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www.mydallysentlnel.~m

Page A 10 • The Dally Sentinel

ALLEYOOP

Chi(ago's ~~n Hampton heads for canton, 81

TUesday, July 30, 2002

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LAKIN, W.Va. - The
wife of-Ma$0n County Fuir.
Board President Kenneth
"Sonny" Fry dfed eurly
today as the result· of u
house fire off W.Vu. Route
62
north of Lakin
Hospital.
Judith K. Fry, 52. wus
found in the house,
according
to
Mason
County
Emergency
Medicul Services Director
Mutt Musgrave. The body
was sent .to the Stute
Medical Examiner's office
in Charleston. The cause
of deuth is pending.
Mason
County
Emeq1ency Services suid
the imtiul911 cull came ,in
at 2:45 a.m..
·
Assistant Stute Fire
Marshal Puul Ritchie suid
the fire .appears to be un
uccident.
"A ll indications are it
was un liCcidentnl fire that
started in the uttic,"
Ritchie said.
The Mason Volunteer
Fire Department );VUS the
initial . responder. while
departments from New
Haven und Point Pleasunt
cume in to· ussist.
"She's a very Iovin~.
curing lady," suid F111r
Board First Vice President
Brian Billings. "She was a
dedicated mother and
wife. She wus ulwuys ttl
the fair with Sonny and
she'll be sadly missed."

. Deaths
..-,BIG NATE
50 YOU'RE .S tTTIN(,

IT FEELS
GOOD . I1'5
II.~L.'\XI N c;,.

THAT DAILY

WOlD

~UULU

OAMi

Alice Brinker, 83
Charles Barley, 63
Paul Carpenter, 56
Sandra Thacker, 37

letter~ of tnt
four tcramblod•worda bo· ·
low to form 'four atm~lo worda.

PLASTIC ':&gt;OD,O. SOTT~E,

HAYCT

PEANUTS
LOOK ·WHAT I FOUND OVER.
IN THE REC ROOM, BROWNIE
CJ.IARLES ... A FOOTBALL!

I

~AVE

A 600D IDEA ..

14()LD TJ.IE 8Al.L,AHD I{()U COME
RUHNIH6 UP AND KICK IT•..

'I

I _If

P U MB Y

The supervisor had mistakenly
~
..,&lt;&gt;
dialed his own secretary. She an. . . .
1 swered the phone, held up the
,.. receiver and motioned to him. "Is
r--:T::-:-:W-:
. I:-::E-A:-"::R~..,~It for me?" he asked. "No," she
--r....,rr-r--r-..,--l
laughed, " •• Is •• -I"
.
t-

I TJ.liNK I NEED TO
._,.,,.,.A PNONE CALL

I I I

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! I
e
I
~-'---'-..t-...1.-l.-..J
.

•

Complott tho chuckle quotod
by fllllnQ In tho mlulng worda
you dovolop from llop No. 3 bolow:

8 PR INT
NUMBERED' LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
.
t)

N£WSPAP£RS
C:OV..Ailhe
Major.....,_

UNSCRAM!II.E ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCIIA M-I. ITS ANSWIRS
Revo~e ·Acute· Stark· Cruise • CORRECTS •
Aman 1n my neighborhood was always busy on environmental commltteee and joining demonstrations. One
I told him that a true activist was not the one who
~~~~~: ~t~he problem but the ·one who CORRECTS the ·

1

Weather
High: XX, Low: XX
D1lell1, A2

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick J: 6·8·:3
Pick 4: 8· 2·0·6
Buckeye 5: 3·1 0·12·17·35
Mep Millions: 2-6-22·27-44

Mep Ball: 1

Plcll 3 night: 6·8·4
. Pkk 4 nl1ht: 1·7-7·3
W.VA.

Dally 3: 0·4·3
Dally 4: 5-4·9·6

Caslil5: 1-HI-14·18·21

..

Wcdnr&lt;duy. July 31,2002
Something rather grand
may trun&lt;pirc in the ycur
ahead involving armngements
between you ~nu anoth~r person with whom yuu have
strong emotional bonds. ·
Those who luve you will
bring you much happiness.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..
Keep yo~r ~uard up today,
because 11 1s doubtful that
someone with whom you may
have dealings will be as sincer~. generous or comp:lssionate as you. Don't get burned.
Leo. treat yourself to a birthday gift. Send for your AstroGraph predict inns for theJear
ahead by mailing S2 an an
SASE to Amo-Graph, c/o
this new~papcr, P.O. Box 167
Wickliffe. OH 44092. Be sur~
lU state your zodiac sign.
VIRGO (Aug,. 23-Scpt. 22)
.. , Happiness 15 dependent
. upon your frame of mind, nut
your po.ckctbnnk. It could
P.rove to be a sheer waste of
t1me, energy or money to
.overind~lgc. m hopes of havln8 a good lime.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
· Lady Luck may not be as .
supp!'rtive.~f yoiJ as she usually IS, so II an ambitii&gt;us de·
sire is dcpcn&lt;lcnt upon her in·
tervent10n, 11 1s best you put it

off until another day.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nuv.
22) .. There i~ a possibility
that information that comes
your way tnday muy be
grossly eKaggeratcd. Don't
believe everything you hear
especia.lly rumon about you;
boss or compuny.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23,
De~. 21) .. ll)ou are hoping
!O ,11et somethmg for nothing.
tt IS a pretty good bet today
that Yo,u'll get the nothing
part. It 1~ not a very good day
for any mvolvements that are
of a spc~ulutive nature.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
19) .. If you make your ell.·
pcct.ations disproportionate to
reality. there 1s no doubt that
you will end up bein8 di!appmnteu ., Quard against tendencies today to expect more
than you should.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) .. II philosophy that may
suit a friend comfortably may
not ncccssilrily fit your needs.
lmituting another could bring
yuu unhappincu today. Be
your own person.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) ... Be mindful ~If your be·
havtor 111 your sue~al mvolve-.

"·

~ent~ today und
Cinu.~ nnd tolerant

be as graas possible.
A ronr d1spluy could leave a
lustmg impression that would
be difficult to .era.~e.
·
AHlES (March 2l•April 19)
.. Try not to do anything to·
day at the CKpense of another
or 1!1 way .~ thut would inconvclllencc anyone. Somehow
you'll be made to pay for it in

·~rcutcr

mcuNurc.

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) .. Using cKcessive flattery .
· !n urde,r to manipulate another
mto betng supponive of views
or.to !let him/her to do somethu!g for y.ou will backfire.
lnsmcerity will be perceived
and you'll be rejecteil.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
·• Thole ugly extravagant
whims you get from time to
time could be very much in
evidence today. Take extra
precautions not 10 5pend'excessively and not to make
foolish purchases.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
.. Just because you were up to
handling challenges the other
day doesn't mean you can
take on another without much
forethought. Don't underestimate the competition or be
cocky.
·

Index ·
2 section• - 12 1'111•

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
Q

·

RACINE - Wheti Bob
Grueser officially slitrts his
new job ns ' Somhern Loc11l
· supenntendent Thursduy. · it
muy seem mon.: like u homecoming.
Thut 's because Gruescr is u
product of the S.outhern Locul
School District.
Gruescr. who resides neur
Rucine. wus reured in the
community of Minersville.
son of the lute Doris and Curl
Grueser. He gruduuted frum
Southern High School In
1967 befon.: emborking on u
circuitous career puth thut
eventually led him buck to
Southern.
After gruduuting from high
school. Gruescr attended
: Glenville State College in
West Virginiu. II wus while ut
Glenville, Grueser suid, ,he
developed his passion for
teaching and couching.
After college, he taught i11

Crohksville utu.l Caldwell
sL:ho(•ls. becoming an assistant d.:mcntury school princiJul , before bein~ hired us u
tigh school princtpul in South
Charleston. Ohio, und Sidney
high schools.
He wus supcrintcm.lent of
Northwestern Local Schools
ncur Wooster before tuking
the superintendent job ut
ncurby Wurrcn Locul in 1998.
where he suid he spent four
wonderful yeurs, hefore retir!ng uml taking the Southern
JOb.
He ulso has two udull chi I·
drcn. Kimberly Bernard of
Boston. Muss.. und Todd
Grucs&lt;;r of Columbu~ . Both
urc gruduntes of Ohio State
University.
Grucser recently outlined
three prlifessionul go,(l]s he
would like 10 u&lt;:hieve ut
Southern:
Continue
to
improve profidency test
'~orcs. analyze und address
the financial resources of the

I

district. and creute pusitive
communication in ull directions.
On u personul level. he s01id
his gouls ure to get to know
district 's empluyees und community memhcrs. get to know
the district's programs. and
uddress school funding issues. ·
There is ulso u common
goal he shares with ull cduca·
tors. "the cduciuion of each
und every child.'~ he suid. He
expluincd his responsibility us
providing udmini,trutors und
teachers with the tools und
cducntion they need educute
the children.
He also brielly referred to
President George W. Bush's
theme, "Let no ~hild be left
behind.''
·•we're getting bett&lt;cr one
chilli ul u time." Grueser Cl:&gt;~n·
mentcd:
NEW SUPERINTENDENT - Bob Grueser officially starts his
He also stressed the impor• duties
as Southern Local superintendent on Thursday. He Is a
tance .or giving chi ldren ll' Minersville
native end 1967 graduate of Southern High
Plaase IH Grue1er, AJ
School. (Jim Freeman)

Protecting
•
untverse
focus of

5

bean dinner
preserves link
with .history

day camp
Girl Scouts
. recewe
'
(Bronze Award'

AS
B3·5
B6
AS
A4
A3
A3
B1·3
A2

2002 Ohio Valley Publlshlns Co.

'

BY KEVIN KIU..Y
KKELL YOMYOAILYTRISONE.COM

VINTON- A tradition reaching buck to the early postCivil War era wi ll be curried on Saturday when Vinton's
annual bean dinner is staged in the Community Purk.
The dinner will be fromt11:30 a.m. until 3 p.m.. precedeo by a parade through the
.
village that begins ut II
a.m. and ends at the purk.
Vinton resident John
Holcomb, who has made a
study of what he called
Civil War bean dinners 11 :30 a.m. to 3 p.m. ·
to distingui&gt;h them from
saturdiy ·.
the newer kinds of gather·
ing - said Vinton can Vinton Community Park
truce its tirst bean dinner
as a ·reunion of veterans
· who fought for the Union. The events were also known as
soldier's campfires or soldier's meals.
Holcomb's research finds the first printed references to
Vinton's dinners in the early 1880s, although it's believed the
tlrst veterans' reunions were held there' soon after the war ·
"At these g~therin~s. ~specially the reunions or ca~p- .
tlres. the pubhc was mvtted to heilr the old soldiers reminisce about Iheir warti~e experiences and partake of ,he
standard Army meal . of beans, pork, hardtack and coffee
prepared over a campfire and served in genuine soldier
style," said Holcomb.
Before the end of the 1880s, the events became known as
GAR bean dinners. and were plentiful in southern Ohio
well into the 1930s.
Today, only three othe.r ~inners are put on that can trace
thetr roots back to the Ct vtl War era - one at Rio Grande
started in 1870 and maintained by the Rio Grand~
Memorial Association, ~ew Castle in Coshocton County
. and Wilkesville.
. '
This ye1ir, Rio Grande's bean dinner is Saturday, Aug. 10
at the Bob Evans Farm Shelterhouse, and features a Civil
War Living History camp from 10 a.m. until S p.m. The
New Castle dinner is Sunday. Aug. 17, and Wilkesville's
dinner is Saturday, Sept. 7. ·
'
For infonnation about Vinton's parade, contact Mayor .
Donna DeWitt at 388-8327. lnfonnation on the dinner is
available from Holcomb at 388-8053.
The dinner has been sponsoced by Vinton American
Legion Post 161. of which Holcomb is the commander
since 1950. save for one year when the sponsor was th~
Vinton Grange.
.
Holcomb encouraged attendance at the dinner to maintain a link with the pust.
·
"Help preserve Ohio\ unique Civil War legacr by sup~rting or attenping one of the GAR dinners,' he said,
'Your support would encourage the sponsors to continue
having these dinners jind thus remember the soldiers who
preserved the Union."

BY BRIAN J, REED

RERROT

I II I

BY JIM FREEMAN

BAEEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detell1, AJ

O Rearrange

Southem grad takes sc:hool district's reins
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

DHERMES.MYDAILVREGISTER.COM

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PHILLIP
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YOURSELF 1'1 iHE
HEAD WITH 1\N
EMPTY 2.·1,.tTEi'.

~

REEDSVILLE
Protecting the universe was
the emphasis of Meigs
County
Girl
Scouts'
"Protecmrs of the Universe
Day Cump," held recently at
Forked R.un State Park.
Jerrena Ebersbuch wus the
director for the event. Vicki
Morrow of the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservution District
presented classes on water
and soil conservation. and
Dee Kimes of Forked Run
State Park assisted in the
council's Gettie Outdoors WATER SLIDE- Girl Scout Hannah King enjoys a water slide
with ODEE program. by provlded by local fire departments as part of the scouts'
teaching the gtrls about an recent day camp at Forked Run...§late Park. (Contributed)
endangered frog in Ohio, the ly complete two' budges per- Kaitlyn Bumgardner, Jessi
Eastern Spade Foot Toad.
taining to their project. and Meadows. Hannah King,
The girls also made bird- se lected Earth Connections Larissa
Riddle,
Haley
houses, and memory books, and Eco-Action.
English, Cheyenne Beaver,
and enjoyed a water slide . The Bronze Award win· Makenzie Greene, Katie
compliments of the Olive 'ncrs, the first in Meigs Keller, Abby Collins, Ashley
Township and Tuppers Plains County, also completed com- Deem, Shawnclla Patterson,
volunteer fire departments, munity service projects at Ruchael Markworlh, Ally
took hikes and studied the Star Mill Park in Racine and Hendrix, Kendra Haning.
trees and plants in the park's . at Forked Run, and created Olivia
Cleek,
Shelby
wooded areas.
the "Captain Protector" char- Pitchpatrick,
Hannah
Campers and families acter who appeared at day Hawley, Abby
Houser,
enjoyed a picnic on Sunday, camp.
·
Juimee Little, Bnttany Cogar.
and an uppearunce by
Adult volunteers assisting Emma
Perrin.
Brooke
"Captain Protector,'' played at day camp were: Joyce Johnson, Maggie Smith,
by Ross Keller and Jaxon Romines, Dawn Romines, Nakayla Ratliff and Jessica
Meadows.
Shirle~
Co~·ar,
Brenda Sampson.
Ericka Cogar, Jo Petty, and Neutzling. Ltsa Meadows.
Juniors: Joyce Romines.
Kayla Fetty, all .of Troop Jenny
Keller,
Danyan Julia Lantz, Danielle Dalton,
1204, Lindsey Houser, 1290, ·Collins, Ann Collins. Cheryl Zari Roush, Hannah Cleek,
and Nikita Young, 1042, were King, Phyllis Deem, Amy Jord.an Anderson, BoDara
recognized for bridging from Markworth, April and Tom Powell, Stephanie Smith.
Juniors to Cadettes.
Smith, Pai~e Cleek, Amy Mary Ann Reed, Mariah Hill.
Cogar, JoAauna Fetty, Smith, Teme Houser, Tina.., Cayla Taylor, Hannah West,
Kar,la Petty, Young, and Sampson, Marty Smith, Carol Nikki Lawson, Chelsea Davis,
Hatley · Ebehbach were Fetty, Rob Romines. Harold Ashley Romines. Leanne
awarded their Bronze Award. Fetty. Tami Pillman, Shannon Tyree. Hailey Ebersbach.
The girls have been working Bumgardner, Tim Ebersbach, Whitney Putman, Lindsey
on their Bronze Award pro- Kim Fetty. Bill Cogar, Lori Houser, Ericka Cogar, Jo
· iect, '"Girl Scouts - Patterson
and
Larry Fetty and Niki Young.
.
Protecton of the Universe," Sampson,
Several of the Juniors and
'since January.
Scouts attending were:
Cadeue.s camped for, the
Each girl had to individualBrownies: Carly Taylor, weekend.

VInton lean ·
Dlnn•

'

/'.

SenlorOuiNach
"Reaching Out to Meet Senior Needs"

•

· Free Telephone Reassurance,
Socialization and Prescription Reminders.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference .

NOW ACCEPTING NEW CUENTS

Wl!W.holzer.org

' (74~) 446·9160 '

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• '

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h•
Page Al ·
0- 10 \
Death row inmcites begin appeals

l

The Daily Sentinel
Thurad•y, Aug. 1

)

I Monol'-ld 111'112' I •
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0
. 1Columi&gt;Ua ln•/M• I

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~
W.VA.

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Sunny lit. ~

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ShOwtrl T·eiOtmt

R.1n

~~~•

Snow

~ AIIOoNIIICI' ,.,..,

Sunny and hot through Friday
•·

BY TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS

Weather forecast
clear.
Tonight ... Mostly
Lows in the upper 60s. Calm
..Jwinds .. ,
Thursday ... Mostly sunny
and hot. Highs 90 to 95. Light
and variable winds.
Thursday ni_g ht ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 60s.
E"tended forecast
Friday ... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the lower 90s.
Friday nighi.. .Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 60s. ·
Saturday... Partly cloudy

with a chance of showm and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
upper 80s.
· Sunday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows 'in the mid 60s and
highs in the upper 80s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and !hunderstorms in the afternoon
and even in~. Laws in the mid
60s and htghs in the upper
80s.
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and !hun.derstorms. Lows in the mid
60s and highs in the mid 80s.

•

·ohio babies surrendered
DAYTON (AP) - At least seven newborns have been
dropped off at hospitals and other safe havens since Ohio
adopted a law in April 2001 to allow parents to give up their
babtes without factng criminal liability. a newspaper report·
ed.
'1 Slate officials say they are concerned that not enough peo. pie have heard about the program meant to prevent injury to
newborns who would otherwise be harmed or deserted.
"Many people still don'l know about it," said Barbara
Riley. deputy director of children and family services in the
Deparlment of Job and Family Services, in a leller sent to
various media outlets earlier this month. "Raising awareness
· requires a grassroots effort among schools, the news media
· and social services agencies."
· ·
Tne state doesn't truck the number of babies brought to
the safe huvens. But the Dayt&lt;tn Daily News contacted chil·
dren 's services officials in Ohio's urban areas and found
seven infants had been surrendered - three in Hamilton
County and one each in Franklin, Lorain, Summit and Srark.

Charity operator pleads
CINCINNATI (AP) - The operator of a Cincinnati charity and food bank admitted in federal court that he lOok more
than $1 million in donations for his personal use.
· Samuel Ashley Jr., 43, ruised millions of dollars and collected truckloads of food for the poor during his l 0 years at
the Ohio Community Emergency Food Center.
He pleaded guilty in federal court Tuesday to mail fraud
and taK evasion charges. Federal investigators say Ashley
diverted money to bankroll a "lavish lifestyle" .that included
: travel and gambling.
: "He did feed the needy." said John Voorhees. a special
agent with the Internal Revenue Service. "But what hap. ..Jpened was the money started coming in, and more and more
: was being diverted for his personal benefit."
·
.

Baby death Investigated
. MEDINA (AP) - Relatives of a man who left a baby
: locked in a car on a hot summer day said he may have been
. · confused and forgot the child was in the car.
: "He's a wonderful guy," said Gail Ramsey, the man's sis. ter-in-law. "He wishes it would have been him" who died.
: Nine-month-old Tyler Costello was in a forward-facing
· · car seat on the passenger side in the back seat of a Dodge
: Neon. By the time the baby was taken out of the car, he was
: not responsive and died at a hospital.
: No one has been charged with a crime. The matter
: · remained under investigation Tuesday.
Ramsey said the baby's father usually does not take the
baby to a babysiuer, but he knew the infant. was in his car
when he left home to make the short drive to work Monday.
She said he apparently ended up forgetting about his son
· being in the car.

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Whale still unattainable
AURORA (AP)- The Argentine governmj:nt is denying
Six Flags Worlds of Adventure's permit for a whale', a newspaper reported.
.
The plan was for Kshamenk, a male orca, to come to the
Six Flags theme park in northeast Ohio from Bue'nos Aires
to breed with Shouka. a female whale that the park acquired
in May.
· ,
.
Victoria Lichtschein, director of wildlife for the Argentine
government, told The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer in an e-mail
that the permil was denied .because the application presenled no proof as to how Kshamenk was captured.
The IO",Year·old whale was acquired by an aquarium· in
Buenos Arres in 1992.

