 45631

DIRECTV
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entertamment
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FREE Equipment and Install
up to lour rooms H5 chan·

STABILITY! I!
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The ODMR&amp;DD Galhpolts
Developmenta l Center 1s
recrUittng
Regtslered
Nurses to plan and provide
nurs•ng serv•ces to 11s res•·
dents Interested perso ns
ParamediC S
&amp;
EMT s should subm 1t an Ohto Civil
needed
Appty at 1 354 Service Appltcat on (avail
Jackson P1ke Ga llipolis
able on grounds ) and have a
vahd Oh1o R N and dnver s
AN/LPNS·- Overbroo~ cen •ltcenses Please subm1! to
ter tS currently acceptmg
applica llons for LPN S and OD MR&amp;DD Galhpot1s
ANS
?A 7P and 7P 7A Developrnet"ltal Center
Shtfts are available tl you Attention Hum an
are tnterested please come 'Resources Departmenf
nand ltll..out an app11catton 2500 OhiO Avenue
at
333
Page
Street Gatltpohs Oh10 45631
Mtddleport or call and PhOne (740)446 1642 exl
speak
w1th
Holl1e 273
Bu mgarner
LPN
Sta ll Fax (740)446-1341
Development EOE
j:)lease fOrward any quesAN SILPN S needed lor 100 !tons about these posttlons
beet sk1flsd nursing taclltty to
the
GOG Human
with excellenl opportunity lor Resources Department
ch allenging ancl rewarding
Grea t start
eKperlence
WANTED Part:l lme positiOn
rates and excellant regulalo·
available to assist tnd.vtclury
compltance
history
als w1th rnilntal retardat1on
Interested
candid ates
at a group home 1n B idwell
should apply lo Aocksprmgs
1) 35 hrs 8am·5pm Sun 2
Rehabtltlallon Center 36759
tOpm M!Tuf'N
Rockspnngs
Road
2) 35 hrs 3 9pm M!Tu 3·
Pomeroy
Oh1o
45769
Exlendlcare
Health 9 30 Wfr h 3·1 1pm Frt
3) 26 hrs 3 9pm Th 2 1 tpm
, Serv•ces Inc Is an e~:~ua l
Fn roam 7pm Sat
opportuntty employer that
encourages
workplace Mus! have high school dlpto
ma/GED
valid
ctrlver s
diVersity MIF ON
license and three years
STNA 5 Overbrook Center good dnv,ng expe rt ence
P re emp Ioyment
1s currently 8"""""hnn appl1· 5 7 25/hr
-• •
o
• 1
send
catiOns for full t me STNA S
JUQ 1!itS lng
resume
k
8 uc eye C ommun• 1Y
7A 7P and 7P-7A and 3A to
3P;
,
shtlts are avatl· Servtces P 0 80 11 60 4
4 56 4 0
able If you are 1nferestecl Jackson
OH
please come 1n and ltll out ~ Deadllfle lor appltcants
an apphr:;at 1on at 333 Paga 7/ 8/05 Equa l Opportuntty
Street Middl ePQrt Please Employer
No Phone calls EOE

1150

ScHob.s

T h1s newspaper w1il not
knowmgly accept
advertisements for real
estate which 1s tn
violation ot the law Our
readers ere hereby
Informed that all
dwellmgs adverttsed m
thla newspaper are
j!ltvaileble on en equal
opportunity bases

Oeck&amp;Butldlng s Atr See a
76 Oshel Ad

SAVE SAV E SAVE
Stock models at old pnces
2005 models arr v1ng Now
Coles
Mob1le
Homes
15266 US 50 East Athens
Oh o 4570 1 1740)592 1972
Wher e You
Get Your
Mo neys Worth

Lar,;&amp;
\tR b \(,1
4 6 acres Walnut Creek
Onve
Sandhill Ad
Pt
Pl easant $32 000 (304 )675

464 3

I Buy Homes Local person
buys homes Con ltdent al
QUick cash Ju'T1 740 992
6300 No calls alter 9

IU\oi\IS

~10

HIOO Chestnut Street
GallipoliS OH
nels $2 9 00 a month Ask
how to gel FRE E HBO
3 Bdrm 1 bath atr WID
MAX and STARS 1. 800 _ Chapel Road At2 N 6 m 1tes on 3 acres SA 7 Eastern
lrom PI Pleasanl 304 675 School D1stnc1 (7 401985 hookup retr1dg &amp; stove
523·7556 for detatfs
1ncluded C1ty school $4 75
1757
4321
mo $400 depos t no pets
180
1
WAN'rm
3 bedroom Ranch 2 car NO DOWN PAYMENT 3 br
Ref reqUtred
(30 4)675
garage
1n ground pool • 2 1/2 bat hs large 2 ca r 2525
$90 000 Call (740)256 • garage
m Mtd dleport - - - - - , - - All Types Masonry Bnck 1962
Rel oc at ng Carr (740!992 2 BR hous e tocalecl •n towr;
Bloc~ Stone Free Es11mate
9799 Leave messa ge
$400 monlh plus depoSit No
(304)773 9550 304 593 3 bedroom 2 bath Ranch
pels refe rence req Uired
642 1
(740 )441 0 1t0
or
style house newly remod Rental PropertieS for sale Call
eled B•dwell area $69 000 Tratler and Garage Apt
(740)9925t 74 as..: tor Jay
Call
(740)44t 1528
or Mason on 4th Ave House o n
j)HK
Clean.ng'\
&amp;
Mad1s on Ave PI Pleasant 3 BOA 2 1'2 baths 2 car
(740)709 5952 after 4pm
Powerwash1ng Can 1 Keep
House Roush Ferrell Lane garage lllrntshed close to
Up Your ' To Do" hst too B g? 3 Bedroom 1 1/2 Baths
Pt Pleasa nt Four Vacanl Holzer hosp1ta l (740 )441
l et Us HELP Yo ul We It Fam ly Room Dtnmg Room
lots m Mason Coun ty 0310
Clean-A ~U p &amp; Get A Done
Full Basement
Storage (304)675 t911 or (.304 )593
~Attention'
do
All B ldg Garage New Central
We
2096
R es t~en t ta 1!8 us t ness A tr, New Wm dows
Local compa ny olfermg NO
112
lns1de / O u tstde
pro
DOWN PAYMENT
Pleasanl St (304)67? 4034
www.orv .com
DatlyiWeekly/Monthly 740
grams to1 you to buy your
Home Ltsttngs
3BF.I 1 1/2 bath Ranch 2 car
home mslead of ren t1ng
965 3639 0&lt; 740·416·1 623
Ltst your home Oy ca lling
garage
1n ground ~ool
' 100°o l1nancmg
(740)406·3620
school
d st nct
-------~ Green
Less than pertect credit
G80tl;l85 Portable Sawmtlt (740)446 161 9 lor photos &amp;
accepted
V
ew
ph,olosimlo
online
1
10
don haul your Logs
the more
·
nformatlon
• Pa~ment could be the
MIIIJU SI call 304 675 19.57
http //www gepqMs cprnlbs
same a ~ rent
lhompson 132/
•
Locat ors
Mortgage
0
0 Down' 3 bedroom t
Health Care elder care 1n
(74 0)367 0000
4
bedroom
3
bath
b
level
14
bath
U
A
0
/R
FfR
my home pnvate ltvtng area
ar garage fenced 1n
Hduse lor rent 1n Pomeroy 2
wtth bath expenenced w1th home country setltng large
ac k yard 1/ 2 acre
bedroom ktlchen &amp; d ne~e
reference Par ~ Ad Shade deciC/patto s1M1ng on aprox
10 acres FA L A OR &amp;
lose to town S t32 500
1 ba th tull basement 2 11re
Oh 1740)992·0556
1&lt;.1tcl1en
$120 000
ode 4505 or call
places ga·agc &amp; e~ "a lot
(740)742 3 142
7401446·8325
call collect !614)475 1459
lntenorl extenor
pamllng
after 5 om
403
Spnng
Ave
Pomeroy
reasonable rates
refer
II sa Steal II 4 bedroom
ences expenenced for free OhiO One fam11y homtt for
New never hveo tn extreme
bath 2 car garage
esttmates ca ll (7 40)7 42· 80 years St11f itke new 3
ly enwonmentatly f nendly 2
New Haven WV Code
bedrooms 1 1/2 baths 2 car
2013 or 645 2638
bedroom 1 5 bath house
505 or call (304)982
garage $50 000 740·992·
1196 SR t4 1 Central heat &amp;
ow- o sure
368
2426
atr cond1tton1ng ut1ltty'room
Carpet-Cleaning
gsraQe No lf'! Stde pets
8 room house m Galltpohs
Brand New Melhocl
HOME'i
$500/oeposlt $500/month
Needs
work
$29
500
Dry In 1 Hour
FORSA.U
(740)446·0066
(740)441·1076 or (740)446·
No Steam~r ShampQo

To Do

MOBILE

()974

Fre~ Esl tmales
... Clearly Cle&amp;n• ..

