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                  <text>Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

w\Yw.mydailysentlnel.com ·

Wednesday, June-4, 2003

Working wife, mom yearns·
for some time to call her ow.n
DEAR ABBY: I am a 26year-olc;l wife an:d mother of a
I 6- month-old son. For the
most part, I feel blessed.
However, there are times when
I feel overwhelmed working
and being a wife and mom. I
never seem to get a break.
We live with my husband's
dad because we had some
credit problems and are trying
to get back on our feet. My
.father-in-law thinks I should
do most of the household
'chores and that I should still be
able to find enough time for
myself- but it hasn' t worke&lt;!
out that way.
If I want to spend a few
hours with my friends, · my
husband and his dad think it's
an imposition when I ask them
to baby-sit. On the other hand,
my husband takes off and
hangs out with his friends any
time he feels like it.
· Am I wrong to feel there's a
. double standard. here? Don't
get me wrong - my husband
and son and I do spend some
time together, and we're active
in our church. But I can't help
feeling I need more time for
myself. Please help. OVERLOADED IN THE
'NORTHWEST
DEAR OVERLOADED:
Before any more tensions and
resentments build, it's time to
draw the line and speak up. As
it stands, your father-in-law

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
has a built-in maid and your
husband has reverted to adolescence. Whether you get
church-based or secular marriage counseling, get it NOW
before you cave in under the
stress of your-current situation.
You and your husband need to
get back on your feet and find
a place to call your own.
DEAR ABBY: I am 15 and
have never had a boyfriend.
All
my
friends
have
boyfriends, and I'm the on Iy
girl without a guy. This whole
yeat I've had my eye on a
senior at my school. I try my
best to get his attention.. but he
doesn' t seem to take the hints.
We say "hi" to each other in
the halls, but that's about it.
How can I get him to notice
me, Abby? I mean, I'm really
in love with him and want him
to know how I feel. There's
only one problem - I'm kind
of scared to approach him.
Graduation is almost here and
soon he' II be leaving. What

A_st~ro_g=---r_ap=---h_ _ _ _ _

8Y BERNICE BEDE 0sOL
In the year ahead condit ions

might be such that who you
know wiII become more 1111ponant th an what you know.
It behooves you to stay connected to nld friends as well
as the many casual contacts
you' ll meet.
GEMINI (May 21·June
20) - Don't take it upon
y.,urself to assume that you
· know what others want in the
way of making plans .
Chances are you" ll be way off
base and will meet wi th unhappy responses.
CANCER (.June 21-July
2'2)- Be extra careful where
something of value is at stake
today when dealing with
friends or associates. Th is
could be a delicate area. so
you must treat it very considerately.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - ·
Those who are usuall y
aligned with you could be reluct~nt participants today.
Don t take them for granted
nnd try to force others to comply with your demands .j usI
because they have in the past.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepi. 22)
- Usua lly you're an extremely re spon sible person
and are ever mindful of yo ur
duties. Today, however. if
something apl?cars too distasoeful. you re likely to
sweep it u.nder the rug.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- It might be very easy today
to get drawn into an ende avor

in

\~tlic.:h

y_ou are

c h asi~g

an

elUsJve .nunbow. You U be

srri"'l 10 steer tutnlly dear of
any ente rprise that os chancy
or risky .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Should you be required to make a decision today th at co uld affect loved
ones as wei! as yourself. don't
-rush to JUdgmen t. Check--out
·every angle before making up
your mind.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21)- A number of disruptive situations could pop
up today and cause delays in
yo ur schedule . Keep your
mind flexible and don't let
them get you off track or out
of cont rol.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-

Mr. Hyde
48 Type
1 Loaf
of bear
6 Newspaper 49 Bundle
edition
52 Fancy
11 Nerdy cap 53 Garrulous
12 In va1n
54 Shark
13 Tell jokes
domai~s
14 Still good
55 Opinion
15 Things
(hyph.)
16 Have a
56 Rice field
hunch
17 To be,
DOWN
to Brutus
18 Moray · •
1 Edible
19 No future
roots
2 Storms
23 Statutes
about
21
25 Gear teeth
3 Glossy
26 Several pts.
paint
29 Stylish;
4 Has a cold
22
tor some
5 Fiddle32 Douse
de--24
33 Ice skater
6 Weld
-- Babilonia 7 Slanted
26
34 Monastery
type
dweller
8 Tip of a
27
35 Hesitant
pen ·
sounds
9 Everybody 28
36 Run
10 Bruce -30
.in neutral
of kung fu
38 TV adjuncts 11 Imported
31
40 Lose
cheese
12 Gas or oil
interest
37
41 Shade tree 16 Gala event
39
42 Lunar effect 1 B Big pitcher
46 Like
20 Muule
, 41

should I do?- SCARED TO Abby. - PROUD OF MY
MAKE THE FIRST MOVE GRAD IN VIRGINIA
IN FLORIDA ".
DEAR PkOUD: When
DEAR SCARED·: Give · or someone receives a gmduation
send him a graduation card announcement, one should do
with a sincere note wishing more than "be happy." Good
him luck and leuirg him, know manners dictate that the
you'll miss seeing him on announcement should not be
campus. It will give him an ignored. At the least, a card or
opening and show him that letter of congr'dtulations is in
you like him. If he doesn't order. (Gifts are optional.)
respond after that, . set your
Dear Abby is written bv
s1ghts on a cute JUmor Abigail lim Buren, also known
someone who' II be around for as .Jeanne Phillips. and was
another year.
founded bv her mother.
DEAR ABBY: Graduation Pauline Phiilips. Write Dear
time is here. My senior is bliss- Abby at www.DearAbby.com
fully happy to be graduating o; P. 0. Box 69440, Los
from htgh school. She Angeles, CA 90069.
addressed her own announcements and sent them to fami ly
and friends of her choosing.
J would like to send a message to the recipients of the
millions of announcements
that' will anive .during these
next few weeks: Please take
these announcemehts for what
they are - they are NOT a
request for gifts.
My daughter is thri lled to be
going through this rite of passage. I remember how I felt a
few years ago when I began , ~o matter what
receiving announcements from
.the children of friends, won- direction you turn 1 t;-;--t---t-dering if a present or monetary
gift was expected. Well, TillS you can always find ,, m--t---+-senior's parent wants to say: ,
It In the
Please just be happy for the
graduating student. Thanks, ~ '--~

·- ,__I_ _ _ _ _ _

Jan. 19) - You might think
go1ng in that you ha ve the upper hand in an important arrangement in which you're involved today. but.the opposite
IS apt to be true . Be prepared

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 191

43 Achilles'

epic
Marlo's
dad
45 Units
of energy
47 President's
no
48 Type size
49 Dell or
. Gateway
wares
50 "I knew ill"
51 Sunbeam
52 Hack off

New
business
coming to
Pomeroy
BY

3rd 00\Nl.l

- 87 .
-=_l!_

4th DOWN

•

2ndDOWN ,;

JUOO'S TOTAL

77

55 .

AVERAGE GAME 115-125 '

by JUDD HAMBRICK ·

I'I'E GOT
ON&lt; &gt;~Clll

FlO\!!: IS
FeilD

_.)

Ccwot.A!

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

=

C 20IXl

GREG
IIJON'M
NOQIMN

FRA~tS

FoRO
(OI'POLA
OIRECTEO "ll'E

I!(!IT ISH

GOOFA1liER'

1WICE!

''AI'OCALYPSE

OPtN

AND

'(ES, SuT
FAANCIS fOI'.D
Clli'1'0L~

ALSO D\\lb:;TED
"ON&lt;fPDM
1\iE H&lt;AilT '

U~ed

Ful\ft Syrldlc•lt Inc

Inside .

HEY, ARE WE

~ERE

TO PtCl&lt;
O!J1' A fjOTTLE
OF \/,liNE OP.
OEMTE
CELE9Rtn~?

NOW "!

WHI
CAN'T
.WE
DO

~ .?

i

-,-

ArlO fO~ n\05E w~O
REALL""f UJ ANT A TttRILL .
ll\E NEW
'

"METALLIC THONG':

DO
HA~E

• Olive: orange alumni
meet, See page A2
• Summer camp planned
.at Meigs Museum , See
page A3
• Family Medicine, See
page A3
• Meigs students' acheivements recognized, See
page A7
Rain,

HI: 70., Low:

5011

Yard sale seeks to
First Pomeroy students raise money for
community
center
at school for final day
BY

THAT
ISN'l'

H•nnah Cleek, 4th pade
Pomeroy Elementary

Index
1 Sections - 11 Pllees

Weather

J,

MILES LAYTON

Staff writer

Entered first
g~ade in new
building in 1961
BY BRIAN J' REED
Staff writer
POMEROY - As Scott
Walton and Edie Mees King
entered first grade in the new
Pomeroy Elementary ~chool ,
m September, 196 1, the world
was gmppling with the reality
of the new Berlin Wall.
Bob Dylan was about to
make his big musical debut in
New York City, and a summer
filled with civil rights demonstrations in Alabama and
Louisiana was just ending.
But for the two" new students. entering a new school
building for the first time,
events happening elsewhere
across the United States and

around the world were not as
important as the adventure
awaiting them - their tirst
day of school ever.
With new book satchels and
unsharpened pencils, paper
and crayons. Walton entered
the first grade cli1ss of Farie
Erlewine. and King in the
class of Dorothy Barnes
Woodard. They would complete'Six years there under the
leadership of Principal Ralph
Spencer, and, Iuter, Ed
Bartels.
They would later go on to
become the first fres hmen
class entering Meigs High
School, and graduated there
in 1973.
Now, an era h&lt;L~ ended.
Students left the building
for the last time Wednesday,
and Walton and King were
there for that, too.
They were there at the
beginning, in 1961, and there

at the end, in 2003. as the
school was closed in favor of
another new' building, the
Meigs Elementary School in
Rut!and. which will open in
August.
Aside fium being his old grade
school "stomping grounds,'' the
building holds even more special memories for Walton.
When hi s fa mil y first
moved to Pomeroy, his fanlily
home sat on the lot where the
school building now stands.
In fact. the steps to the
school's front doors are located in the very spot where
steps once led to the Walton
home.
" It's a sad day," Walton.
who now serves on the Meigs
Local Board of Education,
said.
"To see students leavi ng the
building for the last time gives
one a degr~e of reflection.''

SYRACUSE-Aoommunity
''yard sale" and auction is being
held Saturday to mise money for
.renovation of the old Syracuse
Elementary School which will
soon serve as a community center.
Those seeking hidden treasures
can start' at 8 a.m. in the school's
•· gymnastum.
'1 am elated with the amount
of things we have. The gym is so
. full that we have had to start
using other rooms in the school to
put things," Carol Jean Adams,
chainnan of the Syracuse
Community Organization's ways
and means cornmjttee, said.
Among the items are a I00year-old bed, lawn equipment, a
juicer that is still in the box, stereo
equipment, bicycles, some board
games and a few vintage glass
bottles.
At I p.m., veteran auctioneer
Dan Smith will auction off what'

ever remains.
"Everyone in the community is
helping. The camaraderie has
been exceptional," Adams said
She hopes the sale will provide
enough money to put tables and
chairs in the classrooms and help
out with other longrange plans ·
the board has for the building.
She said 30 to 40 volunteers
helped to put the yard sale together.
The elementary school, whicH
served the village for decade~.
was closed nearly two years ago
when
a new Southern
Elementary School was built_in
Racine.
·
Bob' Wmgett, a fonner Ohio
Valley Publishing Co. publishei,
purchased the old school last
September. He donated the building to the village which transferred owrmhip to the Syta:USC
Community Organization earlier.
this year. .
·
Wingett. the organization's
president, anended grade school
there.

Please see Sale. AS

Raiders on horseback plot Historical ·marker
sweep through Pomeroy
to·be dedicated

AN'ffil l NCr

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies ·
Sports

sons receiving services are benefiting from those services.
··we're very pleased with the
recognition of treatment quality that this accreditation represents," said Wellspring chief
operations officer John Wick
said.
"In addition to · recognizing
our quality of care, CARF has
also provided us with guidance
regarding how to improve the
already high quality of services
that we provide to our clients.
We welcome this input and are
already striving to put this
guidance into practice,"
The center was founded in
1986, and has treated hundreds
of clients frpm I0 different
countries since its inception.
The center is also available
as an informational resource to
civic, church, and law·enforcement leadership.

Scott Walton and Edie Mees King look at a "Wall of Memories" at Pomeroy Elementary
School on Wednesday, the last day of school in the 42-year-old bu ilding. Both were members of the school 's first first-grade class. {Brian J. Reed)

BY

1 SUPPOSE I{QU
CAN READ MY MIND..

REED

ALBANY - The rece nt
accreditation of Albany's
Well spring
Retreat
and
Resource Center recognizes
programs that treat survivors of
cults.. The facility, located in
rural Meigs County, is considered the only residential cult
treatment center in the United
States.
The
Commission
on
Accreditation of Rehabilitation
Facilities awarded the center
· accreditation for one year for
its program of rehabilitation of
former cult members, and for
its program for treating children and adolescents.
The commission said the
accreditation outcome is awarded to organizations that, on balance, demonstrate that the per-

J.

MILES LAYTON

Staff writer

SO '(00 KNOW JUST
WHAT I'M iHtNKtN6, 14UH?

J.

Staff writer

DIRECTIONS : Make a 2· lo 7·1etler word from the !titters 0 11 each y&amp;rd~ne .
Add points to eaCfl word or 1ener usr.o scoring Olreclions at right Seven-lener
words gel 111 DQ.poonl bonus. All words can be found in Webster's New Wortd
~ llt~ge Oic1ional)l .
JUDD'S SOLUTION TQMORROW
;
·~

STILl ...

0
0
0

41h DOWN

.. l-&lt;ll

~T

BY BRIAN

MILES LAYTON

ordinance will allow Charlie
Ritchie to get the final
approval necessary for a building permit from the state to
begin construction on Ritchie's
Quick Lube. Specializing in oil
changes and lube jobs,
Ritchie's Quick Lube will be
built withi n a month and
employ at least four people.
· According to Charles Knight,
who was representing Ritchie,
there was concern that approval
for the variance would be
delayed or denied because the
building is in the t)oodplain.
Knight said John. Anderson,
village administrator, told his
client that · he would riot
approve constmction of the
business because of the existing laws prohibit construction.
Knight said he understood
that Anderson was concerned
for the village and doing his
job, but a business of this type
was an exception because it
would basically built in such a
way so that it is higher than the
floodpl ain.
The operational nature of the
business was such that even if
there was a major flood, the
business would not be ·as
affected because essentially it
.• is a large open garage.
Mayor Victor Young III and
council members agreed that
the ne w business would be
welcome in Pomeroy.

Jl'dDOWN .

mag~ ·

Residential
cult treatment
center accredited

124.
A variance in the zoning

2r.:I OOWN

297

'

Village
POMEROY .
Council gave special -permission for a change in the existing floodplain ordinance to
allow a new business to be gin
construction along State Route

TAURUS (April 211-May
20) - The only way you' ll
ge l the support of others in a
career matter today is 1.0 first
assure them that there will be
as much in it for them as there
is for you.

,.

J.

w__ ,nydailysentinel.com

Staff writer

for sul·cess.

1st DOWN

,

.

_____J

Answe1r
to
previous
Word
Scrim-

THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 2003

44

pating in business or pleasure

PISCES (•'eb. 20-March
211) ..:.... Unless you are very
certain that you're ab le to so.
don't make any prom ises to

AVERAGE GAME 191)-200

Dr. Frankenstein's ·
gofer
Recipe
qtys.
Simdy's
reply
Ear cleaner
(hyph./
"Voila." .
(hyph,)
Ooor part
Clothes or
spice-Bobby-of hockey
Votes in
Fed the
furnace
Greasy

today. but don· t try to mix U1e
two. Each will fal l short of
their mark if you attempt to
spli t the concentration needed

·

I

·~...

gret your pledge later when
delivery IS expected and it's
not that easy.
ARIES (March 21-April
19)- Stick to either partici-

. AQUAKIUS (jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Un less you're vety
diligent today you might let
yo urself be jockeyed into a
positi on whe re you' ll end up
bei ng subservient to the demands ' of ano ther. Think
"equality'' in all your d.eci-

'1.

"

I

another today. You might re -

and don· t .~et careless .

sio rt~;.

cp[acG?) f(; '}~· ThimJ~ f, JfJ, .Jll~

ACROSS .

A3
84-6
·B7

87
A4
AS
Bl -4

·A2

0 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY
Confederate Gen. John Hunt
Morgan and a handful of his
men will be raiding severdl
downtown businesses at II
a.rn. Friday.
Main Street. between
Butternut and Sycamore
streets, and Court Street
· wi II be shut down so reennactors on horseback can
have the full run of the town.
Traffic wiII be rerouted down
Second Street.
Darrell Markijohn, who
wi ll be portraying Gen.
Morgan, said Friday's raid is a
kickoff for a larger raid in
which 150 to 200 horsemen

are expected to invade Meigs
County in September. He said
the raiders are rested, · ready
and waiting for Friday's event.
Markijohn pmised the community for ils support, especially those who wi ll be at the
mercy of the raiders.
The raiders on horseback
will "rob" Farmer's Bank
drive-through. Tellers say ·
they don' t know whal to
expect.
Markijohn said an undisclosed amount of cash in the
form _of Union greenbacks
will be taken in the raid.
Bolts of fabri c will be
stolen from The Fabric Shop.
The raiders, who have been
in the Civil War movie "Gods
and Genemls," also will take
shoes from Chapman Shoes.

and are expected to chowdown at the Court Street GrilL
But before they get too carried away with raiding the vilIage, a nasty surprise in store,
village rs say.
The raiders also wi ll
attempt to steal Jane Ann
Williams· purse while she is
working at Williams lnsurarce.
Wi lliams, no mere· damsel
in distress, may put up a tight
to keep her purse frnm falling
into Confederate hands. Soldiers
who are undeterred by her fist s
and harsh words will be greeted by a contingent of bluecoated Yankee soldiers led by
James Diler. .
·
Sensing possible doom. the
raiders will head off into the
noonday sun to mid Meigs
Cotmty again in early September.

Staff report

Comm ission's Longaberger
Legacy lnitiati ve and the
Wilkesville Village Council,
.
Vi nton County.
WILKESVILLE
A
The program will open with
Morgan' s Raid historical · the Wilkesville American
marker will be dedicated in
ceremonie s at 7 p.m. Friday Legion , Ladies Auxiliary and
the Sons of the Legion of the
on the Wilkesville Village Joseph Freeman Post 476 preSquare under sponsorship of senting the colors and rais ing
the Vinton County Chamber the flag .
of Commerce.
The Vinton County High
Guest speaker will be
School Band will play the
Darrell Markijohn of Canton, national anthem and ot"er
a member of the Ohio
''
Bicentennial Commission. He patriotic songs, and students ·
.
of Wilton Elementary School
is coordinating the Morgan's will lead in the pledge to the
·Raid re-enactment to be held
in Vinton arid Meigs .counties fla~ichard A Hagerty, a forSe~~·e;:~rker is sponsored by mer Wilton School principal,
the Ohio Hi storical Society, a coach, and a Vinton
Ohio
Bicentennial
Please see Marker, AS ·
the

I

.;

Diabetes Support Groups

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The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, June 8 from 2:00 · 4:00 pm at the Hospilol's Picnic Shelter.
PICNIC I Pleo~e bring one covered dish if you plan 1o ollend .
Featured speaker · Jennifer Sheets, HMC Nutrition Services Department,
who will tolk about "Healthy Summer Meals·.

MEDICAL CENTER

In Meigs County: Thursday, June 19 ot 10:30 am - Meigs &amp;lnior Center

Diabetes SeN-Management Paogram

-

Saturday, June

14 from 8:00am - 5:00pm in the French 500 Room

Discover the Holzer Difference
www.holzer .org

'

coli

(740) 446•5010

.

�I

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Page A~

Locai .News

The Daily Sentinel

T)tursday, June 5, 2003

l

t

Ohio weather

.

Accu ealher.com forecast lor da
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W.VA.
·

.. t
'

V~aAnoctatlld Press

Sunny today, cloudy tomorrow
Today.. .Mostly sunrly this
morning.,.Then
becoming
mostly cloudy. Highs in the
lower 70s. West winds 10 to 15
mph.
Tonight...Becoming mostly
dear by early evening. Patchy
fog developing. Lows near 50.
Light and variable winds.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs
near 80. East winds 5 to I0
mph.
Friday night... Mostly cloudy.
A slight chance of showers
early ... Then a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows
in the upper 50s. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
. Saturday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
upper 70s. Chance of rain 50
percent.

Saturday . night...Partl y
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms in
the evening .. .Then a slight
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 50s. Chance of rain
20 percent.
'
Sunday.. . Partly cloudy. A
slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms during the
night. Highs in the upper 70s.
Monday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the upper
50s and highs in the lower 80s.
Tuesday.. .Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 50s and
highs in the mid 70s.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy.
A chance of showers and thunderstonns. Lows in the upper
50s and highs in the upper 70s.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
June 4, 2003

10,000

Dow
Jones

9,000

·;11e..;

8,000

&lt;

' .. i

9,038.98
Pet change
from prO'I\ous: +1.30

MAR
High

APR

9.057.40

8,909.01

MAY

Low

JUN

7,000

Racord high: 11,722.98
Jan. I ( 2000

June 4, 2003

1,800

Nasdaq
composite

1,600

Pet change
lrom pm&gt;&lt;ous: +1.94

MAR
High

APR
Low

1,638.57

1,603.17

MAY

JUN

Thirteen of the 23 members of the Olive-Orange High school class o( 1953 gathered recently in Tuppers Plains for a reunion.
Two classmates are deceased and four others, Rachel Taylor, Barbara and Virgil Spencer and Leon Tootl1man. were unable
to attend due to illness. Reminiscing about school days was a highlight of the luncheon get-together. Atte nding we re, left to
right seated ; Violet Wilson , Norma Powell and Louise Koenig; and standing, Martin Dorst. Pre ntice Hess, Marion Riggs, ·
Howard Caldwell, Keith Chaffee , Bob Baylor. John Sisson, Bill Osborne, De.lbert Sanders, and Cliff Adams.

Summer camp.
planned at
Meigs Museum
POMEROY- A summer
day camp fo r children entering fourth thro\lgh sixth
grades wi II be held from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m., June 9-22, at
the Meigs County Museum,
144
Butternut
Ave.,
Pomeroy, under sponsorship
of the Meigs County
Historical Society.
It will . include crafts,
games, candle-making and
cooking. There will be guest
speakers and activity booklets for the children. An out-

1,200

· Racord high: 5,048.62
March 10.2000

BY ANDREW CARTER

News editor
June 4, 2003

Standard&amp;
Poor's 500
+14.88
986.24
Pet change
lrom pmllious

!t

+1.5t

MAR

APR

High

Low

967 .85

870.72

MAY

JUN

700

Record high: 1,527.46
Marcl1 24, 2000

AP

.

Local Stocks
AEP - 29.67
Arch Coal - 23 .36 .
Akzo - 26.90
AmTech/SBC - 26 .18
Ashland Inc. - 32.85
AT&amp;T - 19.84
Bank One - 39. 10

BLI - 12.42
Bob· Evans - 28 .21
BorgWarner - 59.85
Cha mpion ..:.. 2.99
Charming Shops - 4.n
City Holding - 28 29
Col - 23.37
DG - 19.11

DuPont. - 43.44
Federal Mogul USB- 24.18
'Gannen - 79 .50
General Elec!rlc GKNLY - 3 .70
Harley DaVidson Kroger - 16.60
Ltd.- 15.55
NSC - 21.83
Oak Hill Financial .OVB - 23.70
BBT - 35.39
Peoples - 25.45
· Pepsico - 44.87

Premier - 10.02
Rockwell - 24 .91
Rocky Boals - 8.99
AD Shell - 46.79
29.36 Sears - 32.71
Wai·Mart - 53.86
43.96 'wendy's- 30.04
Worthlng1on - 15.50
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. clos ing
24.63 quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smilh Partners
al Advesl Inc. of
Gallipolis.

.34

'

Bob Evans Farms.
earns nationa·l award
COLUMBUS - Bob Evan'
Frums has been named a 2003
Employer of Choice ,Awan! winner in recognition of itS corrunitment to employee satisfaction and
the strength, quality and success of
it~ human resources and tmining

programs. ,
.
A component of ~ Nlllirnal
Re;amtnt A.ssocmoo lili:a!ia1al
Foundatioo (NRAfF) and Coca-

Cola North America's Resource
Center foc Wakforre Solutions, the
EQ-lployerofChoice Awards bonathose restaurant and food !'eiVice
operators that understand that
enhancing employee satisfactioo
ultimalely le&lt;w;ls to &lt;r::hieving guest
satist~on

''Companies like Bob Evans

ing is also being planned.
Children interested are to
register at the museum this
week, 992-3 810. Cost of the
three-day camp is $30 with
the fee to cover all materials, ,
lunch and trip. In past years
participants have visited
Campu s Martius and
Blennerhasset Island for
the special outing. This
year's trip will also be a
popular historical site.

City to help keep
ajrport debris-free

1.400

•

+31.08
1,634.65

scholarship recipients

Farms are making tremendous·
strides in meeting and beating their
workfon:e challenges;' said Mary
M. Adolf, presicrm and chief qJerations officer of the NRAEF.
"We realize that our employees
are the most important component ·
of our busin!ss - they truly are
ihe fax of Bob Evans Farms to our
eus10trt7s," said Stewart Owen~,
chief executive officer and chairman of the board of Bob Evans
Farms.
"We are OOnored that the leading
as.&lt;;ociation for our inlmtry recognizes the hard wak our COO!p!iny
puts forth to provide a quality wak
environment h our more than
40,0CO employees."

GALLIPOLIS
Galli]llis City ~
have agretrl to alkYw the GaJlia.
Meigs Regimd Airport use the
city 's street sweeper to clean
the runway at the airport.
That decision was made
during Tuesday's meeting.
Gilbert Bush, a member of
the airport authority board,
said the· facility has experi~
enced significant .growth in
commercial traffic recently,
thus, increasing the need for
more frequent cleaning of
the runway.
He said regular runway
maintenance has fallen off in
the past few years.
Tiny pebbles stirred up by
airplane propellers and small
jet engines have caused
damage to some planes. He
said the cost .of replacing a
propeller on a small plane is
as much as $3,000.
Bush said in order for
Ga~ia- Me igs to continue to
develop as a major port of
call in the region, the fac1lity
needs to be mai ntained in a
better fa&gt;hion.
''More than 50 percent of
the tmftic that comes in there
is of a commercial nature "
'
Bush said.
"The major thing recently
is now we'even have government tmftic coming into thi s
airport. I think it's to the
· good of the city to let the airport become an important
adjunct to our commercial
outlook into the area around
us."
JOe Woodall, city maintenance supeJiVisor, informed
commissioners that sweeping
the runway at the airport
would cauSP. no more wear and
tear on !he 'weeper than iLs
normal operation on city

Commissioners agreed to
provide the sen~ce on a quarterly ba&gt;is.