COLUMBUS (AP) - · Larry Komp
acted quickly when the U.S. Supreme
· cdurt banned execution of the m~ntally
retardei:llast month, filing an appeal less
than two weeks later.
His client Allen Holloway, a convict·
ed killer, has mental deficiencies and
brain damage, Komp said. Tests have
shown an IQ ranging from· 55 to 72,
Komp said. An IQ of 70 or lower is generally considered one indicator of mental retardation.
·
"There's never been an expert that's
said he wasn't mentally retarded,"
Komp said.
An onslaught of appeals was predicted even before the Supreme Court
reversed its previous posllion June 20
and ruled that executing mentally
retarded murderers is unconstitutionally

Crash victim had dream

Officers face accusatio '1s
CINCINNATI (AP) - Two Cincinnati poh~e officers
accused of abducting a man, sprayi ng him with a chemical
irritant and leaving him in a city park have been indicted on
, felony charges.
Specialist Michael M er~e r, 34, and Officer Robert Litman,
38, were indicted by a Hamilton Coun1y ~rand jury Tuesday.
They have each been charged with Jelony abduction and
misdemeanor counts of assault and unlawful restraint. If
• convicted they cou ld c;rch face more than five years in
pri son.

•

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...

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•

CENTRAL DISPATCH

POMEROY

5:10 p.m .. Ohio Route 7,
' Sadie Johnson, treated.
'

MIDDLEPORT
.. Middleport Village Council
· will meet in special session
Thursday at 5:30 p.m. to
hold the first reading on the
village's proposed revisions
to the flood plain ordinances .

Showtimes
changed

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•

AmToehiSBC - 26.31
Alhlar)d Inc. - 35.36
AT&amp;T - 10
Bank One - 37.45
Bll - 17.04
Bob EYIInl- 27.37
Borg Warner - 5-4.17
Champion - 2.M
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Charming Shopa- 7.28
,. Clly Holding - 25.51

COl - 25.3ol
' DC! - 17.32
•,'

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Pepllto - 41 .74

Premier - 7.70
Aoc:kwell - 18.48
Rocky Boola - 5.01
AD Sholl - 44.e9
C!KNLY - 4.30
Soara - 48.28
Harlay Davldaon - 48 .58 · Wa~Mart - 49.12
Kmart - .71
Wanoy·o- 36.58
Kroger - 19.35
Worthington - 18.14
Ltd. - 18..C7
Dally atock repor11 are the
NSC- 20 .85
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Qak Hill Financial - 21 .68 lhe previous d11.y'a trana·
OVB - 23 .150
acllona, provided by
BBT - 36:20
Smtih Parlnero al Adveal
Peoplea - 28.17
Inc. or Galllpolla.
Fodera! Mogul - .83
USB - 20.57
Gannon - 70.150
Genoral Eloelrlc- 31 .150

Reds rough up Dodgers, 12-4
See story on Page Bl

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·Obituaries
Chartes Wesley Bartey
RUTLAND - Charles Wesley Barley, 63, Side Hill Road,
Rutland. died Tuesday. July 30. 2002. at Riverside Methodist
Hospital i·n Columbus.
Born on Feb. 22. 1939, in· Cabil\ Creek, W.Va., he was Jhe
son of the lute Ernest Barley and Bonita E. Snodgrass Ingles.
He was a welder on construction. He is ~urvived by his wife.
Donna Faye Barley of Rutland; two dau~hters. Bonita and
·shawn Cremeans of Snowville and Johnm Barley und Abbie
·Welsh of Rutland: and a son, Ronnie Burley of Rut lund; a
brother. Bill and Carol Barley of .Bedford; two sisters, .Lena
and Gary Basham of Coolville and Peggy and Bill Hatfield of
R~a. .
Also surviving are grandchildren. Brittany Cremeans.
Reanna Hannon. Kristen McGuire. and baby K. C. Welsh
(Li ttle Charlie); and several nieces and nephews.
Calling hours will be l'rom 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday
ut Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland. Paslor Les Hayman will
conduct private graveside services for the family !Jl
McGlaughlin Cemetery, Barley Addition, Rutland.
Love . appreciate and validate our life together.

•

Testimony
begins.in
•

•

Arthur

slaying

and a butlertly knife in the
jeans. On the front porch,
POINT
.PLEASANT. investigators found a pack
W.Va. - Fir~t duy tc,timo- of Marlboro cigarettes. a
ny in the first-degree nmrder flashlight. 17 live rounds of
trail of Cur11s Yanko ~o t different J8 culibj,:r ummo
under way Tuesday 111orn111g and u homemade set of
wire
knuckles
after a 13-person jury was barbed
seated.
wraptJCd in duct tape.
Yanko is accused of gun- Defense allorneys quesning down Danny Arthur at ti oned .whether or not anyRACINE - Paul' L. Carpenter, 56, Portland Rd., Racine,
203 Poplar St. in Point one else was on the scene
died Tuesday. July 30, 2002. at hi s residence.
Pleasanl enrly on O~:t. 2. prior to law enforcement
· He wus born July 31, 1945, in Ford, Ky., son of the late Elza
2001.
arriving. and also quesCarpenter Sr. and Virginia Ju~tic e Carpenter. He was a senior
Mason County Prosecutor tioned owners hip of the
production coor!pnator for the American Electric·Power Co.,
Damon Morgan called Point clothes found in the yard.
most recently assigned to the Kyger Creek Power Plant. He
Pleasant Police Officer A motive in the case is
was retired from the Operating Engineers Union und was a
Davi? Downin g as the ulso being questioned.
member of the Calvary Baptist Church in Felicity.
f1rst
wlln ~ss.
"Did Curtis Yanko lry and
state s.
Surviving are hi s wife, Shawnette Cunningham Carpenter; a
Downmg
.
was
the
llrst
flee
the scene?" Lilllepage
son. Robert (Jessica Gay) Means, Crown City; a grandson,
.
respondmg
law
enforcement
asked
Downing.
Ethan Means; a sister, Lucille Withers of Cincinnati; two ·
officer on the scene at 4:2 1 "No," Browning said.·
brothers, Robert (Libby) Carpenter of Paducah. Ky. and Carl
a.m.
..
.
. . "Were any of Danny
(Sundy) Carpenter of Florida; his mother-i n-law and futher-in"
I
was
d1spa1ched
m
~efer.:
Arihur 's personal items
luw, James and Freda Cunningham of Racine: a brother-ine·nce . to ~~ shootrng. mis sing from the house?"
law, Jumes R. Cunningham of Wellsville ; sisters-in-law,
Downrng sa1d from th e Littlepage asked. Downing
Sherrine Cunningham of Dunbar, W.Va. and Jamie Lynn
sta~d
. . When
Do":nmg replied, "no."
(Richard) Swanson, Columbiana; and several nieces and
urrrved
.11
the
address,
he "As tiu as a motive. robnephews.
~md he snw an mdiVIdual bery wouldn't seem to be
Besides his parents. he was preceded in death' by his broth·
stal\dlllg 1n the nuddle of the motive," Littlepage said.
cr. Elza Carpenter, Jr.
the st;,eet with a gun 10 his Paramedic
Richard
Services wi II be held at II a.m. Friday, Aug. 2, 2002 at the
Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine wilh Rev. Dewayne
ha.~d.
.
·
McCullough was next to
I told hun to throw down take the sta~ and said that
Stutler ofticiating. Burial wi II follow at Letart Falls Cemetery.
the gu~ and .get on the when he amved Downin
Friends may cull at the funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m. on
· .
•
.g
ground, Dowmng smd.
Thursday.
The alleged weapon used was. rn the process of diS·
in the shooting is a Colt arr~mg Yanko.
.
Detective Special .38 caliber
I saw th~ defendant with
hand ~un. labeled state a P.1stol at hrs ~ght stde a~d
exhibit No. 1.
offtcer Downmg had ht~
Downing said that Yanko weapon
· .
drawn,
told him , "I shot the guy. McCullo~gh satd. . .
Handcuff me and take me 1o Accordtng to . testimony.
jail." Downin g $aid that when
Br~wmng .
and
when they got buck to the McCullougti entered the
car, he inquired about the house, they fou~d Arthur
victim. He said Yanko slumped 10 a couch exh1btt·
LETART, W.Va. - Alice S. Rollins Brinker, 83, Letart, ·
replied,
"He's dead. 1 shot in~ no vital signs.
W.Va .• died Tuesday, July 30, 2002, at Charleston Area
him
six
times and three of
'He (Arthur) appeared to
Medical Center in Charleston, W.Va.
those were hollow points. '' be ~eyond .any _!llC?d,\cal
Services will be heid at l p.m. on Frid~y. Aug. 2, 2002, at
Yanko, who was wearing help, Dowmng. said. He
Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va. Friends
only
a pair of dark shorts had a pack of crgarettes m
may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Thursday at the funeral home .
when
officers arrived, h1s left hand and a ltghter 10
A complete obituary will be announced later by Fogelsongreportedly
told Downing the right hand ."
Tucker Funeral Home.
that it "was a drug deal gone Also testifying for the
bad."
•
defense were. West V.ir~i~ia
Defense allorney Steven State
Poltce
crvrhan
Littlepage asked Downing if' employee J.R. Layman. a
any
drugs were found on firearm and tool mark examGALLIPOLIS - Sandra Lucille Thacker, 37, Gallipolis,
either
Yanko. Arthur, or at mer,, and Zelma Patterson,
died Sunday, July 28, 2002, at the home of her mother.
the crime scene, to which who lived diagonally across
She was born Dec. 18, 1964, in Gallipolis, daughter of
Downing replied, "No."
from Arthur.
·
Nancy Stewart Butler and the late Harry Ray Bland.
On cross examination, The prosecution is expectSurviving besides her mother are her husband, Warren G.
Littlepage
questioned · ed to call Megan Hanning,
Thacker, and two sons, Warren T. Thacker and Joshua D.
Downing aboul Yanko's who was present in the
Thacker, all of Bidwell; a sister, Kimberly R. Athey of
statement, "it was a drug house at the time of the
Cheshire; two brothers, Kenneth R; Bland of Gallipolis and
deal ~one bud."
shooting.
Jeffrey B. Blessing of Letart, W.Va; her paternal grandmother,
· "Dtd he say, 'drug deal The trial is expected to
Helen Lucille Decker of West ColumbJa, W.Va. and several
gone bad or d1d he say drug last into next week.
.
aunts and uncles.
thrill gone bad?" Littlepage
Besides her father, she was preceded in death by her paterasked Browning. "To your
nal grandfather, Charles Decker: and her maternal grandparknowledge, no drugs were
ents, Thomas and Goldie Stewart.
found at 203 Poplar St.?"
Graveside memorial services will be held at I p.m.
"No," Browning added.
Thursday, Aug, l, 2002, at Graham Cemetery in New Haven,
A pair of blue jeans, a
W.Va .. with Pastor Roger Bonecutter officiQting.
socks and u pair of
shirt,
Arrangements are under the direction of Fogelsong-,Tucker
shoes were found in the yard
Ft~neral Home in Mason, W.Va.
at 203 Poplar St. Also found
There wi II be n·o calling hours.
were a nylon pistol holster
BY DAN HERMES .

OHERMESCPMVOAILVREGISTER COM

Paul carpenter

Deaths·
Alice Brinker

sandra Thacker.

Grueser
from Page AI

Grueser said he is excited
about coming back · to ,
Southern.
"I'm coming here because I
want to make a di fferenoe,"
•· Grueser said. "Wanting to
make a difference is why we
(educators) get so much satisfaction ."
·
" I have a great passion for
what I do," he said. "Now
\hat I've come home it's that
much more i01portant to me
to give something back the
community that supported

quality education.
"Gelling a quality education is the best way to change
your quality of life," he
explained.
Furthermore, good schools
are good for the community,
he said.
" If we ·can have good
school systems, we can have · me."
good industries move into the
"I'm overwhelmed with
area," he added.
the welcome I've received. It
However, he said the com- makes me want to work that
munity's children will be the much harder," .he said.
district's main customers .
"I'm truly optimistic and
"Kids are going to be our enthusiastic about our opporprimary focus ," he said.
tunities," he said.

•
•

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POMEROY Meigs
County Republican Party
will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County
Courthouse.
·

OuPonl - 42.05

AEP -33.36
Arch Cool- 16.09
Akzo - 35.150

Inmates moved at prisons

One Call Covers them All.

Republicans
meet

LOCAL STOCKS

Hall nomination blocked

Local Unlimited Access
As low as $11.95 per Mo.,.
Get Online Today!

Organizational
meeting

REEDSVILLE
POMEROY - Schedules
Olive "('ownship
Regular
for the Junior . Fair dairy
, show and the open class Trustees meeting will be
· dairy show at the Meigs held on Thursday at the
County Fair have been township garage on Joppa
R,oad, at 7:30p.m.
c~anged. according to Ed

Computer error · .
misidentifies 203 schools
as underperforming

Pickup.

POMEROY Meigs
High School and Middle
School cross-country practi ce will begin Monday at
8:30a.m. on I he high school
track. Cross-country is open
to all girls and boys in
grades seven through 12.
All athletes should come
prepared to run oil Monday
rf they have had a physical
for the 2002'03 school year.
Those who have not yet had
a physical should come to
practice to collect information .

Special meeting

Train-car crash kills

2-ooor, 4-Door, 6-Door a

Plan practice

MIDDLEPORT - An
organizational
. meetina for
4 p.m., structure fire at
Meigs
Middle
~chool footy Hawk'residence.
bull. grades seven and eight.
will be held at 8 a.m.
Saturday, with cMditioning
and practice beginning
Monday at 8 a.m.

•

Dragon· Intern~t

Holter, pr~sident of the
Meigs County Fair Board.
Both had originally been
planned for Thursday in the
show arena.
They are now scheduled
to be held in the show arena
on Monday. The Junior Fair
Dairy Show will be held at
10 a.m. and the Open Class
Dairy Show will be held at
noon.

RUTLAND

Court issues death sentence

AUTO INSURANCE

POMEROY Meigs
Emergency Services units
answered the following
calls for assistance on
Tuesday :
.

I :31 a.m., Ohio Route
124,-Robbie Boling, Holzer
Medical Center;
3 a.m .. . Beech Grove
Road. Dennis McKinney,
Pleasant Valley Hospital :
7:30 a.m.. Overbrook
Center, Luella Driggs,
Pleasant Valtey;
8:03 a.m .• Sharon Hollow
Road, Paul Carpenter, dead
on arrival;
10:10 a·.m., Depot Street,
: Middleport, Iva Cremeans.
Holzer:
10:3 1 a.ln.; Elmwood
Terrace. Opal Cummins,
Pleasant Valley;
4:49 a.m ., U.S. Route 33,
Vernon Evans, Holzer;
8:04 p.m., Holzer Meigs
Clinic, Phyllis Skinner.
Holzer;
8:32 p.m., Holzer Meigs
Clinic, ' Tanya Murphy,
Hol zer.

Republicans form
committee for ·
undisclosed donors.

NORTH CANTON (AP)- Jeff-Gowins would often say
his dream was to become a professional motorcycle racer.
COLUMBUS (AP) - O'Donnell·by 14 percentage
He died early Tuesday when he wrecked his Suzuki · Donors who wish to remain points.
motorcycle a ~ he drove south on State Route 8 in Cuyahoga . . anonymous . will have an
Citizens for a Strong
Falls.
Ohiq, created by the Ohio
outlet
for
making
their
posiGowins, 24, wus u 1996 Norlh Cunton Hoover High
tions known to voters this Chamber of Commerce as
School graduate who competed in wrestling during high
year, a top Republican con- an issue advocacy group,
school.
decided lust month it WO\IId
tributor
said Tuesday.
At about 2:06 a.m. Tuesday, Gowins was driving south·
A group called Informed disclose its contributors and
bound when he lost control of his motorcycle and struck a
Citizens of Ohio will raise donation amounts. The
light pole. He was thrown from the bike and slid about 150
money and spend it on issue chamber will have no
yards .
advocacy, said · David involvement .with the new
Brennan, an . Akron busi- group, political director
nessman who's given thou- Chip McConville said.
Informed Citizens of Ohio
sands
of dollars
to
LIMA (AP) - A 24-year-old man is joining his older
Republican political cam- will give donors who don't
brother on Ohio's death row for the shooting deaths of a todpaigns and conservative want their names disclosed a
dler and teenager.
,
·
forum to express their
causes.
Cleveland Jackson and his brother, Jeronique
The
group
is
similar
in
views, Brennan said. Issue
Cunningham, also shot six others while stealing drugs and
structure to Citizens for a advocacy groups are not
money from one of the survivors in January.
Ohio, which drew governed by Oh10 campai~n
Strong
Jurors took about 10 hours before deciding Tuesday to
fire
for
its ads in the 2000 laws, and don't have to drs·
sentence Jackson to death. Cunningham, 29, was sentenced
Ohio Supreme · Court race close donations.
to death in June for the shootings.
·
between by Democratic
"A group has to be formed
Both were convicted of aggravated inurder, attempted
Justice
Alice
Robie
Resnick
for
the many issues that pubaggravated murder and aggravated robbery.
and Republican Terrence lic policy should be addressO'Donnell. The group spent ing . Now, there doesn't
3
$4 million in anonymous- seem to be a viable group to
donor ads, but Resnick beat do that," Brennan said.
EATON (AP) - ·A train struck a car Tuesday evening on
a rural road in southwest Ohio, killing three men in the vehi· cle, deputies said.
· ·
.
•
The men- ages 35, 56 and 82 - died at the site of the
crash in this town about 20 miles west of Dayton, said Capt'.
Mike Simpson of the Preble County sheriff's office.
Simpson would not release their names until their families
are notified.
.
· The Norfolk-Southern Railway train hit the car about 6
p.m. at a crossing that had a warning sign but no lights or
gates, Simpson said.
,
Deputies do not believe alcohol was involved , Simpson
said.
COLUMBUS (AP)- The state developed to compile
news earlier this month from the list required by the No
the Ohio Department of Child Left Behind'Act labeled
Education was baffling to a school underperfonming if it
WASHINGTON (AP) - North Dakota Sen. Kent Conrad
school administrators in had not improved reading and .
has blocked the nomination of Ohio Rep. Tony Hall to be
Springfield.
·
mathematics proficiency test
the ·U.S. ambassador to the United Nations for food and
The stale had identified five scores in both fcurth and sixth
agriculture agencies, Hall's office said Tuesday.
of the city's elementary grudes, said Patti Grey, an
"It is our understanding that Senator Conrad has a hold on
schools as undef11Crforming Education
Department
all State Department nominees before the Senate. The mysbased on proficrency test spokeswoman.
teries of Senate holds are sometimes difficult to follow ... lt
results from students in .the
But that calculation was
was probably the lowest profile of all the holds," said Hall's
fourth and sixth grad_e.
impossible in buildings where
.
chief of sluff, Michael Gessel.
The problem?
a fourth or sixth grade did not
It was unclear why Conrad, a Democrat, is blocking State
"Our elementary schools eKist, Grey said.
Del'artment nominees . His office .didn't return phone me·s- . are K-5 . There are no si"th
sages left Tuesday seeking comment.
·
grades at those schools,"
In Springfield, sixth grade
Hall, a longtime Democratic. congressman from. Dayton·,
Nonda Harvey, spokeswoman is housed in middle school
Ohio, was nominated by President Bush for the U.N. post
for the Clark County district, bu.\ldings.
earlier this year and approved by the Senate Foreign
said Tuesday. "We were in
When we fo~nd out about
Relations Commiuee in June .
here scratching our heads and · the error, we .~ard, well, ~at
trying to figure out what was makes. sense, Harvey srud,
going
on."
chuckhng.
l
The state . announ~ed
Now,
~nly
Lincoln
COLUMBUS (AP) - Thirty-siK inmates have been
Monday ·that a computer Elementary ts hsted us undermoved in the past week from their prison~ to other instituglitch caused it to misidentify performing . in the district.
tions because of disciplinary problems, an Ohio Department
203 of the 415 schools it had Harvey said the district is
of Rehabilitation and Correction spokeswoman said
labeled on July 19 as under~ reviewing whether that school
Tuesday.
'
performing because they did- should be on the list.
Twelve inmates were moved Tuesday from the privately
n't meet academic standards
Under the federal education
run North Coast Correctional Treatment Facil·ity In Grafton
spelled out in the federal edu- reform law, parents whose
to the Marion Correctional Institution for refusing to wear
cation reform bill that children are in low-performproper uniforms, department spokeswoman Andrea Dean
President Bush signed in · ing schools have the option of
srud.
.
.
January.
moving their children elseOn Saturday, 24 inmates at the Southeastern Correctional
, A computer program the where for a better education·.
.Institution in Lancaster who would not return to their living
r
areas were moved to other prisons, Dean said. '
The Ohio Civil Service Employees Association, which
represents some prison workers, including guards. said.
removal of 12 mmates from the pri vately run prison, which
has nonunion guards, demonstrates that the state puts its
problem.inmates in union prisons.
.