12x50

30&lt; 75.0022

Roofing Decks Hardwood DOWN

PAYMENT
pro
Floor and Ceramtc T11e grams for you to buy your
New home Instead ol rent ng
1nstallalion
Constructton Pole Bar ns " 1 00,.~ l tnanC)ng
Top
Notch
Bulldmg • Less then pertecl cred tl
Conlractors (304)675·3042 accepted
• Payment could be the
WV036667
same a!t renl
Loca tors
auw'EWERLY
Mortgage

l'ii

I

C

ARE

1988

Pme

Rtclge

Att1ntionl
mobile hOme Good cond
Loca l c ~m pan y oftertng "NO tlon aU electric 2 bedroom

•

Ch1ldcare 81/&amp;llable near
Holzer
Ct1arolats , Lake
Estates Anytime Mon Fn
12 yrs exp $3/hr $25/day

~

~!;l~-~--....-...,
riO
8US1"~

(740)367 0000

--...,-----Roush Lane
Cheshtre
Beautt1u l 3 O&amp;droom format
dtntng room Oak ktlchen
Oak floors carpeted Sun
room
2
113
bathS
. $117000 (740)367 76t5

-

Country Home tO acres two
bedroom one bath garage
ac.rgas furnace 2 m11e 1rom
Hartford Slrdmg Htll Creak
Road 48 000
304 882
2491

n&gt;RRL"\Ct
'

ava tlab le to rent S150 Includes water sewer &amp;
mo nthly (740)446 2796 or trash PICkUP• (74.0) 446
4824
1740)388·9&lt;387
t4x70 Clayton 1995 3 bed
roorrf 2 Full Bath 2 Decks
Hdat Pump Appt ances
Washer &amp; Dryer Blin ds
Butlt tn Hutcli Out 8 u1ld1nQ

$20 000

oso

(304)593

6437

2 80 14x65 m counlry Iota
electr c
CA
$350/mo
S350 'depos t1
No
pets
(740)245~94 91
Detore
900pm
2 BM·oom Mob1le Home
$375fmon
Localed
tr
Ga ll1po hs
Fer ry
Ca rr

1988 Redma n R.vemew
Good condtl1on 14x70 2 1304)675 3423
bedroom I 1/ 2 balh au
erectnc central air and 2 bedfoom AJC very mce
1n
Ga 1pphs
ma)or kitchen appltances no pets
1740)446
2003
1ncluded Must move S8 soo'
5 Homes und er S1 0 000
Wtll del1ver (740)385 7671

•NOTJCEe
HIO VALlEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends lha

Moon.E Ho' ·~

1 Oat h maJOr app ltances 14x70 e11pando 3 bedroom
Included $7 300 Presenllot 1 1/2 oath $47 5+ depos tt

(740)256·1328

I~==Q=I'I'()RR:::]';:~:rv:~

INsmucnoN
·--iiiitiiiiiiiiii-'

Takmg appllcatrons lor Hot
Tub TechniCian Mu s! have '
knowledge m etectncat and Gallipolis Career College
plumb1ng areas Expenence' , (Careeu; Clo&amp;,e To Home)
1n reps qng poOls and hot Call Today I 740·446 -4367
tubs would be helpful
1·600·214·0452
Anyone mterested please
wwwi:I"II II)Oil.ure:~~~o- com
call Baum Lumber at 740· Accred•lad Member • ccreCirhnQ
Counc&gt;l lor tnoepei'\Oin1 COIIeoes
985·3301
ar.d School' 121•e

which makes 11 Illegal to
advertise any
preference , limitation or
disc nmmatlon based on
race color, religion, su
familial status er nation'!
or+gm, or any lntentton to
make any such
prelerence , llmttat1on or
d1scrlmmat1on

10

ML.,CFIJANFiiUS

OUTSIDE SALES

All real estate adverttslng
in thiS newspaper 18
subJect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968

,._
Newly RemoCleleo 213t:JR 1
Rl \I I ..,I \II
1/2 BA Hardwood Ceram•c
Floors fu ll Basement 1 Car
Ho~u:.s
anached Garage Deck &amp;
fUR SALE
Large Fe nced Ba ckyard
$88 500 (859)797 9806 or
$29 900 6 rooms 3 BR (304)675·2036
home 2 car .garage 89 '----'---- - - - Burnett Ad (740)446 7684 No 0 Gwn Payment Poss1ble
or (304)744·0173
1900 square It house 3
bedroom 2 bath full baser
2 br 2 ba 1 1 acre Ecfl.arcl ment new heat pump sels

r:1-::10; - - - - - - - , r:1-::10;-------...., "t"'ro:-------,
HEU' WAN'IUJ

New 3 EIR Home Only
$1891mo Includes ale del v
ery and set up {740)385
4367

HNOTIC~**

8 used hOme! under St 000
W11l help w1th delivery

(740)385 9&lt;32 1

2 BR centrally located 10
m1n trom town hospll81 and
power plants
(7 40)446
4234 Of (740)208 7861
3 bed room mob1le hOme lor
rent n Middleport no pets

(740)992 5858 .
Great 2000 Fleetwood 2
bedroom w1th tutt dell\ery For rent 3 bedroom 1 1 2
set· up and centra atr Call oaths 1n v nton Fleaay July
1 {740)388 0135•
Russ (740)385 24.34..

·- -------- -.--~-- - -· -----~.-:----------:----:------......_-:---

�•
',

•

•

'

Tu~sday,

www.mydailysentinel.com

July 5; 2005
· Tuesday, July 5, 2005
ALLEY OOP

==='i"'iiiii----iiiiiii"ii
I

river view In Downtown OffiCe Space· 5
Kanauga. Ideal for 1·2- peo- roo-m suite $650/mo; ~ room
ple. · No pets, please. office- $225Jmo.; 2. room
Appfic a11o ns being taken. suite $250/mo. Se:curity
Call (740)441 -0.'81'.
deposit required, You pay
utilities. All spaces very nice.

j

Mobl,. Home ~ot only
Elevator. Call (740)446-3644
A&lt;ldl110o Pike- $125/month- for
appointment.

lnlo.
Nice 2 bedroom furnished ,
$375/mo. $300/depOsit. No
pets, water pd . References
needed. Ph . (740)441-0629.

'TWo 8d mobile home. $325

I.

II

I' I '

II

Jol1n Deere Riding Mow~;~rs
atartlng at $1 ,399. Financing
Bl~, brick, S't'!'~&amp;r pipes, a\lailable subject to John
windows, lintels, etc. Claude Deere Credit appro\lal. Your
W lntet"s~ A!o Grande, OH payments could be as loW
as $39 month wlttl $0 down.
~C;;•:;."_:;740-=::;:2~~~
-5:,:1~21:.,._ __
Carmichael
Equipment

Beaulttul

call (740}446· 3644 for more

I' .\

Pns

FOR SALE

(740)441;-2412.

L~---iiliiililiiiiO.-

.
1 female Pekingese, AKC,
- - - - - - - - sable w/blaclt rnaak, 6 wks
For lease: Office or retail
old,
Adorable!
$30Q:.
spaces in very good condition. Downtown Gallipolis. (740)446· 1000 '.!"ave mes·
Approx. 1600 sq. ft. each; 1 sage.
or 2 baths. Lease price 8 r&amp;Qislered labrador pup·
negotiable to encourage pies, wormed &amp; lirsl shots, 5.
new
business.
Call bl&amp;cks. $150 each, 3 yellows

r

ACROSS

Phillip

I
.

·-------rl·
rib

AlTRli

FOR SALE

1985

F'ontiac Trans·Am ,
Sspd, 305 H.O., Only 55,000
miles. vlper blue, Hops,
excellent shape. (740)446·

2 bedroom apt '" RIO
Grande, $325 plus $32 5
deposit. Call { 740)245 -9060
2
bedroom
apt.
Washer/dryer hookup. Water
paid Nice location ·no pets
$375/mo
plus ' deposi t:

(740)446 -".42.
:7'"t

3 rooms &amp; battl. all utilities
paid,
Downsta1rs.
919

(7401446 .oad.
Chap~l
74 44

!·877·830·
rter,
IO. 3526
$200.00

POP 304·675· white.. 3.0 V6. 42.000
. miles. 81 24.
1850
54
4079
·
Ca ll
} 3.

