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                  <text>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.

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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

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AVERAGE GAME 205-215
by JUDD HAMBRICK .

FOUR PLAY.TOT"L

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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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60.

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t.AitP&gt;l OU. T ...

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ARE 'OIJ RUICN
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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.

~
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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
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TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 2003

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

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50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 199

't.'\.\111? At4P
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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·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Dec. 21) - You're a preny
perceptive individual and not
previous
ll1ere is no way a partnership
arrangement can hang toknown for gullibility , but toWord
day soineone who spins a
gether today if either person
dqes not hold up his or her
good tale could have you
Scrimwrapped around his or her
41h00WN = 12
end of the bargain today .
mag~
Without equal contribution . finger. playing the role of a
AVERAGE GAME 145-155
JUDD'S TOTAL
230
puppet.
it'll collapse from its own

GEi R\~~~
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8 Can. .
neighbor
11 Bogus buller
12 Uvy's bear
14 Geol.
formations
15 Pant
16 Wound
covering
17 Two-piece

material
Tatum
or Ryan
- and aah
Bright sign
Slugger's
slats .
Colorado
tribe
Encircle
"Biondle"
kid
Com unit
Meadow
Hero' a act ·

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Marshall finds its man, Bl

Monday, June 16, 2003

www.mydailysentinei.COil\

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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.

~·

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For more

call

446•5679.

~l...--.. - - - ~---.:.......-- -l

•

�i

Local News .

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, June 18

• i Columbu• leo'/80' I

. .I

() ---~-·-)
Showm .
Fiurries - ' ·
.ke.

Slslny Pt. Clour:ty , Cbl!tj

l·llorms

S~

Aai.n

Vil.ua.:;.Ml Pt.,

Flood watch for today, tonight
Chance of rain 30 percent .
Thursday... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers ·and
thunderstorms . Highs near
80. Chance of rain 30 percent..
Thursday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s.
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs
in the lower 80s.
clear.
Saturday ... Mostly
Lows in the upper 50s and
highs in the lower 80s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A
slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms from early
afternoon on. Lows in the
lower 60s and highs in the
lower 80s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
mid ~ls and highs in the
lower 80s.

Today... Showers with a
chance of thunderstorms.
Locally heavy rainfall is possible. Highs in the mid 70s.
South winds 5 to I0 mph.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Tonight. .. Showers likely
with a chance of thunderstorms ... Mainly until midnight. Locally heavy rainfall
is possible. Lows in the mid
60s. South ..i-inds around I0
mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers arid
thunderstorms. Highs in the
lower 80s. West winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Wednesday night:.. Partly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 60s.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10,000

June t6, 2003

Dow
Jones

9,000

·Pa_=from

:

MAR

APR

Hlgll

LOw

9,318.9!1 9,117.58

+2.21

MAY

JUN

7,000

Aocord high: 11.722.98
Jan. ,4,2000

1,800

June t6, 2003

1,800
1,400
1,866.58

P'tt=-

from

:

MAR

APR

Hlgll

LOw

1,667.n 1,629.59

+2.48

MAV

JUN

1,200

Rocord high: 5,048.82
March 10. 2000

June t6, 2003

1,050

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500
Pd. c:llar9l
from,._

950
850
MAR

,APR

Hlgll

LOw

MAY

1,1010.86 968.6.1

+2.24

JUN

750

RocOfd high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

AP

Local Stocks
AEP - 30.70
Arch Coal - 20.76
AkZo-29.48
AmTech/SBC - 25.85
Ashland Inc.- 33.28
AT&amp;T -18.t6
Bank One- 39.74
BU -15.00
Bob Evans- 29.38
BorgWarner- 64.38
Champion - 3.03
Charming Shops - 5.09
City Holding- 29.50
.Col- 23.78
DG -19.01

DuPont- 41.07
Federal Mogul - .30
USB-24.90
Gannen- 76.24
General Elec1ric- 31 .35
GKNLY-3.90

Premier- 9.75
Rockwell - 24.95
Rocky Boots- 9.18
AD Shell- 49.80
Sears- 33.54
Wai-Mart- 55.25
Hartey Davidson- 44.45 Wendy's - 29.70
Kroger- 15.99
Worthington - 16.23
Ltd~ -16.40
Daily stock reports are
NSC -21.96
the 4 p.m. closing
Oak H* Fnardal- 25.41 quoteg of the previous
day's transnc1ions, proOVB-23.36
BBT -35.90
vided by Smith Partners
Peoples - 26.48
at Advest Inc. of
Pepsico- 45.51
Gallipolis.

Colonial days at Our House
Bv MIWSSIA RussELL
Stall writer

The Buckeye .Hills USAVICA chapter recently participated in a project to serve
area senior citizens. The
name of the project was,
'Seniors serving seniors. 'The
project involved a group of
programs. A computer aided
design and computer aided
manufacturing class made
flyers for advertisements.
· During the visit, the seniors
received manicures, haircuts

during the period.
"We will also teach the girls.
the an of "Fan Talk," Stanley

GALLIPOLIS Young added.
ladies can go back in time 200
Talking with a fan was one
years to experience the lifes~le way to communicate with a
of Gallipolis residents dunng gentleman suitor, she explained.
the annual Colonial Days,
For example, if a young
scheduled from lO a.m. to 2 woman took her fan and tapped
p.m.. June 25 at the Our House her right cheek with it while
museum.
looking at a particular gentleLadies, ages 8-13, are eligible man, it meant "I love you."
to participate in the day-long
"You had to be careful."
. event, which includes games, Stanley said, laughing.
crafts and a tour of the museum.
The girls will also learn table
Period costumes and acces- manners and take a shon course
sories will be provided so' the on how ladies of the.ctay·would
girls can dress the part, said
Janice Stanley, the museum have done tea.
director. Lunch will be provid"It will just be a fun four
ed.
houl-s," Stanley said. "We will
"We want the girls to learn. be doing things that are not only
and to see how people lived 200 fun, but educational as well . We,
years ago," Stanley said.
and the girls. have fun and
"The girls will also learn to · everybody learns something,
how to play games popular and that's the imponant thing."

POMEROY Cases
resolved in the Meigs County
Coun of Judge Steve Story
between May 20 and June I0
are as follows:
Roy Meade, Vmton, speeding, $30 and costs; Richard
A. Mount, Dayton, $21 and
costs; Abraham M. Rach, .
Reedsville, Driving on non- ..
designated, $50 and costs;
Paul D. Williams, Gallipolis.
overload, $410 and costs;
Alexandra Acevedo,
Columbus. seatbelt, $30
and t:osts; Kimberly K.
Adams, Belpre, speeding,
$30 and costs; Christine L.
Adcock, Hideway Hills,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Esther Aleshire, Cheshire,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Sheila J. Allen, Racine,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Jason Arix, Chester, tinted
glass, $20 and costs; Brian R.
Arnold, Pomeroy, tinted
glass, $20 and costs;
Tamara 1\. Bachner.
Middleport, traffic control
lights, $20 and costs; Derek
J. Barnill, Lexington. speeding, $30 and costs; Jeffrey T.
Belt, Lorain, unreasonable
speed for conditions, $30 and
costs; Richard Blankenship.
Albany, ~atbelt, $30 and
• cost~ ; Dallas P. Brady,
Middlepon, speeding. $30
ll!ld costs; Francisco C.
Bmvo, Lynwood, Calif., Viostartinglbacking, . $20 and
costs;
· Carl D. Brewer, Long
Bottom, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Richard D. Brink,
Rossiter, Pa.. speeding. $30
and costs, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Adam A. Bullington,
Rutland, speeding, $30 and
costs; Aaron M. Burgess, S.
Charleston, W.Va., speeding,
$30 and costs;
Nicole M. Bush, Gallipolis,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Rickie Causey, Reedsville,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Richard L. Chapell, Long
Bottom, use of unauthorized
plates, $20 and costs; Harold
W. Chase, Johnstown, speeding, $30 and costs;
NcriJZ On;tm, Mrllkp:It,
rigtt-«-wayl[ilii: highway, m
-alll Wi1S; Lewis W. Coe, Little
Hocking, speeding. $30 and ·
costs; David L. Collins,
Racine, failure to control, $20
and costs.

,~---·------..,--~--------___:_

PageA3
Thesday,)une 17,2003 .

Five Meigs teens head to Buckeye Girls State
BY CHARLENE

HOEFLICH

POMEROY - Five Meigs
County girls joined about 900
teens from across the state
Saturday on the campus of
Ashland University for the .
week-long
57th
annual
American Legion Auxiliary
Buckeye Girls Sate session.
.The teens are sponsored at
G1rl ~ State by the American
Legion Auxili aries to Drew
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy. and
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Middlepon.
Delegates are Brittany
Hauber and Tia Pratt both of
Pomeroy, students at Eastern
High School. and Christi na
Miller of Middleport, . Kara
Buffington:
and
Holly
W1lliams of Pomeroy. students
at Meigs High School.
Selected as alternates were
Ashley Payne of Pomeroy, a
Me1gs student, and Rachel
Elliolt of Racine, who attends
Eastern.
The 2003 Buckeye Girls
Staters are celebrating Ohio's
200th binhday at the hands-on
experience as they &gt;et up a
working government. Each
one will be assigned to a political pany. city and county. The

hepatiti,;, cau,;e ALT to be ele- reaction in your body. Also. the
vated. The blood tests and the common Amelican malady of
. liver biopsy can rule these out, obesity can increase the ALT
but sometimes are inconclusive level. This obesity-ALT link '
early in a chronic disease like has even been noted in obese
Hepatitis C. It is possible. children.
Martha A. therefore. that you have hepatiIt sounds as though your
Simpson tis but it hasn't manifested itself ~ valuation 10 date has been
to the point that it's detectable very thorough. but continued ·
by the -tests. In addition to
hepatitis, other viral disea~e,; testing is in order, as the ALT is
that can cause damage 10 the never elevated for no reason at
like infectio[,; all. Even if your ALT returns to
when liver cells are inflamed or liver
·
· 1 eo .s1s.
· · nonnal. I recommend that you ·
die. Damaged or intlamed cells mononuc
break open and leak ALT into cytomegalovirus and herpes .:ontinue to have it checked on
the bloodstremn. The ALT is a simplex - can also elevate the a regular basis to make sure
very sensitive and very specif- ALT.
that it does not hecome elevatic laboratory indicator for damMany medications, like ed again.
age to the cells of the liver.ln Tylenol. antibiotics. high
Familr Medicine® is a weekmany liver -conditions. an iso- blood pressure medication&gt;, lr column To submit questions,
lated elevation of ALT may be lbu)Jrof~n and chole&gt;terol ll'lite to Mwtha A Simpsm D.O.,
·the only clue to underlying med1cauons can elevate .the MBA. Ohio Universi11· College if
liver disease. Some .liver ALT because _the~e m~dtca- · 0.1tnr~dliicMedicine. PO. 11m JJQ
enzymes can be elevated twns are · metabolized m the Adm~
Ohio 45701. Mediml inji;rbecause the liver reacts to a hver. Alcohol as you men·
· t111.1'· CO11111111 IS· jJIVVI·d·
' a) •
·
f 1/1{11/01/ Ill
biochemical imbalance pro- t I.oned , IS
so a maJor cause o ,
· 1 ., ; .
.
1 .llf/mla
duced by a disease in another liver problems and increaSed " 1 a .l ml ,etllr
.\ alice
orgaJ1. This is not the case, ALT.
There are still anum- uni~e It t!oe.1 . 11111 replace tile .
however, with ALT. It is very ber of other things that can judwnmt r!f your personal
specific for liver problems. cause ALT to become elevated. phy.nmm. &lt;rho should IJI' relied
This means that when ALT is These include systemic illness- 011 to diagm&gt;~is and recom·
elevated, your doctor knows that es such as hypenhyroidism that mmd treatment for WI." medthe problem is actually in the hasbeen present for awhile, as iced conditions. Prw columns
liver mther than ;mother organ. well as a type of hepatitis that's are amilahie · online at
Many viral infections, like caused by an autoimmune W\i'll:jlll'adio.m~~/fin.

L-...----

Maircuts, hea~h lab, manicures
-highlight services offered
during program.
and styles from the cosmetology lab. The patient care
technician students set up a
health lab and ran blood pres-

sure.. glucose and cholesterol
checks. They also di stributed
a variety of health information . Auto mechanics stu-

Hauber

Pratt

Miller

cities are named after famous
Ohio women and the counties
after past state president' of the
Ohio Amelican Legion Auxiliary.
The keynote speaker at
Sunday's opening was Sharon
KhmJUja tl1e 2002 BGS governor. Activities of orgimizi ng the
government got underway
today. campaigning and rallies

Williams

Elliot

will be held Tuesday, and the
elections will take place on
Wednesday as the girls move
toward establishing a state.
By Thursday all levels of
govemmelll will be functioning and the newly elected girl
State Governor will give her
inaugural address.
On F;iday Governor Bob

'

dents provided free oi I
changes on vehicles. Auto
care and auto collision tech,
no logy washed cars. The culinary prep and food preparation programs provided
lunch . During lunch, the
building and grounds mai ntenance program passed out
flowers. The project was a
success and the senior citizens have requested another
visit to Buckeye Hills.

www.qualitywindowsystems.cctml
INTERNET SERVICES

AUTOMOTIVE

BlueStarr Network

Norris Northup Dodge

\vww.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.bluestarr.net
MED'ICAL

www.turnpikeflm.com

Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org

BUSINESS TRAINING

Holzer Clinic
Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

www.holzerclinic.com
Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

COMMUNITY

Yokeyes Birthwear
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

www.meigscountyohio.com

www.yokeyes.com
NEWSPAPERS

www.mydailytribune.com

lnfoCision Management Corp.

www.mydailysentinel.com

ENTERTAINMENT

a.m.. 1 to 3 p.m. Bling shot tiona! meeting will be held at 2 squad. Tryout clinic will be June
records.Children must be a&lt;XXJI11- p.m. at the Meigs Middle School 24-26 and tryouts on June 27.
panied
l7y parenVlegaf g.adian. cafeteria for all seventh and All students interested in trying
Thursday, June 19
eight~ grade sitidents interest- out must have physicals comPOMEROY Salisbury
Thursday, June 19
ad in trying out for the Meigs peted before the clinic the tryTownship Trustees will meet at
POMEROY - An informa- Middle School cheerleading _outs.
7 30 p.m. at the Rod&lt;springs
tONOship buiking.

www.mydailyregister.com

www.charter.com
GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

-~ELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS

Precious Memories

Herbalife Independent Distributor

www.herbsndiet.com
.

www.photosonchina.com

Reader Services
Correction Policy

and

•

2~56 .

News
Editor; Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Blian Reed, Ext. 14

Reporter: J. Miles taylon. E•t. 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Ha ~ris , Ext . 15

CfoeaJCirc.: Judy Clark. E•t. 10

Circulation
Olatrlct Mgr.: Mike Jenkins, Ed. 17

General Manager
~harlene

Other events

Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com

.r
'

Hoeflich, EKt . 12

E-mail:
news@mydailysEmtinel.com

Tuesday, June 17
POMEROY Childhood
Immunization Clinic, Meigs
County Health Dept., 9 to 11

..

every

afternoon,

and
the
Ohio
Newspape r
Association.
Postmaster: Send address.correc·
tions to The Daily Sentinel. 11 ~
"'Court Street.. Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

Sunday, June 29
REEDSVILLE - HaymanBirain reunion will be held at 1
p.m. at the Foiked Run $Irate
Park. There will be a basket dinner.

·-· ... ... ·---- -··---------+ . .

Publis hed

Member: The AsSociated Press

Our main number·is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

Homecomings
Reunions

for only a $1 a day.

&lt;usPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·

Our main concern in all stories IS to be Monday lhrough Friday, 111 Court
accu rate. If you know of an error in a Street. Pomeroy. Ohio . Periodical
story, call the newsroom at {740} 992- postage paid al Pomeroy.

,

Wednesday, June 11l
CHESTER- Special meeting
of Shade River Lodge hal. Work
in the FC degree.

WEBSITE DIRECTORY .

'

"return,"

The Daily Sentinel

Organizations

Take your business into the homes of over 40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties EVERYDAY
with a listing of your web address in our

.

"recover,"

"refill." Ask the child if she
knows how 'the words are similar.
Remember that reading to a
newborn can help start him on
a lifetime of learning. It pro"
vides a basi s for . language
development, increases academic performance, and helps
supply him with the skills and
knowledge needed to lead a
successful life.
Becky Baer is a Meigs CmUJty
Extension Agem with Fami/y and
Consnmer Sciences/Cmmnunitv
Development.
·

The Daily Sentinel
740-992-2156

Clubs and

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- ---· · ---., . ,.

ment in a variety of ways, not
just through reading. Songs.
finger plays. nursery rhymes,
stories with motions, 'simple
word puzzles, dramatic play
and one-on-one conversati ons
with the child can help her
understand the impnnance of
words in dealing with every day situations
Even as infants. parents can
teach their child the importance of reading. Stories that
ha ve a lot of rhyme, rhythm, :
and repetition clue babies into
the way words sou nd. Dr.
Seuess bonks are excellent
examp les of this.
hrst point to pictures on the
left page as you name specific .
objects, then on to those on
the right page. This allows
the child to see that people
read in a specific sequence.
As the child grows older
and becomes a toddler, peri odically point to easi ly recognizable words or letlers to
help him see and hear the repetition. Ask him panicular
questions about the pictures to
keep his attention. An example might be. ''Where is the
tree 0 " or "What -color is the
dog''"
Preschoolers can follow ·
your finger under each word
as you read. This helps them
make the connection between
written and oral languages.
Compare words • that are
derived from the same root or
have similar prefixes. like
"produce " and "reduce," or

Celebrating special
- days with you!

Public meetings

Point Pleasant Register .

Charter Communications

Becky
Baer

.

Community Calendar

The Daily Sentinel

www.infocision.com

For years expens have said
that reading to a young child
not only helps promote his
intellectual development, but
also results 'in better school
performance .
This occurs·because reading
and storytelling encourages
the child's &lt;.:reativity and
imagination, increases his
problem-solvin g ski ll s· and
vocabularies, and gives him a
better understanding . of the
world around him. It also
helps the chi ld's social development due to the · personal
atten tion given by the adult to
the child during the reading
interaction.
How can parents and adult
caregivers instill in their child
the desire to read'' Here are
some suggestions.
Proviqe the child with a
wide variety of books at ageappropriate levels throughout
childhood. Ha ve the books
readily available. Keep them
·where the ch ild can· easi ly
reach them and frequently
look at them.
Read to the child as an
infant. The earlier an adult
reads to a child. the more likely that child will enjoy reading as she gets older.
Set aside a cenain time each
day to read to the child. The
story at bedtime or naptime
can serve several purposes. It
not only provides the opportunity to read to -the child, but it
also gives him something to
look forward to as he goes to
bed , and allows him time to
quiet down for sleep.
Demonstrate an enthusiasm
. for reading by making the stories fun to listen to,.. Read in
different voices for the different characters. Ask questions
as you read, such as, "What do
you think will happen next?"
or "Why did the bunny say
that?" On familiar stories,
have the child supply the
characters' lines ('The better
to see you with, my dear I"). If
you make the story fun and
real for the child. it will help
instill in her .a passion for
reading .
Take your child to the
library often. Let him choose
books he would like you to
read to him.. Enroll him in
story hour. · Check into
renowned books like the
Caldecott Award winners for
the best picture books and the
Newberry Awards for the best
in children's literature.
Promote language develop-

a

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

EMPLOYMENT

Taft will visit Girls State and
that evening there will be a picnic dinner and entertainment.
Saturday's schedule will
include a joint session of the
House and Senate, the State of
·the State address by the BGS
governor, and an awards presentation before a ceremony to
close the 2003 Girls State.

1952- Betty Smalley Reed,
Pataskala;
James Stout,
Tuppers Plains; Betty Nelson
Newell, Chester.
!954-Donna Durst Story,
Marysville;
Kathleen
Hayman Seckman.
1955- Bashan;
George
Hall , Reedsville;
Donna
Smalley Young,
Pomeroy;
Shirley
Summerfield
Roush,
Alpamonte Splings, Fla.;
N ara Wolfe Hartman,
Chester.
1955- Roger
Keller,
Chester; and Ralph Trussell, ·
Bash an.
1956-Roger Epple, Pon St.
Lucie, . Fla.; Helen Haggy
Norris. Syracuse;
John
Riebel, Chester; Gene Riggs,
Chester; June Ridenour Epple,
Port St. Lucie, Fla., Louise
Riebel Monon, Belpre; Dallas
Marks, Belpre; Rosemary Rose
Keller, Chester.
1957- Betty Frost Meyers,
Ashville; George Morrison.
Ghester; and Kathryn Smith
Windon, Chester.
A total of 113 alumni attended along with 63.
Total of 176Gold charms and
key rings and a rose from the
table arrangements were presented to the _113 alumni class
members.
Officers elected for the 2004
reunion were Maxine Whitehead,
president; Roben Wood. vice
president; Harold Newell, second vice president; Mary K.
Rose. secretary; Betty Newell.
assistant secretary; Rosemary
Keller, treasurer; and Harry
Holter, assistant treasurer.
Named to the decorating and
nominating committee were
Howard Larkins. Donald
Mora, John Riebel Sr., George
Holter and Ralph Trussell.
George Hall provided music
for dancing.

Quality Window Systems, Inc.

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,.

Chester High School/holds alumni dinner

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Jim's Farm Equipment

Buffington

Payne

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

Time Out for Tips

Give a young child a
head start by reading

News editor

Buckeye Hills seniors serving seniors

Court News

. B,OOO

9,3t8.96

.