~

••

LOc;AL SRIEFS
EMS runs

cruel. ·
expects some to appeal, said Bryan
At least 14 inmates around the coun- Dupler, deputy chief of the office's captry have sought reprieves in the weeks ital post-convtction divisio'1, .
.
David Bodiker, the Oh10 pubhc
following the decision, and defense
attorneys and prosecutors alike say defender, estimates that 50 of the state's
dozens more are likely to follow.
20 I death row inmates are mentally
Ohio leads the appeals to date with retarded.
· .
nine, followed by Pennsylvania with
~e state's claim after the rul!ng that
two, Mississippi with two and Texas , Ohro had no mentally retarded rnmates
with one.
.
on death row may have been seen as a
They are among 20 states that don't call to action, Bodiker said.
"Perhaps that was a goad to imme&lt;liexplicitly ban the execution of the mentally retarded. Attorneys in several of ately do something," he said.
the other states also filed similar
The Ohio Supreme Court on Monday
ap~als before the ruling, based on the . unanimously turned down the appel!-1 of
ev1dence before the court.
an inmate who claimed his death senIn Oklahoma, the state's Indigent tence was unconstitutional bec11use hers
Defense System estimates 16 of the mtntally retarded. It was the first ttme
state's approximately liS death row the Ohio coun has ruled on the retardainmates are mentally retarded· and tion issue since Supreme Court ruled.

The charges stem from ' an April 13 incident in which
Courtney Evans, 22, said he was abducted by the officers;
driven to a park in suburban Cincinnati, sprayed with irritant, and left there, prosecutors. said.
·
He was found about 2:30 a.m . by ·another Cincinnati
police officer, who reported the allegations.

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Weclnt,.y, July :51, 2002

Ohio weather

IND.

Wedne1day, July 31, · 2002 .

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Page AS

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The Daily Sentin 1

II 2002

The Daily Sentin 1
"

111. 'Court St'"t • ~y, Olllo

(740) 992-2158 • FAX t740) 9N151
-w.mydllllytentlMI.~

•
•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson

Dar

Publisher

Bette Pearee
Managing Editor

CharleM Hoetucn

bby

•

Editor

l ellen w tht&gt; t'clitvr Uft' h't'ln"nt'. l'ht&gt;\' \h~ )«id ~If,\.'" 1A\vt
.WO _Hon.l.'\. AU lt~rtRn W't' \l~b_it'&lt;'f 10 ('(liriii,J&lt; wtd m ..M bft

'

Mxnrc/ wul mdutl..- uclclrt'\\ wul ft'it'I'IWnt' numbf-F. Nc,.
b.- pl&lt;/&gt;li\ht'&lt;l. l &lt;'(It'I'\ ,\ht~tl./ ~(II ,I(;•J\l

llll.lilflltl//rlltn II if/

1&lt;4.\lt' , (t&lt;f&lt;ll't'.\Sill~f( iS.\Uf.\ , tl&lt;-11/"fl',\(ln&lt;~fitW\ ,

~

ADVICE .

I

Abb~

I ~ yoo print this. In C.'\-.c
l:iln~Ct 1s stilllt\&gt;\ng, I want liitit kl ktKIW
what h.~lCI~ to 1\\e. We 'M!tl' lxllh
nk.-e kidS, rto1 bo~M'it\tl ~lile. I did
lilllhil\1! "'~· ~~ lieij) me G&lt;ld. .~M. IN n.oRIDA
.
mtAR t.M.: I'm ptinlit\Jl yuut
let~l' bec\lusc I \IIi\ ~ure ~~~ dre not
tllll .mly tape victinl .lmm that era
who II~ 001\n dtMid tO speak out
\IOOUI her ~~~~~~u\t, I believe )lOll when
yoo MY you dlllnothit\g Wrtll\g. The

••

·l'ht' op·iHicm.-. t' \J•~'Y .. se&lt;i in tht' co.Jmmt bt'l&lt;m W't' ~~ C'(M(' semu.\ &lt;~i the Ohio l'c•lln l'ubll,hill,~ C.•. \ etliltwiul l&gt;&lt;•ml,

•

un/t•.,s vlhrrn·isr m'lrtl.

NATIONAL VI.EW
'

Tllm·off

ME,IGS

Michael jackson:'\ Sony
timde adds to '"~' dedinit~~ itn~~e

Ridenour birth

• Tlw llully News, 1\h·Kt•t'spurt, l'",. ,;II Mirh&lt;1rl
Jackson wttl So11r Mu .~ic : St•meoll&lt;' need&gt; It• tflll Midmt!l
Jn~kson to shut up. If he huun't ulrt!llli)' llHt\le ~nl•lii)h thtmnging \'ureer und lite moves. hb u~:tlom. '" llr th;: pm.t two .
weeks certuinly seem to he the finul mtils in the ~offin for
the former "King of Pop."
Appnrently upset his ZOOI ulhum " lnl'in~ible " sold only 2
million copies, Juckst\11 lmuwhed sevenli tirudes ltgulnst
Sony Musk (his htbell uml Tommy M1&gt;ttoh1. Its •:huirmun, ...
At the Music Industry lnitlutlve Summit In Hurlllm. ura:u•
nlzed hy the_Rev. t\1 Slull'pti•n\ Nutit•nul Musk ·Network.
Ju~:kst&gt;n suld thm once he stul'ted hrouklng t-e•·ords set by
Elvis Pl'tlsley und The Bentles, '\wcrnl~ht they ~ulle\l me u
freuk. u honwsexuul. u ••hild nwlestor.''
This certulnly didn't huppen overnight und Juckson ~nn
.only Illume himself. N~ t'lwcd u burruge l&gt;f chiltl mulestlllinn
cluims in the '90s und hb determimuit&gt;n ti&gt; pnwe his lnnt&gt;·
uilnce resulted In him puyittg off his nc~users .
B~ft•rc "lnvitwible" Wit&gt; .r~l~us~d. J1wks11U hold 11 luugh·
11ble telc~lsed tribute tu himsdf. Add thut to his multiple
plllstiC SUrgeries, hit II ITt' lliiUTIUj;C.' Hlld slrllnge pub Ii\:
llllf'~llflln\.'Os, nnd yt&gt;u huVI&gt; ull the evidt&gt;nce you m'llY us tn
why petlple ure turned off.
· Pcrhups it's lime Jm, kstllllllk~ his ownndvk'Qund luuk Ht
the "m11n In the mit·n•r." Thut'.s whoro he ' ll find the &gt;l&gt;lll'~'e
of hi's problem,.

men "who hamted you v1olated their
JXlSllion of tru~t and authority.
Alth,~h tt ha~ been nearly si~
~adc, 'ill&lt;.'C yoor rape &lt;XX.'Urred,
there i\ Milll~lp available for you in
the h m of JXlSt·trautnatic ~tress
~wm~clit\g. Please pick up the phone
and call RAINN (the Rape, Abuse
and h1cN National Network) at (800)
656-HOPE (4673). RAINN Willl'On·
III'CI you with the ne;tl'C't mpe crisis
~-enter in )'tl\lr area. Please heed thi,
advi~'e . 'r'&lt;lU 'II be glad you did.
OKAR ABBY: My parents, who
he in Eun\pe, ate fil)alitinl! their
divorce . So fat. I have remained neuttaL Bowcvet, I recently learned
some very upsetting news about my
dl\d ,- that he's had multiple extra·
mantal.alfalrs. He also bad-mouths
11\Y mother to everyone who will listen.

Dad plans to retire next yet11 and
wants to visit me and my ttusblnd after

that. This man is an ak:oholic who has
never'sooght treatment. I am not look·
ing terward to his visit. but realit.e now
is not the time'to break off my oonnection with him.
As a t.'OITlP")nlise, I would like to
propose that nty dad visit my husband
and me for one week - but wllh the ·
requirement that no alcohol be broug!tt
into our home. Does !his sound rea·
sonable, Abby?- LOYAL 'TEXAS
READER
DEAR LOYAL: If your fathl7's per··
sonality changes when he drinb, it's
not only reasonable, but it's also sensi·
ble. ln your home. you. make the rules.
Remember that whim your father
. objros (as he allllOSt certainly will), and
don 'I cave in.

INSANE DAYZ

NOTEBOOK
LONO DOTI'OM = Flo~ tmd Ji!t!lll~ N~\\l\!11 Ridenour
,....---., lnnoone\1 the blnh of thl!lr thlrtt (1\lld, 11.
~011, Coon~ Ot\n-en Rldenoor.
.

PERKINS' VlE

Gephardt pushes tvrong tl'a)' to ~o on inun('&lt;ratiou

Dom lullt ~6 111 t':t~llld~ll~Chlrk h1
l\ll'kmhu11, W. Va., he \\l\lijh\ld cll!ht

~U\dS,

11ve OUil~S.
Mr. lind Mn. Rld\llii)Ut h11.w \W() llt~r
\:11Hd~n. Cll.$t)ll.lllle, nove, tmd ~11thtrlne
Nool, 19 n\l)ntl\~,
Mlll\lftllll l!ftllldt'llrenlli 11n1 Blll'!tt 11nd
Ot\rlllne Newtll of Chc81\lr, 11nd tn~tl\lmlll
~iiiiiNoUi'-' 1!1'\mlll·l!fllndil\ollt~ I~ lnt,)l Ncwtll llf . ·

Ch\\stw.

.

.

Ptlt\\f\U\1 l!,l'lllldl'l!NI\S 11!'0 Ki!lth 111\d
' LUi. Rltl~Mtlf of l.ofli Dmmm ""d pl\1\lfl\111 1!1'\ml--l!tlll\d·
mothorls Lucille Rldi.ltlour of Tup~r&amp; Pl11ln~.

Burton birth

'
. WINNIRI- •tnallnll Oeyt," il pi!lntlll!ll field
team from Cheatat, won tecoM place rn the WOW palnball tournament In L.011n.
They lllati\llld $1:1!0. On the U!am, lett to ril!ht, 111'11 Anthony Call. Matt Smith, Harry Whytsall, Shane Collins end Brandon
Cllf!lllfllllf, Cllpt!lln. (CMtfiiMtld)
.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ~SSOCIATED PRESS

1\lduy i' W~dnesdny, July~ I, th~ 212th duy of 2002 . There
me 153 duys left in the ycm.
·
Touuy's Highlight in History:
.
On July ~ I. 1777, the Murquis de L111'uy~ll~. u ll) ·Y~"r-old
French noblemun, wus mude 11 mujor-genernlln the Americun
Continentul Ai'my.
On this dute:
In 149t!, during hi&gt; thir·d vuyuge luthe Westem Hemlsphore.
Christopher Columbu&gt; urrlved ut the Island of Trlnldnu.
In 15!16, St. lgnntius of Loyolu. founder of the Society of
Jesus - the Jesuit t&gt;rder of Cmhoiic priests nnd brmhers died In Rome.
In 187.5, the 17th pr~sldent of tho United Stutes, Andrew
Johnson, died in Cnrt~r Station, Ter)n., ut age ti6,
In 1919, Genmmy 's Weimar Constitution wus udoptect.
In I94!!, Presid~nt Tnunun helped dedlcme New York
lnternulional Atrport Outer John P. Kennedy lntel'llutiomtl
Ajrpor1) at Idlewild Fle.ld.
. •
In 1953, Sen. Robert A. Tuft of Ohio, known as "Mr.
Republican," died in New York ut uae 63.
In 1964, the Americun spnce probe "Rnnger Seven'' trun.l•
milled pictures of the moon's surfuce.
; . .
In 1981 , the leuder of· Punuma, Gen. Omur Torrljos, wns
killed in 11 plane cmsh.
.
'
In 1981. u seven-week-old M(\jor Leugue Busebull mike
ended.
In 1989, n pro-lrnnl11n group In Lebanon releused u ~risly
videotupe purportedly sl1owlng the body of American hostage
Wlllinm R. Hlg~lns dangling from u rope.
In 1991. Prestdent George H.W. B11sh und ~uviet President
Mikhail S. Oorbuchev signed the Strategic Arms Reduction
Treuty In Moscow.·
Ten years ugo: The space shuttle "Atluntl s" blasted off from
Cupe Canaveral, Fla .. on II· problem·plugue\1 · ~cicmific ml·~&gt;o
slon. Summer S"nders became the flr~t American uthlete to
win four mednl~ ut the B!lrcclono Olympics us she won the
gold in the women's 200-metcr bunerny.
Five years ugo: In 11 Brooklyn. N,Y.. poli~e sl,liled five
l)ombs bell~wed bound fnr terrorist auuckljl'on New York City
subways.
V
One year ugo:
A lundslide bu~ied purl of u villuge on u remote lndoncslun
I' lund 11mld ~e~vy rains, killing ut lcu&gt;t lS people und leuv ing·
lf.OITIC 200 1111SSI08,
'l'rxlay's Birthdays : Nobel Prit.e-winning cwnnmi•t Miltun
Frict.lmun Is 90, Sportscu~ter Curt (iowdy i.1 Kl Record t!xe~­
~live Ahmet,Ertcgun is 79. Actl~r Don Mttrruy Is ?.3. Juzz composer-muslctun Kenny Burrell 1' 71 . Actor Oeolfrcy Lewis Is
o7.At:trcs~ Prance Nuycn is t'il Act res- Susnn Flnnncry is 50.
Singer Lobo Is 39, Acrre'1 GcruldinL' Chnplin Is ~R . Movie
studio executive Sherry Lnn,in~ i' ~H. Sln~cr Gary Lewis is
56. Rock singer Boh Welch 1.1 Sli. Tetlllll · pluyer Evo1me
Cloolagong-Caw)cy is~ I. Acllll' Burry Vun Dy ~c i~ 51. Actor
Alan Autry I~ SO. Actor Jutnt'' Rcud i' 4'J. Actor Michnel
Biehn is 46. Rock singcr-mu,,kiun Daniel A~h (Love und
Rocket~) is 45. R&lt;~ck mu.&gt;kiun l~iU B~rTy i' 44. A~lur WeHicy
Sn~~s •~ 40. fv1t"t.ctan hnhoy Slim" .19.Thou~hr lor Toduy:
The art ollik ''ttl 'how your hund . There,, no Jiplnmn·
cy like candor. You nwy lu'c hy it now and then, bill it will t&gt;e
a lo~~ well gained if r,ou rJo, Nothing i• Ml horing .us having to
~ecp up a dcceptum . ' - F..V. Lucu,, English auth,lr und .crii·
IC ( 1868 - 193~ ).

