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"

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, May 27, 2003

www.mydallysentinel.com

I

'

'

support for wife whose
hubby,demands Sex
DEAR ABBY: While I
appreciated the irony of your
response'' to "Ready - and
Willing in New York," subtle, ty may have been lost on him.
He's the man who wants his
wife to guarantee that she'll
give him sex three times a
week.
That poor woman has ·my
sympathy. How could anyone
feel romantic - or ready and
willing -. with a partner who
made that kind of demand?
The fact that she wants to
move to Albany and have her
family help care for their four
children might be an indica·
tion that he's not.helping her
enough. Ask any mother: Not
getting the assistance or
appreciation that you need in
raising children is a surefire
libido killer.
NOT
READY OR WILLING TO
PUT UP WITH THAT IN
D.C.
DEAR D.C.: Many readers
had strong feelings about that
husband and his attitude.
Read on :
DEAR
ABBY:
Your
answer, "Why limit yourself
to three times a week?" was
weak. Why didn't you tell that
awful man what a jerk he is
for thinking sex with your
· spouse can be used as a bargaining tool? What kind of
pe.rson would demand that his

Dear

•

Abby
'
ADVICE

wife make love to him like it
was nothing more than a contract? Shame on him, and
shame on you for not calling
him on it' - FURIOUS IN
PHOENIX
DEAR FURIOUS: What
kind of husband would
demand sex as a. payoff? A·
turkey in the hay, of course.
DEAR ABBY: Your me.s·
sage to "Ready and Willing"
was right on. However, in all
seriousness, this man should
consider why his wife is not
"giving him" the sex he
wants. When a wife hears, "I
deserve it because it is my
marital right," she withdraws.
No one wants to be treated
that way. I have a hunch that
even if they move to Albany,
he won't be satisfied until he·
examines his behavior. MARJORIE IN LONG
BEACH, CALIF.
DEAR MARJORIE: Or
examines his approach, which

is about as romantic as an ice
bath.
DEAR ABBY: Get out the
wet noodle. Do the math. That
woman is caring for four kid s,
the oldest of which couldn't
be more than 10. She is tired!
Your reply was not appreciat·
ed by other tired woms - and
we are legion . - ALSO
TIRED IN K.C.
DEAR ALSO TIRED: I
meant no disrespect to tired
moms.
DEAR ABBY: I just want
to say'! loved your tongue' in•
cheek reply. - MOTHER
OF FOUR IN VIRGINIA
DEAR MOTHER: l ' m
afraid my answer was interpreted as more foot:in-mouth
than tongue-in-cheek.
DEAR ABBY: That wife
should counteroffer and tell
him his agreement is acceptable under the following
terms:
(I) If the toilet seat is left
up, subtract two sex days.
(2) If he nags or complains
when asked to help around the
house,
subtract
one
"encounter" for · each cornplaint.
.
(3) If he starts a project and
leaves it unfinished, subtract
one more.
Sex in marriage should not
be about power and control. It
should be about / intimacy,

1- ·
•

love, ;~nd feeling close to your
spouse. - VALERIE IN
BLOOMINGTON, IND.
DEAR VALERIE: You're
right. Many readers pointed
out that intimacy in marriage ,
is a result of cooperation, con·
sideration and respect in
every aspect of the partnership.
Dear Abby is wrirten bv
Abigail V{!ll Buren, also
known as Jeann e Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
· Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0. Box 69440. Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

The Newspaper
Has Class •••
Students can
learn a lot from
the newspaper about the
world
in which they live. And
now is the
perfect time·to bring
newspapers into the
cia r m.

Astrograph
Wednesday. May 28. 2003
BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

Life could take off in an entirely new direction in the
year ahead. You might be put
in the position from time to
time to try things you' ve al·
ways wanted to do but never
had the opportunity for previously.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- Flashes of inspiration you
might get today could excite
you. but don't be too hasty
about implementing them.
Whm looks good in your head
now m)ght be a burned-out
bulb tomnrrow.
CANCER (June 21-July
22)- A breech in friendship
could occur today between
you and a pal over something
of a matenal nature if either
of yoi.J carries things too far

and allows it to develop into
an i~sue .

LEO (July 23-J\ug. 22) - ·
It" s good to be focused, but

cons1dcr the interests and cori·

ce'rns of companions, not just

your own. If you don' t. you
could come.off looking selfish and alter the way others

think of you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Know when 10 call it quits
when it comes to imposing

your ideas on unreceplive l.istencrs today. If you keep
pushing too hard, you will invite rebuttals that I guarantee
you won't like.
LIDRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- h behooves you to proceed
very cautiously toc!ay in your
business dealings . Neither
Lady Luck nor cohorts will be
around tu baiiJou out should
you make a ba call.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Normally, being cooperative is your best course of
action, but today if you be·
lieve you're bcine pressured
to do something that does not
serve your best interests,
you· d be wise to go your own
way.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21)- There's a strong
possibility that your mind
may not always be on what
you're d.oing today, so if
you're working with any tools
or mechanical devises. be ex·
tra .auenti ve to safety l!roce·
dures.

40 Bumpkin
41 Youngster
1 Party girl
42 - Marie
4 - 500 .
Saint
8 N~t good
44 Bassoon
11 Fix a
cousins
squeak
47 Where
12 .Close
Venice Is
13 Army outfit 51 Engage
J 15 Part of TNT 52 Large tanks
16 Camera
55 Debt letters
part
56 Complain
17 Writing
57 Green pod
fluids
- .58 Old space
18 Dark brown
station
20 Well·fed
59 Wily
21 Leather
60 Routes
.
punch
61 JFK arrival · 10 Lev" .
39 Existed
23 Tool set14 "My, myl" · 41 Ant·slzed
24 Grass
DOWN
19 Fleming,
43 Travel
27 TWA
et al.
papers
1 Specks
20 'Mom's girt ·44 German
guesses
29 Vet's offloe 2 Blarney
22 Dripped
. physicist
sound
Stone site 23 Martial art 45 Life stories
32 "Has 1001
3 Object on
24 Soothe
46 Ph.D. e•am
"
radar
25 Movie
48 Goals
33 Broadcast · 4 Wife's mom
terrier
49 "Dally
34 Hatchet
(hyph.)
26 Is a groom
Planet"
35 Soho co.
5 Born
28 Makes a
name
36 Large
6 Marino or
bow
SO Round tent
parrot
Rowan
29 Pageant
52 Promise
37 Novelist
7 Soph.
figures
53 Alias
James and jr.
30 Office VIP · 54 Sample .
38 Scale notes 8 Muscular
31 Time span
39 Into the
9 A Bronte ' 37 At the drop
. sunset
sister
of- -

I

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - Having a good
time and S;J ti sfying your ex -

travagant urges might be
tempting today . but guard

against tendencies to squan -

der your mental , physical, fi·

nancial or emotional resources.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- Plan your procedures
carefully and strive to be methodical with any task at hand
today . If you get off on the
wrong foot. you may have to
go back and retrace many of
your steps.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) '- Keep your frustrations
or temper under complete
control today, especially with

those with whom you' re emotionally involved. If you overreact, you'll trigger a similar
response from them.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - You can blame carelessness on your part if a financial arrangement you have
today does not work oiit as
well as you had hoped. Slay
on top of things and pay ·attention to details.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - Ambition will be high
in you and easily aroused today. but it 's qu~stionabl e
whether you' ll achieve your
objectives or not. Maintai n
patience if you hope to accomplish something.

Answer
to
previous

Word
3«1 DOWN

Scrimmag~ ·

. AVERAGE GAME 20()-210

JUDD'S TOTAL

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AVERAGE GAME 225-235

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DIRECTIONS : Make a2- lo 7-18tter wcYd !rom lhfllstters on each yardline.

Add poi'lts 10 eaCh word or lenar USing sconng dlrecllons at ~11'11. S&amp;llen-\ene'
words get a 80·poinl boou! . All \'1'9f0s can be IOt.rld in Webstar's New Wol1d
College Dictionary

Meigs earning
high interest
o·n investment
BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor
: POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Elementary School building to
be abandoned by the Meigs
Local School District next
month as students move into a
new building will be sold at
public auction.
That was the decision arrived
at by the Board of Education at
a meeting Tuesday night after
hearing the Rev. Keith R,ader
report that the Meigs County
Cooperative Pari sh is not interested in leasing the buildin~, but
would be interested in buytng it
;tt auctmn .
· Rader emphasized that the
Pari sh still wants the building to
consolidate and expand the
many programs for youth and
adults which are now carried out
in several locations.
"But,'' he said, "we need a
clear title to the property
because we plan to invest
$200,000 and we don't want to
do that on a lease basis."
Rader said he had talked to an
attorney and been advised that
once the building is transferred
County
to
the
Meigs
Commissioners, they can not
just "give the property away,"

JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

n's MINE:.
tM Sl!lE

\WAT CAN 1 GET
fOil. YOJ, SIR~

CfiTI

"1:1JI'I.IIMGI~ATION?

CAlM OOJJ~,
AlEX! IT'S

S·O-L·E .

tr'SOIJ"TUE
MENUr

-v-

.

Of
~R

QF

CIITHtRINE
zrr ~ . :!ONE5...

I~

• Elephant, baby set to
make debut, See page
Al
• Family Medicine, See
page Al
• Rio professor honored, See page Al
• News, notes from
Meigs
County's 4-H
Clubs, See pa.g_e A4
• Soldiers, vets seam
targets, says group, See
page A7
·• Department serving
the health care needs of
Meigs Countians, See
page AS

Bv J. Mtw lAYTON
Staff writer
ROCKSPRlNGS
A
princess regains her crown
and teenagers will mock the
big people at 7 p.m. Thursday

~NO

DO 'IOU

'!?

11\E
HEA.111'1

OO!l'l
IMA6E

Katotyn Hill, 3rtl erode,
Southam Elementary

Index

~

Ul Plies
A4
BS-7

88
88
A4
AS

81-5
A2

2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~~

'
Please see Drama,
AS

.

.

MWDLEPORT
Recognition of reunion classes and awarding of II scholarships highlighted the annual
Middleport · Alumni
Association's annual reunion
held Saturday night at the
Meigs Middle School.
·
Ffllllces McClure introduced ·
Crow ·
Davis
the reunion classes, 1938, 1943,
1948, . 1953, 1958, 1963~ and
1968 following a welcome by
Paul Gerald, president, and the
invocation by Peter Walburn.
Susan
Park
Memorial
Scholarships presented by
Nancy Cale went to Carrie
Crow, Sheena Cunningham,
Kayte Davis, Laura Harrison,
Katie Jeffers, Seth T. Kettel,
Emily Story, and Allison
Williamson.
Jeffers
Kettel
Crow, daughter of James and
Pam Crow. and granddaugher of
Dorotha Wmebrenner Neutzling,
class of 1940, will anend The teacher. Jetlers. daughter of Rigoli, granddaugher of
Ohio State University where Desmond and Joni Jeffers and Eugene and Janet Harris, and
she will pursue a degree in nurs- granddaughter of Barbara Laura HarriSon. The Crawford·
ing. Cunnnginharn, dau~hter of Capetina Mora, c.lass of 1957, Gray-Lewis Scl)olarship was
Ron and Marilyn Cunrungham will go to Kentucky Christian awarded to Elizabeth Wilford:
and granddaugher of Lois •Col!e~e and 'J?lans a career in
Speaking on possible uses for
Cunningham, class of 1943, Christian servtce.
the Middleport schools to be
will be studying pre-med at
Seth T. Kettel, son of Keith turned over to Middleport vii·
Augustana College; Davis, and Ang~la Kettel ·and gnmd- !age by the Meigs Local School
daughter of Wayne and Debbie son of Wtlbr _Rowley, Jr. , cla.ss . District next month and the role
Davis and granddaugher of of . 195_8 wtll attend Ohio which the Alumni Association
Dorothy Davis, ~lass ~f 19~9. Umverstty and wtll be. takmg a will .take were Mayor S~dy
wtll attend Ohto Umverstty pre-med program. Wtltamson, lannarellt and Myron Dufheld.
where she will pursue a career dau~her of Robert and Donna
A dance in the gymnasium
m athlettc fll!~mg .
Willtamson and granddaugher followed the banquet.
'
Laura Hamso~, daughter. of of Donna McC~l Wtltamson,
Steve. and Jenmfer Harrison, class of 1955 will go to the
Alumni emending
·
an~ ,gmddaughter of Roscoe University of Rio Grande to
Alumni attending from their
Wtse, class-of 1951 , will go to study ~dtology.
resective classes are as follows:
Ohio University and plans a
Recuptents of the McCarn~1927:
Frances McClure
career as a secondary education Moore Scholarships were Ltsa Hoffman, Dunbar, W.Va.

WHAT

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics ·Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

by Valerie Carpenter, an
eighth-grade student at Meigs
Middle School, the princess
decides to reclaim her rightful
throne when she grows up.

News editor

ALL

· z Sections -

in the auditorium at the new
Meigs Middle School.
In "Kingdom Reclaimed"
an evil man usurps the throne
and kills the king, the queen
and sends .their baby, a
princess, into exile. Written

____ _

BY CHARLENE HOEFuCH .

,100ETME'R

H~VE

Drama makes a scen·e
at Meigs Middle School

POMEROY - · Attending
a state-mandated training
session, Meigs County
Treasurer Howard Frank
learned the county is earn ing the state's second-high est interest rate on public
funds invested long term.
The news is encouraging
to county officials, who are
grappling with a county
budget made complicated bv
d.windling revenue · and
increasing operating cost s
and state and federal mandates.
Interest on inactive public
funds deposited at Farmers
Bank and Savings Co. is
earning the county 4.3 percent interest, which is
directly deposited into the
county's general fund for
u,se in operating county government, Frank said.
"The county only operates
on 4.3 mills on real estate
and
personal
property
taxes," Frank said. "The balance of the operating funds
come from sales tax., which
is down by $26,000 so far
this year, and fees charged
by county offices and local
government revenue assis·
lance from the state, which

will be down $4,310 by
Jul y."
Frank said he expects to
pay $170,000 in interest on
inactive pub,lic funds by the
end of the year.
"This in-vestment program
has earned the county over 1
$14 million since I took
office in 1963," Frank said,
"saving county taxpayers
additional taxes."
"The investment of public
funds is t\ecessary to help
balance the county general
fund," Frank said . "Without ·
the investment of public
funds, taxpayers · will be
required to vote additional
taxes to operate the county
general fund."
Frank said Gallia County
is first in the state in terms
of return on the investment
of public funds, because all
funds -active and inactive
- have been placed in a
high-yield account at Ohio
Valley Bank.
Frank said the 4.3 percent
interest rate now being paid
on his three-year investment
program could increase. The
terms of the investment
allow him to upgrade ·the
interest rate if rates increase
on deposits.

Middleport welcomes alumni, awards
memorial scholarships to students

Cloudy, HI: 70., Low: I50o

v&gt;OIMNL'I
WRV£5

Meigs Middle School eighth-graders Eddie Neece, Nikkie Guinther and Samantha Shontz listen to direction by drama advisor Amy Perrin who hopes the show will open to a packed house
at 7 p.m. Thursday at the new Meigs Middle School auditorium. (J. Miles Layton)

====::;··~.........__e_

Inside

0

www.mydailysentinel .com

WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2003

Pomeroy
school ·
up for
:auction

;=:=-=·

41r"!OOWN

@@@@@@@ ~~OPo1n1s
by JUDD HAMBRICK

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 186

Please see School, A5

0
0

•

••

" " IJ()\,..

Tll\..1&lt;1~' r

)

0

(9@@@@@@.

C' 2000 Unltd F•.. ur• $yrocll(:llt, Inc:,

'«&lt;J '1\tMirr 1\IA~ G&lt;.lY
Stu.lloiG fUN!liA~ I'\.OTS

Coming Thursday: Places to go, Things to do

ACROSS

Harrison .

Story

1932:
Harold
Lohse,
Pomeroy
1934: E. Maxine Coates
Gaskill, Middleport
1934: Elizabeth Lohse,
Pomeroy
.
1936: Clifford Cunningham,
Lima;
Eugene
Schaaf,
Columbus; Lois Diles Bush,
The Plains: Mary · Hennesy
Harris, Columbus; Robert King,
· Middlepor:t
1937: Howard Russell,
Middleport ·
· 1939: Dorothy Darst Davis,
Middleport
·
.
1940:.Bdty Roush Allensworth,
Groveport; Charles Entsminger,
South Charleston, W.Va.: Janet
Hecox Harris, Columbus;
Martha Robson Cunningham,

..

AHentlon Cancer Survivors! ·

FORUFE•

August I 5 and I 6

RELAY

Lima;
Mildred · Asbury
Moseley, St. Albans, W. Va..
1941 : !'I ill Diles, Athens;
Jean · ,Roush
Russell,
Worthington.
· 1942:
Barbara Hackett
Mullen, Pomeroy; Henry
Clatworthy. Middleport; John
Call, Lonb Bottom; Joseph
Young, Salesville; Kenneth
Mcelhinny, Middleport; Pauley
Kincaid Beaver, Middletown;
Robert Mitch, Wheeling, W.
Va.
.
1943: Charles Burk, Brook
Park ; Matjorie Diles Mitchell,
Atheos;
Mary
Mitch,
Wheeling, W. Va.; Patricia
Devol Kloes, Bidwell, Rowen!,!
Warren Young, Salesville; Ruth
Taylor Strain, Lancaster; and
William King, Middleport.
1944:
Dorothy Turner
Drenner, Costa Mesa, Calif.;
Jeanne Young Bradbury,
Syracuse: William Chlds,
Middleport.
1946: Alfred Scarberry,
Gallipolis; Martin Carson,
Richmond, Ind.: Richard
Bailey. Middleport.
1947 :
John
Fultz,
Middleport: John R. Kauff,
Point . Pleasant; Mildred
Ohlinger Bailey, llhigh, A a.;
Roy A. Evans, .Canal
Winchester; Carla Gilmore
Riley, Middeport.
1948: Bill Russell, Marietta·
Dorothy ' Cha~e Anthony:
Mtddleport; Dorothy Miller
Roach, Middeport; Helen Byer,
Baltimore; Marie . Greenlee
Allen, Spartansburg, s·. C.;
Marilyn
Knopp
Fultz~
Middleport; Mary Rollins
Scarbeery, Tuppers Plains;

Please see Alumni, AS

. And those inlerested in the fight against cancer•
The 2003 Galli a County Relciy for Life will be ·held
MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holza Difference

· at the Gallipolis .City Park
A cancer survivors' reception will take ploce before the opening lap.

All are invited to attend and join us in lhe fight against cancer!

www.holzer.org

For more information, please call Chairperson Bonnie McFarland at (740) 446-5679.

'

••

·•

·-

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'

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T~e

PageA2

Ohio
Elephant, baby set
to make .debut at zoo·

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 29
MICH.

•

[rolociOJS.;~9'l
PA.

•

0

BY JOHN SEEWER

I Monoflold ls2°/67° I •

IND.

Associated Press

:[2-;,,;:,_
~. ~~----.
. . WUI'
~ q!!l . • •
"~~

Surtny Pl. Ckufv· Cloudy

Showers T·stoons

'

Rain

~

Fluiries

' '

Snow

Ice

.

Clouds, rain stay another week
Today... Partly cloudy. A
slight chance of showers this
morning... Then a slight chance
of showers and thunderstonns.
Highs in the ·mid 70s. West
winds 5 to I0 mph. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
Tonight...Showers and thunderstorms likely... Milinly from
late ~vening on. Lows in the
mid 50s. Southwest winds 5 to
10 mph. Chance of rain po percent.
Thursday... Showers
and
thunderstonns likely... Mainly
in the morning. Highs in the
upper 60s. West winds 10 to 15
I mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
· Thursday
night...Partly

cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s.
Fridi\y... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 70s.
Friday night...Partl y cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstonns. Highs in the mid
70s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the mid 50s and highs in the
lowt r 70s.
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s and
highs in the lower 70s.
Thesday... Mostly clear. Lows
in the mid 50s and highs in the
mid 70s.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
May 27. 2003

1.0,000

Dow
Jones
"c+-11il7

8,781 .35
Pel. ctia191

+2.08

from IQ'Aoul:

---;FE;:;B:----:MA=A---:cAP;:;A:-----:M-:-:A::-Y- 7·000
High

I

Rocord high: 11 ,722,98

Low

8,792.44 8,540.59

Jan. 14, 2000

1,600·
- - 1,400
--1.200
---;FE;:;B:-----:M-:-:Ac;:A---:cAP::R:-----:M-:-:A::-Y- t ,OOO
High

Rocord high: 5,00!.62

Low

1,558.28 1,504.22

Maroh I 0, 2000

May 27,2003

1,000

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500
800

Pel. cl1ar1ge
fmm provklus

FEB
High

APR

700

MAY

-high: 1,527.48
Maroll 24,2000

952.76

+1.96

AP

Local Stocks
AEP - 29.25
Arch Coal- 21.17
Akzo - 2.9.95
AmTech/SBC - 25.45
Ashland Inc. - 32.45
AT&amp;T - 18.91
Bank One - 37.61
BLI -12.86
Bob Evans - 25.25
BorgWarner- 56.85
Champion- 2.94
Charming Shops- 4.37
City Holding - 29.54
Col- 22.40
DG -16.30

DuPonl - 41.90
Federal Mogul - .285
USB - 23.58
Gannett - 76.75
General Electric - 28.31
GKNLY - 3.60
Har1ey DavidSon - 42.05
Kroger- 15.43
Ltd,- 14.22
NSC -21.27 ·
Oak Hill F""'r1Cial-24.32
OVB - 22.52
BBT- 33.18
Peoples - 24.50
Pepsico - 44.18

Premier- 10.00
Rockwell - 23.09
_,Rocky Boots- 8.90
AD Shell - 45.85
Sears - 29.76
Wai-Mart .,- 52.50
Wendy's - 29.00
Worthington- 14.53
Daily stock reports are
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Local News·

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

.Ohio weather

Retee Outalde Melge County
13Weeks .... ... ......'50.05
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TOLEDO
Renee
wrapped ber trunk underneath
.her body; grazing the back of
her month-old baby. She just
want!)d to make sure he was
· still by her side, a zookeeper
said.
The elephant and her baby
are becoming inseparable another milestone for keepers ·
at the Toledo Zoo who are
closely monitoring one of the
few African elephants ever
born in captivity in the United
States.
For the last month, keepers
have watched the pair constantly, making sure they bond
and that the first-time mother
doesn't become too aggres-

sive with her baby.
"She sort of had a crash
course in motherhood," said
Don RedFox, .tbe zoo's elephant manager.
Now Renee and her
unnamed baby boy are. ready ·
to make their debut. The zoo
will allow visitors to see them
together for the first time on
Wednesday afternoon.
Visitors will be ushered into
the elephant house in small
groups and limited in how
long they can stay. The time
limits will depend on how the
animals react and how many
people are waiting to seek
them. Keepers want to make
sure the elephants can handle
the attention.
RedFox said he doesn't
think that will be a problem.

"He's going to be a ham,"
RedFox said of the baby. "He
likes the attention. He '.s just
like his mother."
He already likes standing
near the front of the enclosure,
putting his front Jeet on the
steel chain that serves as a barrier.
And he's learning to use his
trunk, coiling it around a
shredded brown paper bag and
pushing an apple across the
floor.
. He weighs 270 pounds and
stands 3 feet tall but can easily
walk underneath his mother's
belly.
·
The baby also is starting to
gnaw on whatever he can put
his mouth around now that his
molars are coming in.
Still, there is cautious opti-

mism because only about half
of the 35 African elephants
born at American zoos have
survived the first year.
In the wild, elephants help
raise the babies. In zoos, keepers must help new mothers
adjust to their new role.
"In the wild, she would've
been in a herd and saw calves
being born," Redfox said.
TI1e zoo had been trying for
five years to have a successful
elephanl birth with its two
females .
Re nee. 24. became pregnant
through artificial in semination.
The zoo 's other female ,
Ratik.i, was the first elephant
to be successfully inseminated
through surgery. But her calf
died during birth last July.

Proposed
Peace Down the Way steps up
bi lis·stiffen efforts in ca_
mpaign against violence
CINCINNATI (AP) - A oration of about 60 commu- Cincinnati is also looking
state's DUI campaign
to stop the blood- nity-based
organizations for employers who wish to
shed on city streets is enter- after a near-record 65 . offer jobs for young adults
laws
ing a new phase with bill- Cincinnati homi cides tfl this summer.

C:OLUMBUS (AP) Kristina Vazquez believes
the man who killed her husband in a drunken driving
accident wouldn't have been
driving the night of the fatal
crash if stiffer DUI penalties
had been in place.
As a result, she's supporting a trio of bills in the Ohio
House that would toughen
penalties for'repeat drunken
drivers.
"Someone going out and
driving a car drunk is the
same thing as som~one
going out with a loaded gun
and randomly shooting people," Vazquez said.
The bills would expand
the time period in which
habitual drunken drivers can
receive the stiffest penalties,
require longer sentences in
fatal accidents and lengthen
sentences.
The bills, sponsored by
Republican lawmakers, are
likely to receive strong support. Gov. Bob Taft also
supports
them,
said
spokesman Orest Holubec.
David Dye was sentenced
to eight years in P.lson on a
vehicular homicide charge
in the November 200 I death
of State Highway Patrol
Trooper Frank Vazquez, 26,
on Interstate 270 in
Columbus.
For the charge of operating a vehicle while intoXi.cated, Dye, 34, received six
months in prison. It was his
fifth drunken driving conviction.
Sponsors of two of the
bills say they acted because
of the death ·of Frank
Vazquez, which left Kristina
Vazquez alone to raise their
three young children, a 5year-old daughter and two
sons, 6 and 2.

No injuries

in collapse
of church
roof
'

LONOON (AP) - A pastor blamed the past winter's
heavy snowfall for the collapse of the roof and walls of
an empty church gymnasium Sunday afternoon.
Officials of the Trinity
Chapel Word Center had
seen cracks in the gym's
ceiling and walls in recent
weeks and had planned to
fort.ify the.building near this
city 25 miles west of
· Columbus.
Activities at the gym had
been called off until the
building could be inspected.
The gym sits behind Trinity
Chapel's church, which has
a congregation of about l 00
people.
"I anticipated pieces of dry
wall falling, but I never
anticipated the building
falling," pastor Gary Noble
said.
No one was injured in the
collapse, the Madison
County sheriff's office said.

·----·--- ' -- -- -

&lt;

b(1ards calling for a moratorium on violence.
The Peace Down the Way
campaign said the billboards
that go up Sunday will read,
"Too Many Tears. Promote
Peace . Moratorium on
Violence."
Mark Gable, the campaign's assistant marketing
director, said the slogan was
inspired by "So Many
Tears," a song by slain rap
artist Tupac Shakur about
the people he had known
who had been kill.ed.
The campaign was introduced on Jan. I by a collab-

2002.
But since then, 30 people
have died on Cincinnati 's
streets, equaling the number
of those killed by this iime
last year.
In addition to the billboards, similar public service announcements will be
played on area radio stations,
while campaigns to increase
self-esteem among schoolage children will begin.
Activists also announced a
jobs program with funds for
about 381 summer jobs for
young people. The Urban
League
of
Greater

The coalition also hopes 10
send "response teams" to the
scenes of homicides to help
residents and survivors
cope . The groups are working with religiou s leaders
and psychologists to staff
the team s.
"Too many children have
seen puddles of blood and
bodies in the streets," Gable
said. "Some might say this is
too little too late, but it's
never too late to help someone deal with trauma and let
them know they aren't
alone ."

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
AGRICIJL TURE

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Jim's Farm Equipment
www.jimsfarmequipment.com

· · Quality Window Systems, Inc.
www.qualitywindowsystems.com
INTERNET SERVICES

AUTOMOTIVE
Norris Northup Dodge
www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis
www.turnpikeflm.com
BUSINESS TRAINING
Gallipolis Career College
www.gallipoliscareercollege.com
COMMUNITY
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
. iNww.meigs(ountyohio.com

BlueStarr Network·
www.blues~rr.net

Fashion then and now

lnfoCision Management Corp.
www.infocision.com

Actinic keratoses can·.lead
to skin cancer if not treated

"Fashion: Then and Now" will be on display 1n the Fre nch Art ~o lony galleries June 1·29. The
exhibit, featuring fashions from 1790 to present will ki ck-off with a Fashio n Show at 2 p.m.
on Sunday, June 1. The style show will be held in th e· FAC's side yard·. Although there is no
fee for the s how, reservations are required for seating. Call the FAC for reservations, (7 40)
446-3834. A dessert buffet will follow the event. The fee fo r the buffet is $3 per person.
Pictured, from left to right, committee members Mary Bea McCalla , Saundra Koby, Jan
Thaler, Peggy Evans and Marianne Campbell.