Elevated 'ALT' proves liver problem,
but doesn't pinpoint cause
Question: After donating
blood in October, l was notified that my ALT was high and
the blood was rejected. l have
had. blood tests since then, and
the ALT is still high: 82, 86,
259~ 144,63. 188 and last week
62. I haven't taken any medications since November 2002
and wa5 off all alcohol for six
months. An ultrasound showed
no liver problems, and my liver
biopsy in March was "mconclusive." I'll continue to check
blood at three-month intervals.
All Hepatitis te·sts have
returned negative, thank goodness.
Would you have a clue as to
what might cause the enzymes
to be so wad;y? I do have w{ne
a couple .of nights a week now.
Answer:· It certainly sounds
like you have been very Vigilant in trying to track down the
cause of your elevated ALT.
Let me try to help you understand what might be going on.
·Alanine Aminotransferase
. (ALD is a liver enzyme. It
used to be called SGPT. so you
may see it referred to this way
in some older literature. ALT is ·
produced .in the cells of the
liver and is commonly elevated

Local News

The nany sentinel

Tuesday, June 17,'2003

'

Family Medicine

Ohio weather

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Marie V. Roberts
MaN, I WiSH

[

PaiD .::rr,..er-~T;o~&gt;J
il'l C\..aSS

i~STeaD

Or W&lt;lSTi/'JG aLL
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Charlene Hoeflich
General manager and news editor

LONG
BOTTOM
Marie Y. Roberts, 85, Long
Bottom, died Monday, June
16, 2003 ,in the Overbrook
Center, Middleport. Funeral
arrangements
will
be
announced by the Cn:meens
Funeral Home, Racine.
·

Local Briefs
Ready for
pickup

REGIONAL VIEW

POMEROY Report
cards may be picked up at the
Meigs Middle School from 8
a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday
through Friday.

.Windfall
Cigarette tax rakes tn
dollars for West Virginia

I

.

• The Dominion Post of Morgantown:
After 25 years. law makers finally get fired up.
The :18-cent cigarette tax hike lit up state estimates for
May.
·
And the good news doesn't end there . ,
According to the chief administrator at the Tax Division ,
the revenue ge nerated from cigarette sales. coupled with an
earlier round of spending cut~. could leave the state with a
surplus when the fiscal year ends June 30.
The state raked in $241 million in May. about $10 million
above estimates .
The cigarette tax brought West Virginia at least $6.64 million in its first month , twice as much as estimated.
AII of this because our lawmakers finally got up enough
nerve to raise the tax on cigarettes after 25 years of appeasement.
"An appeaser is 911e who feeds a crocodi le . hoping it will
eat him last." Winston Churchill once said.
Well , our state 's finances were virtually on their last leg
prior to the tax hike. so we didn't have far to go.
Tax increases are never popular and never will be . Our
nation is a direct result of a revolt against a tax.
Our history is filled with protests , violence, lawsuit s, pol itics and lots of hot air over taxes.
Bur there co mes a time when certain products and services need to be objectively asses sed irl the 21 st century.
Sure, ti'me does pass slowly here rn the mountains. But it 's
almost ludicrous to think that our state took 25 years to raise
the tax on cigarettes from 17 cents to 55 cents.
Compared to the rest of the nation , West Virginia is still
not in sync with the average tax on tobacco in most states.
Yes: we're aware some states that border ours have ridiculously low taxes on cigarettes.
Everyone here is also well aware of why that is the case.
Tobacco products are a major cash crop there and the vol. ume of sales of the resultant products make up for the 3-cent
tax on cigarettes.
We "lould urge the legislature to not stop with taxes on
cigarettes.
·
Other tobacco products also could withstand comparable
tax increases .
Another line of produc.ts to explore for taxes is alcohol.
We wouldn't just stop with so-called ·'sin taxes." either.
Tax reform is an issue that's never going to get the overhaul it deserves.
None 'Of us are giddy about paying taxes. But until someone comes up with a better idea. we plan to pay our fair
s h~ .
_
Paying taxes is one of those certainties in life.
The tobacco tax hike may also go a long way to prevent
that other certainty.

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

Moderately Confused
STEP IT UP.

I'M TRAINING

FoR M'l 25TH
HIGH SCHOOL
: REUNION!

~HCfl(.
~

2003 by NEA. Inc.

T#apons
Opponenls of the war in
Iraq, in and out of Congress.
continue to sharply question
whether Saddam Hussein
actually had .such q~antities
of weapons of mass destruction as to justify the eradication of his regime.
But by far the most compelling reason for the warwhich the Bush administration needlessly and unwisely
underplayed - was that
there was no other way to
end the horrors thal Hussein
was so persistentlY and savagely inflicting on hi s peo··
pie.
As Scott Simon of National
Public Radio recently said,
the "largest source of
weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq was the regime of
Saddam Hussein. against the
Iraqis."
On the pages of The New
York Times - and in multisignatured ads by anti·war
organizations, academics and
true believers in the United
Nations - were calls for
other ways to deal with
Hussein . They included
charges that the United States
had become a rogue nat ion
and that, because of its·
might. was exceedingly dangerous to the future legitimacy of international law.
Bu't a June. I New York
Times front-page story gruesomely recounted the grief of
relatives of Iraqi s trying to
firid the bones and other
Identifications of husbands,
fathers , mothers and children
in Hussei n's mass graves.
Interviewed in the article was
Sandra L. Hodgkinson, who

Report cards
available

of mass destruction in plain .view
Nat .Hentoff

has been documenting · some
of the sites for the State
Department. She said that the
mass graves are·everywhere.
"Litera lly every neighborhood and town is reporting
possible gravesites, and from
all different periods of time."
After 35 years of Hussein,
human .rights groups "estimate tha~ nearly 300,000
Iraqis are missing and probably were executed," Times
reporter Susan Sachs wrote.
"Tens of thousands more,
according to Iraqi opposition
groups, may have ·been
imprisoned and tortured ."
And the mass graves keep
being
exposed.
Sachs
describes young men · from
nearby villages carefully
wrapping "the unclaimed
bones in strips of white
muslin" and ·'sometimes in a
simulation of the Muslim tradition of washing the dead,
they . tenderly stroke the
exrosed skulls .''
saw mariy of the mass
demon·strations against the
war: Already well known then
in reports by human rights
organizations and in the
media was the existence of
Hussein's torture chambers.
They ;were never mentioned
in those anti-war rallies .

On Jan. 26. before the war blurs memory. but I hope that
began and as the prote ; ting at least some of the ungues- .
well -intentioned
rall ies and outraged ads grew tionably
·more. urgent. The New York anti-war activists here will
Times descried the Fedayeen now have read Suriya Abdel
Saddam - a paramilitary Khader account s in The New
group !.eaded by Hussei n:s York Times .
oldest J~n. 38-year-old Uday
Put into custody after her ·
- who would. "masked and four brothers had been arrestclad. in black , make the ed (families were rounded
women kneel in busy city up , co nsidered guilty by
squares, along crowded side- unavoidable
associat ion)
walks. or in neighborhood Khader - after the savage
plots, then behead them with heatings and electric shocks
swords. The famil ies of tho se - "would" find h ers~lf once
victims have claimed they again in a fetid ceiL a room .
were innocent of any crime, so crowded thai most prisonsave that uf criticizing ers cottld nnly stand. The
Hussein."
women died upright. then
If the American-led coali- slumped to the lloor.':
tion . had not gone in •. then
Survivor' nf Nazi boxc:u·s
who would have stopped the told of 'imil•u· vcrtkal
filling of the graves, the cut- death,, unJ ""u lla vl.! al:"ounh
ting out of tongues of "dis- of the tcrrninal overcrowding
loyal " Iraqis, the electri c on Ari1cril'lm slave ships.
shocks ~tnd pulling our of fin When I wrote of why I had
gernai ls in the torture chamrefused to join the anti-war
bers ?
demonstrations
or sign the
More U.N. inspectors?
outraged
acts,
friends
with
France? Germany? Russia·J
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi whom I had marched against
Annan? The same Annan the Vietnam War were
who was deadly si lent during appalled by my apostasy. But
the genocide in Rwanda in when I asked them for alter1994 and, this year, kept natives. they spoke of giving
insisting that Hussein could the United Nations · more
be negotiated with?
. time. One said that "we have
Could the United Nations to abide by the rule of law."
Whose rule is that ? The
Human Rights Commis sion
United
Nations Security
have stopped the piling of
Council
and the Human
bodie.s into the mass graves,
or imposed sanctions to stop Rights Commissions'' What
the tortures 0 The commission rule of law allows the mercicommanded by Sudan, Cuba, · less torture and slaughter of
Libya, China. Zimbabwe and innocent civilians''
Nat Helllo}f i.s a nationalSyria - countries ruled by
some of the world' s cruelest lY renotvn ed authoritv 011 the
First Ame11dmenr and the Bill
tyrants''
The 24-hour news cycle of Rights.

Can Hillary ever settle with political enemies?
Sen.
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton (D-N.Y.) certainly has
the brains, political acumen
and drive to be president some
day. The worry is that she's so
consumed with score-settling
that Washington's savage
political wars would never
end.
..
Her new book, "Living
History" (Simon &amp; Schuster),
and recent interviews are
replete with references to "the
politics of personal destruction" carried out against herself
and her husband.
Gmnted. she makes no vows
to get even. But neither does
she show any signs of forgiveness. reflect on the Clintons'
own responsibility for the
combat or suggest any means
of instituting a cease· fire.
As a Senator, she has
reached across the partisan and
ideological divide - to get aid
for New York from the Bush
administration and work with
arch·conservative .Rep. Tom
DeLay (R-:rexas) on adoption
issues. On the other hand, her
sense of ongoing, all-out war
seems very deep.
Asked by ABC's Barbara
Walters about her famous
statement that ' the Monica
Lewinsky scandal was the
work of a "vast, right-wing
conspiracy," she said, "I would
say' there is a very wellfinanced. right-wing network
of people ... that was after his
presidency from the very
beginning, really stopped at
nothing. even to the point of
perverting the Constitution in
order to undermine what he
was trying to do for the country."
There's no question that
so.rne right-wing groups and

The Daily Sentinel • PageAS

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Thcsday, June 17, 2003

ll"'eRe.'s Tl'!e
CLass vaJ...eDiCToRiaN .

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Tuesday, June 17, 2003

ing involvement with him.
Clinton loyalists savaged
special prosecutor Kenneth
Starr as a "sex-obsessed zealot
on a mission divined from
higher authority" and waged
Morton
what Time magazine called a
Kondracke "clandestine war" to investigate the ethics and sex lives of
members of hi s prosecutorial
team.
In her Barbara Walters interindividuals spread scandalous view, Sen. Clinton claimed that
stories about Bill Clinton from her husband 's liaison with
the outset of his 1992 candida- Lewinsky, while immoral, was
cy and persistently opposed his essentially off-limits for public
policies.
concem.
On the other hand, the bur"The only people with the
den of the evidence gathered right to hold him accountable
by reputable journalists sug- for his private conduct," she
gests that the stories the right- said. "were Chelsea and me ...
wingers spread - such as This ignores, of course, the
Clinton's use of Arkansas state responsibility of a presi dent· to
troopers to faci litate his ram- set a mom! tone for the nation
pant philandering - turned and to - at a minimum out to be tme.
behave·discreetly.
Moreover, the mark of a tulPresident Clinton engaged in
'ented politician is to isolate his what he later called "improper
or her extreme enemies and sexual activity" in the White
render them inconsequential. House with a government
Clinton somehow managed to intern and then persistently lied
galvanize his opponents to about it - to the public. under
include nearly the entire House oath in a coun proceeding and
Republican majority, which 10 his staff and wife. who spent
impeached him.
countless hours and public
And, as IJlUCh as the Clintons money defending him.
may have been savaged by
All thi s was the public 's
their enemies, they savaged business, a point which Sen.
back - or savaged first - Clinton still doesn't seem to
against those who threatened ge.t
them.
Her husband's infidelities
According to former Clinton wouldn't be an issue if Sen.
aide Dick Morris, Clinton's Clinton ever becamf president,
1992 campaign used $100,000, but the tendency tf! make eneincluding federal matching mies might be. She h&lt;L~ a tenfunds. "to hire private detec- dency to demoni1.e, nol co-opt,
tives to go into the personal . those who disagree with her.
lives of women who were
In her book, for 'instance, she
alleged to have had sex with primarily blames . interest
Bill Clinton ... to coerce them groups - especially the insurinto signing affidavits" deny- ance and pharmaceutical

industries - for the failure of
her 1994 health care reform
plan and i:asis them as being
"part of the political war that
was bigger than Bill or the
issues we championed.''
But my own recollection
from covering the he alth
reform debate - bolstered by
that of one of Sen. Clinton's
adversaries - is that she set
out in advance to exclude
potential foes, to not take their
concems into account.
"She could have co-opted
the Health Insurance Industry
Association. bul she wasn't
interested,'' its fanner director,
Chip Kahn, told me .
HIAA sponsored the"famous
"Harry and Louise" television
ads that galvanized opposition
to Clinton 's comprel:!ensi vc
health plan, but Kahn said the
ads originally were simply
designed to win HIAA a role in
formulating health policy.
"It was so clear when you
talked to her agent. Ira
Magaziner
(director
of
Clinton's health care task
force). that if you weren't one
of their f~tvored groups, . they
just didn't listen to you." said
Kahn. now head of the
Federation of American
Hospitals. ·
Talented and bright as she is.
there 's a pamnoid ·streak in
Sen. Clinton's politics. It's
true . as •former Secretary of
State Henry Ki"inger once
wryly observed, "even. paranOids have enemies.'' Bur it's
also true that paranoids make
enemies when the y don't need • •
to ..That 's the potential danger
in a second Clinton presidency.
Mortrm Kondracke is execlllil'e editor of Roll Clll. the
netrsp&lt;tper ofCapiro/ Hi.t.

•

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School grade
cards will be available for pick .
up in the high school office
. between 8:30 a.m. and 3:30
p.m., June 18 through July 2.

Investigators
to examine
plane's
engines
NEW PHILADELPHIA,
Ohio (AP) - F~deral investigators will check for engines
malfunctions on a small plane
that crashed into a gravel pit,
killing the pilot and only passenger, the State Highway
Patrol said Tuesday.
Woodrow E. Williams, 67,
and his wife, Evelyn M.
Williams, 65, both of
Leawood, Kan ., died in the
crash Monday afternoon,
Patrol Lt. Eric Escola said.
The . 1966 Piper PA-30
crashed into the property of
State Route 416 Sand and
Gravel near this city in
Tuscarawas County 70 miles
south of Cleveland. The plane
took off somewhere • in
Missouri and was headed to
Butler, Pa, Escola said
Federal Aviation Administration
investigators were heading to
Ohio TUesday.' The plane's two
engines were still intact, so
investigators will be able to
take them apart to look for
problems, Escola said.
Determining a cause was
expected to take several
weeks, Escola said.
A witness told the patrol that
the plane was headed west at a
low altitude when it banked
sharply to the left, hit a cliff
with its wing and went upside
down into the pit.
The victims were found
dead inside the wreckage,
Eseola said.
The weather was ideal for
flying with temperatures in the
70s and little wind on a sunny
afternoon, he said.

Teacher
'
from PageA1

rice, this person has to work
very closely with the mentor
and adapt a teaching style
which complements that person's methods. Once Roush
was cut loose in her first
classroom, that security blanket was gone and she had to
sfnk or swim.
"In the beginning, · I felt
overwhelmed," Roush said.
"But by the "end of the year,
everything was running
smooth."
People start the profession
with powerful ideals about
what they hope to accomplish. Roush said she always
knew teaching would be
rewanding. Her goals about
bringing everyone up to par
were lofty, but based on an
ambitious plan to serve the
community. But over the
course of the year, Roush
learned that progress is not
made in leaps and bounds,
but in small steps.
'· "I had to realize that a little
tep up is a good thing," she
said.
Some of Roush's students
may not be able to .make an
"A," but a "C" is just as

Phoenix bishop arrested after police ~ay he .
left the scene of a fatal hit-and-run accident
' BY BETII DEFALCO
Associated Press

PHOENIX - The Roman
Catholic bishop charged with
striking a jaywalking pedestrian with his car and then driving away told police he
thought he had hit a dog or a
-cat or that someone had
thrown a rock at his vehicle.
The arrest of Bi shop
Thomas O'Brien, 67, came
two weeks after prosecutors
announced that he relinquished some of his authority
in· an unprecedented agreement that spared him from
indictment on ·obstruction
charges for protecting priests
accused of child molestation .
O'Brien was charged with
leaving the scene of a fatal
accident, a felony. He was
released )ate Monday on
$45,000 bail and declined to
answer questions when lie left
jail.
The accident occurred after
dark Saturday night, when 43year-old Jim Reed was struck
by two cars while walking

across a street in the middle of
the block about three miles
from the bishop's home. Both
cars drove off
Poli ce traced a license plate
number to 0 ' Brien's car and
found the windshield caved in
· Monday morning. O' Brien's
attorney, Jordan Green ,
declined to comment.
Sgt.' Randy Force, a police
spokesman, said 0 ' Brien
wasn 't being charged with
causing the crash because
Reed was jaywalking. "If the
bishop had remained at the
scene, in all likelihood he
would not have been charged
with any crime," Force said .
If found guilty of leaving
the scene but not responsible
for the death. O'Brien could
face punishment ranging from
.Probation to less than four
years in pri son. A defendant
found responsible for such a
death could face more than
eight years.
O'Brien was hospitalized
briefly after hi s arrest. A haspita! spokeswoman would not
say why he was taken to the
hospital. -Diocese spokesman

Jose Robles would only say
the bishop "was very exhausted." The Arizona Repubfic
. said he was suffering from
high blood pressure.
At St. Thomas Church,
Catholics attending Monday
evening Mass prayed for
0 ' Brien and for the man
killed in the accident. 0 ' Brien
has been the spiritual leader
of 430,000 Catholic s in
Arizona since 1981.
"If anything , something
wonderful will happen,"
Anna Becerra said as she left
the service. 'There will be
healing and .a tremendous
amount of prayer tor the people in the community.''
Police said in court documents that 0 ' Brien had driven the car to Mass on
·Sunday and to vi sit his sister
in Scottsdale. He had also
·made a cal l about having the
windshield fixed. police said.
The documents said a priest
had informed O'Brien on
Sunday ni ght that police 1vere
looking for him but that the
bi shop
never contacted
authorities. Police said they

had no information on the
second car.
Force said alcohol wasn 't a
focus of the investigation but
also noted that there would
have been no way to test for it
by the time police talked to
O' Bri en.
The bishop's tan Buick with
its broke n· windshield was
taken away by police, Sgt.
Lauri e Williams said. A
. search warrant called for any
evidence of blood, hair or
glass samples. Williams said. ·
Williams said O'Brien had
told poli ce he was returning
home after a Mass when he
thought he had hit an animal
or that someone had thrown a
rock at his car.
In a statement, Monsignor
Richard Moyer. the diocese's
chief of staff. said the di ocese
wou ld cooperate with the
inves tigation.
''The sy mpath y of all of us
in the Diocese of Phoenix as
well as our pr~yerful support
goes out to the victim's family," Moy e r said .
·
Mon s ignor
Francis
Mani sca lco . spoke ., ma n

for the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops, declined to
comment on O' Brien 's arrest.
In the agreemenr with prosecutors announced earlier this
month, O' Brien admitted that
he allowed priests to work
with minors after he knew of
sexual misconduct allegations
against them and that he
transferred them to ministries
without telling their new
supervisors.
O'Brien agreed to appoint
the · church equivalent of a
chi ef of staff to supervise the
enforcement of the church's
sex ual misconduct policies.
Some U.S. Catholic bishops
have been arrested during
politi cal protests. And in
1985. the former president of
the national bishops conference, Archbishop John R.
Roach of St. Paul and
Minneapolis, pleaded guilty
to drunk driving and was sentenced to 38 hours in jail plus
sub stance abuse treatment
and a fine . He served another
decade as archbi shop.

Former Rite Aid chief Martin
Gregory Peck
Grass agrees to plea deal
honored during
memorial service
Rambo said she would take
the deal . under advisement
peQding a presentence investigation.
HARRISBURG, Pa. Grass, the son of the drug
Former Rite Aid Corp. chief . store chain's founder and its
executive officer Martin L. former chai rman and. chief
Grass told a judge Tuesday he executive officer, was indicted
has agreed to plead guilty to by a federal grand jury a year
two counts of conspiracy in a ago along with two other fordeal that calls for an eight-year mer executives and one current
prison sentence.
employee.
Flanked by hi s attorneys,
Grass becomes the second of
Gr.tss appeared in fedeml court the defendants to strike a deal
before U.S. District Judge with federal prosecutors this
Sylvia H. Rambo as prosecu- month. Former chief financial
tors outlined a plea bargain that officer Franklyn M . Bergonzi
calls for him to plead guilty to pleaded guilty to one count of
one count of conspiracy to conspiracy on 1une 5 and
defnaud Rite Aid and its share- agreed to cooperate with proseholders and one count of con- cutors.
spiracy to obstruct justice.
If accepted by the jLidge,
Remaining charges would be Grass' plea will leave Rite
dismissed.
Aid's former vice chairman
Grass, who was set to go to -and chief counsel , Franklin C
trial next week, agreed to an Brown, to stand trial alone next
eight,year prison sentence, a month. Brown faces the same
fine of $500,200, and forfeiture · charges as \}mss had: conspir.tof $3 million in connection cy, fraud inl,the purchase or sale
with a real estate deaL He also of securities, obstructing grand
promised to cooperate with the jury proceedings. witness tamgovernment and potentially pering, lying to the Securities
testify against remaining and Exchange Commission,
defendants.
mail fraud and other counts.

