<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7108" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/7108?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T11:14:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17515">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/2977cf7afba1ec28b8b55d079d933f3a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>54e06939bc876d9384b1b4ade59a2577</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23266">
                  <text>•

Page D8 • 6unbap "I mrs ·6tntintl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point

Plt~sant,

Sunday, July 14, 2002

WV

Security flaw
Crude .prices jump on Venezuela unrest
afflicts technology
for sending
·
scrambled e-mails
BY TED BRtDtS

send u specially coded e-mail
which would appear as II
WASHINGTON · - The blank message followed by
world's most popular soft- an error warning - and
ware for scrambling sensitive effectively seize control of
e-mails suffers from a pro- the victim's computer. The
gramming flaw that could .hacker could then install spy
allow hackers to attack a software to record keyuser's computer and. in some strokes; steal financial
circumstances, unscramble records ·or copy a person's
messages.
. secret unlocking . keys to
The software, culled Pretty unscramble their sensitive eGood Privacy. or POP. is the 1i1uils. Other protective techde facto standard ,for encrypt- no logy. such as corporate
ing e-muils and is widely firewulls, could make this
used by corporate und gov- more ditlicult.
"You cun do whatever you
ernment offices, including
some FBI agents and U.S. want- execute code, read e-.
intelligence agencies. The · mails, install a backdoor,
scrambling technology is so steal their keys. You .could
powerful that until 1999 the intercept all that stuff."
federal ~ovemment sought to Maiffret said.
restrict 1ts sale out of fears
Experts said the convethat criminals, terrorists and nience of the plug-ins for
foreign nations might use it. popular e-mai I programs
The new- vulnerability, dis- broadened the risk from this
covered weeks ago by latest threat, since encryption
researchers at eEye Digital software is famously cumberJlecurity Inc., does not some to use without them.
exploit any wea~ness in the Even the creator of POP,
complex encrypting formulas Philip Zimmermann, relies
used to scramble messages on such a plug-in, although
into gibberish. Instead, hack- Zimmermann uses one that
ers are able to attack a pro- works with Eudora e-mail
grumming flaw in an impor- software and does not suffer
tant piece of companion soft- the same vulnerability as
ware. called a plug-in. that · Outlook's.
helps users of Microsoft
A plug-in for Microsoft's
Corp.'s Outlook e-mail pro- Outlook Express- a scaledgr~m encrypt messages with down version of Outlook a few mouse clicks. ·
is not affected by the flaw.
Outlook itself has emerged
Maiffret said his company
as the world's standard fore- immediately. deactivated the
mail software. with tens of vulnerable software ali all its
millions of users inside many computers, which c,an be
of the world's largest corpo- done with nine mouse-cl(cks
rations and government using Outlook, until it could
offices. Smaller numbers use apply the repairs from
the Outlook plug-in to scram- Network Associates. The
pie their most ,sensitive mes- decision improved securitr,
sages so that only the recipi- but "makes it kind of a pain ·
ent can read them.
to send encrypted e·mails, he
"lt's .not the numberofpeo- said.
pie usin~ POP but the fact
Zimmermann, in an interthat they re using it because view, said POP software is
ther' re try in~ to safeguard used "quite extensively" by
the1r data,' said Marc U.S. agencies, based on s;~les
Maiffret, the eEye executive when he formerly worked at
and researcher who discov- Network Associates. He also
ered the problem. "Whatever said use of the vulnerable
the percentage is, . it's very companion plug-in was wideimportant data."
sprefl.d.
Zimmermann
Maiffret said there was no declined to specify which
evidence anyone had sue- U.S. agencies might be at
cessfully attacked users of risk, but other experts have
the encryption software with described trading s~rambled
this technique. He said the e-muils using POP and
programmin$ flaw was "not Outlook with employees at
totally obvtous," even to the FBI, the Energy
~rained researchers exumin- Department and even the
ing the software blueprints.
super-secret
National
. Network Associates Inc. of Security Agency.
Santa Clara, Calif., which
In theory, only nonclassiuntil February distributed tied U.S. mformation would
both commercial and free be at risk from this flaw.
versions of POP. made avail- Agencies impose strict rules
able on its Web site a free a~ainst transmitting any clasdownload to fix the software. s1fied messages- encrypted
Jhe company announced ear- or not - over the Internet,
·tier . it was suspending new using the government's own
sales of the software, which secret networb instead.
·
hasn't been profitable, but
"The only time the ~overn­
moved wit~ in weeks to repair ment wovld use POP 1s when
the problem in existing ver- it's dealing with sensitive but
slons. The company's shares unclassified information and
fell 50 cents to $17.70 in has a reasonable degree of
Tuesday trading on the New · assuJance that both parties
York Stock Exchange.
have POP," said Mark Rasch,
· Free ll'ersions of POP are a former U.S. prosecutor and
widely available on the ex~rt on computer security.
World Wide Web.
"It s hardly used on a routine
The flaw allows a hacker to basis."
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.'

. Jay
.

fromPipDl

provide for your family's
needs. Disability insurance
should not be ove,looked and
should replace at least sixty
percent of your'income in the
event you are incapacitated.
Remember, the bills don't
stop working when you do.

SAVINGS
It's very difficult .to start
saving early, especially for
your child's college, when
under'the burden of current
costs. But you need to have a
shan-term emergency fund
first (enough to cover your
expenses for up to six
months) and then get going
as soon as possible.

-

Contribute the maximum
allowable into t~~x-deferred,
employer-matched retirement -vehicles. Then consider putting more away into an
IRA. Consult a financial
planner about setting up a
separate college fund .
·
·WILL
·
Have your will updated or
draw up a new one. Naine a
guardian and an alternate,
pi us someone to manage
your child's assets. Also,
consider placing his or her
inheritance in a trust. This is
a good tool that is no longer
·used only by the wealthy.
(Jay Caldwell is a Certified
Financial Planner@ ar
Raymond James Finan6ial
Services, 441 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis, OH 45631, 800·
487-2129 or 740-446-2125,
Member NASD &amp; SIPC.)

Business news
every weekend.

•

. Sunday limes-Sentinel

NEW YORK (Dow Jones News) Crude futures jumped on both sides of
the Atlantic Friday amid growing concerns about political and labor unrest in
'Venezuela.
Front-month Nymex August crude
oil futures climbed 65 cents to close at
$27.48 a barrel. On London's
International Petroleum Exchange. 'the
gains were more moderate. NOrth Sea
Brent futures rose 36 cents to close at
$26.)2 a bameL
The Venezuelan government. facing
a general strike threat. urged opposition
~roups Friday to come to the bargainmg table.
The appeal came a day after 600,000
people marched in the capital city of
Caracas to demand the resignation of
President Hugo Chavez. who was ousted for two days following a strike and
street protests in April.
Venezuela's largest labor group, the I
million-member Venezuelan Workers
Confederation, will decide Monday
whether to strike to oust Chavez.
Fedecamerus, the country's largest business group. husn 't decided whether to join.

•

Venezuela's largest oil workers
union. meanwhile, threatened to call a
strike nex.t week if talks with stateowned monopoly Petroleos de
Venezuela, or PdVSA, fail.
The union is demanding wage
increases and an upgrade in benefits
during tlilks scheduled for next week.
"If we don't ' have a solid answer by
PdVSA on our demands, the board will
meet· and decide to cull for a nationwide strike," said union secretary-general Oswaldo Caibet.
.
Thursday's massive demonstration
af\d growing talk of a nationwide strike
hqs sparked fear not only a disruption
in Venezuela's oil supplies but also of
civil unrest in the country. a top supplier of oil to the U.S .. analysts said.
"The oil workers strike is what got
Chavez in big trouble in April," suid Bill
O'Grady, an oil and gas analyst with brokerage A. G. Edwards in St. Louis.
Analysts said thai a big part of
Friday's rally wus .related to a recent
surge in gasoline prices. ·
Ousoline futures have SW'ged more than
6 percent over the past lust three sessions

amid supply jitters caused by reports of
refinery snags around the country.
On Friday, gasoline for August delivery rose 2.61 cents to 82.60 cents a gallon; the price of heating oil edged 1.53
cent higner to 70.54 cents a gallon.
Natural gas futures fell 4.3 cents to
S2.787 per I,000 cubic feet.
Among reported refinery outages,
Conoco Inc.'s Westlake refinery in Lake
Olarles, La., was said. to have shut one
of two of its refonners Wednesday,
Repairs would take'four to live days, a
source familiar with operations said.
Also
Wednesday.
Phillips
Petroleum's Rodeo. Calif.• refinery
shut down following a mechanical fail'ure. The company said it would take
four to five days for the refinery to
restan.
· Meanwhile. the International El'lergy
Agency issued its latest Monthly Oil
Report.
.
The lEA revised down its 2002 global oil demand forecast due to a lackluster global economic recovery, but it
said it expects economic recovery to
boost oil demand significantly in 2003.
'+'

Reds, .Indians victorious, li1
'

Melp County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so &lt;enh • Mondoy. July 1 s . 1002 • Vul Sl . No Hl

What's inside

Kyger Creek tourney, Bl

Deaths
Grant Boyer, eo
Kathryn Douthitt, 73
Margaret White, 71 ·
Details, AJ

www

War
John Hunt Morgan 's fal\·e of
2.000 cavalrymen were routed by a much larger force of
Union cuvulrymcn. infantry,
artillery and gunboats on the
Ohio River.
.
Battle reenactments. mili'-'
tury camps und u tent city
containing period merchunts
and a blacksmith will be
ltvailable to the public during
the weekend festivities .
Reenuctors will ulso perform
mili!!lry drill and ceremony'
throughout the weekend as
well as demonstrations and
engaging in smaller skirmish-

lslund reenuL'lment will htke nnrtheuo,tern Ohio. He · wu&gt;
phu:e ut I p.ni . Sunday fol• put into the &gt;lute penitentiary
lowing a I0 u.m. perill(l in Culumbu&gt;. from which he
L·hurch service .
la1cr eM: aped.
The Buttlc of Buffington
While the butth: is considlslund involved u forL'e of cred signitkunt by historinns ·
approximately !1.000 Union due to the involvement of
soldiers under the cvmmund muny types of forces in e~is­
of Gens . Henry M. Juduh and l&lt;'nce ut the time. it was llllgeEd\i•ard H. Hobson, who pur- ly overshudowed by the )urger
sued Morgan 's 2.000.cuvulry- · buttb of Getty~burg and
men ucross Ken1uckv. Indiana Vil'bburg. which &lt;X:curred
und Ohio. The Unioi1 soldien. the \am~ monlh:
cuught up to Morgan\ force
Th~ r&lt;.&gt;~nu•·tm)jnt is coIll Ponland. penning it uguinst &gt;pon&gt;orcd hy the Meigs
the Ohio River.
County Historical Society and
Morgun himself e~cupeLI Hurri s Furms. and is hosted by
from the Union n~t and was the 91 't Ohio Volunteer
captured a week Iuter 111 Infantry. Company B.

READY TO MINISTER

Meigs:County

POR'l;LAND - The I39th
Anniversary Commemoration
of the Ci vii Wnr • Bnttle of
Buffington Island will take
place this weekend l\1
Buffington Island Park in
Portland.
Reenactors begin their invasion of the park on Friday, fol lowed by battle reenuctments
on Saturday und Sunday.
The weekend's events will
commemorate the July lQ ,
1863, Battle of Buffington
Island, which is con~idered
the only significant ~ivii Wur
battle fought on Ohto sot I. In
that battle. Confederate Gen.

IJ:.lO u.m. Saturd&lt;ty with a military drill followed by memonul servkcs at II 11.m. und
noon . At I:30 p.m.. u discussion of locul history concerning the butt lc will be held,
L'omlucted by the Meigs
County Uistoricul Society.
At 3 p.m. on Suturduy. ut u
site nonh of the park reenactors will recreate the Suttle of
Corydon.
Ind..
where
Morgan's Raiders crossed the
Ohiv River and defeated u
small federal force .
Suturduy's events will conclude at 7 p.m. with a military
es.
bull.
Events. get underway · at
The Battle of Buffington

Fair tickets ·

• unlimited nights
&amp; weekends
• includes nationwide
long distance

now on sale
Weather

POMEROY - A jury
triotl scheduled for Tuesday
in Meigs County Court has
be~;!ll~ttns:p\e&lt;;t. • "- ,

camp·meets
MIDDLEPORT- BrooksGrant Camp, Sons of Union
Veterans of the Ci vii War and
Major Daniel McCook Circle,
Ladies of the Grund Army of
the Republic, will meet at 7: 15
p.m. Tuesday at the Riverbend
Arts Council building in
Middleport.

,Audiovox 480
1¢

Special

1,100
anytime
minutes

1,400
anytime
minutes

meeting
' CHESTER - Chester
Township
Board
of
Trustees will hold a special
meeting at 8 p.m. today at
Chester Town Hall.
·

Lotteries
OHIO

Klckar: 0-7-2-1-9·6

US.We Cellular.
connect with

Winner ot Outstaridlng Customer Service /w.iard
- WlreleJs Review Maaazlne

you~

. ~·

llo&lt;klev CrolllrciOOIIIJII!I ••"· ,,._ 132,
w•·Mirt. 1330 M1 -Dr..

-·
~­

004) 255-2751
214511111mAYI., Oo!Q 4j!-1066
100WIImlnD&lt;.,I7001,_

w•.....,_
w•.....,_

OIIIpollo•

1-

511 N, Jt11011011 It; Ill. 9,1304164H121
WII-Mort, 620 N. ll1ftnon St, 1""1606-5190
Wli.....,_ -IIOIIon
conJor,

(304) 25S.J990

..........
Ollk ...

~4Q.IHI21

' authorized agents
~

Wlf.Min. ,556 E. Mlln Sl, (30.1) .t65-5367
Pq PIIU, 12611tlffonl Dr., 130!1417·1156

............

IUII'Ifnii'Nit•

lumftMmtlll•

-..rr

ChiiNcothe
...polio

UWIIblq

A

llllhoolztd · -

)

1WoWIYRid0.561HIIJII!PI"Dr.,

IIOiidtl' lpl1"1
.-

..cl-

13041 252-4075
Jo•oy M. Burnell, Rt ll2 SOUth. IJCUI25H261
1Wo WilY Rid• 1703 llffltiQn It,
(304) 327~7~7
.
The Ctllular Qfaug, 750W.tem Ava,

17001 ,., ...,

-mONo S.IAIIItt, 2AO Uoilor
RilorRd.. ~.ro! ....l212

!larYIIIel:trOnlcl, 1181, llffenon St.
(304) 645-7770

•
MI.,...
Ml 1t0p0

Nlw lloRon

Mlrlord T - , 10117 S.A. 139,
~001 121).2111
~ telul¥ GrOll(&gt;. 117 CtoolrOOCII Mil,
1304125J.7737

CIC SpiCilltllt. 3179 Rhode~ AWl., Stl. 101,
~001

&amp;.3333

Dally 3: o-7·0
Dally 4: s- 5-4·0
Powarball: 3·22·37·42-49 (8)
·cash 25: 1·1o-13-t5-t6-25

:a Sadlon• Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

*Now open Sundays; t2-6pm.
Fof othof ..... olltn,- .........

W.VA.

Index

For businesses with ten or more lines, please call 877-947-5729.
·u.s. Cellular stores )

.

--

- - 3965GIII~ It,
(740) 456-3212

--

T1oe telullr llrclll(l, liMa' 17001 't"l122

AYIJ..

Oollhll
Oollhll

110_.,.

-_.,.

AOL Ke)'Word: -au1ar .

•Phone equipment ofler valid on IWO·Ytar HMc. IQI'"Hmlflta on pfant $35 and high«. Promollonll pno,W ritodeltubjtct
to change, Afle plan offer wild wllh a two·vear NMct aweement on rate plant S3lli and higher. Night and 'WHke~
mlnultl ere vlllld M·F 9pm - 5:59am and all day Saturday and Sundly. Alrlll'l'lt off• ~plrtt upon rtll plan change.

Rooming chargH, IHI lind olher ..... may oppl)l. AcfMiilon ... lol25 porI no. Offer oxplroo July. 31' 2()02,

DID C&lt;lmiWf- 319 E Mlln It,
1304! o161-12A2
.

Indianapolis, Ind., are front row. from left, Rick Bolin, Bethany Amberger, Brook Bolin. Dakota
Smith. B.J. Smith. Cody Smith.and Greg Smith; back row, from left, Caroline Snowden- whose
daughter Amber will be going on the trip - Bill Amberger, VIcki Smith and Doug Shamblin. Not
pictured, .Andrea Warner. (Joy J. Settles)

Bradford church
members head for
•
•
• •
1nner c1 miSSIOn
NEWS(i!IMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Supii'Lotto: 1-22-25-31-40·42

'

BRADFORD GROUP- Leaving today to do mission work for the Wheeler Mission Ministries In

Bv Joy J. SmLEI

Pick 3 day: 5·7-9
Pick 4 4ay: 9·5·3-8
Pick 3: 0-9-4
Pick 4: 3·9-3-5

12 Pllp1

A3
83-5.
86

AS
A4
A3
A3
81-3
A2

e 2002 Ohio Volley Publishin1 Co.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

'

High : 90s, Low: 60s
Details, A2

Trial canceled

700
anytim.e
·minutes

Island

n

•

i

myd.uly"•nt~nd "'"'

.

BY JIM FREEMAN
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

I

Hometown News,.per

POMEROY - Twelve members of the
Bradford Church of Christ. left today on
·their first mission trip. For the next five
days they will be working with inner city
children and teenagers in Indianapolis. Ind.
In that city. according to Vickl Smith,
coordinator of , the mission group, some
children and teenagers live in a world where
gunfire is just outside their front door.
"Those kids join gangs instead of little
league teams and drugs are handy and an
attractive escape," she said.
The Bradford Church mission group
drove to Indiana where they will be working
with Wheeler Mission Ministries in conducting "backyard clubs" for inner-city
children. The "clubs" are similar to vacation
Bible school programs sponsored during the
summer in area local churches, Smith
explained.
Wheeler Mission Ministries offers· wholesome activities as alternatives· to drugs and
gangs, Smith said.
The youth and adult spon sors will spend
their evenings serving meals at Wheeler
Mission's homeless shel.ter and assist with

a basketball camp held at the community
·
center.
Some
members
will
travel
to
Bloomington, Ind ., wheri: they will work us
counselors · for troubled teenage girls at
Camp Hunt. .
·
The Meigs County community a'nd church
members helped finance the trip . The youth
group also collected donations and prepared.
boxes for the local homeless shelter to help
provide funding for the mission trip . ·
Members of the group include Smith,
coordinator, employee with Ohio University
Air Transportation in Albany; Greg Smith,
AEP employee at Gavin Plant; Bill
Amberger. AEP senior lab technician; Rick
llolin, Ohio Valley Electric Corp. at Kyger
Creek; and Doug Shamblin, minister of the ·
Bradford Church.
Youth, members in the mission group are
Bethany Amberger, junior at Southern High .
School; Brook Bolin, senior at Meigs High
School; Andrea Warner, junior at Eastern
High School; Amber Snowden, a recent
graduate of . Meigs Hi~h School; Cody
Smith, senior at Meigs H•gh School; Dakota
Smith, a student at Meigs Middle School;
and B.J. Smith, senior at Ohio University.

HOEFLICH(i!IMYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - Season and member&gt;hip tickets for the ·
2002 Meigs County Fair, Aug. 12- 17, ure now on sale.
Season tickets may be purchased from Joe's Country
Market , Rutland; Home Nutional Bank. Racine: · Baum
Lumber Company. Che ster: Sugar Run Flour Mill.
Pomeroy: Swjsher Lohse Pharmacy. Pomeroy: Little John's
Food Mart . Tuppers . Plains : Gloeckner s Restaurant.
Pomeroy:· Whaley's Grocery. Durwin: SyruL·use Country
Market. Syracuse: Dun's.
Th . fo
Middleport:
Taz's
e price f
Murnthon,
Route
7,
1.:...1.~
Pomeroy; Reed's Country
SeaSOn UUICU Store.
, . Reedsville:
SO/d only to
McDonald s, ·Pomeroy:
• ...r ·~ ,l nd
Little John's Food Mart,
lnu/VIuUOIS 0 not
Middleport,
Rutland
to COmtvJny Of
Department
Store.
• r;-·
.
Rutland; By the Way
Ofgantzation -IS
Country Store. Langsville,
11
year. The
and Landmark, Chester.
.P 14
""
•
. The price for season
ttckets - sold only to
d .
individuals ami not to a
a miSSIOn to
co~pany or .organiZation
fair.1 freefarking aJ/
- ts $14 thts yeur. The
tickets give gate admission
wee long, and
to the fiur, free parkmg all
entertainment
and
week long. and ente,rtum.
ment and shows. but nql
shows
not the
the amusement ndes.
'
'.:.1
Membership
tickets,
amusement flueS. .
which entitle holders to
admission and voting privileges, are $15 und may be purchased from uny fair Board member or are ·on sale at the
Sugar Run Flour Mill in Pomeroy. However, the tickets are
only ;tvai lable to Meigs County re·sidents over 18.
Daily admission to the fair is $6 Monday through
Thursday, $7 on Frid~y and Saturday. Duily admission tickets include ull cntertainmel)t and shows as well as ·the
amusement rides.
· For those hnlding memtiership, season. or 4-H tickets,
there will be an udc.litinnal charge for rides - $4 a day
Monday through Thursday. and $5 u day Friduy and
Suturduy.
.
· ·
As in the past children under two will be admitted to the
fairgrounds free . However. if they want to ride, they must
purchase u ride puss.
.
As in previous years ~enior Citizen's Day will be
observed on Thursday and to be udmitted to the fairgrounds
all seniors have to do is show their Golden Buckeye Cards.
Kiddie Day will be observed on Wednesday and children
12 and under will be admitted free until noon and can get a
handstamp for $3 to ride all day.
The rides will operate on a schedule of I to 4:30 and 6 to
II p.m., Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Sa,turdily;
and noon to 5 and 6 to II p.m. on Wednesday.
. Reserved parking in specified areas is being offered for
$25 for the week. The parking cost does not inclu&lt;;le admission onto the grounds. There me also camping spaces avail-·
able for the week at $100 which includes electric and water.
Spaces can be reserved at the secretary's office on the Rock
Springs fairgrounds on Saturday, Aug. 3, but c&amp;nnot ~
spotted before noon on Aug . 10.
.
All open Class entries must be regis&amp;ered at the secretary's
office on Friday and Saturday, Aug . 2 and 3. The office will
be open from 8_a. ~ . to 4 p.m. both days. The deadline for
reg1stenng entr1es ts 4 p.m. on Aug. 3.

a

tht;..
tickets give gate
th
e

but

Hlrnl Emwulrvntm PI~ 719£, Mlltt It,

1304141Ha

- ..
· · 102 E. C&lt;i... st,
o..,,.w

liM -162A.IIr00d It, 13041112.PbCcMIIIyPIOMI Shot&gt;. 720W EIMII1 ....,

(7,QflH107
ICM, 110 W EmlttM, 110. 3, 17041 ..1...25

ordl!r c1t home, FAH drltvery

t •888~BUY•USCC

uscellular.com

When you need relioble, compassionate,
high quality. home health services, remember

It's Your Health. It's Your Home. It's Your Choice.
Choose Holzer Home Carel

Call 1-888-225·1135

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
:~

www.holzer.org

•

�•

Ohio

'

The Daily Sentinel
Tueadey, July 1&amp;

•
111¥»" 1

0

Mond-y. July 15, 2002

0

w.w.-

..
••
......

