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                  <text>Page 06 • 6an_.,

C:tM -6enttnel

Controlling slugs
at home and farm
POMEROY ·- Have slugs
invaded your yard?
The cool, wet spring has
been ideal for the survival of
s1ugs. Both homeowners and
rarmers have complained tq
our office about slugs
eating, young tender
leaves , plants and
fruit. Slugs are animals that belong to the
Mollusk family. They .
are not insects, so ,; •
insecticides have little
effect on killing them.
Most slugs qverwinter
as eggs and hatch in
the spring when tern- ·
peratures reach 32-42
degrees. They will mate in
late summer or early fall and
lay eggs in the soil or under
rocks, leaves or boards for
next year's offspring. A few
slugs are able to overwinter
and they may lay eggs several
times throughout the summer.
Thus, slug control is a matter
of attrition. Efforts in control
will neap benefits as you minimize the number of slugs
available to eat your plants and
reduce the number of slugs ihat
grow old enough to reproduce.
Slugs feed mainly at night and
will hide in ihe daytime. Some
homeowners use flashlights to
capture and destroy slugs during nighttime.
Control measures should
include reducing the areas for
survival and breeding. Clean
up those outside flower beds
by removing debris, flat
boards, paper and leaves.
Keep mulch off garden areas
until mid June thus allowing
garden areas to dry out.
Capture slugs using fermented yeast (can use beer) in a
shallow dish placed in the
·garden level with the soil
line . The slugs will crawl in
each night as they are attracted tiy the odor. Remove the
slugs daily and destroy ihem.
Protective barriers of a~h.
lime and sand have been mildly
successful in low rainfall years.
The barriers actually work by
injuring the slimy protective
tilm that encases the slug thus
causing the slug to dry out.
Slug baits oontaining the chem-.
' ical, Mesurol or Metaldehyde are
available for the flower garden.
Mesurol products may not be
used in the horne vegetable garden. Foc tUrtrer infoonation on
slugs, pick up Ohio State
University Extemion 's fact sheet
#2010, "Slugs and TreirConttor'
at our office.

Sunday,"'June_15, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

(AP) - Planting a beech tree ·or disease problems, and require
is an uncommon occurrence in little or flo pruning. If you do
Southeast Ohio Grazing Council a society given to instant grati- want to prune a beech tree, go
is holding their June meeting at fication. Yet look at the old ahead - the plant responds
Bill &lt;Uld Stacey \"!all's fan:n on beech trees in the woods or tiappily to all sorts of cutting.
Establishing a beech tree is the
June 19 beginning at 7 p.m. The planted by our forebears in old
public
·gardens.
The
trunk
of
hard
part. They dislike being
Halls have just expanded iheir
one
of
those
trees,
with
smooih,
=!l:lanted and then need
gntzing dairy on a farm located
gray bark and wrinkles at ihe
es to reach majestic pro"joints," stands there like the portions. If you do plant a beech,
leg of a giant elephant.
try to envision the site and a hunAn aged beech is a majestic tree, dred-foot tree in 60 years. "
whetrer you are standing beneath
Beech bark, incidentally, is
it~ crown or viewing it liom afar.
"the" bark for carving into.
America's native Annerican This tradition dates back
,-~,
j
beech is still abundant in forests, thousands of years, when
but if you are drawn to more Romans would cut into beech
unusual or interesting forms, bark cleverly romantic phrasplant one of the many varieties es, such as "Crescent illae,
ttt.iOSU EXTENSION AGENT of European beech. Besides crescent am ores." ("As these
weeping varieties, there are letters grow. so may our
,
on SR 143 beiween Carpenter those with purple leaves, lacy love."). The word "book" is
leaves and columnar form.
derived from the Angloand Harrisonville.
Saxon word "boc," meaning
Once
established.
eiiher
an
OSU Forage Specialist, Dave
beech, perhaps the original
American
or
a
European
beech
Barker, will lead a discussion on
tree
is
easy
to
gmw.
The
planl~
writing
material of · Teutonic A beech tree is a lasting testament to the future. It is a gift
grasses and clovers being tested
given now to future generations. (AP Photo/ Lee Reich)
. on the Hall's Farm used in rota- usually are free from any msect peoples.
tiona! grdZing.
The Ohio Cattlemen's
Annual Summer Roundup
will be held June 20 AND 21
in Logan County. The tour
begins at Indian Lake High
School near Russell 's Point at
8 a.m. on Saturday.
The day before, you may sign
"With so many minutes,
up for Mortality Composting
Certification training beginning
even the offer is a grand slam ."
at I p.m. At 3 p.m. learn about
Marketing Feeder Cattle wiih
Certified for Healih. Dinner and
entertainment will begin at 6
p.m. Reservations are required
for all events. F~ more information, call the Ohio Cattlemen's
Association at (614) 873-6736.

Hal
l' 1··~ . Kneen

.

l}....

•••.

Livestock producers, plan on
improving your operation by
attending one of the following
educational
opportunities.

• ••

Sheep producers, plan on
attending the June meeting of
the Ohio valley Sheep
Association on June 23
beginning at 7:30 p.m. at the
C.H. McKenzie Agricultural
Center. Gallipolis, near the
Galli a County Fairgrounds.

...

.,
'
50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 198

MONDAY, JUNE 16, 2003

• .Ask about o_ur

multi-stat~

.

regional calling plans

BY BRIAN J•.REED

expenses.
• $20.000 to ihe Southern
Local School District for ball
tield improvements and recreation programs.
• $23,000 to the Meigs
County Council on Aging for
a new "Hot-Shot" delivery
truck for the home-delivered
meals program.
• $23,000
to ·Chester
Township for paving.
• $21 ,000 to the Vtllage of
Pomeroy for tire equipment, a
loader and backhoe.
According to Jeff Thornton,
County Commission president, the CDBG program
allows for funding of. only six
projects, but the commissioners will seek special permission to fund a sevenih pro-

Staff writer
POMEROY
Meigs
County Commi ssioners
approved nearly $150,000
in Community Development
Block Gnmt formula projecl~
Friday.
· The CDBG program allows
county commissioners to
award federal fuods to local
governments and public agencies, including townships, villages, tire departments and
.rural water systems, for equipment and other improvement
·projects.
Projects awarded Friday
were:
• $23,000 to the Leading
Creek Conservancy District
for a water line extension.
• $10,000 to the Village of
Syracuse for planning of water
system improvements.
• $20,000 to the Portland
Community Center, Inc., 'a
non-profit organization planning a community and visitors' center at ihe · Portland
Elementary School building,
for equipment and operating

Try mixing a 25-percent
·solution of muriatic acid and
water. That's one part acid to
ihree parts water. Add the
acid to the water. Remember,
muriatic acid can be harmful
to your health. Be sure to'
wear rubber boots, safety .
goggles, rubber gloves and
protective clothing.
Pour the solution onto the
concrete and let is stand for
approximately I0 to 15 minutes be_fore flushing the entire
area with water.
Allow the concrete to dry
to determine if the new finish
meets your expectations.
More than one application
might be required to achieve
a coarser surface. (The
Associated Press).

Nokia" 3585
for 19.95

"These awards are based on
ihe assumption that the state
will allow us to fund an additiona! project," Thornton said.
"Ifihe state denies us permission to do so, one program
wiU be necessarily elin1inated
and the remaining funds distributed among the other pro-

(Phone price after
lJO mail-in rebate)

Curfew

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Counci I has decided to
repeal ihe garbage ordinance it
passed in early May.
The ordinance mandated how
trash ~ollection was to take
place and set a standard for how
trash removal contractors would
submit proposals to contract
with the vil)age. Times and
dates for trash collection also
were established as well as
penalties for anyone who violated the law.
Village residents expressed
concern that the new ordinance
created more problems ihan it
solved because of the type of
.truck required fortmsh removal.
: Cooociiman Flic Cunningham.
who w.t; the ooly cuurili)Jember
to \Ue ag;illN themlinaoce initially,
prqlOied that the oo:linance be
repealed Omningham &lt;wRrl the
orclinaoo! l=ru&lt;;e he rek. it slwld
he the citizen's decision todeter)nine how ihey pick up and haul
. uway their trash. Councilman
Mike Van Meter agreed, and the .

(Phone price after
130 mail·in rebate and
S_lOO manufacturer's
mail-in rebate)

Audiovox' 8500
for 149.95
(Phone price after
130 mail-in rebate)

to be

enforced
BY J. MtLES lAYTON
StaH writer

SYRACUSE
Syracuse Village Police
Chief Brian Pearce said
that the curfew ordinance that sets a, II p.m.
cwfew for juveniles will
be enforced. The issue
w.as discussed at the last
meeting of Syracuse
ViUajle Council.
FaJlure to comply
wiih the ordinance could
result in a citation ihat ·
will be issued to til\! J?llfents of the juvenile ctted
wiih ihe cwfew violation. Parents would be
charged with contributing to the delinquency of
a minor if cited. Pearce
P1111e -

CurfeW. A5
•

For businesses with

--cGallpolir

-MIIOddoy

Bluefield

o.ewllblq

Beckley Grossi!'@ Slq&gt;pire
Piaza, Ste. 132, (ll4) 255-3990
Wli-Mart. 1:m N. Eisert'o,l.e" Dr.,
[ll4) 255-2758
WSI-Mart, 85 RUI' Trace,
(740) 775-1578
INai-MCrt ;~ us EaStern Ave..
(7 40) 44 1-

1066

TINo Wt!y Radio. (304) 252-4075
Two way Radio. (304) 327-6757

-eon-outer.
(740) 288-3282

Gary's Electrmics.
(JJ4J ~5 -7770
Mlllfortl Telephone,
(740) 820-2151

Index .

ten or more lines, please call877-947·5729.

-·--.
--.

Wfii·Mart. 10(:1 W&amp;lmart Dr.,

Oak Hll'

a401 286-0964

518 N. Jefferson st, Ste. 9,
(304) 645-5727
wai-M&lt;rt, 520 N. Jeffen;on St.,
(304) 645-5890
NOW IIOIIXln" Wai·Mart New Boston stq)pir'g
center, (740) 456--1325

.... ._

---

~ (740) 456-3333

""'"'''"'·

f]40) 456-3282

0&amp;0 COOli)Jter 5er\1ces,
(304) 465-124.2

PrttiCitOii·

wal-Mfllt 201 Greasy Rid8e Rd..
(J04) 431-3454

SumiiMifWIII• 101.6 wal St., 0041 872-6922

SW1'1mem11e ' Wfi.Mart. 200 W~ St.
1304)87-2-t.m

WIWOI1y"

WaHwWt'900W. E mm~ Ave.•
(740) 947{X)69

..

-Prtw:etuii

BulldOg WTe+ess. 040) 456-8722

Pine Place, 1233 Stafford Ave.,
(JJ4) 487-3855

OOid1ll

The
Group,
(304)"""""
255-7737
C&amp;C

Pl1hUwi:CHi

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wai-Man. 1556 E. Mall St,
(ll4) 465-5367

RIO G.....

Hoo'o_,....

(:nl) 46~300

s....,,.,'r'l"'
WIWel1y

StBr satellite. (304) 872-4444
l'il&lt;e C&lt;mry ,..., Sl'olp,

WIWel1y

SC&amp;E, [704) 941-4525

&amp;.Jidos Wifeless inside ~.
(740) 355-1111

Future Tech GOmputer seMces.
(:nl) 425 -2709
General Hamw&lt;w"e,

0401 947-7107

-.myd;;lilysentlnel.com

jec~."

J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

Audiovox' 9500
by Toshiba'
. for 199.95 ·

.'

. Calendar
Classifieds
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Dear Abby
Editorials
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1: 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Pancakes and sausage, a view of the river, and some quality
time with dear old Dad. Those attending the Middleport
· Community Association's Pops in the Park Saturday celebrated Father's Day a day early, and enjoyed a complimentary
breakfast besides. Lori Patterson and .her stepfather, George
Gumm, were just two of the many local people who visited
Dave Diles Park Saturday morning to help celebrate Father's
Day at the association event. (Brian J. Reed)

gram.

BY

Harold Kneen is the Meigs
County Agricultural &amp;
Natural Resources Agent1 Tile
Ohio State University.

.

Pops in the park
Meigs County
commissioners
approve projects

Syracuse Village
Council repeals
garbage ordinanc~

• Offer includes nationwide long distance

COrning Thursday ...
''

•

•••

Ohio River Valley River
Sweep needs volunteers to
assist in the cleaning up of
the Ohio River banks on June
21. Registration begins at
8:30a.m. at Pomeroy's gazebo, Middleport's David Diles
Park, Racine's Boat Ramp
and Long Bottom's . Forked .
Run State Park. Groups are
welcomed, just remember
that volunteers under 18 need
parents to sign written permission slips available before
hand, from the Meigs County
Recycling Office at 992-6360
or at the work sites. Wear
long pants and sturdy shoes.
Hope to see you there'

Questions
&amp;'
Answers.
Q. Lane asks: The concrete
walkway and porch in front of
my home are quite slick when
wet due to the finish. I have
considered sandblasting the
walk. but I'm not sure that
would really do the job. And I
really don't want to apply the
"peel &amp; stick" nonskid tape.
What would you recommend?
A'. We concur with your
reluctance to install the peeland-stick type of tape.
Whereas it looks all right and
works well on steps, it isn't
the sort of thing that we
believe one should have lining his front walk.
• Sandblasting, while an
alternative, is something that
usually requires a professional and can be very expensive.

Spurs win NBA title, B 1

Plant beech for the future

r.~.~
.. "'
I

..

Tyler Fry, 5th &amp;rode
Hantoonvllle Elementary

(740)245-9745

. -:

Smith enjoys work as lifeguard
BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

Staff writer
.

....

SYRACUSE - Lindsey
Smith, the London Pool head
lifeguard, ha~ always wanted to
be a lifeguard. She started going
to the pool as a young girl and
even then, she cons.idered what it
would be like to be a lifeguard.
"I have been coming here
since I was little," Smith said. "I
looked up to the lifeguards and I
· ihought it would be fun to be one
some day."
Certified by the American
Red Cross, Smith became a lifeguard at the pool when she wa'
still a student at Southern High
School. She was named )Jead
life guard this season and is
responsible for a stall of eight
lifeguards. She ha~ w01ked at the
pool for ihree years and said she
is lucky that she has never had to
rescue anyone.
Smith works in conjunction
wiih the two pool managers,
Bobbi Hill and Brandi Lyons, to
maintain and manage ihe Pool
that opened June 7. She likes
being a liteguard because ihe job
allows her to enjoy the summer·
and be out in the sun- and the
extra money doesn't hurt either.
The worst pan of being a lifeguard is being out in the sun during the really hot months when
the sun is beating down. The
guards bake in the sun for 45
minutes at a time perched out in
the open on towers overlooking
the pool.
Smith likes living in the
Racine/Syracuse area because
"everybody knows everybody."
Her parents are Jim and Diana
Smiih. She has a pet cat,
Kashmir, named after a Led
L.epplin song and a rabbit named
Hippie.
Last year, Smith attended
Hocking College and plans
to attend Washington State
Community College this Lindsey Smith, head lifeguard at the London Pool in Syracuse, is perched on her tower watching and waiting in the noon day sun'. (J. Miles Layton)
fall to study radiology.

AHentio" Cancer Survivors!
And those in~led in the fight agaiost cancer.

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WAITING TO: "U.S. CeluUuiGrand Slam' Sweepslakes Rules Aequet, 445 Ea511Rirds St. 1144-4. Chicago. ll6061 1. S~ is Cf*liO legal US rasidllnts {excl . NV &amp; PRJ 18 • · TO ENTER: (1) Visit a partiCipating
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ciesigolted er1try 00. between -411&amp;'03and &amp;f.)(),IOJ. For parfielpating stOI"N. wnle to: "U.S. C.lulariGrand Slam- Participating Stor• Uai Aaquesi," 445 E. Illinois St. Suiia 444, Chicago. ll606i 1. (2) To toler via mail Witheltlt
'i~ng a reiali siOre, place a 3~5 ptece ol paper witl your name. aclclrell, phOne fll.ff'lber, and date ol b'rth llgl)lv hand-pnnted. ln an 1nvelope. affix propeo postage and mall io· ' U.S. Ct~lu~r/Grand Slam'· Sweep~taku
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and. d lf'QCiental upenHI not lpiCifled herei!"l • being .-...rdad are eolely lhl W~_~ntri r~~- Certain rMtrietionl and blackoo.tl_dalea may apj)iy. For con""4)1ete: rut.~• visit ~ U:~· Ctlula_r 11111~ store location _or log
onto www.uscailularoom. TriM!II a~ts IUbject 1o Sponso(1 ~ppra¥111 . Foteniial Grand Pnze WIJIOir may t:e rtqUired 10 compltte, ~~gn , and rtturn an affldavtt of aHglbolity and loability/pubi!Ctly retaue. ~- ot wmlng
based 011 number a/eligible entrin rec:eived A ranOOm drl¥"ng wll be oonducled on or abou1 7/11103. Sponsor (whoM dlcllions •~ final) 11 U.S. c.tlular, 8410 West Bryn Mawr, Chlcagc, IL 60631 . Tht AdmonittraiOf 11
Mtlrden·Kan., Inc,, 600 N UcCiurg Ct. t1202A. Chicago. ILI!0611. Airtime one.. Vllid oo two-yu• consuma1 111rvice agreerr~~n11 of $40 ar1l hqli1. Pt1one ot1er Yllld on rwo-v-ar
coniiUIT"Ief ~ 19fH1118nl.s of S-4(1 and higher. Promotional phooe IUtlj4lcl kl ~- PI"OITIOionat phone pPcing is al!e1 S30 ma~ · ln reba!•. On 1he At.dicMJx &amp;500, pnone priCing
11 after lhll 130 and S100 rTWil-ln r.tNIIM. Appicable !axel willlflPiy io pu!Chut d cell phone and 'Nil! nol be ncludad in !he rabat•. 01181"1 upi•• ~ calling plan ctw.ge. Nigh!
and weeMod rntn\Jt$8 are valid M-F 9pm tc 5:59am and all day Satun:ley and Sunday. Nigh! and~ mhJialare available In kx:.al ca~ng araa on~ ROiming !Nrgn, IMI,
USCeJiular.COffi
taxes and re!llrietions may apply federal and Other A~lory Fae cha'9&amp; or S.55 wiW be addad. A monthly Fedentl UnMirBIII SeMctl Fund charge may apply. All MPtloe
aQJaemtnll &amp;OOject tc en early termlnarion !H. Acttmioo 1M ie S25. Limited lime offer.

1•888•BUY•USCC

--~-----~--·-·

---

. ---"·---- ------- - - 1

The 2003 Gollio County Relay for Life will

FORUFE

•

be held

August I 5 ancl 16

M E D 1CAL C E NT E R

at the Gallipolis City Park

Discover the Holzer D!tft.rence

A cancer survivors' reception will tcike place before the opening lap.

All are invited to aHend and join us in the fight against cancer!
For more information, please ccill Chairperson Bonnie Mcfarland at (740}446-5679.
.

~.holzer.org

�.,

Local -News

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 16, 2003

Rio Grande announces scholarships

Ohio weather
Tuesday, June 17

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
ha' announced the awardi ng
of 'cholar,hips to several
incoming freshmen from
Meigs C(mnty.
Tho'e student&gt;. and scholarships recei,·ed. are:
• Brook Bolin. Meigs High
Sc·hool. the Peoples Banking
and Trust Company of
Middlepon Scholarship. The
scholarship was establi shed
in 1978. and is granted to a
graduating senior from Meigs
High School based on financiai need or academic
promise. and is awarded at
each annual commencement.
She has also been awarded
the $2,000 Linnie B. Taylor
Scholarship. created in 1974
to assist children from Rutland

Mansfield ·5T'fT4' •
IND

--~
I Dayton iet'/80'

Page-A2

• Columbus··----63'fT6'
'-----~·

anain a colle&lt;&amp;e education,
'The daughter of Rick ami
Brenda Bolin. she plans to
study nursing.
• Melimja . Jo Chancey.
Meigs High Sfhool. the Ohio
First ScholarsHiP: which ofl'er&lt;;
tree tmtton tor lour years tor
Ohio high &gt;Chool vakdictorians and salutatorians.
The daughte r of Charles
and PaL:Ia Chancey. she plans
to study nursing.
• Jessica Hooten, Mei gs
High School. the Racine Home
National . Bank Scholarship,
awarded annually to a Meigs
County senior who llemonstrates academic promise and
financial need.
The daughter of Harley and
Lisa McDonald. she plans to
study nursing.
• Michele Runyon and

Elizabethy Wilfong. both of
Meigs High S(•hool. the
Atwood Award for Excellence.
Nan1ed in honor of Nehemiah
and Permilia Atwood. the
founders of the ··college. the
scholarship is a four-year fulltuition &gt;c·holar,;hip based nn
academic perf&lt;1rmance.
Runyon is the dau ghter of
Jerry and Vanessa Runyon
and pl&lt;ms to majnr in pre-veterinary medicine. Wilfong is
the daughter of Michael and
Katherine Runyon. and 1s
undecided in her major.
• Candice M. Fetty and
Allison Lynn Williamson.
both of Meigs Hi);!h School, tl1e
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
Tmstee scholarship. a renewable. partial scholarship
awarded·to entering freshmen

who have earned a hi gh
sc hool GPA of .1 .0 nr above
and have demon,trated acade-.
rnic excel lence. leadership and
extnu.::unicular involvement.
Fetty.
. . the dau ghter of
Charles and Beverly ·. Fetty.
plans to major in early child-:
hood education She is also
the recipient of the Luther M.
Jones Scholarship. a partial
scholarship awarded .s tudents
in the 'top :!0 percent of their
graduating class and majoring in professional education . .
Williamson is the daughter
of Bob Williamson and Donna
~ink . and plans to major .an
radiologic technology.

Eastern Elementary announces hono.r -roll
Flood watch for today, tonight
Today...ShOwer.; likely with a with a chance of shower.; and
chance ofthunder.;tonns.. Mainly thunderstorms. Highs in the
this afternoon. Rain may be upper 70s. Chance of min 40
heavy at times. Highs in the percent.
upper 70s. East winds 5 to 10
Wednesday
night...Panly
mph. Chance of rain 60 percent. cloudy with a chance of showTonight. .. Mostly cloudy with ers and thunderstorms. Lows in
a chance of showers and thun- the mid 60s. Chance of rain 40
derstorms. Rai n may be heavy percent.
:
at times. Lows in the mid 60s.
Thursday... A chance of
East winds around I0 mph. showers and thunderstorms
Chance of min 50 percent.
during the day... Otherwise
Tuesday... Showers and thun- panty cloudy. Highs in the
Jer.;torms likely. Highs in the lower 80s.
mid 70s. Southeast winds · Friday... Mostly clear. Lows
:~found 10 tnph. Ch;mce of rain ne;lf 60 and highs near 80.
&lt;50 percent.
Saturday... Mostly
clear.
Tuesday night...Showers and Lows in the upper 50s and
thunderstonns likely Lows in highs near 80.
the lower 60s. Chance of min
Sunday... Panly cloudy. Lows
60 percent.
in the lower 60s and highs in
Wednesday ... Panly cloudy the lower 80s.