9162. Free Estimates. Easy
financing . 90 days same as . Poodles, one Tmy Toy bi&amp;PI.
cash'. Visa/ Master Card. female. Two brown standa rd
(7 0)
9
4 441 478
DriVe- a· little save alot.
Poodles.
•
·
.
Shetti e. Puppy-AKC with
Thompsons Appliance &amp; pedigree .
1sl s hoiS.
Aepal r-675·7388. For sa le. Beautifully marked sable &amp;
re·condi ti oned automatic wl1ile male. $300.00 firm.
washers &amp; dryers. relrigera~ 740-698-9509
·
tors, gas an d e 1ect nc
~,..,,Uri~
.· &amp;
""' •.,
ranges. air conditioners. an d
wr 1nger washers . Will do L__,;V,;EI:;_;;:t·~
· I;A;;H~-~.-_.I
repairs on maJOr brands m

~hop or at your home

HOMEGROWN GROWN .
GAR DEN VEGETABLES

Used Furniture Store, 130
Second Ave.: ~ui table for 1.
BulaVille Pike. Washers, dry· Available at McKean Farm
$295/mo. (740)446-3945.
Ceme·nary
Road
ers. re fr 1 gero11o~s. ran ge s. on
BEAUTIFUL
.APART- ma ttresses. dresser: couch1· \lnt..,ll'l'l 11..,
MENTS
AT
BUDGET es. dinettes. recliners. gra\le
PRICES AT JACKSON monum'ents. much more.
.\11\I ... IIHI'\
ESTATES , 52 Westwood (740)446·478:2 , Gallipolis,
Drive !rom $344 to $442. OH Hrs. 11-3(M-S)
r10
FARM
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call
740-446-~558.
Equal
Housing Opportunity

r

Ml~UES

LO%.~--EQ~UJPM.-:.ENT-._..~

'

l'w

96 Neon 2 door, _
4 : yt. , 5 •
speed. 116,000 miles. new•

Rocky Hupp Insurance

I

~

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT-

ED &amp; AFF.ORDA,BLE!

r

Mlsc.'Ell..ANEOUS

•

I

1\fERCRANDl'IE
Townhouse
apartments.
and/or small houses FOR
2002 Cadillac Deville w/war·
RENT. Call (740)441- 1111
ranty,
$20,500 .
1996
for application &amp; information.
Dutchman crank up camper.
Furnisfled upst_a1r~. _ 3 rooms Air-king &amp; . Queen beds.
&amp; bath. Clean. re t. &amp; dep. $3.350. 2 cyl. diesel tractor
nag,
$3 ,eoo.
require~t No pets. (740)446· w/brush
1519.
{740)367-0106.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed-

room apartments at Village
Manor
and
R1 verside
Apartments in Middleport .
From $295-$444 . Can 740992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Large 1 Bedroom Apartf!ient
tor
Rent
$425.'month ,
utilities included. {304)675· ,
5819
'
North 3rd , Middleport.
bedroom lurnished apt ... previous rental reference. dep.,

no pet s,J40· ~92·0 1 65
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
for 2BA , 3BR &amp; 4BA. .
Applications are
taken
Monday tl1 ru Friday, from
9:00 A.M .-4 P.M. Office is
Located at 1151 E-.ergreen
Drive Point Pleasant. WV
Ph one No. is ( 3041675 •
5806. E.H .O
Tara
To wnhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious.
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Star t $385/Mo
No Pets.
Lease Plus
Security Deposit Requ1red.
(740)446·3481 .

Amana
motel
type
11eater/AC. 9000 BTU w/digital controls, $400. Also,
l ennox heat pump. 3.5ton.
great
shape.
$200.
(740)245-0 134.

Mol~ile

Homes •
Roofs
Flat pr Low Sloped Roof • Ca1ports

' Baros • Por&lt;:hes •

Residential· Commerdal .
ENERGY EFFICIENT

98 Jayco Eagle 30ft. 5tl1
wh~el
with
slide ..out.
T
1997 Dodge Dakota SL V6 . Excellent
cond1t1on.
Automatic, 2 Wheel Drive, ~(7_4__:
0:_)4__:4__:6-_3_50_5_._:__ __
72,000 miles-(3 04)593· 1614 ·
Coleman Camping Trail er
2000 GMC 3/4 ton pick-up, 12FT. 2 King Beds. $4.995
$10.200. Cali . Clarence call fo r Details (304)675·

·Goble (740)992- 1108 il•
1

answer eave message.

no• . _11
· :_:3:_:1_ _:_--c-c---. Starcraft fold-up camper .

2004 Ford F-150 Supercrew
4)j;4, FX4 off road package,
5.4 VS, 6-CD changer, running boards, power everything , Tonneau cover, tow
package, 27. 000 m1les 1
.l.1on.. N.A .o.A.
exce II en t .co nd 1
Book Value $30.375, sell lor

Alrfh!"lat. sink , stove &amp; refrig·
erator, sleeps·4. Was $4,995
reduced
to
$3,995.
(740)446·2282
:.____::__:_.::.:__:____ _ __
Truck Camper. AC. TV
Antenna , wired for Cable,
like new $6,500 (304)675·

7 . Ki ng Culller fini sh mower, 1996 Ranger 4x4, 5 spd, 3l,
A.M/FM cassette. AJC, off
new blades &amp; new double·
S
road~ckage. ·new paint.
/belt. (740)992·5963. 695
$5.5 0 OBO . . Ca ll attar

1~

HOME·
IMPRUVJ&lt;1\IIJ&lt;.:NTS

L.-~;;,:~~-:.:,;:_.J

BASEMENT WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifefime guar·
Irrigation system .. will cover 4:30pm 740)256·6257.
antee. l ocal references fur·
2.5 acres 3" PTO pump 304·
:::93::7_:-2::8::0:::5_ _ _ _ _ _ 1999 Blazer 4x4 LT, origmal nish ed. EstablisMd 1975.
owner, 76K, exc. cond .. Call 24 Hrs: (740) 446~
Jol1n Deere 10ft No Til 01111 loaded, never in mud 0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
lor
Rent
Carmichael $10,500 (304)458-1002
Equipment. (740)446-2412. '
.
1999 Che\ly Suburban 4K4,
John Deere COmmercial good conditio n, loaded, r'lew
Worksite Products In Stock! I tires.
Asking
$1 1,000.
Compact EKcava tor 27C, (740)441 -0658 or ( 740)709~
35D. SOD/Skid Steers 371. 1931.
.
320,
3:25,
32S!Tractor
'
l oader Back hoe 110TLB. 2001 Ford Explorer 4x4 .
Check out our rental r11tes. Leaded, recently detailed,
Great Financing Available· 59,000 miles. new tires,

ADVERTISE

YOUR

BUSINESS
IN THE
tLASSIFIEDS

4900

.

.Will's ATV

Parts

Quali tylG u"a ni nteed ·

ATV Paris &amp; ACC.

James AWill Jr.
Owner ·
32119 WdshtoM·n Rd.

PoJI1eroy. Ohio ·
45769
(740i992-243l
Emuii:Jwi1145769
@yahoo.com

,...

4 N1'

Advertise
in this
space
for
$52 per
month

ano Replacement

-!W 'l)tJieS'Of

i
c;oricrete Work1

25 Years Experience
David Lewis
"740-992-6971

-VP

-fF06~AM

starting at 27 horse · 57 horse

with shuttle transmission
4-wd; remote hydraulh:s ~ year warrant)'
"'"'*"' Also a\·ailable****
• Tnsk Master Tractors 26 horse- 38 bonn-.

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

lnsu~d - 1°1'\'e

F.&lt;tlmnl"
Senior Citizen
discount

740·~'J2·26il

~0 Y~.tr' bp:n~n:r

~oaders,

*free ESUmlleh

949-1405

The Parish Shop

YOUNG'S

Fonnerly ut l0t4
W, Main 11omcroy
IS NOW lH'EN 1\T
ll1e Mulberry

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Frien.dfy Furn.
OPEN
Mnn ...'ri .
9am to .lpm

THROUGH
THAT
DOOR

SIGH):&lt; ME88E
TOMORRY

r.,_;:::r-"l.

---'-t l

'
rit.~U ~
••

SAY .•.

:

THE BORN LOSER

~""C£T

We do It all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill

TO ....----.

~C.\D W,

IJE£5LEFESIER•.

WORK.!

W\1 0367~5

"''

l

M"'N \1-\
NEE.C&gt;OF 1\
fo..

MUlE 5UHO!'-\ 1

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Vears Local Ex rlence

(740) 992-5232
SxiO, IOxiO,
10xl5, 10x20,
10x30

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCnON
• Complete

Remodeling

140-992-l&amp;n
Stop &amp; Compare

work

I "M TAKING '(OUR,

I"ICIURE
ON 1'1'(

TO PUT

POSTE.IZ..S.

Auto

.'

Parts

::!"

'

&amp;

c-

Row~

1

k=~==~--~ ! [~~Yo~M~~~~--~2U--~

St. RL681 Darwin, OH

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Rt.'Hiocki•!q In le ,\lode/ Sohu.qr
and ' Artn .llu rkt·t Parts

PEANUTS
THIS IS TilE LATEST FAD.. .I ·
SAW THEM DOING IT
IN TOWN ...

See Brenl or Brian Whaley
M -Fri R:30-5:00
Sat, 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

'\'ELCRO"
JUMPING!
OVCI-1!

0000!

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
per month.

SUNSHINE CLUB
MY

Wlf~ IS \ALKING
A MPtRR\PI~ --....:.

\0
(CL,\\)5£l.CR
\

• Relerences

Available
"Insured'" :

I

Call Ga'Y Stanley
740-742·2293

!

,.

!

• Leave a message

.

AS LOW AS
$2.6 ..00' PERMONJH!·
'

'

--

''

The Daily SeAtinel
..

992-2155
•

-------

'

0
Call B.D. Consl.

n!modeling etc:,
free estimates
1740) 992·2979
leave mess a e

siding, add-om;,

got you
17-17-1 7,

. Available

$J5 - 1.000 lbs Approx. weight ~~~~
18 spreader buggies available for use
pasture renovators and seeders

Airway

,

Licens,ed agronomist on staff available tor
consulting.