In ~~lost days, ~ \Wil\an (nr ih my
~. 11 \.'llild) \\~lUid lle\'CI' dare to ~II
11\e ~uth&lt;.ll"ities ~usc tht&gt; fel1ialc
\\011' ~sullied to be \IUIUti\alically at
1\ult. I 1111'&lt;.1 110 (\1\ll t0 talk tO. N&lt;l.
\lcti&lt;lll w~ ta~ti .
"
I all\ ~~ i5 ~-s old lio\\0. 11\is
~~~a llfullme &lt;11!0- l.u I renmll'!l!t
it \~VIdly - e\'1!1\ lhe 1\;\11\e ,lh~~e of diC

Chrlstl1n Women's Ftll~wshlp
sponson bloodmobile
Wll.~l'iSVIL.l.l! - Th\\ Chrl~tltm Womon~ tlt!llaw~h)p
()roup will spon~or n bloodmobll~ Mottdi!Y nt thll

W\lkcMvltla Community C~lllllr, lto 'I pl.m.
_
Teroso Snyon, prosftlelll, s11ld thl.l l!l'tlUJl will provide
averythlnll ncat.lotll'or tho vlsh. Donors mu~t llll ut loiiMt 17
)ll!llt8 uf UI!C t~ntl woll!hl tit l0ll8l 110 pound8. ThllMe wlm
dtmotlltlun ur bofurl'e Junll 10 oro llllglblll ttl tltlnlltll. Flnt
"'lime tllliltlr8 nrt Diked to show lhllir Suclnl Seeurlty
Nun\bor.
Fllr further lnt'm·mMitln or tu 8tliltiUII.l 11n bppolntmi!nll.lllll
D11vid Stln1or, Jr., (169·46'1 I.

RED GREEN'S VIEW

MEIGS CALENDAR

Time a married couple .spends.u1ith each other is .vital
Bv RID GilliN
mull is op~n. I HnKwllr' hy loilina hot· , &lt;rulrod un udluMtmont In my thinklnll:·
l.ost week. I wns ut " 2~th we'l'lln11 where I think lho thinl) is. m thut rnnvo We got our ontlro hom gloun d ftlr $~1/.
unniversnr~ for nnnvoruae norm" I Cllll· twthinl! pluned I'm tmlny. or thut llmvo · Thoy Wll8h til tloorK nnd v11uuum thl
plo, If ther11 I• such o thin~. He's 11 no mnll knowlodl}e. But when 1118k my ruyM oml clo11n th emJntOI'M, All rm $9().
schonlteucher, she's u Mul~s clerk. These wll'o unyihlniJ. unil 1mcun unythlna, Mho Now wo don't hove uilull homo, but It
ore two cnrcer~ where ynu don't luke nlwuys ~lvcs me the sumo tmMwor - IM still quit u hit IDI'Kill' tllun ounmr. So
buslne~s trips. Thnt meuns thttl ut the "Why'/" 'Do you know whero tho hnm· l'n\ huvlng .trmtbio I' cmlcllin~ the dif\
end nl ~very dny, ynu hoth gn home. mer· li'l" "Why?'' "Whut nrc you plun· roranoc in tll'iccs. Mu~b~ II's oo~uusu
You huve tn r~specl thnt. This Is u mnr· nln~ IO do todntl" "Why'/'' "IN tho mull uno is culio(l "cleunltll!' whilolhl.l utluw
rlnjje with nntlme nf'J' .. Compnre thut to open·'/'' "Why'/' This is hocuuse women Is cullud "lletnillna." 1 don't know. l'tll
the M.cennl'iu where the mnn und tho · ure pre·occtqlied with the moJive just montinnin!l ft. I'm not QOIIIJI hl
wom1m ure hnth seninr executive~ In It llehittd every lhmt~t~ht und net ion. Men moke linn issue. My Nanso IM thtlt II' thiM
Iurge corpl•rtllinn. They rruvcl nil the don't cttro. M.on · like to know whnt'H lnl'ormutlonls llt'Oil»htl'tli'Wltl'd, the UtlHl
time. In 2~ yeurH ol' mnrriujle. they're soin11 on, und where li's l!nin)lon. unil ut' huvinll thil cur done will ~tuy Ih~
t'elllly only together about l'nur yeurH.
when lt'H j)Oin~ on , The wlwr~ ~~~·~u nl' NHme whne the coN I ol' huv1n 11 1he fJmtHe
· · We need tn dlff'erontlute netween why It's ~oinu on ~vo nluully h:udx tn done will ~~tnulrltllia . In l'u~t. Jll'~tend 1
these types. of. murrlngeH. It's not how huviii!IIO .luslll'y m1r choices und thut 's never men! oned 1.
.
ll]uny ye1tr' yott're murrled. lt'R how ustlully lnirnsslhle.
AU RIWOI·R
many dnys und, mure lmpurtuntly
· 'I'MiklnJI Nh011
·
ThiHIs my IRi st n WHillljlCI' ~ulum 11
Jlights, you've •rem together. Nlow
In nrder to t·egnfn cre!Jihillty umi und tll'llljjs me to !he end nl' my comrncl .
obviously we dt&gt;n't wunlto dli~uulltthe tiW~piiiiWe 111 tiw ureus nl' s o~lul ~on · II hus llocn u illl ol' l'un wrftinQ !hose
.uccumjlifslunent ul' n 2~·Yillll' m11rrluJ!e. vcr~llliun. I'm usklnl! uil mi.Idi ~·III!Cd ~oiumnl! , I'll ilk to thunk uli iht.ll'llllllrs
ret~nru eHH ol' the r~duced yenrK nf' uctlve men toll void Ihe J'ollowlnll to(ll~·~:
who ~llt'l'illd II untl CNJl~~lttli)' yl!u, 1hc
service, but I think you huve Ihe riJiill to
• Yuur CfllllllOHC!Ijly,
reuder~, f'or MU j)J'OI'Iinlllt.
.cullhratc your gift hriHCd on the de~r~~
• Anythin~ ro do with Vlnwu. eHpe· Quute ol' the Duy: "I know Clod won'!
of dlf'l'iculty. The trnvellnJI hu H ine~ H dully the r~sultH .
.
.
~.tlve nf more ·limn 1 oun hundle. 1 luK!
couple Hhould 1101 flpwerKund n Clll'd,
• Th11 hillh price nl' t\llvll .
wi Hh He didn't truKI mo KO muoh.'1 ...:.
the •tuy·t•t · home wurkln11 co npi~
• J-Jow youn11 yn11r illlKS IN .
Red Clreen
de~er·v~s .umethln~ tleller. I SU!llle~J 11
• llnw J!renl yuu once wer·e.
11111 of •eparute hollduy~ for euch 111' • Oth~r people you1' 11110 wlw ure R~cl Ol'flt'll 1.1' 1/1~ ,1'/1;,. oj' "'I'll~ Rvtl
them or u flrrge bottle &lt;&gt;f 1111 ex penHI ~~ · 11irendy deuiJ
(h'flrn Sholl'," 11/t'it'l'l.r/rm m·l~' .rlt'll Ill
hevemge with 11 ~lgn111cunt nlcnhnlcon·.
' (:11!111111111 Ull
· rht• U.S. 1111 filMS 1111d In ('tllllltfil 1111 til~
lent.
I W~lll Ill one of Ihose ~·ur ciellll·ll(l
Nt•IH'tll'k, IIIII/ fir~ llflll/01' oj' lirb
~
. . The DIN W
plu~e~ reccnlly In 1101 !he lnNillc oJ' my !It'll' /Jtwk "/)lfl 't ,'niJ!r 1.1!WI '"'"'IIIJI/1.' A
I ve nutweu thut my wife nnd I huve cur cleuned· out. 1'110Y. did u nice jot), lwmorott.l suill~
to
mltl/lj~ ."
different wuy~ of att~werinH queHIInnN. vucuumed 1he cur'Jlellnll, emptied lhe (11atller·ft•l!lll P1·m, 2002), Wtlll'il Jlil·
· If Nhe ,nskH me where RomerhlnJ! IN or IIHhtruy. cleuned the dnKiihnurd unci then ''!'' .t~~tlurt• film "R~d 0/'CI~n:v 'Dud
whutl m pfunnlna to do wdny ur If' the hunded nte Ihe IJIII f'nr $17!J. ThiH 1rtflt' f·m't! 111•r"' arttllloruur 1ww·,Will.)

cnc.

.-

CommUI\ItV Clltndar II pub•
lltllti 11 1 fill ltrYIH to non•
FIMHII!IONVI~~~
protll groupe w11111ng to
announn mllltnga and IJMOIII HltriiMVItli bOIJQI, ~lAM, .7:10
IYifttl, Till Olllndll II not ~. f!l , 11 1111 Mit. Atlflllhllltntl ..
llltlg!ltd to prwmott 111t1 or
AIIDIVI~LI - ~tmlly l'tunton
tuni•lllllll ol tnv tv,e. lteml
111 prtnttd only 11 ltlflH ,_,. tor dunndanli ol Samuol and

mill ani

lit. IUIII!IIIitl Lttllt Smith, 1 p.m. ~orktd 1'\un
IJIHiftl numlltr 11110 Park. 'fllko oowrtd dill\.

1111!101

to lit prlnltd
ol diVI•

1

TIIUII•IV• Aug, 1

' MIDCLIIIOJIIT - lptclal mall•
Ina ot Mlddllport Vlllau• Council, to·
hOld Mrtl llllllinU ~n IIVIIId MMCI
plain ordln1noo, UO p,m., oounott
ollambtrt.
111Urtlly1 Aut, I
~OJIITLAND
Lttlonan
Towntlllp 1iUIIOII, 1 p.m. II 1111
towntllllp lllilldln~.
, f\IIDIVILLI - no Wall famli)'
11 unlon, d11o1ndontt of John and
LIUII Will, will QIIMII AI ,Oikod
Jllun 11111 Jttrk. Tilt ltmlly will
mill 11 lilt IOWII lhOIItl haUIO It

IALIM CINi'IA ;_ lUll
Qrlngt 7?1 1nd IIIII Jun.lor
OriMQI 171, rtgultr IIIIIM.
l'ottuok at 1:~0 p,m,: mtatlng 11
7:10 pJ,m, Nlldllwork, lrt and pho•
lography oontutl will 01 judQIU.
~lnal pltna will bo mtdl lar Ma1;1
County ~air dtoplay.
. luniav, Aug. •
IVI'IACUII - llolllngor
rtunlon 1 p.m. 11 Carillon lonool
lyfiOYII
TU!'IIBIIII !'LAINI -

Keep these ·things in mind
when planning your vacation.
IV IICIIV llltl

ll 18 never too curly ta sllltt
plunnlng l'ur u vttl!ulloll. Here
nrtl 8om~ thlngN to keep In
mind ~o thut ~our trip will be
run without bil~omingn t'itmil•
c:lul ht~rtlship,
Suv~ for your vucplitm,
Ot~~ltl~ how mud1 tntmey :ttllt
will need und begin 8ltvilll! for
It, V11u mny wunt to ~~~v~
1\lllll~y In II Mpeoinl MtlVIIIQM
1\ueuunl or , huve u vn~utlun
tlub tllut cornM lntcreMt 111
order Ill nnnn~c the trip.
Oi!veiop 11 Mpondl 1111 plun for
your vucatlon. Ocddc how
muuh ytlu wi II Mpcnd tlntrtlM·
portutiM, itldl!inl!, mculs,
fillrO~liOilM Ulltl MtlUVMirM, 'fhe
nmtlunt of money you hnve
IIVnllubie will l!reuiiy lmpuct
huw unci. where you truvcl,
whul you will do, etc, U8e
)ltlUr bUdl!~lcd llllltlUIIIM to
help you keep.expenses under
~lllllrtll '

ReMMNh lnl'ormuthJn ubutu
your dcMtinutltm. Thlk tO(lctl·

pie who lmve visited the ureu ,
Whut did the~ et~oy dolnJ!'I
Whut would they h~ve done
dlt)'crcntly'l Contuct locul
Cottvctllitlll und Vhltor~
l'htrcuuM,
thutubcrM
of
Coliltilcrcll und Tourism
utlkil~ . Reud truvel book~ and
brochure~ . nnd Mcurch websItell. fllnd out UM much us you
~un before leuvlngl so you
w\11 llc sure to do ul Ihut you
wlll cl\lo~ und thut you kllllW
whut to ekpect.
Shop urountl und usk !'or
dls~ount~. 'frnvel Ul!ents nnd
Wlllls\t~t~
su~li
ns
prh:c lhll.l.~llm, trnvelodty lind
e~pedl11, ~nn help you 11etthe
l\lll8t for )'OUf lriiVt!l tlollur.
Inquire tlbout the luwest rurcs
uvnllnblll, fumlly plnnl! and
rnl\!8 t'11r lll88·lhlln·cnr.uclly
ttJurs or unhooked tab ns on
urul8et~ . Check out t~ll ·illdu ­
M
ive vtt~ntlon puck11aes thut
lndutlc, menh, llttrnctloM,·
ct.:. Cot18ltler un Atnerlcnn
Piun with meuls lndudcd or a

Modlt1ed American Plan wllh
breakfast and dinner each duy,
us opposed to the European
Plan where food costs extra.
Plun your vacation. With
your bud11ct In mlnd, decide
spetflically what you want to
do, Make necessary reservu.
tlon8 , Once your vucullon
begin8 , follow ~our itlnerury.
If you chunge your pluns or
do something on the spur-of·
the-moment, It could blow
your entire vucutlon budget.
Take travelers checks In
cuse your money Is lost or

stolen. A credit card Is also
hand;y in emeraenclea, aw:h 11a
major car repal.-., bUI try not
to use it for regular VICatlon
expenses.
Avoid going into debt to ~
foryoll!trip. lfyoumustpayfut
the viiCation with credit, resol\le
to puy it oft' as quickly as poet~l·
ble, so extra interest cltiqes
don't destroy your finance~~.
· (Btcky Barr Is MtiB'
County's Extension agtm fri~
family and consumer ltl·
encelcommunlty Jrvelopmtnt.
'Ohio State UHiverslty.)

87111

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Aaolnt, Ohio • (740) 1114.8·2210
lyraouat, Ohio • (740) 882-8333

Blvar Valley Cbr!at!an Agadamy

(formerly known aa Tiny Tech)
. Middleport, Ohio ·
· 'llllrC"'I~~~

Ilk lar yaur

Mtmber FDIC
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.

•

The Daily Sentinel

New law to

crack·down on
corp~rate fraud

Page A&amp;
'

Wednesday. July 31. 2002

.

•

WASHINGTON (AP) Democrats and Republicans
____,dug in their heels Tuesday
over a Medicare prescription drug proposal, dampening the chances that the
Senate will reach a lastditch compromise before
leaving for summer break.
The proposal, which
would spend $390 billion
over i 0 years to provide
help to poor seniors and
those with high drug bills,
was scheduled for a Senate
vote Wednesday morning,
but Democrats seemed
unsure whether they had the
60 votes needed for passage.
Senate rules require 60
votes because the plan costs
more than the ·$300 billion
allotted by the budget
-}:ongress passed last year.
"We· won't give up. We'll
Senate
keep
trying,"
MaJority Leader . ~om
oaschle, D-S.O., s01d JUSt
before lawmakers began
debating the plan.
Republicans
predicted
failure. "They won't (get
60)," said Sen. Don Nickles
of Oklahoma, the secondranking·Republican.
The breakdown comes as
the Seriate winds down before
leaving ~or summer ~ss.
The partisan fingercpombng
set the stage for a showdown
that is likely to play out in the
fall campaigns.
''They're throwing money
around, throwing proposals
around. It's a crummy way to
legislate," Nickles said.
"People can see through this."
Democrats, complained
Republicans never really
i ntendcd to help Medicare.
"We know who has delayed
the chance to come to closure here," Daschle said.

The Bu.1 h administration
weighed in that it continued
to support a $370 billion
Republican-backed plan,
rejected by lawmakers last
week, that relies on private
insurers to administer the
benefit. That plan "is the
one that most rellects tl1c
president's thinking," White
House spokes;nan Ari
Fleischer said.
Democrats had wanted t,p
attach a Medicare benefit
proposal as an amendment
to a bill easing access to
generic drugs that's being
used for an overall debate
on prescription drugs.
Earlier in the day, ·
Democrats
rejected
President Bush's call to put
a ceiling on the amount
juries can award in medical
malpractice cases.
_
· In a 57-42 vote, the Senate
voted to table an amendment that would have limited punitive damages to
twice that of compensatory
damages and curtailed
lawyers' fees and patients'
ability to file suit over old
cases. It did not limit pain
and suffering awards, as
some Republicans had .
sought.
,
"This is a national crisis,"
said Sen_. Mitch McConnell,
R-Ky. said. "There has been
an explosipn in .medical
malpractice awards."
Republicans have said the
cups would help to drive
down rising healtl1 care
costs. They also cited doctors· complaints that they
have been forced to flee certain states or gi vc up certain
specialties because of high
insurance premi'ums linked
to skyrocketing jury awards.
doctor would have paid

Tribe wins again, Page 82
New. colors for the Cavs, Page 83

Page 81

PilOt dieS in CQIO. chopper cra~h

LYONS, Colo. (APl - A and was contained Friday.
helicopter crushed while
In southwestern Colorado,
d01ng mop-up work on a crews worked to protect
· wildfire northwest of Denver, archaeological treasures at
killing the pilot, wlrilc fire- the Mesa Verde National
fighters on the other side of · Park. A 2,077-acre blaze has
.
'
th ~ state scrambkd to protect forced the evacuation of the
WASHINGTON (AP) - undcr 'way." '
~rchueological .
treasures park.
Lawmakers critici~ White
Leahy said: "I would hope
from a tust-movong blaze.
Two park-owned employee
House action on a brand-new the administration is not
The _crash . ncar Rocky residences were destroyed as
law crocking down on corpo- beginnin!l to water down the
Mountaon Natoonal Park on !lames swept up the pinonrute . fruud, saying President law withm hours 'of signing
Tuesday
brought 1&lt;\ 15 the and juniper-covered hillBush appeared to be weaken- it."
ing the measure mere hours
Leahy's co;author, Sen. . number of firefi ghters killed sides, A sewage treatment
this summer as wildfires pltlnt: three commercial
after signing it.
Chuck Grass ley, R-lowa,
have burned millions of acres buildings and four outbuildBu.~ - rumed the legislation called the White House move ·
across
the West. Some ings were also destroyed. No
into the law of the lund in agmnd "disturbing."
experts beli eve the si tuation
EaSt Room ceremony 1\Jesmy,
"Our intention is to protect ·
will only get worse in injuries were reported.
with tough talk against board- any whistle-blower who
August, traditionally one of The fire was threatening 70
room crooks and,. promises -that exposes · wrongdoing to an
the most difficult months for additional structures and the
his udministr.uion would pur.iUe individual
member
of · fighting fires.
last surviving stands of oldthem as uggrcssively as it . ha~ Congress, · a congressional
"This is ti dcvustating sea- growth trees.
hunted tem:xists.
committee, a media outlet or
The park. 240 miles southson. " sat·d Jo hn Bus 1os,
Eight hours later, the White any other public entity,"
spokesman for the Roosevelt west of Denver, has an estiHouse quietly issued a state- Grassley said. "Whistle-blowNational Forest.
. muted 25,000 archaeological
men! outlining how it was ers need full protection.
The helicopter's pilot. who sites left by the Ancestral
interpreting sever.!~ provisions, Otherwise they won't come
was not identified. was the Pueblo Indians, a civilization
including one that grants feder- forward. Problems won't see
ul protection to corporute whis- the light of day."
o~ly person on board. He that vanished more than 700
tie-blowers who present
The · nonprofit National
was dropping water on years ago.
Congress with information that Whistleblower Center said the
It s cliff dwellings date to
hotspots of the 4.400-acre
books had been cooked or new law marks the first time
fire, which broke out July 17 the 1200s and pit houses date
investors misled.
that federal whistle-blo'yller
Bush spokeswoman Claire protections have been extend:
Buchan said the White House ed to employees of publicly
_~views the provision as shield· truded companies~
ing whistle-blowers from
"Without protecting the
company retaliation only if whistle-blowers, corporate
they talk to a congressional reform efforts would have
mmmitlec "in the course of failed.': suid a statement from
an inve;tigation." The protec- Kris Kolesnik, the group's
lions would not apply when executive director, after the
evidence is provided to indi- bill's signing.
vidual lawmakers or aides,
A fulf lineup of government
she suid.
enforcers and key lawmakers,
The belated presidential but not a single CEO, stood
statement called the interpt'C" witness in the East Room as
tation a "careful construction Bush enacted the most extenby the executive brunch us it sive assault on corporate fraud
fuithf'ully executes the act."
since the Depression era.
The Bush administration
"Corporate ·corruption has
interpretation _could most struck at investor mnfidence,
utl'ect lawmakers - usually offending the conscience of
those in the minority purty· our nation," he said. "Yet in
who cannot control whether the aftermath of Septemb;;r
full commitlees launch formal the I lth, we refused to allow
,investigations.- who under- fear to undermine our ecOfiO·
- take their own inquiries.
my nnd we will not all~w
A Senate aide, speaking on fmud to undermine it ejther."
condition of anonymity, also
TI1e law, which passed the
said investigations often do Senate by 99-0 and the House
not be~in until someone by 423-3, was tougher than
brings mformation forward Bush had proposed nnd
about wrongdoing.
tncluded measures he and
David Carle, a spokesman many fellow Republicans inifor Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., tiully resisted.
who crafted.the whistle-blowThe law · quadruples sener section. said the White tences for accounting fraud, ·
House's take on the law "is creates a new felony for secucontrury to the plain language lilies fraud that carries a 25of the statute, which is intend- year ~rison term, places new
ed to protect whistle-blowers · restrumts on corporate offiwho provide crucial informa- cers, and establishes a federal
tion to Congress whether or oversight board for the
not an active investigation is accounting industry.

Medi(are prescription
·drug deal losing support

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Frozen 2.5 lb.
Boneless Skinless

CHICKEN BREASTS

NOW$399
SAVE $1.00

Assorted Flavors
12 Pack Cans

BUBBACOLA.

NOWSJ79
was $1.99

Assorted 1 Lb. Pkg

JIMMY DEAN
SAUSAGE

. -c~

to the SOOs.
"The
vegetation
is
extremely dry,'-' fire manager
Justin Dombrowski said. The
humidity has hoverea in the
single .digits this · week as
temperatures - reached the
upper 80s and winds gusted
to 20 mph.
Geoff Lund, his wife and
two daughters were touring
ruins across the. Southwest
when they were turned away
· from the park.
"We knew we were entering dry, drought-ridden country and that was one of the
risks we'd be facing," Land
said. "This does throw a
wrench in the works but as
visitors we l;ympathize with
the people who have to live
with this."
In 2000, two wildfires
burned more than a third of
the park's 52,000 acres. The
park closed twice because of
the blazes.
In southwestern Oregon,
residents of the Illinois

16 ounce
Assorted

Vallev fuced a highly dangerous fore as well. Firefighters
finished bulldozing a last liQe
of defense for the area O)l
-Tuesday, but urged tl\e
17.000 residents to leave,
warning it may not hold .
."We are looking at the fire
at thls time as uncontrollable,'' said Greg Gilpin of
'the Oregon Department of
Forestry.
Commanders
of
the
Florence and Sour Biscuit
fires rutcheted up the evacuation notice, telliog everyone
to be packed and ready t&lt;i
leave within 30 minutes of a
notice to be. carried on local
radio.
The Flore rice Fire stands at
about 145 ,000 acres and Sour
Biscuit at about 35,000 acres.
Officials said they were still
four miles from running into
each other but together form .
a 30-milc long front of fire
threatening the communities
of 'O'Brien, Cave Junction,
Selma and Kerby.

oz.p

Pure 5 Lb. Roll

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$4.95 each

Golden Ripe

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CHUNK
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16 oz.

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was 59cc

FOOD STORE
it all •.. Our

Dempster :finally eams a Win
CINCINNATI (AP) Ryan Dempster got himself to stop worrying and
stan winning.
Dempster pitched se;ven
uneven innings but got his
- first win for the Cincinnati
Reds, who homered four
tim_es in a 12-4 victory
Tuesday night over the
fading
Los
Angeles
WEDNESDAY'S
Dodgers.
In his first three starts
· since a July II tmde 'with
the Marlins, Denlpstcr
went 0-3 with a 12.00
ERA. got booed ofT the
field und filled his head
with disturbing thoughts.
Every time something
bud would happen. he'd
start trying too hurd and
make it worse.
"Regardless of the
RACINE - The Southern
results tonight, I felt u lot
Athletic Boosters will meet at
better mentally,'' s&lt;~id
7:30p.m. on Thursday Aug.~