Births
'

Ord birth
announced
MASON -

Ord

Monroe birth
announced

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
· Subscribe today.
992-2156

,.

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Saturday, June 7
MIDDLEPORT

·,

Question: I've been an avid
reader of the . "Family
Medicine" column for a num, ber of years. I've noticed that
since you've taken over from
Dr. Wolf several months ago
that the columns have a
slightly different "tone." This
has made me wonder if there
is any research showing the
differences, if any, between
the way male and female doctors practice medicine.
Answer: Tl)i s is a very
interesting question that has
been debated for years. I'm
very proud of the rich history
of mvolvement of women in
the osteopathic medical profession . My alma mater, the
Kirksville
College
of
Osteopathic Medicine, was in
the 1890s and the first few
decades of the 20th Century, a
national leader in the medical
education of women . . Andrew
T. Still, the founder of the
o teopathic profession and
first president of KCOM, was
an outspoken advocate of
women in medicine and
thought they might even have
an slight advantage in the
ob/gyn field.
That being said, the quev
tion does remain if there is
any measurable differencef'JQ
the way men and women tend

Colwell

James Madison Uni ve rsity in
Virginia for a fi ne arts and
interior design degree.
Cass ie Magnotta, granddaughter of Ron and Wanda
Foster Williams, graduated
from Wyoming High School in
Wyoming, Ohio. She will be
attending the State Uni versity
of New Jersey, Rutgers, pursuing a degree in agriculture
science.
Kelly Johnston , graduate of
Meigs High School , is the sun
of Cecil Johnston. He will be
attending Ohio State University
to study politi c&lt;~ science and
law.
Alli son Lynn Williamson.

Williamson

late Elvira Phel ps Barr. graduate d from M e i g ~: Hi gh School
and wi ll be intending the
Uni versity of Rio Grande to
study edu cational admi nistration.
. Presidin g officers at the banquet were Ronnie Rife. president Jimm y Graham, vice
president : Linda Haley, secretary and Marjori e Priddy Rife .
treasurer.
The ofncers elected fo r next
year' s banquet were John
Jeffers. presi dent ; Ri chard
Nelson. vic:e president; Elaine
Steele Dyer. secretary ; and
Betty Jeffe rs Longstreth, treasurer.

The researchers concluded
that fe male doctors spent an
average of 23 minutes with
each patient, compared to. 21
minutes for male physicians.
It also found that in geneFal , a
female doctor is more likely
to have words of encouragement and reassurance for her
patients. and she is more likely to establish a personMrapport with the patient.
The authors of the study
were quick to point out that
even with the difference s,
they felt both male and female
doctors generally do a good
job communicatin g with
patients. And, they found no
difference in the quality of
care. Nothing in the study.
they stressed, suggested that
women are better doctors than
men or that men are superior
to women ..
The research did reinforce.
though, the fact that diffe rent
doctors have different styles.
So as a patient, it can be to
your advant age to find a
physician who has a personafity and a communication style
you're comfortable with.
Some patients prefer a nurturing 1ype or physician who
can address both the physical
and emotional aspect s of
heal th care. Other patients

Columnist
to practice medicine. Most of
the research in this area to
date has been done on communi cation styles.
One fairly recent study
revealed some interesting differences between male and
female doctors in the area of
·Communication. It found that
primary care physicians who
are women tend to spend
more time with eac h patient
and
communicate
with
patients more.
&lt;
This stud y, publi shed in The
Journal of the At.ilerican
Medical Association , was
based on earlier research that
had been conducted over a
35 -year period. Those earlier
studies had looked at the comniunication styles of primary
care doctors and interni sts as
well as other physicians and
re sident s.

prefer a doctor who's "all
busine"" - who .1hares with
them the facts surrounding
their medical condition and
·presents the information in a
strictl y analytical way with
minimal emotional overtones.
That's why I advise people
to shop around carefully for a
famil y phys ician . l\) find
somebody with both strong
medical credentials and a personality you like. Be it a man
or a woman , you'll be more
sati sfied if you r doctor is
someone with wl10m you can
communicate well.
Fwnih Medicine is " weekh coluinn. 7rJ submit questions. 1vrite to Mllrthll A
Simpsrm, D.O., M.B. A., Ohio
College
of'
Uni•'ersity
Osteopathic Medicin e, P. 0.
Box 11 0. Athens. Ohio 45701.
Medical information in this
column is prv••ided liS m1 eduJmional serl'ice onh. It does
not replace the j udgment r~l
.w ur personal phvsician, who
should be relied em 10 diagno·
sis and recommend treatment
}i11· anr rtwdical conditions.
Pasr columns are available
onlirre ar , ., ., .p,mdio.org!fm. ·

'Mimeetai8:3J a m..ine7 at the
People's Bank in Middleport.
.SYRACUSE
The
London Pool will tentatively be
opening at 12 noon. Summer
long passes on sale now are
$30 per person, or for a family
of four, $25 per person. Daily
pasSes are $3 for people ages
16 and up, $2 for children
ages five to t5, $1 for children
between the ages of two and
four, and free for anyone
yo,unger. For more information on passes , contact pool
managers Bobbi Hill (94901 07) or Brandi Lyons (9859824). The .phone number for
the pool is 992-5418 .
Tuesday, June 10
POMEROY
The
Bedford Township Trustees
will meet al7 p.m. at the town
halL

Thursday, June 5
RACINE
Racine
American Legion will meet at
the haiLA dinner and drawing
will follow the meeting.
Friday, June 6
POMEROY
Meigs
Counly PEA l Chaple r 74 ,
Meigs County Senior Center,
lunch at noon, meeting following. State Rep. Ji mmy
Stewart, A-Athens, to speak
about health care.

Saturday, June 7
COOLVI LLE
The
Coolville Carthage·Troy alumni banquet will be held at the
Coolville Elementary School
auditorum .. Doors open at 5
p.m. For more information call
740-667-3584.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet at 6 30
p.m. for a potluck supper followed by a 7:30 p.m. meeting
at the haiL

Other events
Thursday, June 5
REEDSV ILLE - The Ohio
University
College
of
Osteopathic Medicine (OUCOM) Childhood Immunization
Program mobile hea~h unit will
be at Reed's Store from noon
to 1 p.m. providing free immunizations for all area children
from birth to 18. For more
information call t -800-8442654 or contact your local
hea~h department.
TUPPERS . PLAINS
VFW Post 9053 Auxiliary will
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the hall.

Wednesday, June 1 1
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of HeaKh will
meet at 5 p.m. in the conferSaturday, June 7
ence room of the Meigs
HARRISONVI LLE
~
County Health Department, Harrisonville Lodge 41 .1 will
tt2 East Memorial Drive, meet at 7:30 p.m. al the te m- .
Pomeroy.
pie. Refreshm ents will be
served.

'

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o.

11

The I)aily Sentinel

Checkout
all the
latest
sports
action on
page 81.
•

Who : Grades 7· 12
When : June 8· 12
Suny 6:J0-8:JOp.m.
Where: First Baptist Chu"h
404 Fifth.Street
Racine , Ohio 45771

granddaughte r of the late Fred
Williamson, will be tak ing
rad iology &gt;11 the Uni versity of
Rio Gra nde .
She is a graduate of Meigs High School.
Ashley Colwell , . granddau ghter · of the late John
Col we ll imd a graduate · of
Meigs Hi gh School , will be
attending the Muskin gum
Technical College where she
plans to study radiology.
Tyler Simmons. grandson
of Shirley Cremeans Simmons
and a graduate of Eastern High
School. will be going to the
University of Cincinnati to
pursue premed studies.
Marc Barr. grandson of the

Martha A.
Simpson

(UsPs 2t3-9&amp;0J

·

· Ohi&lt;:l Valley Publishing Co.

Corr elton Polley
_
Our main concern· in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
slory, call lhe newsroom at (740) 992·

2156.

'

Who: Grades K-6
When : June 9·13
Mon. - Fri.• 9:00-12:00 noon
Where: First Baptist Church
404 Fift~ St'reet
Racine, Ohio 45771

Johnston

Hann

Read! r Services

An enthusiastic five-day Jr./Sr.
High program promoting God's
Word with dynamic preaching,
unusual games and fabulous
food . Come and see for yourself.

1119

~tCmmrity Am. illill

.

A five-day, fun-filled youth program
featuring exciting Bible stories, action
songs, enthusiastic competition ,
weekly awards, and so much more .
You' don't want to miss it!

Tyler Simmons

Female docs .have edge on patient
communication, not on quality of care

oooces.

DuraStontt Classic: High Performance Flooring is the newest
addition to the DuraStone product line. OU&lt;aStone Classic
combines the durability and tim.eless beauty of OuraStone
with a new polished finish found In the most exquisite
stones created by nature.

Bolin

Creek Watershed Committee
will hold a water quality sam·
piing demonstration at 6:30
p.m. in Thomas Fork Creek.
The group will first meet at the
Ohio
State
University
Extension Service Office on
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy
then convoy to the creek. The
public is invited. Refreshments
will be served .
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet at
6:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Salisbury Township building
on Rock Springs Road.

Family Medicine

Kyle and Lisa
THE PLAINS - loath
Honaker Ord Moriroe Jr. and Sarah Monroe
ofMao;oo, W announce the birth of a son,
Va announce · Zoath Moore Ill, on May 16,
the birth of a
daughter , 2003. at O' Bleness Memorial
Alisa Lynn, Hospital.
born April I
at the Holzer
•
Medical
Center. The
infatt weigre:l
6 [XJ.J!rls, 13

Maternal grandparents are
Debra Honaker of Middleport
and Paul A. Honaker, Jr., Mason.
W Va.; great-grandparents are
Betty and Charles Smith of
Middleport and Minnie Honaker
of Mason, and great-great gmndparents are Mildred and Carroll
Johnson of Middleport.
Paternal grandparents are Pete
and Cindy Scott of Pomeroy and
Verne Ord of Reynoldsbwg: and
great-grandparents are Bob and
Leah Ord of Syracuse and Janet
Theiss of Racine.

Magnotta

Community Calendar
Pub!ic meetings Clubs and
Thursday, June 5
Organizations
POMEROY -. The Leading

News editor .
RUTLAND - Ten scholarships were awarded to graduatmg semors at the Rutland
Ht.gh School Alumni banquet
held May 24 at the Rutland
Civic Center.
The scholarships are funded
solely by annual donation s
from the alumni with. 78 having been awarded over the past
16 years.with a college completion rate of nearly 99 percent, according to the committee, Suzy Parker, Joan Rife
W~l.fe , and Maxine Ogden
Gnffith. The rec1pients are the
children or grandchildren of
Rutland High School alumni. ·
This year's recipients were:
Kayla Renea George, granddaugher of Avanelle Jordan
George and the late Fred
Georg(;!. The graduate of River
Valley High School in Gallia
County, will be attending the
Uni versity of Rio Grande for
a degree m education.
Brook Bolin, granddaughter
of Joe and Janet Turner Bolin,
plans to attend the University
of Rio Grande for a degree in
nursing.
·
Thomas Simmons, a gradu. ate of Eastern High School,
and grandson of Shirley
Cremeans, will be attending
The Ohio State Uni versity
where he will pursue a degree
in business administration.
Cara Hann, granddaughter
of Delma Riggs Nelson, and a
graduate
of
Manheim
Township High ·School in
Pennsylvania, will be going to

Thursday, June 5, 2003

'

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH

Youngstown .49°n6':_j
'-······· ·T-..

' Man•~!!!! I SO'I75' I •

-

R~tland High 'School Alumni hold ,reunion,

Olive-Orange alumni
meet
.

Friday, June 6

Page \3

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Thursday, June 5, 2003

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Charlene Hoeflich •

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NATIONAL VIEW

Senior citizens easy prey,
need protection
• The Daily Advertiser, Lafayette, La., on protecting

'

Tax cuts leave Bush with no one·- to ·blame

seniors:

One of the sad aspects of life today is that each year about
2 million older Americans are victims of crime. ... The
appalling number of offenses against them must be addressed,
and with un ique approaches and resources.
Senior citizens are targets for robbery, car theft and burglary. Older people are more likely than younger victims to
face attackers who are strangers - along with the chance of
· more serious injury. They are more often attacked at or near
their homes.
It is not always strangers who hurt older people. Sometimes,
famil y members, friends, or caretakers may physically, mentally .or fina ncially abuse seniors through neglect, violence or
by stealing money or property.
The development in Louisiana of a speCial corps of elder
. services officers to guard people at this vulnerable time in
their lives is gratifying. Presently, there are 189 specially
trained elder service officers in 54 of the state's parishes. They
are qualified through special learning programs to better protect older people and, of great importance, to better communicate with them.
As cur population ages, such expertise is critical.

'

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, June 5, the I 56th day of 2003. There are
209 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
On June 5, 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated
after claiming victory in California's Democratic presidential primary. Gunman Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was immediately arrested.
On this date:
In 1783, Joseph and Jacques Montgolfier publicly demonstrated their hot-air balloon in a 10-rrunute flight over Annonay,
France.
In 1794, Congress pa~sed the Neutrality Act, which prohibited
Americans from enlistin~ in the service of a foreign powe:.
In 1917, about 10 mtlhonAmencan men began regtstenng for
·
the draft in World War I.
In 1933, the United States went off the gold standard.
In 1940, the Battle of France began during World War II.
In 1947. Secretary of State George C. Marshall gave a speech
at Harvard University in which he outlined an aid program for
Europe that came to be known as ''The Marshall Plan."
In 1967. war erupted in the Mideast as Isr-ael raided Egyptian
military targets. Syria, Jordan and Iraq enll;red the conflict.
In 1975, Egypt.reopened the Suez Canal to international ship,. ping. eight years after it was closed because of the 1967 war with
Israel.
·
In 1981 , the Centers for 'Disease Control reported that five
homosexuals in Los Angeles had come down with a rare kind of
pneumonia; they were the first recognized cases of what later
became known as AIDS.
In 1999, jazz and pop singer Mel Torme died in Los Angeles at
age 73.
Ten years ago: In Somalia, militiamen loyal to Mohamed
Farrah Aidid killed 24 Pakistani soldiers . In Texas, Republican
Kay Bailey Hutc!llson won the U.S. Senate seat vacated by
Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen. "Colonial Affair," ridden by
Julie Krone, won the Belmont Stakes. Country star Conway
Twitty died in Springfield, Mo., at age 59.
Five years ago: A strike at a General Motors parts factory near
Detroit closed five assembly plants and idled workers nationwide; the walkout lasted seven weeks. Volkswagen AG won
approval to buy Rolls-Royce Motor Cars for $700 million, however. BMW later got to purchase the Rolls-Royce brand name
and logo.
One year ago: Elizabeth Smart, 14, disappeared from her Salt
Lake City home. S!Je was found alive in a Salt Lake suburb the
following March; two people are accused of abducting her. A suicide bomber killed 17 Israelis on a bus. Magic Johnson was introduced as a member of ·the 2002 class elected to the Naismith
Memorial Basketball HaJJ of Fame. Dee Dee Ramone, bass player for the pioneer punk band the Ramones, died in Los Angeles
at age 50,
Today's Birthdays: Broadcast journalist Bill Moyers is 69.
Actor Spalding Gray is 62. Rhythm and blues singer Aoyd Butler
(Friends of Distinction) is 62. Country singer Don Reid (The
Statler Brothers) is 58. Rock musician Fred Stone (Sly and the
Family Stone) is 57. Rock singer Laurie Anderson is 56. Country
singer Gail Davies is 55. Rock musician Nicko McBrain (Iron
Maiden ) is 49. Jazz musician Kenny G is 47. Rock singer
Ri chard Butler (Psychedelic Furs) is 47. Actor Jeff Gatlin is 41.
Actress Karen Sillas is 38. Actor Ron Livingston is 36. Singer
Brian McKnight is 34. Rock musician Claus Norreen (Aqua) is
33. Actor Mark Wahlberg is 32. Actor Chad Allen is 29. Rock
musician P-nut (3 11 ' is 29. Actress Liza Wei! is 26.
.
T)lought for Today: "Dare to be' naive." - R. Buckminster
Fuller. American inventor and philosopher ( 1895-1983).

'Speak Out!'
(740) 9'92-2156
extension 29

.,

Deaths

Love 'em or hate 'e m,
President Bu sh's new tax
cu ts do two things: deprive
him of any chance to blame
Democrats if the economy
doesn't recover, and set up a
Morton
make' or-break test of t he
efficacy of supply-s ide, trickKondracke
le-down Repu blican economtcs. .
.
Congress passed cuts nominally limited to $330 billion ·
over 10 years. a total Bush week, 45 perce nt of U.S.
once derided as "itty bitty," adults think the cuts are a
giving him a potentia l excuse good idea, while 46 perceilt
if the economy re main s say th ey're a bad idea.
A Time-CNN poll showed
weak. but, as everyone now
that
, by 57 percent to 32 perknows, the size of the cuts is
likely to be greater than the cent. voters believe the cuts
$726 billion Bush originally will benefit the rich more
sought - and which , he than the middle class. Bv 50
promised ; would create I percent to 39 percent, -they
think the cuts will stimulate
million new jobs by 2004.
Colleagues say it was Sen. the economy. But, by 47 perDon Nickles (R-Okla.) who cent to 40 percent, they think
recommended using "sun - the federal deficit will grow
sets" early ex pirati on "to unacceptably high levdates - to shoe-horn hu ge els."
Public attitude s
may
long-term tax cuts into the
improve
soon
when
some
25
$350 billion box mandated
million families receive
by moderate .Senators.
Assuming that Congress checks for $400 per child as a
extends the cuts, the liberal result of the increase in the
Center for Budget and Policy child tax credit , and when al l
Priorities calculates their real incmi1e-tax payers noti ce less
cost at $800 bill.ion to $ 1 tri l- mone y being withheld from
lion over I 0 years - or $ 1. 1 their paychecks as a result of
trillion to $ 1.5 trillion, cou nt- rate reductions.
On the hi ghly po liti cal
ing increases ih interest payquestion
of "fairn ess,"
ments on the federal debt.
In any event, whe n Bush there's no questi on that, in
signed the bi II lasi week, he terms of dollars in peoples'
hailed it as a job ere a to~. That pockets. the Bu sh cuts benemeans there can be no excus- fit the wealthy more than
es and no blaming someone lower-income gro ups.
Arguing for his cuts as late
else if the economy doesn' t
as
last week 's signing cere rebound before next year's
Bush··claimed that 91
mony,
election.
Democrats, of course, millio n . taxpayers would
attack the cuts as economi- rece ive an ave rage of $ 1,126
cally in effect ive. fi scally in 2003. But that 's a mi sleadirresponsible and unfairly ing claim , as CBPP demonstrates. It · ·av ~ ra gcs" the
skewed to the ri ch.
Polls indicate that the pub- $93 .350 tax cut for millionlic is skeptical about the aires with the $189 for those
mcomes
between
Bush cuts. According to a with
Gallup poll re leased las t $20.000 and $30,000.

Fi gured as a perce ntage tax
Supply-siders contend 'tax
reduction. though. the Bush cut s will stimulate economic
cuts can be considered "fair." act ivity so much that they' ll
Millionaires will get an 11 .5 more than pay for themselves
percent reduction in th eir . in increased gove rnmeht revtaxes. accordi ng to Treasury enues. wiping out anticipated
Department estimates, while deticits.
the $20,000 to $30.000 group
They claim
it
was
gets a 20 percent reduction.
President Ronald Reagan's
Those wi th incomes above tax cuts that encouraged the
$ 100,000 have bee n pay ing in vest ments and productivi ty
72.4 percent of al l taxes. increases that powered the
Afte r Bush cuts. they' ll be econom y through the 1990s,
paying 73,3 percent.
· ·
·
f ·
11
W.hi Je fairne ss is a hill ra lsmg tncomes or a
debating topic. the real tests groups, erasing deficit proof Bush's tax pol ic ies are : jections and producing surwil l they boost the economy plu ses that have since disapbeforc the 2004 election; peared . .
and, if Bush is re-elected and
Democrats, of course, are
his policies survive. will they convinced that it 's all hokum.
fulfill the supply-siders' They say Reagan's cuts led
promise of conti nu ing pros- only to deep deficits that
pcriry?
President Bill Clinton diminFor Bush, the new cuts ished with tax increases, sethave the virtue of being ting off the 1990s boom and
front-loaded and economi- making the surpluses possically stimulative, with $208 ble.
billion of the total taking · Bush intends to push supeffect in 2003 and 2004. The ply-side theory to the limit,
package also contains $20 offering up one tax cut after
billion in aid to the states.
another.· If he 's right, the
Whether or not the Bush economy could produce
cut s boost the economy enough wealth to pay for
between now and mid-2004, many of the programs
Democrats are in the political Democrats advocate.
bind of ca ll ing for their
If he 's wrong, however,
repeal - i.e., tax increases deficits will get deeper, inter- which is not a popular est rates will ri se, the econoposition goi ng into an elec- my will weaken and the
lion .
·
country will not be able to
Democrats legitimatel y maintain Social Security and
argue th at · the tax cuts Medicare benefits for baby
deprive the gove rnment of boom retirees.
This is a wild ride Bush has
money th:tt could be spent on
education , health care or
more aid to the states, but set ,in moti on. When it's over,
th at stance deprives them of we II know, a lot about ecothe ability to blame Bush for · nom1cs. We ll also either be a
ri sing budge t deficits.
lot :1cher as a country - or
So. politically. Bush seems m disastrous shape. The credlikely to emerge -the. short- II. or bl ame , wtll belong to
term winner in the tax wars Bush.
- scitin u up a climactic (and
I Marron Kondracke · is
risky) test of whether suppl y- executive editor of Ro/1 Call,
side . GOP economics works th e newspapet of Capitol
in the longenerm.
Hill.)

AMESVILLE - Travis M.
Lawless, 19, died June 5.
2003 at hi s residence after a
courageo·us battle with cancer. He is survived by his parents Michael K. and Nancy
L. Bowen Lawless.
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Saturday, at the
Bigony-Jordan
Funeral
Home, Albany, with the Re v.
Chris Stewart officiating.
Calling hours will be 6 to 9
p.m. · Friday at the funeral
home. Burial will be at the
Amesville Cemetery.

Homeless today, helping tomorrow
The metal fan on Martha
Ryan 's desk barely moves
the hot air that rises from
Market Street nine stories
below. From way up here,
you can't see the homeless
Joan
people huddled in doorways
Ryan
along th is grimy stretch of .
San Franci sco.
But wa lk down the hall or
up a !light of stairs. There
they are: women from the
streets.
best pan : It comes with a
They are pregnant &lt;Jr push- check for $120.000.
ing stroll ers. They sleep in
"' I was shoc ked and
shelters · or under freeway stunned. It 's just} mazingw
passes. Some have drug me that I got thts. Ryan sa1d.
addictions. They need prena- "If I could tell people how to
tal care. They need to get otT buil~. an age ncy like thi s. rd
the street. If they don't, they say tt takes a commun_lly. I
doom another ge neration to came up wtth the Ortl!lflal
poverty and sickness.
1dea. bu t so many other Ideas
Th is is whv, with a small can)C Iron; .the people v·:,e
grant and ·two part-time serve. That s why It works.
workers, Ryan (no relation to
Ryan IS a nurse pract1t1 oner
me )· began the Homeless who. dunng_ leaves from her
Prenatal Program 14 yea rs JOb at San Franctsco General
ago. Last week, one of her Hospttal, taught women 111
funders called with some Ethto_pla, Uganda and Sudan
new s. "We're goi ng to be the fundamental s ol health
dancing on Market Street!" care so they could work . in
he said.
th e village cltntcs, help1n g,
He had just gotten off the thetr neighbors. She de~.: 1ded
phone with the Robert Wood to apply the lessons of Afnca
Johnson Community Health to her own ctty. She would
Leadership Program. Ryan trail! pregnant home less
had been chosen, along with women to help each other.
nine others from around the
It d1dn 't matter to Ryan
country, to re ceive the orga- that there had never been a
nization\ highest honor. The program directed at pregnant

homeless wo men, or that she
had no experience in raising
the money essential to keeping it atloat. This is a woman
who, with an associate's
degree in nursing. refused to
accept the rejection letter
from UC Berkeley's graduate
program in public health . She
badgered the admi ss ion 's
director into meeting with
her face LO face. Rya·n now
has a master's degree from
UC Berkeley.
Th e . Homeless Prenatal
. Program 's .success rate has·
bee n impressive: 92 percent
of the hahi es born to homeless clients are healthy land
drug free . Nearl y 2.000 !'amilies come through the center
every year. Ryan and her staff
.find them 'housing, ge t them
into drug treatmelll , hook
them up with San Francisco
City Co llege, ge t them prenatal care, provide parenting
c lasses, computer training,
therapy. crihs. diapers, groceries.
'When a woman is settled
,and healthy, , he can participate in a IS-month training
progra m to qualify for a job
at the center. Of the progra m'&gt; 29 slaffe rs, 20 had
once been homeless.
" My vbio n is that so meone
who used to be a client will
be running this program one

day." Ryan says.
In a sitting room one floor
up from Ryan 's office, three
pregnant women wait for
casewo rkers to call their
names. Despite the exhaustion and exasperation stemming from San Francisco's
homeless problem, Ryan sees
in each of these wnmen a
pebble rippling across a lake.
One mother who gives birth
to a healthy baby and gets
herself off the street touches
other lives - her ch ildren,
her grandchildren, other
homeless women who take
hope from her success.
· Ryan won' t get ~ her . award
money until June II , at a ceremony in Washington, D.C .,
but she has ttlready decided it
will go into the Homeless
Prenatal Program's employee
retirement fund . Right now,
only Ryan has been participating in the retirement program. So with the $120,000,
she will offer matching con- ·
thbutions of up to $50 a
month . It will , she hopes,
encourage her staffers to save
for a future many of them
had never envisioned.
(Joan Rmn is a columnist ·
for the · San Francisco :
Chronicle. Send comments to .
her in care of this newspaper
or send her e-mail at joanrmn@ sfchronicle.com.)