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

•

35537.-SI. Rt 7 Norlh

Pomeroy,

0

Ohio

0

:ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available At

$265 ton (While Suppy Last)
· Mushroom Compost

ava1lable to rent.

11"'5 ..1U51" MY LI1"1"LE
. WAY OF KEEPING- BUSY

DU51"

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 P'
Hlgh cost ol

'

't'OU'Re

for all )'our home
rtpalr needs, roofing,

mo. pd

'
COLLEC:TING-

llailll'x10'
tO 1.0'lc30'
1/1411

'

GARFIELD

Hill 's Self
Storage

'

GRIZZWELLS-

BAU!VI J,LJJ\'IHER
Scorpion Tractors

1. l\I&lt;.E ~ Kt:EP 11-f::l5E 6ATE'D-COIIIMIJ_t\liY
iYi'E-;; 'N\\ERE I
CA~ KU?
t&gt;.ti 'i.'l'E

"Taki11g The Sting Out Of

~~EM

Hard Work!"
Mid -Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
wi\h 30hp &amp; ~Ohp Kubota Engines

· BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124

Che st~r

37 Take a Iller
38.- ·relief

39 Ponder
40 - vera
41 Md.
neighbor

42 Travel on
powder

5

to poets
6 Famous

28 lleadphQnus · in "The
29 Crop hazard
Avengers"
30 Lhasa54 Recede
31 Harness
36 Parson 's
· exPletive

numero
7 Neutral
color
8 Sweet
topping
37 Sprinkle
9 Volcano top 41 Alley Oop's
10 Papertoy
ride
·
' 14 On behalf ol 43 Acclaim

__

,_

hand. You aie

so Is defini tely worth his two-&lt;:lub open·
ing . North is immediately, thinki ng about a
slam, so responds two hearts, which
guarclntees at least a frve·card suit. A two·
.. club opening and a posi live response will
usually equal a slam if a lit can be found .
And when Nortl1 raises spades , South
rolls out Blackwood.
Englishman Terence Reese, one ot the
best-ever writers and players. argued that
slams are permitted to make more often
by not leading an ace at the first trick th an
by teadiiJg one. However, tha{ applies to
unbid suits, not to One in wl1ich an opponent has advertised length. So, scratch
the hear t ace. A trump is ·too passive here.
It comes· down to a minor-suit nine. And
you sho.uld have selected the club nine,
not the diamond nine. Why? Becau.se
partn er did not double the artificial live·
diamond Blackwood reply. This implies
that he isn't strong in 111at suit.
As you w111 have seen, a club lead defeats
the contra ct. It establishes a trick lor part·
ner; which you co llect when in With the
heart ace. Any other start lets si x spades
thro ugh
Remember what Partner didn't do.

985-3301

J

'

'

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce lebr1ly C1pher c;yplogram$ .are creal«! lrom q1.101a110n5 by tamous oeop!o, pasl Mld present
Each leii.BI 1n lhe opller slaoos lo1another ·

Tdd.ay"s clue: J equals K •

• X H. X T W I
0 V
M

VY

HSW

IRBP

'I 0 H S 0

HJ

YTBW

U W V U A W . ••

P W S VA ,M
H

" BPTAMPVVM " I

a

H

•

w ."

STIJ

MHKTM

LW

HAA

PRFPWI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Don't one of you lire ·til you see the whites of their
eyes: - Colonel William Prescott betore the battle of Bunker Hill

.

