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                  <text>· Pqe 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Brew Crew downs Reds
CINCINNATI (AP) - Life
in the National League seems
to agree with Doug Davis.
He gave up only an
unearned run in his ftrSt NL
win Thesday night, a complete-game, four-hitter as the
Milwaukee Brewers beat the
·
Cincinnati Reds 7- I.
Davis (1-0) struck out two
and walked one.
"It feels great. I really feel
like I'm getting an opportunity," Davis said. "I just want to
show I can pitch and start."
Davis ( 1.:0) spent the fust
half of the season in the
American Leag.ue with Texas
and Toronto, ~oing 4-6 with a
5.37 ERA tn 13 games,
including 12 starts. The Blue
Jays let the lefty go in July.
and Milwaukee signed him to
a minor league contract.
He had two quality starts but
no decision after joining the
Brewers on Aug. 18.
"He was awesome," said
Geoff Jenkins, who matched
his career high with four hits.
including his second two-run
homer in two nights. "He did a
great job. ·He kept us off the
field and them off the bases."
Wes Helms also hit his second two-run homer in two
nights as the Brewers won
their eighth straight, their
longest winning streak since a
nine-game string in 1997.
With a 56-75 record,
Milwaukee matched its win
total from last season.
"That's always been the
plan," manager Ned Yost said. ·
"I knew we were better than
56 wins. Fifty-six wins was
nothing to shoot for. Deep in
my heart. I knew we'd be OK.
They never quit. When it got
dire, they never let their heads
get down."
Davis also ~ot his first
major-league btl, a two-out
single off Dan Serafini (0-1)
in the fourth inning.
"That was a lucky hit," said

Milwaukee Brewers' Geoff Jenkins (5) is safe at third as the ball gets by Cincinnati Reds' Ryan
Freel (6) in the fifth inning Tuesday in Cincinnati. Jenkins advanced to third on a fly ball by Richie
Sexson. There was no error charged on the play. (AP)
Davis, who was O-for!9 before
the hit. "(Serafini) hit my bat.
It's my first (baning) average,
too. It's low (.091), but it's an
average."
Davis' complete game was
the fifth by Milwaukee pitchers this year.
"He's done a nice job since
he's been here," Yost said. "It
was a hot night. The plan was
to let him go eight (mnings).
He came off alter the seventh,
and I said, 'Can you go one
more?' He had a little gleam in
his eye, and he said, 'I can go
two more."'
Davis said the 86-degree
temperature at gametime didn't bother him.
"It was beautiful out. It felt
good," Davis said. "My last

.two games were day .games.
One was like 95 (degrees),
and the other was in the low
90s. It was nice to get a night
game with no sun beating
down on you."
Serafini, signed by the Reds
out of the Mexican League,
allowed seven hits and four
runs on a pair of two-run
homers in live innings. It was
his first appearance in the
majlilrs since starting for
Pittsburgh against the Chicago
Cubs on Sept. 29, 2000.
"All four of the runs he gave
up were on home runs," Reds
manaller Dave Miley said.
"That s something we haven't
been able to do. That was the
difference in the game."
The Reds took a 1-0 lead in

the first without a hit. Ryan
Freel led off with a sharp
grounder
that
bounced
through Helms' legs at third
base for a two-base error.
Freel moved up on Ray
Olmedo's sacrifice bunt and
scored
on
D'Angelo
Jimenez's sacrifice fly.
The Brewers took a 2-1 lead
in the third on Scott ·
Podsednik's one-out walk and .
Jenkins' 26th home run.
Milwaukee made it 4-1 in the
fourth when Brady Clark led
off with a walk and Helms hit
his 17th homer.
The Brewers added three in
the seventh, including an RBI
single by Jenkins that glanced
off first baseman Sean Casey's
glove.

Reds claim Hummel from White Sox
CINCINNATI (AP)- The Cincinnati
Rc;ds claimed infielder Tim Hummel off
waivers on Tuesday, completing their
trade with the Chicago Whtte Sox.
The Reds sent reliever Scott Sullivan
to Chicago last Thursday along with
money for a player to be mimed.
Hummel was expected to join the Reds
for the rest of their series against
Milwaukee.
Hummel, 24, hit .284 in 128 games for

Wednesday, August 27,

www.myclallysentinel.eom

Triple-A Charlotte with 15 homers, ~0
RB!s and nine steals. He played 97
games at third. 31 at shortstop and six at
second base .
The Reds also put outfielder Reggie
Taylor on the 60-day disabled list with a
dislocated left Shoulder, which he suffered while trying to make a diving
catch during a weekend series in
Houston.
Left-hander Mark Watson went on the

Indians edge
Tribe,·S-4

15-day disabled list with a kidney problem, and right-handed reliever Joe
Valentine was optioned to Triple-A
Louisville.
The Reds filled their spots by calling
up left-handers Dan Sarafini and Phil
Norton and right-hander Scott Randall.
The Reds have used 49 players, two
shy of the club record, and have already
matched the franchise record by going
through 25 pitchers.

Pirates trade
Giles to Padres
PITTSBURGH (AP) Brian Giles, one of the NL's
most productive players for
five seasons, was deal.t
Tuesday to the San Diego
Padres in a long-rumored
trade that further depletes
the talent-thin Pittsburgh
Pirates.
In an uncommon late-·
season deal involving a
name player going from
one non-contender to
another, the Pirates get
promisin~
left-handed
starter Ohver Perez, minor
league outfielder Jason Bay
and a player to be named.
After acquiring Giles, the
last·place Padres sent AllStar outfielder Randell
White to the Kansas· City
Royals for two minor
league pitchers.
"Over our last 10 or I l
games, we've been pounded by left-handed pitchers
late m the game," Kansas
City general manager
Allard Baird said. "This
cef!ain!r gives us another
optton.
Giles. a San Diego
native, has averaged 35
homers and I00-plus RBis
since being traded by
Cleveland before the 1999
season. He is hitting .299
with 16 homers and 70
RBis this season despite
sittin~ out a month with a
knee mjury.
The Pirates, headed for
an II th consecutive losing
season, are rebuilding from
the ground up with younger
and lower-pnced players.
"There's a lot of disappointment - and satisfaction," the 32-year-old Giles
said. "It's disappointing
because when I signed
here, I wanted to play for a
championship club · here,
but it just dido 't work out.
... But I'm excited to go
back and play in my hometown."

The Pirates have dealt
their top . starting pitcher
(Jeff Suppan), two best
relievers (Mike Williams
and Scott Sauerbeck), two
most productive position
players (Aramis Ramirez
and Giles) and center fielder Kenny Lofton since midJuly. The trades came after
owner Kevin McClatchy
revealed losses of as much

as $30 million since PNC
Park o~ned in 200 I.
That s why the Pirates initially tried to include catcher Jason Kendall in the
Giles trade. Kendall has $42
million remaining on his
$60 million, six-year contract, and the Padres wanted
the Pirates to pay about half
that.
"What was worrisome
from our standpoint was
taking on that salary,"
Padres general manager
Kevin Towers said. "Once
we were able to separate the
two, we were able to agree."
Kendall , Giles' best
friend with the Pirates,
declined to comment on
Giles' departure or his own
status. He apparently was
under the impression he
would be included in the
deal.
.
"Obviously, he wanted to
come to San Diego with
me:''
Giles
said.
"Unfortunately it. dido 't go
through the way we thought
it was going to go through.
From my · understandinjl,
they are still interested m
Jason."
White was hitting .278
with 18 homers and 66
RBis, and now joins a team
contending for the AL
Central title.
White, scheduled to
arrive in Kansas City on
Wednesday, could spell
either Raul Ibanez or center
fielder Carlos Beltran.
"I still haven't decided
where l'mgoing to use him
yet," manager Tony Pena
said. "I've still got a game
to worry about tonight."
The Padres got left-hander Chris Tierney and righthander Brian Sanches for
White. San Diego also will
send some cash to Kansas ·
City, but will save some
money on White's salary
that it can apply to Giles,
who will earn a little more
than $1 million the rest of
the season.
General manager Dave
Littlefield said the Pirates
dido 't wait until the offseason to trade Giles because
the offer was so attractive.
"We felt this was the
trade that made the most
sense and acquired the most
talent," Littlefield said.

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• Meigs prepares for
Athens. See Page 81

BY B!ltAN J. REED

breed@ mydailysentinet.com
MIDDLEPORT
Supporters and opponents
of a proposed ordinance
regulating manufactured
homes in Middleport will
have the opportunity to
express their opinions about
the proposal at a public
hearing on Thursday.
The hearing wi II be held at
5:30 p.m. in council chambers, and is required before
the proposal can be consid-

Page AS
• Charles Schuler, 70
• Charles W. Black. 84
• Gladyce Aiken, 93

In observance of the Labor
holiday, The J)dily Sentinel
will not be publiShed on
Monday. Sept. I. Sentinel offices
Y411 also be closed Monday.
. :The oftice will re-open at 8
a. m. Tuesday, Sept. 2.
[}~y

WEAmER
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Low: 801

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16 PAGES

B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3

Down on the Farm

A6

Editorials

A4

Movies

As
As

Obituaries

Sport~·
Weather

B1-4,8
A2

© aoo3 Ohio Valley Publtohlng Co.

POMEROY- One of the
mysteries of tlie universe
may have been solved by
one local priest at the Grace
Church
in
Episcopal
Pomeroy. The Rev. Marie
Mulford has almost discovered how to be in two places
at once on Sundays.
Mulford, 54, tends to the
four Episcopal churches in
the River Bend Episcopal
Ministries, which includes
Christ Church at Point
Pleasant,
St.
John's
Episcopal Church in Ripley,
Grace Episcopal Church in~
Ravenswood and Grace
Episcopal
Church
in
Pomeroy. Since these congregations are so small, they
must share a priest. Mulford
estimates that the size of the
congregation ranges from
40 to 70 people in each
parish .
Like any parish preacher
tending to tiny diverse
flocks in spread out over a
wide area, Mulford gives a
sermon to as many as two
churches each Sunday.
On any given Sunday,
Mulford may preach in
Point Pleasant for the early
bird service and Pomeroy
for the late service at II
a.m. On other weekends,
she will do the same for the
Ravenswood and Ripley
congregations.
Mulford gives basically
the same sermon each
Sunday to two separate congregations. She said there
are some variations, but the
message is the same.

'( , 1 1 ~

\\11\1

more than five years of age
into the village. and sets
forth minium size regulations for mobile home lots.
The regulations proposed
also prohibits mobile homes
as rental units, and requires
that all mobile homes be
owner-occupied. The proposal also would give village council discretion in
refusing permission to anyone to park a mobile home
or manufactured home in the
village if the home is considered unfit li&gt;r occupancy.
Mobile homes now locut-

cd in the vi llage - and
the re are now 189 - would
be exe mpt from the regulations contained in the proposed new ordinance.
although 25 percent of those
are locmed in zoned areas
where manufactured homes
are prohibiteLI.
The planning L'ommission
cites increased propo:AA,y value s in the villa~bc and
inneascd revenue through
property taxes on conventional homes for its support
of the pt'oposal.

rishes

les four

The Rev. Marie Mulford studies the Bible and prepares for a sermon she will be delivering
to two congregations in different churches. (J. Miles Layton )
'

Mulford said the secret to
being a priest in four different pari shes is to be organized and to touch base with
as many people as she can
'each week .
"The hardest part about
being a priest is trying to
meet everyone's needs," she
said.
in
June,
Ordained
Mulford replaces Katharin
Foster who transferred to
the Church of the Epiphany
in Nelsonville .

"You don't start out
knowil\g everything as a
new priest," Mulford s&lt;tid.
"I'm going to have to learn
things as I go ulong. The
more I do it. the easier it
will bewme."
While Mulford is familiar
with most of her parishioners in Pomeroy and Point
Pleasant. she is still learning
names.
"The people have been
very understanding and supportive," she said. "Bei ng a

priest is an &lt;twesome
responsibility."
Mulford
live s
in
Gallipolis and is used to driving. She tea.:hes stLtdents
with disabilities at Meigs
Hi gh School during the
week . Arranging her busy
sc hedule as a teacher.
Mulford has severa l duties
includin g administering
marriages. hapti sms. taking
confession, and generally
tending to the spiritual
needs of her llo~k .

businesses an opportunity to
a.m. to 5 p.m.
This is the eighth an nual display what they se ll . and
hoeflich@ mydailysentinet.com
event which is geared to local agriculturists a pla~:e to,
highlight family activities show what they grow.
POMEROY - . For those and feature exhibits and disThere will be li ve enterwho want to see what local plays which point up the tainment both days. a craft
residents do for fun or to
positive attributes of living market and exhibit will be
make a living, the 2003 Big
included, along with a
Bend Town and Country in the Bend area.
The emphasis, according wildlife mount display.
EXPO is the place to go.
Local commercial and nonIt will be staged on the to Hal Kneen, chairman. is to
commercial displays will be
Rock Springs Fairgrounds show achievements of the
on the grounds hoth days for
past,
present
and
future
,
to
on Saturday, Sept. 20, from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and on display the talents, activities the EXPO which has no
Sunday, Sept. 21, from 10 and unique possessions of admission charge .
There will be a classic car
residents, and to give local

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

1 •• 1

1 1111111•••111

Fireworks
almost
silenced at
Sternwheel
River
Festival
Bv J. MtLES LAvrDN
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY - The fireworks were almost silenced
at this year's Sternwheel
River Festival. Traditionally,
a large number of lireworks
de~orate th ~ sky on the last
night of tl1e three-day festival
in late September.
John ,Mu sser, chairm;m of
the Sternwheel Riverfest
Committee. said the Ohio
Lottery Commission. which
has paid for the fireworks for
the past four or five years. is
not paying for any tireworks
at this vear's festival.
This· has for~ed the
Stcrnwheel
Riverfest
Committee to pay more th&lt;m
$6.000 to provide fireworks
for the festi va l. Musser said
thm unless husinesses and
concerned dtizens donate
money for the fireworks, the
committee will have $6,000
less to spend on the festival.
Pomeroy mayor Victor .
Young Ill is leading a
fundraising drive to ,ay for
the tireworks.
"Every little bit we get
counts:· he said .
Young said the fireworks
arc very important to the
Sternwheel Festival.
"If we stop having fireworks. the festival will go on
but it will take away from th&lt;ll
final night." he said . "The
fireworks sort of wrap up the
summer /or a lot of people
who wme 10 tllwn to watch."
Musser saiu that more than
I0.000 people alleml the.
three-day festival, which will
he S~pt. 25 to Sept. 27. He
said that bet ween 5,000 to
7.(Xl0 people usually attend
the fimtl day nf the festival.
There was an annada of at
least R&lt;J boats of all types
llo;tting in the Ohio River.
Doml\i(lns c·an be sent to
the Stcmwlwel Rivcrfest
Commillec. P.O. Box 442,
Pomerny. Ohio, 45769 .
Young saiu Downing. Childs.
Mullen and Musser Insurance
at Ill E. 2nd Street in
Pomeroy is accepting cash
donations .

drive-in and an antiljUC car p.m. on Saturday. Sept. 20.
and tractor show. A lJUilt and an open-air Sunday
comcst will he held along church service at 10 a.m. on
with a make-your-own Sept. 21 with Frank Vaughan
scarecrow contest.
.
in charge.
A pettmg J.txl will be avat lThere is sti ll an opportuniablc lor youngsters to enJ 0 Y·. ty for anyone in the area to
and thcrcwtll he putt-pun goll participate in the fun and
and gardcmng classes taught
. ..
·d
.
b lh M· st ' r n rd 'n ' r . acttv tlles o1 t11e event. sat
y e
,J. "
r.t c " s. Kneen. Those who want to
Crops, vegctahlcs amlllciwcrs
will he displayed and food come as a vendor or to put
up a display should cbntact
will he available.
Also scheduled has been Del Pullins LJS5 - ~tr6&lt;J for furan amiqul' tractor pu ll at I ther details.

Information at your fingertips ...

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••• ••

Plans underway for Big Bend Town and Country Expo

.

------------,--- ·----.

\1 (,1 '-.. 1 ' ,1 \

BY J. MtLES. lAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

No Sentinel Monday

Detollo

1 ~ ' .. (~\\

·erect by village council. A
previous public hearing in
July was not allowed to proceed because notice of the
hearing had not been given,
although approximately 25
people on both sides of the
issue attended that hearing.
The ordinance proposed
by the Middleport Planning
Commission sets forth
stricter regulations for the
placement of mobile and
manufactured homes in the
village. For example. it prohibits residents from moving manufactured homes

New priest

OBITUARIES

INDEX

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I

Mobile home hearing set Thursday

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Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy,
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NCAA, OSU have few
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~:'lease see Dave or Brenda at The Daily
CLEVELAND (AP) Craig Monroe and Dmitri .
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Young hit home runs Tuesday
night as the Detroit Tigers won
their second straight game for
the first time in six weeks with
5-4 victory over the Cleveland
Indians.
Nate
Cornejo
(6-13)
snapped his five-game losing
streak and gave the Ti~ers
their first winning streak stnce
Cornejo had lost five
they won three straight straight starts since winning in
wrapped around the All-Star Cleveland on July 24. The
break.
Tigers have four wins in his
The Tigers, who already five starts against Cleveland
have 97 losses and are threat- - their only victories in 13
ening to break the 1962 New games against the Indians this
York Mets' modem record of season.
120 in a season, snapped ~ Monroe led off the Tigers'
11-game skid Sunday.
second with his 17th. homer,
Cleveland lost for just the hitting a 3-2 pitch from Billy
seventh time in 20 games Traber (6-7) into the first row
since Aug. 6 as Cornejo held of the left-field bleachers.
the Indians to four runs and
The Indians went ahead 2-1
. nitie hits over 7 1-3 innings.
in bottom of the second. Jody
Jamie Walker got five outs Gerut was hit by a pitch, took
for his third save.
second on a single up the mid. The Tigers scored four times die by Man Lawton and
In ·the fourth on Young's 26th scored on an opposite-field
horner, a solo shot, and five bloop double by Ryan
more hits and an error to take Ludwick that landed inches
a 5-3 lead.
fair down the right-field line.
.The rally ended with a
Lawton scored and Ludwick
bizarre double play. With the took third on a groundout by
bases loaded and one out, Ben Broussard · - and · the
Bobby Higginson grounded to Indians then ran themselves
third baseman Casey Blake. out of the inning.
Runner Alex Sanchez never
Josh Bard grounded back to
left second and when Blake Cornejo, who caught Ludwick
flipped to second baseman halfway down the line from
John McDonald, rookie Dan third and tagged him out.
Klassen was ruled out advanc- Meanwhile,Bard rounded ftrSt
ing from firit base on a force and Cornejo threw there for an
play. Sanchez, however, then easy double play.
went to the dugout, thinking
Broussard doubled in
he was· out and Klassen was Ludwick, who had singled, to
safe.
make it 5.-4 in the bottom of
Indians . manager Eric the fourth.
Wedge came out to argue and
Traber allowed four earned ·
the umpires ruled that Sanchez runs and nine hits over four
Borders and Artwork
was out for leaving the field. · inning's .

.

2003

...

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�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel .
Friday, Aug. 29

I llonotleld lw112· I •

•IColumbuo !r"WJ

020011

__

(.&gt; ~--·-···"•
Pf. Ct:w.d)'

ClOudy

Showars

T-f!IOtmS

Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Chance of thunderstorms
Friday night...Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s. Chance of rain 50
percent.
Sat urday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs near
80. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday
night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the mid 60s. Chance
of rain 40 percent.
Sunday ... Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstonns. Highs in the
upper 70s.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today ...Partly sunny. A
chance' of afternoon showers
and thunderstonns. Highs 85 to
90. South winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tonight...Partly
cloudy
with a chance of mainly
evening showers and thunderstonns. Lows in the lower
70s. South winds 5 to I0 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstonns from late morning
on. Highs 83 to 88. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of rain 50 percent.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10,000

Aug. 27, 2003

I:ON'Jcnes

9,000
8,000

9_.~3.79

::..-=..,

MAY
High

9,346.98

-0 .07

7,000

JUN
' Low

JUL
AUG
A - high: 11,722.98

9,306.49

1.800

Nasdaq

1,800

::.=..,

+0.65

1,783.12

1,200

JUN
LOw

AUG
JUL
R - high: 5,048.62

1,784.63

Mln:h 10, 2000

Aug. 27, 2003

1,0!0

Stanim:l&amp;

810
BOO

MAY

::..-=..,

High

+001

998.05

750

AUG
JUL
Roc:ord high: 1,527.46

JUN
Low

993.33 .

March 24, 2000

AP

Local Stocks
Garrett- 77.'JIJ
Gene!aJ Elect!ic- 29.75

ACI-22.25
AEP-28.31

Akm-31.83
Ashland 1,..,.- 32.90
B8T -35.67
El.l-17.60

Bob EltlnS- 27.t4
Borgwamer- 69,38

GKNLY-4.15

Harley DaWison - 49.82
Kmart- 28.70
Kroger- 19
Ltd.- 16.59

Cly Hoki'lg- 34.04

NSC-t8.36
Qak H~l Flt1ardal- 29.t5

~-3.63

Bank One- 39.05

etan•g Shqls-6.07
Col-26.95
l:luAlnl- 4423
00-20.92
Federal MogoJ- .26

O.IB-23.85
F"'q))es- 27.70
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.,

"This would provide us
with the clarity we were
looking for in order to understand and maintain our
power plants in the future in
accordance with the Clean
Air Act," Ellen Raines, a
spokeswoman for Akron ,
Ohio-based
FirstEnergy
Corp .. said Wednesday.
The electric utility and oil
industries have been lobbying
the administration for 'the
changes. saying the costs prohibit them from making energy-efticient improvements.
"We feel like we can comfortab ly
proceed
with
replacements, whereas in the
past, we were in limbo," said
Meli'ssa McHenry, a spokeswoman for Columbus, Ohiobased American Electric
Power Co.
Environmental groups say
the rule will allow power
companies to do major work
on their plants in increments.
many of which can be going
on at the same time .

"It's completely contrary to Act's "new source review· ~
the intent of the law," said program into law in 1977.
Kurt Waltzer of the Ohio Since then the agency has had
Environmental Council. "You mixed success in enforcing
can essentially rebuild your the maintenance provision .
old plant and make it last for- The Justice Department has
ever and never have to install sued several power compa;
new pollution equipment.''
1· ·
h
h ·
Waltzer said his and other nies, c atmmg t at 1 ey
rebuilt 36 power plants in vio:
groups may tile 3 lawsuit to lation of the Clean Air Act
try to overturn the rule.
"It's unfortunate that when and that pollution from the
you go so far in gutting the plants winds up in the
Clean Air Act that there is no Northeast, where it causes
other choice but to turn to the add rain and health problems:
courts," he said.
The lirst of those cases to
The new rule signed come to trial was FirstEnergy
Wednesday by the EPA's act- earlier this month. A judge
ing administrator, Marianne ruled that the company vioL. Horinko, represents a fun- Iated federal law by not
damental shift away from a · adding new pollution con.
long-problematic 1971 main- trois when updating a plant.
tenance standard.
"We're going to really. 1 A second trial is expected irt
think, create certainty going March to determine what the
forward for industrial facili- company should do to corties. by spelling out what reel the violations.
specific replacement is
Wednesday's announcement
exempt," Honnko said.
was not expected to affect this
Congress put the Clean Air or other pending cases.

State releases records, despite utilities' concerns
COLUMBUS (APl
of Canada. The blackout affectState utility
regulators . ed 50 million people. shut
released documents to the down more than 100 pawer
public. despite c.oncerns by plants and knocked Cleveland's
some power companies that water supply off line.
some records should remain
The burden was on the
conlidential.
companies to prove why the
The
Public
Utilities records should not be
Commission of Ohio had released. Utility representaasked five companies to tives say security -and linanexplain why certain docu-. cia! disclosure are among
ments required to be tiled with reasons for conlidentiality.
the commission were marked
"We did not release specifconfidential. The commission ic locations of specific generhas received requests from ating stations because we
news organizations
for viewed that as a national
records such as maintenance, security
issue,"
Shana
outage and forecast reports Gerber, a PUCO spokesfollowing the massive black- woman, said Wednesday.
out earlier this month.
FirstEnergy Cf!rp., the
The documents were liled Akron-based company at the
before the Aug. 14 blackout center of a joint U.S.-Canada
that darkened homes and busi- investigation of the blackout,
nesses in eight states and pans successfully argued that maps

Panel.
formed
to review
museum
practices

1,400
MAY
High

WASHINGTON (AP) Ohio power companies
expressed relief after the Bush
administration issued longawaited guidelines on when
older pltmts. relineries and,
factories will have to install
costly clean air controls.
Until now, plants were
required to install the latest
pollution control equipment
when they underwent major
upgrades that caused emissions to increase signilicantly. Work that was "routine
maintenance" was exempted.
but the delinit.ion for what
work constituted as "routine"
was a source of confusion to
the industry.
In a major revision to its air
pollution
rules,
the
Environmental Protection
Agency will allow up to 20
percent of the costs of replacmg each plant's production
system to be considered
·•routine maintenance" that
doesn't require costly antipollution controls.

of transmission lines, substations and generators, including nuclear power plants,
should not be released.
"We don't think it's a good
idea to make those maps public," said Ralph DiNicola, a
FirstEnergy spokesman. "We
think that's a pretty dumb
idea ... for security concerns."
Cinergy
Corp.
of
Cincinnati told the commission that highly technical
documents - performance
indices and inspection, mainlenance and repair practices
and reports - should remain
off-limits lo the public
because it is not comparable
between utilities and "the
potential for misinterpretation is high."
However, Cinergy did not
object to the release of compa-

ny records, saying that the public has an interest in such information because of the blackout.
Acting on behalf of the
PUCO, the Ohio attorney
general's office informed
FirstEnergy.
Cinergy,
American Electric Power Co .
of Columbus, Dayton Power
and Light. and Pennsylvaniabased Allegheny Power on
Friday that they needed to
defend their contention that
the documents should not be
made public.
U.S. and Canadian investigators investigating the blackout are locusing on failures of
a power plant and Iines owned
by FirstEnergy in Ohio,
including one transmission
line that sagged into a tree.