Rio professor hC?nored by colleagues
· RJO GRANDE- It's often
said that in order to be a good
teacher, you also need to be a
good student.
'
Dr. Jian R. Sun, professor at
the University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College is
both of these and he is one of
. the favorite professors on the
campus. The Bidwell resident
was recently honored when he
was presented with the Edwin
A. Jones Award for Excellence
in Teaching at Rio Grande. On
Monday, April . 21, Sun
received the award during
ceremony in the Student
Center Annex . on the Rio
Grande campus.
;&lt;Being selected for this
teaching excellence award
makes me feel 'special' in two
ways: special in the sense that
teaching (education) is recognized as important in our society, and special in the sense
that this importance may not
yet be fully recognized by all,"
Sun said. "Education is important for getting better jobs and
better pay, but higher education also means higher learning, which is much more than
just acquiring the skills needed
for a job," Sun said.
Sun has taught in the
English department at Rio
Grande since 1992 and serves
as the chair of the School of
Humanitie.~ and director of the
University Assessment Program.
He teaches courses such as college ~omposition,linguistics , history of the English language,
English as a second language
(for international students) and
English grammar. He utilizes
technology· tdJ enhance his
classes and has made a strong

a

effort to help Rio Gmnde students use the technology available on campus.
;'I do not want Rio studems
to feel that being in a small
college like Rio Grande would
not offer them the same type
of learning opportunities that
their pe·e rs have in larger universities,'' Sun said. He· constantly re-evaluates hi s own
leaching and incorpomtes new
ways 10 engage and challenge
his students.
Sun received his undergraduate degree in English from
the English Department of
Xi'an Foreign Languages
Institute in Xi'an. China in
1979. He also taught Engli sh
at the same institution before
taking further academic programs in England and at Ohio
University in Athens. where
he received his malter's and
doctoral degrees. Sun's wife.
Nian H. Yang, is the director
of tlnance at Rio Grande and
the couple tfas a 16-year-old
son, Xiao. who is a post-secondary option student al Rio
Grande.
"Jian · Sun is such a good
teacher because he i.s such a
good student," said Greg
Sojka, provost and vice president of academic affairs at Rio
Grande.
"He continues to learn, even
after his forrnal ·education and
his doctorate. was completed.
He has become one of our
campus leaders in distance
education , teaching a variety
of classes online."
According to Sojka, Sun
shares whal he learns with others on campus and he has
offered and coordinated sever-

al professional development
workshops on a variety of topics for Rio Grande faculiy
members.
;;He also has been such a
valuable campus asset by sharing his native culture with students, faculty and staff ranging
from classroom presentations
to actually leading trips to his
native China for both students
and staff," Sojka said.
Sun said that he works as a
teacher so that he can make a
ditference in the lives of hi s
students. The things he teaches
them while they are at Rio
Grande will help them for the
rest of lheir li ves, and that
inspires him to always look for
new ways to teach more effectively.
He has been influenced by
several of his teachers, and
now he tries to impact hi s students in the' same way. It is a
job he is very good at, and it is
a job he loves.
"It is rewarding when students ask me questions about
their studies, when they stay to
tinish a course despite difficulties that they encounter, when
they share their joy with me,
and when I reali ze that I still
do not have all the solutions to
every single question/problem
that studer)ts present me with,
and that I need to keep enriching myself with new know ledge," Sun said.
He is an excellent teacher
and a proud member of the
Rio Grande family, and he is a
fitting recipient of the Edwin
A. Jones Award for Excellence
in Teaching.

Holzer Medical Center ·
www.holzer.org

Martha A.
Simpsoo
Columnist
is when the patient is most
likely to not ice the sk in
blemish and the doctor to
diagnose it . Most commonly the se blemishes are
found on the fa'ce , the back
of the hands and the forearms . They fee l like a rough
patch on the skin and can be
red and scaly. There can be
one le sion or several.
A physician can usually
reco gnize thi s les io n and
freq uentl y does not need to
do a biopsy to make the
diagnosis. Several different
lype s of creams and ointments are used to treat these
les ion s. They can also be
removed by freezing them a
coupl e of times usi ng a
technique called cryotherapy.
After your lesion s have
bee n take n care of, your pri mary goal should be. to not
ge t anymore. We· are realizing now that sun expo'sure
when we are young causes
lifetime damage to the· skin .
We cannot turn back the
clock, but we can move for'
ward , wearing prote ctive ·
clothing· when out in the sun
and us in g a sunblock with a
high sun protection factor,

or SPF In generc\1 ·t hat SPF
number sho uld be 15 or
higher. On any da y the~ t yo u
are anticipatin g sun ex posure, you should ap ply sun block in the mornin g hefore
yo u go outside .
.
Don 't forge t to tJ..,~ -.. un block on your Iip s. :111J if
yo ur ha i r i ~ th i nnin g. on

you r scalp . U&gt;ing the se pre ventive techni4u e' C&lt;lll he'lp
yo u avoid anot her round of
actinic keralosis . Th e .same
measures - if started c&lt;~r l y
enough in life - c&lt;1n also
pro1ect again,; otl1er fo rm s
of sk in cancer. inc: luJin ~
th e dani!erou s me lanom:t
variety. Also. taki ng the se
common

se n ... e

~tep\

to

red uce sun expllsurc 11 ill set
a good exa mpl e fur o ur
children und gramkhi !Jre n.
If they fo ll ow our examp le .
their genera tion will sc·e
many less cases o f prec ancerous and cancerous ski n
lesions .
Farnil r Medicin e is u
weeklr 'co lumn . ];, .llfi&gt;Jnit
question s, rrTI/ e w Manlw
A. Simpso11. D.U .. M.B.A ..
Ohio Uni1·enin· College vj
Osteopathic Medi cine. P 0.
Box I IO. Ath en s. Ohio
4570I. Medical intimn11tinn
in this colum.n · is. pml'ided
as 011 educational sen·ice
only. It does not rep/act' the
j udgmertt of' ro ur pn.m nal
physician . ll'fw sl1o11ld he
re lied on lo dia gnosis a11d
recomm end n·etltm eru fr•r
anv medical corl&lt;lititins.
Past columns are 1/l'tl ila/J/e
onlineat ll'll'll '..fhrodio.orgljin

First class of certified welders graduates
RIO
GRANDE
Commencement fo r the 2003
graduates of the University
of Rio Grande/R io Grande
Corpmunity College included
the ·first class of graduating
certified welders and welding certificate rec ipi ents from
Rio's ne w certi ficate program
in Welding Technology.
Two students, Adam Hood ,
Gallipolis, and Tim Howard,
Thurman, recei ved their bachelor 's degrees in Industrial
Technology and their ASME
(American
Society
of
Mechanical Engineers) 6G
Welding Certification, a
nationally recognized Welding certification, which certifies them to perform welding
in all postilions for both
structural plate and pressure

piping applications.
Recipients of o ne-year
welding certific ates were
Ryan Baylor, Gallipoli s;
James R. Fraley, Patriot; Tim
Jones, Oak Hill ; Thomas
Nader, Rey noldsburg; and
Darrell Tilley of Coalton.
Hood and Howard chose to
take one of the ASME's
toughest tests which consisted of welding two pieces of
pipe coupons . together with
the coupons fixed at a 45
de gree · angle. This test
requires the we1.9er to perform welding in the overhead, vertical, horizontal, and
fl at positions durin g each of
the weld passes.
Welding Technology at the
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College

provides a student wi th J
strong foundation in su·uctural welding and fabr ication.
de structi ve and non-dest ru ctive weld-te stin g techniques.
and welding code compliance
requirements . In addition lo
welding ski ll s. the program
.requires, students to complete
coursework in prim readin g.
machine tool operation s,
technical mat hema tic.; , and
technical communications.
The cuurse is 1au ght by
Mike Dyer, a Certified
Welder who JS an AWS
(American Welding Soc iety)
Certified Welding Inspcctor
and a Certified Wel din g
Educator.

Farmers Bank

Holzer Clinic
www.hc;»lzerclinic.com

'

Pleasant Valley Hospital
www.pvalley.org

We're Your Bank for fife5;;

Yokeyes Birthwear
www.yokeyes.com
NEWSPAPERS

APPRECIATION DAY!
At the Tuppers Plains Location.

Point Pleasant Register
www.mydailyregister.com

Charter Communications
_ www.charter.com

Question: I have noticed
the se rough patches on my
fore head since doing ya rd
work this spring. I we nt to
the doctor and he said I
ha ve an ac tini c keratosis
and gave me some cream
for it. Could yo u tell me
more about thi s condition ?
Answer: Actinic keratoses are skin lesions that
occur in up to 25 percent of
the populati on in the northern hemi sphere. They are a
direct result of ultra violet,
radi atio n and are more co mmon in fai r-skinned people
as we ll as those who have a
long hi story of sunbathing
and/or not using su nc
screens.
These les ion s are also
often seen in those whose
jobs require them to work
outdoors. It's good that you
are hav ing these actinic keratosis lesions treated : Thi s
is because they are classi-.
fied as "premalignant" and
can become · canc erou s if
left untreated . The kind of
cancer they develop into is
called squamou s cell carcinoma. It 's one of three
major types of skin cancer.
While not as likel y to kill as
melanom a, squamou s ce ll
carcinoma is more dangerous than basal cell carcinoma, which is the most common type of skin cancer.
Actinic Kerato ses co mmonly "show up " in the
spri ng or summer, leading
physicians to belie ve that
they become more ac tive
aft er sun exposure . . By
,;show up, " I mean that this

MEDICAL

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com
I

ENTERTAINMENT

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

Family Medicine ,/

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
www.mydailytribune.com

EMPLOYMENT

· Pag~A3

GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

WELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS

Precious Memories
www.photosonchina.com

Herbalife Independent Distributor
www.herbsndielcom

Come &lt;,&gt;ut to the FARMERS BA:-&lt;K Tuppers Plains location on
May 30th from 11:00- 1:30 and let us thank you for choosing
FARMERS BANK . We'll have )Jotdogs, refreshments, drawings for
FREE gifts and much, much more! We value your patronage and
hope that you will join us for a day of fun.

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!

TO REGISfER ,

.
Take your business into the homes of over 40,000 con·
somers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties EVERYDAy
witb a listing of your web address in our

WEBSITE DIRECTORY

for this FREE program,
Or: for fllOt"e information,
please call

an innlivlt
quitting. Emphasis will
on long-te.rm freedom
smoking, in~luding
nrn•.tAt1 SkillS fOr

for only a $1 a day.

(740)
•

·---- .. --- __! ___ -'- - - --- - -·- _..

,.

_.. --- ---- ·- f

''

The Tobacco Use l'l(e...,lclot C..-:
Holzer Medl«&lt;t

*uitli

For more information
call (740) 667-3161

I ,

�•

Local News

The Daily Sentinel
'

News notes from
Meigs County's
4-H Clubs
Kountry Kidz
The Kountry Kidz 4-H
Club met on April 26 at the
Chester Church with two
advisors and · twelve 'members attending. They talked
about project books, livestock tag- in and date.s of 4H camp. Refreshments were
se rved by Debbie and Abbie
Chevalier.
- Morgan Windon, new s
reporter.

Lakeside
Leaders
The l akeside Leaders met
on March 30 at the
Chadwell home with two
advi sors and eight members
prese nt.
Officers were
elected: a bake sale and car
wash were set for May 24
and July 5 and camping at
Forked Run State Park was
planned.
Project se lections ·by
members were to be made
by the next meeting .
Brianna Ayres gave safety
tips regarding dogs. The
ChadwellS served refreshments.
At the next meet project
se lections to be completed
and health and safety
reports to be given.
Rebecca Chadwell,
news reporter.

•••
The Lakeside Leaders 4-H
Club met on April 17 at the
Ayres residence with two
advisors and eleven members present. They
discussed project updates, animal entry forms due by May
I , bake sale and car wash on
May 24 and camping at
Forked Run State Park
A health report was given
by Kori Collins on toddler
safety and a safety report by
Brianna Ayres on lawnmow·
er safety.
Ba sketball was enjoyed
for recreation and the Ayres
served refreshments.
Rebecca Chadwell,
news reporter.

••••

The Lakeside Leaders met
on May 18 at the Collin=s
residence with two advisors
and nine members present.
Discussion was about a
bake sale and car wash on
Saturday May 24th; participating in the Ohio River
Sweep; Camping at Forked
Run on June 25th through
the 29th; T- shirts for new
members and possible 4th
of July parade participation.
Project books were handed out ·and members were
told to work on projects for
next meeting.
A safety report was given
by Brianna Ayres on Bicycle
Safety. Refreshments were
served by the Collins family.
The next meeting will be
on June I at 4:00 p.m. at
Forked Run State Park.
Demon strations will be
given by Jenifer Chadwell
and Che lsey Wood.
Re becca Chadwell,
news reporter.

A Penny For Your Thoughts ...
How About $100 for your opinion?!?

2.

The Pioneers 4-H Club
met on March 16 at Ashley
Life's house with one advisor and ten members attending. Officers were elected,
presidents, Nancy Pickens
and-Tri cia Congo; vice presidents. A-lyssa Baker and
Brittany Hen sley ; secretary,
Jessica Pooler: ·treasurer,
Kim Casto r; health and

Do you read both the Saturday Times-Sentinel and Sunday Times-Sentinel?
_ _ Saturday
Sunday
Both

3. How would you rate the Saturday Times-Sentinel?
_ _ Excellent
Good
Satisfactory

Fair _ _ Poor

4. How would you rate the Sunday Times-Sentinel?
_ _ Excellent

Good

Satisfactory

Fair ----'· Poor

5. How w.ould you rate our local news coverage, excluding local sports?
_ _ Excellent
Good
Satisfactory
Fair
Poor
6.

If you feel local news is insufficient what do you feel we are missing?
.Please be spt&gt;cific.
·

7.

How would you rate our local sports coverage?
_ _ Excellent
Good
Satisfactory _ _ Fair _ _ Poor

Correction
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
will collect tires at the
Rocksprings Fairgrounds on
Friday only. The cost is $ 1
per tire, and only tires 16
inches and smaller will be
accepted. They will be
accepted on a first-come ,
first-served basis.
In the event the tire collection trailer is not filled on
Friday. a second collection
date will be set.

9. How .would you rate news from neighboring counties?
_ _ More than sufficient
Would like more
lnsufficieht _ _ Prel'er less
10. Would you prefer to have your newspaper go back to the Sunday Times-Sentinel and the Satnrday
Register and discontinue the combined Saturday Times-Sentinel?
-,--Yes
No
Comments----------------------------------------------------~-------------------

BPA meets

11 . . Do you feel you have lost some of your autonomy and identity as a county and community through

the combined papers?
_ _ Yes
No

God's Country Kidz 4- H
Club met on April 6 with
three advisors and fifteen
members attending. Election
of officers was held,
upcoming dates and deadlines were reviewed and
ideas for fundraising and
community services were
discussed.
Bingo was played for
recreation.
At the April 27 meeting a
bake sale was planned at
Hills Citgo in Racine and
members reviewed 4-H
camp dates and deadlines.
The members used food
items to make bugs as recreation.
- Kim Hawthorne, news
reporter.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs will hold its regularly
sc heduled meeting . at 5:30
p.m. on June 2. The public is
invited.

12. Do you plan on renewing your subscription to the Register, The Daily Sentinel or Daily Tribune?
-....,..Yes

No.
lfno 'please explain why·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Trustees meet

13. How would you.rate coverage of local clubs and organization?
-~Excellent

Good

Satisfactory

Fair

ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees will meet
at 7:30p.m. on June 3, at the
home of the clerk, Osie
Foil rod.

Poor

14. Do you prefer local game stories in the Saturday newspaper, or longer game stories in the Sunday
Times-Sentinel?
_ _ Saturday Times-Sentinel ___ Sunday Times-Sentinel

I

15. Please indicate your interest level in:
News about local government/public officials
Stories about local people
Stories about local scilools/education issues
Crimes news, including police reports
Local sports ,
Stories concernmg health and fitness
Home and garden stories
Food and nutrition , including recipes
News concerning local attractions and .events
Local business news
Regional news, or news from surrounding area

Alfred 4-H Club

_Very
_ Very
_Very
_ Very
_ Very
_· _ Very
_Very
_Very
_ Very
_Very
_ Very

Interested
Interested
Interested
Interested
Interested
Interested
Interested
Interested
Interested
Interested
Interested

_Mi ldly
_ Mildly
_Mildly
_Mildly
_ Mildly
_ Mildly
_Mi ldly
_Mi ldly
_ Mildly
_Mild ly
_ Mildly

interested _Not
interested _ Not
interested _Not
interested _ Not
interested _ Not
interested _ Not
interested _ Not
interested _ Not
interested _ Not
interested _Not
interested _Not

· Off to regional
track meet

interested
interested
interested
interested
interested
interested
interested
interested
interested
interested
interested

EAST MEIGS - Brandon
Werry, Ross Holter, Jen
Hayman ,
and
Jennifer
Chadwell of Eastern High
School will be participating
in the regional track meet
which gets underway at 4:30
p.m. today in Lancaster
today. Finals will be run on
Friday.

Water sampling
demonstration

16. When contacting any department of your local newspaper, do you feel you are treated professionally
. and your business is taken care of in a timely manner?
_ _ Yes
No. If no please explain: - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - -

POMEROY
The
Leading Creek Watershed
Committee will hold a water
quality sampling demonstration Thursday, June 5, 6:30
p.m. in Thomas Fork Creek.
An incorrect date was earlier
announced.
, The group wi II first meet at
the Ohio .State University
Extension Service Office on
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy,
then convoy to the creek. All
are welcome and refreshments will be served.

. ..
I
1
I

17. If you are a honie delivery subscriber, how would you rate your carrier service?
_ _ Excellent
Good
Satisfactory
Fair
Poor

18. What other newspaper do you .subscribe to'?
_ _ Athens Messenger
_____ Marietta Times

The' Survivor 's 4-H Club
mel on April I at the Roush
house with two advisors and
s ix members pre sent. A
yard sale was planned for
May along with participation in the the Ohio Ri·ver
Sweep as a community pro-,
ject and 4-H camp.
Haileigh Bush served
refreshments .
- Haileigh Bush , news
reporter.

Beryl Carsey
Wyatt

Local Briefs

8. If you feel local sports is insufficient what do you feel we are missing? Please be specific.

God's
Country Kidz

Obituaries
MIDDLEPORlt - Beryl
Carsey Wyatt, 93, of Dayton,
formerly of Harrisonville,
passed away Tuesday, May
27, 2003 at Kettering
HosPital in Dayton.
Born March 13, 1910, she
was the daughter of the late
Charles L. and Mahala King
Carsey. She was also preceded in death by two brothers,
Joe Carsey and Elda Carsey
and a sister, Katie Knicely.
She is survived by a brother, Thor "Jake" Carsey, a
daughter. Kathern Ash of
Dayton;
two
nephews,
Kenneth (Sheila) Carsey of
Middleport, Danny Joe
(Cathy )
Carsey
of
Chillicothe ; three nieces,
Louise (Bob) Luke, Judy K.
Clifford and Connie K.
Chapman of Middleport.
Graveside services will be
held at I:30 p.m. Friday, May
30. at Well s .. Cemetery at
Page ville.

I. How do you &amp;ubscribe to The Daily Sentinel, Point Pleasant Register or Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
_ _ 7-Days _ _ 5-Days _ _ Weekend __ Sunday only
Single copy buyer

The Survivor's

Pioneers
4-H Club

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

.
.
----------~-------------------------~-----------------------------·-

safety," Ashley Life; recreation leaders ,
Kaitlyn
Sauvage and Am~er Pooler;
news reporter, Tina Drake.
Work with the Bicentennial
Committee for community
service was discussed and
members decided to do tiedye club shirts.
·At he March 30 at Nancy
Pickens' home officers were
installed ; quilting as a
group project was taken on
and the color for t-shirt s
wwasdiscussed.
Everyone prought Italian
food for refrhhments .
At the April 13 the members discussed Teen Gene
Camp,. what to look for in
an animal, and how to tiedye club shirts.
At the April 26 at the
home of Nancy Pickens the
possiblity of making quilts
for senior citizens was discussed along with other projects. The · lesson was on
how to set a proper place
setting.
Demonstrations
were
given by Nancy Pickens on
place settings; Ashley Life_,
Kaitlyn Sauvage and Katie
Lawrence on how to make
the food from the project
books.
Refreshments were served
by Ashley Life, Kaitlyn
Sauvage
and
Katie
Lawrence from their cooking project books.
· Tina Drake.. news
reporter.

The Alfred 4-H Club met
on March 23 with sixteen
members present. Enrollment
cards were filled out and projects were planned. . Fund
raisers were discussed and
tabled until the next meeting.
Officers elected were:
president, Tyler Fryar; vice
president, Michael Scyoc; secretary, Chris Myers; treasure,
Ryan Kidder: news reporter,
Mary Rankin; safety, Brittni
Hensley; health,
Tim
Marksworth;
recreation,
Craig Hensley.

PageA4

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

Huntington Herald Dispatch
Columbus Dispatch
Parkersburg News- Sentinel _ _ Charleston Gazette

19 What is your age category?
_ _ Under 35
35 to 44 _ _ 45 to 54 _ _ 55 to 64 _ _ over 64

Correcti.on

20 Please comment on your thoughts or suggestions to improve The Daily Sentinel, Point Pleasant
Register, Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Saturday Times-Sentinel or Sunday Times Sentinel. If you need
more space please feel free to attach a separate sheet.

Meigs High School senior
Brooks B'olin was the
school's homecoming queen.
A story on May 25 incorrectly identified her title.

.

.

Middleport approves
second tire collection
BY BRIAN

J.

to be carrying the virus.
· ''This will have to be the
last
chance," Council
President Stephen Houchins
said. "After this, people will
have t.o find another way to
dispose of their tires."
The Meigs County Health
Department will. collect tires
at
the
Rocksprings
Fairgrounds on Friday, on a
first-come,
first- served
basis, at a cost of $1 per tire .

REED

Staff writer
MIDDLEPORT - The
Village of Middleport will
give residents , another
opportunity to eliminate tires
-- and the risk of West Nile
Virus -- from their backyards.
Meeting Tuesday evening,
Middleport Village Council
authorized Mayor Sandy
lannarelli to arrange for
another tire collection trailer,
to be placed near the village
garage on Park Street, to
allow residents to dispose of
tires at minimal cost.
No dateJor the service ha!
been set, but . lannarelli
stressed Tuesday evening
that this would be the final
opportunity for residents to
dispose oflires through the
village. The · cost, she said.
will De b9me by the village's
refuse fund.
Tires are a breeding
. · ground for mosquitoes,
which · carry the virus to
humans. Last year, three
in
dead birds found
Middlepon were contirmed

Other business
Council approved the hiring of Bonnie Smith as the
pool and park manager for
the summer months. She is
expected to ·begin work on
Wednesday, Iannarelli said,
and wi ll supervise ihe preparation of the pool for opening on June 4.
Council also authorized
the hiring of Bryan Pearce as
a full -time police officer, and
Steven Palmer as a maintenance worker through the
Rio Grande Community
College/Crossroads
program.
Hershel and Bob McClure
met with council for authorization to proceed with

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH

News editor
POMEROY

The

Meigs
Local
School
District's five-year forecast
to be submitted to the Ohio
Departtnenl of Fih!Cltion shows
stable finances through fiscal year
20}:1 and then a gradual move
into deficit sperxling.
Presented to the Board of
Fihcllion by Mark Rlnlemous,
treasurer,atThesdaynight'smeeting,therrojectedfigures for this
fiscal year show a balance
of $479,332, with the
amo unt declining in the
2004 fiscal year to $10,330.
In fiscal year 2005, . it is
projected that the district
will
have a deficit of
$339,48 1, in 2006 $764,079
and in 2007 $1 ,661,468 .
It was emphasized that

Boy burns
friend with
hot water
stunt
GAHANNA (AP) - A
13-year-old boy, in~pired by
"Ja::kass: The Movie," threw
a cup of boiling water on his
best friend as he slept, police
said
Collin Gaffney was
chai!led with a delinquency
count of teloniou&gt; lli.llmlt.
Shaka TOW!llend 14, W.IS
treated foc first- and seconddegree bum' &lt;U Children's
Hospital.
Police Ll. Jell" Spence said
Gaflrey videotaped the May
19 incident and others in the
weeks betare that. The boy
told police he planned io
make his own movise of
pranks and jokes, similnr to
"Jackass," a movie version of
the defunct MTV television
show.
Gaffney, Townsend and ·
·other neighborhood boys in .
this Columbus subwb appear
throughout the 'hourlong
video, a::ting out pr-.tnks and
stunts. Spence said no one
wa&gt; htut in the rest of the tape.

the figures are only projection s because of the
"unknowns, like the state
budget which is one of the
bi]e new middle and elementar.Y schools also create
. some unknowns insofar as
operational expenses are
concerned.
It was pointed out that the
revenue projection is one of
growth through fiscal years,
2005, 2006 and 2007, with
an increase in expenses
resulting in the deficits.
Buckley said that 80 percent of the money on which
the school s operate comes
from the state and that some
changes which are being
made in the way students
are counted could result in
decreased school aid.
The board approved procedures for the education of
children with disabilities to

be used' beginning next
year, a mandate of the Ohio
Department of Education .
Buckley · explained that the
standards to qualify for special education have been
reduced by the state.
He said that means less
students will qualify for
special education which
means less money for the
schools. The level of funding is higher for students in
special education.
Approved at the meeting
was the revised permanent
appropriations for the current 2003 school year of
$27,212,301.
Attending the meeting
were Buckley, Rhonemous,
and board members, Scott
Walton, Ron Logan, Norman
Humphreys, Roger Abbott,
and John Hood.

Drama

involved in this production.
Perrin said they practiced
after school at least three
days a week since March
memonzmg
lines and
preparing the set for opening
night.
"People should attend to
support the students' hard
work and to support how talented these young people
are," she said. ·
Perrin, who is a tnember of
the Riverbend Community
Theater, said the duet of
plays represent a revival of
theater arts at Meigs Middle
SchooL She said the eighth
grade class was determined ·
to participate in an eighth
grade play this year. Through
Perrin's' direction and passion for theater, that wish
came true.

from PageA1
"Teenage
Nightmare"
· promises theater aficionados
a ta~te of the trials and tribulations of youth that parents
just don 't understand.
Written in a talk show format similar to "Late Night
with David Letterman," the
one act play promises quite a
punch said Amy Perrin. the
director and ·drama club
advisor.
Perrin said one of her
favorite scenes from thi s
duet of performances came
from "Teenage Nightmare."
The scene involved two
teenagers dress·ing up as children to fool a very unwitting
babysitter.
At least 43 students are

Alumni

Trustees to maintain as ball .
fields for use by community ·
youth.
The Salem Center and
from PageA1
Rutland schools will be town
but can only lease it or in down, the Middleport Middle,
Central af\d Elementary Schools
some instances put it up for will go to the . Village of
bid. '
Middleport for leasing to a comAfter hearing from Rader, the munity group for development,
board voted to sell the Pomeroy the Salisbury school will be used
buijding at auction to the highest for board of education facilities,
bidder.
·
and the Bmctbury building tor a
It is the second of the six prognun of the Athens-Meigs
schools which will hi! dosed Educational Service Center.
next month which will be sold at
Superintendent
William
auction. Last month it was Buckley said that he's hopeful
agreed to put .the Harrisonviije the auctions of the buildings apd
school up for bid. reserving a the fumishings can take place .
section for the Scipio Township before 'the end of June.

School

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Saturday, May if
POMEORY - Alpha Iota
PORTLAND - Lebanon Masters end-of-year picnic, 6:30
Township Trustees,. 7 p.m. at the p.m at the home of Joan Corder.
township building.
Take a COIII3red dish.

