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                  <text>Page A 10 • The Dilly S.ntln~l

Tueldayl April 21 20911

www.mydalll•ntlnel.com.

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undlrllng
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22 Mort cozy
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32 PromiM .
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II

I'TUESDAY

APRIL 21

I I .I! I I I Ie
e

II

outrageou~ .

W~dn...Uy,

April3, 2U02

lu the yc:af ahead your ere&lt;~·
rive abilitie&gt; will bring about a
~uccntful co1~dtf~iun

"' a project that' • been difficult for orhrrs to launch.

IIRIES (March 21-April19)
-- Yuu'Jl giv~ much encouriilgC'mcnt to othen, but you
~~"' nuy dood it wid! a fi&lt;JP·
rive warning. ConK'quendy,

nn one will know what to do.
Aries, trrat yoon&lt;"lf to a binh~
day gift. Send for your A.troC"'f'h prrdiCiion• for the year
ahead by mailin~ $2 and SASE
to Jhlfo-Craph, c/o thi•
newtpaper, 1'.0. IJox 1758,
Muruy Hill Surion, New
York. NY IUI5lt. Ue surr to
&gt;Ute }'Otlf lo.JUHI!tJI. • "'" .
TfiURUS (o''l'ril 20-M•y
2fl) -- It\ 0~ to offer «&gt;nt&lt;·
op«: wntnd .Wvi,c, b.n oiT'"nnJf
financial ;nsittancr to bail

tl;e1;, out could be, a major
· mi•uk~. Don't put· op any
h:ud money.

CEMINI .(May 21-Junc 20)
-- Your ,,.u,ul lcadrnhip

qu.1hti~ ~r~ nlwtom. lo uthct\.
Unfunun;atclf, tt"J not obvi-

It)~·----

ouJ 10 you. :mP you could
r.1in o n pmr ·uwn p.tr.1 dt• .

iuic

VJIUolgC

J'OIIIt1

!iO

them to help out "omconc
cbc. Go for 1hc protluc1ivc

me.

LEO Qull 2.1-~u~;- 21) - It
nuy be. difficult for you to

this in a lukewarm fashiori . .

This could lead thent to b..licve that yuu don't n.•ally
c.·are-.

mainuin a po!itivr outlook,

(Doc. 22Jan. 19) -- 1\ poor attitutlr

so the Lut thing you 'II wam to

~1.'11Cr,1Jij' rro()\l(C.'~ undcsir.~bfc

do is to · turn to a negative

resulu . I yqu adopt •uch a
pmturc, w1ut )"Ou ptoducc
will be mcJJot.:r~ .It bl.'st. l
AQUARIUS (J•n. 20-F.rb.
19) -· If you mingle too ..,lec-

friend for rncouragen~mt.
VII~GO (/lug. 23-Scpt. 22)
-- You may ttrive Hard for
tomeching only co discover
that it provide• you with insignificant gratification. lie
surr- you know what you
want.

LIBRA (Stpc. 23-0cc. 23) c
Nobody wilf endor* JOm&lt;·
thing thot you Jock C.ich in.
Your unc&lt;rt.linty will be. euily picked up on by 01hm.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22), - Put younelf in the p&lt;Kiriob o( orhus to gee tilt

Deaths
George Hudson, 75
~gnes Widner, 84 "
Details, 3

..