Jan. 14, 2000

Aug. 27, 2003

1,782.13

Thursday,Augusta8,2003

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DAYTON (AP) - A
watchdog panel has been
created to review practices
at the U.S. Air Force
Museum, where hundreds
of items from bombs to
artifacts of aviation pioneers Wilbur and Oryille
Wright are missing.
David Ponitz, former
president of Sinclair
Community College, said
Wednesday he has agreed
to serve on the panel ,
which is to be headed by a
four-star general. The Air
Force said an official
announcement was being
prepared.
"I was asked to serve on
that group to determine
what the facts are, and
that's what I intend to do
- listen to the facts and,
along with other people
who are skilled and
knowlecjgeable in that
, kind of stuff, make a reasoned judgment' into
appropriate,"
what's
Ponitz said.
The announcement of
the panel followed a series
of stories by the Dayton
Daily News on an audit
that said several hundred
artifacts, including NASA
technology and military
weapons, were missing
from the museum at
Wright-Patterson
Air
Force Base.
The March 2002 audit .
by the Wright-Patterson
Area Audit Office concluded that the museum's
personnel "did not always
effectively manage museum property."
About 2 million people
a year visit the museum.

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
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Court News

Fined
Patricia Shane, Pomeroy,
disorderly by intox. cost only,
·disorderly after warning, $50
and costs; Ronald Keys,
Pomeroy, disorderly after
warning, $ 100 and costs;
Heather Mattox, Pomeory,
disorderly by intox, $100
plus
costs;
Christina
Holloway, Pomeroy, unsafe
:vehicle. $63 and costs;

:Military News

DEAR ABBY: The recent
letter from the woman who
was seated next to a man
who talked on his cell phone
all during her daughter's
gradumion ceremony leads
me to relate my .:xperience.
Recently. my c·ollege-aged
daughter and I were in a grocery store. A woman was
walking down the aisle with
her cell phone stuck to her
ear. She was goss iping in a
loud voice and using first
and last names.
Aller two aisles of this. my
daughter said to the woman,
"Excuse me. I KNOW so-andso. Shall! tell her how you tccl
about wh;tt happened'!" The
woman was visibly llustered.
She ended the call. telling her
"ce ll rnate" she'd call her
when she got home.
After we lel't the store. I
asked my daughter how she
knew the person . My daughter
said she didn 't. But she wanted the woman to realize that
she was being overheard saying hurtful things in a crowded place. My daughter's rule
of thumb is to never use
names in pub! ic because you
never know who's listening.
End of lesson from a 21-yearold. -- PROUD MOM IN
WALLINGFORD. CONN.
DEAR MOM ; Your daughter is on the right track. but
here's my rule of thumb;
Gossip is usually hurtful and
always cowardly. Before
saying anything in public or
in private, people should ask
themselves, "Is it true? Is it
kind' Is it helpful''" If the
answer is no -- don't say it.
Period. Read on:
DEAR Al!BY: The letter
from the woman whose graduation ceremony was ruined
by a cosmically inconsiderate ce ll phone user reminded
me of how I once dealt with

her of tht' ~ungregatinn stood
up. took a cell pho1w L'a ll at
th ~ back of th~ dum:h and
continued to converse· during
lhl' sermon.

'

:Lance Cpl.
Grimm
:completes training
• RACINE - Marine Corps
:Reserve Lance Cpl. Timothy
·J. Grimm, son of Karen L.
Mcintyre of Racine and
James R. Grimm of Vienna.
:W.Va., recently completed
·annual training at Fon A.P.
:t-Iill, Va.
: During the two-week trainjog exercise. Grimm was
:taught the skills to maintain
his proficiency as combat
.engineer and ba~ic Marine.
·The e~ercise focused on vari:Uus skills, including land
:navigation, rille qualifica-

fi ll.hl of Wily,

Transfers
posted

.

Cn.:hrun. h •mttli.•r Cudtr.m, dl't•,J. O ltw

Sul is ~uw

Wi lmn Htmi s ltl rP-CWD, rig.hl nf
Lt•hanun

Wily.

H r~· un Gi lk y, C'uml Gi lley, r:nmk. Gtllcy, 111
TP-CWD. ril:hl t)f Wlly. Olin· .

R~rhnm ~-ln~lns 111 lli strid Ad1 i~nry n..unl .
NIIIU I'C IIl' t)!hndl t•f Cc1111111 Ohio, &lt;k.-l'i!,

Mills tu n•-cwn. ri~hl nf Wit)".
.liutl\111.
l)undt W. L~! hman , Erma J. Lthmun, tu TP{"WI), n~l 1 t tll "- 11)", Suttnn.
Jun M Kt&gt;~tii' Lt l, Ttmlnm L . l(,.,.ti\' nl, \ tl Tl'·

Oli\' C.

\WD.nght nl"

-~

Mdl:!s County

Gn~ g L.

R~'l·o•dn Jud~·

King t\'f'll11txl till' thlk1wing mut~rers i11 1\'111

Cox graduates
from Army
ROTC

tor did a "mt:t:t am.l ~reet' ' at

·Land Transfers

POM EROY

lion , basic demolition and
The camp provides the best
squad and plaloon assaults.
possible professional training
Grimm is assigned to and evaluation for all cadets
Company A. 4th Comhat in the aspects of camp life.
Engineer
Battalion
in administration and logistical
Charleston, W.Va. He is a support. Although continued
200 I gmduate of Eastern military training and leaderHigh School, and joined the ship development is included
reserve in August. 200 I.
in the curricu lum. the primary focus at camp is to develop
and evaluate each cadet's
officer potential. The cadet
command assesses each
cadet's performance and
progress in officer trails,
Jared M. Cox has graduat- qualilies and professionalism
ed from the Army ROTC while at camp.
The cadet is a student at
(Reserve Officer Training
Corps) National Advanced Ohio University. Athens and
Leadership Camp m Fort the son of Mark B. Cox . of
Lewis, Tacoma, Wash.
Shade.

After the service·. the pas-

Dear
Abby

the front door. when lhc
oftcnder went ''' shake her
hand. she said. "The Lord
se111 lllt' a special message
just for you . He says that.yuu
someone of that ilk .
arc to refrain frnm tak ing
I used to commute by bus calls during the service . He
to work in Manhattan every rewmmends that you keep
day. and every morning a your l'ell phone in your car.
woman passenger behind me ami says he· 11 he happy to
would crank up her phon.: lake any messugc s and save
and use it for intensely per- them on voiremail for yo u."
snnal ~.:onversations .
·
One day, I turned around in
My fri end said the person
turned hcet I'L'll -- and more
my seat, faced her with my
chin in my hands and .lis- than one perso 11 "gnt the
messavc" that dav bc'C:ause
tcned raptly. She noticed
"
'
immediately and said. rather lhere have been nu more cell
tartly. "Excuse me . This is a . phone calls in church. -private conversation!''
ALSO ANNOYED
IN
I replied. ,; No. it isn't, lady. SALINAS. CALIF.
They can hear you in
DEAR ALSO : Which
Brooklyn." She signed off proves lhal not all· important
immediately. The phone messages h:m· tu he deliv went into her Furse , where it crell from 1he pulpit -- or even
remained unti she got off at from the grc\tt beyond -- ,in
her stop.
order to be univeNtlly heard .
Of course, some etiquette
(Dem Ab/11· is ll'l'itrn't bv
experts might ·not approve uf Abi~:ail Vmi Buren . als~J
my tactics, but sometimes klliJII'II m .lt'WIIW Plri/lips, wul
when dealing with that 11'11.1' j iJu1111Pll h1· lrer mother.
degree of inconsideration, Puulim' Phillips. Write Dear
the only solution is to raise Ahbr ar H'I\'1\'.DearAbbr.&lt;'Ofll
the bar. -- KEN IN LIV - or ·Po. Box 69440, · Los
INGSTON, TEXAS
Angelt'·'· CA 90069.
DEAR KEN: Funny -- but
Abbr .1/r£11~'-' more tlran /00
if! were you, I'd reserve that t!f' lrerjct\ 'urite recip&lt;'.l' in t•m
tactic only for extreme cir- /wokll't.l': "Ahhr\ Famrite
cumstances. People who Raipt'·' "
and
"Mon'
fi~Jht lire wilh fire may end Favorite Rt'cilw•· hy Dear
wtth more of a confrontation Ab/1\'. " Smcl 11 Jmsin e.l'.l'- .l· i~e.
than they bargained for.
se((adtlre.1.1·e d en•·e/"l'"· plus
·DEAR ABBY: A good clreck or 11/ 0 IIt' \' onil' l' for
friend of mine recently visit- $10 (U.S. fiuuil) to : D~'ar
ed a friend of hers in Palm Abhr __ Cooklwoklet Set,
Springs and attended church PO.. Box 447, Mou/11 MiJrris ,
services with him .
During the service, a mem- IL 61054 -0447. (Postage ts
indutletl in prict'.))

CS III I('

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-------------4~---------------------

Timothy Hawthorne. Long merit. $75 and costs; William
Bottom. DUI. $700 and Durst. Middleport. speeding.
costs, $350 suspended if 72 $30 and costs; Kendra
hour DIP school complete Swartz, Middleport, stop sign
within 90 days. 180 day violation, $35 and costs;
license suspension: Charla Jennifer Adams, Racine,
Little, Pomeroy, speeding, unsafe vehicle, $25 and costs;
$53 and costs: Joseph Boyd, Donna Hunter, Pomeroy,
Pomeroy, driving under sus- speeding. $35 and costs;
pension. $50 and costs; Chri s Robert Haley. Pomeroy, driBrown. Pomeroy. driving ving under suspension, $50
under suspension. dismissed, and costs, traffic control
license plate light, $35 and device. $35 and costs; Wendy
costs;
Keith
Matto~.
Long, Pomeroy, assault, $75
Pomeroy. driving under sus- and costs: Michael Pierce,
pension. dismissed, window Middleport, driving under
tint, $10 plus costs.
suspension,
dismissed,
improper display, $25 and
costs; Travis Hawk, Athens,
Bonds Forfeited
DUI reduced to reckless
George Ramsey. Pomeroy. operation, $100 and costs,
disorderly conduct, $50 and $650 ferfeiture to the Law
costs: Babette Sizemore, Enforcement Trust Fund ,
Wellston, wrongful entrust- speeding, $49 and costs.

POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Pomeroy
Mayor's Court of magistrate
Charles Knight on Aug. 25
are as follows ;

Thursday, August 28, 2003

Rude cell phone users are
shamed into hanging up

A. Jackson Bailes, O.D .. of Meigs Family Eyecare , donated booklets about eye care to the
Pomeroy and Middleport Libraries, represented by Wanda Ashley. Topics include cataracts.
macular degeneration. diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma. retinal detachments. lasik, and contact
lenses. (Brian J. Reed)

Pomeroy
Mayor's Court

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

New EPA rule lets industrial plants
make·upgrades that increase pollution _

Ohio weather

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflicl'!
General Manager-News Editor

NATIONAL

PageA4

VIEW

Flight 93
No one will ever know what
happened in tlwse final moments
The Tribune-DemocraJ, Johnstown, Pa., on the inrestigation
into Fliglrt 93 s crash:

Despite the uproar over the federdl government's newly
released theory about what caused the crash of United Airlines
Flight 93 near Shanksville, Pa., on Sept. I I, 200 I, the reality is
that no one will ever really know what happened in those final
moments on that doomed flight.
Ln an 858-page report to Congress a!Jout the Sept. II terrorist
attacks, investigators contend that one of the hijackers advised
the terrorist pilot to crash the plane and end the passenger uprising. The public release of this infonnation this month_has sparked
an intense reaction among those who always believed that the
passengers crashed the plane to prevent the terrorists from com~lleting their mission.
The passengers were intent on taking control of Aight 93 back
from the terrorists, and their actions obviously precipitated the
crash. That 's the story to be told at the permanent memorial in
Sha11ksville.

•••••

Thursday,August 28,2003

Fading days ofsummer
This year we didn ·I even
get until Labor Day to wring
the last few drops from summer. School is about to start
again soon.
I'm not ready. I never am.
For some people. winter is
the most depressing time of
year. For me, the most
depressing time of year has
always been that crease
between the end of summer
vacation and the start of
school. It's not that I mourn
the loss of sunny weather; the
sun tums my pale Irish skin
an appalling shade of red. I
prefer .autumn's moody
to summer's
crispness
brightness.
What plunges me into a
funk at the start of school is
that suddenly, from one day
to the next, life must reorganize itself into some semblance of structure.
Gone are the lazy mornings
watching.TV in our pajamas
then drifting perhaps to the
park or the beach. (On those
days, I always remember
why I work part time.) Gone
are the formless evenings of
staying late on a neighbor's
patio or walking into town
after dinner to rent a movie.
paying no mind to bedtimes.
Gone. for my son. are the

wiches packed in vinyl beach
bags an.d ice cream trucks
with thick freez.er doors.
During the summer, perhaps because everything
slows down, we notice things
that escape us the rest of the
year. How the sky looked
like rainbow sherbet late one
day as we walked the dog.
How the tomatoes smelled
like warm soil. How the
seagulls left constellations of
footprints in the sand.
I think about these languid
weeks of summer whenever I
try to figure out where I stand
on year-round schools.
Intellectually, I favor them.
Students are away from
school so long that the first
month of. the new term is
spent reviewing past lessons.
And summers are increasingly expensive for working
parents who must pay tor
camps and ali-day chtldcare.
But don't ask me for a reasoned position today. I face
the end of summer with the
maturity of a first-grader. My
adult version of crying and
holding my breath is to go
into deep denial. I won't buy
lunchmeats. bread and drinks
in little cardboard boxes for
my son's lunches. 1 put off
buying school si1pplie~ (as if

Joan
Ryan

afternoons of reading whatever he wants, not what a
teacher assigns. And gone,
too, for him are long
moments of staring into
space without me instinctively (OK, compulsively) asking, "lsn 't there something
you should be doing?"
In that sense, summer is
more a state of mind than a
season. Time shakes loose
from the power-pack of
schedules and seems to stop,
or at least to slow to a lazy
stroll. Even as adults, we
happily lose our temporal
bearings· as our children's
summer days mingle like
streams of smoke with gauzy
memories of ou.r own : The
faintest scent of Sea &amp; Ski
sunscreen on my son sends
me back 30 years to Graydon
Pond and white lifeguard
chairs. peanut butter sand-

school won't start if I simply
avoid the purchase of pens
and pink erasers).
I am not ready for that
other life, of packing lunches, hollering for everyone. to
please hurry up. plannmg
·meals, letting the clock dictate when we eat, do home·work. read, bathe, go to bed.
I'm not ready to give my life
over to compartmentalization, in which virtually every
hour five days a week are
divvied up into appropriate
slots of activity and responsibility.
I need a few more afternoons of doing nothing but
feeling the sun dry our wet
skin after swimming . I need
more evenings of watching
the outline of my son disappear in the fading light as he
shoots baskets in the neighbor's driveway. I haven't
eaten enough white corn yet.
Eventually. without even
noticing. I'll fall into a
schedule and summer will
fade as it always does.
But not yet.
(Joan Rran is " columnist
jor the · Sun Fmncisco
Chronicle. Sl'lld co/111111'11/.1' to
fwr in care of this neu·sfwper
or send her e-mail at joann-an@ .\:fc·hroni&lt; ·/e. com. J

Vive.

THERE'S

BROCCOLI POX.

I THINK

· Both Wheeling-Pill and Weirton have received some assistance
through federal programs intended to help ftrms victimized by
imported steel. But such progranns are opposed by many foreign
governments and, incredible as it may seem, by some American
manuti1cturers. Government shouldn't be subsidizing domestic
steel companie~. say the critics.
Indeed it should not - but subsidies by some foreign governments have helped their steel companies engage in unfair trade
practices in the U.S. marketplace. Washington was merely
responding to such subsidies in putting in place its own relative·!y modest plans of assistance for American steel companies.
Approval of the new Wheeling-Pitt contract was the most
recent demonstration that.steel workers are willing tq work harder. often for less money and benefits and less job security, simply
to help their companies survive. Without at least some government assistance against unfair trade tactics, their sacrifices will
nave been in vain. That would be a tragedy that should not be
allowed to occur.

•••••

The Modesto (Calif.) Bee, 011 recall a11tl other elections:
The recall roller coaster isn' t the only wild ride awaiting
California voters. They' re as likely to find themselves off-balance at the prospect of three, and possibly four, elections within
~five months.
The Oct. 7 recall election - no longer a sure thing, apparently - is just the first in a series. Citizens have more decisions to
make Nov. 4. when they'll consider mayor and city council positions in Modesto, Merced and Ceres, and a number of school
board races.
And while the candidates are campaigning for the Nov. 4 election, voters will start hearing from and about the people running
in the March 2 primary.
Modestans may have one more ballot in the middle, a Dec. 9
mail-in runoff....
Between Oct. 7 and March 2, Californians will make key decisions on virtually every level of local and state leadership. Those
who vote will be taking pan in a remarkable - if confusing democratiC experience.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
. Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be les.Y than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editinx and must be signed and include address
·and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
. be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. j· editorial board, unless othe!Wise noted.
..

Gladyce Aiken

Public meetings

board office of Syracuse
Village Hall.

Thursday, Aug. 28
SYRACUSE
Meigs
County Board ol Mental
Retardation
and
Developmental Disabilities,
4 p.m. Carleton School in
Syracuse.
Saturday, Aug. 30
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township
Trustees,
Saturday, Aug . 30, a.m . at
the township building.
Tuesday, Sept. 2
RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet in
recessed session at? p.m. in
council chambers at the
municipal building.
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association will have a work
session at 5 p.m . . to get
downtown Pomeroy ready
for Morgan's Raid lestivities .
Volunteers are needed to
assist with weeding llower
beds and helping with other
cleanup chores.
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Clerk
Osie Follrod .
.
VVednesday,Sept.3
Scipio
:PI\GEVILLE
Township Trustees. 6:30
p.m. Pageville townhall.
Monday, Sept. 8
Meeting time change
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse Board of Public
Affairs has . changed its
meeting date from Sept. 1 to
Sept. B. The meeting will be
held at 7 p.m. in the water

Clubs and
Organizations

Tucker Funeral Home in Wanda Belle Faber Schuler;
Mason. W.Va. with Pastor his children: Susie Wilkins of
COOLVILLE - Gladys Donald Roach officiating. Council. Iowa, Charles
Friends may call from 5 to 7 Eugene Schuler of Texas,
Belle Aiken, 93. Coolville, p.m.
Saturday.
David Lee Schuler of South
died Tuesday, A1.1g . 26, 2003
A graveside service will be Carolina, Rosemary Shippy
at St. Joseph Hospital in held at I :30 p.m. on Sunday.
o( Piedmont, Norman Arthur
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Aug. 31, 2003 at Franklin Schuler of Gaston. S.C..
She was born Feb. 17, 1910 Valley Cemetery in Oak Hill.
Randall Henry Schuler.
in Patten MilL daughter of
Memorial contributions Pollyanna
Strupe
of
the late Perley and Bessie may be made to Mason
Coshocton. Tamatha Lynn
Cody Sheets.
County Action Group, I0 I Blasko of Dayton. Daryl
Services will be held at II Second St., Point Pleasant, Thomas Schuler of Rutland,
a.m. on Friday, Aug . 29, 2003 W.Va. 25550.
and Angel Darlene Schul~r of
at
Coolville ·
United
Flushing; brothers and sisMethodist Church with Rev.
ters: Evelyn Haley of
Phillip Belle officiating.
Glendale: twin brother.
Burial will follow at
Schuler of Rutland.
James
POMEROY
- Charles
Coolville Cemetery.
John
Schuler
of Rutland.
Friends may call from 2 to Henry Schuler. 70 of Jean LaFleur of Virginia and
formerly
of
4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday Pomeroy,
Lafferty, died Wednesday. Jane Elbin of Bidwell; 29
at the funeral home.
August 27,2003 at Wheeling grandchi ldren and one great
Hospital. He was born March grandchild.
Friends will be received
2, 1933 at Cheshire, son of
from
7 to 9 p.m. Friday and 2
the late Charles Arthur and
to
4
and
7 to 9 p.m. Saturday
HENDERSON . W.Va .
Evelyn Mary Denny Schuler.
Charles W. Black, 84, of
He was a retired employee at the Toothman Funeral
Henderson, W.Va. died of Marietta Coal Co. and a Home, . St. Clairsville. where
services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2003, as protestant by faith .
the result of an automobile · In addition to his parents he Sunday. with Pastor Gary
accident.
was preceded in death by two Smith officiating.
Burial will follow in Holly
A funeral service will be sisters , Mary Schu ler and
Memorial
Gardens
m
held at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Nancy Van Meter.
He is survived by his wife. Pleasant Grove.
Aug. 31, 2003. at Fogelsong-

Charles Schuler

Charles Black

Local Briefs

POMEROY - St. John
POMEROY - The newly
Lutheran Church on Pi nc formed Meigs County Quilt
Grove Rd. will observe Guilde will meet at 7 p.m.
Harvest Festival Sunday and Sept. 9 at the Meigs County
celebrate 125 years in the Public Library in Pomeroy.
church building on Sept. 7.
All area quilters are invited to
Bishop Calion Halloway of attend. For more information
the Southern Ohio Synod will contact Saundra Tillis, 742preside at the II a.m. worship 2572.
and
Holy
service
Communion. A pork roast
and potluck will follow at
12 :30 p.m. Pastor James
Brady invites the public.

Reminder of
SCIP/LTIP Grant
Application
Bahr reunion set Deadline

!I

001~.
0 2003 b)' NEA, Inc.

C 2003 by NEA, Inc

Wrong time to 'Stay the Course'
BY MICHAEL McFAUL
The Washington Post
-----''------Last week was a tragic setback for those committed to promoting regime change in the
greater Middle East. Terrorists
slaughtered dozens of innocents
in InK]. Israel and Afghanistan.
ln the wake of the carnage.
expressing hope for democracy
in
Palestine, Iraq
and
Afghanistan sounds naive. Even
the prospect of stable, eftective
government in these places
seems remote.
Reflexively, Bush administration officials and their supporters
reacted to these holTOrs by reaffirming the need to "stay the
course." If offered only two
choices-stay the course or tum
back-then Bush and his team are
most certainly. right. Quitting
lrnq, Mghanistan or the road
map would produce greater
chaos in these places &lt;tnd eventually new security threat' to the
United States.
But why must this debate be
confmed to two choices? Now
more than ever, the search for
third ways demands more allenlion and resources. The current
polarized, simplistic debate is
obstructing creative thinking
and effective policymaking. The
Bush administration is playing
defense precisely when innovalion is needed.
The call for "staying the
course" is even more indefensible when one tries to find it.
What course are we staying on
in Iraq or Afghanistan? Bush ha'
boldly outlined the objective or
endpoint of our policy: democmtic regime change in the
greater Middle East. But he has
never articulated the strategy for
·getting there. Without a plan, the
Bush administration instead
must react from crisis i'o crisis,
making up "the course" as it
goes along.
Compare the debates and
tools developed by those working on economic reform to those
developed by social scientists
and government officials work-

Plains-Chester Water Distri&lt;.:t
has lifted a boil advisory for
Sutton and Letart Township
customers on Jenny Watt.
Yellow bush, Canter and Mile
Hill Roads.
A ,ample has revealed the
water supply to be safe.

Quilt Guide 'to
Service planned meet

THE BACKPACK LOOKS

DATED•

.

Obituaries

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Health Department
will be closed on Sept. I for
the Labor Day holiday. The
office will resume normal
business hours ut 8 a.m. on
Sept. 2.