BY MARK SCOLFORO
Associated Press

BY Boa THOMAS
Associated Press

LOS ANGELES - Brock
Peters remembered Gregory
Peck's simple gesture of
welcome after Peters was
selected to . appear in "To
Kill
a
Mockingbird ."
Cardinal Roger M. Mahony
cited his heartfelt integrity.
They were among hundreds of actors and friends
who came Monday to say
goodbye to an actor hailed as
an extraordinary human
being.
Peck, 87, was laid to rest
during a private· service in
the
crypt-mausoleum
beneath the Roman Catholic
Cathedral of Our Lady of the
Angels. ·
Mourners included Harry
Belafonte, Anjelica Huston,
Louise Aetcher, Tony Danza,
Michael York, Piper Laurie,
Harrison
Ford, . Calista
Aockhart, and Peck's family,
including
his
wife,
Veronique, his sons, Stephen,
Anthony and Carey, and his
daughter, Cecilia Peck-Voll.
Peck, · who won the best
actor Oscar for his role as
lawyer Atticus Finch in 1962's
''To KiD a Mockingbird," died
. last week in his sleep. He was
eulogized by Peters, his longtime friend and "Mockingbird"
co-star.
"In an there is compassion,
in compassion there is
humanity, with humanity
there is generosity and
love." Peters said. "Gregory
valuable because these students may have had to work
harder and overcome greater
obstacles to achieve this
grade. Roush recognized
that they sometimes have to
overcome greater obstacles
in poverty stricken back~
grounds to succeed.
Roush said more often
than not, if the kids in her
classes were in high wealth
districts like Shaker Heights
in Cleveland or Ottawa Hills
in Toledo that things might
be different. Roush's ambitious ~oal is to do her best to
equalize these inequalities
through teaching .
"I really felt like I have
succeeded this year," she
said.
Roush credits her success
to talking "with" her students instead of "at" them.
She,has created a check-list
so students know what they
have to do when they are
crossing the line. And, she
has worked one-on-one with
many students to figure out
how best they can learn new
things .
· After a year, Roush
describes herself as "more
patient and laid back" about
teaching.
"I really love my job," she
said. "I have learned a lot
this year."

Peck gave us these attributes
in full measure . To this day
the
children
of
'Mockingbird' ... call him
Atticus."
·
In the film. Peck is a widowed lawyer raising two
children in the South while
defending a black man.
played by Peters. who is
wrongly accused of raping a
white woman.
Peters recounted how
shortly before he was to start
filming, he was awakened
early on a Sunday morning
by a phone call from Peck
calling to welcome him to
the production. He was so ·
surprised, he recalled, that
he dropped the telephone.
"Needless to say, that has
never happened again. And I
worked over the years in
many, many. productions.
but no one ever again called
me to welcome me aboard,
except perhaps the director
and the producer, but not my
fellow actor·to-be."
Mahony presided over the
service of prayers, Bible
readings, hymns and remembrances, and a recording of
Peck reading from the Bible
was played.
"Gregory Peck did not
have to act at being an 'extraordinary human being,"
Mahony said.
Mahony said Peck was a
man of deep integrity.
"He said he needed to do
this part (Atticus Finch)
because that story needed to
be told, racism and discrimi nation needed to be seen for
what they were. and what
they were was evil."
Mahony said .
The
gathering
also
watched scenes from Peck's
films and a videotape in
which Peck unwittingly provided his own eulogy during
a lecture several years ago.
He said he hoped to be
remembered first as a good
husband , father and grandfather..
"As a professional," he
added, "I think I'd like to be
thought of as a good storyteller; that 's what's alway s
interested me."

The founh defendant, Eric S.
Sorkin, Rite Aid's vice ·president for phanmacy purchasing,
is expected be tried separately
on charges of conspiracy to
obstruct justice and lying to a
grand jury.
The indictments allege that
the meteoric increase in Rite
Aid's stock price under the
.Grass team's management in
the late 1990s was accomplished by "massive accounting fmud, the deliberate falsification of financial statement~.
and intentionally false (SEC)
filings."
In the wake of the scandal,
Rite Aid was compelled to
issue a $1 .6 billion restatement
of net earnings in July 2000,
the largest in history at the time
but . since eclipsed by
WorldCom Inc.'s $9 billion
earnings overstatement.
1
' To turn the company aroun!i,
the new management team has
unloaded assets, closed hundreds of stores and restructured
Rite Aid's once-crippling debt.
The court action has had no
effect on the nation's third-largest
dnlgstore chain, said Rite Aid
spokeswoman Karen Rugen.

Presbyterian minister ousted
for marrying same-sex couples
FORT MITCHELL, Ky.
(AP) - A minister ousted
from the Presbyterian Church
(USA) for violating a church
order to stop marrying same·
sex couples says the struggle
for acceptance of marriages
between gays and lesbians will
continue despiie his removal
from the ministry.
. "TI1is is an issue that is going
to stay at the surt'ace of the
Presbyterian Church,'' the Rev.
Stephen Van Kuiken said after
a church council voted
Monday -night to remove him
from his ministry and membership in the Presbyterian
church.
Van Kuiken, who was minister at
Mt. Auburn
Presbyterian Church in
Cincinnati, said he will miss
his congregation but he doesn't regret following his conscience.
"The fight is worth it

despite getting beat up and
despite the pain and the strug·
gle and the hru·dship." he said.
"It is impot1ant for me to be
true to myself and to what my
beliefs are about God and what
it means to follow Jesus.''
The voti ng body elf the
Cincinnati Presbytery. a cluster
of Presbyterian churches in the
Cincinnati rcuion. voted 11945 Monday night to approve a
111inistry cumrniuee 's recoi llmendation that Van Kuiken be
tound to have renounced the
constitution and govemance of
the Presbyterian Church
(USA) by refusing to abide by
a church court order. Four people did not cast votes.

The court "that tried Van
Kuiken in April publicly
rebuked him and directed him
to only marry men to women.
Van Kuiken said then that he
would continue to marry
same-sex couples, and he married another gay couple last
month.

SUMMER MATINEES
WEDTHRU SUN

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM MON &amp; TUES
RUGRATS GO WILD (PG)
7:30 &amp; 9:30

HOMICIDE (PG13)

Bridge
from PageA1
the project.
"Deputy Director George
Collins wants to take steps
right away to relieve congestion at the current bridge
approach, and we' re working
on cost estimates at the
moment," Tillis said. "That
project will definitely go
ahead later this summer."
The expansion of the
Middleport-bound
traffic
lane will be a "relatively

easy" endeavor, because .the
state has purchased the real
estate to be used in ·the
widening of the traffic lane .
The lane expan sion is not
actually part of the bridge
project itself, but is being
treated as a separate job.
Tillis said .
Tillis said work on the
bridge approach and other
land-based facets of the project will probably not begin
until next year.
·
"It's going to take a good
seven to nine months for
work to come ashore," Tillis
said.

STARRING HARRISON FORD I
JOSH HAATNflT

7:15 &amp; 9:30
2 FAST 2 FURIOUS (PG13)
7:30 &amp; 9:30

7:00 &amp; 9:00

2FAST 2AIIOIJS

...

6:50,10:00
7:00.7:20,
9:35.9:45
7:05,9:50

DAYCAIE '&lt;'

7:10,10:10
7:30,9:45

_

All AGES All TIME'S SJ 00

BRUCE ALMIGHTY (PG13)
STARRING JIM CARREY I
JfNNtP:£R ArflSTON

7:20 &amp; 9:20

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Scoreboard, Page B3

Thesday, June 17, 2003

High water strikes W.Va'--; Partisan debate in House
over IVIedicare drugs
residents evacuated

PageBl
Tuesday, June 17, 2003

~

CHARLESTON (AP) Emergency officials braced
for more rain after storms
lVe nvhelmed streams and
' ewer systems in at least three
counties Monday, forcing
dozens to find refuge on
rooftop~
and in hastily
arranged shelters.
No deaths or injuries were
reported as water up to 7 feet
deep rolled through Kanawha,
Mingo and Nicholas counties
Monday morning. A man's
body was found floating in
Blue Creek near Pinch, but
Kanawha County authorities ·
say the man had been dead for
a week.
The National Weather Federal Express workers wait on a roof as rescue workers
Service said a severe storm ·attempt to reach them, Monday in Charleston. Heavy rains on
sy$tem was expected to reach already saturated ground caused widespread flooding in
central West Virginia early Kanawha County including the Federal Express office. A delivTuesday, but emergency ery truck which was in the parking lot floated away collided with
responders Tuesday morning a pickup truck. (AP)
said no severe flooding had
been reported.
Mud left by high water was
eral hours, while the high
Parts of Charleston and sev- water kept others from their caked waist-high on buildings
eral rural Kanawha County departing flights.
along the road. Yvonne Perry,
suburbs suffered the worst of
Nearby businesses and a 36, said her parents' house
Monday's storms, with more U.S. Federal Reserve.building appeared to be "a total loss."
than 50 homes heavily dam- were besieged. The churning
Perry said she did not know
aged or destroyed. County currents chased more than a the fate· of her own house,
officials declared a state of dozen Federal Express work- which is iri the same area,
emergency.
ers to the 'roof of their deliv- because her street was
Kanawha
County ery depot, where · they impassable.
Emergency Services Director watched a package truck float
Coonskin Park, also near
Bill White said local officials into the creek and lodge on Yeager Airport, was closed,
·would spend Tuesday assess- the flooded bridge.
County
Kanawha
ing the damage.
The Red Cross set up an Commissioner Kent Carper
Gov. Bob Wise asked emergency shelter at the said.
President Bush to designate Charleston . Civic Center.
In Mingo County, houses in .
the county a disaster area.
Pinch Volunteer Fire Chief the Dingess area were evacuWise has asked federal offi- Sonny Wagner said rescue ated Monday evening due to
cials to consider Monday's workers sent more than 30 mud slides and high water,
destruction a continuation of people there after picking said Capt. David Wells of the
damage similarly wrought by. them up by boat. All had East Fork Volunteer Fire
sudden rains and high water apparently · found places to Department.
last week. The designation stay with friends or family by
The home of about 12 families were evacuated, a Mingo
could spell more financial the afternoon.
About 5,000 American County 911 dispatcher said.
relief from the Federal
Several homes were also
Emergency ·
Management Electric Power customers in
Agency and the U.S. Small Kanawha County lost elec- evacuated I n Mason County
tricity Monday morning, most along Plantation Road, said
Business Administration.
Last Wednesday's storm due to trees falling onto Roger Sheets, a firefighter
dumped nearly 2 1/2 inches of power lines, AEP spokesman with the Winfield Volunteer
Fire Department.
rain on the Charleston area in Phil Moye said.
A three-mile stretch of State
one hour. Flash flooding· About 27 Allegheny Power
customers
in
Nicholas
County
Ro11te.
85 in Boone County .
destroyed several houses ·and
forced the evacuation of also spent the day without between Van and Cazy was
Meadowbrook
Nursing electricity, a spokesman said. shut down by multiple mudElectricity was restored· to slides, said State Police
Home. About 60 residents
were moved again Monday Allegheny Power customers Senior Trooper Larry O'Brian
after high water threatened by II p.m. Monday, said Jay in Madison.
Johnson, spokesman for the
In Nicholas County, mud
the nursing ho'me.
slides and high water shut
The National Weather utility.
Floodwaters
tore
a
halfway
down State Route 39 in the
Service
estimated
-that
Drennen area, a Nicholas
house
for
de'velopmentally
between two and three inches
of rain hit the flooded areas disabled people off its foun- County 911 dispatcher said.
between midnight and noon dation and" smashed it into a But one lane of the road was
Monday. It forecast scattered tree in the Rutledge Road area later opened to traffic
showers and possible thun- near Yeager Airport. The resi- Monday evening.
Several houses and a church
derstorms for the region for denrs had left the house
before the rushing water hit in the Drennen area were
the next several days.
and
took refuge at nearby flooded with up to six feet of
In the capital city, a swollen
Bethany
Baptist Church. water and some vehicles were
creek swamped a bridge on
Greenbrier Street, Yeager They later were moved to a damaged, said Junior Tucker,
Airport's main . access road. safe IDeation, said Rachel secretary of the Keslers Cross
Volunteer
Fire
Arriving passengers found Smith, whose husband is the Lanes
Department.
themselves stranded for sev- church's pastor.

contrasts with Senate

WASHINGTON (AP) - Debate over
improving Medicare kicked off with a tone
of bipartisanship in the Senate, but the mood
was decidedly less cooperative in the House.
House Democrats were releasing an analysis by Consumers Union that found
Republican bills in both the House and
Senate lacking.
The group calculated that the proposed
drug benefit was so meager that in just a few
· years, given inflation , seniors would be
spending more than they do today on prescription drugs.
"Medicare beneficiaries have waited a
long time for help, but unfortunately, this
legislation falls far short of what seniors and
disabled Americans have been waiting for,"
said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi,
D-Calif., who planned a news conference
Tuesday to take apart the GOP bill.
The bill was being considered by two
House committees starting Tuesday, with a
vote expected by July 4 on the floor.
Across the Capitol, there were few harsh
words. Rather, both parties claimed credit
for the legislation, which represents the
largest expansion of Medicare since· its creation nearly four decades ago.
Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the GOP
whip, opened debate Monday by crediting
President Bush with making victory a realistic possibi.lity after years of political promises.
But Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.,
said Democrats and senior citizens had
forced Republicans to back off a Bush plan
that would have required seniors to join
managed ·care plans if they wanted full drug
benefits.
.
·
Unlike his Democratic colleagues in the
House, Kennedy said the bill offered enough
help for seniors to win his support.
"It 's a solid down payment,' he said.
The Senate will now spend the 'next two
weeks debating the bill, with passage a virtual certainty.
The measure would subsidize prescription
drug coverage while giving pnvate insurance companies an unprecedented role in the
government's giant health care program for
the elderly and disabled.
Private insurance companies would offer
drug coverage for seniors beginning in 2006.

Prep football

Marshall finds its man Simmons

Al so. se niors could sign up for privately run
preferred provider organizations. where
patients are encouraged to use doctorS and
hospitals on the company 's. li st but can go
elsewhere for an extra charge.
Supporters said the changes would. make
the program stronger, by giving particip~t s
more choices. It's hoped that those chmces
will lead to-competition among private firm s
and drive down costs.
Unlike the bipartisan collaboration ihat
has marked the Senate 's work, in the House,
Republicans drafted their bill alone. And the
prospect was for a fierce partisan stmggle
there.
The House GOP bill gq,es further than the
Senate to inject private companies mto
Medicare. Beginning in 20 I 0, the traditional
Medicare program that now serves some 90
percent of beneficiaries would have to compete with private companies for business.
and if the government's costs were higher, it
would cost seniors more to stay with the
government plan.
Democrats say that, over time, more
healthy Medicare recipients would gravitate
toward cheaper private coverage, leaving
traditional Medicare to provide coverage for
an increasingly olde(, sicker population.
That , they say, would lead to a large di sparity in the premium price .
Still, House [)emocrats were complai1Jing
loude st about the size of the prescription
drug benefit. Congress set aside $400 billion
over I 0 years for Medicare changes, enough
to cover less than 25 cents out of every dollar spent on prescription drugs for seniors .
The Consumers Union report assumes that
drug spending will continue to explode. rising 17 percent a year. That assumes that a
variety · of efforts to control drug spending
will fail, including federal legi slation to
encourage generic drugs and state initiative s,
to control drug spending Medicaid programs
that could have spi llover effects to Medicare .
The report says the average Medicare beneficiary will use $2,3 18 in drugs this year,
rising in the years ahead.
The government would be picking up a
piece of the tab under both the House and
Senate bills: $1 ,400 under the House plan,
and $1,829 under the Senate plan.

Days Until
High ·School

Football
Season!!!
Meigs Chamber
golf tourney
POMEROY - The Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce golf tournament
is planned for I p.m. on
Thursday, July
17 at
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason , W.Va.
Registration fee is $50 per
player, which includes greens
fee. cart, food and beverages.
The format is a four-person
scmmble chosen by blind draw.
· For infom1ation, call 992-5005.

on radioactive devices. Its previous report focused on only
the United States. Both repons
were requested by Sen. Daniel
Akaka, D-Hawaii.
The countries that responded
to the survey said that a total of
612 devices had been reported
lost or stolen since 1995 with
almost a third of them never
recovered.
Most of the devices lost,'
stolen or abandoned was located in Russia, the GAO said. Of
particular concern were hundreds of electric generators
spread across rural Ru ssia,
cantaining strontiurn-90.
· While each of these contain
only small amounts of the
radioisotope, there could be

enough for a so-called "dirty
bomb" if a numbi:r of generators were stripped of the material, nuclear experts warn.
The Energy Department earlier this year said discussions
ha,ve been underway for some
time with Russian officials
over securing the generators.
The International Atomic
Energy Agency estimates that
as many as I I 0 countries
worldwide do not have adequate controls over radioactive
devices that - if enough of
them were obtained - could
be used to build a conventional explosive device that could
spread radioactive material.

GALLIPOLIS
The
and
Gallipoli s . Parks
Recreation Department will
sponsor baseball clinics on
consecutive Saturdays June
21 and 28.
Clinics will be held from 10
a.m. to noon each Saturday.
Registration fee is $10 for
each session or $15 for both
sessions if players attend both.
Pre-registration is mandatory and must be complete by
the Friday before each clinic.
For information, call 4416022.

..

JACKSON- The Jackson
Area YMCA will host a 3-on3 basketball tournament
beginning at 9 a.m. on
Saturday, July 26.
Registration fee is $50 per
team for the double elimination tournament. For information: call (740) 286-7008.

Make this the best
summer .·you've ever hadl
CreditXpress has
prepared special
loans specifically for
Summer Fun items . .

Officiating
classes slated
JACKSON -The Jackson
Area YMCA js hosting basketball officiating classes
beginning Monday, June 23.
Registration fee is $50 per person. Classes are held from 9 to
II am. For information, contact
Scot Srurgill at (740)352-4106.

· Pools • Four Wheelers
· Hot Tubs · MQtorcycles
· Vacations · J'et Skis · And morel

Roush qualifies
for tourney

992-1771

or www.creditxpress.com

Credit '

~-RESS

•

•

·.

MASON , W.Va. - Trent
Roush of Mason won the sectional qualifying tournament
for the United States Public
Links at Riverside Golf Club.
With rounds of 71 and 68,
Roush advances to the
national championship at
Blue Heron Golf Club in
Galloway, N.J.
Adam
Krawsczyn of
Mason shot rounds of 73-71
and was selected as the third
alternate for the championship match ..

11- - - -

-- -

ready for
next level
Gallia Academy running
backlooksfonNanito
all-star game, college
BY ANDREW CARTER
Sport~

editor

WESTERVILLE - Ty Simmons of
Gallia Academy High School will put the
finishing touches on his prep career
Saturday when he plays in the 58th annual
Grange Insurance Ohio All-Star Classic.
The game is
scheduled for
7 p.m. at
Columbus
Crew Stadium
in Columbus.
Simmon s,
w
h
0
announced
that he has
signed a letter
of intent with
Ball
State
University, is
one of 34
young
men
who will suit
'up for the
South squad
Simmons
coached
by
.
Portsmouth's Curt Clifford. He directed the
Trojans to the Division IV, Region 15 finals
in 2002.
During Monday's media day activities at
Otterbein College's Memorial Stadium,
Simmons, wearing the familiar No.2 jersey
that he donned for GAHS , said he's excited
about getting the chance to test his mettle
against some of the top players in the
Buckeye State. .
"It's a real big thrill," Simmons said with
a grin. "''m looking forward to getting to
know everybody and playing with them on
the field. It's going to be fun , I know that."

Chicago 4, Cincinnati 3

Please see Simmons, B:Z

Baseball clinic
in Gallipolis

3-on-3 tourney
in Jackson

Call

Please see Herd, Bl

CHESHIRE - The River
Valley High School cross
country team begins its
weekly summer workout
. schedule at 7 p.m. Thursday.
.Coach Ed Sayre said the
teain will meet for weekly
running on the hike and bike
trail near Thornas Do-It
Center on McCormick Road
near Gallipolis.
The workouts are open to
students in seventh through
. 12th grades interested in
cross country.
For information, call Sayre
at 441-0850.