Clear skies, high heat ahead
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.A stulled high pressure system that provided the Mid-Ohio
Valley w1th mostly sunny skies over the weekend will contin,
ue io do so through Tuesduy.
.·
.Tempenuures likely reach move into the 90s on Tuesday.
Overnight lows will be in the SOs and 60s.
A cold front situated over the Pacific Nonhwest on Monday
will move eastward und und could produce some showers und
tllunderstonns ucross the region Wednesduy und Thursday.
·
Weather Forecast
·
Tonij.~hl ... Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 60s. Light and vuriu.ble wmds.
-:ruesday... Mostly sunny. Highs near 90. Light and vuriable
wmds.
·
Tuesday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 60s.
.
: Wednesday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 90s. ·
: Wednesday night ... Punly cloudy. Lows 65 to 70.
Thuts~ay ... Punly cloudy. A chunce of showers and thunder,
storms from curly afternoon on. Highs 85 to 90.
E~tended Forecast
·
Friday... Panly cloudy. Scattered showers and thunderstom1s
from early utiemoon on. Lows 65 to 70 and highs in the mid 80s.
Suturduy... A chance of showers and thunderstonns during
the day .. . Otherwise panty cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s and
h1ghs 111 the lower 80s.
Sunday... Mostly cleur. Lows 60 to 65 und highs in the mid
80s.
·

Alleged sex abuse
vidims filing suit
against priest
'
:TOLEDO
(AP) ..:... Two
men are suin~ the Toledo
Rhman Catholic Diocese, u
Bellevue church and a priest
· fQr sexual abuse they claim
happened when the pastor
'took them to a cottage for
~cekcnd visits when they
were boys.
:Attorneys for Ueorge
Keller. 54, and Harold Lee,
SO, planned to file the lawsuit
Monday morning in the Lucus
County Common Pleas Court.
:The Rev. Leo Welch abused
the boys when they were 6 to
IZ years old while an ussistUilt pastor of the Immaculate
Conception
parish
in
Bellevue. about 60 miles cast
of Toledo, the lawsuit said.
The abuse occurred at
W~lch's cottage in eastern
Lutas County and at diocesan
p~openies from 1959 through
1!161. according to the suit.
:Welch did not deny allegations that he in.vitcd more
than 50 boys to the cottage
and forced some of them to
perform sexual acts when
mterviewed last month by
The (Toledo) Blade. He did
mit return a message left
Sunday at his home in Inkster,
Mich .. a Detroit suburb.
"The only way I could lallcl
it - it w~s a sexual cxperi·
mentution," he told the news·
paper. "I've lived with this
e~ery day of my lik I was
si~k. That's alii can say. I was
si~k."
.
:Welch. 75. said he was an
alcoholic at the time and did
not remember much of his
w~kcnds with the boys. He
w~s removed from his post in
Bellevue after the church's
pastor learned of the alleged
abuse.
.
The church and diocese
failed to disclose the allegations against Welch, the suit
claims.

Keller and Lee arc seeking
at least $25,000 in damages
each.
Lee, a recovering alcoholic
living in Roanoke, Va., said
he never told anyone about
what allegedly hapP.ened in
Welch's collage unul revealing it to a sister about 15 years
ago.
Keller, of Bellevue, said he
lirsttalked about Welch ubout
the same time while being
treated for using cocaine.
Toledo Bishop James
Hoffman said he was shocked
after listening to Keller's
accusations in a May I 5
meeting. A message left
Sunday at the diocese wus not
returned.
The Rev. Tom Quinn. u
diocesan spokesman, said
ther~ were no r_ecords of. the
earher · allegnt.'ons a~amst
~el~h or of~ d1ocesan mvesugutton of h1m.
.

doubl~ Y,our comfort

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Athletic Boosters
will meet at 7 p.m.
!,. '
Wednesday at the high
Meigs
school. Plans for the fair and · POMEROY Emergency
Services
units
full spons will be discussed.
answered
the
following
calls
All parents and friends of
athletes in grades seven for assistance on Sunday:
through 12 are urged to . CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:53 a.m., Titus Rd .•
attend.
assisted by Rutland, Seth
Johnson, Holzer Medical
Center.
9:21 a.m., Meigs County
MINERSVILLE
Jail, assisted by Rutland,
County Road 402 in Sutton Terry Icenhower, Holzer.
11:45 a.m., from station,
Townshi~, Minersville Hill
Road, w1ll be closed today Mony Wood, Holzer;
12~ 56 p.m., Pizza Hut,
and Tuesday to repair a slip.

Calls ansWered

Road closed

'

l

·

Right now you can bring home 2of your
favorite L•·Z·Bof styles for 1 great low prlcel

CLEVELAND (AP) - The Ohio
L_ottery sold one Super Lotto Plus game
ticket with the correct combination from
the drawing Saturday night.
The winning ticket, sold at Circle
Mart in Columbus, is worth $3,080,000,
which is the lump sum amount the lot·
tery wou!d .hav~ investe~ in order to pay
the $7 m1lhon Jackpot over 30 years.
The Super Lotto Plus combination: I·
22-25-31-40-42 .
Bonus Ball: 15.
Kicker: 0-7-2-1-9-6.
Buckeye Five : 4-14-21-23-28.
Pick 3 Numbers: 0-9-4.
Pick 4. Numbers: 3-9-3-5.
Day Drawings:
Pick 3 Numbers: 5-7-9.
Pick 4 Numbers: 9-5-3-8.
Sales in Super Lo!!o Plus totaled
$1,624,922 and players shared
$3,321,530. Sales in the Kicker totaled

right combination for the: drawing
Saturday. so no one can claim the Ohio ·
Lottery game's top prize of$100,000.
There were 94 Buckeye 5 tickets with
four of the numbers, and each is worth
$250. The 2,563 tickets showinf three
of the numbers ure each worth $ 0, and
the 23.54 7 tickets showing two of the
numbers are each worth $1.
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$135,373.50 to winners in Saturday
night's Pick 3 Numbers duily game, and
sales totaled $805.303.50.
The winners' pool in the Pick 3
Numbers day game was $205,772, and
the lottery sold $466,114 worth of game
tickets.
In the Pick 4 Numbers nighi game,
players will share $110,600, and the
sales were $310,002.50; the day game ·
winners get to split up $63,800, und the
sales were $166,028.

not ~oing to remove black bears that
aren t causing problems, he said.
Black bears tu'e protected in Ohio,
and hunting them is illegal.
Ohio had black bears in pioneer days,
bu.! the beurs were shot or trapped to
protect livestock and crops. The last ·
bear in Ohio was killed by 1850.
In recent years, · bears have been
migrating back into the state ~ generally from Pennsylvania and West
Virginia, Kramer said.
Pennsylvaniu has more than 10,000
bears. and West Virginia has more than
8,000.
Nationwide .. the United States has an
estimated 400,000 black bears.

I

'•'

·MEIGS COUNTY COURT NOTES
W.Va., $30 and 00111, apttd; Wlllalm A. Schultz
Jr., Pomeroy, $30 and 00111. llltbtll, $20 and
coati window lint; Jay P. Flehar, Middleport, $20
and costa, atop algn; Jamtt H. Bllrchtr Jr., Long
Boffom, $20 and costa, fallura 1o oonlrol: Earl M.
Rsmaburg, Middleport, $30 and 00111, ell"d:
Angela J. Blake, Logan, $30 end COlli, tll"d:
Paul L. McDanllll Jr.. Langsville, $30 and coste,
aeatbelt; Kurt A. Bolin, Albany, $384 and coati,
overload, $20 and coati, explrtd trailer reglllratlon ; Jeremy J. Lewrance, Pomeroy, $30 and
ooata, seatbell: Chrlatopher Yeauger, Raolne, $30
and cottl, eealbell: Dorthy J. Waehlngton,
Whllltvllle Va., $50 and ooetl, apeed.
Eulonda C. Haley, Middleport, $20 and colla,
Improper paaalng; Connie J. Myert, Ravanawood
W.Va., $20 and ooate, failure to control: Charltt R.
Weekely Jr., Ouytvllle, $20 and 00111, ACDA:
Jennller A. Lheren, Centerville, $30 and coalt,
epetd; Billy .J. Bp\Jrtoek, Cheupeake, $30 and
coats, apetd: Yelanda E. Dlkon, Albany, $30 and
coata, apetd; William A. McClure, Galllpolll, $30
and cottl, apeed; Ray H. Btnnen, Denville W.Va ..
$30 and cotll, epeed: Bred G. Plan, COlumbus,
$30 and COlli, epted; Paul G. Youel Ill,
Jacobsburg, $20 and 00111, teatbe~: Jamea B.
Fouls, Bowling Green, $30 and cottl, eealbell,
$30 and coati, IP"d.

A number ot c11e1 were Heather M. Knight, Pomeroy, $30 an,d colla,
9ounty Court Judge tpttd; Phillip K. Grutttr, Pomeroy, $30 and
SltVen L. Story.
oa111, Natbelt; Charlae L. Mlanllt' Jr., Albany,. $20
Tholl llntd were: Todd A Ackerman, Rutland, and ooell, eaatbtll; John M. Wlthera Jr., Athena,
$30 and 00111, ltalbelt: Rott · m. Dearing, $30 and ooatt, tll"d; Sally E. Jankowtkl, Toltdo,
Middleport, $25 and cotta, etop elgn; William $30 and ootll, epetd; Lellle V. Frank, Pomeroy,
Monteroue. Parl&lt;ertbug W.Va .. $10 and 00111, $30 and 00111. ttatbell; Kevin R. Alexander,
epttd; Chlepln Ramirez, RaveniWCOd W.Va., $30 COiumbut, $30 and cotll, tpttd ; Alan L. Norrl1,
tnd 00111 tll"d, $30 and 00111, llllbelt: Ktrrall Athant, $30 and coste, apetd; $30 and co1t1,
P. Lemley, Pomeroy, S30 and 00111, 11atbelt; 111tbelt.
Lewrtnoe Lea Jr., Shlda, cotta, 30 dayalall au~Brlln C. Johna, W~mlnglon Del., $30 and coall,
pendtd, IWO yllrt probation, dom111lc vlolenoe, tpttd: Nawn Raoevakl, Cenltr Line Mich., $50
thrM oountl patting bad chiOkl, $25 and 00111 end oottt, epetd: Denlel R. Lewlt Jr., Leng1vlllt,
on each, three deyajall auependtd on each, rttll· 130 and coata tpttd; Thomas E. Harahbangllt',
tullon: Kelley N. Moran, Milton W.Va., $20 end Ctrtdo W.Va., $30 and coatt, apetd; lrla L.
coala, following too olo11; Daniel J. Wl11man, · Matheny, Moundavllle W.Va., $30 and cotll,
Ntlaonvlllt, $20 and 00111, atop elgn; Vlnoent tpttd; Andrew
Rozandal, Lot Ang~tea cam.,
Giordano. Jr.. Clendenin W.Va., $30 and 00111, $30 and cotll, epetd: Scott Curl, Middleport, $30
apatd, $30 and coati ltetbtlt; Michael N. Uaoon, end cotta, epeed; Mllllua J. Burna, Bidwell, ·S30
Pula1kl Tenn., $30 and COlli, tpetd, $30 and end coell apttd, S20 and coati expired platea;
coati llllbalt; Shawn o. OuiUtn, lldtraon W.Ve., Robyn L. Coakley, Lancutar, $30 and ooell, aeat$30 and coati, apeed; Daniel T. Slgado, belt; Don L. Betqle, racine, $30 and cotta, apetd;
Brunewlok, .S30 end oottt, tpetd: EIIZibtth Henry
Johnttn, Eut Sparta, $30 and collt,
Stanebarry, Galllpolll, $30 and 00111, 1petd; Gery tpttd; Darren A. Dotbtrelner, Waterford, $30
E. Grtan, Euclid, $30 and COlli, tpetd; Dana and ooatt, atatbell; Michael Wolfe, R'etdavllle,
Wllllamt, Pomeroy, $20 and 00111, window lint: $30 and oottl, aeatbatl; $20 end oo1t1, axplrtd
Jimmy N. Gray, Oak Hill, $30 and 00111, apeed; regletratlon; Franklin J. King, Pomeroy, $30 and
Roger A. Selltrt, Athent, $30 and cotta, ualblllt; COlli, ttatbtlt: Shari L. Robarll. Scott Depot
POMEROY -

proot~atd recently by Mtlgl

w.

w.

c.

Kathryn Douthitt
MARIETTA- Kathryn Douthitt, 73, Marietta, died Friday,
July 12. 2002. ut Marietta Memorial Hospital.
She was bom Dec. 23. 1928 in Marietta. daughter of the late
Donavan and Freda Steed Williamson. She was employed at
the Busy Be(_ Restaurant and Johnny's and was later
employed at Marietta College until retirement 'She was a
member and past president of the Au~iliary of American
Legion Post 64.
·
·
Surviving are a dau~hter, Pam Douthitt of Tuppers Plain$; a
son, B. Gale Douthlll, Jr., Marietta; two brothers, John
William~on and his wife, Diana, of Williamstown, W.Va., and
Bill Williamson of Davisville. W.Va.; three brothers-in-law:
Bill Douthitt uod his wife. Phyllis, of Lowell. Melvin Douthitt
and his wife. Charlotte. of Williamstown. and · Charles ·
Ridgeway of Marietta; a sister-in-law, Pauline DeMattis of
Columbus; and several nieces and nephews.
·
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husbund, Bernard Gale "Doc" Douthitt, whom she married on
Oet. 8, 1948; a brother, Roben Williamson. and a sister-in·
law, Bonnie Ridgeway.
Services wiU be held Monday. July IS, ioo2: at I p.m. at
First Congregation~! Church m Marietta with Rev. Linda
Steelman officiating . Burial will follow at East Lawn
Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the Monday at the church for an hour
prior to service.
Memorial contributions may )Je made to Eastern High
School, 38900 Ohio 7. Reedsv1lle. Ohio 45772.

•

Margaret White

.PORTLAND ~ Margaret Magdalene White, 71. Portland,
d1ed Wednesday, July 10, 2002, at her residence. following an
extended illness.
.
She was bom in Luwrence County oil March 21, 1931,
duu$hter of the late James Edwtu'd and Georgia Bri~gs
Eakms. She was a former employee of Pinecrest Nursmg
Home.
Surviving are her daughter. Carolyn Kay Klonowski of
Canton; stepdaughters and their husbands: Agnes and Larry
Sellers of Ponland and Margaret and Ferris Justis of Arizona;
stepstons, Kenneth White of Long Bottom and Walter and
Jean White of Gallipolis: u sister-in-law. Eva McKenzie of
Gallipolis; a brother-in-law. Eli White of Minersville: seven
grandchildren and 14 great grandchildren.
·
. Services will be held at I p.m. Tuesday at Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy with Donald Swick officiating. Burial will
follow at Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call an hour prior to the service at the funeral
home.

Grant Boyer
.

MASON, W.Va.~ Grant Ercell Boyer, 80, Mason, W.Va.,
died Saturday, July 13, 2002 at his restdence .
He wus born June 28, 1922 in Cottageville. W.Va., son of
the late Otho Winfield and Anna Belle Canter Boyer. He was ·
u retired maintenance workc;r for the Town of Mason ami •
attended the Chrislian Brethercn Church in Mason.
·
Surviving are a brother and sister-in-law, HalT)' and Irene
Boyer of Point Pleasant, W.Va. and several nieces and
nephews.
.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his sisteri,
lone Patterson and Hallie Bush; and three brothers: Wayni;
Holly and Otho Boyer.
•
Services will be held Tuesday, July 16, 2002 "at Fogelsong- :
Tucker Funeral Home in Mason with Rev. Billy Zuspan and
Rev. Greg Collins officiating. Burial will follow at the comienience of the family.
,
~
Memorial contributions may be made to the Christian
Bretheren Church, Mason, W.Va., Pleasant Valley Hospice M1
Pt. Pleasant, or Mason United Methodist Cancer Society
Mason.
·
'
•

MEIGS CALENDAR

Sc-.

MIIJIUy0JYiy 11 .

,
RACINE - VICIIIon Sible
RUTLAND - Rulland Townohlp ltvough Frlclly lrom 8 to 8.30 p.m., Sl.
Trullttl , epeclal 1111lon, 8 p.m. John Lulhlr1n ChYroh, 33U1 Pint '
Dloculllon wllh Buckeye Hlllo a...... Rd., R1clno. Theme Ia 'Bug
Hocking
Valloy
Regional Solari.' Children lrom preochool Ia
Dtvtlopment pertonntl on mitigation grado llx "" wtloomo.

P'Oioct.

Tllladoy, Jyfr If

RUTLANO- VICIIIOn Bible SChool,
AUIIond FrHWIII Slptlll Churell, 8 lo
8:30 p.m., Moncloy !hrough Frlclly. For
lntormallon, con Dione Handrldca 11
740-DD2-tl342.
CHESTER -

Chaallr Townlhlp

POMERO'I'- Mtlgo Counly HN"h , .

· Dtparlmonl, CIIIJCihOocl Jmmunlullon .

ollnle, 810 11 a.m. and 11o 3 p.m.. 112
E. Memorlol Drlvt In Fomtroy. Taka
ahol rtoorda. CMdrtn mull bt accomponltd Dr poronVguardlln.

!loam o!Tru-. opaclll ..-lng, 8 p.m.

MIDOLEPOAT "'- Brooki·Grtnl
C1mp, Bono ol Union Vlltrana of lht
POMEAOV- T.B. Clinic, 4:30 lo 8 Civil Wtr, lnd MajOr Oonlll MCCOOk
p.m. 11 lht Tuppora Pial no Fire Clrola, Lldlto ollhe GAA tc ..-. 7 : 1~ · ·
Doporlmonl. Roadlng will be dono Of1 p.m. 11 Rlverllond Aria Counell bUilding.
July 17, 4:30 lo 5.30 p.m All load han·
dlefl ore urged lo attend.
MIDDLEI'ORT - MHIIng lor paronll•. Clllldron lnll- In worldng Of1
POMERO'I'- FomtriJ'I Cl\lpltf 1811, ntw ll!ullobolrd p1r1&lt; , 8 p.m,
Ordlr ollhe Ealltrn Sllf. potkl&lt;i&lt; dinner, Mldditporl Vlllgo Hill CX&gt;Undl cham~ : 15 p.m., raguilr mooing, 7:30p.m.
btro.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

New• Department•

DragQn Internet .

The main number It 1192·2166.
Department axtenllona art:

•

·

Clanaral maneglt'

~xt.

N-

Ext 13

or

Ext. 14

12

Other ••rvlce•

PrJ1on1l E-m1ll )~ecount, Cuolomtr Support
Pertonal Wtb Space, lmmediale.Adlvatlon

Advwlltlng

Ext. 3

1-888-657-0977

Circulation

Ext 4

Cllttllltd Ade

Ext. &amp;

Local Acce11 Ar••• Include:
•orntrow, "- ""''"'· wv, PorttmoY1h, Wtl1 Union, Wlvtrly,
'liNd on ~tlriV IUDIOflpiiOI'I ,..,,
H4up f.. IPpllttiO til ntW ICOOUntf,
Montrlly DUIJIIf tilt II lll.tf

$290,235 and players shared $191.870.
Buckeye S sales amounted to $202,879.
Winners will share $72,677.
There were 31 Super Lotto Plus tickets with five of the numbers, and each is
wonh $1,500. There were no tickets
with five numbers plus the ·bonus ball.
The 1,453 Super Lotto Plus tickets with
four of the numbers are each worth $100
and the 79 tickets with four numbers and
the bonus bull are worth $500. There
were 2,04:6 Super Lotto Plus tickets with
three numbers plus the bonus bull.
The Ohio Lottery's Super Lotto Plus
jackpot for the drawing Wednesday
night will offer $4 million.
In Kicker, one game ticket had all six
numbers.• and the owner can claim the
$100,000 top prize. The winning ticket
was sold at Kwik King Food Stores in
Toronto.
·
·
No Buckeye 5 game ticket had the

AKRON (AP) - Wildlife officials "We may have to deal With bears being
say there's a reason why they are ge,. our neighbors.~'
·
ling more bluck bear sightings this year
Already that's the case in cities such as
- more black bears.
·
Pittsburgh and Charleston, W.Va., which
Lust year, there were 128 sightin$s · huve hj:althy bluck bear populations livinvolving SS bears in 29 ' counties m ing at the edge of suburbia, he said.
eastern and southeastern Ohio, accordDave Swanson, a wildlife division bioling to the Ohio Department of Natural ogist and Ohio's black betu' expert, said
Resources.
people and bears can peacefully c~xist.
AlreadY. this y.eur, the Ohio Division
The animals generally are shy, reclu·
of Wildhfe has received 70 reports of· sive arid not aggressive, said Swanson,
bear ~ightings in nonheast Ohio's 19 who advises slowly backing away in an
counties.
·
encounter and never feeding u bear.
"It's u continuing trend ... and we may
Ohio monitors bear reports and will
have to adjust to the idea of living with live-trap or immobilize troublesome
black bears," said Dan Kramer, a blolo- bears with sedative~ and move them if
gist for the Ohio Division of Wildlife. necessary, Kramer said. But the state is

Correction Polley

McAruuw, w..hlneton CH, MI. lltmng, Ironton, Mer61Ut,
Alhfnt, tnd MOftl
PJod ye on fbt web II WWW dfiA~Ofll

5

RUTLAND
6: II p.m .• Will-Vance Rd ..
Jerry Schoolcraft, Holzer;
9:16p.m., Nonh Front St.,
Middleport, Donna Powers,
Pleasant Valley:
9:57 p.m.. Brick St ..
Pomeroy. Jamie Patterson,
Holzer;
SYRACUSE
I :40 p.m.. Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center,
Dorotha Riebel, O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital;
11 :36 p.m., Ohio 124.
Charlene Foreman. Holzer.
,TUPPERS PL~INS
9:30 p.m., Sumner Rd.,
motor vehicle accident.
Tullhamer,
Jr..
Roger
Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital.

·aear sightings up across.Buckeye State

Our main concern In etrttorltl It
to bi aoourala. II you know or en
error In a etory, cell the newaroom
at (740) 1192-2158.

Get Online Today!