RACINE
- Memorial
services for Freda M.
Carpenter will be held at II
a.m. on Saturday, June 7,
2003, at Cremeens Funeral
Home in Racine. Burial of
the cremains will be in
Stivers ville Cemetery.
Carpenter, · 76,
of
Stiversville, died Oct. 18,
2002.
. at her res idence.
.

Local Briefs
Meeting
canceled

c~

Martha Stewart indictment

Freda Carpenter

Vidims

Th e.paily Sentinel• Page AS

www.mydailysentinel.com

Travis L.
Lawless

. lURING:

·General manager and news'editor

Thursday, June S, 2003

)

POMEROY - The reg ular
meeting of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce
scheduled for Tuesday has
been canceled so that members may attend the celebration of the 30th anniversary
of the Meigs County Council
on Aging. State auditor Betty
Montgo mery will be the
speaker at the celebration.

.&gt;

NEW ,YORK (AP) Martha Stewart took her
defense straight to the public
Thursday, writing in a newspaper ad, , "I am innocent" and
"will fight to clear my name"
in a federal insider trading case
that pressured her to step d!Jwn
as head of the retailm1d media
empire that made her a fortune.
The queen of horne decor
resigned late Wednesday as
chairwoman and CEO ·of
Martha
Stewart Living
Omnimedia the company she
used to stamp her style on
everything from magazines
and TV screens to bed linens
and bath towels. She plans to
stay on as creative chief and a
member of the board.
· Stewart's resignation carne
hours after federal prosecutors
in New York charged her with
obsnuction of justice, conspiracy, securities fraud and lying
to investigators.
She pleaded innocent on aJI
counts before a fedeml judge,
saying "not guilty" in a calm,
deli.bemte tone and with little
expression on her face.
The indictme.nt stems from
Stewan's sale of nearly 4,000
shares or lmCipne Systems on
Dec. 27, 2001 - the day
before a disappointing Food
and Drug Administration
report that sent the biotech
company's stock price tumbling. lf convicted, she could
be sent to prison.
Also indicted was Peter
Bacanovic, Stewart's former
broker at Merrill Ly,nch, who
prosecutors say illegally sent
word to Stewart that the family

of lmCione founder Samuel
Waksal was planning to unload
shares.
Bacanovic also pleaped
innocent to all counts against
him, including perjury and
obstruction of justice.
In an open letter published as
a full-page ad in USA Today
on Thursday, Stewart said, "'I
want you to know that 1 am
innocent - and that 1will fight
to clear my name."
"I simply returned a call
from my stockbroker," Stewan
wrote. "Based in large part on
prior discussions with my broker about price, I authorized a
sale of my remaining shares in
a biotech company_ called
lmCione.. I later derued any
wrongdmng m public statements and voluntary mterviews with prosecutors. The
government's attempt to cnminalize these actions makes no
sense to me."
The charges against her
carry a maximum penalty of
· 30 years in prison and a $2 million fme for Stewart, and 25
years and $1.25 million for
-Bacanovic. Any sentences
would likely be much lighter
under federal guidelines.
Followt~g the mdtctment,
the Secunlles and Exchange
CommisSion filed a c1vii complamt seeking to ban Stewart,
61. from ever leading a public
company and to ltmit her acnvity as ofticer of a public company.
Regulators also want the
court to force Stewart and
Bacanovic to pay more than
$45,000 - the losses they say

Pennsylvania officials deny .
zoning change to allow
Amish men to keep horses

Stewart avoided by unloading
lmClone stock before Wall
Street learned legally that the
FDA had declined to review
lmCione's application for
approval of its cancer drug
Erbitux.
At a news conferenc.e,
Manhattan , U.S. Attorney
J
C
ld
ames omey to reporters
the case was about Stewart's
alleged lies - to the SEC, the
FBI and to her own inyestors.
"Martha Stewart is being
prosecuted not because of who
she is but because of what she
did," he said
Her attorney said Stewart
· was being unfairly targeted perhaps becau5eofherextraordinarily high profile.
Attorney Robert Morvillo
aJso asked: "Is it because she is

ZION , Pa. (AP)
than two acres. and does not
Offtcials rejected a request to allow horses within villages
change a local ordinance so or in areas zoned for multi two Am ish men could keep fal1)iiy re~idcntial use.
horses on their rural central
Kei tli Harter, chairman of
Pennsylvania property. mean- · the board of supervisors. said
ing the men ha ve less than a the zoning ordinance was
week to remove the animals necessary because of conor face fines of $ 100 a day.
cerns abo ut animal waste .
The horses are an esse ntial
The men 's attorney. James
form of transportation fo r the M. Bryant. said most or the
Amish, who generally shun available land where. the men
modern conve niences such as could keep horses was eit her
electricity, te lephones and ill -suited or too expensive.
Bryant said he would
cars. Daniel King and Dani el
Beiler said they use the hors- immediately appeal a j udge 's
es to pull bugg ies.
May 30 ruling that estab"1 ai n't going to be able to lished the fines. He said he
live ve ry long paying $100 a may also appeal in federa l
day," Kin g. 26, said after court on the gro unds the ordiWednesday 's vote by the nance violates the Constitution
Walker Township superv i- and the federal Reli giou s Land
sors.
Use Act. which exempts rel iThe men 's attorne y said gious gro ups fro m most local
they would appeal the ruling . zon in g rules unle ss the
Kin g and Beiler. -3 1. re str ictions protect public
•acknowl edged
knowin g safety.
\1 Walker Township had a zan"We' re livi ng in . America
' ing ordinance prohibiting here. I can't believe .~ou can't
horses when they bought the ha ve a horse for reli gious
land. The township only transportation." Kin g said . ''It
allows horses on plots larger makes no sense at all."

a woman who has s~ccessfully
competed m a man s bus mess
world by vtrtue of her talent.
hard work and . demandmg
standards?"
At a hearing before U.S.
District Judge Miriam Goldman
Cedarbaum,Stewartwasreleased
withoot bail until her next couit
appearance June 19. Stewart
ignored reporters and camera
crews as she enteied and left
the federal courthouse in lower
Manhattan
Barry ~hkover associate
.
.
•
.
regiOnal director of the SEC tn .
New York, said Thur~da7
when ~ked ~bout Mot;illo s
co~plamt, · It wouldn t be
appropriate not to charge her
because she's a celebrity."

Marker

,,.

Bomb plot suspected.in LA,
stashes of weapons, ammo, jet fuel

MONTEREY
PARK ,
Calif. (AP) - A man in
pri son for vehicle theft is
suspected of pl anning a
. significant attack, say
authorities who uncovMARIETTA - District 18
ered an arsenal of semiauOhio
Public
Works
tomati c assault weapons ,
Integrating Committee will
ammunition,
pipe bombs
meet at I :30 p.m. on June 26,
and barrels of jet fue I.
at Holiday Inn, Marietta. The
No charges have been
meeting is for the purpose of
filed, but the federal
appointment
integrating
Bureau
of
Alcohol,
committee members to the
Tobacco a·nd Firearms is
executive committee, appoint
inve stigating, authorities
small government committee
said at a news conference
members, appoint officers,
Wedne sday. The ATF is
ard approve R,ound 18 evaluinve st igatin g John Noster
ation criteria.
for firearms and exploImmediately following, the
sives ;v iolations and plans
District 18 executive and
to prese nt a case to federsmall government commit- ''' al prosecutors in the near
future. ATF spokeswoman
tees 'will elect efticers for
Latese Baker said. '
Round 18.
Noster, 38, has refused
Questions may be directed
to
talk to inve stigators,
to Misty Casto at Buckeye
sheriff'
s
Sgt.
John
Hill s/Hocking
Valley
Demooy said .
Regional
Development
" He was ( definitely
Distri ct at 374-9436.
planning on ta rgeting a
structure, location , individuals, and would have
created signifi cant damMARIETTA
The
age," Demooy said.
Di strict 18 Ohio Public
Authorities have not
Works Round 17 Executive
been
able- to identify the
I
Committee will meet at 10
target.
a.m. on June 26 at Holiday
They said an investig aInn, Marietta, to revise the
tion that began last fall
Round
18
Evaluation
t led to the discovery of
Criteria, prior to submission
three ·pipe bombs, two
to the integrating committee
incendiary devices , six
55-gallon drums 9f jet
for their approval.
fuel.
five
assault
Questions may be directed
weapons , smokeless powto Misty Casto at Buckeye
der, cannon fu se, electric
Val)ey
Hills/Hocking
Regional .
Development
District at 374-9436.

Committee
meets

Meeting set

matches , thousands of
rounds of a ~munition
and $188,000 in cash.
The guns, ammunition
and cash were in a garage
"with a $3 padlock on it,"
Demooy said.
Noster had traveled
back and forth across the
country in a pickup with a
camper shell after leaving
a Los Angeles sporting
goods company where he
was
an , accountant.
Investigators say he went
to Texas, Arkansas and
Oregon.
He worked for Easton
Sports, which makes aluminum bats, hockey gear
and bicycle frames , until
voluntarily leaving in
November 2000 , said
John Cramer, the company 's vice president and
general counsel. . ·
Noster pleaded no contest to one count of grand
theft auto on Jan. 14 and
was sentenced to 16
months in prison but was
given credit for 120 day~
served, district attorney 's
spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons
said. Authorities said he
had no other criminal
record.
" He was white-collar
professional , seemed like
an intelligent man and · I
believe if charges are
brought again st him ...
that he ' ll be vindicated in
court," said Nicholas
Khan , an attorney who .
repre sented Noster in the

theft case.
Noster was arrested in
November at his father 's
home in the West Hills
area of Los Angeles .
Incendi ary devices were
found there in the pickup
truck, investigators said,
leading to further discov- .
eries at sites in the northern Los Angeles County
city. of Lancaster and the
Los Angele s suburb of
Culver City.
Authorities also found a
handwritten note about
options for destroying a
bui'lding by either dropping an "instrument" from .
a gyrocopter or placing it
nearby. A gyrocopter is a
tiny aircraft that look s
like a helicopter but is
pu shed by a rear-mounted
propeller
while
the
unpowered
overhead
blades create lift.
Authorities also sei?;,ed
a note addressed to
Noste.r by a person only
identified as Lance.
"Hi John , well here it is
.. . the first of many issue s
of homesl and," the note
said . " As I find other
areas I will mail them to
you. Hope you get a
chance to come up and
VISit , we · need so me
excitement around here ,
you know, like bomb
threats or something ....
Hope to hear from you
soon, Lance ."
.,

EXCE

Sale
from Page A1
"I thought the building was too
good to be destroyed when it can
serve the needs of the community," he said.
Wingett said . plasterers and

7:00&amp; 9:45

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992-2156

They're a part
of. the family.
When a pet passes
away, it 's really impprtant to some families that
they are able to say goodbye to the family friend in
a caring way. It may
seem a little unu sual ,
but for some individuals being able to experience a gnevmg process
and closure is very important in making
their memories of their best friend complete. At Fisher Funeral Homes
we offer affordable
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ilq'l 'll'- l'l,11 h tHI
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(740) 992-5141

I "

I-Sll0-2llti-.Jllil; ot ( ~ .J(I) hh~-71SS

[:] =

other workmen will begin some
renovation work soon.
Fonner classrooms may feature a yoga workshop or a' computer lab someday. The siage
will be opened up for community events. Balliields and a track
also are included in the iongrange plans, Wingett said.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLRS.

Call us, to tinct
out how our staff
can help you with
the loss of a pet.

MATRIX RELOADED (R)

THRU
SUN. BEGINNING 814103

Wilkesvi ll e Mayor Karen
Spurling. and other village
ofi1cials.
from Page A1
The
Vinton
Count y
Bicentenni al Bell will be
Township native. wi ll share a ru ng 17 times in honor of the
family legend of how State of Ohio bein ~ the 17th
Morgan's Raiders visited his state to join the Uni on and to
grandparents' home on Jul y celebrate its 200th birthday.
'The marker celebration is
17, 1863.
"I Am The Spirit Of being held in conJunc ticm
America" will be given by with the semi-annual si ng spi:
Howard Richard. a hi story ration bv the Wilk esv ille
Communit y Chorus directed
teacher from Portsmouth .
All ancestors of Gen. John by Nancy Steele All man and
·Hunt Morgan and John and pianist Catherine Shenetiel,d.
Eliza Levis will be recog- The group wi ll sing Civil·
nized during the servi ce. War songs at the dedication
Mrs. William (Ruth Virginia ceremony.
Refreshment s will
be
Altha() Cline was a first
served fol low ing the procousin to Gen. Morgan.
The marker will be. gram.The public is invited to
unveiled by the Village of attend in period costume.

..
•

�•

Downon·th8

.The Daily Sentinel

Pecan ·grower~ hope to
·match Vidalia's success
BY EUion MINOR
r\ssociated Press

CORDELE, Ga. - Usi ng
Georgia's famous Vidalia
pnion as a ro le model. the
~t a t e's pecan growe rs arc trytng to add val ue· to their crop'
by marketing the nuts as a
Specialty product.
The
Georgia
Pecan
Commi ssion is matc:hing a
$25,000 grant from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture to
consider the feasibility of creating a high-quality "Georgia
pecan" brand.
; . The study will look at other
·success ful comm odi ty promotions, such as Idaho pota~oes. Florida ci trus. California
~alnut s and almonds and
Georgia's · sweet Vidalia
onions -- an $80 million crop
that has captured I0 percent
of the U.S. onion market.
"O ur thinkin£ is that
Georgia is the N'o. _I pecanproducing state in the nation:
there might be something
there, " said John William s.
president
of
Sahlman
Williams Public Relation s in
Tampa, Fla .. the firm that wil (
conduct the study.
·But it mav be harder to create a demand for "Georgi a
pecans" because the nuts are
grown from North Carolina to
California. Texas and New
Mexico are the nation's second- and third-largest producers.

Vidalia onions, on the other
hand. can be grown in on ly 20
southeast Georgia ,·ou nt ies.
The varieties that can C&lt;UTY
the Vidalia name arc tightl y
controlled, and the name itself
is a trademark of the G~orgia
Department of Agric ullure.To make sure Georgia
pe,·ans arc uf the hi ghest
qua lit y. the pecan commission
&lt;liso wi ll spe nd the grant
mone y to cd.JJL'ate retai lers
&lt;lllu consumer' &lt;Ill prope r storage mclhod~.
"They ha1e to he refrigerated:· said conuni &gt;Sinn Chairman
Buddy Leger. v. ho grow' 90
·acres of pecans ncar Cordele.
about 150 miles south of
Atlanta. "They have more oi l
in them than other nu ts - the
good fat - so they go rancid
fast. ..
Pecan shel lers already
know how to store the nuts.
but supermarkets amj other
reta ilers need he lp. Leger
,aid.
The comm ission hopes its
storage campaign will lead to
' more consistent quality for all
consu mers, .including touri sts
to Georgia who may be tasting pecans for the llrst time.
'·If someone tries a pecan ...
and it' s bad. th ey' ll never
ta"e one again," William s
said. "If sto~a ge is handled
properly, th at' s"going to be a
win-win for every body. the
Georgia growers and the con-

Associated Press
STIX:K1DN, Mo. - Dick and
Anna Lee Lower SJ=t 43 y=&gt;
raising beef canle, tending to hay
fields to keep the animals fed and
growing vegetables for their dinner
lilble.
- Then a t0!11&lt;ido churned &lt;¥:ross
'their 420-acre farm on tl1e edge of
Stockton, lea~ing it in shambles.
The couple have tOund a bull and
about a half-dozen cattle dead so far.
jlams, outbuildings ruld tence; are
~allowing their250-he'.rl herd
yo become scanered an10ng neighruing fanns.
: "We have lived here over 40
and it took us that long to get
everything the way we Wlii1Ied i~"
ffiid Anna Lee, 66. "Now it's all
tJone, and it only took about 15 secbnds to wipe it out It just makes me

dreds of btL&gt;inesses tmd horne;.
They carved a tmil of destruction
fium the Pktirts into the Ohio mtd
Tennes,;e;! valleys. The violent
wemher left 46 people dead in six
stales.
The twister.; took a heavy toll on
humers, who lost ar1 unknown
numher of cows, pigs. chicker~s.
turl&lt;eys and horses. &lt;aid Eldon Cole.
a li vestock' specialist with
Unive~&gt;ity of Missowi Outrea:h
mld Extension.
Some fam1er.; are walking away
hecmLse starting fium scratch would
require too much work tOr the small
(.nlfil

'This was tl1eir livelihon.l and
their business," Cole said ·These
fanns rer:re;ent y= of eHO!t and
years.
hmt!WO!k"
The he~nning of May is a critical
time in the spring breeding sea&lt;;On
for cattle. Cole &lt;aid S&lt;1me cows thm
were in the early stages of pregnan~ick."
cy
when the IDm:rll hit may abort
; The toma:lres that wra::ked the
Hay
is at it' peak at this tin1e
tvfidwest in early May killed I ~ of the also
yea~; but l'mr1er.; am 't get
Jmrle in Missouri and leveled hun- their equipment in field' to cut it

because of debris. Some hay cut
emiier in d1e year was ruined as
wind mld hail shred:led protective
plastic. tdlowing mold to develop.
After the t0!11&lt;ido, Dick Lower
emerged fium his basement to find
several of his cows rooming the
two-lm1e cowmy roo:! in front of the
house in soutlrwest Missowi. He
a'Muned a gate 1m blown open.
"I !,'Ot a bucket of feed and stm1ed
~dking to them," Lower said. "They
were scared, but they followtil me.''
It only took a few minutes lbr
Lower, 70. to 11:aiize tl1e clarna!,&gt;e to
_his tarm was extensive. Although his
house WJS untouched nearly evel)'thing at'Olllld it was in tatters.
"I can't even round up my can!e
to see how many r ve lost because
I' ve got no place to hold them,"
Lower said
The sce11e LS the same elsewhere.
Bill ;uld Linda Wtlgller lost both of
their primary SOLJrr:eS &lt;lf income.
He had a clenud pmctice in the
basen1ent of tl1eir Cedar llimty,
· Mo.. home. She terded to their herd
of 80 cows and 70 calves.

•

Roundup-resistant weed could
cost farmers minions to fight
BY DOUGLAS PiLS

Associated Pres3

Meigs $tudents'
acheivements
recognized

per acre.
to ~ lyp hnsate likely occurred
Farmers have been using I.OtXl years ago.
glyphmatc since 1974. when It
More recently. exclusive use
was developt•d '" Roundup hy of the herbicide killed the
Mon,untt&gt;. The herbicide is hor&lt;-cwceds that weren't genetnnw made by several different icall y r-c,istant to glyphosate,
companies and it is widely useu Now. the horseweed containing
becau'e it apparently doesn't ' the hiot ype that makes il resishann the environment.
tant to• Roundup is becoming
David Hccring, u Roundup dqminant.
.
tec hn ical ' mana~er for St.
The
Stlmples
Smith
bruught
Louis-base(! MrnJS&lt;mto. 'aid
to
hi
s
&gt;!reenhou
se
at the
horseweed. also known as
mm·estail. is typically ti&gt;und in Uni versitY of Arkansas at
no-till tu·eas because it can't Mnnticell~&gt; have been difficult
grow in a ti lled 11eld. No-till to ~ill. He said he has used
areas help reduce soil erosion eight times the nonnal use rate
and also help f;mners reduce l(&gt;r herbic:ides and the weed is
planting costs.
still flourishing.
Hee1ing said products sold in
Two
thine s
about
areas where the resistant horse- glyphosate\ cffc~t i veness and
w.eed is conlirmed will include the h&lt;,rseweed's re sistance
instr11ctinns almut mixing other WLltTy weed 'cientists - s.oil
products with Roundup to erosion becoming a problem
c:ombat the weed.
once ;ruain and a long wait for
"Another product coLfid he an i mp~·&lt;\\'L'd herbi cide.
de~ei&lt; "' -'d tu mt llrol it. out
Smith estimates that 60 per-.
there "' " sc1cral produch that ce nt ,,f Arkansas' cotton
can he used tuuet hcr tn control ancage is par1 of the soil conit." Hccring said.
'
serl'at ion dli111. If an herbicide
In 1996. Monsanto designed solut ion can·1 he ·l{,und hefore ·
glyphosate-rmmune . 'eeds lor · next ,pring. farmers may have
soybe.rlls. mtton ,md othcl to plu11· their land lx:fore plantplants. That allowed the lamrers to spray herbicide wi thout mg.
Smith s:rid Monsanto and
damaging their nops. and tillother chc.mical. companies are
ing wasn't us necessary.
llrc resrstanl horscweeu has aware of the horseweed's
been .found in Arkan""· Iowa. . ~ rowin~ res istance to the
Indiana. Missouri. Tenne"ee. glyphos~ lle. hut it could take
time to dew lop a new product.
Delaware and M&lt;uy l&lt;urd.
·A weed doesn't bu ild resi'- The infu;cd seeds. Roundup
tance to hcrhicidcs ovem i ~ht. and 'i milar prod ucts have
Bob H&lt;U1£ler. a weeti scierl"tist worked so well for the past 30
at Iowa State, said the muiation years. no one has be~ n working
.
I
tlrat made horseweed resistant on unproveme nts. ·

BY BECKY BOHRER

BILLINGS. Mont. - TI1e
winter wheat on Keith Schon's
cemml Montana limn is the best
he·s seen in three or four ye.m;.
and his newly plrulted spring
wheat tinajly, alter a fe w ...easons of drought, seems to have
better thru1 a lighting chance.
He credits his optimism on
the rai n. And both. he knows.
can dry up ta~t.
"As always, time wi ll telL"
Schon. who grows wheat tmd
barley near Broadview. wrote

this week as pw1 of an on line
survey of Montana farmers
meant to gauge att itudes as
much tLs·crOJl a;id moisture conditiotJs across the cou nt rys ide.
The Web si te is run by the
Montana Grain Growe rs
Association. Responses, posted
eac:h Monday from spring pltmting to t;lll harvest. &lt;ue generally
shon - but &lt;&gt;lien rich in detail.
One bnner from Shawmut.
in central Mont&lt;Ula. noted pn &gt;hlcms with kochia, Russi&lt;Ul thistle and other weeds. Anotirer
lium Whitewater said wi nd was
taking a toll on crops on her

News editor
POMEROY - Students
were recognized for .academic
and athletic accomplishments
at the annual awards assembly Tuesday at Meigs High
School.
Scholar-athlete
awards
went to Mathew 0' Brien and
Melinda Chancey, with Kayte
Davi s and Marc Barr receiving the Archie Griffin
Sport smanship Awards.
The Bausch and Lomb honorary science awards were
presented to the outstanding
junior boy and girl, Tyler
Barnes and Megan Dodson.
Selected to receive the "I
Dare You" Danforth awards
in recogniti on of personal
ac hievement and outstanding
skill s
were
leadership
Dod son, Jayme Davis, Erica
Poole, and Ryan Stobart.
Emily Story was presented
the U.S. Air Force math and
science award us the most
outstanding senior in those
two
areas
by
S.Sgt.
Christopher Gildenast who
also acknowledged Michelle .
Run yon with a scholastic
award and Derrick Fackler
with a distinguished athletic
award,
Jennifer Walker was recognized for having received the
Franklin P. Walter scholastic
award which annually goes to
the outstan.ding senior in

no11h-central Montru1a farm.
Ri chard Owen, the Grain
Gmwers.· executive vice presi:
dent, . said the survey that his
group has conducted for four
years now pmvidcs infonnation
beyond co !lee-shop chatter.
Congressional aides. federal
and state agriculture officials
and even cmp insunmce agentS
monitor tl1e responses. They' re
watching for trends, trom the
'c' &gt;pe and sevelity of a dry spell
to outbreaks of crop diseases
and yield projections, that may
signal a need for help, Owen
said.

L

A

CJ

B

0

PageA7
'

Thursday, June 5, 2003

Generations gather

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Montana farmers take crop talk to the Web
Associated Press

Local News

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 5, 2003

Elli s Bros. near , Vienna, ,·
wh ich has 1.1-14 acres of
LITTLE I{OCK - Genetics
pe,·an trees and a pecan store
and herbicide use are contrihutalong lntcr&gt;tate 75, said he 's
ing to the rise of a strong su·ai n
seen chain stores carrying
of
hor.;eweed, Ul&gt;ubling fmlllpecans over from year to year
ers
who likelv will have tn
·and service stations se lling
spend millio1is of dollars to
them after they' ve been
tight th.: 'plant that is immune to
improperly stored .
a
common weed-killer.
Elli s said 90 percent of his
A weed scientist who concustomers are from out ·of
limled
the horse weed's presstate. some of them Georgia
in
an
Arkan" 1s couon field
ence
tran splan ts who can't get
said
it
could
cost the state's
fresh pecans .
fanners as much as $9 mi!lion
"They remember what good
to
combat it next year. The
pe.:ans wen' like - fres h off
weed
is also present in tields
the trees," he said . " Properl y
from
the
Midwest to the East
stored, they can retain their
Coast.
lluvor...
Ken Smitl1. of the University
Georgia produces 38 'perof Arkansas Cooperati ve
ce nt of the nation's pecans
Ex tension Service, said the
with a $100 million crop .that
weed stalks in Mi ssiss ippi
averages X8 million pounds a
County were eventually killed
year. Three southwest Georgia
with a mixture of chemicalS:
count ies. Dougherty. Mitcl1ell
hut the wind-blown seeds likeand Lee, ha ve the highest conly have 'pread to other tie ids in
centration of pecan trees in
the region.
the nation - laigely because
"We' re probabl y to the point
of a fail ed scheme in the early
where it 's going to be too late to
l'IOOs to se II retirement lots to ' give them gr•&gt;d conuul this
Northerners. wi th the promise
year ru1d they're going to suffer
that each lot wo uld produce
some yield loss." Smith said.
eno ugh pecans to pay their
Farmers exclusively usi ng
utility bill s.
glyphlWHe and gly phosateIn recent years. the Pecan
infused seeds to light weeds in
Commission and the Atlantathei r tields likely will need to
based National Pecan Shellers
take additional steps before
Association have been touting
next year's planting season .
the health benetits of pecans.
Smith said the weed could
Studies have shown that the
affect 600.000 acres by next
fat in pecans can reduce choyear's planting season in
sumers.··
lesterol and lower the risk of
February and March, costing
Keith Ellis. a part ner . in heart disease.
fanners an additional $8 to $15

·Midwest farmers struggle to
recover after devastating tornadoes
8Y CONNIE FARROW

J&gt;age.A6

Meigs County. She was al so
one of three, the others being
Melinda Chancey and Emily
Story named WSAZ Bestof
the Class recipients.
Among the other students
recog ni zed ' were · Mary
Rankin, outstanding senior in
the work-study program ;
Ashley Eblin and Carrie
Darst, recipients of the Slavin
art award; Tyler Barnes and
Miranda Beha, American history awards; Jessica Preast,
top JOGS student ; Sara
Casto, DECA award; Alison
Smith, market student ol' ihe
year; Whitney Thoene, first
place winner at Science Day
at Ohio Uni ve rsity.
Al so recognized were
Michel e Runyon for the highest average in college Engli sh
IV and speech and drama.
Paul Will received the award
for the best student in Access,
and Andy Smith, for the best
.Exce l student ; Melinda
Chancey, Mathew O' Brien,
Michelle Runyon and Emily
Story, top physics students;
Jeremy Roush and Ashley
Colwell , top students in
essential of physic s.
Named the best actors and
actresses in the senior plays
were Juley Eblin and Jon
Diddle and Jeremy Roush,
and Juley Eblin and Jennifer
Walker.
An Ohio High School
Athletic Association a.ward
was presented to Mick Childs
by Coach Carl Wolfe.