Seminars look to
lift voices in song.
BY NICOLE FIELDS

Register intern
POINT PLEASANT - He
loved to sing. and now his fami1y wants to sbare that love of
gospel music with the rest of the
community.
People 'who knew Bo Rickard
knew he loved music.
Rickard, who passed away at
age 19 after a lifelon~ battle with
spina bifida, a dtsease that
affects the formation of the
spinal cord, enjoyed singing and
was active in his church choir.
His family has set up a memorial fund in his name, and they
want the money to be used to
help other people in the community who share a love of music.
"Bo just loved to sing, so his
family wanted to keep that
memory alive," said Randy
Parsons, general manager of
JOY-FM radio in Point Plea.~t.
Initially, the family wanted to
award a local student with a
scholarship to a performing ans
school. But they thought more
peciple would benefit from a
three-day seminar such as the
one they have scheduled for
Aug. 14-16.
. "Now we can help out a lot of
people mther than just one or
two, and we're also keeping the
talent here local Iy," Parsons said.
Parsons said the seminars are
for people who want to develop
their singing, and improve thetr
voice and song techniques.
Panicipants will be faught
proper breathing techniques, as
well as timing fundamentals. the

basic compooents of music and
how to direct. ·
Sandy Richards, a choir director from Parkersburg, will conduct the seminars. Richards
owns a music store in South
Parkersburg, directs a 100-plus
voice choir and gives private
voice and piano lessons. She has
conducted Seminars such as this
in the past.
Richards said the message is
crucial to the song.
"The most important part of
any song is the message. and in
southern gospel music, we have
the message," she said.
Parsons agreed. noting that the
ability to sing well is not a pre·
requisite.
"Even. if they just sing at horne
or in the shower, they' re welcome to participate," he said.
The seminars will be conducted in a choir-type setting so that
no individual person will be singled out Parsons said this will help
boost fXXJ!Jie's ronfideoce. especially if trey think. trey oo nct sing as
well as others.
Par.ions urged entire choir groups
to get involved, but said individuals
and families also are welcorre.
"We ju&lt;;t want to get this up and
going fl'etty good the first year."
Parr.ons said
Par.ions encouraged illlY~ who
is interested to register early. The
registration fee is $20 for adults
and $15 for children in third grirle
through junior high. The fees will
be used to linance the Bo Ricklm:l
Memorial Fund.
For more inf01111ation. call (304)
9374135 or (740) 367~30.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
following students were
named to the honor roll at
Eastern Elementary School for
the fourth nine-weeks grading
period:
.
Grade I: Tyler Barber.
Zachary Browning. Jenna
Burdette, Samantha Cline.
Paige Cli'ne, Chase Cook.
Molly Dunlap, Aliyah Gantt.
Meredith GauL Jenna Hysell,
Tanner Jenkins, Katie Keller,
Joshua
Parker.
Jessica
San1pson. Jasmine Smith, Erin
Swatzel, Savannah Woodson,
all A's: Sarah Anderson.
Latham Bissell, Haileigh
Bush, Garrett Caldwell,
Cassidy Cleland. Kendm Fick,
David Frank. Austin Gheen.
Kaitlyrr Hoffman, Joshua
Justis. Tucker Keener, Jordan
Koblentz, Sarah Lawrence.
Whitley Leach, Emily Moore.
Dakota 0' Brien. Jordan
Parker. Lindsay Pul!nan, Cody
Rayburn, Madison Rigsby,
Benjamin Sampson, Alex
Victory, David Warner,
Heather \\'ells, Christopher
Yeater.
Grade
2:
Marshall
Aanestad, Hannah Adams,
Randall Armes, Maxwell
Rebecca
Carnahan,
Chadwell, Victoria Goble.
Jason Kelley, Krista Miller,
Timothy Minear, Derick
Powell, Shanda Welch, all
A's; Alex Amos, Samuel
Collins,
Larissa
Cunningham,
Nicole

large number of people come
throu gh our doors and leave
StaH writer
with new shoes on their feet
L k'
and smiles on their faces," said
G.AL LIPOLIS
,.
~ mg Becky Ward, manager.
for a new patr of shoes· Then . According to a company
look no further ~han the Shoe news release, store founder
Show, Gallipolis newest shoe Roben B. Tucker opened the
stre. 1 d at 305 Upper River tirst Stioe Show ov~r 40 years
•. _ "
ago wtth used carpetmg bought
oca e
. h h d
k that
Road, the new busmes~ 011ers f
customers a variety of name rom a c urc . an rae 5
brand footwear and shoe-relat- were _spray pamted by Tucker
ed accessori es at affordable and hts fnends.
The ftrst . store employed
r nce,,
Tucker,
his wife and one panThe 1tore officially ope ned
time
employee.
fo r business on June 6.
The company now has over
"S ince our grand opening
last Friday, we have seen a 6.500 employees and 862
stores in 32 states. The compa-

-- .. ----·---·----

Carnahan. Ashleigh Duffy. Cozart. Tim• Drake. Rhonda
Scott Gilbride. Allie Rawson. Durham.
Herbert Grate.
Roben Warner, all A's: Hayley Zachary Hedrix. · Matthew
Aanestad. Jonathan Barrett. Hosken. Cody Hyse ll, Kaylee
Jessica Cleland:, Morgan Hill. Milam. Alvssa Newland.
Rachel
Kille .
Timothv Anthon y Putman. Kayla
Markworth. Dunielle Maxey. Rus-.ell . Katie Wilfong.
Beverly Maxson. · Ashley
Graue 7: Andrew Bi ssell.
Miller. Britney Morri son. Nathan Carroll. Ryan Davis.
Bravdcn Prntt. Jennifer Reed, Kelsey Holter. Ky le Rawson.
Zari
Roush.
Matthew Morgan Werry. all A's:. Daniel
Whitlock. Morgan Windon.
Buckley. Joshua Collins.
Grade 5: _Br:ea , Buc~ley. Lindsey Grate. Cassie Hauber.
Wade Collins, Hann~ H) sell. Kathrine Havman. Samantha
Breanna T:•y ~or. all As: Brend:• • Jordan. Tyler Kcames. Jarold
Barber. Darc1 B1ssell. Andrea Kuhn .
Shane
Milhoan,
Buckley. Lawrence Collms. Saralisha Powell. Hannah
Kanssa. Connoll
· pran. Tns
· t.a. Put man.· Conne'
E . 0y. Samantha
S
Cunmuns.
_nn unn. mnue1 S
H
w_ If 11;
Evans. Matthew Friend. Denise cyoc.
eaven
es a ·
Hannum. Kimberly Minear. NtkJta Young. . .
., .
Grade 8. Bntt&lt;tny Bissell.
Phillip Morehead, Audrionna
Pullins. Whitney Putman. Ryan Dav1 s, Tyler Lee.
Amanda
Roush.
Katie Nathamel . McGrath , Cory
Shepard, Hannah West.
Shaffer. Enn Weber, all As;
Grade 6: Alexis Hirzel. Je ss tca Amo s, Stephame
Michael Moore. Kyle Sargent. Baker.
Sarah
Boston,
Katlyn Sauvage. Amber Kunberl y Castor. . Dane
White. all A's; Keith Aeiker. Etehmger. Jason Marc111ko.
Samanthia Baker, Matthew William
Owen.
Derek
Barringer. Zachary Carson, Putman. Trista Simmons.
Brittany Casto,
Rannah ·Amber Willbarger.

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Quality Window Systems, Inc.

Jim's Farm Equipment

Local Briefs
Named to
honors list
· LONG · BOTTOM
Brynn M. Moss was named
to the spring semester Dean's
High Honors List at Mariena
College, earning a grade point
average of 3.5 or higher.
Moss, the son of Jeanette
N. Grate of long Bonum, is a
2003 graduate with a bachelor
of science degree in petrolem
engineering.

Graduates
Washington
State
REEDSVILLE -Robert
Davis of Reedsville was
among the 27 pmctical nur.;ing
graduates to be pinned at
Washington State Community ·
College last week. ·

On dean's list
POMEROY- Joy Settle; of
F'o!m'oy has l=l named to the
cran's hst ar y~ Stae
University fer the srring qumer.

ny averages a new store opening every l~ve days.
The Shoe Show carries its
own popular-price brand as
well as Hush Puppies, Life
Stride, Reebok. Nike, Keds.
New Balance, Hi -Tee, and
Adidas.
Besides footwear, the store
also carries an assortment of
belts, hats. purses, socks, body
pierci11g jewelry, and various
shoe care products, Ward said.
The Shoe Show is open from
I0 a.m. - 9 p.m. Monday
through Saturday. and noon- 5
p.m.. Sunday.

- -----·-.

.. .. ,..
'

INTERNET SERVICES
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Holzer Medical Center
Holzer Clinic

Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com
.
.

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Communty Band under the
POMEROY - The nariles Matthew Fuller, K'Tayona Kara Ackerman, Tiffany Grover~. Brittany Haning,
of students making the honor Games. Casey King, Dylan McKinney. Jennifer Robinson: Kcilah Jacks, Cayla Lee,
direction of Roger Williams
ro ll for the final nine-weeks Lavender,
Kyle . Lemley. Mr. Curfman's Fourth Grade:: -Gabrielle Lester, Chalsic
Mo1Jday, June 16
will perform at 7 p.m. at
gmd(ng period .of the school Samantha · Loar, Cameron AlexAckerman, Shellie Bailey, Manley, David Poole, Jesse
RACINE - Racine village Overbrook Rehab Cente(
year were announced by Meigs Manox.
Sam
Morgan, Austin Sayre.
.
Price, Bradley Ramsburg,
Council will met in recessed
Local Superintendent William UndsayPanerson. Ty Phelps,
Gmde 4: Cameron Bolm, Robert ReedWhitney Smith,
session, 7 p.m. Monday at the '
Municipal building.
Buckl~y.
Zachary
Test,
Mikijyla Angela Keesee, Tyson Moms, . Bobbi Smith, Krysta. Stitt,
Making a grade of B or VanMatre. Sydney Walker. Braden Prater, Cartee . Smith, Mcbclle Weaver, Ashley
Monday, June 16 ,
above in all their subjects to be VictoriaWalker. Brianna Will. Shannon Walzer-Kuharic.
Zielinski.
LETART - Letan Township
RACINE- Southern Locai
listed on the honor roll were Joseph Wines, Wyatt Wooten.
Gmde 5: lan Bullington,
Meigs High School
Trustees, 5 p.m. at lhe office
High
School underclassmen
building .
students in their respective
Grade I: Emmitt · Banon, Mtc~t Barnes, Ben Hood,
Freshman: Miranda Beha,
report cards may be picked
schools.
·
Garren Banon. Shandi Beaver, Anmsha Kotc;.
T b'th
B
Trav·1s
.
C·
D
.
Clark
a
'
a
rower,
up from 7 to 3 p.m. through
Pri
Bradbury
Cassandra
Boyd.
Ryan
mary
. ustm
. B he ·s
tha c 1 Carita
0
Grade 4· : Shelby Johnson, Brothers,
be.
I
Talmadg"
Lew1's,
Chance
utc
r,
aman.
e,
.
Friday at the high school,
K1111 r y
¥
G d
B
J k
Morgan Howard. Shannon Cunningham. Trenton Deem. Mick, Bryan Priddy.
ar ner,
nnn~y
ac s,
McLaughlin. Tanner Tackett, Brittany
Durst,
Austin
Intermediate CC: Adam Nathan Jeffers, Juha Johnson,
Tuesday, June 17
Monday, June 16
Olivia Bevan. Nicole !Ydvis, Fitzgerald,
Adrianna George, Jeffrey Mullins, Kyle Jacob
Kennedy,
Karla
POMEROY - Childhood
POMEROY
Meigs
Taylor Dowler. Kyle Johnson, Hutchinson. · Jamie Johnson. Russell.
McCarthy, Pann~k McDaruel,
County Right to Life ·meeting Immunization Clinic, Meigs
Colt Kerr. Brenton Southern, Damon Jones. Sara Klein,
Salisbury
Angel Riley, Whitney Thoene,
. will be held at7 :30 p.m. at the County Health Dept. , 9 to 11
Chandra Stanley and Paula Anna Little, Ciera Marcinko,
Kinderganen: David Davis, Joshua Venoy, Jacob Venoy,
Pomeroy Library downstairs a.m. , 1 to 3 p.m. Bring shot
Vm1Meter.
Austin MiUer. Jack Reilmire, . John Davis. Nikki Dickens. Adam Wilson, David Young
records. Children must be
room.
Gmde 5 - Tyler Andrews, Gabrielle Rice. Kaylee Rowe. Sierra Hill, Cody Kinzel, Dillon
Sophomore: Emily Ashley,
accompanied by parent/legal
Autumn Ebersbach. LaTricia Jessica
Ryder,Thomas Mayes, Hailey Roush, Charlie Renee
Bailey, · Jeffrey
guardian.
CHESTER
Pomeroy
Baughman, Jeremy Blackston,
Smith. Charles Fitchpatrick, Schoolcraft. Carolann Stewan, Whitley. Brandon Young;.
Tyler Simpson, Megan Tripp Carty Taylor, Jamie Walters.
Gmde I: Olivia Cremeans, Jenny Bowles, 'I)'ler Brower, . · Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, will meet at 7:30
Thursday, June 19
and Jacob Well.
Second 2: Ryan Caruthers, , Alyson Dettwiller, Devan Eric Bumem, Miranda Casteel,
p.m.
at
the
Chester
Shade
Harrisonville
Alyssa Cremeans, Shestan Du~an, Chase Hayes, Eric Raymond Colwell,
Eric
POMEROY - An intorma·
River Lodge hall: There will be tiona I meeting will be held at 2
Kinderganen:
Brook Curtis. Haley English, Cody Sllllth, Katlynn Stanley, Damn Cullums, Justin DeMoss,
election of officers.
Andrus, Shania Gilmore, Fink. Kacy Fink. Amanda Wtll.
.
.
Trevor Depoy, Jodi Donahue,
p.m. .a t the Meigs Middle
Cheyenna Lewis, Mitchell Grant, Kendra Haning. Eddie
Gmde 2: Kaulyn Colltns, Patrick Dowell, Eddie Fife,
School cafeteria for all sev·
Tuesday, June 17
h
d · hh
d
t ·
Mens. Brittany Qualls, Breahna Hendricks, Christopher Jones, Kenz1e
Shuler,
Autumn Melissa Gow, Brandon Grover,
CHESTER - There will be enl an elg 1 gra e 5 uThompson, Dakota Wilson, Corey King, Thomas Klein. Withams.
.
.
Randy Hart, Kayla IcenhOwer,
a special meeting of the dents interested .in trying ot,Jt
Paige Phillips and Austin Chandra Mattox. Alexahder
Grdde 3: Dantel Collms, Aaron Ihle, Madison King,
Shade
River Lodge 453, 7 for the Metgs Mtddle School
Welch:
Morris. Tess Phelps. Tyler Emalee Glass, Cody Hanning. Matthew Krawsczyn, Cassie
p.m . adt the hall. work will be . cheerleadmg squad . Tryout
Gmde I: Josiah Beha, Daniel Price, Maggie Smith. Bethany
Grade 4:. Alame Arnold. Lee, Tiffany Manley, Megan
in
the EA degree .
clinic will be June 24-26 and
Morman. Dylan King, Autumn Spaun · Amber Steinmetz. Heath Denw1ller, Nathan Eblin, Mayes, Christina Pauley,
·
·
tryouts
on June 27. All stu·
Preast, Christian Romine. Robert
Strow.
Steven Miranda Grueser, Nicholas Samantha Pierce, Stephanie
Wednesday, June 18
dents interested in trying out
Samantha Spires, Brandon Stump.Madelyn
Thomas. Ingels, Marissa McAngus, Pridemore, Katie Reed, Adam
CHESlER
Special
must have physicals compel·
Thompson
and
Treavor Justin Tillis, Caitlin Will. Haley· Jonathan McCanhy, Connor Snowden, Eric Sydenstricker,
meeting of Shade River ed belore lhe clinic the tryWilliamson.
Will. Tisha Zeigler.
Swanz.
.
c
Wi al N' ki Wil
·Grade 2:
Casi Arnold,
Grade 3: Darienne Betzing.
Grade 5: Darby Gtlmore,
hester tg • tc ·
son,
Lodge hall . Work in the FC outs.
Natasha
Wise,
Carl
M.
Wolfe,
degree.
C
lb
H
d
S
Ashleigh Sayre, William Olivia Cleek. Wesley Davis, o Y
ayes. an
colt .Jennianne Young
Taylor. Brittal]y Cremeans and Andy
Fairchild,
Ronnie Kennedy:
.
.
Tuesday, June 17
Ashley Jeffers.
Haning. Taylor Jones. Shawna·
MeigS Middle School
Junior: - 1'y Ault, David
TUPPERS PLAINS
Grade 3: Zachary Sayre. Price, Jeffrey Roush. Zachary
Grade 6:. Jam1e Bruley, Barnes, David Boyd, Jaclyn
Bicentennial dance workshop
Stephanie Hoalcraft.
Sheets.
Clayton Bohn, Chad Ronnel(, Bradbury, ·. Brandi Dailey,
.
·
will
be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
Grade 4: Ashley Edwards,
Grade 4: Kastle Balser, Crockett Crow, Jennifer Fife, JayneeDavis, Meagan'Dodson,
at the Eastern Elementary
Monday, June 16
Tessa Chabot, Hope Hajivandi, Brianna Buffington Dakota Laura Ghem Charles Hannmg, Tyler French, Jesse Gates,
MIDDLEPORT
Big
end
School Library. .
Teirsa Kopczinsky, Julia Lantz, Castle
Hannah ' Cleek Amber
Hockman,
Lian Ashley Halley, Nicole Harper,
Tiffany Lee and Melanie Natha;1iel Gilkey. Branda~ Hoflinan, Jessica . Holliday, Jessica Howell, Randall
Taylor.
King. Johnathan Michael. Sarah Hubbard, Ltlly lacks, Hudson, Adam Johnson,
Grade 5: Dawn Bissell, Dustin
Nash
Chelsea Jessica
Jewell,
Morgan Aubrie Kopec, Jonathan
Alisha Chapman, Cody Hill, Patterson Bo-Dara Powell Komcdy. Stephanie Lawson, Larkins, Sarah Lee,
Dean Hively. Michael Wallace Ravenne 'Reed Garren Riffle' Morgan Lentes, Caitlin Leslie,
Rachel McDaniel,- Sheena
. and Hailey Williams.
Kasey Roush.' Katelyn Stacy: Jahnna Lydic. Courtney Mayes, Morris, Erica Poole, Brittany
CC I Class: Terrie Craig, Sar.Jh Thomas, Cody Weaver, Mana Meadows, Mason Mens, Powers, Melissa Richmond,
Lacy Morgan, Joey Foley.
Christian Woods
Jason
Moms,
Andrew Robert Stamper, Ryan S_tobart,
Middleport
Grade .S· Chelsey Arms O'Bryant, April -Oiler, Aaron Corey Vaughan
Kinderganen: Sammy Ash, Ashley C~ey, Shane Day: . Oliphant, Erin Perkins, Calee
Senior- Dwight Apperson Ill,
McKay Ia Barrett, Jardin Caleb Davis, Taylor Deem, Reeves, Zachary Schwab, Bridget Balser, Deadra Barnett,
Brannon, Jenny Casto, Brene Kristen
Eblin,
Veronica Chelsea S~allwood, Me~~ Brook Bolin, Troy Brooks,
~
..~&amp;~.
Crane, Hannah Cremeans, Grimm, Holly Jeffers, Ryan Smith, Menssa Snyder, Crutlm Miranda Buckley, Andrea
Karie Dickens, Darrell Dixon, Jeffer.;, Cody Lee, Ariel Nitz, Swanz, Tess Thomas, Kelly Burdette, Melinda Chancey,
Hoffinan, Kelsey Shelby · Ohlinger, · Erin Tyree, Kem V!'"Reeth, Jessica Ashley Colwell, J&lt;liyte Davis,
Leslie
Hudson, Haley Kennedy, Panerson,-Jacob Riffle, Cayla Wagner, Chassldy Wills.
Ashley Eblin, Hollie Ferrell,
Kwesi Lane, Reuben Lawson, Taylor Ryan VanMatre Meri
Grade
7:
Samantha Amanda · . Fetty, Jacqueline
Ackerman, Michael Ball, J~ob
Hatfi
Nl.ck Lester, Bre Mitchell,. VanM~ter, Ashl;y Walk~r.
"'al
h
Frechette,
Elyse
eld, .
B
A
B
Taylor Northup, Taylor,Palmer,
DH: Dale Ellis.
ames, my arr, '' IS a Meghan Haynes, Jessica .Hooten,
Anna Reynolds, Mariah
MH: Patricia Clark, A.J. Beh~, Emil~ Davts, Joshua Katie Jeffers, Kristal JohnsOn;
Shoemaker, Caleb Smith, Kopec, Mrujorie Lewis, Nate Eakms, Christopher Goode,
Matthew Taylor, Issac Watson, McBane, and Enima Swiger.
13radley Jones,
Kaylee Kelly Johnson, Sebastian Kaiser,
Austin Wolfe.
Rutland
Kenn.edy, Kirk Legg, Jjndsay Amanda Langdon, Kanndies
Grade I: Dillan Andrews,
Kinderganen : Jacob Cleland, McKinney, Breanna ~tched, Lee, Crystal Maunte~ Mathew
Morgan Bell, Breanne Bonnett, Jerod Cleland, Alexis Coleman, Cassandra Pauerson. Carrieftelps, OBrien, Heather Phalin, .Jessica
. Tishea Boothe, Kimberly Jordyn Elliott, Reese Ervin, Bnnany Prcast. Steven Stewmt Preast. Jeremy Roush, Michele
Casci, Rocco . Casci, John Clinton Lambert, · Rachel J~ ~ ~tom Alexa Venoy, Runyon, Alison Smith, Emily'
Casto,
Devon
Cundiff, Landers, Austin Pierce, Cody Patti Vuung, Richard Well. .
Story, Samantha Tilley, Casey
Michaela Davidson, OJ Dixon, Robinson, Ciara Schold.erer,
Grade 8. Bnttany Adm.s, Tillis,
Courtney
Varian,
Scotty Dowell, Patrick Evans, Matthew Smallwood, Scott Dame! Bookman, Valcnc Jennifer Walker, Allison
Billy Ferguson, Isaac Gibbs, Stewan, Tanner Vanaman, Carpenter, Heather Elam, Williamson,Hannah Woolard,
Cheyenne Hall, Bradley Christopher Wise, Collen Andrew
Garnes,
Kayla Jennifer Zielinski
·
Helton, Courtney Holley, Young; Devon Buffmgton, A. J.
Olivia Lane, Taylor Rowe, Levi Howard, Amber Davidson,
Smith,
Allison
Walker, Bruce Davis; Jamie Ellioft,
Shannon
Walker, Cheyenne Gorslene, Stephanie
DominiqueWatson, Tiffany Kauff, Brayden Kopec, Jack
Reader Services
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Monday, June 16, 2003