BY BRIAN J•. REiD
BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

KDOTSONOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - After 15
months of waiting, a little
bundle of joy from Vietnam
entered the lives of local couple Cliff and Angie Queen.
Phan Thi Quynh Thanh, or
as her new family ~n Gallia
·Hlp: 501, Low: 201
County
knows her, Katie Linh
. · Details, 2 ·
Queen, now quietly and happily :inuggles in her parents'
arms after flying half way
around the world from a Red
Cross Orphanage in DaNang. .
In the Tuesday, April 2
Now 5- I 12 months old, litedition of The Daily Sentle Katie is "so very beautiful,
tinel, it was incorrectly
when I ·look at her my eyes
noted that the OMEA
water;' said proud papa Cliff
Honor Band concert is
"I just can',t believe she's BUNDLE. OF JOY - New mommy Angle Queen snuggles her
scheduled 10 take place at7
ours, God realty blesse.d us," bundle of joy Katie for the second time at the "Giving and
p.m. Saturday at Peden ·
said a tearful Angie.
Receiving~ ceremony at the Ministry of Justice In DaNang.
Auditorium in !ithens.
.,.
And this is how the storY,.•)~ubmltted)
The concert will be held
went...
•·
at Mem&lt;lrial Auditorium
mo~li'ds and mounds of
In December 2000, the
'.'There were parents with
on the campus of Ohio
paperwork.
children from Russia, China
Queens decided to adopt.
University in Athens at 7
"They required, just to
They tim looked domesti- and Vietnam:· said ClifT. "An
p.m. Saturday.
.name
a few, five letters of refcally, but the waiting lists were older. (50ish) couple was
so 'lmig that they decided to standin~ off to the side with erence, marriage license, our
go outside the U.S. borders the most beautiful little baby birth certificates, medical
and contacted .the EAC we had ever seen and we statemel)t of health, employ(European Adoption Agency) knew right then and there it ment status, local police clearjust outside of Cleveland.
was Vietnam for. u~."
. ance, fina _ncial statements., tax
They attended their first . The Queens sa1d that ch~l­ forms, and fingerprinting by
POMEROY- Gasoline
prices in south central and . meeting in Columbus, where . dren from V 1et~am were avail- both the Bureau of Criminal
other parents that had adopted able for adoption as young as Investigation and the lmmi- ·
southeastern Ohio jumped
successfully shared their stories three months and that the gration Nat11ralization Ser- ·
four cents this week, with
·
and proudly showed off their waiting time was shorter.
the average price of regular
PIHH 1M Klltle, :S
new children.
Next came the paperwork
unleaded self-serve climbing to S1.368 per gallon.
The average price last
week was S1.329 per gallon.

Weatlier

Co1aeclion

,.

G8s prices
on the rise

Relay for Life organizing in Meigs Co..
BY 'CHARLINE HOEFUCH

Lotteries

HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL 0COM

OHIO

~J:o-:J-7

Pick 4: 7-3-5-6
Juckeye 5: 8-13-16-2l-25
flldl J day: 9-1-3
~ 4 clay: 6-6-0-0
W.VA:

Oally J: 9-6-7
:O.IIY 4: 4-2-3-5

.
. .
:casli 25: 1-12-16-19-20

ISidiiR-11 ......

calendar
Classifieds

Comics
Dear Abby
fditorials
Movies
s~

5

7-9
10

5
4
3
3
~7

2

e 2002 Ol1io volley l'l!bliollins eo.

POMEROY - I f you like
to walk or jog and enjoy
combining a good time wich
a good cause, why not orga~
nize a team for . the Meigs
County Relay for Life to be
held' May 3-4 at Eastern High
Schqol?
Plans are moving forward
for the .signature event of the
American Cancer Society, an
18-hour relay where t~ms
take turns walking or jogging
around the track I!Sually 30 ·
minutes at a time, all night
long, while camping out at
.
the ,ite.
To get started, JoAnn Cmp,
chairman, suggests "gatherin!l
up a team of 10 co 15 upbeat,
fun-loving people, select a
team, captain and a team
name, pay the regismtion fee
of $25, and tben get out there

. . .. ••• -

....,, J

FIRST TEAMS - Th~y call themselves the 'Racers' and the
"Glow Worms.' uie two teams of Farmers Bank employees
who were the first to register to par.ticlpate In the Meigs County 2002 Relay for life. Chairing the "Glow Worms" are Amy
Young, Tamml Zirkle and Kristy Greenlee; while leaders of the
"Racers~ are Vicki Hoffman and Amy Davis, pictured left to
right. (Charlene Hoeflich)
•

The Holzer Health Horline. is now...