Dempster, who gave up
in the high school cafeteria. ·
four runs in seven innings.
The purpose uf the meeting
"When · I first came over
is to dtscuss and finalize the
here, I was thinking the
schedule for fair parking, to · wrong things out there."
discuss uniform purchases, to
This time. he tried to
discuss the upcoming volley-keep his focus on a few
ball and football needs. and
tips he got during his most
fall spons programs.
recent bullpen workouts.
Coaches need to be present
Instead of dropping his
to get their assignments for
right arm and leaving his
fair parking. The tentative
pitches up, he concentratparking schedule is as foled on keeping the ball
lows:
down. .
•Monday: Volleyball
(6- 11 l
. Dempster
regressed in the fifth.
•Tuesday: Girls Basketball
Footbnll,
•Wednesday:
Pl1111 IH Fln1lly, 13
Baseball. Softball
•Thursday:
Football.
Basebnll. Softball
Track, Cross
•Friday:
Country. Cheerleaders
. •Saturday:
Boys
Basketball
In addition to coaches and
booster members, all parents
of athletes should attend, as
well as members of the communi!¥ who wish to help with
fair parking.
.
For further information or
to help with parking. please ·
contact booster president
Tammy Chapman at 992. 5270.
.

59
LB.

I

HlGHLIGHfS
Southem
boosters meet
lbursday

ACCEPTABLE NIGHT ON THE HILL- Reds pitcher Ryan Dempster throws against tl'le Los Angeles Dodgers In the first Inning
Tuesday tn Cincinnati. Dempster pitched seven Innings, giving up four runs on nine hits. (AP)

Match·this Shot

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Eastem plans
youth football
camp

JUMBO
BISCUITS
was $1.19

I

•

Hampton's.trip to Canton
an unexpected .honor _

LUNCH MEATS GROUND BEEF

99~

Wednesday. July Jl, 2002.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School will
hold a youth league football
camp (grades four through
six) starting on July 29 at 5
p.m. This camp will also be
held tot the high school.

Worker killed
at Ford Field
DETROIT (AP) A
painter working at the Detroit
Lions' new stadium fell 150
feet to his death when his
hydraulic lift tipped over.
Gjon Gojcaj, 42, fell into
· the first tier of seats at Ford
Field, cousin Jason Gojcaj
said.

.Raiders
whining, cryln1
foul a1afn ·
LOS ANGELES .(AP)
The Oakland Raiders will
seek a new trial in the team's
$1.2 billion conspiracy lawsuit against {he National
Football League, citing
alleged juror misconduct.

Volleyball
offlciatln1 dass
planned
GALLIPOLIS - A volleyball officiating class will
be held in August for anyone
interested in becoming a high
school volleyball official.
The cost of the course is
$120. Interested individuals
should contact Roger Foster
at 446-2704.

•••••
Send · your spons news to
the Sentinel via e-mail at
spons@mydailysentinel.com.

•

•

BEFORE THE YOGURT - The Bears' Dan Hampton "Danlmal" as he was nicknamed - tackles Miami
Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino (13) 11'1 this 1988 file
photo. (AP)

Dan Hampton knew little
u!&gt;out foot)&gt;all growing up.
And even when he was a
dominating defensive linch1an at Arkansas, he didn't
think much about turning
pro.
''I never · got in this game
for any other reason but to
help my buddies," Hampton
said. "I didn't play football
until the II th grade, I never
thought about college. I was
offered a scholarship and we
were real poor and ·1 didn't
want to pass up the opportunity."
He's still amazed that he
will be inducted into the Pro
Football Hall of. Fame on
Saturday. the 26th Chicago
Bear to be enshrined.
''I'd never seen an NFL
game in P.erson,'' Hampton
said.
"Monday
Night
Football,' I'd watch it a little,
but I didn 'I care about it. I
thought college football was
the thing.
"Guys would ask me, 'Did
you see Earl Campbell run
over Isaiah Robenson?' No. I
saw him run over us the year'
before."
While Hampton might not
have been thinking about the
pros, his future coach was.
PIIIH Ill H1mpton. 13

SHOWSTOPPER - Lisa_Leslie of the Los Angeles Sparks
dunks during the first half against the Miami Sol at the
Staples Center In Los Angeles on Tuesday, becoming the
first .player In the WNBA to slam dunk the ball during a
game. (AP)
·

Testaverde hurts right thumb
at Jets camp
.
.

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP) New York Jets quanerback Vinny
Testaverde banged his 'right thumb
on a player's helmet in training
camp Tuesday.
Testa verde said there was no
major damage but he will miss at
least a few .days of practice and
maybe more.
"Anytime you miss a day of camp,
it can't be good," he said. "I would
rather have a setback in camp than
during the regular season.''
Testaverde said he has jammed
the thumb several times in his 15
years in the NFL, "and it's usually
been just a couple of weeks. But I
don't expect to miss too much time.
I. certainly hope to be back by the
start of the regular season. I think I
can be back in a couple of days. I
don't have to rush back." l
The Jets' first preseason game is
Aug. 8 at Pittsburgh, ~ut Testaverde
was expected to play little in any
case.
Coach Herman Edwards called

•

the injury a "stinger. like hitting
your funny bone. I'm not even sure
whose helmet it was. It was some
big guy."
Testa verde's right hand was
wrapped in ice, and he stood on the
sidehne for the final 30 'minutes of
the morning workout.
_
"I'll talk to Herm, the lr.tiners and
the doctors to see what they say,"
Testaverde said of the timeUibie for
his return. "If it was up to me, it
would probably be just a couple of
days, but it's not entonely up to me."
Edwards said last week that
Testaverde could not lose his staning
job in training camp, but that former
Marshall
quanerback
Chad
Pennington would get the opponunity to prove himself and earn
Edwards' confide'nce in case
Testaverde faltered in the regular season.
"I feel like I can run the show,"
Pennington said. "A good NFL team, ARE YOU READY? - Former Marin order for it to be successful, you shalt quarterback Chad Pennln~ton
·have to have two good quarterbacks." takes snaps during Jets camp. (AP)

&lt;

•

'

•

•

�'

The Daily Sentinel

-

-

..

_Page·Bl

Baseball

:Cavaliers consider
changing team colon

Wedne1d1y, July Jl, 10G2

,,,
,.,

_,

'

Rolen, Lofton make sudden Moving up: Floyd goes
from
Expos
to
Red
Sox
,impad on NL playoff races

,.

.

·=-'

1&lt;1,..

It is the·mission of the llllllln IICllll C.W
• Occupational Tbtrapy
111111111111111 11• to re.store each individual we se~e • · Physical Thera
to the fulle.st possible level of physical. r:.~otal, social 1
py
avbcational, sensory and spiritual ~.. oction.
• Speech Therapy

PLEASANT
VALLEY

12111LIIIDDrcllllrlel • RIDIIJ. WV 21271 e1314J m-MH

•

I

'

'

•

01' .. 101 COUNT¥.
01410. TNI MIIOI
COUN~ IHIIU"
MAlt I
NO
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'THI I'TA'TUI· OP
'tiTI.I PIIIOII TO

•

IOUIICI 01' TlTt.l
ut~a...,.,.m
of lilt ltittl81 ColiRlf,
01110 lltt "'' ot

OMdt, llt"tl No. ...
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CLEVELAND (AP) - On the duy they tr11ded for one of
NOTICI 01' IALI
_ , oomtr: thtllo. 11Mwt ClaMtllllcl.-1 IAI.I.
the NBA's most colorfttl pluyers, thll Cleveland Cuvuiiers
fllllllllt that 111•
'
" ' 101~4 roGI to on tht 1..11 IMIIII•
pflmlatt Itt aolt,
unnounced they might ch1m~e their teum colors, too.
ly vlrtUI Of II\ ltltl ICIIIIII-1 nlflt til I~ Ill1M ., Lll\h II. WI!- VOIII ln""'t ll'lnn
The Cuvs usked fans to vote for one of si~ color combina· Qf~Mf Of ltlt lllltld ol IIndt IOICI lo otllltl Of l~tlon I, COIMCII'IIl
10110101141 IIIII tot
out of 1ht common ltlllon'lln ,.loMaon; Town 4, llan.. 11; . Atlornay
hlf any otlltr rttltl u
• tions the teum is considering tor the 2004-04 seuson.
l'ltll CCIIIrt ol Mltlp tllt~~ot nortih to lht 1htnu !rom 111e1 O.tal\itnte, 1!0111 lhlll Ill JUII llld
: "We thought it was time to look into it," team president Jim County. Ohio, In lht norlh-1 oo.....- of alollt __.ttrtv 1o tha IIIIOIIIt. ·
.
: Boland suid Tuesduy. "There has been so much change in the 0111 of lht IIC!btll M"tlng lloy"' tni otllltr ot tilt o..-;. Clltrltl llltthlt, equlllblo.
'toll Ill! !llqlltM t.
• past lew years, couches, ott r general mum1ger, players ... we llltohlt, lr. tl 11.. llltrylne erouni: un- ~~own'"'""" ll•vmond ltrbtr, IIIIWtr lilt IIICI
Plllntltll, VI, IIOitr thMIOI Mil lo Qlllltf Itt 01 1M t'""- 10 1M lllfntle
oomplelnt by lilt ~\h
~ thought it might be u good lime to look into new colors."
llltohlt, 11 at., ot lht road; th.noe moutih ofltclor. Nn; 1'111 Wart• · and . Cloy
ol ltP,1. or
The Cuvs' wlors huve been blue, black und orunge since the Dtltndtnta, upon 1 nonn10ftllr--l lhtntt .. altriV I Charlu William Judeomtnt
by
Judgment therein to lht OM\tr of lht rocla 11 Itt\ to 1 ~
: 1994-95 seuson when the club moved to Gun(:! Arena.
Dtlt\111
will
lit
rtndtr-.1, btlng Ctll ICHICI lhll IMdl up Wlllo"'i IMnH I 111111 rt4111t!.O
tttlntt
VO\I•
; Two of the color options funs can vote for include shades af No, 01-CV.S. In llld thl hill bV 11\tl 1011001 -~ of IOUIIIIO tht John fl , Lnln
:red and white. A third has red, two shades of blue. gray and court. 1will oner lor hou .. tollowllltl tht ttnttr at 1111 t!Mkl !OOittMl
MAliK t&lt;', MoCOWN,
• black , Votes cun be cast on the teum's Web site. 111111 the front door mMndtrlnga of llld 1htnll dawn uld Allomty tot l'lllntiHt 1110. NO, OotllU,
O! lht Couri~OUII In I'Otel ""lllfly to lilt Olltk IIIOUl 10 l"t 101 W, ltHnd llfetl
ATTOIINIIV 1'011
: www.cavs.com, und ut Gund Arena until August 9,
Pomwov.
Mtltt aaotton lint: tntnot btlow en ali mill ""*ty, OH am
; Cleve land's possible chanae of hues wus nnnounced County, O~lo, 011 ll'lt 1011th U roela, to tht dtm-. thtnu ...ttrly l'lllllhon• (7401 IP. IILAINT"J!
o 1 ptaot ot lltllnnlng, about a tocla to •n 11110
. TUesday, shortly ulier the club completed u four-player deal et n ell y
~· 10. n , ••· ~~
Septtmbtr,
aooa,
11 oon1alnlng 1 ""'· oak tiM: lhMU 1111
• thut~ent Andre Miller to the Los Angeles Clippers for Darius 10:00 a.m., lht folio.,.
mort or ltla.
I IOdl .t I 1111 to I m1J, ~ ~1,1001
(I)~. 1001
; Miles.
lng Ianda and ton• hotpl 3.'4 aort tltkli th.not eouln
menta, looatod 11 tcljolnlnt lht Ohll1'11h 1t rooa 1o 1 Gum lltl
p .. ,I N 11
: The 20-yeur·old Miles has become u favorite with funs 37212
· Publlo Nollot
•••n•n Floed, end bury Ina IC!I aold In , ameli rt~lntl
u.. 0 0 ot
because of his high-11yiny gume. M,iles' · replk11 jersey is Long lottom; OH 'tor I tohoollllt,
lhtnot I lllllt - I o
IN THI COUII'T 01'
ltlurdly, A~IUII
runked nmong the Top I0 in sales league-wide.
.
41743, A oompltll
l'llllhtl IMOtpllng •aouth 4Q rode to I
QOMMON PLI"I 10,0111001
11 IO;QQ am
''IIOI "OU"'TV
, ltQil dtaorlptlon ot trom Paro•t No. I, • atone In John P.
1ht
Homt
Nttlontl
lhl 1111 tllllt II II 1/l hrtl oon~tyld 'orrtnot't _, 111111
m
OHIO " '
link will oHt! lor lilt
tollowat
to
lmt,.on
ltll,
IIV
lhtllll
""'t
on
llid
•
at p~tbllt auotlon on
Since then, it's been mostly
Tho following real dlld ,..ordtd In Vol, lint IO Onld
NOTICI 1'011
lht
ltnk perking tot
downhill. The l eft~hunddf is ulalt tllutltd In lht 103, Paga Itt ot lht OaiiOm'l nofth ani ·
IIUILIO"TlON
&gt;
lilt
following
'fthlolt:
2-6 in his lust nine starts with County of MtiQI, In Olti IIIOOidl Of aouth lint; lhMDe on CAll NO. QI.OV.Oia 1UI Cl'lnroltt
thlllttt ol Ohio, and Mtlll Qounty, Ohio. 11ld lint to lht plaot
n4.96 ERA.
Lumina
YIN
from Pep 11
In
lht
Townahlp
ot
MIICIL
NO.
1: of bttlnnlng, oon• MIDoiTATI TIIIJIT, IV tiQ1WLI4TONI1~
His latest start wns by for Chllttr,
• n d lltuala In tht Ill nine 11 urn.
I'~INTII'P.
b
olin
d
t
d
1
11
d
Tllwnthlp
of
Ohaaltr,
mort
or
ftlt.
his
worst.
lie
guve
up
u
sen· when he gnve up u pair of
Tht ttrmt or the
IIIOIIOWI: Mtlll County\ Ohio.
PAIIC:IL NO , 111 HAIIOLDVI,I. IMITH, • 1111
wulks und lo ur hits. Buc the son-high eight runs In u sou- dtloilbtd
l!liOIItl.
PARCIL NO. It Alto lhl lol Ciwlng AIIO tdjolnlng 11'11
'Tht Home Nallontl
AltA HAIIOLII
Reds hud such 11 comfortable son-low 2 2-3 inn ings, IIIUIII In Chlllll dllarlbld prtmllll lill IIIO'It Clttarlbtd
rtiiiVII It'll
' lend thut it didn 't really muke matching hi s season high by Townahlp, Mtitll adlolnlng lilt tllovt perolt on lht lOUth, 1. IMITH, Jll., IT AL lank
right
to
rtjlot •ny or
OIPINOANTI.
· u di ffere nce.
wuiklng six . He threw only County, Ohio end In 011 tnt ·aouth . llluatt In Chllltr
tlf
billa
or
to rtmo~~t
Harold 1 . lmlth, 1ny 111111 !rom
ltollon 1, Town 4, .1111nnlllt11l thl _, TQwnahtp, Mtlgt
...J The Dodgers uren ' t pie used 35 strikes out of 72 pitches.
Compeny'e lint ot llld ltotton I Co11nty,
Ohio . tkl Hllold 1. lmltl), llanytlma. 1~1 1111
with much of anything these · Ken Griffey Jr. had ;1 twa- Ohio
111 1 •
11
Purohut, btglnnlng tnd the otnltr of leglnntne on lht J
mov
duys.
·
·
run sinyle In the first, Juson In the oenttr of tha lhtit flllvtr; thlnot OMIII lint ot ltotlon 1{,•1 ,W 011 "M"!ro~0 ~~~ btArrangtmll\11
macfe
to
tnaptol
· They led the NL West by 2 LnRue hit u solo homer in the road atlht northttat down nli orttk " 1 runntne north and aooa
ol tha above Dally Sentinel
oomar ol gravt lot roda to 1 btnelln tht tj~Uih tbGut 10 rodt
Mld IIIII Trull, IV 1ny
' 1/2 games ut the AII-Stur second , and Aaron Boone's and
~thi Olll prior to lht
houaa orttkl thtnoa down aoulh ol "'""' ntd mecr Ita oo mpt tnt 1111 by oautnf 7U·
IIM·I1U
brcuk , but have gone Into lt5· two-run homer completed 11 loti, mtttlng
thonot w"t 18 tlld GfMk II rode lo tint OfOIUI lhl agtlnat rou In 1tht .....
110.
13 nosedi ve. they've slipped five-run third inning thnt rode to 1 oomtr; • oomar ; thtnOt or•k, 1 1tont oomlf Court 0 common (7) 14, H, l1 (I) I ·
into a second· pluce tie with knocked Ishii out ~ f th e thanot north I ro&lt;lt north 70 rode to • In uld notion ; Pint ol Melge
to 1 oomtr: lhtnot oorntr; thenot north· thtnoe north eo countv.
oh1o,
Card ol 1'1111\kl
Sun Frunci sco, five g-umes game .
'
1111 15 rode to • wttt 10 rode to •
dtgrttt
""''
to
the
r""Utltlng
tht
Co~trt
behind Arizona.
"' ttrmfnett 1 n~
Brnndon Lurson und Adum oomtr; theriot touln oomtr; thttiot wttt otnttr ot tha orttkl
The offense has been in u Dunn Iuter udded homers on· I rodt to lha pltot ot "rod• to tht •~lion thtno• lollowlng up 10
lnttl'llllhat ~ou ht~~t
Wfl W()llld llko H• - '
beginning, containing line; thtnot aouth on 11 td orttk to ttld In Ihi prem lUI
slump und Kuzuhlsn Ishii th-nk ~~·~rrnn o
aort.
nld line to pteo• ot oanltr lint; thenot llltorlbtd 11 tollowe: •
their lirst·hnlf stur - is fud- th e bullpen 11s the Reds 3/4PARCI
.,The
whn
hoi~ 111 ~~~
1: btglnnlng, oonlaln• lOUth about 1111 !Odl · IIIUIII In lht
. ing ulong wilh their playoff scored 12 runs for only the lllullt L. InNO. tht
w~
W~ IORU-I'ili'
lngiQ aoret, mort or · ·lo tht pt101 of lltlln· Tllwnahlp of Olive,
third time thi s season.
,..;_
Dally
dlinn
ll nllnn
chance~ .
or Chot1tr, ''"·
nine, oonlllnlne I Melee county, Ohio_
The Dodgers mude three Town1hlp
Mtlgt County, Ohlo, I Matpt lilt Cowary 1ore, mort orlttl·
1
e
-,:
•
11
W"!
~ ~ ~ ~ 1110 ,
Ishii ( 12-7) signed us 11 free
1
sentinel
and btln,. 1 Pill ol temlly burying
PAIIOI~ NO . 111 11~, ::~f~NINQ,
In'tht
~M8!Qd AW"Y·
.:agenll'rom Jupun und became errors nnd hud u run-scoring 8totlon
,
Town
4,
ground,
llluatt
In
the
otnltr
or
tht
county
'I
IAIIk! II&gt; RQV
passed
bull.
helping
the
sec·
a sensutlon by winning hi s
Range II, Ohio PAIICIL NO , ?1 Tllwnthlp of Chllltr, flload lttdlng lrom
llnh
Rnhln1on rm
first six stnrts. He was 10-1 ond·pluce Reds pull away to Comp,any'a Purohaae, llluattd In tht Malga Counry, 011101 lllldtYlllt to Joppa
vliili An\1 fnr 1lw
on June 8 - the eurlicsl any n wm th111 kept them five be on tht Wtll lint ol Townahlp ot Chtltll, All that pal1 ollhtlol• 11 tht N,l , oorner of
"'"II~NI\It 11lQ!•
t, whtrt tht Mtl81 Countyl Ohlo1 lowing dttorlbtd 1111 101 dttclt&lt;l by Mtjor
Dodger pitcher hud won I0 gumcs behind SL Louis in the laotlon
'"fo
Th"nk; for
IOUihtttl oomer ot Alto tht tol owing tltllt thlt liM eoutn Rlld 10 lludlty lllld;
NL CentraL
-:lgnmcs since 1991 . ·
"
lih~
~~"~m ,,
Iandt ot P. w. lntar· dt~orlbad pttot ol of lht otnter ot the lhtnot In 1 louthtrly
In Memory
vlillo,
ow~n.
uota nl&lt;l 11at1on parotl ot.Jand td\oln· lett branoh ol lhtell cllrtotlon along lht
"nd
J&gt;hun~ ~"Illlint, and•runnlng lng thllllt Cltlor btd lllvtr,
to •., It 1 lilt lint of lht·llld
. I
Th"ll~i 111 nw1np
In Me1nmy
And us the Bears slowl_y w,.t alone tht north pl~llllht northlltl ltalnntne Ul roil lotol Oudlty•llold to
of Iande of ~ohn oomor tnd Clllarlbtd 1111 ollht nofthwttl lht oenltr or lht
runoml ll unw lm "
built themselves into u doml - llna
Iaiii!, 21 rodt I fttt "tollow111111nntng oomer ot l~llon 11 Tllwnahlp lloea 1 Utwld Dorrell
~~~~ w ~ ll &lt;l11n~
nnting pre sence thut rum· to tht otnttr ot 1ht ninety tight rode "'t thlnat aouth 41 rode thtnOtlttltrly along
GrlndNtilff
liu fm Jlm~•l
paged
through
the
leugue
In
townahlp
rold,
ot
Chlrltl
I
,
to
•
d!llll
i
therioe
llld
Townahlp
!load
J1111~
/i'.IU2U·
Run
'' hur~h \."~i~•
from Pep B1
10ulh 70 dtgrttt to tht lnttrllotlon at
. 198~. Hampton wuN the con ... known •• tht lohool CowdtrYI northwtll
for • ~rvlo» tho
Jill,\' ,1./, 2001
flll'll d1m1tod ~r
stunt. He und' safety Guty Hou11 Road through Qomtrl lhe.noe touth till 41 !ldt to the tht urd count~
MlhOOMit """ h~t¥f t•l!n
1 1 Ufltlf!
Mike Dilku, who knows a F'encik rode herd on the nld ltotlon T1 41 (ltg. 1111 IWtlll~ atnltr 111 nlcl. Ito• • d th
fnr nYf itr, 1tlll' ll for·
frl@ndM, Nil worliM
PYtJf hf It! f~!f tli!Am lllld
thing or two about hurd- defense, instilling an attitude th1no1 In • north• .rodt to • tllkll llont thtnot eouth N:~hlv..c:~:• "
~" n
11""'
dlraollon
thtnot
north
fourl•n
114
rodt
to
leU
tint)
cllrtotlon
tiona
lilt
lltterly
tll11\lh hl M"lllnmlf!rfill
- nosed football players. was that they didn' t need 11 power- along tht mt•n · rodt; lhtnot wnt thtnot 1111 11·111 otnler of the nld
lh"n l'llllh"l
fnll!\11, h\lliht~, nU, Ud\1, !Hill
' with the Dallas Cowboys ful offense bccimse the other dtrtlng• of tht otn• lourtten rode to rodt •to
11'0 "fQ, ~"~
David count~ llotd to tht
(irtlndhtll"lilr lll~ fl~l f11 r
Oo~ Rio •·
ltr ol llld road to PilOt of btglnnlng, Otllom't ltnttllltnOI pilOt of IIQINNINQ
lhll ll\lll'flUflil- il¢iU',
when Hampton wus drafted team would not score.
whtrt
tht
Will
line
oontalnlng
nlntty
north
to
tiDIIOn
line,
and
oonlllnlng
1
Wif~
/fi'P/.Y;I /J,
HP.I'~.
C/tl/i/1'
1
'
1
1
.~
No.4 6verull in 1979.
The Yul e·educuted Fencik ot 111&lt;1 leotlon l tight rode, lit tht lhtnoe Wtll to tltt 1011 more.or leu.
C.rtpidl'lulrlmt . ,
1/oflllll ,G ~ilmi/.Y
"I watched Dun when he und the rowdy; Arkansas-bred oro1111 ttld rotd; nmt mort or 1111.
PIIOI of btglnnlng, In
I' g1 f11
L,t, 1 T
· came out of Arkansas," Ditko Humpton seemed 10 be un lhtnot lOUth olona PerOtlt 3, .b e. • Tllwn •• "•no• u. .
·--::-.'":':"'~-:--~-:-.:.::~-PAIICIL NO, !11
I
s11id. "I remember couch odd couple 10 be leading the tnt uld wut Unt ol lnd 7 I OVI
eaollon
1
to
the
ptaot
dttorlbed
111
w11t
at·
lltuttt
tn
tht
Publlo
Salt
1nd
Auot
on
• (Toni) Landry suying what a Beurs' '46" defense, which ol beginning, oon· tht rotd lttdlng trom 'fllwnthlp of Chtlttr,
. gr~at foorb~!l pluyer he wus was con ce ived by Budd_y talnlng 1 aorta, mort Ktno to Tuppera Mtlgt county, Ohio:
gomg to be.
lou.
Pltlnt,
All thll plrl oltht fol•
RyuQ . Hampton said the untt or PARCIL
NO . S:
PAIICIL NO. I I lowing dtUrlllld rttl
Ditku, who coached the wus like fumlly.
lltullt In ·tht IIIUitld In lhl ttllltlhll Uti touth
· Bears when Hampton wus
"We hud such 11 close llffin- Townthlp of Chtlttr, Townehlp of Chiller, ol tht oenter ol the
playing, nvted thut Humplon lty for euch nther, we took Molge county, Ohio, MIIIJI Oounty, Ohio, · 1111 brenoluf lhedt
" was the key defensive line- everything
personally," ond In 1oo11on 1, tnd tllutltd In "lver, to•Wltl ltlng In
, mun on the l9RS Super Bowl Hampton suid. "Anybody 'Town 4, R1ngt ta, I toll on 1, Town 4, Ito lion 1, Town 4,
compeny'e 111nge11 ol 1hl Ohio "•ne• 11 ot thl Ohto
champions, ulthough he was took u shot ut one of our Ohio
Purohllt,
beginning Company'a l'urohlll Comptn~·· Purohut,
less publici~ed than two of guys, we would systcmaticul- at Wllllem
loll'• bou ndtd
tnd dttorlbtd 11 toUowtl
· hi s lincmates - Ri chard ly try to drnp them. We want- northout comer; dttorlbtd 11 follow11 ltalnntng 10 rolit
· ,Dent
und
Willium ed to be so dominant that if th•n•• north to lhe ltglnnlng 2 rode II 1111 of tht northwttl
tltt brtnoh ollh1dt llnlli north U oomtr ol ltotlon 11
~"Refrigcrutor" Perry.
they dcln't score, we cun 't Rlvtr; thtnot up 11id dtgllll Witt ol • thtnot 1111 12 rodt;
" "A lot of times in footbull. lose."
Orttk with. Itt motn· lltok W1lnut lrtt on lhtnot eouth •• roit
it's not so much the slut, but
Hampton led by example, dtrlne• 11 rodt to • aid• of th• rotd; to 1 Clreln1 thenoe