Powell holds talks with Sharon aide
WASHINGTON (AP) - Hamas to agree to stop the meantime, Sharon has vowed
·Preparing for a potential attacks, and Palestinian Prime consistently to keep up Israeli
round of talks next weekend Minister Mahmoud Abbas attacks on Hamas.
in the Middle East, Secretary decided to make his own
The Bush administration
wants to build up the
of State Colin Powell held an i effort.
Powell said last Thursday Palestinian Authority's secuunannounced meeting with
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's that he was keeping his travel rity force in the hope it would
chief of staff a!) a U.S.-backed schedule flexible for a possi- dismantle Hamas and other
road map for peacemaking ble trip to Israel . after the militant groups.
Quartet meeting in Jordan .
American envoy John s.
hung in the balance.
Violence has battered the · He would confer in Israel Wolf arrived in Jerusalem
blueprint and the Bush with Sharon and also on the
administration is trying to sal- West Bank with Abbas.
over the weekend and began
vage it .through diplomacy.
After scolding Israel briefly talks with Israeli and
Powell stopped by the for targeting a Hamas leader Palestinian security forces.
White House on Monday to last Monday, Bus~ has backed His assignment is to try to
sc:e Sharon's aide, Dov Sharon by calling for harsh bring the leve l of violence
We isglass, as he met there treatment of the terror group down so the U.S.-backed road
with Condoleezza Rice. that specializes in suicide map for peacem~ing can be
President Bush's assistant for bombings.
·
· put back on track.
More than 50 people were
national security.
White House spokesman
The three-way meeting was Ari Fleischer said "there are killed in last week's spate of
held before Powell took off threats to the Israelis, threats blood-spilling. Hamas leaders
for Cambodia for a confer- to the Palestinians, that come and Sharon have vowed a
principally from Hamas and fight to the finish .
ence of Asian nations.
Powell plans to go on to the from the other groups of a
At the same time, though,
Middle East toward the end of rejectionist nature, a rejec- Maj . Gen . Amos Gil ad, a
the week for talks in Jordan tionist front, who have no senior official in the Israeli
with U.N. Secretary General interest in peace."
defense
ministry,
met
Kofi Annan, Russian Foreign · Fleischer said they did not Saturday
night
with
Minister Igor Ivanov and support creation of a Palestinian security minister
senior European Union offi- Palestinian state and represent Mohammed Dahlan on an
~ial s.
a threat to the Palestinian 'peo- Israeli initiative to withdraw
.
.
Israeli forces from northern
They are concerned about pie.
thm road map for peacemakBush and his U.N., Russian G
d
.f th
ing between Israel and the and European Union partners • aza . an
see . 1
e
Palestinians that is now bat- have set their sights on a Palestinian Authonty could
tered by fighting between Palestinian state by 2005 control Hamas ..
Israel
and
Hamas,
a established on land Israel won
Egyptian mediators, meanPalestinian militant group that in the 1967 Middle East war. while, met with Hamas leadhas killed scores of Israelis
The president has not called ers to seek a halt m attacks on
with suiciae bombings.
for Israeli restraint or publicly Israel m exchange for a halt m
Egy ptiap mediators were criticized targeting terror Israel's targeting. of Hamas
unable Monday to persuade leaders for a week. In the leaders.

court and attack," Jirsa said .
"That's how the players want to
play, and that's how we' re going
to coach."
Two of Marshall athletic director Bob Marcum's top choices
withdrew on consecutive days late
last week.
Larry Hunter, a North Carolina
State assistant and former- Ohio
University head coach, and
Tulane coach Shawn Finney, a
West Virginia native, interviewed
for the_jdb.
Hunter withdrew from the
search June 12, citing a commitment to the Wolfpack. Finney

RVHS begins ·
cross country
workouts

Devices containing radioactive .
material found in many countries
WASHINGTON (AP) Devices that contain radioactive material have been distributed - and in many cases lost
- around the world, a congressional report said Monday.
The report by the General
Accounting Office said that
nearly I 0 million devices that
contain radioactive material
exist in the United States and
the 49 countries responding to
a survey.
Though there is limited
information about the number
of devices that have been lost,
stolen or abandoned, it is estimated to be in the thousands
worldwide, the GAO said.
The report was the GAO's
second in a little over a month

::zo:::~:-1

thing is to find a
place where you
can win a championship," Jirsa
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. ·said. " Marshall
Clemson assistant Ron Jirsa was
has the tradition
named Marshall's men's basketand facilities to
ball coach Mpnday, filling the
do that. Those are
final Division I opening imd cap- .
the types of
ping a tumultuous five days for
places I am interthe Thundering HerCI program.
"-..- ested in."
Jirsa,.- 43, was introduced at a
Jirsa
Jirsa plans to
news conference as the replaceemphasize
ment for Greg White, who left defense.and rebounding to rebuild
Marshall on June 3 to return to his a Marshall program which hasn't
old job at the University of played in the NCAA tournament
Charleston, a Divi sion II school. since 1987.
"When you 're a candidate for
"But when we get the ball,
several jobs ... the most important we're . going to take it down the
BY JoeoY McCREARY

Associated Press

Cincinnati's Jason Larue (23) is tagged out by Chicago's Ramon Martinez, right, in a rundown between third
and home in the second Inning Monday in Cincinnati. The Cubs won the game, 4-3. (AP)
I

Karros,.Alou club Reds
the team and took batting
practice before the game.
He must sit out one more
CINCINNATI _ Eric to complete his sevengame suspension for
Karros figures it 's all a using a corked bat.
The Cubs also . are
matter of repetition.
Playing more often looking ahead to Choi's
while Hee Seop Choi return from a collision
recovers from a frighten- that left him hospitalized
ing collision, Karros has June 7 with a sore neck
found his swing and and head. In the meangiven the Chicago Cubs time, Karros has done a
some stability at first nice job filling in.
"Everyone off the
base.
Moises Alou and bench has contributed,"
Karros hit solo homers manager Dusty Baker
within a three-pitch span said. "Everyone we've
Monday night, setting up signed has come up big."
a 4·3 victory over · the
Karros, who came to
Cincipnati . Reds that the Cubs in a trade with
brought the Cubs one Los
Angeles
last
game closer to becoming · December, has gone l Iwhole.
for-34 in his last I 0
Sammy Sosa rejoined games with a pair of
BY JoE KAY

Associated Press

homers. He has a fivegame streak and a .303
batting average.
"I've tried to keep
myself prepared all
year," Karras said. "The
more pitching you see,
the better off you're
going to fare."
Hi s seventh homer
decided a game controlled by the pitchers.
Matt Clement (5-6)
won his third consecutive start, giving up three
runs in six innings while
striking out nine. The
right-hander has allowed
only six runs in those
three starts, pulling himself out of hts rut.
· "It's nice to see all of
the work and the thought
pay off a little bit,"
Clement said.

Jimmy Anderson (1 -3)
was recalled from TripleA Louisville before the
game and ruined a good
night with two · bad
changeups. He hung two
in the decisive threepitch sequence to Alou
and Karros in the sixth.
Anderson threw only
four changeups all game,
and two of them turned
into homers.
"I was cutting them
short, almost bouncing
them, and they were taking them, so I decided to
try throwing them a little
harder," Anderson said.
"Alou's was right in the
middle of the plate. The
one to Kartos was more
away, but he was able to

Pl1811 SH Reels, B:Z

Buckeyes Notebook

Tressel, OSU agree
on
new
deal
.

,
COLUMBUS (AP) ~ ()hio
State football coach Jim Tressel
signed a new six-year contract
Monday worth' at least $1 .3 million this season and escalating to
$1 .8 million in the final year.
The new deal comes after
Tressel led Ohio State to its first
national championship since 1968
with a 31-24 double-overtime win
over Miami in the Fiesta Bowl.
The contract, which replaces a
deal that would have expired after
the 2005 season, includes a base
salaiy of $285,700 that increases
to $405,300 in the final year.
Tressel will earn $420,000 from
radio, television and public rela-

tions
and
$335,000 from
the universitts
deal with Nike
in the first year.
Both amounts
will
increase
yearly.
The contract
also contains
bonuses tied to
Trenel
the academic
perfdrmance of
the team, but at Tressel's request,
the only athletic bonus is an additional $200,000 if the Buckeyes
play in the BCS championship
game.

Tressel has a record of 21-5 in
his first two seasons at Ohio State,
including an NCAA-record 14·0
last year.
The contract ctmld be extended
for three years if an agreement is ·
reached by March I , 2006.
Around the Big Ten, several
coaches are known to have higher
annual compensation, including
Wisconsin's Barry Alvarez, at
$1.4 million, and Michigan State's
John · L. Smith, $1.5 million .
Michigan coach Lloyd Carr ·is
paid around $800,000 per year.
Ohio State President Karen
Holbrook's salary is $325,000 a
year.

---- --··

Bartrum and
Brown football
camp returns
Former Marshall stars ·
to host youth football
clinic, golf tournament
Staff report

HUNTINGTON, W.Va . - The third
annual Bartrum and Brown football camp
and golf tournament are scheduled for
Friday and Saturday, June 27-28 in
Huntington.
The camp is co-sponsored by former
Marshall. University AllAmericans Mike Bartrum
and Troy Brown in coni unction with Meigs High
School, Bartruni's alma
mater.
Bartrum currently plays
Philadelphia
for
the
Eagles, while Brown is a
member of the New
England Patriots.
.
· The camp will be conducted in two sessions,
from 9 a.m. to noon for
athletes in first through
seventh grades, and from I
to 4 p.m.· for athletes in
eighth through 12th grades.
Camp will be held Friday,
June 27 at Spring Valley
High School, located on
Spring Valley Drive near
the V.A. Hospital in
Huntington.
Brown ·
Re!listration fee is $25 if
paid m advance with a $15 ·
charge for each additional child in the same
family. Registration is $30 if paid the day of
camp.
.
Several current NFL' players are sched- '
uled to make appearances during the camp,
including New York Jets quarterback Chad
Pennington, a Marshall alumnus, and former Thundering Herd players John Wade of
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Chris Hanson
of the Jacksonville Jaguars and Chris
Massey of the St. Louis Rams. Also on the
camp ,roster are former Ohio State punter
and quarterback Tom Tupa of Tampa Bay,
PIUH

see C.mp, Bl
P'"

i

•••

�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

College baseball

Simmons
from Page 81

'

'

Rice's J$ff Jorgensen, center wearing batting helmet, celebrates with teammates, from left,
Colin Matheny, Matt Moake , Sean Hirsch, Lance Pendleton and Phil ip Humber after scoring
against Texas on a two-run hit by Justin Ruchti in the fourth inning of a College World Series
game Monday in Omaha , Neb. (AP)

·Rice blows out Texas
· OMAHA , Neb. (AP) fourth inning on Justin
Wade Townsend stnlck out I 0
Ruchti's two-run double.
and ~ave up two hits in the
The Owls put up their seven
last s1x innings Monday night,
runs with two out in 'the sixth.
and Rice used a seven-run
Four Texas pitchers combined
sixth inning to pull away to a
to walk three batters. hit two
12-2 victory at the College
others and bring in a run with
World Series.
a wild pitch. The Longhorns
The Owls (55-11) will play
also committed two of their
either Texas (49-19) or Mtami
three errors in the inning.
(45-16-1) on Wednesday. The
Rice had only four hits in
loser of Thesday's game will
straight batters in one stretch. the sixth, the biggest a twobe eliminated.
single
by
Craig
The loss was Tel):as' sec- After Taylor Teagarden 's run
Stansberry.
double,
ond-worst in 119 CWS sixth-inning
The Owls extended their
Townsend
set.
down
I
0 more
games. The Longhorns' most
lead
to 11 -2 in the seventh on
lopsided defeat was an 11-run in a row before pinch-hitter
Michael Hollimon's ground- Chris Kolkhorst's RBI single.
loss to Arizona in 1963.
Texas scored the game 's
rule
double with two out in
It was the first loss in six
first
two runs on Curti s
the
ninth.
CWS games for' the defending
Townsend, who allowed · Thigpen's dot~ble in the first
national champions, who won
·
seven
hits, left wi rh two out in inning.
four straight last year and beat
The
Owls
got
a run back in
the
ninth
after
walking
Tim
Miami 13-2 in their Series
MDss. David Aardsrna came the third when Kolkhorst
opener Saturday.
Townsend ( 11-1) gave up · on and needed only one pitch scored from first after Texas
starter Justin Simmons (5-6)
two runs in the opening to get the final out.
Texas' seven pitchers threw wildly to first after
inning, then settled down and
dominated the Longhorns. He walked nine and hit four bat- fielding Craig Stansberry 's
came within one out of pitch- ters. The number of pitchers bunt.
ing his first complete game.
used and hit batsmen equaled
Simmons
lasted· four
The 6-foot-4, 225-pound CWS records.
innings, giving up three hits
sophomore retired eight
Rice took a 3-2 lead in the ·and two earned runs.
Jirsa said Marshall associate athletic director Jeff
O' Malley contacted him '
about the job four days after
from Page 81
White restgned, but he then
didn't hear from Marshall for
pulled out the following day, about
a week.
sayinjl that while Mullens ts
· While attendinga wedding
his btrthplace, New Orleans
in
West Pl~no, Texas, Jirsa
had become his home. He is
was
invited to Huntington for
expected to sign a contract
an
interview.
He flew back to
extension later this summer.
Jirsa is a former Georgia his Clemson, S.C. , home,
head coach, but he has been packed a suitcase and caught
an assistant coach for most of a flight to Huntington on
his 22-year coaching career. Friday morning. He met with
He went 35-30 i'n two seasons Marcum and Marshall presiat Georgia, where he replaced dent Dan Angel later that day.
"I liked the idea that, No. I ,
Tubby Smith in 1997. He was
he let me know up front, 'I want
fired in · 1999 and was
replaced by Charleston native this job,'" Marcum said. "I like ·
Jim Harrick. Smith now that attitude. And he had
already studied the stats and he
coaches at Kentucky.
"When you ' re the head knew our plusses and minuses."
By Saturday, Jirsa was
.coach of an institution in the
Southeastern Conference, arranging data on possible
you have to ~o against some Marshall recruits, and he met
good people,' Marcum said. with the Thundering Herd play"We're not worried about ers on Sunday. He had planned
competition. You competed." individual meetings with each
Marcum had five candi- player early this week.
Marshall forward Marvindates in mind and said Jirsa
Black
is familiar with Jirsa.
came recommended by
Smith and Memphis coach While at Coffeyville (Kan.)
Community College, Black
John Calipari.
recruited by Jirsa in 2002.
Jirsa was an assistant to was
"The
way he talks to you, it's
Oliver Purnell at Dayton
like
if
you've
known him for
from 1999-2003 and was one
of two candidates to replace five minutes, you've known
Purnell, who left for Clemson him your whole life,'' Black
said. "He's so easy to e;et along
in April. When Dayton hired with.
He's both mild-man:
Brian Gregory, Jirsa followed
nered and a~gressive."
Purnell to Clemson.
Black satd his teammates

Herd

Reds
Page

from

81

get it and hit it."
Ken Griffey I r. got to the
fence in center and timed his
jump. but the ball sailed over
his glove.
"I hit it pretty well," said
Karras, who has seven
homers. "Anytime yo·u hit a
ball pretty well in this ballpark, it's going out. It's probably the most hitter-friendly
park in the National League,
or in all of the majors, for that
matter."
Griffey's
right
arm
smacked· the padding on top
of the fence as he tried to
make the catch. It was the
· hardest blow Griffey has
taken since he dislocated the

shoulder on April 5 while
diving for a fly ball in the
outfield against the Cubs.
Griffey missed 5 112 weeks
after he dislocated the shoulder, which still bothers him
on an awkward swing. He
cradled the ann briefly after
hitting the wall Monday, then
grabbed his · wrist and
stretched the arm. A trainer
was waiting to talk to him
when the Reds came off the
field.
"l:fe didn't hurt it, but he
could feel it in his shoulder,"
manager Bob Boone said. ·
Once they fell behind, the
Reds got only one more hit.
Jose Guillen singled off Joe
Borowski with two outs in
the ninth, and Adam Dunn
walked. Borowski struck out
Barry Larkin to get his 14th
save in 16 chances.

Players from both teams
arrived Sunday on the
Otterbein campus and brief
workouts were held to shake
the rust off tlie athletes, many
of whom haven't .touched a
football si nce last .fall.
Despite the long layoff.
Simmons sa id most players
looked sharp.
'Tve seen some pretty
impressive stuff," he said.
" It s like watchin~ all those
college hig hlights. ·
Clifford, whose top player
Jeremiah Bolden is also playing for the South team, joked
that he picked Simmons for
the South team just to sit him
on the bench for the game.
"I told him I let him on the
team but I' m not going to let
him play," Clifford laughed.
"That's his tonure for beating
us. He's a real good player."
Simmons burned the
Trojans for 196 and two
touchdowns in a 28- 12 Biue
Devi l victory on Oct. II.
2002, at Ponsmouth,- snap-

Camp
from Page 81
Tony Stewart of the
Cincinnati Bengals and Jeff
Thomason of the Eagles.
. Applications · are available
at Meigs High School, Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce,
Anderson
Furniture in Pomeroy and

Tuesday, June 17, 2003

ping the Trojans· seven-game
win streak.
"I alway' thought Ty could
play at the next level.''
Clifford said of Simmons'
signing with Ball State.
"Good things happen to good
players."
Simmons said he had offers
from Division II and Ill programs, but settled on Ball
Stale after visiting the
Muncie. Ind .. campus and
meeting with tea m officials.
"I· went down there and
they impressed me: they
impressed me a lot.'' he said.
"The coaches and the coaching staff are real nice and I
liked the way they ran their
. offense."
He said Ball State also Iii
the bill by fu lfi lling his
dream of playing Division IA footbalL He sa id he looks
forward to the challenge
ahead.
"Oh, I can't wait." he said.
"I want to see how much I
have to step it up and see
-what they're looking for from

state track. and field championships and as a member of
the Blue Devil .football squad
that has rea~hed the slate
playoff' for the past four seasons.
He thinb those experiences will hdp him make the
transition to the collegiate
level.
''I'm prepared." he said ..
" It·, really no pressure at all,
just like another da y. I'm
ready ...
Simmons said he plans to
major in nursing at Ball State.
He finished the 2002 season with a GAHS single-sea. son record L,663 yards and
s.cored 23 touchdowns.
Also during hi s senior campaign. Simmons set the
Gallia Academy si ngle-gallie
rushing record of 323 yards
and established the hi ghwater mark for longest run
from scrimmage wi th a 99yard sprint, setting both ·
records in the same game
agai nst Warren last season . .
He was .voted to the tirst
me.''
team in the Division Ill AllSimmons has become Oh io balloting and was voted
accustomed to playing on a Southeast District offensive
big stage over the past few player of the year.
~ears with appearances in the

Locker 2 19 in Middleport.
Online registration is available at www.bart rumandbrown.com.
For information, contact
Rhil Ratliff at (304) 360-0962
or (304) 429-1699, ext. 202:
Rich Gannon at (304) 7437514 or (304) 697-5640;
Mike Chancey at (740) 9922158: or South Point Ford at
(740) 894-3673.
The golf tournament is

The Daily Sentinel

.

4.

.

Pro baseba'll
National Leag11e
East
W
LPcL
Allanta .
. .45
22
Montreal
39
30
Ph•la~el ph•a .. 35
32
Flonda ...
...34
37
New York, ....... 31
37
Central

.672
.565
.522
.479
.456

W L Pct
30 .559
32 .536
33 .515

Ch1cago
. 38
Houston
... 37
· St LOUIS ........ 35
C1ncmnat1. .
...34
M•lwaukee
. 28
Pittsburgh ..... 27

34
40
39

GB
· 7
10
13
14',

GB

500
.412
.409

f,
3
4
10
10

West
WLPctGa
San Francisco ... 42
Los Angeles ..... 40
Colorado
. 35
Arizona
.... 33
San D1ego ....... 22

26
28

.618
5a8
2
36 .493·
8 '1
35 .4a5
9
49 ,3 10
21'1
.
• ·sunday's Games
Toronto 5. Chicago Cubs 4 , 10 1nnings
Colorado s. Detr&lt;llt 4
Los Angeles 4, Cleveland 3
N.Y Yankees 5. St. Louis 2
Pittsburgh 9, Tampa Sa~ 5
Ph•ladelphia at Cincmnati. ppd .. rain
Baltimore 5. Milwaukee 4
"
Boston 3 . Houston 2, 14mnings
Arizona 12. Minnesota 8
Kansas City 5, San FranCISCO 4
San Diego 1, Chicago While So~e 0
N.Y. Mets 8. Anaheim 0
Oakland 9 . Montreal 1
Seanle 2, Atlanta 1
Florida 10, Te)(as 4
Monday 's Games
Florida 1. N.Y. Mats 0
· ··
Chicago Cubs 4 , Cincinnati 3
Milwaukee 9. St. Louis 4
San Diego 7, Colorado 5

Tuesday's Games
N.Y. Mats (Sea 4·2) al Florida (Pavano
5-7). 7'05 p.m.
(L.He•nancM!z- 6-4)
at
Montreat
Pittsburgh (D'Amico 4-7), 7:05p.m.
Atlanla (Reynolds 5·1) at Philadelphia
(Myers 5-6) ,' 7:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Zambrano 5·6) at
C•ncmnat1 (Dempster 2·4). 7:10p.m.
Arizona (Good 3·1) at Houston
(Robertson 4·3) , 8:05p.m.
St . Louis (Stephenson
3-5) at
Milwaukee (Kinney 5·4). a·05 p.m .
San Diego {P~avy 5·5) at Colorado
(OI•ver 3·5). 9:05 p.m.
San Francisco {Foppert 4-3) at Los
Angeles (K.Brown 9- 1 ), . 10:10p.m .

Wednesday 'a Gamea
Montreal at Pittsbu rgh. 7:05 p.m
N.Y. Mels at Florida , 7:05p.m .
._ Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7:05 p .m.
Ch1cago Cubs at Cincinnati. 7:10 p,m
Anzona at Houston, 8 :05 p.m.
St. LOUIS at Milwaukee. a:OS p_m
San Diego at Colorado, 9:05 p.m.
San Francisco at Los Angeles, 10: 10
p.m.

Chicago ........ 0 11 002 000 - 4 6 0
Cincinnati .... 200 0 10 000 - 3 1o 1
Clement, Farnsworth (7), Alfonseca (a).
Borowsk1 (9) and DMiller: JAnderson ,
Sullivan (7), Reitsma {9) and LaRue. WCiement 5-6 . L-JAnderson 1-3. SvBorowski (14). HAs-G h!cago. Alou (7).
Karros (7) .