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WORLD VIEW

A round-up of editorial
views around the glode
'

· • Asahi Shimbun, Tokyo, on Middle East:
The U.S. government has decided to send a small team of
observers to monitor the truce. But such a team is not enough,
either in its capabilities or the credibility of its neutrality. An
international team should be considered that would include
representatives of the European Union and Russia.
Last year, United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan
proposed sending a team of U.N. officials as observers. but
Israel objected, claiming the world body is against Israel.
This time. however, the palnstakin~ efforts being put forth in ·
peacemaking must not be left solei y m the hands of the parties
directly involved. Previous cease-fires have failed time after
time because the parties in conflict distrusted each other so
deeply. If Israel refuses to comply, the United States must
apply pressure.
We hope the Arab nations will support the Palestinian
Authority's Mahmoud Abbas in his peacemaking efforts. Of
course, they should also maintain a close watch on e)(tremists
in their respective countries and open their own dialogue with
Israel.
· This peacemaking initiative has ·come about because the
Bush administration has turned positive toward peace in the
Middle East. The people of Arab nations wilt not, however,
simply forget the pro-Israel leaning of the United States or the
war against Iraq. If the United States departs from the path of
being the honest broker, the peacemaking process wilt be jeop. ardized.
• Tages-Anzeiger, Zurich, Switzerland, on the Middle
East:
A rocket attack could lead to the collapse of the latest peace
initiative in the Middle East even before the first steps have
been taken toward its realization. The Israeli assassination
attempt against Hamas leader Abdel Aziz Rantisi 'witt not be
without consequences. That is clear after 32 months of the
Intifada.
It is also not the first time that Israeli Premier Ariel Sharon
has played this game. Last year around Christmas a cease-fire
with extremist Palestinian resistance organizations held for
three weeks. Then the Israeli army murdered Fatah leader Raed
Karrni, and the spiral of violence and revenge began again. By
now the Israelis have intentionally liquidated more than 150
activists. These executions were the biggest provocation for
the militant resistance organizations and the main reason why
all attempts by the Palestinian government to achkve an
armistice have failed.
At the summit in Aqaba last Thursday Sharon gave his
agreement to the road map. Thereby he, too, committed himself to refrain from anything that would again undermine the
confidence between the two parties to the conflict. With yesterday's attack he intentionally broke this commitment. The
· rockets aimed at Rantisi have above alt .hit Palestinian Prime
Minister Mahmoud Abbas. His chances of agreeing on a ceasefire with Hamas are probably finsihed, and Sharon has his justification not to have to take any more steps toward peace ....

r

'

Moderately Confused

Hamas returns to the .old.road. map
If you (still) read The New
York T101es, pretty much all
you know about the bedside
interview of Abdel Aziz
Rantisi, the Harnas arch terrorist and pediatrician who
escaped an Israeli missile
assault this week with a minor
leg injUty, is that he "vowed
revenge from his hospital bed."
However, this Dumas-like
description doesn't quite fit
Rantisi's hospital-room rant as
reported elsewhere. Knowing
what the Harnas leader actually
said makes Palestinian government irisistence on all "dialogue" and no action regarding
Harnas (or, in the words of
Prime Minister Mahmoud
Abbas, ".the brothers of
Harnas") seem even more like
the dangerous sham that it is.
Hen; are some of the H&lt;ll11~s
leader s chotcer word~ .. I
swear we will n?t !~ave a sm!lie Jew m Palestme - ~htch,
1~ terror-speak, means, not .a
smgle Jew .Ill Israel.. Th1s
statement appeared ~~ the
Washmgton Ttmes. I am
telhn~ Sharon and all th.e
lsraeh murderers, you don t
have any securi~, unless . you
leave the country . (t.e., leave
Israel), the Washmgton Post
reported.
.
Such statements strike me
more as conversation-enders
than dialogue-openers. These
sentiments don't promise
"revenge" as much as they
reaffirm the same old strategy
of annihilation by terrorism
that imperils Israel inthe modem age- now to a calamitous
degree. Indeed, Internet news

Diana

West

service IslarnOnline.net characterized Rantisi's words as
having "rea1ftnned" the strategy of "resistance and ritle" terror-speak, it seems, for donning Orthodox garb and selfdetonating a bus filled with
ffi b
o tee- ound
commuters.
That's e)(actly what a Harnas
terrorist did the day · after
Rantisi spoke. Sixteen Israelis
were killed during the afternoon rush hour on Wednesday,
. leaving scores maimed and
wounded on a sunny Jerusalem
thoroughfare.
"You have no option but
Jihad and martyrdom," Rantisi
told IslamOnline.net. "By
Allah Almighty, we will pursue
Jihad until we bring back all
Palestinian refugees to their
homeland and restore every
inch of our usurped land" - .
terror-speak. of course, for
every inch of lsmel. This wasn't Rantisi's first rant (and,
regrettably, won't be his last).
A few .months back, Rantisi
justified the loss of the space
shuttle Columbia as "part of
the divine punishment of
.America and, together with it,
Zionism." Be tore that, the
good doctor was calling for
"thousands of squads of mar-

tyrs" to be equipped with
"thousands of sophisticated
explosives belts" to kill themselves, along with as many
Americans and British troops
as possible, for the greater
gloty of Saddam Hussein.
"In order to defend the
homeland from the terrorist
Crusader attack," he wrote,
according to MEMRI's online
translation.. "there is a need for
people who yearn for Paradise,
and the shortest way to
Paradise is death for (the sake
ot) Allah."
Suicide killers haven 't materialized in Iraq by the thousands, but a scattered few have
murdered American soldiers.
And, according to the grim
tally
of
the · Zionist
Organization of America, 29 of
the 39 Americans killed by
Palestinian Arab terrori sts
since 1993 were murdered by
Harnas. Such statistics make all
the more distressing the fact
that George W. Bush, a biggame terrorist-hunter himself,
would be "deeply troubled"
because the Israelis took aim at
a big-game terrorist following
post-summit terror attacks that
left five Israeli solqiers dead.
Almost worse than the
hypocrisy. however, is the
illogic behind the president's
stated reason: Mr. Bus(I was
concerned, he said, that the
Israeli action would impede
official Palestinian efforts to
fight terrorism. How it could
be ihat drying up a poisonous
source of terrorism could be a
drain on any legitimate light
against terrorism is an argu-

ment.for the rilentallv doublejointed. Without engaging in
dangerous gymnastics, it's still
easy to see that such thinking,
taken seriously, would require
the United States to cease all
eff01ts to target Osama bin
Laden.
Prime Minister Abbas has
declared himself unable or
unwilling to act against.
Palestinian terror groups;
Israel, attacked again, must
defend itself. In so doir.g. it is
helping defend every other
country threatened by lslamist
terror. The accelerated road
map to a Palestinian state
comes not as a hopeful result of.
any Palestinian reform; it
cornes as a weary concession
to Palestinian terror. This is a
dangerous precedent for the
entire Western world. Even
worse would be an Israeli con- ·
cession on the right to selfdefense. Look again to the
maniacal words of Rantisi:
"The enemies of Alillh ... are
cowards. They crave life, while
Muslims crave martyrdom.
The martyrdom operations
(suicide murders) tl1at shock
can ensure that horror is sowed '
in the (enemies·) hearts, and
horror is one of the causes of
defeat."
Life vs. martyrdom: an easy
choice in the West. But in
choosing life, we must defend
it everywhere - the only triumph there can be over Dr.
Rantisi 's horror.
(Diana Wesr is a whimnisr
for The Washingron Times. She
ca11
be comacred · via
diwwwu ·anglobal.lrer.)

Getting real about child support
Say you're taking orders at the
takeout window of McDonald's.
You make $6.75 an hour, which
adds up to 11 bit over $1 ,00) a
month. You get a nollce that
you're in arrears on child support
payments, $693 a month for the
two children with your ex-wife.
Of course, $693 per month is
ridiculously high, given your
income. But you never answered
the legal complaint lodged
~ainst you - maybe the state
didn't bo.ther to ftnd you. So the
state set the support payment in
your absence at an amount not
based on your actual income, but
at a standard presumed income
of $2,200 a month. You don't
make the payments because they
are way beyond what you can
afford. The state charges you l0
percent interest on the accruing
.debt.
You miss more payments. The
interest compounds. The debt
giPWS.

~

2003 by NEA, Inc.

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

Forest Service study seeks to jump-start elm evolution

Signups begin

didn't have thousands of years
to develop resistance.
A few cities, such as
DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) _ Minneapolis and Washington,
D.C.. are . tiercely ·protecting
In a daisy-tilled meadow that their remaining trees by 4uicklooks on houses and a fastfood chili restaurant, a stand of ly pruning or chopping down
di51!ased specimens and injectgangly 5- to 7-fooi saplings ing fungicide in trunks.
cou'ld represent the genetic
About 3 billion elms are in
future of the American
elm.
.
U.S. forests, but 80 percent are
Th e species
that once young trees with trunks less
formed stately arches over city than 5 inches thick, the Forest
streets might one day improve Service said. The disease typiits ability to fight off Dutch catly attacks mature trees.
elm disease in the same state
The few giants still standing
that allowed the deadly fungus are likely not immune, just
into the country about 70 years lucky, Slavicek said .
ago.
The nation 's largest elm. in .a
Researchers are planting farm field in Buckley. Mich.,
clusters of cuttings from the died from Dutch el m last
rare and scattered trees that spring. It was 112 feet tall and
recovered after infection· so had a tiS-foot-wide crown they can cross-pollinate in the creating the false hope that size
wild. 'TWenty-one saplings are made it invincible. said
being planted through Monday Deborah Gangloff. executive
at Highbanks Metro Park just director of American Forests.
north of Columbus. Dates had The Washington, D.C. , envim1t been set tor plantings in ronmental group identifies
northeast and southeast Ohio. "champions" of many tree
The ·hope is to jump-start spectes.
elm evolution, said Jim
Surviving trees should be
Slavicek. a geneticist at the protected, she said. but genetic
U.S. Forest Service research research is needed to preserve
station here. When the fungus the future of the species.
evolves to overcome today \
Since the 1960s. the U.S.
tolerant trees decades from Department of Agriculture
now, new survivors might be screened about I00.000 trees
found in the Ohio woods.
that survived the epidemic, but
"The Ameriqm elm is part of identified few that naturally
our heritage. and through this tolerate the disease. The re&gt;t
project we hope to JJ)ake it part ·were s·imply never e)(posed.
of our legacy," he said.
said Denny Townsend of the
Never a dominant tree in department's
Agricultural
U.S. forests, fast-growing elms Research Service laboratory in
since Colonial times were Glenn Dale. Md.
urban favorites for making
Slavicek is planting five totleafy canopies. They tolerated erant rypes - four identilied
air pollution, road salt and by Townsend's team and one
weather extremes.
from Princeton University.
No one knows how many Ptivate laboratories also have
millions of elms died since sought tolerant trees.
Dutch elm disease arrived with
"Thi s sounds like quite a
a shipment of logs at a large step in the preservation or
Ctev~land harbor in 1930, but · the American elm," Gangloff
estimate~ range as high as 90 said. .
Leaves on tolenmt trees die
·percent of the population.
As with other diseases from on 13 percent to 55 percent of
overseas, such as the blight the branches in the first year,
that all but wiped out the but the trees bounce back in lotAmerican chestnut, the trees lowing years, Townsend said.

Livestock
Livestock report ·

others

Multiply this scenario by seveml million and you begin to
understand how back payment
for child support in California
has grown to $17 billion, according to an alarming report
released last week by the state
Depar1ment of Child Suppon
services. California isn't alone;
arcane child support Jaws - and
a sagging economy - have
plunged parents a:ross the country deep into a debt that promis-

Joan
Ryan

es only to get deeper,
Consider the situation in
California: Ten years ago the
state's back child support debt
was $2.5 billion. That represented 10 percent of the nation's
arrears, which made sense:
California had l 0 percent of the
country's child support caseload.
Now California has 12 percent
of the ca&gt;eload - and 20 percent of the nation's arrears debt.
With a state budget deficit of
$38 billion, California ought to
be leading the way in dismantling a dysfunctional supportpayment system that is ruming
thousands of American families.
ltd~n 't work.lthasn't worked
for years. If it continues as is, the
report warned, the arrears debt in
California alone will StupaSS $30
billion by 2010.
"No question, a new day is
needed in c(litd supPQrti'
Department of . Child Support
Services Assistant Director
Leora Gershenwn said from

Sacramento, Calif.
to get tow-income debtors to
California is particularly bad at come forward.and pony up what
getting non-custodial parentS to they can in exchange for the state
participate in setting the payment forgiving chunks of what they
amount. That's why more than owe. It would reduce the debt
70 percent of child support pay- and increase the tlow of money
ments are set by default; in most to the families. The money p&lt;tid
states the default rate is 40 per- from the parent to the family
cent. There is apparently linie reduces the amouQt the governeffort made in California to track ment has to pay in public assisdown the non-custodial parent tance.
before the hearing. TJ:is is ridicuCalifornia and other states that
lous, es~tally considering that charge interest on arrears should
the report s authors were able to reduce the 10 percent rate to a
fmd 85 pe~nt of .the debtors number more in line with current
sunply by usmg online databas- rates. And it should apply back
es.
.
• payments to the principal rather
Without mput from the non- than to the accrued interest.
custodml parent, payments e~m­
In any case, the · reptm's
not be based on actual income
authors
say, the stale can ex peel
but mther on presumed income.
to
recover
only about 25 pen:ent
The result in such ca~es, a' this
.repon quantifies, is the parent is of the multibillion-&lt;loltar debt. ·
Low-income parents, who make
less likely to pay.
"The old philosophy was to up the bulk of the debtors, simestablish (payment) orders p! y don· t have the money to pay.
quickly and high and hope to get This is not to say they should be
a' much as you could." said the let off the hook. But the system
report's lead author, Elaine in California, as in so many other
Sorensen of the Uman Institute. states, now is set up for failure a nonpartisan social policy for the parents who have been
research organization. "But that told to pay more than they Ciiffi,
resulted in people not complying · to families who end up o~ wetwith the orders and mcking up fare and to the taxpayers who
arrears,,
end up picking up the tab.
(l&lt;XUI Ryan is a cu/umnisr for
Already. the report is prompting the state senate Budget and rlre Scm Fmncisco Chmnicle.
Fiscal Review Committee to Send conunenrs ro her in CL/11' rf
propose changes. It haS suggest- rhis newsf'&lt;lfler or smd her e-mail
ed offering a clemency progmm at }(l(l!li)WLI'{clmmic/e.mm.)

••

S~ntinel• PageAS

Local Brief
TUPPERS PLAINS- Fall
spons signups have begun at
Eastern High School for golf:
football. volleyball and
cheerleading and will continue thonlgh Monday, June 23.
Athletes must be accompanied by a parent to register.
Hours are 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Monday through Friday at
the high school office. Payto-play fees will he accepted
at that time.

0

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily

www.mydailysentinel.com

GALLIPOLIS - United
Producers Inc. market report
from Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday.
Feeder Cattle-Higher
275-415# St. $90-$103.0
Hf. $75-$90 425-525# St.
$85-$94 Hf. S75-$82 550625# St. $80·$B8 Hf. $72$80 650-725# St. $75 -$84
Hf. $70-$76; 750-850# St.
$70-$75; Hf. $65-$70.
Cows-Higher
Well Muscled/Fleshed $36$42; Medium/Lean $33-$36;
Thin/Light $22-$28; Butts
$38-$52
Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $440-$785;
Bred Cows $300-$690; Baby
Calves $20-$240; Goats $11 $90; Lambs. $78-dn: Hogs
$20-26.
Upcoming specials:
Call the office at 446-9696.
Visit the Website at www.uproducers.com

Vermont
trooper killed
attempting to
stop driver
· MONTPELIER, Yt. (AP)
-A driver who had !led after
he was pulled over for speeding struck and killed a veteran
trooper who was trying to stop
his car, authorities said.
State Police Sgt. Michael
. Johnson, 39, had placed
spike strips on Interstate 91
in Norwtch on Sunday to
stop motorist Eric Daley, 23,
police said. Daley .swerved
to miss the spikes, struck
Johnson as he tried to take
cover, then got out of his car
and fled into a wooded area,
· pollee said. A search for the
sus[XU continued Monday. ·
Johnson died Sunday at
Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical
Center in Lebanon, N.H
"Sergeant Michael Johnson of
the Yennont State Police today ·

tl100e the ultimate sacrifice and

gave his life in the line of duty,"
said Gov. James Douglas. It was
the first death of a Vermont
~r in the line of duty in
more than l0 years.
Daley, driving a 1991
N~ NX ~ hOO teen
st£W:d foc SJnXling by aoother
trooper about 3:45 p.m State
police said retied sooth about live
mile&gt; lUltil re catre to the spikes '
Johnson had placed on the
highway to puncture his tires.

Curfew
.. from Page A1
' is
said the. line for violation
$300 and a $65 fee for CQUrt
costs.
P~arce said hj s ofticers
would use good judgment
when issuing citations. He said
juveniles who are with an

BY CARRIE SPENCER

Associated Press

Jim Slavicek checks an elm tree for disease in the open area of a lathhouse Monday, at the ·
U.S. FroesrService, in Delaware . The trees are clones of laboratory-produced strains. (AP)

Since the 1990s, the USDA
has made cuttings available to
cities and nurseries of the two
trees that seemed to fare the
best. The varieties are "Valley
Forge,'' from a tree grown from
a seed mailed to the researchers.
and "New Harmony." from &lt;t
Springfield, Ohio. elm that survived the fung us but died in
floods.
But those trees are clones,
Stavicek said. Urban trees produce seeds that land on lawns
and pavement. with few if any
growing to maturity. There's
no chance to mix genes- the
engine of evolution.
."We actually need to go back
into the woods and plant these
tolerant strains in areas where

the trees can naturally produce
seeds and generate new trees,"
he said. As the fungus evolves,
he said, the trees will too,
while maintaining some genetic diversity in the species, he
said.
The next two sites will be in
a clearing deep within
Mohican State Forest in
'Ashland County and grassland
.fit The Wilds, a privately
owned t 0.000-acre game preserve in Cumberland.
·
Townsend welcomed · the
approach.
"Ideally .it could be best if
we could plant higher numbers
in the forest ," he said.
'
Back at the Forest Service
laboratory in this city 22 miles

north
of
Columbus,
researchers are getting a sneak
preview of the outcome ..
They're analyzing results from
trees that were crossbred in
1992 and deliberately infected
with the fungus last year.
·
"It looks like we're getting
some great results from these
crosses," Stavicek said. "One
particular cross · has no symp-'
toms."

The lab will grow clones
from those trees and test them
again in a .few years to confirm
the results are due togenes and
not the environment.
"In a way I think it's fitting
that the restoration begins in
Ohio because the disease
began here." Slavicek said.

Gov. Keating's. plan to quit panel investigating clergy-..
.

are apparently so upsetting bishops ulcers in the short
to the bishops," said David run, but in the tong run, if
Clohessy, national director he had stayed around, any
of Survivors Network of report he issued would hav e
Former Oklahoma Gov. those Abused by Priests.
absolute credibility," he
Frank Keating's expected
Robert Bennett, a member said.
Keating's
National
The resignation follows a
resignation as head of a of
ganel examining sex abuse Review Board and a promi- Los Angeles Times intery · Roman Catholic priests nent Washington .. lawyer, view in whi.cb Keating said
was met with disappoint- insisted the change in lead- of unnamed church offiment by church critics,
white others said it would- ership won't stall the · cials: "To act like La Cosa
n't be a fatal setback to the panel's investigations.
Nostra and hide • and supprobe.
.
"There are many very press, l think , is very
Keating's spokesman Dan strong and outspoken mem- unhealthy. Eventually it will
Mahoney ~aid Sunday that bers on this board who are all come out"
on Monday or Tuesday going to remain on the
Los Angeles Cardinal
Keating w.ill send a resigna- . board and who are going to , Roger
Mahony
called
tion tetter to Bishop Wilton see to it that the bishops .Keating's comments "the
Gregory, president of the honor their commitment to last straw."
U.S. Conference of Catholic protect children and the
The cardinal said he
Bishops.
promises they made, " he would ask other bi shops to
Mahoney said Keating said.
consider calling for Keating
had thought of resigning for
But the Rev. Thomas ,to step down during the full
several months but criticism Reese of America magazi ne, hierarchy's meeting that
of recent remarks he made a New York-based Jesuit opens Thursday in St.
that likened church leader- weekly, said Keating's Louis. The review b?ard:s
ship to the Mafia "hastened departure is "a setback for next scheduled meeting ts
his decision."
the bishops" and "another July 28-29 in Chicago.
Representatives · of abuse stumble on · the way to
Deal Hudson, editor · of
victims were dismayed by cleaning up . the bishops ' Crisis. a conservative Catholic
the development.
reputation. "
magazine in Washington, D.C.,
'The governor was obvi- said Keating has been "a great
"It's very disturbing that a
couple of candid remarks ously giving some of the asset as a voice of Catholic
BY RICHARD

N.

OSTLING

Associated Press

adult, such as a parent. or who
are returning from work would
be exempt from the. It p.m.
curfew.
The chief said he has already
issued a ticket this week to two
male juveniles who were out
atier curfew. Pearce said that
aside from the village's cwfew,
which is a common practice in
many other villages, the county
has its own curfew laws.

meeting.
Council
members
·Cunningham, Van Meter. Mike
from Page A1
Deem and Donna Peterson
voted to repeal the ordinance
and
council ·president Mony
proposed repeal of the ordinance went before the council Wood voted to maintain the
for a vpte at Wednesday night's garbage ordinance.

Garbage

laity who want the managerial habits of the bishops to
change ." The ne)(t chairman, Hudson said, "needs to
be someone who is capable
of giving bad news to the
bishops if that's what's nee.
essary. "
The review board ls spon- .
so ring a survey of the extent
and patterns of abuse cases
based on reports filed by all
195 U.S. dioceses. A verbal
flare-up bet;yeen Keating
and Mahony began when
the cardinal initially refused
to participate in that survey
unless procedures were
changed.
In a Sunday statement the
cardi nal 's office said "nothing shou ld distract us from
our most urgent goal: the
protection of all our people,
especially our children,
from the sin and cri me of
sexual abuse."
Last
year,
Gregory
appointed Keating chairman
of the 13-member review
board.
Keating
soon
angered smi1e church leaders by suggesting that

parishioners who disagree
with how their bishops handle abuse should withhold
contributions · and swi tch
churches.
The charter doesn't speci'
fy what to do if the chair'.
man resigns. Reese said he
thought Gregory would
choose the new chairman
and someone acceptable to
continuing board members;
most likely one of those
members.
Other members of the
board include former congressman and White House
chief of staff Leon Panella;
Anne M. Burke of Chicago, a
justice on the Illinois
Appellate Court; and Michael
J. Bland, a victim of clergy
abuse and a psychological
counselor ·Who works with
fellow vtcttm s for t~e
Chicago Archdiocese.
On the Net:
National Review Board:
hnp://www.usccb.org/comrnl
restoretrust.htm

Check out all the sp&lt;&gt;rts
action, Page B1.