Th,e birth of Alisa Lynn Ord on April 1 made the fifth generation in the Johnson fam ily. Making up the generations are from
the left, Betty Smith, her great-grandmother; Mildred Johnson of Middleport, her great-great-grandmother; Debra Honaker, her
·
grandmother, and Usa Ord , holding Ailsa, her mother.

Gallia Sheriff's Office faces impendrng layoffs:
BY TONY M. LEACH

Staff writer
GALLIPOLIS - Impending
layotl's at the Gallia County
Sheriff's Office have some residents throughout the area feeling
uneasy about the length of time it
will now take deputies to re5(Xlnd
to a crinle.
SheriltT)avjd L. Manin rerendy
announced that severJI jobs at the
slrrilf's office will he tetminated
beaiu.se of budget problem~.
Some residents are worried the layoffs will result in slower response
t:iJres, especially for those living in
more rural areas of the county.
According to Ma!1in, fin1Ciing
shonages in the slrrilf's office
budget fortlX! him to cut 12 peqJie
from his staff- two full-time crrrections olli= and lO ~-time
employees.
The slrrilf's office, which is
usually staffed by 40 employees,
will now operared by 28 individuals. The layoHs are scheduled to

take eft'ect this Friday.
In an eftbrt to save money,
Manin said, JXI!rols will he CUI
ba:k during '1ow crime" shifts.
However, he added that JXI!rols
will increase during "high crinle"
times.
Despite the new JXI!rol arrangement, residents are still arpehensive about the situation.
'1t's an awful siJan.'e that 12 pxr
pie has to be let go from the sheritfs office," said Emma Newman
of Clay Township.
'1t would have been nice for
slierur Martin to keep these fX!ople
on. However, l suppose the sheriff
has to 00 what he has to in Older to
OOlance his depamuent's budget,"
she added
Springfield Township resident
Sue Robelts said she is mle!!ed to
hear of rre irnpeming layoffs ar1CI
feels rre loss of employees from
the slrrilf's office will ooly OOd to
an alrea:ly existing problem
'1 don't like the Sltuatioo ore bit
I helieve the slrrilf's office shouldn't be laying off anyore right now.

Even before the layoffs, there wasn't eiloogh law enforcement to
cover the entire county," Roberts
said
. "Now, the sheriff's dejxutrnent
isn't going to he where they need
to he," she said
"These layotf~ are definitely
going to hun the county, especially
with the recent increase in crin1e
we have been experiencing;' Dale
Taylor of Hanison ToW11ship said
'We live in a rum] area of the
coUnty ar1CI it takes awhile tiT
dep.nies to get here if something
~ns. Now, with the loss of thL~
additional manpower, response
times will probably take even
looger.''
''I hope ~ slrrilf's office can
fiOO eoough rrKreY to re-hire these
soon-to-be laid off employees,"
Taylor said
Michael Anowood of Walnut
Township agrees with Tayla'.
"First of all, I hale to see anyone
lose tlrir job, especially with the
way rre economy is right now,"
Arrowood said

''Townships in ~ southern rat
of the county are very rural and it's
han:! enough for deputies to
respond to a crin1e around here in a
timely fashion. Unfoounately, it\
going to take even looger now," tE
added.
.
Resideilts in Rio Gnud:, local..
ed in Ra:coon Township, are 111Ying closer attention to rre situatioo ·
iwause tre budget deficien:ies
resultfd in terminatioo of acootra:t
between rre slrrilf's office ar1CI village officials·_· a contract that p-eviously puvided tre village with
90 OOurs ofextra deputy palrols per
week.
''OveJall, it is a 1Hi siln3lion foc
evecyore in rre county. I koow residents here in Rio Grnnde' 'MXIId .
like to see rre additiooal (lllrols
conrinue," Bill Sllodcey, village
resident said
''I really hale to see these peqlle
get laid off. But what can you oo?
HqEfully, a renmy fii this llllfil'tunare situatioo will (:1~ Wielf
soon," Sllodcey said

Y'
Archie Griffin Sportsma~·ship 1Awards went to Kayte Davis, and
Marc Barr, and rece iving the scholar-athlete awards were Mathew
O'Brien and Melinda Chancey, left to right. (Charlene Hoeftich)

ore

•

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Selected as the outstanding junior boy and girl at Meigs High
School and receiving the Bausch &amp; Lomb Honorary Science
Award were from the left, Tyler Barnes and Megan Dodson.
Dodson also received the Danforth award along with Jayme
Davis, Erica Poole, and Ryan Stobart i'n recognition' of personal
achievement and outstanding leadership. (Charlene Hoeflich)

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"

Page As- The Daily Sentinel

Thursd~y,

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Inside:

June 5, 2003

·

Scoreboard, Page Bi .
.
. .
NBA Finals: Spurs win game one, Page 83
Major League Baseball, Page 84 ·

The Daily Sentinel'
PageBl

·. •

Thursday, June S, 2003
'

Marshall can't
afford to
be cheap'
0'

Eut Dlvllton

W L · Pet Q8
39 19 .672 ' 33 26 .559 6\

Montreal
Philadelphia

New York
Florida

The French City Chapter of the Barbershop Harmony Chorus will perform ' We Love the Ladies " at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, June 7, at the Ariel Theatre. There will be a party at the Elks
following the performance. Tickets are $10 for the performance and $10 for the party and are .available at the door or through a Chorus member.

31 27 .534
2e 30 .464
27 33 .4150

8
12

13

t:enlral Dlvlolon
WLPctGB

31 28 .5+4
32 27 .542
30 27 .526

Chicago
Houston
St. Louis

1

29 29 .500 2~
24 33 .421 1
22 3-4 .393 8\
Wnl Dlvlolon
WLPctGB
San Franci8CO
36 22 .621
Loo Angeles
32 26 .552
4
Colorado
30 30 .500
1
Ari...,a
28 31 .475 8~
San Diego •
17 43 .283 20
Amoricln IMguo
Eut Dlviolon
WLPctG8
BooiOn
33 24 .579
.• New 'lllrk
33 25 .669 · ~

Cindnnati
Plt1sb&lt;JtW1
Milwaukee

Pomeroy I Middleport
Front Porch
Republic
a

The Front Porch
Republic, a bluegrass
group, will perform at 9
p.m. Thursday at the
Court Street Grill.
At 9 p.m on Saturday
Bob Fo". a country blues'
singer will entertain. and
at 9 p.m. Wednesday,
Nick Moss and the Aip ·
Tops will do Chicago
blues at the Grill.
There is a $5 cover
charge for each of the con-

cens.

"*' •""

...

F~ more informati.on

call 992-6524 or' see
www.court~"treetgrill.com.

Meigs
County
Kids Day
• Meigs County Kids
Day will be observed
from II a:m. until 5 p.m.
Saturday. June 7 at Gen.
Hartinger Park, featuring
swimming, batting cages.
picnicgames , music and
prizes. for more informatioo, call (740) 992-64li5 oc
(8(:6)655-FR(XJ. ~

by )WVK rre Frog, ~
ard CMrtmi: Rtnblitairn
~

Point Ple45ant

Mason

!Rio _Grandel

Dwight

· FWJingRodeo

Catfish

Icenhower ·
as Elvis

• The lOh Annual
P..mt.Olik.l fNJing Ro:m
will re held fum 8 am 10
run at Krcd:l Purl&lt;. The
evert LS ~ by tre
l\'llm1 Ccuty Rnnily
Res:ureNdY.ok ~an·
a Sam IM!s will re awardxl
anxn

Pancake
Benefit

• Elvis impressionist
Dwight Icenhower and
High Country will per,
fom1 . a ''Concert in the
Park'' at 7 p.m. Saturday,
June 7 at Gen. Hartinger
Park. Advaoce tickels are $5,
and $7 al tre gull:. fu ITUI:
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a

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Tournament is Saturday,
June 7 at the Mason levee.
Check-in and registration .
is at 5 a.m., and the tour. nament regins at 7 a.m.
Wmner and door prizes
wiU re announced at 4:'30
p.m. Children's games
regin at I p.m. For more
information, contact Elvis
Zerkle at (304) 773-5680
or Tim Roush at (304)
8ll2-3574.

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June · 7 from 8
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'

National League
Manl~

.

· Reds go yard against Mussina Junior

HUNTINGTON , W.Va .
(AP) - Marshall can 't afford
to be a bargain-hunter in its
search for a new basketball
coach. athletic director Bob ·
Marcum said Wednesday.
Marcum vowed to pay
Greg White's replacement
"whatever it take ~ to make us
competitive" after White
resign ~ d
Tuesday
as
Marshall's coach, citing family concems.
.
"You also have an o~ponu­
nity to enhance revenues. and
you always need to take that
into consideration," Marcum
said.
Marcum said he has no
timetable for finding White' s
replacement. but acknowledges that July is a key
recruiting
month.
The
NCAA's off-campus recruiting period begins July I.
"You can ' t always choose
your timing," Marcum said.
He said about 25 coaches
have expressed interest in the
Marshall
job,
though
Marcum said he won't identify candidates.
''You know it's really getting se rious when (ESPN
analy st Dick Vitale) calls,"
Marcum said.
Marcum said Marshall had
the lowest-paid staff in the
Mid-American Conference
last year. While's base salary
of $84,602 was supplemented with funds from summ~r
camps. a shoe contract and a
television show.
Marcum said the new
·coach's contract probably
wi II be laden with performance incentives .
White 's departure comes
after Marcum ordered cutbacks in each of Marshall's
athletic programs, except
football. Men's indoor and
outdoor track were dropped ·
because of budget concems.
White signed a three-year
contract Tuesday to coach the
University of Charleston ,
where he 68-70 as head
coach from 1990-95.

•

(

CINCINNATI (AP) - Mike
Mu ssina felt as if he was pitching in a different NL city, the
one that's a mile high and a
homer haven.
Mu ssi na gave up fo ur
homers, including a ~o lo shot
by injured Ken Griffey Jr.. as ·
the Cincinnati Reds pulled
away to a 6-2 victory
Wedne sday night over the
New York Yankees.
Griffey mildly strained his
right biceps on a sw ing against
Mu ssina in the fifth inning, but
stayed in the game for one
more pitch and homered - . a
measure of how the ball flies
in the majors' most homerprone park .
Aaron Boone, Sean Casey
and Jason LaRue also homered
off Mu ss ina (7-4), who took
his worst beating of the season . . The Reds' four homers
came in a span of only II batters, and left Muss ina. feeling
like he was in Denver.
"A couple of times tonight,
they hit pitc hes that people
usually don ' t hit .for home
. runs," Muss ina said. "In this
ballpark , the ball flies out like
Coors Field. It gets up in the
air and you don ' t know what's
goitig to happen."
Jason Giambi hit a two-run
shot off Paul Wilson (3-4) that
fit the occasion - all eight
run s generated by homers.
Ninety have flown out in 30
games at Great American Ball
Cincinnati's Sean Casey 121) is congratulated by Adam Dunn after Casey hit a two-run Park.
·
·
home run off New York Yankees "pitcher Mike Mussina in the fifth inning on Wednesday
in Cincinnati. The Reds won, 6·2. (AP)
Ple•se see Reds, 83

Cleveland l.oses to Colorado, 2-1 .
DENVER (AP)- Darren
Oliver was more worried
about his teammates standing in the rain than gripping
the baseball. •
Oliver overcame a late
start due to rain and a shaky
first inning with four .scoreless innings as the Colorado
Rockies beat Cleveland 2-1
Wednesday night for their
seventh straight home win.
"It's hard when the ball is
wet and it just gets away
from you ·a bit," said Oliver,
who has won two of his past
three starts after opening the
season 1-3. "You just try to
get them to put the ball in
play and get the guys back in
the dugout because they definitely do not want to be out
there in that rain."
The game star,ted more
than an hour late because of
rain and Oliver (3-4) tried to
pass the time by playing
cards and watching TV. It
, didn ' t help.
Jody Gerut hit Oliver 's
second pitcli off the wall in
right for a double. \lnd John

and try not to walk guy s,"
said Oliver, 3-0 at Coors.
Field this season. "They
were hitting the ball, but I
was making them put it in
play."
I
Cleveland ~ tarter Billy
Traber (2-3) was just as
effective as Oliver, but didn' t . get much help. The
McDonald followed with a Indi ans managed just three
hard sing le. The Indi ans got hits in the final eig~t innings
a run when Elli s Burk s hit and didn' t get a runner to
into a double play, then third base after the first
Milton Bradley hit a single inning.
so hard that shonstop Jose
The Indians have lost two
Hernandez didn 't have time straight to Colorado after a
to react.
.
·- ·· five-game winning streak .
Shane Spenc;r followed . ··we weren't able to step
w!th Cleveland s fourth hll up-with a big hit," Cleveland
of .the mnmg. a smg le, but manager Eric Wedge said.
Ohver ended the threat by '"Ball s were hit hard. but
striking out Casey Blake.
ri ght at people or , the y
Ohver sett led m from stepped up and made a play."
there, allowing one hit over
Wet weather didn't make
the next four innings before things any easier.
Todd Jones replaced him in
Steady rain started falling
the sixth inning after another in the third inning and pudhour rain delay.
dies started to form along the
"Sometimes you get in lines in the top of the fifth. In
trouble, but you have to .go the bottom half. plate umpire
in there and keep ~artl \ng Jim Rey.nolds ran a ball out

to Cleveland pitcher Jake
Westbrook instead of throwi_ng it to him.
·· The Indians managed just
ihree runners in the final
four innings, while the
Rockies had two hits.
It also resulted in the thirdlowest scoring· game in
Coors Field history.
The only games with
fewer runs were on June 16.
1995, when Atlanta beat the
Rockies 2-0, and on Aug. 9
last year. when the Rockies
beat the Chicago Cubs by
the same score.
It was the ninth three-run
game since Coors Field
opened in 1995.
Preston Wilson homered
for the second straight game
and had an RBI single for
Colorado, which improyed
baseball 's best home record
to 23-8.
Jo se Jimenez pitched a
perfect ninth for his ninth
straight save , his 13th in 14
chance s.

strains
right
biceps
CINCINNATI (AP) Ken Griffey Jr. strained his
right biceps ·on a swing· .
Wedne sday night. then
homered on
the next pitch
and left the
game.
The Reds
outfielder
mis sed 5 1/2
weeks after
dislocating
hi s
right
shoulder
Griffey
while trying
to make a diving catch on
April 5. H~ returned before
the shoulder was completely healed, and was starting
to hit the ball hard consistently when he had the setback.
He fou led back a onestrike pitch from the
Yankees' Mike Mussina in
the fifth inning , and
strained hi s arm on his follow-through. He winced in
pain and gingerly rolled the
shoulder, bringing a trainer
and manager Bob Boone
from the dugout.
They talked to him for a
few seconds and decided to
leave him in. Griffey hit the
next pitch into the seats in
right field for his seventh
homer, but held the right
arm carefully at his side
\ while rounding the bases .
.He -l:lsed hi s other arm for
high-fives when he got · to
the dugout, then headed for
the trainer ' s room after ·
talking to Boone.
Griffey hit a tying solo
homer in the ninth inning
last Friday, then another in
the 11th inning for a 4~3
victory over Florida, his
- best game since returning
from the shoulder injury.
His
solo
shot
on
Wednesday was the 475th
of hi s career. tying Willie
Stargell and Stan Musial for
22 nd on the career list. He .
has 33 career ' homers
against the Yankees.
Griffey has mi ssed 140
games while on ' the disab'Ied li st over the last three
seasons. He tore a hamstri ng during spring training in 2001, then tore a tendon in his knee during the
opening week of the 2002 .
season.

1

Funny Cide is favorite in run at history
NEW YORK (AP) - in - . one race away from the
Funny Cide has no idea he'll Triple Crown- and I have a
be making a run at history in pretty good chance," jockey
the Belmont Stakes. Yet the Jose Santos said. "Thi s is the
gelding is behaving as though best 3-year-old I've ridden in
something b'ig is about to hap- my life. I think he 's going to
pen.
do it."
In stead of being tuckered · As
the
even-money
out after winning the favorite, Funny Cide will
Kentucky
Derby
and only be a popular bet mnong
Preakness, Funny Cide put in those wanting souvenir $2
a sizzl ing final workout and win tickets. His low odds will
has been a voracious eater be a turnoff to anyone seeking
leading up to Saturday's race . a big payoff.
A vict9ry would make him ' The last Belmont favorite
the first iriple Crown winner who was even money or betin 25 years.
ter was Real Quiet in 1998.
· "He' s a !load-feeling, big. The Derby and Preakness
stron g horse. He's just winner went ·off at 4-5 and
improved all the time." train- lost his Triple Crown bid by a
er B~rclay Tagg said at nose to Victory Gallop. .
Also running are Empire
Wednesday's post position
draw, where Funny Cide }"as Ma)&lt;er (6-5). Dynevcr (5- I ).
made
the
even-money Ten Most Wanted ( 10- 1).
favorite in u fie ld of six.
Scrimshaw
120-1)
and
"He was just bucking and Supervisor (50- I ). Be st
squealing. We don' t know Minister was not entered after
whether it's a good sign or trainer Ken McPeek said the
not."
colt had developed a virus.
1
Funny Cide enjoys a home"Empire Maker has probatracl:: advantage at Belmont bly been the favorite mos.l of
Park. He lives in a stall not far hi s life," jockey Jerry Bailey
from the paddock where he said. "So if he's the underdog
will parade before more than ~t won 't be by much and it
l.!lO,OOO fans Saturday. He is won' t matter once the gate
undefeated in three races opens."
here.
·
Brooklyn-born
Bobby
"It's a great position to be Frankel, who trains Empire

gate.
"That should help him,"
trainer Wally Dollase ,aid.
"He 'II walk right in, but he
wants out of there. A lot of
times we 've had problems
with him because he starts
throwing his head around and
he gets a little anxious." t
Ten Most Wanted finished
ninth in the Kentucky Derby,
beaten 7 3/4 lengths by Funny
Cide. He was bumped at the
start, got checked early and
ran a wide path all the way
around the track.
"He had a bad break in the
Derby. It was definitely the
horses around him and not his .
fault," Dollase said.
Ten Most Wanted had bad
luck in· an earlier race against
Empire Maker in February.
He got slammed by another
horse
at the start of the Sham
Funny Cide bites is held Monday at Belmont Park in Elmont.
at Santa Anita, and lost
Stakes
N.Y. Funny Cide, winner of the Kentucky Derby and the by 8 1/2
lengths.
,
Preakness , is entered in the Belmont Stakes to be held on
"He ran scared he got hit so
Saturday. lAP)
'
hard," Dollase said. "He went
has
gleefully Empire Maker's condition. " I too fast because of the cirMaker,
embraced the spoiler's role.
think he's dead-fit for this cumstances. He's .more
"I like that," he said. "They race." he said.
mature now."
love me here in New York.
Ten Most Wanted prepare.d
Of course, Ten Most
They bet on my horses all the ·for the Belmont by training in Wanted and the other four
time ."
sunny and warm California. horses could be reduced to bit
Despite several days of rain He will break from the No. 6 players in the coronation of a
that aiTected training sched- post, making him the last, Triple Crown champion if
ules. Frankel is satisfied with horse to enter the starung Funny &lt;;ide wins.

�I .

Page ~2
•

• The Daily.Sentinel

ACC

team finds Syracuse a good fit

SYRACU SE. N.Y. (AP )
- Syracu se would be "an
excell ent match" for th e
Atl antic Coast Conference.
ACC
offi c ial s
sai d
Wedn esday fo llowing a
two-day ·vi sit to the upstate
New York campu s.
Syrac use
Athleti c
Director Jake Crouthamel
called the vi sit "fruitful"
and encouraging but said
Syracuse is not ready to
make a dec ision on leaving
the Big East.
"There is still a process
completed, "
to
be
Crouthamel said. "Until
that time, we are still in the
.process of evaluation ."
The ACC voted last
month to invite Miami,
Boston
Colle ge
and
Syracuse to begin formal
discussion s on joining
their nine-team league.
The ACC wants to re-create itself as a 12-team
"s uperconference," which
would allow it to add a
lucrative football title
game.
If the three school s left
the conference. the Big
East would remain with
only five footb'a.li-playing
teams - Virginia Tech ,
Pitts-burgh , West Virginia,
Rutgers and Division 1-A
newcomer
C{)nnecticut ,
which just spent $90 mil lion on a 40 ,000-seat stadi um.
ACC dele gations previously visited Miami and
Boston College. Virginia
Tech sought, but did not
receive , an invitation from
the ACC.
On Wedne sday, a nine member team led by ACC
Commissioner
John
Swofford concluded its
visits with meetings with
Syracu se coaches, athletic
department offtcial s and
key admio.islrators. presentations and tours of the

·

i s~ u es .

university 's athleti c facili ties.
The next step will be for
the pres ident s of the ACC' s
current schools to convene,
prob ably via conferenc e
call , · tQ hear reports about
each of the three sites by a
faculty representative who
parti cipated in the visit.
Swofford said.
There will be additional
conversations between the
ACC school president s and
those af Syracuse , Boston
College and Miami , and
ultimately a vote will be
held , Swofford said .
·
A final deci sion should
be made by the end of
June, he said.
"What we found, both in
terms of athletics and academics , is that Syracusecertainly would be an
excellent match with our
current institutions in the
Atlantic Coast Conferen ce," Swofford said.
The ACC delegation had
high prai se for Syracuse a founding member of the
Big East.
Maryland AD Debbie
Yow
said
she
was
impressed with Syracuse 's
graduation rate in football
and the university ' s academic support and compli ance units.
''The prevailin g thought
was that the visit was a
very productive one and
the · ·athletic program was
very impres sive,'.' Yow
said.
ACC ·and Syracuse olli-

Cro uth amel said th e two
sides di sc usse d the ACC's
rev e nu e - ~ harin g plan with
the vtsollng committee.
The ACC plan differs significantl y from the incenti ve-based Bi g East plan .
"We have to our sati sfaction the information . We
just hav ep't had time to
eval,uate it. " Crouthamel
said .
Swofford said the visit
did not resolve all th e
issues rai sed. He said some
issues - such as division
bre ak-up - re ally can only
be resolved if and when the
conference is expanded.
'' Any time you take a
step lik e this there has to
be a certain leap of faith
inv olved," he said. "You
can' t nece ssarily have all
the an swers . Sometimes
the risk of staying as you
are is ju st as great as the
change being considered."
Swofford renewed his
declaration that the ACC
was not out to ruin the Big
Ea st but was only acting to
ensure its own future stability. He noted that over
the last decade there have
been more than 30 changes
in conference membership
around the country.
"I think what we are
lnoking at io; ·a continuing
evolvement of the change
in th~ landscape of the
conference s, " he said.
" The
landscape
will
change whether we are part
of it or not."