Profiles of your friends and neighbors
· in Meigs County every Monday.

www.mydallysentlnel.com-

National League Leaders
BATTING-Pujols, St. t puis. .379:
Renteria . St. Louis, .348; Sheffield, Atlanta,
345; AGonzalez, Florida, .332 ; Helton,
Colorado, .329; Vidro, Montreal. .329; Lo
Duca. Los Angeles, .328.
RUNS- Furcal, Atlanta. 60: Pujols. St.
LOUIS. 56: Helton , Colorado, 56 ; Sheifiekl,
Atlanta . 54 : Berkman . Houston, 48;
Se.:.son.. Milwaukee . 48 , Payton , Co lorado,
48. Bonds , San Francisco, 48.
RBI-Lowell. Flo ri da. 57: PrWi tson.
Colo rado. 57: Kearns. Cincinnati. 56:
Helton. Colorado. 56: Sheffield. Atlanta. 56:
PujOlS, Sl. lOUIS. 55; AJones, Atlanta, 52.
HITS-Pujols, St. Louis, a9: Renteria,
St. Louis, 89: Pierre, Florida, a7; Furcal,
Allanta , 86; LCastlllo. Florida, 86:
CPatterson. Chicago. a4: Lowell. Florida.
83: Hel ton. Colorado. 83.

DOUBLES - MG11es, Atlanta , 24: PujOis,
Sl . LOUIS. 23: Rolen , St louis, 23:
LGonzalez , Ar•zona, 23, PrWilson ,
Colorado. 22, Hollandsworth, Florida, 22:
JKent. Houston , 22 : Biggio. Houston . 22.
TRIPLE-S-Furcal.
Atlanta .
8;
CPanerson. Ch1cago. 7: LWalker. Colorado,
7: Wigginton New York , 5 , AGonzalez,
Flor1da. 5: Podsednik. Milwaukee, 4 ,
JEncarnac1on.
Florida ,
4;
Payton ,
Colorado, 4.
HOME RUN$-Dunn, Cincinnati. 22:
Lowell , Florida. 21 : Sexson. Milwaukee. 21 :
JLopez. Allanta . 19 : Bonds. San FranCisco.
19: PUJOis. Sl Louis, 18; AJones , Atlanta ,,
18: Edmonds. St Louis , 18 ; Sheffield,
Atlanta . I a.
STOLEN BASES-Pierre, Florida, 28:
ORoberts , Los Angeles . 22 : EYoung.
Milwaukee. t 6 : DeLee. Florida. 13;
LCastillo, Flonda, 13 : Lonon , Pittsburgh ,
13; Podsednik, M•lwaukee, 12: CPatterson.
Chicago. 12; JEncarnacion, Florida, 12;
Renteria , St. Louis, 12 .
PITCHING (7 Decis•ons)-KBrown. Los .
Angeles. 9-1 . .900. 2 .00: Rueter. San
Francisco. 7-1.. 87~ . 3.60: PriOr, Ch1cago.
8-2, . BOO, 2.7 1: WWIIIiams. St Louis , 8·2.
.800, 2 66; Ishii , Los ·Angeles, 6-2 .. 750,
2.97; Chacon , Colorado, 9-3, .750. 4.21 ;
Reitsma , Cinclnnab. 6·2, .750, 5 .55.
STRIKEOUTS-Wood . Chicago. 11 9:
JVazquez. MontreaL 109: Prior. Chicago.
106 ; Schmidt, San Francisco, 100; Noma,
Los Angeles. 90; Wolf. Ph iladelphia. a6;
Millwood. Philadelphia , a6.
SAVEs-Gagne, Los Angeles, 26 ;
Smaltz, Atlanta , 26: Wagner, Houston. t 9:
MiWilliams.
Pitlsburgh,
1B: Biddle.
Montre al. 17 ; Benitez, New York , 17 ;
Williamson , Cmcmnali, 16: JJimenez ,
Colorado. 16: Worre ll. San Francisco, 16;
Mesa, Philadelphia. 16 .

American League
East ·
W
L Pet.
New York ......... 40 28 .588
. .. 39
29
Boston ..
Toronto ............. 39
31
Baltimore ........... 32
35
Tampa Bay
.23
44
Central

W

GB

.574
.557
.478
343

7',
16'1

L · Pct

GB

..~59
.515
464
388
258

3
6 '1
11'1
20

Minnesota ......... 38
30
Kansas City ...... 34
32
Chicago .......... 32
37
.Clewland ........ 26 ' 41
Oetioit
...... 17
49
West

1

2

WLPctGB
Seat11e ........ ,. .46
22
676
Oakland
..... 38
29 .567
7' 1
Anaheim ........... 34
33 .507 '
11'?
Taxa's ....
..; ... .27
40
403
ta ',
Sunday '• Games
Toronto 5, Chicago Cu bs 4, 10 innings
'
Colorado 5. Detroit 4
Los Angeles 4, Cleveland 3
N.Y. Yankees 5. St. LOUIS 2
PiHsburgh 9, Tampa Bay 5
Baltimore 5, Milwaukee 4
Boston 3, Houston 2, 14 irinings
Arizona 12. Minnesota a
Kansas City 5, San Francisco 4
San Dieg o ~ , Chicago Wh ite So.: 0
N.Y. Mets a, Anaheim 0
Oakland 9, Montreal 1
Seante 2. Atlanta 1
Florida 1 Te~eas 4

o.

Monday's Games
Ka nsas City 9, Minnesota a
Chicago White Sox 4, Boston 2
Seattle 6. Anaheim 3
Tueaday 's Games
Tampa Bay (Gonzalez 2·2) al N.Y
Yankees (Weaver 3·5), 1:05 p.m ., 1st game
Tampa Bay (Brazelton 1 -5) at N.Y
Yankees (Wells a-2). 7 :05p.m .. 2nd game
Toronto (Halladay 9·2) at Baltimore
(Daal 4·7), 7:05p.m .
Cleveland (Sabath ia 5·3) at De troit
(Berne ro 1-8) , 7:05p.m.
Minnesota (Rogers 5-2) al Kansas City
!Affeldl 3-3), 8:05p.m
Boston (Burkett 4·3) at Chicago White
Sox (Colon 6·6), a :05 p.m.
Anaheim (App •er 4·3) at Seattle
(A.Franklin 5-4) , 10:05 p.m.
Te~eas (Santos 0-1) at Oak land (Lilly 3·
5), 10 05 p.m.

Wednesday's Games
Toronto at Baltimore. 7:05 p.m
Cleveland at Detroit. 7:05p.m.
Ta mpa Bay at N .Y. Yankees, 7 :05p.m

Minnesota at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m
Boston at Chicago White Sox 1 8:05p.m.
Ana,hetm at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Texas at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.

Wednesdey 't! G•m••
Buffalo at Nbr1olk
Durham at Pawtucket
Louisville at Columbus
Ottawa at ChafloHe
Rjchmond at Rochester
ScrantonWilkes-Barre at Toledo
Syracuse at Indianapolis

American League Leaders
BAITING-Mora,
Baltimore. .360;
Muellet. Boston. .344: Blalock. Texas .. 341 ;
!Suzuki , Seatlle. . 339: MYoung, Texas,
.333: Byrnes, Oakland , .333: Garciaparra,
Boston , .333.
RUNS-CDelgado ,
Toronto ,
61;
Garc:1aparra, Boston, 59; ASoriano, New
York , 54: MAamlrez, Boston, 54: BBoone.
Seanle. 53; Catalanono. Toronto, 51 : Wells,
Toronto, SO: CEverett, Texas, 50.
RBI-GDelgado. Toronto. 76: Wells .
Toronto, 61 ; GAnderson . Anaheim , 61 :
BBoone, Seattle, 54; MRam•rez , Boston.
51 ; Gibbons. Baltimore, 50: JGonzalez.
Te)(as. 49.
HITS-ISuzuki,
Seattle,
94;
Garciaparra. Boston, 94: Wells. Toronto.
88: ASoriano, New York. 87 ; Baldelli,
Tampa Bay, 85. MYoung , Texas , 85;
GAnderson, Anaheim , 85.
DOUBLES-Mueller,
Boston .
24;
Matsui. New York. 23: HuH, Tampa Bay, 23:
Wells , Toronto, 23. Cata lanot1o, Toronto,
23: GAnderson. Anaheim , 22; CDelgado,
Toronto, 21 , BBoone, Seattle, 21 .
TRIPLES-Garciaparra, Boston , 12;
CGuzman , Minnesota, 9; Baldelli, Tampa
Bay, 5; MYoung. Te)(as, 5: Byrnes, Oakland.
5: DJimenez. Chicago. 5: CatalanoHo,
Toronto, 4: Ni~eon , Boston. 4 : DYoung ,
Detroit, 4 .
HOME RUNS-CDelgado, Toronto, 22;
ASoriano, New York, 18; BSoone, Seattle,
1 8; JGonzalez. Texas. 18: JaGiambi. New
York. 17; CEveren. Te)(as , 17: AAodriguez ,
Texas, 16: Thomas. Chicago, 16.
STOLEN BASES-ISuzuki, Seattle, 1~ ;
ASoriano. New York, 18; Beltran, Kansas
City, t 6 : Crawford, Tampa Bay, 15; Hairston
Jr.. Baltimore. 14: Mondesl, New York, 14;
ASanchez. OelrOII, 12: Damon, Boston, 12 .
PITCHING (7 OeCISio ns)-Ha ll aday,
Toronto, 9-2 . .818, 3.91; Loaiza, Chicago,
9·2, .818. ~ . 24 ; DWells. New York, 8·2,
.800, 3.63; Moyer. Seattle, 10-3, .769, 2.99:
Meche. Seattle. 9-3, .750, 3.13: Penson.
Bal timore. 9·3. .150. 3 .64: Valdes. Te)(aS. 62, .750, 4 .62
STRIKEOUT3-Mussina, New York. 99:
Clemens. New York, 97 ; Halladay, Toronto,
85: Loaiza. Ch1cago, 7llt: Colon , Chicago, .
70: Pett ine. New York. 70: Wakefield .
Boston, 69.
Si..VES-Guardado, Minnesota, 19:
Urbina, Texas, 18; Foulke, Oakland, 16;
Julio, Baltimore , 15: MacDo ugal. Kansas
City, 14; DBaez. Cle'Jeland. 14: LCar1er.
Tampa Bay. 11 .

L

·Pet.

Washington ....... 16
Chillicothe .......... 11
Evansville .......... 12
Richmond ......... tt
Kalamazoo ......... 8
Florence ............. 3

·5
6
a

· .762
.647

W

W

L

Pet.

Louisville ......... .. 39
Toledo ......... .. .. .34
Columbus ....... 32
Indianapolis ...... 28

29
33
36
40

.574
.507
.47 1
.4 12

W

thing s as a starter in the
minors.
"Felipe right now is not.the
guy we saw in spring training," Boone said. "He's got to
get some things worked out
with hi.s stroke. He 's just got
to play."
The low point for . Lopez
came on May 22, when 'he
struck out three times and had
a fielding gaffe during a 9-4
loss to' Atlanta at Great
American Ball Park. He had
hi s back to the infield while
taking a rel ay, and didn 't see a
runner heading home from
third until invas too late.
He was booed loud! y when
'he came off the fi eld and
every time he came to bat
again. As his slump went on,
fans repc;atedly vented their
fru strations.
"It affected him, just like it
affects the manager." Boone
said. "He's a sensitive kid.
He's young. It affects anybody. You need a lot of experience to deal with that."
Larkin, who heard boos as
he struggled while pl aying
with a groin injury in 2001 ,
thinks Lopez handled the criticism well for a young player.
"I paid close attention when
he was going through what he
was going through," Larkin
said . "I th ink he handled it
very well. So that's a positive
that can collie out of all that's
goi ng on.· That 's one thing I
said to him: I liked how he
handled that. I though he hani
'dled failure very well..
"It 's just a bump in the
road. I think the direction is
clear. It's just a matter of what
he has to do to show the consistency to take over th e
reins."
BOONE AGAIN: Aaron
Boone was chosen as the NL
Player of the Week for the

I

l
6

Pet.

GB
4 '~

4'i
.4',
5
5

L

Pet.

GB

GB

0
0

.000
.000

0

.000

0
0

.000
.000
.000

0

.000

o .ooo
o

.

''
·,'
'

'

•

· Columbus at San Jose , 10 p.m.

Transactions
BASEBALL

.

American League

BALTIMORE

ORIOLES-S1gned OF ,

Jarod Ri ne. Recalled OF Larry B•gbie lrom :
Ottawa of the IL
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Placed LHP : ·
Kelly Wunsch on the 15-day d•sable,d list,

.

relroactive to June
t2 . Recalled INF-OF ·
'

Legion baseball

CLEVELAND

June
..... _at Mason County, 15·4 L
tO.
.. .. at Mariana (DH). 5·2 L
10
!J .. .. 81 Manetta (DH ), 10·6 L
11 ...... ......................... at Athens, 7· 2 W
13 .............. , ........... Mason County, 11·9 L
15 ..
...al Pickerington (DH) , 1 p.m.
1a .... .. ................ ..at Parkersburg. 6 p.m.
--· .... ........ at Wellston , 6 p.m.
19
22 ..... .. ..
... lancaster II (DH) . t p.m.
23. .
.. ......... Athens. 6 p.m.
24 .....
. ................ Mari ana. 6 p.m.

July
3 .......... ................. at Wellston , 6 p.m.
5.
. ..... Parkersburg (D H) , 1 p.m.
6 ..... ..
.. ....... Shinnston (DH} . t p.m.
? ........ ...... ,... ..........Mason County, 6 p.m.
8 ........ .. .................... at Nitro (DH) , 1 p.m
t O.... .......... ... ................... weustyn. 6 p.m.
11 .... ......... ... ............. Parkersburg. 6 p.m
12
...... Nitro (OH), 1 p.m. ·
13 .. ~ .... .. .... ....... .... at Winfield (DH). 2 p.m.
15
.. ... .at Lancaster (D H), 5:30p.m.
16 ..... ..... , ... ....... .... ..... ..... at Athens. 6 p.m.
t9
................ ... .. Athens (DH) , t p.m
20 ......... :.. District Tournament at Wellston
(All home games played at Meigs High

te rms With

INDIANS-Agreed

iB

MI Chael

th~

and
South ::

Atlant•c League.
TEXAS RANGERS-Agreed lo terms
w1th RHP Jonathan Ramos and SS SCott • .
Welch and ass1gned Ramos to the Arizona
League and Welch to Spokane of the
Northwest League. Released RHP Jamey
Wrighllrom ,h •s minor-teague contract. .

TOAONTO BLUE JAYS-Claimed RHP
Scott Serv1ce ott waivers from the Anlona
Diamondbacks. Optioned AHP Mike Smith :
to Syracuse of the l,l,

Na11ona1League
CINCINNATI

REDS-P urchased

Monday, June 23 - Riverside Golf
Course (Mason)
·
Monday, June 30 , Pine H1IIS GoH
Course (Pomeroy)
Monday, July 7 - Cliffside Golf Course
{Gallipolis)
Monday, July 14 - (Roundup} H idden

Val ley CC.

contract of LHP J1mmy Anderson from ·
LouiSVIlle of the IL. Optioned INF Felipe
Lopez to Louisville . National Basketball
AssociationBOSTON CELTICS-Announced F- C ·.
Bruno Sundov exercised his contract
option tor 2003·2004.

ATLANTA

FALCONS- Signed

GREEN BAY PACKERS-Claimed PK
Owen Pochman ofi. waivers from the New
York G1ants_1

JACKSONVILLE

•

Major League Soccer

o

Sunday, June 15
Game 5 • South Carolina 1~ , LSU 10,
LSU eliminated
Game 6 • Cal State-Fullerton 6, Stanford

•

Monday, June 16
Game 7 • Miami 7, Southwest Missou ri
Stale 5, Southwest Missouri State eliminat-

ed

JAGUARS-S1gned

MIAM I DOLPHINS-Signed TE Donald
Lee·

to

a lour-year contract. National

Hockey League
CALGARY

Pro soccer

Game 1 - Stanford 8. South Carolina
Game 2 • Cel State-Fullerton a, LSU 2
Saturday, June 14
Game 3 • Rice 4, Southwest Missouri
State 2
,
Game 4 - Texas 13. Miam1 2

WR

LaTarence Dunbar.

WR J.J. Stokes to a one-year contrac t.

Cost - $7 per person each week .
·
Registration - 8 :30a.m
Tee OH- 9 a.rn.
Age Groups- 15-17, 13·14, 1 H2 , 10and-under

(double elimination)

Eastern Conference
W L T Pta GF GA
MetroSiars ..... 5 3 2
17 13
tO
Chicago .. .. , .. .. .4 2 3
~5
15
11
New Engtan d .. 4 3 · 3
15 16
15
Columbus .. ....,4 4 3
15 15
16
D.C. United ..... 2 3 5
11 11
9
Western Conference
W L T Pto GF GA
SanJose .. .... .. 5 2 2
17 13
11
Kansas City ... .4 2 5
17 20
17
Los Angeles ...2 4 4
10 ' 9 11
Colorado ..... ..2 6 2
8
a
16
Da llas ........... 1 4 3
6
9
13
NOT£: Three points for victory, one
point for tie.
Wednesday 's Games
Dallas at C hicago, a:30 p.m.
San Jose at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, June 21

FLAMES-Named

Tom

Webster eastern pro-scout.

COLLEGE
ALLEGHENY - Named Sandra Sanford
softball coach .
BELMONT :-Signed

Ton,y

women's basketball coach, to

Cross ,

a

five-year ,

contract extensiOn
DREW-Named Walter Townes men 's
basketball coach.
MARSHALL-Named Ron Jirsa men·s
basketball coach .
OH IO STATE-Agreed to terms with Jim
Tressel , 1oo tball coach, on a six-year contract extens ion.
WIDENER- Named Steven Carcarey
baseball coach.

EXTRA! EXTRA!

~

Coming Friday, July 2, 2003
The

Daily Sentinel

1

Emma Johnson

0

Daughter of .
Frank and janet Johnson
Someflnetown, OH
Picture~
must be In by
· Thureday June 19, 2003.
Picture• can be picked up alter
·July 3rd, 2003. ·

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of local
children - ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 2nd issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved!

Complete the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more .than one child is in the picture,
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
Send to:

The Daily Sentinel

.

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio' 45769
I

1

the

National Football League

2003 Tri-Co~nty GolfTour

At Rosenblatt Stadium, Omaha, Neb.

. .

to

Aubrey

ass1gned him to Lake County ot

Golf

College World Serle&amp;

5

Chicago at Kansas City, 8 p.m.
Colorado at Dallas. 9 p.m .

FOOTBALL

c~ireg~rlb~ss~ball
Friday! June 13

New England at D.C. Un1ted. 7·30 p.m.

Willie Harris hom Charlotte of the IL.

School)

Monday's Game
Le)(ington 6, Charleston. WV 0
Tuesday'a' Gam8s
Asheville at South Georgia
Augusta at Savannah
Capital City at Rome
Charleston , WV at Lexington
Delmarva at Lake County
Greensboro at Kannapolis
Hagerstown at Lakewood
Hickory at Charleston, SC
Wedne1day's Gamea
Asheville at South Georgia
Augusta at Sa~Jannah
Capita l City at Rome
~lmarva at Lake County
Greensboro at Kannapolis
Hagerstown at·Lakewood

.GB

June 19
Game 13 - Winner Game 6 vs. Winner
Game ~ 1. 2 or 7 p.m., if necessary
Game 14 - Winner Game 8 vs . Winner
Game 12, 7 p.m., if necessary
Friday, June 20
No games scheduled
Championship (beat-oHhree)
Saturday, June 21
Game 1 -7p.m
Sunday, June 22
Game 2 - 2 p.m .
Monday, June 23 'f
Game 3 - - 7 p.m .. if n~essary

5

Pel.

o

Thur~day,

Meigs American ·Legion

L

W

Ashellille ..... ... .....
Augusta
.0
Capital City ......... 0
Charleston, SC .. 0
x-Hickory ......... ... 0
Rome .... .. .. ..... . 0
Savannah ........ .. .0
S. Georgia .... ... .. 0
x-won first halt

5
5

second time this season. He 's
the first Reds player to win
two of the honors in one season since Eric Davis in 1987.
Boone hit .556 with a
homer and seven RBl s last
week - numbers that were a
little underwhelming to his
teammates ..
''What did he do?'' outtielder Adam Dunn said. "Do the
managers vote on that
award?"
No, Aaron's father, manager Bob Boone, didn 't have
anything to do with him getting it.
"See," Aaron said . "The
reaction shows it wasn't that
good of a week."
He didn't have the biggest
game for the Reds, but was
the most consistent as they
went 4-1.
SAMMY BACK: Sammy
Sosa took batting practice
Monday and put on a fanpleasing show. He hit numerous ball s into the seats and
two that landed on the roof of
the batter's eye building in
center field.
"That a boy, Sammy!" one
fan yelled from the upper
deck.
Sosa has two games left on
a seven-game suspension for
using a corked bat. He said he
used a corked bat in batting
practice to hit long drives for
the fans, and mistakenly used
it in a game.
He didn't accompany the
Cubs for a weekend series in
Toronto, stay ing back in
Chicago to work on his hitting .
Sosa is expected to return to
the lineup in the third game of
the series on Wednesday. He
decli ned interviews when he
got to the ballpark. reserving
his comments fo r a ne ws conference on Tuesday.

12

..