PROUD
TO BEA
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PageA6

Nation • World

Monday, June 16, 2003

'

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Dodgers top Tribe, Page B2 '
Scoreboard, Page 83 •

I

Senators debate WMD
Sept. 11 survivor adds
personal touch to.work of reviews ahead of hearings
independent commission
WASHINGTON (AP) Of the 30 people on duty in
rhe
Pentagon's
Navy
Command Center the morning of Sept. II , 2001, only
one -Lt. Kevin Shaeffersurvived the crash of a
hijacked airliner.
·
He is agai n standing out,
now as one of 60 employees
of t.he independent commission studying the events of
that day.
His scars testify to the fireball that engulfed his section
of the Pentagon. His resolve
is a reminder that those most
affected by the terrorist
attacks hunger for answers.
"He brings a passion for
telling the definitive account
of what happened," said John
Farmer, a former New Jersey
atto rney ge neral who is
working with Shaeffer. "He
has a million ideas about
everything we're doing and is
incredibly focused. He brings
sort of a spiritual energy to
the work."
During a grueling recovery
that included 18 operatiQns
and two near-fatal cardiac
arrests, Shaeffer set a goal of
resuming full-time work this
September. He willed himself
to get well faster, he said, so
he could join the National
Commission on Terrorist
Attacks Upon the United
States when it began work
early this year.
Now medically retired
from the Navy, he hopes the
experience will lead him into
a career in homeland security
and counterterrorism. ·
"I think every day of all the
co-workers who were killed,
my close friends 1111d office
.mates," said Shaeffer, 31.
"They all had ·families. Two
of them had pregnant wives
on Sept. II. I know in this life
that I'm not going to have any
answers of why I survived the
attack, but what I do know is
that I can hopefully make a

difference in the future."
Shaeffer works on a task
force, led by Farmer. which is
investigating the emergency
response to the plane crashes
at the World Trade Center,
· the Pentagon and a field in
·Shanksville, Pa.
The 'goal, Farmer said. is to
find lessons that will improve
the reaction to future attacks,
should they come.
The commission has until
May to report on topics
including intelligence. diplomacy, aviatiQ.~W~nd the flow
of assets to ~terror organizalions. Even as he focuses on
his task force, Shaeffer
immerses himself in the full
scope of the inquiry.
He watched from the audience, quietly ·and intently, as
the commission held a twoday hearing last month on
aviation security. The office
in his Virginia home, a few
miles from the now-repaired
Pentagon, includes a shelf of
books he has read, including
"Report from Ground Zero,"
"Who. Becomes a Terrorist
and Why" and "Inside AI
Qaeda."
·
"Being a survivor," he said,
"I'm trying to learn every lesson I can."
Other commission staffers
also suffered personally on
Sept. 11. Elinore Hartz, a liaison to victim families, lost her
husband at the World Trade
Center. John Azzarello, a former federal prosecutor working as a commission counsel,
lost two brothers-in-law.
·Thomas Kean, appointed
commission chairman by
President Bush , said he and
other commissioners debated
whether to hire people with
personal ties to Sept. II .
Kean said the commission
determined it would be open
to hiring all but the most
active of victim advocates.
"To have some of-the passion
that these people bring to our

WASHINGTON (AP) -.
With Congress set to begin
hearings this week into prewar
intelligence on lrdq. senators
are trying to come up with
some consensus on how to
proceed with a formal review.
On
Sunday,
Senate
Intelligence Committee eMirman Pat Roberts, R-Kan ., held
out the possibility of open
hearings - a key demand of
the Democrats - "if we think
· that is warranted."
As lawmakers debated the
· congressional reviews on the
weekend television talk
· shows. Roberts offered another possible concession. He
said hearings would likely be
followed by a classified report
as well as a public report,
something the Democmts also
have called for.
The closed hearings of
Roberts' committee would
consider wha~ information
President Bush used to build
his case·against Iraq.
The format overrules
Democrats' demands for a
more form al investigation
with extensive questioning of
witnesses about why prohibit,
ed chemical and biological
weapons have not been found
and accusations that some evidence cited by the administration has proved false or misleading.
Republicans suggested last
week that such a probe could
become politicized PT.. harm
national security. They instead

favored customary oversight
hearings by the Intelligence·
and Armed Services committees; . the Senate Armed
Services panel already has
begun closed hearings.
Sen. Carl Levin of
Michigan,
the
senior
Democrat on Armed Services.
opposed the GOP approach.
"We need a thorough, bipartisan investigation," he said on
CBS' "Face the Nation,"
where Robens also appeared.
The doubts that have been
raised about some of the prewar weapons assessments go
to the "heart of our intelligence," Levin said. "Is it
objective, or has it been shaded, has it been stretched by the
intelligence community to
reach some conclusion?"
He complained that Senate
Republicans are not working
and consulting with the
Democrats on how to move
ahead with the intelligence
reviews. Senate GOP lawmakers should adopt the more conciliatory working spirit in the
House. where both parties'
intelligence committee leaders
have' agreed on a similar
review, he said.
The House Intelligence
Committee also will start its
hearings this week with two
closed meetings, and open
hearings will follow if appropriate, panel members have
said. The inquiry will include
staff interviews of intelligence
personnel and updates on

efforts 10 lind weapons of
mass destruction. .
The House panel's top
Democrat, Rep. Jane Harman
of California, said there's a
real need to ensure that repons
from the intelligence community matched the strong
rhetoric from the administration in the run-up to the war.
Harnmn said it is too early to
say whether the administration
hyped or manipulated intelligence on weapons of mass
destruction in order to justify
pre-emptive military action.
''We're ~oing to find that out,"
she satd on "Fox News
Sunday."
Bush and other administra- ·
tion officials maintain that Iraq
had an active weapons program and that time will bear
that out. More than two
months have passed since
Saddarn Hussein was routed,
and weapons of mass destruction have not been found.
According to a new CBS
News Poll , six in 10
Americans say it is important
for t~e United States to find
the illegal weapons. Twothirds of those polled said they
think the administration exaggerated the weapons threat.
That sentiment appeared not to
·have harmed Bush politically.
with his job approval still at66
percent.
The poll of 841 adults was
taken , Thursday and Friday
and has an error margin of plus
or minus 3 percentage points.

inquiry is helpful, not harmful," said Kean, a former
New Jersey governor.
On the morning of Sept. II ,
200 I, Shaeffer was at his desk
near the center of the Navy
Command Center, on the west
side of the Pentagon. There,
officers · monitored events
around the globe, around the
clock, with the help of giant
television screens.
"Just like the millions of
people around the world, we
were watching the attacks
unfold in New York City,"
said Shaeffer, who served on
the staff of the chief of naval
operations. "I just couldn' t
stop watching the television .
Never did I or anyone else in
the space have any sense of
the impending danger. I
mean, I was in the safest
office building in the world."
American Flight 77, seized
by hijackers after its takeoff
from Washington Dulles
International
Airport,
slammed into the Pentagon
shortly before 9:40a.m., tearing into ,the command center.
All told, the crash killed
125 in the Pentagon, plus the
plane 's 59 passengers and
crew and five hijackers.
NOTICE OF SECOND PUBLIC HEARING
· Shaeffer had · serious burns
over 42 percent of his body
The Meigs County Commissioners intend to apply to the Ohio Department Of
and severe.respiratory injuries
Development, for funding under the FV' 2003 Community Development Block
from inhaling jet fuel.
Grant (CDBG) Formula Allocation Program, a federally funded program adminis"I consider it a miracle I
survived that initial blast," he · tered by the State. Meigs County Is eligible for up to $154,000 of Fiscal Year
2003 CDBG funding provided the County meets applicable requirements. On
said. "I a(so consider it a mirMay 12, 2003, the County conducted Its first public hearing to Inform citizens
acle I stayed conscious and
about the CDBG program, how It may be used, what activities are eligible and
didn't pass out, because had I
other Important program requirement.,
done so, I don't think I would
have made it out."
Shaeffer said he has strug~
A second public hearing will be held on June 26, 2003 at 1:30 P.M .. at the Meigs
gled to find a reason why he
County Commissioners office. Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio to
survi vcd and others did not.
give citizens an opportunity to review and comment on the County's proposed
The commission's work may
CDBG FY'2003 Formula Allocation project.
provide an answer.
The attacks, he said, "gave
Based on both citizen Input and local officials' assessment of the County's ·
a totally unexpected purpose
Community needs. the County Is proposing to undertake the following Formula
to my li fe."
Allocation CD130 activities for Fiscal Year 2003:

. Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

.. "~~ tiJ .~· f? ~~ ,IJ JPIJ" .
I

ACTIVITY;
Street Improvements- Chester Township ·Various Streets
CDBG Funding- $23,000
Other Funds: $9,000 • Chester Township
NATIONAIL OBJECTIVE: AREA LMI
ACTIVITY; Water and Sewer Facilities- Leading Creek Water District
CDBQ Funding: $23,000
.
Other Funds: $127,400 Leading Creek District
NATIONAIL OBJECTIVEi LMI
ACTIVITY; Planning - Syracuse VIllage Water Systems Project
CDBG Funding: $10,000
Other Funds: $83,800 Various Grants.and Loans- Village
NATIONAIL OBJECTIVE: AREA LMI

, __
••C
...__
"'l)AIC. •

57

ACTIVITY: Public Services Meigs Council an Aging
CDBG Funding. $23,000
Other Fund: $4,400 Council on Aging
NATIONAIL OBJECTIVE: Llnlted Clientele

.

ACTIVITY: PubllcRebabilltation -Portland Community Center
CDBG Funding: $20,000
Other Funds: .None
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: LMI
ACTIVITY: Parks and Recreation Facilities
CDBG Funding: $20,00(1
Other Funds., In Kind - SoUthern Local Schools
NATIONAIL OBJECTIVE: Area LMI
ACTIVITY: Machine/Capital Equipment- Village of Pomeroy
CDBG Funding: $21,000
Other Funds: $32,800 - Pomeroy Village
NATIONAl,. OBJECTIVE: LMi

.

ACTIVITY: Administration and Fair Housing
CDBG Funding: $24.000 (Admin : $12,0011- Fair Housing; $12,000

Page Bl
Monday,June16,2003

Duncan, Spurs kings of NBA again
Bv CHRIS SHERIDAN
. Associated Press

.,

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!

Jirsa to
be named
coach at
Marshall
HUNTINGTON , W.Va .
(AP) Former Georgia
coach Ron Jirsa wi ll be
named men's
basketball
coach
at
Marsh a ll
University
toc!ay filling
the
final
remaining
opening in
Divi sion I.
according to
Jirsa
m e d i a
reports.
WSAZ-TV in CharlestonHuntington
reported
Saturday night that Jirsa
interviewed with Marshall
athletic director Bob Marcum
earlier that day and would be
introduced Monday as head
coach.
The Herald-Dispatch of
Huntington also reported that
Marcum had sc heduled a
news conference for noon
Monday to announ&lt;:e Jirsa as
coach.
Jirsa's hiring would bring
an end to a tumultuous seven
days at Marshall , which saw
its two top choices to replace
Greg White withdraw from
consideration in consecutive
days.
North Carolina State assistant Larry Hunter and Tulane ·
coach Shawn Finney, a West
Virginia native, interviewed
for the job this week. Hunter
withdrew from the search on
· . Thursday, and Finney pulled
out Friday.
Neither Jirsa nor Marcum
could be reached for comment Sunday by The
Associated Press.
After Hunter and Finney
Withdrew, several newspapers reported that Jirsa could
be the top candidate to
replace White.
Jirsa, 35-30 in two years at
Georgia, was fired in 1999
and was replaced by
Charleston 'native
Jim
ljarrick. Jirsa was an assistant at Dayton from 19997003
before
joining
Clemson's staff two months
ago.
White resigned June 3 and
returned to his old job as
coach of the University of
Charleston, a Division II, citing family concerns.
White went 11 5-84 at
Marshall, his alma mater, but
he was just 29-30 in the past
two seasons. His first season
at Marshall was 1996-97.
White did not receive a
contract extension, as the
school had done in earlier
years, after the Thundering
Herd finished 14-15 this season.

Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on June 26, 2003 to express
their views and comments on the county's proposed CDBG FY'2003 Formula
Allocation Application. Written comments, will be accepted until1 :00 P.M., June
26, 2003, and may be mailed to the Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

..--

...

Darin Smirh

•

1 - -- ' - -------- -·--"--

Please see NBA. Bl

BY DOUG FERGUSON

Associated Press
OLYMPIA FIELDS. Ill .
- Say what you want
about Jim Furyk 's swing.
It won him a U.S. Open
with a performance that
put him in the record
books.
The toughe st test in golf
finally lived up to its repu- .
tation Sunday, and Furyk
rose to the challenge with a
g~itty round of 2-over 72 to
win his tirst major championship in a landslide.
Despite bogeys he could
afford on the last · two
holes, Furyk won by three
strokes .at Olympia Fields
and joined Tiger Woods,
Jack Nicklaus and Lee
Janzen with a 272, the
lowest 72-hole score in the
I03 years of the U.S·
Open .
.
. The loopy swing might
not be conventional , but
the strategy was all too
familiar: He sent the ball
down the middle of the
fairway and no one could
catch him.
Furyk led . by at least
three shots the whole way,
but never allowed himself
to enjoy the moment until
the gallery rose to salute
him as he walked up the
18th fairway.
He missed a 6-foot par
putt that would have given

him the record outright,
but all that mattered was
the silver champions hip
trophy waiting for him.
Woods shot 1'2-under
272 three years ago at
Pebble Beach, which
pi ayed as a par 71 . He
remains the only player to
finish a u.s. Open in double digits under par.
Furyk was on the verge
of joining him until he
failed to get up-and-down
from behind the 17th
gree n, then three-putted
from about 40 feet on the
final hole.
Stephen Leaney of
Australia, in contention at
a major for the first time,
fell five strokes behind at
the turn and couldn't catch
up. He closed with a 72 ,
h
but his runner-up finis
assures him a PGA Tour
card for next year.
The only other players
under par were Masters
champion Mike Weir (71)
PleiH see Open, Bl

Jim Furyk and wife, Tabitha , admire the championship trophy after he won the 103rd U.S.
Open Sunday at the Olympia Fields Country Club in Olympia Fields, Ill. (API

NASCAR Winston Cup

Busch grabs .third win of season

Kurt Busch (97) passes Jeff Gordon (2(1) on lap 177 during
the NASCAR Sirius Satellite 400 on.Sunday at Michigan
International Speedway in Brooklyn, Mich. Busch won the
race, beating pole-sitter Bobby Labonte by 0.77 4 .seconds.
Gordon finished third. (AP)

tiiUIIIII.
.......... 11.2113
lnslnl£:1or:

Nets 88-77 to take the series 4-2.
Duncan finished with 21 points,
2.0 rebounds, I 0 assists and eight
blocks for a triple-double. San
Antonio won the title for the second
time in franchise history. sending
David Robinson into retirement
with the ultimate present.
Robinson jumped and did a 360 as
he punched .his fist in the air and
then hugged several teammates after
being replaced with 35.6 seconds
left.
The fourth quarter was stunning
for its turn of events, with the Spurs

Furyk king
of swing at
U.S. Open

BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP)
- Kurt Busch became the first
three-time Winston Cup winner
this season after snatching the
lead from Jeff Gordon with 24
laps to go Sunday in.the Sirius
Satellite 400 at Michigan
International Speedway.
That was the first time the
24-year-old
NASCAR
"Young Gun" led the 200-lap
race, but a late charge by
pole-starter Bobby Labonte
came up 0.774-seconds about six car lengths - short.
Labonte, a three-time
Michigan winner, got one last
shot at Bosch after Todd

I
l
l
Give Y11r Child That Competllln EdgeI

If a participant will need auxiliary aids (Interpreter, brallled or taped material,
asslstlve listening device, other) due to a disability, Please, contact Gloria
Kloes, Clerk, prior to June 26,.2003 , at( 740)992-28951n order to ensure that
your needs will be accommodated. The Meigs County Commissioners office Ia
handicapped accessible.

Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners,

SAN ANTONIO - First' came a
blocked shot, one of eight rejections
Tim Duncan had on the night.
Next came a two-handed, overhead pass from the low post that
found Stephen Jackson at the 3point line. Swish, and the Spurs had
their first lead of the night.
Finally, an almost identical pass
found Jackson for yet another 3 his third of the quarter - and
Duncan's triple-double was complete.
The San Antonio .Spurs won the
NBA championship Sunday night
San Antonio's David Robinson. left, and Tim behind a devastating all"around
Duncan (21) block a shot by New Jersey's effort from Duncan, using a run of
.Richard Jefferson (24) during Game 6 of the 19 unanswered points in the fou rth
quarter to defeat the New Jersey
NBA Finals Sunday in San Antonio. (API

-after trailing for almost the entire
game - using the 19-0 run to take
the life out of the stunned Nets.
It was the fifth straight NBA title
for a Western Conference team. The
Nets showed none of the characteristics of a championship team as the
game got away from them quickly.
Coach Byron Scott left several
reserves in during San Antonio's big
run, letting them play alongside
Kenyon .Martin as he struggled
through one of the worst games of
his career. shooting 3-for-23.
San Antonio outscored New
Jersey 25•11 in the fourth quarter,
with Duncan getting six rebounds,
three assists and three blocks . San
Antonio tied the fmals record with
13 blocks in the game, and
Duncan 's 32 iH the seri~s broke

t$41/. .Mn

Busch

Bo d i ne
brought out
the
ninth
caution flag
of the race
with 10 \aps
rem a 1 n In g
when
he
crashed 10
tum two on
the 2-miie,

high-banked
oval.
Busch's No. 97 Roush
Racing Ford had Labonte's
Chevrolet nearl y on his back
bumper when the green flag
waved for the start of lap 196.

Labonte made a strong
move to the top of the track,
but Busch held him off and
pulled steadily away· to his
seventh career win.
. The victory ended a short
slump for Busch, who had not
finished better than 15th in
his last three races.
H
e had seven top- I0 finishes in the 11 races before that,
including wins at Bri stol and
Fontana, Calif. , and three runner-up finishes .
"We're hot and we're
rolling," Busch said. "We've
also got a team that has
learned from some mistakes."

20Sessl•
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�Page 82 •The Daily

•

Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Nomo, Dodgers shut
down Tribe to wrap up
interleague road trip
CLEVELAND (AP)
Hideo Nomo finally got a li't.e offensive support from his
::lodgers teammates. Some
had baserunning by the
Cleveland Indi ans helped,
too.

Monday, June 16, 2003

NBA
from Page 81
Patrick Ewin g's champi onship record .
Robinson wmpleted his
14th season with a strong
performance, grabbing 17
rebounds. scoring 13 points
and blockiDg two shots.
As the buzzer sounded, he
ran across the court looking
for somehody to hu g, and. he
found his son wearing a

Robinson jersey and blackand -si lv'er wig . He picked
him up. then hugged his
mother as silver, black and
white confetti ·rei! from the·
rafters.
"I WUS just trying to give LIS
whatever energy I could. We
finally hit some shots in the
fou.rth 4uarter," Robinson
said.
Duncan hugged an9 kissed
his wife. Amy. While 19-year
veteran Kevin Willis cried
and gave a long hug to veteran Steve Smith - both of
them having finally won a

tit lc .
Jackson tini,hed· with 17
points. n.inc of thcnt nn Jpotmers 111 the fourth . Speedy
Claxton " or~d 1.1 and Manu
Ginohili added II .
J'""" Kidd led fhc Ne"
with 21 poi rm. and Kerry
Kittles hau 16 ill his best
game of the 'cries. Kittles.
however, was on 1he bench
watching alongside fellow
star.ter Rich ard Jefferson as
the Nets eollapseu early in .
the fourth with the st~uggling
Lucious Harris and Rodney
Rogers on the court together.

father, Mike, who taugh.t him
a swing only a mother could
love.
Furyk heard the snickers
about hi s swing growing up
in western Penn sylvan ia, as
an All-American at Arizona.
and even while winning
seven times on the PGA Tour.
All he has to do now is
show them the U.S. Open trophy.
"He's consistent," Woods
said. "You know he 's going
to hit every fairway and
every green when he 's playing well.''
The toughest part for Furyk
was seeing his father when· he
arrived Sunday afternoon. He
hugged him long and hard,
intent on ·giving him the best
Father's Day present avail able .
They were togethe r on 'the
practice green minutes before
the final round began; just
like old times - the father
sq uatting behind the son.
making sure everything was
in place.
"Looks good." he told his
son, and sent him on his way
to win ·a U.S. Open .
Furyk takes the club back
on the outside, loops it
around and brings it back to
the inside. Some say it l.ooks
like a one-armed man try ing
to ki ll a snake in a phone
booth.
No one can· fault the
results. It held up just line
under the Sunday pressure of
a major champi onship.
When his first tee shot split

the mitldle of the fairway,
Furvk was on his way.
c·hallengers stepped aside :
· quickly.
Vijay Singh birdied the
second hol e, bu t lost hope
with a drive into the cabbage
on the next hole that led to a
double bogey.
Singh. who tied the major .
championship record with a
63 in the second round. made
six straight bogeys at one
point and finished with a 78.
Nick Price opened with
three straight bogeys and was
nevedt factor. He closed with
a 75 and tied for fifth at evenpar 280 along with Emie Els
and David Toms.
Leaney is the only one who
didn't back off, followin g
bogeys with birdies on the
first four holes and doing his
best to keep Furyk in his
sights.
"I guess I' m happy and
sad.:· Leaney said. "I had a
very good chance today. He
just kept me at ann's length
all day ...
Furyk . was simp ly too
tough in a fina l roL. Jd that
required nothing less.
With the sun baking out
Olympia Fields on the weekend. and no water on the
. greens overn ight . the U. S.
Open finally played like one.
Nineteen players started
the fina l round under par.
· Only four remained at d:1y 's
end.
Furyk won $ 1.08 million
for his eighth career victory.