POMEROY -Th~ deficit in Meigs County's 2002 sales.
taX revenue continues to climb, a.month before a proposed
increase in the tax, to be set aside for law enforcement,
comes before a vote.
,
The county's deficit in revenue from sales tax, compared
to last year's revenue at this time, is now at $20,950, with the
receilt receipt of$86,494.39 in january revenue. l
In 2001, the county received .$99,805 in local sales 1ax
revenue based on January sales, and in 2000, $102,385.
The monthly loss in sales tax revenue is ·largely blamed on
. last year's closing of Pamida in Pomeroy and Jerry' Bibbee
Ford in MiddlepO{t, according to Auditor Nancy Parker
Campbell, but does not hecessarily reflect a further downturn in the local retail economy. Rather, the continuing
deficit is a sign of the loss of larger retail stores from those
two businesses.
Meigs County commissione_rs have approved the placement of a half-percent sales tax increase proposal on the
May 7 primary ballot. ·
While they battle with the continued increase in the costs
of operating county governntent, combined with the loss of
revenue from local government funds, sales tax and persot1·
al property tax revenue from the closing of the Southern
Ohio Coal Co., commissioners will not use ·additional revenue for general operations .
Instead, they say they will pledge the revenue from the tax
increase, if it is approved, toward the operation of the sheriff's department, jail and other law enforcement operations.
•

Plans finalized
for- "ellow Flag'
sale May 3-4
FROM STAFF REPORTS

MIDDLEPORT - Final plans are underway for Middleport's annuJI Yellow Flag Yard Sale, set for May 3-4. .
Susan Baker, event chairman, discussed the sale and tts
promotion at Tuesday's monthly meeting of the Middleport
community Association. The association, along· wi.th the
Pomeroy Retail Merchant•. Association, are to-sponsors of
the community-wide yad sale.
Those who wish to participate in th~ sale will pay $5 for
a yellow flag to mark their sale location, as well as a listing
on a locator map to be included in all promotional materials. The association has approved payment of costs associated with advertising the event
in Meigs, Athens and Gallia
counties and Mason County,
W.Va.
Flyers and promotional
handouts will also be distributed, said Baker.
"This is a great opportunithe port of
ty, and a good bargain
because no advertising is portidponts. F"tve
necessary on the part of indiof
vidual parlicipams," Baker
said. "Five dollars takes care
\lf all promotional needs."
Su11n Bokw, ule chelrnwn
·For those who do not live
in the villages of Pomeroy ~nd Middleport, a S10 fee wiU
allow set up in either the Pomeroy or Middleport municipal parking lots, and listing on the locator Jl}ap.
· .
Participating Middleport and Pomeroy merchants w1ll
hold sidCwalk sale promotions during the yard sale weekend..
.
·
The association also discussed continuing plans for july 4,
· and the prog~ess on fund-raising for fireworks. A souvenir
water bottle which will be sold to help raise funds for the .
firework.&lt; display, was unveiled.
·
.
Several local mercllanL&lt; have purchased the..bottles for use
as in-store promotions, and the bottles will also be sold in
local shops to help raise funds.
.
It was announced that Donald "Dodger" Vaughan and
tourism director Betsy Herald Nicodemus will coordinate
July 4 entertainment.

pression as Sdmeone who is

aldof md haoghry.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mareh 20)
•• If you ne overly protective
of thosr in your c_~argt, they
will feel ·mangled and lind
way• to avoid you ,. detpite
. your JPOd inunriom.

If you have health questions or concerns, call
River Cities Nurse On-Call and speak to a ·
specially trained RN.

r

Check with your physician obout medicotion coticem5.
I

...

"This is a great
opportunity, and
·a gOod bargain
because no advertising is necessary on
individual
dollars takes core all
promotional needs."

.

. Rhrer Cities
N
.
.
.
On-Call
.
.
1-800 462-5255

tivrly at a tacial JPthering,
you .could leave a fatting im-··

proper .prnpC'clivc un tf..cir opinion•. It'll l'lvr you a re•f-

•

·deficit

January proceeds down $13, 000

Bv KRII DoTION
•

VV~er
~

•

County
couple:
-recounts .
adoption

Indians stop Angels, 6

Obituaries

CAI&gt;I~ICORN

'.