Lopez takes demotion in stride
CINCINNATI (APJ
Felipe Lopez handled his
demotion the way he has handled most of his setbacks this
season. If it bothered him, he
wasn't letting on.
The Cincinnati Reds sent
the strugg ling shortstop to
Triple-A Louisville
on
Monday to ope n a roster spot
fo r
Ieft :hander
Jimmy
Anderson. who was called up
10 starr against the Chicago
Cubs.
The move wasn 'l a surprise.
Lopez was batting only .213
and led the team with 16
errors, making him the obvious choice to go.
"I don' t know how I feel ,"
Lopez said, before' heading
out of the clubhouse. "I want
to be up here, but I've got to
play."
Lopez, 23, was obtained in
an offseason trade that cost
the Reds their top starter,
Elmer Dessens, and brought
them their next everyday
shortstop. Lopez is expected
to take over next season for
39-year-o ld Barry Larkin,
who wants to stay with his
hometown team as a backup.
Lopez got plenty of opportuniti es to play wh~n Larkin
went on the disabled list twice
with leg injurie s, but struggled defe nsively and at the
plate. drawing a harsh reaction from fa ns.
He was primarily a backup
after Larki·n retumed from the
disabled li st last week. He' ll
be 'the st;trting shortstop at
Louisville.
"Pl aying every day is going
to help me a lot with everything." Lopez said. "I'm not
mad or disappointed or anything. This is to help me."
Manager Bob Boone thinks
that Lopez wi ll benefit greatly
from the chance to work on

.158

Lexington . .......... 1
0 · H&gt;O
Charleston, WV ... 0
1 .000
Delmarva ........ 0
0 . .000
Greensboro .. .. ..... 0
0 .000
Hagerstown ...... 0
0 .000
Kannapolis ... ........ O
0 .000
0 .000
X·Lake County ..... 0
Lakewood ............ 0
0 .000
SOuthern OIYIIIOn

3',

11
Monday's Games
Onawa at Charlene. pod .. rain
Louisville 2. Columbus 1. 8 inmngs, 1st
game
Colu mbus 4, LoUisville 0, 1st inning,
susp., rain, 2nd game
Toledo 6 , ScramonWilkes-Barre 2
Pawtucket 11. Durham 3
Rochester 3, Richmond 2, 10 innings
Buffalo 4, Norfolk 3
Syracuse 9, Indianapolis 3
Tuesday's Gam~s
Buffalo at Norfolk
Co lumbus at louisville
· Durham at Pawtucket
Ottawa at Charlotte
Rich mond at Rochester
Scranton Wilkes-.Ba rre at Toledo
Syracuse at Indianapolis

.400

Northern Olvlalon

GB

7

.550

South Atlantic Leaguu

'

,.,

9
12
16

3\
4'1
7',

Tueaday'a Games
Gateway at Chilticothe
Kalamazoo at Rockford
Mid -Missouri at Evansville
Richmond at Cook County
River City at Florence
Was hington at Kenosha

GB
'

3

.600

Gateway ..... .. ..... 13
.684
Mld-Missourl ........ 9
11 .450
Cook County ....... 8
10 .444
Kenosha .............. 8
10 .444
12
.429
Rockford ....... .. ..... 9
River Clty ............. 8
1t
.421
Monday's Games
No games scheduled

International League
North Division
W
L
Pel.
Pawtucket. ........ 39
28
.582
BuNalo ........... .38
28
.576
Ottawa
... 35
34 .507
Scranton ............ 35
35
.500
Rochester. ...... 31
37 .456
Syracuse .......... 28
36 .438
South Dlvlaion
W
L
Pet.
Nortolk ..............36 30 .545
Durham .............. 33
34 .493
Richmond ......... 33
37 .471
Charlot1e ....... . ... 3 1
35 .470
West Dlvlelon

GB

w..t DIYialon

------ ------------- ----------------- -----------,

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

I

1-----------~-----------------------------

1
1

Parent's Name:----------~-----------------1 City &amp; State: _ _- ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ••• The above information will be used In the ad. •••
Phone Number: ------------- Submitted by:-----------------

----------------------------------------------HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
THURSDAY JulY 18. 2002!
. '

I

83

Los Angeles at Metro Stars. 4 p.m.

Tuesday, June 17
Game 9 • South Carolina (45-21 ) vs
Stanford (47-16), 2 p.m.
Game 10 ·Miami (45-16-1) v.s. Texas (49·
19). B p.m.
,
Wednesday, June 1 8
Game 11 -Cal State-Fullerton (50· 14 )
vs. Winner Game 9, 2 p.m .
Game 12 ~ R1ce (55-11) vs. Winner Game
10, 7 p.m.
·

East Division

W

a - Rice 12. Te)(as 2

Game

Frontier League

Reds notebook

800.949.4444 • ll'll'lP.I'tJBolf.•om

The Daily Sentinel_• Page

Scoreboard

Cubs 4, Reds 3

_approved of Jirsa's hiring
during a private gathering
after meeting with their new
coach Sunday evening.
.
"I know my style of play tS
very good to fit his style,"
Black said. "We wish we
could start practice right now."
Jirsa's contract include~r a
four-year deal with a base
salary of $130,000 and various performance incentives,
Marcum said, and his income
could be supplemented if he
signs a shoe contract.
Jirsa said he wants to beef
up Marshall's non-confer~
ence schedule by luring
attractive opponents to
Huntington .
"That's the best way to get
to know somebody, to get
them on the coun," he said.
Jirsa said he will announce
his four-man coaching staff
within two weeks.
Two weeks ago, White cited
family concerns in his decision
to leave Marshall, his alma
mater. He lives in Charleston,
where his wife is a doctor.
White did not receive a
contract extension, as the
school had done in earlier
years, after the Thundering
Herd finished 14- 15 this season, 9-9 in the Mid-American
Conference.
He went 115-84 at
Marshall, but he was just 2930 in the past two seasons.
His first season at Marshall
was 1996-97.
"It looks like we're clicking really well lately,"
Borowski said of the bullpen.
"Everybody
understands
when they're going to come
into the game. Everxone has
done a fantastic job. '
· Notes: The Cubs sent RHP
Francis Beltran to Triple-A
Iowa and called up INF
Bobby Hill, their secondround draft pick in 2000. The
second baseman played two
games and part of another at
third at Iowa, learning a new
. position .... The Cubs are 3-3
during Sosa's suspension . ...
The Reds demoted SS Felipe
Lopez, who is expected to be
the everyday shortstop next
season. Lopez was hitting
.213 and had a team-high 16
errors.... Griffey stayed in
the game and finished 1-for-

scheduled for
p.m.,
Saturday, Ju ne 28 at Spring
Val ley Country Club. The
to·urnament is a three-man
team format. Lunch will be
served prior to the tournament at noon.
A dinner and celebrity auclinn wi II be conducted
Friday, June 27 at the country
cl ub. For information, call
(304) 429-5570 or (304) 6975640.

Tuesday, June 17, 2003

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

-

�www.mydai lysentinel.com

'ar:ribune

~ · Sentinel

- l\egister

CLASSIFIED

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
(740)446 ·7444 1·877·830·
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash . Visa! Master Card.
Drive· a- linte save slot.

NEW ·AND USED STEEL
Sleet Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle ,
Channel , Flat Bar, St-el
Grat in g
For
Drain s,
Driveways &amp; Walkwa~a. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Queen size bed frame. mat· Friday, 8am·4:30pm. Closed
tress&amp; boM springs 6 mon. Thu rsday,
Saturday
&amp;
old paid $550.00 will take Sunday. (740)446-7300
$250.00 304-882·2626

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Malon
Counties Like
· NoOne
Else
Can!
' .

Thompsons Appli ance &amp;
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re -conditioned
automati~
washers &amp; dryers, relrigera·
tors , ..gas and electric
ranges, AID• . and wringe r
washers. Will do repairs On
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'

Gallb Counly, O H

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

TO

«rrthune

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Your
Ad •••

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

Visit us at 111 Court Street, PomerQy Visit us at: 200 Main Street; Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
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Word Ads
Dally In':"'Column: 1:00 p .m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
In Next Day's Paper
Publication
SJ•nda•v In-Column: 1:00 p.m. · Sunday Display: 1 : 00 p.m.
Sundays Paper
Thursday for Sundays

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to s:oo .p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Description • ·lndude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Nuniber And A.ddre5s When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

I \11'1 II\ \II\ I
"'IH\HIS

YARD SAl.£

YARD SALt:·
HI! My name is Jeffrey
Coon . I am a lonely fellow
looking for a companion .
Should like to talk and good
loo~s would be a plus
I·
have brown hair, blue eyes.
5'9"
Anyone interested

itO

l

fb:LP WANTED

GALI.IPOL.l'\
Access to a Computer?
4 Family Garage Sal e. Earn $450·$1500 monthly
Thursday &amp; Friday. 379 1 part·time or $2,"000-$4.500
Addtson P1ke.
9:00am· full· lime. 1·800·585-0760 or
3:00pm. Rain· or Sh1ne.
www.OurAnswer.com

~uy

o

-Jun-e-2-0-.or
plexase , cPoonr taacntd,meOH at P
2-, -. 8-.-m--1--. -5 -1a-m.:..i· ASVO N! SAil Areia s!· To
4 57 70 ly, 1263
B0 57
11
Watson Roa d.
ell.
hirley 5 pears, 304675-1 429
ANNOI.JNCEMEJ\"1~
Children 's cloth.ng newborn- - - - - - - - - -• 6X. piUs sizes Xl·4X. baby Cook/Waitress Meigs Co.
swing. crib, double stroller, Honest. Good Pe rsonality
~ ' A STARSEARCH"
high chair, books.
must be able to cook &amp;
Singers Bdnds &amp; Vocal
1074 YARD Sr\U:·
Serve. Interview (740)594·
Groups. All Styles _
&amp; Ages.
Po
IMn
4446
Nashville Record Exec·!.
MmOY
X&gt;L.E
Seeking New Talenf~
EMperienced
carpenters·
Coming to
June 20 &amp; 21 9·5 Barrett must be lamiliar with all
Huntington/Charleston .
residence on 124 . Rutland . phases ot res idential remod·
731·424·2229 or 731·424·
Rai n cancels to 23 &amp; 24
sling . valid drivers license.
2141
tools, transportation , and
Pullins- 4 family yard sale references. Local work, pay
based
on
experience
with a lot ot m1sc. items.
C· l Beer Carry Out permit baby girl clothes from 0-6 Applications available at
tor sale. Chester Township. months. some baby furniture Ch ri stians
Cons truction.
Meigs County, send letters
t40
3
Ea
ste
rn
Ave .,
1tems. woman 's clothing
of 1nterest to : The Daily
Gallipolis_ 446·4514
med. &amp; large and some
Sentinel PO Bmc 729-20. men 's clo thing. Will be on
GARDEN Help Wanted.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
June 19th &amp; 20th tram Sam~ Wages, hours f!e)(ible. Call
? . Located on Rt 33 just out
B·9p.m. (740)446·3760
of Pomeroy near the four
GI\'EAWW
lanes.
Gas Utilities Position
Duties include; Meter
YARn SALERe ading, pipe laying and
FREE KITIENS. (7401446PT. I'LK\SANT
repairs. heavy pipe eqUip~
4053
ment loading. General Utility
Carolina Flea Market now work. Send application too ·
accepting
Vendors Job Position PO Box 27,
loveable . well mannered.
Winfield. wv 25213
(304)675-5270
young female tabby, would
make good companion .
Heating
and
Cooling
to
good
hOme. HOME INTERIOR SALE!
Free
Company
looking
for
1
(740)446-7 143
Discounted items. light
H.V. A_C_ · Technician with at
retreshments , door prizes
least 1 yr. eMperience. Must
Los'fAND
Saturday. Jupe 21st.
be certilied . Send Resume
FOUND
9:00 _to 5·00 Butlalo Town
to : P.O. Box 572, Kerr, OH
Hall. For more cntormation
45643
Found
:female
Calico Call (304)937·2929
houseca t near Krode l Park
Help wanted caring for the
call 304·895-3577 leave Yard Sale Fri, June 20
elderly, Darst Group Home.
message Found around a 8-2pm. 2625 lincoln Ave_Pf. now paycng minimum wag e,
mon th ago.
Pleasant 3n1 pool table
new shi Ns: 7am·3p"m, 7amteansc1othes&amp;misc .
5pm, 3pm· 11pm. 11pm7am, call 740·992·5023.
lost· on Hayman Ad~. long
W.o\NIID
Bottom Oh. co pper-nosed
·1u BUY
~ HVAC Installer Operiing
Benelits available. Apply at
beagle. Reward , (740)843or Send
Resume
to:
1034
Absol ute Top Dollar : U.S.
Bennett's MH Heatmg &amp;
Silver,
Gold
Coins,
Cooling
,39 1
Safford
Proolsets.
Diamonds.
Gold
Small female red dog found
SchOOl. Rd . Gallipoli s, OH
6f12 Foodland park1ng lot at RinQs. · U.S. Currency.· 45631 (740)446·9416 or 1M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
Porter. wearing two collars.
Second Avenue , Gallipolis, 800·872·5967
(740)367-7565
740-446·2842.
Independent Contractor•
Motor
Route
Drlvel'l
Wantad tor Ma1on County,
P~nt Pleaeant Reglettr
tor Into contact Sean
Cullan 304-675~ 1333 Ext
20

r

I

r
r

--------- •=--=---....,
r
I

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS

T~~~:t:~y S©'RJ:!N\-~'EtrS..

WORP

GAM!

Edll•d lfy· (LA V " · 'OLLAJI' _..;,._ _ _ _ _ __

~o ReorronQ" , l~ttar.l of the
· lour JCrc mnltd words be·
lew 10 form four simple words .

I
3

· ~_,r_&gt;-'Ei·':-'C'-rB-:.rH~~ ~
.

The teenage girl stepped mto
the phone booth as the people
tn line moaned . "Don't worry ,"

1 1• 1 1: 7.
_

.

.

.

. ..

r - - - - - - - - - she said, "I'm just calling so 1

r~ N GIRD . lcRn---- --"
~-.1-:5,__..,--:,r'---TI--=:.;,r.~Comp lete ;h.

I
.

.

.

.

•

_

HEI.PWANim

.

e

chuckl e quoted
by l illin9 in the mls.sing words
you de..,.elop from step No. J below.

LErTERS
LEHER5 TO

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Campus - Nob.y- Graph - Palfel- THUMB

Gallipolis Career coneg8
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 74()-446·4367.
1·800·214-0452
www.gallipoli sca reercollagacom
Reg #90·05~ 1 2748.
WANTFJ)

JA.NjiDRIAL SERVICE has
two lmmQdlata openings.
Experience a must In floor
care .
Criminal back~
ground check required.
(800)988-7847
--------Kipl ing Shoe Company is
now accepting applications

not JUSt a manicurist," the cutie announced to her
c ltent "I like to thll1k of myself as someone who lives by
a rule o f THUMB ·"

213 acres level lot, 2 st ory
house. a rooms. 2 bath s.
porch and large deck. heat
pump, recently remodeled ,
corne r of Green tree . of
Bulavllle
Pk
$69,500.
(740)367-7272

1100

for a Managers Position,
Poinl Pleasant l ocatiOn.
--------laundry and dry cleaning
person needed to operate
local
cleaning
service
Experience preferred. but
will train. Send resume to:
Special Care Serv 1ces , 1743
Centenary Road , Ga llipolis,
OH 456 31
--------little Caesars
in the
Gallipolis area is now hirihg!
A c c e p t i n g
application/resumes
for
Mgmt posi tions . delivery
drivers and crew members.
Appl y in person or fa)(
resume to ("740 )866·09St .

mRSALE
14X70 Mobile Home with
7X2 1
expando.
newly
remodeled, newer furnace
A must to see!! (740)446·
79(l1 .

Schultz
12X 65,
1973
Central air, on . ren ted tot
3 Bedroom newly remod~ available to continue rent ing .
eled, in Middleport, call Tom (7 40)446·1 Oa9 leave mes·
Anderson alter 5 p.m.
sage, •
992-3348
--~------ 2 Modular Units tor sale ~ 1
3 year old Brick Ranch, unit is 24J~:36 with metal Sid·
3,000+ sq.ft .. 2· 112 acres, ing and is in fair condition is
inground
pool. storage askmg $6,800: 1 uni t is
building, e:~~cellenl neighbOr· 24:~~36 with wood siding and
also in fai r condition but
hood, (740)446·0149

"----TiooiloiDolliii---"
Bookkeept·ng ·,n my home.
price neg., relerences avail·
able. call Barb after 6pm,
{740)992.()762
--------Elderly ca re in your hOme or
mine.
Night
or
day.
Experience and references.
(304)675 -7961

needs some minor repairs
3br, 3ba, w/living' room &amp; They wou ld be good lor
dining room . Great Room. Sunday
School
Class
Asking $85,000. 304-675· Rooms . Work Shops or as a
2192
Cabin. Delivery of Units also
. e p
1y can be adde d. Mak,e all
Bank For.clos ur
roper •
·large 2 story. 4 bedroom, 2 es qu ires to Steve Pullins at
bath. located on .34 acre, l_.7_4_0_:_
19__9_2_-2_4_7_
8 ,.-_ _ _

J &amp; M Construction
Shingle &amp; Metal Roofs.
Concrete. Gutter, Pai nting,
RemOdeling , Siding. Pole
Barns. and Garages.
FREE ESTIMATES!
(304)593-2153
OR
{304)675-4662

r

!"""

LO'rs &amp;
ACREAGE

HousES
nlR REI'.'T

competitive salary, benefits
Package, 401k, llex time ,
and
SIGN·ON·BONUS.
EOE. Please send resume
to 430 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 4563 1. Attn ·
Diana Harless, Clinical
Manager

c

Medi Home Health. Agency,
Inc.
seeKing
part·time
MediCal Social Worker for
the Gallipolis, Ohio area
Maste rs Degree required .
We offer a competitive
sal ary, ben elits package,
401 k, and tlex time. EOE.
Please send resume to 430
Second Avenue. Gallipolis.
OH 45631. ,Attn : Diana
Harless, ~ t inical Manager
Need to ea rn Mor1ey? lets
talk the .ti.E.W. Avon . Call
Marilyn . 304·982· 2645 to
learn all the ways it can work
for you.
Part~time collector neededGallla, Meigs, and Mason
counties , 30·35 hours per
weeik. must be honest. reliable , and have goOd driving
record . Send res ume to Paul
Barker,
Ohio
Valley
Publishing. 825 Third Ave .
Gallipolis Ohio 45631

j

Part-time Dental ·Assistant,
progressive dental otlice in
need of experienced dental
assistant in Gallipolis area .
Send resume and refe{·
ences to P.O · Box 565,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631

r

c

I

HUSINfo.SS

10

"---ttitlliitiiiiiitliO.._.I

The Town of Mason will be
accepting applications for
Police Off1cers. Would prefer
certification. applica tiOns
can be pick up at the
~u nic 1 pa l building.

·--oiiliitiiiiilili-_.1

Road In Gallipolis. Two bed·
roorns . $400/ month plus
S400
secur ity
deposit
requ~red . U!ihl1 es no t 1nclud·
ed. No pels. 740-44 1·1108.

N1ce one bedroom i.mfu r·
· h d
A
&amp;
nJs e apar1ment . ange
refrigerator pra ....ided. Water
&amp;
b
·d
gar age par . 0 epos11
required . Call 740·446·4345
after 6pm
--------North 4th Ave .. Middleport, 1
bedroom fu r nished apa r t~
ment, no pats. dBposit &amp; ref~
eren ces, (740)992·01 65
Now raking Applications- .
35
West 2
Bedroom .
Townhouse
Apartments. ·
Includes Water
Sewage .
Trash. $350/Mo .. 7 40 ·446~
0008.
Plea san t Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
tor 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR. .
Appli cations
are taken
Monday thru Frcday, from
9:00 A.M .·4 PM , Ollice IS
Loca red at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point _Pleasant. WV
Phone No is (304)675·5806 .
EH .O

FREE FISH
FRY .

1977 Corvette. White with
Red Interior. 350 automatic,
m iles, $6.500 080.
(740)446-3005

June 19th
Pomeroy
Ea les

1980 CJ5 Jeep. 360 4 sp.
New Engine, Tlre_s &amp; Top.
$6 ,300.
Nice
Jeep.
(304)675·1310

Help Wanted

c.,..,'"'"

Under Naw

A ..-.ri~r,. or &lt;'11110\l llll!'
dol hin" and huntifllt
q uipm&lt;"nl

..

Rer:t;1odeling

748·992~1671

Nrw Irems Addrd H·h•.lr ly
36 198 Pc:ach Fork Rd.

Jeff Warner Ins.

1·74(1.992·7007

992-5479

P~Jm,.roy, Ohio, 45169

Stop &amp; Compare

Howro 1.,_. pm

'~Spring'~
,:&lt; Special &gt;:f

TIERAPEMIC
MASSAGE

I

&amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround
Makes

Cet lnd Free!
Htather A. Fry L.M.T.

740-992-5379

1979 Ford F150&amp; electric
chair 304-576-9929
--------1988 Dodge Ram 0 10 pick· "--iiiiiili
up, VB , auto, air, runs good 1976, 21ft 5th wheel .
$
080 446 2
_ 15_00
_ ·_ _ _._444
.:.__ _ Cavalcade. AC/ stove, big
ref . . good
t;:ondition.
1990 dump truck , Chevrolet
(304)736-6024
Kodiac, CATdeisel, 5 esp
transmission, 2 speed rear. - - - - - - - - 10' dump bed, elr brakes. 96 Hornet 25ft T.T. Sleeps 6,
c.O.L. required. · 48, 000 queen bed. microwave and
miles exce llent con dition. stereo. Excellent condition.
$10, 500.00 740.992-2478 (7401386·8402 (740) 3888422
or 740· 591·9342

Also now accepting

most insuranct'

Septic Systems,
Footers and
Concrete,
Excavation, Utilities,
Back hoe and
Dozer, Ponds.