I

•

Nomo pitched two-hit ball
for seven innings and Shawn
Green drove in three ru'ns as
Los Angeles defeated the
Indians 4-3 Sunday to complete a 6-0 interleague trip in
which· they gave up j ust II
runs.
'·S ix road games and six
wins - we have to feel
good." Dodgers manager Jim
Tracy said.
Dodgers catcher Paul Lo
Duca and Indians . outfielder
Bnidley quickly
Milton
avoided any expected confrontations.
They · had
exchanged verbal barbs during imd . after Saturday's
game. but as Bradley stepped
to the plate in the second. he
gently tapped his bat on Lo
Duca's shinguards and they
had a friendly exchange.
"I always do that first time
up." Bradley said. "I say hello
to the umpire and catcher. Lo
Duca said he might have
overreacted and I said 'No big
deal. It's a new day, a new
ball game."'
Lo Duca went 2-for-4.
extending his hitting streak to
23 games.
'The streak is getting pretty
fun," Lo Duca said. ''Milton
said, 'What's up?' and said he
was sony and I said I was sorry."
Nomo (7 -6) also apologized
- for not winning more
·games.
" I'm not satisfied with how
l.' m pitching," the right-hander said after allowing just
one run, striking out eight and
walking one. He won for th~
first time in four outings since
May 24- Los Angeles averaged just 2.8 runs in his previous eight games.
"''m happy about today,"
No mo said. "But we've lost a
lnt of games I've pitched and
I want to win every one.''
The Dodgers nearly blew a
4- 1 lead after Nomo left.
·
Cleveland loaded the bases

Open
from Page 81

Los Angeles catcher Paul Lo Duca works Cleveland's Coco
Crisp into a rundown between second and third during the
eighth inning Sunday in Cleveland. (AP)

in the eighth against relievers season.
Paul Quantrill and Tom
Dave Roberts led off the
Martin. Brandon Phillips game by bunting past Indians .
scored on a wild pitch and starter Brlly Traber (2-4) for a
Coco Crisp walked to reload , single. He took second as Lo
the bases.
Duca struck out on a wild
" I stunk, ... Martin said. "But pitch in the dirt. After Green
then what happened, I had to walked, Roberts stole third
see it again on tape to find out and scored . on a single by
how. "
Brian Jordan .
With one out, Bradley hit a · The Indians tied it in the
Brandon
Phillips
sharp ground single off second third.
baseman Jolbert Cabrera's reached on a bunt single and
glove that scored another run! we nt to third on a hit-and,run
but Matt Lawton was trapped single to right by Jhonny
rounding third base.
Peralta - the shortstop's first
"The thir(base coach told major league hit. Phillips
me to go, so I went." Lawton scored o n a groundout by
said. "Then he said stop, so I Crisp . .
stopped. There was nothing I
That was the fi rst of 12 concould do ."
·
secutive outs recorded by
While Lawton was in the.. Nomo until Bradley walked
rundown , Crisp advanced to to open the seventh.
"Nomo was tough, mixing
third and Bradley alertl y went
to second. But right before his fastball and split-finger.
Lawton was tagged, Crisp real tough.'' Bradley said.
suddenly retreated all the way
Los Angeles went ahead 2-1
back to second and he was in the sixth . Roberts walked,
tagged out, too.
advanced on a wild pitch,
"I should have gone to third took third on a single by Lo
and let Lawton be in the run- Duca and scored when second
down," Crisp said. "That way. baseman Phillips mishandled .
we would have had two outs. a grounder by Green.
but runners on second and
Green hit a two-run double·
third.''
off reliever David Riske with
Eric Gag ne pitched th e the bases loaded in .the sevninth for his 26th save and enth to give the Dodgers a 434th straight dating . to last I lead.

and Kenny Perry. whose 6 7
was the be st score on the ·
toughe st day at Olympia
Fields.
Furyk is knewn as much
for hi s gri t as hi s unorthodox
swing. and he re lied on that
throughout a sun ny day sout h
of Chicago. He never
flinched the few times he was
in trouble . He didn't come
unglued when a streaker ran
out of the gallery on the II th
green.
When he .tapped in for
bogey, he dropped his putter
and raised his ar!lls, then
hugged caddie Mi~e "Fluff'
Cowan. who . hasn't been in
thi s position since he was on
the bag for Tiger Woods at
the 1997 Masters.
Woods was never a factor.
closing with a 72 to tie for
20th. For the first time since
1999. he is not the def~ nd ing
champion at- any of the four
majors.
"When you're playing bad.
it's a lonely world out the re.''
Woods said.
When you· re hiiting fai rways and greens with a th reeshot lead in the. U.S. Open.
life couldn't be beller.
Just ask Furyk.
· " It 's
beyond
some
dreams," Furyk said on the
18th green, choking back
tears as he looked at his

The Daily Sentinel

Mond.ay, June 16, 2003

Scoreboard
Pro baseball

Mond~ 'l

L

L

ChicagO .......... 37 30
Houston
...... 37 32
St. LoU1s ........... 35 32
Cincinnati ....... .34 33
P1ttsburgh ...... ,.. 27 39
Milwaukee ........ 27 40
West

GB

(May 0·3). M5 p.m.

.672
.565
.522
.471
.463

7
10
13'~
. 14

White Sox (Buehrle 2-10). 8 :05p.m.
Anaheim (la ckey 4-5) at Seattle
(Pineiro 5-5), 10.05 p.m.

Pe1

GB

Pet

Boston (P.Martlnez 4-2) at Chicago

.552
.536
.522
.507 .409
.403

1
2
3
9'1
10

WLPC1GB

San Francisco .. .42 26 .618
588
2
Los Angeles ...... 40 28
Colorado .......... 35 35
.500
8
9
Arizona .............. 33 35 · :485
San Diego ........ 21
49 .300
22
Saturdey'a Games
Philadelphia 12, Cincinnati 2
Sunday'&amp; Gamea
Philadelphia at Cincinnati, ppd., rain
Mondsy'a Games
~ . Y. Mets (Gia'linei 5-6) at Florida {Willis

5· 1), 7:05p.m.

Chicago Cubs {Clement 4·6) at
Cincinnati (JI.Anderson 1·2}, 7:10p.m.
St. Louis (Calero t -1) at Milwaukee

(W.Frankll n 3·5) . 8:05p.m. ,

San Diego (Eaton 2·5) at Colorado

(Cook 2-6). 9:05 p.m.

Tueaday'a Games
Montreal at Plnsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Florida, 7:05p.m.
Atlanta at Ph iladelphia, 7:05p.m.
·chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 7.10 p.m .
Arizona at Houston, 8:05p.m.
-.St . Louis at Milwaukee, a:o5 p.m.
San Otego at Co lorado, 9:05p.m
San Francisco at Los Angeles, 10: 10

p.m

American League

Tuesday 's Gamet
Tampa Bay at ,N.Y. YB:nket,!ls. 1:05 p_m,,
tst game
·
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees . 7:05p.m.,
2nd game
Toronto at Balt1more. 7:05 p.m
Cte\Jeland at Dei[OII, 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota at. Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
Boston at Chicago White Sox. 8:05p.m.
Anaheim at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Texas at Oakland, 10:05 p.m .
Dodger~

4, Indian~ 3
LosAngeles... 100 001 2,00 '- 4 7 2
Cleveland ..... 001 000 020 - 3 7 2
Noma, Quantrill (8), TMar tln \8), Gagne
(9) and lo Duca; Traber, Westbrook (6),

Rlske (7). DMicell(8) and Laker. W-Nomo

7-6 . l - Traber 2·4. Sv-Gagne {26) .

North ·D ivision
W L Pel.
PalNtucket
..... 38 28
.576
.569
Buffalo .... .......... 37 28
Ottawa ............... 35 34
.507
.507
Scranton ........ ..... 35 34
Rochester ....... .30 37
.448 .
Syracuse ........... 27 36
.429
South Division
W
L
Pet.

Nortolk .......... ..... 36

GB
',
4'ti

Pet.

Louisville .. .........38
Toledo ............... 33
Columbus .......... 32
Indianapolis ....... 28

29
33
35
39

.567
.500
.478
.418

GB

Pet.

588
582
.557
478
343

1 6~

L , Pe1

GB

Minnesota ........ 38 29
Kansas City ....... 33 32
Chicago ........... .3 1 37
CJeveland
.... 26 41
Detroit ............. .17 49
West

L

,,
2

7 ',~

567
508
.456
388
.258

20 '~

Pel

GB

4
7',

12

Seattle ... ., .
...45 22
672
Oakland
..... 38 29 .567
7
Anaheim ........... 34 32
51~
10 '·~
TeKas ...... ..... 27 40
403
18
Saturday's Games
Los Angeles 5, Cleve land 2
N.V. Yankees 13, St. Louis 4
Atlanta 3. Seattle I
Chicago Cubs 4, Toronto 2
Oakla:-;d 5, Montreal 4
Pittsburgh 12, Tampa Bay 9
Boston 8. Houston 4
Detroit 9. Colorado 7
Arizona 9, Minnesota 2
Milwaukee 8, Baltimore 3
San Francisco 7, Kansas City 4
Chicago White Sox 6, San Diego 5
Texas 13, Florid:l 2
Anaheim 13. N .Y. Mats 3
Sundav's Gamel
·Toronto 5, Chicago Cubs 4, 10 innings
Colorado 5, Detroit 4
l os An geles 4 , Cleveland 3
N.Y. Yankees 5, St. l ouis 2
Pittsbu rgh 9, Tampa Bay 5
Baltimore 5. Milwaukee 4
Boston 3, Houston 2, 14 innings
Arizona 12 , Minnesota 8
Kansas City 5. San Francisco 4
San Diego 1, Chicago White Sox 0
N.Y. Mats 8, Anaheim 0

3 '~

5:
5 '1~

4 ',

6

10

East Division

GB

Pet.

Washington ....... 16
5 .762
Chillicothe ...... .... t 1
6 .647
. Evansville ...... .. :1 2
·8
.600
Richmond .......... 11
9 .550
KalamaZoo .... .. .... 8
12
.400
Florence ............. . 3 16 .158
West Division

W

L

Pet.

Gateway .........·.~. 13
Mid-Missouri. ...... 9
Cook County ....... 8

6
11
10

.684
.450
.444

June
5 ............ ........... at Mason County, 15·4 L

GB

Frontier League
L

Meigs American Legion

10 ... ....... ..... .-........ at Marietta (DH), 10-8 L
11 .............................. at Athens, 7·2 W
13 ........................... Mason County, 11·9 L
15 ................. at Pickerington (OH) , 1 p.m.
18 ..... .... .............. at Parkersburg, 8 p.m.
19 ....... . .
....... at Wellston, 6 p.m .
22 ......
... Lancaster II (OH), 1 p.m.
23 ....
.. .......... .. ....... ... Athens, 6 p.m.
24 ............................... Marietta , 6 p.m.

BuHalo 7, Ric hmond 4
Co lumbus 9. Charlotte 4
Norfolk 6, Louisville 1
Durham 7, Ottawa 6, 10 innings
Pawtucket 6, Syracuse 1
Indianapolis 3, Scranton-Wilkes-Barre 1
Toledo 5, Rochester 2
Sunday's Games
BuHalo 4, Richmond 3 ·
Charlotte 11 , Columbus 4
Louisville at Norfolk, ppd., rai n
Durham 3, Ottawa 1 ·
Pawtucket 5. Syracuse 3
ScrantonWilkes-Barre 5, Indianapolis 3
Toledo 4, Rocheste r 3, 10 in nings
Monday's Games
BuHalo at Norfo lk
Columbus at Lou isville
Du rham at Pawtucket
onawa at Charlotte
Richmond at Rochester
ScrantonWilkes-aarre at Toledo
Syracuse at Indianapolis
Tue sday's Games
Buffalo at Nor1olk
Columbus at Louisville
Durham at Pawtucke t
Ottawa at Charlotte
Richmond at Rochester
ScrantonWilkes-Barre at Toledo
Syracuse at Indianapolis

W

Pro basketball
National BaaketbaiJ Aaaoclatlon

3
3'1
4'1,

1'11
12

GB
'

~

' 4 '·~
4 'r~

NBA ANALS

'

(Boll-ol-7)

S.n Antonio va. New JerHy ·
Wedn.dl)', June 4
.San Antonio 101, New Jersey 89
Friday, June I
New Jersey 87 , San Antonio ~5

July ,.
3 ................................at We llston . 6 p.m.
5. ...... .. ....... Parkersburg (DH) , 1 p.m.
6 ........... .. ..... ...... ,.Shinnston \OH) , 1 p.m.
? ...... ....... ........ ........ Mason County. 6 p.m.
8 ....
.... .... ..... ... .at Nitro (DH) , I p.m.
· IO ... ,................... ............. Wellston , 6 p.m.
11 .......... ..... , .............. Parkersburg , 6 p.m.

12 ................ ....... ........... Ni1ro (DH), 1 p.m.
13 .. ... .............. at Winfield (DH), 2 p.m.
15 .......... ...... at Lancaster (DH), 5:30p.m.
16 .... ............ ........... ........ at Athens, 6 p.m.
19 .
........... ....Athens (DH) , 1 p.m.
20 ........... District Tournament at Wellston
{All home games played at Melga High

SChool)

Golf

sundoy, Juno 8

2003 Tri-County Golf Tour

an Kens th""";" Forct200. $93.275
ichael Waltrip, Chev rolet , 200,

$114.540,

n, San Antonio 78

1

8 12) •1

n , San

$ 110843 ony

6s}

9.
Mark
10. (5) Terr
$89,571 .

Sl

art Che"rolet 200

ew '
•
·
·
artin, Ford , 200, 596,248.
Labonte, Chevrolet, 200,

11 . (23) Jeff Burton. Ford. 200, $93,447

Martin 3-23 ()..() 6, Jerfereon ·&amp;-15 1-1 13,

Collins 2·5 O.&lt;J 4, Kkld 8·20 2·2 21. Klntes
5· 12 4-4 16, Harris 0·1 2-4 2, Williams 2·4
0·0 4, Johnson 2·4 O.Q 4, Mutombo 1·1 2·

2 4, Rogers 1-2 0·0 3. SColobrlno 0·0 0·0

o. Slay O·O O·O 0, Totala J0.871 H 3 n
SAN ANTONIO (88)

Bowen 1-7 0-0 2, Ouncan 9·19 3·5 21,
Robinson 6·9 1·4 13, Parker 2-6 0-Q 4,
Jackson 7-13 0.0 17, Glnob lll2-8 7-9 11 ,
Rose 1·3 3·3 5, Claxton 5·8 3~4 13, Kerr 1·

1 0·0 2, Willis O.&lt;J 0·0 0, Ferry 0·0 O.&lt;J o.
Smith 0·1 0·0 O, Totola 34·74 17·25 88.
Now JIIHY....... 25 1e 22 1• - n
Sin Anlonlo ..... 17 21 18 31 - B8
3·Point Goal~ew Jersey 6·21 (Kidd 39, Kitt ies 2·6, Rogers 1· 1, Harris 0-1,
Jefferson 0-1, Johnson D-1 , Martin D-2),
San Anton io 3·15 (Jackson 3-7, Duncan
1, Smith 0·1, Bowen Q-2, Ginobili 0·4).
Fouled out- None. Rebounds-New
Jersey 46 (Martin 10), San Antonio 61
(Du ncan 20). Assists-New Jei"sey 14
(Kidd 7), San Anto nio 20 (Duncan 10). Total
fouls-New Jersey 25, San Antonio 14.
Technlcals--New Jersey coach Scott. A-

o-

Eeatem

W

ConfeNnce
L

Pet.

DEHroil.
.... 3
1 .750
Cleveland ..... ..... ..4
2 .667
3 .625
Charlotte .... ......... 5
Connecticut ....... .4
3 .571
lndiana .. .... .. ......... 3
3 · .500
New York ... .......... 3
3 .500
Washington ......... 2
5 .286
Weatem Confentnce

24.(16) Bill Ellion. Dodge. 199.$89,223.
25, 124l Kenny wallace. Dodge. 199.
$84,290.

W

L

Pet.

Los Ange les ....... .9
0 1.000
Minnesota .. ......... .4
4 .500
Houston ............... 4
5 · .444
Seattle ............ ..... 3
4 .429
Sacramento ......... 3
6 .333
San Anloni o ......... 3
6 .333
Phoenix ............... 2
7 .222
Slturday'a Games
Los Angeles 67, New York 60
Detroit 93, Wash ington 56;
Cleveland 84, Connecticut 56
San Anton io 62. Charlotte 52 ,
Seattle 72
Minnesota
Indiana 79, Sacramento 67
Phoenix 76. Houston 61
Sund8y'a Games
No games scheduled
Monday'• Gam"

n,

S60,n5.
28. (i3) Jeff Green, Chevrole t, 199.

sn,81 2.
$60,304.
31 . {29) Greg Biffle, Ford; 199,$49,190.
32. (25) Dale Jarrett, Ford, 199,$94,893 .
33. (43) Tony Ra1nes. Chevrolet, 199 ~

3 2 17 13
ChiCago ........ ,4 2 3 ·15 15
NewEngland .. 4 3 3 15 16
Columbus ...... 4 4 3 15 15
D.C. United ..... 2 3 5 11 11
Weatern Conference

10
11
15
16
9

W L T P1o GF GA

Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE
ORIOLES-Activated
AHP Rodrigo Lopez from the 15-day dis·
abled list. Optioned RHP Rick Bauer to
Ottawa of the IL.
CLEVELAND IN DIANS-Agreed to
terms with OF Brad Snyder and assigned
him to Mahoning Valley ol the New YorkPenn League.

KANSAS CITY ROYAL&amp;-Piaeed INF
$49 ,940,
· Mendy Lopez on the 15-day diSabled list
34.(42) Kyle Petty, Dodge, 199.$56,935 . Activated 26 Carlos Febles from the 1535. (36) Christian Fittipaldi, Dodge, 199.

GB

$84 ,573.

4 ~,

$48 ,745.

36. (18) Hermie Sadler, Chevrolet, 198,
5
5
6
6
7

W L T P1o GF GA
e_tros 1ars ...... s

26. (26) Johnny Benson, Pontiac. 199.

30. (31) Ward ·Burton . Dodge, 199.

1
1
2 '4

Eastern Conference

$79,790.

$85 ,896.

'!,

Major League Soccer

San Jose ........ 5 2 2 17 13 t 1
Kansas City .... 4 2 5 17 20 17
Los Angeles ... 2 4 4 10
9 11
Colorado ......... 2 6 2
a
a 16
Dallas ............. 1 4 3
6
9 13
NOTE: Three points for · victory, one
p_oln1 for tie.
,
•
SatUrday'e .Gamea
Chicago 3, MetroStars 2
DC United 3 Col umbus 0
C~l~rado 4, New England 1
San Jose 2 , Dallas 1
$91,468.
L A
I 2K
Cl 1
19. (14} Jack SpraQue, Ponti ac, 199,
os nge es . ans~s 1Y
W~nesday s Games
$55.290.
20. (22) Casey Mears. Dodge. 199,
Dallas .at Ch1cago, 8:30p.m.
$80,190.
San Jose at Los Angeles. 10:30 p.m.
21. (12) Joe Nemechek, Che~Jrolet, 199,
Saturday, June 21
$54,540.
Los Angeles at Metro Stars, 4 p.m.
22. (19} Robby Gordon, Chevrolei. 199..
New Eng land at D.C. United. 7 :30p.m.
$79,427.
Chicago at Kansas City, 8 p.m .
2·3 . (34) Mike Wallace, Pontiac, 199,
Colorado at Dalla s. 9 p.m.
$67,790.
Columbus at San Jose, 10 p.m.

29. (40) Jimmy Spencer, Dodge, 199,

GB

Pro soccer

12. (17) Rusty Wallace , Dodge, 200.
$93,457.
13. (20) Jeremy Mayfield, Dodge, 200,
$67,290.
14. (39)' Jamie McMUrray, Dodge. 200,
$63,590.
15. (37) Ricky Craven, Pontiac . 200.
$83,590. .
.
11?. (11) J1mm1eJohnson, Chevrolet, 199,
$71,890.
17. (7} Elliott Sadler, _Ford , t .~9. $90,440.
18. (10) Kevin Harv1ck, Chevrolet, 199,

27. (33) Steve Park, Chevrolet, 199,

Women's National Basketball
Asaoctatlo11

Average Speed: 13 1.219 mph.
Time of Ra ce: 3 hours. 2 minutes, 54
seconds.
· Margin of Victory : 0.774 seconds .
Caulion Flags: 9 for 41 leps.
Lead Changes: 22 amOng 9 drivers .
Lap Leaders: B. Labonte O: T. Stewart 119; D. Earnhardt Jr 20; T. Stewart 21 ...28: S
Marlin 29; T. Stewart 30·31 : R. Newman 32;
T. Stewart 33 : R. Newman 34; T. Stewart
35-38; C. Fittipaldi 39; S. Marlin 40-47; T,
Stewart 48-58: S. Marlin 59-69; T. Stewart
70-72; H. Sadler 73; S. Marlin 74-119; T.
Stewart .120-121 ; G . Bittle 122: S. Marlin
123· 158; T. Stewart 159;-J. Gordon 15D176, K. Busch 177·200.
Top 10 in Points: M . Kenseth ~ 2,275: D.
Earnhardt Jr ~ ~. 090 ; J. Gordon - 2,052;
B. Labonte- t ,998 ; K. Busch - 1,933; M.
Waltrip - 1,900: J. ·Johnson - 1,853; A.
Wallace- 1,798; S . Mar~ n - 1,783. M.
Marlin~ f740 .

erltng Marlin , Dodge. 20~

$ 7oJ~Jo~~le arnhardt Jr., Chevrolet , 200,

Spurs 88, Neta 77
NEW JERSEY (n)

Olymplo Flelda, Ill.

BROOKLYN, Mich. - Results Sunday
from the Sirius Satellite Radio 400 race for
NAS,PAR 's Winston Cup series at
MichiQan lnternalionst Speedway, listing
starting position In parentheses. driver, car,
laps completed with reason out if not runlng at finish, and manGy won :
1. (4) Kurt Busch . Ford. 200. $172,650.
. {1) Bobby Labonte , Chevrolet, 200,
$
,858
3. 6) Jeff.' Gordon , Chevrolet, 200,

6. (30)

18.797(18,500).

Yardage: 7,1 90; Par: '70.
.. .. 67-66-67·72- 272
J1m FuryK .
Stephen leaney ... .....67-68-68·72- 275
Kenny Perry ... ............ 72·7 1-69-67 - 279
Mike Weir .................. 73-67·68·71 -279
Jusiin Rose. ........... .... ?Q-7 1-70·69- 280
Freqrik Jacobson ....... 69-67-7~-71 -280
David Toms ...
.. ... 72-67-70 -71 --.--:280
Ernie Els..
. ... 89-70-69-72-280
Nick Price .................. 7 t -65-69-75- 280
Padraig Harrington .... 69-72·72 -68 - 281
Jonathan Kaye ......... 70.70·72·69- :281
Cliff Kresge ...... .. ........69-70·72·70- 281
Scan Verplank ..... ...... 76-67·68 -70 ~ 281
Billy Mayfair.. .
. ... 69-7 1·67-74- 281
Hidemichi Tanaka .. ... 69-7 1·71-71- 282
Tom Byrum ........... .:... 69-69·71·73- 282
Tim Petrovic ..............69-70·70-73 ~ 282
Jonat,han Byrd .......... 69-66·71-76- 282
Eduardo Aomero ...... .7Q-66-70·76- 282
Peter Lonard .... ....... ... 72-69-74-68- 283 ·
Tiger Woods ........ .... ?Q-66·75-72- 283
Robert Damron ..... .... 69-68·73-73 - 283
.Jay Williamson ..........72~69·69·73- 283
Justin Leo nard ........... SS-70-72·75 ~ 283
Mark Calcavecchia .... BB-72-67·76- 283

NASCAR Winston Cup Series
Sirius Satelttte Radio 400

$81 .475.