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Mail completed survey by May 31, .2003 to:
Reader Survey, Ohio Valley Publishing Co., 8251fhird Ave·., Gallipolis, OH 45631
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Other events

. Friday, May 30
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
TII.ursday, May 29
Church of Christ, West Main
POMEROY - Wildwood Street, is hosting a Memorial
Garden Club, 1 p.m.Thursday at Day community picnic supper
the home of Peggy Moore. Hal with serving between 5:30 af)d 7
Kneen,
Meigs
County p.m. Everyone is welcomE!·

Winchester; Mary Carolyn
Wiley, New Haven. W. Va.;
Nancy
Roller'
Cale,
Middleport.
from PageA1
1957: Barbara Capteina
Mary Thomas Maggied. Mora, Pomeroy; Edward
Charleston. W. Va.; Poly Karr McComas, Las Vegas, Nev.;
Matthews. Port Charlote, Aa.; James Bowles, Point Pleasant,
William Moore, Chillicothe; W.Va.
1958: Carol Blaker Oilen ..
Riggs
Neff,
Lorraine
Stockport;
Charlotte Lightfool.
Ravenswood, W. Va.
VanMeter,
Pomeroy; Dale
1949:
Charles
Byer,
Little,
Donald
Karr,
Baltimore; Dave Diles, Athens;
Gerald Anthony, Middleport; Middleport; Gene Crooks;
Hazel Hawkins Ginther, Annapois, Md.; Jeanette
Columbus; Jane Custer Sayre, Crooks 'Thomas, Judy Arnold,
Hilliarcl; Katherine Bachtel June Edwards Thomas, Cornell
Dallas, Agoura, Calif. ; Virginia Vance, Donald Karr, Ronald
Miller. Sandm Fultz Brown.all
Grogan Holman, Middlepon,
Middleport Milton Wayland, ·
of
1950: Donna Ruth Hayth,
Wellston; Grace Montgon:)ery Big Prairie; Pearl Edwards,
Abbott, Pomeroy: Norma Long Bottom; Vera Covert
Custer, Raymond Walburn, Rundle, Columbus; Yanda See
Mary Gilmore Brewer, Jean Walburn, Vienna, W. Va.;
Searls Craig, Fred Hoffman, all Warren Stover, Lancaster;
of
Middleport ;
Robert Wilbur Rowley, Jr., Ironton;
and James Wilson: Sandusky.
Richards, Colubmus.
1959: Carla Wil son Lohrer,
1951 : Betty Ashley Rosser,
Troy:
Herschel Knap. Sabina;
Athens; Don Payne, Dayton;
Norman
Manley Columbus.
Frances Chase Young, Clifton.
1960:
Carter
French,
W.
Va.; James Buell,
Knightdale, N. C.; James E. Middleport ; Dennis Walburn ,
Bowles
Sanborn, Proctorville: Myron Beverly; . Olivia
Lockett,
Shaker
Heights:
Duftield, Middleport; Roger
Phyllis Hilbert Town;ely.
Dillard. Pomeroy.
1951: Roscoe Wise. William Fayetteville.
1961 :
Dann y
Malik,
Swisher, Middleport.
Ashland.
Ky.;
Doris
Rice
1952:
Carol
Bachtel
Tannehill,
June
Seines Walbrn. Beverly: Janice Zirkle
Duffield, Nancy Miler Beaver, Springer, Miarietta: Judy Sauer
Nola Knopp Swisher, all of Crooks, Middleport: Raymond
Middleport; Carolyn Pierce Kloes, Crestview. Fla.; Tom
Litchfield, Point Pleasant : Anderson, Middeport.
1962: Beverly Perrin Dixon,
Charle,~
Dudding, Elyri a.
Clakeston.
Mich.; charlene
Richartl Rawlings, Mason. W.
Davis Batey. Middleport; Peter
Va.
.
1953 : Arlene E. King. Walburn, Jacobsville.
1963:
Arland
King,
Carolyn
Bronx, N. Y.; Bill Darst, Lima;
Blaine Walburn, Vienna, W. Ru ssell, Charlotte Davidson
Va.;
Charlene
Dillar Hanning, Janet Baker Downie,.
Stoltenhoff, Hertford, N. C.; · Pomeroy; David Wiley, North
Charles Vroman, Belpre; Charleston, S. C.: Jeanne
.Donna
Roush · Preston, · Bowles Gross. Gahanna; John
Baltimore; Franklin Eastep, Allensworth, Reynoldsburg:
Dayton; Larry Wiley, New Judith Overturf Dowling, Bay
Haven, W. Va.; Lois Smith Village; Richard Hayes, Grove
Rosenbaum, Pine Mountain City; Sarah Bechtle Klontz,
Lake, Calif. ; Margaret Hoyt Lancaster.
·1964; Carolyn Nicholson
Nasemann, Syracuse, N. Y.;
Marilyn Wolfe, Racine; Nancy French, Cinda Sauer Harris,
Hartley Cooper, Liberty, Mo.; Marilyn Swan Anderson,
Paddy Jo Lambert DoolittJe, Sandy Ohlinger lannarelli,
'Berea; Robert E. Byer, David Casci, all of Middleport;.
Syracuse; Shirley Eastep, Ellen Dufton Kiehl, Saratoga:
Judy
Dayton;
Mary
Bradley . Springs, N. Y.
Wildermuth
Allensworth,
Stanton, Marietta, Ga.
1954:
Laura
Rowley Reynoldsburg; Lillian Slaven,
Harrison, Pomeroy; Marcella Columbus; Ronald Hanning, .
taylor Womer, Barboursville, Pomeroy,
1965: Alan Wallace , · Ft.
W.Va.
1955:
Freddie
Cline, Myer, Va.; David Casci, Diane
Lynch,
Indianapolis, lnd; Roinald VanCooney
Fultz, Westervile; Sheila Middleport; Judy Kern Well,
Hubbard, Lancaster; Betty Shade; Martha Fowler King,
Ward
Field,
Trotwood; Pomery; Marty Nicholson,
Ernestine Asbury McComas, Nashville; Tenn.; Paul Gerard,
Ravenswood, W. Va.; James Middleport; Robert Swanson,
Mary
Mourning. Middleport; John Nashville, Tenn.;
Vroman. Lakeland, Fla.; Walburn Taylor, Fostoria.
1967: Kathy McElhinny
Juanita Bangefter Jones.
Mullins,
Middleport; Rose
Zanesville: Leah Row ley
Parker, Kennewick, Wash.; Marie hackett, Lexington, Ky.
1968: Bill Swan, Middleport.
Marlene Knapp Yeauger, Canal

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Community Calendar

Clubs and
Organizations

plans for a new car wash
across 'General Hartinger
Parkway from the family 's
restaurant. The construction
of the car wash will necessitate the relocation of a. por'
tion of ·Short Fourth Ave.,
which council approved last
night.
Council referred the
McClures to the Board of
Public Affairs for their
request to drill a well for the
operation. A village ordinance prohibits individual
wells in the village, but the
McClures said Tuesday
evening
the
Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency has informed them
the well can be drilled if
water from it is not used for
human consumption.
"Whether we build this car
wash in Middleport or somewhere else will be determined by whether we can
drill a well," McClure said,
adding· that using village
water is most cost effective
at this time, but the well
would be used if water from
village sources becomes too
expensive.

Meigs submits Jive year plan to
Ohio Department of Education

•

·Public meetinas

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The DaiJy Sentinel

Wednesday, May 28, 2~03 .

·The Daily Sentinel

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SOMe!

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Nation • World

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(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

WTO rules that Canadian
logging practices n~t a
subsidy, says Canada

"President signs AIDS bill"

FoUND

·PageA7

www.mydallysentlnel.com

-

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

BY MATTHEW DALY

Associated Press

Charlene Hoeflich

General manager and news editor

WASHINGTON
The
World Trade Organization has
ruled that the United States
erred in approving stiff tariffs
on imports of Canadian softwood lumber used to build .
homes, Canada's t:rilde minister said Tuesday.
International Trade Minister
Pierre Pettigrew said the interim ruling" by a panel ·of the
world trade body supports
Canada's claim that its logging practices which
include charging fees for use
of government-owned forests
- are not subsidies.
"Yet again, it appears that
the U.S. is being told that its
attempts to prove that our
softwood industry is subsidized are flawed," Pettigrew
said in a statement.
But a U.S. trade official disputed Pettigrew's account.
He called the confidential
ruling mixed and said the U.S.
prevailed in at least one Cf\1·

NATIONAL VIEW

Solution
US.} Mexico need tougher
border policies
• 1•

1 Austin (Texas) American-Statesm·an, on immigrant

deaths:

' That we've seen the story before does nothing to mitigate
ihe horror of the 19 illegal immigrants who died after being
locked in a tra'rler and abandoned by · smugglers in South
Texas. Authorities report that more than I 00 immigrants were
qammed into a trailer and left to their fates by the driver.
: · ... The solution, however, lies in formulating a border poli~y that shatters hypocrisy on both sides of the border. For too
long, the United States has huffed and puffed about illegal
IJllmigrants while welcoming the cheap labor. For too long,
U,.e Mexican government ignored the immigrants publicly
while privately depending on the money they send home. The
inoney transfer is the third-largest source of income for the
Mexican economy.
: ... Before 9/11, the new U.S. and Mexican administrations
1yere tantalizingly close to reaching a guest worker accord that
would bring some order to workers crossing the border. Given
lhe proper safeguards "against abuse, a guest worker program
~ould help both governments keep track of the flow of work~rs across the Mexican border.

..

I ,

••

:TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOC IATED PRESS

; Today is Wednesday, May 28, the !48th day of 2003.
!rhere are 217 days left in the year.
.
·
: Tod.ay's Highlight in History:
: On May 28, 1934, the Dionne quintuplets - Annette,
Cecile, Emilie, Marie and Yvonne - were born to Elzire
Dionne at the family farm in Ontario, Canada.· ·
On t11is date:
In 1533, England's archbishop declared the .marriage of
King Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn valid.
In 1863, the first b)ack regiment from the North left
Boston to fight in the Civil War.
In 1892, the Sierra Club . was organized in San
Francisco.
In 1937. President Franklin Roosevelt pushed a button
in Washington signaling that vehicular traffic could cross
the just-opened Golden Gate Bridge in California.
In 1937, Neville Chamberlain became prime minister of
Britain.
· In 1940, during World War II, the Belgian army surrendered to invading German forces.
ln. 1972, the Duke of Windsor, who had abdicated the
English throne to marry Wallis Warfield Simpson, -died in
Paris at age 77.
In 1977 , 165 people were killed when fire raced through
the Beverly Hills Supper Club in Southgate, Ky.
· In 1985 , David Jacobsen , director of the American
University Hospital in Beirut, Lebanon, was abducted by
pro-Iranian kidqappers. He was freed 17 months later.
In 1987 , Mathias Rust, a 19-year-old West German
pjlot, landed a private plane in Moscow's Red Square.
·Ten years ago: A jury in Orlando, Florida, acquitted
~iami police officer William Lozano of manslaughter in
tl1e 1989 shooting death of a black motorcyclist and the
resulting fatal crash of the cyclist's passenger. Lozano
D.ad been convicted in an earlier trial, but that verdict was
pverturned.
.
· Five years ago: Pakistan matched India with five
nuclear test blasts of its own, raising fears of a nuclear
arms race. Comic actor Phil Hartman of "Saturday Night
Live" and " NewsRadio"· fame was shot to death at his
home in Encino, Calif., by his wife, Bryon, who then
killed herself. California astronomer Su san Terebey
aimounced she had photographed what may be. a planet
· some 450 light years from Earth.
One year ago: NATO declared Ru ss ia a limited partner
i.!J the Western alliance. President Bush, in a meeting
triside the Vatican , told Pope John Paul II he was cone~rned abeut the Roman Catholic church's standing in
America, where the church had been rocked bysex-abuse
scandal. NBC announced that Brian Williams would succeed Tom Brokaw as anchor of its "Nightly News" after
the 2004 presidential election . Mildred Wirt Benson, creator of' the "Nancy Drew" children's mystery stories, died in Toledo, Ohio, at age 96.
Today 's Birthday s: Actress Carroll Baker is 72. Actor
John Karlen is 70. Basketball Hqll-of-Famer Jerry West is
65. Singer Gladys Knight is 59, Singer Billy Vera is 59.
. Singer John Fogerty is 58. Country singer Gary Stewart is
. 58. Actress-director Sondra Locke is 56. Singer Roland
Gift is 41. Actor Brandon Cruz (TV series "The Courtship
of Eddie's Father") is 41. Country singer Phil Vassar is
41. Rapper Chubb Rock is 35. Singer Kylie Minogue is
35. Actress Monica Keena is 24. Actor Joseph Cross is 17.
Thought for Today : "A ll the troubles of man co me from
liis not knowing how ·to sit sti lL" - Blaise Pascal, French
philosop her ( 1623-.1662).

'Speak Out!'
(740) 992-2156
· extension 29

Entrepreneurs find no luster in the golden state
"California," said Gray
Davis, "is the best place in
the nation for businesses to
prosper." Better than New
York, better than Texas, better than Delaware and
Nevada.
The Golden State's "business-friendly policy envi. ronment," the governor
added, provides "fertile
ground for the best compa·nies in the world to grow."
Well, that may be true for
California's biggest businesses _ such Fortune 500
companies
as
ChevronTexaco
and
Hewlett-Packard
and
Northrop Grumman and
Walt Disney _ · but it certainly isn't so for'the state's
small businesses.
Most sniall businesses
find it far more difficult to
prosper in California ihan in
other states. And most find
the policy environment in
Sacramento anything · but
friendly toward their businesses.
Indeed, the California
Chamber of Commerce and
California
Business
Roundtable
recently
released their annual survey
of the state's business elimate. It was culled from a
random sampling of business leaders around the
state, most of whom rt!present small businesses with
fewer than I00 employees.
More than three-quarters
of the respondents rate business
conditions
in
California as worse than
two years ago. More than
half say conditions for theiP
own company have gotten
worse. That's the highest
level of pessimism in the
survey's 12-year history. It

Joseph
Perkins

is also a harbinger of bad
things to come for the
California
economy.
because small b~inesses
make up nearly 98 percent
of all firms in the state.
employing more than 50
percent of the st;ne's work
force and generating more
than half the state's economic output. They also
create most of the state's
new jobs year by year.
it' s
not
the
So
ChevronTexacos ana H-Ps
and Northrops and Disneys
that drive the California
economy. It 's the state 's
smaller businesses . It 's the
state's entrepreneurs.
Like Harold Lewis, a sa·n
Diego-based McDonald 's
franchisee who opened his
first restaurant in 1987 .
Today he owns eight restaurants, grossing a combined
$13 million a year and
employing more than 225
workers.
Lewis
says
that
California's small businesses have been hit with a douhie-whammy in recent
years . .
The state's sluggish eco- .
nomic growth has taken a
toll on business revenues.
At the same time , • the
expense of running a business. in California has risen
exponentially.
In fact, in the latest issue

of Forbes magazine, San .The law suit eventually
Diego. Los Angeles, San was resolved out of court,
Francisco and San Jose are · as have most of, the claims
among the metropolitan that have been filed against
areas with the highest cost the small businessman. But
of doing business (out of he still had to pay lawyers
the 150 surveyed) .
to make the nuisance suits
California's energy crisis go away.
is partly to blame. Lewis
And while California's
says that the monthly elec- governor and Legislature
tricity bills for hi s restau- might profess to feel Lewis'
rants are double what they pain, while they might prewere just three years ago. In tend to empathize with the
January, the local .gas and state's over-burdened small
electric company se nt businesses, they have done
Lewis a notice informing little to lighten !hat burden.
him that it was raising hi~
In fact, hardly a day passenergy bill another 4 per- es in Sacramento that some
cent.
lawmaker or another doesThen there is workers ' n't introduce some piece of
compensation insurance. legislation or another that
Three years ago, sa id makes it even more expen!-ewis, he paid a $78,000 sive to run a bu siness, to
premium to cover his small create jobs in California.
business . Thi s year, he has
That includes a pending
bill that would require
to shell out $138,000.
And he hardly is alone in Lewis and othet small busihis troubles: since 2000, ness owners to provide
workers' comp rates in health insurance to all their
California have risen a employees
and
their
whopping 50 percent. And employees' dependents or
if it 's not bad enough that pay a new tax.
the state's employers pay
It also includes a measure
some of the highest premi- . that would automatically
urns in the country, they can increase the state's miniexpect double-digit increas- mum wage year by year
es for at least the next few based on the co nsumer
years.
price index. And legi slation
Perhaps the most galling that would impose a socost of doing business in called "litter tax" on di&gt;posCalifornia is · litigation, able cups and bags , which
noted Lewi s. He can't would cost Lewis roughly
imagine that'there is a more $17,000 per restaurant.
lawsuit-happy state in . the
California once was
country.
indeed a golden state for
Lewi s said he's been hit · business, a promised land of
with all manner of frivolous prosperity. Not anymore.
claims, including a recent
(Joseph Perkins is a
racial discrimination suit columnist for The San
filed by a fo rmer, black Diego Union-(Tribun e and
employee who dtdn t real- ca n
be
reached . at .
ize that his employer is also Joseph.Pe rkin.~@ UnionTrib
black . ·
.com.)

"

"What's that horrible
smell?"
That's never a good question when the two of us are
by ourselves. We were
walking down our driveway
to get the mail. Sue was
ri~ht. There was a ·mighty
sunk rising up from somewhere nearby. As if something large and hairy was
decomposing. A muskrat. A
possum . A raccoon . Ed, our
Neanderthalish · neighbor.
The worst of the odor
seemed to be close to the
main road, off in ttie
drainage ditch . The next
day I went down to investigate. It was a big deer,
probably hit by a car, which
had stumbled up our driveway to die. Now it was a big
stinking deer.
There was no wa.y I could
move this thing by myself
and I'm not sure I'm good
enough friends with anyone
to say, "Hey, can you come
help me move a big stinking
deer carcass?" Moving furniture is one thing, this was
another.
Sue had the perfect solution . "Call the town . They
pick up big stinking deer
carcasses off the roads all
. the time."
"Yeah, but it's not in the

Deerly departed
.
Jim
Mullen

road. It's in our driveway."
"But it's clo se to the road.
They'll pick it -up."
"Is our road a town road
or a county road?".
"Would you just call them
and tell them to get .rid of
that thing . I would like to
go outdoors sometime this
year. I would like to sit on
the porch without having to
use smelling salts . I may
want to use the grill -- if we
can find any fresh deer."
So I called the town and I
asked, "Do we live on a
town road or a county
road?"
"That depends."
· "Depends? Depend s on
what.?"
,
"Depend s on whether you
have a big sti nking deer carcass on your road or not. "
"We ll . for argument's
sake, let's say, I do have a
big stinki ng deer carcass on

my road . Will the town cally.
come pick it up?"
So it wasn't hard to get
"How ·far is from· the Sue to help me rope and
road?"
drag the pathetic thing as
"Oh, I don't know. Fifty close as we could to the
or 60 feet."
town road. "How come we
"The town will only pick ·never do things together
up big stinking deer car- like this, anymore?" I asked
casses that are 15 feet 6 her as we were pulling, tryinches or less from the cen- ing to , breath through our
terli~e of the road. Fifty or mouths, so as little air as
60 teet, it's your deer."
possible would go up our
Luckily I am a profc;s- noses. "We should make
sional writer and good at this a regular thing, it will
lying . "You misunderstood be our little romantic
me . I said 15 or 16 feet from moment Each year on this
the road ." I could actually day we'll pull a rotting deer
hear the man's ·eyeballs 45 feet together."
rolling upward as I sa id
Her eyes got very small
this.
and her face tightened.
" Ri gh t." he said. "''ll "You," she gasped, "are an
se nd the road crew."
idiot. "
We didn 't even stop to
Sue's garden ha s been
savaged by deer more times measure if it was within 15 (
than I Iike · to remember. To feet and 6 inches of the ceoget rid of them, she's tried · terline. As we ran gagging
everything ·that doesn't · and retching from the
require a background check stench of the big stinking
and a five-day waiting peri- deer carcass she said, " I
od. Bags of hair, bone meal. thought I only hated the live
fences, netting, dog&amp;. ultra- ones."
(Jim Mullen is lir e author
sound , · whistles, voodoo -none of it works. So every of "It Takes A Villa!ie Idiot:
time she sees one I have to A Memoir of Life Afler the
li sten to what pests th ey are, Cily." He ·also contributes
what traffic hazards they regularly to Entertainment
are, what a threat they are to We.~klv. where he can be ·
civi lization in genera l and reached
a/
jim human gardenin g specifi- mullen @ew. com.)'

'

•

President Bush signs a $15 billion global AIDS bill Tuesday at the State Department in Washington. Standing with Bush_are
from left, Rep Tom Lanton, D-Calif, Senate Majority Leader Bilr Frist, R-Tenn., Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy
Thompson, and Secretary of State Colin Powell. Bush said it is the "moral duty" of the United States to act against a disease
that has killed more than 20 million people worldwide. Woman at right is unidentified. (AP)

Soldiers, vets scam
targets, group says
Society in Maypon, Fla. He superhigh interest rate. The
said one to three service mem- repon said in many cases the
Associated Press
berscometohimeachwe~kfor borrower can't repay the loan.•
help after falling victim to a and the car is lost to the lender
WASHINGTON - Soldiers !IJOney-lending scheme.
for a fraction of its value.
who dodge bullets and bombs
The worst offenders, accordVeterans are targets, too. The
on the battlefield have a differ- ing to the repon, are payday NCLC said veteJ'lUIS can Jose
ent enemy at home: scarnrners lenders, cash advance or other tens of thousands of dollars in
who prey on America's active- fast cash businesses that lend
duty forces and veterans, a con- small amounts of money, usual- so-called benefits buyouts, in
sumer advocacy group said ly about $300, for shon terms at which future benefits payments
Toesday.
whopping interest
rates. are signed over in exchange for
A report by the Boston-based Kennedy said the rates average a lump-sum payout. '
·
National Consumer Law Center 400 percent.
Tbe consumer group charges
identified several types of busiThe Navy-Marine Corps that these buyouts not only are
nesses as directly targeting the Relief Society handled about unfair but illegal.
military community.
800 "payday"lendin~ cases last
Sf!me l)lilitary officials conThe group cited predatory year, which cost servtce person- tend the scams and schemes can
len"ders, check cashers and nel $276,000.
lower military readiness.
high-cost car dealers as some of
A top official with a payday Retired Adm. Jerome Johnson
the scarnrners who often set up company, Billy Webster of of the Navy-Marine Corps
shop in clusters right outside the Advance America. called aile- Relief Society in Arlington, Va.,
gates of military bases.
gations that military members explained that when a young
Young soldiers are an espe- are being targeted absurd. He sailor is worried about putting
cially ripe target because of cited a 200 I Georgetown food on the table, his attention
their age, their lack of financial University report that suggested
knowledge and their steady only 2 percent of payday . is not focused on the battle.
paychecks, the law center's advance customers are military. ' The NCLC recommends
Steve Tripoli said.
Another major problem out- expanded consumer protecuon
Retired Navy Capt. Bill lined in the NCLC report were laws as well as better enforceKennedy works · with military scams in · which a car title is ment of extstmg laws. It satd
men and women at a branch of used as collateral in exchange more education at military
the Navy-Marine Corps Relief · for an instant cash loan at a bases also would help.
BY JENNIFER

cia! respect: The WTO ruled
that Canada's sy~tern of providing lumber producers with
timber from public lands is 11
financial contribution and,
therefore, subject to duties
such as those imposed by the
l]nited States.
The official called that
aspect of the ruling "a victory
for both the U.S. lumber'
industry and the environment.n
The United States contends
that Canada's fees are artificially low and amount to subsidies that allow Canadian
mills to sell wood below market value. Last year, the Bush
administration
slapped
antidumping duties averaging
27 percent on softwood
imports from four provinces,
contending that Canadian
lumber imports threatened the
U.S. industry.
Canada complained to the
world trade body that U.S. tariffs have cost Canadian lumber companies hundreds of
millions of dollars and wiped
out thousands of jobs.

TAE BO LIVE Aerobic
Kickboxing is bock in
Meigs County!!! ~....·
Join the areas only Billy Blanks Certified
Tae Bo lnstrudor in the best workout you
will ever have. New music every time.
no routines. self defense and fat bumlna
aerobic moves!

Melp County Library downstairs room

Mondays &amp;.Wednesdays at 6:15p.m.

Starting June 1 for 9 weeks!
·

C. KERR

Bring Plenty of Water!!

.

More info: taebo20002000@yahoo.com

9:55a.m. Friday

·

'·

University hopes to create DNA
bank to study illnesses in blacks
WASHrNGTON (AP) - .
Howard University hopes to
create the nation's largest bank
of DNA from black Americans
with the aim of studying genes
inYOived in diseases that disproponionately strike blacks.
The DNA bank isn 'I funded
yet, but the universi!y
announced Tuesday that it
would work with a well-known
database company.
First
Genetic Trust Inc .. to develop
the project.
The goal is to gather samples
frOm 25,000 people over. five
years. mostly patients at hospitals associated wtth the htstoncally black university in the
nation's capital.
The planned program is one
of several projects under way
around the country to study
genetic differences am~ng certain populations.
Research shows the DNA
sequence of any two people is
99.9 percent alike, regardless of
race. But subtle variations in
genetic structure, called polymorphisms, can greatly affect
an individual's risk of disease.
The National Institutes of
Health already has begun a

,,

•

$100 million effort to identify
disease-causing
polymorphisms, called the International
HapMap Project. It is analyzing
genetic patterns in blood sam-

' pies taken from people in
Nigeria, Japan and China and
from people of northern and
western European ancestry in
the United States.

THE EASTERS ,... IN CONCERT
I

Middleport

Baptist
Church

Tree branches thai touch or fall onto pow~r lines are ti1e major cause of
power outages. To help maintain reliable electric service, AEP regularly
trims or removes trees and brush growing near power lines. Our treetrimming professionals use established clearing methods tq preserve the

'

health of your trees. When it comes to reducing outages and keeping
you safe, AEP is there, always working for you.

FRIDAY
MAY '3QTH

7:00p.m.
The Kussell Easter. Jr.. family are on tour In Ohio
and West VIrginia and will be having a uospel Sing
at the First Baptist Church In Middleport The Easter
Family are a full time Gospel music group and
have appeared at Gaither Concerts and In churches
throughout the United States over lhe past 6 years.

·--'-- -- -- ---- -- -

. ,.,. AMIRICAN"
itilif-I&amp;ICTRIC
.
I'OWIR

-~-------·-------------

For more information about
electrir:al safeiy. visit aep.com.

-------·

.

_

__.._

,,

-----

-

�,•

•
\

The Daily Sentinel .

Page AS

Local News

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

Department serving the health
care needs of ·Meigs Countians

\

Inside:
NHL playoffs: Devils beat Ducks, Page .82
Indians win, Page 83
Major League Baseball, Page 85
·

The Daily Sentinel
PageBl
Wednesday, May 28, ~003

.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.

.