NO 6UCH THIN6 AS

ing on political reform. When become proactive in filling this
the moment came for promoting. void of ideas. It must speak honeconomic transformation in the estly about the need to refine the
former Communist world in present course and engage those
1989 and 1991 , Western econo- who reject retreat but who also
mists developed theories for have alternative ideas for
how change could occur, pro- improving the present course.
posed specific policies for creal- Intellectually exhausted and
mg capitalism and suggested politically challenged. Bush and
very concrete tools to be used by his closest advisers have circled
outsiders for facilitating market the wagons, but they cannot
reform. The evidence of sound remain in the bunkers for two
theory and well-articulated argu- more years; Democrats in turn
ments was the emergence of must do their pan to engage in
alternative hypotheses that could and not simply politici7.e this
be tested in the real WOJid. There debate. Too many innocent peowere well-defined objectives, pie are dying every day to put
clearly deli ned strategies for the search for new ide&lt;L' on hold
achieving these goals, and critics until November 2004.
of both.
To help articulate and execute
A parallel body of knowledge a relined course. Bush should
regarding regime change or create a Department of
political reform or state building Democratic Regime Change
does not exist Nor is a com- headed by a Cabinet-level oftipelling blueprint for bringing cial-the .oll'ensive equivalent of
about democrdtic regime change the
defense-oriented
sitting on· the shelf of a policy Department of Homeland
planning staffer, a Stanfonl pro- Security. The SUite Department's
fessor or a fonner government mission is diplomacy between
officiaVthink tanker. It's time for states, not the creation of new
us all to confess that our under- states. The Pentagon's mission
standi11g of regime change and should remain regime destructhe role that outside actors can tion; its fonnidable capacities for
play in fostering it is frightfully regime constructitm should be
underdeveloped. Government moved into a new agency, which
officials and out, ide analysts roll would
also
appropriate
out their favorite analogies-post- · resources lium the Agency for
war Germany today, East Timor International Development (partomorrow. Practitioners who ticularly the Oflice of
have worked in countries under- Transitional Initiatives), the
going regime change have a State Department, Treasury,
wealth of on-the-ground experi- Commerce. Justice and Energy.
ences. But this mishmash of This new department must
metaphors and anecdotes ha&gt; include an oftice for gmnd stmtnot added up to a model for how egy on democratic regime
to chan~e regimes effectively.
chan~e and be endowed with
The ltst of immediate amend- presttge, talented people, and
ments to the course in Imq (and above all else resilurces. Our
Afghanistan) is obvious: more capacity to help build new states
American troops, fm~ter deploy- must be a'. great as our capacity
ments of newly tr.llned Irnqi to destroy them. (It is telling that
forces, more money for the the top position at AID i~ called
reconstruction effort, and a new "adm1mstrator," hardl y the
United Nations resolution to equivalent of a secretary of
~lp bring .in soldiers lium other defense.)
Radical?
Yes.
countites. But these reactive cor- Unprecedented? No. It is exactrections do not substitute for ly what leaders with vision
fundamental rethinking of our undertook after World War II as
grdlld strategy.
a way for dealing with the new
The Bush administration must threat of communism. Their ereI

ations included the CIA. the
National Security Council.
Radio Free Europe and a bipartisan commitment to the gmnd
strutegy of containment as the
guiding doctrine of Americw1
foreign policy. By compmison. it
is striking how little institutional
change has occurred or how little bipartisan agreement has
emet¥ed to address our new .
secunty needs.
The smne can be said of institutional innovation at the in,ternational level. In the wake of
M'orld War II. the United
Nations,the
International
Monetary Fund, the World
Bank, NAlD, the precl.INJr to
tl1e Eumpean Union and many
other new bodies all got their
start. Since Sept. II , 2001, not
one new major intemational
organization ha~ been fonned.
~ISiead of citing the real flaws in
existing international institutions
a~ an excuse for unilatemlism,
the Bush administmtion should
take the lead in creating new
organizations for promoting
democ1iltic regime change.
For instance, what ·ahout ~re­
ating an Organization for
International
Trusteeships?
Founding countries would offer
assistance in governing tailed or
new ' states (Palestine, Liberia.
maybe even Imq) in retum for
levemge over "sovereign" deci- .
sions in these places-a kind of
IMF with guns and a locus on
state bu i!ding mther thw1 economic refonn. As a representative orgm1 of all states. with a
commitment to neutrality and a
focus on diplomacy between
states. the Umted N;1tions c&lt;mnot
e!fectively 1.1ndertake such misstons.
In the private sector. orgmlizations fonn mld dissolve all the
time to respond to changing
market cond1tions. Govemment
institutions must do the s&lt;une.
(McFaul is Hooverfellmr and
professor of {Jolitiml .•cil'llce at
Sranfoni University and u senior
associate at rhe Cat11eliie
Endowment for lnrematiolral

Peace. )

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com·

Obituaries

Office closes

Parkersburg News and Senti11el:

Wheeling-Pitisburgh Steel Corp. employees -both union and
management -have done their share to resuscitate their company. They have suffered through wage and benefit cuts and elimination of hundreds of jobs. A new labor agreement reached
between the company and the United Steel Workers of America
calls for even more concessions.
Both executives and mill workers at Wheeling-Pitt have done
their pan to keep ihe company alive. Government -their government -simply must not let them down.
. Competition from steel companies in other countries is one
reason why Wheeling-Pitt fell on hard times, resulting in a
Chapter II bankruptcy filing, during recent years. Had that competition been straightforward, on a level playing field, WheelingPill workers would have faced it with confidence. But the competition from steelmakers in many other countries was on the
basis of unfair trade tactics, including "dumping" steel in the
United States at prices below actual costs of production.
"Dumping" and other unfair l(ade practices have hurt most
American steel companies -and have killed some. Workers and
both Wheeling-Pitt and Weirton Steel have been determined not
to fade into history without a fight, however.
· But it is a tight they cannot win on their own. Help from federal government is absolutely essential for both companies to sur-

Thursday, AUgust 28, 2003

REEDSVILLE
-The
POMEROY
- The
annual reunion of the descendants of Abraham and Mary District 18 Ohio Public
Will Bahr will be held on Works Commission Liason
Saturday at Shelter No. I at reminds pontential applicants
Forked Run State Park. All and interested parties that the
fami ly members and friends deadline for submission of
are invited to come at noon the
State
Capital
for a potluck lunch, followed Improvement
Plan
by games for the children and (SCIP)/Local Transportation ·.
a silent auction and bingo for Improvement Plan (LTIP)
the adults.
Pictures and grant application is Sept. 12.
information about the Bahr
The
State
Capital
family will be on display, dating back to the 1700's. Table Improvement Program and
the Local Transportation
~ervice will be provided.
Those attending should bring Improvement Program were
lawn chairs and item s for the created to assist in financing
local public infrastructure
silent auction .
improvements.
including
ro&lt;lds, guardrail s, cu lverts ,
bridges, storm sewers and
- Tuppers water and sanitary sewer sysRACINE

Advisory lifted

Counties reporting West
Nile in birds hits 16
CHARLESTON (AP) Two more West Virginia
counties have reported birds
that tested positive for the
West Nile virus thi s summer. raising the total to 16.
Jackson and Nicholas are
the latest of the state's 55
counties where dead birds
infected with the virus have
been found.
Carried by mosquitoes,
the We st Nile virus can
cause flu-like symptoms in
humans &lt;ind potentially fatal
swelling of the brain. Two
people died from West Nilerelated causes in West
Virginia last year. No
human cases have been
reported in the state so far in
2003.
Jonathan Graziani. sanitarian for the Jack son
County Health Department.
said the virus was co nfirmed in a sparrow found in
C~ttageville and a bluejay
found in MillwoOd .

Joyce Cree I
of
Cottageville, who . reported
the sparrow. said she found
the bird on her deck .
"The first thing through
my mind was the bird died
from ·West Nile," she said.
The Department of Health
and Human Resource s says
mosquito activity will contin~e to increase until
autumn, when temperatures
begin to fall. Until then,
officials urge residents to rid
their property of standing
water, a breeding ground for
mosquitoes , and apply
insect repellant containing
DEET. among other precau tions.
Previously, birds found in
Greenbrier,
Kanawha,
Morgan , Wyoming, Ohio,
Cabell, Wayne, Jefferson,
Barbour, Webster, Wetzel,
Berkeley, Pre ston and
Pendleton counties tested
positive.

tems. Local subdivisions that
require financial assistance in
moving projects forward can
pursue this funding through
the 18th Public Works
District. Eligible applicants
include cities. villages. counties, townships .and public
water and sewer district~.
Consideration for funding is
not made on a per capita
basis. No particular community has an entitlement to
these funds .
Applications are to be submitted to the 'District 18
Liason. Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional
Development District, 245
Millers Lane, Marietta, Ohio
45750, no later than 4:30
p.m. on Sept. 12.
If you have questions
regarding the application
process or deadline, please
contact Brent Smith at (740)
374-9436.

.

Thursday, Aug. 28
POMEROY - Caring and
Sharing meeting ol the
Meigs County Council on
Aging, 1 p.m Thursday at the
Senior Citizens Center.
Melissa Gandee ol the
Alzheimers Association will
be guest speaker.
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW 9053. 7:30 p.m .
Thursday at the hall in
Tuppers Plains.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club, 6:30p.m. at
the home of Chris
Chapman .
Wednesday, Sept. 3
CHESTER Chester
Garden Club. 7:30p.m. open
meeting at . the Chester
United Methodist Church.
Linda Blazer of Athens,
herbalist , will speak. Open to
eve ryone. Special invitation
to garden club members.

Concerts,
Shows
Friday, Aug. 29
RUTLAND - A songfest
leaturing bluegrass gospel
music by six diflerent
churches will be held at 6
p.m . at lhe Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church. There will be
a potluck following the sing
in the fellowship hall. Pastor

Trustees to meet
RUTLAND
The
Rutland Township trustees
will meet at 5 p.m. Tuesday
at the Rutland Fire Station.

Trustees to meet
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township trustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Syracuse municipal building.

Leach birth
POMEROY - Josh and
Tara Leach of Pomeroy
announce the birth of a 8
pound, 4 . - - - - - - - ,
ounce son,
J a c o b
David on
July I5.
Grandparents are
Edith and
D a v i d
Brickles
and David L.J....._"-'--"--'
Leach, and
Leach
great-grandparents are Mark and Teresa
Davis all of Pomeroy.

Sunday, Aug. 31
POMEROY - Thirty-first
homecoming of the Poplar
Ridge Free Will Baptist
Church , State Route 544,
Poplar
Ridge
Road.
Services, 10 a .m. Sunday
school; 11 a.m. preaching by
Paul Elswick ; lunch, 12:30
p.m. and 2 p.m. afternoon
service with Ray and Deloris
Cundiff, Mason, and Eternity
of Point Pleasant.

Other events
Wednesday, Sept. 3
POMEROY - Oh-Kan
Coin Club Exhibition, 9 a.m
to 3 p.m.at the Peoples
Bank, Pomeroy, for the
enjoyment at customers and
the public . Free coin to chldren six and under. County
currency and tokens wil also
be included in the display.

Birthdays
Sylvia Robenstine will
observe her 90th birthday,
Sept. 2. She resides at rose
lane health Center, 5425
High
Mill
Ave ., NW,
Massillon, Oho 44646 and
cards may be sent to her
there.

The Meigs County flag displayed here by
Commissioners Jim Sheets.
left, and Mick Davenport,
and Margaret.Parker, chairman of the Meigs ·
County/Ohio Bicentennial
Commission. was designed
as a bicentennial project and
is now on sale at the Meigs
Museum on Butternut
Avenue. Pomeroy. The flag is
one of the 88 county ftags to
be featured In the Morgan's
Raid parade on Sept. 6 in
Pomeroy. (Charlef1e
Hoeflich)

Holter family reunion
RACINE - The descendants of George Jr. and Anna
Maria (Ramsburg) Holter
met for their 21st annual
reunion at the home of James
and Karen (Holter) Werry at
Morning Star.
George Holter. Jr. was a
veteran of the War of 1812
having fought in the famou s
Battle of Baltimore when the
"Star Spangled Banner" was
first used. The family arrived
in Mei~s County in the
IR30's ftrst coming to Letart
Falls to stay with the Adam
Wolfe family of Plants who
were close relatives.
The Werrys prepared barbeque chicken for the gathering.
·
Reported were deaths in
the family over the past year.
Lucille (Sponagel) Schick.
Linda (Stockton) Watson ,
and Ed McKinney.
Family members attending were Jim and Betty
Kincell ofTullahoma, Tenn .:
Jean McKinney of Butler,
Pa.; Rachel Dennis of
Columbus;
Doug
and
Marilyn
Martin
o(
740·753·3400
MOVIES

10 .....
"'p

Gallipolis; Mary Kay Holter
of Bashan; Gary Holter of
Bashan; Jean Fitch of
Portland ; Mike and Sharlee
Evans of Portland.
Tricia Davis of Pomeroy;
Edith Sisson of Pomeroy ;
Alan and Kay Holter of Five
Point s; Roy and Patricia
Holter of Five Points; Greg
and Jun Davi s of Pomeroy ;
Keith. Emma, and Whitney
Ashley of Rocksprings. Roy.
and Bonnie Van Meter of
Morning Star; Jim and Karen
Werry of Morning Star;
Jimmy. Penny and Biranne
Werry of Morning Star: Rick
and Tasha Werry of Morning
Star.
Roger and 'Helen Holter of
Racine;
Doug ,
Lori.
Jeremiah , and Adam Warden;
Delbert Van Meter of Oak
Grove ; Robbie and Brook
Card of Racine; Issac Card;

Aaron Werry; Danny, Dawn,
Jacob and Julie Weddle of
Racine; James A. Dean:
Sharon Card; Rosemary and
Titus Pierce ; June Ashley of
Racine, and Bill Harris of
Racine.
Guests of the family
included Gerald Crawford of
Letart
Falls:
Marion
Easterday; Bri ce Bolin:
Sarah
Triplett : Cheryl
Triplet!; Harold and Sue
Hager nf Carme l; and
Dwight
Icenhow er
of
Pomeroy.
The 2004 reunion wi II be
held on the first Sunday in
June .

FRI
• THURS 8128103
TUES BARGAIN NIGHT

$3.75

I

OFFICE OPENS
6:30PM MON ·FRI.
&amp; 12 :30 PM SAT- SUN

IIF UllUIS

FREDDY VS
7:00 &amp; 9:30

SEABISCUIT (PG13)
7:00

The Wild Horse Cafe
is postponing its
opening until
Sept. 8th, so that
we will be prepared tn
meet the hi gh .
volume of tmffic.
We arc sorry for any

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

incnnvcn ierH.:t'.

MATINEES 1:00 &amp; 3:00

The Daily Selltinel
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Homecomings/
Reunions
•

Parade flag

Special meeting
set
RACINE A special
meeting of the Southern
Local Board 1of Education
will be held at 5:30p.m. Sept.
3 at the high school.

Jamie Fortner invites the
public. Revival services wil
be held at the church Sept.
22-28.

MEDALLION (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 9:00
MATINEES 1:00 &amp; 3:00

'
All 11r,1-. All liMl'!o

~4

OJ!l

\Ve

W&lt;lllt to insure exce llent serv ice. quality
food and the ability to
meet all of our cuswmers expectations.

-

�PageA6

DOWN ON THE FARl\f
Corn.producing industry·struggle~ · Extension Corner
with handling of biotech crops
Farm Science

The Daily Senti.yel

CHAMPAIGN. Ill. (AP)Seed companies. farmers and
grain handlers are st r~ gg ling
with how to keep genetically
altered corn from mixing
with non-biotech crops.
There is no si mple way to
ensure that biotech varieties
go only where they're accepted. Some safegu ard s are
already in place , btn the
proce ~s is still evolving.
Some in the industry say
changes aren't happening fast
enough to keep up with the
steadily increasin g use of
genetically altered crops.
They fear problems similar
to what happened with
StarLink in 2000. when the
biotech corn not approved for
human consumption was
accidentally mi xed with other
crops. The resulting scare
trigge red fuod recalls and
caused a worldwide drop in
corn prices.
'There needs to be some
improvement here to avoid a
train wreck," said Steve Pigg.
president of the Illinois Corn
Growers Association.
More biotech corn is being
planted each year in the
United States. with 40 percent
of the nation's 79.1 million

acres of corn this year being
ge netically altered. That was
up from about one-thin! of all
corn planted last year.
Genetically altered corn is
bred to resist plant diseases and
pests, allowing producers to
inl're&lt;t-e yields &lt;md reduce costs.
With the harvest season
just a few we,eks uway in
parts of the Corn Belt, the
stakes are high for titrmers
and grain handlers.
Any co-mingling of grain.
however small. headed for a
country that won't accept it
endangers the entire shipment.
said Peter Goldsmith, an assisl&lt;lnt pmfessor mthe University
of Illinois' College of
Agriculture. Consumer and
Environmental Sciences . At
least seven biotech com varieties have not been approved
for use in the European Union.
Govemment leaves it up to
the industry to ensure the "identity preservation" of crops. said
Jell" Squibb with the Illinois
Department of Agriculture.
Spokesmen for Monsanto
Co. and Pioneer Hi-Bred
lnternati'onal. two major makers of ge netically altered seed.
said they have programs
aimed at making sure farmers

Thursday,
August 28, 2003
.

and grain handlers know what ers to tell them if they have
to do with biotech crops.
genetically altered crops in
"The respons ibilit y li es their truck.
with the grower," said Bry&lt;m
"I'm counting on it. I need to
Hurley, a spokesman for know it. If I don't know it, I've
Monsanto . "But there is an got zero chance" of separating
infrastructure that has been biotech grain during a busy
built to facilitate this and harvest. when more than
information and education to 800,000 bushels of corn can
go with that."
Farmers planning to plant arrive in a single day, said Dave
biotech seed that isn't Hastings, general manager of
approved for export are asked t11e Ludlow Co-op Elevator
to tell their seed company in Co., which operates in three
the spring which elevator eastern Illinois counties.
Grain handlers are paying
they plan to take the crop to
in the fall. Seed companies close attention to the issue.
push grnwers of biotech ·but it isn "t easy for elevators
crops to work only with ele- accustomed to handling large
vators equipped for and will- amounts of the same kind of
ing to take them.
grain to handle smaller seg"If they aren' t. we contact ments of a biotech crop. said
th~ customer and let them
Jeff Adkisson, executive
know that the handler they director of the Feed and
listed is not tuking the grain Grain Association of Illinoi s.
and we otTer to help find an
Hastings said biotech grain
alternative outlet," said Greg
W;mdrey. Pioneer' s director will be stored in separate bins
at his company 's elevators. He
of product stewardship.
About2.lXXlelevators willing is training his staff to ask more
to take genetically ;tltered corn yuestions when titrmers cross
are listed in a national directory the scales, but worries that
maintained by the American even that won't be fail-safe.
·•sooner or later when we
Seed Trade Association.
Come harvest time , eleva- ~e t. .busy, we won't ask and
. tor operators depend on farm - we' ll miss a guy," he said.

built the business selling Packer," an industry newspathings that were different."
. per, said it's difficult to estiSteve Grinstead. chairman mate how nmch revenue speof the United Fresh Fruit and cialty companies generate
Vegetable Association. said within the $100 billion produce
Frieda "wrote the book on indt1stry. Frieda's posts annual
specialty prodt1ce. "
sales of about $50 million.
But after four decades, the
Caplan lists three key criteproducts have become ria for developing products:
well, less special.
"The first thing is taste. the
Frieda's remains one of the second thin~ is shelf life, and
leaders in the sector. but the third thtng is interesting,
scores of large and · small attntctive appearance.':
competitors have sprung Lip
There have been some flops
across the country.
along the way. Fruit-flavored
Frieda's newest offering is fo11une cookies and colored
the toma bella - a hybrid walnuts never caught on.
that combines the sweetness
Calif11rnia brown mushrooms
of a tomato with the crunchi- were Frieda's first success.
ness of a red bell pepper. It's
A buyer at a major grocery
one of the 500-plus products chain . suggested she push
marketed by the company brown mushrooms because
through stores like Costco, they had a longer shelf lite
Kroger and Wal-Mart. and than white mu shrooms . At
sold to upscale restaurants.
the time. most mushrooms
Ben Wood. editor of "The were sold in cans.

Bv

HAL KNEEN

The Farm Science. Review
is being held September 16lll at the Molly Caren
Agricultural Center near
London. Ohio. This event
attmcts. thousands of farmers,
students and citizens to
review the latest in farm
power and technology. The
Ohio State University has
arranged this review since
1963 to showcase the
dynamic Ohio &lt;lgricultural
industry. Over 2100 acres of
test plots and trials are available to attendees. Plan on
visiting over 600 vendors
representing over 4,000 companics selling everything
from buildings to tractors.
Bring along your spouse as
there &lt;tre activities fi)f the
whole family. Pick up landscape ideas at the Q. Utzinger
Memorial Garden, Natural
Resources
Interpretive
Center and the Gywnne
Conservation Area. Tickets
·are $5 in advance and are
available at our office. Hope
to see you there!
In the past month have
you noticed the pink trumpet-like blooms that appear
frorn nowhere sprouting in
your neighbor 's yard?
Caplan bought bushels . · These pl ants are commonly
referred to as magic lily, resfrom California growers 'lnd
urrection lily or naked
sold them to supermarkets.
ladies.
The name refers to
She opened lier company a
their growing habit of profew years later, with mushducing
lots of strap like
rooms as the premier item.
in
the Spring season
leaves
"Merchandisers were look(they look like large daffodil
ing for things that would
leaves) but no spring flower.
make the produce department
Then magically, or so it
more attractive," she said.
seems, in late July a flower
Karen Caplan, her daughter,
stalk appears that bears the
who took over as chief execucharacteristic
pink trumpettive in 1986, said she was inilike flowers . The flower
tially resentful of copycat
stalk may grow several
companies but has learned to
inches in a day's time. At
look on the bright side.
·
this time of the year no
"If it weren't for all the
leaves are produced, so the
competitors. I don't think
flower stalk looks "naked"
there would be as much
as it stands alone without
attention on the category of
the expected basal leaves.
specialty produce," she s&lt;1id.
Now is the time to divide
"All the energy they put into
and tran splant magic lilies,
. their bminess helps our busialthougli they would prefer
ness, too ."
to remain left alone . Magic
lilies like well drained soils

Farmer takes different approach amid suburbs
WEST CHESTER (AP) Bob Bauer is like other farm ers growing tomatoes to sell at
roadside stands: He's praying
for sunshine, ~waning tl ies
and pulling pesky pigweed.
: But that's where Bauer's
r.esemblance to other farmers
ends. He lives in the middle
&lt;)f a subdivi sion in West
Chester Township - not a
picturesque furmhou se with
cows and a windmilL And he
wears colorful floral print
shirts, shorts and open -toed
sandal s. Bib overalls and
work boots just don't fit him.
A .former scuba instructor
who designs jewelry on the
side, Bauer. 4o, has sandy
l)air and eyes the shade of
faded Levis. He co uld pass
(m a good vibrations Beach
Boy. But he is a farmer who
rives in the suburbs and caters
to its residents at his roadside
stand in this commu nity just
north of Cincinnati.
: More and more peopl e are
~eali z ing the stuff grown
close to home tastes better,
~ays Bauer, who loves to turn
suburbanites on to his tomatoes and other produce.
Unlike the boys in overalls,
he rarely ri ses at the crack of
dawn. On thi s Wedne sday,
it's nearly I0 a.m. ano Bauer
still is tending flowers in hi s
front yard. A quick tour
reveals hi s talent. His back
yard looks like a landscaped
garden center, with a stonelined ory creek bed. dwarf
conifers.
crinkly-leafed
hostas and redbud trees. He
designed and planted it all .
Among these exotic planll;,
there's the occasional volunteer pumpkin or syuash vine
- he's not sure which - and
tllll Swiss ch'ard sprouting by
the porch . On ihe south side
of the house, there are neat
rows of lettuce. which have
bolted fro m the s11mmer heat.
~e ndin g up flowering stalks.

He started the lettuce,
tomatoes and hundreds of
other vegetables from seed in
his heated basement. using
100 hanging lights to simulate sunlight. Bauer knows
how to grow pl&lt;1nts and how
to care for them . But. fi guring out what people will buy
is another thing entirely.
He is relatively new at selling
vegetables - this is only his second season. But he ha~ been fas- ·

cinated with growing plants
since he was a.blond. moppyhaired child growing up in tl1e
Cincinnati suburb of Sharonville.
His mother, Dolores Bauer,
who helps him run his roadside stand, remembers her
you ng son planting a small
vegetable garden next to his
plot.
grandmother's
Gr&lt;~ndmother used chemical
fertilizer. while grandson fortified the soil with organics.

Her garden turned out better, his mother S&lt;iid. But
Bob's tomatoes were still just
as big as hers.
Dolores Bauer's grandfather was the head gardener of
Spring Grove Cemetery in
Cincinnati and her father was ,..
adept at cultivating hybrid
plants, so Bauer is well-rooted in gardening.

Sale Starts today and ends
~~un1day,, September 7, 2003

•

•

..•
••

..

in full sun or partial shade~
Wet soils and shady loca;
tions may greatly reduce th'
plant's survivability. Plant
the bulb (looks like a larg~
daffodil bulb or amarylli~
. bulb) at le ~1st five inche ~
deep and eight inches apar~
Remember. these plantS
may be left alone for sever!·
al years &lt;1nd continue tQ
bloom. If you cannot fin¢
anyone wishing to shari!
some bulbs with you, loo...:
in the garden catulogs undet
its botanical name, Lycori =
squamigera. Do not pur~
chase its cousin, Lycoriio
radiata unless you want to
grow it in a pot and take th6
plant indoors each year us ii
is a tender perennial unable
to take our below freezini
wmter temperatures.
•
Interested in mising fooi
plot s for game animals sue~·
as whitetail deer. turkey an~
grouse? The pub lic is invit~
ed to attend the Wildlif~
Habitat
Managernenl
Workshop on September ~
from 1.- 6 p.m. at Heartland
Institute's Research Farm~
The farm is located ill
Meigs Courity just off StattS'
Rout e 143 at 40193 Horneii
Hill
Road .
neai
Harrisonville.
Speakers
from the Ohio Departmen!
of Natural Resources •
Division
of
Wildlifei
Heartland Institute and Snit
&amp; Water Conservation wilt
present topics includina
planning, planting and man•
aging food plots; wildlife
biology; managing crop
damage; managing grass;
lands, edge habitat, pond~
and forests for wildlife. A
tour of the Heartlanll
In stitute Farm's wildlifti
habitat management will
also be available. For fur:
ther information call Meig~
County Soil and Water,
Codservation District aJ
(740) 992-4282.
••
(Hal Kneen is the Meig~
County Axriculrure
&lt;t
Natural Resources A!(ent;
Ohio
Stare
University
Extension )

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California company that pioneered
specialty produce takes on competition
LOS ANGELES (AP) There was a time when kiwis
were called "Chinese gooseberries" and brown mushrooms were considered exotic.
That was before Frieda
Caplan.
Caplan. who turned 80 this
month, founded Frieda's, her
specialty produce business,
in 1962.
The California Kiwifruit
Commission says she introduced kiwis to the United
States that same year. Her
Los Angeles-based company
also brought American consumers such fruits and vegetables as man~os , purple
potatoes, alfalta sprouts,
sugar-snap peas and its trademarked donut peaches.
: " I had a reputation of trying
anything new," Caplan said.
" I couldn "t compete with all
the boys on the big items so I

ClOSED FOR UBOR DIY· MONDAY SEPT.1,

,,

•
'

Review.to be held~

Special to the Sentinel

Sentinel•

The

~

HOURS
Mon - Frl8om - 9pm
Sot. Bam - 5pm
Sun. CLOSED

Open WeekniQhls 'TIU 9 • Friendly Service

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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _......t,,.;.__ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _

- ·-

�Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

Thursda~Aug.28,2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Bl·

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
High school football predictions, Page 83
Scores and Standings, Page 82
Ielah Thomas gets tired, Page 82
Indiana win, Reds lose, Paga B4

(:,
'-'

··rr.
'

~urs~y, August 28, 2003

Jr·

Eagles v. Cadets: Key early season battle

The OVP

Bv BUTCH COOPER
bcooper@ mydallytrlbune

The

Willie

Spartans

Nelson
• Willie . Nelson in
concert as a J?alt of the
Marshall Artist Series.
The concert is at 7:30
p.m., Sept. II at the Bi&amp;
Sandy Superstore Arena.
Tickets can be purchased
from the · Marshall
University Web- site,
www.marshal!.edu/muar
tser.

• · The Spartans: A .
History of Professional
• Football in Portsmouth,
· Ohio, presented by Jerry
Holt, Ph.D. The presentation will be held at 7
p.m. at Shawnee State
University's
Flohr
Lecture Hall, Clark
Memorial Library. For
more info call (740)
351-3550.

A look at the region's top
lootballr~~s. as voted by
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sports staffers. (First-place
votes in parentheses)
Team
Prey. Votes
1. Cols. Desales 1 47(3)
2. Ironton
1 43(1)
3. Gallia Academy 4
31
(tie) At~ens
5
31
5. Portsmouth
1
26
6. Parkersburg So. 6 20(1)
7.Jackson
nr
17

B. River Valley
(tie) Wahama
10. Fairland

Airplane
rides
If you are looking
for a day filled with good

Dance
• Dance to music by
Countryfied, from 7 to
- lO p.m. Satwtlay, Aug.
30 at the Southside
·Community Center.

11

nr

10

11

Others recatvtng votaa:
Logan 5, Westerville South 4,
Symmes Valley 4, Marietta 3,
Eastern 2, Point Pleasant 2,
Chesapeake 2. Cheshire
Naval Academy 1.

.•

food and aiJplane rides,
vjsit the VInton County
Airport on Saturday, Aug.
.30 for the aiiport's ·annual
Labor Day Fly-In breakfast and piCnic1unch.
Airplane rides will be
given during the day with
pilots from the Vinton
County Pilots and
Boosters
Association
donating their planes and
time. Rides will be $15
per person.
lf you fly to the aiiport,
aim your plane at 221. If
you drive, the aiiport is
located about 6 miles
north of McArthur off St.
Rt. 93 on Airport Rd.
For more information,
call Association President
Nuck Rupert (740)3570268 or (740)384-2649 or
call the airport at
(740)596-~588 and leave
a message.

nr
nr

Margaret
Cho
• Comedian Margaret
Cho will perform in concert at 8 p.m., Oct. 21 at
the Keith-Albee Theatre.
The event is part of the
Marshall Artist Series.
For more information,
log onto the group's
Web site at www.marshall.edu/muartser.