how you r.Juy the game," playing through injuries and ettkt· thtnot eouth e lhtnot te rodt on the south 70 dtgr111
dtgrHt w11t HI rode road to 1 tlekt end · aut 41 rodt to the
. Dilku suid. 'If that's the meu· always playing hurd .
to tht oountr ro1&lt;11 tht oomer ot tht otntlr ol IIOIIOn l
• suring stick, then he pluyed
The Bears defense was nt thence ttlttrly !!on m"tlng houtt Iota running north tnd
' the game us well us uny- Its best in 198~ us the team 11ld ro1d to tht pltot thtnot Will I rode toulhi lhtnot toulh
btglnnlng, oon· 10 llnk1 lo 1 tllktl t II radii tntnot
bod ."
rolled to un 18· 1 record, ol.
ttlnlng a 10111, mort thtnot north 11 IInke wttt II ro~• to lht
. When he was drafted by allowing. u leugue-low 198 or
loot.
.ro lht aouthwtlt oenttr ol lht rotd l
· the Bears in' 1979: Hampton points and shutting out the
lutpt 1 lot oom11 of tht m11Ung thtnoe north 2•1/2
didn't know he wus becom• Giunts and Rams in the NFC dtfdtd lo lohoot hOUitl thtnoe w111 lltgr•• w11t 14 rod•
Dlrtotort of Dltt. I lor tlong llld lint of the on 11ld ro1d to 1
. ing part of tradition that sturt· playoffs.
tchool purpout. m•Ong houtt tot-al Wtlnut trtta thenoe
ed with Bronco Nagurski and
The defense wanted a PARCIL
N0 , . 41 1111 to lht touthwttt north 10 dtOr'" 1111
' run through the likes of Dick shutout in the Super Bowl, llluatt In tht comtr or lht m•Unl Ia rode 10 lht otnttr
· Butkus, Gale Sayers und too, but the New Englund Townehtp ot Chllltr, houtt lot/ lhtnot 1 of thl 1111 brtnoh ol
Malgl county, Ohio1 rodl 20 I nkt lOUth, lhldl "lVIII lhlnOI
Wulter Payton .
Patriots scored I0 points. T~e Alto
onothtr pltot or lhtnot till I rode wttt 7 roe11 to mouth
One thing Hampton did Bears scored 46.
ltnd being dlreour t 2· 112 llnka to tht or email run1 thana•
know about Chicago was that
Were the Bears defenders w11t ot the tbove p!tot ot btalnn!ng, north 1o dtgrttl
it was cold.
dlsappoirlted that they let .the &lt;lttorlbtd pltot, oonltlnlng 1ft rocra, Wfll 111 roil to lht
beginning 11 the otn· more
Pilot of llfllnnlng,
"I thou$hl, ' Why couldn't I Patriot.s score?
t.r
ollhado
Crttk
on
'
P
AfiiCIL
NO
.
11
oonltlnlng
"Extreme! y," . Hampton thtwt~lllntolttkl lltutll In lht mortoriHe,t tortt,
1 0 to Mtami or tA. some'
• where warm, on the water said. "My dear friend Walter ltollon 1, tht eouth· Townthlp of Chttltr,
lltltrtltOI Dttd 1
• and have a boat.' lnsteud, I (Payton) 1101 1\ bad hundoff wttt oomtr or lend Mtlge Counry, Ohlo1 Volumt 211, tt1g1 u 1
had to come up here and buy and he fumbled. Next thin11 formerly own1d 11y ltluiiiCI In holton '1 Mllll County D•a
,,.dtrlok ,,lgtri Town 4l"'"'' 12 ~ lltoirde, .
a snowblower," Hampton you know, lt'i ht and 10 on 1htnot
21 rode to lht thl Oh o Compeny I
o\udllor'e · Perot I
the 20. After three rlayt the)' county rotil lhtnot lturohlll llttltnnlngl NOI.t OI•OIOit,OOO,
said.
He also got a Super Bowl kicked a field JIOa from 3.5 tllltrly on ,.,d .rotd rod Witt Ollfltllltok 01•01017.000, 01·
at rode 10 1 whitt walnut ''" on the 01 oti.DOO, and 01· ·
ring and a spot in .the Hall of yards.
merktd lor 1 lOUth lint of 111111 lor· 01011,000.
Fame. ·
·
"But you're carplnJI about 01k
oomtrl thtnot north marty owntG ~~~
I'IIOPIIITY
"I didn't realize I was com· the peanut~ on the 1undae. D itQrttt till 20 llhtn Cowdry, ADO"III
I 11111
ina to 1he Mecca of football," Overall. it was a hell of a rod I 1o lhl otnttr ol llltnot lOUth II !OCII llthln IIO.i~ Long
uld cr~tkl rhenoa 10 .. htclgtl· lhlnll lollom, OH 41r4J,
ride." ·
• Hampton 1aid.
north
II dtgrttl tift 17 roCII It I
IIIAL
I ITATI
Hampton
doesn't
care
Hampton also d,ldn 't r~al­
will
7 roolt lo lht tllkti lhiiiH ODn• AflfiiiAIIID
A'll
ize that hi&amp;h flrlt·round packs much for the paaeantry of the brtnoh o1 ttld or•k Unutng 1111 to lht 1141,117.00, Thl rttl
• aenerall )' ilon' I have to worry. Hall of Fame inductlona; he end tlont oomtrt oenler of .lho llet •~~t~ IIIIIIOUt Hkl
north 1 lhallt Cr•lll lhtllff for . '•• lhln two·
; about job security their first 1ald thai he'd rattier watch It thtnot
8 IIH Will 1 roe111 nor1h . .ltrly follow·
'l"llf!ll 1111 ••.,,,.,IIi
on TV. But aetlinll _the call dt
.,.,.
lh-01 ·WIIIWtrd :U lnt tht Hiller ollhl ~~Jvt,
' Y~~-thouahtl had to be in ihe meant the world to bim.
radt to tht ttollon mtllldlllll'l ol thl
TIIIMI OP IAI.II
"I thouah I hlld a aood lint I ltd PilOt Ol orttk 10 llld ltr• 1~ lflwtl .. wof lilt'
best lhape of my life becau1~
mtr!Y OWIIIII lty 1.~ ta•'" 111 ':.-II
I didn't want to 1101 cut, chance, but the mornln11 ther, II•1 I"" I"'' oon I1 11' Oevlcl
OtiiOrn Wtll ,,. ., - vwy
4
1
' ""'I lhtnoe
called, I waa stunned, ' "1 11" 1 1"11 147
Hampton said with a lau11h .
north
~ ....,,_
!'!!!!:~,_111
rodt, more or lett.
...... ..,
1 .:1:
Hampton
illd.
Hampton was a quick
PAfiiCIL NO • I I with I IIi lint t r,_ !Qet,
Dhka waa deliahted.
· lllulll In lftl IIIII 1/41 lhlnll -1
ALL IHIIIII'It'l
learner, becomin, one of t~e
Townehlp
ol
Cllllllr,
N
roaa
10
1M
pllta
lALII
OI'IIIATI
in
there,"
"He
belona•
• best defentive inemen tn
Mtlft
County,
OhiOI
If
llttllnnllll,
U
H
D
I
II
THI
Ditka
aaid.
"I'm
so
happy
for
: football in 1hort order, The
Alto
lht
following
PAiiCII..
NO,
lOt
DODTIIINI
0,
•- · ' man who would become Dan. I'm aure it's somethlnJI
known aa 'DII!Iimal' had 70 that he'1 thou11ht aboul for a . pi·~~ o: '·~~~ J~'r• f~:.Wn~~~Pol~ ~~11To11.
~~~:" :b:v~ Mfllf County, OhiO; fiUIIONAIIIII Nil
tackle111 a roolcie and led the lona time."·
dllortlltd
pltlt Tht lol!owlnl . UIIOID TO OHICK
Now
he
can
stop
thinking
• team hit second year with II
ltflnnlng
11
Chtrtft
Clllorlbtll PIIOI ol POll UINI IN THI
' 1/2 sacb.
·
' about It and 11art enjoying it, I , CowdtrY'I north· land tlllolnlnt lht ftUII.IO 111001101
.

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - Ryun over tour yeors. Milton Brodley ma.de- , . . . - - - - - - - - : - - - --- - - - - - : - - - -- - - - - ,
Drtse fulfilled u childhood funtusy. It a diving cutch in shullow center wtth
just happened in a difTertnt uniform. runners on first und second·10 end it.
Ricky Gutierrez drove in u pair of "They made some outstunding
-,
runs
and Drese won for just the ~ec· defensi ve plays," A's mnnuger Art
Ql
ond time in eight starts as the Howe said; "Obviously thnt last play
M :II .&amp;II
Cleveland Indians made it two in a of the game was outstanding."
04
St .soo
·'" 11
153 153
MurK Ellis. who hit the bull, thought
row over the Oakland Athletics, S-4
It SS .&lt;lit
17
it wus going to drop.
·.
48 110 .&lt;117
Thesduy nighl
·
"They
wert
playtng
deep,"
he
said.
Drese
(9·8),
who
grtw
up
in
: - : . ...,
Ql
58 44 .an
.., Oaldund and attended Cal, received 11 "I hit the bull well. but it doesn't CIUT)'
010 .1 1 4 .
nice ovation from ubout 200 family .hert ut ni~ht very well."
and friends when he cume out of the
Cory L1dle (3·9) allowed five runs
04' 51 ~~·
'
&lt;II 110 .4153
~~~
three earned - und live hits over 5
gome
after
S
1-3
innings.
He
guve
up
.. 10 ..as 11~
sa ea .1151 u. one run on eight hits with two wolks 1-3 innings.
Ricardo Rincon begun the duy with
and three strikeouts.
W L 1'91 01
"It
was
awesome,"
Drese
said.
"I
the
Indians, bul was traded IO the
MIOnl
04 42 .104
l.ol MoM~ . 58 47 .557
hud been dreaming about this since I Athletics for minor leu~ue infielder
Sin FIIIIOilaol 58 . U .117
I
was u little kid. When I wus little I Marshall McDougull JUst before
Calorldo
&lt;II Ill .4153
tl
wus hoping to be on the A's, I' II take gametime. General Manager Billy
Son Dltgo 44 ea ,4 ta 20
Beane· said Rincon was available to
this any duy. This.is very special."
llonde\l"to.
·Drese smd he attended game~ regu- pitch.
No ..,.. IICIIIdultd
"I wanted to make the trade before
larly ut the Coliseum ond rooted tor
'IUolldlly'a a - .
Pllfllllrgh 4, CdO!Ido t
the Bush Brothers - Murk McOwire the game stuned because I didn't want
Moolttil 0, Artzonl 4, 10 iMIIIQI
him pitching against us," Beune said.
and
Jose Cunseco.
St. LOUII I, FIOrldl 0
Indians munuger Joel Skinner suid DEAD TO RITES - Indians catcher Einar Dl!ll, right, tags out Oakland 's
"I always imugined myself us u hit·
s.n Fit.....,. to; PNiadotP~'Iil s
HaultantS,N.V.Mtlll
ter like the Bash Brothers because he told Rincon about the trade 30 Ramon Hernandez at home plate In the t~lrd Inning Tuesday. (AP)
.CinolnnoU 11,1.111 A...... 4
·minutes before gumetime.
they wert my favorites," he said.
Alllllll 3. Mllwauket 2
In three previous starts, Drese
"We hod just gotten through our
s.n DltVO a, CNcaoo CUIII a
w.tnu;llf'l a.m.
Cleveland broke it open with four
batting
practtce routine and I got the get traded, but was surprised it was
ollowed
21
runs
and
25
hits
in
7
1-3
Sin DltQO (OI,I'IItl 3-3) tl ChlciiiO innings. He gave up eight runs in one phone cull,"
runs
in 'the sixth. Matt Lawton sinSkinner
said.
"I
was
able
tlle
A's.
Cube (C.Zambflno H), 2:20 p.m.
gled,
Vi~uel doubled and Selby wus
The Indians opened the scoring
inning uguinst the New York Yankees to get him and tulk to him."
Cotorl!lO ISlallc. HI II Plltlburgh (Fogg
. 10.7), 7:ol P,!ll.
Rincon retired the two left·hunded with a run in the first inning. Mutt safe on Ltdle's fielding error to loud
his last stun on July 24.. MIIWIIukH (Shull 8·12) II Alanto In "l
wus
u
lot
more
determined
to
get
Ouklund
butters - David Justice and Lawton was hit by u pitch, stoic sec- the bases. Jim Thome hit u sacrifice
IMNiwoocl H), ?:OS p.m.
AriiO!ll (JohniOt\ t 4-4) II Moolrtll myself bock on track," Drese suid. "I Eric Chavez - he faced on Monday ond and udvunced to third on a sacri- fly scoring Lawton and Bradley sinI~ R·S), 7:01 p.m.
· was able to keep my focus nnd make ni~ht to help preserve the lndi.ans' fice bunt by Omar Vlzquel. Bill Selby gled home Vizquel. Gutierrez folSt. Lou II (FinleY 2.0) at FIOr\dllfl"'''ttt 3wtn.
·
followed with a sacrifice fly.
lowed with n two-run single.
better pitches,"
4), 7:01 p.m.
San Fronolooo (Jtllton 10·71 11
Scott Haueberg singled home a .run
Rincon, speaking through an inter- The A's tied it in the fifth. After
Murk Wohlers recorded the finul
PhilldtiPhiiiDuokWOtth 1-8), 7:01 p.m.
in
the seventh and Murk Ellis hil a
four
outs
for
his
second
save
in
us
preter,
said
he
wus
huppy
lo
be
going
Mark
Ellis
und
Mi~uel
Tejada
singled,
Houlton (MIIold 3-8)11 N.V
,Mill (Eitlt $.
two-run
homer in the eighth.
many
days
after
not
recording
one
in
to
a
contending
team.
He
expected
to
Juslice
followed
w1th
an
RBI
single.
8), 7:10p.m:
,
1.111 AfiO'Itl (Nomo 1M) II Clnolnnlll
CMMI!Itr toO~ 7tt0 p.m,
Thllt'ldly'aa1.111 Anltltl (Od.l'trtl tOo?) tl
Clno!IIMU tl'--dll 1·1), !IIIII p.m.
Sin Dltgo PMvy a..) II ChloegQ CUIII
Cl.ltbtr ..,,, 2:20 l)lm.
Artzonllllchlllng !H) 11-.... (OIIkl
H), 7:011 p.m.
·
Colo- l"-nnlnoa t0-81 11 F't•fll!\
(Mild- 0.0), 7:0S l)lm,
.
at, Loull fT,Imllh 4·1) II Flarldl (lurniH
tD-71 7:011 p.m.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sin ~nciiOO (Oft~ HI It Phlltdllpllll ,
!\'lollt-7), 7:0hm. .
Cliff
Floyd
moved
a step closer to the playoffs. This time,
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ftoueton (Otwlll tt.e) ot N.V, Moll
·he was traded to Boston, where he reunites with former
(A1110io 10.3/, 7:10 p.m.
Scou Rolen und Kenn,Y Lofton joined their
teammate Pedro Martinez.
·, 'MIIwouktl ~ueoh 1•10) 11 Atlontl
new teams and immed1ately made n major
(Moddux !0.3), 7:sa p.m.
Floyd was dealt by Montreal on Thesduy night nearly
impact on the NL playoff race.
three
weeks after he was traded by the Florida Marlins !O the
Aniorta.nl.logi.t
Rolen hil un RBI triple und wenl 2-for-4 in
Expos.
·
latl
his St. Louis debut, helping the Cardinals beat
Cll
W L M
The Red Sox sent minor league pitchers Seung Song and
the Florida Murlins S-0 Thesday night.
11 sa .1:11
Sun-Woo
Kim to Montreal.
·
ea .s .seo
5
"There ure a bunch of professionals here.
oil H .411
11
After
hitting
.287
with
18
homers
und
57
RBis with
You Clll1 tell that right away," said Rolen, who
41 " .433 at~
. Florida, Floyd wus dealt buck to Montreal on July II and
admitted he was nervous. "These guys· don't
sa 10 .:133
~
strugaled - batting .207 with three homers and four RBis.
Celtlntl
just show up at the ballpurk and go through
Cll
W L lOot
in ~3 at-bats.
'
·
the motions. They come to win."
,
M • o43 .see
"It's
weird.
Gettin~
traded
twice
in
a
season
is
something
13
Lefton mode an even bigger splash right
5I 81 .477
new for ·me, but this 1s the way this game rolls.'" Floyd said
47 81 .441
from
slurt, hitting a home run in his first
" aa .415 - 1U at-but the
in Montreal. "You've got to go with the flow and I'm going
with the Sun Francisco Giants to spurk
40 e5 .sat
23
to
u ~rent situation. Boston is a great team."
u I0-3 victory over .the Philudelphia Phillies.
Wttt
W L Pol
Cll
With
Murtinez ( 14-2) on the mound, the Red Sox have
The six·time AII-Stur ulso tripled and scored
H 42 .107
'
been unbeatable. He pitched two-hit ball over eight innings
tWICe.
13 42 .eoo
1
in a 6·0 win over the Anaheim An$els on Tuesday night and
eo 47 .1111
5
"It wus fun, it was exciting," Lefton said.
.. aa .4ts ao~
Is undefeated in ~s lust seven decisions with a I. 10 ERA.
"I'm glud I did my purt."
·
"That's vinta~e Pedro Murtinez," Angels manager Mike
Rolen played perfect defense at thirll base,
-.y"to-.
,__ Bey 8, ... ~..... 1
Sciascia said. 'About the third inning, he reall~ sturted to
· helping Andy Benes (1-3) win for the first BIG DEBUT - San Francisco's new center
N.V,Vanklll I, To... 2
get into a rhythm, changed speeds, hit his spots. '
fielder,
Kenny
Lofton,
right,
Is congratulated
time
in
almost
a
yeur.
.
KaniU Clf'l 4, Toron10 I
Boston owner John Henry, who sold the Murlins to buy
by
third
base
coach
Sonny
Jackson
(15)
lifter
The 27-yeur-old slugger seems a perfect fit
Anl1\tlm a, IIOIIon 4
...Hit 4, Dltrolt B
the
Red Sox this yeur, completed the deul for Floyd while
for the first-place Cardinals, who acquired Lofton hit a solo home run In the first Inning
Clluclancll, CMktand I
Martinez was helping Boston move within a game of the
. him a day earlier following an unhappy stay in against the Ph lilies on Tuesday. (AP)
'llllldey'l a-.
Angels. in the wild·card race by ·Striking out nine. The trade
Philadelphia.
SltH!t J, Ottrol1 4, 10 lnrtlngl
"-!IIIII !Iey 10, lonii!IOif 3
. wus announced during the game and Murtinez approved.
Rolen
batted
fifth
in
u
lineup
that
ulreudy
Kevin
Young's
bases-loaded
walk
forced
in
N.v. v.n~c~o~e, T..,, e
YANKEF.S !1, RANGERS 6
included Albert Pujols, Jim Edmonds and the go-a'head run, and Adam Hyzdu added a
Toronto 13, 1&lt;1nu1 City 4
.In Arlington, Texas, Bernie Williams und Jason Giambi
ChfciGO WhHollolc a, Mlnnooola o
Tino Murtinez.
,
two-run double in a three-run eighth inning
lotiOn .. Mlhllm 0
hit
two-run homers, helping David Well s overcome a rocky
"He's
been
a
prime-time
player
since
he's
fcir
the
Pirates,
who
snapped
a
six-game
losCleVIIIIid 5, Olldlnd 4
start
as New York won for the IOth time in 13 games.
been
up
here,"
Cardinals
manager
Tony
Lu
ing
streak.
.
-'llldly'l 0.!1111
Cit¥118nd \Nogy 1).2) ot Otklond
Raul
Mondesl and Alfonso Soriano also homered for the
Russa said. "The most important thing he has
Mike Williams got his 31st save in 33
CMukltr11of,l:35p.m.
to know is that he doesn't have to be anything chances.
Yankees, who hit four or more homers for the eighth time
lleltlmont (L.DptZ 11·3111 TIIIIPI Illy (Dt
special in thai clubhouse. On the field, we just
ASTROS .16, MI!TS 3
this season. Texas hit three, including Alex Rodriguez's
Lao lonlol 0.2), 7:11p.m.
N.Y.VanMil (l.tulllno 13-4) 11,._ (8111
. 35th, tops in the majors. .
·
need him to play the wuy he docs, und we
Geoff Blum drove in five runs with four hits
' 34), 8:08 "'"''
.
know
how
stron~
that
is.'.'
us
Houston
roughed
up
Jeff
D'Amico
(5·9)
at
Wells
(12-~)
won
his
fifth
straight
decision, giving up four
Chfo«~ Whllo So• (Oorlond 8·1) at
·runs - three earned - and seven hits in seven innings.
Mlt•••aia (MIYI t-2), 1:06 p.m. . , St. Louis, wh1ch has won seven pf nine, Shea Stadium.
1bl0r110 . (f'jtl!il 3·2) II Klnllt City
remained a season-high five games uhead of
The Astros tied a season high with 20 hits
MARINERS 5, TIGERS 4
HJ, 1:01 p.m.
·
Cincinnati
in
the
NL
Central.
and
rookie
Kirk
Suurloos
(3·2)
won
his
third
Pinch-hitter
Murk
McLemore drove in the winning run
(Woloollold 4·3) 11 Anohllm
The
speedy
Lefton
gives
the
Giants
the
straight
since
being
recalled
from
Triple-A
n..a.v 1·1), 10:01 p.m.
with a squeeze bunt in the lOth inning off Jeff Famswonh
llllral((- 1-111 ot looltlo ,(llldWin •
leadoff ~iller they've been lacking for years, New Orleans,
(2·3)
to give Seattle a win at Safeco Field. Edgar Martinez
· · 7), 10:08 p.m.
but
he
impressed
his
new
team
with
some
Blum
hit
a
home
run,
a
triple,
and
two
sin·
had
led
off with a double.
'
Tltlltld.v'l o-.
~ (Hollocloy ' iN) al
City
une"pected power. It was his 24th cureer lead- gles. Brad Ausmus also homered and tied a
Seattle's Ichiro Suzuki ended an ()..for-16 hitless streak,
IMI'II·7). 1108 flolll.
off homer.
curcer high with four hits.
·
his longest this se1111on, with an infield single in the seventh.
- - ( - 4-1} II TM1pl 8ly
"He's
got
some
sock,"
San
Francisco
man·
BRAVF.S
3,
BRI!WERB
2
DEVIL RAvs 10, 0RIOLII:8 3
(ION 1-11, 7:10P.m.
llolton (lurtcon fo-3) IITikll (Park .1),
ager Dusty Baker said.
Dumian MOlls allowed two hits over seven
In St. Petersburg, Fla., Jared Sandberg hit his first career
1:08 p.m.
·
J&lt;.Jrk Rueter (9-6) and the Giants, playing innin41s, und Gury Sheffield do.ubled in two
~rand slam off John Stephens (0-1) during a six-run first
Chl..,go Whlll SO• (Wrlllfll N) II
without
injured
star
Burry
Bonds
for
the
lOth
runs
tn
a
three-run
sixth
at
Thmer
Field
us
mning, lll1d Joe Kennedy (6·8) struck out seven to tie
MI..._ (Milton la-7~ I:OS p.m.
N.Y. ~ ~ 7-t) It Anlholm
straight game, pulled even with Los Angeles Atlanta ended Milwaukee's four-game win·
Kansas City's Paul Byrd. for the AL leud with his fifth com(WJifti)Um I WI, 10:08 p.m.
in
the
wild-card
race.
ning
streak.
plete
game.
Dtlra/1 (lparkt ll-10)11 OtkJond (Morang
Bonds took batting practice but isn't e)(peCtMoss (7-4) has won three in a row, giving r
3-2), IO:OS p.m.
Aubr~y Huff homered twice for Tampa Bay, which has
C-nd C. .bllhla H) II INnla
ed to play in this series. . · .
up only one earned run in his lust 20 innings
won
six of 10. The Devil Rays (3S-70) have the wont
(l'llltlro , ..~ , ...........
EXPOS 5, DIAMONDIIACKS 4, 10 INNINGS to lower his ERA to 3.25.
record in the majors.
Vludimir Guerrero homered off Byun11·
John Smohz picked up his 39th save,
.....,..., LIIIUt LIICitrt
WHITE Sox 3, TWINS 0
I I'ITCI-.CI 111 DloiiiOIII) Hyun
Kim
(4-2)
in
the
lOth
inning
at
Olymp1c
matching
the
Atlanta
record
set
in
1996
by
Murk
Buehrle
(14-7)
allowed five hits. in his third ·cureer
_..,.,....., t44, .8751 a.a,.LZJto,
Stadium a~ Montreal ended Arizona's sea.,on- Murk Wohlers. ·It was Smoltz's 25th straight
OllllatMI, 111-3, .1:13, 3.o2;
,,.,.,
shutout, bealing host Minnesota for the second straight sturt.
high seven-game winning streak.
save, also a club mark. · .
.
Millfl I =JA, ...2. .111, 3.20; WMhbiJfTI,
.
Masglio Ordonez hit a three-run homer ofT Kyfe Lohse
-lm, IW, .100, U3: ,.~,
Cliff
Floyd,
who
homered
in
the
second
·
PADRF..S
6,
Cuss
5
.
(10·6),
who allowed six hits in 6 2-3 innings.
Jleiii!I\OI't, 11·3•• 788, 3.01; Jlurlotll,
inning
and
wus
on
deck
when
Guerrero
con·
Tom
Lampkin
lied
the
score
with
a
seventhBLUI! J'A'YS 13; RoYALB 4
.
"'*'c
'.o.a•.718, a.n, Muoolno, 'IIIII&lt;. ,..,, .781, 4.47, "
nected, was traded to Boston immediately fol- . inning homer and singled in the go-ahead run
Vernon Wells hit a bases-clearing triple in a five-run fifth
I ITIIIIIIOUTI -I'Minlntl, ._,,
lowing the game for two minor league pitch· . i~ the eighth, leading San Diego at Wrigley
inning
and tied a career-high with four RBis as visiting .
171' """*"• - 'r1or1l. 121; FOoM,
ers.
F1eld.
....... liii;Zito, OIIJjlnd, 124: Hlllldly,
Toronto stol'ped a four-game losing strtak.
lbnlftiO, 111: AOI11z. Mlhelm, 113;
PIRATF.S 4; ROCK IF.~ 1 Bubba Trammell also homered as the
Orlando Rudson, called up July 24 from Triple-A
........ -lbrk. 107.
·
Kris
Benson
(4·5)
allowed
three
hits
over
Pudres
overcame
Summy
Sosa's
32nd
homer
1 IAYII ~ Ml_,, 32;
Syracuse, hud his first three-hit game and scored two runs
......,, ...... 27; Koch, Ooklond, 21;
eight innings at PNC Park in his best start of and b~oke u four-game losing streak.
for the Blue Jays, who had 17 hits.
...,_....,., Hlw ~. 2-4: Urbina. Boillon,
the
season,
and
Pittsburgh
sent
Colorado
to
ita
Trevor
Hoffman
recorded
his
25th
save
in
Pete Walker (4-2) $Ot his first victory as a starter in si~
tu; ,._, Anahtlm, 24; Wlel&lt;mln,
seventh straight loss: .
26 chances, sending the Cubs to their sixth
starts $ince June 8, g1ving up three runs and aeven hits in
et• ala~ tel, ao
loss in seven games:
five innings.
·