AGRICULTURE

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.EAS T RUTHERFORD ,
N.J . (AP ) - Tal k about cui tore shock .
·· SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Check out Tim
As the Anah eim Might y
· .
Duncan's phenomenal stat line from Game · ~
Du cks tra ve led from th e
I of the NBA Final s: at least three celebra~- ~l]3fl'1
comfortable confines of the
tory muscle flexes, one screaming argu- j
~ ~0[i,'i]ffi[1 ~
Pond . to the inhospit abl e
ment, countl ess words of encourag~ment -.
~
New Jersey swalnpland for
and ,the starnng role m one btg wm for.hts .
' · cs 0 0 &lt;!::&gt;
Game
5 of the Stanl ey Cup
San Antonio Spurs. ·
finals , th ey found themThe taciturn two-time MVP wanted to be
selve s ·as far away from
a loud~r lea~er in this postseason, and the · Crawford and Dick Bavetta after a no-call
Fanta sy land as po ss ible.
tone .
hts play was easy to h'e ar in the third quarter - another uncharacterIn An aheim , th e colorful
Wednesday night: Duncan was vocal and istic moment for one of the NBA's inost
local
fi ct iona l characters are
enthusiastic, slapping hi gh-five s and
·Jikely would be far more
yelling as the Spurs easily beat the New collected stars.
Mic key. Goofy anu ~onald . diffi cult than winning Game
In New Je r~e y, they re the 5 _
Jersey Nets 101 -89.
"I don't care about my image ."' Duncan
Sopran os. II the Duck&gt; dod- , "Th .
h
d
Duncan also had 32 points, 20 rebounds, said. "Whatever you (medi a) think . Write
• k
h
. .
os our c ance , an we
.
.
n
t
now
t
ey
wcren
t
on
.
II
d
..
d
seven blocked shots, six assists and three something good ."
· d
can 1 .1a
own,
e1ensefnen ly and .oh
-su-sunny
S
d
'
0
I'
h
steals. He scored 24 points on 8-of- 10
A year after they were swept by the
. .
man an ts zo tfl S sat·d .
h
S
C
I
out
ern
a
ol
ornoa
any
"W ·
fd t e
shooting in the second half as the Spurs Lakers, the Nets felt fortunate they weren' t
longer, th ey knew it wh en
. e . re con I . en w ca~
took another big lead - and then held i\
th ey pulled in to their rain - wtn som e thtngs here,
with minimal drama, avoiding another of . facing Shaquille O'Neal in the final s this
dre
nched (eam hot el .and goaltender J~.an - Sebasuen
the come-from-ahead losses that have season. But the Spurs already knocked out
found
it swarming with fans Gogu:re saod . Obvtously, ol
'
. . Che L~kers this season - and in the final s
plagued the Spurs this 1spring .
_ not of hockey: but ()f sev - we wa nt to ~tn the· th•~!g ,
· So must the Nets deal with a less kind, I opener. Duncan had a game that would
eral
rap stars pcrformi•ng at we need to wm one here . .
less ge~tle Duncan as he pu,rsues his second tnake Shaq envious.
nearby Giants Stadium .
The Ducks were th e best
ch.~mpoo~sh•P. nng?, He tsn t telhn~ .
.
"I played him as tough as possible .. said
It is in th is settin g tha t the road . club m the playoffs,
. I don t thmk I played any dtfferent .'
.
.
~
Duncan said. "If it was it 's because of the Kenyon Martm , who louled out wnh 2 1
Du cks will try Thursday 10 wmnmg sox of seven , before
crowd and the s ituatio~. What's not to be points. "I was riding him, tailing him . He
do what would truly have a do smal debut tn New
excited about?"
just made tough shots. We executed our
be e n see n as a fant as y J e r ~ey that suggested the
before . the sea son siarted: sene s would end quockly. It
Game 2. is Frid~y night
.
game plan when we had to. He just made
c los~ within a victory of . dodn' t, but Devtls coach Pat
hThe Nets hadn t lost sm:e A~nl 2~. but tou gh shots, man ."
winning the Stanley Cup .
Burns thtnks returntng
t eo_r _10-game wonmng streak was snapped
New Jersey scored se ven points on the
.
.. . .
. .
dectstvely 111 thetr worst loss of the postsea- .
Convin ced that their twin home woll get the Devtl s
son. San Antonio largely stopped New forst b:eak on the ":st quarter, but just'? the
3-0 losses on New Jersey back to . th e way they were
Jersey's fast bre'ak, and the Spurs ' 7,one rest of the mght. So nee the Nets couldn t get. . · ice last week are ·nothin g but playtng a week ago.
defense forced the Nets into many outside their usual compl ement of easy baskets,
There -:va s one setback for
a di stant memory following
s)lots they c~uldn 't make.
.
their shaky ltalr-court offense was tested two mom entum-restoring. the Devtl s on :Vednesday.
.The Spurs frontcourt domtnated under- and New Jersey scored just 17 point s in the
overtime wins at home the Center Joe Noeuwcndyk,
stzed New Jersey •. Wtth soon-to-be-reured third quarter enduring three lengthy scm·Duck s talkeu Wedne s d~y of out since the Eastern
center Davod Robmson getting 14 pomts; .
.'.
. .
not wastino what could be a Conference fonals because
six rebounds and four blocks . Tony Parker mg drou ghts tn the second half. .
once-in-a-~fctime
chance.
of a hip-related injury, tried
Parker and Duncan keyed the thtrd-quareven outplayed Jason Kidd , getting 16
·'You
could
coach
or
play
skating but quickly shut it
points and five assists while Kidd went 4- ter rally. Moments before Duncan 's 60-foot
in th e lea uue forev er and down and almost certamly
for-17 from the field. . ,
.
lob pass to Jackson, Parker made an elegant
YOU might "not net back to won't play in Game 5.
"When they came up in the third quarter, drive past three defenders for a difticult
-here ,'' said
~
"
fir st-year
coach
"T here was no reason to
they picked it up a level," New Jersey coach Ia u in tralfic
·
Mike Babcock, who. inherit- push it ," said Nieuwendyk,
Byron Scott said. "We never matched that
~~ P
· .
.
.
ed a team that was coming who didn ' t skate at full
level. We never got up until the fourth quarIn the first hall I tned to run the team.
off three straight last -place speed before leaving the ice.
ter•and we were 15, 16 (points) down. "
get conlldence in everybody, and th en in the
"We wanted to get a baromfinishe s.
Late in the third quarter, Duncan tossed a third quarter try to be aggressive and look
But to win the Cup. the eter of ,where it was; and the
picture-perfect lob pass behind three Nets for my shot more.'' Parker said. "Th e presDuck
s must win at least trainer indicated I should
to Stephen Jackson. who slammed it home sure is always there, especially when you're
once at Continental Airline s come off. It 's . frustrating ,
fl~~~"~ff ;~~~~; ~~~k~;·csac;~~~~d~~~~ trying to win the championship.
Arena; where they are 0-8 but it 's something I have to
run that gave San Antonio 3 16-point lead . "Playing against the best point guard in
since Feb. II. 1996. Thev deal with."
- its largest of the night
'
.
the league make s me want to do more and
reali ze the task wi'JI be diffi"The Devils were hoping
Duncan even berated referees Joe play my best."
cult, but that waiting until a that even a less-than- I 00
Game 7, if it is necessary, percent Nieuwendyk could

&lt;;)®®"G)

9f

•'

James Jackson to a one·year contract
extension, through 2004.
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Signad DT
James Lee.
HOUSTON TEXAN S-Signed S Curry
•
Burns.
lNOIANAPOUS COLTS-Signed QB Jim
Kubiak.
NEW YORK JETS-Signed PK Clay Rush .,
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ATLANTA THAASHEA5-Agreed to terms
with G Kari Lehtonen
CHICAGO BLACKHAWK$-Ae-s1gned F
Ou1ntin La1ng.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTN ING-Sig ned AW
Eero Somervuon to a one-year contract.

WNBA

"EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pel GB
Charlotte
3
1 .750
Connecticut
2
1 667
'
Cleveland
1 1 .500
1
Indiana
1 .500
1
New York
1 .500
1
Wa shington
2 333 · 1·,
Detroit
0 1 .000 1'1
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pet GB
Los Angeles
.. 4 o 1.000
Minnesota ·
3 1 .750
1
Houston
3 2 .600 1'1
Sacramento
2 2 .500
2
Seattle
1 3 .250
3
Phoenix
1 4 .200 3' ,
San Anton1o
1 4 .200 3',
Wednesday's Geme
ChaJiotte 67, San Antonio 52
Thursda~ · s Games
COnnecticut at Detroit. 11 a.m
Phoenix at S8n Antonio. 8:30p.m.
Sacramento at Los Angeles , 10 p.m.
Friday's Games
Houston at Charlotte. 7 p.m.
Cleveland at Washington , 7 p.m.
New York at Minnesota, a p.m.

Frontier League
Eeal Dtvtebn
w L Pet. GB
Washingloo
a 3 .727
Richmond
7 4 .636
1
Chillicolh&lt;i
6 4 .600
Kalamazoo
5 6 .455
3
Evansvjlle
4 e .400 3\,
t
Florence
a .111 6
Wnt Dlvlalon
w L Pet GB
a 2 .BOO
. l(anoolla
e 4 .BOO 2
Mld-Miuourt
a 5 .S.5 2'/f
Roc:l&lt;ford
5 6 .455 3'.4
COOk Coun1y
3 6 .333 4';
River Ci1y
3 a .273 5&gt;

,.,

.a.,_

-OHdoy'o Gomn
Richmond 5. Chlltlcothe 4, 11 innings
Evansville 11 , Kalamazoo 3
Oateway4, MicJ.Mlasouri 3
Cook County 3, River City 1
Kenosha 3, Rockford 1
Wash ington 9. Florence 1
Thuraday'a G1mea ·
Chillicothe 11 Richmond
Evansville at Kalamazoo
Mk1-MissOUrl at Gateway
River Clly at Cook Coun1y
Rockford at Kenoaha
Waa~lngton at Florence
Frlday'a G1mea
1
Gateway at Kenosha
Kalamazoo at Chill iCOthe
Mid-Missourt at Cook Coun ty
Richmond at F ~rence.,.
River Cily al Rocl&lt;ford
Washington at E'vansV111e

!

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help on faceofh . which the
Ducks are winni ng at a 6 \
percent rat e. Burn ' didn ' t
offici ally rule hi m out. hut
he was n' t o pt imi;.tic.
"We thou gh t, may be he· d
be abl e to play. bu l he can' t.
We ' ve got to ge t that o ut of
our mind s, .. Bur ns ,a id .
Even
witho ut . Nieuwendyk, th e Dev ils felt they
were the aggresso rs when
the seri es starteu . o nl y to
become passive anu tentative in th e 3-2 and .1-0 Jo,se s in Anaheim . 13 u~ the
Devils are more com fortable at ho me, whe re they
have a\loweu only 10 goa b
while winnin g \0 o f II
playoff gam e;. They ' re on ly
4-6 on th e road.
"In Games I and 2 they
were chasi ng uo;, in Gam es~
and 4 we were c hasin g
them ,'' Burm sa id . "We 've
got · to ge t back 'to th em
chasing us. If we kn ew
(why) ... we probably wo uld
be celebrating now. I ,i·i;.h
we were , but we' re not. "
The Ducks w&lt;On t to c\o'. it
the same way th ey di u in
Anaheim: Ke ep the games
close and low-scorin g &lt;O nd
the Devil s on the ir hee ls:
ride thcit' hot goa lte nd er.
Giguere ; and don' t do anything fool ish or reac tive tha t'
would let the De vi h get
back to wh at they had last
week.
Even if the Dev ils arc
back in Jersey.
"It 's like Mi ke Bahcock
said , I've ne ve'r seen a Jan
score a goal or tak e a hit or
give a hit ," th e Duc ks' Steve
Thomas said . "It 's playo ff
ti_me, and it do es n' t matter
(n e ga me
is
(where
played).''
The Devils think it does :
" We ' ve got a good mood

going, "
Burn s
' uid.
"Everybody is exc ited and
happy to be back ho rne and "
ready to go."

Reds

follow-through , A trainer heading for the trainer's
and manager Bob Boone room .
came out to check on him.
Tests on the shoulder
"It happens from time to were negative. and the
from Page B1
time," said Griffey, who injury was diagnosed as a
The Reds would Iike to returned before the shoulder strained biceps . Griffey
think it has more to do with was completely healed. "I probably .will sit out the
their power than the .park. feel all right. I just had a lit- final game of the series, but
They ' re second in the NL in.. tle tingling down my arm . isn 't expected to mi ~ s sig homers.
After a few seconds . the nificant time.
"I don't think you can say numbness goes away. The
· Mussina had allowed only
the homers here have been doc said if I took a funky six homers in his II previcheap," said Casey. ~hose. swing , to be ready for it."
ous, starts thi s season . Hi s
two-run shot put the Reds
The next pitch wa£ off- earned run average jurpped
ahead to stay. "We:_.hit them speed. and Griffey hit it into from 2.62 - second in the
·
on the road , too ."
the right-field stands for hi s AL - to 3.09.
The Yankees returned to 475th . career homer, tying
Mussin a la st gave 'up four
Cincinnati for the first time Willie Stargell and Stan home rs in 'J 6-2 loss to
since 1976, when they got Musial for 22nd place . l-Ie . Texas Ja~t Au g. 23 . His
swept by the Big Red held the right arm carefully career hi gh is five homers
Machine in the World at his side as he rounded the by California on July I,
Series, and have dropped bases, then gave high -five s \994 .
the first two games of the with his other arm before
long-awaited rematch in
front of capacity crowds.
WTH
"They're e)(cited," manager Joe Torre said. "All of
Unlimited night &amp; weekend minutes
l.• the talk has been about 'the
f , big bad Yankees, the rich
there's always something to talk about
Yankees.' They went out
arid beat us last night, and
they beat us up pretty good
tonight. "
The Yankees have lost
•Unlimited night &amp; .
eight of their last 12 games
Weekend minu.tes
overall, a skid that has cost
o600 Anytime Minutes ·
them first place in the AL·
(400 Included 1 200 eddl11onal Any11me Minu1ea)
East arid made owner
•Nationwide long distance included
George Steinbrenne·r antsy.
Nokia 1260
Boston's
doubleheader
$0
sweep of Pittsburgh on
wi1h $50 maiHn-rebete
(Reg: 49.991
a one- or two-year
Wednesday moved the Red
Credit Cheek and
service
agreement
So)( into first place for the
sales tn apply
first time si nee .May 29 , a
half-game up on New York.
Let your thumb• do the talking.
· Since their 20-4 start, the
Aek about text meuaglng.
Yankees have gone . 13-21
and looked vulnerable.
"This is more than a (bad)
stretch," Mussina said.
"When you go a couple of
weeks or a month, that's one
of those stretches . But we
haven't played consistently
good since we got out of
April. We ' re just not the ·
same team we were then."
The Reds are back to a
.500 team, hoping they
won't have to carry on without Griffey. He already has
missed 5 112 weeks with a
,dislocated right shoulder.
After Casey 's two-run
homer put the 'Reds up 3-2
in the fifth , Griffey came up
and fouled back a one-strike
pitch , wincing in pain on hi s
'

INTERNET SERVICES

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r

•

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
'

Duncan, Spurs open·
Finals with win over Nets

cial s d isc ussed a· numbe r of
i" ue, . i nc lud ing how the
pote ntiul ui visi nn s might
be di vided, sc heduling and
tno vc l po lic ie s. fi nan cial
implic ations, compliance
iss ues, academi c standards
and other stud ent -welfare'

Jim's Farm Equipment

Boston, 21 : Catalanotto, Toronto. 20: Huff.
Tampa Bay, 19: GAnderson , Anaheim , 19:
.369; CDelgado, Toronto, 19; Hinske, Toronto,
Shettield. Atlanta , 351 : Renteria , St. Louis , 18; ShStewart, Toronto,' 18; BBoone.
.346; AG on zalez, Florida, .333; Lo Ouca, Seattle. 18: OIIHUd, Seanle. 18.
l os Angeles.. 333; Vidro. Montreat. .332; TAIPLES-Garciaparra ,
Boston ,
B:
Furcal.
Atlanta ,
.324; Lieberthal, CGuzman , Minnesota. 7 ; DJimenez,
Philadelphia.. 324: JKent. Houston, .324.
Chicago. 5; Baldelli , Tampa Bay, 4,
AUNS-Fwcal , Atlanta, . 54: Helton. MYoung. Texas. 4: Byrnes. Oakland. 4:
~ 1 Col orado. 50: Pujots. St. LOUIS , 49: OYoung, Detroit, 4.
Sheffield, Atlanta . 46 ; Sexson, Milwaukee. HOME AUN$-ASoriaOO. New York, 17;
42 ; Payton, Colorado, 42; MGites , Atlan ta, CDelgado, Toronto. 17: JGonzalez . Texas.
40. .
'
17: AAodriguez. Texas. 16; BBoone.
RBI- PrWilson. Colorado. 52: Kearns. , Seattle, 16: Hutl, Tampa Bay, 14; CEverelt,
Cincinnati, 50 : Sheffield , Atlan ta , 50; Texas, 14; Ef.Aartinez, Seattle, 14.
Lowell, Florida, 49; Helton, Colorado, 48; STOLEN BASEs-crawford . Tampa Bay.
AJone&amp;. A·tlanta, 46; Roten. St. Louis. 4 6.
15: ASoriano, New York. 15: Hairston Jr.,
HITS- Furcal. Atlanta. 79 ; Pierre, Florida, Baltimore, 14; Monde!li, New York, 14;
76: LCast1ll0, 'Florida, 75 ; Renteria , St. !SUzuki, Seattle, 11 , Beltran, Kansas City,
Louis, 75 ; Pujols, St. Louis, 72; Helton . 11 : Damon. Boston. 11 .
Colorado. 71: Sheffield. Atlanta. 71.
PITCHING (7 Decisions)-Moyer, Seattle,
OOUBLES-JKent. Houston. 22: Rolen , 9-2. 818, 3.21: Meche. Seattle, 8-2 . .800,
St . Louis, 21; Hollandsworth. Florida, 21. 3.10; L081Za, Chicago, 8·2 . .800, 1.90;
LGonzalez, Arizona, 21 ; PrWit son . Halladay. Toronto, 7-2.. 778. 4.40 : DWells,
Colorado. 20 : Vidro.. Montre al. 19: New York. 7-2 . .778 , 3.35: Mulde r,
ShGreen, Los Angeles, 19.
Oakland , 8-3, .727, 3.08; JJohn son .
TRIPLES-Furcal , Atlanta, 7; LWalker, Baltfmore, 5·2, .714 , 3. 63; Valdes~ Texas,
Colorado, 7 : Wigginton. ·New York . 5: 5-2.. 714. 5.01 : WaKefield , Boston. S-2,
CPatterson, Ch1cago, 4: AGonzalez , .714 , 5.10
.
Florida , 4; ·JEncarnacion, Florida . 4: STRIKEOUT$-Mussina. New York, 88;
Payton. Colorado, 4 .
Clemens. New York, 82; Halladay, Toronto,
HOME RUNS- Dunn, Cincinnati, 18 ; 69; Loaiza. Chicago. 65: PMartlnez,
Lowell. Florida , 18; Sexson, Milwaukee, Boston, 62; Pellitte, New York, 6~ ;
17: Pujols. St. Louis, 15; Sheffield, Atlanta . Wakefield, Boston, 61 .
15; PrWi lson, Colorado, 14; ABoone , SAVE5-Urbina, Texas, 17; Guardado,
Cincinnati. 14; AJones. Atlanta. 14 : Bonds . Minnesota. 16; Foulke, Oakland, 15: Julio,
San Francisco. 14.
Battlmore, 14; MacDougal, Kansas City,
STOLEN BASES-Pierre. Florida, 24; 13; DBaez, Cleveland, 11 ; LCarter, Ta!T4)a
ORoberts, Los Angeles. 1a: EYoung, Bay, 11 .
Milwaukee. 15: LCaslillo. Florida. 13:
JEncarnacion, Florida, 12; Delee. Fl orida,
Wednesday's Sports Tr1n18Ctlona
12; Furcal , Atlanta, 11 ; Lofton. Pittsburgh,
BASEBALL
11.
Amerlc•n League
PITCHING {7 Declsions}-WWIIhams, St. BOSTON RED SOX-Purchased the con·
LOUIS , 7·1, .875, 2.19; KB rown, Los tr'act of RHP Hector Almonte from
Angeles, 7- 1, .875, 2.02; Rueter, San Pawtudtat of the IL. .Oesignate&lt;t LHP Matt
Francisco. 6-1. . 857, 3.33: Chacon. White lor assignment
Colorado. 8-2 . ..800, 3.17; Pnor. Ch1cago, CLEVELAND INDIANs-Traded INF Bill
6·2 .. 750, 2.76; Leiter, New York , 6· 2 , .750, Selby to St. Louis for C Clint Chauncey.
4.35; Nathan, San Francisco, 5·2, .714, ·MINNESOTA TW!Ns-placad RHP Rlclc
3.73.
.
Read on the 1&amp;-day disabled list. rettoac·
STAIKEOUT5-Wood, ChicagO. 100; l ive to June 1. Purchased the contract of
Prior, Chicago, 88; Schmid t, San RHP . Mike Nakamura from Rocrlester ol
Francisco,· 88; J.Vazquez , Montreat. 86: the IL. Transferred RHP Mike Feners to the
Sch illing.
Ar izona,
82 : Mi!lwood. 60-day disabled list.
Philadelphia. 76: Noma, Los Angeles . 7 6:
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYs-Released lNF
SAVES--Smottz. Atlanta, 22; Gagne, Los Damian Easley. Called up INF Jason Smith
Angeles, 19; Wagner, Houston. t6: from Durham of the IL.
Benitez, New YorK. 16; Biddle, Montreat , TORONTO BLUE JAYS-PJaced RHP
15: MiWIIIiams, Pittsburgh . 15; Mesa, Pelo Walker on lhe 15-day disabled 1111.
Philadelphia. 15.
Placed OF Shannon Stewart on the 15-day
disabled liM, retroactive to May 29.
AMERIC~N' LEAGUE
Recalled RHP Josl'l Towers and OF Jayaon
BATIING--Muetter, Boston, .37t ; Blalock, Werth from Syracuse of the IL
Texas, .35 8; Mora, Baltimore , .356; TEXAS RANGERS-Traded RHP Alan
Bradley, Cto\.eland, ,346; Baldelli. Tampa Benes 10 lhe Chicago Cul&gt;O fer lNF S18VO
Bay, .336: CDelgacso,. Toronto. .327; O'Sullivan and assigned him to extended
MY.oung, Texas .. 326; Catalanotto, Toronto, spring training.
.326; TWatker, Boston, .326; EMartlnez,
NIIUonol L.Ngue
Seattle, .326.
ARIZONA
DIAMONDBACKS- Placed
AUNS-COe tQado,
Toronto.
53: RHP Curt Schitltng on ttJe .1S.Oa~ disabled
Garciaparra. Boston, 50; ASoriano. Nhl list. Recalled RHP A.ndrew Good from
York, 49; BBoone. Seattle, 49: CEverett, Tucson of lhe PCL.
Texas. 46; Wells, Toronto. 44: MAam~rez , LOS ANGELES DODGEAS-Placod RHP
Boston, 43.
-.
Darren o ieifort on the 1s~av disabled list,
ABt-coetgado. To ro nto, 58; Wells, rt1troact1ve to May 28. Recalled LHP VIctor
Toronto, 55; GAnderson, Anaheim, 51 ; Alvarez from La• Vegaa of the PCL.
BBoone, Seattle, 47; EManinez, Seanle. MILWAUKEE BRiWERS-Released OF
47; CEveretl , Te)(Ba, 42; JGonz.alez. Te.as. Jeffrey' Hammonds. Purchased the con42 .
tract of1B Ooug Jennings from Lakewood
HITS-ASoriano, New York, 78; Bakletll, of lhe FOOTBALL
Tampa Ba~. 77: !Suzuki. Seattle, 75:
Notional Footbotl L.Mgut
Garclapsrra. Boston. 75: Wells, Toronto, CHICAGO BEAR5-Agreod lo lerms wrtll
74; GAnderson, Anaheim, 72; BBoone, LB Brian Ur1acher on a wnine-year con·
Seattle, 71
tract
DOUBLES-Wells. Toronto, 22: Mueller, CLEVELAND BROWNS-Slgneo RB

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com
I

WILMINGTON ,
. De l.
"This reully helped my 2-foot par putt that 'kept her
(AP) - Five years fr om success ." Pak said.
ol.H of the playoff.
Sorenstam is plenty sueShe never had much of a
now, Se Ri Pak could see
herse lf at the top of the cessful in her own ri ght . ·She chance last year, when the
LPGA Tour with a record alread y has 44 victories,
that might surpa ss Annika including
ba ck-to-back· ·course was firm . fast ·and as
Sorenstam .
titles in the
Nabis,co tou gh as anythin g the
The 25-year-old So uth Champion ship and U.S. women saw all year.
Korean already has won 20 Women's Open to account
Sorenstam
lost
her
times and four majors . At for her four major champi - patience on the rock-hard
that stage in her career. onships.
greens in the second round
She will be inducted into and shot 76, and when
Sore nstam, 32. had · won
onl y 16 ti.mes with two the LPGA Hall of Fame thi s Sunday arrived, she found
maj ors.
fall. Sorenstain has been the herself 14 shots out of the
Pak listened to the com- LPGA Tour player of the
parisons Wednesday at the year five times in the last lead. She closed with a 65,
LPGA Champion ship and , ·eight years.
the best score of the tournanodded her head, a quiet
Most of all , she has ment, just to fini sh third .
"I won four majors , but I
approval of where she is and brought new fame to
how good she can be.
women 's golf by playing in never won here ," she said.
"One of my goals was to the Colonial. the first "I know 1 have the game for
make as much history as I woman in 58 years to com- thi s course, and I've won
oan , which is not easy,'' Pak pete on the PGA Tour. majors, so 1 know 1 can do
said .' " But I feel as great Sorenstam missed the cut by
• , about the next five years or four shots (71 -74). but han- thi s. I haven ' t performed as
more . My success is going died the sc rutiny with well as I should for four
incredible poise and·style .
days, but hopefully it will
to be much better."
She
already
ts
She wanted to challenge change this year."
Sorenstam 's equal in one herself against the men. and
She has never been more
·area - the niajors.
Sorenstam al so wanted to poised to do that.
· Last year, Pak made up a get her game ·ready for the
Despite the mental fatigue
four-shot deficit at DuPont majors. Compared to other of playing in front of 20,000
Country Club and won by feat s. her record in .the fans ·
hole
three shots , finishing at 5 majors is lacking.
on every
at
under on the toughest
"The majors is what Colonial,
Sorenstam ·
course the LPGA Tour faced means the most to me." she bounced back quickly and
said. "I've won 44 times. defended her title last week
all season.
That made her
the but I want some more in Chicago. She bogeyed the ·
youngest woman to win four majors, so that's my biggest last two hole s and still won
maj ors - the same number challenge, to see if I can by three.
Soren stam has won in her peak when I want."
The soggy conditions at
I 0 seasons on tour. .
Overnight rains and heavy
" I want to win more clouds canceled the pro-am DuPont fall right 'into her
majors, " Pak said. "I would Wednesday, and the course game plan.
'love to win four majors in was closed on the eve of the
The course figures to play
one year. I try every single LPG A' s second major of the much longer than its 6,408
year. but I already mi ss the year. Sorenstam practiced yards because drives won't
first one, so that screws up Tuesday and noticed the roll much on the fairway s.
the year."
· rough taller and thicker than Sorenstam leads the LPGA
.
in driving distance at 276
She has come a long way 'ever. ·
in just a short time.
"You , can ' t get away with
Pak hasn't mastered the bad shots here," she said. yards.
. English language. but she is "If you hit them good ,
The rough is so deep that
just as engaging as she was you'll score well. That ' s Pak lost two balls during a
during a brilliantrookie sea- what I Jove about this golf practice round Tuesday.
Sorenstam is renowned for
son that came to life in the course."
LPGA Championship.
All that's lacking are the her accuracy off the tee.
"I've got to hit good dri She won by three shots for results.
her first victory - "I didn 't
Her best chance to win the ves and make putts,"
LPGA Sorenstam said. "This is a
· know thi s was a major when McDonald 's
,
I won," she said - then Championship came sox .
captured the golf pu~lic a years ago, when she played bog tournament, but I ve got_
month later with a 20-hole bogey-free until the final to focus on my game. and tf
playoff v(ctory in the U.S. hole, where she three-putted I can do that, I think things
from close range , missing a will be all right. "
Women ' s Open.