Galli a

•

'

TUrevenue

•

you •

won't delude younclf.
·
CANCER Uune 21-July
SAGITTAIUUS (Nuv. 2.112) -... Vl)U C.m lUC' l'llmtit1n ,
Drc. 21) ·· You may be sop- ··
ponive oflovcd ones, but un"' 'h:r~r .mJ ~o.·''"'P·'"' ..IUn w red
torry litr ~·nur4t.· lf. .or .1pply .P fortunately you fllight relay

Hometown Newspaper

'

..nge

44 F111tmlty
lettor ' '
45 COuntltl'l
epouH
46 MonKobl
tribe
46 Milo., In
Borctlono
49 Wl'ltiCh or
honlllltr
50 Big Foot'•
couoln
52 Mile gypar

r::~:t:~T S©"R~"M.-~"E~s·

!

THERE5. NO
TUI!NIN(,

Whafs ·inside

41 Mtlld'l
ltltnd
43 Arkanllt

"To c or not to
be: thai is the question. whether 'tis •nobler in the mind to ·
sulfer the slings and
arrows of outrageous
fortune. :. " This is a
well-known passage,
53 LimOn
drlilk
bi1t the letters can be
54 Fruler of
rearranged to rroboxing
·Ollcc: "In one o ·the
.-..~!'Uard's best-thought~
of tragedies, our insis-,
tcut . hero, Hamlet,
queries on two fronts
about how life turns
rotten."
'In today's deal, you
arc hlc&lt;·d with finesses
on two fronts. After
West leads a low diamond, liow would
you plan the play in
both six spades and
s&lt;·ven spades?
What should North
do when he hears his
partner open a weak
!WO spades, showing a
,lcccnt ~ix-card suit
and some u- 10 highCELEBRITY CIPHER
em! points?
by Lui• Campo1
First, he should vcrCelebrlly Cipher cryptograms are .created lrom quot8llon1 by lamout
people, past and preHnl. Each leiter In the cipher atanda lor anotn.r.
&gt;fy their cards have
Today's cluo: G equals L
the same backs. Then
he slwuld check for
'ZFUDU
J D U
J
acz c s
kiugs . If South has
two, seven spades and
F U J T B
FUJDZP
R H
Z F U
seven no-trump will
GCEAUO
surely be . fine conDCCL .• '
tracts. However, note
ZDUTCD
FCSSLJH,
CH
that North must ask
for aces first, although
ZFU
KUJZF
CS
WJKDU
he know• the answer;
•
only then can he inZUJLLJZU
L R A U K J o·o
quire about king•. ·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Fool: what a man can be wllhout
Here, North would
knowln~ II, but not II he'a married.'- Evan Esar
settle for either six
spades · or six nowon
OAMI
trump.
ldlltc by ClAY R. POlLAN
In six spades, South
Recrronge · letter• of fh•
needs one minor-suit
four scrgmbled words befinesse to work. So, low 10 form lour ~mple wordt.
he should. finme in
ELPNOY
diamonds at trkk one.
If it loses, he wi1" the
12
return, draws trumps,
and tries the club fiP L E XE
nesse.
In seven spades,
13
though, the diamond
finesse is a mirage.
Even if it wins, deU T E Q 1:::
Famous comic on fashion :
clarer still needs the
'They should put expiration dates
club fine!Se to sucon clothes . That way people
would know when what they are
ceed. And if the club
SIDVCI
wearing has gone out of· - - - .:
finesse is working,
~
Complete the chuckle' quoted
there are three cll!b
by filling In lhe milling wordt •
tricks available, to go
you develop from ofop No. 3 below.
with ~ix •l&gt;adcs, three.
PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
heam and one diaTHESE SQUARES
mun.t. So, South
A UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
should win with
V
TO GET ANSWER
·
du rnmy 's diamond
ace,\ draw trumps
SCIIAM-LETS ANSWEIIS
ending in hand, and
.tunket- Pilot- Giant- Neatly- TAKE: IT
lead the club jack for
People are always asking me for advice. 1 can come
a ti••cssc. If it wins,
up with some very sound advice for lhem. The problem
is that I'm not smart enough to TAKE IT.
the opponents will
feel your fortune was

"""

i HOPE. MV"SUPPER I'M SHOR
WUZ TO SNU~~'Y 'S IT WUZ
LIKIN I I LOWEEZ.Y ~I ELVINE'Y!!