News editor
POMEROY - From dental,
medical and preventive care to
matters of environmental concern, the Meigs County Health
Department works to promote
the health and well being of
county residents thrQugh low
cost health services and screening.
Combining local levy funds,
grants and private monies with
federal and state allocations. the
agericy is successful in reaching
large sections of the population
and achieving the objective of
better health through early detection and treatment.
New to the Health Department
headed by Nonila Torres, health
commissioner. is a program
geared toward preparation for
potential threats of bioterrorism,
outbreaks of infectious disease,
and other public health emergencies. The pro~ is funded
through the Ohio Department of
Many programs of the Health Department are carried out with grant monies. Working in
flealth via the · Centers for
those programs are from the left, seated, Beth Cremens, tobacco prevention and dental clinic
Disease Control.
Health Department personnel manager; Edena Russell. newborn home visiting nurse: Becki Ball, child and family health serhave been attending training ses-· vices assistant; and Brenda Curfman , wellness program; arid back, Edwina Bell, lAP clerk;
sions in preparation for a biolog- Connie Little, Children and Family Health services and prenatal project director; Frank
ical event that could potentially Gorschak. sanitation and environmental program; Leeann Cunningham. wellness program;
Laura Horsley, cardiovascular coordinator. Absent were Nancy Broderick, well child clinfc direcaffect Meigs County.
Local pl)blic health agencies tor. and Sherry Weese, immunization program director. (Charie'ne Hoeftich)
are likely to be the ftrst to be
&amp;ware of unusual occurrences of treatmen~ and referral services. for 2002 for her work in breast Program which is urider the
health threats. Their ability to
Evaluated were 35 in cardiac, and cervical cancer.
direction of · WIC Director
quickly detect and effectively five in neurology. eight in hearSpeech and hearing clinic Debbie Babbitt, RN. The prorespond to a public health emer- ing, 10 in vision and two in plasAn evening · Speech and gram offers nutritional · supple~ency lbioterrorist attacklbiolog- tic .. Prevent Blindness of Ohio Hearing Clinic continues to pro- mentation counselin~ and referteal event can make a difference also provided two uninsured vide services to county residents. ral services for elig~ble infant1,
in containing the spread of dis- children with glasses through the CarQiyn Heines, pathologist, children and pregnant women.
ease and preventing panic and vision clinic last year.
coordinates the program with Servioes including hemoglobin
instability within the community.
Screenings
assistanoe from students of the screenings height and weight
· The many other programs of . A. free Pure Tone Hearing Ohio University Speech and measurements,
nutritional
the Health Department and the Clinic was conducted for Meigs Hearing Program.
assessmen~ and counseling.
people they touch include:
County adults by Melvin Mock
There were 1,228 children and
Dental servioes
of Advanced Hearing Center, adults screentx) durin~; the year
Family and Children First
Through the Appalachian with 27 hearing screenings per- with 53 clients reoeivmg ongoProgram
Dental Clinic, which opened in forme&lt;\.
.
ing therapy. Hearing tests were
Brenda Curfman, LSW is the
the fall of 2001, continued
Forty-three . men received performed for 131 individuals program director of the Well ness
through most of 2002, closed for prostate cancer screening ser- with 82 referrals being made to Block Grant funded by a grant
several months and then reoently vices which were conducted by other agencies.
via the Family and Children Erst
reopened, a total of 1,445 clients Dr. Hunter. Dr. WithereU, and
Children with medical
Council. The program teaches
were seen, a clear indication of Dr. John Ward.
abstinence education and other
h8ndica115
tl}e need for dental servioes in the
Sports physicals were conThe local Bureau for Children issues such as self-esteem within
county.
ducted by Dr. Richard Simpson, with Medical Handicaps the schools.
Child and Family Health
Dr. Witherell, and Dr. Hunter.
(BCMH) continues to assist area
A total of 902 student contacts
servioes
Pre-natal clinics
families with the application were made in 2002. The proDuring the monthly Child and
A total of 320 clients were process for this state-funded pro- gram remains active in targeting
Family Health Services Pro~ seen in pre-natal clinics coordi- gram to ensure that children with the health of youth in the county
(CFHS) Well Child Chnics nated by Connie Little. R.N. chronic health concerns and through education coordination
(WCC), ffJ2 Meigs County chi!- Pregnant women of Meigs those in need of diagnostic ser- of assistance with youth-cendren aged birth to 21 years were County benefited from social vices reoei ve necessary medical tered community event,.
examined by Dr. James assessments nutritional counsel- attention/care. BCMH provides · Newborn Home Vtslllng
Witherell and Dr. Douglas ing,blood work, cultures, height, families with financial assistance
The Newborn Home Visiting
Hunter last year.
weight measurements and regu- to reoeive servioes from medical Nurse Program had a very sucThe clinics are coordinated by lar physical exams.
specialists and providers through- cessful year with health departNancy Broderick, RN . ' The
The program contracts Dr. out the state. Home and offiCe vis- ment nurses making 460 conexammarions include blood lead Wilma Mansfield to see clients its were conducted with more tacts with 102 families includand hemoglobin screenings; uri- during the first 26 weeks ofrreg- than 25 contacts made.
ing 42 ·prenatal and 142 newnalysis; social and nutritional nancy with ah average o five
born home visits.
Immunizations
services; hearing; speech; vision visits each and ultrasound schedRegular Immunization Clinics
Cardiovascular Services
screenings; · height; weight; uling. At 26 weeks gestation, the were conducted. There were l,
The cardiovascular health
blood pressure mea&gt;urements; staff coordinates transfer 176 flu vaccines and I,406 child- program got underway in
referrd! servioes.
armngement' for client' to the hood and adult immunizations Augmt through the Tri-County
· Additional professional - staff delivery hospital of choice.
administered throughout the Heart He'llthy Coalition which
include Maureen Hennessey,
Mobile mammography · year. Nancy Broderick, RN, consists ol' Athens, Meigs and
Speech and language pathologist
Last year 62 women had mam- Immunization Action Progr.un Washington Counties. It is
and Janet Golland, registered mography screenings through the Nurse coordinated the childhood coordinated locally by Laura
dietitian. S~alty Clinics were Ohio State University mobile immunization clinics.
Horse!y, LSW.
conducted m 2002 hy specialists mammography unit Those ser.Women, Infants and
Vital statistics
for children aged birth to 21 vices were discontinued for a
Vital' Statistics Registrar
Children senioes
years were cardiac, neurology, time due to the levy failure but
A total of 1,245 initial WIC Edwina Bell responded to
hearing, vision, and pla,tic clin- have now been resumed.
visits were ffiade with a total of 1,576 requests for copies of
ics. The free clinics are conduct- · Courtney Sun, assistant more than 2,490 follow-up visit~ ·birth and death records. Bell
ed two to three times a year and administmtor, was awarded the provided through the Women, repons that Meigs Co.unty had
include examination, diagnosis Janet Voinovich Servioe Award Infants and Children (WIC) one in-county birth and 148

..

•

vr tt- Lt

HOLZER CLINIC
www.holzercllnic.com

Braves rally past Reds

DENVER
(AP)
Colorado's Patrick Roy is
retiring, ending the 18-year
career of one. of the greatest
goaltenders in NHL history.
Roy will make the
announcement at a news conference on Wednesday, team
spokesman Jean Manineau
said.
A four-time Stanley Cup
champwn, Roy leaves as the
NHL's career leader in victories with 551 and games
played with 1,029. He also ·is
the all-time leader in playoff
victories. games played and
shutouts.
Roy is still ·considered one
of the best goalies in the
game at age 37. but he has
been bothered by . arthritic
hips the past few years:

BY PAUL NEWBERRY
Associated Press

Ligue pleads
guilty
The Women, Iniants and Children program at the Health
Department is directed by Debbie Babbitt, R.N. standing,
assisted by Pam Sharp, health professional, seated left, and
·oortha Riffle, assistant. (Charlene Hoeflich)

CHICAGO (AP)- A man
who pleaded innocent in the
father-son beating of a
Kansas City Royals coach
changed his plea to guilty and
will be sentenced June 18.William Ligue Jr. was
charged with two counts of
aggravated battery last
September after leading his
teenage son onto the field at a
Chicago White Sox game and
beating Tom Gamboa, who
was coaching at first base.
Ligue's son, released to his
mother's custody. was sentenced to five years' probation and 30· hours of community service. Before his sentencing, Gamboa advocated
probation rather than prison.

John Rocker
designated for
assignment
Making up the Board of. Health staff for the Meigs County
Health Department are seated, Courtney Sim, assistant
administrator, left; Norma Torres. health commissioner;
Edwina Bell, registrar for vH:al statistics; Don Hodge, sanitarian ; Keith Little, director of environmental health; and Sandy
Cunningham. budgetary officer. (Charlene Hoeflich)
deaths during 2002. The leading cause of death continues to
be cardiac related with cancer
being the second leading cause
of death of Meigs Countians.
Environmental programs
Meigs County Director of
Environmental Health. Keith
Little, RS is assisted by Don
Hodge; R. S. There were a total
·of 51 animal bites investigated
with nine specimens being
sent to the Ohio Department of
Health for rabies testing. All
tested negative for rabies . A
total of 360 site visits were
made for water and sewage
inspections and 257 food service operation retail food
establishment inspection s
were conducted.
Tobacco Use Prevention
The program consists of
presentations for school s,
parent groups, and organiza-

•

et~fn,t

tions and participation in public events such as health fairs.
The Meigs County Tobacco
Prevention Coalition still is
·active in the community, and
the work consists of encouraging local school districts with
implementinll tobacco free
school policies; in the
American Cancer Society
STAMP program and coordination of the Smokeless Tobacco
Educational Campaign.
Personnel
In addition to Torres and oth·
ers named with their respective
programs. others in admmistrative positions include Dr. James
Witherell , the medical director,
and Dr. Dougla1 Hunter, the
PHIG program medical director. along with a five member
Board of Health chaired by
Gene Jeffers. president. and Jim
Clifford, Jr., vice president.

Medicalfxcel(ence.

Loca/Carm~·

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(AP) - The Tampa Bay
Devil Rays designated pitcher John Rocker for assignment.
Rocker had been pitching
for Double-A Orlando. The
left-hander made two appearances earlier this season for
the Devil Rays. allowing one
run, two hits and three walks
in one inning.

Knaus fined for
rules violation
.

.

DAYTONA BEACH, Aa.
(AP) - Crew chief Chad
Knaus was fined $2,500 by
NASCAR for a rules viola.. tion before qualifying for the
Coca-Cola 600.
Knaus, boss of Jimmie
Johnson's Chevrolet, was
fined for using an unapproved refrigerant near the
fuel system. The team never
made a qualifying attempt
because. the motor broke
before Johnson went onto the
track.
So they changed the engine
and Johnson started last in
Sunday's race. He went on !o
win it when NASCAR called
it because cif rain after 414
miles.

Correction
LANCASTER - Brandon
Werry, Ross Holter, Jen
Hayman
and
·Jennifer
Chadwell of Eastern High
School will participate in the
regional track meet which
gets underway at 4:30 p.m. ·
today at Lancaster. Finals
will be run on Friday.

..

May is Better Hearing and
Speech Month. In recognition
of this,. Holzer Clinic is offering
FREE hearing screenings and
hearing aid checks for all ages
at the following locations by
appointment only.

Colorado's Roy
to announce ·
retriement

Jackson Clinic
Main Clinic
Tuesdays in May
Monday thru Friday
8:30 to noon
. for the month of May
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
740.395.' 8801

ATLANTA - Chipper
Jones was ready to go
home, so he looked fol'·a
pitch he could drive into
the seats.
Jones led off the bottom of the lOth inning
with a homer to give the
Atlanta Braves a 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati
Reds on Tuesday night.
"I '¥asn't swinging ' for
a single , I'll tell you
that," he said after the
Braves bounced back
from an 11-inning loss to
the Reds on Monday.
Chris Reitsma (3-2)
started Jones with a
curve, which he took for
a ball. The cleanup hitter
knew. what to expect
next.
"His best pitch is the
change," Jones said. "He
loves to go at big guys .
who can hurt him a lot
with the offspeed ·stuff.
After he threw the curve
on the first pitch, I figured 1-0 was the perfect
opportunity for him to
throw the changeup. l
was sitting on it."
Jones sent a drive into
· the right-field seats for
his eighth homer of the
season. Reitsma squatted
on the mound in disbelief
as the ball landed some
400 feet away. ·
"It was not a very good
pitch," he said. ''It's frustrating when you can't
get the job done."
Trey Hodges (2-0)
escaped a jam in the top
of the IOth after second
baseman Mark DeRosa's
error let the leadoff, man
get on. Austin K'eariis ·
struck out with a runner

Please see Reds, BJ

is. Lisa DeRiso. 38, who grew
Associated Press
up near the spons complex
_ _ _ _.:..:..:._ _ _ _ (her father runs the Hot Dog
EAST RUTHERFORD, House just across from the
N.J . _ When New Jersey's Meadowlands), said the playpro sports teams win big. offs could "put us on the
there are no ticker-tape map." (As if New Jersey were
on the map already.)
Parades or big-city homecom- notBoth
the Nets and the
mgs.
Devils
play
at · the
Instead. in what sounds like Meadowlands' Continental
another New Joisey joke, the Airlines Arena, set amid the
celehmtions are held in the swamps of northern New
parking
lot
of
the Jersey in East Rutherford,
Meadowlands, the . spons population 8,000. (That's
complex where Jimmy Exit l6W on the New Jersey
Hoffa's remains are said to be Turnpike, the universal landburied in concrete near
Section I 07 of Giants mark for locating all things
Stadium.
·
New Jersey.) In fact, New
York sportscasters refer deriTbis year, the parking lot sively to the Meadowlands as
could be especially busy: "The Swamp."
Both the Devils and Nets are
It has been nine years since
playing for championships.
two pro teams sharing an
The Devils are facing the arena reached the finals in
Anaheim Mighty Ducks in their respective sports: In
the Stanley Cup fmrus, and 1994, the New York Rangers
the Nets will go up against won the Stanley Cup, and the
either the San Antonio Spurs Knicks, their co-tenants at
or the Dallas Mavericks in the Madison Square Garden, lost
NBA Fmals.
to Houston in the NBA
The two contenders could F.Ina1 S.
,
give a big boost to the coUec- . And in the six previous
tiveself-esteemoftheGarden times in the last 50 years that
State, a plaoe that is often co-habitating teams have
overshadowed by New York vied simultaneously for
City and Philadelphia, and championships. never once
subjected to countless wise- have both teams won.
cracks about mobsters and
Ho Young Kim, 48, a
toxic waste.
florist in East Rutherford,
In a measure of just how said the Nets' and Devils'
low New Jersey's self-esteem success could take New
BY STEVE STRUNSKY

'

Please see Mavs, B4

Jersey out from under the
shadow of Manhattan's skyline. The big city is about I0
miles
east
of
the
Meadowlands.
YankeeNets. owners of the
Devils and Nets, want to
move the teams from their
21-year-old home in the
Meadowlands to a new arena
in Newark. a move that some
say could generate more
excitement for the teams by
giving them a larger city to
call home.
The New York Giants also
play at the Meadowlands.
But that doesn't make some
New Jersey residents happy
.the way the Nets and the
Devils do.
·
For all the excitement, few
people actually expect the
jokes about Superfu'nd waste
sites and gangland rubouts to
go away !J!:cause of one successful sports season.
"The Jimmy Hoffa stuff,
you know, that's just New ·
Jersey," said Jim Cappelluti,
48. who grew up in Jersey
City and now owns a deli in
Kearny. "Jimmy Hoffa in the
Meadowlands, Frank Sinatra
in Hoboken, Tony Soprano
on TV. So, it's always going
to be that way."

walk, Roberts places
sixth in discus •

Staff report

e v e n t

OLATHE, Kan. - · Five
·members of
the University
of
Rio Grande
Track and
Field squad
captured a
total of six
All -Ameri can awards
at the NAIA
Boyles
Outdoor
National . Track and Field
Meet over the weekend.
On the men's side, Matt
Boyles of Tuppers Plains
became
the
National
Champion in the men's
5,000-meter race walk. He
outlegged a field of six with
time of 21 :34.53. Boyles
also won the mitional championship in .the 3,000-meter
race walk at the indoor meet
in January. Boyles was in
two other events at the meet,
finishing sixth (out of 21 ),
an earning All-American
honors. in the 10,000-meter

(31:12.82)
and crossing
the line 15th
(out of 18)
in the 5,000meter run
(15 :31.70).
Jim Robmson was
Roberta
edged out.
by his teammate as he finished runnerup in the 5,000-meter race
walk , earning All-American
honors. Robinson also finished second behind Boyles
at the indoor nationals.
was
Robinson's
time
clocked at 21:34.53.
Tim Sykes also earned
All-American honors by
finishing 4th (out of 6) in
the 5,000-meter race walk
(24:35.65).
Senior thrower Ashly
Roberts of Vinton came.
away with All-American
honors.
Roberts, competing he1
final
meet
for
the
Redwomen, finished sixth

Please see Track. BJ

• Thursday,June 5, 2003- Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
• 4 p.m. -All mi'ddle and high school girls

.

Meigs Clinic

Point Pleasant Clinic
May28
_May 19
8:30 a.m. to noon
1 p.m.to 4:30p.m.

• 5:30p.m. to 7:30p.m.- All middle and high school boys
eCostis$12/student '

304.675.4498

• For more inforrnation.call:.(304) 675-7222
•

..

SAN ANTONIO - Michael
Finley, Nick Van Exel, Steve Nash
and the Dallas Mavericks wouldn 't
let San Antonio clinch a spot in the
NBA Finals.
Given the way the Spurs played
in (he fourth quarter, they didn 't
,
deserve one .
On a night that shaped up as the .
final night of basketball until the
championship round begins June
4, things didn't work out that way
at all.
The Mavericks fell behind by 19
points but never quit, staging a
comeback throughout the second
half that culminated in a stunning
turn of events in the fourth quarte1
as ' Dallas defeated San Antonio
103-91 Tuesday night .
The
Mavericks
cut
San
Antonio's lead to 3-2 in the bestof-seven series. with Game 6
Thursday night in Dallas .
Finley scored 31 points and got
huge help in the fourth quarte1
from Van Exel and Nash - the
two starting point guards in the
small-ball lineup coach Don
Nelson was forced to use as Dirk
Nowitzki (knee injury) sat out his
second straight game.
The Mavericks used a 14-2 run
to take a I 01-88 lead with I :42
left, prompting San Antonio to call
a timeout and Bruce Bowe!J to- yell
"Shut up!" three times at a hecklei
sitting behind the bench who was
telling the Spurs how terrible they
were.
The heckler was right.
Dallas outscored San Antonio
29-10 in the fourth quarter as the
Spurs missed their first eight
shots·, II of 12 and 14 of 17 overall.
Blown fourth-quarter leads are
nothing new to the Spurs this postseason, but this one was especially
, galling because the team that
seemed to want it more was not the
team that was one victory away
from the finals.

NAIA National Track Meet
New JerSey
has
two
potential
.
Boyles wins race
champions in Nets, Devils

740.446.5135

740.992.0060

Cincinnati Reds starter Jimmy Haynes delivers a pitch to.an Atlanta Braves batter dur"
ing the second inning Tuesday in Atlanta. (AP)

Mavericks
beat Spurs ,

I
.

'

PLEASANT
"V ALLEY ·
HOSPITAL
I

•,

I ,

�'

'

Page 82 •

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

. ~
.
The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

.

Scoreboard
Prep Baseball

0

NHL

Ma~ys'VIIIe (25·4) vs . Gahanna Lincoln
(22-6), Thursday. 4:30p.m.
Finals: S aturda~. 1 p.m.

Aqlonal Boya Baaeball Pairings
At Unlveralty of D•yton
DIVISION I
Ket1ering Fairmont (~4-5) vs. Hamilton
1
Regional Samlflnala
(17· 12), Wednesday, 4.30 p.m.
At Thurman Munaon Stadium,
W. Chester lakota
(23-5) vs . Cln.
Canton
NW (23-2), Thursday, 4:30p.m.
Massillon JackSon (25·2) vs. Yourygs.
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
'Austintown Fitc h (19-9), Friday 2 p.m.
DIVISION II
: Cuyahoga Falls (23;6) vs. Mentor (23..,
Reglon11 S.mlfln•l•
4) . Friday. 5 p.m.
At Flreatone St1dlum, Akron
Finals : Saturday, 1 p.m.
Poland Sem inary (22-5) vs . Ashtabula
At Dublin, Coffman
Edgewood (20·5) , Wednesday. 4:30 p.m.
Cln. St. Xavier (19-9) vs. Groveport
Mantua Crestwood (2 6·2) vs . Alliance
Madison (23-4), Friday, 2 p.m.
Marlington (2Q-t) , Thursday, 4:30p.m.
Upper
Arlington
(26·4 )
vs.
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
Reynoldsburg (22· 3), Friday, 5 p.m.
At Bucyrue
Finals. Saturday, 1 p.m.
Lexl~gton (17-3) vs. Clyde (23·3).
I
At Shelby
Wednesday, 4:30 ~ . m .
· Perrysburg (21·6) vs. Berea (17·7),
Chardon NDCL (27·2) vs. laGrange
f ridey, 2 p.m
Keystone {26· 1), Thursday, 4:30p.m.
Tol. Start (23-4) vs. Cle. St. Ignatius (21·
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
6), Friday, 5 p.m.
At Pickerington
Finals : Saturday, 1 p.m.
New Concord John Glenn (28-~) vs.
r~At Miami Univtl'llty
Hebron Lakewood (22·9) , Wednesday,
Hamiltoi'1'(24-6) vs . Cin, Elder (17· 11 ), 4:30p.m.
Friday, 2 p.m.
Thornville Sheridan (21·5) vs . Dover
Milford (27-2) vs . Vandalia Butler (24-4) , (22-5) , Thursday, 4:30 p.m.
Friday, 5 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
At Northmont
DIVISION It
Defiance (16· 11) va . Spring. Kenton
Regional Semifinal•
Rid9e (28- t ), Wednesday, 4:30p.m.
At Cane Park, Struthert
Cln. Turpin (19·6) vs . Franklin (21·6),
Poland Seminary (23-3) vs. Cs.n. Cent. Thursday 4:30 p.m.
1
· Cath. (29-1) or Canfield (22-6). Friday 2
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
p.m.
.
DIVISION Ill
Akr. Hoban (23· 6) vs. Cuyahoga Falls
Regional S.mlflnale
Walsh Jesuit {22·6). Friday. 5 p.m.
· At Genahaft Field, M1nlllon
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
Youngs .
Ursuline
(20-10)
vs .
At Gallon Helae Park, Gallon
Jeromesville
Hi!lsdale
(20-7),
Sandusky Perkins (23-3) vs. Parma .Wednesday, 4:30 p.m .
Padua ( 17-9), Friday 2 p.m.
Independence (21·2 ) liS . Rootstown
Defiance (19·7) vs. Cols. Hammon Twp. (20-9), Thursday, 4:30 p.m.
(23-7), Friday, 5 p.m.
Final!: Saturday, 1 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
At Brookelde P1rk, Aahland
At Gant Municipal Stadium,
Sycamore
Mohawk
(26·1)
vs.
Zanesville
·
Bloomfield Elmwood (18·6), Wednesday,
Jackson (18-10) vs Steubenville (21·6), 4:30p.m.
Friday, 2 p.m.
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. {25·2) liS.
Waverly { 19-5 ) vs. Richmond Edison Magnolia Sandy Valley (27-0) , Thursday,
(24·2), Friday, 5 p.m.
4:30p.m.
Finals : Saturday. 1 p.m.
finals : Saturday, 1 p .m.
At Xenia
AtLancalter
Newark Licking Valley (22·6) vs St.
Wheelersburg (22·3) VI. Mt. Gilead (25Pa ris Graham (22·5), Friday, 2 p.m.
3). Wednesday, 4:30 p.m.
Cin . Purcell Marian (18-8) vs . New
Richwood N. Union (21·3) vs .
Richmond (22-5). Friday. 5 p.m.
Portsmouth W. (26·1 ), Thursday. 4:30
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
p,m.
DIVISION-tit
Finals: Saturday. 1 p.m.
Regional Samlrlnals
At Wright Stott Unlvorolty
At Malllllon W11hlngton
Batavia (13-6) va . Convoy Crestview
Youngs. Ursuline (10-15) vs. Cle. VASJ (24·1). Wednesday, 4 :30p.m.
(9· t 9). Frida]/ 2 p.m
Arcanum (20·3) vs . Caestown Miami E.
Elyria Cath. { 19· 4) .vs . Campbell (.18-12) , Thursday, 4":30 p.m.
Memorial (14·7· 1), Fr i da~. 5 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
DIVISION IV
At N. Robin1on Col. Crawford
Regional S.mlflnlll
St. Henry (25-3) vs. Plain City JOnathan
At Ktnt Stott Unlvorolty
Alder (22-7). Friday. 2 p.m.
Crestline (24-4) v1. N. Jackson-Milton
Doylestown Ch ippewa (24·3) vs . (21-6) , Wednesday, 4 :30 p.m.
Millbury Lake (i9-7), Friday, 5 p.m.
Mogadore (14·14) vs. Bristolville Bristol
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
(13·5), Th ursday, 4 :30p.m.
At VA Memorial Stadium, Chillicothe
Finals: Saturday, 1 p. m.
Ironton (17·9) vs. Gnadenhutten Indian
At Findlay
Valley (23-7), Friday, 11 a.m.
Fostoria Sl . Wendelln (18-7) vs.
Proctorville Fairlano (20·3) vs. Bellaire Gibsonburg (24·3), Wednesday, 4 :30p.m.
(15·8) . Friday. 2 p.m.
Defiance Ayersville (19·5)·vs. Kalida (9·
Finals: Salurda~. 1 p.m.
13), Thursday; 4:30p.m.
At Wright Stale Unlverelty,
F'inals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
Versailles (~ 4· 10) vs . Gahanna Cola.
At Pickerington
(25-4) , Friday, 2 p.m.
Sugar Grove Berne Union (18·13) vs.
Gin . , rlills Christian (20·8) vs. ReedSville Eastern (21·2), Wednesday,
~ellefontalne Benjamin Logan (17-9) or
430 p.m.
Carlisle (17·12), Friday, 5 p.m.
Mowr~stown Whiteoak (15-1)
vs.
Finals : Saturday, 1 p.m.
S!tasburg-Franklln (22-2)
DIVISION IV
Finals: Saturday, 1 p .m.
.•
Regional Semifinal•
AtWoyno
At Elyrlo
Middletown . Fenwick (19-6) V!. N.
Cortland Maplewood (18-4) vs. LOrain Lewisburg Triad (25-6), Wednesday, 4:30
Cath. (l2·8), Friday 2 p.m
•
p.m.
.
Newbury (12·15) vs . Sandusky St.
Pleasant Hill Newton (24·6) vs. St.
Mary's (16-8). Friday. 5 p.m.
Henry (2b·9). Thursday 4:30 p.m.
Finals : Saturday, 1 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
At Ed Sondy Flold, Elida
Sycamore
Mohawk
(20-6)
\IS .
Montpelier (14-8), Friday, 2 p.m.
Tiffin Calvert (14-8) vs. Leipsic (19-7),
Friday. 5 p.m.
National Baaketball Anoctatlon
Finals : Saturday, 1 p.m.
Playollo
At Beaver• Field, Lancaster
CONFERENCE FINALS
Seaman N. Adams (16·6) vs. Berlin
lBeot-of·7)
Hiland (2 1·7). Friday, 2 p.m.
Sunday, Mey 1B
Portsmouth Clay (16-5) vs . Newark
New Jersey 76, Detroit 74
Cath . (24-5), Friday, 5 p.m.
Monday, May 19
Firlals : Saturday, 1 p.m.
Dallas 113. San ArJtonio 11 o
At Wayne
Tuoodoy, May 20
Minste r (17-7) vs . Ft. Loramie (19 -8) ,
New Jersey 88, Detroit 86
Friday, 2 p.m.
Wodnooday, May 21
Bradford (1-4-8) vs . St. Bernard·
San Antonio 119, Dallas 106
Elmwood Place (20-9), Friday. 5 p.m.
Thuraday. May 22
Finals : Saturday, 1 p.m.
..~.t.Jew Jersey 97. "Detroit 85
Friday, Moy 23
.
San Antonio 96, Dallas 83
Satunloy, May 24
New Jersey 102, Detroit 82. New Jersey
Girl• Regional Softb1ll Pairings
wins series 4·0
DIVISION I
Sunday, Mey 25
Regional semifinals
San Anton io 102; Dallas 95
At Unlverwllty or Akron
Tuesday, May 27
Medina (23-3) vs . Warren Howland {19·
Dallas 103, San Antonio 91 . San Antonio
4), Wednesday, 4:30p.m.
leads series 3·2
Massillon Perry (18·8) vs. Painesville
Thurodoy, May 29
Riverside (17·7), Thursday, 4:30p.m.
San Antonio at Dallas , 9 p.m.
Finals: Saturday, 1 p.m.
Sslurcloy, May 3 t
At Amherst Steele
Dallas at san Antonio, 8:30 p.m., if nee·
N. Ridgeville (17·10) vs. Parma Hts. essary
Holy Name (22-3), Wednesday, 4:30p.m
NBA FINALS
Whitehouse Antho.ny Wayne (21·5) vs .
(-t-of-7)
Styvanla Northvlew (25·5) , Thu.rsdaY.
Dalla•San Antonio winner
4:30p.m .
vs.NewJeraey
Finals : Saturday, 1 p.m.
Wodnoodoy, Junt 4
At Ohio State Unlveralty
' New Jersey at 'Dallas-San Antonio winHilliard Darby (25·4~ vs . Lebanon (27· ner. 8:30p.m.
3), Wednesday, 4:30p.m.
Friday, Juno e

w.

I .