(e) 2005 by NEA, Inc

7-5

~~~i::;~v S©\\4{\N\-LG't~~t
_ _ _ __:_:____: ldil•d by CLAY a . POLLAN

"'our&lt;JIIrlhday:

Wednesday, July 6 , 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol

• Afforda~le Rilles

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740·949-2217

Pass
Pa s!;i
Pass

?"

at only the West

-~

A.LL F-IGHT , C. A.T ,

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

+ ·

' component
36 Frizzy do

·0
·. . ~; AstroGraph

BIG NATE

Whaley~s

, Pass

points, he has 10 winners all on his own,

AN'~

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
.• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Pluinblng
~ Roofing &amp; Goners
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Deeka

992-6215

3 t\
5
Pa:;s

-

35 Hi-li

• carv)ng
49 Poker pair
50 Rockies,
brielly
52 Squeal on
53 Emma

hearts? Do you start with a trump, tile
heart ace, the diamond nine .or the club
nine?
.

Phone

·New Homes
·Garages

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

. ..

WILL WALK

EOl iii'MENT

. right in tht.• henrt of Chester
9!154.1ll4

l'ntileroy

• Pass
Pa:.s

2•

34 Military -

EaSt

48 Preciout

you select after the given auction, which

FOttTIJN~!

ME88E
DAY
MY PRINCE CHARMIN'

inl'l1 cuttin~ width 3 year warranty

Greilt l.ow l'rices
tmd Smili11g·

Pass
Pass .

North

maneu-

46 Turkey

tells you that South has a-strong two·bid
In spades anq North hlis at least eight
poin~s with five (or six) respectable

BARNEY

l!IJillC ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon !Zero Turn
Radius Mower) JO inch Cutting width to 50
1M! TRACI'OR SAU'S &amp;

Wes t

44 W11p up
45 Air show

Allhough Soulh ·has only 19 high-card

nnish mowers. tillers

Sam~

· 10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

*ROOFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAilESS
· GOnER

ANl&gt;

•

4wd (I y~nr wurranl)·j '
• Farm Jlro Tractors 20 hurst.• - 30 horse

Cnmnmnily CeniH
260 Mulht•rr)' Avr . .

Storage

First, look.

• Free Estimates

.

A :i

59

on lead againsl si)( spades. What would

·

Frre Estimates

High and.Dry

•

Ttl~ ~OAt&gt; . TO
fAM~

/

'

ttf~~~~~=~~

New Dealer for Montana Tractors

Insured

Service

WRITEStl

ONtH,tS~ PA

4

A K Q

The lead
agail'}st a slam

wE'l&gt; Ll~~ TO Al&gt;OPT

.SIGN

Myers Tree

HOWARDL.

Metal.
Free
Delivery
www.nationwidepolebarns.c Ze ro Turn z -Trek Mowers
. SPACE
I rom John Deere a\lail able at
om (937)559-8385
ffiK REI.T
4.9%
fixed
ra te
fro
Carmichael E~ulpment wltl1
mower:
. ml· les ou1 Aiding
Murray John Deere Credit approval.
Trairer lot. 2.5
l Wizard, 11 Hp, 30 in. cui,
Rd
Cal
h
d
NEllgl1bor oo
$250;. 81 F01d F 100 V 8, ( 7 4 0 )·4 4 6 - 2 4 1 2
(740)446-1885.
2861, $400, (740)992-7607 wwwcarog rom

'

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

''.Af&gt;Opr A

11 H: 992-416.1

1 ""

1 4 II II"

•

58

20 Dilly look
60
21 --tree
61
23 Sharp lum '
24 Mask
feaiUre
27 Film holder
29 lllfalfa
1
32 Hunter"s
2
garb
3
33 Symbol
4

• J 4 3
... KJI~- 42

Opening lead:

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

J.KWIS
CONCRKTK
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal

.1m

14 y"'rs. Er.perien\.·c

Ask . about our AQHA
Member Discm.mts on neW
John Deere Equipment.
Carmichael
Equipment
i740)446-2412.
::___:::_.::.:__:__.::.:__ _ __
Horses lor sale. Call tor
more informatiOn ' (740)379·
2584.
Ill\ ,\ (,I '· Ill \

,.6.
South

Top • Removal • Trim
• ·Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Owner•• Brl"an Durham
PhOne• (740) 949·4011
•
Special•" zing in custom homes

• Garuges

_7_78:_7_.- - - - - - -

.

57

18 Buzz off!

8
10 6 52

Soulh
. K QJ\0943

Tree Service

DURHAM'S CONSTRUCTION

• ·Ro&lt;Hl) Add. • Rooling
• Ki1chens • Ba1hs
"No Job To Sm"ctlf"
Rac ine . OH
740-147-2t62 or
7411-416-35118

2 miniature baby Donkeys.
Mare nice pets. (740)446·

!I 8 ( 6

... 9 8 1 6

JONES'

All Your Home
Improve ment NccdJ&gt;
• Sidm~r· Wmdows
• D e~ks • Porches
• Ceramic Tile &amp;
Hardwood Flooring

L,--L•MSTOC--•l&lt;-_..1

I

+

"•
•

Dealer: South

'I'll
Construction

·r

East

A 5 2
¥ A H7

45783 Home • A"uto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

yield

17 Gung-1\o ·
about

Vulnerable: Both

and additions.

lh-1
lrllhoriHI
FaH
lomoroe
Faloe lronl
Gridiron ·
play
PulpH
Lal1
Wield,
•• oars
lndenl keys
Supennan 's 19 Garage
emblem
.
conlenls
· 20 Lingerie
DOWN
lab1ie
22 A lpad to
Snow boola
carry
Horo "s lale 23 Nulls
Kind of miss 24 Injury resuH
Stadium
25 Mantra
hoverer
chanter
·
Above,
26 Brany kids

12 Homool]llzZ 52
13 Salon job
15 FBI
55
' coun~erpan 56
16 Hemallla

IJH3·05

z·

10 ~

West

1 ~':!~T·u~ppers Plains, OH

"'I H\ U I~

,Jf:T
Rakes/ John Deere Disk
AERATION MOTORS
Mowers. Call lor pr ice.
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In Carmichael
Equip ment.
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- (740)446·:241 2.

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Reba r
Twin Rivers Tower is acceptFor
Concrete. · Angle ,
ing applications for waiting
list tor Hud·subsized, 1- br, Channel , Flat Bar. Steel
For
Drains,
apartmeflt. call . 675-6679 Graii ng
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp; l
EHO
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
valley Apartments in Mason . Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
WV
currently acceptmg Friday, 8am-4.30pm. ClOsed
Saturday
&amp;
applications: Apply at 501 Thursday,
Shawnee Trail in Point Sunday. (740)44~6--7300
Pl~asant .
Applications
accep ted on Tuesdays. Pole Barn ,30x50x 1OFT
HUD assisted. (304)675· $6795. includes Painted

•

.. Q :1

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP134

I-UK SAU:

(740)256-6936
Carmichael
Equipment. 112,000.
~~e~a::'•:cm~•·~·~•!!:ge~·---Antique Haywood Wakelield (740)446·2412.
table s. cha 1rs $600, good
Chevy 1989, short bed, slep
New 5003, 5005, &amp; 5020
ao Adition
Steel Jeep
side, orig. owner, $3,099.00,
Series John Deere Utility
(740)992-5963 .
wheels. $100. (740)4 46 Tractors C 0%" fixed/ 36
6962.
months. Used Utility Tractors
- - - - - - - - - @ 4.9% Variable/ 60
Gravely Super Con\le., duel months.
Carmichael
wheels, 4ft. blade, complete Equipment. (740)446·2412
rebuild, electric stsrter,
StSOO.OO OBO. Lawn Boy New John Deere Round
21 inch mower. $ 85 _00. ·Balers @ 1.9% FiKed Rate
Financing for 48 Months or
740 . 696 •1227
New Model 457 Standard
Hobart meat slicer. set of Round Baler Only $13,:250
cas h. Makes 4X5 Bale.
digital scales, meat grinder.
Carmichae l
Equipment.
Pepsi pop cooler, wood dis·
(140)44 6 ·~41 2
play or
Work
•abies.
~740)446-1787.
Special Purchase· JOh n
Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel

aoo-537-9528.

.

51 When

8 Groat!

.KQJ &lt;.I

41800 SR #7

TRUCKS

i

owner.

I·

North
• A 7 6

and Financial Services

•

paint, e)( tra clean intenor. J1999··Trail Lite Bantam
rear nice, runs great. $1,900 Flyer. Excellent condition
(740)669-0302.
Loaded. Musl sae. 740 ~15
949-2709. $8,000

Fi)(ed Rate up to 36 $28,900. (740}446-8217
3353
Beech Street. Middleport, 2 'Buy or
sell.
Ri\lerine months on New John Deere
bedroom turn1shed apt. , util· Antiques. 1124 East Main Compact Tractors&amp; 110 ,J.LB
4x4
ities paid , previous renta l on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740_ at Carmicl1ael Equipment. L~---·'·OiiKiiSII'Aiill.tliiio
: - · 10
relerence , deposit, m;&gt; pets ,
992·2526. Russ Moore. (740 )446 •241 2
.

(740)992-0165

CAMPERS &amp;
MOTOR HOI\1£4i

11 • copier

111111

8~1;:5~2;;,.:":'~~~~.-,..,

or (740)446· $200 each.

~

47

11 H hu long

Windows.
power locks . . .---...;....-;...._,. .- - - - . - - - . . . . ; - - . ,
cruise, rear A/C, 160,000
miles. $2,600. {740)256-

~;) MOTORCYa.ls/
I 4 WHE'EI FRS

44 Dolnty,

1 O.k Item
4 Prize llghl

Alder

t

required , no pets, 740·992·
2218
·
1 bedroom Apartment, par·
lially furn ished, $300 month
(304)675_435 1

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

96 Ford Windslar. Power

\vANrnD

~-·

/

1995·G MC Con·IJan , A·1
condition , low miles, Must
see to appreciate. A bargain
$~ . 995. Also Walking Horse
Saddle Bridle (304)675·
8175

94 Harley Da\lidson Ultra
call (740)247- _o3_50_
. - - - - - - - Classic, 10.000 miles, blue . .
'
21 17
1995 Ford T·Bird LX V8 , excellent condition, $13,500.
.
74Q-992-5039
AKC German Shepherds. Sunroof, Cellpho.M , Front (740 949·221_7
Pups &amp; Adults .
Bumper. cova1 &amp; Hood Bra .
BoATS &amp; MoroRs
Two Bd. mobile home. $300
llllillimiiioRENriiiiii-_,j 1·Biack &amp; Tan Litter
~oos Great, Runs Great,
FUR SALE
a rponth , $300 deposit, year
$5,000/0BO (304)593·6437
no
pets,
in · looking lor house to rent 1-Solid Black litter
lease,
Middleport. No callS aft er locally. .Mason or meigs co. vet-checked &amp; shots
1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr., 4 1984 Bayliner 19ft. Cuddy
(304)937-2310
cyl 76.000 miles. $3 ,000 cabin, Volvo~ Penta , good
9:00. 740·992·5039
-call --30lS-77J..5600
www.tristatek·9 .corri •·
OBO. Call (740)441·0712.
\If I(( II \"\Phi
condition. $3,500. (740)367·
0314
Foi Sale; Chocolate Lab 2000 Ford TBurus. 70,000
&gt;IU
Hou;,'IJIOLD
Pups: S200 oo. 740-992.
$
Gooos
ml1as.
7 ,600 ; (740 )742 • 95 Kawasaki ST750 jet-ski.
6227
1 and 2 bedroom apart- " - - - - - - - - · ::::__ _ __:____ _ _ 3405
3 seater with trailer, \lasts.
ments, furnished and untur·
Golden Reteiver puppies 2dr 2001 Dodge Stratus ski rope/skis. Excellent connisl1~d . secunty depoSit MollohanRCarpePo
l , 202 OCih~rk AKC l si shot &amp; wormed· One owner, like new. Pearl dilion. $1.800. (740)446·

a month , $325 deposit, year
(740)446-4425
lease. no pets. Located in 3936. . ...
Aacine. No calls aher 9:00

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

CondiAio n s look extre mely hopeful lor