Southem bl~sts River Valley, 6

.. MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer J?ifference

www.holzer.org

.
"

••

�.

.

)

•

·•

.. ..

-~

•••

.

Page 2~

Ohio
One year after riots, Cincinnati
struggleS. with bpycott, change:;

• The Daily·Sentinel

.

Ohio weather
Thurac:tay, April 4

• !Calumbu•IW141' I

"'

Cooler conditions will linger
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Colder conditions will stay with us for the rest of this week,
the National Weather Service said.
Daytimes highs will be mos~y in the 40s through Saturday,.
while overnight lows will be in the 20s, forecasters sa1d.
·
Sunset tonight will be at 6:58, and sunrise on Thursday is at
6:11 a.m;
·
·
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Beco1ning mostly clear by early evening. Lows in
the upper 20s. North winds 5 to 10 mph.
·
Thursday... Partly sunny. Highs in the lower 50s. North winds
5 to 10 mph.
Thur~day night ... Mostly cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... A mix of clouds and sunshine. Highs in the lower
50s.
Friday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows near 30.
Samrday. .. ~artly cloudy. Highs in the lower 60s..
.
Sunday.. .Increasing cloudiness. A · chance ·of showers late.
Lows in the ntid 30s and highs in the upper 60s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy with a ch~nce of showers. Lows in
the upper 40s and highs in the mid 60s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s and highs in the ·
lower 60s.

· CINC:INNAT[ (AP) - A ~u after
the polic&lt;' shooting of on· unarmed black
man sparked days of rioting. ·signs of
healing an· mixed with all ongQing
sour.:e of divhtcln: a boycott called to
prompt social change.
Black octivim have prevailed on entertainm like Bill Cosby and Whoopi
Goldberg to cancel ~ppearanccs in
Cincinnati, and urged others to avoid
spending money in d1c downtown business district.
But some bbck business owmm and
others say the boycott has slowed the
economic health of the city and jeopardized jobs - the . opposite of what its
backers intended.
"They do not speak for the masses absolutely not," said Tom Jones, 57. who
has a graphic arts business and ran
unsuccessfully for Cinci nnati City
Council in November.
Jeff Ruby, who is white and is owner
of one of the city's once-busiest steakhouses, said the boycott has mostly hurt
the hospitality industry. "We have tu rneq
this great town into a ghost town," he
said.
·
Boycott backers ~ay the costs are
worth the struggle. They are seeking
social and economic eq11~1ity and public
accountability of police. They also want
a citizens police revicw'panel to be given
pow.~r t9 subpoena pohcc officers to testify a.bout usc of force.
·
"We have just asked anyone who can
help nc:it to come to Cincinnati until we
see justice for our dead and economic
inclusion," said spokeswoman· Amanda
Mayes.
Cosby, Goldberg, Wynton Marsalis, the
O'Jays and the Temptations all can celed
appearances, and the Progressive National Baptist ConVention moved its -10,000-

L---------------------------------------.. . . - - - o:.
member two weeks ago
On Monday night, Per•' '
Vote jeopardizes inboard
Pollee hunt · rysville
Washington, D.C.
's five-memb er
•:
Henderson
said
Bush
wants
lage council voted to fire
rail plan
stolen marker Sommer
mput on policy and funding
for staging a traffic
v ii~ ·