'From Here' debuts this weekend at Ariel Theatre
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County's bicentennial celebration continues Saturday
and Sunday when the Ariel
Theatre plays host to "From
Here: A Century of Voices
from Ohio," presented by
the Wallpaper Project.
Public performances are
set for 2 p.m. and 7:30p.m.
Saturday and 2 p.m. on
Sunday.
Admission
is
free.
Donations will be accepted.
The Wallpaper Project
traces its roots to an arts
and humanities program
that started in 1997 in
Auglaize County. In 2000
and 200 I, the Wallpaper
Project was named as a curriculum model for humanities education by the Ohio

Humanities Council and the
Ohio
Association
of
Historical Societies and
Museums.
Kim Vanco, local producer for the project, has been
busy selecting cast members for the 12-person production, which has been
compared to reader's theater.
The cast features Gallia
County residents Dick
Cornett, Ann Epling,
Dennis Hurt Jr., Sabrina
Lee Hurt, Herman Koby,
Paul Koch, Kim Painter,
Greg Shrader, Brittany
Smith, Jerry Wade and
Carrie Ann Wood.
The local production will
feature first-person storytelling about events and

peofle in Gallia County as
wei as personalities from
around the Buckeye State.
Tbe local history - interviews conducted with
numerous Gallia County
residents - was compiled
largely by Bertie Roush and
Dene Pellegrinon and sent
to
Rachel
Barber,
Wallpaper Project coordinator, who then forwarded
the information to playwright Eric Coble.
Coble then blended
Gallia County's stories with
those of other residents
from around the Buckeye
State to form the script for
the production. ·
Maura Rogers, a native of
Wickliffe, Ohio, will lead
the local cast as director.

Rogers is a veteran educator and director who directed · the Wallpaper Project's
2002 production, "Friends
and Neighbors."
Gallia County residents
interviewed for the production and who are part of lhe
finished script include Earl
Tope, George Woodward,
Tom Woodward, John
Brunicardi,
Dene
Pellegrinon, Bob and
Jewell Evans, Jessie Mae
Bills, Carl Boggs, Charlene
Wood, Hobart Wilson Jr.,
Bobbi Holzer, Barbara
Scott, Virginia Garnes, Roy
Moses and Jerry Dillon.
For information, contact
the Ariel Theatre at 446- ·
2787.

Chill

Cookoff
• Annual Chili CookOff Saturday, Aug. 30
under the Bartow Jones
Bridge. The entry fee is
$42 and proceeds go to
the Muscular Dystrophy

Association.
Set~ 'is 8 ·am ads
lllflfting~am~ligh-

ing 9 am~s Orice
dH begins · 9 am
W111m
lp.m
Interested chili cooks
~to call Bill Reebel at
675-'}JXj7.

Cho ·

..
commg

Hayrides
soon
• The 0.0. Mcintyre
Park District is taking
reservations for group
hayrides in the months
of September and
October. Cost for this
program is . $50 for a
wagon ride for a group
of up to 30 people and
$40 for each additional
wagon ride of up to 30
people. Rides are from ·
45 minutes to an hour in
length. The park district
will also provide a bonfire and hotdog sticks.
All hayrides must be
scheduled at least three
days in advance of the
date desired. To make
reservations, · ·call the
office between the bout&amp;
of 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. at
(740) 446-4612 . extension 256 on weekdays.

To be eligible lor The OVP
10, a team muat either: a.)
be from the Maaon-GattlaMelgwackaon area; b.) be
: a local conference member;
or c.) play atlaaat one game
against local or conference
teams.

Southern,
eastern golfers
do well at Oxbow
BELPRE
Trimble
golfers made it three-forfour
in
Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking division matches by capturing
the top spot iii Oxbow on
Tuesday.
The Tomcats were eight
shots better than runner-up
Southern ( 178) and 12
ahead of Eastern ( 11:12), who
finished third. Federal
Hocking finished in fourth
with a team score of 185 ,
but Lancer Jon Thompson
did take · home medalist
honors after an excellent
round of 34.
Trimble (18 pts.) now owns
a four point lead over both the
Tornadoes and Eagles in the
league standings.
Brad Crouch, Craig
Randolph and Patrick
Johnson all shot rounds of
44 to pace Southern followed by teammates Matt
Thaxton
and
Mike
Lavender at 46. Josh Smith
shot a 50.
Mike Owen and Steve
Shepard had the best days
for Eastern with a pair of
45's followed closely by
Jon Owen and James -wm
with scores of 46. Nathan
Cozart and Evan Dunn finis hed with a 4 7 and 48
respectively.
The next TVC-Hocking
match will be held today at
Pine Hill s, where Southern
will be the host school.
TVC Hocking
Golf Standings
Team
Trimble
· Eastern
· Southern
:Federalk Hock ing
:Waterford
Miller
• Thru 8/26*

BEST DEAL IN TOWN
252_ Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio

446·0842

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

Crow's Family Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken
228 Main St.
Drive-Tllna W'Uidow

992-5432

Oil I Fltt..r • lube Chassis

win.
J
Fort ~·rye's defense is
something Newland hu s
been co ncentrating on this
week .
"II looks like they've gt&gt;t
a lot of team speed to me,"
said Newland of Fort Frye's
defense . "They· vc got some
guys who can come up and
hit you. They thing s we' re
going to try and do a~;ainst

Marauders prepare for Athens
Meigs faces
another tough
challenge in week 2
Bv BRAD SHERMAN
sports@ mydaitytribune

RACINE After losing
4N-O to Berne
Union in week
I. the Southern
football team
wi II be looking
for :1 better
performance
this
week
when Symmes L.__J[!:;;_...J
Val ky &lt;.:omes
Barr
to town .
"We wutt•hed film on
Monday, amt looked al things
that we huve to do to get better." said Southern coach Dave
Barr. "The kids seem like
they' re up tn the challenge,
· they've been working hard in
prm:ticc."
As good as Berne Union
was, thi s week's opponent
could be even tougher.
Symmes Valley ( 1-0) was perhaps one of the better kept
secrets in Southeastern Oh10

THE PLAINS - ·
Meigs (0-1) has a
difficult schedule
to open the 2003.
football season;
there is no doubt
about that.
The Marauders
opened last week
with a 46-0 home
loss to Gallia
Academy, and this
Chancey
week, will face another team in
the upper echelon in Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League.
"We want to have our program
to where we're very competitive
with everyone on our schedule,"
said Meigs coach Mike Chancey.
"Gallipoli s is a good football
team, but that's behind us
now ... we can't go back an.d
change· it. It's t\me for us tO'· pllt.4c~
that behind us and look towards'
the future."
Meigs will travel to The Plains
on Friday to face a very confident
Athens Bulldogs team, which is·
coming · off a 35-6 win at
Nelsonville· York.
"We want to go to Athen s thi s
week, prepared and ready to play
four quarters of football,"
Chancey explained. "Athens is a
talented football team, we' II have
our work cut out for us, but I think
our kids will be ready."
Ple..esHMelp,BJ

Southern
looks to
rebound
Bv BRAD SHERMAN
sports@ mydailytribune.com

last seasnn.

Meigs defensive back Josh Buzzard picks off a pass during practice on wednesday
afternoon. (Brad Sherman)

The Vikings finished the
2(Kl2 regular season at 8-2,
won the: Southern Ohio
Confere nce Division-! and
made the Division VI playotfs.
This season. the norsemen
from Willow Wood are
expected to dmllcnge SOC
favorite Lucasville Valley for
another division crown.
"They're an extremely good
fnolballlcam, they're as good
as anyone we play.'' commentPlease see Southem, BJ

.

NCAA, OSU have few disagreements in Clarett case
Bv RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS - Ohio
State and the NCAA
haven't discu ssed a particular number of games that
star tailback Maurice
Clarett will be suspended,
athletic director Andy
Geiger said Wednesday.
"We have distussed
ranges," Geiger said. ''That's
all that we have done."
Clarett is practicing with
the Buckeyes even though
he's serving a "multigame"
suspension for his role in an
exaggerated car theft report .
Geiger said Ohio State
likely would not submit a
response before the end of
the week to several pages of
allegations
regarding
nonacademic
eligibility
questions the NCAA sent to
the university last week.
During a news conference
last Friday, Geiger said 'the
response could be returned

to the NCAA by Monday or
Tuesday of this week
The NCAA did not immediately return phone messages seeking comment.
Claret! is bearing up well
under the scrutiny of the past
few weeks and hopes the
matter might conclude soon,
said hi s attorney Scott Schiff.
"Maurice hasn' t spoken
much
throughout this
proce ss," Schiff said. "If
and when people get to
know Maurice Clarett, he is
an upstanding young man
who is misunderstood right
now and has no goal but to
play college football for
Ohio State University."
Geiger said the process

PROTECT YOUR CHILD

. Norris Northup Dodge .

OIL CHANGE

pts.
18
14
14
I0
3

TUPPERS PLAINS
Fort Frye has become a
really strong early nonleague test for Eastern over
the past few years.
On .Friday, it could
become an even more
important game for an
Eagles football team seeking a return to the playoffs
as the Cadets pay a visit to

East Shade the season," said Eastern
R i v e r head couc h Pat Newland.
Stadium in "11'11 be a big morale boostEastern's er if we can start off 2-0."
h o m e
The Cadets are coming
off a defensive struggle last
opener.
"Every week
against
Federal
game .is a Hocking.
big game
The game was scoreless
for us. but at the end of regulation. hut
this
one the Lancers scored on a
Newland
will decide Tyler Jarvis 5-yard touchif we'll come out ;md win down run in overtime tu lift
our first two games to sturt Federal Hocking to a K-0

(4) TIRE ROTATION
• BALANCING

might be expedited somewhat becnusc Ohio State
agreed with "most" of the
allegations against Clarett.
"I think a couple were ~ot
as telling or as significant as
others," he said. "There
were shades of gray.
Generally, there' s not a wide
amount of disagreement.
There's not co ntention
·between us and the NCAA."
He added, "I don't think
this is go ing to be a hugely
long process. It 's just a mattcr of working our way
throu gh. 1 don 't want to
send a report to the NCAA ,
and then have to send in a
bunch of supplemental
reports. 1 want to get .il all
done if 1 can ."
·
Clnrett is under NCAA
investigation for exaggerating his losses when a car he
was driving was broken into
in April. The tailback. who
scored the winning touchdown in Ohio State's dnu ·
Ohio State tailback Maurice Clarett
practice Tuesday in Columbus.

(24)

iakes a break during

On Saturday, August 30, 2003, the office of
Agnes A.E. Simon, MD will be hosting a Kinderprint
site from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in conjunction with the

Mason County Sherlffes Department.

Chtdc All Fluids • Check Chassis

S1J95

Onnled~t

1/4 mite north
Pomeroy -Maaon Bridge
Maaon, Weal Vlrglnll
Phone(304) 773-5721
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Provided os a public .&lt;·en&gt;ice hy the office of Agne.1· A.E. Simon. MD

-- .. .....,.. ···--

The FREE Kinderprint program allows authorities to
instantly track missing children usihg ready information
such as photographs and fingerprints.
.
.
Dr. Simones office is located at 214 Colonial Plaza ·
2415 Jackson Avenue in Point Pleasant, WV.
For more information, please call 304-675·6090.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�Baseball
National

L~~~gue
Eut Dlvlolon
W
85
70

Arianta

Florida
Philadelphia

Montreal
New York

L
47

Pet

82 .530
7.0 82 .530
70 84 .522
58 73 .443
c.ntral Olvlolon
W L
Pet

Houston
St. Louis

70

62

69 63
69 63
60 70
58 74

Chicogo
Plllsbulgh

Cincinnati

San Franctsoo

80

Arizona
Los Angeles

69 84
67 84
84 71
53 81

Colorado
San Diego

51

15
15
18
26~

GB

.530
523
.519

~

.482

9

.439

12
13

57 75 .432
WHIDivlolon
W L ' Pel

MHwaukeo

GB

.6«

.811
.519
.511
.474

.396

1
1h

GB
12
13
18
2B&gt;

Aoaheim 5, Minnesota 4
Tampa Bay 8, Seattle 4
Oakland 6, Baltimore 2
· Thuraday'a Gamea
Chicago Wh~o Sox (Cotta 1-01 at N.Y.
Yankees (Mussina 14-7),1 :05 p.m.
Baltimore (Lopez 6-8) at Oakland (Halama
2-4), 3:35 p.m.

Minnesota (Lohse 10-10) at Anaheim
(Ra.Ortlz 15· 101. 4:05p.m.

Tampa Bay (Sosa 4-9) at Seattle (Garcia
11·12), 4 :35 p.m.

Detroit (Sonderman 6-17) at CleOJeland

(Lao 2·1 ), 7:05 p.m.
Texas (Valdes 7-8) at Kansas City (Abbott
().{)), 8:05p.m.

.
Frlday'a GIIMI
N.Y. Yankees al Boston, 7:05p.m.
Toronto at Cleveland, 7:05 p.Ql.
Chicago White Sox at Detrolt,7:05 p.m .
Anaheim at Kansas Qlty, 8:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Texas. 8:05p.m.
Baltimore at Seat11e, 10:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.

International League
North Dhtlllon

llleldly'I-

W L Pet. GB

Pittsburgh 4, Fio&lt;lda 3

Pawtucket (Red Sox) 79 60 .568 -

Montreal 14, Philadelphia 10

Ottawa (Orioles)
76 63
Scranton (Phillies)
72 66
BuHalo (Indians)
70 68
Rochester (Twins)
66 72
Syracuse (Blue Jays) 60 76
South Dlvlalon
W L
Durham (Devil Rays) 71 84
Charlotte (White Smc) 70 69

Milwaukee 7. Cincinnati 1
N.Y. Mats 6, AUanta 5
Houston 18, Loa Angeles 4
Chicago Cubs 7, St. Louis 4
San Francisco 3, Colorado 1
San Diego 5, Arizona 4

. -.dl)l'o Gameo
Atianta 4, N.Y. Mots 1
Pittsburgh 41., FlOrida 0
Monln!al 9, Philadelphia 6
St. Louis "'· CNcago Cubs 2

Norlolk (Mats)

San Franci8oo 6, Colorado 4

san Diego 1o, Arizona 2

Thurodoy'o Gameo
Milwaukee (Obermueller o.4) at Cincinnati
(~Wilson

8-10). 12:35 p.m.

Philadelphia (Telemaco 1·1) at Montreal
(VBzquez 11-8), 1:05 p.m.
San Francleco (Hermanson 2·3) at
Colorado (Jennings 10.12), 3:05p.m.
Florida (Wills 11-4) al Pittsburgh (Fogg 77), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mels (Leiter 12·7) al Allanla
(Hampton 12-5), 7:35p.m.

Los Angeles (W.Atvarez 2·1) at Houston
(Redding 8-12), 8:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Zambrano 12·9) al St.
Louis (Mo"ls 8-8), 8:10p.m.

Frtdoy'o Gomoo
Milwaukee at ChiCago Cubs, 3:20p.m.
A~anta

al Pittsburgh, 7:05p.m.

Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 7:10p.m.

St. Louis at Cincinnati, 7:10p.m.
Montreal at Florida, 7:35p.m.

San Diego at Houston, 8:05 p.m.
San Francisco at Arizona, ~0:05p.m.
COlorado at Los Angeles, 10:10 p.m.

American La1gue
Ellt DIVIIIOn

Now Vorl&lt;

WLPctGB
80
51 .811

Boston

77

56

579. 4

Toronto

65

68

.489

Baltimore

61
71 .462
Tampa Bay
52 79 .397
central Dlvlllon
Chicago

.

Kansas City

Minnesota
Cleveland

Detroit

28

WLPctGB
71
62 .534
69 62 .527 1
66 84 .515 2~
59
u. .444 12
33
96 .252 37

WlltDivleton
WLPctGB
78
55 .586
77 56 .579 1
84 69 .481 14
61
72 .459 17

Oakland

Seattle
Anaheim

Texas

Tuudoy'l Gom11

Toronto 12. Boston 9
Detroit 5, Cleveland 4
Chicago White Sox 13, N.Y. Yankees 2
Kansas City 9, Texas 2
Minnesota 3, Anaheim 0
Seattle 9, Tampa Bay 3
Oaldand 2, Baltimore 1, 12 innings

w.ctnetdly'a Gamea ·
Boston 8 , Toronto 3
Cleveland 9,

Detro~

Toledo (Tigers)

7

Chicago White Sox 11 , N.Y. Yankees 2

Kansas City 9, Texas 0

6~
8~2·

12'h
11/2

Pet. GB
.526 -

.504 3
.435 12'1.
Pet. GB
.543 .532
.457 12

n2

63 76 .453 12'1

Gateway
Rocl&lt;ford

Kenosha
Cook County
River City
Mid-Missouri

GB

7
14'/,
15',
18

18
19
25'1,

Southern Dtvlaion

W L 1'1:1-

GB

x·HickorY (Pirates)
Rome !Braves)

39 25.609 38 27 .585 1~

Asheville (Rockies)

3530.538 4b

S. Georgia (Dodgers)

35 30.536 4),

Charleston. SC (D Rays)36 29 .554 3~

Capital City (Mets)
Savannah (Expos)
Augusta (Red Sox)

31 34.477 8~~
2440.375 15
22 42 .344 17

)(-won first half

·

W&amp;dneaday'a Game11
Capital City 8. Augusta 4
Delmarva 7, lexington 4
Charleston , WV B, Hagerstown 4
Asheville 13, Hickory 1
Kannapolis 5, .lake County 4
Greensboro 6, LakewOod 0
Rome 7, Savannah 4
Charleston, SC 6, South Georgia 3

Thursday's Games
Capital City at Augusta
Delmarva at Lexington
Haijjerstown at Charleston, WV
Hickory at Asheville
Lake County at Kannapolis
Lakewood at Greensboro
Rome at Savannah
South Georgia at Charleston, SC
Frtdey'e G.mes
Asheville at Augusta
Capital City at Hickory
Charleston, SC at Savannah
Delmarva at Charleston. WV
Hagerstown at Greensboro
Kannapolis at LakewOOd
Lake County at Lexington
South Georgia at Rome

W

L

Pel

GB

31
32

.631
.619

1

51

34

.600

2~~

47
32
26

39
54

.547
.372
.302

7
22
26

W

L
35
40

Pet.
.583
.535

GB

49
46

44

41

.518

5'k

40
40
'32

46
46
54

.465
.465
.372

10
10
18

PF
1.000 108
.667 72
.500 74
.333 72

PA
54

4 0 0
2 1 0
2 2 0
1 2 o

Tennessee
Indianapolis
Jackson~ ilia
Houston

South
WLTPctPFPA
3 0 0 1.00070 45
210.6676750
2 1 0 .667 49 47
0 3 0 .0003573

80
79
68

Not1h
W ,L T Pel PF PA
1 2 0 3333554
1 2 0 .333 51 61
1 2 0 .333 44 61
0 3 0 .0005486

Wast
Denver
Kansas City
Oakland

2 1 0
2 2 0
1 2 0

.667 58 50
.500 72 82
.333 23 41
.333 36 53

San Diego
1 2 0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Eoll
Wednttday'a Gamel

Mid-Missouri 11. Cook County 4
Aorence 4, Evansville 2
Chilflco1he 11, Kalamazoo 9
Kenosha 3, RiOJer City 1
Rockford 2, Gateway 0
Washington 3, Richmond 2
Thureday's Games
Cook County at Mid-Missouri
Florence at Evansville
Kalamazoo at Chillicothe
River City at Kenosha
Rockford at Gateway
Washington at Richmond

WLT
2 1 0

Philadelphia
1 2 0
Dallas
Washington 1 2 0
N.Y. Giants 0 3 0

Pet PFPA
.867 60 57
.333 48 34
.3333743
.000 30 61

South

W
Carolina
3
Tampa Bay 3
New Orleans 1
Atlanta
0
Detroit

L T
o 0
1 0
2 0
3 0
NOtlh

Pel PF
1.000 60
.750 76
333 51
000 52

PA
17
65
71
70

WLTPctPFPA
2 1 0 .667 74 53

Less on line this time as
Browns, Falcons meet again
CLEVELAND (AP) Michael Vick won't be on
the field at all, and Tim
Couch won't be out there to
stan.
Plenty has changed since
the last time the Atlanta
Falcons and Cleveland
Browns got together.
In December, with playoff
hopes riding on the outcome,
the teams met in a memorable regular-season finale at
Browns Stadium. Cleveland
held on for a 24-16 win,
thanks to a goal-line stand in
the final minute, sending the
Browns to the postseason for
the first time smce 1994.
Despite t.he loss, the
Falcons got m the playoffs,
too.
,
There won t be nearly as
much on the hne Thursday
mght as Atlanta (0-3) and
Cle~eland (0-3) play m the
exhibihon season for both
teams, who are wmless and
have a lo! of work to do
before their Sept. 7 season
openers.
.
Th~ Browns need to quickl~ ftx a defe.nse. that has
gtven up 38 pomts _m consecuuve_ gw:nes and btckered. on
the sidehne l~st weekend m a
loss to Detroit.
On offense, qu~rte~back
Kelly Holcomb, ptcked by
Davts to start the season
under center, is ellpected to
be in for at least IS pia 5
before turning things over lo
Couch.
Struggling without the
injured Vick, the Falcons'
offense hasn't been able to
establish a running jl&amp;me
and there were a senes of
breakdowns on special teams
last week at Miami.
And although wins in
August mean little, both
team~ would like to fin 1'sh
h
.
~o~/reseason on a positive
HYou want to win,..

r

Browns coach Butch Davis
said. "You don't go into any
of these games wtth the idea
h
d •
1
t at you on t want to P ay
to wm. But there are other
underlying things that are
equally as important."
_ For the Browns, that
means getting a better performance from their firstteam .defense, which has
/played poorly in each of
Cleveland's
first
three
games.
The unit showed some
improvement in last week's
38-17 loss to the Lions, but
any si~nificant gain was
undermmed by a sideline
shouting match between cornerback Anthony Henry and
tackle Gerard Warren after
quarterback Joey Harrington
converted a fourth-down
pass for a touchdown on a
blown coverage.
Warren, who had his best
game of the preseason
·
·
·
agamst the L10ns, said he
and Henry have patched
thmgs up an~ that the
defense has fixed some
h~!e,s, too...
. I m posihve about every,;
thmg the def~nse, IS _domg,
:-varren sat~. Were Improv}ng eve7e Ume we ~o on !he
sield. I eel hk.~ we re ·takmg
t~sfor~ard .
. oms m reverse would ~e
tmpoSSib.le .
.C levela~d s
defense ts allowmg 28 pomts
per game, 246 passmg yards
and enters Thursday night as
the NFL's lowest ranked

unit.
It's a good thing for the
Browns that Vick is out with
a broken right leg.
But there is some help on
the way for the secondary.
Safety Robert Griffith will
make his preseason debut
after mi ssing three games
with a broken right index
finger and defensive end
Courtney Brown is expected
to get more time as he continues to recover from knee
surgery.
Meanwhile, the Falcons
haven' t recovered since Vick
got hurt.
Last week, Vick's fill-in at
quarterback, Dou~ Johnson,
wasn't to blame m a 30-21
loss to the . Dolphins.
Johnson went 12-for-20 for
148 yards, including a 35yard TO pass to Peerless
Pnce.
However, the Falcons
managed just 26 rushing
yards, and m the last I 0-plus
quarters, Atlanta's offense
has scored just two touchdowns.
Runnin,g back Warrick
Dunn said his teammate s
failed to practice like they
intended to play.
"Our whole attitude at
practice has to be, 'The way
we 're going to win this game
is running the football ,"'
Dunn said. "We have to stah
having that mentality in
practice. That carries over to
the games."
·Atlanta's play on special
teams was more troubling.
The Falcons fumbled
punts, gave up two big
returns to Miami 'and were
stung by costly penalties.
" We can all do better,
including myself," said kick·
er Jay Feely, who led the
league with f 38 ~oints a rear
ago. "What we did at Mtamt
was just unacceptable."

•

3 0

.333 51
.250 70

48

911

W L T
Arizona
3 0 0
San FrS.ncisco 3 0 0

Pet PF PA
1.000 56 27
1.000 65 28

Seanle
St. Louis

.667 69
.333 56

2
1

1 0
2 0

59
51

Thuraday's Game
Pinsburgh 15, Dallas 14
Frldey'a Games
New England 24, Philadelphia 12
Miami 30, Atlanta 21
, Minnesola 21, Oakland 6
Arizona 27. Chicago 17
Saturday's Games
Buffalo 28. St. Louis 24
Detroit 38, CleOJeland 17
Tennessee 23, Cincinnati 15
N.Y. Jets 15, N.Y. Giants 14
Carolina 20, Green Bay 1
Washington 24, Baltimore 3
Tampa Bay 10. Jacksonville 6
San Diego 19, Houston 17
San Francisco 27, New Orleans 12
Seattle 42, Kansas Citv 31
Monday's Game
Indianapolis 28, Denver 23
Wednesctev'• Game
New England 38, Chicago 23
Thursday, Aug. 28
Detroit at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Phi_ladelphia. 7 p.m.
Oakland at Dallas. 8 p.m.
Tennessee at Green Bay, 8 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Baltimore. 8 p.m.
Miami at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
Kansas City at St. Louis, 8 p.m.
Atlanta f;t Cleveland, 8 p:m.
Houston at Tampa Bay. 8 p.m.
Washington at Jacksonville, 8 p.m.
Arizona at Minnesota, 8 p.m.

2003 CART series
sc;hedule and standings

WLTPctPFPA
4

1

Racing

New England
Buffalo
N.Y. Jets
Miaml

Baltimore
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
Cleveland

1 2 0

.500 72 81

Friday, Aug. 29

Eelit

W L T Pet

2 0

Cincinnati at Indianapolis. 8 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Carolina, 8 p.m.
Seattle at Denver, 10 p.m.
San Francisco at San Diego, 10 p.m.