Pro Basketball

Prep Softball

New Jersey at Dallas-San Anton io winner, 8:30p.m.
Sunday, June B
Dallas-San Antonio winner at New
Jersey, 8:30 p. m.
Wednesday, June 11
Dalla s-San Anton io winner at New
Jersey. 8:30 p.m.
F~doy, Juno 13
Dallas-San Antonio winner at New
Jersey, 8:30p.m., h necessary
SuncHy, June 15
New Jersey at Dallas-San Antonio winner, 8:30p.m., It necessary
Wednnday, June 18
New Jersey at Dallas-San Antonio win·
ner, 8:30p.m .. If necessary
Women'a Natlonar Baakatbell
Aaaocl1tloh
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L
PctGB
Washington ~
1 · 0 1.000
Detroit
0 0 .000
lnqiana
()(X)
Naw York
0 0
.000
o 1 ..000
Charlotte
Cleveland
1 .ooo
0 1 .000
Connecticut
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L
PetGB
Houston
2 0 t .ooo
LOs Angeles
2 0 1.000
. 1 0 1.000
Minnesota
~
San Antonio
,. 1 0 1.000
~
Sacramento
I 1 .500
I
Phoenix
0 2
.000
2
Seattle
0 •2
.000
2

o o
o

w
Mid-Missouri
River City
Rockford
Cook County
Gateway
Kenosha

2
2
2

L
1
I
I
2
2
2

Pet. GB
.667
.567
.667
.333
1
.333
.333

Tuesday's Game•
No games scheduled
Wedneaday 'a Gamea
Cook County at Kenosha
Evansville at Chillicothe
Florence at Kalamazoo
Gat~ay at Rockford '
Mid-Missoun at River City
Rlc:hmo.nd at Washington
Thursday's O.m11
Cook County at Kenosha
Evansville st Chillicothe
Florence at Kalamazoo .
Gateway at Roc:ldord
Mid-Missouri at River City
. Richmond at Washington