Tentative settlement
reached in Cincinnati
police lawsyit

I,

AKRON (AP) - A pro- relating to issues cencerning
MARION
(AP).
posed commuter rail line from historically black colleges and Po.lice are searching for the
Cleveland to Akron is in jeop- ·universities.
5-foot- 6,
1000-pound
ardy after the governing board
"We're to review the com- cast-iron flower urn that
of
the
Akron
Metropolitan
marked
Wenona
mitment from all of the feder-· has
.
. '
.
.
Area Transportation Study · al age ncies who have programs Sweney's grave in Ma,jon
voted against it. '
that arc designed to encourage Cemetery sirtce 1910.
Plannin g organizations in researc h a c tivities~' he said.
The urn, which has an
.
.
Cuyahoga and Stark counties
estimated
value
of
could stiU push for conunuter
$20,000, was taken sof!1eCINCINNATI (AP) - A meeting again on Thursday. rail scrv\cc, but there is no
time last week. Police have
tentative settlement was The court had given the par- interest iu Summit CouJi ty,
no suspects in the theft.
reached early Wednesday in a ties until this Friday to settle said Ken Hanson, executive
Jim Riedl, who is superyear-old lawsuit filed against the lawsuit or face taking it to director of the transportation· 1 RE ADING (AP) - A man intet1dent
of
Marion
the city by activists who trial.
agency.
arrested in the deaths of his Cemetery, believes out-ofaccuse police of illegally tarLast . Friday, representatives
Hanson said the $170 mil- former sister-in-law and his town thieves stole the urn
geting and harassing blacks on of the Justice I;&gt;epartment lion project was hurt by a cen- two next-door neighbors was and sold it to a private colthe basis of race.
· .
joined the settlement talks sultanc's draft report that ~aid charged with three counts o( lector.
·
Negotiators for the city, the which included the police the rail line would provide few aggravated murder, police said. He said the urn was
Cincinnati Black United department, the ACLU, the benefits to Summit County
Robert Cordell, 43, of this removed before for mainFront and the American Civil Fraternal Order of Police and and attract few riders.
Cincinnati suburb, was being tenance, so it may not have
Liberties Unicin announced civil-rights leaders.
The report also said the cast held Wednesday in the Harnil- drawn attention if somethe agreement.
The Justice Department, at of developing commuter rail ton County jail in the death of one put a f«ke decal on
Scott Greenwood, general t~e mayor's request, is invcstigat- would be hi gh and would not his 40-year-old former sister- their truck an4 tOok it
counsel for the ACLU · in . ing the police department's pro- reduce traffic congestion along in-law, Kathleen Cordell, and away.
·Ohio, said terms of the agree- cedures and has reconunended Interstate 77. ·
the deaths of former Reading
m.ent would be released numerous changes to enhance
Maypr Frar)k Ca rnevale and
Wednesday afternoon .
training and shore up record ·
Carneva l e'~
ex-wife, Rita
"'This will give us the most keeping and vague policies.
Bushman.
comprehensive · community
The negotiators. agreed that
"It's basically a triple homirelations ageeement in the Justice Department recom- '
ASHLAND {AP) - A forcide," police Chief Greg
CLEVELAND (AP) - A Hilling said at a news confer- mer police c;hief who . was
· country," Greenwood said. mendations for improving
"No other city has don~ what police procedures would be federal grand jury on Tuesday ence late Tuesday.
fired for covering up an
·mcorporated m
· the ·1awsu1t
· indicted two irnmtes accused . Carnevale, 72, and Bush- accidental . Jhooting was
We have done he ••e."
He called it a collaborative settlel)1ent, Greenwood said.
of orchestrating bank holdups man, 68, were found dead arrested Tuesday night • and