AMERICAN CDNFERENCt

53
52

60
Welt Dlvlalon

South Atlantic League

Northern Divlelon
W L Pet.
x·lake County (Indians) 47 18 .723
Lexington (Astros)
4025·.615
Lakewood (Phillies)
32 32 .500
Hagerstown (Giants)
31 33 .484
Charleston , WV (8 Jays)?.9 36 .446
DelrT)arva (Orioles)
2936 .446
Greensboro (Martins) 27 36 .429
Kannapolis (White Sox) 21 43.328

2

weot

National Football League

E11t Dtvl1lon
Washington
Evansville
Richmond
Kalamazoo
Florence

Green Bay
Minnesota
Chicago

Football

Frontier League
Chillicothe

Frldey'a Glmea
Chilhcothe at Florence .
Evansville at RK:hmonQ
Gateway at River City
Mid-Missouri al Kenosha
Rockford at Cook County
Washington at Kalamaz~

3

Wednesday's Gamet
BuHalo 12, ScrantonWilkes-Barre 8
Charlotte 10, Durham 1
Louis'llille 1~ , Columbus 1
Norfolk 5. Richmond 2
Onawa 6, Pawtucket 3, 1st game
Ottawa 9. Pawtucket 1, 2nd game
Rochester 5, Syracuse 0
Indianapolis 4, Toledo 3
Thurtday'a Gamee
Buffalo at ScranlooWilkes-Barre
Louisville at Columbus '
Norfolk at Charlotte
Ottawa at Pawtucket
Rlchmo·nd at oumam
Syracuse at" Rochester
Toledo at Indianapolis
.
Frtdey'a G1m11
Buffalo at Ottawa
Columbus at Indianapolis
Louisville at Toledo
Norfolk at Charlotte
Richmond at Durham
ScrantonWilkes·Barre at Pawtucket
Syracuse at Rochester

16
19~1•

.547
.522
.507
.478
.441

67 71 .486 5:1

Richmond (Braves)
60 78
Waat Dlvlalon
W L1
Louisville (Reds)
75 63
Columbus (Yankees) 74 65
Indianapolis (Brewers)63 75

Milwaukee 8, Cincinnati 2
Houston 6, Los Angeles 1

PageB2

·SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

Feb. 23- Grand Pr~x of St. Petersburg,
St. Petersburg, Fla. (Paul Tracy).
March 23 - Tecate Tetmex Grand Pri)(,
MonterreY-! Mexico (Paul Tracy).
April 13 - Toyota Grand Prix, Long
Beach, Calif. (Paul Tracy)
May 5 - London Champ Cer Trophy,
Brands Hatch, Kent, England (Sebastien
Bourdais)
May 11 German 500. Lausl tz,
Germany (Sebastien Bourdals)
May 31- Milwaukee Mile 250, West Allis,
Wis. (Michel Jourdain Jr.)

June 15 - Grand Pri)( o1 Monterey,
Monterey, Calif. (Patrick Garpentler)
,June 22 - G.l. Joe's 200, Portland, Ore.
(Adrian Fernandez)
July 5- Cleveland Grand Prix, Cleveland
(Sebastian Bourdais)
July 13 - Molson Indy, Toronto (Paul
Tracy)
July 27 - Molson Indy, Vancouver, British
Columbia (Paul Tracy)
Aug. 3 - Mario Andretti Grand Prix at
Road America, Elkhart Lake, Wis. (Bruno
Junquelra)
Aug. 10 Mid·Ohio Grand Prix,
Lexington. Ohio. (Paul Tracy)
Aug. 24- Molson Indy, Montreal. (Michel
Jourdain Jr.)
'
Aug. 31 -Grand Prix of .Denver.
Sept. 2B- Orand Prix Amerlcas, Miami.
Oct. 12 - Telmex Gigante Gran Premia
Mexico, Mexico City.
Oct. 26 - Lexmark Indy 300, Surfers
Paradise, Australia.
Nov. 2- Champ Car 500, Fontana, Calif.
Drlvir Standlnga
1. Paul Tracy. 192.
2. Bruno Junquelra, 164.
3. Michel Jourdain. 157.
4. Patrick Carpentier, 128.
5. Sebas tien Baurdals, 126
6. Oriel Servia, 93.
7. Alex Tagliani , 87.
8. Adrian Fernandez, 82.
9. Darren Manning, 76.
10. Mario Dominguez. 75.
1~.Mario Haberfeld, 57.

Thursday, Aug\lst 28, 2003

Thursday, August 28,
12. Roberto Moreno. 51 .

13. Jimmy Vasser, 44 .
14. Ryan Hunter-Reay. 41 .
15. Max Papis, 25 .
· 16. Tiago Monteiro, 20.
17. Rodollo Lavin, 12.
1B. Patrick Lemarie, 8.
19. Joel Camathias, 6.
20. Ale• Yoong, 4.

2003 Formula One
schedule and standings
March 9 - Australian Grand Prix,
Melbourne. (David Coulthard)
March 23- Malaysian Grand Prix,
Sepang. (Kimi Raikkonen )
AprilS- Brazilian Grand Prix, Sao Paulo.
(Giancarlo Flslchella)
Apri120- San Marino Grand Pri)( , lmola.
Italy. (Michael Schumacher)
May 5 - Spanish Grand Prix, Barcalona.
(Michael SChumacher)
.
May 18 - Austrian Grand Prill:, Spielberg.
(Michael _Schumacher)
.
,
June 1 - Monaco Grana Pnx, Monte
Carlo. (Juan Pablo Montoya) .
June 15 Canadian Grand Prix,
Montreal. (Michael SChumaCher)
June 29 European Grand Prix.
Germany.
· (Rail
Nuerburg ring,
Schumacher)
July 6 - French Grand , Prix, MagnyCours. (Aalf Schumacher)
July 20- British Grand Prix, Silverstone.
England. (Rubens Barrichello)
Aug. 3 German Grand Pri)(,
Hockenheim. (Juan Pablo Montoya)
Aug. 24 - Hungarian Grand Prix,
Budapest. (Fernando Alonso)
Sept. 14 -Italian Grand Prix, Monza.
Sept. 28 - United States Grand Prix,
Indianapolis.
Oct. 12- Japanese Grand PriM , Suzuka.
Drtver Stlndlnge
1. Michael Schumacher, 72.
2. Juan Pablo Montoya, 71 .
3. Kiml Ralkkonen. 70.
4. Rail Schumacher, 58.
5. Fernando Alonso, 54.
6. Rubens Barrichello, 49.
7. David Coulthard, 45.
8. Jarno Trull!. 24.
9. Mark Webber, 15.
10. Jenson Button. 12.
11 . Giancarlo Fisichella, 10.
12. Cristiano Da Matta, 8.
13. Heinz·Harakt Frantzen. 7.
14. Olivier Panis. 6.
15. Jacques VIlleneuve, 3.

2003

Prep Football

ave

BASEBALL

CLEVELAND INDIAN5-Piaced INF JoM

McDonald on the 15-day disabled list.
Designated RHP David Cortes far assign ment. Recalled INF Brandon PhiiHps hom
Buffalo of the IL. Purchased the oontreci ot
AHP Jose Santiago from Buffalo.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Placed RHP

National League
ATLANTA BRAVES-Placed RHP John

Smaltz on the 15-day disabled list
Recalled LHP Jung Keun Bong from
Richmond of the ll.
CHICAGO CUBS-Placed RHP Dave

Veres on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to Aug. 22. Recalled RHP Jon
Leicester from West Tennessee at the
Southern League.
.
CINCINNATI

REDS-Sent

Jim
Chamblee outright to Louisville of the fl.
COLORADO ROCKIES-Placed RHP

Chin-hui Tsao on the 15-day disabled list.
Purchased the contract of LHP Jesus
Sanchez from Colorado Springs of the
PCL
MILWAUKEE BREWER5-Acqulred RHP

Mike Crudale from St. Louis as one of two
players to be named in last week's trade for
RHP Mike DeJean and optioned Crudele to
Indianapolis of the IL.
·
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIE5-Piaced RHP

:

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Placed C

Fla. (Scott Dixon)

Yorvlt Torrealba on the bereavement list.
Activated C Alberto Castillo from the 15•
day disabled list.

March 23- Copper World Indy 200,
Avondale,,Ariz. (Tony Kanaan)
April13 -Indy Japan 300. Suzuka.

BASKETBALL
National Basketball Aaaocletlon
GOLDEN STATE WARRIOR9-Signed G-

(Scott Sharp)

F Calbert Cheaney.
INDIANA PACERS-Fired lsiah Thomas,
coach.
MIAMI HEAT- Announced the Los
Angeles Clippers did not match the Heat's
oHar to F-G Lamar Odom.

June 28- SunTrust Indy Challenge,
Richmond. Va. (Scott Dixon)
July 6 - Indy 300, Kansas City, Kan.
(Bryan Herta) ,
July 19- Firestone Indy 200, Gladeville,
Tenn. (Gil de Ferran)
July 27 - Michigan Indy 400, Brooklyn
(AieiC Barron)
Aug. 10 - Emerson Indy 250, St. Louis.
(Helie Castroneves)
Aug. 17 - Belterra Casino Indy 300.
Sparta, Ky. (Sam Harnish Jr.)
Aug. 24 - Firestone Indy 225. Nazareth.
Pa. (Helio Castroneves)
·Sept. 7- Delphi Indy 300, Joliet, Ill.
Sept. 21 - Toyota Indy 400, Fontana,
Clalf.
Oct. 12- Chevy 500. Fort Worth. Texas.
Driver Standing•
1. Helie Castroneves, 429.
2. Gil Cle Ferran, 404.
3. Tony Kansan, 397 .
4. Scot1 Dixon, 387
5. Sam Harnish Jr .. 348.
6. AI Unser Jr.. 319
7. Kenny Brack. 309.
B. Scott Sharp, 280.

CINCINNATI

BENGAL5-Cialmod

DE

Greg Scott off waivers frOm Washington .
Waived WA Marquise Walker.
·
INDIANAPOLIS

COLTS-Waived

WR

Royd Williams.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Agreed to terms

with CB Willie Ford on a one-year contract.
Waived LB Larry Atkins.
NEW YORK JET5-Signed OT Michael
Thompson. Waived WR Cedric James.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER$-Ciaimed OT
Charles Hill off waivers from Houston .
Waived WR Fred Coleman.
HOCKEY

National Hockey League
CHICAGO

BLACKHAWKS-Signod

C

Tyler Arnason and RW Matt EUison.
DALLAS STAR5-Signed C Mike MOdano
to a one-year contract extension.
DETROIT

RED WINGS-Signed

RW

Kevin Miller to a one-year contract.
SAN JOSE SHARKS-Re-signed D Scotl

Hannan.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-Re-signed C

Brad A1chards to a multiyear contract

lsiah Thomas fired as Pacers coach
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) lsiah Thomas was fired
Wednesday as coach of the
Indiana Pacers , a surprise
move by new boss Larry
Bird that came only two
months before the start of
the season.
Thomas, an NBA Hall of
Farner. led a young Pacers
team into the playoffs in all
three of his seas·ons, but they
were knocked out in the first
round each year.
" After looking at film ,
seeing how things were and
evaluating the basketball
operations, I detected the
team's chemistry wasn't

what it should be," Bird
said. "Donnie and I decided
that a change was necessary
and a fresh start was important."

Donnie Walsh, the team's
CEO, and Bird, the president
of basketball operations, did
not immediately pick a successor or set a timetable for
choosing a new coach.
The learn said it would
honor the final year of
Thomas ' contract. An official announcement was
expected at a news conference later in the day.
. Thomas was with the U.S .
men's basketball team at the

Olympic qualifying tournament in Puerto Rico earlier
this week . He checked out of
his hotel Tuesday and could
not immediately be reached
for comment.
The Pacers were 13 1- II 5
in the regular season under
Thomas.
Bird and Thomas were
contentious rivals from their
. days of leading the Boston
Celtics and Detroit Piston s
to NBA titles in the 1980s.
When he was hired July
II , Bird walked off the podium at a news conference and
shook hands with Thomas
- but neither smiled.

•

Coat Grove at
Gall!a Academy

Coal Grove at

Coal Grove at

Ga!!la Acadgmy

Ga!lla Academy

Ga!!!a Academy

Point Pleasant

Point Pleasant

eo!nt pieagnt

Point Pleasant

Point Pleasant

al

Bli&gt;W'

Coal

Gro~e

at

at Ripley

at Bll&gt;lolt

at

Bli&gt;W'

Nelsonville· York
at Blytr VOJ!ev

Nelsonville-York
at Blnr Yal!ey

Nelaonyllle-York
at River Valley

Nelsonville ~ York

Nolsonyl!le-York

at R!yar Vall"'

at River Valley

Meigs at

Meigs at

Meigs at

Meigs at

Meigs at

Meigs at

AlhiM

Albini

AlhiM

AlhiM

AlhiM

AlhiM

W.bama at
Federal Hocking

Wahama at
Fadtral Hocklna

Wahama at
Federal Hocking

Wobamg at
Federal Hocking

Wghgmg at
Federal Hocking

. Wabamo at
Federal Hoc~ing

Soyth Qal!la
at Green

South Galll11
at Green

Soytb Gallla
at Green

South Gglllg
at Green

Sgutb Gqllla

at Green

South Ggllla
at Green

Symmp• Yallav
at Southern

Symm01 Valley

Symmt~Val!ev

at S.outhern

at Southern

Symmas Vtl!ay
at Southern

Symmes Volley
at Southern

Symm11 Valkty
a1 Southern

Fort Frye

Fort Erva
at Eastern

Eon Frye

Eon Erva
at Eastern

Fort Frye

atGU!Im

at blll!n

Hamlin
atHanngn

at Hannan

at Hannan

at Hannan

at Hannan

at Hannan

Waverly
at Jackson

Waverly
atJackaon

Waverly
at Jackson

wa~erty

at Jackson

Waverly
atJackaon

Wave rly
at Jackson

l:tamlln

llllm1ln

at

blll!n

llllm1ln

at Eastern

llllm1ln

will continue to practice.
The process has already
rolled past the point where
he has any further input.
Schiff declined to comment ·On whether he was satisfied with the process to
this point but added, "The
goal as his lawyer is to make
sure that there is no disparity in penalty range between
what Maurice may receive
and what other similarly situated athletes have received
from the NCAA by way of
penalty."
Should Ohio State appeal
to the reinstatement committee, Clarett can be represented by counsel and can
make a statement to the
reinstatement committee.
Since he is suspended,
Clarett will not be in uniform for the second-ranked
Buckeyes'
game
on
Saturday night against No .
17 Washington.

· __.----'SEOAL

w

IHm
All
Athens
o-o
1-o
Gallia Academy
o-o
1-o
Jackson
o-o
1-o
Marietta
0-0
1-0
Point Pleasant
0-0
0-0
Logan
0-0
0-1
0-0
0-1
Warren
Friday's Games
Coal Grove at Gallia Academy
Point Pleasant at Ripley
Meigs at Athens
Waverly at Jackson
Chillicothe at Logan
Cambridge at Marietta
Philo at Warren

Point Plaaunt
at Ripley

Nelsonville-York
at Btvpr Yalley

TVC

l:tamlln

Ohio Division

m

I9m
Alexander

0-0

Eagles
from Page 81
them offensively is just the normal stuff we
do. It 's going to be a good defensive battle
this weekend."
The Eagles also have to show respect to
the Cadets' offense, even though they
struggled somewhat against Federal
Hocking, including a center that anchors
both the offensive and defensive lines .
"Their quarterback (Tyler Engle) looks
pretty sharp and their tailback (Brice
Ullman) looks to be rea lly fast," said
Newland. "Their guards look like they can
run pretty well. They look like a pretty
solid football team ."
Eastern is coming off a 14-6 win against

Non-league

Im!m
All
Ironton
1·0
Symmes Valley
1·0
Hannan
0-0
0-0
Wahama
0-1
OakHtll
0-1
South Gall1a
Friday's Games
Hamlin at Hannan
South Gallia at Green
Wahama at Federal Hocking
\South Point at Ironton
All .Oak Hill at Unioto
Symmes Valley at Southern
1-0

South Gallia.
While the Eagles were able to come
away with the win. key mistakes could've
led to a different result.
"We did some things like had so me bad
snaps on punt s we can ' t do ." said
Newland. "We fumbled the ball and pass
blocking wasn't that great.
"We played on our side of the field the
whole game becau se of mi stak es like that.
Little mistakes that turn out to he hi g mistakes. Mentally, it was a wake up call for
us ...
Eastern's big offensive leaders against
South Gallia were Bryan Minear. who had
107 yards rushing , Terry Durst, who had 66
yards on the ground and a second half
touchdown, and Ken Amsbary, who was llfor-12 passing for 84 yards with a ru shing
touchdown.

from Page 81
Meigs had a difficult time
_stopping GAHS quarterback Donnie Johnson. In
addition to rushing for 54
yards on six carries,
John so n also went 5-6
through the air for 99 yards.
· Athens also sports a solid
quarterback for which the
Marauders will have to deal
with, in three-year starter
Grant Gregory.
Gregory, along with fel•
·low senior haltback Chris
Hewitt lead a very potent
:Bulldog offense .
: "Both of those kids have
·a lot of ellperience," said
Chancey. "They have some
good football players, but Meigs defensive back Matt Holley picks off a pass in
:those two kids are the two Wednesday's practice. Holley missed last week's game
against Gallia Academy, but is as questionable for Friday.
:that make them go."
: Hewitt ran for 131 yards
:on just nine touches, two of entering Friday's tilt, and sidelined since the Trimble
those for touchdowns. He that he may have the ser- scrimmage, is one of the
was also on the receiving vices of one of his key better receivers and defenend .a 60-yard Gregory players back. "Everybody sive backs on the Meigs
:touchdown pass and com- that played last week , as far roster. "He's still nursing a
:pleted one toss of his own as key players. are healthy knee injury, he is questionright now," he said. "We 're able for Friday night,"
;for six yard s.
trying to get Matt Chancey concluded.s
still
: Chancey said that overall
Friday 's game will kick-his. Marauders are healthy Holle y back."
Holl ey, who ,. ha s been off at 7:30p.m.
offense. and very physical on
defense. We .expect more af
the same this week ," he
explained.
from Page 81
Symmes Valley already
avenged onii'Of those two reged Barr.
ular season losses by defeating
: The Vikings return all five Huntington Ross, 21- 14, in
:Startin,g offensive linemen week one. The Vikes used that
;ncludmg senior standout solid running game along with
.Caleb Bland, who Barr two huge . defen sive plays to
:ctescribes as possibly the best do so.
'offensive lineman his team
In a couple of injury notes,
will see all year long. "They're Southern haltback Derek
going to take advantage of Teaford likely won't play after
:those guys, they have tr~di­ suffering a sprained neck and
)ionally been a runnmg

Southern

.I valve stems

Brian Billings
General Manager
Record: 7-3
Last week: 7-3
(picks in bl!k1)

1-o
1-o

1-0
Belpre
0-0
1-0
Vinton County
0-0
(}-1
Meigs
0-0
0-1
Nelsonville-York
0-0
0-1
Wellston
o-o
Hocking Division
IHm
rn; All
1-0
Eastern
0-0
Federal Hod&lt;ing
0-0
1·0
1-0
Trimble
0-0
1-0
Watertord
0-0
0-1
Mtller
0-0
0-1
Southern
0-0
Friday's Games
Meigs al Athens
Fort Frye at Eastern
Symmes Valley at Southern
Trtmble at Alexander
Williamstown at Belpre
Rock Hill at Vinton County
Wellston at Minford
Wahama at Federal Hocking
Millersport at Miller
Watertord at Frontier

Meigs

,.

. 2os-7o:. ts ~
215-70-1$ $~2.1f,
. 225-60-16 $6B.9.J r

Andre Tirado
Sports Staff
Record: 8-2
Last week: 8-2
(picks in llQld)

Coat Grove at

CLarett

National Footbaii .League

Brad Sherman
Sports Staff
Record: 9-1
Last week: 9-1
(picks in b2Jd)

Gall!a Academy

king the opposing team's
top tailback while running
plays against Ohio State's
from Page 81
first-team defense.
Geiger said his staff members
working on the response
ble-overtime, national chamto
the
NCAA still have some
pionship game victory over
Miami in the Fiesta Bowl, "fact-finding" to do.
Ohio State's response will
said on a campu s police
report that items totaling be sent to the NCAA, with
more than $1 0,000 were suggested penalties to
Claret! included. A commit- .
stolen from the vehicle.
He later acknowledged tee of NCAA officials who
that he had exaggerated the deal with student-athlete eliclaims and apologized to the gibility will then respond
university and his team- back to the university with
mates for any embarrass- the penalties that it recommends .
ment he caused.
'They'll either agree with
Ohio State suspended
Clarett for last Friday, although us or not ," Geiger said.
he was allowed to return to the "Then we have a choice to
team to practice. He had been appeal that to the reinstateheld out of preseason camp ment committee."
The reinstatement combecause of questions surroundmittee is composed of faculing his eligibility.
ty
representatives , athletic
He is currently working
out with the team as a scout- directors and senior women
team tailback, wearing the administrators from other
uniform number and mimic- universities.
In the meantime. Clarell

FOOTBALL

Colo. (Soott Dl•on)

Paul U. Polcyn
Copy Editor
Record: 8-2
Last week: 8-2
(picks in b2Jd)

Coal Grove at

Fort Frye

PIRATES-Designated

RHP Pat Mahomes for assignment.

Butch Cooper
Sports Staff
Record: 9-1
Last week: 9-1
(picks in b2Jd)

GoUla Academy

alllllltn

INF

PITTSBURGH

May 25 - Indianapolis 500. (Gil de
Ferran)
June 7- Longhorn SOOK, Fort Worth,
Te)(as. (AI Unser Jr.)
June 15- Honda Indy 225, Fountain ,

Andrew Carter
Managing Editor
Record: 7-3
Last week: 7-3
(picks in b!llil)

All

o-o

Fairtand
o-o
River Valley
0-0
1-0
Rock Hill
o-o
1-o
Chesapeake
0-0
o-1
South Point
o-o
o- t
Friday's Games
Nelsonville-York at River Valley
Wayne at Chesapeake
Coal Grove at Gallia Academy
Tolsia at Fairland
Rock Hill at Vinton County
South Point at Ironton .

Amerlc1n Lt~gue
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Agreed to terms
with RHP Jose Paniagua on, a minor
league contract.

Jose Lima on the 15-day disabled ~st.
TEXAS RANGER9-Agreed to terms with
3B Emerson Frosted and RHP MarC
Lamacchia.

~

Coal Grove

Transactions

17. Ra lph Firman, 1.

schedule and sfandlnga

IHm

OUR •EX·PERTS' BREAK DOWN NEXT WEEK'S MATCHUPS

16. NICK Heldleld, 2.

March 2- Toyota Indy 300. Homestead.

Area High School Football
Standings &amp; Schedule

9. Tomas Scheckter, 277 .
10. Tore Takagi. 257.
11 . Roger Yasukawa, 23·1.
12. Buddy Rice , 229.
13. Dan Wheldon, 213.
14. Greg Ray, 205.
15. Bryan Herta. 204 .
16. Robbie Buhl. 204 .
17. Buddy Lazier. 187.
18. Sarah Fisher. 170.
19. AJ FO)'IIV, 16&lt;! .
20. Alex Barron , 160.

Terry Adams on the 15-day disabled list
and AHP Mike Williams on the tlereavement list. Recalled AHP Brandon
Duckworth from ScrantonWilkes Barre of
the fl. Purchased the contract of· AHP.
Geoff Geary from ScrantonWIIkes Barre. ·

2003 Indy Racing League

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www .mydailysentinel.com

'

·I

bruised collarbone last week.
Fullback and featured runner Jake Nease has a sore
shoulder, but is expected to
pl ay, as is haltback Kyle
McKeever, who sustained a
against
the
concussion
Rockets.
The Tornadoes should have
the services of Darren Teaford,
however, who mi ssed last
week's game with an injured
elbow.
Friday night's game 'will
kick-off at 7:30 p.m. at Roger
Lee Adams Field in Racine.

when life gets under y~ur. ~~~it's .good tQ focu ~ on simpler
thing.r. l;ike how grc:at it feels to just pick up the clubs and play.
An~ when ,the course is this goe&gt;d, d:.afa. ~uori.g mc~lcinc. Play
the eight magnificent Ideations of the
Robert Trent Tones Golf Trail. and forget
m all that other srutf. WhM: 16• ,
,.... ~~
i~t the ri/!hl place, :JfUr hill- .,;u fo/Jpw,
800 .'/49. 4444

~

wu•w.rtjgolfcom

�BASEBALL

The Daily Sentinel

PageB4
Thursday,August28,2003

mrtbune- Sentinel - l\egt~ter
CLASSIFIED

Brewers drop Reds, win ninth straight

·. Cle vela nd Indians' Coco Crisp dives

s afe !~

back to the bag as the attempted

pi c~o ffthrow

I rum the pitcher comes in to Detrmt Ttgers ltrst baseman Carlos Pena dunng th e lirst mmng
~ednesday ·in Cleveland. (AP)

Indians look 'Crisp' in victory
became the first Cleveland
CLEVELAN D (AP)
Coco Crisp had a game he 'II player to score four runs in a
remember, and the Detroit game since Roberto Alomar
]"igers had yet another they on Sept. 19, 200 I.
· "The guys behind me just
~a nt to forget.
Crisp had fou r hits and kept knocking me in," Crisp
S(:OTed f(JUT runs, and Jody smd. "That's fun ."
Jack Cressend (2-0) pitched
Genii had four RBis to lead
th e Cleveland Indians over the I 2-3 scoreless mnings. and
Detroit Tigers 9-7 Wednesday David Riske worked the ninth
!l ight.
. for his fourth save.
Detroit rallied from a 6-1
"I know I had games in the
minors where I had four hits, deficit with a live-run tifth
but I can't remember when," inning that included three
Cri sp sa id . ") know I'll homers off Terry Mulholland,.
Brandon )nge hit his seventh
remember thi s one. for sure."
Detroit hit a season-high homer. Dan Klassen added a
II vc homers. The Tigers have two-run shot (his first homer
not wo n co nsecutive road since June 26, 2000) and
~ames si nce June J-4 at San Dmitri Young tied it with a
l::&gt;iego ami must win at least two-run drive.
Mulholland made hi s tirst
three of their next four to
avoid losing 100 games before start since last Sept. 13. - the
40-year-old left-hander had
Scptemher.
Gen1t hit a two,ru·n homer pitched in 39 games in relief
anu a two- run double. and this year, but was called upon
Matt Lawton drove in three when scheduled starter Jason
Davis developed tendinitis in
runs with three singles.
" It ·, great when Coco gets his right shoulder.
Mulholland allowed six runs
on and sets things up
us,"
Lawton sa td . " He s my and seven hits in 4 2-3 innings.
favorite guy to root for
Crisp opened the game wtth
because wf1en he gets on with a singfe and scored on a single
his speed. they throw fastballs by Lawton to give Cleveland a
to us other guys to hit. I just 1-0 lead against Shane Loux,
loYe that ...
who pitched only two innings.
Crisp went 4-for-5 - all The right-hander left with a
singles - stole a base, and strained right shoulder.

ror

man;tge r
Alan
Tigers
Trammell said Loux will be
examined by team doctors.
Craig Monroe tied it at I by
leading oil the second with his
18th homer - giving him six
in his last 16 games and eight
in August.
Omar Vizquel pllt Cleveland
ahead 2- 1 wtth an RBI double
in the third off Wilfredo
Ledezma. Gerut then followed
with a two-run homer for &lt;1 4-1
lead.
Gerut made it 6-1 with a
two- run double in the fourth
that left fielder Monroe and
center fielder A le x Sanchez
seemed to have difficulty seeing in th e twilight. The ball
dropped safely as Monroe
made a desperate lunge at it .
Cleveland regained the lead
7-6 in the filih against Chris
Spurling ( 1-3). Lawton lined a
single ofT the rij,1ht-tield wall
and scored on Casey Blake's
doubl e.
Crisp sparked a two-run
sixth with a two-strike bunt
single for his first career fourhit game and a I0 -game hitting
streak . Ryan Ludwick and
Lawton added RBI singles for
a 9-6 lead.
Carlos Pena opened the
eighth with his 16th homer.
making it 9-7.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A fa lse fire alarm
couldn ' t slow down Scou Podsednik and the
Milwaukee Brewers.
Podsed nik drove in three runs and the
Brewers won their ninth in a row, 6-2 over
the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday night.
The Brewers' winning streak is their
longest since a nine-game string in 1997.
when they were st ill in the Am~:rican
League . Milwaukee· has not won 10 in a row
since 1988.
Podsednik was at the plate in the second
inning when strobe lights began flashing and
a siren started wailing at Great American
Ball Park. The game was delayed nine minutes, and Reds spokesman Rob Butcher said
dirt that accumulated in a smoke detector set
off the fire alarm.
When play resumed. Podsednik lined th e
first pitch up the middle for an RBl single .
"I JUSt tried to treat it like the intermission
of another inning, but I was ahead in the
count, sp I tried to look at it with as many
positives as I co uld," Podsednik said.
The Reds lost their fourth in a row.
Milwaukee will try Thursday for its firstever four-game sweep in Cincinnati.
"We got some timely . hilling, but I was
more impressed that ' Po' got that big hit
after that delay," Milwaukee manager Ned
Yost said. "He didn't Jose his concentration ."
Podsednik extended his hiuing streak to a
career-high 12 games with two hit s. He also
picked up his 31st stolen base.
Wayne Franklin ( I0- 10) improved to 3- 1
in his last four games. He gave up two run s
:u.1d eight hits and three walks in 5 1-3

To

Place
Your
Ad •••

· HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

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

r

\\\111 \1 I \II\ h

Geoff Jenkins gave Milwaukee a 2- 1 lead
in the third with· his 27th homer anu thi rd in
three games.
The Reds tied it in the fourth 011 dnubles
by Tim Hummel and Stephen Smitherman.
Notes: Hummel's double was his first
major league hit .... Reds C Jason LaRue
made the se.:oml appearai]CC or his career
and first start at first hase .... The Brewers
have come from behind to win their last six
games .... The Reds have scored nne run in
th e first inning of ea.: h of their last three
~ames ... . Jenkins ' homer gave him six hit s
111 hi s lust seven at-bats .... Milwaukee's
Richi e Sexson fell to 0-for-12 f(H· the series.
... The attendance was :mnou need as a season-low IS ,06'1 at Ci ncinnati .