BY ALAN ROBINSON

Associated Press

Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Agreed to
terms with LHP Adam Lo'ewen on a fiveyear contract.
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Purchased
the contract of AHP Dan Mlcelr from

~~~~~~~ ~~,'~:~l~n~e:~~-nat.ed AH~. Jason

DETROIT TIGERS-Acquired OF Alex
Sanchez from Milwaukee for LHP Chad
Los Angeles 79, Cleveland 71
· , Petty and OF Gary Varner.
Wedneldoy'o G~ta
KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Placed RHP
Los Angeles at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
San Antonio at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Aunelvys Hernandez on the 15-day disThursday's Game
abled list, retroactive to May 17. Recalled
Indiana at Charlone, 1 p.m.
RHP Brad Voyles from Omaha of the
PCL,
RAYSTAMPA
BAY
DEVIL
Designated LHP John Rocker tor assignment. Recalled RHP Carlos Reyes from
Nattonal Hockey League
Durham of the IL . Optioned RHP
Ployollo
•
Brandon Backe to Durham. Activated OF
STANLEY CUP FINALS
Damian Rolls from trie 15·day disabled
{Beot-of.7)
lls t and optioned him to Durham.
New Je.-.y va. Anaheim
TEXAS RANGERS- Acquired OF Rick
Tue1day, May 27
Asadoorian from St. Louis tor AHP
New Jersey 3, Anaheim O, New Jersey
Esteban Van and cash . Designated RHP
leads series 1-D
Todd Van Poppel tor assignment.
Thurodoy, Moy 29
Purchased the contracts of INF Jeff
Anaheim ~t New JerSey, B p.m.
Pickler from Oklahoma of the PCL and
Sstunlay, May 31
1 B-OF Paul Ottavinla from Frisco of thO
New Jersey at Anaheim ; 8 p.m.
Texas League, then optioned them both
Monday, June 2
back to their respective minor leaguei
New Jersey at Anaheim, 8 p.m.
teams. Recalled RHP Rosman Garcia
Thuraday, June 5
Anaheim at New Jersey, 8 p.m., il neces- from Oklahoma, Transferred the rehabili. sary
tatio n sites of AHP Chan Ho Park and
Saturdey, June 7
OF . Doug Glanville from Oklahoma to
New Jersey at Anaheim , 8 p.m., if neces- Frisco.
sary
Netlonal League ~
Monday, June e
_
MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Activated
Anaheim at NeW Jersey, 8 p.m., if neces- LHP Valerio De Los Santos from the 15·
sary
day disabled list. Assigned LHP John
Foster to Indianapolis al the IL .
Purchased th~-. contract of RHP Tim ·
Bauaher from Berkshire of the Northeast
League.
lntematlonal Laague
NEW YORK 'METS-Piaced OF limo
North Dlvlalon
Perez 9n the Hi ·day disabled list
W L Pet. GEi
Activated INF. Aey Sanchez and AHP
Buffalo (Indians)
28 19 596
Da11ld Cane from the 15·day disabled list.
Pawtucl&lt;ei (Red Sox) 26 22 .542 2\.
Optioned LHP Jaime Cerda to Norfolk of
Ottawa (Orioles)
27 24 .529
3
theiL
Syracuse (Blue Jays) 21 24 .467
6
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES- Actlvated
Scranton (Phil lias)
22 28 .440 7l.
RHP Terry Adams from the restricted list-.
Rochester (Twins)
21 28 .429
8
Designated RHP Joe Roa for assignSouth Dlvfolon
W L Pet. GB ment . Assigned OF Tommy Bost to
NorfoHc (Mets)
27 21 .563
Carolina of the Southern League.
· Charlotte (White Sox) 25 22 .532 t ),
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS-Recalled OF
Richmond (Braves)
27 24 .529 111t
So Taguchi from Memphis ol the PCL.
Durham (Devil Rays) 23 25 .479
4
Optioned RHP Gabe Molina to Memphis.
We1t Dlvlalon
Removed LHP Les Wal rond from the 40·
W L Pet. GB
man roster.
29 21 .580
LouiSIIIIIe (Reds)
SAN DIEGO PADRES-Agreed to
Toledo (Tigers)
23 25 ' .479
5
terms with C George Kottaras. LHP
Columbus (Yankees)
23 26 .469 5'c,
Danny De La 0, CF Drew Macias and LF
Indianapolis (Brewers) 18 31 .367 10h
Chad Etheridge.
FOOTBALL
· tueSday's Gamet
National
Football League
Louisville 3, Buffalo 1
CINCINNATI BENGAL5-Released LB
Durham 3, Charlotte 2. 1.1 innings
Canute Curtis, OL Brock Gutierrez, DE
Columbus 5, Scranton-Wilkes-Barre 1
Eric: Ogbogu and FB Mike Green.
onawa 8. Toledo 2
HOUSTON TEXANS-Claimed OT
Norfolk 8, PawtuCket 0
Alonzo Schuler oil waivers from the New
Syracuse 5, Richmond 2, 1st game
York Jets .
Richmond 5, Syracuse 1, 2nd game
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Signed S
Indianapolis 4, Rqchester 1
Johndale Carty.
Wednesday'a Games
Buffalo Bt Louisville
MIAMI DOLPHINS- Named Bill Baker
. Columbus at ScrantorvWilkes-Barre
to the college scouting staff. Announced
Durham at Charlotte
the resignation at Greg Jeffries, scout.
Ot1awa al Toledo
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Waived
Pawtucket at Norfolk
DL Watt&amp;r Sampson.
Richmond at Syracuse
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Acquired
Rochester at Indianapolis
LB Derrick Rodgers from Miami for a
Thuraday's Gamn
2004 seventh-round draft plc:k.
Buffalo at LOuisville
HOCKEY
Columbus at Scrantoll'Wilkes-Barre
National Hockey League
Durham at Charlotte
OTTAWA SENATORS-Picked up the
Onawa at Toledo
option on the contract of Jacques Martin,
Ftawtucket at Norfolk
coach, Don Jackson·. aSsistant coach,
Richmond at Syracuse
Roger Neilson , assistant c:oac:h . and
Rochester at Indianapolis
Perry Pearn, assistant coach , for the
·
2003-04
season.
Frontier Laague
COLLEGE
Eaat Division
NEW ENGLAND · COLLEGE- Named
W L Pet. GB
David DeCew men 's soccer and baseball
Chillicothe
2 0 1.000
coach .
Kalamazoo
2 1 .667
\·,
NEWBERRY-Named David Stanitard
Richmond
'It
2 1 .667
Evansville
men's tennis coach .
1 2 .333 1't
Washington
1 2 .333 , .,
WASHINGTON &amp;
JEFFERSONFlorertee
0 2 .000 2 Named Peter Coughlin men's and
West Division
women 's golf coach.

Tueaday'l Game

Pro Hockey

Pro Baseball

Devils·blank
Ducks in·
Cup opener
EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J . - The Mighty . Ducks
can take this lesson from
their first Stanley Cup finals :
There's nothing like experience in big games.
Jeff Friesen, the very reason New Jersey is playing in
its third finals in four years,
beat Jean-Sebastien Giguere
for the all-important first
goal early in the second period and the Devils beat the
offense-less Ducks 3-0 in
Game I Tuesday night.
Playing on a makeshift
line that was missing injured
center Joe Nieuwendyk,
Friesen scored his fourth
game-winning goal in seven
games to halt the momentum
Anaheim brought into the
finals 'off stunning upsets of
powers Detroit and Dallas
and a four-game sweep of
Minnesota.
Unable to knock the rust
off from a I 0-day layoff that
was the longest ever for a
Stanley
Cup
finalist,
Anaheim looked like ducks
out of water against the
patient, make-no-mistakes
Devils, who now take a 1-0
lead into Game 2 Thursday
night. .
The Ducks gave up only
21 goals in their first 14
playoff games but also
scored only 33, and they
don't have a single scorer
among the top 15 in the
playoffs.
That scarcity of off~e
showed up against a De its
team that allowed the few st
goals in the league during
the season; Anaheim had
only four shots in each of the
first two periods, and so few
good scoring chances that
goalie Martin Brodeur often
went minutes at a time withput seeing the puck in his
end.
·
It was Brpdeur's first
finals shutout and his fifth in
this year's playoffs.
New Jersey and Anaheim
tied for the league lead with
24' one-goal victories · each
during the regurar season,
and this series figures to be
among the lowest-scoring in
NHL history.
So it was no surprise that
Friesen got the game-winning goal - . after all, his
three such goals in New
Jersey's tense elimination of
NHL regular-season champion Ottawa in the Eastern
Conference finals were by
the most in any playoff
round since the Islanders'
Mike Bossy also had three in
1984. His goal late in Game
7 on Friday night sent New
Jersey back tp the finals.

Friesen added an empty
net goal.
In a game in which the
first goal figured to win it in
a matchup of the league 's
hottest go3'lie (Giguere)
against arguaoly its best
goalie (Brodeur), the Devils
pressured Giguere from the
start of the second period.
Finally, Sergei Brylin substituting for Niuewendyk
on the Devils ' second linecontrolled the puck near the
blue line and swe pt it to
Friesen near the left faceoff
circle dot , and he whipped it
over Giguere's right shoulder just inside the near post
at I :45 of the second .
In not even 22 minutes, the
Devils had as many goals as
the Minnesota Wild scored
against Giguere in the entire
Western Conference final. It
was only one goal, but the
Mighty Ducks, named after a
Disney movie, had to sense
the script in this game might
be different.
The Ducks pulled off the
near-impossible in their first
three series, winning Games
I and 2 on the road, including multiple-ovenime wins
in each Game I. But, this
night, they asked Giguere to
do the truly impossible: win
a game for them in which
they didn ' t score.
Giguere, trained by the
same goaltending coach who
tutored the now-retired
Patri-ck Roy, was outstanding
most of the game, and ·certainly wasn't the reason the
Ducks lost their first finals
game ever.
And if a 1-0 lead seemed
big, the 2-0 advantage supplied by Grant Marshall 's
fifth playoff goal in 12
game s must have seemed
insurmountable
to
(he
Ducks.
Giguere stopped ·Patrik
Elias' shot from below the
right circle·, but the rebound
deflected directly back onto
Elias' stick, and he immediately fed it across the .slot to
a wide-open Marshall for an ·
uncontested goal at 5:34 of
the second.
Marshall went 65 playoff
games without a goal, but
now has five in his last 12
games.

'

Vizquel steals· Cavs, James still
home, Indians looking for coach
~teal

victory

DETROIT (AP) - On a
when
C leveland
night
Indian s
rookie
Ben
Broussard had the best hitting day of hi s career, he
may have helped his team
just as much with hi s ac ting
·
skills.
Broussard 's poker face ·at
the plate helped teammate
Omar

Vizquel steal home in the
eighth inning, breaking a 22 tie, and he followed with a
two-run triple to hdp the
Indians to a 5-2 win
Tuesday night .
" I saw Omar coming
home, and I didn ' t want to
react and let the pitcher
know what was happening,"
he said. "I waited until the
very last second before getting out of the way."
Brou ssard also doubled
and homered, driving in
three run s.
"I hadn ' t been hitting the
ball very well , so I just
wanted to relax today and
look for something to hit,"
he said . "This felt good."
Cleveland manager Eric
Wedge
was
especially
happy with the triple, coming against the lefthanded
Avery. Broussard entered
the game with no hits in
seven at-bats against lefties.
"Benny really gave us a
lift tonight," Wedge said.
"Not just the homer. but the
big hn in the eighth to· give
us some breathing space. I
know he hasn't played much
against lefthanders. but he
has been making progress
and I want to see what he
could do."
After the game, though,
everyone was talking about
Vizquel 's play. With the
bases loaded and two out,
the ve.teran realized that
Tigers reliever Steve Avery
wasn't paying any attention
to him . With the leftbander's
back . turned,
Vizquel was almost to the
plate before Avery even
reacted.
"I was on third base, and
he never looked at me once
on the first four piTches,"
Vizquel said . "Even when I

Track
'

from Page 81

look off, everyone wa s
yelling at him, but he just
froze . He kept looking at
Ellis Burks on second like
he thought he was goi ng tu
try to steal third or something ."
Avery said he had never
seen the play in 15 years of
professional ball , but that
didn ' t mollify Tigers man ager Alan Trammell.
"Looking back on it ,
Steve looked back at second
' base on every pitch, and ·
tha t's not what you want to
be doing." he said . "We all
feel like we deserve some of
the blame - the coaching
staff and even so me of the
players.
·
"Omar is a very smart
player who sc hooled us with
a heads-up play. It was definitely the play of the game."
Vizquel
also
had
Cleveland's
previous
straight steal of home on ,.
Sept. 20 , 2000, and Wedge
was giving him all the credit.
" I can't take any credit for .
that - th at was all Omar,"
he said. " He has a tremendou s feel for the game, and
he noticed that Avery wasn't
paying attention to him . We
saw it too, and we were j ust
hoping Omar saw the same
thing."
Both team s lost players to
injury during the game .
Cleveland starter Jason
Bere left after one innin g
with stillne ss in hi s pitching
shoulder. while Tigers fir st
baseman
Carlos
Pcna
strained a calf muscle running out a grounder in the
third .
Sere. l'&lt;ho started the season on the disabled list with
shoulder problems , was
makin g ju st hi s second start
of the year. He is expec ted
to go back on the disabled
li s t.
"This fee ls the same way
as when I hurt il the first
time ," he sa id . "Thi s is way
beyond simple discomfort."
Pena , on the other hand, is
in much better shape. ·
"He's had a slight strain in
his calf for a week now,"
Trammell said . " In a situation like that. ·where he's
running hard out of the box,
trying to stay out of a double play, that he extended
himself a little extra. I Think
he's OK. I do have to check
on that, though."
meter sTeeplechase (9:46)
and Glenn Arnold was 13th
(out of 15) in tht; di scus
( 146 feet) and 14th (out of
20) in the hammer throw

(out of 22) in the discus to
earn the title of All- ( 160 feet. one inch'f.
American. Roberts meaThe Redmen scored 26
sured 142 feet, six inches.
She also participated in the points and fini shed lith for
meet.
Lindenwood
hammer throw, finishing the
18th (out of 20) with a (Mo.) won the
team
'
throw of 134 feet , eight National
Championship
inches .
with 65 points .
Sophomore
Kristin
Barnett
and
Robert s
Barnett finished sixth (out
of 8) in the 3,000-meter allowed the Redwomen to
race walk with a time of · tie for 39th place (sill
18: 19.0 I. Barnett also points) with Baker (Kan.)
achieved the prestigious and Ed~ard Waters (F la .).
honor at the indoor meet.
Asuza Pacific (Calif.)
Other Redmen finishers :
Scott Littrell finished lith won the women' s national
(out of 12) in the 3,000- title with 86 points.

BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

.

CLEVELAND - LeBron James showed
up 10 watch some basketball at Gund Arena on
Tuesday ni ght wearing a Cleveland Cavaliers'
No. 34 throwback jersey.
He brought some high ·school teammates,
friends, hi s mom and new agent.
James' next coach was nowhere to be found.
Cavaliers general man.ager Jim Paxson said
the team 's coaching search will continue this
week, but he re fused to say whether he has
offered any candidate the job.
" We're still in the process to talking and
interviewing candidates," Paxson said before
the Cleveland Rockers pl;tyed their WNBA
season opener against Los Angeles. "Until we
get to the point of getting a coach in place,
there is really nothing to talk about."
Rumors continue to swirl around the NBA's
coaching carousel, which picked up another
rider Monday with Larry Brown's surpri sing
resignation in Philadelphia.
Jeff Van Gundy and Paul Silas have interviewed for the Cavaliers' job, which got much
more attractive last week when Cleveland
won the draft lottery and the rights to select
James, the 18-year-old Akron high school star.
Van Gundy, who has already turned down a
chance to meet with New Orleans about their '
job o~ning and is also on Houston's wish list,
mel for nearly five hours last week ~tth
Cavaliers owner Gordon Gund.
Van Gundy IS workmg the NBA play~ffs ~s
a.color.commentator for TN~ and hasn t srud
,ct he wants to return to coachmg next season.

With Brown leaving Philadelphia, Van
Gundy, who is under contract with the New
York Knicks until July 31, would appear to
have more options than ever.
Paxson wouldn' t say if Brown is a candidate
'f h
2
d
·
or 1 t e 6 -year-ol coach's ' latest move
would have any impact on Cleveland's coaching search.
•
·
·
Brown, who has taken six teams to the playoffs in a 31-year coaching career, left the 76ers
with two years remaining on a contract that
paid him $6 million per season. On Tuesday,
Brown and his wife had dinner with Houston
owner Les Alexander and general manager
Carroll Dawson in New York.
.
On Sunday night, James chimed in on the
Cavaliers' coaching situation by giving a personal endorsement to Brown.
"I think Larry Brown is a great teacher if we
can get him," James said during a TV interview. "l consider myself a student of the
game, so Larry Brown would be great."
Paxson chuckled when asked if James'
approval carried any weight.
"Players are going to have their own view,"
Paxson said. "Ultimately, Gordon and I will
have to decide what we feel is the right decision for this team."
Before the lottery, Paxson said the Cavaliers
would like to have their coach in place in time
for the June 26 draft. But now that they have
James, that may not be a priority any longer.
"We're not putting any deadline on it,"
Paxson said. "It's. not holding out waiting.
"We have a specific way we want to approach
th ls and we are continuing_that."

PARIS (AP) - Michael Chang cried at
!he French Open for the second and last
time.
Back in 1989, they were tears of joy after
he won the tournament On Tuesday, a lifetime·later, they were tears of sadness after he
hi! his final stiot here.
Charg·s farewell to Roland Garros ended
with a 7-5. 6-1 , 6-1 Joss to Fabrice Santoro
in the same spot that the American claimed
his lone major title.

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Tueaday 'a Games

Montreal at Florida. ppd. ram
N.Y. Met&amp; 4, Philadelphia 2
Atlanta 3, Cincinnati 2. 10 innings
Piltlburgh 9, Ch icago Cubs~
Houston .7 , St. Louis 4
·
Colorado 7, L os Angeles 3
Milwaukee .4, San Diego 2
San Francisco 4. Arizona 3. 13
Innings
Wtdneadey'a Game&amp;
PHtsbu'!ih (0'Amico 4-4) a&gt;Chlcago

Los Angeles at Colorado, 3:05 p.m.
Hpuston at St. Louis, 4:1 o p.m ·
Milwaukee at -San Diego. 5:05p.m
Montreal at Florida, 7:05 p.m .
N.Y..Mets at Ph!ladelp ~la , 7:05p.m.

the disabled list earlier in
the day. He had been sidelined since April 17 with a
bulgil)g di sc in his back.
." My back felt fine,"
Hayne s said. "It probably
-will be sore (Wednesday),
but it feels good right
now."
Hayne s. wh() carne into
the game .at 0-4· with 12.74
ERA, gave up seven hits
and two runs .
Atlanta second baseman
Marcus Giles was hit just
above the left elbow with a
pitch in the fifth. Giles fin islled out the inning, but
was replaced by DeRosa
when the Braves took the
field in the sixth. X-ray s
were negative, and Gile s
was day -to-day.

.

American League
Ea&amp;t Division
WLPctGB
Boston
31 20 .606
New York ·
30 22 .577 1't·
Toronto
29 24 .547
3
Baltimore
24 26 480 6' 1
Tamps Say
19 31 .380 11 ~'
Central Olvltlon

W
Minnesota
Kansas City
Chk:ago
Cleveland
Detroit
West
Seattl~
Oakland
An!lhelm
Texas

L · Pet GB

30 20
26 23
23 28
19 32
13 37
Division
w L
32 18
29 21

600 .531 3),
.45 1 7 ·1
:373 11 '1
.260 17
Pet GB

.640
.580

24 25 .480
24 26 480

3
7~~

8

Tueeday 1s Games
Bal'llmore 12. Anaheim 4
N.Y. Yankees 11 , Boston 3
Cleveland 5, Detroit 2
Toronto 5, Chicago White Sox 1
TSI(aS 4, Tampa Bay 2
Minnesota 4, Oakland 3
Seattte 15, Kansas City 7
Wednesday's Games
Oakland at Minnesota, 1:05 p.m.
Cleveland {Ric .Rodriguez 2·5) at
Detroit (Maroth 1-9). 1:05pM.
Seattle at Kansas Cliy, 2:05 p.m.
Boston at N.Y. YanKees, 7:05p.m.
Anaheim at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
ChlcagoWhiteSoxatToronta . 7:05
p.m.
Texas at Tampa Bay, 7:t5 p.m.
Thursday'&amp; Games
Texu at Baltimore, 7:05 ~.m .
Chicago White Sox at Toronto, 7.05
p.m.
Anaheim at Tampa Bay. 7:15p.m.
Seanle at Minnesota, 8:05p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 8:05p.m.

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-

ThUI'$day's Games

Also bidding adieu at the clay-court Grand
Slam were No. 6-seeded Andy Roddick and
three-time champion Monica Seles - who
might not be back . It looked as if defending
champion Albert Costa would lose, too, but
he constructed !he biggest comeback of his
career after being a game from defeat.
_
Roddick was considered capable of contending. He reached his first major semifinal
at the Australian Open, and he won a claycourt tournament in Austria last weekend.

Braves starter Shane
Reynolds got off to a mi serable start , but it could
from Page 81
hav e been much worse. He
allowed the first four hitters to reach base, includat . third and Sean Casey
ing a walk to Kearns with
grounded out with the
base s loaded to end the the base s loaded . Aaron
Boon e then popped to
inning.
Hodges, a minor league short , and Casey grounded
into a double play.
starter, is emerging as one
Wilh the Braves down 2 of ATlanta's most effective
0
,
Vinny Castilla led off
pitchers out of the bullpen.
He has a 2.13 ERA in 17 the bottom of the third with
hi s ninth homer, a drive to
ga mes.
Jefl
thai barely cleared the
"I ' m flashing back to
college at LSU when I . walL The third baseman
pitched three times out of has six homers in his last
the bullpen in the College 10 games.
In lhe fourTh, Reynolds
World Series ," Hodges
helped
himself at the plate
said . " It 's a pretty big role.
I like it. ... Anything they with a two-out, run- scori ng
throw my way. I' II be single that slipped under
ready to adapt and give it a the glove of short sto p
Felipe Lopez. It was the
try."
pitcher's
first hit in 22 atTh e Reds did not have a
hit after the third inning bats this season.
Reynolds
went
six
and finished .with only four
innings, strug gling with hi s
hits overall.
control
but limiting the
Cincinnati lost for the
first time in I 0 games this · Reds 10 four hits and two
seaso n when tied after runs . He walked five and
threw only 48 of 90 pitche s
eig ht innings.
for
strikes.
Brave s
closer
John
"I
made a couple of real
Smoltz worked a scoreless
ninth, once again pitching good pitches in tough situin a game won by the ations ," Reynolds said .
Braves. On Monday, his "After tbe first couple of
record streak of pitching in innings. I kind of got in a
73 straight games won by groove.''
Reds
starter
Jimmy
Atlanta ended with an 7-6,
Haynes
went
five
tnmngs
It-inning loss to the Red s.
after being activated from

Eaat Olvlsfon
W L Pet
35 17 .673
Atlanta
32 19 .627
MontreBI
27 24 .529
Philadelphia
New York
23 28 .45 1
Florida
23 29 .442
Centr•f Division
W L Pet
, Chk:ago
28 23 .549
St. Louis
26 24 .520
Houston
27 25 519
Cincinliati
25 27 .481
Plttaburgh
22 29 .431
Milwaukee
19 32 .373
.Waat Division
W L Pet
San Francisco 31 20 .608
Los.Angeles
30 21 .588
25 27 .481
Cotoredo
24 28 462
Arizona
SOn Diego
14 38 269

Cubo(Prlor 5·2) , 2:20p.m.
Montreal (L.Hernandez 4·2) at
Florida (Phelps l-0), 5:05 p.m., 1st
garn9
).lontroai (Day 4-2) al Flori da
' IT•Jora 0·3), DH
Cincinnati (Auslin 2·21 at Atlanta ·
(Otttt 6-3), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Astacio 3-1) at
PhUadelphia (Padilla 3·6), 7:05p.m.
Ho.u~on (J.Johnson 0·0) a1 St.
-Lo!Jia (Simontacchi 1-3), 8: 10p.m.
Loa Angeles (Droilort 4-3) at
Colorado (Chacon 6·2). 9:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Rusch 1·8) at San
Diego (Loewer 0-1), 10:05 p.m.
Arizona (Patter son 0·1) at San
. ~ranclsco (Moss 5-S)•, 10:15 p.m.

Chang, Seles, Roddick say
'au revoir' to French Open

If )IOU Cll'l rud this. ...

Jennifer Chadwell - 300 hurdles
]ermlfer Hayman :- 400 yd. dash
Brandon
Wfrry- 100 yd. dash
.,
-ZOO yd. daslt
Ross Holter- Shot p11t

National League

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'

Page 84 • The

Daily Sentiflel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Baseball's disci pi inarian
investigating Curt ·Schilling
NEW YORK-(AP)- Major league
baseball's disciplinarian is looki ng
into Curt Schilling's ,d estruction of a
ca mera used to evaluate umpires.
The Arizona pitcher smashed part of
the Questec Umpire Evaluation
System last Saturday night during a
loss to San Diego and said . umpires
have told him they are changing their
strike zones to match the evaluations
of the machine. ·
''!' m investigating it in the fullest,"
Bob Watson, baseball's vice president
of on-field operations, said Tuesday
night. " I haven ' t fini shed my investigation yet."
Watson won't complete hi s inquiry
until Thursday at the earliest.
"All I' ll say at this point is they ' re
better off in vestigating the Questec
sys tem instead of Curt Schilling ,"
players' association lawyer Gene Orza
said.
Larry Gibson;- a lawyer for the
World Umpires Association, said that
umpires had complained about the
operators of the system in Phoenix this
year. Gibson said a former Triple-A
umpire ran the system during Ar,izona
home games last year, but that different people .were operating Questec this

year

at

Bank

One · believe to be the Questec strike zone ."
Gibson said. "Umpires have to ld me
Alderson , they are passi ng a long to each ot her
Sandy
executive vice presi - what the Questec strike zone is from
dent of baseball ope raballpark r6 ballpark."
tions in the co mmi sQuestec is being used .at 13 of the 30
sioner' s office, said the
change in .operatnrs major leag ue ballparks this year. The
wasn 't ·significant', that WUA ha s filed a grievance, claim ing
only a working knowl- the computer is inaccurate and its
edge
of base ball and resu lts change depending on the operSchllllne
computers was neces- ator. Hearings are sc hed ul ed for Jul y
sary.
7. 21, 22 and 3 1, accordin g to Gilison .
"If you are a baseball fan and subSchilling could not be contac ted
scribe to AOL, you can IJperate the
system," Alderson said. "It's not about before Arizona's ga me at San
the sys.t em. It's not about the umpire s Francisco on Tuesday night.
"It 's unfair it 's o nl y in some ball - the umpires have never been more
accurate and more consistent a bout the parks, and umpires say they call th e
strike zone and the rule book than they game differently in th ose ballparks,"
are today. "
Diamondba c~s manager Bob Brenly
·"What this is about is about is Curt said. "It should be in all or none .
. Schil_ling wanting pit ches that are · When umpire s ope nl y admit they call
balls, called strikes. If that' s what he
the game differently using Questec, it
wants, he should go to the rules com. mittee. Otherwise, he should stop le ads to inconsistency. Obviously,
Curt has a personal interest in this.
whining and go about his bu sli\ess.''
Gibson said the strike zone fluctu- He 's trying to make a livin g o ut there.
ates, depending on the stadium.
and it makes a difference in the strike
"Umpires are changing their strike zone. I can sy mp athi ze with hi s pas.
.
zones to ac commodate what they sion.''
Ballpa~k .

Jack Nicklaus still keeps a close
watch on tournament he created
BY RusTY

MILlER

Associated Press

DUBLIN, Ohio (A P) Jack Nicklaus learned to
swi ng a club as a blond,
c hubby kid living in a
Columbu s suburb . He grew
up to become a champion ,
then built Muirfield Vi.Jlage
Go lf Club. home of the
Me morial Tournament, in
the area.
Even though he seldom
returns to hi s hometown and
has designed almost 300
oth er co ur ses around the
world, he still has a special
place in hi s heart for one of
hi s first layouts and· the
tournament he created.
The Memorial , which
beg in s Thursday, always
draws a glittering field. One
reaso n is that Nicklaus
wan ts the top players to feel
the same way he did whenever he came back.
"From day one here our
goal was to make sure that
we took care of the players
so that when they came
here , th ey felt like they were
at home. " Nicklau s said
Tuesday before playing in
the pro-am. "Their needs are
taken care of from the fami ly sta ndpoint, transportation
sta ndpo int ,
acco mmodations, child care." .
It might see m incongruous
for a multimillionaire athlete and corporate executive
to be co ncerned about having baby sitters available for
the. c hildren of Ernie Els or
Jespe r Parnevik. But times
have cha nged, and the

Memorial must compete long I always play the same
with the other tournaments ones," said Tway, who wi ll
on the PGA rotation to draw tee it up for the 19tl) tim e at
the best players.
the Me morial. " I kind of
"I had a couple of players nail down the place s I rea lly
saying, 'We select our tour- enjoy going, the go lf coursnaments based on the child es I really enjoy playing.
care,"' Nicklaus said with a And I really like thi s pl ace ."
gfin. "I said, 'I'm sorry. I
The Me mori al will draw
beg your pardon ?' ... It's eight of the top 10 and 39 of
different than when we the top SO players on the
played. We took care of our PGA Tour money li st. Every
own kids . One wife would tbp player has visited the
go to the golf course one tournament over its 28
day and the other wife years.
Past c hampion s
would go the next day. include Tiger Woods (three
They'd get to see nne or two 1 time s). H ale Irwin and
days. It doesn't happen that Nicklaus (twice each). Jim
Furyk, Greg Norm an, Tom
way now."
A winner of 18 major. Watson and Vijay Singh.
championships, Nicklaus
Thi s year, since there is no
didn't have to concern him- conflict with a · major
self with child care. His European tournament, many
wife, Barbara, watched over of,.the world 's top players
the five kids while Ja.:k are
al so
vi si tin g
the
traveled the globe first as a Me mori al.
Padra ig
player and then as a course !'!arrington, Carlos Franco,
architect.
Lee Westwood, Jose Maria
He didn't build his sc hed- Olazabal , Bernhard Langer
ule around ameniJies, for his and Sergio Garcia are in the
105-man
field,
which
family or himself.
"It was always around the includes 21 of the top 32 in
golf courses - the ones that the world rankings.
Some players make the
I felt were the greatest challenge," he said. "It was built stop in
New Orle ans
around the majors and then becau se of the food . Some
built in between with the make sure they play in Las
ones that I wanted to play Vegas beca use of the
that I felt were good golf nightlife and gambling.
courses and I would enjoy · Othe rs
favo r
Orl a ndo
playing ."
because of its proximi ty to
Bob Tway, who won the family entertainment.
Memorial in 1989, said he
Ni c klau s created
the
doesn ' t pick a tournament Memorial in the image of
becau se it hands out gift his favorite tournament, the
bags, massages, a limo or Maste rs. The Masters, startconcert tickets .
ed by Bobby Jones, has p'e r. ''I'm a creature of habit. petuated Jones' legacy.
I' ve been out here for so
The same will likely be

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

the case for the Memorial
and Nicklau s, long after the
many of the Golden Bear 's
reco rd s have bee n surpassed.
Nicklaus, now 63, recogni zes th at hi s days ·as a player are nearing an e nd. Still.
he will te e it up in his tournament - as he has in the
pre vio us 27 - and hope
that his ac hy bac k and his
arti fic ial hips ca n yield a
few more birdies.
As he said before las t
year's Memorial , · " I've
· played every one of I hem
and I do n' t wa nt .to sto p
now."

ACC to begin site
visits to Miami,
Syracuse, BC
BY

MARK LONG

Associated Press

DAVIE. Fla.
The
Univ'ers ity of M iam i is
moving closer to a decision · o n joini ng the
Coast
At la nti c
Co nference.
The sc hool 's executive
co mmittee of the board of
trustee s
will
meet
Wednesday to discuss
moving from the Big East
to the ACC. The university also will host the first
of three ACC site visi ts
Friday, the next step in a
like ly re locat io n that
co uld drastically change
the landsc ape of coll ege
athletics.
Miami's exec uti ve ~om­
mittee will eve ntu a ll v
vo te o n whethe r to join the
ACC, but universi ty officia ls don ' t expec t it before
the site visit.
Hurri canes
football
coac h Larry Coker sa id
Tuesday he ex pects a deci sion "sooner ra ther than
la te r.'' .
·:1 don' t know the timeline , but I thin k it will be
relatively soon if it does
come down," Coker said.
· Teams of ACC officials
including an
athl e ti c
directo r, facult y rer resen tot ive and conference
office official will trave l
to Miami on Thursd ay and
tour th e sc hool's facilities
Friday, according to a univers ity source. ,
They also are expected
at Bo slon College and
Syracuse early nex t week.
ACC pre sidents vo ted
May 16 to di sc uss expansion with th ose sc hoo ls,
mak in g plans to grow
from nine to 12 me mbers.
No formal in vi tat io ns
have been offered, and
site visits are required by
ACC bylaws.
Miami is reviewing th e
finan c ial impli cati o ns of

the move and negotiating
details that include divisiona l ali gnment and
implementation date .
Coker sa id he wou ld
rather be in an . opposit e
divisi on th an Florida State
- co nt radicting re ports
th at Miami wants to be in
the same division as the
Seminoles.
"Ideally. you ' d love to.
be opposite Florid a State,"
Coker said . "They 've been
down a little bit the last
couple years from their
standards, but that's not
"
go in g to last for long.
They ' re go ing to be a very
good te am."
If the Hurricanes and
Seminoles are in oppos ite
divi s io ns , they cou ld continue th eir ann ual riva lry,
but the loser would still be
abl e to win it s division,
advance to the co nfe rence
cham pi onship ga me and
ha ve a shot at earnin g an
aut o matic ·berth in the
·Bowl
C ha mpi o nship
Series . ..
If Miami a nd Florida
Sta te are in th e same division. the lose r of the ann ual rivalry ga me wo uld
need the win ner to drop
two league ga mes to have
a s hot at the confe rence
title.
The downside to being
in the opposi te divi sion is
that th e tea ms mi ght have
to play twice.
" I don't know of any body if you take a vote
that would want to play
Florida State twi ce,"
Coker said . "But for us to
be in the sa me side of the
bracket, I don't particularly li'ke that ."

Major League Baseball: AL
Giants win despite Rivera's Boss -bellows, Yank~s respond :

bizarre baserunning ·
sv THE ASsociATED PREss
Rivera bumped into third
Ruben Rivera got so lost baseman Alex Cintron and
on the bases , even fans at
dh
' f ic Bell Park tried to spe
Pac1
A
· ome.
nzon
a sh ortstop Tony
.
omt hi m in the right direc- Womack reco e d
d
P
uon .
v re
an
Hi s misadventure was threw 10 the ~late, and
Rivera was eas il y .tagged
blooper tape material, for out .
sure. And he could afford to
"1 don •1 know if 1 can
laug h about it later, too , sleep ton ight," Rivera said. ·
because his team won.
"In all my career, it's the
Despite the San Francisco first time it's happened. 1
Giants' 4-3 victory over know it's going to be on the
Arizona in 13 innings highli ght s.
·
Tuesday night , Ri vera was &lt;it
"It can happen to anybody.
a loss to explain what hap- I'm not sad, but I am sad
pened to him in the bottom that 1 tried to score and it
of the ninth.
· dian 't happen . Everything
"Whoa, that 's really kind was so quick, I didn ' t ha ve
of hard to say," he said.
time to think."
In other game s. Colo1ado
Giants manage r · Felipe
beat Los Angeles 7-3, Alou could only shake hi s
Atlanta edged Cincinnati 3- · head after \Vatching the
2, Houston defeated St. kookiness.
Loui s
7-4.
Pittsburgh
" I' ve got to li ste n to a lot
downed Chicago 9-4, New of versions of th e replay and
York beat Philadelphia 4-2 then I'll tell you how !feel
and Milwaukee topped San abo ut it," Alou said. " He
Diego 4-2. The Montreal at mi ssed second a cou pl e
Florida ga me was rained times."
out.
Ea rli er this month , Pac
It was 2-all in the ninth Bell was the site of another
when Giants pinch-hitter wacky play. Montreal mi sAndres Galarraga reached played a popup and mixed
on an error. That 's when up the infield fly rule , allowRivera came in to pinch-run ing a Giants runner to sneak
and the craziness began.
home . .
Rive ra was running as
The Giants won this one
Marqui s Grissom hit a high on another fly ball to right
fly that ri ght fielder David by Grissom. He hit a twoDellucci misjudged, and the out. two-run triple off the
wall.
ball landed for an error.
Ri vera had already made it
Ba1ry Bo nds was back in
to second base, but retreated the startin g lineup, four days
once he thou ght .the ball after hurtin g hi s right knee.
would be cau-ght. When it The Giants star was 0-tor-3
wasn't. he reve rsed course and walked three times.
again and took off for third.
Only one problem : While Astros 7, Cardinals 4
sc rambling, Rivera mi ssed
second base and wound up
Jeff Bagwe ll e nd ed the
on the infield grass .
longes t RBI drought of hi s
At that point , many fan s in caree r, doing it at Bu s-c h
the crowd were standin g, Stadium on hi s 35th birthpointing at the s kipped bag. day.
So Rivera went back,
The Hou ston star had gone
retou ched second and· head- 75 plate appeara nces withed for third. The relay from out driving in a run be fore
second base man Junior breaking the string with a
Spivey was in plenty of time single in the ninth. Bagwel l
to get Ri vera at third, but the had four hits.
ball sk ipped aw ay for ~ noth ­
Roo ki e Jeriom·e Robert son
beat St . Loui s for the s'econd
er error.
When the ball rolled loose, time in six days.

Mavs
from Page 81
A steal by Finley and a
fadeaway
12-footer by
Nash made it 92-86, and
Van Exe l hit two from the
line and then stole . Malik
Ro se's ensuing inbounds
pass . He was fouled on a 3point sho t and made all
three, makin g it 97-84 with
2:32 remaining.
It was no contest the rest
of the way as Dallas avoided its first fo ur-game losing
streak in more than ·three
years.
Van Exel finished .with 21
points , Nash had 14 and
Walt Williams 12.
Tim Duncan had 23
· ~point s and 15 rebounds for
the Spurs, shooting j ust 1for-2 from the field in the
fourt h.
Van Exel scored 12 points
in the fourth a nd Nash had
seve n, with Finley adding
four points a nd two steals.

.,

--------~~------------~-- ---

-

Mets 4, Phillies 2
AI L,e iter pitched SI·x
shutout
innmgs
and
Armando Benitez hung on to
preserve New York's win at
Veterans Stadi·um.
L .
. eiter gave up on 1y two
hits , but threw 136 pitches.
He struck out eight, walked .
six and we nt to a full count
on 16 batters.
Jim Thome hit an RBI single off Benitez with two outs
in the ninth . Philadelphia
load~d the bases' with . two
outs, but Mike Lie bertha!
popped out.
The Mets have won four
of six. The Phillies have lost
five of six.

Pirates 9, Cubs 4
Kenny Lofton extended
hi s hitting streak to 25
games and Aramis Ramirez
had four hits as Pittsburgh
won at Wrigley Field.
Eric Kar ro s and Corey
Patterson each hit two-run
homers for Chicago.
·

Brewers 4, Padres 2

Pinch-hitters Brady Clark
and Keith Ginter delivered
two -run singles with two
o uts' in the ninth to rally
Milwaukee at San Diego.
Padres starter Jake Peavy
blanked the Brewers on
three hits until the ninth .

Rockies 7, Dodgers 3
Larry Walker drove in fo ur
run s and Colorado stopped
Los Angeles' · I 0-game winnin g stre ak.
The Rockies scored five
times in the first inning at
Coors Field, keyed by
Walker's two-run · triple .
Walker hit a bases- loaded
si ngle in the seventh after
the Dodgers drew within 53.
Los Angeles ' wmmng
streak was its longest si nce
an !! -game string in 1993. ,

It was only a matter of all.
Blue Jays 5,
time
before
Geo.rge
Jason Giambi went 3-for-5
Steinbrenner had something with two RBis and Alfonso Wh.ite Sox 1
to say about his te am's poor Soriano also drove in two
play.
runs as New York matched
At Toronto, Roy Hallac(ay
Derek Jeter and the New its run total from the previ - won hi s sixth straight start
York Yankees responded ous four games and cut . by pitching hi s tirst complete
right away.
Boston's lead in the division game of the' season as the ·
Jeter got the slumping to I 1/2 games.
Blue Jays won their sixth in a
Yankees off to a quick start
Pettitte, given a rare early r&lt;iw.
•
Tuesday night, hittmg a lead- lead by New York's strugCarlos Delgado went 3off homer to send New York gling offense, allowed only for-3 with a walk and two·
to an 11 -3 victory over the two run s and five hits in 7 2- runs scored for the Blue.
Bostdn Red Sox that 3 innings to snap the longest Jays, who iied a franchi se .
snapped a five-game losing losing streak of his career,
record with their 19th win in .
skid.
"I felt like I won a World
The slump knocked the Series game tonight," he Mt{~lladay (6-2) allowed
Yankees out of first place in said. "We've been down."
Boston 's
No mar seven hits, striking our seven
the AL East and drew the ire
Garciaparra
went
0-for-4
to and walking one,
of the Boss, who said
Monday it was up to manag- end his hittin~ streak at 26
Bartolo
Colon
(5-4)
er Joe Torre to figure out games, best 111 the majors returned from a five-game
this season.
suspension and alloweq nine
how to turn things around.
hits in hi s fo urth complete
"It's strange how a team
game this season.
can look so bad when you Twins 4, Athletics 3
lose.and get whacked around
and then someone goes out
At Minneapolis, pinch-hit- Rangers 4,
and dominates a game and it ter Bobb&gt;; K1elty 's tl\ree-run
changes the whole outlook homer in the eighth rallied · Devil Rays 2
for a team," Torre said.
Minnesota over Oakland.
At St . Petersburg. Fla .,
Jeter was critical of his
Barry Zito (6-4) breezed
teammates as well, saying through the first seven Rafael Palmeiro hit hi s
they failed to "show up" in innings, holding the Twins to 503rd home run, and Mark
an 8-4 loss to. Boston on one hit and striking out I 0. Teixeira and Juan Gonzalez
Monday New York' s Minnesota hit only one ball also homered fo r Texas.
eighth straight defeat at out of the infield in that span
Palmei ro homered for th e
home.
third
time in four games, hitCorey Ko skie 's solo
He backed up his com- homer in the founh .
ting his J 3th in the . second
ments, sparking the Yankees
But Dustan Mohr doubled inning off Carlos Reyes (0-1 )
to their highest-scoring with one out in the eighth to mo ve within one of Hall
home · game of the season and Zito hit A.J . .Pierzy nski of Farner Eddie Murray for
with his I Oth career leadoff with a pitch. Kielty then conhomer off Bruce Chen (0-1) nected for his seve nth homer. 18th on the career list.
Reyes made hi s first major
and a bunt single that led to a
league
appearance in three
six-run eighth inning.
years - a break that includ"We needed it," Jeter said. · Mariners 15,
ed
a stint as a minor leag ue
"We've been playing terri- Royals 7
pitching coach.
bly. It feel s good while it
Ugueth Urbina earned his
At Kansas Ci ty, Mo.,
lasts. The intensity level was
good today. We have to carry Edgar Martinez homered 17th save.
The Devil Ray s desi gnated
twice and drove in five run s,
it uver until tomorrow."
In other AL games, it was: and Randy Winn haq a reli'eve r John · Rocker for
Minnesota 4, Oakland 3; career-hi gh fi vo. hits •Tor assignment.
Toronto 5, Chicago I ; Seattle Seattle.
15, Kansas City 7; Baltimoi&lt;!
The Mariners led 11-0 Orioles 12, Angels 4
12, Anaheim 4; Cleveland 5, after three innings and went
Detroit 2; and Texas 4, on to set season highs for
At Baltimore. the Orioles
runs and hits (20).
Tampa Bay 2.
New York's losing streak
Ben Davis homered and hit three homers off Aaron
was its longest since a seven- drove 111 four runs for Sele ( 1-3). and Sidne y
game skid late in the 2000 Seattle. Freddy Garcia (4-6) Ponson (6-3) pitched an
season, but Jeter hpd plenty got the win, 'giving up tWo eight-hitter.
The Ang els lost afte r
of help in ending it. Andy earned run s in seven innings.
spending
the morning at the
Chris George (5-4) lasted
Pettitte (5-5) snapped a fourWhi
te
House, . where
start losing streak, and Robin only I 1-3 innings. The
Ventura and Todd Zeile also Royals have dropped 20 of President Bush honored
homered for the Yankee s, 30 after beginning the season them for winning the 2002
who had lost 12 of IS over- 16-3.
World Series.

•

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
"""-=-..... NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
May 29th 1:00 pm
Commissioners
office County of
Meigs, Ohio
The purpose being
to authorize the
Issuance of not to
exceed
$2,800,000
adjustable
rate
Industrial
demand
developmenl revenue
refunding
bonds ,
series 2003 (The
Kroger Co.) of the
County of Meigs,
Ohio (The "Issuer")
the
procMds
of
which shall 118 loaned
to the Kroger Co. to
finance the refunding
and retiring of the
Issuer's outstanding
lnduatrlal developIng
bonds
(The
Kroger Co.) dated as
of October 1, 1991;
providing lor the
pledge of revanuea
lor ths payment of
ouch banda; author·lzlng a loan agrHment and trust Indenture appropriate lor
the protection and
dlapoaltton of ouch
revanuee and to fur. ther aacure , auch
bonde; authoriZing a
purchaae
bond
agrHmant, to regulatory agrHment and
offering circular and
other
outhorlzlng
action• In connection
wtth tho taauanca of
ouch bonda.
(5) 23, 28

with 5:48 left, and a dri ve
by Van Exe 1 made it a I 0. point game.
Raef LaFrentz picked up
his fifth foul defending
Duncan with 5:01 left in the
third. yet Nelson left him in
a while longer and he never
fouled out.
Finley continued to hit
tough shots and create
opportunities for hi s teammates, and the Mavs pulled
within six late in the third
before San Antonio took an
81-74 lead inlo the fourth.
William s, Nash and Van
Ex.el made the first . three
shots of the fo urth quarter
to pull the Mavs to 81-80,
and a 3-pointer by Nash
completed ' the comeback
and tied it at 83 with ·8:35
left.
A dunk by LaFrentz off a
pass from Nash gave Dall as
its firs t lead, 85-84 with
7:30 left, and Van Exel's
driving layup upped the
lead to three as the Ma vs
we re on their way .

Public Notice
Shtrlll's Sole
Roll Eotate .
.Caae II 02-CV-Ge2
U.S. Bonk, N.A. lka
Firat Star Bank, N.A.
clo u.s. Bank Home
Mortgage
Plaintiff
VI,
Ktvln M. Graham, at

al
Ollandonlt
Court Of Common
Plaea
Metgl County, Ohio
In pursuance of an

•

'

I

Major League Baseball: NL

ment revenue refund-

Both Bowen and Rose
fini shed the first quarter 3for-3 as the Spurs shot 65
percent, didn't commit a
turnover and led 30-23 . A
16-3 run ending with a 3pointer by Stephen Jackson
gave the Spurs !heir largest
lead, 48-29 .
. Nelson slowed the game
down the same way he did
in Game I by intentionally
fouling Bowen three times,
but Bowen made four of his
six free throws. If the strategy was intended solely to
take the Spurs ou! of their
flow, it worked.
But Dallas was only able
to climb back wiihin II by
halftime as the Spurs were
still shooting 61 percent
from the field .
San Antonio rebuilt its
lead hac~ to 17 with 7:47
left in the third, but the ·
Mavs wouldn't quit. Finley
came out of a timeout and
s tol~ a sideline inbounds
pass by David Robin son,
turning it into two free
throws to make it 70-59

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallysentinel.com

order of sate Ia me
directed from said
court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at
public auction at the
Courthouse on June
19, 2003 at10:00 a.m.
of said day, the following described real
estate:

See atlached 'Exhibit
A'

Prior instrument rferences: Volume 322
Page 705
Property
sddress:
'Route 2 355210
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Appraised
at
$35,000.00
Tenns of sale: Cash
Ralph E. Trussell
Sherrill,
Meigs.
County
Run dates: 5114103,
5121103 and 5128103
Sara M. Peteramann
Lerner.- sampaon I
Rothluu '
120 E. Fourth Street,
8th Floor
Ohio
Cincinnati,
. 45202
(513) 241-3100
OH Sup Ct f 0055402
Legal Deacrlptlon:
located In the County
of Malga, State of
Ohio:
Tracll: Situate In
Townahlp
of
Sallabury, County of