Major League leader~
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING- Pujols. St. Louis,

Thursday, dune 5, 2003

Thursday, June 5, 2003

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�. Page 84 • The

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 5, 2003

www.mydallysentinel.com

Major League B~se~all: · lnterlea9ue Play

m:rtbune - Sentinel - 1\.e ister..
,

,

aosox take doublehead~r fiom Pirates

CLASSIFIED

'

PITTSBURGH (AP) - .tonight, 'they had another Seattle 7. Philadelphia 2; St.
Lolli S 8. Toronto 5: and
The Pittsburgh Pirates mea- ·.3 00 hitter at the plate."
si.trcd themselves against the
The Red Sox are hitting Kansas City 2.. Los Angeles
Boston Red Sox - and .297. but Boston's pitching I.
The only N L ga me.
cam~ up short.
"(as equally impressive. The
Byung-Hyun Kim and Red Sox moved back into Milwaukee at New York.
Derek Lowe each limited the AL East lead for the first was rained out.Luwe has
the Pirates to five hits over time since May 29, a half- won two of his last three·
seven innings as Boston game ahead of the New York starts.
'This. offense is going to
swep t a doubleheader with Yankees .
Pittsburgh. winning 11-4
"The good starting pitch- score runs. You just have to
ing in the first game set the put up as many zeros as you
and 8-i3 Wednesday night .
"When we sit down to talk tone," said Jason Varitek, can," Lowe said . "You just
about the kind of club we who hit a three-run homer in have to keep it as close as
eve ntually want to be, the the opener. "When we do you can. because you know
Red So" are one of the that, it allows us to build on at some point our guys are
teams we use as a measuring it and score some runs . We going to break it open."
Kris Benson (5 -6) gave up
stick," Pirates manager did a good job 'tonight, and
eight
runs and 1.2 hits in the
Lloyd McClendon said. we did it with starting pitchfirst game - both season
''You look at that lineup. ing."
highs
- in 6 1-3 innings.
from No. I through No. 8.
Kim (1-0) made his secand it 's pretty _phenQmenal'-- on,d appearance for Boston He has a llowed 30 hits over
When you have a guy like after pitching one inning of his last three starts.
Johnny Damon, a ·guy who's relief Sunday in a loss in Devil Rays 5, Cubs 2
an All-Star, hitting eighth. . . Toronto.
··
that tells yo u how deep of a
"I'm very happy we were
Awaiting word on his pun able to win the game," he ishment from the commislineup they have."
Damon went 3-for-4 with said through a translator. "I sioner's office for using a
three RBis in · the second had a ~retty good fastball corked bat, Sosa went !-forgame m support of Lowe (5- and I tn~d to pttch aggres- . 4 and struck out three· times
3). He had 'a two-run stngle stvely. I m JU St glad I w.~s at Wrigley Field.
tn a four-run se•,lenth and an able to help .the team wm.
Seventy-six of Sosa·s hats
Ktm prevented any run- confiscated Tuesday night
RBI double 111 the nmt h.
. Trot Nt"on , who homered ners from. advanc tn,g past . were X-rayed and no cork
111 . both games, htt a solo second until Wtlson s two- was di scovered. Many of the
shot 111 the second game off out stngle drove 111 Abraham announced crowd of 33.317
N~nez in the fifth.
gave him a standing ovation
Jeff D' Amico (4' 6).
_ Manny Ramtrez went 4He came tn there and . when he came to the plate in
tnr-4 wtth _two doubles, a showed us ex?,ctly what we the first before striking out.
homer and i·uur RBis tn the wanted to see, Boston manVictor Zambrano (2-31
opening game to help Kim ager Grady Little said. "I allowed one run and three
win his first start since join- think everybody knows that hit s in seven innings and
mg the Red Sox last week m when you have a guy like struck out eight. Shawn
trade wtth Anzona.
. . that come mto your rotatton, Estes (5-5) gave up five runs
Boston's Todd Walker sm- and a guy hke Pedro and eight hits in seven
gled , in the ninth inning of Martinez getting ready to iRnings.
the nightcap to extend his come back, it means a lot. "
career-high hitting streak to
In
other
interleague . Braves 5, Rangers 2
1'9 games , the longest active games, it was Tampa Bay 5,
Chicago Cubs 2; San
streak in· the majors.
Greg
Maddux
15-5)
"We just came from St. Francisco 4, MinnesotJ! 3; allowed two runs and nine
Louis, and ·the' Cardinals Atlanta 5. Texas 2; Chicago hits in eight '·innings at
have a pretty talented line- White Sox 8, Arizona 6; Turner Field. sing led home
up. As hard as it i'S' to Oakland · 6, Florida 5; a· run and made a stellar div, believe. these guys are bet- Anahe~m II, Montreal 2; ing stop and throw on a slow
ter...
Pittsburgh's Jack Detroit 5, San Diego 3; roller by le adoff hitter
Wilson said. "Every time I Colorado 2; Cleveland I; Michael
Young .
Gary
looked up at the scoreboard Houston 6, Bali~mo~e 4; Sheffield hit a two.-run

homer o.ff John Thon\son (3 7) as Atlanta se nt the
Rangers to their fifth
straight loss.

D-backs 8, ChiSox 6
Shea Hillenbrand hit his
first NL hom er and doubled
twice in his [ourth game
since coming to Arizona
from
Bo sto n.
Visiting
Chicago has lost five
straight and eiglll of II .
Andrew Good (2-1 ). pit ching because Curt Schill.in g
has a broken hand. allowed
three runs and five hits in
"x
inntngs and Jose
Valverde, who came _up
Sunday
from
Triple -A
Tucson. entered and got
three-outs for tiiSfiist career
save. Jon Garlai1d (3- 5)
allowed seve n runs.

A's 6, Marlins 5
Scott
Hatteberg
hit
tiebreaking RBI sing le in
off
Tim
the
eighth
Spooneybarger ( 1-2) at
Miami. Chad Bradford (4-3i
escaped a jam in the sevemh , and Keith Foulke
pitched a perfect ninth for
hi s 15th save.

Astros 6, Orioles 4
Wade Miller (4-6) al lowed
three runs and four hits over
seven innings at Houston as
the Astros rallied with three
runs in the sevent h on an
RBI double by Craig
Biggio, a· run-scoring single
by pinch -hitter Gregg Zaun
and a wild pitch by I:U .
Ryan , who had repla ced
starter Pat Hentgen ( 1-3)
after Biggio's double. Billy
Wagner pitched I 1-.1
innings for his 16th save.

,
AP

sports columnist

Only in America would a
player get a standing ovation a
day after getting thrown out of
a game for cheating.
'
Or, in Sammy Sosa's case,
maybe only in Chicago.
Wait till he leaves the
"friendly confines" of Wrigley
Field and goes to other ball•
parks. Don't count on too
many "Still Loving Sammy"
signs like the one iri the
bleachers Wednesday night.
Sosa, perhaps baseball's
most popular player, promises
to take it like u man. And take
it he will from hecklers as he
travels armind ·the country
with everyone wondering how
·many of his 505 home runs
were propelled off a corked
bat. Miles of smiles and kisses
to the crowd, and he came
undone with a dinky groundout.
''It's going to be tough.
Some fans are probably not
too happy about it," Sosa said.
"I've· got to deal with that. ... I
know that I lost the fans and
they have been great to me.
It's a mistake, and I take .the
blame.''
Even if he hits 800 homers,
none will be televised more
than that splintered swing .
David Letterman already did a
Top I0 list of his explanations.
In one mortifying instant,
Sosa jeopardized his near certain path to the Hall of Fame.
The second paragraph of his
obituary will record his most
ignominious moment - just
as George Brett's obit will
recall his infamous pine tar
bat
.
I'd like to believe in Sosa.
I'd like to believe in Martha
Stewart. I'd like to believe in
Santa Claus and the Tooth
Fairy. The older we get, the
more cynicism sets in.
Sosa strains credibility
when he claims it was all "a
mistake'' or "an accident" that
he picked up his corked batting practice bat, the one he
says he uses solely to put on a
show tor fans, and swung it in
a game. Oops! The only one
of his 77 bats embedded with
a chunk of cork found its way
,

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

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Your

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallytrlbune.com

•••

Offee 11o~~

r

ANNOUNCEMENTS 1 . Eslale Sale. 1804 Millcreek,

-------,.J

II tO

HELP WANIED

______

Gallipolis,
Household
Goods. Furniture. Antiques . '
1984 Cougar. . Ma~e OHer. A leading prov ider of sup·
(740)367-5036.
port services to individuals
with mental retardation and
t.,

r

I --------

I

GIVEt\WAY

5 family, Karr sireel.
. Syracuse. June 3rd 9·4
Longaberger, beanies,toys,
6 mixed breed puppies, 6 ·home interior. knick-knaCks.
weeks old, beer1 wormed , clothing.
'reacJy to go Call 992-5088
__

REPRESENTATIVE

part-time or $2 .000-$4 ,500
full-time, t-800-585-0760 or
www.OurAnswer.com
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
675·1429
-------Bass player needed for a
working Blues, Rock. &amp;
County Band, please call
740-667·0135.
740-99250_ 7_9_ _ _ _ _ __
_

For

Free Kittens. 6 weeks old . 6 family yard sale, Duncan·s
Grey tiger. To good , home . residence, 4th &amp; Rollins.
New Haven, JUne 4th &amp; 5th,
Call (7 40)256·6678
lots of everything.
Small wtlite cat. blue eyes.
spayed and declawed, 9 June 2 &amp; 3 4 mile out 143 9·
years old, must be kept
4 Lots of misc.
Comfort Air is now accepting
inside. TO GOOD HOME
"'\11~~-~---, applications for installers
ONLY ! 13041882-3941
YARD SAi.£' and service technicians,
Lo!.TAND
PLF.ASAI'IT
experience preferred . but·
will train . Apply at Comfort
· FOUND
Air 1160 Jackson Pike in
Co mmunity Yard Sale
Spring Valley Plaza
Dog found on 5/29, 35
Gunvllle Ridge June 5·6. 6 - ' - - - " - - ' - - - - Henkle Avenue , Gall ipolis ,
1/2 miles long, from Pt
Concrete mixer drivers
beh1nd GAHS, gentle. large , Pleasant Rt 2 N . Ia AT 87 ·needed at our Columbus
all white dog, breed could be
plant, Class B COL required,
Kuvasz ·or Great Pyrenese
contact Arrow Concrete
(740)446-9937.
740-446·1594

,no

t

Pr.

~.o.-------"

Cosmetologist
needed
lul l/part time pd . vacation.
lree CE hrs.Fantastic Sams
(7401446·7267

2817

r
r

wanted to buy-your eMtra
car. minor repair~ ok. all
pnces ok 388·8228

YARD SALE

wanted ~ 1 -60

acres farm in
Gallia County, area not picky
388-8228

509 Vanco Road , Gallipolis.
May 31 , June 2, June 3.
Cancelled on
Saturgay
ONLY if raining .

.:

I

•

0

ltn•r&amp;

of

fcrm fgur

simple wcrdt.

I

TELEKT

I

EGATAJ

•

WH 5 L

A3· ?

My sister-in-law says that when
5
~ company is coming and she
. . _ _
hasn't had time to straighten the
r-----,-----, house . she covers the coffee
A L Y [l y E
table with - -- - - -- cards
&gt;--~~~.-.~--~r-...;..1~7"''TI--l
ComDioto the thuckle Quoood

I I I I 1

I

.

.

Ie

'--l.-..t...-L.--J.-.1-.-'

by f•lling in the mining words

you develop lrom stop No.

r

Yesterday's

• Must have good
Com.m unlcatlon akllls
• Muat have good
driving record &amp;
provide own
transportation
• Muat have ability to
be a TEAM player

S8nd Resume to:
Gallipolis Dally Tribune
RE: Advertlalng
Seles Rep
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohto 45831

holidays; health/life insurance is available. Salary is
commensurate with experi·
ence. Contact Kim Billups,
DON at Lakin Hospital,
lakin , wv at (30 4)675•

the

.

3

below.

HELPWANIED

11110

HELPWANIED

1 _1~7U M&amp;rJ~ l~.,r.ID__..,:;~:; :i.:';oSAI·IDi·.-E·-rllr~.,.~o_..~:; :~;,S:; :~.ES:.-.-~

Registered Nurse (RN) for
tull·lime and part-time work
in a 114 Bed Long Care .
State Facility. Full·time
employment offers an exten·
sive benelit package , including State civil service
retriement, earn up to -15
days vacation, 18 days sick
leave. and 12 plus paid holidays; healthtnfe insurance is
available. Salary is commensura te with eMperience.
Contact Kini Billups, DON at

Position is full·time salaried
oHering a competitive and
comprehensive
benefit
package, including health
insurance. Applications may
be picked up at the oHice of
the City Manager. 518
Second Avenue , Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 . Appl ications
will be accepted unlil5 p.m..
June 11, 2003. EOE

Lak in HoSpital , Lakin, WI/ at
(304)675-0860 ext · 126.
Monday thru Friday from
8:00 am-4:00 ·pm. Lakin

District is currently seeking
applications from certified
applicants for Assistant
Varsity Football Coach (3
positions), Reserve Football
Coach, Freshman Football

AN Supervisor
A leading provider ol sup·
port services to indiv.iduals
with mental retardation and
deVelopmental disabilities iS
(ook.ing for a full lime RN
Supervisor. Benefits included. Call Dorothy Harp6r at
740-446-7148 or fax resume
to 740·446-3987. An Equal
Opportunity
Employer

F/MION.
Sell Avon
Make 40% (740) 446-3358
The

HVAC company is looking
lor full time installers andhelpers in· He9ring and
Coolihg, send resumes to
PO Box 572 Kerr, OH 45643

four s.c:rombl•d word1 b ..

tow to

SERVING THE
TRI-COUNTY AREA

Licensed Practical Nurses
(LPN) lor full· time and part·
time work in a 114 Bed Long
Term Care State Facility.
Full-time employment oHers
an extensive benefit pack·
age, including State civil
service retirement, earn up
to 15 days vacation , 18 days
sick le ave. and 12 plus paid

S©tt~~-~"Bt.rs· · ::::

Aearra,ge

well establi shed
Local Co.

For Herballte
HelpWented
Are you ser ious about work·
in g from home, call now lor
lree inlormatjon (8B8)601 4356 or visit · www.suc·
cess4u4me.com. ...
-------Head cook for summer
camp Francis Asbury con·
tact Chris or Sue Lewis 740·
245 -5254

TMlT DAILY
PUULII
- - - - - - - lol114 ~y CLAY I , ·POLLAN

Board

of

Park Commissioners of the
0.0. Mcintyre Park District is
seeking a director to serve
as Chief .Administrative
Ollicer to direct the total
planning ,
admin istration,
management and opera·
tioos of the countywide Park
District.
Requirements: A
bachelors degree from an
accredited college or univer·
sity. Experience in commu·
~ ity leader_ship, c~mmunl~a!Ions. public r~ latiOns. build~ng partner~hlps, !und rals·
1~g, . adm_m1strat1ve and
f1nanc1al sk1lls.
.
Prospecii "O can
•
·
dictates must complete an
Employment
Application
provided by the Park District
along with a Resume and
.Cover Letter outlining their
education, trainmg , experi·
Efnce and certificat ions.
Submit to 0 .0 .
Mcintyre Park District, Gallia
CO!Jnty Courthouse , 18
Locust Street, Room 1262,
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1262
Truck Drivers. Immediate

hire, class A COL required,
excellent pay, experience
required. Earn up to 51,000.
per week.Ca ll 304-6754005- - - - , - - , - - 0860, ext. 126, Monday lhru c
Friday from 8:00 a.m.-4:00 The City of Gallipolis Is
p.m. lakin Hospital Is an accepting applications for
EOEIAA Employer.
the pos ition or CreW Ch ief.
Position will provide supervl·
lifeguards wanted· must be sory direction ·and routine
lifeguard cert ilied, please dally responsibilities for the
loll 1
d
pick·up (and return appllca~ .
ow ng
epartmen 1s:
lions) at Middleport Village Streets, Water/Sewer Line
OHic'e by June 2nd, Spm, Maintenance, Cemeteries ,
Interviews will be conducted Parka and Municipal Pool .
. June 3rd.
Duties will consist of direct·
lng, supervising and partlcl·
Lost your Job? Need to pating with all dally reapon·
Wort&lt;? Let's talk... The new albilitles of, those depart·
Ave ni
There
are ments. Qualified applicants
••2s.ooo··customers in our must possess a minimum of
area needing service. Earn high school diploma oo GED
$1 ,000+ Monthly by selilng and basic knowledge or past
$20. of Beauty Products to 6 work &amp;Mperlence in !tie lol·
Peop le, 5 days a Week! lowing areas: construction,
Great lor: Couples-Single vehicle and equipment oper·
Moms · Familles- allen, carpenlry, plumb ing,
Handlbapped, Plans to Fit electrical , masonry and
wbrk,
and
any Need. No Stock Ups, No cement
Door to Door. It will Wotk tor lawn/grounds care including
You l 510.00 Star1 up Fee. pian1ing and seeding of
trees,
shrubs.
Call April , 304·882·3630 or grass,

=

--------,-The Meigs Local "School

Coach (2 positions), 7th &amp;
8th Grade Football Coach (2
positions), Boys· Freshman
Basketball COach , Boys'
Middle School Basket ball
Coach,
Assistant
High
School
Track
Coach,
Assistant Middle School
Track
Coach.
Reserve
Baseball Coach, Wrestling
Coach, Assistant Wrestling
Coach ,
Middle
School
Wrestling Coach, Girls'

Queen Pillow Top Mattress
set. New in plast1c w/Warr.
Will accept S199, Cell phone
304-412-8098 or 304·552·
1424.
-------SONG OF THE SOUTH
(Tales of Uncle Remus) full
· VCR 1ape $29
le ng lh mav1e,
call 888·315·6004

It

l
. iD

.

WANTED

3br. House on 3/4 acre , on
Eckard Chapel. (304)675·'
8635
-------3br. House on 314 acre . on
Eckard . Chapel. (304)6758635
-------4 Bedrooms 2 1/2 baths.
5.52 acres. Pt . Pleasant.
Information/photos online
www.orvb.com code 51903

L;,--•'11;;0_Do
___,

(304)675-5773
-------Great Gifts: beautifUl wood 4 br. 1 1/2 baths. bnck and
frame . full basement, 2 car
signs lor any occasion . gara ge. New haven WV
Residential-Business. Blue· (740)446-4274
Star banners. 525. and u'p.
(304 )675• 6925
By Builder. aHortable New

Will pressu re wash homes, Brick 3 bedroom 2 1/2 bath.
trailers. decks, metal bu ild· 2 car garage. Corner lot.
incs and gutters. Call Great Location , Green &amp;
(740)446..0 151 ask for Ron Cily Schools. (740J446·9966
or leave message.
.:___:__ ___:__:__ _
Will set tor the elderly or dis·
abled
Day
or . night.
Monday-Friday. Call Jan
675-7792 Cell 1·704-2087107

G)

i

6

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertise '1any
preference, limitation or·
discrimination baaed on
race, color, religion, sex
familial statue or nation&amp;!!
origin, or any intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination."

1

11«J

170
1

~~..,...........,....
•NEXllJS
rn.J.""A...I'..LI.A.

I -1--8.::.8.::.B·.::.B.:;ID::_·.::.
IT-.::.U.::.
P.::.H.:;e:_
nry
_ M_. .June 14. Big Savings. Big

Adult electric Rcooter like
Wai-Mart has for shopping
682-6850

Stanley. II ICAI·AARE

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1$Sl?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582-3345

I ~ I \I I o.., I \ I I
-------Black leather love seat $100
55 gallon aquarium WI black
shelving unl1 5350 1997
FOR SALE
Oldsmobile Acheiva $2500
937 9249
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
- - - - - - - - for Immediate possession all
Full Size Manress Set New within 15 min. ol downtown
in Plastic wiWarr. · Sacrifice Gallipolis. Rates as low as
$119, Cell PhOne 304·4 12· 6%. (740)446·3218.
8098 01304-552-1424.
-----~--

;;;;;::=:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

rio

HOME5
L,.-'-loiiiiioiiliiiii;;.._.l

-------Good mix grass hay, square
bales ,

never been wet ,
$2.50 peo bela. Registered
Black Angus bull, 21 /2 years
old 446-1062

-------King Size P1llow Top
Mattress set. New still In
PlaStic, Sa le $299, Cel l
PhOne 30~·~12-8098 or
304·552·1424 .

Rebate. 446·9340

fl20

MOBILE HOMF.S
1'01&lt; SALE

Will stay with elde rly person
in there home. Nights ·Only.
Assistant Varsity Basketball (3041675- 1898
Coach.
Girls'
Soltb~ll
11'\"1\1
Coach,
Girls
Reserve ~~;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Sohbal l
Coach,
Giols'
Assistant Middle School
vrrun.• u 1" 11 •
Volleyball Coach·, Girls'
Midd le School Ba sketball
Coach,
Middle
School
!NOTICE!
Cheerleader
Advisor, I OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Assistant
Cheer leader lNG CO. recommends that
Advisor and National Honor you do business with people
This newspaper will not
Society Advisor for the you know. aild NOT to send
knowingly accept
school
year. money through the mail unlil
2003 _04
advertisements for real
Applicants must hold a valid you have investigated the
estate which is In
Ohio teaching certif icate offering.
violation of the law. Our
and for coaching positions - - - - - - - readera are hereby
must meet certification Never lose money again in
inforrried that all
requirements of Ohio fo r MLM! Instead. try EMM! It's
dwellings advertised In
-pupil activity supervisor and new, it's hot, it pays up to
this newspaper are
available on an equal
CPR Persons interested 10k weekly! No selling! Get
free inlo 600·242-0363 eMt.
opportUnity baaea.
should contact
William
Buckley, Superintendent, ;,18;,;06,.;....------.
Meigs Local School District.
PR
Custom . all br ick 3BA 21/2
~.U.
Bath, 3200 sq. f1 . l1ving area
272
:~ ~x · Pomeroy. Ohio ~.,_ _.;S;O:ER:.VI~CES---' on
5tl2 acres with pond,
,;,;,;..;.;_ _ _ _ __,
John's
Contracllng
~
30x40
detached garage. 4
B~
miles past hospital on 160
Services
TRAINING
$279,000 446·2927
"---~~~-_.1 carpentry. painting , roofing, - -- - - - - insulation. ded&lt;.ing·free esti r
FORCLOSURE
Galllpolil Career College
males
740-367·0437
3
Bedroom
home only
(Careers Close To Home)
$13,500
for
listing ca ll
Call Today! 740-446-4367,
Stanley and Son, Inc.
1-800-,7 19-3001 Ext. F144
1-800-2 14-0452
Auction , Real Estate,
WYoW.gallipollscareercollege.com
Appraisal. Serving you
French City Mobile Homes
Res t90-05·1274B .
since 1960-3 Generations. Open House May 30 thru

r·IO ""~~~

Pictyresgye 75 acre
Hilltop Family Estate
5 Year old. 1 ,568sq. h.
ranch style vinyl sided
home. 3-Bedroom, 2-baths,
heat, pump, with detached 2
car garage and breezeway.
Large Master BA with walkIn closet and Jacuzzi.
Beautiful wooded acreage
for hunting and 15·20 ac res
ot hilltop meadow. Perfect
for private family home or
Mid to High end residential
development
F,lrst offer of 5180,000
buys II!
~0 Minutes from Po1nt
Pleasant on Route 2 Nortt'l,
4 miles South of State
Route 87.
Call 3Q4-675-5740

'l

Home on pond. F1va Points
area. Pomeroy 1.3 acres 3
br.,1 112 baths, dihing
room ,family robm,stone lire~
place ~s g~s. logs. basement w1th fmtshed room.
Mid 80's (740) 992·3493

Moore St. Hartford, ,WV 6
rooms &amp; bath; needs work.
Nice large lot . 740·742·
2535
-------Nice custom built Qape Cod,
over 3.000 sq. ft .. clOse to
town .
(7401446-3764 or
3 Bo, I Ba, full unfinished (7401446·2885.
basement, new kitchen, new
windows
and
vinyL REDUCED PRICE Small
$53.900.00, (740)367·0299 home, eJ~cellent beginning
or 7()9.()299 leave message. home or rental property.
740·742 ·3.1281eave name &amp;
3BR Ranch Style Home. number.
Only
serious
City schools; 2 car garage. inquires please
covered carport . above
ground pool. partially lin· Thre.e Bedroom. One Bath
ished full , dry basement. Ra nch Style Home 10
$73k 446·9545 5·10pm or Addison Twp. Call (740)446leave message Clurlng Clay
8491

2003 Clay1on 16x80 3 BR 2.
Bath . partially furnished, 2
building,
decks. 10x12
reduced priGe 245-5100

-

24 x 36 double w1de modular
class room . Built very heavy
duly to Oh1o building code. 1
large open room , no balh or
kitchen . sell contai ned heat
pump unit. Approx .. tO years
old. S6. 500 delivery ~vailable. 740·992·2478 or 740591 ·9342

·gg 14x70 Clayton . 3 bdrm. 2
bath. all electric. central ale,
new carpet , water lines &amp;
underpinning. $1 6.000. 675·
8707

.

SCUM-LETS ANSWIRS

A ramous comtc was host to a couptE!s litlieth wed-

ding anniversary He told lhe couple that btgamy was
tile only crime where a wrong is made up or TWO
RITES!"

Coming Soon The All New
"Pinnacle Best Buy· Home
You saw them last . year.
Many were sold at a fantastic low price. Now w1th more
deluxe features than ever.
"Where You Get Your
Money's ·· Worth"
Coles
Mobile Homes. US 50 East ,
Athens, Ohio (740)592-1972
Land Home Packages available. In your .area . (740)446· ·
3384.
New 14 wide only $799
down ai'ld only $157.93 per
month . Call Nikki 740·3857671.
--------

New 14 .wide only $799
down aQd only $157 . ~ per
month. Call Nikki 740·385·
_
76_7_1_._ _ _ _ __
New 2003 Doublewlde . 3 BA
&amp; 2 Bath. Onl $1695 down
Y
:;~ &amp;295/mo. 1"800 ' 691 "

7

Rio Grande area . 2400
sq .ft. . OfticeJ Commercial '
Building lor RenV Lease .
Plenty off parking. (740)245·
5747
•

r.

Buildmg lots close to Pt.
Pleasant at Meadow hills off
Sand hill Rd . (7401446·9340
or 304 -675-3000.

Oh 1o Vallev
Publishing
Company has a part·time
opening In ~he ma ilroom.
Please applv in person
Monday-Thursday 8·10am.
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis.
·Ask for Tomrw Long .
Reception ist.
Lumber
Handlers,
lift
Truck
Operatots, Cootact office at
(7401992·5965 loom 6:30 lo
4:00 M· F or Send Resume
to: PO Box 227, Middleport,
Oll45760.. .