Pomeroy. Marie . Young,
Holzer;
I :32 p.m., Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Ralph
Badgley. Holzer;
2:24 p.m., Collins Rd .,
Mary Searles, ' Pleasant
Valley Hospital;
6:04p.m., Ohio 681, Edna
Hendricks, St. Joseph's
Hospital;
10:52 p.m., Overbrook
Center,
Dora
Hysell,
Pleasant Volley;
II :0 I p.m., Country
Mobile Home Park, Tommy
McChristian,
Pleasant
Vulley.
REEDSVILLE
I0:36a.m., Ohio 124, Inez
Boring,
Camden-Clark ..
Memorial Hospital.

'•

Following his removal in
Bellevue, the di&lt;icese secret! y
ordered Welch to have psychiutric evaluutions at a
monastery ncar Louisville;
Ky.. he said.
The case was reviewed at
the time by attorney Churles
Siler, who was the city prosecutor and u lawyer for the Lee
family, but he never forwurd ed information to police,
according to interviews and
records.
Welch wus reassigned to
Christ the King Purish in
Toledo in 1962.
He said he continued to
drin)&lt; alcohol while he wus
there but did not ubuse any
children.
He abruptly left the church
in 1965. Church leaders said
he left u ~urprise note on · the
rectory k1tche~ table saying
he was depurt111g, und they ,
never heard from him uguin.

Local UnJimited Access
As low as $11.95 per Mo. it

The Deily Sentinel • Pege A3

Ohio Lottery drawings,.wagers, winnings

'

&amp;save!

The alternate route is County
Road 30, Forest Run Road,
and 7A, Chester Road.

Boosters meet

HURON (AP) - The body of u
fourth swimmer who disappeared while
trying to rescue a woman an Luke Erie
was ~overed Sunday morning. a fire
official said.
The body was recovered by rescuers
ubout S:SO u.m. at the n1outh of the
Huron River. The bodies of three other
swimmers were recovered Saturday in
the same area, just east of where tho
men disappeared. '
Rescuers were on their bout but hud·
n't left .the dock_ when the fourth body
wus spotted, suid Lt. Mike Hohler of the
Huron Fire Depurtrnent.
· The victim's families identiliL'tl th~
bodies, but there was no oflidul iiJ~nti­
ficution from the Lucus County coron,er's office, which will perfonn uutopstes.
,
On Saturday, u fishennun reported the
first body ubout6 a.m. und u rescoc bout
recovering it found the s~-cond. tire
Chief John Zimmerman said .
The t.hird body was found at I :30. p.m.
about 300 feet uwuy. All three were
floating nenr the 25-foot-dccp shipping
channel of the river.
. The . four disappeared umid 5-ftlOt ·
wuves on Wedriesduy while trying to
reuch u friend who hud been knocked
down und swept out by u current ut
Nickel Plate Bench neur liuron. ubout
50 miles west of Cleve lund.
Firefighters eventually rescued tim
womun, Amy Renee Anderson. 22. but
her fiance, Steve Cupec. 27. and fril:nds
Jehrod Smith. 19. Kyle Kroc.tz. 29. und
Man hew Smith, 21. couldn't oo found .
Divers had been searching the ureu
since then and bout crews used sonur
and drugged chuins to locute the bodies.
On the duy the four disappeared, wind
blew out of the eust-nonheast ut ubout
34 mph, cnusing some of the 'worst conditions_on the luke tlmt Zimmerman suid
he hud seen in his 31-yeur career.
' TRAGIC TIME- Michelle Catrl, 20, gives a hug to her friend Paul Butkle 21 as
The public beach hus no lifeguards they stand near Lake Erie, end a makeshift memorial at Nickle Plate Beach in
and was closed for swimming because Huron on Thurdey. They both live nearby In Huron, and came to look out at the
of the dunger. but people were allow~'d waves that claimed the lives of four men Wednesday as they tried to rescue a
woman. A search for the four men was called off Thursday after two due to high
to sunbathe und picnic.
The live were warned not to swim by winds and waves. (A~) .
a city stuff member ut the park. suid gerous in Lake Erie, said Andy ully considered unsafe to swim, he snid.
City Munuger Mike Thnn. Leanets out· McDowell, director of public programs
Lust year there was u drow.ning at
lining the -swimming bun ulso were for the Great Lukes Science Center.
Nickel Plute beach and unother one in
passed out.
Undertow is caused by a strong buck- 1999. On July 5, 11 14-yeur-old girl had
While the undenow in oceuns is more wash from waves breaking on a beach. to be rescued by u private bo!ller utter
severe and constant. it also can be dnn - When .waves reuch over 6 feet, it's usu- she struggled against rough water.
·

CATHOLICS IN CRIS-IS

..P

LOCAL BRIEFS

of fourth swimmer recovered

Ohio weather

1-

..

•

www.mvdallvaentlnel.com

Mondey, July 15, 2002

PageAl

.. ,.

To aend •m•ll

FREE
Parking

FLAIR

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

ntweOmydallyaaritlnlll.oom

FREE
Layaway

"&amp;RAND NAME .I'URNITUAE .AT DISCOUNT PRICES" .

Ate 2,

WV

675·1371

On the Web
www.mydallyttntlnel.com

N-

Sublcrlptlon r•t•
ly "rrltr or m-.ro111t
one-k
12
one month
ta.70

·-

Gou FIB lilt,.,..
....... TV . . . IIIII

Ono year
1104
Dilly
150 otnll
Suboerlbtfl not dollrlnglo poy lho
corrler may romllln adv•not dlrecllo
Tht Dilly Stnllntl. Crtdk Will bt given
corrltr taon week. No ~~~-lpl10f1 by
f!llll pormllttd In ""' - . homt
arrltr ""'~ lll\lllllblt.

oo...

Prurs:blli
-(ltlth. .I.MI
....... Allllollll'I

"'10

.•

~~Mt~tn ·

13W-

:leW~2W-

w-

121.30

U3.82
I10UII

Alltl outt!do Mtltt Count)'
13
1211.26
:2e W1llkl
•~ ee
52 WHkl
$10Q.72

Reds, Indians win ... 81'

liiiZJ•
"

(UIPim.fiO)
Ohio Vlllley P•bllohlng Co.
Publllhtd Mry ollfrnoon, l\londl)l
lhrough Frldl)l, 111 Co uri 81.,
Pomorov, Ohio. Sooond-&lt;1111 poologe
pold 11 Pomoroy
Memblr: The A1100latltd Prtu and
lht Ohio
Alloollllon.
Pollmllllr. Sind lddrtll OOJTIO•
IIOJ1IIO The Dolly Stnllntl, 111 Court
81., Pomeroy, Ohio &lt;4l578e.

'

larlfi!IU..,. ...

\W-ftiii . . Wll-fiWII'I•IUIAI&amp;II ......

........................,..,

flilefi&amp;IIOI ..,..., ,.. • 11M : a:L

flll/\1,1',

(!.II

IIMI'&gt;'I.• IIIU

......... ,. ........ _,...... ___
C.........._ ••r

...... Mf'Y, f'HT',
t
a.-.fwnoiCNII. ...... _ _

Pomeroy team moves on ·
in Kyger Creek toomey

.

"~:Z
' ·~··... I Ohl-n~tdJ~ "i.:'in7.;." d
_.:. :.... ·.~:::.··-·-~.~.!'!.~.!!,.._~e.... ..m
...........
_____ ~o . , .
tl C••~·l f••l"•

•

.

'

&amp;Ill/

tct 1111 •

ltllillll.,._,..,

,

)

�.

.\

Inion

The Daily Sentinel

~Th_eo_a_Hy_se_nt_ine_l----=B:;:::;:;.y the

PageA4
MOndly, Ju

I !!1, 2002

The Daily Sentinel

~'ll.LfS ll"'i~N

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740..992·2155 • Fax: 740..992·2157
www.mydallyllnllntl.com

-

infun1ry un:t cturin!,l r.t:td •ruining.
Greenlaw und other recruils also l'e(cived
instruction 01111\e Murine Coq&gt;s' COI'I: vulues
-honor, courage and commitment. and what
lhe words meun in guiding persot1al und pro·
fessionul conduct
Greenlaw und fellow n,'Cruits endoo thCI tmin ing phase wi1h The Crucible. u S4 ·ho~tr tcum
effort. problem solving evolution which cuhni·
naled with an ClllOiional ceremony in which 1he
recruit were presented 1he Murine Corps ·
Emblem. um.l were uddn:ssed us "Marines" for
1he lirsltime since bo01 cump begun.
Greenlaw is tho son of Thmmra K. Wumcr
of Ashen, WVu. und Douglas E. Oroenluw of
Bmdemon, Flu.

STATE

MIDDLEPORT - Nuvy Peny Officer
Third C'lass Juson A. Harris. son of Penny A.
Evun of Middlepon. recemly departed on a
six·momh dcployn1ent to tile Medilerraneun
Sea and Arabian Gulf while assigned to the
guided missile cntiser USS Normandy. homo
ported in Norfolk, Vu.
USS Normundy is one of the most powerful
wurships ever put to sea. The computer 'based
AEGIS weapotlS system is the heart of the
ship's war-lighting capability. h centers uround
u powerful rudunhul enublcs the crew 1ode1cct.
true k and lire on more 1hun I00 turgels.
Hanis is one of more thun IO,OIXl Athmtic
Fleet StliiO!l! undMnrines aboard the hips of the
USS George Wushington Cunier Bunle Group
und USS Nu Slut Amphibious Reudy Group to
putticipulc in Operntion Enduring Fn.'Cdom.
. Harris is a l999 graduu1e of Meigs High
CHES HIRE - Navy Peuy Oniccr Second
School .
Class Christopher W. Queen, u 1995 ~ruduutc
of River Valley High School of Cheshin:.
recently returned from n six-month dcploymem to the Wes1en1 Pacific und Arubitm Gulf
.A SHTON- Murine Corps Privulo Calvin W. while assigned 10 1hc guided missile de troycr
Greenlnw reccnlly completoo basic lnlining u1 USS Decatur. home ported in Sun Diego.
Queen wus one of more thun 10. 000 Pucitic
Murine CofllS Rccruil Depot. f'llnis lslund S.C.
Grecnh1w successfully completed 12 weeks Fleet Suitors and Marines ubourd lhc ships of
of lruining designed to challenge new Murine 1he USS John C. Stennis Carrier Bunlc Group
and USS Bonhommc Richurd Amphibious
rl)cruils hoth physicn lly and mentully.
Grecnluw und fellow recruits, begun their Reudy Group who deployed 45 duys curly to
truining ut 5 u.m. by nmni~g threll miles und participate in Operation Enduring Freedom.
Queen's ship is one of the most powerful
performing culislhenics. In addilion .to the
physical conditioning progrum. Greenlaw warships ever put to sea. The computer-bused
spent numerous hours in clussroom and field AEGIS weapons system is tlie hcurt ol' the
ussij;nmcnts which included lcurning lirstuid, ship's war-fighting capnbility. It centers
lltli1orm regulations. combut wu1er survivul. uround a powerful rudur tlml enubles the crew
murk smunship. hund·to-hund combn1 and to detect. truck und lire on more thun 1()0 1nrussortcu wcupons training. They performed gcts at u time.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
·Den Olcker~ton
Publleher
Diane Kay HIll
Controller

Charlene Hoelllch
General Managet

•

l.tftrn ru rhe t'flif,.,. ,.,,. •·,.ku~t~r. l'liil,f s1wtdd H l~tJ tllaH JOO wuntr. Alll,nrn
m" •whfrrl /u t"dltlnx um/ llllt.~t bfl siM IItll uml lrtl'ludfl mMrfi.I'J 4Nd Ulepl~t~rtl •uuttb.r.
1\ 'jl IIHIIJ:mul lmm •·ill h• Jl,;Mbhl'(i. l .I'Hflrs .rh?uld IHr Ill ~t4wd ldJit, ulktr.Uillf
/.uur~.

rwl prnumdltl••·
1'ht1 IIJiillillll\' txpri!UtlliH tit• rn(Hmn hrJ,,., urt lltl ('ftmrHnu 4if the (lhl•• l'UII•.v

l'ublli'hirtK

c·,,,

'J·

rdlturiut h4Jftrd, unlt'n

tJi hi&gt;rll'i.Jff Hilled.

. Christopher W. Queen

·

NATIONAL VIEW

Calvin W. Greenlaw

Anti-terrorism 'Mincta tries to make security smarter
(Los . Angeles Times) Transportation .
Secretary Norman Y. Mii1ett1 installed federal
security directors at nine U.S. airports, including David M. ~tone at Los Angel?s
International and Rtchard R. Baker at Ontano
International. Stone, an admiral and one of the
Navy's top anti-terrori~m exper~s. and Bake~, a
20-year FBI veteran, are .expenenced secunty
profess~onals. They're sorely needed in a new
Transportation Security Administration th~t
isn 'I doing much. better than the slapdash pn·
vate system it succeeded. ...
.
Airlines, federal officials and aviation
experts increasingly agree that the most cos~­
eflective step would be to put less emphasis
on P.oorly · thought-out random searches
confiscating a grandmother's manicure kit,
rU1i1maging through underwear in. a pilot'~
bag, even searching the person and luggage of
former Vice President AI Gore - twice - on
a recent Midwestern trip.
Instead, experts agree, aviation security
efforts should focus more on improving computerized passenger · profiling systems like
those long used successfully in Israel. That
means more intensive attention to a smaller
numher of travelers. The profiling system
looks for anomi1lies in a traveler's itinerary,
nn~mces and personal profile not, as .is
commonly assumed, at race or ethnicity ....
The good news is that' some federal officials
seem to understand what's needed.
1

TODAY IN HISTORY
,BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Toduy is Mond;~y, July 15. the ll)l\th day of 2002. There are
169 days left in the yc;~r.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On July 15. 1971, President Nixon announced he would
visit the People's Republic of Chin&lt;~.
On this date:
In fl606, Dutch paint~r Rembmndt was born in I.:cidcn,
Netherlands.
.
In 1g7(), Georgia bec;~mc the last Confederale state read·
milled 10 the Umon.
In 1916. Boeing Co .. originally known as Pacific Aero
Products, was founded in Scuule.
·
In 1948 , President Hurry S. Truman was nominated for
another term of office ill the Democratic national convention
in Philadelphia.
·
In 1964; Sen. Burry M. Goldwmer of Arizona was nominat·
ed for president a1 the Republican ni11ional convention In San
Francisco.
·
In 1965. U.S. sdentists displayed close-up photographs of
Mars taken by Mariner 4.
In 1976, a 36-hour kidnap ordeal begun for 26 schoolchild·
ren and their bus driver· when three gunmen abducted them
near Chowchilla, Calif. They were imprisoned in an under·
ground cell but escaped unharmed.
In 1979, President Carter delivered his "malaise" speech in
which he lamented what he.called a "crisis of confidence" in
America.
In 1985, a gaunt-looking Ruck Hudson j!ppeared at a news
conference with actrc;s Doris Day. It was Iuter revealed
Hudson was su ffcring ·from AIDS.
·
In 1996. MSNBC, a 24- hour all-news network. debuted on
cable and the Internet.
Ten years ago: Arkansas Gov. Bill Climon claimed the
Democratic presidential nomination at the party's convention
in New York.
Five year&gt; ago: Fashion dc,igner Gianni Versace was shot
de~d ou1sidc his Mi~mi home: suspected gunman Andrew
Ph1ll1p Cunanan was found dead e1gh1 duys Iuter.
One year ago: China's Prcsidenl· Jiane Zcmin arrived in
l{u"ia to ,ign a friendship treaty - the ftr~1 between the for·
mer Communi&gt;t rivals in niqrc than 50 years.
Today\ Birthdays: Ador Philip Carey is 77. Actor Alex
Karra~ i~ 67. Actor Ken Kercheval is 67. Sen. George V.
Voinovich, R-Ohio, is 66. A~:tor Patrick Wayne is 63. Actor
Jan-Michael Vin~cnt is 58. Rhythm-and-blues sihger Millie
Jack,nn j, 5ll. Rock singer Peter Lewis (Moby Grape) is 57.
Singer Linda Ron,tadt is 56. Aclor Terry 0'9uinn is 50.. R&lt;!C.k
mu&gt;i~:ian Murky Ramonc 1., 46. Rock m.us1c1an Joe Satnant IS
46. Model Kim Alcm 1' 42. Actor W1lhe Aames "42. Actordirector Forest Whitaker i&gt; 41. Actress Lolita D~vidovich is
41 . Actress Brigille Nielsen i&gt; 39. Actor Kristoff St. John is
36. Rock musidan Phillip Fi&gt;her (Fishbone) is 35. Acwrcomcuiun Eddie Urirfln i' 34. Actor Stan Kirsch i' 34. Actor
Scot( Foley is 30. Actor Brian A. Green i&gt; 29. Rhythm-andblues ~inger Kia Thornton (Divine) i' 21.
·
Thought for Today: "He who tells the truth mu~t have one
fool in lhc 'tin·up." - Armenian proverb.