..

The Dilly SWitiMt • hQe I 3

Wec:lnead•y, July S1, 2002

Tribe takes second in a row from Oakland

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Jlltan go to front Olllk
Aak lor Mr. Wlatman

Rooting, Siding, Hdd-Ons, flectrtce~

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

Plumbing, becks, Remedellna,

~~~~~~~~.·middleport,
97BeechSt.
OH
l'l1111nl VIIIIV Holpllll
PIOAIARI VAIIIY Nurtlng And l'llhAbiiiiAIIOM
01nt11r II A OVRAfiiiO b6Mfl•ltlffft Olfll
fllolllty that provld111 lntarmot'llata 11M
1klllto 01r1 110101 to rllldtnte . Oiltnll)oln
our MOiilth CArl OrQilRillltltln WMirl WI
JllliVIt'll DXOIIIitnOI In 0811,
I'OIITIONI AVAII.AILII
. liN• 111r1 time 1nd "" Diem
t.I'N • l'ulltlma\ l'lrl time and l'er Diem
IIATI WII.L II IAIID ON
IXIIIIIIIINOI
llnlfllllnoludll
• eli,OOO llgn on bORUIIflr FUll tlmi
bloon111ff Nuro111
•1'111* oonodulln!l (lnaludlllg 1g hour 8hilt1)
• llhllt dllforont!Al
1 Wookond paaltlono
• Trnlnlna JJroarnm lor now graouat111
• HOIIIIh lnlurllROII llngiDIIAmlly plan
•I!Nplriii,ROt PAY and 1108111 UJlfiiAdA In
IllY r11111
Applv In Plf'IOn or 0111
Angell Olellnll, DON
(104) 171•11H
MillOII

llusiness Services
UOU ltrtiHd?

I ARRET
.

~IPIIWOoG

Llkt
July ._1·1

IIPICIII

740·141·2734
Campeltll with
water, llwtr 6

CIIIIIIW for your

appt,

mEIOS mftSSIIOE
THfRftPY

I

Haning's Con$truction

(10'M10' 110'K20')

F'orfltnan: Larry
740-387-0181

(740) 992·3194
992·6635
MllfllllWOOd bilkII .
Aug. 2·3

Cellular .

!!1. Rt. 11!4
biiiWillll'l Rlllllnll .
&amp; 9yr!IHU811
9p11011D AVIIIIIIblll

Jeff Warner Ins.
992·5479

848·2734

HotOog lltlll'ld

OM

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing • Home.
Malnlenanoe·
Qultera • Down
Spout
Free Eetlmatee
848·1405

l.1l" lho ' l'lilN

"'II •.1Pl1 lNHNCI
I I I I " ' I . tl I'

I '/' '"'

Th•

t;RAF~.

00Cad«C &amp; Gravely

BLIND SPOT

c

M1111y F1tgu10n

(,aotory Outlet)
All •erllul bllndo ore

Parte 1 ltrvlce

millie lu order 11
• Verllull • Woud

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
4381181. AI. 110

• MIHII 1 Hie

Oilllpoll•; OH 4H31

uurlo~ollon

144 TW!Uvt. w,.lt

(740),448-1044

446-4995

mn. llcolld ftut.

Mond,y·Frldly ..IPM • lallltday ..2pm
P/8

MACK'S

lllddltpolt, DH

H2•170S

CONTRACTOA8
I INC.

Pooktt Knlvt• ·
&amp;Colltotlbl••

Flaclna, Ohio 4&amp;nt

.h...I. Cut Above

T40-118S.It48
.,..fh•~en" CONCAETEIBLO
.
Hour11
CK/BRIOI&lt;
• l'nuuen, WaUl, Slepsq•
Mon·llt 1(1.4
I

I

I

I II , , "

,

I

Pial Work,
• Walko
and Orl•ee • Slell&lt;:li

217 I. 2nd It•
IIOIMrO)', OH

Repl~tellit!Nio,

(740) 012•81108

' "

CN!te

( l •lfl ) 1 1'I:J ',1!/',i

for

um•.
aj(JIJI

11100,

YOUR

DO~
with
1

Dally
Sentinel
Olllllfled
Ad I

740·992·0780
Cell: 591-8393

P'LI!A
MARKl!T

S••lf
Storag••

u"1 Qooo, Clooo

OwtHJr.·
Ronald "Mick' Haning

Ohrlatlna "Chris' Haning
Cell • 740·591·0919

Hill'~

I~IU ~u~, ToO~~~~

Painting

O~wall,

~·Ro:o::IE~RT~IISmSEl'l"'·
CONSTRUmON

.'

•New Holl!ll

'

.....gee

• Complttt

.

tmodlllllg

E

op&amp;Compare

PIEI ElnMATII
740-lti•11T1

LimESTOnE
O.IIVIIId Alpr..d
lpeolllll ton
1131.00

•so per

740·742·7037

Bl·

l

IUILOfRS IOC.

N•w Huttk!l • VInyl
!jldlna • New {!atlge•
•litpi.Welltint .
Win~ • Moonna
COMMCAOIAL lnd
A IIDINfiAL

fiR f! lliTIMATII

T40-tl2•71tl

Ilh' .:
·

I

·lfHIINf Jf
Ll11
.. tl
1/l'fIJIIION
IJIIIQ,.

I

NATIJ/Itl Will 1"'

"'

I ·
I

•

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.

UMITIIAOIIIIR~~~OIIIjpjjH

'- --.• !!"!~~~

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---- .

.

..
I

Page 8 8 • The Dally Sentln~~ _

Wednesday, July 31, 2002

viww.mydaliysentlnel.c:om

-.

NEA Crouword Puule

BRIOOE

ACROSS 40 Slmplol
d..Hfl
1 E1plort1r - 42 Mavulne
d1Gama
fl!ltr•
43 JFK
a Shapa•
rtgU!Itor
clly
44 Ancl4nt
11 Stell
Tokyo
glrdlrtl
(hyph.)
48 Second
thought•
13 Numryrhymo girl 49 Equipped
$3 Toot
(2-.)
14 Cruel dudl4 54 Reallul
15 Gmdlly 55 Take a nap
5e Entertainer
18 Handy
Delliabbr.
17 Pollen
DOWN
lprtlldtr
18 Coolocunle
1 RObuot
21 Bind
lnttrumanta energy
2 Vlgoda at
23 Blvd.
"Barn-y
26 Com•nMiller"
che'a kin
27 Evtnttul pe- 3 Mormald"a
dom1ln
riod
4.Sugor
28 Dirty air
aource
2i Lodger
s Len out
3t Couple
8 Rolocatoa
32 Socret
l1nguage · 7 Shtrltt
Andy'aaon
33 Lovt 1na1r
38 Stoln tlllara 8 Wont tlrlt
37 Frtud topic 9 TlerriFuego
38 -Pialnelc
tO Molt,
Ill.
39 Br~tc11e
IOrtlttlmtl
ltitm
12 Tit down

P!!lLLIP

ALOErl

OH

I" ·'' 'I

A Q I
9

lj I

• !0 • '
.. 1\ J )1113
..

t; )&lt;I I 161

\

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+

~

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•

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W ~7Gt
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..
t

A. K t,1 ~ 1

lil'!lh•t WI'''
.;-UIIII'IOihl(' l:a~ t 'I C!&gt;l
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I '11
! •

\I t\ \
~ •

" urth
I 'll~•

I',,"

l'us

I'"''

~ A

F"'l
I'"'~

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'II"

llll1'1li!11! lf'fld • ,,

__j

To go wrong
Defense. as we all
know . is very tough.
If only we could luok
around corners and
see clcclarcr"s hand!
If you really wish
lo test yourself itl IP·
clay's deal. look only
ut lhe West and North
hands. But if you are
in a hurry, peek ut ull
52 cards. Sou!h is in
five diamonds . West
StUI'lS Wilh his (WO top
spades. everyone follvwing. What should
he lead at trick three?
Four spades is an
overbid, especially at
adverse vulnerabill!y,
but these days. no one
seems to care about
• that.
South's four notrump is a two-suited
takeoul bid. So, when
he corrects five clubs
lo five diamonds, he
is · known t(l be :\1
least 5-5 in the red

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

YOU 60T ((/PPel&gt; OFF/
YOU DON'T
NeEI&gt; tiOMe
AND tleALT~
fNStJflANC.E.

......-.. . . . . c:!~;_. _.. .:.·;--21~ ~--

.,...;...~

.

. I::.N'iTf) I~

ROMN-i Tl&lt;'.,

Melp County's

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campo•
· Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are crultd 'rom quotatlona by lamoua
people, ~ 11 t and pre1ent. Each latter In tha clphtlr alanda lor another.

AI the !able. al Irick .
.
Today's clue: S equals Y · ·
three, West uncler"UK NNKH
NO
BHRNK
WDH
stundably shifted !o
the club seven, hopSDJHXKCW
T E G
PTZ K
~
~
"'I
ing declarer was 2-5OOYOUE:.V£~ ~E.T
GU-\\J'I), WI\HOUT YOU, MY
5- 1 with u lvsing
MJUCRO NPTE
N 0
8 HRN K
~~YI~GME.7
UFC: WOULI) 0C LIK£ WNI)
club. However, disasG\IMD Wl\f\OJT 1\ ~ZE 1
WDH
NPK
ter struck. Declarer
MJUC:RO
TEG
ruffed and drew
;p T Z K
ED
X K C W ,"
trumps in three
be
rounds.
Then,
I
OBHRC
ODEEDCCS
cause he was lucking
a dummy •enlry, he
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "The regul1r reao~rca ot people
had no choice but to
who don't go enough Into the worl&lt;f to llvt a novel it to write
one."- Thomas Hardy . .
.
cash the heart :tee.
The appearance of the
WOlD
GAM I
king was a wonderful
sight •• , for Norlh·
South at least.
O four
R•arran;• letterJ cf the
T!'·H)N'I'.
scrambled words be·
BI'.AIN
Possibly
West
lew to form four Jlmple wcrds.
I DAMAGE ?
shou ld have dropped
THVNI&lt;.
11'--.,..:/
THVN!o(.
the diamond jack on
ALFATO
THuN~
the
scco1id round of
THUNI'trumps, but that
IH UNK
THVNK
wouldn't . work
.'
againsl a suspic ious
MYLHP]
declarer. Slightly
1
1
!
more likely to sucg
ceed is a trbmp shift
, '!;j'J~::::::.:~~~iJ atdenly
trick three~ ud1.:::~------..1 ' :..:
in the dummy
T Y F IF
While in the drug store I overwith the diamond
• 1 1 1 1 ::: heard ·the pharmacist say to his
eight or I0, maybe
=·=~·;;;:::·~·~~., customer, " Take this medicine
SORR'&lt;, WRONG declarer would be
,..
,.. every fo~r hours, or as often as
tempted to take the
NUM8ER.,
C E· P K A T
you can get the - - - -. -."
heart finesse. But per~--,~..:;5~~1'"6,....,..1~~--T~---1 G) Comploto tho chuckle quoted
haps he would notice
. .....1.-.l.. .....1.
by fllllng in the mlulng words
L.....l.--.1.. ...:..J..
the strong scent of royou dovtlop lrom '"P No . 3 below.
dent and, guessi ng
what was happening,
would drop the hean
king anyway. And
South certain ly"would
if he could see around
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS·.
corners.
T~rror- Yacht- Bumpy- Waiter. IT is .YOU
The supervisor had mistakenly dialed his own secre·
tary . She answered the phone, held up the receiver and
motioned to him. "Is it for me?" he asked . "No " she '
NEWSPAPERS
laur~hed
, " IT Is YOU!"
·
.
'
Cover All The

i

BIG NATE ·
HE C.LAIM,

H1111NG

IN THE HF::AD
lo/ITH AN EMPTY PLA~TK
SODA 80TTL.&lt;E;_;.I::_~-&lt; I
HIM~EI..F

RELAXING

~

THUN~ .

STAFF REPORT

•

)!

[')l&lt;:l.J\U.'&gt; 7

· Gallipolis man
accused In
,shooting

13 "Ar1bl1n
roo•
Nlahta"' 40 TraHic anarl
Alf(hyph.)
18 Whul cov, 41 Pari oi
or
SEATO
19 ·Potar- ot 43 Bart~
tllma
45 Horrible
20 Make numb
bo"
22 FIMrm
48 Ollamta.
pari
47 www
23 Mr. Spock't 1ddrt111
mothtr
48 Vote In
24 Spoke
· f1vor
25 Way out . 50 Whir 141der
21 Ahtllth "'" 51 Space
aort .
width•
30 Ho..,., In 52 Ruby or
. tho phone . Sondrl
book
34 Gawktro ·
35 Mort! mo·

.GALLIPOLIS - Lowell
L. Harris, 20. 607 Socond
. Ave .. Gallipolis, is curren1ly beiQg held in the Gnlliu
·County jail following u
shaoling about 5JO p.m.
Wednesday at ·the Spring
V11lley Cinema. 1284
Jack~on Pike . ·
lfurris wus churgcd with
felonious assnull tlflcr he
allegedly gunned down II
man in the purking lot al
th¢ Cinema.
Michael B. Myers. 36,
l'hird Ave., Gullipolis,
wus mkcn !o Holzer
Medical Center by GnUiu
County EMS for un injury
to his leg and loss of blood
nfler he was shot •with .n
.38-culiber hundgun.
According to the Gulliu
County Sheriff's (')ffice.
Myers nnd an ucquuintunce, Henther Armstrong,
29, uf 13 Left Fork Roud,
Bidwell, hud pulled inlu the
parking lot und were Utlk·
mg to the victim' s brother.
Billy Myers, 32, 251 Grub
R;nad, Patriot, when Hn:Tis
und Dora A.. Denney, 18, of
a·eaver. pulled into the
p~rking lot behind him.
·: Armstrong, .Hm:ris and
Denney gnt into u verbal
uigument, the . sheriff's
report suid. When Myei·s
begun wulkin~ towurd
J-tarris' cur, Hurns pu lied u
h~ndgunund fired m Myers.
:Harris fled but was
at:&gt;prehended in Jackson
(.punty after an all points
bulletin was released on his
vehicle,
a
bluck
Oldsmobile 88.
The shoming ,is still
investigated by Galli a
County· Sheriff's Detective
Chud Wallace.
A urraignment hearing
wus eKpected to be scheduled Iuter toduy.

no

suits.

.THE
,. BORN LOSER

Dodgers knock out Reds, B1

I