•

-·

LoTs&amp;
ACREAGE

3 acres Ready 10 build .
· Co
Mason
$20.000.
(3041458·1916

l-888· 748-3630.

-

.

Cole's Mobile Homes
US 50 Eas1. Athens . Oh1o.
45701 ' 740.592-1972

.

Warmth- Oasis - Jetty- Coddle- TWO RI TES

l

Help wanted caring for the
elderly, Darst Group Home.
now paying minimum wage,
new shifts : 7am·3pm, 7am5pm, 3pm· 11pm, 11pm7am, call 740-992·5023.
---,------,Lead Guitarist needed lor
bar band . Play various music
and count ry. Most equip·
ment suppli ed. 740-709·
9053 or 304-675-3449 ask
for Frankie.

Infant.
children. · adult developmental disabilities
clothes. Home Interior. misc . has vacant positions lor
1 m1-1e bel ow dam . M ay 1•5 Casual LPN's.. Pay starts al
$1,6.00 per hour. For more
-Ju_n_e-2-_-.--a.-m-.- - 0- , - 1 information call Dorothy
83
3 9
5
Ave. clothes. scrubs. toys. Harper at Middleton Estates.
booKs
740-446-8145 or 446-4814 .
An
Equal
Opportunity
Overbrook Center is seeking
May 31 at 2295 Graham Employer F/MJON.
a parHime position lor an
Metabolism LPN . For more information,
School Ad . mens. womens, A
1 lost 40 contact Michelle Gilmore at
childrens sizes 0·6x, 222 Breakthrough!
case, riding mower, push pounds in
2 months. (740)992-6472
Sum~er camp F~r Kids
mower, and miscellaneous . Ephedra Free 1·888-5460penmg Mon - Fn 6am·6pm
7207
4
lor more into. call Kelly
YARD SALE·
ADVERTISING
Casto 740·667·6460
__ PoMERoYIMIDDLE . Access to a Computer?
SALES
Earn $450-$1500 monthly

r

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publl1hlng r..eNII the right to edit, r1ject, or cancel any 1d at any time. Errora muat be reported on the firtl dsy ol publication and
and only the first insertion. We •hall not be liable
made in lhe first available edition. • Box number
111 •lw1y1 confidential. • Current 1111 cerd 1pplill. • All r11l 11t1te advertiHments are subj1ct to .the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1958. • Thla n~.•P•I'"'I
accept• only help wanted ad1 meeting EOE atlndllrda. We will not knowingly accept any acjvertlllng In vlolallon of tile law.

TrlbuM-Stntlnei-A~Iem will~ rnpon1lbie for rlO more than the colt of the epace occupied by the error
any 1011 or axpanH that r1aultt from thl publication or omla.ton of 11n advertiHment. Correction will be

~~ I ;:;:; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ~.,11.10-HELP--W·ANIED--.,.1' rtO

SHOP

_,;

Sundaye Paper

Description • Include A Price • 'A void Abbreviltlons

lost: Black. White and
Orange female cat. Ohio
Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
side of Silver Bridge $25
Silver,
Gold
Coins,
reWard 304·576-3130
Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold
U.S. Currency. f&gt;uppy lost, Cora Mill &amp; Rings.
Brushy Point Area , Olack M.T.S. Coin Shop, ~51
with light brown markings on Second Avenue , Gallipolis,
leet, face, and chest 379· 740-446-2842.

at.nri/stein (at) ap.org)

In Next Day'a Paper
1iuo1diiY In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should flun 1 DIYI

" A STARSEARCH"
Singers Bands &amp; Vocal
Groups. All Styles &amp; Ages .
Nashville Record Exact.
Seeking New Talent.
Coming to Huntington
731 ·424·2229 or 731·424·
?1 41
-------C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale. Chester Township,
Meigs County. send ·leners
· of inte rest to : The Daily
Sentinel , PO Box 729-20.
Po~eroy. Ohio 45769.

Can the Reds
sweep the Yankees?
See tomorrow's
Sports, Page 81

BINGO

Monday-Friday for Jnaartlon

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

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

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

Dally In•Column: 1:00 p.m.

• Start Your Ad1 With A Keyword • Include Complete

\\'\Ot '\t I \ II \ I""

r

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
classlfled@mydallysentlnel.com

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

Co11nty, O H

~eglster

Word Ads

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

Angels 11, Expos 2

clout. Pitchers have thrown
· spitters. greased baits with
petroleum jelly. scuffed them
with emery boards and rubbed
them on their belt buckles to
make them dip and dart.
Managers have stooped to
giving pitchers refrigerated
balls to deaden them when the
other team is up . Stt aling
sign,s is an art as much as
stealin g bases.
More than other sports,
Public Notice
baseball has tolerated ,and
even celebrated cheati ng as PUBLIC NOTICE
Board of Public
· part of the game nearly since The
Affairs
agreed
to
its inception. As the title of implement the followone book on the subject sug- Ing policy : No wells
be drilled or drivgests, "It Ain't Cheatin'lf You can
en In the Village of
Don't Get Caught"
Middleport
All new
There is a more serious side services must hook
to the cheating issue: steroids. onto village water/
lines. No
Admissions of steroid use by wastewater
exceptions.
Pomeroy Eagles
several baseball players, and
Effective
July
2,
BINGO SPECIAL
suspicions that many sluggers 2003.
Non-paid
utility
June 8th
juice up. have shadowed the
bills, If the BPA cannot
$15
.00
as many packs
·home run explosion in recent eottecl the amount
years. Sosa. rippling with' owed from the resias you want
muscles, has always denied dent who made the
biti, the landlord · I
taking drugs. but some may property
owner wlit be
AUCTION
wonder whether he might responsible for the
have cheated with his body if total payment of the
Friday night
bttl before .services
he cheated with his bat.
Syracuse Fire Station 6 pm
will be turned back on
. Innocent ·mistake or not, at
the property.
No
Large Load w/several·
Sosa stepped over to the shad y e•cepttona.
new items
Effective JulY
2,
side of sports. He didn' t sink
2003.
Chicago Cubs' Sammy Sosa shatters his bat' with a grounder to the level of Olympic sprintEffective wtth the
to second In the first inning against the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. er Ben Johnson, who loaded August
2003 bttttng,
Tuesday evening at Chicago's Wrigley Reid. Sosa was ejected · up on illegal steroids to win water rates witt
the 100 .meters in the 1988 Increase by twelve
after umpires found cork in his shattered bat (AP)
Example: A
Sat., June 7
Olympics before he was percent
minimum btu lor two
The game's integrity, as much caught and · stripped of the thousand
into his hands.
gallons
6:30pm
No one who knows any- as Sosa's, is at risk and a two- gold. But Sosa's "mistake," if usage will go from
thing about baseball will think week suspension is warranted that's what it was, sti ll puts $8.14 for water 10
All Packs $5.00
for a minute that Sosa hit 505 to send a message to other him in the company of other $9.12; senior citizen
rate will go from $7.33
Starburst $1,650
home runs because ' he had players. A . month isn 't too alleged cheaters.
to $8.21.
help from corked bats. But did stiff.
Hotball $750.00
Adopted
by
the
"There are cheaters in
.
h
•
Even if Sosa didp 't plan on sports, JUSt
he hit one with a cprked bat?
Middleport
Board
of
"Must
be
1B to play or to be in hall."
as t erf are on
'!'Y;o? Ten?
.
using the bat in the game, he Wall Street and in corporate Public Affairs June 2,
Middleport American Legion
2003.
Did Pete Rose. bet on base- should get a heavy penalty for America - · people who try to (6)
5 , &amp;; ll 3TC
ball? He says no, the commis- using it at all and putting him- gain an unfair advantage,"
sioner's office says yes. Let's self in the posttion to be Peter Roby, director of ·
say maybe. But did he ever caught. Stupidity is no e"cuse Northeastern
Universllty' s
cheat in any way? Nobody for breaking the rules.
Center for the Study of Sport
says he did. Which is more
But the retribution should in 'Society, said Wednesday.
serious and goes to the integri- end there. This is not the kind
ty of the aame, Rose's actions of violation that should keep "It sends an unfortunate mesor Sosa's~
·
him out of the Hall of Fame. sage to fans and young players
CLASSIFIEDS
If Sosa knowingly played Too many~hers have done tjlat cheating goes . on at the
highest
levels
of
the
game.''
with a· tricked-up bat, he the same thin or worse.
FOR
In the end. that' s what matBaseball· as a long history
cheated. He should be pun.
ished severely, far more than of chicanery. Over the years. • ters mqst. . . . .
BARGAINS GALORE
!Ste••e Wtlstetn t ~ a narwnal
the usual week or I 0 days, bats have been corked filled
because of his status as one of with rubber a·nd ha~mered sports co lumnist for The
baseball's premier sluggers. with nails to give them e)(tra Auociated Press. Write to him

______

- ___

Rookie Kyle Snyder (I -3)
combined
with
.Jason
and
Mike
Grims le y
MacDougal on a three-hitter
for hi s first major league
victory. and Carlos Beltran
and Angel · Be'rroa homered
off Hideo Nomo (6-6).
McDougal got hi s 13th save
as the visiting Royals won
for the fifth time in 20
games . Los Angeles has lost
six of eight following a I 0game winning streak.

G~JIU.

Garret Anderson homered
three times in San Juan.
Puerto Rico. and Jeff
DaVanon had hi s third
straight multihomer game.
Troy Glaus and Brad
Ful lm er also homered for
the World Series champion
Angels. who set a club
record with seven homers in
the game and matched a
record for AL teams with 13
Giants 4, Twins 3
·homers in two games. Jarrod
Mariners 7, Phillies 2 Barry Bonds hit an RBI Washburn (6-5) beat Sunsingle with two outs in . the Woo Kim (0- 1) as Montreal
John 0\erud doubled ninth inning, lifting San lost its fifth straight.
·

Sosa's hears cheers amid skepticism
BY STEVE WtLSTEIN

Francisco over Minnesota at
Pacific Bell Park.
' Twins
reliever
Ju&lt;ln
Rincon , ( 1-2) walked three
batters, bringing up Bonds
with the ba ses loaded . He
hit th e first pitch to right
field · for the winner and
emphatically stomped on
first base.
Bonds earlier hit an RBI
triple. Torii Hunter had a
pair of doubles for the secCardinals 8,
ond' straight
day
for
Blue Jays 5
Minne sota.
Tim Worrell (2-2) worked
Mi guel Cairo snapped an the ninth for the win.
0-for-18 slump with three
hits as St. Louis wmi its Tigers 5, Padres 3
tpird straight, improving to
SA on a- \3 -game homesPitcher Steve Avery had a
land. Edgar Renteria had a
two-run doubl e and slow- pinch-hit single and scored
footed Tino Martinez and the go-ahead ru'n in the sevMike Matheny had back-to- enth inning to lead Detroit.
back triple s in the sixth to
With its second win in a
chase Cory · Lidle (8:4). row at San Diego, the Tigers
Jason Simontacchi (3-3) ( 16-40) left the Padres ( 17gave up five run s on 10 hits 43 ) with the worst record in
in five innings. Ca rlos the majors.
Delgado hit hi s I7th homer.
The score was tied at 3
tying Juan Gonzalez and
when
Avery batted for
Alfonso Soriano for the AL
Wilfreda Ledezma ( 1-2) and
lead.
singled off Luther Hackman
Royals 2, Dodgers 1 ( 1-1) to start the seventh.
twt ce and drove in four
runs to back,Gil Me che (82), who allowed two' run s.
five hits and four walks in
six innings at Phil adelphi it.
lc.hiro Suzuki went 4-for -5
and Bret Boone extended
his hitting streak to I 0
games fot" the Mariners
(39-18). who have won
eight straigh t. Vicente
Padilla (4-7) gave up all
seven runs .

-------------------

�Thursday, June 5, 2003

Thursdi!y, June 5, 2003

www. mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Pag~ B 7

\IIIII II\ ' Ill '!

'
90 oeauliful rolling acres
near Harnsonvtlle. Htghway
frontage on SR 143. bias
wQit anCl stocked pond.
Cash or 1erms. Call (740)
742-3033 ·

Lot tor sate tn
(7 40)992-5858·,

Racme.

Nic~mobile home lots. qut8t
. cou ntry settmg, S115 p~r
month.
tnctudes wate r

'.

sewer, trash. 740-332-2167

Rio Grande area. 3t I~ 30
acres lois. some restncltons,
whter &amp; eleclnc. (740)2455747
1 ~ 1'\1\1 "

r

"Oll~
. '"
n
.-w...-,

10

HlR RENT
....,_...,;liiii;.;,;iiii.;,...-1

10

"
'"---•G
iii.iiitlOi
iiiiiiJS;";,-_.I

Jac~

1'_

Puppies~

446- 1400

financing . 90 days same as
cash . Vtsa/ Master Card
Drive- a- tittle sava alot.

Man-Sat

r

AN11QUI-li ·

jii
ow
;;:n~e;;.;'..,..-----,
·
P«l Mtoo:u~\NEOus
2 bedroom. Reterences &amp;
M ERCHA.Nl&gt;ISE

Deposit. No Pets. (304)675· L-.;,..-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii_.l
5162
BURN
Fat ,
BLOCK
Cravings. and
BOOST
3 bedroom. $500 per mo
Energy Li~e
You Have
plus deposic references
Never Expenenced .
requi red ,
no
pets,
WEIGHT- LOSS
Harrisonville area, 740- 74 2·
REVOLUTION
7303. 740-347-4370.
New product launch Octobe r
Nice older home for ren t 1n 23 · 2002 · Call Tracy at
New Haven WV. Has fenced _&lt;7_4_01
_44_ 1_.1_9_82_ _ __

M OBILE

H OMES

HJR RENT

14K70 two be droo.m total
electric , $300 'a month , $250
deposit, no pe ls, (740)7 42·
2714

2 BR tra iler., $280 inonth
plus depo sit · 'n ea r Hotzer
~osp i t a l 446-9204 call after
~ '00 p.m.

? br. mobile home. all

FARMS
FOR RENT

WILSON'
ROBERT
,uun· Slllli'UiS
BISSEll
Whare the cusromar
comes
CINSTRUCnON
Under New

500.00 740-992-2 478

$10,

-19_9_2_C_h_e_v%-Je_t_S_1_0_B_Ia-ze- r

NEW AND USED STEEL

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
., Remodeling

Managagement
A \'a r i~ l ) nr
dut hin(!. anJ
t'q uip m ••m

r

GHAJN

3600

Srop &amp; Compare

No Pets. (304)895-3815

Apartment in dOWf'\town
Gallipolis 886·7 174
BEAUTIFU L
MENTS
AT
PRICES AT

APART·
. BUDGET
JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 We stwood
brive from $297 to $383.
Walk
Shop &amp; movies Gall
740-446 ·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Ia

Furn ished Efftciency-3
rooms and balh, all uttli ltes
paid, down stairs. 5285.00 .
919 Second Ave. 446-3945
Gracious livifi'g. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Vtllage
Man..or
and
Riverside
Apartments in M iddleport.
From $278-$348 . Call 740992-5064. Equal Housing
OpportuMtes.

Pomt''"Y• Oi1io, 4.S 169

992-5479

1 · 7 40-992· 7007
Hours 1o.8 pm

~~~

High&amp; Dry

Easter &amp; Mothers Day

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Heal her A. Fry L M.T.

740-992~5232

II{

\\~1'(

Ull \I H)\

Atrro PAR1S &amp;
ACCI-.."iSSRII-.:..~

L-.-oitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiio_.l
Otd cars lor sale. pa rt s.
repai r, restore. 304· 458·
1754 o r 304 -458- 1831

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estim ates
Fast Turnaround

WE REPAIR
• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
•Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karls • Mini
Bikes
JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
32 11 9 Welsntown Rd.
Pome roy, OH 45769

740-992-2432

CAMPt;R5 &amp;

740-992-5379 '
· Oll&lt;'r ~·•~o.lthru ~

10

Ho~iE
IMPROvt:MINJ'S

C&amp;C
General
Ho me
Maintenance - Pa1 ntmg , vinyl
stding . ca rpentry, do ors
windows. baths. mobile
home repair and more. Fo1
free estimate call Chet, 740·
.9 9 2 ~632 3 .

im·,,rcmce

Septic Systems·,
Footers and
· C()ncrete.
Excavation , Utilities,
Back hoe and
Dozer, Ponds.
We Make House Calls

JONES'

Jump
on

SAVINGS ·

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.
992-7953
591-7002
591-4641

~c;al~t7~4~0-;2;45~-5~1;21~---·•ll!••lltl••ll!••••!lll•••~;;;;;;;;;;;;.

ADVER;T/SE;YQUa
BVSIN65S
1

on this poge foros lOW cis
$25.00 periiJonthi

Bucket Truck

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

(304) 675-5282

Gravely

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

GRAVELY TRACTOR
Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSELL
BUilDERS InC.

New Humes • Vinyl
Siding •

N~w G arage~

• Rcp l a1.\: m l·n t

Roofing

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

'

Saves on Cool1 ng.
Metal and Mobile
home roo f s ~ No
Prob lem . 15-Year
Gua rantee
992·7953
591-4641
591-7002

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

HOWARDl.
WR!TfSfl
dOORIIG dOME

Pomeroy Ea ~t es
BINGO 1171
Ever)" Thursday &amp;
Sunday
IJoo rs Open 4:30
Jo:a rl)' bird.1 start
6:30 lsi Thursday

GUnER
•Fm ESIImates•
949-1415

or

Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417
·w .v·s

#I
&amp;

Chevy. Ponl lac. l:luick , Otds
Custom Vnn Dealer""

CANCER CHECK
Fnmll) ... M1 1 n~~ pa 1d 111lllli whl.." n cancer
:.. tr ike:... You c htlt l:-.l: til e &lt;H11 0LI1l l up In $~ 0. 00)!

Pa\:.. in udditiun Ill ut h L'I' in:.urw11:c.
You' l N' thl: mlmq hi'Wl'\ l: r yo u lihc.
CatKL'r \\ill 'lri h · \\ hen ynu h:a:-.t expect it.
k :l\t' ~ PII and ~~ mr h un i l}· fin anci all y

'11 \\i ll

'trc1ppod. Ctl t\CER CHEC K willl-.c

'

uf ever)' mnnth

there wh ~.~ n ~ou nt:.'cd i1.
C all nt\W tn n .' "L'I'\t' )..Q1!l c heck.

All pock $5.tHl
Bring·!his coupon
Ruy $5.JHI Bonanza
GeJ 5 FREE

RO CKY H UI'P INSU RAN CE
.&amp; FINANCI AL SERVICES
Hox JH9 Mt DDLHOKT. OH45760
740-843-5264

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bas han Road
Rac in e. Ohio

45771
740- 949~22 17

'

$1zes 5'x10'
10'x3o'

to

Hours
7:00 AM · 8:00 PM
1/ 14 1 mo pd

.\I I ~

General
Contracting
New
· Construction ,
. Remodeling ,
Backhoe and
Dozer Work.
Roofing.

HOME CREEK
ENT., .INC.
992-7953

1(11

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do it for youl

ered his girlfri end. Please help
me look at this relations hip
with clear eyes. - "ONLY A
FRIEND" IN NEW YORK
.STATE
DEAR
''ONLY
A
FRIEND" : It's time to face the
fact that for whatever reason,
Bruce is commitment-phobic.
Up to now, your re lationship
has been entirely on his tenns,
and he likes it the way it is. I'll
gi ve him marks for honesty.
You must accept it - or move
on. (If it's marriage and a
secure future you're after, I
urge you to do the latter.)
DEAR ABBY: I am a ISyear-old girl , anti my parents
split up a couple of weeks ago.
1 didn't see it coming because
they always acted li ke they
were happy together. My mom
and dad have both talked to me
about it, but I feet like they're
try ing to make· me c hoose
sides.
Mom is forever asking me if

I Pencil

ends ·

6 Polite

45 Tombstone .
deputy
47 Osaka yes
50 Company
52 Give
. homewqrk
54 Corsage
flower
58 Is generous
59 Mistake ·
(hyph.)
60 Made do
with
61 Thickset

· cough
10 Glossy
,
fabric
12 Steered
14 Stiglil · ·
difference
15 Dream
16 Tiara Insets
18 VCR needs
·19 Produced,
DOWN
. as eggs
21 Darth 's
daughter
1 Worker·s
17 Stretch
23 Yo ungster·
10
19 Fishing
24 Want-ad
2 Sweater
spots
letter .
abbr.
20 Sun-dried
26 Mi ld oath
3 Actress
brick
29 Boxi ng win
- Hagen
22 - Khan
30 The Plastic - 4 Movie mull 23 Corporate
- Band
5 Withdraw
abbr.
32 1960s
6 Bush
"25 Dawl)
ha irdo
dweller,
goddess
34 Rookie
maybe
27 Following
socialites
7 With-it
28 Witt
36 Noncom
8 Fix a
31 Stug_ger
37 Haul
manuscript
Mel 38 Animal that 9 Vanna·s
33 - up
boss
·barks
(confen)
40 Modern-day 11 Modern
35 Mineo of
leiter
12 Big blow
old films
42 Long time 13 -Plaines, 39 Dragged
43 Greed kin?
ttl.
along

I'm OK , and I always say yes, still relevant, and my copy has
but I'm not so sure. I can' t talk become wom and tattered. l\ ny
to my father because'we aren't chance you would print tt
as close - we never were. ·again? - HELEN REZENAiso, I don't see hi m as muc h DES, SAN JOSE, CALI F.
anymore and he rarely calls.
DEAR
HELEN :
I'm
My grades have dropped, pleased to print it again. My
and I've been falling as leep in mother is a wise woman.
some of my classes. D~d th inks · "Maturity is:
I' m depressed, but I don't
··- T he ability to stick with
agree. I 'don' t know how to a job unti l it's fini shed .
ex plain what I' m going
"- The abi lity to do a job
,throug h.. My parents don' t without being supervised.
understand. Abby, please help
"- The ab ili ty to carry
me because I don' t know what money without spending it.
to do. - LOST AND CON"- And the ability to bear an
FUSED IN STAFFORD, VA. inj ustice without wantin g to
DEAR LOST: Your father get even."
may have more insight than
Dear Abby is written by
you hiiVe given hi m credit for. Abiga il Van Buren, also known
The signs of depression can be as Jeanne Phillips, aru1 was
subtle. Among them are sleep j ou11ded by her mother; Pauline
problems.
- Phillips. Write Dear Abby at
Please level with both of www.DearAbby.com o r PO.
)'OUr parents about your feel· Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
ings. Your reaction to the 90069.
divorce is nonnal. You should
also speak to a counselor ai ·
school. Help is available for·
you. Please don' t try to go
through th is process alone.
·•
Reading the
Trust me on thi s: You' ll start to
t -- Hnewspaper keeps
feel better as soon as you speak
you informed and
up and stop bottling up your
in tune with
feelings.
what's happening
DEAR ABBY: Back in
now, whether
it's across the
1963, your mother printed a
globe or. in your
great definition of "maturity." I
own backyard.
clipped and saved it, and have
referred to it many times. It's

Affor 6pm '' ,.

~

@@@@(9@
@(9@@@@@
@@@@®@
@@®@@@

NELSON'S LAWN
CARE
R e s idential •

WORD®©®CD@@@@®·
0000000
~·oo-

0
0000000
®@@®®®© !'~ ~~~~T~al 0
@@@@@®@

2nd DOWN