Bend

MILITARY
~~~~~~~
.....
"""
Jason A. Harris

'

.

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

HARD·BALL

The Spfrit of (7 6'lives today
WASHINGTON - The men who first big .lhing to come uh&gt;n¥ thul they
si~:ned · the
Declurution
of cun claim a pnr1 of. This ts the one
Independence risked being hnnged for drum-bun~ing media show where
the actions. If there's u worse way to lhey're gmng to claim a· front-und-cc n·
1er seut.
go,. I cun't think of it. ·
This country wus slartcd by people
risking lheir lives to h'nve a counlr,Y
thnt heralds freedom, honors the indt·
vidual more than the ~nvernment and
says you have u God-~1ven right to the
'' pursuit ot' happiness. ·
Last fall we saw that there ure still
those willing to protect it.
I loved the way those firefighters
trudged dutifully up the stuirs {)f the
World Trude Center. "This is my job," ·
one of the guy~ answered us he run p;tst
u woman with the look of sheer won·
COLUMNIST
der in her face. I loved the way the pas·
sengers on the fourth plane, after learn·
ing whut was happening in Washington
und New York, went for broke and . 1 hold President Bush and his crowd
stormed the cockpit.
responsible for all this hand wringing.
The. fuct thut those. brnve souls rose ' We Americuns have suffered through
to the occasion. epitomizing whul much worse. If you don't believe me.
Ernest Hemingway called "grace under then read some history books. We had
pressure," convinces me thalthls coun· u 25 percenl unemployment rate in the
try is us tough as we were ut her sturt. curly 1930s. There wus no Socilll
Well, u1 leus1 part o'f it is.
Security, no unemployment compcnsa·
This week, as we celebrate the tion, nothing. If you lost your job, then
Fourth of July. there ure people in this you and your family went broke. You
countr.y who still don't get whul it then just hopped ll freight train and
means to be an American. They're becume u hobo.
obsessed •. and I mean crazed •• with
During W\irld War II, 50 million peo;
what happened on Sept. II.
pic were killed. We lost u quarter-mil They buy gus musks, rudialiQn detec- lion of our best and brightest. In the
tors, potassium iodide (to guard combined wars of Korea and Vietnam,
against so-culled "dirty" bombs). They we lnsl ulmo~t half that number.
avoid the subway. shopfing mulls and So stop talking like we are in World
build their own persona bomb shelters War Ill, Mr. President. If this is a real
-- jus1 in case. And. most of all. they war. then it hud a beginning tmd it will
chatter ... constantly about their per· have an end. If this is a serious effort to
sonal fears of what might happen to protect this country from a loose band
them.
of lslat'nic terrorists worldwide, then
You know what I think? I think it's let's call it that.
downright narcissism: they see it as the Let's plant our feet on the ground.

Chris
Matthews

Braziliuns, whose tcum jusl woi1 lhe
World Cup, went nuts ·- over u. socc~r
game! But ut leusl they hud thtngs 111
perspective more than some of us. You
could sec it in their smiles ·· they know
that life is going 10 go on. They know
that there will be more World Cups,
just like there will be Friduy night high
'school footbull this full. the World, ·
Series und Christmus.
·
This is a country of 260 million people. Bud things huve huppened and will .
happen . People die ever~ duy. some·
times wuy too young. Whtle the unucks
were horrific, und terrorism must be
stamped out. lei's put these Fourth of
July threat wurnings into perspective.
Let's stop reuding and jubbering about
the end of the worlu. Let's drop the
"Apoculypse Now" number.
"Oh, I know thai in the midst of this
war there Is a lot of wurllke talk, nnd
I'm us guilly us ... I'm guilty. I talk that
wuy." the president udmiued this \
Monday. Right there. thtll's why we · ~ I
like you, Mr. Pres idem, becuuse some· .
times, when you look down ut those
,
speech curds, I'd like to helieve lhal ·
you're thinking "enuugh is enough."
This weekend. with the fireworkS "
behind us. let's all remember what the
Declamtion. of Independence is all ·
about. It's about U1king risks in order to : be free.
. Let'~ be reusonublc. Compared to
what the signers risked, we're lookin~ ·
at some very good odds. Go tlnd enjoy.
(Chris Mew hews, · author of "Now,
Let Me Tell You What I Really Think" :
(Free Pres.1, 2001) rmd "HardbCIII"
(Ttmdwrme Book.Y. 1999). 1.1 a rration·
ally syndicated coltmmisl for rhe San
Francisco Cltrorric/e and the host. of
"Hardball" on CNBC and MSNBC
cable channels.)

PERKIN'S VIEW

Pledge ruling shows need for conservative judges
M,Y. how quickly Democrats on All told, the presidenl has nominated
Capttol Hill rushed to condemn the fed· 100 able individuals for'federal trial and
eral appeals court panel thai deemed the appeals court seats . .Yet, the Senate
Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional Democrat majority has seen til to con·
because of the phrase "under God."
firm little more than half so far.
"I see no reason," said House Meanwhile, lhe federal courts are in
Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, the crisis mode, according to the
Missouri Democrat, "to change the Administrative Office of the U.S.
time-tested, .venerable pledge that is Courts. The problem isn't the high
such a central ~art of our country's life number of vacancies on the federal
and our nation s herilage." ·
bench lthere have been more vacancies
"I thin.k we need to send a loud and In times past), but there are more key
clear message," said Senate Majority vacancies lhan ever before, creating
Leader Tom Daschle, the South Dakota what the administrative office refers to
Democrat, "that the Congress disagrees. as "judicial emergencies."
The Congress is going 10 intervene, the Some 38 trial and appeals courts
Congress is goin~ do all it can to live up around the country were tn a state of
to the expectations of the American emergency last monlh, based on the size
people."
of their case loads and the length of time
Yet, the party of Gephardt and they have been operating without a full
Daschle bears much of the blame for roster of judges. Last May, when
outra_geous rulings rendered by liberal, President Bush made his first nomina·
activ1s1 courts, such as the notorious 91h lions, there were 33 judicial emergenCircuit; based in (where else?) Sun cies. A year earlier, there were 21.
·
Francisco. After all, the Democrats Apparently, the party of Daschle
have used every maneuver and artifice could h\IJ'dly care less about how many
10 delay, if not block altogether, 1he judicial .!!Cats remain unfilled and how
appointment of mainslream coni!Crva- many federal courts find themselves in
tive jurists to the federal bench; judges emergency situations. The party is more
who would not strike down the Pledge concerned . with blocking Bush nomiof Allegiance because il describes the nees who are too conservative for their
United States as "one nation, under taste; ,wilh keeping open as many judi·
God" because it offends the riot-so-ten· cia! vacancies as possible with an eye
der sensibilities of alheists.
_ toward the 2004 presidential election.
IQdced. it has been more than a year The unspoken hope is thai the voters
since President Bush unveiled his first will turn Bush out of the White House,
II nominees for aP.poinltnents to the and Democrats wil.l retain control of the
federal bench. As of last month, eight of Senate (if they do not lose the upper
those nominees hadn 't even gotten lhe chamber this November).
courtesy of a hearing· in the Daschle With both a Democral in the White
House and a Demrlcral majority in the
lie nate.

Addressing tomato, pepper rot
Bv

HAL KNEEN

Arc your 1oma1o plunts producing fruits with bluck col·
Orcd r01S Ul the biOSSOtn end?
'l'his serious disorder · of
tomato. pepper und eggplant
1s culled blossom end rot.
Losses of 50 pereent or more
mu&gt;' occur 111 the curliest
fru tt.
Initially. the symptoms on
tomatoes und eggplants con·
sist of a small water-soukcd
urea a11he blossom end of the
fruit• As the fruit mutures, a
lesion develops, it enlarges,
becomes sunken and turns
black and leulhery.
On pepper. the . affected
urea. appears tan in color.
Many times a secondary
Infection of molds causes fur·
thcr breakdown of the fruit's
surface. Blossom end rot Is
not a parasitic oraanitm but u
physloloalcal disorder due to
low calcfum levels In the fruit
caused by high action levels
In the soli. drou,aht stress,
eKcesslve soli mo1sture flue·
tuallons, or rapid vegetative
growth.
·Calcium is needed In large
quantities by the plant to pro·
duce normal cell growlh.
When shortages of calcium
occur within the plant al fruit
formation. the !Issue breaks
down earlier. thus forming
the bluckencd sunken lesions.
Reduce the problem of bios. som end rot by maint~i!l!ns
soil pH around 6.5. L1mtng
sui Is according to soil sample
instructions, greatly improves

the uvuilability of culcium This progrum is free und open
ions in the soil.
10 lhc publk.
Usc 11itratc forms of fertil•• •
izcr nitrogen source instead Alfulfu .hay producc.:rs,
of the ammoniacal forms check your fields for potato
(Ureu, ammonium nitrate) leuf hopper dumnge. This lit·
thus reducing excessive vegc- lie sucking insect may quick tutive growth. Avoid soil ly reduce yields in the alfalfa
moi s1ure stress by using field. The bes1 wuy to discov ·
mulches, irriguling when drx er whether you have un excesund huving good sod sive infeslution is to usc u
drainage.
sweep insect net. Sweep your
Foliur upplicutions of calci· field 10 times with the net.
um ure not useful as lhey are
If the number of leufhoppoorly absorbed through lhe pers is greater thun the num·
leaves and thus not trans· ber of inches the height of the
ferred efficiently to 'the fruit alfalfuls you need 10 consider
where it is needed. Fruit with · sprayina your field. For
blossom end. rot should be example. If your ulfulfa is si"
removed to enhance the res1 Inches tall, you should have
of the plant's arowlh.
cauaht leu than aht leatnop·
111
pera. Take Into account how
Are you Interested In arow· much lonaer the alfalfa will
Ina brambles (rupberrles, arow before you will harvest.
blackberries)? Plan to attend Most Insecticidal sprays
the annual Honlculture, Soli muat be applied seven to 14
and Water Resources Nlaht day1 before harvest. Note
on July 18 1t1nina at 6 p.m. at label Instructions for perme·
the Ohio Stale Unlveralt)' thrln type sprays whlcn cau,
Centers at Piketon, locate(( tlon spraylna effectiveness
one mile cast of the intersec· when temperatures arc over
tion of U.S. 23 and Ohio 32. 80 dearees Fahrenheit.
·
The proaram for the
I I I
evenina ·
will
cover Meigs County Fair open
"Aitemate·ycar bearin* sys· class entries for fruit, vescta·
tems for braml:&gt;les,'' Black bles, hay, flowers need to be
raspberry fenilizatlon trial,'' registered Aug. 2 and 3 from
"Black raspberry variety 8 u.m. to 4 p.m. at the Senior
lrial." ·"Cover crop evalua· Fair Office on the Meigs
lion," and "Specialty vegeta· County Fairgrounds.
bles - Bitter melon und (Hr1/ Knee11 Is MeiJS ·
ornamental eg~plant." For Cotmty :1 Extension 11gem ]or
further information, call our t~gricalture mul rrmural
office 992-6696 or directly to · resource.1·,
Ollio . State
Piketon ul .740·289·2071. University.) .

upper chamber - for lhe first time
smce 1992 - lhe party of Daschle
could elevate judges to the federal
bench who reflect its left-leaning ideol·
ogy, like those who dominate· the 9th
Circuit and have turned lhe Constitution ·
on Its head; who misread lhe First
Amendment's guaranlee of "free e11er·
cise" of religion to mean freedom from
religion; who interpret the so-called '
"establishment clause" to prohibit even
tpe mere mention of God, the Almighty,
the Creator, in the public square; who
disdain this nation's Judeo-Christian ;
heritage; who ignore that this Republic :
was founded br men whose' words and :
deeds were tnformed by religion.
Indeed, Whjte House spokesman Ari
Fleischer poinled out that the
"Declaralion of Independence refers to
God or the Crea1or four differenl ·
times."
Which meanil thai the rogue 9th •
Circuit probably would rule that docu- ~
ment unconstituti01lal. Or declare that :
school children didn't have to study the .
Declaration because of its inappropriate :
religious references. This is where lib· =
eral, activist jurisprudence has led us. :
And that's why lhe federal couns need
to be leavened wilh the kind of conservative judges that President Bush
already has nominated.
·
Judges who won't find it odious to
utter the phrase, "So help me God,'' '.
when they re sworn to the bench.
(Jo.weph Perkins i.v a columni.lt for ~
The San Diego Union-Tribune and can ~
be
reached
at :
Jo.1eph. Perkin.1 UnirmTrlb.com.)

.

Page AS
Mond.y, July 1s, 2002

Teen worries over
• ·d
sh01J1•l l• rten
n~

DEAR AHBY: I rend wilh inh!restlhe lfl·
ter from "Worried Pretllens in Culifomi~."
who were t·onwmed aboul a friend who was
shoplil\ing. ·
I huv ~ 1&gt;..-en u thi~f my entire life. I've
stolen from my fumily, the familie of my
friends. und employers. s1ore und strungers .
I don't know c~uclly why I sleul - I just
do. Som.:titncs it' for vengeance; other
1itnu . it's for thc challenge. I s1eul things I
don't nc~d or even wunt. The items usually
huvc liul~ or no vulue, und once I've gotten
uwuy with il, I wonder why I bothered.
I s1~u l when I ti!d bud nbout myself. When
life is going go&lt;ld. I don'l even think about
doing it.
"Worried" is smun · nQt to wunt 10 be
around "Joo" when he goes 10 1he store. If he
is there when Joe gets caugh1. he will lund in
jail with his pul.
Going lu Joe's puren1s will only cause Joe
10 feel resentful und betrayed. "WotTied"
needs 10 tell Joe ubout the concems he und
his friends huvc - and let Joo know thul his
hehu vi or is unacceptable.
· Joe ulso needs to .know he's jeopardizing
the friend ship when he puts his friends in a
sillllllion 1hu1 could j1uve n H.fetime of lcgul
und career implications. If Joe doesn't
'hungc his ways. "Worried" must end the
friendship. BEEN THERE IN

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
I huvc told Elaine thut Mlmc of 1he 1hings
she wants to horrow uru gilh or 10 b.: W&lt;lm
only on special occasion,, I don't wun1 to·
risk losing or having them dumuged. For her
binhduy. I' w given her items similur to
what she's horrow~d fromm~ - bu11hcre's
no stopping her.
I feel like I'm being tuken ud vantugt: of.
Abby. how dl' I put un end 10 her unnoyin!,l
hubit without ruining un otherwise wonderful friendship? RELUCTANT
LENDER, AUSTIN, TEXAS
DEAR RELUCfANT: It's not 'Surpri ing
you f~-cl ust:d. lx'CaUSI: you IU~ve been for the
Just 40 yeurs. It's han! to usscn yourself al\er
huving hcen pussivc for so long. However.
ut)til you Sllll.lmon the ·t:ouruge to t~ll your
friomd the tntlh, you nti!,lht jusl us well hung a
Mucy's sign over your closet door. Have tl
1n11h &lt;;('~&lt;inn 1vi1h Flloit1•• h.•ff)~' th•• \l(r'&lt;'k'\ nut
UEAR AHUY: I love tile stones abOut
"pennies fmm heaven."
My hushund of 46 years usLod to pick up
pennies and any other loose chunge he spotled on the grmmd. It cmbutTussed me. until I
~iscovcrcd 1
.1c. wus putting' the change i.n u
Jllr. When Ihe JUr wus full, he would tuke 11 to
the priest ill our t·hurch to udd to the poor
box·. He still continues this commendable
habit. H.: has tilled jar aficr jur over the
yours. NO LONGER EMBAR·
RASSED, PLYMOUTH MEETING, PA.
DEAR N.L.E.: There is something fitting
about pennies from hcuven going to a charilable cause. I like your husbund 's style.
(Drmr Abby is wrifl&lt;'ll bv Abi ~t1il Vall
Bure11, also k11ow11 us Jrrmm• Pili/Iii'·'· .mul
was fmmded l1y ·111'r morht'r, Pauli11r
Phil/ifJS.
Write
Dear
Al&gt;bl'
ur
www.DearAbb\'.rom or' P.O. Bo.t 69440. Lo.&lt;
A11seles, CA 90069.)

l'liOI&lt;~ NJX

I&gt;EAR BEEN THERE: Thank you for
shu ring your personul experience, and I hope
you lmvc been the beneficiury of your own
udvic~ - und thut you soughl professional
help. I agree thlll the boys must speak up .
Silence indicutcs upprovul.
DEAR AHBY: I huve a friend. ''Elaine,''
·whom I've known since we w.ere 12. Over
I he years. we've smycd close and now enjoy
successful
lives wilh busy cureers and mar·
•
I
rwgcs.
My problem: Elnine doesn '1 like to shop.
Whenever she has u business or pleasure 1r1p
on the hori1.on - or special occasion 10
unend (u wedding, party. business meeting)
- she comeS' over und picks oul clothes.
shoos, jewelry und luggage from MY closet.
When we were in our 20s and single, I did·
t.'t mind. Now, however, we're in our mid50s. and Eluirie 's routine closet ruids have
become a huge annoyance.

EXTRA! EXTRA!
Coming Friday, July 26, 2002
The

Daily Sentinel

Emma Johnson

•

,

Daughter of
frank and janet johnson
Someflnetown. OH

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of local
children - ages n'wborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 26th issue.
Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved!

PIOIUtll muat bt In by
Thurtlday July 11, aooa.
Plolutta oan bt ploktld up alter

July 28th, aooa.
Complete the fonn below and enclose a snapshol or wallet sized picture plus
·u $7.00 churge for each photograph . If more thiln one child is in the picture,
pleuse enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
Send to:

TheDaily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'"' ... pc.
0.000101

""'"'

--~--------------------------------------------·
Child'• Name (1) &amp; Aae (s)i_ _ _ _ _ _ _~_ _ _ _ _ _ _.,;;,._ _

Parent's Name:- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " - - - - - City &amp; State: _ _ _ _ _ __;___ _ _.:__ _ _ _..:...__;__ _ __
(

••• The above lnformatlop will be Uled In the ad. •••
Phone Number:
Submitted by: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

----------------------------------------------HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
THURSDAY Jul~ 18, 20021
in the Sentinel ...
IPiiiil
l!.!ill!lJ

~:f~JPe

.........
..,
,....,

I

....

)

--~--·

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

�.

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

WORLD BRIEFS
Islamic militants
convicted
HYDERABAD. Pukistun
(AP) - A Pukistuni judge on
Monduy convicted four
Islamic militunts in th~ kid·
nup·sluying of Wt1ll Street
Joumul com:Si'('nd.:nt Duniel
Peurl und St'll!t:nred the
Rritish·hom chief detl!ndunt
to dt'ulh. The olht'rs ~cei ved
25 yeur scmences.
l'ukistuni utuhoriti~s hru~·t.:d
(or u violent reuc:tion by
lslumk c~tremists , ulrcudy
ungry owr President Pcrvez.
Mushurruf's support for the
l lnit&lt;.' d Stutes 111 the wur
u~uinst terrorism.
Judge Ali Ashrul' Shuh
handed down the verdict
uguinst chief 11cfendunt
Ahmed Omur Suced Sheikh
und the others - Sulmun
Suqib, Fuhud Nust't.'11l und
Shuik!t Adil - in the hcuvily
guarded juil where th~ triul
wus held uftcr it wus moved
l'mm Kurnchi for security rett ·
sons. Defense lnwyt.·rs suid
they would nppcnl.
In a statement reud to
rer?rt•'rs by his luwycr. Sneed
stud. "we'll see who will die
· lirst, me or Jhe uuthorities
who huve urmn~ed the deuth
scmcncc for me . ·

SEC chief begins
· Investigation
WASHINGTON (AP) Vice President Dick Chenefs
former compun.Y is being vtg·
orously investtgated by the
Securities und Exchange
Commission, which will tukc
enforcement action if needed,
the ugcncy chainnnn snys. ·
As for President Bush, it is
up to him to decide whether
to relcuse documents relnted
to the decade-old SEC invesli~tation of his sale of stock in
hts former oil company.
Hurvey Pin suid Sunduy.
Democruts ure ~ailing on
the president to do so, but u
. White House spokcj)mun suid
"all the relevant SEC docu·
ments" hnvc been mude public.
·
Lawmakers of both purties
pressed uguin for Pit! 's resig·
nation. saying his previous
work for btg uccounting linns
und corporutions us u privutc
securities lawyer crcutes too
much potential for u connict
of interest.
With u stream of company
accounting scunduls shuking
Americans' confidence and
drugging down the stock market.
Bush
und
the
Republicans hnve been on the
defcn~ivc us Dcrii'ocruts huvc
made corporute accountubili·
ty u political issue in this congressionnl election year.

WorldCom
officials shifted
accoun~
WASHINGTON (AP)
Officials ut WorldC'orn Inc.
shifted accounts uround u·s
curly us 2000, well before the
nearly $4 billion in account·
ing irregularities that led the
government to lilc civil fraud
churges ugainst the company,
documents turned over to u
House investigative panel.
show.
Several
managers
at
World Com discovered · the
earlier juggling of the books,
tried to do something about i\
and were brushed off by
senior executives. Rep. Billy
Tauzin, R-Lu.. chuinnan of
the House Energy and
Commerce CommiHee, said
Sunday.
The latest revelation con cerning one of the biggest
accountin~ scandals battering
investors confidence came

'

60 billion stock deal
wcmld expand reaclz
~f dmg giant
NEW YORK (AP) - In u smprising
hlockt&gt;uster m&lt;:rg()r thut would expand
the reach oft!te world's largest dntg com·
pun)•, Ptizer Inc. hus agreed to buy rivul
Phnm1ucia Corp. for $60 billion in stock.
The den! has been approved by the
honrds from hoth companies. Pfizer
spokeswomun Muriunn ('uprino suid
Mondny.
· "lt"s n \'ompelling strategic fit for
Pliler," Cuprino snid.
The merger would create a compnny
tlun produces muny of thc common prescri,ption drugs found in medicine cabi·
net s around the world.
Already the world's biggest Jrug
compnny before the deul, Pfizer's products include Viugru (anti-impotence),
Lipitor (cholesterol) und Zolofl (depression). while Phurmucio's major drug is
the tlrthritis medicution Celebrex.
Phurmucin ulso makes the Rogaine
huir p~ucts und the ,Nicorellc smoking
cessation Ime. Pfizer s over-the-counter
products include everything from
Listcrine mouth wash and Roluids
tuhlcts to Hulls cough drops und Vi sine
eye drops. ·
The new company would huve com-

Assassination
bid thwarted

Monday. July 11. 2002

bined annual revenue of $48 billion und
In the first sill months of the year.
u research-and-developnll!nt budget of onl~ $200 billion in trunsactions in the
more than $7 billion.
Untted States was announced. accord·
"Combining Pfizer with Phunnucia is in¥ to Thomson Financial. At current
a strutegic opportunity that immedituely prtces. n Pflzer-Pharnlaciu merger alone
croutes u global pharn1aceu1ical compa· would udd up to more than a quarter of
ny with unsurpassed resources und thut amount.
cnpnbilities," Fred Hussun. chuirmun
The Plizer-Pham1uciu deal was first
und chief executive officer of reported by The New York Times and
PIU1m1ucia, said ill u statement J&gt;OSloo The Wall Street Joumal for Monduy
on Pfizer's Web site.
editions. Under the deul. Phunnacin
Said Hunk McKinnell. chairmun und shareholders would receive 1.4 shares
chief executive officer of Pfizer: ''By of Pfizer stock for each "shnre in
combining with Pharmucia. we nrc Pharn1ncia - u 36 ~rcem ~remium
ensuring that our core capabilities in the over the company's Fr1duy closmg price
discovery, development und commer· of $45.08.
ciulization of new medicines ure strong
The deul still needs upprovul from
around the world."
regulators und shareholders, but the
The: timing of the dl)ul is surprising Times und Jonmul reported thut it is not
considering the ovcrull hculth of the expected to run into nny major snugs.
economy und the many obstacles fucing
Pfizer, whose stock soored in the lute
the dmg ~ector..
1990s with the success of Viugru, is no
Phurmuceutical com~anies ure experi- stronger to mega-mergers. In 2000, It
encing intense competition from gener· completed u $liS billion ucquisiiion of
ic dmgs. pressure on prices from the · Wumer·Lambert. gaining control the
federaf government und u growing num· cholesterol-lowering drug Liphor in the
ber of patents thut are expiring. Their process.
stock prices huve fullcn in recent
That deal ranks us of the largest glob·
mon.ths along with the rest of the mnrket ul mergers ever.
.
us .distrust in corpornte Amc:ricu grows
Phnnnuciu, bused in Peupack, N.J ..
ulmos1 daily umid· several high-pmfile wus created through the merger of
uccouming ~cand~l~ and bunkruptcies. Phannuciu of Sweden nnd Upjohn Co.
The eros1on ot mvcstor conlidc:nce The company hns· 59,000 employees in
and the dowmum in the economy hus more tlmn 60 countries.
creuted u major slump in merger und
Pfizer. bused in New York City,
acquisition uctivity.
'
employs uhout 90.000 workers.

•

t

MONDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

.

.

•

,,

992-3671

RAf¥0NDJAMFSN
EINANQ!Ab BEffiYIOES. INC.

Flnanclallnstltutlons Division

p :
,. /

"'

,

I··'
·~

Member NA8D/81PC

Court &amp; Second Streets, Pomeroy, OH 45769
.

Call us at:

Dianna Lawson, CFS

(740) 992·2133
•

'""'Ill AdYiror or

lt)!"""ll- FMilllcMell,l,.,

No extra charge for moving fumlture or removfng old carpet.

'

I

~.' ' : ~-!:

All styles of. a~rpet are Included: ·
BERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET, TRACKLESS CARPET, SHAG
CARPET, LEVEL LOOP CARPET and SCULPTURED CARPET.
Call us or stop ln. We'll
tome to your home and
measure for a free no
obllgaffon quote.

..

•Petrp~u lnvestiJJSIJt Slll'fllcea
·

•

~ tllrl•l•n "' "'""'"" ••nit

Every Bank Has Assets. We Named Ours After The Most Important One.

Socunlloa are ollored exclusively through Raymond James Flnanoial Services. Member NASD/SIPC, tn
Indo pendent broker/dealer, loctltd at Peoplee Bank. INVESTMENTS AAE NOT FDICINSURED ARE NOT BAM&lt; DEPOSITS NOA AAE THEY
GUARANTEEDBY THE FINANCIAL INSTITUTION INVESTMENTS ARE SUBJECT TO RISK ANO MAY l OSEVALUE.
'

JOLIET. Ill. (AP&gt; Kevin
Hurvkk won fi1r the second stmighl
yeur ul Chicugolund Speedway, pussmg up u lute pit stop to gnin the lend.
then pitllhll! nwuy Sunduy to win the
Tropk nnu 4(XI.
And he just hurely hud enough fuel :
Hurvick run out uf gus while driving
cclehrutory doughnuts in 'front uf the
puc ked grundstund.
The top Winston Cup rllokie in
200 I picked up his third cun.--er victo·
r~ - hut t1rst in the 12 11111nths. since
hts lusl visit to the suburhun Chkugo
truck .
·
The ruce's drunuuic finish wus set
up on lup 240 of the 267-lup event.
Pole-winner Rynn Newmun. who wus

STAF.F REPORT

CHESHIRE Aller
ruins . washetl
uwuy
Snturdny's gn1iles ut the
2002 Kyger Creek Lillie
Leugue
Tournament,
Su ndny brought beuer
weuther. ullowing !'or 11 full
slme of uction.
Six gumes were . pluyed
Sundny, Including the first
of
four · quurterflnnl
mntchups. The other three
quurterflnul g_nmes will be
pluyed todny nt. the Kygct·
Creek Em,ployees Club
bullpnrk.
Sunduy's uction snw the
t1rst home run of the lournnment, un estimated 230foot, . 3-run shot by Arron
·Story of Pomeroy Swisher
&amp; Lohse thnt helped propel
his cluh to un 11·1 win over
lhe Muson Yellow Juckets.
With his blnst, Story
become the fil'llt cntrunt In•
the unnuul home run de1·1ty,
which will be held nt 5:30
p.m. Wedncsduy prior to ·
the consolution gume . He
ulso got to keep the home
run bull.
Today's quarlerfinuls ure
scheduled to begin ut S:30
p.m. with Bidwell I meetmg Federul Hocking. Omne
2 ut 7 p.m. fentures the
Kyger Creek Bobcuts
ugalnst the Rutlnnd Reds.
Tito third quartorflnul, set
for 8:30·p.m., pits the New
. Haven Reds ngulnst Green
I.

Romero wins
Scottish Open
LUSS, Scotland (AP) · Eduurdo
Romero
of
Argentinu took udvumugc of
u lute collapse from Fredrik
Jucobson to win the Scottish
Open In u pluyoff und
become the third-oldest winner on the Europcnn tour.
Romero closed with u I·
under 70 und forced the piny·
oft' by muking n 10-foot pur
pull on the li nul hole nt Loch
Lomond.·

Carpenter ·
s~sto

)&lt;"J!t&gt;I!RI\L HOCKIN!; S,
GtUlF.N 1111
Kyle Deun hucJ u triple, u
double und scored two runs
to lend Federul Hocking
pnsl Green II to open tournument pluy Sunduy mornHERE IT COMESBucs pitcher Dnniel Buckley fires tnthe plate during first
Ing.
'round pluy nt the Kyger Creek Linle Leni!UC Tournumcnt on Sundny. Gr.-en I bcut Chester.
. Pltllt IH KCLLT, i:S
7-3. to ndvunce tn tnduy's. action. (Andrew Curter)
.·
.

Grand Prix win

Jerry Manuel's
Job Is safe
DETROIT
(AP)
Chicago White Sox. generul
munager Kenny Williams
met with Jerry Manuel for 4~
ml nutes nnd suid his munugcr's job Is ~ufc. ·
The White· Sox are it) sec·
ond place in the AL Centrut
nine
games ·
behind
Minnesotu und five games
under .500.

Splinter
remains on Ice
HERNANDO. Flu. (AP) Ted Williams' youngest
duughter ex.pressed anguish
over the legal wrangling over
her father's remains.
Speaking publicly for the
tirst time since the busebull
great's death July 5. Claudia
Williams suid some mediu
accounts' have been "terriblr, .
hurtful, and simply not true. '
Attorneys
for
Ted
Williams' estate will ask a
Florida court to decide the
matter when· they rile the ·
. will. us early as Monday.

'•

.

Clear skies prevail on Day TwO

DEARBORN, Mich. (AP)
- Slewurt Ginn shot u 6·
tlr1der 66 to win the Senior
Players Chumflonship, the
fourth und linn mujor of the .
yeur.
Ginn finished m 14 under
lo win by one stroke und cuplure his lirst victory on the
Senior POA Tour.

CLEVELAND . (AP) Putrlck Cnrpentil!t's engine
didn't blow, his wheels
stayed on. und he didn't run ·
out of fuel.
Curpenticr.
beset
by
mechunical problems lust
week in Toronto, finully got
some luck and his secortd
curcer victory, winning the
Mnrconi Orand Prix of
Cleve lund to end Cristiuno da
Muttu'.l CART winning
strcuk ut four races.

24M'. uml Hurvick 's Chevl'l•l~t dh· l.truighmway tu get pu•t Kurt Busch
tunced itself SII.'Udily Ill the tini,h.
und wuund up lu;.mg control und
"The hilliest worry I hud v.u' un 'ku.lllin11 thmugh the pnvcd urea
the restart," Hurvick snid. "Jdf below the whit~ line in the lirst tum.
Gordon is great on resturts. Whl)n he
On Mtme lrucb, lhul i~ ~'lln.idere-d
didn't gel me there. I thoul!ht 1\C \llll of h&lt;tund, , Nut ut Chlcaj~ulund .
cnuld win it."
llurl'kk wu' ublc to re!Jluln ~·ontn•l
Hurl'kk won by lU! 12 sel'l•nd•. fin· nnd ptt urter Ellioll Sudler, Hut
ishing nbout eight cnr·ll"ngth&gt; uhel!IJ . Stm·llin nn1l Nndeuu •pun hehind
"My cur wus greut in clenn uir, "b'ltt him .
.
when I got up close lo him, tl"-' fl\ull
Tuny St~wnrt. who uppcured to
end just tO\lk ot'f." snid Gmdon. hnw the ht&gt;tc't cur · on the true!.:
whose winless string is now 26 ruce,, thl'l'\ll!h must of' the h1'1 hulf of t~c
"He drove the line he need to run und m •·~. wt•und up third utier tuklng gt1s
I'm just huppy tu come in secund ." nnly un hi&gt; ht&gt;t pit 'li'P
Hun'kk got u big llrenk (Ill lnp I 'l7
Stt.•wurt, whu left immediately uflor
when he dol'e to the hotlom of the the finish tu lly tn Kukomo, Ind .. fc:ir
slightly bunked truck on the mnin . n &gt;oprinl \'llr me.: Suntlny nil!ht. sll~.

2002 KYGER CREEK LITTLE LEAGUE TOURNAMENT :

Ginn tops
Senior Players

)

lcmling the ntl' C,
neurly cmshed us his
right fn)nt tire went
11ut. Jerry Nnd~nu
lost control of his.cnr
nnd cmshed hehind
Newmun.
The seventh ''HU·
lion of the ruce
nllowed the lenders
to pit. but Hurvkk
nnd Jell' Gordon who hml been run·
ning ninth und lOth. t'espectlvety stuyed on the truck .
.
Gordon, the four-time und dt'l'endlng series chmnplon. couldn 't get pust
the new lender on the t-estnrt ''n lup

'

MILWAUKEE (AP)
Jeff Slumnn tired n 3-undcrpur 68 for u lour-stroke victo·
ry over Tim Herron (66) und
Steve Lowery (70) .und his
SCCllnd Oreuter Milw'nukee
Opcnlitlc.
·
His 23-under 261 tott1l wns
one stroke shy of Loren
Roberts' 72-hole tournument
record set two yeurs ugo. It
was Slumun's si~th PGA
Tour victory.

Wolfowitz: U.S.
regretS civilian
Afghan deaths ·

Mexican
government
frees prisoners

Kevin Harvick triumphs ~at Tropicana 400

Slumanwlns
GMOtltle

"

HANSON
ISLAND. in Puget Sound. he said.
transmitters n'tlnched to her injury from u propeller."
British Columbiu (AP) Killer whales, a kind of with suction cups to help
And she could pur kayak·
An orphan killer whale who dolphin. are found in all the the Cunudiun Depnrt111ent of ers at risk by nuzzling up
strayed itlto central Puget world's oceans. Resident Fishe.ries and Oceans keep against them. noted John
Sound · neur Seuule lust pods in the hiland waters of un eye on her during her
Nightingale
of
the
n\onth eagerly fled her the United Stutes and first duys us u free whale.
· human helpers to strike out Canada are struggling with
Canadian offlciuls ure Vancouver Aquarium. If
on her own in her nutivc dwindling sulmon runs, us king bouters to try to steer such behuvior is encourwuters.
increasing human contact clear of her. She hud gotten uged and becomes 'a prob·
After pausing to pluy with und pollution.
too cozy with bouters in lhe lem, she may have to be
some kelp. ·the 2-ycur-old
Within two hours of her Scuttle urea.
Iuken buck into captivity.
whule swum out of Dong release. the orca swum up to
"It's for her own good," But, such u drastic step
Chong
Buy
on
Sunduy
u
passing
motorboat.
The
Barrett-Lennard
suid. would be u long wuy off.
BAGRAM. Afghanistun
(AI') - The U.S. government heuding west. The eight oren was eusily recogniz· "There's u very reul possi - "That's the worst-case
wusjustified in un uir rnid thut passing members of her able becuuse of y·ellow bllily of her S11Stuining an scenario," he suid .
likelr killed innocent Afghan birth pod he adcd east, r-------.;..---~-..;;.;.;..;.;;,;,~~::...;~.;,;,;;.;,;,;;,;.;.;;;;,.;;,;.;;,;;;.;;:;__ _,
civilians becuusc the strike though they were still with·
wus aimed ut enemy targets in heuring runge of euch
whore "bud guys" were hid- other.
"She's a toddler." snid
ing. deputy Defense Secretary
Vancouver
Aquarium whule
Paul Wolfowitz suid Monday.
expert
Luncc
Burrell·
Afghan officials . say 48
Afghnn civilians were k.illcd Lennard. Killer whales hnve
und 117 others were injured about the same life spun us
July I when u U.S. AC-130 humans, und their life
gunship fir.ed on sever~l vii- stuges roughly parallel
luges m Uruzgun province. those of humans.
The orca was kept in the
Among the deud were 25 peotemporary
pen uft1.1r she
ple ut u wedding celebration,
urrived lute Suturduy on u
Afgl1ans suid.
400-mile,
13-hour trip
U.S. ofliciuls suy the uuuck
ubourd
a
donated
high·
wus launched after forces
reported coming under anti· speed ferry. She wus capuircrnft lire nround the vii· tured in June after spending
luges. A joint U.S .·Afghan the winter by herself in ·
Puget Sound.
investigation is underway.
The orcas that entered the
buy - a very unusual move
for killer whales, . BurrellLen nard suid - were us
tentative us the orphan.
They entered the buy "slowly, inquisitively," he said.
"Your impression wus that
SAN SALVAUOR ATENthey
·were being coy." he
C'O. Mexico (AP) - An
explosive four-day stundolf said.
cased Monday us vi lla.g~:rs
They milled . around· for. u
Is your portfolio riskier than you think itis? If you haven'(
fight in~ to block u $2.3 hil- time ut u distance. exchung- .
lion atrporl project outside' ing culls with the long-lost
thought about diversifying you.r investments, the answer to that question
Mexico City released most of orca, then advanced a bit.
their hostages ufrer officials She poked her head out of
might well be "Yes.''.Diversification is one key to a sound future for your
freed tO or their imprisoned the water, Lis (lid some in the ·
family and an enjoyable retirement for you. Stop by and see one of our
comrudcs.
group .
Two hours after officials · "Her best chance is to
representatives for a Risk Assessment. We can help you understand the
freed ·the prisoners, leaders
benefits·of a diverse portfolio, and tell you about your investment options
from the town of Sun find u female she cun bond
Sui vudor Atenco brought out with closely," said uquuri.·
including stocks, bonds, money market investments and mutual funds.
15 hostages. put them aboard u.m vice president of opera·
Because you can't just stick it all in ajar anymore.
two pickup trucks and sent tions Clint Wright, who
them off to an exchange point oversaw coordination of her
transport north.
along a highway.
The hope is that she· will
· They said four remaining
find
u niche within her clun;
hostages would be freed after
it was confirmed that two but life us u solitary whale
other detained villagers were in these waters would offer
hospitalized, as officials say. her u more secure future
. ~.· ...;' ·,
·, '·
•
und not still in custody.
than she could have found

FREE CARPET PADDING

'

Plga 11

Orphan killer whale swims free in her
native waters-toward an unknown future

Here's the deal... Buy your carpet from us and we'll give you the pad FREE!!

f

Dicmrmrd Round14p, Pcrgt~ 82
ll•erscm partits on, Page 83

Mond•y, July 15, 2002

Ptizer to purchase rival Phannacia

th~ duvs ul\~r Tuu1in ~uitl
new in(ormution indicutt•d
that WorldCom founder und
form.:r chief executivt~
Bemurd Ebhers wa uwuro of
the improper hoo~kecping
disclosed lust month.
Ebbers' unom~y hns insist(d he hud no knowlc:dge of
the transactions.
rommitto:c invcstit:nlors
received five hoxcs of doni·
mcnts
Thursday
from
WorldCom. the dcudlinc set
by the panel in it. request for
the records. ·

PARIS (APl - . Fnmch offi.
ciuls credited spt:ctutor;; und
police for thwnrting nn ussns·
sinution nllcmpl on Presid.:nt
Jncqucs Chiruc by u m:o-Nnli
who.pullc:d u rifl~ from u guitar case during the nnnuul
Bastille Dny pnrud&lt;'.
The rnun tired 111 least once
from a fully IOltded rifle us
Chime. riding in nn open-top
jeep about 50 ytlrds nwuy.
wns reviewing troops nt the
start of n pomp-lilled militnry
purude to celebrute Fnmce 's
nutionul holiday Sunday.
Cries of ulurm sprung out
from members of the crowd
ulong the tree-lined edge of
Pul'is' Champs-Eiysccs. neur
the Arc de Triomphc. At leust
one spectator grubbed the gun
und tumed it upwurd . Cuught
by . police, the ri1un tried to
turn the gun on himself.
Paris police said the mun
wus 25 ycurs old und a member of "neo ~ Nuzi und hooli gun" groups. . ·
'

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Page A&amp;

'

Sel.by slam tops Fernandez picks up first win
Yanllees, 10-7
CLEVELAND (AP) - Bill Selby hud to cairn down ut\cr
within inches of beating Mariano Rivera. Moments
later, h1s heart wns really racing,
He hit a grund slum tn cup' a six-run ninth
·
inning against Rlveru us the Indians rallied from
seven runs down to stun the New York Yankees

comin~

.

Trulling · ufter four innings. Clevelund cutltto7-4 enter·
the ninth uguinst Riveru (1-4), who blew his second save
ot th!! series nfter converting 17 struight chances.
Chris Magruder's RBI gmundout nnd Ellis Burks' run-scoring double mude it 7-6. Riveru then intentionally wulked Jim
Thome to loud lhe buses with one out for Selby, who had live
homers In 269 career at-buts.
Selby hit a 2·2 pitch over the right-field fence for his first
homer since June 17, 200 I - when he was with Cincinnati.
Ricurdo Rincon (1-3) pitched I 2-3 Innings as the lndluns
split the four-gflllle series.
.
Ron(!ell White hud three of New York 'M II hits und drove in
two runs for the Yankees' 7-0 lead.
Thome hit o three-mn homer, his 27th, to make lt7-3 In the
sixth off Mike Musslnu. Mussinu allowed three runs and four
hits In six Innings and urpeared headed to his fourth straight
win and IOth in his last I decisions.
.._zquel 's RBI single off Ramlro Mendo7Al made It 7-4 in the
seventh.
The Yankees scored four run~ in the first. Alfonso Soriano
led off with the first of flve singles in the liming agolnst Chuck
Finley, who also walked two In the rally. Bernie Williams.
White, Robin Venll!ru and Chris Widger ulltlddcd RBI singles.
Jason Oifllllbi hud an RBI double In the second and Rill sin·
gles by Williwns and White in the fourth mode it 7-0.
Finley guve up seven runs, seven hits and five walks in 3 13 i~nings, his. ~hortest -outing in . 17 sUII'Is since going I 2-3
inmngs on Apnl 16. .
·

· in~

HOUSTON (AP) - The bull felt a little odd .
In his hand, but !hut's OK- knucklebutler Jared
Fernw1dez won for the lirst time In the big
leagues.
· .
Fernandez pitched seven strong' innings
Sunday, helping the Cincinnati Reds end u fourgame losing streuk with tm 8-3
victory over the Houston Aslros.
AIII'On Boone was 3-for-S with
two doubles to help stop the Astros' flve·giunc
·winning streak.
Femnndez ( t -0) struck out eight - lops lor u
Reds pitcher this sellSOiJ' - In just his fourth
mlijor leugue start. He limited the Astros to three
runs and seven hits In only his second stnrt since
being recalled from Triple-A Louisville on July

ReelS

4.

Tim Redding (3-~) allowed live runs m1d
seven hits in 3 1-3 innings. His right knee was
spiked on a play at home plate In the foUrth
inning. und he WIIS lifted two butters later. He's
listed as day to day.
Reddln11 is 0.3 with five no-decisions In his·
last eight struts and husn't won shx.'CI u· twoinning relief stint May 29. He hasn't won as a
starter since beating Philadelphia t 7-3 on May
13.
'
Sean Casey sturted the Reds' scorinll In the
first Inning with an RBI single. It becume 2-0 in
the fourth when Adam Dunn broke out of on 0for-14 stretch with a double, and went to third on
Casey's single. Dunn scored on u wild pitch by
Redding.
Rnul Oqnmle1.'s RBI single drove Redding
out of the gume. Corky Miller followed with a
two-run double to the left corner oil' .reliever
Brundon Pufler for S-0.
In the slx.th, Femundez hit reliever Scott
Llnebrink io the leg und the ball cnrccned Into