Dodge

Now Interviewing In
Person
WERRY'S WITTLE ONES
DAYCARE

Location: 252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio

now has openings
992-6975
Open Monday-Saturday

UNLIMITED INCOME
POTENTIAL
NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED

1

Must possess good people skills,
ambitious attitude, and the desire
too succeed.

All types of Industrial
Sewing Machines for sale
Blind Stitch, Single Needle,
Upholstery, Surging &amp; Leather

304-458-1667

MATTRESS SALE
at Old Empire Furniture
Building
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-1835
US Mattress Discount
Twins Starting at $88.88 set
Friday &amp; Saturday
10am - 6pm
Sunday 1 pm til 5 pm
Independent Medicaid
(LPN) available for
11 P-7A shift in
Meigs, Gallia and Athens Co.

1·304·773·5739

Help Wanted
Caring People ...

RESIDENT SERVICES
ASSOCIATE
If working with he eld -

erl y to meet th eir d~tily
social needs appeals to
you, and you have a background in Social Service.~~,
Nursing, or Heahhcare.
we may hav e: just the
position you're looking
for. We ' re a 70 bed l ong~
term care nursing facility
who's main focus is quality care for our residents.
Benefits inc lude:

Hutlh tn~uran&lt;t

Ufe IDSurance
401K Plan

Vacotlo!&gt;

This position requires
good wrinen documentation and communication
skills. I f you are interested, please co ntac t us

at:

380 Colonial Drive

Btdwoii, Oblo 4S614
or call 740·446·SOOI
1Equlll Opportun!1y Employen

Read your
newspaper and learn

I

Card or Thanks

Thank you
Chris Wolfe for
the cookout
and Connie
Tucker for the
pool party.
Racine Boys
Little League
SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
Public Notice
The Homo Natlon1l
Benk wilt auction tho
following vohlcle on
Selurdey, Auguot 30,
2003, at 10:00 a.m. at
Mike Httl'o Storage Lot
at the tnteraectton of
124 and Bllhan Road,
Racine, Ohio:
1993 Ford Probe
12VCY20A5P5196052
The Home National
Bank re1ervaa tha
right to reJect any and
all bld1. For an
appointment to '"·
Call 949·2210, Ask lor
Sheila.
(8) 27. 28, 29

ANNt H INt'EMENll'

4 Male mixed puppies . brand boys, girls, toddler,
BeaglefGerman Shepard and lad10S, lots ot mi se
good w/kids . 992·35t6
Sat . Aug 30 , Sept 1·2,
items,
co l8 Month old Cahco female household
killen. Has been spayed all lectibles, go-cart, books &amp;
of shots on front line. misc. rain/shine
(304)882-2798
Tues day
9·2·03
5636
Give-away lree kittens Iiiier Bulaville Pike. everything
goes, ca mcorder. bunktrained, 740-367-0855
beds. movies. home Jnlerior,
Giveaway free kitlens part vacuum cleaners. 0-size
persian. vory adorable, call bed sets. name brand
740·44 1·0833
clothes. boys 7·12. girls 10·
Loving Calico cat. about 1 14

Lw-------,1
Found lemalo-hunl rng dog.
about 9 months old. loving
disposr tion. Wayn National
Forest area. 740·643- 1002

If so, you qualify for a

lor Discount*

FOUND Small Beagle dog.
Black/white/tan has a coUar
at
Watterson
Grocery.
1304)576·9007
lost Family -pet, REWARD,
li 'male chocota1e- lab. Byeers -old. (Mocha). disap·
peAred
Bf15.
Do- 11Canter/Hotzer area 740·
446-4250

on your home delivered subscription!
Here's all you need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
· copy of your photo ID.

OTl

Y&gt;\1111 s.~u:·
GAI.I.II~II.L~

3 Family yard sale
Aug . 28-29·30 9·?
4 1/2 miles out 325 of Rio
Grande· Wolle Run Rd. toys,
high
chair, microwave,
clothes other stufl .
3-Family
Yard
Sa le,
Saturday only, rain or shine
8:00-4:00, 314 mile oil At 7
on Teens Run

6alltpoU' JBail!' tlribunt
tlotnt tllea,ant 1\egi~ter
The Daily Sentinel

46 Hubbard Ave Kanauga ,
boys clothinQ , Home Interior,
womens clothing, mise
1tems. 9·5 Aug 29-30
914 4th Ave.
kids
clothes,baby though child
size 11 . adult clothes.
shoes. toya, bikes , mlsc.
Thurs-Frl 9am-?

&amp;unbap ~ime• -6entinel

925 4th Ave Friday Bam -?,
dryer . gla~aware , deak ,
clothing, doora, cur tai n- .
bedapread, exerclaer, etc.

• Once you have atgn•d up tor the Senior Dtacount, your renewal notice wilt rafl•ct your dtacount.

•

Aug 29-30, Clay Townhouoo ,
toys, baskets. shoes, decor,
bedding, brand-name cloth·
lng, mla&lt;:.
Aug 30-31 t mile off SR 7 on
Georges Creek to 27t
McCully Road, household
Items. dishes, ~oeevllle pot·
tery, depression glass, avon,
CI01heS.

'

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

HI \I I .., I \II

l'&lt;lM.:KnVIMIIHlt .K

Ho~u.:-;

New ahd Used tools. cral1s.
antiques. 1997 Sunflre. gas
turnAce. 6+8" galvanized
duel work, porce lain doll .
wooden pop crate wagon.
arid clothing 4608 1 St
Rl1 24. Racine September
1.2.3

A '$ultE

PR.oBt..EN\ ~

~3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
tor immodlate possession all
wlthr n 15 min. ot downtown
Gallipolis. Rates as tow as
6~'" (740)446-3211:1

lwrlght@lic.not

CO 2003 by NEA, Inc.
11

Htl.PWANlHl

~--·

www .comlcs .com

:16

.
1

Industrial

area . Ca ll on coaches,
For Sste 2 Grave lots, at
PTA'a, &amp; Principals, $46K . Ohio
Valley
Memory
education . and 3 years _ _ _
81_3_'7
_1_3_
"2_82_8_~ Garden , 740 -256-6070
experience, please fax
resume with salary hlslory to
so_m
_:e_o_n_a _
•o_•o_p_ • _ u_•
• •
To Do
513·733·9164, or email· (740)367-7328
jconrad C aluchem .com
Will babysit ln my home.
-------~ Come and enjoy a tun . lov- Tronoml .. lono, oil typoo,
MESSAGE:
Local Ing . and educational envl· 740.245·5177.
Insurance AQency hiring Full ronmenl. I am a Mother off
or Part·tlme poaltlon lor P &amp; two and have over 5 years Will pressure wash homes,
C ' Ll~ensed
Insurance proteselonsl experience with trailers, dec~s. metal build·
Flexible hours . ings and gutters . Call 1740)
Agent. Send Resumes to: children.
JA26 , 200 Main Street. Point Call or leavo mossage 740· 446-0151 ask tor Ron or
leave a message
256·8338
Plea san t. wv 25550

&amp; wool blankets &amp; spreads , experience. or equivalent
antique garden tractor, old
tools &amp; bubble gum mactllne
&amp; cast Iro n weather vane .
clothes, oil lamps, electric
lamps, cl oc~s. much more ,
114 mile &lt;•H State At. 7, turn
at Meigs Memory Gardens
Co Rd 32 (Eoglo Ridge Ad)
(7401992·7599

August
29-31, 8373
Bulavllle Pike , 2 miles trom
Sl At 554 on right. Baby
clothes. baby bed. girls
clothes size 4-12. womena
clothes size 3-20. Home
Interior. Mermaid coffee
1able. lots ol misc .
Rainer's
garage
sale,
Yard Sale Fri-Sat. 668 Lett· Tackervllle Ad , Racine.
Fork rd
pas t Caldwell Sept. 1·2·3, dinette sat .
tools, collectlbtea , mise
Trucking

WANn-:n

Ht·:u• WANIHI

Addressers wamed lmmedi·
Items, adult clothing, doopately! No &amp;Mperlo nce neces" Need 7 ladles to soli Avon. TheriiPIItl Needed
well-pump
AZ Dlveraltled Haalthcare
sary. Work at home . Call Call 740·446·3358
Is looking to r lull tim e
Yard Sale 1773 McCOrm1ck 405·447·6369
Need lo earn Money? Lets Ltcen11d
Phyalcat
Ad Aug. 29 9·3, Aug. 30 8·?.
tal k the tlEW Avon. Call · Tharaplsta
and
Yard Sale, clothlng·house- AVON! All Area s! To Buy or Marilyn, 304·862·2645 to Aaalatanta, Occupallonal
hold items. baked goods, SoH. Shirley Spears. 304- learn all the waysii ca n work Theraplala and A11latents
Aug, 29·30, Sopl ·1·6, 1275 675· t429.
tor you
and Speech Language
Evergreen Ad , Bidwell, Ohio
Pathologlat lor raprdly
Bartender/Waitress. se rrous Neoded experienced trrnber expanding Home Health
4
"'
YAKil SAt.t:•.
inqu 1rres only. In terviews cutter, and experienced
Agency in Pt . Pleasant. WV
l'tJMUt( IV/Mttltli.E Sunday, August . 31 t-3pm · skldder operalor, call alter and
surrounding areas
Call (304)675-1880
6pm 740-682-73 t8
WE Offer
2 Family Yard Sale across
Drummer needed for ostab· Now Accepting Applicatio ns • Excellent Wages
from Sy racuse Pool Friday
lished Pomeroy-ba sed rock ExJCon on 22nd Street, Point ·comprehensive Insurance
and Saturday AUQllSI 29 and
Package
band. Covers and Originals, Pleasant. Apply in Person .
30
"Paid Vacation. Holidays .
Led Zeppelin a mu st.
Personal. and Sick days
Carport
Sate. Sa tu rda y, Practice twice per week, Now taking appllca!IOne for
·Job Security
August·30. Come to Aaclne, play ou t every other week· desk clerk and hou sekeep"Great wor~lng environment
turn on BashBn Road. then end. gllkent@charler.net or ing . Apply In person at
Please
contacl S!acy at .
Budget
Inn
260
Jackson
on Sal~ Knob Road . Stroller, 740·378-6102
1-800·577-4310
Pike_
Absolutely
no
phone
baby . kids . adult clothes. Experienced lead carpenor fa~~: your resume to
household-Items and more. ters-must be familia r with al l ca lls!
1·937·695-1375
Rain or shine
pha ses at residential romod· Overbrook Center ls taking
Ya rd Sate, eling, va lid drivers license, applications tor a parl·tlme Wanted full·time, desk clerk
Community
Saturday August 30th at tools , transpor tation. and housokeepingflaundry aide, t 1pm-7am, apply In person .
45585 Eagle Ridge Road references. l ocal wo r ~ , pay mu st be able to work all Holiday lnr1, Gallipolis, This
on
experience . shills. Come in and 1111 out an Is the night Audit shift
(Rain or Shine) go north on based
Route 7 from Pomeroy Appli ca tions available at Qpp llcatlon at. 333 Page
Construction, Street. Middleport, Oh
Wallted someorle to remod·
toward Chester, turn on Christians
Eastern ·
Ave .,
el. lake plaster down &amp; put
Eagle Ridge Road at 1403
Part lime dental asslslanl pl aster back up (740)367·
Memory
Gardens.
go Gallipolis. 446·45, 4
needed lor dental sealant 7328
approx 112 mile . signs at Full Time poslllons, mostly
Intersection, Sam till when· days. Flexible schedule's. program. send resume to il;;i~-~----"1
Bo• 88. Por11and. Oh 45770 114!
8Ult1NJ.:'&gt;'&lt;;
ever. Will have toola , clothes apply between 10am- t1 am.
TRAINING
, guns, an tiques, ~ la saware. Mon-Thur-Sat,
McCtures Part t1me receptionist! clerk
Coleman
equipment, Restaurant 820 Jackson needed lor dental office
crocKs. stone jars. lots of Pike , Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1 send resume by malt only Golllpollo Coroor College
(Careers Close To Home)
good misc . furniture Don't
703 22nd St. Point Pleasant
Call Today I 740·446·4387,
Help wanted caring for the
miss 11. Call992- 1527
wv 25550
1·800·214·0452
elderly, Darst Group Home,
Garage sale. AugUst 29th &amp; now paying minimum wage ,
RN/LPN (HOME HEALTH) www.galtlpoll•c•r•erooll-o•.oom
30th, 33686 Swick Rd.
Reg jj9Q·05·1274B.
new shifts : 7am·3pm, 7am· Part or Full time, per vial! or
5pm,
3pm-11pm,
11pmhourly,401k,
cafeteria
plan,
Garage · sale· 1/4 mile off
mileage . uniform
124 on Beahan Ad . ~acroaa 7am, call 740·992·5023.
allowances. CEU rel m·
from Hill's Cluslc cars) House kee plng /L aundr y
bursement, Sam's club.
Caldwell realdence . Fri. Aug . Arbour!l 170 , Pine Crest
as SeriOUI People Wented
Health &amp; Life Ins. PTO
29 &amp; Sal. Aug. 301h, 9 00 lo Drive, Galllpo11o. Oh 45831
Who want to LOSE weiQht
which accumulates from
4:00, Lot of nice clolheal Aopear In person ask lor
we Pay You caah ror !he
first work day. Top pay In Trl·
Men &amp; women .
Linda Oennla .
pounda you LOSE I
State. Sign on bonus. 800Safe, Naturtl. No Drugs.
Huge garage aale· Fri. &amp; House ~eeplng/L sundry
759·5383
800-201·0832
Sal. Aug. 29 &amp; 30, Sam·? , Supervisor needed lor
EOE
old glassware &amp; depreaalon Gallipolis area . II Interested
glass, stone jar6 &amp; crocks , lix resume to: 613·677 · - - - - - - - - 3 rolls 4' used link fence,
740.387-0144
old sauaage atufter, hun· 8235
SCHOOL
dreds of Bitter bollles &amp; Jim
FUNDIIIAISING
ex1 2 Tilt down trailer, new
Beam collec tor boUiea, Jackson Plant-lookln~ for
Araa Olrttctor needed for
$1100. 740-446·2927
established co. tor la&lt;:al
Fenton &amp; other glaas, 3 old indulllrlet eleclrlclan mini·
5 yeara

Ranch Style JBR. 2ba ths.
caroga, Orick Scl1ool Aol:ld.
Gal lipolis. viaw photolln!or mo tion
on
lrno
nt
wwworvb.com. coclo 8t803
-or cull 740-3 67-7039

MOillt.l·: lit IIIII:-;
10 Room ho use. 7 acres at
lllH SAt .t :
land . toncod pasture . Arver
Vn lloy DIS!riCI
740-367 ·
1992 1 4~70 mobile homo, 3
0144
bOd iOOITIS, I bath, $ 10.500,
109 Mabeltn e Or · Ran ch lor (740)985-9857
sale. 1394 sq It wrth fin·
1shed full basement , 5 1994 Clayt on Mobile Home
rooms. 3 bedrooms. hoat - 14K70, 2
BA , new
ing/coollng yn s, slngte-car heat -pump.
2·Cieck s
garage, vln:ft siding ollterio r $15.500 740·24 5-9469
with deck (pati o) anachod
2000 Clayton Mobile Home,
Gallipolis
Cr ty
School
14K70, :iBA, 28 th, great
Orstricl. Priced to sale by
owner_ Call 740·446-0551 cond, all up-grades, large
back deck . $22 .000 740·
lor appointment.
379 ·2928
11 rooms. 3, 000 squnre feet.
30'K 40' ga rage . 3 bath - Cole's Mobllo Homes
rooms. in wall vacuum . 4 US 50 East. Alhen s. Ohio.
major appliances to go with . 45701 , 740·592 -1972
~ 1o me . Trn no 110a1 pump. For Sale Mobile Homo. 2Br.
must woo beloro priced. in 1 ba th call 740-256-6796
Enstorn School District. tor
appoin!mont call 740·992 - Land Homo Packages avail·
ablo. In your aroo. (740)446344\ .
3384 .
2 br Housel
HU O hOme. On ly $6,500. Mus! sell nice 2 bedroom
For listing call 1-800-719- 14)(70. Vinyl Siding and 2)(6
walls . Call KarenA 740:.3853001 Exl Fl44
9948
3 bedroom house. 4 112
acres. double garage. can· New 14 wide only $699
tral arr. wrll make your down down and only $167.98 ·per
month . Call Nikki 740.385·
payment. (740)985-4288
76.71
4BA house and 69 .9-acres
Brick 3200 sq-11., new home, New 2003 Doublewrde. 3 BR
Clark Chapel Ad. $265k, &amp; 2 Balh . Only $1695 down
and &amp;295/mo. l -800 -6 9 t ·
740-256·1226
8777
8ul avl lte Pike, two-story, J
bOOroonrs, 21/2 baths, living No Problem Sale- Want a
roorn, dln rng room. tamlly now sectronal home? No
room , gam e roo m, 2 ca r Pro blem . Need foundation
yarago wilh 3 car unat - and septic? No P10blem.
tached. pool. one acre. Neod utilities run or drive$165,000.00 740-446-8050 way? No Problem. Want big
---~----, · savings on fl 2003 model.
No Problem. Cole's Mobile
Homos. U S. 50 East.
.-Athens. Ot1io. 740-592· 1972
Srnce 1967 , Where You Get
Your Money's Worth

on. "

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Gold
Coins.
Sil ver.
Proolsets. Diamonds, Gold
Rings.
U.S. Currency. M.T. S_ Corn ShOp, t 51
Second Avenue. Ga llipolis,
740·446-28 42.
I \11'1 0\ \II\ I
..,, 1{\ It I ..,

l'.iO--•WiAillioiiiill'iii'D--'

'Ill ))n

D&amp;J Plcky Palnler1
Free Estlmatos. Interior an
exterior painting. Give your
home or garage a trash
new look. We paint homes.
garages. mobile homes.
buildings. barns and roofs .
Licenced and Insured.
(Coli M· S, H)
(304)895·3074
20 Years experience
and referenc:ee.
Do you want io come home
to a clean horne 1
I can help you II I want to
clean homos in th e GaU1polls
VIcinity, I have 20 years oxp.
1 ca n givo rei. call ~ 740)256·
1482 if nn an::wer please
leave message
Ekperlenced
Carpenter and Gardner.
Has own tools &amp; Mowing
equipment.

NO JOB ISrO
BIG OR SMALL.
Call 304-578-3320 or
call 304·593-1 719
tf no answer leavQ.&gt;fflessaQe
all calls will be answered or
returned as soon ns possl·
ble.
Mother of 2 will babysit Day
shift only. Fenced In yard on
Sandhill . (304)895·3774

r

All raal aatate advartlalng

in thll ntWI PIPer II
eubj.c:l to the Ftderal
Fair Houelng Act of 19611
which m1kt1 ltllltgal to
lldveru.. "any
preference, limitation or
dlecrimlnatlon bated on
reca, color, rallglon, Mil
familial atatue or nttlonal
origin, or •nv Intention to
maka any euch
preferen ce, limitation or
dlecrlmlnatiOn ."
Thle newa,.per will no!
knowingly tccapl
tdvartlat!T1tlnte fDr ralll
..tate which 11 In
violation of the law. Our
reltdere
hareby
Informed th .. all
dw•lllng• tdvertlud In
1hle newepaper era
•velltble on tn •qual
oppor1unlty b.....

•re

III Il lSI•:-;
mKRt-:NT

HOME'
mKSAI.E

~~-~~-

WANrEil .
m lltJ\.

floor model radios, old qull1 mum

IUKS!.U:

Sl6~ oF A SERIOVS Ft-E'A

Ya rd Sale - libby Fisher
Ye llowbush Road. Racine
Tue-Wod September 2&amp;3
(Formerly VMH Ladies Aux)
l ots of Bra nd New stulf

hOme Upper At 7 In Chesire ,
Aug,29 misc. household

Fol INil

Mall or drop off thla coupon along with a copy of your pholo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.'O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

YAKI&gt;SALE-

1

""""''""'I

r

LO!"'"T ANU

City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~--~---------

J014

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlthlng rtHrvtt tht right to tdll, rtjtct, or cancel any ld alan~ time. Errore mutt be rtported on lht llrll day of

·rrlbunt·S.ntlnti·Regltler will 1M rnpooalbltlor no mort tllln lht cotl of thtlpiCt occupltd by lht error and only the flrtllnnrllon. Wt thtll not bt
11ny loll 01 IIpenM thlt r.. unt from lht publlcttlon or omlttlon ot an adv..-tlttmtnt. Correction wm ~ made In the llrtl tvtllablt tdiUon. • Bo•
trt always confldtnlltl. • Current rale card applltt. • All r..l 111111111 ldvartiMmanta Ira aubjectto lhl Federal fllr Houalng Act of HlfiiJ. • Thll
acCitptl only h~lp want.ct ada matting EOE attndarda. We will not knowingly accept any advartlelng In vlollltlon of the law,

made by me. Maci l 0 . Arnold Drive. Bidwell
and 3. BAM til SP M
Haydo n
Garage Sale. Sat 30. 5765 Ya rd Sale: September 4th
S1. At 325. 8am -2pm
9am·4pm September Slh
Gti'EAWAV
lrvins Glass 1273 Eastern 9am ·3pm Wolf Pen,
Ave. Aug 30 9-Spm . Name Pomeroy (Russell's)

Are you 65 or older?

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

y &gt;\KI&gt; SA.t~GAUJt~H .L~

yr. old . to good
(740)446· 774 1

···················-----------------------------Subscriber's Name - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - -

In Next Day'• Paper
hu•d•'V Jn• Column: 1:00 p .m.
For Sund•y• Paptir

I will not be responsible lor dinette-set. recliner. lots of Ya rd Sale 230 Ru1la.nd
any debts other than those chlldre ns clothes &amp; toys, 82 Strae1. Middleport Sept 1,2,

Help Wanted

Norris Non11u1

on

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

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

Dally Jn•Column: 1 : 00 p .m.
Monday ~ Frlday for tn•ertlon

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Detcrlptlon • Jncfude A Price • Avoid Abbrewllttons
-J:nclude Phone Number And Addrt~n When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Dave

Big Garage Sale
922 Jericho Ad . Cheshire
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit OH.
Aug .
28·29·30 .
for sale. Chester Township, Everything must gol RartV
Meigs County. send letlers shine.
or Interest to: The Daily
Moving-Sale,
Sentinel, PO Bo~t 729·20. First · Time
Furmture. sink, decoratingPomeroy, OhiQ 45769.
items. clOthes. good-quality,
Comprehensive
Piano 36 Vinton Avenue. Gallipolis.
Instruction. Children or Aug 29-30, 8:am
Adults, Inquire 740-4462272 . Charles A. Murray, Fri-Sat only, 3 miles out 588
Gallipolis. Ohlo. (Ne~t l door 1 !rom town 9am-?
oHMCj
Garage
Sale
Fri-Mon.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Help Wanted

Word Ads

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

Milwa uk ee Brewers and Cincinnati Reds
players stand around the field during a nineminute false fire ala rm in the top of the second inning Wednesd ay in Cincinnati. A video
showmg flames plays on the scoreboard
video screen in background. Dirt th at had
accumulated in a s moke detector tripped
the device and set off the alarm, Reds
s pokesman Rob Butcher said. (AP)

~egister

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Call us at:·(740) 992·2155
Fax us at: (740) 446·3008
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classlfled@mydallytribune.com
classified@ mydallysentlnel.com

Office !fo~~

innin~s.