San Antonio 93, New Jersey 83
Sund1y, June 15
San Antonio 88, New Jersey
Antonio wins series 4-2

U.S. Open

Auto racing

4. (2 1
5. (9)

San Antonio 84, New Jeraey 79

Sunday, Otympla Flelda Country Club

No games scheduled
Tueaday 'a Qamea
Seattle at Plloenix, 3 p.m.
Sacr~mento at New York , 7:30p.m.
Los Angeles at Detroit, 7:30 p m.
Houston at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Charlene at Indiana, 8 p.m.

s126. 8.

Frtdoy, Juno 13

10 ............ .. ... ...... at MarleHa (DH) , 5·2 L

GB

.554

L

Monday. July 14 - (Roundup) Hidden
Valley CC.
Cost - $7 per person each week .
Reg istration ·- 8:30a.m.
Tee Off- 9 a.m.
Age Groups- 15·17, 13·14, 11·12, toand-under

New Jersey

a ··~

9',

Durham .............. 33 33
.500
Richmo nd ......... 33 36
.478 •
Charlene ......... 31 35
470
Weat Dlvllllon

W

· Monday. June 16 - Hidden Valley cc.
(Point Pleasant)
Monday, June 23 - Riverside Golf
Course {Mason)
Monday, June 30 - Pine Hills Golf
Course {Pomeroy)
•
Monday, July 7 - Cliffside Gail Course
(Gallipolis)

Wodnndoy, Juno 11

4\

saturday's Gamel

W
L
New York ..... . .... 40 28
Boston ..
.... 39 28
Toronto ............. 39 31
Baltimore .......... 32 35
Tampa Bay .. ... 23 44
Central

W

29

10 .444
4\
12 .429
5
11
.421
5
Saturda~ ·· Qamea
Washington 8, Cook County 7
Evansville 7, Gateway 1
Mid-Missouri 7, Florence 3
KellOsha 10, KalamazQO 8
River City at Chillicothe , ppd., rain
Richmond 7, Rockfort1,4
~
Sunday '• Gamet
Washington 4, Cook County 0
Evansville 9, Gateway 2
Mid -Missouri 4, Florence 2
Kalamazoo 6, Kenosha 5, 15 innings
River City at Chillicothe, ppd ., rain, 1st
game
·
River City at. Chi llicothe, ppd., rain , 2nd
game
Rockford 2, Richmood 1
Monday's Gamea
No games scheduled
Tue sday's Games
Gateway at Ct,dlicolhe
Kalamazoo at Rockford
Mid-Missouri at Evansville
Richmond at Cook County
River City at Fl orence
Washington at Kenosha

Legion baseball

International League

Eaat

W

Games

Minnesota (Lohse 6-4) at Kansas City

At1a nta ..
..... 45 22
Montreal .......... 39 30
Philadelphia ...... 35 32
Flonda ...
.... 33 37
New York ......... 31
36 ,
Central

W

Kenosha ............. 8
Rockford .............. 9
A1ver City .............8

Seat11e 2, Atlanta 1
Florida 1O, Texas 4 ·

East

W

'

Oakland 9, Monheal 1

National League

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

37. (41) Todd Bodine, Ford, 191, acci·
dent, $48,695.

38. (38)

$56 ,585.

Dave Blaney. Ford . 167 ,

39. (27) Geoffrey Bodine. Ford , 11 9,
vibration , $48,550.
40. (35) Derrike Cope. Chevrolet, 68 ,
engine failure , $48,515.
41. (8) Ryan Newman, Dodge. 36, engine
failure , $78,355·.
42. (28) Ken Schrader, Dodge, 1, accident, $48,440.
43 . (32) Ricky Rudd , Ford, 1. accident,

$55.765.
Race

a~tlstlca

day disabled list. Tra·nsferred RHP Miguel
Asencio from the 15-day to the 60·day disabled list. Purchased the contract of AHP
Jose lima from Newark of the Atlantic
l eague. Optione d - RHP Nate Field to
Omaha of the PCL.

TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS-Recalled
AHP Rob Bell from Durham of the IL.

TORONTO BLUE

JAYS-Op1ioned

AHP Corey Thurman of the Syracuse ot
the ll.
National League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS-Placed
28 Junior .Spivey on the 15·day disabled
list. Recalled INF Man Kata tram Tucson of

the PCL.
CHICAGO GUBS-0ptioned INF David
Kelton to Iowa ol the PCL. Recalled AHP
Francis Beltran from Iowa

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
a a

v·

HOME

IMPROVE MEN

SALE
Hurry in &amp; you could

INSTANTLY WIN A
•

•

recliner
2'Xl

•

S6() ~

f."~r~ l

PP/G VVinl"'orS

•

I!.J!Ji

:(,)) Soc.-or,d hlLe Wlr.nfJJS
No Purcha"8 ~-ry F&gt;urchH5e w 1tl "&gt;cJJ •ncreiils.e ~ our cNincas o1 Wlr)r11rl" MUll~ IIQ81
resident ol !rO U S . DC. or CAI!lllda . who rlll!lr,aed a~ of m11)0111y m theor s.tatllfprt:niii'ICe.,llmtmy of
rH~C~tnce tn C a~\~4&amp; , llc~l 111111 app!&lt;K Efldi 6123.'03 IIO&lt;lt, 0~ afiO Wlltlll pro~t~ l)v law
Sl1JjiiCI Ill Olho al Rule1 ~ at PI!HIICIP!II""iJ La· Z· Bo)! 1111 11....

Mon • S.t &amp;to 5
Frtdly0-7
Cloud Sundly

FURNITURE&amp;: DESIGN

' IIIAM) lfA!41

I

rt!tlm'niU AT DISCOOI'T PRIUS'

Sealed proposals
witt be received at the
office of the Mayor,
Vtttage Hall, 237 Race
Sl., Middleport, Ohto
until 3 p.m. local time
on Wednesday, July 2,
20031or furnishing all
labor,. materials and
equipment necessary
to complete tha profknown
as
act
Middleport Bu~tneso
and
Residential
S t r e e t.
Reconstruction , and
at said time and
place ,
publicly
opened and read
aloud.
Contract documenta,
bid aheets , plans and
apeclllcatlons can be ·
obtained
at oatd
oHice
Monday
through
Friday
between the hours of
8 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Each bidder Ia
required to furnish
with Ita proposal, a
Bid Guaranty and
Contract Bond In
accordance
with
Section 153.54 of the
Ohio Revll8d Coda.
Bid aacurtty lurnlah.,t In Bond form,
ahall be laaued by •
Surety Company or
Corporetton llct1noad
In the State of Ohto to
provide aald auraty.
Each
Propoaet
nluat contain the lull
name of liiL P'-rY or
perlita
aubmlttlng
the propoul end 111
peraona lnteraatad
therein. Eech bidder
mull aubmlt evl·
lienee of Ita 1xparl·
encea on project• of
· elmllar elze and complexity. The owner
lntenda and raqutru
that thta project be
completed no lotar
than Auguilt 30, 2003.
A 1J111IIty of $100
per dey will be
anaued lor aech
day that the profaot Ia
"ot completed altar
the completion dele
of Aug . 30, 2003.
All contractor• and
subcontractor•
Involved with the
project wilt, to the
extant
prectlcabta

'

u~o Ohio Products,
materials , services,
and labor In tho
Implementation
of
their
project.
Additionally, contrac,
tor compliance with
the equal employ·
mont
opportunity
requirements of Ohio
Administrative Coda
Chapter 123, the
Governor's Executive
Order of t 972. and

Governor's E_xecutlve

Order 84·9 shalt be
required.
Bidders must com·
ply with the prevailing
wage rates on Public
Improvements
In
Meigs County and the
Vlttaga of Middleport,
Ohio as determined
by lhe Ohio Bureau of
E m p t o y m e n, t
Services , Wage and
Hour Division, (614)
644-2239.
VIllage
of
The
Middleport reserves
the right to waive
lrregularlttaa and to
reject any or aU bids.
Sandy
lannarelll,
Mayor VIllage
of
Middleport
(8) 18, 23
Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO,
MEIGS COUNTY
Jemahad Nuggud,
at el., Pl1lntln1

vs.

Aceta•

to Human
Aeaource
Development, II al.,
Dtltndantt
cue No. 02 cv oee
Purau1nt to an
Order of Site directed
to me In the above
entitle ectlon, I will
ollw lor Slle at public
aucuon, 11 tha front
door
of
the
Courthouaf tn Melgt
County, Ohio, In the
ebove named county,
on Thursday, July 17,
2003 at 10:00 a.m.,
the
following
detcrtbad real eattte :
TRACT 1:
Situated In the
Vlllega of Middleport

County of Meigs end
SUM of Ohio:
Being Lot No. 17
and 23 feel oH of the
northerly side of L.o t
15, moklng about 83
feet
fronting
on
Second Street and
running back at the
width 100 feet being
formerly known as
the R. R. Hudson p
property and at the
time occupied by said
R. R. Hudson as his
re~ldence
In the
Vttlage of Middleport
Meigs County Ohio, a
part of which was
transferred from Nella
P. Calderwood, Dec.
to Myrta C. Hobart by
Certificate of Transter
dated May · 11 , 1939,
recorded tn Volume
143, pege 625, Meigs
County
Deed
Recorda.
Reference Deed:
Volume 320, page
247, Meigs County
Deed Recorda.
The
above
deacrlbed real estate
hoa been aaalgnad
Parcel
Auditor's
Number•
1500126.000 end 1500127.()()(),
Property Addreaa:
North Second Ava11u•
Middleport OH
TRACT II
Situate
In the
Vttlaga of Middleport
Couniy of Melgo ond
State of Ohio.
Known
•• and
being attueted In the
Vltlege of Coelport
now a p1rl of the
Vltllga of Middleport
and being Lot No. 18
11 delineated on tha
plot of uld VIllage of
Coalport now a part
of tho Incorporated
VIllage of Middleport,
Ohio, together with ell
the appurtenanc..
and hereditemonta
thereunto belonging,
but aubfecl to all legal
hlghwaya and zoning
reetrlctlon.
Reference Dnda:
Volume 295, pegea
43-69, Matga County.
Dead RIICorda.
Tho
above
detcrtbad reel eatata

has been assigned
Auditors Parcel No.
15.00503,000
Property Address:
567
North
First
Avenue
Middleport OH
Said real estate
appraised
at
$150,000.00 and cannot be sold lor teas
of
than two-thlrda
the appraised value.
Tracts land II are contiguous parcels and
shell be auctioned as
one.

TERMS 01 SALE
Tha
successful
purchaser, as soon as

his btd Is accepted,
shall tie required to
deposit on the dey of
the sole, In cash or by
certified
check
payable to the SheriH,
10% of the amount
of web accepted bid
but In no event teas
than S 1,000.00. Tho
balance of the purchase price shalt be
due and payable to
the ShertH within thirty (30) days from the
date of Confirmation
of Sale.
The purchater ahell
ba required to pay
on
aald
Inter..!
unpaid baltnce at I
10% par annum from
the dele of' conllrrnetlon of tala to the
dtte of payment of
the baltnce unteaa
tha bel1nce ohall be
mtde within eight (8)
d•r,• from the dtta of

fer of real property on
each deed within the
boundaries of Melga
County, as outlined In
O.R.C. 322.02.
(6) 16 &amp; 23 2TC
Public Notice
The
Sclpto
Townalilp
trustees
wttl accept seated
bids lor the lottowlng:
1978
tnlernatlonat
truck, 1800 Load Star
pumper/tanker,

va

gas engine, 5 apaad/2

speed rearend, power
steering, hydrauttc
good
brakea,
tlellg9od cab, Vlnf
00532HCA27268
Seated btda wilt be
opened II the regular
Twp. meeting held
July 2, 2003 at 6:30
p.m. at the Pagevttte
Town Halt. Bids may
be matted to Rtndy
Butcher,
38754
Road,
Mudlork
Pomeroy, OH 45789.
Tha truataaa reaarve
tha right to reject any
or att.btda.
8/11, 18

Get AJump
on
SAVtNGS
,

....

Ralph E. Truaaatt
MtrkE. Shaata
Melgo County Sherin
Attorney
lor
Plalnttlle
(8)18, 23 • 30, 2003

,,,·.

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Public Notice
PUBLIC .NOTICE
A aecond pubttc
h..rlng wtll be held
on June 25th, 2003, et
1:00 p.m. at lha
Commltalonera
onlce lor the purpoaa
of paying the coot of
enforcing and admtn,
teterlng tha con·
veyance let on trane-

.....t"~e you·65 or older?

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1
· = ····-~---······································
'

'

�www.mydal

QCrihune - Sentinel - 1\egi~ter
CLASSIFIE -D

we eov.-~.-7

Kenmor ~

Wash er
and •
General Electric Dryer tor
Sale.
$75 for bo1h .
(740)441 -1516.

MdM••on

CountluUke
' No 0...
I!IMC.nl

Kmg
Size Pil low Top
Mattress set. New sl1lt in
Plastic, Sale $299. Cell
Phone 304-412-8098 or
304·552· 1424.

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
'
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
m:rtbune
·sentinel
Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallytribune.com

Your
Ad •••

·Offee llo(Jj£J'
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00. p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AQ
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\"\ \ CII \t I \ II \ l '-1

t

~M£ I

fill My name is Jeft,ey
Goon. I am a lonely fellow
looking for a companion .
Should likB" to talk and good
looks would be a plus. · I
h_ave brown hair, blue eyes,
s:g· Anyone interested
contact me at PO

" A STARSEARCH"
Singers B..mds &amp; Vocal .
Groups. All Styles &amp; Ages.
Nashville Record EOO.
Seeking New Talent.
Goming to
Huntington/Charleston.
731-424·2229 or 731·4242.141

·•

rro

r~ ~y~ I

HOME INTERIOR SALEI
Discounted Items, light
relreshments, door prizes.
Saturday, June 21st,
9:00 to 5:00 Buffalo Town
Hall. For more information
Call 304 937 ·2929

C·1 Beer Carry Out permit
WANTFD
for sale, Chester. Township,
Meigs County. send letters
T08UY
oJ. interest to : The Daily
Sentinel; PO Box 729·20, Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
~meroy, Ohio 45769
Silver.
Gold
Coins,
Prootsets, Diamonds, Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency,M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
GIVEAWAY
Second Avenue, GalliPolis,
740-446-2842 . .
F)~·male Rat Terrier/Beagle
I \11 '1 41, \ ll \ I
fllllix . Almost 1 year old. Has
'\ ll{\1 ( 1 '\
e)rs &amp; tall clipped . Been "'l'fP"_ _ _ _ _ _...,

r

nino

Spayed &amp; has had rabies
stlot, lOveable. gciod with
klds. Needs a country home.
IndoOr or outside pet.
Access to a Computer?
(304)937·3348
Earn $450·$1500 monthly
part-lime or $2:,000·$4,500
Kittens • Free. (740)441. fuiHime. 1-B00·585·0760 or
0426.
www.OurAnswer.com

ElCperienced Phlebotomist
for first shift at local Medical
Lab. Resume' to : P.O Box 33
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563~
Help wanted caring lor the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now paying m1n1mum wage,
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am·
5pm, 3pm· ~ 1pm, 11 pm·
7am, call 740-992·5023.
HVAC Installer Opening:
Benefits available. Apply at
or Send
Resume
to :
Bennett's MH Heating &amp;
Cooling
1391
Safford
School, Rd . Gallipolis, OH
45631 (7·40)446-9416 or 1·
800·872-5967
Independent Contr•ctors
Motor
Route
Drlvtrt
Wanted tor Maaon County,
Point Plea.ant Register
tor Info contact Sean
Cullen 304-675-1333 Ext.

Lost· on Hayman Rd .. Lang
Bottom, Oh, copper-nosed
beagle, Reward, (740)843·
1034

Small female red dog lourld
61~ 2 Foodland parking lot at
Porter, weanng two collars.
(740)367·7565

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win I
1·888·582·3345
I~

I \I I ..., I \II

r.p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

r16

HmiDJ

.(3)FHA &amp; VA homes se1 up
for immediate possession all
within 15 min. of downtown
Gallipolis. Rates as low as
6%. (740)446·3218.

213 acres Level Lot, 2 story

low to form fovr time'~ Words.

J • M Conatructlon
Shingle &amp; Met81Roofs,
Concrete, Guner, Painting,
RemodelinQ, Siding, Pole

Interior &amp; Exterior, custom
d k &amp; fences. Ch an
I
w.ood
k Allec
Odd J b
Ltn
.
o s.
(304)675-3733

I

. I 1I I .

WM\ do basic alterat1ons and

. .IG_. .:.•[Hi- ~-1. ~. cutie"I'mannounced
not just a manicurist," the
.:-~. --.-1. A_,.RI_P'
.
to her client. "I
•
.. like to .think of myself as some: r-rl--,A_._P-r-E..,.L_T-r,....-ltone
j'lho lives.by a rule of--- --.'
O
I I I I I
3
Quoted

by filling '" the mi.Sing woods
from otop No. boi.W.

you do,elop

~ PRI NT NUMBERED LfTHRS IN

H1f&gt;E .\QUARE5

mending. Reasonable rates.
For Information, call Mary M.
Houck (740)446~8602 if no
answer, lea\16 meSsage
Will do odd jobs· $4 per hr.
Babysitting or house clean·
ing. Ask for Stacy. 74D-44f·
9761.

All re•l estate adver11eing
In thl1 newspaper i1
subJect to the Federal
F1lr Houeing Act of 1968
which makaa It Illegal to
adv..-tl1e "any
preference, limitation or
dl1crlmlnatlon based on
rtce, color, religion, Hx
temlllal 1t11tua or n1tlonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any 1uch ·
pret.rence, limitation or
dlecrlmlnatlon."
Thl1 newapeper will not
knowingly accept
tdvertlaementa for rHI
eatete which 11 In
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
informed thet all
dwelling• edvertlnd In
thlt new1paper ere
avalleble on an equ.l
opportunity btHa.

3, pedroom, 2 baths, 2 car
garage, 6 stall barn, 13
acres with lanced lots,
Bidwell. $65,000. (740)256·
19n
3 year old Brick Ranch ,
3,000+ sq.fl .. 2-1/2 acres,
inground
pool. storage
building, e~~:cellent neighbor·
hood, (740)446-0149

Bank Foreclosure Property·
large 2 story, 4 bedroom. 2
bath, located on .34 acre,
level lot at 407 S. Broadway
Street. R~ci ne, Oh., call 740
949·2210, ask for Sheila for
an appointme"nt · to see.
P'lced at $28,000.00.

MOBil.!: Ho~m;

roRSALE

mR Rmr

home,

r

t

SPACE
IURRENT

r

~~~E

1

hunting. pasture (priced to - - - - - -- - sell) Call (740 )441 -0806 · 2 bedroom apartment avail·
Leave Messa e.
able in Syracuse. $200
deposit , $315 ,per month
rent, rent includes· water,
sewer, trash, no pets . rental
Point Pleasant. 6th St application, references and
across from coU rthouse, suffjcienl, income to qualify,
office/commercial bldg. ask· (740)378-61 11
ing $50.000, day' 304-675·
5734
evening 304·675·5038 ,

j

~

ACREAGE

1/2 acre tot, Tycoon Lake on
Eagle Road . City water.
$8500.00 (740 )247·1100 or
(304) 532·6271

14x70,

Good Qual1ty straw. Volume
discount &amp; delivery avail·
abl e. Heavy square bales.
$2.85 per bal e. (304 )675·
5724

Tuesday, June 17
6:30pm
. All the packs you can
play $20.00
·
Starburst $1,700.00

-$1
_2_.500
__
· _w_nh_•_xl_"_'_
· -7-40_·
446·4836
1995 14x70 Ail electric 3br.
2 ba, new "carpet, 2 miles out
Rt-60 From Holzer Hospital.
Good Condition. $12,000.
446·4734

r.'o·-·"-OI.ISES···--,J

r:

~Must

be

18

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611

to play or lobe in hall"

A!J'rol
!·OR SALE .
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas.
c hevys ,
etcl
cars/trucks hom $500. For
listings 1·800-719·3001 exl
3901

AliTOS

PF.rs

Jeff Warner Ins.

Pom eroy, Ohio, 45761)

1-740-992-7007

992-5479

Hours10.8 pm

Spring ~-*
~:&lt; Special ~:~
TIIEUPEmC
MASUGE
~:~

TRUCKS

1,---ro~~R-SIIALE:o;;;_.,J
2001
Dodge
Dakota
Clubcab Motorsport series.
Loaded, bed line r, CD
Player,
Keyless
entry.
Excellent condition . 22,000
miles. $15,000. '(740)446·
4616
2001 Dodge Dakota Sport.
Black, 4&gt;&lt;4. extended cab
$11,500. Call 446-7311 or
645·4139.

&lt;iet lnd Free!
Heather A. Fry LM.T.

740-992-5379

750 East State Street Phone (740)5•93-661'11

Offer good thru 5- 1 H B

Albens, Ohio

Al,w now accepting

mosl ins11rance

Septic Systems,
Footers and
Concrete,

PC DOCTOR

k '

Excavation, Utilities,

JIM'S SMALL

ENGINE REPAIR
321 19 Welshtown Rd .

Back hoe and
Dozer, Ponds.

We Make House Calls

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

r'IO

1986 Honda Magna, excelM&lt;JIURC.'YCUS
lent shape, $2,600 firm :
Lane rocker/rec liner, $300;
call alter 5pm (740)99,2- 1996 Kawasaki 750 Vulcan . .
Garage kept, great condi·
6154
tion . 7200 miles . 675-5630,
1987-XLH-1100
Harley 675·5664, 606-923·6171

Gravely

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Davidson motorcycle. nice
bike $5,500. OBO 304-675·

204 Condor Street

1997 Custom Sottail tow
miles , super sha rp ride . Lots
3824
of extras. $16,000. 441·7038
1999
Harley
Heritage leave message.
Springer, eXc. condition 4462002 Honda XR100 . like
6253
new, $1 ,750 .00. 7.40·256·
1928

movie'

ClUilrartleedlll Fod 11111111
opon;ng QOOd.
Sllop"""''·
Cal'tlr'a OuickStorll
alectronic8, and video games online.
All at aftordable piiceet

Visit www.cartertpromotiMa.com

Pomeroy, Ohio

Law11 and Garden Equiptnent is our
business, not our sideline

Ptt:~tllm

Siding • New Garages

Qt\

'IIIII you:

...
""'rt 118ft
• lml'f"'VV memory
• , ... happier

Consolidate your billa with

First Continental
12,500.00 lo $150,000.00
Bad cro1d~ welcomed
LOANSO.A.C
Free consultation with live agent
No application lee
Toll·1- 1-81M05-33711
www.lwlllbldtbttrM :com

Buy
or sell.
Riverine
Antiques, .1124 East Mainon SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992·2526 . Russ Moore,
owner

Ml•iCFLIANEOIJS
MEROIANIJL~E

Mailing Our 5ales Brochure's!
Foee Supplies. Postoge!
Start Immediately!
Genuine bWortunlyl
For Free Information,
Cill Toll Free:

10.000 BTU air condition.
$75 ; 23 " Murray push
mower, $50; Stihl weed
eater, $75: {740)992·6833

1·800·357 ·11 70
17-good aluminum windows,
3 sizes , plus 3 sm . ones $10.
a piece for larger one $5. for
sm. Call 740·446-0719

Earn big proNtal
Training!
FrN Info!
800-311-4555xl$05

• Replacement
_Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
DURO-LAST,

$FREE CASH NOW$ lo'm wooll~y !omllieo
unloading millions ol doflara, to help
mile their tax~ . Writt lmmtdilttly.
I
110-64 QUEENS BLVD .. ..15 FOREST

CAMPERS&amp;

"'AFFORDABLE LEGAL SERVICES"
Dlvorco$115
Adoption $215
INCORPORATION $115
Not Do it vourself Kitl
CAU1-ICJ0.30!.1170
lor lfee 1nlormation

MmuR HoMES
1976, 21ft 5th wheel ,
Cavalcade, AC/stove. big
ref .
good
condition .
(304 )736·6024

Flro You' Llncllonllll
S$$0 DOWN HOMES!
No Rent\. TaJC Rei&gt;06 &amp; Bankruptcieal
OKI$0 to low down For Llel~ngel
1·8()0.501·1 n1 eKt. 8998

C-

10

flllll PIOI!Iomo?

HOME

IMPROVEMEN'IS

Wt can holp ""' your 1111 bock.
FQI' FREE Information
wllhoul olllloj1111on

BASEI\'IENT
WATERPROORNG
Unconditional tifet1me guarantee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 HIS. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basemen!
Waterproofing ·

1-210-Tm

General
Home
C&amp;C
Maintenance· Paintirig, vinyl
siding, ca rpentry, doors ,
windows. bathS. mobile
home repair and more. For
tree estimate call Ghet, 740·
992·6323.

v

I

NORTHUP
CONSTRUC·
TION-Home repair, room
additions, garages, roofing,
siding, carpeting , &amp; remod·
eling, extensive experience
call 245·9023 or 245·9704

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

. Slue 5'x1 o.'q'~
to 10'x301
Hours
7:00AM- 8:00 PM
1/14/ 1

Advertise

in this

96 Hornet 25ft T.T. Sleeps 6,
queen bed, microwave and
stereo. Excellent co.ndition .
(740)388·8402 (740)388·
8422
'I In II I '

Hill's Self
Storage

ROOFING
Flat Roof
SpecialistsCommercial and
Residential
Saves on Cooling.
Metal and Mobile
home roofs- No
Problem. 15-Yea r
Guarantee
992·7953
591-4641
591-7002

A904 Dodge automatic
transmiss ion to lit small
block Dodge VB 5200: Also .
front wheel drive automatic
to fit 2.2 litre Dodge $200,
both ready to run . 740·44 1·
0199 avenin s.

• Ha¥1 mort IIMf9Y

Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
of every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get 5 FREE

Nev..: Homeq • Vin)·!

ACC.'ESSORIES

vou

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171

BUILDERS me.

Auro PARTS &amp;

... """'"""'"'·
SUinciS , a'IOwlf'!O

space for $25
per month.

iftOWARDL1

WRITfSfl

*ROOFING
I dOME
· MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS
I•FrnESUmetes.

948·1405

Shop
Classlfleds!
I

I

'

Call now to reserve

xmu: check.

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES
Box

l89 MIDDLEPORT.

OH 45760

740-843-5264

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

:V I$tfn

Ta~e

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me d:; 1t for youl

HOME CREEK

ENT., INC.
992-7953

YOUNG'S
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garage&amp;
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing I Gutters
• VInyl Skiing &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

NELSON'S LAWN