~~~

I

LIN\IS.W~AT AM

L.

1 601N6 TO DO 7

I

I

IWEDNESDAY
I

MoJo! Subjocbl

-,-.".-~-.·-,_1,--,_--·IC ~.!'h,._,
~ ..------------

- -.-r-h.-,,"d-.,,-..-.•
,
"

.

Lt!t y, &gt;ui· p:.t-.:[ I! Xpc n ~n ~o:.:" .
uhm•' 'Nit h Ill~ n~ '·'' aware n~.· .....;

)&lt;::: 'll acquire in the ''"'

;1head . g u 1J~ ynu over ' old
s lumhlin ~ · hloJC k;. In the

mon :hs tlia: follow vou can

turn them ill II) 'lll.'ppi n·.:; stolh.: '\
thJt le&lt;.~J tu o.; uL:r~o.;s.
LE.o (Jill \. -'.'•·.·\::•.•. ,_,_) ..

L o~tl..:' 'ihiH~ l d ·rrl2\ ;II 0\'t..'r

~: nwt tnn .ll Hh.: lliHII J\IIh toli.lv
\\ h~:n d.t!a lnl•_.! \\ 11h O JJJJt h i n~
..
\1 \!\\ pO HII'. \O:I d~ ' lt::l \- 1..:' room
t'nr 'lll llle ';.!1\.l.'-Jlld-IJk...'. \\ h•H

i1 "!nahie":or you :nay '"" be

-

-.,..

~
·you could end up

. ~.

.

hol~ng fh~:

bag on a JX)Orly performed

jut&gt;.

SCORPIO IOcr. ~.\, Nov .
22 1 ·· !I' you are afraid 10 as·

· s..:rt yol!rsc:lf · today when
working coOcctivc.ly

with

an -

oth~ron unambitious project.
)'~ lur r~.·ar may tempt you tL)

at,:t :mr~c ptiti,,u o; ly in :-. tl.!aJ t) t'
in the! upc.•n -- and vnu

vm

ma.v bl! ac~uo;l!iJ

i.Jt'

bc'1 nil...

snt!uky.

10

ti,m;.~lly.

rctlc~..~t on it uncmo ..

PISCES (Feb . 20 -March
20)
This may be: one: of
those duys when you feel
things huyc piled up on you to
u

the puint wh~re they ovcr whe lm you. Don't uso· your
.energy on bmuumg
...•. ; use ·11 on
doing whal you can .
ARIES (Murch 21 - Aprlll ~J}
-- Dnn 't feel likc you hitve to
ar.:~,;ept

an invit;.~tion toduy thai
includes someone= you di~like .

It's ali right to be selective rc·
garding your :;o~,: ial involvc-

somclhin"e an oth~r " ' )';IS a

"'·J ~ IIl1,\prr
• ·· "Y
20l ·'.."' 13 rii
g home :HHTIC ·
o n ~ tod ay \1.-hU yo u kno•V
your spou..,t. : N famil y.docsn' r
lik~ is 11l)[ bdn" v~ry kind .
:;,
..
K~ep till s p~rs&lt;&gt;n · out ol lhc

~t.!n s itivt.! tllday und t a k~

rl.! vt!a_l'\ wlw.: h s1gns arc: m pL'rft:L:l for you .

:HJtl!rtli!Ol a.; "' 0 all•H: k 1"

_. 111 &lt;111tH•.: all y

time

SAGITTARIUS (:oio~v , : JDe~: . '2\ J -~ There i s~ ~tron1!
po!lsi bilil~ tlhr ) 'l ~! Wil l b~

!'iO lm .u1 ntha . Knnw when!
lo l no ~ rnr ·r,l mJO I:t! and
.vqu "ll ri nd II. The A slro ..

.
( Haph
M:il . : hnwJ... ~ r in.; rantly

ing to it nnw, givo yourself

pt:r'ion .ll at'fl'llnl.

T rc:.tll tl~ .a

mcnt~. Pulirdy tJcdinl!.
·r'"R ''S
'I "' OM

M.lil
$2 .75 1:1 1\l!alchmcok~r:
I I
..,
c" t '" ncw , papcr. P.O. Bo•
167. WidlitTc, OH 4409: .
VIRGO IA::g . 23-Scpt. ~21
-· s, l_mconc may try 10 con VIIK'c yuu tutlay that you nl!ed

""tly due 111 u lack ofb"l id
CAPRICOR:&gt;J (Dec. :!:!-Jan,
191·· Oc alert today li.Jr de·

(ace of ynur lnvcd one•. Ar'ter
all. il i• thcir h&lt;lm~ . too .

vclop!OCilt"i that C•mld otlill"w
_
L"Ith.:r-4 ll&gt; trl!:ul 011 your o;ym-

·- Thi s might be a day wh!O!n

.l"isuc.
.

rl.!o;o urcc'i .

1\l ~u rn:ndcr to him/h~:r on an

even 1hou g11 you may
have g&lt;x1d n:il'i,bn to stand up
tu th 1o; .pcr..,LJn . Take a tirmer

~ t anct: .

LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23) _

- Be caroful in whom you

place your trust toduy. If you
selccLsomeon~ bos&lt;d on tryin~ Ill be kind to this porson

ln slcJd of 6n comp!.!ll!nc y .-

11

in VOUf\l!lf.

purhl.!lic n"aturc and usl.! your

11\S I~ ;.u.l nf tht!ir

own , in accomplio;h th~ir

~oal :;: Don't be u'\eJ by tak.t'rs.

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-F&lt;b.
I'!) ·· A person with whom
you huvt:!! u relatu&gt;nshlft could
••veal a siile of hj!~ .~crl~ clf
today that "'"Y be '11 !'u.tl&lt;l
~ndcrs lanJ . .Jn~tcaU ot react-

GEMINI (MJy :!I ~Jur.c: 20)

11111.. 1 ,,f·V()Ur ~ncm11Hcr" wi1h

l :th··r~
'n••~ an,u
.. , ··r:•
.. . . "h:·l ...,.11111·11"
,1
un.:;:n;1i n. lh&gt;"-I.:H.'r. if ynu'rl.!
o;m,lrt. whalthh aft'nrd'\ you 1'1

a nl! w -scn .. lti vdy anc.l

awart:·

""'"·
CANCER (June 11 ·Julv 2!l :
--- Avoid pl;.~ying the viLtim or 1
martyr rok toduy nvcr what
youJJn not hJve ht&lt;lthink ym:
are entitled Lo.
·

.

Plans proceed.for Hobson expansion
.

Feasibility stt.~dy,
design plans nearing
· completion

mellls .:oulll be
completed, inclltding new " 'l'tinns of
tmtk , puving, 11
switL·hin~ fudlily
und II: nc mg un the
propeny.
The
imllrovcments ure p unned
in till eflt1rt tl1
;;ncouruge
lt'-'ttl
VARNADOE
businesses, indtiding lumhcryurds.
11reenhouses und . farm equipnlCtlt
firms in the region. to use the tucility
to export their products.
ll 'is ulso hoped. Vurnudoe suid, lhm
the improvements might ullow fur jon
creation ul the fucility: where JK full1ime employees now wurk.

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM
HOBSON - Economk dcvclupt1lent officiuls nnd the Norfolk
Southern Railroad ttre en•·ouruged by
locul support for renovlltions und
expunsiun ul the Hobson ruil yun.l .
Accordingto
Economic
DireL·tur
Perry
Development
Varnadoe, those rcnovutions could
begin curly neKt spring if .funding is
secured. About ,$500,000 in improve-

•

.

'

OHIO
Pick 3: 8·8·8
Pick 4: 9·3-7-3

•

recording
'

Bv DAN

HIRMII

DH CR M~Slii'M VDAI\ Y R cU I Sl~O

.

Lotteries

th&lt;' t\nm..·,"
A f~n"llihl\. \!uti\ uml t1 nnl Llcill"llil
.
..
nrc nnw :wnll tl !l •·ompletiun,
Vnrmt\lue ~ntd .
"W~ think 1t\ imj\Qrtttm . Hl mtwt:
uhculi on th ... , ... . imprtlH' mrnts ,"
Vnrnudue ,nid. "lloh"m ·b ·ill&gt;illtnunl
tl&gt; tho wmmunlt) . unll 1ho,e Joh;. ure
impl'l'tunt. Anli .t&gt;tll'c )l&gt;il ln&gt;e ' ume·
,
thin!! liken rml htL' Iilt). It ", l!llt11.' hlr·
c i"CI',· 'o 11~ 're ~· n~t,urug,·\1 hy the lvcul
'~'Pilnrt und the 1\lllin ~ neM• llr
Nmfnlk Smnlwrn tn wurl with us tu
pt't' s~t·vc 1ho;,~ -.' l'l'k,.,:·
Ill

JUrors
hea·r 911

was his final road of trash to be turned Into cash before the money he had accumulated over the past
year was sent to the Shrlners Children's Hospital. (Charlene Hoeflich)

High: 90s, Low: 60s
Det811•, Al

it

'

ANOTHER LOAD- Walt Manley was enroute to Manley's Recycling Center In Middleport with his pick·

Weather

} urd."" \'urnnt.lu..• 'n i&lt;l W~dne~lltt) . ,
" \\\ •'re 'ltlt ~~~'llltll! 1\''lll 'tl'~' th •m
lt'l.'tt l \lu'itl~"~' "ht• hm r u'~\l mil in
th~ j'U\I , ttl\' U\\1\): tl 1\ll\\ nr tni!lht U'-C

Yanko
.

NOT JUST A. HOBBY

.

Manley's work supports
Shriners' hospitafs
·

And mising money so lhnt children cun ~et the
care they need i,l whut Munley hus been doma for
TUPPERS PLAINS - While many SR-year-old years.
,
Suptrlotto: 3-9·17-30·35·42
men like Wult Munley spe~d their ~ays sitting ut , In addition to collecting cans which remnin the
Kicker: 3·0·8·1·8·4
home, he's out there collecllng ulummum cuns.
mujor part of whut he d(\CS, he hns added a little
Buckeye 5: 4-9· 14·23.·30
No it's not jusl a hobby for him , it's serious busi- junk, like rudiutors und scrup metul. which he cun
Pick 3 nl1ht: 9·6· 2
ness because every cent he gets' from selling those se ll at Munley's Recycling Center in Middleport.
Pick 4 nl1ht: 2+7-1
cun~ he collects goes to suppon the Shriners Because of where the 111oncy goes, the recycling
Children 's Hospital in Cincinnuti.
center gives him u premium on whutevcr he brinss
W.VA.
Last month, the Athens Shrine Club, to which in to sell.
·
Oelly 3: 4-4· 7
Manley belongs, sent $8,697.41 as Meigs
Manley describes him~~elf as "like a milk man who
D•lly 4: 8-3·9·0
county's contribution to the Shriners Bum Center has a regulur route he travels nnce or twice a week."
Powtrb•ll: 2·4·6·22-34 (26)
in Cinci nnati.
He not only picks up cans ll)ong the roud, &amp;ul has
Nearly half of that came from Manley's can friends und businesses who s11ve them for him.
sales. The rest came from local contributions,
"WIIhou~ them, it would· be harder for me to get
including Forked Run Gun Club, which raised money together for the chi ldren," he said,
$1,000 from a gun shoot, the Eagles Club, which
What he collects each week he srnrcs in an old
made
a
$500
donation,
and,
sales
on
Shriners
building
at · his hOme and then when he thinks
3 Stdlon• - II Pill••
tabloid
day
in
Meigs
County.
.
·
.
there's
enough
to fill his pickup truck. c11lled "old
Calendar
AS
Definitely not a man of few words, Manley stinky," he hauls itto the recycling center where he
Classifieds
BS· 7 . loves
to tell stories ' of his visits to the Cincinnati trades his trash for cash.
Comics
B8 · hospital, of the children he saw there, and of how
All of the money goes into a special bank
Dear Abby
A4
he felt when he left.
·
account to accumulate until June or July euch yeur
Editorials
A6 ·
"There was always a lump in my throat and a when it's added to other funds. lind senl by the
Movies
A3
tear in my eye, and I knew that in !lOme small w11y Shri,ne Cl ub to the Cincinnati Shrlners HoRpilal.
Obituaries
. A3
I was making a difference," he said.
· One friend affectionat,ely described Manley ~~~
Sports
Bl-5
"ShrincnJ Hospitals provide free medical care rochil- "Meigs CounJ_y's old ciln picker-UpPer with u pu~·
dren," explained Manley, "and it !likes people like me sion for helpmg chi ldren who cun't help themWeather
A2
to get out there and raise the money to help pay for it." ~~elves."
·
Cl 2002 Ohio Valley Publlshin1 Co.
BY CH4RLENE HOIFJ.ICH

HOEFLICH~MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Index

COM

POINT PI.E1\SANT. W.Vn .
llil'lll'' in !lw
Cuni' Yuuko · fu·,t ·d~llr•• c llllird,•r ll'lnl h~urd lhc
911 lnpc lhlll wu' :worded ~uri ~ in lh~ 1111\l'lling
111' Ocl. 2. 200 I , nflcr Y:llll\lltllc~~dl )' 'ht&gt;t Dunny
Arthm ~i~ timeN with u · J ~ culiher huml11un .
The ~uller wus Megun Hunnin11. 11 Mlmmme of
Arthur and glrlt'rlcmr of Ynnkn .
·
·
·~urt, what have
, th .J ,__ ,
you dune?" Httnnin~
Its e ue11:tlse S
usked Yunko uner 1he
contention that
shooting
.
M k0
· 'red
, "Cull the ~ups. cull
rm wa~ lmpol
the cops nuw.' Yunkn
the mght of the
nllegcdi,Y suid.
shooting while ,the
Hnnntng suid .th tll
prosecution has
·ufter the shool:ng,
b h·
.I
Ynnko went (l\1\Siue
. roug t msevero
und wns sin!:! In~:~. suy·
Witnesses who have .
ing
hh · Socin l
testified that Yanko
Sec~rity numher unci
didn't exhibit the
yc lhn~ .

1

,

th

•

Dele use ntlnrney
CraSSIC Signs at
Steve n
L,inlcp,ltl!e
moming after he
suid 1hut ,111s cltent
was arrested:
wok eig ht ZttnttK pills
h
1 red
I he night of the shootSlur.
in~ und wus ulsn
bloo.dshot eyes,
dnnkin~ '"40s"
and staggering.
slung fnr 40·\liiiiCe
houlc "of mull liquor.
It's !he uefensc's cnnlentinn thut Ynnkn wus
impuircd Ihe niJ:lhl of tile shoi1tin11 while the pros·
· ~cui inn hn~ hruu~:ht in · severn! wilne~se .s who
huw tcstil'iel.ltlllt.t Yunko didn't el'.hlbit !he clns·
sic signs thm morning af1er he wus nrrestcd:
Slurred speech, hloodshill eyes, und stuggcring.
Hanning 1es1ificd thut un the niuht or Oct. I, ut.
10 p.m .. Yunko culled Arthur's residence, ut
which time she left und wont over to Yunko's'
house ut 3218 Roush Ave. In Poin.t Plensunt .,
Ynnkt' mel Hunnlng ut the door wilh u gun held
behind his bu~k . Slll11ethlng she suid wus u first.
During thu! time. Yunko went and got a box cutler und Stllrlet.l cuuing hilnsell', Hunning suid.
She ul~o tc•lificd thut Yunko wunted to 11gh!
her brother, Shunnon, und then mllde the statement. "Danny Arthur, thul's unofher story. I've
got plans fur him.''
·
The del'ense's comention is 1hat Yanko hod
plnns to start plttY.in,g music . in n bund with
Arthur, nu.t pluns ol v1olence.
Hunning testified she left Yanko's nround mid·
night und the nel'.l time she saw him he was
stunding u few f'eet away from Danny Arthur In
the front room of 203 Poplar St. .
.
Liulepuge a~ked Hanmns If she wuN Nurprilied
to see Yunko ut Arthur·~ residence.
"YcH," she replied.
.
·
The prosecuuon presented un ID Caller ~~~ evi dence, showing Yanko'Hntune on it from the 10
p.m. call the previous night.
·
TeHtirnony iH expected 10 continue uxlay,

speec '

'

Kleis' Fair
Sponsored by .the HMC Pediatric Unit

Monday, Au1u1t S
.. 1 OaOO am • 2a0:0 p111
·Podiatric Unit (3rd Ploor)

. ME,DICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Differeltce

All ore welcome orid invited! Refreshments will be served!
Parents - bring tour child's immunization record for free fhecksl ·
For more

call

·
'·

I .

Since sprin~. Vttrnndoe unll
Middleport ufhduls httve ho&gt;tcll
meetin!!&gt; with rmlmud nl1kiuls mul
h'l.'ltl btt&gt; iii~S&gt;CS WJlllmight ltl.'l't» ntil
ll'lln;.porHIIion. til delermine whut
impmvemcnls might be mude 10
enmurug~ new ruil husinl!s~ .
.
A~:•·on.lin~: Ill Vurmtllue, lottn fumJ s
ure uvnilnbk !hMtgh the Ohiu Rnil
Commission li\ fudlimte the improvemcnts. If thnse funds nre stX,ureu, the
milroml would li~el~ turn the facilit y
over to 11 public enttl - the villn!lc
Ill'
C1•mmuni!y
lmpruvem 'tlt
Corpl&gt;l'lllinn, for · e~umple - unll uM:
rt•wnuc from the t'udlily's use tn
retire the deht .
'"It\ cnnlurnging lhut then:' uppe i tr~.
tti be ~lllllll!h Jllltcntiul mil hu~in~~s ttl
justify some cxpltnsion 111 1hc mil

.UP truck ,.loaded with aluminum cans when he stopped by The Dally Sentine l office earlier this week ; It

I I 1 I.J

PEANUTS

'

Hometown Newspaper

www.holzer.org
..

446·1071
,,
I

•

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