you in th e year ahead where ypur
material ci rc umst ances are co n·
ea rned . Th ere's a good chance you"ll
soon be able to gel many th ings lor
yo ursolf without straining the budge!.
CA NCER (June 2 1-J uly ;;;2) Financial . ways and means · could
de-.elop in such a manner today !hal
wil l enable you t b .get some kind of
d esirable lucky Item you "vo b een
wanting. Ta ke advantage ot the circumstances.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - A short trip
you hadn"t co unted on making m ay be
required today to fulfill an obligation .
H.owever, do it w illi ng ly because
something quite beneficial could be in
it for you .
VIRGO (Aug
2.3-Sopl. 22) Someone you assisted in lhe pas!
may prove to you today that your deed
was not forgott en by bringing about a
happy deve lopment o f a materia l
natu re .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c t. 23)
Today,
you' ll serve as the link between two
t riends. Puttin g .togelher som ething
th at'll makli:l th em happy will actu ally,
end up doin'g more lor you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2 4 -Nov. 22) Someone who is close to your h eA rt
may have some h appy tidings . to
s hare with you today. Seek ou l a cozy
aimosphere where JUSt the two of you
can ce lebrate and savor the. pleasant
n ews.
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Even though a ~;on s1derab le distance .
may separa te you from one o f whom
you"re quite land, your hopos and
aspirations will be in lun a with one
another. Hold onto th ose po.sitlve
thoughl s.
CAPRICOR N (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Although you may not have fu ll knowl edge ot 1t today. a close lrlend mighl
be unself ishly working on yqur behalf
to bring aboul sor'ne . circu rnslances
th at will make you QUile happy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -Feb. 19) - A b1g
opportumty ex1st s today in a situation
where you w ill be working Ill close
unison with ' ar10tll er. Togelher· you"ll
t ake pride in you r accomplishmenl of
· being able to bnng It abo ut
P ISCES (Feb. 2()-Ma.rch 20) - It you
are th e employee ot anoth er. it IS
always impo rtant lo do a good job, bul
t oday there could be larga_r !han usual
rewa rds tor producing at lh_e peak of
you r ability. Do your best on Th e job
AR1ES {M arch 21 -April 19) ~- Aga1n
today Lady l uck and sheer chance
Will play imporlanl roles in your
altairs Some very beneficial stirrings
' are aboul to produce 'a s1tuaT10n lhat
w ill make you very happy
TAURUS (Apr'il 20·May 20) - You"d
be smart lo direcl your creative urges
today toward th'J beautlflclltlon ol your
surroundings. Your ert1s1ry can odd
touches that wil l have ve ry plea~ant .
4
last1ng ellects .
GEMij'ql (May 21 -June 20) - Tt-ere
will be an active buzz of conversation
going on beh1nd your back todBy. but
it won't be anylhirJ.a you wou ldn"t want
(laid• ot you . You 'O"be h1ghly pleased
wilh lhe flattering telk .

O foReorronoo
I~ lieu of
ur '("rambled Words

woao

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be·

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MA R CE P

Granny gave me lhe best
advice when I left home for college . She sai d that the best
exercise is when you . reach
down and help up olhe r- - - - - -

I

~-,,_:.:.,,.:..:-;.,,,_:c.,.,,,;-,.,___; G)
L_ _j__ .J_L_L_-L._,L___.J,

Compli!!re rhe chu ckle quoTed

by Idling in the m1u.nq words
you qeYelop from sTep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS JN
THES E SQQAR ES_
UNSCRAMBLE A60VE LETTERS

TO GET

ANSWf~

SCRAM-lETS A,NSWERS ,.,.; 5

Baffle- Press - Aloud -Woolly - YOURSELF
"Have you ever noticed ." "lY friend· lamented lo
me. "that it's easier to admi re another person 's thrift
than oract1ce it YOURSELF?"
·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

,
r

SOUP TO NUTZ
CO'OO~ ~ CO. Slt~"'OI'&lt;t D I I bY NE..". •~c

...,...;. ~"''et CO"'

OO..D2~ .. 1&gt;:0oo o

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I THIN!&lt; THari&gt; '"-'f'R&gt;sED

To ~Ef="ER. To CORN . NOT
WEEDS ..

�;

.

:

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.~

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com
'

fromPageBl

HoWARD FENDRICH

I

' ASSCIATEO PRESS

WIMBLEDON, EnglandA day before " Wimbledon
began, Andy Roddick st~
on a slope overlooking the
practice courts at the All
England Club. Down below,
Roger Federer was going
thr6ullh a training session, and
Roddtck sneaked a peek.
Two weeks later and a short
walk away. Roddick got a
much closer look in ·the
Wimbledon final , and after
absorbing a lopsided loss to
fall to 1-9 against Federer, the
American arrived at two conclusions:
.
Federer is better than every• one a.t everything, and
Rodtiick would love nothing
better than to keep trying to
defeat the man who's by far
the No. I player of their generation and now is being
judged against ihe· greats of
generations past. ·
"He's probably as close as
has been (o unbeatable."
•
Roddick said Sunday after
losing
to
Federer
at
Wimbledon for the third consecutive year. .
"I want another crack at him ' ·
till my record is 1-31. I stili
want to go against him again.
You want to compete against
tne best. He's the measuring
stick, so you kind of know
AP photo
where you are and where you Andy Roddick. of the USA. holds his second-place trophy after
go."
.
being defeated by Roger Federer, of Switzerland, 6-2. 7-6 (2).
As talented as Roddick is 6-4
in the Mens' Singles Fin.al on Centre Court' at Wimbledon
good enough to win the 2003
U.S. Open. finish No. I that Sunday.
year at the age of 21. and now
What's vital for Roddick is of the fastest serve and one of
make it to the final at the All that he keeps trying to catch the biggest forehands in the
England Club two straight up.
game. Federer produced more
years - he can't come close
And that' ~. what he plans lo aces ( 11-7), more forehand
to Federer at the moment.
do.
•
winners (14-3), and broke
But that's OK. No one can
"There's things that Andy Roddick four times to win in
on grass. And no one can , con- could do to be , effective straight sets.
"All' of them are trying as ·
sistently, on any surface.
against Roger. It's all a leamas ·they can:" Federer
liard
"The bad news," as three- ing process and it's obviously
time Wimbledon winner Boris' gaining confidence in ·some of said. "Obviously. for the next
Becker put it, "is Roger is the new things he was trying few years. I'll definitely be a
only going to get better."
against him ," Roddick's h.ugc favorite ·also for this
Since June 2004, Federer is coach, Dean Goldfine, said. tournament. Doesn't mean
98-5 (a .951 winning percent- "His net game is getting beuer necessarily I'll take them all."
If he's got a touch of a
age) with 15 titles that have and that's obviously one of the
come on grass, hard, clay and . keys. If you sit back there and charhpion 's arrogance. he's
indoor courts. None of the let Roger hit from the baseline earned it.
losses came
in
finals ami don ' t .pressure him, it's
Bjorn Borg an'd Pete
(Federer's won a record 21 in tough."
,
. San'lpras arc the only other
a row), though two were in . . The amazing thing about men in the past 60-plus years
semifinals at this year's Grand Federer is that he's so versa- to win three consecutive
titles.
And
Slams, against Marat Safin at tile, he &lt;.:an beat anybody in Wimbledon
Federer
claimed
his
fifth
· the Australian Open and any way, including a demoralRafael Nadal at the French izing tendency to one-up Grand Slam championship at
the same age - 23 years, I0
Open, the only major he has opponents in their strengths.
In the quarterfinals. Federer months - that Sampras was
yet to win and now w\.11 foctts
on adding to his collection.
faced No. 21-seedcd Fernando when he won the fifth of his
Unprompted, . Federer men- Gonzalez, who hits every shot record 14 majors.
" He loves playing at
tioned those setbacks during as if it's his last. Federer
the on-court trophy ceremony matched Gonzalez power for Wimbledon , he loves the
Sunday after his close-to-per- power, and displayed dazzling game. Federer's mother,
feet
performance·
beat defense to win in straight sets. l,..ynette, said at the All
In the . semitinals, , Federer England Glub . on Sunday. "I
Roddick 6-2. 7-6 (2), 6-4. He
said the losses in Melbourne faced No. 3-seeded Lleyton hope the tennis world cim reap
and Paris meant "the pressure Hewitt. widely considered the benefits from what he is
was on" at Wimbledon.
best returner in the game and a showing on c0url.'
It should , because Federer's
After making 33 winners baseline ·expert who's as
and only three unforced errors speedy as· they come. Federer sublime tennis and A-Rod's
through two sets and , whip- looked every bit as quick and super ·tude are both good for
ping passing shots by Roddick adept in lengthy rallies. faced the game. Frpm 1983-03. the
at will, Federer was told that only one break point atliT)atch two top-seeded men never met
just when it seems as if he while earning eight, and broke in the Wjmbledon 'final ; now
·can't gef any better, he does.
Hewitt three times to win in it's happened in consecutive'
"It seems like it. yeah ," straight set,.
years.
Federer said, drawing laughter
In .the tina!. Federer faced
There's little reason to think
from the Centre Court crowd. No. 2-seede&lt;l Roddick, owner it won't· happen \\gain.

-

would like to go, but•it is not
a big priority with me," said
Hafner. ·who was not selected
for the team despite posting
star-quality numbers.
Entering the second game
of a day-night doubleheader
at Jacobs Field against
Detroit, Hafner had 16
homers,. 56 RB!s and a .313
avenagdn 73 games·. Much
. of the product ion came over
a tornd stretch of etgh!
games since June 27, dunng
which he hit .500 t 16-for-32)
with five homer' and 16