PC DOCTOR

HOME CREEK

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

ENT., INC.

32119 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

992-7953
591-7002
591·4641

740-992-2432

·I

Tara
Town hou se
Apartme nts. Very Spacious.
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floor&amp;, CA. I
1/2 Bath , Newly Carpeted,
Adul t Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
Patio, Start $385/Mf . No
Pets. l ease Plu s Securiry
Depo sit Required . Days :
740~446-3481 . Evenings :
740·367·0502.
---------Twin A1vers Tower Is accepting applications for welti ng
list for Hud·!&gt;Ubsized, 1· br,
apa r tment , ca ll 675-6679
EHO

Snapper

204 Condor Street

992-2975
Lawn a11d Garde11 Equipmml is our
business, not our sideline

Maintenance- Painting, vinyl
siding, carpent ry, doors,
windows, ba1hs, mobile
home repair and more . .For
lree esfimale call Chet, 740·
992·6323.

r~ii~~~~Fi

CANCER CHECK

NORTHUP CONSTRUC·
TION· Home repair, room
additions, garages. rooling .
siding , carpeting , &amp; remo(.f:
eling , extensive experience
call 245·9023 or 245-9704

Windows •

Routing

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
DURO-LAST
ROOFING
Flat Roof
Specialists-

Commercial and
Residential
Saves on Cooling .
Metal and Mobile
home roofs- No

Halp Wantad

------.1.

:MH071

Tht Conatruollon
Man•e•r for the
Prolaot le:
Tht
Qua~dtl
Group, Ina., 1111
Worthington Ao1d,
Wllttrvllla,
OhiO
41011, Phone: (1141
•·11000, l'ax• (114
Ill 1001·, www. quan·
2.
Any
pro·
poaed lqual lor a
Standard ehlll be
aubmiHad to lha ,

l!laotrlatll, • f 1,000

lid Paqklge No. 04
!levator, 141,000
lid Package No, 01
Combination
lid,
Paokz•
,,.,

1410,

until lid Datt ol
June 25, IOOS II 12:00
p.m. (looal 11tndard
time), when lhay will
be opened and read,
3.
A pre·bld
11111t1ng will be held In
thl loutharn Looal
lohool
Dlatrlot
(IOIIow
Calelarla,
algne) on Monday,
June 1I,IOOS 8112:00
p.m.
(8) 10, 17 2TC

Cancer will stri ke when you least expect it.
h wi ll leave you and yo ur famil y financially
strap ped . CANCER C HECK will be
there when you..need i1.

C'!ll nOw tu r~serve

740-843-5264

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771

740-949-2217

Slzea 5'x1o:

Let me do 1\ for y•Ju1

liNDI1 PllmNG

' to 10'x30' "

HOME CREEK

992-7953
591-4641
591-7002

Hours
7:00AM-8:00PM

ENT., INC.

amER
1•Frat bllmlles•
I

949·1405

.\I I Htfn

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

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

Hill's Self
Storage

992-7953

l t 14l 1 mo. pd

YOUNG'S ·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

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

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

check.

BOX 189 MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760

Problem . 15-Year
Guarantee

*SEAMLESS

XQ.U_I

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICES

Sunset Home
Construction

. SP,\CE

lid l'tPIICciiKallglgt No. 02,
Plumbing, •11,000
lid Paolcla• No. 03

Finall y ... M oney paid to XQY when can~er
strikes. You choose the amount up to $50,000!
Pa ys it1 addilinn to other insurance.
Yo,u use the money however you like.

Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
. Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday
of every OtOlith
All pack $5.1H)
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
Get 5 FREE

*HOME
MIINTEIWICE

1214,000

1-800-822-0417

Home

I *ROORNG

Full s1ze bed $75. full size
bed $~ 50 . twin mattress &amp;
box springs $80, queen Size
manress S50 . king size mat·
tress &amp; bo:~~ springs $ 100 ,
nice Broyhill co uch &amp; chair
S1 75. table and chairs $125,
lamPs $10 eaCh. coffee table
$45 . Skaggs •-plr'ance 76
""'
Vine St. 446-7398
1
--Good Used App liances.
Recond itioned
and
Guaranteed.
Washers ,
Dryers .
Ranges.
and
Relrigerators, Some start at
$95 . SkagQs Appl iances, 76
Vine St. , !740)446· 7398

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley. WV 25271

Pomeroy, Ohio

WRITESH

lll'i~..;;.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
liOUSF:H&lt;)LO
L_ _ _.;Gii'~{)()UN;;;
·::;;;·:,._.,J

Bucket Truck

(304) 675-5282

HOWARDl.

Tra iler space for rent in

• Stump Grinding

SALES &amp; SERVICE

se.ooo

Archltlcl no later than
len (1 0) days prior lo
the bid OPIInlng. H no
Addenda .,.. leeued
In uaoclatlon with
the Bidder'• request,
the prop.oeed Equal
ah1il be conelderod
rejected.
Sealed blda will be
received lOr:
Southern
Locll
School Dlatrlct
Eatlmated Conlract
Value
Bid Packagt No. 01,
General
Tradea,

Trim

www.wvpcdr.com ·
cdoctor@wv dr.com

Buckeye Community Services
. P.O. Box 604
Jackson, Ohio 45640.
Deadline for applicanls: 6124/03

STATE OF OHIO
oHIO SCHOOL FACIL·
ITIES COMMISSION
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
1.
Bide will be
,..celved
by the
Soulhern
Local
School Dlatrlcl Board
at 47725 Sl. At. 124,
Racine, OH 45771,
Attn. ·pemela Cerler,
tor the following
Project:
High
School
Renov1tlon1
Southern
Local
School Dlllrlct Board
Recine, OhiO.· M1lg1
County In accordenca
with IIIII Drawing• ,lind
lpeollloatlona p,...
Pllrtd
by
MKC
AIIOCiatll Inc., 104
l'alr
Ava.,
N1w
Phllldelphlar
OH
44H3, Phone.• (177)
112...71 • l'ax (130)

Top • Removal •

We Make House Calls

Sand resume to:

FOR RENT

Tree Service

GRAVELY TRACTOR

'
BASEMENT
WATERPRDOANG
Unconditional llfet1me guar~
antee. Local references fur~
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870,· Rog ers Basement
Waterpr'ooting.

Genaral

JONES'

~

Gravely

IMPROVEMENTS .

C&amp;C

750 East Staie Street Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio
A Beller Way, Ever Da

Offer good lhru 5· 11 ·03

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

HOME

lcHivRo,~T/

Buy I Gift Certificate,

WE REPAIR

1999 Aquatron, 18', w/3.0
Mercruiser
inbOard/out·
board, excellent condition.
low hours, (740)949-4026

LARRY SCHEY

Easter &amp; Mothers Day

ENGINE REPAIR

A904 Dodge automatic
transmission to lit small
block DOdge VB $200; Also,
front wheel driVe aut omatic
to fit 2.2 lilre Dodge $200,
both ready to ru n. 740·441 ·

TFN

' - -Cloa•d
- - -lund•r•
-----'

JIM'S SMALL

t A:c.:: I

Cellular

Managagement

• New Homes
• Garages
• Comp Iete

WANTED:

1111. oom

'

Where the customer

I::::::::::

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

..llli'EL

.\lUI\' Sl ' Ill' !.I 'S

Emergency Rellel Workera (Subatltulea)
needed lo work w~h people with mental relardalion in Meigs Counly. Hours: As scheduled/as
itteeded. 25 hrsiwk. Requirements: High school
diploma / GED, valid driver's license, three years
gOOd driving experience and adequale automo·
bile insurance coverage. $7.00/hr.

)

Surrogates
Needed.
Interested in helping coupleS complete their families?
Your eggs w1H not be used
II interested, please call
(440)356-4604

GIWN

~~---oiiiiiiiiitt_,....

r

WILSON'

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCnON

Announce mente

SmhmONS

WA,'VI'ED

HAY &amp;

Queen Pillow Top Mattress
set. New in plastic w!Warr.
Will accept $199, Cell phone $500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
304-412-8098 or 304·552- Hondas,
chevys ,
etc!
1424.
cars/truCks from $QOO. For
li sfings 1-BQ0.-719·3001
3901

Truck Drlvera , Immediate
11ira, class A COL required.
excellent pay, expe rience
requcred . Earn up'to $1,000.
per week .Can 304·675·
4005

120

r

GOOd quality straw. Volume
Lincoln Pipeliner Welder. discount &amp; delivery &amp;\Jail·
$1900. or make offer. able. Heavy square bales.
$2.85 per bale. (304)675·
(304)675-4975
5724
· New A Frame 30')(40' Metal
11&lt;\ ' ' 1'411( 1 \Ill I\
Building. Not assembled .
(740)446·2861

Modern 1 br. apt. (740)446·
0390
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

i

r

r

Manress set New still In
Plastic, Sale $299, Cell
Phone . 304 -412·809B or
304·552' 1424.

••••••••1111

.

.c-------,---

· Located al end of Chi llicothe

s

Medi Home Health Agency.
Inc.
seeking
full-time
licensed Physical Therapist
lor Ohio and' West Virginia
client bas~d . w e offer a

RENT

BEAUTIFUL ,
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive tram $297 to $383.
4 acres Eagle R1dge Rd .. Walk to shop &amp; mov ies. Call
eMcavated. electric. septic 740-446·2568.
Equal
permit &amp; water available. Hous1ng Opportunity.
(740)992·0031
Gracious living . 1 and 2 bed·
Lot for sa le in Racine. room apartments at Village
(740)992-5858
Manor
and
R1vers1de
Nice mobile home.lo,ts. quie t Apartmen ts in Middleport .
country setting , $115 per From $278·$348 . Call 740·
month.
include s water, 992·5064. Equal Hous ing
sewer, trash . 740·332·2 167 Opportunities.

J410

t=

1083
Central Cooling System s,
new &amp; used , as tow as J.D. 215 grain heal &amp; trailer Rome Auto Sales, 9267
$850.00
Install ed
May phone 304·675·2443
State Route 7, Proctorville,
Speclelt (740)446-6308
OH (740)886-1343. 2001
•
Pontiac GrandPriM $1'0,589.
Full Slze Mattress Set New
Prism
2001
Chevrolet
in Plastic wma rr. SacriUce
$9,995.
2000
Ranger
$119, Cell Phone 304-412$7,995, 2000 Chl:lvrolet
18 While Leghorns $3.00
8098 or 304~552·1424 .
1500·4X4 $14,300, 1998
each must take all.
Voyager
$4,995,
1997
JET
10 hole metal nest good
Grand
CaravanSE
$5,995,
AERATION MOTORS
sllape $45.00
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Small wood burning stove 1995 Neon $2 ,688, t995
$2,850,
1988
lntrapld
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· $50.00 304·937-3348
Chevrolet1500-4X4
$3,850,
800·537-9528.
call after 6 pm.
1997 Cutlas $2 ,500, 1995
Dakota
$2 ,395,
1.995
Kenmore
Washer
and
GrandAmGT $2,995, 1993
General Electric Dryer for Reg. Angus bulls· Top perEscortGT $1,395, 1986
$75 lor both. formance bloodlines. Maine Dodge 1500·4X4 $1,795.
Sale.
(740)441· l516.
Chi· Angus show bulla.
Slate Run Farm, Jackson,
TRUCKS
Pillow Top OH . (740)286·5395
King · Size
FOR SALE

1!2 acre .lot, Tycoon lake on
Eagle Road . City water.
$8500.00 (740)2 47·1100 or
(304) 532·627 1

,;==::====~

Moore,

BURN
Fat,
BLOCK
Cravings. and BOOST
Energy Like
You Have
Never Experienced.
WEIGHT· LOSs
REVOLUTION
New product launch October
23 , 2002. Call Tracy af
(740)441·1982

AI•A~N'l'S

FOR

1·3 bedroomS torec los ures
$
199
4
home
from
%
down 30
years at mon
8.5%thAPR
level lot at 407 S. Broadway 200 1 16XBO Schull S1ng le fo r listing call t ·800·3 19·
Street , Aaci.ne, Oh .. call 740 Wide. like new. 3 bedroom 3323 ext.1709
949·22 10, ask lor Sheila tor
2 bath. AC . Call alter 4pm.
an appomtment to see. Motivated seller. 1740 )256 • ' 2 bedroom References &amp;
MR FIX IT!I!
priced at 2a,OOO.OO.
6306
Deposit. No Pets. (304)675·
Complete Remodeling
5162
.
Interior &amp; Exterior. custom
24 x 36 double wide mo dular
wood deck &amp; fences. Chain
· e lawn. No
3 Bedroom , larg
class room . Built very heavy
l ink. All odd Jobs.
Pet
s.
Reference
and
(304)675·3733
duty to Ohio b uilding code. 1
Deposit.
(740)379·2540
· large open room. no bath or
Will babysit in my home.
kitchen, sell contained heat Patriot Village
0 ver 5yrs pro tesstonal
·
expe~
pump unit. Approx. 10 years 3 br. ranch house for rent,
All real estate advertising
rience with Children. Great
old. $6, 500 delivery avail· $350.00 a man. in New
in
lhla
nawapaper
11
R e1erences. a 11 anytime.
~ble . 740·992·2476 or 740· Haven , 120 H ~ward St. 304·
subject to the Federal
(740)256·6338
591-9342
Fair HoutlngAct ot 1968
675-3458
- -- - - - w.hlch makes It illegal to
Will do basic alterations and
Cole's
Mobile
Homes
advenlae " any
Beaulitul Riverfront 2br. 2
mending. Reasonable rates.
preference, limitation or · US 50 . East. Athens. Ohio, 1/2 ·bath Syracuse wldeck,
For inlormalion. ca ll Mary M.
dhscrimlnalion based on
45701 ' 740-592· 1972
AC. Jacuzzi, WID. $650. Per·
Houck (740)44 6·6602 il no
race; color, religion, seK
mon th . Utilities Inc luded.
answer. leave message.
Coming Soon The Al l New
familial atatus or national
(740)594-4446
~ Pinnac l e Best Buy" Home
origin, or any Intention to
Will do odd jobs· $4 per hr.
make any such
You saw them last year. Taking appllcalions for sma ll
Babysitt ing or house cleanpreference, llmltatlon.or
Many were sold al a fant as· one
bedroom . house
Ing. Ask fo r Stacy. 740·4~ 1 &lt;
dlacrlmlnatlon."
tic low price. Now with IJ'Ore Middleport. call alter Spm,
9761.
delulee features lhan ever. (740)992·6154
This newapaper will not
"Where
You Get Your ~~~..;..;..~~-Will pr~ssure wash homes,
knowingly accept
Money's
Worth" Coles !""' MOIIII £ HoM•"'
tra ilers. decks, metal build·
advertisements tor real
Mobile Homes, US 50 East,
f 'OR RENT
ings and gutt ers. Call
estate which is In
Athens, Ohi o (7 40)592- 1972 "---oitiiiitiiiiiii-violation
of
the
law.
Our
(740)446·0151 ask for ·-Ron
2 br. mobile home. all appli·
readera are hereby
or leave message.
l and Home PackageS avail·
ance included , washer &amp;
Informed that all
Clble. In your area, (740}446~
dwelllnga advertlaed In
dryer 304·576·9991
3384.
lhla newtplper are
avalltble
on
an
equal
BUSINE$
New 14 wide only 5799 Beautifu l Ri..,.er View Ideal
opportunity biHI.
OPI'OiffiJNITY
down and on ly $!59.63 per For 1 Or 2 People,
month. call Nikki 740..385· References. Depo sit. No
INOTICEI
For sale by Owner, ranch 767 1
Pets, Fosler Trailer Park,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· style home behind Addevllle - - - - - - - - - 740·441 ·0 181 .
lNG CO. recommends that school, 3BR 11 12 bath . New 2003 Doublewlde. 3 BA
you do business with people jacuzzi in master suite. new &amp; 2· Bath . Only $1695 down Furnished one bedroom,
you know, and NOT to send siding, 2 car garage, ve ry and &amp;295/mo. t -B00-69 t · ~:~~ricre~=~~n~~~p(e~/~~e~~
money th rough the ma1t until nice home 367-7039
:6~7~77;..,.--:::----"'1
you have investigated the - - - , - - - - - - - F.
trash &amp; water paid , rent
FORCLOSUAE
FARMS
·1 $300 plus deposit &amp; electric.
otfering.
3 Bedroom home on ly
____
FOR SALE
. (740)992-6862
No·risk Internet busine ss. Sl 3 ,500 for listing call
Mobile .home for rent , no
Great new concept. No sell· 1·800·719~300 1 Ext. F144
Nice 43.5 acre farm with pets, (7 40)992·5858
1ng. free tools, training . No
FORCLOSURE
32X60 metal pole barn on ~~-------..,
runaround. 740·256·6130.
Green tree Road , Add1son
APARllHF~
3 Bedroom home only
PR~lONAL
$13,500 for listing call
twp. Wooded . lot with level
FOR RENT
S
1-BOQ-71 9•3001 Ext. F 144
frontage nice. lor building.
hunting, pasture (priced to 1 and 2 bedroom apa rt·
ERVICE5
Call (740)44 1·0806. ments, fu rnished and untu r·
; Gallipolis, Mill Creek Ad , 1 s911)
John's Contracting
~ m i. from · golf cou rse, 3 br. .Leave Messana.
nished, sec urit~ deposit
Services
ranch . brick tronl, new vi nyl p..l)
required , no pets, 740-992·
carpentry. pai nting, roofing. siding, ~eat pump, excellent
AND BUII.J)IN(;s
2218.
insulation. decking-free estl· cond., appro:~~ . 1/3 ac. asking
mates 74()-367·6437
$77,500. call afl~r 5pm 3042 bed room apartment avail·
APa rtment building for sale:
675-5038
able in Syracuse, $200
4 apartmenfs plus oll1ce
TURNED DOWN ON
deposit, $ 315 per month
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? Sin gle fam1ly dwelling , 4 located in Ra cine, OH (740) rent , rent 1ncludes· water.
No Fee Unless We Win!
bedrooms. 1 bath , living 949· 2305 for appOintments
sewe r. trash. no pets. rental
1·888·582·3345
room. dining room . kitchen .
Poi nt Pleasant , 6th St. application , references and
Located at 611 4th Aven ue
across from courthouse, suff icient, income to qualify,
on 40X 130 lot
$45,000.
.
(740)3?8·6111
r.r"~---,---...;"" Call 245·7221 or 245·7203 oIll ceIcommerccal bldg. ask· - - ' - - - - - - - ing $50 000. day 304·675· 2 Bedroom Apt. 5 min. past
H0'-'1~
FOR SAU:
fJ20 MOIID.E HoMES 5734
Holzer 740·441 ·0 194
evening 304·675·5038.
HJR SAl.£
Apa riment upstairs 46·112
(3)F HA &amp; VA homes set up
T
he
Corner
Resta
urant.
M111
,Creek.
2·bedroom.
for immedi ate possession all 10 used homes under
included.
within •ts min. of downtown $2,000. will help with deliv· Middleport, Oh., business &amp; Water/Trash
buildin~ &amp; property. estab· $275/month. $275/Deposlt.
Gallcpons _ Rates as low as ery, call Harold 740 -365·
fished 199~ . turnkey opera· (740)44 1·0583 or (740)446~
60f.., (740)446·32 18.
9948
tion. (740)992·3955
7620 af1er 7

·veslerday·s
'I'm

HJRSALE

HOMES

Russ

Beautlfut engagemenl ring &amp;
wedding band, 14K gold
w/ 11 diamonds, size 7 1/2,
bough! for $800 at Zales will
sell for $350, (740)247·2070

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

MOBILE

QUES

Air Oondilioner 12.Qoo BTU.
9.0EER, $45.
(304)675·3875

classified@ mydailyregister.com

Ho~

10

RusJN•-s;
TRAINING

Sitter
lor
'days/early
evenings Mt 'Alto area in my
home pr consider si tter in
roosevel t schoo l district
Reliable Transportation 1.6
or older. (304)895·31 H

n- OHUV
I I
.

140

Secretary- Receptionist for
local clean1 ng company.
An swer phone and general
Office duties. Send resume
to . Special Care Services,
Road .
1743 Centenary
Gallipolis. 0~ 4563t

H

. 1

110

1.

992~2526.

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publishing reurvaa the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at eny lime. EtrOI"I m.ust be reported on the II rat day of publ icatio n and
Tribun•Senttnet-Regleter will be reeponalble for no mora than the coat of the aP:aca occupied by the error and only the firstlnaertlon. We ahall not be liable
any loea or eKpeneelhat results from the pubtlcation Of omi11ion olan advertiaement. Correction will be made In the f irst av1ilable edition. • Box nurnber acl••
are alwaya confidential. • Current rate card applies. • All real ee1ate advertlaementt are lubject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1988. • This n"roparp" l
acatpta only help wanted ada f1"!1Nllng EOE standards. We will not knowingly acatpt any advertising In violation of the law.

• Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Include Complete

'\'\01 '\( I 'II'\ Is

\

Display Ads

ANn

.•

1999 1·1on Chevrolet with
util1ty bed, 40,000 miles,
$16,500. For more inlo. call
(740)245·5768.