Meigs, and State of
Ohio:
Boglnnlng
where the woalltne of
Arnold and Marcelle
Snowden 67.25 acre
farm Intersects tho
boHom of 1 cliff of
rocks; thence South
20 degrMI Eaal 90.6
IHI to 1 1" Iron plpa
In line with the center
of the pruenl road
No. 186; thenca South
II degrees 12' E11t
528.4 feet with the
canter olaald road to
the canter ala bridge,
said brldga being hte
Southwest corner of
•aald 67.25 aero farm ;
thence North 73
degrMI Ell! 45 feet
along the center of
the crHk to the right
way line of new State
Highway
No.33;
thence
North
8

degrees 41 ' West 275 have heretofore benn
feet along said rlgth conveyed: 1.3 acres,
way line; thence more or less, conNorth 65 degrees 05' veyed
lo
Waller
West 86.3 feet to the Morris, at al., by Deed
bottom of a rock cliff; · of Record In Vloume
thence Southwesterly 237, Page ,311; 13.98
along Ihe bottom of acres, more or less,
said cliff to the place conveyed to the Stale
of beginning, con- of Ohio, by Deed Ql
taining 1.3 acres, Record In Volume
231, Page 709; and 19
more or ktss.
Sub]e&lt;;t to all legal acres, more or less,
ea-ements and leas- conveyed to Douglas
Little, at at., by Deed
es.
Parcel
IDI
14- of Record In Volume
01062.000
271 , page 473 ; all
Tract II: Situate In contained In Meigs
Section •11, Town 112, County
Deed
and
range
1!1 3, Records.
Salisbury Township, Also Granting to the
Meigs County, Ohio: granlees, their hairs
Beginning at the and ssstgnsl, all all
Northeaet corner of and gas under lh 19
exception
tho middle 113 of tho acre
South 112 of sold sac· referred to above.
tlon " •7; thence west Subjecl to all legal
1035 feat; thence easements end teasNorth
660
feet; es.
'
1Dt14·
thence weal 1379 feel Parcel
to the lana road ; 01386.000
thence South 880 feet Save and Except:
along aald . road ; Situated In Sallabury
thllnce from canter of Townahlp,
Malga
aald road, Eaat 892 County, In the Stole
leot; thence South 19 of Ohio, In oecllonl7,
degrHa 00' Eaat 2300 Townahlp 2N, range
feet along the E11t , 3w· of the Ohio
line of William and Company Purchaalt,
Buena
Gru11er's and being a parcel
land, to the canter of created out of the
said lane road on Kavln M. and Charyl
South aide ol bridge; L. Grahom property
thane• North 48-30' (Volume 322, page
E111 ·177.5; thance 705 Tract It Melga
North 10-00' Eaat County
DMd
224.1 feat; thence Recorda) boundod
North 18-35' Eaat 259 and deacrlbed 11 folleol; thance Nolh 54· lows:
30' Eaat 162 feat; Commencing at the
thance Noth 12-15' point of beginning of
Ellt
535
feat; a 1.30 acre tract of
· thenceNolh 54030' land owned by Kevin
Eaai 239 leo!; thence M.
Graham
and
Noth 68-00' East Cheryl L. Graham and
274.9 feet; · thence described In Volume
North 730 feet to the 322, Page 705 of the
place of beglnn!ng. Meigs County Deed
containing 87 and. Records 11 Tract I,
251100 acres, moe or said point of com·
mencement
alao
Ian.
Excepting the cool being on the eaat
underlying the above boundary of a 28-12
premtaes and the acre tract formerly
rlghl Io mine lhe owned by .William
Grueaar 11 recorded
same.
Excepting
and In Volume 329, Page
Reeervlng , however, 805 ·of the Meigs
lhe following parcels County
Deed
of real estate which Recorda, aald 29.12

~

........

~ ....
11:.

te&gt; -...c_.-..:._..,..

acre tract now being right of way easeowned
by
Helen ment:
Blackston as record· An easement for right '
ed In Volume f2, Page of way purposes
129 of the Meigs across a strip of land
County
Official · twenty feet In width,
said
Records; .
strip
being
Thence along .the bounded on Its westeaat boundary of aald erly end by the cen28.12 acre tract North terline of Blake Hill
09 degrees 41 min- Road
. (Salisbury
utes 03 seconds West Township Road 186),
679.14 IHIIO an Iron being bounded on Its
pin sal by this survey easterly end by the
at .the point of begin- east boundary of a
ning of the real estate 28.12 acre tract fordescribed herein;
merly owned
by
Thence along a new Wlllalm Grueser as
parcel boundary fol- recorded In Volume
lowing three couraee: 329, Page 805 of the
1) South 85 Degraee Meigs County Deed
40
r,llnutes · 14 Records and now
Helen
Seconds East 290.34 owned by
feet to In Iron pin set Blackston as record·
by this survey;
eel In Volume 12, Page
2) North 08 degrees 129, of the Meigs
40 minutes 41 Hc- County
Official
onds Waat274.02 feet Records, said twenty
to an Iron pin 111 by· foot otrlp being oltuthla Iurvey;
aled ten feet on either
3) North 88 clegraea . aide of a centerline
18 mlnutea 38 ••c- wtlh Ita point of
onde 292.25 feet to an beginning being on
Iron pin ut by thta the eaat boundary of
aurvoy on the e11t aetd 28.12 acre troct
boundary of
the at a dlllanca of
aloremantloned 28.12 m.75 feet from the
acre'tract, from which point .of beginning at
Ihe northaut corner 1 1.30 acre tract of
of aald 28.12 aero land cleecrlbed 11
tract blara North 09 Tract I In Volume 322, ·
dagr•• 41 mt11utaa Page 705 altha Malga
03 IICOnda Will County
D11d
737.941MI;
Recorda, utd canterThanca along tha line thence running
tall boundary of aold olong the following
28.12 acre Iract South alx couraoe to the
09 degrMI 41 min- centorllno of uld
ute• 03 oeconda Eoat Blake Hill Road:
261.31 IHI to the 1) on a tangent North
point of beginning, .72 dogrMa 21 mlncontolnlng
1.749 utea 00 oeconda Weal
acre1.
56.50 feet;
Sub}act to all legal 2) on 1 curve to tho
Humenta.
loft of rodlua 159.43
The above cleacrlp- feet, length 83.10 IMt
tlon woe made lnec- and chord North 87
cordance with an ace· degrMI 18 mlnUIII
lull survey conduct· 54 IICOnda W111
eel byf Jomaa S-art 82.18 feet;
PS 7,428 In January 3)on a hlngent South
18 and 19, 1996. n degrM8 47 .mtnBearing• era baaod utoe 11 aeconda Woet
on the canterltne of 51.01 feet;
U.S. Route 33 and are 4) on a curve to the
lntondod only to right of radlue 174.02
oxprae ong~ter mee- INt. length 134.77
•urment.
feel and chord North
Alao conveylid Ia the 80 degr•• 01 mlnfollowing deacrlbld utea 34 11eonda W11t

a:.aac:

l'o.l&lt;»t.•~.:!! """'"

£:'»~··"~-~-=-

• .,.,

~·~·--~

['.1 ~ -..-•J-P~- s­

••:• ~---··- .--&gt;··-=-·--

131.431eet;
lhe above collalerel
GRAND
PRIX
5] on a tangent North
p~or lo sale. Further,
1G2WJ14TXNF24776
57 degrees 50 min- The Farmers Bank 3
utes 20 seconds West · and
Savings
Company reserves · The Farmers· Bank
29.55~1;
6) thence south 62
the right Io reject any and .
Savings
degrees 44 minutes
Compimy, Pomeroy,
or all bids submitted.
30 seconds West 8.00
The
above Ohio, re serves the
described collateral rlghl to bid at this
feet to the center of
Blake
will be sold " as is· sale, and to withdraw
Hill
Road
(Salisbury Township
where is." , with no
the above collateral
Road 186) at a point expressed or Implied prior to sale. Further,
warranty given.
The Farmers Bank
815.21 feet right of
For further infor- and
U.S. Route 33 centerSavings
line station 421 + mation, or for an
Company reserves
32.82
to the right to reject any
appolntmenl
Subject to all legal
inspect
collateral , or all bids submitted.
easements.
prior to -sate data con·
The above descrip- tact
Cyndle The above described
tion was made In
Rodriguez at 992- collateral will be sold
accordanca with an
"as ls·where Is ", with
2136.
actual survey con· (5) 28, 29, 30 3TC
no expressed or
dueled by James
implied
warranty
Stewart PS 7426 on
given.
January 18 and 19,
Public Notice
1996. Bearings are
For further Informabaaail on the centerPUBLIC NOTICE
tion, or for an
line of U.S. Route 33 ,
The annual report appointment
to
and are Intended only
Form 990 PF for the · Inspect
collateral,
to express angular
Kibble· Foundation, prior to sale date con·
measurement
Cyndle
Barnard V. Fultz, lac!
Auditoro Parcal No. Trustee Is available Rodriguez at 992·
1~1386 . 0001
lor public lnapactlon 2136 .
at Bernard V. Fultz
(5) 14;21' 28
Law Office, 111·1/2
Wtal Second Street,
Public Notice
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
during regular busl·
•
PUBLIC NOTICE
neaa houra for a pert·
NOTICE lo hereby
ad of lBO daya aubsegiven
that
on
quent to publication
Saturday, May 31 , olthla notice .
2003, at 10:00 a.m., a (5) 19, 20, 21, 22, 23,
public aa!e . will be
27, 28, 29, 30, (8) 2, 3,
4,
hold at 211 West
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, In tha
parking lot of The
Public Notice
Farmera Bank and
Savtnga Company. PUBLIC NOnCE
The Farmers Bank
Savlnga
and
NOTICEa Ia hareby
Company Ia selling
given
that
on
for caah In hand or
Saturday, May 31 ,
certified check the
2003, at 10:00 a.m., a
following collateral: · pubttc aale will be
1
f995
PONTIAC
held . at 211 Weal
GRAND
AM
Second
Street,
lG2NE15M5SM61015
Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
9
parking lot of The
2003 DODGE RAM
Farmer• Bank and
2
5
0
0 Savings Company.
3D7KU28CX3G77491
The Farmara Bank
6
Savings
and
The Farinarw Bank Company Ia selling
Savlnga lor caah In hand or
and
Company, Pomeroy, certified check the
Ohio, reaervoa the
following collateral:
right to bid at thla
uta, and to withdraw
1992
PONTIAC

FOR
EVERYONE

CAN BE

FOUND IN

THE

NEWSPAPER

••

'

�May 28, 2003

2003
I \10 1...,11'1' 11 1"
.\1 1\1 ... 11111,

rm

CLASS IF I'E D

ltaUer space for rent $125.
FARM
per/month At 2, 6 miles --,
f.Qulfrl.tENT
North of Point Pleasant. ·---""iiiiiiiii-..,J
(304)895·3094
For Sate 1972 Diesel 135
Massie Ferguson with 2yr
Tra iler space tor rent in old Bush hog. $5,500. FIRM.
Middleport, (740)992·5858
882·20 99 01 aft er 1pm. 8822875

Melp County, OH

"'r.~o-·H•~----·_.~I ..,r__L.1VE.~.r oc-:. .·..,J
For Sale: Reco nditioned
washers, dryers and refrigerators.
Th ompsons
Appli anc e.· 34 07 Jackson
Avenue, (304)675-7388.

c.,nb County, OH

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

To

Place
Your
Ad •••

m:rtbune

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

r~ I
c:1Beer Carry Out perm it

fer sale. Chester Township,
~elgs County, send letters
af interest to: The Dally
Ser1tiinel.l PO Box 729 -20,

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mondey..Prlday for lneertlon

All Display : l:Z Noon :Z
Buelneea Days Prior To

In Next Day•a Pepe·r

Publlc:etlon

&gt;urldiiY In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Sunday• Paper

• Start Your Adl With A Keyword• Include Complete

Delcrtptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlonl

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

• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Nee4fed
, • Adl Should Run 7 D.ys

~ARDSAU:-

ro

Welding eq=elder,
ory and ace tanks, torch,drill press, grinder, sand
blaster, large tool box: full of
tools Kessel Produce &amp; Flea
Market Spring Valley 28th·
301h 8-5

JIElpWANJ'ED

A .

I~ll.io_Jiap
__

Motobolllm
Bratkthroughl I lost 40
'Pounds in 2 months.
Ephedra Free . 1·888-546·
7207

·-·G·IVEA-·WA
·Y-· e~y~

r

W_ANJ'ED
__

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

lbuWANIID

I

Truck Drtvera, Im mediate
hire. class A COL required,
axcellont pay, experience
required. Eam up to $1 ,000.
per wnk.Call 304-6754005
11':"-~~----,
,t41
.
BUSINESi

r ~AL
Stanley and Son, Inc.
Auction . Real Estate,
Appraisal. Serving you ·
since 1960· 3 Generations.
t -888-BIO-IT·UP. Henry M.
Stanley. IIICAI·AAAE

New 14 wide only $799
down and only $ 157.93 per
month. Call Nikki 740-3857671 .
New 2003 Doublewide. 3 BA

28

I

r"ll

If'

Do

r10

- - - -+ --'--

IUR SALE

r--1.

E

vED

I

D I, I I' .

:====~M
-~~..:.T....:.r-R..:E:..,·,.:B~H-1'1 "',~= I I j ·I'

.,

N

a

L K y E , ~ -- - e
O

I: .I I I I

~~PR~IN~T~N"'UUMruBf~ROtfO~-;r-T:r-r.~r.-.-.-,~~-.~

&gt;
w

a

Beaulltut River View Ideal
For 1 Or 2 People , ·
References , D&amp;po sit, No
Pels , Foster Trailer Park ,
740-441-0181 .
Mabile home for rent. nq
pets (740)992 _58 58

Fa1.
BLOCK
BURN
Cravings, and BooST
Energy Like
You Have
Never EXperienced.
WEIGHT· LOSS
REVOLUTION
New product launch OCtober
23. 2002 . Call Tracy at
(740)44t · t982

m::~·;...;~~;,;;,;,-...,

r..,
__

Wanted to rent- Pas ture in
Gallia Co. with good fences ·
&amp; water
Phone: Jim

1br. Cottage in Gallipolis .
$250. month + Deposit. 4462468

2 bedroom. References &amp;
Deposit . No Pets. (304)6755t62
2 br. a'pt. In Gallipolis
$425.00 a mon . (740)44t ·
t322
Apartment Available Now.
RiverBend Place, New
Haven, WV now accepting
applications for HUD-subsi·
dized , 1 bedroac:n apartment. Ulilities included Call
(304 )882-3121 Apartment
available for qualified senior/disabled person. EHO
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES . I&lt;T JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $297 to $383."
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

r

12:00 noon to 4 :00pm .

IOfmance bloodlines, Main e

Reserve tables by May 27,

Chi- Angus shOw bulls.
Slate Run Farm. Jackson,
OH. (740)286-5395

Nice
Two
• Bedroom
Apartments, Large rooms,
tully equlped kitchen , centrill
heating/cooling,
washer/
Dryer hookup. (304)882·
2523
Now Taking Appli cati ons35
West 2
Bedroom
Townhouse
Apartments
Includes Water • Sewage'
Trash, $350/Mo., 740. 446:
0008.
Tara

Townhouse
Apart":~e1'11s, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA , 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpe ted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. NO
Pets, Lease Plus Security
Deposit Requ ired , Oa~s:
740·446·3481 ; Evenings:
740-367-()502 .
TWin Rivers Tower Is accept· ·
ing applications tor .waiting
list for Hud-subs1zed , 1· br,
apartment , ca ll 675·6679
EHO

"

r10

&amp; table

Door prizes

Star Mill Park Basket Bingo

Al!I'Oi

5, 6 pm

June

FOR SALE

·--i.iiillliiii"""_.l

Pomuay, Ohio, 45769
1-740-992-7D07
Hours 1Q.I pm
Clo•ltd lund•y•

Stop &amp; Compare

1/u.t~~
High&amp; Dry

21 Games- $20

$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas,
chevys ,
etc!
carsl1ruclcs from $500. For
listings 1·800· 719·3001 ext
390 t

-

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
992-5776

Special l:f
THERAPEmC
MISUSE
,~

Self-Storage

Syracuse Now Open
All Flats $6.95

mix or march
10 in. Hi.lnging baskets
$5 .95 &amp; $9.95 .
12 in. Hanging Baske ts

Easter &amp; Mothers Day
Buy 1 Gift Certificate,

$ 11.95

Get lnd Free!
Heather A. Fry L.M.T.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

6 iri. Perennials S2.25,
4 in . pots $1.00 - $1. 25
. 8 in &amp; 10 in . Clay pots
&amp; co mh inationion plant·

740-992-5379
Offer

Special Games - 50/50 Drawing
Bicentennial
i

~,:ood ttlru

,

5- 11 ·03

Oren Mon· Sat 9-5
Closed Sunda

Septic Systems ,

PC DOCTOR

Footers and

- - - -- - - 1985 Camaro has 1979, 350
engine. Needs wo rk. $4 ,000
Firm. (304)n3·5873

Concrete ,

Woodyards Mini Mall

1987 Dodge van, riding lawn
mower caU 256-1102 ask for
Junior
-------1987
Pontiac
Fiero,
Burgand'y, in good cond .
$2000. OBO 304-458·255t

85 Vine St. - Gallipolis

Excavation , Utilities,

Sat. May 31st- 6 :30 pm

Back hoe and

&amp;

Doze r, Ponds.

We Make House Calls

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

992-7953
591-7002
591-4641

www.wvpcdr.com
doc:torOwv dr.cam

Also visit our furniture

Flea &amp; Craft
Sale
American Legion
Annex

1994 Ford Thunderbird LX
V-8, auto., leather, loaded.
Ne w Daytona GT. radial
tires . Excellent condition .
99,000 miles. $5000,00 obo
740- 992-2784

Thursd~y

r

TRUCKS
S

--

FOR ALE

I

iri:,;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

HOME

IMPRo•=~~0
1984 Ford 1 ton truck, 15 ~--iiiiiiomiiii·tiii~"iii
•
toot lighted box with roll up
door. V-8, automatic $2000
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
call 446 -42~ or 446·0205
Unconditional lifeti me guar1988 Dodge Ram DtO pick· antee. Local references furup, VB, auto, air, runs good nished. Established 1975.
$t500 080 446-2444
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870 , Rogers Basement
1988 s- ~0 2.5 4 cylinder 5 Waterproofing.
speed. New Outlaw II rims
witl"l neW Daytona GT radial
ti.res. Sharp truck. $1500,00 - - - - - - - obo. 740·992·2784
C&amp;C
General
Home
~·
Maintenance- Palnrlng, vinyl
89 KW T600 400 Cummins siding , carpentry, doors,
w/JaKe. 90 Ravens Magnum windows. baths, mobile
45tt wlside Kit &amp; 3 boxes &amp;
home repair and more. For
equipment. $20,000 . 740- free estimate call Chet. 740709-()336
992.6323'

92 Chevy Extended Cab
Silverad o pacKage . Engine
repl aced '02 . Looks and runs
good. $5.000. 675-5369

VANS &amp;

~---4-iiooiWDs
___,..l
~

Get AJump
on

SAVINGS
···.

87 Blazer $3800. 95,000
orig inal miles. 6cyl. excellent
shape , new paint, mech .
SOl)l'\d . Will trade lor 4
wneeler of equal va lue. Call
r304) 675- t833

flO

i

CAMPEHS&amp;

I

Shop the
Classifieds!

Bucket Truck

Snapper

Condor Street

Dean HlU

New &amp;Used
475 South Ch1UCh St.
.Ripley, WV 25271

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975
lAwn and Garden Equipment is our
business, not our sideline

' l-800-822-o417

----l

"W.Y's # 1 Chevy.

• Lawn Mowers

&amp;

Ponttac, Butck,

Olds

C ustom Van Dealer"

• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws

Bl

• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters

CANCER CHECK

• Tillers • Edgers

BUilDERS IDC.

• Go Karts • Mini

New Homes • Vinyl

Bikes

I S i 1l in~ • New GaJraoesl

'

• Replacement
Roofing

JIM'S SMALL

Windows •

ENGINE REPAIR

COMMERCIAL and

32 t 19 Welsh'town Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-2432

740-992-7599

RESIDENTIAL

r~~~~-~~~~;::;::;;::;::;:;:::::;::~

SUE's GREENHOUSE
Beaaing, Vegetable Et Sweet
Potato Plants,
4"' annuals Et Perennials
Fruit Et Flowering Trees Et
Shrubs
(Rhoaoaenarons Er
•ow " Azaleas)
, ..,.
weft daylight
•
II
I
S
a on a e
,•••,.,
1·740·949·2115

-----

RemovGI • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Top •

(304) 675-5282

Morning Star Road - C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

A!JTU PARTS &amp;

LIVELY's AUTO SALEs
MaroR HOMFJ&gt; .
20 Cars For Sa le, !rom "--iii.iiiiliioiiiiiiiiiiiilo.-1
INSI'KUMENTS
$350.00 to $t ,600.00. Open Double Axle Travel Trailer
piano,
$50, M-F 9 to 5, Sat. 9 to 3, coachmen 21ft. $2500.
Upri gl"lt
Closed Sun. Call: 388·9303. (304) 576-999 1
(740)992-5tt5

204

WE REPAIR

r•o

Tree Service

SALES &amp; SERVICE
I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaro und

\ IR\HI...,

JONES'

GRAVELY TRACTOR

29th - Friday 301h

9:00- ON

750 East State Streel Phone (7•10)!59!1~m1
Athens, Ohio

'k

Gravely

Middleport, OH

r

er ~ $4 . 50&amp;$7 . 95

Also nuw• accepting
mosl insurance

DURO·LAST
ROOFING
Flat R oof
SpecialistsCommercial and
Residential
Saves on Cooling.
M e ta l a nd Mobile
home roofs- No
Problem. 15-Year
Guarantee
992-7953
591-4641
591-7002

Finally... Money paid ro J:Q!.1. when cancer
You choose the amount up to $50,000!

Every Thursday &amp;

strikes.

Pays in addition to other insurance.

Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Th,ursday

You· use the money however you like.
Cancer will strike when you least expect it.
It will leave you and your family financially
strapped. CANCER CH EC K ,will be
the re when yo u need i~.
Call now to reserve )lnl[ check.

of every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
GetS FREE

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
Box 189 MIDDLEPORT. OH 45760

740-843-5264

Pd I mo

Advertise
in this
space for 525
per month.

I
I

II

HOWARD l.
WRITESEl
dOOFIIG

29670 Bashan Road

Construction,

Racine. Ohio
45771

Remodallng,

General

New

Le ~

'. .

:.~:ftl,i~
.g~
~~ -1''
Hours

Dozer Work.
• Roofing.

HOME CREEK
ENT ., INC.

992-7953

Sunset Home
Construction

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,

&amp;

More

I GmER

•Frn Ellhnltel* -

949-1485 '

me :lc 11 f·:.r y·:c'

Backhoe and

740-949-2217

Siding, Decks, Kltchans, Drywall

*:'dEIMLISS
:TEIIIICE

" "''"

the PAIN
out of PAINTING'

Contracting

Garagas, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
I

.

Ta~e

Hill 's Self
Storage

7:00AM ·8:00PM
1114/ 1 mo. pd

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411
Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

• Room Addltlono I
Remodeling
• Ntw G1ragea
• Electrical I Plumbing
• Rooting Guttera
• VInyl Siding 6 Painting
• Petlo and Parch Declw

a:

Free Estimates
YOUNG Ill
992-62t5

V. C.

Pom~,Oh~

!i/9·814

'

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

878-2417 or 448-2112
Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

NELSON'S LAWN
CARE
Residential •
Commercial Mowing
• Mulching • Edging
• Fertilizati on • Leaf
Removal • Pruning
• Landscape
Maintena~ce Spring
and Fa ll cleanup

{7 40) 985-9829
{740) 591-3891

FLU MARKET
$7.50 per
space
at
Maplewood lake
State Route 124
Between Racine &amp;
Syracuse, Ohio

June 6-7
· Campsite available
with full hookups

Call 949-2734

Seamless Gutter
Services

Owner Operated
David Rhodu &amp; Norma Rhod~s

Office (740) 985-3511
985-3622

• Driveways • Tennis Cdurts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
WV

Contractors lie. #003506

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
[10'x10' 610'x20')

(740) 992-3194

992-6635

No Seams
• No Leah
1 Free Estimates
1

Home

,.

992-5479

~~ Spring 1~

740-992-5232

Middleport Legion

Jeff Warner Ins.

J619B Pra ch Fork R.4.

740-992-1611

'

95 Mazda MX3 hatchback , Old cars lor sale . part_s,
Rotweiler puppies for sale 88,000 miles, new .lights &amp; repair, restore. 304·458·
·
moth er · and father on prem- tires, excellent condition. 1754 or 304·458·1831
$4750 call446·8222
ISes call288- 1636

r

Neu• llrtnl Added J.i.1ot'Miy

prizes

RACO Food Drive
Racine, Monday
June 2, 8 to 1 pm
Corner of 3rd &amp; Pearl Sts.

-

M IJ!&gt;lCAL

Remodeling

. 2003 by calling 992-3867

·Cellular

Managagamant
A vuie-ty 11f nmouOiK"
cloth ina and hun1in~~:
tquipmtnt

.

• Complete

• • Saturday, May 31, 2003

Reg. Angus bulls- Top per-

L--AiOiiCCIX'iOiiii-iiiRIISiiii''-,1

t

• Garages

card party and salad luncfieon

BlocK , brick , · sewer pipes, or and ex.terior, brand new
windows, lintels, etc. Claude tires, $2000 firm 388-8506
Budget Prlead
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
95 Hyundai Scoop 5 speed
Tranamlaalona,
ALL
Cell740-245·5 121 .
AJC, 73 ,000 miles, runs typea, 24S-5677 or 643good, $2500 OBO 44 t · t083 0814.

Furnished Efficiency-3
rooms and bath, all utilities
paid, downs tairs, $285.00
9.19-Second Ave. 446·3945
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
roo m apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $278·$348. Call 74()-.
992·5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.

• Neyv Homes

invites all card players to a

Cummings (304)675-6248

1995 Monte Carlo, Green,
black
leather,
spoiler.
loaded, keyless enlry, 116k.
Ex:cellent condition. $4.400.
Central Cooling Syslems. (740)446·2310
new .&amp; used, as low as
$85 0.00
InStalled
May 1995 Pontiac Grand Am
Special ! (740)446·6308
SE vs AC c ·
·1
.
;
; ru1se ; lit;
JET
automatic : cassene; red
AERATION MOTORS
72,000k. $2500. 740·379·
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In _27
_4_ 8 _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
SIJ0.537·9528 .
1998 Kia Sophea , 4 de.
auto, air, arnlfm CD, 83.000
miles, (740)742-2483
NEW AND USED STEEL - - - - - - - Steel Beam~. PipA Rebar 2001 Alero 2d. 46K $5,995,
Fo r
Concrete.
Ang le. 1998 Malibu 62K, $5 ,395.,
Channel, Fl.at Bar. Steel 1996 Cavalier 96K $2,995..
Grating
For
Drains, 17 otllers in stock sta rting at
Driveways &amp; WalKways. L&amp;L $1 ,495 . COOK MOTORS .
Sc tap Metals Open Monday. 7
_4
_1&gt;-44
-'H" -1-03_ _ __
TueSday. Wednesday &amp;
66 GTO , 2 dr, hard top, auto,
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed
no engine or transmission ,
Sa1urday
&amp;
Thursday,
many new parts. restoration
Sunday. (740)446-7300 ·
started , needs fin ished ,
$6,000 368·8506
Office Furniture
New, scratch &amp; Dent.
Pontiac
Catalina ,
Save 70%. t -8Q0.527·4662 73
400/400,
many
new
parts,
Argonaut 519 Bridge Street,
Ouyandotte/Huntington. MI F 73k , asking $1500 in very
good shape, 2 dr hard top
Wolff Tanning beds
388-8506
l&lt;llortable .Con,lonenl
------'-Tan At Home
84 Silverado, K-10, 8 h. bed,
Payments from $25/montl"l lltted, new 33 in. tires, bl ack,
FREE Color Catalog
auto, some accessories,
Call Today 1·800·842·1305 130k miles, 305, runs
www.np.etstan .com
strong , 4wd $3000 388 1!:~--::-----, 8506
B UIWING
- -- - - - - SUI'PI.IES
·
92 Olds Cutlass Supreme, 4
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,. door, run~ good, good interi·

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
menls, lurnished and unlurnished . security deposit
required , no pets, 740-99222 18.

comesl1rs~

Pomeroy, Ohio

1991 Buick Century auto:
AC : Cruise: Tilt ; cassette ;
Btt. Bass-Boat $500. Couch new tires. 87,000; very
&amp; Chair set $60 . Coffee table clean . $2 ,000. 740-379·
&amp;
end
tables.. -$30. 2748
(304)675-4352

t ~=N&lt;~ I .IUR·F·~-fS--""

I
·--·IUiiRiiiiSiiiALEiiiii•• .

n.~ ·unttJ~

Buy or sell. Riverine
Ant iques, 1124 East Main
on SR t 24 E. Pomeroy, 740·
992·2526. Russ Moore,

r M~s~IES It

r

InO

·~~ ~·

___

I

I

~

i •

POUCIES: Ohio Velley Publllhlng reltfYII the right to edit, rel-et, 01 ctncel any ad 1t 1ny time. Errors must~ reported on the fir.t
Tribune-Sentinel-Register will be re~ponalble tor no mer. than the coal of the IJ*:I occupied by the error 1nd ontv the flfet lntertlon.
II not
tny Ieee or tXPiftM that rttullt from the publtcatlon or omislfon of en tdverfiHmtnt. CGITection will be mtdeln the first available edition. • Bo•
1n ttw1,-1 confldlnt ..l. • Current rttt CIFd tppllll. • All rttlltlltt tdvtr11temtntttrl tubjtct to the Ftdtrtl F1lr Houtlng Act of 1968. • Thlt M¥11pllpe!'l
tcnpla ont,. help WMttd ldt mMtlng EOE tt.ndlrdt. We will not knowingly tccept any tdvertlsln'il in violation of the ltw.

,..~II'm

Comfort Air is now accepting
applications for installers
and service technicians, ·
experience preferred. but
will train. Apply at Comlort
Air 1160 Jackso n Pike in
Spring Valley Plaza
_:__:_ _:__ _ _ _ _
Concrete mixer drivers
needed at our Columbus
plant. Class B COL required,
contact Arrow Concrete
74()-446- 1594

Sunday Dleplay: 1:00 p.m.

Wh irlpool washer $95.00,
GE Dryer $95 .00. Frigidaire
Electric Range $95.00.
Hotpoint
Refrigerato r
$95.00, Sunray Gas Range
$150 .00, Portable Washer
$125.00, Washer &amp; Dryer
Sets $300.00 , Small Chest
Freezer $150 .00 Skaggs
Appliances 446·7398

WILSON'
ROBERT
,\lUI\' SI'IU'I.I S
BISSELl
CINSTRUCDON
Under New
Wh8fl'l th8 customer

326 East Main St.

r

·T hureday for Sunday•

3

r

Women

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Yearling BlacK limousin bull ,
. (;;hapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
(740)992-7888
(740) 446-7444 t-877-8309162. Free Estimates, Easy
HAY&amp;
financing , 90 days same as
GRAIN
cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Drive- a- little save alot .
Good quality straw. Volume
Used Furnitu re Store 130 discolUlt &amp; delivery availBulaville Pike Gallipolis OH able. Heavy square bales.
446·4782. Good buys. $2.85 per bale. (304)675·
Check us out~ Hrs 10-4 5724

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyreglster.com

All retl estate advertising
&amp; 2 Bath. Only S1695 down
Access to a Computer?
TURNED DOWN oN
In this newspaper Ia
an d &amp;295/mo. 1-800·691 Earn $450-$1500 monthly
SOCIAL SECURITY JSSI?
tubject to the Federel
part·lin]e or $ 2,000 .54 ,500
l'RAINING
6777
Unless We Win!
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
full-time, 1·800·5B5•0760 or
·--oliiiiiiiiiii-_.1 No Fee
1--888-582-3345
which makel it Illegal to
www.OurAnsw~r.
com
1
Gallipolis Career College
advertise "any
- - - - - - - - '·
(Careers Close To Home)
preference. limitation or
Free S1. Berncird/Greal May 30-31, St. Rt .7, 3 miles
Addressers wanted lmmedi·
Call Today! 740·446-4367,
dlacrlinlnatlon based on
Gane puppies. (740)992· from At. 7, baby girls 0-3T,
Rio Grande area . .2400
ateiYt No expanence neces· Cosmetologist
1~800-2 14·0452
r10
HOMES
race, color, religion, HI{
baby
boys
0-12mo,
needed
00t7
sq.ft., Office/ Com mercial
sary_
Work
at
home
.
Call
•
men/women ·clothes, Little
fuiVparl time pd. vacation, www.gallipollscareercollege.com
temlllal atatua or nttlonal
Building for Rent/ Lease.
~
, origin, or any Intention to
We are three cute . litter Tykes toys, Powj3'r Wheels, (405)447-6397
free CE hrs.Fantastic Sams ft!II:"A;:eijjg.,:•:,::90-0~5~·,:;t2 7,;:
Plenty off parking . (740)245·
4~B.....,
.
make any such
00
(740)448-7267
t[ained ltittens approximate- baby bed walkers twin size
5747
170 ••·""-- •. .._,.,..._ ~ I (3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
preference, limitation or
ly 8 wks. old in need of a beds, disl"les, appliances,
lY~IU"J
for immediate possession all
discrimination,"
Qood home, Call (740)992- wasl"lers, 15' boat, furniture, CHECK US OUTI Help wa'nted ca rlnQ for 1he 1
within 15 min. of downtown
..
elderly, Darst Group Home.
much more.
76.16 to adopi us.
Gallipolis. Rates as low as
Thla newapaper will not
now paying minimum wage, 4-6ftx20f1. corrugated steel %. ( o)446-3 a.
At tnfoCision we pay
knowingly accept
6
74
21
YAHDSAU:·
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am- culverts $500.00 each L&amp;L ------,--~
advertlaements tor real
$8
an houri
3 acres Ready to bu ild.
5pm, 3pm·11 pm, 11 pm- Scrap Metals 446·7300
Pr.I'LF.A.wrr
160 Park Drive, 2 story, 3
estate which lsln
Mason
Co.
520.000.
7am. call \40-992-5023.
bedrooms, fa mily room, din·
violation of the law. Our
(304)458·1916
We also offer:
8 hp Troybitt tiller, Homelite ing, full basement. $4S,000 .
readers a~ hereby
Collie/Sheppard
mile , 404 Lincoln St. May 30 &amp; 31.
Help wanted-drivers, 18 or
• Weekly bonuses
weed
eater,
battery
cha
rger,
Willow
Lane,
bedinformed that all
9·2.
Tools,
Archery,
hsh1
ng.
90 beauliful ro lling acres
81
1
2
!&amp;male, leather collar, Pt.
older. Call 446-4200 or
• Paid training
Colem8n lantern, stove and rooms , large kitchen, front
dwellings advertised In
Harri sonville. Highway
near
Rteasanr High School area Treestands, TV, air condi·
apply in person at Jumbo
• Paid vacations
heater, garden cart, Sk;ill porch , double carport, lot
this newspaper , ,.
tioner, misc . items.
frontage on SA 143. Gas
cell 675-4220
Italian Resta raunt
saw, small electric motors,
available on an equal
well and stocked pond.
• Paid holidays
~ize 93x1 38 , new siding .
Homelite
150
chainsaw
740·
opportunity baaaa.
Mans
Vard
Sa
le
2903
Cash or terms.. Call (740)
HVAC company is looking
Lost Black, White and
$35,000 . Call Somerville
(30 4)675,3030
742-3033
Rea lty
fo r a full iime helper in heat· 446·4274
Orange female cat. Ohio Parrlsh Ave. pt _ PL Bam·
We will be
ing and cooling, send Full Size Mattress Set New (304)675-3431
li;ide of Silver Bridge $25 1pm. Tools, repai r parts,
conducting open
Custom, all brick 3BR 2112 Building lots close to Pt.
cabi net maKer supplies,
resumes to PO Box 572 in Plastic wMarr. Sacrifice c_Bed_roo~m---a-th_t_960
reward 304-576-3130
__
sq. Bath , 3200 sq. ft . living area Pleasant at Meadow hills oH
fnterviewa altha
Junk.
Kerr, OH 45643
$ 119 • Cell Phone 304"412 • ft. ranch on 12 acres, 24x48 on 5112 acres with pond, Sand hill Rd. (740)446·9340
Rio Granda Job
Fn./Sal
8098 or 304·552·1424.
YARDSAI~
must
be
Lifeguards
wantedbarn, 16x18 ·building, close 30x40 detached garage , 4 or 304 -675·3000.
Service In Rio
miles past hospi tal on 160 .:...:..:....:...:...:.:..:..__ _
lifeguard certified , please King Size Pillow Top to hospital, $180,000, sa riAIJC110N AND
Grande, OH on
$279,000 446 -2927
Lot for sa le in Racine.
picK-up (and return ~p pl i ca­ Mattress set, New still in ous inquiries onty, 441·1334
FLEA MAJo&lt;h~·
(740)992·5858
Thursday, May 29,
tions) at Middlepor1 Village
Plastic, Sale $299. Cell 3 Bedroom newly remodFOACLOSUAE
2003 from 1 :00Office by June 2nd, 5pm, Phone 304-412-8098 or
Nice mobile home lots, quiet
Auction, Saturday, May 31 at
eled. in Middleport, call Tom 3 Bedroom home only
interviews will be conducted 304_552 _1424_
4:00
country setting , $ 11 5 per
10:00 am at 333 Mechanic
$13,500
tor
listing
call
month, includes water,
June 3rd .
- - - - - - - - Anderson after 5 p.m.
Street, Angles' FleamarKet,
B8ck yard sale-Multiple
t ·800·7t9-300t E•t. Ft44
Queen Pillow Top ~attrE!SS 992-3348
Stop
by
to
interview
sewer, trash, 740-332·2 167
·
.:.muy Sat. May 3t 9:00 Info (740)992-9734
Local Medical Office· seek- set, New in plastic wiWarr.
with us in Rio
lf.l)"l. 10 3:00 p.m. 6231625
ing a person with extensive Will accept $199, Cell pnone 3 BR 2 Bath Bli Ck ranch , French City Mobile Homes Property &amp; antiques for
WANTEO
Grande on
~rtl\ A,e.
garage
m Open House · May 30 thru sale ., Serious Calls only.
computer knowledge, to 304-4 12-8098 or 30-4-552·. attached
roBuv
Rey
noldsburg.
Trade
t
for
June 14. Big Savings. Big (304)576·9929
Thursday or call
work in a small office 3 days t424 .
:.:..:..c.:..:..c.=:.:....--~ropire Furniture-odds a~d
our job hotlin e to
a week/flex. time. Must work - - - - , - -- -- - soull"lern Oh10 farm or land Rebate. 446·9340
Rio Grande area , 3 to 30
Wlds, moslly used furniture. Absolute Top Dollar: u.s.
614-475-2126
SONG
OF
THE
SOUTH
well with public and children.
schedule an
Gold Coins,
Must see, 3 bedroom, 2 acres lots. soffie restrictions,
Tjhur-Fri-Sat 12 noon till 6 Sliver.
(Tales of Uncle Remus) full
Some
evening
hours
interview at our
3br. House on 314 acre, on bath, large patio on front , water &amp; elec)ric . {740)245·
Proofsets. Diamonds, Gold
'req uired. Office hours are length movie, VCR tape $29 Eckard Chapel . (304)675·
Rings.
beautiful deck on back, on 5747
U.S. Currency,Gallipolis office.
8a m-4pm. II interested call 888-3t5·6004
8635
~1-Sal 2847 A1 t4t 2.8 M.T.S. Coin Shop, t5 1
corner lot in Syracuse,
I~ I \1 \I ....
please send your resume to:
miles. Baby furniture . boys Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
Call today to start
(740)992-3520
Wi\l'ffiD
3br. House on 3/4 acre. on
Oaity
Sentinel,
PO
Box
729·
~l4, girls 8- 16. women 2- 740-446-2842
To
earning more
Eckard Chapel. {304)675· NEW HOUSE lor SALE
19, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
plus, ,tent
8635
money I
before
June
4,
2003.
Debbie Drive $129 .000.00
HOUl.'ES
wanted to buy -your extra
Odd Jobs , pa1nting, mowing,
Garage Sale 2212 Rain or car. minor repairs oK. all
FOR RENT
4 Bedrooms 2 112 baths, 3 bedrooms, 2 ba ths.
Lost
your
Job?
Need
to
weedeating,
ca'n
Bill
or
1-877-463-6247
stline Cherry Aldge Ad. 2.2 prices ok 388-8228
Worl&lt;? let's talk ...The new Dave. 882·3419 or n3-6 119 5.52 acres. Pt. Pleasant (740)245-9268.
rMe s from Rio Grande
ext . 2457
Information/photos online
1·3 bedrooms foreclosures
Avon!
There
are
dollege cloth"es. home lnterl· wanted-1·60 acres !arm in
.. 25,000ucustomers in our Will pressure wash homes, www.orvb.com code 51903 River Frontage 1112 acres home from $199 month 4%
or. toys, and rnore 8:30·4:00 Gallia County, area not pic
more or less. 3BA 2 Bath, down 30 .years at 8.5% APR
area needing service. Earn trailers, decks. metal build· (304)675·5'773
388-8228
master suite w/ jacuzzi, full for listi ng call 1·800·319·
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or $1 ,000+ Monthly by selling ings and guners. Call
~UGE Multi-family yard sale
4
br.
1
1/2
baths,
brid!.
end
basement. 2 decks w/ river 332_3 ext. 1709
Sell.
Shirley
Spears
,
304·
(740)446..()
151
ask
for
Ron
1 \1 1'!(1\ \ 11 \ 1
$20. of Beauty Products to 6
Firlday and Saturday -9- ?
frame. full basement, 2 car· view, 2 docks . 1 floating 446·
675-t429 .
.
or
leave
message.
People,
5
days
a
Week!
'-I In It I ...,
Southeastern Equipment in
garage, New haven WV 2784
2 bedroom , 1 bath house
Great ·lor : Couples -Single
~anauga. All proceeds go to ~r--------,
(740)44fi·4274
: : - - : - - - - - : : - - $350./mo. References +
Moms-Fami l ies ·
Relay for Lile
Rustic log home, ¥3R, 11 Deposit Required . Located
HELP WANI'ED
49 acres. Long Bottom,· 3 years old, cou ntry sening, 1 In Point Pleasant. (304)593·
BtiSINFSi
Bass player needed tor a Handicapped. Plans to Fit
0
br., 2 bath farm house, full acre. leave message 740- 200
~
May 31 1686 Lincoln Pike " - - - - - - - · working Blues, Rock,' &amp; any Need . No Stock Ups, No
1
1
Gallipolis. Everything you 'd
County Band , please call Door to Door. It will Work for ·--PI'OKilJNITYiioiliii,;;;;iioi_.l basement,
garage,
2 258·930t
Sell Avon
neecl for baby, also adult
stocked ponds, $104,900,
740·667-0135,
740·992· Youl S10.00 Start up Fee.
3 bedroom , $sao per mo.
Make 40°~o (740) 446·3358
Call April, 304-882·3630 or
5079
(740)843-t229
&lt;loth ing
!NOTICE!
Moon.£ HOMFS plus deposit, relerences
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
req uired ,
no
pets.
t -888-748-3630.
lNG CO. recommends that By Builder, affortable New
Harrisonville area, 740·742·
OverbrooK Rehabilitation you do business with people Brick 3 bedroom 2 1/2 bath,
1965 Travelo 2 Bedroom 7303, 740·347-4370.
Center is curren tly accepting you know, and NOT to send 2 car garage . Corner lot. M b'l H
Se
N
..:.c::.:.:...:..:..:...:::.:...::.__
WOlD
0 18 orne. . .' 500 eg. 3br. House at G lenwoocl.
applications tor a part-time money th rough the mail until Great Location, Green &amp;
lAM I
(8 hours) Activity Assistant. you have investigated the City SChools {740)446·9966" Very Good Condition. (740) Appliances
. included.
388 -0578 ·
Appl ications may be picked offering.
.
(304)576·9991
up at 333 Page Street, - - - - - - - - New home· 4 bedroom, 2 -,-,.,.--,--::----:-::•
Middleport. Ohio 45760 or
Absolute Goldminel
bath , livingroom , family ~ 1980 12x65 Skyline 2 SA, 3br. Nice Brick home . 1 ~
phone. M!ke Crites. Activity · 60 vending maChines witl"l room . dining room den , storage building, 2 porches, miles from Toyota Plant. 4
exc. tooations all for
modern Kitchen. 2 car heat pump, inside remod· · miles from scllool. $500.
Director at (740) 992-64 72
for more Information.
$10,995 800-234-6982
garage, hp, all electric, with- eled $7500 OBO 339·1745 Month . (304)576-2217
V ANU
in walking distance Pomeroy
Re ceptio nist Needed lor Pizza Francl"lise. Unique Golf Course, 3 acres, '99 14~e70 Clayton . 3 bdrm. 2 Point Pleasant 4 bedroom.
Medical Office, good organi- rapidly growing Concept. $ 110 ,000 , ·ca ll
Susan bath , all eleclric, central ale , Large
living
Room,
zational skills a must, typing 22yr
history. (740 )985 . 4291 , work 740 _ new ca rpet. water lines &amp; . Attached garage . After.
skills required, 40 hours per Train1ng1Marke1ing/Operatto 446•7267 _
underpinning. $16,000. 675- 5:30pm
(304)675-6633
week, send resume to Box n support. See wrry we sold - - - - - - - - 8707
QJ MOB
H
""'
100+ Franchises in 2002 Home on pond. Five Points .
ILE OJ\.,p•
568 825 3rd Ave. Gallipolis
liUR Rt.Nl'
OH 45631
alone! 1·888·344·2767 Ex. t. area, Pomeroy 1.3 acres 3 Cole's Mobile Homes
", .:.....:...:.:.::..:_ _ _ _ _ 210. EK1 . 210.
br.. 1 112 baths, dining US 50 East, Athens , Ohio.
Receptionist,
- Lumber llljr~------, room,famlly room ,stone fire- 45701 , 740·5'92·1972
:2 BA trailer 14x70 on
Handlers .
Lilt
Truck
PR~AL
place has gas logs, baSe Bulaville Pike. $375 +. $375
First old gent: "I love to lie· in
SERvKEs
ment with finished room . land Home Packages avail- deposit Outside pets only. 6
Operators. Contact office at
:.· s
bed and ring lor a valet • Second
Mid 80's (740) 992·3493
able. In your area, (740)446- months lease. 740 ·441 ·
(740)992·5965 trom 6:30 lo
•
•
•
_
•
old gent: " I didn' t know you had
3384 .
4:00 M·F or Send Resume
12,83.
John's Contracting ,
Home · lr6m $199/month .
.-----.,---''~·_ ____,valet : First old gent "I don't I just
to: PO Box 227, Middleporl,
S.rvlcat
foreclosure
homes 4% New 14. wide only $799 2 BR trailer, $280 month
Oh 45760 ..
carpentr~. painting, roofing,
f
the - - - - •
down , 30 years at 8.5 % apr. down and only $157.93 per plus deposjl, near Holzer
lnsularion . decking-free estiRN'S/LPN'S needed lor 100
4 listings ca ll800·319·3323 month. Call Nikki 740·385; Hospital 446·9204 call after
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Complele ·th• chuck le ouoted
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ext 1709.
767 t .
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tr TI!R S IN SQUM£S
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candidates 0
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lo: 0
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Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
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(formerly WhitnrySJ
Under new own~rship
and new managcmcn1.
COME

7

JOIN US
AWeek!

�.
Places to go Things to do A6

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.Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel
.

www.mydallysentlnel.c.o m

Wednesday, May.28,

Man carries torch ·for:
wolna·n hot for anothe·r

•

200~ .

ACROSS

42 Blushing
43 Path to
1 Top monk
sa tori
6 Deadly
44 Capture
snake
46 Romeo's
11 Rough
girl
fabric
49 Cut,
13 Looked
perhaps
good on
53 Revises
14 Tight spot 54 Tell
.
.
~
.
15 Frees
55 Loose
(2 wds.)
56 Piece of
DEAR ABBY: I am still
nosed with Alzheimer's and a IN SILVER LAKE, CALIF. 16 Evergreen
cake
17day
now
madly in love with my exrare bone cancer.
DEAR PENNY: Tell your
DOWN
girlfnend, "Holly," but all she
I miss.certain aspects of our children you don't want to be 18 Laptops
marriage. It is lonely being a "Hard-Hearted Hannah," 21 Squeals
feels for me is friendship. We
23 Mouth part · 1 Tummy
single. But I did not recog- but ·"You Can't Give Them 26 Team
talk on the phone 'daily, and
muscles
nize, nor could I have known, Anything but Love." It's the
'she confides in me about her
cheer
2 NFC
grldder
"guy trouble." I should tell
what caused the disintegration truth - so stick by it. It's time 27 Murmur
3
Wintry cry
28
Not
all
you, she dumped me for an
of his personality. for your "children" to change
29
Progress
4
Norse king
older guy. He has strung her
ROBERTA
IN
PALM their tune and accept the fact .
31
Not
5
Bland
along for months, and accordADVICE
SPRINGS
that they are adults and should
exciting
pudding
DEAR ROBERTA: You stand on their own two feet.
ing to what Holly says, she's
32 Dirty
6 Demeanors
afraid he's about to blow her
have my sympathy, and so
Dear Abby is wrillen ' by 33 Upbeat
7 Legal rep
8 Natural
off.
DEAR ABBY: When I read does your husband. I advise Al!igail Van Buren, also 36 Yukon
vehicle
elevs.
Holly is in a lot of emotion- the letter from the faithful readers whose family mern- known as Jemme Phillips, and
37
Smog
9
Entreat
a! pain right now. I'm trying wife whose husband called hers exhibit a sudden change was founded by her mother,
monitor
10
my best to console her, but · her by another-woman's name in personality or behavior to Pauline Phillips. Write Dear 38 ·Compass 12 Fuss
Punclua·
thts situation tears me up. I'm in his sleep, and who claims nottfy their doctors so the per- Abby at www.DearAbby.com
dir.
lion mark
so in love ' with her, I'd ··do that his boss "demands" that son can. be physically and or P. 0. Box 69440, Los 39 Gab
13 Verbal
40 Consumer
abuse
evaluated. Angeles, CA 90069.
anything to be with her ~ but he drive a female co-worker neurologically
· advocate 18 Prim
she's made it clear she's got it to and from work, I had to However, in your case the
bad for the other guy.
write.
physician missed the warning
Should I continue trying to
My husband called me signs.
be Holly's friend and advise "Stephanie" at the dinner
Yes, being single can someher how to "hold on" to this table for four years : He times be lonely. But it is better
guy? Or should I hang on and accused me of stealing money •'than living with the abuse you
hope that she'll see the light? from accounts I didn' t even described.
· Whether your
I'd be grateful for any advice. know existed or was not a sigDEAR ABBY: My husband
favorite subject
- LOVESICK IN NEW natory on. He abandoned me and I always gave our two is nlath or mu&lt;tr.
ENGLAND
for months on end, locking children money whenever
science or
DEAR LOVESICK: If doors and sneaking out of the they were m a light spot. Now
social studies,
she's asking you for advice on house. He called me filthy that I am a widow, money is
you'll find
bow to hang onto another names and told me I was tight, and I've lost most of my
something
man, it's safe to conclude that hideous.
savings in the stock market.
interesting in the
your romance is over. Accept
At the · time. his physician
The "children" are now
newspaper. In fact, the
it, extricate yourself and move said his behavior was normal. approaching 50 and still ask
paper is such a reliable
Three years later, after a me ·to bail them out. (I can
on. Unless ·you like having
source for the information
your molars drilled without divorce, loss of home, friends, hardly pay my own · bills.) I you want, you can even use
anesthetic, to continue with status, club memberships and know I must put a stop to this,
it as a homework and
Holly would be folly.
financial assets, my husband Abby, so please help me find
school research tool:
•
is in assisted living - diag- the right words. - PENNY

,,
'

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 187

Dear
Abby .

builders
19 Cooking oil
43 Whining
20 Piercing
noise
scream
45 ln,oice
22 Had a
46 Quick
snack
punch
23 Casual
shoe
47 Ms.
Thurman
24 Exempt
48 Journey
25 Did KP
work .·
stage ·
50 Mai28 Saultcocktall
Marie
51 Common
30 Primeval
abbr.
34 Game one
52 "Gidget"
35 Festive
actress
events
40 Indigent
41 Hill

' .

..

Jan. 19) -Today your vision
for value might be severely
blurred, so it isn ' t likely
you'll get proper mileage
from the dollars you spend. If
possible. don "t take your wallet out of your _pocket.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - It might be too easy to·
day to start blaming others fot
mistakes you create, such as if
you use poor judgment and
delegate an assi~nment to
-someone who can t handle it
and then blame him or her.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - If you are too easy11o·
ing today and let others 1m·
pose upon you. they'll get

JUOO'S TOTAL

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to 7·latler word lrom th11 ktners on eat:h yartline.
Mel poln!s to eact'l word or lener uSing $COring airEtCtions al right. Seven -letter
words ·get a 60-polnt bonus. All words can be lCHJ"od IIi Webster's New World

....,

Eight sessions
to kick the habit

Staff writer

'
Inside

C/2000 Unltd ful~n S,ndble. lr1c .

AND ITS NOT JUSr
"T\jAT H~~ "!\!&lt; MAl.l..
8U~I~l.· PLor SA~SIIIAN

AC\UALLY INFERIOR I

Adult entertainment
language questioned
in·proposed ordinance·

0~

1r WAS

~IGHr Wrti.H€
Sir INTO THAT 81(;

• Club reviews Potter
series, See page A2
• Birthdays, See page

GUMDROP COO~ I€:

AJ
• Class marks reunion,
See page AJ
• Flags donated, See page

AJ
!&gt;wii\IIIEAR
AA "tliE

5Wlii\WE'\R
fOR "tHE

5oiii'\WEAR
FOR TilE

EMPOwERED
lllOrM"' OF TOOA'i !

IH~AMIC,
~LETlC,
"'I·NON~N5E

.

Ql'*IOENT .
WOM/IN OF TDMt r •

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lllOMAN Of 10DA'i!

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•

Hannah King, 2nd &amp;rade

i
!

Rutlland Elementary