~~~ - Reda'

Jared Fernandez pltchea 11 knuckleball durin&amp;
the sixth lnnln&amp; Sunday In Houaton.
Fernandez struck out aeven better• In the 83 Clnoy win; (AP)
right llcld for an RBI Ringle to make It 6-0.
Crals Biggio doubled fn a run ln the sixth for
Houston·~ fil'!lt run.
· Lu11o's two-run hOmer in the seventh closed
the m11rgin lo 6-3. It wu.~ his sixth homer of the
year.
·
Pinch-hitter AuRiin Kenrn~ hit u two-run dou·
ble ln the ninth to round nut Clncinnatl'tiCOrilll. .

•
I

'

•

�Ia

The Daily Sentinel

AROUND
THE
DIAMOND
•

•

IIIIIOMII.el\lllt
btl

. ,.

01

.st7

a\

L

&amp;a
••

~

"

••

.&amp;all

•

41

10

,&amp;51

...

.~

q .488 1tl
q ..as ,...
41 4t .... 11
Ceftll'el
WLI'IIQI
4t ~ .1&amp;7 , 47 " .Ill
, ..

q
,

kLM
CIMI!\.'1111
~
~

Sl

II
1111
WHI

m

,oQ7
.3'/0

17

M!MIIIItt

,.

,
I.GIAngitll

IS

3?

.IM

-

...
"""~ ..
~
~

~
48

,af1
,4e7

·~
II

,

WLI'oiOI

...._

" s7 .m

...
.. ..........
.. ·*
' ~ .._y

BY THE ~SSOCI~TtD PRESS
TORONTO - Erk llinskc hit ll
winning homer in the ninth ul\¢r ~tlll·
n....:tin11 1'or u ticbreuklnl! htm1o: 11111 in
thll SllVtnth us hnst .Tomnto t~ut
Boston,6·S,. 1\lr Its thtrd
stl'll(ght win .
.,,
• ~mske homen•d tlll . l'it,n
Wul.:~hold m the ~ev~nth. und lut Ius
16th homer yn ~ lus~ r U!l ~tcth
Ufbinu's (0·-l).hrst ptldlm the nmth:
MARtNKIIS 7, l)t:VIl. RA\'S 6
,At St,. Pc)~rsbu ~~· Fl11 .. Ruh :n
StciTII lnt 11 llebreuklllll home run Ill
the dl!hlh inninll to kud Seulllc.
Bret Doone ulsn hit u solll h•lmcr
for the Muriners. wh11 guv : Freddy

ChiolQO C\lbl t. 1'101101 •
Sin ~ncltao a, eolalldo I

t,:::Ote,'rt~t'::'l:\

Pl1ltbu!Qti~IWIIII&lt;NS

St, t.oulll,.#~~not
N.V.t.ltli~PI\1110ttD11111 ·

ClftoiMIII \.IIOUIIGII'

Colatadol,
a.
1.01111 4, IIIIInl'llncltao3
OltQO 1
Lot~I.Atl!Onl1

IIOntlly'aO.~Gt14ta,~~~~ •.e) " MOnltMl
tPIMVH)liN.Y.Mtll(lloelk1·

.afi.t'""'" 0.,.111 Ohlolt10 Cuba
2~no t•l), t:oe p.m.
1~t.i.78i' t"'- ..,., 11HautiOn (Crull

=~b=~'PI atlltMIIttte

tlterlt C·l) • 11 lln 011180
tCt.I'MI~n. 1o:osp.m,
at. 1.ou11 (T,Irnlth 1-0) 11 Loa AnQtltl
~"'1.:,: ~~i ll Stn l'fti\QIIQO
tJJnHII t-t,l:~~p.m.

Cotortdo

Ot;ii'N:" .._.
) •' 11.v. Mttt IL!IIIw
..
'l),ti:IOp.m.
·
.
Atllllll
74) et Ohlolgo Cuba
~~~~ 11 Stn l'llnalloo
·
tantu.e),I:Oip.m.
81. LCNII (ltntll Dol) II 1.01 AnQtltl
l'tOIIcll t~toM~t

=I:MIId

='"'~~:If·

1=tp.m.

)ltHtltltlon(Oiwlll
IWOII' 4•1) , II t.lO!\IItll

11~-il-r::u:;, 11 MIIWIIIttte b

"

· ="'!~'~) Stn
1,1o:arD
II'Mvyo-:J' 10' P.lll·
AIMflllll LMeut
•
JMIL I'll.
•. '
1111 Sol .a*»

'"·--·

...... ~-

~~

:o;;rOifi

,._
..._
·

=::=.om

11

.411

11•
17

'!! .!: ,r-''/0
.. .... •

I!

~
3?

-

-;1m

41

u

~,:

.:sao

•1:~ ::l: :m
:fl

ot

1

,;~

WHI

•

JIM111t

w L
u ,.

1111
.1:10

~~~

o10

eo

.~

ttl::

111
-

H f. :HI

:

17
15, c~::~~=. 11101111,

:o..ror

&gt;OMt3,0!1fc~VoWIIIItiOic t,llndiJI~"