Rehever Glendon Rusch allowed two hits
in I 2-3 innings. Leo Estrella gave up two
hits in a scorefess eighth and Luis Vizcaino
pitched a scoreless nmth .
Seth Etherton ( 1-2 ) allowed six hits, three
walks and four runs in 5 1-3 innings in his
third National League start after being promoted from Triple-A Loui sv ille on Au g. 16.
Consecutive doubles with one out bv Wes
Helms and Keith Osik snapped a 2-2" tie in
the sixth inning. Brian Reith reli eved
Etherton and gave up an infield single hy
Royce Clayton, and Milwaukee loaded the
bases when Reith mishandled Franklin's saL'ritice bunt for an error.
Podsednik capitalized with a two-run dou ble and Keith Ginter capped the scoring with
:1 sacrifice tly.
"They were giving us an out, and we didn' t get it," Reds manager Dave Miley said.
"If we make the play on that bunt , we have
more options than you have with bases
loaded and one out. Those are mistakes you
can't make when you're not scoring a lot of
runs ."
Ruben Mateo gave the Reds a 1-0 lead in
the first with an RBI single.
The Brewers responded in the second with
Clayton's one-out walk, Franklin'.-. sacrifi•e
bunt and Podsednik 's RBI single.

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

lms&amp;
AcKK\1:1·:
5 acres lor sale . Groat toea lion oil Kerr Rd .. 2 m1les
!rom AT 35 and Holzer
Hospital. 10 mrnulas !rom
downtown. (740)388·8972
Country Land
Country Living
Country Fu n

n llOl\!10. lull bD!IO·

melll. t ro uaa. contrnl air.
biQ
11d .
hunl.lrcal)ped
occo Mo 2 nulos out ot
Poruu 1d $400 oo month.
740-843-5128
~33 Soco nd Avo . 2-sto(y
houso 2BA. 1ti2Boltl , lurnlshod kllchon . WID hookup. oil stroot ~a rk.mg . wntk.
unywhore dOwntown . t2
mon ths rnin . $545. montt1.
10ll&lt;lep, no pels. 740-4464926

For Aont· N1ce 4 BR home

nea r A10 Grando $7 50.00
pa1 month
Dep osit and
Rntmences required Call
W1somnn Real Estate a.t
740·446-3644
Ho me hom S 199tmonth
toroclosure homes 4%
aown. 30 years ar 0.5 % apr.
4 IIsling s ca ll 800·319·3323
ext t709.
Small 38R house, 47 t12
Sp ruco Streot, Galllpolls
$400/depo sll, $400fmonth
740·446 -0332
...,...,,..,..--,,.,..-.....,
420 Momu·: J·lo~u:'

·--~~H-IRI.iiRiii•:N
-1'-.,t
14x70 :2BR. 2btlfh, No pots,
RIO GrAndO 740-44 6-9964
or 339·1556
1996 14x76
2BA. 2BA,
CIA, 8. WfO. no pets . renl
$400/rno
sale S15.000,
740-446 -1062

2 Bedroom mobtto homo In
Middleport
$350 . plus
doposrt No In side pets
(740)992 ·3194
-------2 bedroom . all electric. A!C.
Sprr ng Valley area.
1n
$325/rn onth, $250fdeposrt
(304)675·2900 or ~740)4 41 6954

2 BA , pertecl , arr, porch,
very nice. 740·446·2003 or
740·446· 1409
3br mobile home wl1h wfd
Located
In
Glenwood
(304) 576-9991
Two Mobile Hornes. both
2BA . wulerft ra sh/sa wag8
pn ld , no pets.
$400
rent l $400dop os l! ,
$28 5ren11$285rlep
7·10·
368·9325

440

AI'AK1'MENIS
tllR Rt-:N r

1 Md 2 bedroom aparl·
ments. turnrshed and unturRecreational Land &amp; Scenic
ntstred. security deposit
Homesltes available
requ ired . no pet s, 740-992·
throughout Southern Ohio
2218

GALLI A COUNTY
FEATURES

1 BA wllh stove end refrloer·
ator. startlnQ at $290/mo. •
deposit 740·441 · 1:122

l:ioma &amp; Hunting
Land ava ilable In lhree 1 BR . CIA. Quiet Location,
Willing to slt with an elderly
areas. 3 to 33 acres. wilh on nea r Holzer. WID Hookup.
person . 5 days a week .
11 +acre
tract touching $359 .00 plus utltrllee:~. lease
hours 7am-5pm, no week·
Wayne National Forest
&amp; dopoBit required . no pots
ends. call(740)949·2722
House tor sale 1n Ohio
740 -446·2957
3 br. ln Oakhlll on a nice lot Owner Financing Avallable.
11'\\ \. tl\1
1br All uti lities Included .
$85 ,000 owner lin. available Call for FREE mapsl
100·213-1311
$325 . inonlh t304)875·3854
S5000 .down &amp; $399. par.
mon.740·256-t686 or 740www.countrytyme.com
2·BA , 2 bath, living-area .
339·0387
Lot lor sa le In Ra cine, and kitchen. A!C, and appll·
ancas. $400. call 74D-44flMeadowbrook Drive 3bl . !740)992·5858
INOTIC!I
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH · 2ba . Hardwood floors, large New on ma r~et. Beautiful 5+ 48M

:.:..;;=:..==----

family room. Private, tenced
acres Country aetting, 5
bee~
yard.
· and
min from hospital and 1111
gorogo.(3041875·1303 ·
amenlllea. Homesite ready
New Home 3BA , 2baths, 2 with atone d driveway and
Tlmb,r, ae rl ou1
car garage , Debbie 01lve , water.
740-446 Gallipolis, view photo/lnlor· lnQulrlea only.
matlon
on
line 0908 or 740·645·0244
www.orvb.com, code 8t903
Nice mobile home Iota. quiet
or ca ll 740·245-9268 alter
country ~ettlng . St\5 pe r
Darst Adult Orouo Home 5pm
month, Include• water,
has a vacancy tor a male or Ranch Style 3BR , 2batha, sewer, trash, 740·332·2167
1ome1o. call 1740)992·5023 garage, Brick School Road,
Ul \I \I ..,
Oaltlpotls, view photOIIntorTURNED DOWN ON
matlon
on
line
Ill
SOCIAL SECURITY /881? www.orvb.com, code 81803
No F.te Unless We Wln l
HoustN
or ca ll 74D-367·7039
1·888·582·3345
lUll R•:Nr
Remodeled 3 bedroom, 1
112 bal h ln good neighborCleM 2 br . hOuse In
hOod 1n Middleport (740)
.
Pomeroy. $400 mo . plus
992 -77 43
or view at deposit, (740)698-72 44
www orvb comll 81503
lNG CO. recommends thet
you do business with peopto
you ~now, and NOT to send
money through the malt until
you liave Investigated the

I~

. I

--·- --------------- ---

2BR apt . $375/mo ultllltea
Included,
$300/depoaft ,
740·992-2274
Apartment Availa ble Now
t:~ r verBend
Place
New
Haven . wv now acceptin g
appliCations lor HUD-subaldlled . 1 be droom apart ·
mont Utllrtlea Included Call
~ 3 0,.)882 - 3121
Apar!me nt
aveltftble tor qualtftea sen IOr/drsabled person . EHO
Apan ment lor rent in
Syracuae . $200 depoelt ,
$3~ 5 per month. mutt have
sufficient Income to Qualify,
1740)378·6111
Modern 1 br apt (740)4,.6·
0390

�....
Thursday, August 28, 2003

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel•

www.mydailysentlnel.com

APAR11\ID{f5
FOKRmr

$.400 deposit
4450 per 9 162 . Free Estimates. Easy
month 446-2205 or 446- financing, 90 days same as
cash . Vis a/ Master Card .
9585 Ask for Virgi nia
Drive- a- little save alot.
"BEAUTIFUL
APART· .
MENTS
AT
BUDGET Refrigerator $75 .. Whirlpool
PRICES AT JACKSON Washer $95.. Kenmore
ESTATES, 52 Westwood dryer $125., G.E. relrigeraQrive from S297 to $383 . tor.
like
new,
$195.,
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call Kenmore Washer /d1yer set
740·446-2568 .
Equal $300 .. 3-couchs· $50. each.
Housing Opportunity.
table 4-chairs, $95., King SIZe
box-spring/manress
For Lease: Beautiful, 1600 $100., chesL'dresser wfmirSQ.Ft. , restored, second
ror $140.
Skaggs 740·
tt oor apartment 1n Historic
446· 7398
District, Ideal for protession- - - - - - - - al couple . a ll modern
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
amenities. 2 bedrooms;
Aepair-675-7388. For sale,
spacious living/dining: lots
re-conditioned automatic
of storage, 1112 baths; rear washers g dryers. refrigera deck; HVAC. $600)month
tors . gas and electric
plus utilities. Security and
ra nges. air conditioners. and
key depos 11. No pets
wringer washers . Will do
lileferences required. 7 40- repai rs on major brands in
¥6-4425 or 445·3936
shop or at you r home

For Lease : one bedroom.
unfurnished. newly redecorated, second floor Apt. at
corner of Second and Pine
,"AJC : $300.00 per month;
water included . security and
:~ey deposit Ott street park:-

Used Furniture Store. 130
BUiaville Pike. Mattresses,
dressers,
couches.
bunkbeds. bedroom suites.
recli ners.
Grave
Monuments. 740-446-4782
Gallipolis. Oh Hrs 10-4pm.

__

i
- - - - ....

·lng. References Required.
:~o pets. 740-446-4425 or
-446·3936

.:S,::to~p.;B.;.y------,

"Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport
tlrom $278-$348. Call 740·
-992 -5064. Equal Housing .
:Qpportunilies.

_..

ANllQU~:S

._
Buy or sell . Riv erine
Ant1ques. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992·2526 Ru ss Moore ,
owner.
-------Moving Sale 8/30·911 Mise
:Honeysuckle Hills Apts.
turniture ,1reezer.treadmi ll,to
Located on Colonial ·Dr. ols.mtsc-ilems. 34580 Crew
behind Highway Patrol Post Ad , Pomeroy. 9am/4pm
on Jado:son Pike 1 &amp; 2 br.
rent starting $255. low &amp; j540 MISCEU.ANto:OUS
·moderate income . Equal
MERCHANDL.~E
Hous1ng Opportunity 740446·3344 TDD 1·800-75Q- Cool Down!!
Central
0750.
Cooling Systems. New and

Lg. 3 br. over Huttons Car Used. Installed. (740)446Wash . $500. per mon. all 6308
util. included el!cept elec.
JET
304-675· 7255 or 304·372·
AERATION MOTORS
6094
Repaired. Nevv &amp; Rebuilt In
New Haven 2 Apt. 3br turn. Stock:. Call Ron Evans. 1$400../mo. 3br unfurnished 800·537 -9528.
$300..',mo. A.clults only. No
Pets. Call 304-675-4340 ext
Lawn mower trailer . 5118
1263
(heavy duty). 50 inch tall Now Ta king A p p l i c ati o n ~- gate, ramp 1n good cond ..
35
West 2
Bedroom good tires. new spare never
Townhouse
Apartments , used (740)245-0460.
Incl udes Water
Sewage,
Trash. $350/Mo., 740-4460008
Plea sant Valley Apartment NEW AND USED STEEL
Are now taking Applications Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
Concrete.
Angle,
for 2BA . 3BR &amp; 48A . For
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Appli ca tions are take n
For
Drains.
Monday thru Friday. from Grating
Driveways
&amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
9:00 A .M.-4 P.M . Office is
Located at 1151 Evergreen Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wed nesday &amp;
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Friday. Sam-4 :30pm . Closed
Phone No is (304)675·5806
Sa turday
&amp;
Thursday,
E H.O
Sunday. (740)446-7300
Townhouse
Tara
Apartments. Very Spacious.
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
1/2 Bath. Newly Carpeted ,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Security
Deposit Required . Days :
74
740-367-0502.
- 0-·4_4_6_-3_4_8,1:_E_v_e_ni_n_
9•_·
-

Country Produce Market
Potatoes.
Tomatoes,
Melons, Corn. etc. in season. Troyers Woodcraft 9
miles west of Gallipolis
along St Rt14 1
Home Grown Red Pontiac
Potatoes $8.00. Per sack.
(3041675-2745
sale
PotatoeS
lor
(Kennebec, Red Pontiac) .
Mon-Sat. . 65002 State
Route 124, Reedsville. Oh.
50# $10
Ye s were gonna have Fresh
Freestone peaches from
Romney at the Farmers
Market Saturday Aug, 30.
Also sounds of bluegrass
playing -1 0-Noon also.
I \R \ 1 "' 1'1'1 II""~
.\II\ I "IIH h.

r

LIVE.'o"lOCK

3yr old Mare Appalossa
Pasa mix . Chocolate wlwhite
spots, saddle/bridle broken.
Follows
commands.
(304)937-2281
Limousine show cattle tor
sale. 2-black . 2-red . reg
740-256-6089
Mm1ature Donkeys
446-1158

r

740·

HAY&amp;
GRAIN

Hay Round Ba1ls, $20. 740379-2989
11 ~\\ ... 1'()1{

1 \110\

2000 Buick Century $3,995. 95 Nissan Pathfinder 4x4 ,
5-spoed, $2600.
1997 Ply Breeze $2.395.
97 Ford Ranger 4~.:4 $4600.
1994 Saturn $2,195.
96 Ford EKplorer 4K4 $4200.
We Take Trades
B &amp; D Auto Sales HWY 160
Cook Motors
N. 74Q-446·6865
740-446-0103
2000 GMC Sonoma 32 ,000
actual miles, loaded. excellent condition. (7 40)446 4385

2002 · Lincoln LS ve, one
owner, onlY 2,700 mlletl
Crimson blue with black
leather," options include key·
less entry, dual clima te control . power windows, locks.
seats, mOonroof. automatic
wipers . fog lampS, Alpine 6
disc changer and more.
Under Lincoln wa rran ty
through 50,000" miles. New
$41 .000+.
pr1ced
at
$30.990
Call (740)379·
9420 or (7401645·3060

1994 Yamaha Warrior. lots -o f
new parts. ready to ride call
(740)992-2309 or 74Q-5918587

Qxn;

•

J ;,

K 6 2
Eu1
410 A .1 8

• J s " :.:
t 9 G2

+

9 I 3

South
"' 9 4

.A 9863
ti\QI081

"' 5

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: East-West
\Vts l

,. '.! .

4•

BUilDERS InC.

Pn ss

North
Pass

Ea!llt
r a~s

2.
Pa s:;

PKS!l
Pn s~

olo
'------------....1
Opening lead:

New Homes • Vinyl

Siding • New Garages

A

port

54 Nuclear
58 Perseus foe
59 Once and
twice
60 Red Ink
61 Uncanny

DOWN
1 Drink like
Rover
2 Seine alghl
3 Proposal
4 Harvests
5 Tlckt off
6 Mr. Spack

- Durocher
23 From,
lo Frllz
25 Charged
particle
27 Clammy
29 - out
7 Former
(withdraw)
NOW cause 28 Winfrey of
talk ahowa
30 Mine yield
8 Garden
31 KLM dalum
32 Klutz•• cry
bloom
33 Fix a ..em
34 Not e'en
9 Thin
35 Hwy.
once
11 Fr. holy
39 Regulale
36 Hockey
woman
goal
12 Beneficiary 41 "Faull"
creator
37 Part of UK 13 " Vol·•
38 Tijuana
17 Heavy rains 44 Whll
Ms.
t9 Collar situ 46 Delight In
47 "Big Blue"
40 Old horse 20 River
48 Tall grasa
42 Understood
mammal
49 Factfon
43 Rewrl1e
22 Baseball's

51 Slrow ltom
53 CIUII
.
1 bllalor
55 Coomonaut
opact lab

56 He111,
In Connoo
57 Decent
grodt

Mr"""''!'...,--

• Rcplaceml!nt
Windows • Roofi ng
COMMERCIAL and
By l'hllllp Alder

RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

As I mentioned yes terday, the Open
Trial . he ld la s t June in
Memphis. Tenn .. was won by Doug

Te&lt;~m

740.992-7599

Duub -

Adam Wild avs k v, St eve

Landen - Pralap HRjadhya.kshn an d
Dan Morse - Bobby WOlff. with Rrtlph
Cohen as t hei r nonplaying captain .

Advertise

Tree Service
Top .· Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

in this
spacefor$100
per month.

will piny in the Bermuda BuWI
world tea m championship in Mon te
Crtr lo neKt Novem ber. T he United
States will have two teams cmnpclilljit.

T hey

: BARNEY

the.second being Nick Nickell - Dick
Freeman , Jerf Mec kstroth - Eric

WITH THAT, AT

OAYS
I MISS MY

llod well arrd Bob Hamman - Paul
Solowa y , wh o won the first trial ~ast
ycnr . If these two teams mee t. there
will probnbly be some tension because
Hamman and Wolff won six world ti·
ties ns pnrtners.

LEAST l COULD
SWALLERTW

OL' STILL
!I

Uoub m;ule life hard for his opponents on this tleal from the trial finaL

Often when vou have

it

t wo -suite r

~111.1 find a fit iil one suit, il is

Dean HiD
New&amp;Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

IMPORTS
Athens
DRING IN THIS AD

I. ~ INSTA-CA$H jtl
FO R ONLY S1l 00 PrH HU NIJHHJ

l1Wj

GEt Cash Today

~l

Bring your
1
'Last chocking sta1oment
I
'Last pay chock atub
I
1 'Pholo I.D. 'Phone Bill with name and address I
1
116 Main St,
I
Pomeroy OH
I
740 992 CASH (2274)

1-800-822-0417

~arket

I HOWARD £
-:WRITESEL

Sept. 5th .. 6th

Maplewood Lake *ROOFING
on St. Rt. 124
*HOME
BetJVeen Racine
IAINTEIIANCE
&amp; Syracuse.
I dEAMlESS
Large spaces
GOnER
$7.50
-rtrfrtll hiiiiiiiS-rtr
740-949-2734
949-1405

21ft
Cubic refrigerator,
M USICAt
rraezer
on
top,
1ce- ·-oiiNsiiiii
.ITRriiiiU
iiiMiiEN"
ii'loiirsiro
· _.J
maker/water sprout, $350 '
740-388-8658
Ludwig Jet Pak Snare Drum
kit. includes snare drum with
Floor Lamp $5.00. 2 match· height adjustable stand ,
ing end table lamps, brass. practice pad, and 2 Lud wig
$15.00, Black couch leather 28 drum sti cks .
$200
toilerod. $75.00 (304)675· (740)446·1425 evenings, or
2034
leave message.

\ ••

'\l

flf;.

, 1i

affordable and easy it is to

• Go Karta • Mini
Bikes

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
32119 Welshtown Rd .

Pomeroy, OH 45769

740-992·2432

•

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
Box

189

BINGO 2171
·Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

there Is the leas! resistance . Instead ol
a"empting to buck a rising lide, you'll go
further taster by flowing with events.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Be protective ol you r matorial inte rests t oda~. but
not to the poi nt to where you cross the
tine and take advan tage of ano the!"s vul·
nerRbility. Cut .a deal that' s fa1r for all.
LI BRA (Sepl. 23·0 ct. 23) __:There's A pos-

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI
Let me :Jo it fer youl

~7(~

High&amp; Dry

in this
space

for

$75
per
montli

33795 HilandRd.
Pomeroy,Ohio

740-992-5232
THE944
STORE
Salvage
Parts &amp; Cars
County Rd. #35
Racine, Ohio

(740) 517·9138

or
(7 40) 949·0020

gent today without reRiil ing it. You might
even get away with 11. unless you run into
someone who is equally as unyielding.
SCO RPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221- Noml811y.

SOMETIMES ..
EVER'( NOW AND
THEN ••• ONCE IN

TI-lE BEST

T~IN6 ABOliT
5C~OOL IS

All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

S FREE

'I'MD TO 6REET
'l'OV!
-'""'""'

--=-- BETTY

00011! tJOW -nltY 1RE

a.

• VInyl Siding • Pointing
• P1tlo tnd Porch Dtcka

'i\i\S IS pp,my
COMI'EI.~ll'leo
~I-E-VISION,
I~N'liT'?

· Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

C :2003 b~ NE.-. . lnc. WWW.C01'11tCI .COm

SUCING Off A 8UI'lc.K
OF ~&amp;P.SKIN ...

so,

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb . 19) - You

IT'S ~IK~
GOING
TO "!HE
TAILOR

FOR

A~~AATI OflS

'fES,
TO

THE

"BtR1110AY
SUIT'

MYERS PAVING
Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

. GARFIELD

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

I L.IKE
CEL.ERY

(10rx10r 610'x20')

(740) 992-Jlg4
ggz-6635

•

THE GRIZZWELLS

ROBE.IT
BISSEll

co•m•cnoN
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

741-192-lm
Stop &amp; Compare

tnlght get a little miffed today with some·
one who owes yo u a favor of long stand·

FGPPUJ

•
PREVIOUS SO LUTION - ""It is bailer to enlertain an Idea lhen
to lake it home lo live wl1h you lor lhe re sl of your lite."
-

Randal l JarreH

harrango l•ttert of
0 lour
&amp;erambled wordt

th•

be·

low ro form four simple words.
..---------,

~-,..=-B-'i-0-:-"HrE-'iL'-:;-'8'-r--i
1

1

II

1

12 1

I CI'A M TI"H I
1

·

1

.

~'"

My nephew had graduated

I P EQ N
°1 f
rom co llege and was going to be
5 I~
a Certified Public Accountant. I got

I I 1

7

'-::::::·=~·~-=~-~-~:~.,a

plaque for him that read : "This

L ERRAY

1I I I I

0,

c

1

h1s buddy and sa1d . "'You ne'ler profit from the m1stakes
you make at the RACETRACK."

ing. This person Is likely to come up with~===~----~---~;::======~~
more excuses than th e energy It would
take to keep his or her promise.
shenanigans.
PISCES(Feb. 20-March 20)- lmportant GEMI NI ' (May 21 -June 20) commercial transactions are better tabled Comp etition will be the name ol the game
today until anotller lime when those tod ay, especially concerni ng career mal·
involved aren' t so heated up over trivia. If ters, and II will bfllmportant that you don't
you Can , put oil your negoti ations until lei anyone draw you into e dogfight. Be
ne~~:t wee k.
above It all.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19)- The past CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Someone
few days may hAve put you in a negBtive who Is envious of your accomplishments
frame ol mind, so it isn 't likely your heart mig ht engage In some game -playing
wil l be In yoln work today . You mig ht today in order to try to make you look
wani to shelve Anyth ing impo rtant unlit bed . Don't be tricked into respon ding to
another day .
this person 's sour-grapes attitude
tAURUS (April 20 -May 201 - 11 you are LEO (J uly 23 -Aug . 22)- Discussions
participating In a social actiiJity today and with friends today over personal phlloso. ~. '
someone who likes to gat peoples' goal phles Is not the forum tor aolvlng world
'•.
Is among the group, you 'd be«er put on pro\l.le ms, so don 't get drawn Into one .
your thick skin In order to ha ndle these Issues are likely to gel to the boiUng point.

Classlfleds

Results.

1"HAT'5 WHY l'VE 17RE55EI7
1"HI5 STAL.K UP IN ITS OWN
L.ITTL.E OUTFIT!

CANNIBAU

.

SOUP TO NUTZ

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

g7 Beech St.
middleport, OH

0 A V

Fast

878-2487 or 448-1111

Advertise
in this
spacefor$25
per month .

~

KN~IZEBN

\

Get

Henderson, WV

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

G

A E T D C

0

S

ACROSS T14E

• Room Addltlont &amp;
Remodeling
• New Oaregea
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing Gutter•

X J 0 H U

I

A WHI~E ...

'iOliR D06 RACE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

XJOHU .

you're seldom hesltanlto be ol sorv; ce lo 1f---..-::--r-,..--,.-...--II·C-P_A_w_ o_ n_ ·~ ret1re he'll just lose his_
a pal when you're in a position to help.
However, you might lind these types of
1
'
7
omp eta tne chuckle queted
requests an ln!ruslon on your tIme todtty.
.
by filling in the miuin~ wordt
SAG ITTARI US (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 t ) - Just '--'--.L..-L-..1--'-ol.-1 you dev'!lk:p from step No.3 below.
becau se you like people who hol d dillerPRINT NUMBE RED LEITERS t
ing opinions doesn't mean others will tol·
IN l HE5E SQU,\RES
erete them AS w11111 . If yo u·re pulling
toge th er a gat11enng. be sure the particiUNSCRAMBLE LETrERS TO
pants' politics aren' t too clashing.
GET ANSWER
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . t9 ) - Be
careful how you go about sa tisfyin g a
goal today. especially if it involves stomp·
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
ing on someone else's ob jective .
Cooker- Decay- Crazy· Mortar· RACETRACK
Competition is one thing , but obliterating
Looking at his empty wallet. one old tirner tu rned to
another's work is quite another.

COMIN6 !-lOME,
AND t-IAVIN6

Bonanza Get

A G B 'H

sibili tythatyoucoutd beabittoosell ·imlul- ~

PEANUTS

6:30
Last Thursday of
every month

&lt;blr &lt;Birthday:

In the year ahead. your greates\ opportu·
nities are likely to develop In areas where

(740) 843-5264
Pomeroy Eagles

AstroGraph
Thursday. Aug . 28. 2003

Mlddle~rt

CELEBRITY CIPHER

good

hiS spade losers . The heart queen was
run to Wesl's k in~ . Sout h ruffed the
next club , played n diamond to dummy's kin g. finessed the hear t 10.
played a hcurllo his nine, cashed the
heart tlcc. &lt;f nd rnn th e diamonds for
his co ntra ct.
At the other table , South mad e
thre e hearts exactly after West did
switch to spades at trick two.