~~~~~~~ ~'~a~.:~·• 0
~~~g~~~ 0
AVERAGE GAME 220-230

Comme rcial Mowing
• Mulching • Edging

0008.
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments . Very Spa'cio us.
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors . CA. 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pa tiO, Start $385JMo. No
Pets. lease Plus Security
Oeposil Aeq u1 red . Days ~
740-446 -3481 . Evenmgs :

740-367-0502.
Twin Rivers Tower is acceptIng apphcat1ons lor warting
list lor Hud·SUbSIZed. 1- er.
apartment . call 675-6679
EHO

t
space for l"ent 1n
rt , 740 992-5858

• Fertili za tion • Leaf

Daily
Sentine:l
'

&lt;

992-2j55

R em o v.a l • p r unin g

·.Landscape

Mai nlenance Spring
an d Fall clean up
(7 40) 985-9829
(740) 591 -3891

at

.

Maplewood Lake
State Route 124
Between Racine &amp;
Syracuse, Oh10

June 6-7
Campsite available
with ful l hookups

Call 949-2734

SUE's GREENHOUSE
Beaaing, VegetaiJ!e E; sweet
Pcxato Plants,
4" annuals E; Perennials

Fruit E; ·Flowering Trees E;
Shrubs
(Rhottottenarons E;
NOW Open
7 d•y•
Azaleas)
, 11 week dayllghl
all on Sate
·' to dark!

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
DIRF;CTIONS: Meke 11 2- ro 7-lener word lrcm the leners on eacn yan.tlne.
Add points to each word or lener using scori ng directiOn$ 11 rignt . Seven-tener
words get a 60-po1n1 oorw.;s. All wordS can be ro~d in WabSler's New World
College Dictiom11y
JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

\N\-1~\?

l:

TO

BUIME

BUT

M~'ioELf 1

0~ , PLEASE !

5ELf·

LOATH! Nrf

'"so
L ~5T

C E~TUR~ !

&lt;ODA"';, 11\m&gt;RMED
CttltEN Bi.AME5 1\!E FA5T·

I fOOD tND U5TR~ I'OR mAK-

!

IN&amp; U5 [liT i'OO MUCH, ..

I

!

l

22 Years Loca l

...

u;, mOVE TOO L l1f ~E . , .
fRitND5 f OR Et1118LW&lt;'r
~ ~E OE ,TAI&lt;'i

"If £.. .
:t~ ~H O!I.T 'r'._. --1

-===;;;;:i"l, )

~==;i

~====~
~.~~~~ ~~~~~~~~
T~AT WAS A BEAUTIFUL
RAIN 'WE HAD LAST N16HT..

675-2457 or 448-2812
• Driveways.• Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

IT RAINED ON OUI&lt;. LAWN ,
AND OUR TREES AND
ALL OUR FLOWERS ...

-

WV Contractors Lie. #003506
GINA ,

(740) 992-3194
992-6635"

m~ c.H

l

. Henderson, WV

(10'Hl0' 6 10'x20']

u;, &gt;li 100

ELELTRONtCo I'OR MilK!~~

'•

992~6215
Pomero~. Otuo

MYERS PAVING

MANLEYS
SElf STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

WE BLAM E T\J fOR mAKtNC:t

I

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
5/9-814

~AVe

~0 ONE

we -RE
NOT
DONE

Rivcrwcn•
Cafe
in Syracuse
, hWIII! ' th Whitllt'\ :\ )

UnUcr n~w nwn cr .,hip

z~

~
..,
:;:.:
z

P~S'51MIST S'OCI~TY
TtiOI.JGtl7' fOil 7'0l&gt;AYt
Tt-115 15 Ttlt vJO/lST
I&gt;AY Of Ttl~ ~t.f7'
OF . YOI.J~ ST/liF~ :

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

anU m:w man agt: me,nt.

COM E .lOIN US
7
A Week!

" The l .i11 1e rt·~ t :nu a nt

\\ 1th !h e ht,g: !, J,te"

'

=

by JUDD HAMBRICK

YOUNG'S

FREE ESTIMATES!

$7.50 per
space

to pay
57 Tiny
speck

MY

"!( ff.;

• Room Additions &amp;
Remod eling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing _
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pa inting
• Patio and Porch Decks

FLEA MARKET

rival

56 Promise

WAR'KEN,

Wi.

Bryan ReevBs _
New Homes, Room Additions ,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Rools,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More

740-742-3411

yea r ahead. With il. 111any
new fr ienli&gt;hips will develop
us well. 1!" 11 be important for
you , however, to also main·
tain pas! relalionships. .
GEMINI (May 21 -June
20) - When planning a social function today iJ 's not being inhos pilable to limil your
guest li s1 onl y 10 !hose who
are pari of th e purpose of I he
get-togeth er. Famify members
don: I have Jo be included.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - Unless yo u plan your
log isl ics wisely today. }',PU
could end up cosJine yourself
many unn eeded and was Jeful·
time and steps. Kee p thin gs
uncom plicated by stickin g to
a sensible itinerary.
LEU (July 23-Aug. 22) When ge ttin g invol ved in a
costly endea vor with others
tod ay, be prepared Jo, pay
your fai r share and make ce rtain others kn ow !hey arc ex~
peeled to pick up expenses for
whaJJh ey incur.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Jan. 19)- Stick 10 acti vities
your purposes un d not by anand eve nts today that are b01 h
Wh en layin g ou t th e
other who cou ld unwisely in~
ageridu for a grou p endeavor
fun and safe. Thi s is not a
fl uence you to go off on tangood time 10 imp lement untoday. plans should not be ar~
gents wit h him or her.
ranged 10 serve any one per- t dert akings th at are based upo n
ARIES (March 21-April
chance aml gambles.
so n's needs. Be con siucrale of
19) - ·· Disco rd can be
lhc requircmenls of all th e
AQUARIUS (.Jan. 20-Feb.
avoided al work Joday if eveothers as well.
19) - It won" J take a wad of
ryo ne invol ved in a ce rtain
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23)
money loday to hav e a good
job is ass igned a specific task
ti me . In fact. your greatest en :
- Before you begin a job
beforehand . However. be very
wilh whi ch you're not too fajoy ments arc apt to be derived
careful that Jh e workload. is
from doi ng lhi ngs that cost
miliar. check wiJh the ex perts
fairly di sJributed.
.
and letlhem supply the knowyo u lill ie or nothin g. Hi gh
TAURUS (April 20-May
price tag s tlon ' t guaran tee
ho w. Avo id ex perim enting
20) - Don' t take anything
with Sl ran ge maJerials o r , pleasure.
for granted today. especially
eq~11 p ment.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
in areas that ha ve elements of
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
20) - The best course Of acchance involved. You mi ghl
22) - Anyone who is overly
tion yo u shou ld Jake Joday is
not be us lucky us you think,
in sistent upo n uoing things
lhe one designed by yo u for
so avo id lak ing any s_ill y ri sks.
his or her ow n way co uld ereale unnecessary di sse ntio n
within yo ur group today.
WORD SCRIMMAGE'"1:! :MlQ3
SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
Don' t you be that person ; stay
U&lt;1hcl FUI""I Sl"'((lnle , IP&gt;C
Answer
in tune with the majority.
1
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 231sl DOWN
to
Dec. 21)- In compelil ive inprevious
2nd DOWN =_2L
vol ve mcnl s today make ce rlain you're not tripped up by
Word
3od 00WN =
..zL
your ow n carelessness. It yo u
Scrimare -dcfeaJ ed. lei il be by the
4th
DOWN = 12
opposi1ion; don' t be your own
mag~ worst enemy.
AVERAGE GAME 115·125
JU DO'S TOTAL
182
1·4-IIJ
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675·2457
Now Taking Apptlcalions35
West
2
Bed room
Townhouse
Apa rtmen ts.
Includes Wate r
Sewage.
Tra sh, $350/Mo.. 740-446·

41 Subways
44 Getalan
46 Wide tie
47 Bought ,
48' Neisler
Arthur 49 Ms.
Dlnesen
51 Weep
53 Part of UK
55 Clnemax

1•
(Belol&amp; 6pm
\c.:,
l eave Me.sa~2 .•

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Advertise
in this
spacefor$25
per month.

ADVICE

UN011 PAINTING
[1401 985-418

Sunset Home
Construction

MAIIITEQIIC~

.SEAMlESS

stronecr you could ' emerge
nut
eve nts that oc.:cur in the

475 South Church St.

992-2975
IAWII and Garde11 Equipmelll is our
bu .~ iness. 11 0 1 our sideline

A more inde pe ndent and

Deari Hill
New&amp;: Used

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Dear
Abby

AC ROS S

Astrograph

Snappe r

R ~ si denti al

Shop
Classlfleds!
I~~

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

DEAR ABB Y: I am in my
late 20s. For six years I have
been entang led in a strange imd
powerful relationship wi th
"Bruce," a 38-year-old man
wko considers himself ''on ly a
friend." I am very much in love
with him and he knows it. He
!las never said he loves me. In
fact, whenever we get close, he
steps back emotionally and
reminds me that he's 'j ust a
friend."
Bruce was hurt badly by a
cheating wife and has . been
divorced for many years. I
know for a fact that there 'have
been no other women in his
life. Despite all this, Bruce
treats me like a queen.
Whatever I need - you name
it - he is right there. He is the
most generous, protecti ve and
responsive man I have ever
met.
He calls me every morning
to say hello and every night to
wish me sweet dreams. We
spend weekends together and
we' re sexuaii)Y ac tive. We
enjoy each other more than any
couple I know - married or
unmarried. We're such a good
match that people fell us we
absolutely "glow" when we're
together.
.
I have finally reached the
end of my rope. l need SOME
kind of recognition. At the very
least. I would like to be consid·

www .w vpcdr.co m
c docto r@wv cd r.co m

DURO-LAST
ROOFING .
Flat Roof .
Specialists·
Commercial and

.

Tree Service

k ·

W i1H.Inw" •

I

,-

l' hom• (7~10 )!WJ' ·61i7 11
Athens, Ohio

Al.m m ,w ac:C"e"ptillg

$2000

' '

750 East Slatr Strrrl

11-{11

Manning K. Roush
Owne r 0 en Mon-Fri 9·5

lfOME

·10

/cH€VRO,~T/

PC DOCTOR

MOTORHOMI;&lt;;

27' Prowler 2000 .model. like
new. sleeps 8. Hitch and
200 1 Mercury Sabl e 73,000 sway bars included $ 10.000
miles $8.000 call446- 47 15 call 740-446- 1750 or 740709·1382
87 OICls moblle
Cu tlass
Cierra. Runs. needs work. 96 HD A oad Ktng, low m1 t es.
$600. obo. 446-4359
11
d.
s ooo .
- - -- - - - e~Cce ent con Ilion . 14 ,
95 Mazda MX3 hatch back, Call after 5: 00pm. (304) 57688,000 miles, new lig hts s· 2933
1ires. excell en t con d illan.
'-~1~\HI ~
$4750 call 446-8222

L ARRY S CH EY

Gilt Certificate.
Get 2nd Free!

Buy I

IIUI!!i~

BoATS &amp; MaJORS
FOR SALE

5724

'

*' Spring *'
&gt;:~ Special *'
THERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE

Self-Storage

rm

~:;E~!:=

Jeff Warner Ins.

J6198 P•·ru /1 FOrk R,J.

Clo• .ct S und• y •

Good quality straw. VolUme 2001 H arley Davidson 883
d tscount &amp; delivery avail- 1700 miles S7000 call 367able. Heavy square bales. 7296
$2.85 per bate. (304)675-

Sunday. (740)446-7300

'

h1mti n ~:

709-0336

1

2 br. apl. in Gallipolis
$425 oo a mon (740)441-

CIIII H&gt;u iJ ;o~r

Nt' u' It em s A,fdt•d Hh·kly

740-992-1611

Ford Esco rt , 5 speed, good
r;,ents. furnished and unfur- Truck toppe r, e~C ce tte nt con- condition, OSk mi tes.
L--~-~.IPR~O;,;V,:;;E~:;;l::;,ENT
:.;,;os,.
· ,J
nis hed , sec ur tty deposi t ditiOn . maroon. will lit Ford 8 080 call 44 6-3239 leave ·
r'equired, no pels, 740-992- ft. bed $350 379 -9046 or messa ge
BASEMENT
441 -321 1
2218.
WATERPROOFING
TRucK~
Uncondi tion al lifetime guar·
F"" . B UJLiliNG
FOR SAI.t:
1br. Apa rtment . Some utilianlee. Loca l references fu r·
SUPJ'UES
ties paid . (304)675-651 2 or
ni shed . Establish ed 1975 .
(304)675-6366
1984 Ford 1 ton truck , 15 Calf 24 Hrs. (7 40) 446Biock, b rick. sewe r pipes. fool lighted box with roll up 08 70 , Rog ers Ba!:!em ent
1br. Cottage 1n Galltpolis. Win dows, lintels, etc. Claude door, V-8, automatic $2000 Walerproofirig.
$250. month+ Deposit. 446- Winters . Rto Gran de. OH call446·4254 or 446·0205

2468

~ll~L
Cellular

f1~~

excellent ~ ndition $3000
call 446 _
0425
-------'87 Ford F150, black. 35 1w,
auto. power. good condition
St 800 call Lee 379-9046 or
441-3211

IT
Starcraft.
inboard
10
Mercury Cruiser 302 engine,
dual axle . l11! ing trailer.
Store-d for severa l years .
Ce ntra! Cooling Systems. $500 PO LI CE IMPOUNDS Maks Oller. {7 40)379-21 11
new &amp; use d, as low as H on das.
chevys.
etc! - - - - - - - $850.00
ins1atled
May cars/trucks from $500. For
1988 Bare na Super Spor t
Special ! (7 40) 446-6308
listings 1-8{)()..719-300 1 e.:t 27' cru ise r w/cuddy. 225h p
Generator; washe r; full size 390 1
inbo8rdloutboard . new tan·
bed liner: Reming ton 270
dem
trail er. $10,000 0 80
1976 Monte Ca rl o 66,000
rifle; 45 cat. Auger pistol ; 22
miles, 4 Cralge r r1 ms, good
Brown ing
pu mp
rifl e; 11res. new eq uipmen t. runs 1994 Ranger R-72 Dual
conso le. 11 5 HP Mercu ry
(7 40)992-5970
great 304-773 -5420
Trac~e r Outboard . 3 props,
-~nd-us-tr-ia-1-S-ew
- i-ng_M_a_ch-ine
moto r
guide
2
1990
Chev.
L umuna 45#
for
sale..
New/Used
Thunder Ltmited Edition, Humm in gbi rds . GAAMINUpholstery
&amp;
Surging.
66K miles. one owner. 3.1 V- GPS. Ranger Trai ts tralt er
{30"\)458-1667
6. PS, PB. AC , PW &amp; door w1th c ro me wheel s and
Ru ns and l oo~s
locks, am/fm cassette, new spa re .
JET
11res &amp; battery, garage kept. great. $6,000 00 (740)446AE RATION MOTO RS
.
RePa tred , New &amp; Rebuilt In $4495, seri ous inquires only, 6970.

Steel Beams, Pipe R e~r
Fo r
Concrete.
Angle.
Wa nted to rent- P a~ture in Channe l. Flat Bar, Steel
For
Drains,
t;allla Co. wtlh good fe nces Gratt ng
&amp; water supply. Phone: Jim Driveways &amp; Wa lKways. L&amp;L
au hma£1 740)256·6535. Scrap Melals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wedne sday &amp;
APAR11\llii\T.)
Friday. a8m-4:30pm . Closed
mRRENT
Thursday.
Salu rday
&amp;

1 and 2 bedroom apart·

IIIIJIIIIII•••••IIIIIII

or 740- 591·9342

AQHA Reg . 2 Year o!d
Gelding 15 .1 HI{ Gay-bar·., 40
M01URCYL1 . K~
Ktng &amp; Leo on top. 3 chicks
and hard tw1sl on bottom,
loops ctrcle bo th way's
1996 CBR600F3 exce llent
Sl ops good &amp; backs up
condi tion.
yoshi mura
$2.000 . 304-576-2847
exhaus1. 1Ok mites $4000
Htgh Quality. yearling Angus OBO 645-1308
Bulls, $800. each . Roy - - - - - - - Cummings (304)675-6248 . 1996 Yamaha Wolve nne 350
4x4, excelleh t cond1h0n.
Wh tte laying c hickens for....$2.7:00..740: 379=.9038
sale. 75e each 740-9853956
2000
Hartey-Davtdson
Softta1t Standard
8. 000
lhi&amp;
miles $13,000.00 740·949·

appl i· Stock. Call Aon Evans. 1- (740)992-6020
ance mctuded . washer &amp; 800·537-9528.
.
"1995 Plymouth Voyager
9ryer 304-576-9991
Van, 3.0 V-6 engm e. ai r_
Lawn
mower.
set
of
rear
stereo
.. Excellent Condi tion.
~aut iiu l River View tCl~at
tires.
Carlisle Runs Good. (740)446-1662
For 1 Or 2 People. l urft ype
10·00-8 .
New
fl etere nces . Deposit . No 20 X 1Q_
-2001 Alero 2d. 46k $5,995,
Pets. Fos ter Trailer Pari&lt; . Condition. $50. (740)379- 1998 Malibu 62K, $5,395 .,
21
1f
.
140-441·0181 .
1996 Cavalier 96K $2,995 ..
•
Male
Peacocks.
Full 17 others in stock starting at
~ obil e home for .ren t.
no Feathered. S50 (740)379· 51 ,495 COOK MOTORS.
~e ls, (740)992-5858
211 t
740-446-0103

r

C. D.l . reqwred . 48 , 000
miles excellent condition .

i

1200

back ya rd. 3 br.. new carpel,
must see to appreciate wi tt
rent to non- smokers. nq
p6ts call 304-675 -3961

I \H\1 Sl 1'1'1 II S
,\ I I\ I ' I ttl 1-

1990 dump truck, Chevrolet
Kodtac. CATdetsel. 5 esp
transmiQSIOn, 2 speed rear,
10' dump bed, a1r brakes,

89 KW T600 400 Cummtns
Queen Anne Chatr. Sed
w/Jake. 90 Ravens Magnum
· LJII.'&gt;"TOCK
4511 w/.,de K&lt;t &amp; 3 bo•es &amp;
Frames. Radio. Retired baskets , many items. (304)6?5- ...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _,.. ~CjUipment 520 .000 740 -

Buy
or sell
Riverine
2 bedroom. 1 bath house
Anttques. 11 24 East Main
$350Jrno. _ flafareocss. _ +.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740Deposit Required LOcated
992-2526. Russ Moore.
1n Point Pleasant (304)593-

_,

Russe ll
Terne1 1968 Dodge Ram 010 ptck·
10 Weeks Old 3 up, VB , auto. M. ru ns good
Female.
$150 each. $1500 OBO 446-2 444

IF. or (Sate :· Recondtltoned
was twrs: dryers and refng- (740)245-5624.
erators.
Th ompsons
Pupptes,
AKC,
Apphance 3407 Jac~so n Lab
Chocolate, vet checked . dew
Avenue. (304)675-7388.
claws removed. very healthy
Good Used Appltance;s. and fnendly. {740)367-0659
Re con dtttoned
and (7 40)645~2 2 93
Guaranteed.
Washers.
Dryers, • Ranges,
and Reg istered Border Co llie
Retnge i'Btor s. Some start at pups Perlect Father's Day
$95 . Skaggs Appliances. 76 gttl. Shots, wormed , imported blood lines and worktng
Vme Sl. r (740)446· 7398
pare0ts. (740)379-91 10
·Mo.llo han Carpet , 202 Clark
Chapel Road . Pofter. OhiO. Stamese k11tens. born April
(7 4 0 )446-7444 1-877- 630- 3o . ready 6-10 $10000
•
9162. Free Est1mates. Ea sy 740 -949-9015

1-3 bedrooms foreclosures 2045
home from $199 month 4%,
Used Furnllure Store 130
down 30 years at 8.5% APR
Bulaville Pike Gallipolis OH
lor lis ting call 1·800·319·
446-4782
Good
buys.
3323 ext. 1709
Check us out.
Hrs 10..4
2 ·Bedroom house in town.
NO .
PETS .
Deposit,
References Call after 5PM

After six years of 'friendship'; ,
woman want more

l!CK !;I~Jl

.,.,

..
:

�I

I
Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

topple Reds, B1

Thursday, June 5, 2003

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 53. No . 192

www.mydaily•entinel .com

FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 2003

Fee increase to benefit county's general fund
'

BY BRIAN

J.

. Meig s
Counly
Commissioners will hold a
second public hearing on June
25 on a proposal 10 increase
lhe conveyance fee charged
on all deed transfers through·
the county auditor.
The charge is now levied at
$1 per $1 ,000 paid for real
estate, but under a .. proposa l

REED

Slaff wriler ·
POMEROY - A proposed
increase in fees charged by
Meigs Coumy in transferring
real estate could generate an
additional $42.000 for the
county's ge neral fund.

now being considered by
commissioners. the fee would
triple to $3 per $ 1,000 paid.
Meig s County Auditor
Nancy Parker Campbell said
the county collected $21,135
last year on the conveyance
fee collection. and to date this
year. has collected $8,406 .
Collections lhrough the past

live years have been consistent, Campbell said.
Fees collected through the
conveyance are paid into the
general fund, Campbell said,
and would help in alleviating
some of the cash !low problems the county now faces.
Other business
Commissioners agreed to

lease a 'corner of land owned
in Chester, near tpe historic
Chester Courthouse. to the
Veterans of Foreign War Post
9053 in Tuppers Plains, for
the erection of a monument
honoring local veterans of
foreign wars.
The land, according to
Commissioner Jim Sheets, is

.

located adjacent to the
Chester llrehouse.
The lease. as approved at
Thursday's regul ar meeting,
will be in e!Tect for 99 years;
at a cost of $1.
Commissioners
also ,
.approved
appropriations
adjustments for County
Engineer and juror fees.
'

Mayor decrees:.'No Meigs Council on Aging celebrates 30 years
more favoritism'
BY.CHARLENE HOEFliCH

News editor

2001 FOCUS ZX3
Sunroof, CD, AC, Alum Wheels

2002 NEON SXT
Power, CO, Sunroof,
12,000 miles

200.1 SABLE LS PREM
Leather, CD,- Power Equip,
19,000 miles

2003 RAM 1500 QUAD
4x4, 5.9 Engine, Power, Trailer Tow

•&amp;,950.00

'9,950.00

5 11,950.00

:S 23,950.00

2002 WINDSTAR SEL
Leather, All Power, 15,000 miles

5 18,950.00

2002 MAXIMA SE
Sunrqof, Auto, Loaded
'

'17,950.00

'

\

2003 SATURN VUE
AWD, V6, Auto, Power Equip

2002 THUNDERBIRD
264 miles, Gott See This One!

5 18,950.00

5 35,950. 00

Repeatparkingucketoffend~rs

and unpaid water bills targeted
BY J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer
POMEROY- Mayor
Victor Young Ill told village
council Wednesday night that
there will be no favoritism
for anyone who does not pay
parking tickets or water bills.
· Young said motorists who
park their cars for more than
the two-hour limit allowed
in downtown Pomeroy are in
violation of the law.
The mayor said he is aware of
all the nicks people use to avoid
getting a ticket and has qn idea of
who is doing what. He has
instructed the police depamnent.
which checks the parking meters,
to tow vehicles parked longer
than the law allows - especially
those of motorist~ who already
have overdue tickets.
Councilman George '
Wright expressed concern
for the people who work
downtown and for any
p01ential cu stomers that shop
there. He was worried that if
a shopper receives a ticket

and it results in towing. the
shopper might not want to
return to Pomeroy.
Young indicated that while the
village could enforce a zero-tolerance factor for everyone. it was
ll10II! concerned with habitual
offenders with "hundreds of dolian;" in unpaid parking tickets.
The mayor said the people
who routinely ignore parking
tickets and work downtown
are more at risk of being
towed than someone like a
potential shopper who
acquires one ticket.
The mayor also plans some
changes in the collection of
water bills.
He said there are residents
and businesses with large,
unpaid water bills.
"From here on out," anyone
who receives a shut-off notice
who fails 10 pay the water bill,
will have their water shut off.
The mayor, who has a
large family, said that if he
has to pay his water bills,
then so should everyone else.

Inside

2003 F150 sc 4x4
XLT, 5.4 Engine, Auto, 3,000 miles

5 23,950.00

2001 TUNDRA LIMITED
VB, 4 Door, Full Power, 4x4

2003 JEEP WRANGLER
Auto, 4x4, AC, 12,000 miles

2001 TAURA,S SES
Leather, Power, Alum Wheels

• Senate set to vote on ·
$49.3 billion spending
plan, See page Al
• New pastor to be
installed at lutheran
churches, See page A&amp;
• Jobless claims rise to
five-week high, See page

AB

'1 0,450. 00

'•

2003 DAKOTA QUAD 4X4
Auto, VB, Power Equip, SL T

*21,950.

00

2001 ESCAPE X~ T 4X4
Auto, Leather, Sunroof, CD

2003 F150 SUPERCREW
Auto, 4x4, 5.4 Engine, Power Equip

5 16,500.00

525,950. 00

2002 F150 SC 4X4
XLT, Auto, Full Power

*21,950.

Natalie Ma~ar,
Southern Elementary

00

Index
2 Sections - 16 Paces

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

'12 950.00

372-7560

2003 MERCURY SABLE
Power Equip, AC, Alum Wheels,
7000 miles

'13 950.00

2002 FOCUS SE
Auto, Power Equip, Cruise

•&amp;,950.00

2003 CHEV S10 ZR5
Auto, AC , Power, 4x4 389 miles

1

'20,950.00

1-77
Exit 132

86
B6
A4

Movies

AS

. Sports

2003 GRAND AM SE
Auto, V6, Power Equip

A3
83-5

Editorials

· Weather

of

Please see Seniors, A5

Joyce Bunch, right, and liamona Hawk who have been with the Meigs County Council on Aging
since its beginning. look over scrapbooks of articles from the early years. They were joined by
Susan Oliver, longtime executive director, for a trip down memory lane. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Landslide

Women seek relief
from flood problems
BY

J.

81-3

A2

_o 2003 Ohio Valley Publi5hing Co.

..

Attention Cancer Survivors!

FOR LIFE

August I 5 and 16
at .the Gallipolis City Park

4 ...

MILES lAYTON

Staff writer
POMEROY- Two women.
victims of recenl !loading,
carne before Village Council
Wednesday to ask what is
being done to solve the recurring problem.
Melinda Strong, a rcsidem
of Mulberry Avenue said her
niece's car was "totaled" during a recent flood . She said at
least'three feet of water ruined
the vehicle, which was parked
in front of her house.
St,rong said that if the vii·
!age would just dig a large
ditch in that area, the water
would have some place to go.
Tammy Sayre, the mother
of nine children. lives at 285
Mulberry Street.
"My house was the main
house that got hit," she said.
Sayre said there was a lot of
damage. A lawnmower. weed
trimmer and several toys were
damaged in the latest flood .
"Last night (Tuesday). I was
chasing
my kids' toys down
A landslide occurred .Thursday night behind the Meigs County Sheriff's office in Pomeroy.
Mulberry
Avenue," she said.
There was minor damage to a patrol car, .but since there is a $2,500 insurance deductible,
Sayre's freezer. which was
the Sheriff's Department said there would be no repair work done on the vehicle. Small landfull
of meat. wa~ destroyed and
slides like this can destabilize the ground and rocks on the bluffs behind the Sheriff's
will
be hard to replace on the
Department which could lead to a larger landslide in the future, (J. Miles Layton)
wages she earns from Wendy's

Partly cloudy, HI: 70., Low: 50s

'22,950.00

POMEROY - • Thirty
years of service to elderly
Meigs Countians will be eel·
ebrated Tuesday by the
Meigs Coun1y Council on
Aging al the Senior Cilizens
Center.
" What
We
Do
Makes
a
Difference,"
will be the
theme of the
observance
which will
get underway .at II
a. m.
and
f e a l u r e Betty Monteomery
auditor
state Beny Montgomery as the
speaker.
Montgomery's career has
focused .on protecting Ohio's
most vulnerable citizens,
including the elderly. She has
prosecuted criminals, helped
victims. protected taxpayers.
reshaped Ohio law, and contin·
ues to provide professional services to local government agencies, such as Councils on Aging.
There will also be remarks
from ·representatives of
Senators Mike DeWine , and
George
Voinovich.. and

RE~Y

A

Restaurant. She has applied for
relief from several agencies
with no success, she said.
Mayor Victor Young lli told
her the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA)
will not provide relief for the
village residents because it
could care less about such . a
small place.

''Last night (1Uesday), I .
!l'as chasing my kids' toys
tkJJn Mulberry Aven~te;'-'
·Ternn\y . . .
·Pi);;Ntoy

rwaldlnt

Young said FEMA places
the blame at the doorstep of
the villa~e for not clearing the
streams 111 the area.
The mayor told both women
the village is doing all that is
possible to clear the streams.
Young, Councilman George
Wright and Street Supervisor
Jack Krauter have been working diligently to see where the
problem is coming from and

Please see Flooding. AS

,

And those inf!!rested in the.fight against cancer•

•I

The 2003 Gallic County Relay for life will be held
MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

A cancer survivors' reception will take place before the opening lap.
All are invited to attend and join us in the fight against cancer!

www.holzer.org

For more information, please call Chairperson Bonnie McFarland at (7401446·5679•

.

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