1

'III!Onlo 4, 110110n I
:tr.~~f ~. 10 lnnlnQI
Qlhll.;lt~St~tmortO
,
~~~~::'a=:ne~ 1

,

his pit~h t:mmt, but we just
Ku1.uhisu Ishii mude sut'C didn'tl!i vc him un t1ppm1uni·
tht: Los Angeles Dndgcrs ty to do thut."
t.mdt.'d their showdtlWII scri~s
Elo:l'&lt;lS IO,IIIIAV•:s 3
with Arizonu in the sumc spot
Wil nrdct" hit n grunt! ·
they hcgun It : ftrsl slum on· Dumiun Mo~s (4·4)
pi11ce.
llllli hud livt RB Is to Icud
Ishii held Al'iZilllll Montreul over Atnntu hd't&gt;t'C
to two hils over 7L2.-3 shutout
. I the third · lur~cst Olympic
lnninss. nnd the os Angees Studlumcmw ofthescuson.
Dodgers avoided n four-gumc
With 25.109 on hund sweep hy bcuting thtl Montrcul's third m1wd over
Diumondbucks 2· 1 Sunduy. · 20,000 this sensl)ll - fnr u
· "The one thing you hcurd 11m Rulncs bobbleheud
ubout Ishii beforo we signed motion, the second·p liCe
him wus thut ho wus 11 big Expos split tho four-gumc
gilmc fiilchcr," Dodgers num· series to druw within 9 112
nger im Trucy snld. "My gumcs of Atluntu in the NL
guess is thut he's been Eust.
involved inulot of bly gumes Juvlcr Vuzqucz (7 · 5)
in Jnpun, nnd thnt he rfscs tn ullowed two runs in seven
the oecnslon."
innings.
He did just thut for the
Roctm;s s, GtANl'S 3
Dodycrs. movinf thenUI hulf·
Slmwn ·. chucon Rll ched
I d o tho Wor ld seven innings of twn·
. 1it bu II ,
gumc 111ea
Series
chumpion ullowiny onfy un uneurncd ·
Dlnmondbucks In the NL run, us vl slllng Coloi'Udo
West.
· Sllll[lllCd U four•!!UI11C losing.
Ishii wulked nve und struck streuk. ·
·
out five In his longest S!int so Chucon (4·6) got .hls first
fur for Los Angeles. Thts wus victory since Muy Mhy nvcr·
just 11nother big g11me for the powering the Oiunts. whost:
rookie, who uppe11red In 10 fivc ·gumc winning strcuk
Jupun Series, · winning five wus snupped.
chumplonshlps with tho
l)urry Bonds went l· for-4
Yukult Swullows.
with un RBI singl~ fnr Sun
"I ' ve hud c~pcrlcnce In Frundscn, which lost for just
chumpionships In Jopon," the sixth time in 17 gumes.
Ishii suid throuah un Inter·
CI\RIIINAI.S 4, PI\DRRs \
preter. "I thou,ht ubout thut . I Bud Smith got h)s first wm
like pressure, ike to win big tlf th~ ycur, uguinst th~ u:um
gomcs."
· he no-hit in September. uml
Adrlon Bcltrc's sucrlficc lly drove In u run us St. Louis
In the fourth scored Los wonut Sun Diego.
An~elcs' flrst run oiT Mi11ucl Smith ( I·S) 1\ud struggled
But stu·(4-6). Puul Lo Ducu's so budly thut he wus
RBI single In the fit~h guvo scrutched from u sturt just
the Dodgers u two-run leud. before the Ali·Stur brcuk. He.
Guillermo Motu cume on hud no problem uguinst the
for Ishii oftcr Ishii issued u punch less Pudres, holding
two-out wulk to Junior Spivey them to three hits In seven
In the clkhth. · ,
scoreless innin~s.
.Eric tlugne pitched the
J.D. Drew, m his second
nmth for Ills ml\)tlr longue· go me buck from the dlsublcd
leudlng 33rd suvc. He list, homered for thu
ullowcd Mutt Willlums' lirst Curdinuls.
·
hpmer this seuson, with one
Bobby'Joncs (5 -S) tnok the
out.
.
loss.
Only one Arlznnn runner
CUllS 10, Ml\ttUNS 3
reuched second buse usul nst . Summ~ Sosu hi1 one ol'
ls!lii. Spivey led off the sume Chicngo s four homers to
wllh u single und stole second buck Murk Prior (3-2) us the 'NUTHER OLD BALGAME- Dodgers 'rookie' pitcher Kazuhlsa
with two outs. Ishii then Cubs completed 11 swee1&gt; of the second Inning agaln5t tho Diamondbacks on Sunday. (AP)
wulkcd Luis Gonzule1., but Florida nt Wri11lcy Field.
·
Wllllums fouled out.
Sosu hit his 29th homer, u
•
"We hud sevcrul lirst·pitch two-run shot in the seventh Muellcr homered in the double
off
Brundon
outs und he hud u four-pllch ·off Vlud.imir Nunez to tic eighth off Oswuldo Muircnu. Duckworth (S·7) to lead New
· i ng eur Iy 1n t11e gumt:, " H&lt;)uston's Luncc Bcrknum
•
M•:Ts 4, I'1111.1.11•:s 2
yor k
mn
fnr
over
,v 1s11I ng
Arizm:u munugcr Bob Brcnly the NL !cud. Cmey Puth:rson,
Pedro Astueio pitched Phlludelphiu.
sui d. 'Our best chnncc to run Alex Gm1zulez und Bill seven shurp innings , und
Rcy Ordonez und Edgurdo
him·out of there wus to run up
Roberto Alomur hit 'u two·1·un Alfonzo ulso knocked In runs

NL

=-~~.~.:~~

0\lolfiO C\lbl10, Ftontla 3

C

lunHI''a a.m.o

· ~t.IOiton s

:...111~ 1~= ~Nev. Vllnltllt 7
11111mon e, Othln ~

;:t::,=~·;~·~'h.lm ~

:Chloluo Whltoloot e, Dttral14
,
MondtW'I O.l!llt
"'Ull IBonoll 1·0) 11 l&lt;t~u•

Clly

~:,0~,~1J·~'31'ft'~t~\ ~= t•4l,
T:OU.I!I.

(Prtnhlln
4·11
-1lullli
1'0111011 ~41,
?:08 p.m
. II tlllllmort
N.Y. Vllnltloo (O.Horntndu 5•1) t1
X&gt;h'f:~~P;'~~~·~~;~o~&amp;i~.;.,

a..) 11

CttVIIII'Id !Phlltlpt G-1), ?tOt P·"'· ·
Ollcltncl (UIIy loG) t1 ,.IIIPI ~ (Aupe 0•.
1), 7:11p.m.
'liMit tltll ~·31 11 Kanm Oily
tAu.l'tlmtndla 0.0 , 7:35p.m., ancr Ill"~•
Antlltlm (1.101101' . 1-1') II MlnnHoll·

, (8tnllr~~ ·~~'a.m..
.IHttlt · (Pinttro 10.31
·= H ) , 11:10 p.m.

II

tlllllmol't

.

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

PLOUAY, Frunce (AP) Finally, Lance Armstron11
turned on the speed us the Tour
de Fmnce nelli'cd the pans of
the mce where he hopes to build
his founh strllillht champi·
onship.
A duy ufier losln11 time in a
cmsh, Annstrong covered the
finul pun of Sunday's eighth
stnge through Brfttany in e~tcep·
tionully fast time to keep pace
with race leader Igor Gonzalez
Oaldeuno of Spuln.
"Thut's probably the good
news ubout the crush - It's that
I wus reully forced, for the first

BUCS

Belmcl suid. "I just didn't
mukc the pitch, und ltuke ull
the blumu."
Despite being on puce to
strike out 201 times und
brenk Bobby Bonds' singl~·
senson striku out rcco1·d ol'
181), Ncrnundcz leuds NL
shortstnps with 17 honiers
und 46 RBis. Hernandez Is
trying ttl be more selective
with two strikc,s thi s slluson,
und is hit.ting .290, ubove his
lifetime uveruge of .24M
coming into the season.
"I still swing ul bud pitch·
cs, but when I get two strikes
I cun probably let u bud pitch
go," said Hernandez, who
turned 33 Sundny. "I hope I
cun do It uli the time. But I'm
only human."
Ruben Quevedo (5·6) gave
up three runs in five innfngs,
and four relievers combined
to allow one hit over the
final four innings for the
Brewers. Mike DeJe11n
pitched out of u ninth·l nning
Jam for his 16th save in 19
opportunities.
With one out; DeJcun
wulked Jasoi1 Kcndull , · und
Wilson's ground out moved
him to second . With fi.rsl
huse open, Royster opted to

NO MORI! PRIVACY FOR YOU - Allen
lverton, rl&amp;ht, talks with •n unidentified
women. In the early morntna ho1.1r1
Sunday et hi• Gladwyne, Pa. home . (AP)

HI'

lloh IICICitr mutt
ThiiiOI loulll 4e
lnlllrl lhll Ill
Clll• 01'17" 1111 I
tmp,loytu 1ne1
tn the dltllno• or au.t4
tppdoenll
lor
County r101 to tn ••ltllnt
tmptoymtnl '" not on
hy ol 111111not or 111.11
dltorlmlnliecl lttlntl July, aooa, 1t 11:00 r101 to lho Pflntlllll
DIOIUII of r-, oolor, o'otook· 1.m. thllolo potnt of blllnnln~r
rlltelon, .... nttlontl towing ...orlbtd ,.., oonttlnlng 1.tl
that tho NBA stur wont lookln11 for her
origin,
htndloep, 111111, tllutllln the 1oree. mort or l"il
there, usklng security auards If they hud
lftOHtry, or lat.
County of Melge end 111biHI to 111 Ill
seen a car with sm11shed windows. He
All oontrtolort 1ne1 IUtlt of Ohio, to wit: 11 umtnlt tntl
left without finding It, authorities suld.
IUIIoonlfiiCIIorl
ltlng IIi plrl of 1 rlghtHr-wty.
Involved with the . 20.11 torte, more or Alllron 111n1 1411 lfl
Pollee have ordered the 76ers'lluurd to
projtol 1h1il to the 1111, treot of 11nd Ill" • JO'r;llllr wltll
remain at home until Tucsdu~. when he
••tent prtollnble, Ult lrtn1rerred lo Ken 1 plttllo ldlniiiiOIIs scheduled to tum himself 111 after his
OhIo prod uoh, end Ktmbtlrly Will 11 liOn OIJilniiCiriiiiCI ;
lawyer return s from u European vacameltrltlt, l.trvlou rtoordtd In Ottd C.T.I . 1144
end Iebar In lht look 111 11 Pill 111r1ng1 lrt
tion.
tmpltmtnltllon or 001 , Mtlge county euumtd 11111 Itt lor
"If Iverson is seen on the street or out
I h 11 r
Pro Ito t. fiiiiCIOI'illr't Oil lot. tht httrmlntllon al
(lanyinJI. we will 11rrest him," Pollee
DOMIITIC I'TIIL MilOt County Ohio, tntlll only, Tht
Commissioner Sylvester Johnson said
Ull IIIOUIIIIMINTI tlta btllnt 1 Plrl of ltiOVI dttOrllfiiiOn
AI IPICI"ID IN Prtollon I, Townthlp w11 pr~p~~rtd from Ill!
Thursday.
·
IICTION 148.011 OP 7 Nortl\, fll1n111 14 tolutl turvey mieN
Thtl charges filed aaulnst Iverson
THI
(OHIO) fiiiYIIID Wul,
1o IpI o on the 1011\ Clly or
ln.c lude felony trespass und weupons
CODI APPLY fO THII Towntl\lp, Mtllt April, ZODG, by C;
churgcs and misdemeanor assault.
Pllo.JICT. COPIII OP County, IIIII of Ohio Thom11 lmlth, OhiO
IICTION 111.011 OP 1nd mort pll'lloul~rly ProiHtlonll
Anonymous sources told Tho New
York Times in Sunday's editions thllt would.ha ~e no comment whl tc the pol ice THI (OHIO) fiiiVIIID dHortiiiCI 11 rottowe: lurvtyor, tll44 tncl
continues.
CODI CAN I I ••otnnlng et , tpprovtd IIY lht
Iverson's contract with the Slxers would· lnvesttgatlon
Police
huve
been
stutioned
outside
the
"II OM ANY potnlln tilt cenllrllne Mtl o t
cow ntv
n't be guuruntecd If he were convicted of stur's mansion for days directlna traffic OITAINID
OP THI OPPICII OP of 11111 11out1 tll4 lntllnttrll'u M1l.
u felony. Iverson hus $40.~ million and
0
an April a '
three rears left 011 u $70.8 million ex ten· from fans .and news media on tlfe leafy, ' I~~~~=~:Z#~r ' ::~~l.rr~h:orn~ro:~
usually
QUiet
S
treet.
IIIIVICII.
llld
20.11
IOrtt
PAIICIL
NO.I 17!
slon stgned in Jonuury 1999.
The
lvcrsons.
who
met
in
hlah
sc
hool
Addltlontlly,
mort
or
''"·
lrtot·:
00112.001
Sixers spokoswomun Koren Pr11sconu in Humplon. Vu .. have two children. oonwtolor oomplltnot Thtnoe tlang 11ld ltld Premtu1
refused to confirm.the repon when con, Tiaura 7 and Allen [[ 4 known as with the tqu11 oenterllnt thlloilow. Loolltd 1t
' '
tmploymtnl
In, lour OOUrtH:
IIIII fiiOICI .. 4,
tuctcd Sunday. Frasconu suid the team "D ' ,. '
euce.
opportunity
. North u dtg. llomeroy, Ohio.,.,.
requlrtmtnll of Ohio tt'OI" Witt 1 dlt• hid llremlnl
AdmlnlllrttiVt Codt llnat OIIO.tt.IHI to Apprtllld II U
Chlpltr 1U, 1111 1 point:
I,IDG.DG tnd 01nno1
Governor•• htowtlvt · a. North ae deo. $3' be told rot 1111 1111n·
Ordtr Of I 172, lnd 01" Will 1 dltltnOI two•lhlrdl ol IIIII
Qovtrnar't IKIOYIIVt of 11.11 lttl to 1 tmount.
·
Order 14·1 1h1il bt point:
Tlf'ml ot 111e1 1n
·
h r1ulrtd.
a. North u aeo. "' crown dly of 1111;
time In this mce. to ao as hurd us ning. und they don't seem to stage where Ihe Amencan
Ull
lddtrt mutt 11" WHt 1 dltttno• btltnot within ao
I could, and I think lt was prelly ever slop," he ~uld. '1'he other prospered - un individual time oompiY, with Ohio of 117.01 lttt to , crtyl
fust," Am1strong said. "rt wus duy we did I00 kilometers in trial. But the defending chump!· prtvell ng Willi rtl11 point:
0 n
P u b II o 4. North 21 dto. M1 pot lltr
•
two hours - 1don't rememl'ler on suid he was ~lck.ing
confinnatlon that I feel good.
,
.L~ lmprovtmtnll
In
01'11"
Will
1
dlt•
Mtpollltr.Anomtyl
I
ld
Oo
a
"I've been feeling good in the the last time we did that.
nza ez a euno toe u1m'"" Melge county 11 11no1 or 311.41 1111 ~•mu P. Dldy
ruces, but you ride ulong in the
'1'he reason I think they are 32.2-mile stretch.
dtttrmlntd by the
to 1 point;
(OH41121
"I'm
&amp;Qcond
fiddle." Dtptrtmlftt or Ltllor, Tl\tno.t lnvlng · CounHI lor lllatntlfl
group und It's not possible to atwcklng Is because the Tour
said. ''Oaldeuno will P1d1r11 W•o• lnd uld aenttrilntlouth IOU Vlnt ltr11t,
reully test it."
has moved all the difficult Armstrong
ood
h
· h .
Hour DIYIIIon.
10 dttl 11' 41" 1111 lulll 2120
Kurstcn Kroon led u Dutch ~Ulges to the reur. They know 00. g.. .• e can wm
1 e tune Till lnolnttr't p11elng through 1111 Clnolnntll, Dhlo
sweep of the top three places thut now Is their time - it's u tnul.'
1ttlm111 tor 11111 Iron pin wllh f.D. o1p 44202
Gonzalez Oaldeano, who proiiiCIIIt t271,000.
ut • dltllnot of (111) Mto4111
Sunduy.
guess, u hypothesis."
While remaining eiuhth over·
Those difficult stuges sturt ride• for Once l•udsArmstrong · The VIIIIOI of az.oa 1111 1nd going
• secemd·s,' thanks
"'
· to Pomtroy
lht 1111.14
Iotti t Clltl1no1
ol ~~ 14' 21 ' ...
•• , .....
"""2
oil, Armstrong suicf he w11s ·n,ursduy. when the Tour enters by ·34
laraely
rlgl\t to rtltrvtt
wtlvt lny
11 t to , 111
I, 12,2002
impressed by the speeds the mountains .- Armstrong u Saturday crush that caught lntorm1lllltt or
reuched by riders .in this year's country in each of his three vic· Annstron~· s buck wheel and lrrltlulertllu. Tht
Tour.
·
toties.
slowed lum down by 27 sec· ~!~:'-~• •:":~,:~~~~
'1'hey uttliCk from the beflln·
On Monduy. there's another onds.
rtitol 1ny or '" bldl
or to 1nore111 or
dtor1111 or omit 1ny
111m or llmtt tnd/or
In the ·first Inning with Derek sucril1cc by Musser. Swlaher
Mason's lone run came in 1w1rd
bid to tht
Veazey and Oube Roush &amp; Lohse uddcd three runs in the founh innlna when Kyle IOWIII,thtrltpOniiVI
IICOrina. Racine pulled bllCk a the third .with Kirk Leaar. Zerkle scored .after reach ina 1nd rupontllllt
run in the third when We1ley J.R, Oreenc and Cflrl1 base on 11 w11lk.
blclcltr.
Riffle doubled and scored, Burkhumer · scorlna. Greene
Camp struck out three bat· •Y order of 1111
YIIIIOI of Pomtroy
ten In 2 1/3 lnnlna• of work IOOIIId
then tied the aumc In the top had an RBI. .
II 110 lltl
of ·. tho tixtli when Cod)'
Wood,
Story,
Shane for Mason. William Zuapan Mlln ltl'tll, Pomlf'oy1 .
itched I 2/3 lnninaa. strik· Ohio, County or
Putterson singled and ~corci:l Mllhoun ond Oreene each
Mtlgt, IIIII 111 citY Of
on 11 double by Brr.an Harr)s. scored In the founh to end the . ng out one batte~.
A Large Pepperoni
Juty,
zooa
New
Haven s
Jesse aame.
(7) I, 11
tor only $7.99.
Litchfield struck out 12 bat·
tors In six. innlnas of relief
. OOMINO!S PIZZA
Pubtto Nolloe
work. Derek Veazey struck
992·2124
out three of the five batters he
lhtrlll'l 1111 or 11111
faced In the eighth. Starter
111111
Adam Roush struck out two
Olntrtl Coclt, ....
,, .., lltvlllld Coclt.
batters.
Needed:
110.1121.21
Patterson pitched six
Skilled Construction
lnninas for Racine. strikina
C111 No. 01..CV•1.W
Workers· Knowledge of
out seven. After surrendering
YILLAQIOP
lloh llddtr II Ufl'rlenotl on
Tht
IIIII
of
OhiO,
POMIIIOY
rtqulred to turnllh proltott oltlmlltrtlu
two runs in the flrst, he
·carpentry and/or
MIIQI COUNTY
With Ill IUbmiiiiOn Of 1nd oomple•rty. Tht
Mtl(lt County.
allowed just four runners to
LIQAL NOTICI•
lilt fully oomplllld Owntr lnltildt IIIII Olkwooel AOOipllnOI
plumbing, roofing,
reach In the next five innin11s
INVITATION TO liD lid Dooumente, I lid thlt Projeol bt
Corportllon
and gave up only one hit.
HVAC, etc.
Pllllntlll
IHitd liCit will be Ito u r II y · I n oornpltltd no ltttr
VI,
rtoiiVtd
tor uoordenot with tl\tn tht time period
Local Work
lurnltl\lng Ill ltbor, Ito lion I la.U of lilt ·11 HI forth In Arlloll 4 Mlrlln L. INriH, 11.
GRI!:Il)'; I 7, CIIESl'llR
mtier 1•1•
• n d Ohio llevl11d Code. of thl ltandtrel ~orm
II.
992·7943. 591 ·7002
Dues 3 '
equipment n•01111ry lid IIOUtlly lumlthtd 0 1
Agr-1
.
Dlltnhnt
.Green I rulllcd from u 3-0 to oompltll 1 proltol In lond rorm (ltd lttwlln owntr tnd
591·4641
deficit to pick up the win known 11 Pomeroy Outrtnlu end contractor on '"' In purtulnot olen
1 n d • 1111 of 1 lllplllllld Orhr of ltlt In the
over the Chester Buca. Riverfront OoDkt •• Con Irt o I
tbovt entltltdiOIIon,
Trullina by three runs in the 1111 Vlll1g1 or Pomeroy Ptrlormenoe lond 11
(lhl
"Owntr"),
320
provldtd
In
ltollon
-----------~======----~-.....:.----:
fourth innina. Luke Wuus . • Ill Mlln llrlll, P.O. 113.17.1 of the Ohio
walked and scored and John IOK eel, Pomtroy, RIVIItd Code), muol ·
Public NotiOI
Paul Finnicum singled and OhiO 4171. untll12:00 btl IIIUICI by 1 lurely
C.••'•"-"1
_ , tl llw WI tl lltoroto"'
p.m. 10011 time on Comptny
or
scored to jumpsturt Green's '1\111dey,
,,.,,.,, rw e. Nl•, • .
July
·
23,
Corportllon
llotrllld
r11lly.
2002, end 11 11ld Umt, In lhl IIIII Of Ohio to
I-.e
IIIIU
Green scored five runs In 11:00 p.m. on provldt llld IUrtty, IWU Qllll11!.0
lUI,..
-.u.
the fifth to put the gume 1\llldty, July 23, 2002 Tholl llddtrl lhll
, .._ ... _ flllll'rt-...;.,__.__
:111:1• •aumm-----1,
uw11y. Wuus, Finnicum, Jeff 1nd pleoe, 120 1111 tltol to tullmlt bid rat~t~r••
mtln
llrHI,
P.O.
Ia•
guerenly
In
1111
farm
'""
..
1,,..
••.
"
•.•
•.•
•...
Golden, Andy Denbow and 111, Pomeroy, Ohio of •· oertllltd· ohtok, r~u ..
• .
•••••
t.llll
•••
• ••
An()rew Dyer each scored In 4171•, publloly ottl\lw'• ohtok or
1-••
111,111 ••
the innina. Josh Hunt had optned tnd rtld teller of oredll '"' "'""' 1o101
•
lit,. . .
tloud. lldl m1y bl pure111nl to Chtpltr IAtroc•mllll•
"'""""
.Oreen's only hit in the fifth.
1tf71,f1
lf MJ.I•
t ••
...... It
mtlllel
Gr
·dellvtrtd
In
1301
or
lhl
OhiO
Cl"' 11"'"'11 1 ,.,
Dyer pitched four inninas ldVInOIIO 1111 Vllllat lltVIItd Codt tnd In ""' -:::::, '"_,,
wltl1
eight
strlkeout11. of Pomeroy 11 the eooordtnot with 11011 .....,
1
Finnicum ttruck out four but· lboYe lddrtle. Apr.. llollon 113.14 (C) Of ,_,1"""'
•::::.~
...
'
.,li1.11 ;
bid milling will be lhe Ohio lltVIIId
roul ,.,,., • r..-"'"'' ,,..,,....
:::
ters in two inninjs of relief.
I , I'll..... II .
.
on Tuttdey, July Code. Any IUOh letter
IIL&amp;:Oiil
,...,._IIUIIIIUBIIIII-II
For Chester, 'Iyler Kearns htld
U, 2002 1111\t Vllltp of oredlt ehtll be ,....,...,.,
&amp;;1111'1t.tr
•·•
•••
•••
... lolllo'llotr ' .
doubled and scored, Ben of Pomtroy, 320 1111 revoo1bl1 only ·1 tile. ._.,.. ..,,...,
•••
•••
....
1,1...... 11 .
1,111,111.11
•·•
Buckley alao doubled and Mtln llrHI. Pomtroy, option of 1111 llir-rou• "'"""•
1•,111.11
•·•
....
....
••• l..ll,l'lt.ll
.,,.,,.
l,tlf,l'll.ll
•·•
1cored a rlin, ...itnd Jared Ohio 4171t 11 10100 btntllolary Owner. '"'"""
11111 ..,,.,.
1•1119,..,· 11
•••
•••
•••
1...,..,••
1.m.
.
The
1maunt
of
the
•·•
Russell IICOred a run.
1111
Jfl,l!'.tl
•••
•••
1.,11'.11
lid Dooumtnll oerlllltd ohtok, "''- " " ' •
•·•
•·•
• Che1ter starter Daniel lnoludt
lht lid o11hltr'1 ohtok or
Buckley pitched four inninaa, llequlrementt tnd lttllr or ortdllthtll be ._,.,, _,,.,
•·•
•·•
111,-.•
IM
ll,...,lf
lflo&amp;ll
1triklna out 10 batters. Ben C11ntreot Dooumtnlt 1qu11 to . ten (10) 111""' ltlollt
•·•
•·•
lnoludt til bid ptrotnl of lilt .ld tnd
'"" .,.., ..1...1. ,,..,,... »
loll
Buckley, Jake Lynch and (IIIII
I hull,
pllnl, lilt IU-IIIIIIIeleltr C..,_,. .. ...,,~, .... I l,m,....,
1.11 I lll,a.llt
0.11
...... I 111111N.IIJ'
Kearn• all1aw time In relief. tptolllotllont, end will lit rtqlllrtd to
- , _ •-•'"'' • I
-W'IIItl• Dl 111-1
tny 1dd1nd1) 01n btl IUbmlt I IIOnd In the """'11111• 1-o•
Itt.•
1.11
obltlnecr lrom M·l form provided In "'"•- "'- ,.,. ,.,..,.,.
•·•
POMEJIOY SWJIIIEil &amp;
Comp1n111,
tno.,
(lilt
tiU7
of
the
Ohio
-.....,
•·•
•·•
Lollll 11, M.uoN YELLOW
"lntllnur"),
Ul
IIIVIIId
Codt
In
=~:
"'::,..,.II
•
..:::
:::
JACXET81
lrooklldll .llvd.. oonj11not1on wllh the 1111,.. """ ...,.....,,
· •·•
11,11
Arron Story waa the 1t.ory WllltrVIIIe,
OhiO IKIOYIIOn Of lhl _..,,.. ,_,. u
1 ........,
1,11
f,ll
loll
1.11 I
........
for Swlahcr &amp;: Loh1e with a 4JOt1 with 1 non· ContriOI.
'"" • ,,., ...,..1111111
.,.,..,,.
•·•
3-run homer and I0 I trike- rllwndtblt peyment of lloh propoul mutl - -~~- _,,,.,
....
0,1'11.41 I I,.....Ofl;
ftO.OO per HI. Chtokl oonllln th• lull """'
~&lt;•• r ltiiiJIIo llilllfll 1 l,m,611.7!1
out• In four lnnlna• of work ehould
bt m1111 of lilt party or parlltt · . .,..,.,. ""'c. w,,..,.,,.
m.11
to pace hi• club to tbe mercy p1y1bll to M•l eubmlltrng tl\e ""'"' ""Colo I i i DI,M.D
I
0.11
ru~ win.
. Comptnlll, lno., •td •tddlng Document• - -..'",...,"'~-rl,ltf,\17
llo,M.II
Story'l homer came in the Dooumtntt will 11eo 1nd 111 ptrtone
Coil 10- IIIII
IM,III ...
be on 1111 In 1111 pl1n lnttrlllld lhtrttn.
fim innina with Orc:a Mu110r room
"'
"
Colo
,...
Coil
...
of the ,,w. 11011 bldd•r mutt I 1..1111 lilt IOIIM"'- It Ill
and Eric WoOd on biiiC. He Doclgt Corporetton. tubmlltvleltnn ollll
.
took the t1nt pitch he aaw
from Maaon'1 Jeaaie Camp
and launched It an e1tlmatcil
230 feet over the left field
I,), tlff'NI, E MiU.
fence to 1take SwiJher &amp; •
-~~···
Loh10 ahead 3..().
J:..7w•• 1:t •· .,.a. IS
Swlaher &amp; Lohae added a
II#... ,,. . ,.,.
run In the aecond with
Nathan Cook acorina on a
t
•

=··

""0

u...

.

KCLLT

fromPIIpB1
Jared Cline had a double
and scored, and Cory
McCune slnalcd and scored
for Fed Hoclt. Grant Smith
scored Fed Hock's other run.
McCune and starting phch·
er Jared Gandee combined
for u one-hitter.
Brian White had the , lone
hit for Green II.
KYGER CREEK BOBCATS
8, MIODI.EI'ORT GIANTS 2

Kyger Creek's Jason Jones
hod two doubles and scored
twice, and Tyler Ctmuday
ripped 11 two-run triple und
scored us the Bobcats
advanced with II win over the
Middleport Giants.
Buddy Higginbotham col·
lected the win for Kyger
Creek. pitching a compfcte
11ame wtth II strikeouts.
· Seun SuMs und Scott Ward
ulso hud hits for the Bobcats.
Duvid Rumley drove In u run
on u sacrifice. .
For the Oiunts, Austin
Dunfee single" and scored
and Nick Wise scored
Middleport 's other run.
Dunfee struck out I I batters.

Ishii throws to the plate during
.

for the Mets, who .1plit the
four-gumc series.
Astuclo (9·3 ) nllowed four
hits, lncludln11 solo homers
by Ricky Ledec und Bobby
Abreu .

Hernandez homers sen·d Pirates packin'; 5-3

MILWAUKEE (AP) (lurlltll lo3) 11 Dllroll (lptrtcl 4•
Jose Hernandez suw to Itt hill
the
Milwuukee Brewers
I· ~.v~'=• IWtavtt 1..1 II 'ltiiOIIIO
finally
aot some runners
7:01p.m
.
......11-1),
Whitt
101 (Wrlthl W) tl
home .
Clllr-llnd (llllllhll H), 71111 p.m.
Hernnndez hit
,OIIdind IMuldtr 10·5) II Tampa hy
1wo home runs
0•1),,7:1fp.l!l,
,
'"'"' ~5) II Klrwoo Clly (Mty m-e), and drove In four runs us th ~
..a:Oip.rn.
Brewers bent the Pittsburgh
S-3
Sunduy.
Pirates
Pittsburgh won the t'lrsnhrec
1111mes of thl) series by hold·
Ina Mllwuukee to 3-for-37
with runners In ·scoring posi tion.
"When 11 team 11ives us un
opcnina. we huvcn't token
ui:lvantage of it. We did
today," Brewers munuger
Jerry Royster suld.
Milwaukee didn't h11ve us
many chances to. score
Sunday alit did earlier In the
series. But when Plusburah
shortstop Jack Wilson boot·
ed a possible lnnlna·endina.
double·pluy bull, lfernundez
followed with 11 thr~e- run
homer that gave the Brewers
u 3-1 leud in the second.
"Things like that urc 110ing
to huppen," suid Joe Beimel
(1\ 4), who gave up four runs
• three earned • In six
Innings. ·
"You · can't get up set."

PHILADELPHIA (AI') - As he
awaited urrest on ussuult cha~cs. Allen
Iverson played host to un all ·maht puny
ut his mansion, where guests swum and
played basketball In the ruin .
·
The $2.4 million house In Gladwyne
had been quiet since the churacs were
tlled Thursday.
But the puny that stoned Salurduy lust·
od through the night, and photographs
Iuken by The Assoc luted Press show
Ivorson in u heated di scussion with an
unidentified older woman on the front
step just before S a.m., us tho puny was
breaklna up.
Police, who have ordered Iverson to
remuln at home until hi s e~pected tirrest
Tuesduy, kept tuhs on the sttuutlon from
outside the gate.
Philadelphia poliGc filed warrants for
Iverson's arrest the same day they
searched the suburban mansion and
towed off o Cadillac SUV, In which they
found broken glass, , rocks and' blood.
The search of the home and vehicle did
not tum up a weapon. 11 police source has
said.
·
· the wurrunts charge that Iverson ..-.
urmed und uccompunied by his unc lo.
Gregory Iverson - went lookln11 for his
wife July 3 after a dispute and threatened
two Philadelphia men at hi s CO!lsin's
apartment.
Pollee huve said that Tuwonnu Iverson,
26, checked into o hotel on July I and

Armstrong says he's 'second fiddle' for Tour time-trial

I'm·

:~~= 11 ~~.0.1) II MlnllHOII

·=
·=

TwiNS !1, R11.Nco•:tts 4
At Minncullolis, Dnvid Ortll. nnd
Tori! Hunter homered in the hnltom
ol' the eighth us Minncsntn ovcrcume
two lmmc runs by Alex Rndl'iguez to
00',111 1•1:'.Kus.
, ,
..
l'rutlm~ 4-3, lluntcr led" of~ th~.
eighth wtth 11 shot m rlghl·(Cntcr oU
Colby Lcwis·(l -2). Then Ortiz home·
red to center, giving the Twin~ the
lcud for gotld
·
udvu ntugcofupuiroftl~rowing errors
The rully c;tnte 11 hulf-inuing ul'lcr
to s1111p u tlwcc-gumc shdc.
.
.
ff
l.cc hit snlo shots In the third und Rodnguo~z 1HI II IWtH'Un s1H&gt;.t 0
111111 Innings nlr Adllm Berncro (2·5) rulicvcr Mike Juckson. Rodngucz
tn givc the White Sox u 3· 1 leud.
homered, l(n the third struight gumc.

first inning und uthrec-run shot in the
se,ond ttl tic the cluh record with
seven RBis, powering Knnsus Ci ty
pust visi,tin!! Anul.11.~im . ,
Breu~my un.O-Ior·IJ sktd,lbuncz hit
11 3-2 -ptlch nn Rumon Ortiz (8· 7) for
his sccnnd curecr grund slum. Ortb.
hus ullnwcd 211 hon)C runs - the
most In the mi\lms this scuson.
Wmn: Sox Cl, TtG~RS 4
. At Detroit. Curios Lee went4-for-5
with twn homers und Chlcugo tonk

8V THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

1111

.

Gm\:iu un ~urly live-run lt·ud thut th~
AII·Stur cnuldn't pn1tcct.
ORIOI.I\ll Cl, A1'111 .KI'lt'S .\
Juy Oihhnns hit two humc runs uml
hnd u curter-high live RB.Is us host
Bultiml)rc uv&lt;et'tl!d u lnur-gn mc
swe~: 11 . Ancr scmlnll tmly one nnt in tl1c
first three j!um.:s of the series, the
Ot'iolcs · fc11stcd on Otlklund sturtcr
tJrY Licllc (2·~). who ylcldctl six
runs in 5 1·3 innings.
· Rndrigtl Ltl!IC7 (1}-3) ull•lwcd three
runs seven hits und tWtl wulks in
scv~;, innings. '
RnvAt.~ 12. ANm: t .~ 3
Ruullbune1. hit ugi'Und slum in the

Ishii moves Dodgers back into first place·

"'

ltolltlolt I, CIMiftfllllll

\

Despite impending arrest, Iverson parties on-

•

~7.N.V. ~Mtll. l lln~ngt

r.hllldtrl1

Mondly,luly 15, 1002

The Dally llntlntl• Page 13

www.mydallylentlntl.com

Monday, July 15, 2002

Toronto wins third straight over Boston; M's win again

- A

I'll.

W

Page Bl

inlentionully wulk Briun rifi cc ny ~cored Oc.hon from Jeffrey Hummonds WUH
G1lcs. Giles hnd homered in third .
scrutchcd. from the stnrtinl!
cuch of the first three guines
Pittsburgh pulled within ·· lineup becuu se of a stilf
one in the 11fth. Wilson's RBI neck .... Pirntcs C Kendall
tlf the series.
"GileN is just scu1·y when single scored Pokey Reese huN thrown out only 14 of 47
he's stundi'n* up there," from second for 4·2. Giles runners Ullcmptlng ·to stcul .
Royster sui d. 'I wusn'tgoing· singled, moving Wilson to this seuson .... Brewers 1B
II) lei him bcut us uguin . third, und Rumlrez followed Riehle S~xson returned to
Under no circumslunccs wus with un RBI single. ,
th~ starling lineup ufter
he going to beut us in thut
Hernandez led off the sev- mtsslng twt! sumcs to rest
situutlon ."
enth with a homer off Jo1ius his rore lett hamstring. ...
DcJcun
got
Arumis Munzunlllo, muklng his first J5.cndull'~ stolen buse in the
Rumircz to ground into u uppeurunce since returning hnt lnmn~ wus Pittsburgh's .
fi elder's choice w end the: from un elbow Injury.
fint steul '" I0 gumcs.
gurne. Oolng into the ut·but,
NOTE!i:
Brewers CF
Rumircz . wus hitting .12.5
with two outs und runners in
scoring position.
· ·
Pittsburgh, which had won
its first six games this year ut
Edw.rde Moving and
Inc. haa been
Miller Purk, took a 1·0 lead
contracted to move
turbln11 and
In the second when Kevil)
tranlformere Into
Rolling Hlllt Power
Young hit his 12th homer.
He has homered in three
Plant In Wllkttvlllt. Roade wlll.bt ehut
consecutive ~umes.
down 11ong Ut• following rotJ.tt tor the .
Hernundez s homer guve
duration of tlch move. Wt will bt etartlng
the Brewers the lead for
at the Wlttrloo Co11 Terminal on Hwy. 7 N.
good. With one out,
We will proceed to Hwy, 124 going w11t
Ochoa
singled.
wv '" "' •
Thompson grounded sharply .
through Rutllnd Into Wllklevllle. At
to short , but Wilson botched
WllktiVIIIt WI will bt taking Hwy 180 north
n possi ble double pluy.
to tht Power Pl1nt. We would appreclltt
Hcmundcz then hnmered to
vDtu ptatlence and cooperation.
put Milwuukce up 3: I.
It bccume 4- 1 in the fourth
· when Roi'Jcrt Muchudo'8 sue·

........

Nu IICt • NUliCE • NOTICE

RU'ri.AND RF.I&gt;H

:Z,

POMI\ROY 01AMONil8ACKll I

•

The Rutland Reds manu·
factured the gum~-winnin11
run in the 11fth mnlna to
defeat their Meigs County
neiJihbors.
Cameron Bolin opened the
inning by reaching base on an
error ·und scored on u one-out
double by Ju1tln Little to pro:
vide the Reds with the win·
nin~ margin. ·
·
Little 'scored Rutland's first
run in the t1ut innina, taklna
advantaae
of
three
Diamondback erron.
Josh Burnem had two hill
for Rutland and Jake Bame1
had one.
Nathaniel Davis and Clay
Bolin combined for nine
strikeout• for Rutland. .
Bryan Delon11 11n11led and
·scored Pomeroy's lone run in
the aecond lnnln11. He had the
D· Backa' only hit · of. the
aamc. Delona ~Itched a com·
plete IUme With four ltrike·
OUtl.
NEW HAVEN REDS 3,
RACINE GoLD

:Z

New Haven'• Juttin Arnold
•cored the aame-winnlna run
in the eia~lh innin~ 11 the
Red1 held off 1~ Ractne rally
to earn the vlcwl')'.
New Haven took a 2-0 lead .·
'!'
.,.....

____

..,...

r,

-- -·. ......
..•....•.. . ....... ....• .. .. .........
..• .... ..•
.....
"'···..·•...,.....
....• .......•
..• .• ..• .
....•..• ......•... ... •.. .
...,... ...
.
........
...•r• ... ... . .
,.

,,.......•

w.,...,,.

..........
,,.,...,

,,,..,.,,,,.

.....,..
.
t..
1

•••

::= :!.':" """"'

:::

.

... .,•••••
••••• ,
•••
••• ...........
., " ,. ,

::: . ,., ,.

•••
•••
•••

..•
........
.........
...........
,.

....

......•....
.....•
.........
..•

......
,,..... ,., "··,.
........
...... .......... . ....

'~=,,....,,., t~A

,,.

,

•

., .,

,,.,,

•••

I

I

,,

.........

•••

I

••
••

•

.
... .... "
...... .......... .
.....•..• ..... ... ......

.
_, ... -· .........
-·
...
,... ""'' ·.........
...
. ......... ,_,..
....
..
... ....._
1111-,_
..
"'"' ,... ,.,...
...
__
....... •••

""''
"
,,.,,
....

,

.,,.,.
........
.
....
,,,,
.
...."' .,,...,.

I

�Page 114 • The Dally Stntlntl

www.mydallyatntlntl.com

'Otribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED
rv

n ttv

Ntw Homta, ~A dlllooa,
mQM, Pol IYildlfl I ~.
Siding, Dill ka, Kllehortl, DtYwtJll
l Mt)te

FR EESTIMATES!

740· 742·3411

ln·One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR All

All Mt~~~'

To Pia~
ij)';ribu)le
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, (740) 446·2342 (740) 992·2156 (304) 675·1333
Call ·Today... or FIX ra 44e-sooa
or II•• .,.0 eea-am
Or flax To
11711-ea34

Olfoe llotV-e .
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Item•

ln•enton

DMB tttll

l\~\illlill~llll 1,111\

1 1&lt;11'11"~ Aulh\"111.'1.1
t"~ - 1111 1~11\

Ntw • Uattl

Iouth Cbunh lt.

IIIU.lPA

lll!111~1\
/l!tlll .~1. 1!1..~ StHllh
ti~~~~/1~, tlll.tWt

Oeatl~irw·
J.IQO p,m,

1\'ll~h" &amp;

llpltf, WVUI?l

1·800s811·0417

740·667-1)36.'
Include• Pree Y•rd •••e ••ani
Up To 11!1 Word•, 3 D•v•
Over 11!1 Warde 2011: P•r Word
Ad• Muet •e Pr•p•ld

• ltlrt 'taur Adt w·lth A Meywqrd • lnc:hul• Camr,l.to
Dllcrlp-len • lnchHII A 'rice • Avoid Altluevllt on1
• Jnalwde 'hont Numlttr Anct Addru1 Wh1n Nud•d
• Ad• •l'lould lun 7 01y1

\ '\, Ill "" I \ 11 "' 1"

r

IINITIUOTIIN

· *lll@§iE!Iiling In:
FIM!Ing, t}§@k8,

llo~1~n~o~ ~too~

Trill·
~~ . •lki Niw (HQ1a7@·
~~~ft, Ql\1 Mll~r ftillll