~~~
High&amp;! Dry

CARE
Residential •
Commercial Mowing
• Mulching • Edging
• Fertilization • Leaf
Removal • Pruning
• Landscape
M!l.intenance Spring
and Fall cleanup

SeU-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

GREENHOUSE

Fruit tr Flowering Trees tr
Shrubs
(Ritoaoderrdrons £r
NDWO,O,.
Azaleas)
·• wte~c •ytleht
all on Sale
to d•rkl

......

·No-risk internet business.
Great new concept No sell·
ing, free tools, training. No
runaround. 74()..256·6130.

there when you need it.

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More

a

Iambic - Frown- Yokel- Temple- WELCOME

· Finally ... Money paid to yo,u. when cancer
sLrikes. You choose the amount up to $50,000!
Pays in addition to other insurance.
You use Lhe mone y however you like.
Cancer will strike when you least expect it.
h will leave you and your fami ly financially
strnpped. CANCER CHECK will be

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Bedding, Vegetable 6- Sweet
Pt*to PlalttS.
..~ tllflfUIIIs Perennials

Yesterday's SCRAM-LET&gt;. ANSWERS

CANCER CHECK

Free- Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992&gt;6215
Pomeroy, Ot11o

519·814

ar

al

MYERS PAliNG
Henderson, WV

8711-24&amp;7 or 448-2112
Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

SUE~s

lngs and gutters. Ca ll
(740)446-()151 ask lor Ron
or leave message.

"W.Y's # 1 Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

Sunset Home
Construction

Advertise
in lhis
space for $25
per month.

GITTEI
I

mo. pd

1-800-822-0417

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411

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

WH!· pressure wash homes.
' trailers, decks, metal build·

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

992-2975

2000 Sun-tracker 16 fl. pan·
toon boat 60 HP. with assesseries, $t2,500. ·may trade
tor Honda Trike or motor
home ol equal value 304·
, 675·3000 leave rnessage, o r
304-675·6277
evenings

lhll
tDr

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1999 Aquatron , 18', w/3.0
Mercruiser
inboard /out·
board. excellen~ condition ,
low hours, (740)949·4026

L. Rirl

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

5~1-7002

19' 1985 Bayliner, 305 VB ,
open bow. blue and white,
runs pertect, good condition
740·441-0199 evenings.

"""""'
"""'
Hubb!lrd
nabnl prnomm

Tree Service

591;4641

~

~:::::~~~~::~;~~~~~~

JONES'

992-7953

OH 45769

740·992·2432

MaruRCYUES

/cH€VRO,~T/

Buy 1 Gift Certificate.

• Lawn Mowers
•Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

Pomeroy,

LARRY SCHEY

Easter &amp; Mothers Day

WE REPAIR

lJNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO r:iET ANSWF.P..

"My home town Is probably the smallest place you
will ever see." one old timer told me. "The mayor painted
'Come Again'·on the back of the town's WELCOME sign.'

Nru; ItcmJ A!Mt•d J.Hckl)•
36198 Jlt'IICII F()rk Rd.

r lloA~:s~roiiS I A~~~~~9F;~::;~~~~~
BISSEll

r

i5«l

Cellular

A variO'I) vf ··•unmo n" lo:•

d o rhing ~ nrl hu ruing
equip1111'nt

Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

June 19th
Pomeroy
Ea les

r'IO

comes fifsl!

'u nder New
Managagement

SMALL
ENGINE
REPAIR

FREE FISH
FRY

r

Wl!are 1/16 customer

CloUd Sund•ti•

Announcements

mRSAu:

WILSON'

:\lUI\' SI'IU'U'S

Stop &amp; Compare

American Legion
Middleport

Good Used Appliances ,
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed .
Washers,
Dryers.
Ranges ,
and
Refrigerators . Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appl iances, 76
Vine St., (740)446·739B

Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark..
Chape l Road , Porter. Ohio.
2 Bedroom Apt. 5 m1n. past (740)446· 7444 1·877-830-:
Holzer 740-441·0194
9f62. Free Estimates, Easy
linan.cing , 90 days same as
Apartment upstairs 46·112 cash . Visa/ Master Card ~·
Mill Creek.
2-bedroom. Drive- a- little sa\16 alot.
Water/Trash
included.
$275/month. S275/Deposit · Queen size bed frame. mat·
(740)441 -0583 0 1 (740)446· tress&amp; box springs 6 mon;
7620 after 7.
old paid $550.00 will take
$250.00 304·882·2626
'
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET Thompsons Appliance &amp;.
PRICES AT JACKSON Repair-675·7388 . For sale,
automatic
ESTATES, 52 Westwood re-conditioned
Drive from $297 to $383. washers &amp; dryers, refrigera·
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call tors, gas and electr ic,
740·446·2568.
Equal ranges. AJD. and wringer
washers. Will do .repairs on
Housing Opportunity.
major brands in shop or at
Bedroom Kitchen D.R. L.A., your home.
Refrig &amp; stove. bath .367·
7015 $275. md.

Located at end ol Chillicothe
Road in Gallipolis. Two bed")oms . $400/month plus
,
roR RENT
security
deposit
$400
1~3 bedrooms foreclosures required . Utilities not includhome from $199 month 4% ed. No pets . 740·441·1108.
down 30 years at 8.5% APR
Nice one bedroom unlur·
tor li sting call 1·800·319·
nished apartment. Range &amp;
3323 el&lt;l. 1709
refrigerator provided. Water
2 bedroom. References &amp; &amp; garbage paid. Deposit
Deposit. No Pets. (304)675· required . Call 740·446·4345
after Bpm .
5162
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:._

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

GIWN

r

r ":o~=

2000, 14x70 Claylon 3br.
2ba. Excel lent Condition.
Beautiful engagement ring.$.
Gallipolis, Mill Creek Rd, 1 .Larg&amp; .. Carport. front porch,
wedding bend . . 14K gold
b
heat
purnn
w/underpennlng
. f
It
mt rom go course, 3 r.
"""'
ranch .. brick front, new vinyl &amp; appliances. Must be 3 Bedroom, large lawn. No North 4th Ave., Middleport, 1 w/1 1 diamonds, size 7 1/2,
Reference and bedroom furnished apart· bought tor $800 at Zales will
st'd'1ng, h eat pump, exce 11ent Maved 1rom 1o1. $17 ,500 . Pets
cond ., appro)( . 1/3 ac. asking Call99·~-po78 after 5pm.
Deposit. ·
(740)379-2540 ment, no pets, deposit &amp; ref- sell lor $350. (740)247·2070
"
5
304
Patriot
Village
eref)ces, (740)992·0165
$77 •500 . caII auer pm
BURN , Fat,
BLOCK
2001 16 X80 Schult Single Beauti ful Riverfron t 2br. 2
675-5038
Cravings,
and
BOOST
Now Taking ApplicationsWide, like new. 3 bedroom.
Energy l,.ike
You Have
For sale by owner, ranch 2 bath, AC. Call after 4pm·. t/2·bath Syracuse w/deck, 35
West 2
Bedroom
style home behind Addalfille • Motivated seller. (740)256- AC , Jacuzzi, WID. $650 · Per· TownhOuse
Apartments , Never ElCperienced.
school,
month. Utilities Included .
WEIGHT· LOSS
3BA 11 12 bath. 6306
Includes Water Sewage.
REVOLUTION
jacuzzi in master suite, new - - - - - - - - - ~(7_4~0.:_)5~9._4·.:44.:4.:6:.__ _ __ Trash, $350/Mo.; 740-446·
New product launch October
siding, 2 car g"age, ve~
Cole's
Mobile
Homes
·
0008.
·1
Taking applications for small
23. 2002 . Call Tracy at .
nice home 367-7039
US 50 East, Atheils, Ohio, one
bedroom
house
Tara
Townhouse
(740)441-1982
s·mgle I am•ly
.
Middleport. call alter 5pm,
dwelling, 4 -45701,740-592-1972
Apartments , Very Spacious. Central Cooling Systems, ~
bedrooms. 1 bath, living
(740)992·6154
Coming Soon The All New
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors , CA, 1
. new &amp; used , as law as
room, dining room, kitchen . ~Pinnacle, Best Buy" Home
MOBILE H~=
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Vl'"lLI"J
Located at 611 4th Avenue
Adul.t
Pool
&amp;
Baby
Pool
,
5850.00
installed
May
on
X ~ lot. $4 5,000 _ You saw them last year.
FOR RF..NT
Patio, Start $385/Mo . No Special ! (740)446·6308
Many were sold at a fan1as·
245 7221
245 7203
"
Call
"
or
tic low price. Now with more 2 Bedroom . air. ww carpet. Pets, Lease Plus Security Full Size Mattress Set New
FORCLOSURE
delu)(e features than e\18r. very nice, no pets, in Deposi t Req uired. Days : in Plastic wtwarr. Sacrifice
3 Bedroom home only
"Where You Gel Your . Gallipolis. 446·20()3 446- 740·446-3481 ; Evenings: S1t9, Cell Phone 304·412·
740·367·0502 .
$13,500 for t:sting call
Money's
Worth" Coles 1409
8098 or 304·552-1424.
1-800·719·3001 Ext. F144
Mobile Homes, US 50 East. - - - - - - - - - ::-:-::-:--::-----Athens, Ohio (740)592-1972 Beautiful River View Ideal Twin Rivers Tower is accept- J 0 . 400 Lawn M6wer 60
.
FORC~OSURE
For
1 Or 2 People , 1ng applications tor wailing inch cut, hi·w ra nge , power
3 Bedroom home only
Land Home Packages avail· References, Deposit, No list fer Hud-subsized. 1· br. steering . 23 hp Kohler
$13,500 lor listing call
able. In your area, (740)446· Pets, Foster Trailer Pa rk , apartment : call 675·6679 engine . Runs well . $2500.
1·800-719·3001 Ext. F144
3384
740-441·018 1.
EHO
(3041675·8069

40 1

fuy&amp;

r

Furnished one bedroom . Trailer space lor rent in
electric heat pump. w/d. no
I
pets, references required .
trash &amp; waier. pa1d, rent
$300 plus deposit &amp; electric,
New 2003 Doublewide. 3 BR (740)992 ·6862
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down
and &amp;295/mo. 1·800-691· _M_o_bi.le_h_o_m_e_lo-,-,-e-n-t.-n0
Full size bed $75, full size
6777
pels, (740)992·5858
bed $150 , twin mattress &amp;
box springs $80 , queen ey.ize
mattress $50. king size mattress &amp; box spri ngs $100,
Nice 43.5 acre farm with 1 and 2 bedroom apart· nice Broyhill couch &amp; cha1r
32X16 metal pole barn on ments, furnished and unfur· $175, table and chairs $125 .
Greentree Road , Addison nished, security deposit lamps $10 each, cottee table
twp. Wooded, lot with level required. no pets. 740-992· $45. Skaggs Appliance 76
Vine St. 446·7398
frontage nice for build1ng, 22 18

4 acres Eagle Ridge Ad.,
1973
Schultz
12X65, excavated, electric, septic
Central air, on rented lot perm it &amp; water avai lable ,
available to continue-renting . (740)992·0031
(740)446-1089 leave mes·
Lot lor sale in Racine.
sage.
(740)992·5858
Grac1ous living. 1 and 2 bed·
1975 Schultz 2 br. mobile Nice mobile home lots, quiet room apartmen.ts at Village
and
Riverside
home, good cond. new cook country setting, $11 5 per Manor
stove. underpinning &amp; porch month. includes water. Apartments in Middleport.
incl uded priced $6500. 304· sewer, trash, 740·332~2167 From $278-$34B. Call 740·
992-5064 . Equal Housing
675·3000 leave message.
Rl"\1\1'
Opportunities.
1994 Century 3 bedroom

3br, 3ba, wlliving room &amp;
dining room . Great Room mobile

-~-:~_~"-g_s_a_5._oo_o_._3_0_4·-6-75_·

MOBILE HOMES

The Corner Restaurant,
Middleport, Oh., business &amp;
bui lding &amp; property, estab·
lished 1991 , turnkey opera·
10 used homes under tion, (740)992·3955
$2,000, will 'help with dell,. l!.o.;.;...;.;.;.;;..;.;,;;.;.._ _,
~ call Harold 740·385·
Lo-r.&gt; &amp; ·

8

I

OR
_ _...1304_.:_J6_7_5_·46-62___
MR FIX IT!II
Coinp•·to
.., Rem-.......
.....- llng

i~IJLP/\~;

$9

New 14 wide only $799
down and only $159.63 per
month, call Nikki 740·385·
7671

house, 8 rooms, 2 baths,
porch and large deck, heat
pump, rece ntly • remodeled,
co rne r ol Green tree of ·~
Bulaville
Pk.
$69,500.
(740)367-7272
14X70 Mobile Home with
7X21
expando,
newly
3 Bedroom newly remod·
remodeled, newer fUrnace.
eled, In Middleport, call Tom
A must to seell (740}446·
Anderson after 5 p.m.
7901 .
992·3348

4005

Barns. and Garages.
FREE ESDMATES!
(304)593-2153

'..:Omglere the chuckle

!'OR SALE

Truck Drivers. Immediate
hire, class A COL required,
excellent pay, experience
required. Earn up to 11,000.
por w..k.Call 304·675·

l

lottt"'"' o:)f thl!ll
lour scramblo!d word• bs·

@

r

Co'"'

Q li~~torronQ"

'

ParHime Dental Assistant,
progressiw dental ollice In
need of experienced dental
assistant in Gallipolis area.
Send resume and references to P.O Box 565,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631

Secretary-Receptionist for
local cleaning company.
Answer phone and general
oflice dulles. Send resume
to : Special Care Sel'l.lices,
17-43 Centenary Road ,
Laundry and d~ cleaning Gallipolis, OH 45631
person needed to operate
cleaning service. ·The _Town of Mason will be
local
Experience preferred, but accepting applications for
will train. Send resume to; Police -Officers, would prefer
Special Care Services, 1743 certification,
applications
Centenary Road , Gallipolis, can be pick up at the
OH 45631
Municipal building.

T~~~:~;~y S©RJJ1A-~£~s·
Ull,d br ClAY A. POUAN _..;.._ _ _ __

s

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
you do business with people
you know, and NOT to send
money through the mall until
you have Investigated the
offenng.

John'a Contr•cllnsl
servlcn
talk the NEW Avon. Call
carpentry. paintin g. roofing,
Marilyn, 304·882·2645 to
insulation, decking·free estl·
learn all the ways il can work
mates 7 4Q-367 ·0437
for you .

Mecli Home Health Agency,
Inc .
seeking
lull -time
College
licensed Physical Therapist Galllpollo
(Careers
Close
To
Home)
lor Ohio and West VIrginia
client based. We offer a Call Today! 740-446·4367,
1·800-214-0452
competitive salary, benefits
package, 401 k, fJe)( time, - .gllllipoliscaraercotlege.com
Rea ft90-05·1274B.
SIGN ·ON·BONUS.
and
EOE . Please send resume
liJ
WANJ'ED
lo 430 Second Ave nue ,
4446
To Do
,•
•
Gallipolis, OH 45631 Attn :
Diana Harless, Clinical
Bookkeeping in my home,
Experienced
ca rpenter s· Manager
price neg., references avail·
must be fam iliar with atl
phases ol residential remod· Part·time collector needed· able, call Bart::l after 6pm,
eling, valid drivers license, Gallia, Meigs, and Mason (740)992-()762
tools. transportation, and counties . 30-35 hours per
references. Local work, pay week, must be honest, reli· Elderly care In your home or
or
da"y.
Night
based
on
experience able, and have good driving mine.
Applications · ava ilable at record . Send resume to Paul Experience and references.
Ohio
Valley (304)675·79\11
Christians
Construction, Barker,
1403
EaStern
Ave. , Publist]ing, 825 Third Ave.
For Hire, odd jobs, Bobcat
Gallipolis. 446-4514
Gallipolis Ohio 45631
work, clean &amp; repair barns,
fencing. etc. (740)256-1977

B y3 0 L N

Sunday Display: '1:00 p . m.
Thursday for Sunday5

Need to earn Money? Lets

Kipling Shoe Company is
now accepting applications
lor a Managers PositiOn,
Point Pleasant Location.

WOlD
GAM I

.. 1"

Publication

HOM!l&gt;
roRSAU:

Medi Home Health Agency,
Inc.
seekinQ
part-time
Medical Social Worker for
the Gallipolis, .Ohio area.
Masters Degree req uired.
We offer a competitive
salary, benefits package,
401k, and flex time. EOE.
Please send resume to 430
Second Avenue , Gallipolis,
OH 45631 . Attn: Diana
Harless. Clinical Manager

I \1~\l"' t 1'1'1 11 "
,\ 11 \ 1 '-I IIU I'\

1980 CJ5 Jeep. 360 4 sp.
New Engine, Tires &amp; Top. 90 Ford Probe, auto, looks
N1ce
Jeep.
$6 ,300. good, runs but need work,
$300, (740)247·2070,
)679·1310
(304
Queen Pillow Top Mattress
set. New In plastic w/Warr. 1985 Honda Accord XL
Will accept $199 . Cell phone (7401446-3969
95 Hyundai Scoupe, 5·
304·412·8098 "' 304-552·
speed, AJC , 73,000 · miles,
1987
Monte
Carlo·SS,
406
1424.
S.B .. TH350 trans, 8S 10 runs great. S2000 (740)4411083
Riding . Mower· 18 H.P. 39 bolt rearend, black. corvette
InCh CUI. $600. (304)675· ralleys willet caps, lint, AJC ,
lnter1or perfect . . $6,500. -R-om_e_A_u-to_S_a-le_s_._9_2_6_7
4849
(3041675· 1175
State Route 7, Proctorville,
BUILDING
1992 Mercury Cougar 2dr, OH (740)886·1343. 2001
S1.1PPLJfS
automatic, acyl , auto sun- Pontiac GrandPrhc $10,588,
roof, good tires, Exceflent 2001
Chevrolet '' Prism
Block, bnck , sewer pipes, Condillon. (3041615·1M9
$9,995,
2000
Ranger
windows, lintels , etc . Claude
$7,995, 2000 Chevro let
Winters , Rio Grande, OH 1993 Chevy Camaro Z28,
1500·4X4 $14,300, 1998
Black. 379·2282
Cell 740-245·5121 .
Voyager
$4,995 ,
1997
1994 Corvette Coupe, white, Grand CaravanSE S5,995 ,
red leather interior, loaded, 1995 Neon $2,688. 199:;
!'OR SALE
$11.000. 740·682·7512
Intrepid
$2,850,
19B8
AKC Chinese Pugs 4 mo. 1995 Firebird. black . V·6 , Chevrolet 1500-4X4 S3,850,
old female, vet ched&lt;ed and auto, air, runs great, $2700 1997 Cutlas $2.500. 1995
$2,395,
1995
Dakota
shots 7 40·446· 1944 Leave OBO, (740)742·2357
GrandAmGT $2.995, 1993
Message. $350.
1992 Ford Ranger. 4 cyl. 5
EscoriClT $1.395. 1986
sp., 1 owner, $1700.
Dodge 1500·4X4 $1 ,795 .
Miniature Appaloosa horse (740)742·2357
w/saddle, bridle &amp; bit, geld·
TRUCKS
lng, 100 % safe for kids , t995 Hyundai . New Tires ,
FOR
SALE
Excellent
Condition.
$2.300
$600, (7401742·3802
Day
(740)6 45-2 192,
1988 Dodge Ram D10 pickPomeranian Puppies,' 2 Evening (740)446·0 101
up, VB. auto, air, runs good
males, ready May 28th ,
1995 Jeep Wrangler. 4 cyl. 5
$1500 OBO 446·2444
'"
(740)992·3595
speed. 4WD. Soft top and
bikini top. Great Condition
Registered Bordei' Collie
137.000 miles . (740)367·
Pups. Firsl shots, wormed ,
1999 1-ton Chevrolet with
7 1'52 ot (7401339·0707
imported bloodline, working
u.tility bed , 40,000 miles.
parents . perfect Father's 1999 Oldsmobile Ate ro $1B,500. For more info, call
Day gift. (740)379-91 10
$6,800. (740)256·91 97
(740)245·5788 .