"BIG NATE

Pom1roy, Ohio

Self-Storage
Advertise

BOOK Ot-1. Tf&gt;.-l'E: 7

get the coverage you need.

in this
'
space for $1 00
per month.
Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

~

BUT WI-\'! DO YOU!&lt;:. LIPS f'ICVE.
1--Jf-lf.N. 'IOU~ U :'lTE.l'.II-IG \0 r._

t1

by Luis Campos
idea to show the other s uit !'io that
p&lt;lrlner ca n decide what to do if th e
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past.an.d prt!sent. Each lener in the cipher stands lor another.
nppon ent 5 hid hi gher . ll e rc. th ough,
Today"s clue: N equals Y
Duub ISouth l fell that H he jumped
~t rai g ht to g~me , he had a good
chance to sile nce th e oppo5ition. who
0
X G K
HJGOBUC
0
might do well inn black suit.
... 0 S
After cas hin g the club ace, We st
continued with th e club queen. lGh•cn X E T 0 C
X J 0 H U
JUG DON
the au ction. it is hard to rind the vit&lt;ll
spade shifl.l Dcdarer won with dtun ·
HZOBPK
HZGH 0
nw's dub kinJ( and di scarded one of P E E C

Let me sholl· you how

Advertise

WE REPAIR
• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
•Cheln Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers

r

'
' · ~ Don ' t leave the debt of
~1
., j
burial and linal expenses
Z.._'ft;;;..· ~·~· ~
for your ramlly und
, .~-q ~.;;)~· ·
loved ones.

YOUNG'S

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

~

c·

ll .i/1 Hold 1:or .ill Dap

flea

THE BORN LOSER
. .
~
YCO'Il-.E. t-IOT Tf-1.€. ONLY P€R~ .
Wf-I.CY.£. U~ MOVE. Wf-1.\LE:.
~1'-.0\~G r-., BOOK ...

·r

·w .v ·s #I Che\y. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van

I

1

I

K 7 3

... ~ Q J l 0 B 7

BISSEll

"I IH It I "

992·2155

K

South

!1W

NO MAllER
WHAT YOUR
STYLE. ..

•

TFN

1991 Chevrolet S 10 P1ck:up,
mRSALE
look:s &amp; runs good, ps, auto·
malic, bed liner &amp; cover
' CE IMPOUNDS. $2.100.
$500 POLI
(304)675-5253
Tool Box lor mid-size pickHondas.
chevys ,
etc!
up, white 2yrs old like new
cars/trucks from $500. For For Sale: 1994 S· tO P1ckup with keys
$50, or best
listings 1-800-719-3001 ext truck. cus tom coach pack- oller(740)379-9122
3901
age. Fender flares and runCAMPERS &amp;
- - - - - - - , - - ning boards. Loaded with
1990 Che rry Caprice S.W., lots of extras. No oi l leaks or
MmuR Ho~m&gt;
50,000
mile
on engine oil consu mptions.
engine,$1000, Buck-stove- Runs great, must see and 1998 Yellowstone Camper
fire-place-inserU34" blower drive
to
appreciate. 22 ft ., $ new tires, ref, air,
$250. 740-44 6-791 1
(304)675-3471
heat. very good • co nd.
$4000. 740-388·8743
1990 Chevy Beretta, 3.1 V-6
Full length running boa rd for
auto, good cond. (740)44 6F-150 Ford truck extent cab. 2002 Gulfstream lnnsbruck
2115
electr ic
red
1993 Buick LeSabre. runs (740)985-3840

70

Q 10 7

t

Wf'"t
410 K 10 G 2

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

2001 1900 FA Max um open
1982 Chevy 3/4 ton, llat- bow, v..a 10, less than 20 hrs
bed, goose-neck hitch , run time. white &amp; cream
newer engin e/trans . must color ca nvas cover, $17,000.
sell $900. 740 -388-()436
(3041882-3652

Solid Wh ite
registered
German Shep. pupp1es. has
first shOts and
been
wormed . 7wks old, ask for
Tommy. (304) 882-3486

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
'SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

'MONTY

Cellular

Hours

= -------

08·2.8-03

•

+

4577 1
74G-949-2217

1

FOR 5AU :

around

52 Lebanese

14 Slulfy
scholar
15 -Seinleld pal
16 Lyrical
18 Upper
atmosphere
1~ Curious
2t Face-to·
face exam
23 ·Dye
container:
24 Isaac
Newton's
title
26 Verne
caplaln

"'tl 753

2967D Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

198 1 Honda CB 900
Custom, new tires , 13,000
miles, like new, asking
$1600. 74Q-44 1·7390

EHO

HOUSillOW

North

Hill 's Self
Storage

AUIOS

s

6 Conceal

10 UFO crew
12 Team cheer

1981 Honda CB 900 custom
, new ti res, 13,000 miles, like
new, asking $1600
740·
441 -7390

General
Home
C&amp;C
Maintenance- Painting, vi nyl
siding. ca rpentry. doors,
windows . baths. mobile
home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chet, 740·
992·6323.

45 Promise
47 104Q org.
1 Zodiac sign 50 Kidded ·

ALDER

Monmo·~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditiona l lifeti me guarantee . Local references fu r·
ni shed. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

. ACROSS

PHI LLIP

1996 Polaris Express 400,
4-wheeler, 2-wheel drive ,
94 Camaro T-Top V-6 Auto auto, loo~s good, run s axe.
$2,200 74()-669.0121
93K 53400.
98 Ford Escort 4 cyl. Auto. 1998 Super Hawk 996, 600
85K $2600.
miles. Excellen t Condition.
97 Escort tOO K $2000
sharp. $B ,OOO.
98 Plymouth Breeze 93K (304)675-3100-8:00-5:00
$2400.
(304)675-5509 alter 5.30
96 Plymouth Breeze 104K pm
$1800. 740-742-2357 740·
669-1603
For Sale
1963 Harley
Davidson XLH motorcycle.
runs good/looks good.
99 Ford Mustang $6500
$3500. 080 740·367-0399
98 Toyota Camry $4900
98 Pontiac Firebird $4800
95 Olds Cutlass 2dr. $2600.
95 Ford Probe $1750.
98 Ford Conture $2500.
DO Ford Focus 5-speed 17ft. Stinger Bass Boat. 175
hp. ready to go. $2500. abo.
$2800.
Must Sacrifice. (304)67492 Cavalier $1 200.
0698
96 Ford Contu re $1600 ..
87 Pontiac Grand Am $300.
1990 Thompson boa t 17-lf
140 horsepower Inboa rd
B &amp; 0 Auto Sales HWY 160
with fish-tinder radio/casN 740-446-6865
sette . ship/shore , bikini top
and winter cover. $6,000,
TRUCKS
740·367-0247
TOR SALE

1987 Dodge Ram Charger,
4)(4, 9" lift, 35" ti res ,3 18
1995 Ford Aspire . low miles. motor. looksfruns good
ru ns good. looks good , $2.750. 740-367-0239
46rnpg $1000 740-3881995 Ford E-350 Van, 14 ft .
8743
hi gh c ube box, excellent
p50
BuU.IJii\(;
1999 Chrysler Sebring LXI cond. 740-446-94 16
Coupo.
54 ,000
miles .
SUI,, ........
Loaded with PIW, PIL. 1997 Tahoe
4dr 4)(4
power seats. and moOnroof, $10,000, 1997 S-10 Blazer
Block. brick . sewer pipes, keyless. CO. l~athe r, and 4d r
4)(4, $35 00 . 1981
windows . lintels. etc. Claude more. Book value 1J,900 Chevy 4x4 3/4 ton $1700, 16
Winters, Rio Grande. OH priced at s12 .50o
Call ft Checkmate Speedboat
Call 740-245-5 121 .
(740)37 9.94 20 Of (74 0)645· 115hp
Mercury
$2500
1740)245-0144
I'E:rsiiiliiiii--,.1
•3011161110•1!11111!!1!111
··

r___

r:

Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applications for wailing Mi niature Yorkie, male,
li"st for Hud-subsized, 1- br, w.lpapers. 9
mo. old
apartm ent. ca ll 675-6679 (740)949·2253 alter 6pm.

\IIIH II \\IHSI

NEA Crossword Puzzle .

BRIDGE

Applicati ons being accepted Good Used Appliances. Canning tomatoes- u-pick
for very nice, clean 2 bed- Reconditioned
and $4 , we pick $6 bushel; bell
I'OOm apartment in country Guaranteed
Washers. peppers by order, $10 a
sening, yet close to town. Dryers, , Ranges.
and bushel. (740)247-4292
L.e.rge living room &amp; kitchen. Ael(lgerators , Some start at
Washer. dryer. stove. !rig, $95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 Cannmg Tomatoes. You p1ck
n .oO/bushel . We
pick
·and dish washer included. Vine St.. (740)446-7398
$5.00/bushel. Please call a
Landlord pays water and
garbage. Tenant pays elec- Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark day ahead to order. o ·Brian
tric. Total electric w!AC No Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. Farms Letart Falls 740..
J'EIIS non smokers onry (740)446-7444 1-877-830- 247-2113

Page 81

'M-\E.Rt.
~ 'N~E YeO
: 'IEST~A.Y?
.~

�'

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 28, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.c:om

Big Ten Notebook

Davenport
winning,
feeling
optimistic

Carr won't be waving Twins' Homer Hanky
B Y RusTY MtLUR
Associated Press

Imagine this scene unfolding in the
dimly lit Schembechler Hall office of
Michigan coach Lloyd Carr.
H.: has his TV tuned to a Chicago
White Sox or a Kansas City Royals
game. He's yelling, he's cheering, he's
waving a pennant.
Carr is a traditionalist who prefers
football games to be played on
Saturdays, at I :30 p.m. if at all possible.
But should the Minnesota Twins in a tight race with the White Sox and
Royals in the AL Central - make the
playoffs, the University of Minnesota
football team may have scheduling
conflicts at the Metrodome for their
home games in October against
Michigan and Michigan State.
Carr has made it clear he will play
anywhere on Oct. II - including
Green Bay or Chicago - but does not
want to play at the Metrodome on a
Thursday or Friday night, as
Minnesota officials have proposed.
Carr, and Michigan administrators,
Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany and
Minnesota officials spoke on a conference call this week to talk about, of all

CONFERENCE
things, the ramifications of a pennant
race.
"It's an issue of academics, it's an
issue of schedule parity, and .it's an
issue that we feel very strongly about,"
Carr said. "It's not like we're publicly
asking for a review of Big Ten officials
and where they live, where they spend
their vacations, we' re simply doing
something we feel strongly about in
terms of taking guys out of class ."
That last part was a not-so veile~
shot at Penn State's Joe Paterno. In
January, the Big Ten denied Penn
State's request to prevent officials from
calling games in the areas they live.
• GALLERY OPENING: One
look at Robert Gallery was enough to
convince quarterback Nathan Chandler
that Iowa was the place for him.
Gallery, 6-foot-7, 320-pound offensive tackle, hosted Chandler on a
recruiting visit two years ago.

"When you look at a guy like that
and know that he's going to be protecting you, how can a quarterback say
no?" said Chandler, no small fry himself at 6-7 and 250 pounds.
Chandler, who transferred f~om
Pasadena, C!llif., Community College,
will succeed Brad Banks as Iowa's
starter.
Gallery is the lone starter back from
an offensive line that was one of the
nation 's best last season as the
Hawkeyes went 11-2 and etuned a
berth in the Orange Bowl. He could
have declared for the NFL draft.
"It says something about the type of
person that he is that he came back for
his senior season," Iowa coach Kirk
Ferentz said. "He still feels he has
something to accomplish at this level."
Which is?
"I want to be the best offensive lineman in America," Gallery said.
• SOME PROMOTION: Want evidence of Maurice Clarett's precipitous
fall at Ohio State? He isn't permitted to
even wear a Buckeye jersey during
practices.
From Heisman hopeful to scoutteam tailback, Clarett's stock has
plummeted at Ohio State while the
NCAA and a university panel probe his
alleged financial and academic prob-

!ems.
While the negotiations continue over
his penalty, the player who scored the
winning touchdown for Ohio State in
last January's national championship
game lias the job of pretending to be
the opposin~ team's running back. This
week, he s pretending to be
Washington 's Rich Alexis.
Coach Jim Tressel was asked how
Clarett - who was held out of practices until Monday - is handling the
role of being cannon fodder for Ohio
State's fearsome f!rst-team defense .
"You know, it's not nearly as big a
drop as not being out there with your
teammates," Tressel said. "So it's probably a promotion."
It's doubtful Claret!, who isn ' t talkin~. agrees.
• TEST)' ALVAREZ: Jim Sorgi
may be 14th in career passing yards at
Wisconsin, but he 's 0-5 as a starter.
Unless you want to be part of a bigtime wrestling scene, don't go asking
coach Barry Alvarez about Sorgi's
winless streak.
"It's important for Sorgi to get a win
like it's important for our team to get a
win , and I have instructed Jim that if
anybody asks him that question to not
even respond to it because it 's a foolish
question," Alvarez said .

NEW YORK (AP) Lind say Davenport is
replacing thoughts of
retirement with hope for
a U.S. Open title .
If her mjured left foot
holds up, she just might
pull it off.
Davenport , the only
past Open champion in
the women's field. didn' t
play
perfectly
Wednesday night , but
she played well enough
to put together a 6-2, 6-4
victory against overmatched Maria Elena
Camerin, an Italian
ranked 92nd.
"The main thing is, my
toot didn't hurl , and I' m
on to the third round.
You always want to be
doing things better and
beuer at Grand Slams,"
Davenport said, and she
know s what she's talking about, having won
three such tournaments .
Roger Federer, too,
now know s what it feels
like to take to the court
as a Grand Slam champion . Kim Clijsters, still
gelling used to seeing
"No. I" next to her
name, would love to be
the proud owner of a
major title, too .
Accustomed to shaky
siarts at Slams ~ Federer
lost the first set of his
U.S. Open, then took
control against Jose
Acasuso and eventually
advanced to the second
round
when
the
Argentine quit because
of pain in his groin and
back . The official score
was 5-7, 6-3, 6-3, 2-0,
ret.
Clijsters followed in
Arthur Ashe Stadium
and had a much easier
time, beating Laura
Granville of Chicago 61, 6-1 to get to the third
round.

Bengals' Justin Smith will be on the field less
BY

JOE

KAY

Associated Press
CINCINNATI Justin
Smith is learning how to be a
spectator.
The Cincinnati Bengals
want to keep their sacks
leader on the sideline more
often this season, keeping
him fresh for late in the game.
They might need to invest in
a ball and chain to make it
work. ·
The energetic end trusts
head coach Marvin Lewis,
who built one of the best
defenses in NFL history at
Baltimore. Still, he isn't keen
on the notion of standing and
watching.
"Most of the time I' ve
played football, I've usually
heen in there," Smith said
Wednesday, coming off the
practice field. "I never came
out in college. If that's what
he wants, that's what he's
going to get, obviously.
That's what they did in
Baltimore and Washington.
You've got to do what the
man wants, and hopefully it
will work out."
Lewis is looking for a big
year our of Smith, who was

"Most of the
time I've
played football,
I've usually
been in there."
- Ben gals' defensive
lineman Justin Smith

'
the fourth overall pick in the
2001 draft. He started the last
II games that year and set a
team rookie record with 8.5
sacks.
Smith got more attention
from defenses last season,
when injuries sapped the rest
of the defensive line. He led
the team once again with 6.5
sacks- the Bengals had only
24 overall. tied for secondfewest in the league.
He also led the ·defensive

line in tackles for the second
consecutive season and was
on the field for 95.5 percent
of the plays, second only to
linebacker Takeo Spikes for
durability and dependability.
His new coach wants to
convince him that less playing time will mean more big
plays.
"We want to get Justin
accustomed to that, so that he
realizes that he's not going to
be in there on first and second
downs sometimes in the first
half," Lewis said. "The reason we're doing that is so that
at the end of the second quarter and the end of the fourth
quarter, you can go get the
quarterback. You' re fresh.''
Rebuilding the defensive
line was one of Lewis' first
priorities. He brought in free
agents Duane Clemons, John
Thornton and Carl Powell,
providing depth and experience.
The line has been a strong
point in the three preseason
games, with Smith sharing
his spot at right end.
Defensive coordinator Leslie
Frazier senses that Smith hasn' t accepted the diminished
role.

"I think over time he might,
but right now he wants to
play every down," Frazier
said. "That's how he is. He's
a very intense guy. To stand
on the sideline is foreign to
him. For our team, it's probably beller."
In his first two seasons,
Smith developed a reputation
as one of the Bengals' most
active players. Smith also has
been one of the leaders in the
weight room. He's not one to
ease up - or stand and
watch .
"It will be a little tough," he
said. "As a player, you
always want to be out there.
Hopefully it will be for the
best, to get rested a little more
between plays. I think it will
be a good adjustment."

Frazier, who was a cornerback on the Chicago Bears'
Super Bowl championship
team in 1985, is trying to convince the linemen that they're
belter collectively.
"Guys believe that the more
I'm playing , the more plays
I'll make,'' Frazier said.
"That's not necessarily true
and doesn't necessarily help
the team. If ,You're tired but
you're on the field , you're not
really making play s but
maybe every other down .
"It does take some coaching to get them to buy into the
team concept, as opposed to
individual slats. Once you get
enough guys who understand
the team concept, now you
have chance to develop a
championship team."

OUholds
off Indians, B1

ne
Record gas prices await weekend travelers

SPORTS
• Foes shooting for
Buckeyes. See Page 81

MIWSSIA RUSSEU
mrussell@ mydailytribune.com

BY

GALLIPOLIS - As drivers
gear up for travel over the
Labor Day holiday, gas prices
remain at an all-time high, leaving consumers shaking their
heads in disgust and disbelief.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Charles Schuler, 70
• Hilda Roush

Notice to Readers
In observance of the Labor
!Ydy holiday, The Daily Sentinel
will not be published on
Monday, Sept. I. Sentinel offices
will also be closed Monday.
The office will re-open at 8
a. m. Tuesday, Sept. 2.

WEATHER
80s, Low: 60.

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 9-9-1
Pick 4 day: 6-5-0-1
Pick 3 night: 2-4-4
Pick 4 night: 0-3-0-1
Buckeye 5: 6·19-27 -29-35

Dally 3: 0-4-4
Dally 4: 0-7-0-9
Cash 25: 3-4-8-12-15-24

INDEX
2 SI&lt;CTIONS -

Medium Firm
SAU

'IWin HI , , , , .SS4e
Pull .., •••••• ssee

'03 Buick Century or Olds Alero .............. '12.900
'03 Bonneville .....:.:......... _................................ 1 16.900
'03 cadillac DeVille .....................................~. 119.900
'Ol Trailblazer................._.......... ,_ .......... ~ .......... 111.900

·o:a s1o Extended cab 414 ....... :.................. '16.900

l:aee
•••••14ee

, , ••••

Kln1"'

KlniHI •••• ·••••

FREE

FREE

Delivery

Set-Up

~

IN STOCK!!
AlL PRICE
RANGES I

FREE
Parking
Tuoldlly - Saturday
9:00 1.m. to 5:00p.m.
· Monday and Frlday
9:00 1.m. to 8:00 p.m.

CLOSED SUNDAY

Wt

Serta Perfect
Sleeper Plush

SALE

tWin "' • ; •••1:a1e

...II HI

QUliN SIT

• SALE

Twin .HI •••••117e
Pull HI ••••••s..aee
Kln1 nt · •••••seee

FREE
Sheep

Calendars
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Editorials
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Obituaries
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Weather

16 PAGFS

A3
B4-6
B7

A3
A4
A6

As
BS

As
B1-4
A2

© 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACINE
Rachel
Chapman was selected as one
of 34 of the state's top senior
scholar-athletes to receive a
$1 ,000 scholarship from the
Ohio High School Athletic
, Association (OHSAA).
The daughter of C.T. and
Tammy Chapman of Syracuse
was among the recipients honored at the recent OHSAA
banquet held in Dublin.
She was nominated for the
award by Coach Scott Wolfe
and Southern High School
principal Gordon Fisher for
her "impressive work in the
classroom and her exemplary play this past season in
varsity softball." Chapman
owned a 21-4 pitching
record on a team that won
the sectional championship
with a 21-5 overall record .
In order for a student to be
eligible for an OHSAA scholarship, student~ must have had

Other business
Commissioners opened a
hid from the Shelly Co.,
Thornville. in tl1e amount of
$226,012, for paving in
Scipio
ami
Lebanon
Townships . The projects,
funded tlnough the stale's
Issue Two program, involves
paving of streets in the communities o f Harri s&lt;1nville,
P'l,gevillc and Ponland.
Comm issioners also:
• Approved . bids from
Asphalt Materials, Marietta,
and Middleport Terminal ,
Ga llipoli s. for bituminou s
materials for September;
Aut hori zed EMA
•
Direc10r Roherl Byer to
adverti se for bids for new
radio equipment, to be purchased t,hrough Homeland

Clair Muscaro, OHSAA COmmissioner, presents Southern
Loca l graduate Rachel Chapman a $1.000 scholarship fr()(Jl
the Oh io High School Athletic Association. She was one of
34 scholar-ath letes in Oh io recognized and presented schola rships at a recent banquet in Duolin.

Please see Funds, A5

675•1371

I

•

a 3.5 gmde point avemge at the
end of their seventh semester,
plus have earned three varsity
letters in one sport or four letters in two sports or more, said
Wolfe. The recipients were
selected by special committees
in each of the six OHSAA athletic districts. Recipients of athletic scholarships from NCAA
Division I or II institutions are
not eligible for the award.
This is the II th year that
the OHSAA has awarded
scholarships to outstanding
scholar-athletes.
Chapman was a four-year
letter winner for the Southern
softball team and was a threeyear varsity letter winner in
girls basketball and volleyball.
This past season she was
named Tri-Y..Uley Conference
player of the year and wa~ a first
team nominee for the second
straight year. She also earned
All-District honors in both softball and ba~ketball and earned
second team All-State, All-Ohio
in softball.

Norris Norlhup Dodge

NAME ftJRNI11JA~ AT DISCOUNT PRICES•

Ate 2, Gallipolis Ferry, WV

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Grants Office has
received a half-million dollars
in funding for down pay ment,
rehabilitation and home repair
assistance for low and moderale-income homeowners.
Jean Trussell. grunts administrator, met with Meigs
County
Commissioners
Thursday to announce the
grant award from the Ohio
Department of Development
Otlice of Housing and
Community Partnerships.
1l1e $500,000 in Community
Housing
lmP.rovement
Proe;ram funding wlll be used
10 ftmmce three separate home
improvement programs in the
county, Trussell said. The county will make available $120,000
for down payment and rehabilitation assistance tor new home
buyers, $20 I.&lt;XJO lor private
rehabilitation for rehab of
owner-occupied homes, and
$8.000 lor low-income households for limited repairs on their
owner-occupied homes.
According 10 Trussell,
ihere isa waiting list ofaprlicants for hill rehabthtat10n
and home repair. and those
who have been waiting will
be offered assistance before
new applications are taken.
The down payment and rehab
program, however, has no
waiting lisl , and applications
will be available in October.
In addition to the funding for
home repairs and down payment
assistance. the county also
received $15.000 in New
Horizon Fair Housi ng grant
funds, to be used filr a ':Teaching
Tolerance" pmgmm in the county's three high schtxlls.

Ohio Valley Bank

FREE
Layaway

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

~ aRAND

BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

BY

The Pedialric patients and stoH at Holzer Medical Center
would/ike fo lhank lhe July spons'Ors ol lhe
Earl NeH Pediafric Fund:

MAHI 1111 WIIIUII's HtSI MAIIIIISS."'

FLAIR

Housing
repair funds
awarded

?)

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

West Virginia

. Serta
Pillow Top

gaspm:es.c·om .
This site allows travelers to
post gas· prkes from aaoss
the stale during the past 72
hours. on their website.
The lowest price listed this
mnrning was lisled as $1.53
at a Speedway in Zanesvi lle,
while the lowest price in the
area was $1.69 in Gallipolis.

RACINE - Times have
changed and so has the
dairy business that the
Hamm family lives and
breathes every day. .
The Hamm family has
been in the dairy business
since 1940. Virgil Hamm,
86, said the dairy started
with 16 cows and ·today
have more than 150. But
Hamm says due to governmental regulations, illegal
imports and several other
reasons, dairy farming is not
as profitable as it used to be.
"You can't make much
money any more," com. mented Hamm.
According to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture,
in 1990 there were about
193,000 dairy farms. Last
year there were
,900, a
decline of over 52 percent.
Machinery costs and feed
prices have increased but Tom Hamm is the last of a dying breed of family dairy farmers . His family has sold milk
the price of milk has stayed since 1940. Hamm said the dairy ousiness has changed a lot since then. (J. Miles Layton)
the same, th dairy farmer
The milk accumulates in a take it to the processing tributors at around $1.10
noted. Each morning before
even the sun gets out of bed big silver tank outside the plant where it is pasteur- per gallon.
"Dairy farmers arc at 1he
at 5:30 a.m., three genera- barn. A huge IS-wheeler ized , put into containers,
and
distributed
to
to
stores
..
mercy of middle men who
tions of the Hamm family tanker truck comes daily to
In
most
places
the
going
·
control
the prices,'' he said.
drain
the
large
tank
full
of
milk more than !50 cows.
Tom
rate
for
a
gallon
of
milk
is
According
to the USDA,
milk
.
Virgil's
son,
Unlike the olden days,
cows are milked by a Hamm, 50, said in the past, abouit $3. Tom Hamm s&lt;ti&lt;.l the number of U.S. dairy
machine that sucks the 1pilk dairy farmers had more con- milk prices have not operations has been declinright out of the cow. Eight trol over the marketing and increased much since the ing, most not iceably among
. cows can be milked at a distribution of their products . 1970's. The dairy farmer small operation s. For exa m'
It used to be that local does not see but a third of pie. while the total number
time and it usually takes
between two or three hours, families would do the truck- the price consumers pay at of milk cow operations
morning and night, to do the ing of the milk, but today. a the grorery store . Humm
big tanker truck comes in to said milk is sold to the di s- Please see Farming. AS
whole herd.

hoeflich@mydallysentinel.com

Serta

Associat ion estimates thai this
holiday weekend wi ll bring out
motorists in record numbers more than 2ll million - with
most traveling 50 miles or
more from their homes.
Those planning lrips in
Ohio lhis weekend may find
some re lief on the Internet at
a site ca lled www.ohio-

Bv J. MtLES lAYToN
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

LOI'I'ERIES

QUliN SIT

up 23 ~e nts from July and 31
cents fro1&gt;1 1he same rime last
year.
''This is ridirulous." said
Terry Mason of Gallipoli s
Ferry. W.Va. " I hate payin g
this much for gas, but they
know you've go I to do i1. so
they can get away with it."
The American Autmnobile

Dairy farming sours as it ages

Details on Pap A2

QUliN SIT

According to the U.S .
Department of Energy, retai I
gasoline prices soared to a
record $1.75 a ga llon on
avemge th.is week as inventories fell to their lowest leve ls
iri three years.
In South Central Ohio, the
average price per gallori for
regular unleaded gas is $1 .71 ,

.

Thunderwtvnn•~ HI:

s349 S449 5499

Clarett to miss ·a t least
three games, Bt

·~

-·-.

__._,_ __ '

,_

.,

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