~~~~~~-~- - - .. ..-.
600D MORN IN&amp;, MA'AM..
I CAME TO APOL061ZE...
I DIDN'T ~AN TO SPOIL
YOUR 616LE CLASS ..

Public hearing
set for June 30
BY BRIAN

President Bush shakes hands with House Ways and Means Chairman Rep. Bill Thomas,
R-Calif.. after signing a bill in the Ea~t Room of the White House on Wednesday, that
offers $330 billion in tax breaks to families, businesses and investors and $20 billion in
state aid - a package less than half the size of the one he initially sought. Standing behind
Bush, are from left, Secretary of Commerce Donald Evans, Secretary of Treasury John
Snow,. and Senate Majority Leader Sen. Bill Frist, R· Tenn. (AP) ·

Former president says
economy moving, visits $tate
COLUMB US (AP) President Bush's $330 billion tax cut will help give
consumers more confidence
in the nation 's economy, his
father said Wednesday.
Former President George
H.W. Bush , speaking before
about 1,000 people at a
meeting of the Ohio
Chamber of Commerce,
said the economy is coming
out of a slump created in
pan by reports of wrongdoing at some of the country's
largest companies.
"Consumer confidence is
coming back," Bush said.

His son's plan to ease the values to stand by if you're
tax burden of families has going to make public sercome at ,the right time, he vice a noble calling, and I
added.
believe it is," Bush said.
"He's got a rather radical
The values Bush learned
idea: the more money you from his family, he said,
put into the pockets of the "were cliche-like values citizens, the better it is for help the other guy, give
the economy," Bush said. · credit, and don't talk all the
He urged the business time.';
leaders to become involved
He said a lack of commuin their communities - a nication with Americans
lesson he learned from his helped lead to his loss in
father, a U.S. Senator, and 1992 to former President
his grandf&lt;ither, a one-time Clinton, adding his son has
Columbus steel company no such problem because he
owner.
"has proven to be a forceful
"You have to have some advocate of his beliefs."

J.

REE[/

MIDDLEPORT - Explicit
language in a proposed ordinance regulating adult entertainment
bus·ine sses
in
Middleport might prevent the
measure from passing.
The ordinance , written by
James Hartzler of . Canal
Winchester, who recently
completed work on revisions
to Middleport's downtown
business district zoning_regulations, is designed to regulate the location of adult book
stores and live adult entertainment bu sinesses in the
village, and was submitted to
Village Council Tuesday
night for consideration.
.The ordinance was attached
to a broader zoning ordinance
designed to . tighten land use
restrictions in the "village
center," or central business
district, which has been in the
planning stages since last
summer.
The village will conduct a
public hearing on both the vil lage center ordinance anq the
adult entertainment provision
on June 30.
While Middleport has no
adult entertainment businesses, at least one such business
considered locating there a
year ago. and Hartzler told a
planning committee charged
with reviewin~ downtown
zoning regulations that an
ordinance such as that proposed should be considered
as part of any updated zoning
regulations submitted to
council.
Following an executive session called by Solicitor Linda
Warner, to discuss "pending
and possible litigation ,"
Council President Stephen
Houchins said he would not
vote in favor of any down-

town zoning ordinance as
long as the adult entertain.
ment regulation was included;
citing the explicit nature o{
the ordinance language defining an "adult entertainment
facility," "specified sexual
activities," . and "spec ified
anatomical areas."
"This kind of language is
what I object to," Houchins
said . " If that language is
included, I won't vote in
favor of any new zoning regulations. If it's not included, I
will vote for the downtown
business district re-zoning."
Council members KathY,
Scott and Roger Manley alsq
expressed concern with the
explicit nature of the defini·
tions portion of the threepage proposed ordinance.
• ...
Meanwhile, members of the
committee which met with
Hartzler during the ordinance
review
process
urged
Houchins and other council
members to consider the con· ·
sequences of rejecting the
ordinance based on the language; and said such graphic
descriptions of adult entertainment and products offered
in adult book stores is the
result of test cases challenged
by the owners of adult enter·
tainment businesses.
"I agree the language is .
offensive, but it's there for a
reason," John Blake said.
"Without using this kind of
very specific language, the
ordinance will not be effective . Test cases in other communities have proven that."
"If you change anything, in
my opinion, you're opening a
can of worms and you' 11 have
problems."
"We've tried to warn the
church leaders in the community that the language in this
measure is offensive, but if
we don 't use that kind of specific language, we can't stop
adult entertainment businessPlease see Adult. AS

JUDD'S SOLunON TOMORROW

College Oiclionary.

354

11 'lURHs em lQl.l. b.?I

~:i)ltJ~~ ~~~~~ =

by JUDO HAMBRICK

www.mydailysentinel.com

Coalition
offers ·
clinics for
smokers
POMEROY - Want to kick the
habit? ·
1\ so, the Tobacco Use
Prevention Coalition of Gallia,
Jackson and Meigs counties will
be holding an eight-session stopsmoking clinic at the Pomeroy
Library.
1 The first session, called "think•
ing about quining," will be held at ·
6:30p.m. June 3. To register or to .
get more information, residents
may call (740) 446-5940.
Developed by the American
Lung Association, the program is
conducted by a professionally
trained instructor in a supportive
environment geared to help smokers break the smoking addiction.
Each smoker who joins the clinic will'bc assisted in developing an
individual plan for quitting. The
emphasis will be on long-term
freedom from smoking,
"Smoking is a learned habit,"
said Cindy Liberatore, Tobacco
Use Prevention Adult Coordinator
at the Holzer Medical Center's
Tobacco Prevention Center.
"Individuals teach themselves
how to smoke and it becomes an
automatic behavior. The cessation
clinic offers individuals a siep-bystep plan to help them to quit
. smoking." she added.
The clinic also includes the Iatest improved skills for good stress
management, weight control,
assertive communication and
exercise, which are the, skills that
are needed to succeed.
Participants will work on the
process of quining not only individually, but as a group.

AVERAGE GAME 160.170

mag~ ·

AVERAGE GAME 225-235

.

News editor

done What 1s on their agenda
while -your responsibilities
will remain neglected .
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - If you're having problems dealing with associates
today, check out your own behavior first before pointing
the finger at them . Make certain you're not dealing from a
selfish point of view.
TAURUS. (April 20-May
20) - Although everything
might be all business for you.
don ' t expect co-workers to
feel the same way. If you
come on too stron·g, you' II
evoke a few negative reactions.

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim-

THURSDAY, MAY 29, 2003

. BY CHARLENE HOEfliCH

Astrograph ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- If you assign a task to anBy BERNICE BEDE 0sOL
other today that you should be
There will be definite adtaking care of yourself. don't
vantuge in enlarging your cir· · be surprised if you end up
cle of -friends in the year
finding yourse lf in a bind.
ahead. Go oul of your way to
This person won't du the job
participate in activities in
as it should be done.
which you'll get ample oppor'
LIBRA (Sept. 2,3-0ct. 23)
tunities to rilake new contacts
- There is never a good time
and develof friendships.
to take a ri sk. on someone elGEMIN (May 21-June 20)
se's ideas in an .area with
- There· s a good chance you
which you are unfamiliar. It's
could encounter someone to·
like shooting in the dark. If
day whose politics or philoso- you're going to gamble, gamphy is diametrically opposed
ble on yourself.
to yours. If you're smart, you
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
won't get into it with this per- · 22)- There's a good chance
son.
that both yuu and your male
CANCER (Jmie 21-July
could have rather short fuses
22) - Keep your nose clean
today and it won't take much
and out of everybody else s
to i/lniie a confrontation . .
business today . Intrusions into
Don t bring any matches to
matters that do not concern
the dinner table.
you could invite problems
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23that should be avoided.
Dec. 21) - Be careful you
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) don't take it upon yourself to
A partnership arrangement
berate a co-worker who discould be disastrous today if
pleases you today, especially
your objectives are not in harin front of others. You would
mony with one another. If you
be the one who would come
cannot pull together. you'll
out looking like the heavy.
find ways to pull apan.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-

I

'

.

Thursday, May 29, 2003

I

Index

-·

ACTUALLV. MAAM.

l Sections - 1l Plllts

I'VE F'ALLEN IN
LOVE WIT~ 'I'OU ...
/"

Calendar
Classifieds'
Comics
Dear Abby
Ed ito ria Is
Movies
Sports
Weather

A2
83-5

•

B6
B6

A4

AS
B1·3
A2

c 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

Plans continue for middle
school development
BY BRIAN

J.

REEO

Staff writer
. MIDDLEPORT The
transfer of Middleport's school
buildings to the village could
take place as early as next
month, and Middleport Village
Council heard preliminary
plans for use of the Middleport
High School building during
Tuesday's regular meeting.
Council met Tuesday evening
because of the Memorial Day
holiday.
Myron l)uffield, president of
Mid:llepOO Citizens Committee,
Inc., a non-profit committee
formed to oversee the development of U!e building - most
recently used as Meigs Middle
School - discussed the starus
of plans to convert the building,
and the Central .Building next
door, into a multi-purpose community center.
The village plans to retain
ownership and control of the
elementary school on Pearl
Street, which will· be vacated
early next month, and convert it
into a village hall and jail.
Duffield said the Middleport

Alumni Association con- enabling the group to present two
tributed $8 ,000 . toward the to three productions per year.
development of the property
A catering company is interest·
during last weekend's alumni ed in using the kitchen and cafetereunion, and said individual ria in the building, Duffield said ·
Middleport High School alu~"We're also in ongoing discusni also made contributions. The sions with higher education facilcommittee will also seek ~t ities for use of the classroom
·funds for operating costs. To spaces," Duffield said.
date, the committee has
The committee and village had
$12,000 for the development of negotiated for over a year with
the buildings and the mainte- the University of Rio Grande,
nance and operation of them hoping the college would expand
while tenants and practical uses its Meigs Center there. but the
are found.
oollege decided renovation costs
According to Duffield, the made such an ofler cost-prohibiYouth Athletic League has live. ACENet, an educatiom~
asked to take over the athletic organization based in Athens, had
field at the school, and has also proposed using the building
already assumed responsibility . as an entrepreneurial developfor maintaining the grounds this ment facility, but stan-up costs
summer. Duffield said the · required of the village IIUide that
league plans to make repairs to plan impossible, as well, Duffield
the grandstand and concession said:
. .
stand, atid to replace the fence
The building ha~ 20 rentable
surrounding the field
classroom spaces. DUffield said.
The Riverbend Community
"It's not going to be easy,"
Theater has expressed interest in · Duftield said. "Negativity in the
a-;swning responsibility for the conununity is the biggest obstaschool's auditorium, and has de we face, but I have · seen
offered to make imrrovements to these projects take root in other
the lighting system artd to install a communities, and 1 know it can
new air conditioning system, happen here."

Scholarships awarded

The Rac ine Area Community Organization (RACO) awarded
$6,000 in scholarships to Southern High School 's best and
brightest this year. Kathyrn Hart, RACO Chair, said that
$.5.000 was raised through garage sale proceeds. The RACO .
James Adams Memorial Scholarship, named after .a well
known educator and administrator, provided $500 each to
Jordan Hill (not pictur~)and Justin Connolly. Each of these
students received a $500 scholarship: (Left front) Mariam
EIDabaja (valedictorian), Adani Ball, Curt Crouch, Amy Lee ,
Jeri Hill (Left second row) Amanda Miller; Brandon Smith
(valedictorian), Crystal Cottrill (valedictorian), Justin Connolly
and Thomas Theiss (salutatorian). Rachel Chapman (not pictured ) also received a RACO scholarship. (J . Miles Layton)

LHe Is Always
Celebta~lng •••
t!l

rr

"FEEP ME"?

The 9th Annual National Cancer Survivors Day Picnic
:Sunday, June 1, 2003 • 1:00- 3:QO p.m.
Bob Evans Farms Picnic Shelter, Rio Grande•
Good food, door prizes and lots of hugs.
Open to any cancer survivor, their family and friends.
·

C;,_

celebJale lifel

S&lt;Jpporlo&lt;i by Holzer Medical Cenier
Ho/.,.. Clinic, PhonnoceuHcal Companies and ll&gt;e Community.

•Take the road acrou from the

rilslauronl.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holze1· D~fference

www.holzer.org

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