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publllhlng reHrVea the right to edit. ;eject, or cancel any ad at any lime. Errors muat bl reported on tl'le flrat day of
i
Trlbune-Santlnet-Reglater will bt reaponalbla for no mora than the coat of the epace occupied by tha error end only ihe first lneartlon. We shall not be
any loll or expenu that rttultt from lhe publication or oml11ion of tn advertlument. Correction will be made in tht flrat available edition. • Box
are _
atwtya confkientlal. • Currant rite card applle1. • All rul eatate advertlsementa art 1ubject to the Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1968. • Thia """"P''P"I
accepts only help wantld ada meeting EOE atendarcll. We will not knowingly accept any advenialng in violation of the law.

20

Litt le Caesars In I he
Gallipolis area is now hiring!
Accepting
application/resumes
for
Mgmt positions and crew
members. Apply in person
or fax resume -to (740)886·
095 1.

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

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

All Display: 12 Noon 2
, Business Days Prior To

l.n•o-HEu&gt;-•W•AI'I'IlD--rl~~no Hw&gt;W~

Loveable, well mennered, AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
young female tabby, would Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
make goad companion . 675· 1429.
Free to
good
home.
(740)446·7143
CookJWaitress Meig s Co.
Honest. Good Personality
Pallets far giveaway call must be able to cook &amp;
446·2342
Serve. Interview {740)594·

LosT AND
FOUND

iu1~day In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Sunday• Paper

• Start Your Ads With A ICeyword • lndude Complete
Description • Include A Prke • Avoid Abbreviation•
t Include Phofte Number And .lddre.t When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Days

YARD SALE

Pullins - 4 family yard sale
with a lot of misc. items,
~aby girl cl&lt;;~thes tram 0·6
months, some baby furniture
items, woman's clothing
mad. &amp; large and some
· men 's clothing. Will be on
June 19th &amp; 20th from Bam?. Located on At. 33 just out
of Pomeroy riear the four

Display Ads

Dally In~Column: 1:00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

r

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel ·Beanis, Pipe Rebar
For
Coricrete.
Angle,
Channel , Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Dra ins,
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday .&amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm . Closed
Thursday,
Saturdat
&amp;
Sunday. (740)44&amp;-7300

Register

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

Word Ads

'lP.' column lnch weekdays
"15"' co1un1n inch Sal or SUnday
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

lincol n Pipeliner Welder.
$1900. or make offer . Wanted· small acreage,
. preferably square baled or
(3041675-4975
raound baled, Dexter area,
New A Frame 30'X40' Metal (740)742·4163
Buildtng. Not assembled.
I I~ \ "\"'I'UIU \Ill 1\
l740)446·2861

In One Week With Us

Place

BULLeTIN BOARD

M•lpC11unty, OH

M•ltl, . .Ill•,

TO

Get Your M1nage .Acroal
Wllh A Deily Sentinel

JET
Registered
mini ature
AERATION MOTORS
Appaloo sa horse, red sorrel
Repaired . New &amp; Rebuilt In w/blonde mane/tail. wou ld
Stock. Call Ron Evan5, 1- make nice breeder, $500,
, (7 4 0) 742 -~ 80 2
800·537-9528.

Morning Star Ro1d • C.Rd 3Ci • R1clne, OH

1-740-94 ·2115

Pd 1 mo

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'K101 6181K20')

[740) 992·3194
992·6635

Rh t'n' :1\.
( 'al'(·
In Syracuse
(Former/}' Whitney $)

Under new ow nership

and new management.
COME JOIN US

7

A Weeki

�Page 86 • The Dally Sentinel

Friends can't talk woman·
out
of married marl's arms
.

\

ACROSS
46
1 Grow wheat
5 Yes, In
49
Yokohama 50

.

DEAR ABBY: I have a girlfriend at work I' II call
"Crystal." I think she's cheating
with "John," a co-worker who
is married. Crystal was going to
be married in the fall, but now
the wedding is off. She says
that she and · John are 'just
friends." But the way it looks to
me, they are a lot mo~ than
that.
,I see Crystal and John in the
parking lot after work. He sits
in the driver's seat, and she
sticks half her body through the
car window to kiss him goodbye. They also go "out to
lunch" every day. When I ask
her if she'd like to have lunch
with me, she lies and says she's
staying in - then I see them in
the parking lot and she's all
over him.
I've tried ~.¥king to Crystal
about John, but she gets defensive. I think he convinced her
not to get married. This isn't the
first time he's been involved
with a co- worker, How can I
tell Crystal she shouldn' t waste
her time with a married man?

- WORRIED IN ILLINOIS
DEAR WORRIED: Love is
blind, and sometimes also deaf
to the voice of reason. In your
case, it is already too late to reason with Crystal. If a co-work. er who had an earlier fling with
John would be willing to share
her experience with Crystal, it
might wake her up -but I'm

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
not betting on it. Some lessons
must be learned the hard way,
and when a workplace romance
fizzles and reality hits, it's a
cold awakening. (Clip this, give
it to her. and tell her this message is for her- from both of
us.)
DEAR ABBY: My fiancee,
"Charlene," and I plan to marry
this fall. We couldn't be happier and eagerly anticipate spending our lives together.
However, the wedding planning is causing tension in our
families.
·
Charlene and I are recent college grads, struggling to pay off
student loans. We are unable to
afford a large, lavish wedding.
After discussing this at length,
we realized that neither of us
wanted a big wedding in the
first place. We prefer a quiet,
intimate gathering, and a small
ceremony would suit us both. .
Our problem is, Olarlene and
I feel we must accommodate
our large families who want to

attend our wedding. We 're
What's bothering me is that
afraid that if we don' t invite neither of my sons did anything
everyone on both sides, feel- for me on Mother's Day. No
ings will be hurt.
card, no phone call, no "Happy
How do we arrange for the Mother's Day" - nothing'· I
pertect small wedding of our feel angry, hurt and awful. And
dreams without disappointing , I don't know what to do with
our extended family members? these feelings. What, if any- TRYING TO KEEP THE thing. should I say to them? PEACE IN THE PACIFIC MISERABLE MOM IN
TUCSON
NORTHWEST
DEAR TRYING: Limit
DEAR
MISERABLE
your wedding to parents, MOM: Tell your thoughtless,
grandparents and siblings. As self- centered sons exactly what
long as no exceptions liTe made, you have written to me. They
there should be no hard feelings need to hear it. Your feelings
among the extended family are valid.
members.
Dear Abby is written by
P.S. Consider celebrating Abigail Van Buren. also known·
with friends and other relatives · as Jeanne Phillips, and was
by hosting an open house a few founded by her mother, Pauline
weeks after your wedding. It Phillips. Write Dear Abby aJ
needn't be anything formal WWl&gt;:DearAbby.com or P.O.
you could serve wine and/or Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
punch, a few simple homemade · 90069.
liors d'oeuvres and something
sweet.
The Newspaper
DEAR ABBY: I am a single
mother of two boys. My oldest
Has Class •••
is 21 with a wife and baby.
Students can
They live here in town. My
learn a lot from
yqungest is a junior in high
the newspaschool and lives with me.
per about the
Recently, because he's out of
work, I helped my older son by
.
world
· paying his $600 rent. My
in which they live. And
younger son has a part-time job
now is the
and should have money of his
perfect
time to bring
own, but he usually blows it
newspapers into the
and never seems to have a.
I
m.
dime.

@@C9C9®

~ ~~r StAi ~

~ RIG\.\T NoW.' ·.;;

-

J

54

55
56
57
58
59

part
18 Vegan' s
taboo
20 Tackle the
job (2 wds.)
22 - and
don'ts
23 Pool cover
24 Efficient
27 Row
olseats
29 Harmful
30 Feral
quality
34 Roundup
mishap
37 ~chi
ch"uan
38 Cushy

39
41
43

44

DOWN
1 Low-lying
clouds?
2 "Woe Is

m@f"'
3 Take a

siesta
4 Cheap

whuls?

5 Peanut
shells
6 Rainbow
7 "Ere-Elba"
8 PalaHe
color
9 Kind
of search
Vise
Wharf
10 Strong
Garden tool
- - ox
13 Lei up
Sheet

19 Fine,
to NASA
(hyph.)
21 Mend a toe
24 Air rille
pellets
25 Squeal on
26 Wyo.
neighbor
27 In order
28 Seine vista
30 " Scream"
Director
- Craven
31 Flight
'•
board Info
32 Well-known
uncle
33 Lillie
swallow
35 Lunch or

brunch

36 Forking out
39 Not pro
40 Ogled
41 Minimum
number
42 Theater
employee
43 Accord
maker
44 Grimace
45 Play.wright
- Stmon
47 Skillful
48 Green lruh
51 Mother lode
53 ·Install
a lawn

@@@®(9@@

BY BRIAN

0000000
fu'IIT,\fy)@,(j)tw;-,1(5:1
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0
0

"" DOWN

511l LoHeo Total
+ 1 Po1nts

~~~~g~~ 0
0 999?. 9. 9. ~Total
@@®@@@@ +50Po~ta 0
o1!l

AVERAGE GAME 205-215
by JUDD HAMBRICK .

FOUR PLAY.TOT"L

=

TIME UMtT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to Hener word !rom the lefters on uch ya~.
Add points to each ~d or leiter .us.ng sconng tSreetloos at fight. S.~~en-lener

-

....

get a 60-point bon.Js_ All words can be fot.n::l in Wetmel's New World
coneoe Dic110f'ltry.
Juoo·s SOLUTION TOMORROW
words

REED

POMEROY - The first steps
in
building
the
new
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge will
take place in the Ohio River.
Crew s with C.J . Mahan
Construction Co. are preparing·
to conduct test drilling for the
shafts that will support the
bridge's two towers. according
to Don Tillis, project manager
on the bridge site for the Ohio
Department of Transportation's
Marietta office .
According to Tillis, the test
drilling will confirm rock loca-·
tions beneath the ri verbed itself
as indicated in the plans for the
bridge . The towers will hold up
rhe cable stays, Tillis said.
The bridge design includes
eight piers, and the coffer dams
needed to construct those piers .
will be built later this summer,
according to Tillis. Meanwhile,
a crane moored just offshore on
the West Virginia side is being
used to build temporary docking
facilities at the construction site.
Tillis said plans to widen the
right-hand "through traffic" lane
at the approach to the existing
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge are on
track, and said ODOT is now
working on the cost analysis for

Please see Brtdp. AS

Papers·

..

maybe late
Your Sentinel may be late
today due to flooding. Your
carrier is making every effort
; to ensure on-time' delivery.
, We .apologize for any inconvemence.

Inside

T\\1\\1\ 'l\IAI

• Family Medicine, See
page A2
• Court News, See page
A2
• Time Out for Tips, See
page Al

WAS

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J.

Jrd OOWN

&lt;~DOWN

~\CAL
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Rain, HI: 80s,
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t.AitP&gt;l OU. T ...

l OilNi KNOW,
ARE 'OIJ RUICN
~ IHAi??
AIYI I READ'

CARR! EO OliT .. ,
ORD€RED IN , .

fOR T~RT"1'

Mary Hunt

Southem Elementary

'' How do I love
thee?'' he said.

"Let me count
the ways."

~
:z

"Five, ten, fifteen,
twenty, .. "

wE TtiiNI' YOU WOV'-P
I~ MORe I~AUTIFV'­
IF YOU l&gt;Y~l&gt; YOV#t

~

tiAIIr A
PU!rPLISt:l

~

fl,~l&gt;.

l:tC

Index
:z Sectlous Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather
·~

ll hps

A3
B4-5
86.
86

A4
AS
.81-3

A2

2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~
"
~
~

•

'l
I

ffi I""I'J.J:.l'iCU CDNTtt-IUN..LY&amp;:12-"1( "i: 1-JP.,:, CWTN\'-1 Of Tf\E c:t:&amp;\le"' 'You 00./IOU~Y 1'\U:,r W&gt;.V( ~

...

said when she reads to the
stude nt, he can recall
almost everything when he
is tested whic h demonstrates to her the degree of
intelligence the boy pose
sesses. Rou sh said her
classes at Ohio University
gave her a theoretical background to teach the boy, but
workin g with him was different.
., "As a new teacher, I am
stillleaming new strategies
and trying to fi gure out different things to try," she
said.
Roush had to use these
theories to adapt a specialized learning program
which wo.uld better fit the
boy's needs. One of her.
goals was to be able to keep
him inside the classroom
with the other students
instead of separating him.
Roush said .this could create self esteem problems.
In order to graduate from
Ohio University, Roush
worked as a student teacher
under a practicing professional. This mentor takes
the student-teacher and
exposes them to different
practices of educating students in a "live" classroom.
Roush said that while a student teacher works, or
rather serves as an appren-

Plean see Teacher, A!l .

Soil &amp;Water District uses Village: Few will
be affected in
grant to buy 174 acres

water rate change

Property to be
used to educate,
preserve streams

BY J. MILES
Staff writer

Staff report
RUTLAND- The Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
· District last week acquired
about 174 acres of land near
Rutland, thanks to a little help
from the Clean Ohio Green
Space Conservation Fund.
The district was successful
in its bid to acquire $172,493
from the fund, which will be
tied with local funding for the
$229,990 streamside acquisition project, David P.
Hanselmann, chief of the
Ohio. Division of Soil and
Water Conservation, said in
recognizing
the
Meigs
SWCD.
The property is located near
Rutland, and was formerly
owned by CETM Inc., which
also donated a portion of the
property.
According to Jim Freeman,
Meigs SWCD wildlife specialist, the acreage includes
3,100 feet of conidor along
Little Leading Creek and
approximately 1,300 feet of
tributary streams.
"One of the biggest problems affecting thrs section of
Little Leading Creek is acid
mine drainage (AMD) and
mining sediments," said
Freeman.
"The property contains
areas of abandoned mine land
and still bears the scars from
strip mining including acidic
ponds and high walls.
"The property can be used
as a living laboratory to better
help students understand the
impact of surface mining on

The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation DistriCt has purchased
17 4 acres of property near Rutland. Participating in the deed
transfer ceremony were. from left, Brian Christman and George
Thompson representing CETM Inc. and Bill Baer and Joe Bolin,
representing the Meigs SWCD Board of Supervisors.
our landscape," Freeman
said.
The Meigs.SWCD plans to
seek funding to plant streamside forest buffers, and possibly to plant native prairie
grasses. In keeping wtth the
SWCD's mission of promoting conservation and wise
land use, the property will be
used to educate youngsters
and community members on
water sampling, conservation
practices and wildlife management, explained Joe
Bolin, a member of the Meigs
SWCD Board of Supervisors
and the Ohio Federation of
Conservation Districts' Board
of Directors.
Educational activities will
include field days for'county
elementary school students,
and soil judging and envirothim contests for junior

high and high school students. Other community uses
may include stream clean-ups
and special handicappedaccessible and youth hunts.
"There are 11 different
types of soils found on the
property, and the habitat is
incredibly diverse. That
makes it pertect for environmental education," said Vicki
Morrow, district education
coordinator. "Most parts of
the farm are readily a:cessible
through a variety of trail s
criss-crossing the property."
According to Bolin , a
detailed conservation plan
will be developed for the
land, which must be used for
the public gooc! and main- ·
tained as open space, meaning it must be prote~ted
from development, he
explained.

lAYTON

RACINE - A ftTSt reading
of an ordinance to establish
3,000 gallons of water instead
of the current 4,000 gallons as
the basis for determining the
monthly water bill of residents
has been approved by Racine
Village Council.
The current month! y rate of
$14.50 stays the same for tlie
first 3,000 gallons .instead of
the ftrst 4,000, and then the rate
goes to 35 cents for each 100
gallons more.
Clerk-treasurer Ddvid Spet'XH'
said the rate~ changed because
the Ohio Department of
Development, which provides
the village with additional
funding for upgrades or
additions to the water system, mandated the change
because the village saw a
nominal increase in the standard of living. As a result, the
village had to change rates
accordingly to keep pace with
this reality. .
. Spencer said the rate change
will not affect very many residents.
"Village council and water
board agreed thin this would
affect the least amount of people whereas a water rate
increase would affect everyone," he said.
Spencer said this would
have almost no effect on
senior citizens because in
most cases they don' t use
more than 3,000 gallons per
month.
Council also approved a
second reading of an ordinance regulating noise emitted
by motor vehicles and/or the

playing of sound amplification systems from within a
vehicle so the sound is plainly
audible at a distance of SO feet
or more.
The ordinance also includes
regulation of "jake braking,"
and the "peeling" of tires
when motorists drive away.
Other business
• Dawn Jones was hired as a
part-time worker in the clerk's
office. She will work approximately 24 hours a month on
billing and collecting water
and refuse accounts.
•Clerk-treasurer
David
Spencer reported that he had
been in contact with George
Collins, District I 0, Ohio
Department of Transportation,
regarding signs to the new
section of Alternative 124
from the Ravenswood Bridge.
• Council gave a vote of
thanks to the Enduring
Freedom Group for the donation of American flags which
are being displayed in various
locations around the village. .
• Residents were reminded
that dogs are not pennitted in
the village park.
• Mayor Scott Hill reported
that $753 in fines were collected in May wiih $120 going to
the state. He and Council president pro tempore Robert
Beegle will attend the mayor's
court yearly continuing education session in Marietta.
Attending were council
members Robert Beegle,
Henry Bentz, Joe Evans, Gary
Freeman, Greg Taylor and
Charlotte Walmsley. Also present were Mayor Hill, clerktreasurer Spencer and the marshal, Dion Jones.

19th Annual Comnlunlty Health Fair
HFor the Entire Family"

Saturday, June 28

~

rn
0

lAYTON

RACINE - "The first
year of teaching is usuall y
the hardest," said Am y
Roush, who has just fi nished her fi'rst year of
Southern
teaching at
Elementary School.
Roush, who graduated
from Ohio University last
year, had to learn the difference between academic
theory and practical reality
tn the classroom .
" I' m still le11rning stuff,"
she said. "I learned more in
my first year of teaching
than I did in school."
Roush had a home
advantage because she
Southern
worked
at
Elementary as ·a student
·. teacher before graduating
from OU. As a Southern
High School graduate from
the class of 1997, Roush,
23 , is very familiar with the
school district and the community.
. . :'They welcomed me here
with open arms," the former SHS cheerleader said .
Roush is responsible for
· formulating individual education plans for students
who learn in different
ways. One of her students
is
dyslexic and he has _a
Southern Elementary School teacher Amy Roush works closely with Sebastian Lemley, a 7th
hl!fd
time reading. Roush
grade student, to achieve his full academic potential. (J. Miles Layton)

z
~

www.mydailysentinel.com

BY J. MtLES
Staff writer

Staff writer

WORD®©®(i)@@@®®·
0000000
••oo~

TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 2003

Bridge First year.teacher 'learning the ropes'
project
takes to
water

,.....,.._,.,..-

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\!..3\.::J\;Y

•

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 199

't.'\.\111? At4P
e.11r 0111t4''1'

t

~ r&amp;~-~''l:

52

1,...-~--t--

L-----------------------~~~~----------------~
ever, don' t humble you rself to
weight.
8Y BERNICE BEDE OsoL
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22the point where others can
In the year ahead chances
Jan.
19)For
someone
who
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
take advantage of you for
-You cannot automatically
are you cnuld meet many peotakes great pride in being his
their own purposes.
ple of considerabl.e influence,
or her own person, you might
assume things left w their
ARIES (March 21 -April
own devices will \YOrk out to
ye t, od!'lly enough, those who
allow yourself to be cast in
19)- The fact that you' re a
help you in the ways that are
the unfamiliar role of dependyour satisfac tion today. You
self-starter and not afraid to
need to stay on top of things
. most i&lt;,nportant to you will be
ing on another for a matter of
challenge others when you
of the lesser rank.
ma1erial security ..
and not leave anything up to
feel it is necessary is good,
chance.
GEMINI (May 21·June
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
but today you could ~o up
20)- The fact that you're inLIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) . 19) - Listen to the suggesagainst someone who is more
- If you act without first
t ~igued about gathering new
tions and points ·of views of
than you had bargained for.
data causes you from t1me lo
consulting with your friend s
others today. but under no cir·
TAURUS (April 20-May
or
associates
about
a
soci
al
time to be a .bit gullible cumstances let anyone make a
.
20)
- Be careful what .you
and this could be one of those
assessment , you could find
major decision for you . Contake
on today when you bedays. Verify any new infor- . them all siding together and
sider all the data and come to
lieve others are followmg
ganging up on you today.·
mation being relayed to you
your own conclusion.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
your banner. You could be
today.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
mistaken· about the support
22) - Be very careful not to
CANCER (June 21-July
20) -Sincere humility is a
assume your position is much
you thought you had and lind
22)- Financial or commer- .
wonderful vinue. and one you
yourself out on a limb alone.
stronger than it actually is. If
d al situations must be treated
di splay often. Today , how· it turns out that you' re even a
with caution today. Conditions arc very uncertain at this
tad beh ind the curve. you
could quickly find yourself
time ami what appears to be a
Answer
totally off the road .
bargain could be anything
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.
23but.
to·
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perceptive individual and not
previous
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day soineone who spins a
gether today if either person
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41h00WN = 12
end of the bargain today .
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AVERAGE GAME 145-155
JUDD'S TOTAL
230
puppet.
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12 Uvy's bear
14 Geol.
formations
15 Pant
16 Wound
covering
17 Two-piece

material
Tatum
or Ryan
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Bright sign
Slugger's
slats .
Colorado
tribe
Encircle
"Biondle"
kid
Com unit
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Marshall finds its man, Bl

Monday, June 16, 2003

www.mydailysentinei.COil\

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TEPoJo\,\/~tTY :,P,PiC.l:&gt;'[CX:~D

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•

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:,..'( TO \Ill\\ 7

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CQ

10 AM - 2 PM _• HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
FREE SCREENINGS
Non-lasting cholesterol end glucose • Blood prenure
Body fat onolysis • Bone densiiy... ond much morel
s-;rol displays ond health info~mation will be on-hond os well.
SPECIAL ATDACOON FOR THE KlOS • Oown Show ftaturing Galja Cqwty's own Phi! Luckrtdoo

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org

t 1 I&gt;M and 1 PM. Balloon animals handed ool throughout the day.

~·

=

For more

call

446•5679.

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