2001
Dodge
Clubcab Motorsport series.
Loaded , bed liner, CO
Player,
Keyless
entry.
EMcellent condition. 22.000
miles. $15.000. (740)446·
46 16
1993
Che~
Camara
Z28,
Queen size Som ma Soft
Black. 379~2282 .
sided waterbed . commercial
size coffee grinder. station· 1994 Corvene Coupe, white . 2001 Dodge Dakota Sport,
Black, 4X4 . eMtended cab
ary bike w/monlto~ .. reverse red leather interior, lvaded,
$11 .500. Call 446·7311 or
.o$s moslsKwbater Gpu htre r all lor $11 ,000. 740-682-7512
645·4139.
200 .
lr Y 4 sweeper
·;~::~~ments. S250 · 1995 Ford Escort, new t1res,
excellent condition 52500 2002 Ford F-250 SuperCab,
Diesel, 4X4 . 1996 F-250 2
080 446·4880
wheel drive. 2002 Camper
1995 Jeep Wrangler. 4 cyl. 5 Te rry 5th wheel. (740)386·
speed. 4WO. Soft top and 9082 or (740)645.0145
Block. brick, sewer pipes, blklnl top. New Tires. Run s
windows , lintels, etc. Claude &amp; looks Great. 137,000
40 MO'IURCVC.1.E'i
:
Winters , Rio Grande, OH miles. $5.000. (740).367iCi:ialii-17;,;4;;;0-;,;2:;4;;;5~·5,.12•1;;..--~ 7152 or (740)339-&lt;l707.
1986 Honda Magna, eMcel·
PEts
1996 Ford Taurus 78,000 lent shape. $2,600 firm:
FOR SALE
miles. 1 owner, garage kept, Lane rocker/rec liner, $300;
At, AC, PS, PB, PW, Cruise. call alter 5pm (740)992·
Miniature Appaloosa horse EMcetlent condition . $4,000. 6154
w/saddle, bridle &amp; bit, geld- {304)675·3182
lng, 100% safe for kids , - - - - - - - - 1996 Satu rn 4 dr. 90K 1987-X LH· llOO
Harley
$600, (740)742·3802
$3195.
Davidson motorcycle , nice
Registered .Border Collie 1993 Grandam 2 dr. 68K bike $5,500. 080 304·675·
Pups. First shots. wormed , $2895.
3824
imported bloodline. wortc:ing Four caValiers and 12 olh·
paren fs, perfect Father's ers In stock.
1996 Kawasaki 750 Vulcan .
COOKS MOTORS
Day gin. (740)379·9 110
Garage kept , great condi- '
740-44&lt;HI103
lion. 7200 miles. 675-5630.
Registered
miniature
675-5664; 606-923·6171
Appaloosa horse, red sorrel 1999 · Oldsmobile Alero
wlblonda mane/tail, would $6,800. (740)256·9197
1999
Harley
Heritage
make n ice breede r, $500,
90 Ford Probe, auto, looks Springer. eMc. condition 446(7401742·3802
good, runs but need work , 6253
I \1 0 1 't 1'1'1 II '
$300, (740)247·2070
,\11\l " l l Hh.
95 Hyundal Scoupe, 5- 2002 Honda XA1 00, like
speed, A/C, 73,000 miles , new•. $1 ,750.00 . 740·256·
runs great, $2000 (740)441 ~ t928

rI- -._

Buy br selL
Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pllmeroy, 740·

lRegtster

Sentinel

Offtee lloaJ&lt;-~

I

r

1987 Monte Carlo-SS, 406
S.B., TH350 trans, B 5· 10
bo!t rearend , bta(i(, corvene
ralleys w/flal caps, lint, A/C,
Interior perfect . $6,500.
(304)675-1 175
--,-------1992 Mercury Cougar 2dr,
automatic, Bcyl, auto sun~
roof, good tires. EMcellent
Condition, 1304)675·1519

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Gar~~ges
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
Free Esttmates

V. C.

YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomero~.

519·8/4

Ohio

22 Years Local

MYERS PAliNG
Henderson, WV

871-2487 or 448-.912
Cell Phone 674'3311 Fax 304·675-2457

NELSON'S LAWN

CARE
Residential •
Commercial Mowing
• Mulching • Edging '
• Fertilization • Leaf
Removal • Pruning
• Landscape
Maintenance Spring
and Fall cleanup

(740) 985-9829
(740) 5111-3891

~"'~
High &amp;Dry

Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy. Ohio

740·992-5232

SUE's GREENHOUSE
·Beddln~etable

· ·

q Sweet

o Plants.
· 4"' tlllnlltlls li' Perennials
Frtllt li' Flowering Trees q
Shrubs
CRIIOIIodclldrons li'
_ Ooten
Azalt45)
ail orr Sale
• "'-::,".":~\lght

• Driveways 1 Tennis Courts
t Parking Lots t Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

MANlEYS
SElF STORAGE

Ri,t·r"a'.
( 'aft'· ·
In Syracuse

97 Beech St.

(formtrl.\' Wh/mtyS)'

Under new owncn;hip

middleport, OH

and new managemenl. .

(10'K1D' 610'K20')

COME JOIN US

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

7

AWeek!

r-

'The Little re1taurant
with the hig taste"

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

1-740-949-211 •

Pd 1 mo

'·

'

�.

'

Page B6 • The DaUy Sentinel

Friday, June 17, 2003 .

~w.mydailysentinel.com

.. .

Man looks back with longing
at teenage romance ·he nixed
DEAR ABBY: This is near. -.
ly 25 years late, but I need to
apologize to someone.
When I was a ).unior in high
school, I dated 'Carole.': She
had many fine qualities and I
really enjoyed her company.
After Carole and I had dated
for near! y a year, I met
"Marie." She was cute and
ADVICE
exciting, and · I immediately
fell in love with her. Marie
broke up with her boyfriend always the right choices. and I broke' up with Carole so TONY
.
·
FROM
we could be together. (I'll GREENVILLE mGH
never forget the day I broke up
DEAR TONY: Some peawith Carole. She was at a pie learn more from their misfriend's house when I told her. takes than their successes, and
She stood on the porch crying you are one of them.
as I drove away to meet Sometimes what is best for us
Marie.)
is right in front of us.
I joined the military after Recognizing what you DON'T
graduation and married Marie want can be a giant step in the
later that same year. Our mar- right direction. I hope you
riage lasted 10 months. Marie have put that knowledge to
left me for .another guy -the good use.
same way she had left her
DEAR ABBY: I have an
boyfriend in hi~h school for unusual dilemma. My busme. Carole mamed a great guy band, "Keith," and I have been
a few years after high school. married for t~ .years. He is
They have been together for my dearest and closest friend.
more than 20 years.
The problem is, Keith works
To Carole: I'm sorry I hurt for his sister, "Kathie," ih the
you. I should have chosen you shop she owns. Several nights
over Marie. Everyone saw that a week she holds "dinner
but me. You and I probably meetin~s" after work, but I am
would have had a nice life never· mvited to join them.
together., I hope y~u·re happy. When their parents host family
If there s one thmg .I have get-togethers, Kathie says
learned over the years, It's that · they're "business-related" the "flashiest" people aJ"!ln 't and again I am excluded.

Dear
Abby

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

BY BERNICE BED£ OsoL

. well.

. CANCER (June li-July
22) - Pride can be your
worst enemy. so today, if a
concerned friend wants to do
something for you; don't allow vanity to siand in the
way . Good things could happen for you if you'lllet them.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today. forge ahead on that alliance that you've been considering. It might turn out to
be an important establishment
and may cement strong links
that will prove to be successful.

- Perform your work today
as if it were the most impor·
tant thing you could do. Later,
when the results of your ef·
forts become known, praises
will quickly turn into raises.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Bold measures might be
called for today in order to
advance a personal in teres!. If
it is important to you, and you
truly believe in what you're
doing, don't hold back on
ways to accomplish it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Loose ends concerning
a financial matter that you
might have had trouble tying
up can now be knotted to·
gether. It will give you peace
of mind to have it completed
once and for all.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) - Owing to your
ability to be able to judge
events accurately. you could
have an edge over your com·
petitors today . You'll know
how to use this asset to distance yourself from the pack.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 19) -. Keeping the

1 Try for a
field goal
5 Beret kin
B Skip past ·
ads ·
11 Type
of eagle
12 Keats work
13 Labor's
t.W.15 DNA
component
16 Above,
to poets
17 AMEX rivet
18 Hosp.
staffer
20 Hilltops
22 Composure
25 Sundial
numeral
26 Fast plane
27 Mortlcla's
cousin
28 Planets
31 Spasms
33 "Norma-"
34 Object
38 Netster

For the longest time I boyfriend may be on the upthought I could live with and and-up, but pushing for a
accept my sister-in-law's non- quick, exclusive commitment
acceptance of me. However, is one of the warning signs of
she has start~:d telling lies an abuser. Tell him to put on
about me to my husband, and the brakes because this
calling him at all hours to romance is movin~ too fast for ·
come to her house when some- you. Explain, straightforwardthing needs fixing .
ly, what your goals are, and
I have confronted Kathie to how you hope to pursue them.
no avail. Abby, what advice They may - or may not - be
can you offer to end this compatible with his. But at
bizarre "real life" nightmare? least you ' II have a clearer
- OUT IN THE COLD IN understandin~ of how you
COLORADO
both want to hve your lives.
DEAR OUT IN THE
Dear Abby is written by
COLD: Encourage your hus- Abigail Van BuiY!n, also known
band to find another job with as Jeanne Phillips, and was
Arthur no strings anached. And help founded by her moiher.
39 Part ofTGIF
40 Calf's cry .
him to recognize that his sis- Pauline Pfrillips. Write Dear
41 Pizza topper
ter's .behavior is toxic to your Abby at www.DearAbby.com
44 Computer
rnarnage.
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
key
P.S . If Keith doesn't get the Angeles, CA 90069.
45 Tenn.
message, marriage counseling
is in order. If he won't go, go
The Newspaper
without him.
DEAR
ABBY:
My
boyfriend is crazy about me. Has Class •••
We are both 23 and have been
Students can
dating only a month. He
learn a lot from
repeatedly tells me how much
the newspahe loves and cares about me.
Sometimes I feel suffocated.
per about the
My problem is I'm not sure
world
if I want to date exclusively. I
am immersed · in my studies · in which they live. And
now is the
and hope to establish myself in
a great job - my lifelong
perfect time to bring
dream. What should I do? newspapers into the
GRACIELA IN BRAZIL
I r m.
DEAR GRACIELA: Your
--·

Astrograph
It behooves you in the year
ahead to keep nurturing those
seeds you·ve planted. Many
things that seemed mired in
mud will suddenly spring. to
life and produce a plentiful
harvest.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) - When confron1ed by a
si tuation similar to one .
you· ve encountered and mismanaged previously, you'll
make sure not to repeat the
same mistakes again today .
You've learned your lessons

ACROSS

profit mot1ve uppermost in
your mind will moiivate and
encourage you to be more industrious today. Your timing
is great, because the cycle is
excellent for accumulation.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) - Although people already seek out your company.
today you could find yourself
more in demand than usual. If
you can take a little time off
work, spend it with some with
pals.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - Leave your fears and
apprehensions behind you today and stop worrying about
the outcome of events . They
are all figments of your

Anawer to Prevlouo Puzzle
I

neighbor
48 And,
In Bonn
49 Desf'er·
ado s fear
51 EKcurslon
53 Rabbit's

•

foot

54 Complexion
problem
55 Diamonds,
slangily
57 Perry's
penner
61 ,Summer
forecast
62 Mosquito63 Fasten
boards
64 Establish
65 Whiz leader
66 Soll)e NCOs

10
14
19
21
22

DOWN

23

1

2
3
4
5
6
7
8

9

Toga-party 24
25
dellvery
Eur. country . •
29
News
network
30
Hull parts
Cel chai'IICier 32
Fruit drink
35
Ming the 36
Grey of
37
western
42
novels
43
Chasm

Nuisances
In case
Hard se•t
Dispose of
Pocket
bread
Elevator
Inventor
Yen
For adults
only (hyph.)
Showing
around
Close kin
Wine
category
Little kids
Most sheep
Fr. miss
Shade

water
• monitor
45 Barely open
46 "Star Ware"
director
47 Comics
orphan
50 Track star
Jesse 52 Canterbury
locate
53 Fountain
of jazz
56 High note
58 Old cloth
59 Illuminated
60 Overhead
trains

Combine action with vision.

Inspecting damage

Deputy layoffs

not• prompted
•
cr1me Increase
BY

TAURUS (April 20-May
20).- There isn 'I much you
can't do once you put your
mind to it, and today, if
you're prepared to work.
you're objectives can be
achieved. However, aim high
so you can accomplish b1g
things.

Garage fire at old junior high
cau~ed by burning _
vehicle
BY BRIAN

OOWN

·-1!!..... ..

J.

REED AND

8:30 p.m. in the gymnasil,!m,

J.

MILES LAYTON

Answer

Staff wnlers

to
previous

AVERAGE GAME 165-175

by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN - -

DIRECTIONS; Make a 2- to 7- ~ner wctd !rom the letters on eacl'1 yardllne.
Md ~110 each worn cr ~111r uSing scoring direCtions al fight Seven-let1er
words Qel 1 60-pcinl t&gt;onus. A• woros can be tound In Webs1ef's Ntlw Wor1d
CoOiego Oictiono'Y
JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

321

. I

POMEROY - A fire that
caused extensive damage to
the old Pomeroy Junior High
School gymnasium and four
village-owned
vehicles
Tuesday evening was caused
~y a village employee's bummg car.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Rick
Blaettnar said the employee
was working on his own car at

used as a village garage, when
the car caught on fire.
Mayor Victor Young Ill
identified the employee as
Robert Klein. Young said
Klein was replacing a fuel
pump when he dropped a
trouble light on the ground.
The light bulb broke and
ignited some gas fumes.
The mayor said the car
quickly burned, and the fire
spread over the work bay and
ceiling.

:-...\\: : rr--:-r~,.·, \
ll~~~rT~,-r~. .~

'

'

.

'THAI'~

!VE ~EARD

111E 1111RD ·

Of ANOiiiER
ll'll\.E STORE
0~ i\IE EDUE

51DRE

~Ottve

Oii iDU.l"l , ..

...11\ERE r
11\ERE rr: t~'

!®IT
00 'THE'!
HAVE ·

• Missions in Afganistan

Bv BRIAN

program, See page A3
• Family Medicine, See
page A3

Staff writer

Partly cloudy, HI: BOo, Low: 60o

111Ai'S
50
SPeCIAL'?

J.

REED

POMEROY - The boat
dock at Horace Karr's Wild
Horse Cafe is symbolic of problems the owner faces with com. pletion of his new restawant
Two days ago, the 128-foot dock
was visible fium the restawant's
veranda. Now, it's covered with
water;

Carrie White

-....
z
&lt;

old

s==
&lt;

Pomeroy Elementary

'(OIJ TllfEW A FASTeALL,
AND T14E eATTER 5WIJN6
AT IT AND MISSED...

:Index
l Sections - n hps
Calendar
A3
· Ciassifieds
83-5
Comics
· 86
·Dear Abby
86
·Editorials
A4
Movies
AS
81-2
Sports
A2
Weather

~~!

'
~

~

f,

i'

MILES LAYTON

~ 200~

Ohio Valley

!'

Blaettnar said ~8 firefighters responded to the scene,
and that nobody was injured
in fighting the tire. The fire
was out in about two hours.
"We were lucky to have
escaped any injury last night,"
Blaettnar said. "Shortly after
the fire was reponed, the gas
tank on Klein's car exploded,
and with all those vehicb:s
and their tires in such an
enclosed area, the smoke was
unreal."
Smoke and fire damage

POMEROY Village
Police Chief Mark Proffitt
said the layoffs at the Meigs
County .
Sheriff's
Department have not yet
caused an increase in crimerelated calls to the Police
Department from people in
the county.
Last Friday at midnight,
Sheriff Ralph Trussell
became the lone law
enforcement provider for
anything that happens in the
· county outside the village
limits . Proffitt said that
unless the sheriff requests
back-up from the Police
Department, that it would be
unable to respond to any
calls outside its jurisdiction
- unless it was an exceptional situation such as a
felony.
Proffitt said the Police
Department did not receive
an increase in calls during
the weekend, but he wanted
to emphasize .that the police

Publ~hing

Co.

The constant rains that have
dampened everyone's spirits for
the past month have been a par·
ticular thorn for Karr. as he and
contractors working for him
scramble to finish the rest;rurant
· before the mid-July projected
opening date.
Because the wet weather has
. delayed el\terior work. Karr said
Thesday. the restaurant likely
will not open before the end of
July. Of panicular concern to
Karr is the the parking areas on
either side of the restaurant,
where fill is needed before concrete can be poured.
"It will lake four to five days
to dry sufficient!)' for work: to
proceed in those areas," Karr
. said. "and another three to four
days to pour the yards and yards

are not allowed by law to
respond to anything that
does come up unless the
sheriff requests back up.
Ignoring this law could
potentially make both the
village and the county liable.
The need for a county law
enforcement presence could
change during the July 4
weekend. Lt. Dick Grau of
the Ohio State Highway
Patrol, said that due to the
increased traffic on the road·
ways during the holiday
weekend, there may be more
traffic crashes. Grau said
there may also be an
increase in criminal activity
because people are away
from their residences, which
could increase the tempta-.
tion for property crimes.
Grau said he wishes the
highway patrol could do
more to serve, but its jurisdiction is limited by state
law to the public highways.
With the July 4 weekend
approaching, Grau said the
situation at the Sheriff's
Department concerns everyone.

GED opens world
.of opportunity for
gra.duates

were limited to the g)'mnasium area, Blaettnar said.
It took fire crews only two
minutes to arrive on the scene
after being dispatched by the
Pomeroy Police Department,
Blaettnar said.
"Most of what we did last
night was try to control the
smoke damage," Blaettnar
said . "There was a lot of damage in the loft area above the
gymnasium. In fact, it was so

J. MILS lAYTON
Staff writer

BY

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Adult Basic and
Literacy Education (ABLE)
presented diplomas to more
than a dozen people who fulfilled the state's requirements for receiving a
General
Educational
Developmem certificate at
Meigs High School Monday.
Please see Fire, AS
Each year more than
860,000 people nationwide
decide lo finish their high
school education by prepar·
ing many hours so they can
take the GED test. Those
who obtain scores high
enough to earn a GED outperform at least 40 percent
· of today' s high school
seniors. One out of every
seven high school diplomas
issued each year in the
United States is based on
passing the GED Tests.
Ben Mitchell, 20, would
have graduated from Meigs
High School in 200 I , but he
got a little sidetracked.
Mitchell hated school and
saw no point to finishing his
education. For a couple of
year§, Mitchell moved from
job to job. He was a commerCial painter, telemarketer
Kenny Burke of Bob Bissell Construction Co. works on the verarr
and construction worker.
da of the Wild Horse Cafe Tuesday, where a canopy protected him
"Being .in the real world
and co-workers from the constant rainfall. (Brian J. Reed)
and away from home makes
you realize things," he said.
of concrete needed."
customers inside, and another 50
Mitchell decided to go
"And that's if the weather on the full-length veranda,
back to get his GED.
cooperates fuUy."
·
which overlooks the Ohio River
Avonell Evans, one · of
Surrounded by mud. the and affords a bird's eye view of
Mitchell 's teachers in the
restaurant. itself, meanwhile, is the Pomeroy/Mason Bridge and
ABLE program. said he was
nearing completion. Karr esti- Pomeroy's historic downtOwn.
a "good student, very smart
mates that the interior of the
The upscale restaurant is
and gung-ho about getting
restaurant is 85 percent complet- designed to serve as a tourist · his GED." Mitchell said his
ed, and crews were hard at work attraction for Meigs County, · goal was to finish .what he
Thesday painting and installing Karr said. It will serve steaks and
started in high school and go
~some of the' fixtures.
other entrees wiih a 'Tex-Mex"
to college . He wants to
The restaunmt can seat 200 flavor.
become a marine biologist

Rain delays restaurant completion

Inside
..

J.

Staff writer

Jack Krautter, Pomeroy village street superintendent, left, and Mayor Victor Young look over a village truck that was burned in
the fire at the former Pomeroy Junior High School building, now used as a garage for village equipment. (Charlene Hoeflich)

AS long as you're 'conceptualIZmg; dream b1g.
.

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WEDNESDAY, JUN£ 18, 2003

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Word
Scrim··~

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imagination and have nothing
to do with reality. You' ll do
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L
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Reds over Cards, B 1

so that he can work with
whales like Shamu at
Seaworld in Florida.
Mitchell has advice for
anyone considering dropping out"of high school.
"Stay in school no matter
how. much you hate it," he
said. "You have to tough it
out sometimes.
Pauline Patterson, a mother of two children, passed
the test and received her
GED certificate after only 3
weeks of prep work.
Patterson, 48 , is from
Ireland. Her husband, Brent,
works at Ohio University.
She got the certificate so that
she can get a college degree.
"I got my GED so that I
could funher my education
and get a decent job over
here," she said. "I.would like
to study early childhood
education. I have always
worked with children.
Patterson said the GED
opens up more opportunities
for her. More than 95 percent of U.S. e111ployers consider GED graduates the
same as traditional high
school graduates in regard to
hiring, salary, and opportunity for advancement.
"It's just nice to have
because it gives me more
opponunities," she said. "If
you don't have it, you really
can do anything."
The Meigs County ABLE
GED graduates are: Amanda S.
Baninger, Rita K. Bell, Arica N.
Blackwell, Rebecca Church,
Becky L. Collingsworth, Bobbi
J. DeLong. Anthony Lyons,
Jared Marcinko, Benjamen A
Mitchell. Pauline Patterson,
Clara J. Pullins and David P.
Tiemeyer.

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