"We think we have an through a prison phone.
agreement for solving racial
with b'lliuhot wounds to the will be charged with filing a
problenu, "not just pointing agreement that Will be a ]and- ' Prosecutors say Warren head early Tuesday after fire- false report, official! said.
fingers."
mark for this city;' said the Cromety thought u.p th e fighters responded to a caU
Tim Sommer was arrested
The lawsuit, Jlled in March Rev. Damon Lynch III • presi- scheme so he 'ould afford an about smo'-e coming from without incident at his home
2001, accused the "city of dent of the Cincinnati Black attorney to win .an appeal to their house.
in Glenmont about 6 p.m. by
decades of discrimination United · Front. "For this get him out of prison.
Ashland County sheriff's
against blacks. It sought a nation."
Cromety, his stepbrother
deputies. He could appear in
, hi ngton · and three othen face consp.ir. a· ...
court Wednesday, Prosecutor
Bill y Martm
court o~der "ermanerldy prowas
"
D
c
'
·
th
'
.
acy
charges
involvin
~
the
robRobert
DeSanto said.
•hibiting racial profiling by . . attorney represen 11 ng e b ·
f
F' M · b hk
.
ffi
Th
1· · · · h lks 'd h
enes o two 1rst ent a s
.
po I1ce d cers.
e po 1ce City m t e t1 , s~1 . t e 60- in Ak':ron. The robbers alleged- . CLEVELAND (AP) - U.S. .
department says it does not page document would be pre- 1 t 1 $27 000
Rep. jamu A. Traficant Jr. said
use racial profiling.
sented ~ to Cincinnati Ci~y y~~~ety,'27, ~fWarren, and he 'll have to get on the ~h.one
Three weeks after the law- Cou-ncil at 2 p.m. Wednesday. his friend, Frankie Porter, are to find more witnesses in h1s
. suit was filed, a white policeHe . md It Will address setving sentences ·in the corruption ·trial, angering the
man shot and killed an excessiVe use of force, how the Lebanon Correctiona! 'lnstitu- judge who doesn't want the
unarmed black man, touching pohce department addresses tion for murder and robbery, congressman to waste time.
off three days of riots. Timo- .those . allegations and how respectively.
"l have 220 cases pending in
this room," U.S. D.istrict Judge
thy Thonus, 19, who was acceSSible the department 11 tQ
peing. sought by police on . 'citizens.
Lesley Wells told Traficant on
misdemeanor charges, became
There will be one monitor
Tuesday. "You're suppo~ed to
the 15th black male to die in to oversee all of the changes in
S
be prepared."
. .
confrontation with city police the agreement and the federal
Traficant could -not tlame
since 1995.
.court will have oversight of
WILBERFORCE (Ap)-- any witnesses •he planned tO
Stephen R~ch, the officer that monitor, said Ken Law- Wilberforce University's presi- call Wedneaday but promised
who ahotThQnw, w.u acquit.. son, ah attorney for the plain- dent has become ,a member of WeUs he would make phone
· ted in 5epteffiber of m.isde- tiffs.
.
President Bush's national calls Tuesday night to see who
meanor charges of negligent
"That way the city has only boara of advisors fqr black: he could find.
homicide and obstructing one monitor tO answer to," he coUcges and universitieS.
Wells pounded her hand and
. or.:rial business.
said.
John Henderson !.aid Tucs- shouted for .order, and TrafiSt&lt;ttleiTU!nt talks had been · Greenwood &amp;id it is hoped &lt;Uy he wou honored to serve cant stormed out of the courtheld ofT and on.since the law- the agreellU!nt will not only on the President's Board of room after she ruled he could
wit was filed. 'h!lu were held change · race relations in Advisors on Historically. Black not call one of his staff' meJU.- .
· two weeks ago at Xavier Uni- Cincinnati but become the Colleges and Universitie-. ben as a witness.
venity and negotiaton began model for o'the~ cities.
• Henderson was sworn in as a ·