RBls.
·'Hafner has picked it up,"
said Detroit manager Alan
Trammell . "I remember
· when we voted. I looked at
him and I want to say he was
hitting in the .280s. If we
were picking (now): he
would have been considered
a little more."
A year ago, Hafner was in
the running for the final spot
on the AL tea'm, but lost in a
lan&lt;lslide vote by the fans to
Hideki Matsui of the New
York ·Yankees.
"I want no part of that
again," said Hafner. ·~when
Matsui is on the ballot, you
have no chance." ·

Reds
·from, Page BI
had a huge day for us."
Ryan Wagner (3-2) pitched
two innings for his first win
since May 27. Kent Mercker
allowed baek-to-back doubles to pinch-hitter Pedro
· Feliz and Moises Alou to start
the ninth - Griffey said he
couldn't see either ball- and
was repk\ced by Belisle, who
got the tina! three outs fpr his
first major league save.
· "I love it!'' he said. "It was
awesome."
San Francisco's J.T. Snow
doubled among his three hits,
drove in two runs, and made a
remarkable stop at fir~! with
the bases loaded in the second. He dove to knock the
ball down, then threw from a
seated position on ·the ground
to nitcher Kirk Rueter on the

btr:.

iiou had iwo RBI doubles
and Michael Tucker doubled
twice, had an RBI single and

Armstrong
from PageBI
move in front again . .
Then, Armstrong - who
has worn the leader's jersey
r{tore than 60 times - will
truly consider himself on
track for a seventh straight
title before retirement.
For the past two years ,
Armstrong's team won , the
team time trial for the U.S.
Postal Ser.vice squad. Now he
wants to win for new Sponsor
Discovery Chan ne I in the
nine' man discipline - i'
41.9-mile ride from Tours to
Blois.
·
"It's critical in that you can
gain time and every second
counts," Armstrong said. "It's
good for the morale and good ·
for the team to show they are
strong. We've been lucky
enough to win the last two
years and we 'd like to try
again."
A strong showing could
bolster hi s advantage. The
Texan leads Jan Ullrich·by 66
.seconds,
Alexandre
Vinokourov by 51 and Ivan
Basso by 84.
"I can' t go to bed at night
thinking I00 r,ercent we' re
going to win,' he said. '' I
think we're up against some
strong teams. It 's critical at
the end to ride steady becau se
the course will be going up '

being on the 15-day disabled
list with a sore right shoulder,
but said he knows :it is the
wise fbing to do for the team.
Betancourt has been a key
co~ in tbe Indians' bullpen,
gmpg 2-2 with a, 2.21 ERA
and 38 strikeouts in 36 2-3
innings.
"I feel · bad right now
because I'm the first one to
go down," said Betancourt.
'The bullpe'n is strong and
we work ·with each other. J
really !eel sad becauSe when
PAIN IN THE NECK: I come to the ba!!parkJ know
Casey Blake continues to- be I'm not going to-PKlY·
· bothered by a strained neck.
'The big thing is to g!!l,
·•r d give it a go," said the ready for the final three
Indians'
out11eldcr-third months of the season when
baseman when asked if he. hopefully I can help this team
when it really counts."
could play Monday.
He winced as he answered,
BASELINES: Third basehowever, as he gingerly tried
to tum and face re_P?rters man Aaron Boone missed the
first game to be with wife
asking about his cond1tion.
"It feels like I've pinched a Laura. who delivered the
nerve or something,'.' Blake couple's first baby, a boy.
said. 'T ve had something a Boone was in unifonm, but
little like this before and have did not start the second
been able to play trnough it. I game .... Hall of Farner Bob
tried Saturday and it locked Feller, 86, threw out the ceremonial first pitch before.
upon me.
"1'\tey had a chiropractor. game two and got a standing
.come m before the first game ovation .... The Indians had a
today and he twisted a couple promotiGn where fans could
things. I feel a li,ttle better, buy hot dogs for only $1 during the doubleheader, More
but not much.
than 55.000 were sold in the
FEELING BAD AND first . game and the team
SAD: Right-.hander Rafael expected to exceed that figBetancourt is. unhappy at ure in the nightcap.
.In 2004, Hafner had some
fun with the vote, using his
odd nickname of "Prank" to
start a campaign that included a groundswell of support
from his ·home state of North
Dakota.
"I carried the home folks,
but so did Matsui," Hafner
said after the Yankees star got
millions of Internet votes
from Japan. ',' Let's just say I
was at a distinct disadvantage." ·

Rutland parade

scored three runs for the The right-hander was tagged
. Giants, who lost their third for seven runs mi three hits ·
straight following a four- and he walked two.
Rueter allowed a seasongame winning streak:
After San Francisco went high three homers·after giving
ahead on Deivi Cruz's solo up only four homers m 17
home run in the lifth, the previous ·games against the
Reds tied the game at 8 in the Reds.
.
sixth when Rich Aurilia
Rueter, who hasn't won
scored on a passed ball by since beating the Astros in
Jack Taschner, which spoiled Houston on May 13, also saw
a chance for. Jeremy Accardo his winless stretch reach nine
(0-2) to notch his first major starts and he has a five~game
league win.
·
losing streak during that span.
Elizardo Ramirez, recalled
He allowed seven runs and
before the game from Triple- nine hits. in four innings,
A Louisville and sent back struc)&lt; out two and walked
down afterward, failed to pick four.
up his first major league vicManager Felipe Alou said
tory in his ·fourth big league atierward
the Giants would
start. He has allowed a home
discuss
whether
to keep the
. run in each star.t. This was his
first start since May 26 and struggling left-hander in the
first appearance since June 3. rotation.
"It's. an uphill battle," he
The Giants scored the tying
said
of the rotation. "Coming .
r-un in the fourth when
Ramirez failed to hold onto a into spring tmining, )lie had
. throw from Felipe Lopez try- · what I thought was a ~ery
ing to complete a double play good situation with the
.ing rotation. W. '
ring
at fir!;t.
Ramirez gave up a single to enough runs...t win games.
Snow moments later. and he You say .we need Barry
was done atier 3 2-3 imiings. Bonds, but this team hits."

Coming Friday, July 29,2005
.'

Daily

The
Sen~inel

.The Daily Sentinel :Saby
Edition is .a Special Edition filled
with photographs of local
children .• ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 29th issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved!

Tristan Roach
Son of
Charles II. April Roach
, Gallipolis

Middleport o,Pomeroy, Ohio
.;o CENTS • Vol. :;4, Nu.

Complete the form below .and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus .
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. lfmore than one child is in the picture,
please enclose an additional $2 .00 per child. Enclose payment. with picture.
Send to:

·The Daily Sentinel
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I ·

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

I

1Parent's Name:_~--------'----------------­
: &lt;;:ity &amp; State: _ _'-:---- - - - - -- - - - - -- ----,,.-- '
••• The above inrormation will be· used in the ad. •••
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Submitted by: _ __:___ _ _ _ __ _
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HURRY!! PICTUkE DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY JulY 22. 2005!

"" "·"'"lail) "'"lilwl.•·""'

City National
cites space limitation as reason for move
.

SPORTS
'·

• Lance takes the lead,
See Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
City
National _Bank is closing its
Pomeroy branch and consolidating all accounts to its
Mason, W.Va. branch due to
space limitations in downtown.
City National Bank Vice•
president ' of Retail Craig
Stilwell said the Pomeroy
branch was closing due to the

' "challenges of the facility."
"The fadlity has never been
ideal because it's not a full service branch," Stilwell said.
"It's hard to operate a branch
without a drive-up ATM.
We're a small office tucked
into the downtown" area which
limits how much growth we
can have . When the lease came
,up we decided not to renew."
Stilwell acknowledged that
recent llooding sustained by

the facility was a factor but it
was not. a major one. In fact
the building · had undergone
two remodels in 18 months.
"Flooding was not a l'najor
factor," he added. "If it was a
situation where we had a full
.service facility we would have
continued to brace for the
llnoding just like the other
downtown merchants and let
the Ohio River run it 's course."
. Stilwell says that full service

facility can be found at the
Mason. W.Va. brunch, ;tdding
that the drive-up facility has
been enhanced, the ATM has
been upgraded and evening
hours arc availahle to accommodate a larger clientele .
Employees from the Pomeroy
branch e&lt;m abo be found at the
Mason and Ne w Ha ven . W.Va.
branches. No one from the
Pomeroy branch lost their job
due to the consol idatiop.

Association
pledges funds to
July 4 pool party
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

MIDDLEPORT The
Mid\lleport
Community
Association will donate up to
$2 ,000 to help defray costs
associated with the July 4 pool
Page A5
party at Middleport pool , and
• Martha Chain, 88
members hope the party will
• James Cunningham, 84 be .incorporated into the Village's annual Independence
• Roy. Dowell, 61
Day observan&lt;.:c when it's
• Richard Fick, Sr., 81
revived next year.
At Tuesday's monthly
• Roger Russell, 83
meeting of the assoGiation.
members discussed the success of the pool party, organized by pool managers Dale
Riffle .and Jim Brewer and a
committee
of local citizens .
• Sayre receives
Riftle
and
Brewer had
Rice Scholarship.
planned July 4 events at the
See Page -A3
pool before the community\
celebration was canceled last