1ftll

j:j@mflllllllng,
!llfiiRO, E!ftfl
Mfilll!lft8

l ll 'olln {1~~~~ i @g §1@111@·
111!1WII, N~w 111~~ ~~~ Qgm
Plok~rl ~ 4" ~lnrii~WIIml fi i~­

I'IMOi

111~11 17~Ql4 ~ij ~4ft&amp;

~11

F111n

wlwnAI\~

\Ml

~MIIy

AoM Qomlllloo
I~QA!m· 7Q!G

Fm~

Ow nor•
Lamm

Tlii\QI

IJ1AWMI

~lriiQhl

~ ft~~

\!Hill t

IMQP

NiP.tl '

(~0Aifl1fl ·

Daily
Sentinel
992

(aOA)i7A ~Q.:::
OQ~~~
WMniMrl In ~~~~ \.11@11 Mg·

Iiiii!

llomM !1AII

om or

~04

WWW,Iftllfl&amp;lfllllflUifOIIf,68ftl

"lALII AND IIJIVICI"

WOLIII HIATINQ • COOLINQ

moo

IMuno POiMI IQI 611
IIIII il" 1n1go

•

·~

MIIMI ~pm

600 TriQW, 111'1! 11\lW•

lill t f\liiW

I llllllfl@ '
Ane.lfd•
• All ll8Rt!lll8ftlfl
• IIIYI&amp;I On Alllttftdl
• Mttldenllal &amp; ~llhl Oommttilltl
• 10 y~ "lflt &amp; ~IBilf
• llllliRg &amp; All llllRdlllllRII\1

17AOiAAA·

MANLEYS
SEUSTOHAliE

Roonnu~ Siding, Rdd •Ona, tltctrlc•l~

87 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Haning's Construction

(740) 992·3194
992·6635

1116-~61-6161
!'1ohald "MJck" Ha~lhg
tl hrl~liHr! "tl htl~' HaHIH~
H0-992-0180
tM ~ t46-fl§I-M1~
dell: 591-Siiliii

Plilmblno, Dttkt1 Remodeling,
Drywnll, Pelnllng

(10'K101e10111l01)

F!Jfl!l!l!IH: Larry

Advert Ill

n7UQ@§.

I,IVIINIIM'M

Dusiness Services
Pll

CONTf!IACTOf!ll
I INC.
I'IMino, {)hlo 4§m

740·111·1141
CCNer-l iMU.C
CK/Br-llt'll&lt;

Ntw Homo•
01r1gtt
Complolo
llomodtllnu

llo·p I Comtl)lrt I
l'f!IIIIITIMATII
740o812·1
Rr1 uou 11r11Nd?

.ALLtiL

In thla
apace
tor
•so per
month .
HOWARD L.
·WAITESEL

Cellular

Jeff Warner In
l.1l" llini'IIIN

ObOzaC'&amp; Qravtly

,,ql ,,f I'IIINIINI.I
/o l tr ltl&lt; /t• t l

f

•t

MillOY JlorguiOII .

v··ll'

Roofing ~ Home
Malnt•n•na.. liNI'I PIINnNI
Qutllre •Down 17401
I pout

mllii'HIIIIImll m
IIID~~ W Ul'll~f Dl

unP lunllun
• \'~flfi•KI! • 1'111111

• Mlnfi • ~11•
144 ""~ ..,, ~·

u•·m•

t48o1401

THfRftPY

mn,ltcond ftut.

MACK'S

mlddltPift, OH

1740)192·1705
Tonia Rtlbtr
UctnHd llv lhl Ohio
ltat• medfell&amp;oM•

lloolltt Knlv11
I Oolleollbllt
•A Cut Abtl VI!
tlit! 14t!H"
our11
Mon•llt 10•4

Connlo'li
Chilo CAFlE

I

I

I

I II

(1•1111

IIIO'h10'
1110'd0'
Hourt
1100AM •

(140) 74Jol1011
(/YIIfly llwmt Wm

DfiVOWiy§, "llfQf,
"'"'ltlfJ/PfiiY Allill§,
lidfwlllkl, l'looll
f,f YHfl

I•PfrlfMf

,,.,IIIIIIIIIH

.

'

.I

•

892·5479

cau now for uour- '"•latlmatu
eppt. ·

mftos mnssnor

OWHer·

I

1

q~~~·

• &lt;I

',II}.'

I

1111. 1111111•
ftiiii"OV• OH

('740) tti•IIOI

Part• &amp; lorvloo

LOWILL C. IHINN TRACTOR
4311 11. AI, 180
Qalllpon•~ OH

•at31

(740) 448·1044
Mond•v·l'rldly •liliM • §Mturdly l•lpm

I

�I

Page 88 • The Dally Sentinel

'
Monday, July 15, 2002

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

ALLEY OOP

IRIDOJ:

11tl

ACROSS
1 Coamellc
ur.ty 0111·
4 Kind ol
IChclol
I Hltttt''lllll
11 Gartllndo
13 ~ II
14 Cui*15 Wight t .g;
11 Fur
17 Competa
11 Zaclloc lloh
· 20 Bldg. unlto
21 Actor - ·
Walloch
22 Clroundhog
mo.
24 Drenga
pit It
27 Corn1talk
tip
30 BIHblll't
Tornmil31 Brownloh-

01 11 1111

Q 10 ••

"• ~r &amp;• 1
• ij 10 u
t:ll ll
A J 4 I
• K 10 B S

• J' 4

•

.lim MPddkk

K T4

""qth

. ,.

\ ~ i ~

•

~ S\1~ 1\E#] IM\SA€&gt;~!2.

. •

,, 10

~

~
prall'l" !=1 •11!h

., " •

a

\'u hl~!l" llble 1:11~1 \~ el l
~n 111~

1 ..
3A

ll••t

i•

t ·~..

ra-t

~ 1nlh

[}1:11
1' ..1

36
I'IU

Upenlnlf ll'itd • A

•

\bPAY . If THE
fl/lSi ~YoF
THE ~6-.FiOF
yov~

l-IFE

HAitNEY

'I'JUj BORN LOSEit

....

[ BOJ(,f\T 1\ ~f-.1\) M/'..C.f\INE

. TOW0Kf'.IO\~
\o.lf\ILt [ ~LE:tP I

~

r&lt;eALL'( 7

t·ve: GOTIEr--&lt; SO t
C.N-I'T ~p WITf\·
OUT Mli&gt;lt 01-1! f.\'(
FI\VO~I\E

~1\ING I "l

Jwf\vE"l

w-

OM Tf\C.

&amp;:~!
1&lt;1~1~

DIG

million

41 -out

(ecrepe by)
42 Wheol jolrier
45 a.ta he

lponenuo'o
City
50 Young IIIII
53 DIIQUIII"'I
54 Aooltt
55 Vltltld
5I Tul rider
57 Bind
55 Totally
botch
!I Huok
DOWN
1 Turn over
2 Hubby of
Lucy
3 F"ftlll
4 Coci-COII
rlvtl
4t

5 Rtubln
bread

Melp County's

23 Flight dlr.
24 Funny

DtCitntm
42 Whll Hlmlll
tmlllld
(2-.)

ChtriOtll "--the
picture"
43 florntn 13
28 Agrlpptnt'a 44 ProtPIC~
ton
or'ollnd.
27 Volt
41 Kind 01
25

210etrtch

couelnt

opera

rl ==·==· I

:::·

thenkrunz
SIJadc cashed
king, Ro==~-~-=~
sc
his r~=lwo diamond tri cks,
C I M ~~ I ~~
After taking an exam In my histhen conlinued w.ilh !
16
tory class I heard one student
anolhcr diamond,·~
h
whith cnnccded a
.,...
sig . "The eighth wonder of the
rutT-antl-discurd
world Is the person who can ••.•
R
A WE E R
, . ···the first seven."
whi Ic prom ol i ng It is 1-_,.;.~~..,.:_:;..,;,;..,....--1
partner's. spade ~·ack.
O Compltro
tho ehueklt quoood
..
·
.
_
by filling In the mlt1fng wordt
AI.lcr ru 1·lmg
Will his L-..1..-L.......L......l-..1-...J. you dovolcp from""~' No. 3 bolow.
lusl !rump. Reygadas
exi led wtth a heart.
@ PRINT NUM8EiEO
IHJ h conc e d i ng 11 ~:::::lf~T~TE;R~S~I~N;;:S~Q:;U~A=iE::S:;:~=:;:::;=;:::::;:=;::~~
rutT-und-tliscurd and
A UN SCiAM8LE FOR
cnsurinl!
a club trick
V
AN ~WER _ _ _ _...__._._..~.,_L-..J.......J-.L......;
. .
. . . . .
for his stue.
_..:.::..:;:.:.;.::.;;.
Dcdurcr nHuJc one
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
error, received two
Hyphen - Basin - Whelp.- Nuzzle- ZIP her UP
rttff-and-discurds, and
. Two fellows were talking about the office romeo "I
wenr three down.
don't know how' he does it," sighed one fellow . "The
only thing I've done behind my wife's back is ZIP her

.

I

PEANlJTS

I

{ APPRECIATE '(OVR COMING
IT LL BE AN ADVENTURE ..
ALONG TO CAMP WITH
HEW I-IILL5TO CLIMB .~ NEW
ME, SNOOPC:.'(~
... -:;::::::::::j VALLE'I'5 TO EXPLORE ...

I

I I .:,

I

FOLLOW TI-lE TRAIL
TI-lE SUPPER DISH'

I' I I I Ia

I

•

I MONDAY

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED!Il&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County will commit $350,000
for the development of higher
education progrums in the
county. und the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grunde
Community College could
benet1t if it decides to expand
its
Meigs
Center
in
Middleport.
Meigs
County
Commissioner
· Mick
Davenport announced the
county· s plan to make a onetime
commilment
of

KCLLT continues today, B1

Deaths
Edgar Trivette, 90
Grant Boyer, 80
Detltlls, AJ

•

•

•

•

JULY 151

I I

1 1 ·I I . I

UP I"

lu~sJuy ,

July 16. 2002

Ynu may experience u pro·

fu"iUn Of Ojlj)(lflllllitti!S in the

Y'-'ltr uhcml. hut tukc cure : Ex ~
uminc L'm.: h lor their wmlh

unl1 du not igru,n: the .~ mullcst
or most dirricult ones.

CANCEil [Juuc 21 -Juty 22!

·-..Cielth•~ Y,uur wuy nilty he of
('tlllrlllOUS lltlpOI'lt!llCC IO YOU

lndny. but it i;n't likely I&lt;&gt; win
ynu any admirer'&gt; or provide
y1,U rnuc:h In the way uf hcnc 1'11'4 . Try to he m.:ctJmmodmir1ll

io~&gt;leud .

Tryinp to j"'tch up n

hrokc"b-· mnuuu.: c'! · 'he Astro -

Go:oplo Mutchmukcr cun loeltJ
you tutdemun&lt;i whnl to Ju tu
mukc the rclutlonshljl work ,
M•til $2 . 7~ tu Mute 1mnkcr,
c/o tills ne w'f'" l'~r. 1'.0. llox
167. Wkklifl'c. 01144092.
.. LIJO (Ju ly 23 -Aug. 22) ..
I here nrl' tnJi(.;Uttnns loJuy

!hnl you ·"'!lid lull rour&lt;elf
tnto a mode ol unrculo~~ti~.: cx IICI..'tution~ .

M,, mallcr how

· l'uinful it muy be for you ttl

JC pnt !l~ l.Uilil..' . ynu mu~o,t do 'iO
-- or 'Htflcr thC' L·on,cqucnct''·
Y.IIHiO IAu~ . 23-Scpl. 22 )

·· I rim ull

and unrtc,.
c .~ ~t~try y \pt•nditurc'i from your
wuhl c

HCIIVIIU'.Irl illld lrano.,acliOII~ 10·

ciHy . IAtl'}!C Jo."'L','i urc poMdhlc

if you 'P''"' "itholll •·cguru tn

I

-~;
. .
'

til(.' L:&lt;ll l sidcrution~ Ht.hund.
LIBRA (Sept. 2~ - 0ct. 2.1) · · l~un ' t cml1m:rnss you1·~c!f by
~ lrytn g

10 ~CI Jl lVUlV Ctl With U
h\l!~r~holtodny who thinkM s/hc
is bc11cr than you uml your ussu..:iulcs. This jerk wi ll

l''l'llngfully nwkc you feel bud
u1'&lt;1ut ynur•clf.
SCOI(I'IO (Oct. 24-Nuv .
22) .. A baltic of will• nmy
!run.opire .today between your
onncr hemg and your outer
pcr.&lt;on. Your better n:uurc
mar ur~c you"' do one thing.
wtule your lcs! noble •ide
cnuld cncourngc the opposite.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 2~­
Dcc . 2I) -- If you're naive toduy. ym• muy trot off aflcr a
curo·" t hcing dangled by Nomeone who i.&lt; tryinji w take ud·
v;mtagc

nr you . Qn,c you ' re

hou•keu. the unly thing that
will get emen i• you .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
/~) -- Wherr there is u pn•si ·
blc "'lllflkl of intcrcso tudny.

it may be wise In uvnid n
1 c mptln~ panncr~ hi\' arran~c ­

mcnt. Harmuny o · thought
must be pr~vulcnt if a lea on is
to be •ucccssfuf.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb.
19) -- Method and prncedurc

mu~t

be your fir4.il consillcru-

Weather
High: 90s, Low: 60s
Detltlla, A2

Wall Street

•

NEW YORK (AP) The drama continued on
Wall Street Monday as
despondent investors sen.t
stocks skiddin~ and the
Dow Jones mdustrials
fulling nearly 440 points
bd'ore bargain hunters surfaced in lute afternoon . The
blue chips ended with u
moderate loss of 45 while
tech stocks posted a modest
advance.
·
The Dow recovered to a
loss of 45.34, or 0.5 percent,
at
8,639.19.
Combined with lust week's
loss of 694.97, the blue
chips have fallen 740.31
points o~er six straight lostng sesstons.

Lotteries

to· un endcuvor you •vC been •

hundling alone. you'd be fur
better off continuins . a~
Yllu've heen doing, no man~r
how budly ~ou need help.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Objective., cun be uccumpli•hcd today. pmvi&lt;led
you know the difficulties involved anti ure prcpurcd to
luke them on. Without knowing what ~ou'rc getting into,
projects Wtli nnp.
GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20)
Overal l. your financial
trenus u1 . this time look encourueing; however. there cun
he intermittent bud days. Today may be one of them, so
put off uny nction in thi• area
until anm~cr duy.

•

Ten.1porary Assistance to
Needy Families funds to
facilitate the expansion of
associate degree programs for
TANF-eligible residents and
others who wish to pursue
degree programs in the counly. .
"We've been talking u lot
about higher education. and
we 've looked far and wide for
wuys the county cun be
involved in making thut hup·
pen." Davenport said. "We
would like lo see u proposal
using existing facilities in the
county for a program which
would enable our residents to
pursue llll nssociate degree, ut
the very least ."
, "With Rio Grande already
in place in Meigs County. we
plun to begin with you."
Davenport
Jold . URG
President Bttrry Dorsey
Monduy.

The fund s would be avail uble to the community college
for expenses relating to facili ties or program devclnpmenl,
uccording to Mike Swisher,
director ol' the Depunment of
Job and Fumily Services. who
hosted u meeting of URG
udministntlors, cnunly nnd
Middleporl officials tind community members.
"We· d like to cruft u prnposul thlll makes good sense
for the counly und our studenls," Swisher suid, "It's all
about preparing our lucu l
workforce for jobs in the 21st
centur('
"Thts finttncinl commitment is just u seed thut will
hopefully ullow ectuculional
programs in the county to
grow," he udded.
· A citi7.ens committee organized lust year and ·the
Plusa ... Rio, AJ

ACADEMIC COMMinEE - ,Dr. Barry ·Dorsey, flllr left,
University of Rio Grande/ Rio Grande Commun ity College presIdent meets with members of a new academic committee
form~d to consider programs which mlgh,t be offered at en
expended Rio Grande Meigs Center. from left, Jeanette
Thomas. Chris Pines and Mike Gerlach. !Brian J. Reed)

Pick 3: 1·3-1
Pick 4: 3·0·0·8
Buckeye 5: 1·6·1 8·19·26
Pick 3 day: 1-5·1
Pkk 4 day: 1-9·7·9

Pine Grove Church ready
to rise from the ashes

W.VA.

Deily 3: 1·8·3

BY PAM WIU.IAMION
pamwtll&gt;mydaltyreatster.com
PINE GROVE, W.Va.- II was
·tate in the evening on . May 24
when the Pi~ Grove Church was
consumed in flames. Since that
time, the 15 regular congregation
members of the little log church
have held fast their beliefs and
are set to raise their voices in
praise in an benefit gospel sing to
help rebuild their church.
"It reall)" broke · people's
hearts," Antta Gill, member of
Pine Grove's congregation, said.
"We had people·out there crying.
We didn't have any insurance on

2 Sectlol!ll .,. 12 ......

Calendar .
Classifieds

As

83-S

comics
Dear Abby

B6

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

A4
A3
A3

Sports

AS

81-3

Weather
A2
Q 2002 Ohio Volley Publ~nln1 Co.

•

•

Sbickland: Rural
post offices need
to remain open

OHIO

Index
lion today. Don't rush into'
!•nylhing wilhout first think'~8 through ult the step•. Con!ISICI~cy woll depend upon
l!lunnmg .
PISCES (l'ch. 20-Murch
201 -- The D&lt;ld.&lt;clearly are nut
111 your cmner today . It is not
a tome lo take chunccs on people or things.
ARIES (March 21 -At1Fil19)
.. Unle" ~omeonc cun muke
u ~olid, genuine contribution

•

VYING FOR FAIR ROYALTY - Reigning as the 2002 Meigs County
Junior Fair Queen wilt be either Meghan Haynes, left, or Rachael Ann
Morris. As for fair king, Robbie Weddle had no competition. The can·
BY CHAIILINI HOIFLICH
dld11tes
have been judgecj end the winner wl~ be annoo;nced In openHOEFLICH!Il&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - Candidates for Ing ceremonies at the fafr on Aug, 11. 6:30 p.m. at the grandstand.
the 2002 Meigs County Junior !Contributed)
Fair kin~ and queen and the live~
stock pnnce and princesses have
been judged and the winners will
be announced on Aug. II during
Sunday night opening ceremonies at the !39th Fair.
Competing for queen . are
Meghun Haynes, member ·of the
Shade Valley 4- H Club and
daughter of Paul and Janice
Haynes of Beurwallow Ridge,
Coolville; and Ruchael Ann
Morris, daughter of Steven and
Carrie Morris of Rutland, a member of.the Harrisonville 4-H club.
Only candidate for king is
Robbie Weddle, son of Joyce and 2002 LIVESTOCK ROYALTY- The prince and princesses of tlvesto.ck
Clarence Weddle of Portland. u have been selected and the winners will be announced at the opening
member of the USA Kids 4-H of the 2002 fair. They are. from left, front, Audronle Pullins, Tina
Club.
Drake, Celt/In Leslie; middle row, Kelsey Holter, Suzanne Gruaser,
The livestock prince and Kara Osborne, Brooke O'Bryant, Ashley Life; end back row, Carson
princesses are as follows:
Yost, Taylor Russell, Lindsey Houser. Holly Davis and Summer Folmer.
Pluae IH Fair, A3
!Contributed)

Dally 4: 2-6-7·2
Celli 15: 5·7-9·10-13-20

_______-, C 'hlr

•

Royalty
ready
for the
fair ·

,.

the aceinand
=·=~-~.J
spude,
lhistmother
reality ~==·
an error.
. B EAV0 .
After winning w i1h i--,1,;3....;1...;.;,.,;1~""I.-l

.

Commissioners
agree to kick
in $350,000
for project

47 Ure IUG-

Rcttc Daumal . u
· Fl'l'IKh pocl '&lt;tnd
l:rilil:. wrote, "Art has
a tlotohle fuc('. of ex prcssitlll and illtjsion.
JUst like sdctH;c hus a .
double face: the reality of error anti the
phunlum of Iruth ."
lly those. dcfini Iions, bridge is doscr
to a sdcncc thun :til
un. Itt litis tical, from
a c lub duplkatc in
Mcxil:o Cily, give
your t'X I&gt;rcssion lo
llrl'dtctthc play.
Norih made &lt;111 aggrcssi vc tJcguti vc
tlouhk. intlkating
four s/Htdes. E&lt;isJ's
thrcc-c uh hit! showed
four hcurl s wir h (, .y
puinl,, a su-c&lt;tllctl
mixed ruisc: Wcsl
would h&lt;tvc mude
three hearts, fur plus
140. So. if S01t1h
l•ould eSCOijlC fur IWO
CELEBRITY CIPHER
down inlhrcc spades,
,
by Lula Campoa
minus 100, he would
Ctltl&gt;nly Clphor cryptogram• art cr1111d trom quclltlono by tomouo
get a good rcstilt; bui
people, pall and preoont. Etch ltHtr In tho cipher otandolci onothar.
three down, mintts
TodiY 11 ciul: B equtia C
150, would be bud.
"LC
XR
VTLCLVC,
L DNA
(Wc ,q might have
risked u double .)
Tf\E:~NDOF
EWF
OF AI!
I!WNI!'A
FSFZ
East
and
West
were
C.OIN~ Jlt-\GLIN(.,
Miguel Heygadas anti
Q F F C."
I~ 1\ ['\(,(,'{ e/\N.K I
Dr. George l&lt;osenkMVIZ·ELXF
WFN8RDFLKWI!
runl, Mexico's mosl
successfu l purlncrIIWNXTLVC
FSNCPFZ
ship.
WVHRMLFHP
The defense begun
.
with the heun ucc, a
PREVIOUS SOLUTION.., "Women hiVt gont through I rtll
henri to the king, unci
revolution ... they have 1tartld INoting ont another .•
- Mario .Thomaa
u diamond shift 111 declarer's. u&lt;:c. Now
WOlD
Sottlh would huvc
GAM I
...---~- _'t'IM:-;] dnnc bcsl to con titluc
~
wirh tt low spade. Dedurer would h:tve
sume guesswork, but
he could get out for I
..
two down. However, f--r-K:.....:.R;.....:E-rT...:..:A,..M:.:..,.---i.
South continued with
1
11 1 12 1 1

Hometown Newspaper

County·commits to Rto expanston
•

e~[P,~IIIct I Llmprey 28 Fill time
Ottlor
oounct
7 L.A. hoUri
31 F"llor
41 Huoky vel!~
34 Alwoyo, Ia 8 lnvltltlon
33 "1cle
Pot
'-~tore
robbtdt" eo T V 35 BorCIIIIC
I Lure
3S Brawnil'l
aory
rllllll'k
10 Shtrblll
org,
51 - Cltlre,
31 Luncheon 12 Withdraw
31 Ve1 ~
WIIO.
Uild
11 SubWiy
wdt.
12 Jtcquao'
37 Skoalt and . oppollltl . 3S Croc pltat
pol
Chttrl
20 Tummy
31 surrflly
38 Qulmt
Ill
muteill
40 Corti lor· 22 Confront
41 lltrktn or

. 32

One error
l&lt;'liANK &amp; EArtN.EST

Traficant faces ethics panel, Al

NEA Crouword Puule

PHILLIP
ALDER

•

.'

the building so that was kind of a
deterrent to even rebuilding, but
that's something the congregation has really prayed about."
Now, the people of Pine Grove
have accepted their church's .
destruction as an opportunity to
expand.
They need funding for their
new dream, and are planning a
benefit gospel sing/dinner from
noon to 8 p.m. on Juty 20 at
Letart Community Center to raise
money.
Slated to perform at the event
are: Re~ Harmon, Chester
Martin, The Glory land Believers,

Claudette Hordlyn, Chosen, Joe
Keefer, Carl and Kay Beaver.
Ruby Clark and Family, Kings
Daughters, The ·United, Joyful
Noise, Heaven Bound, Sisters in
the Lord, Tina and Steve Casey,
Tara Smith, Pam Stewart, Ta~"a
Gerlach, Wally Hart, Pam ·
Gordon, Mercy and Bill2inn.
Tina and Steve Casey donated
the use of their sound system for
the event.
·
The concert is free and open to
the pub! ic. Donations to aid in
construction of the new church
PluM ... Church, A3

WASHINGTON . D.C. - Sixth District Rep.
Ted Strick land. (D-Porl&gt;molllh) und more thllJl ·
60 other members of Congress ure urging United
Stutes Postmuster General Juck Potter not to
dose or consolidate hundreds of rurnl post
offices ucr1&gt;ss the U.S.
A letter to the postmaster generul'from the law.
mukers wus prompted by a recent decision by the
Postal Service to lift a 1998 self-imposed mortl.torium on the closings and consolidation of rurol
poat offices.
·
"Many small towns across rural America are
strugslins with decreasing populations, and clos·
ings local post. of~ces can huve u devos~~tin~
impact on the ltvelthood of these commumues. ·
the Jetter said.
"Post oflices in rural areas are more than just a
place to drop the mail - ihey draw resi~ents
together and heiJl pre~erve our c~mmuntrtes.
Simply put. post offices tn rural Amertcn are vttal
to our quality of life and are important to the survi val of many small towns .
"If the Postal Service were to close post offices
in rural America, many communities in the 6th
District may not receive the sume quality service
available to residents of lar~er towns and cities.
This treatment of rural Amertca is simply unfair."
Strickland said.
"Posl offices are more lhan places tq pick up
the mull or buy stamps. they are also the centers
of their communities."
Customers of the tiny Kerr post office. located
between Gallipolis and Bidwell, agree.
.
"The small post office is ·convenient and personal. and the Postmaster knows everybody and
is verx helpful." Kerr area resident Carol Powell
said. 'It also helps individuals in the community
to feel more secure about their personal mail such
usc heck s.. .. .
The lifting of tl)e moratorium come.s at the
same time the Postal Servtce presented tls trans.
formation plan to Congress, with the goal of get·
ting ,the Postal Service out of debt while not
decreasing functions such as universal service.
''The· post office used to be a service to the I'W"
pie. but now it's about the money." customer Carl
Pennington said. "I think it would be u great disser·
vice to a lot of people if this post office would close.
"You just don 't get this kind of service in a big
city post office." one customer said.
A big city post ot'fice this is not. the lobby is
small and cramped, but the personal service by
Post Mistress Peggy Patterson and many others
just like her in· small post offices throughout the
United States, more than makes up for it.
Patterson, who has been with the Kerr Post
Office since 1983, knows each customer by name
und is well loved by those she serves.
.
"We love Peggy and we wouldn't want her to go
anywhere." said Spring Valley resident Laura Mae
Breakiron. "With a small post office like this I
don't have to worry about traffic or finding a place
to park, and there are no stairs to WQfrY about."
· Accessibility is important to Break iron, who ·
brings mail to the post office for the elderly and
disabled residents m her Gallia Manor apartment
complex.

~--~~~----~----~
Holzer Meclical Center · JackJ011 is now accepting applicafiom
for fvll·time licemecl physical therapists. We oFfer new per diem rates,
ll.lition reimburfllment, Rexible scheclvling, in·hovse CE opportunities, and a
•lgn-on bonu• al $3000. Inpatient and outpatient positions are available.
~
AlllisflKI positions require p~r licensure in Ohio.

If lnlere11ed, pt.oH contact:
~mon ~·-

Otporl\111111, Hoi...- Medical Center, 100 Jockson Pike, Gollipolio, Ohio _&lt;~5631

........ 17401446·1101 •••• 17401446·1106
I'

'

~-

-

'

R

MEDICAL CENTER
JACKSON

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

j
•

•
.'

!.

'•••
I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="467">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9915">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23268">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23267">
              <text>July 15, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4126">
      <name>douthitt</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2382">
      <name>eakins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="241">
      <name>white</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="102">
      <name>williamson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