• Bank issues advisory.
.
month. but then decided to
See Page A5
work with' volunteers to
• Possible Rehnquist
expand the scope of those
retirement offers prospect events once the Association
announced plans to cancel the
of double vacancy at
festivities in Dave Diles Park.
Supreme Court.
Yesterday. lhe membership voted to pay expenses
See Page A5
associated
with the party,
• Ohio joins states.
such as food , prizes , extra
allowing Medicaid-paid
payroll expenses, . and other
costs, using funds originally
assisted iiving.
donated for the community's
See Page A6
July 4 celebration and fireworks display.
.
'
Association Vice President
Tom Dooley said donors.
WEATHER
who had contributed $4.000
toward the annual celebration. were contacted after the
association canceled the July
4 program . Some of the
donors asked that their dona-·
tions be returned, but others
allowed the association to
keep their 'donations $2,120 in all - and to use·
the funds at the discretion of
the association .
" Being able to use those
Details on Paee A6
donations to benefit the community's July 4 celebration
was ihe most gratifying part
of the entire situation,"
Dooley said about the cancelation
of the traditional cele2 SECTIONS - 12 PAGES
bration
. "I hope next year the
Calendars ·
A3
Association dm work with
Classifieds
82-4 the pool managers and incorporate the pool party and the
·fes!ivities in Dave Diles Park
Comics
to make a day-long event."
"This is a good coll&lt;~bora­
Dear Abby
A3
ti ve project that benefits
·
Editorials
A4\. everyone.''
The Association also voted
Obituaries
As to make two $150 donations
to the United Fund for Meigs
B Section County and the River City
· Sports
'
Players, which tntditionally
, A6 , sell concessions in the park
Weather

Plene see Move, AS

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGE N T @ M Y D~ILYS E ~T I NE L .CO M

POMEROY - State Senator ·
Joy"Pmlgett &lt;R -Co,hocton) will
be " guest reade r during children's story hour' at 2 p.m.
today at tk Pomeroy Library. .
Padgell will he joined by
sp,ecial guest readers from
the
Pomeroy/ Middleport
Lions Cluh Brenda Barnhart
and Meig s Coun ty Sheriff
Robert Bee~le .
The rcade'r., will he demon-

OBITUARIES

strating the ir

;1bil i t i e ~

to see

the words on the page. an ability that so me children do not
possess whi ch is wh y the
·:Wild About Eye, .. exhibit
will also be at the library &gt;tart-

INSIDE

Please see Pledges, AS

"Pom(:roy ha:-. ~c cn t.l good

site for I" despiiC som·e o f lfte
chaiiC.. ge,." S1ilwcll said.
"But .' it 's fairl y limited in its
a ccc ~~ am1 nlo:-.1 cu..,torn ers
want us to ha i'C a dri 1c-thru
like !he Masmt office ...
,After the cl"" "·c nf lhe
Pomeroy
hra nl'lt
City
Naiional Bank. 11 h"'c corpora to; offices arc ba ,cd tn

"Wild About Eyes"
exhibit and Senator
Padgett·at Pomeroy
Library today

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

._ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . 1 .. - - - - - - - - -

WEUN ESI&gt;AY, JULY (•,, 2005

!.!!.!!.!

ns

2005.

of the Year, A3·

,.

INDEX

Plctur~s must be In by Friday
July 22nd, 2005. Pictures can
be picked up after August 1st,

Southern Athletes

~nnersannounced,A3

'

EXTRA! EXTRA!

1

and down ."
Zabriskie said. "He asked me
Ullrich and Vinokourov if he could have a turn."
will ' ride for the T-Mobile
Zabriskie ·
, fears
team while Basso races for Armstrong's turn is immiTeam
&lt;;:SC,
as doe s nent. ,
Zabriskie. Zabriskie finished
"Holding onto the lead is
in 56th pla.ce in Monday's going to be ·really tough." he
133-lllik leg, which started . said.
from · La Chataigneraie in ' Time losses are limited
western · France and snaked during the ,team tin]e trial
toward tne medi'eval city of after a rule change was put in
Tours.
place before the 2004 Tour.
Booncn won in 4 hours, 36 The last of the 21 teams comminutes, 9 seconds .and kept ·. peting will concede a l'naxi-·
the green jers~ y as the best · mum .. of three minutes no
sprinter. Peter Wrolich of matter how far behind it finAustria was second and ishes.
Stuart O'Grady of Australia
The team placing second
was third . '
~ ·
loses a ma ximum of 20 secArmstrong loathe\ such 1lat onds while third and fourth
stages and was relieved sim- place give away no more than
ply to have avoi&lt;.kd an acci- 30 and 40 seconds. respecdent.. Two years ago. he was tively. This soften s the blow
&lt;.: aught in a 35-rider crash on in case of a heavy loss. but it
the Tour an..! was. lucky .to also nullifies the impact of
escape with cuts and bruises. catching Armstrong on a bad
'' Day s lik e today aren' t da y..
The · main threats to
necessaril y my idea of a gre a~
time." he said. ' "Everybody Armstroitg 's team are Team
does something a little bit CSC and Phonak - led by
crazy in front of YOl! on the his former US. Postal le&lt;!m·
fini sh...
mate Floyd Landi s and feaArm stro ng stayed in the turing former world time trial
middle of the pack as f&lt;~ rm e rs champion Santiago Botero.
L1st year, Phonak fini shed
put down their too ls and vil lagers gazed from ston e jn second 'place. Team CSC is
houses at the mass of cycli sts ~ onfid e nt of improving on
streaming past in a mili1ary- firth place. ,
"We've heett training hard
like unit. He eve n found time
to chat with Zahri , kic ,' hi s 0 11 thi s course." .&gt;aid Bjarne
former teammat e at U.S. Rii , , the 1996 Tour winner
now wa&lt;.: hing the team . '·' And
Postal.
'
"Lance was telling me to I think we're ready."
')
JUSt enJoy the ydlow jersey. :'

...- .

Tuesday, Julys. 2005

.

Notebook

Roddick on the outside looking in
BY

.

'

Brian J. Reed/photos

ing today through .Jul y 26.

"Wild Ahnlll Ev es" i, a
Tim Baum of Baum Lumber in Chester and Sheriff Robert Beegle load donated building suptraveling
exhihi! th:1t PreYe nt
plies for use in Beegle 's jail renovation . Baum has don:eted floor ti le and hundreds of dollars
BI'imlitc" Ohi&lt;1 l1:" liclcl in other materials toward the project .
oped tu Clll'oumgc chi ldren to
be awme of th e illlpllrt ann.· of
their v i~ i on and e y~: t: ar('.
Am&lt;mda Bai ley nf the Me igs
County
District Public Library
BY BRIAN J. REED .
rates could cause problems in
The county pays $55 per
said
that.
" By rrnvidi ng this
BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINE~. C OM
other areas of the .sheriff's day. per bed, under contracts
prograHl
al the Pom eroy
operations - in&lt;.:luding pay- 1Vith the Southeastern Ohio
POMEROY
. - Meigs roll , Beegle said !;1St week.
Regional Jail in Nelsonville Library durin g the children's
County Sheriff Robert Beegle
'T ve ~ot to gci the Jail and Washington County Jail summer r.cading progmm. it
hopes ,.to re-open the Meigs opened by .the end of July," in Marietta. There is also gi ves k1ds and their parellls a
-County Jail by thll end of July. Beegle said. "It's going to si.gnificant cost involved in wondc1i'ul opportunit y to read
Beyond that time. contin - ha vy Ill be done· be~ a use the transporting prisoners to .and ahnut subjects ..:ont·erning l:!)'e
ued use of outside jail space housing funds arc needed in from court appearances from health and sal"'lv."
"Wild Abmll f:yc., .. i, a travthose outside jails ·and otheven at negotiated contract other areas ,''
.eling cxltibit tit ell gil'cs partiders. Beegle said.
Beegle is using donaled pants hand s-on experience and
materials. cash contributions knowledge to make informed
from local residents . and and healthy dce~s ion ' regardcommunity organization s. in!!. the care of thei r eve~ :
l lsing bowling ha ib. hand
and ~olunt e er labor to
he
ld pad dk ' thai , jmul:ite
upgrade the jail. which wa.\
ey
~
di-:t\hl'' an d an c~ · c ,afeclosed two ye ~trs ago by former Sheriff lblph Tru ~ .,~ll . tv matchinu ~a m c . t he L' \ hi hBc~glc hopes using tlte jai l as ii k ~&gt; partic ip:uil ' .1cc for
a five-day holding facility thi.' Jll :-o L'h L' "&gt; ~1\IW ti l L' l'Y C
for minor ollenders will 'worb . It ha &gt; four k arn1i1g
relieve the budgetary burden stiltinns that pnH"iLlc:-. hand sof paying for jail bed·, in on intl'raL'li \'e vj, j\111 ex pt•ri encc \ for children and adults.
other facilities .
"Wild Ahnu1 EI'C&gt;.. was
So far. 'he has rece iV'e d
hi' • Prc l'cnt
$9.292 in donations to the develope..!
Blindne"
·
Ohio
· and the
project.
Boonshort
Mu,ctllll
of
County commissioners are .
by state law. re sponsible for Discm·c,y in Dayton. It i' lundthe housing. food and med- eo by the Ohio Dcpanmcnt of
ical care expenses associated Health. Bureau of Chil d and
with prisoners in county cus- Famil y Hc·alth Sen icc' and the
tody. However. funds appi·n- Save Om Si ~ht PmL!ram .
The lthrar\•, 2&lt;KI~ Children's
priated for those expense s
Summer
Rc-adin:. : Pn,:..: ra m has
but not spent have. in the
a
th
~ml'
·
o!"
··oni!.!Pil ~~ Dreams
past , been made ava ilabl e for
other sheriff's depanment amJ Darin!.! Dec~b. .. and each
expenses - including \\'ages chilli i:-. t.::ll~C( l li ra~t.·d Il l rL~&lt;tJ at
for deputies .
, lea~t twn hnm~. . ?t \\ eck \\ ith a
As of the, end of June . hook of thcir cht~i~c ~
"'TI1c summer r'L'adi n ~ prn- _..
$86.426 remained in Beegle \
gram
uive:-. \..'l1ildrcn. and aJull ~
$24:1 .039 salaries line item.
lime
t0
t:~pll\1"\.~ 1\.'_adiJtg Pf'li~m~
and Be~g l e said upon ass umin e offi ce in Januarv that lav- tn a:-.:.. r:-.tm pnnnnll ng. a\'·:an~ n~ ~ s..
111 man' . . ubit.'(b area:-. that m;_t\
otl\ mi ght he neces',:u-y if till' .. he
un!~~mll i;..,r H) them. like c.::ve
State Senator Joy .Padgett. R-Coshocton , and Sheriff Robert
Please see Beegle, AS
Beegle inspect Work completed to date m the Meigs County Jail.
hcal\h .111d "''~! ) ... Baile-) ,.,;d.

Beegle sets end of July as jail deadline

.

'

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