Suspect held
. in slayings

I

I,.

..

stop to cover up accidentally
shooting a hole in.,bi1,jlfuiser's windshield .
.
Sheriff's invcstig~tors con • .
cluded that after Sonuncr· '~
accidentally fired the shor ' l
through the windshield in' ' l
the police gara~e on Maidr !
19, he drove to a rural road •;
and staged a traffic stop.

Traflcant,
judp11pe

LOCAL BRIEFS
·EMs~

.....,.d
POMEROY - Units of
Meigs Emergenc;y Services
answered 12 calls for assistance on 1\iesclay. Units
responded as folloWJ:
CBNTRAL DISPATCH
5:38 a.m., Eagle Ridge, Joy
Combs, Holler Medical Center;
7:52 a.m., Rage Slleer, Mildml Hites, HMC; •
9:59 a.m., County R~d
. No. 5, Clmnce Boyer, Hf\1C;
11:43 . a.m., Butternut
Avenue, Sanh · Moon, Jessic;a
Davis, Ethel Boltz, refused
treatment;
2:30 p.m.,Veterans Memorial Hospital, Earlene Kennedy.
HMC;
8:19 p.m., Village Manor,
Tammy Dillon, HMC;
· 10:23 p.m., Maples, Harold
Hudnall, treated.

MJDDLBPORT

11:51 p.m., Kfrfcl Road
structure fire, assisted by
Pomeroy, Charl~s Ray Stewart
residence, no injuries.

ae.nupset

Ge01p Hudson

SYRACUSE Sutton
township trustees are making
preparation for spring cleanup
of cemeteries. Anyone wanting to keep grave decorations
to remove them by April 1S.

POMEROY - George Hudson, 75, Pomeroy, died.Tuesday,
April 2, 2002, at Holzer Medical Center.
Arrangements will be •nnounced by Foglesong-Thcker
Funenl Home in Mason, W.Va.

.Hunter safety

REEDSVILLE -Agnes Widner, 8.4, R«:edsville, died Tues$1ay, April 2, 2002, at her residence.
.
. '
She was born in ·Barlow on June 8, 1917, daughter of the late
Guy and Connie OggVanDyke.
.
.
Surviving are a son·, Bernard Bobo.ofReedsville; two daughters, .Cjlrolyn Willison of Columbus, and Virginia King of
Gllysville; a sister, Elizabeth Moore of Kentucky; ahd seven!
grandchildren.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Joseph; and
two brothers, Lee and Wells.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Clorks Chapel
· Cemetery in Athens. Friends may caU a~ White Fun en! Home
in Coolville on Thursday from 11 a.m. to.l p.m.

coune
REEDSVILLE - Hunter
safety coune offered at
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
Friday, April 19, 6 p.m. to 10
p.m. and Saturday. April 20, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.

to meet

~THENS

.

Facilities
mmittee for the AthensMeigs ESC Governing Board,
to meet at 7 p.m. at . the
RBBDSVIU.B
Athens-Meigs ESC, 507
6:0? a.m., Ohio 7, Sandra Richland Ave. conference
Boling, HMC;
room 109, Th.ursday and
3:09p.m., Ohio 124, Max- · Monday. ·
ine Powell, Camden-Clark ·
Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND
1:21 p.m., Mechanic Street,
assisted by Syracuse, Adam
Bias,HMC;
CHESTER - A spaghetti
9:13 p.m., Dunbar Road,
all-you-can-eat
dinner and
Lawrence McQuaid, O'Blebeverage for $5 will be held at
ness Memorial Hospital.
the Chester Volunteer Fire
Department Saturday with
serving from .11 a.m to 6 p.m.
'
RUTLAND County ThiS is afund drive for air liftRoad 3, New Lima, will be ing bag system to help aid in
closed from White's Hill rescues.
Road to Ropte 60 all day
Thursday and Friday for
Ben~
replacement of ·a culvert,
according to a County Highway Department spokesperson.
LONG BOTTOM - A
benefit for Ted Coppick will
be held Saturday from 5 to II
p.m. at the Long Bottom
Community Building. There
will be a spaghetti dinner, an
REEDSVJLUi
Reedsville Squad 90 annual auction, and country music by
steak dinner, sunday, with Buzz Sloter and Band. Cost is
serving to begin at 11 a.m. SS for adults, $2.50 for chilDinner to i·nclude steak, dren six to 12, and no charge
mashed potatoes, vegetable, for anyone under six.

Spaghetti
dinner planned

Road to dose

·to be held

Stukdlnner
to be held

· AEP-411.20

""*'
eo.!- 24.40
Alclo-48.44

Premier - ·8.88

FedMI Mogul ..:.. .82
USS-22.82 .

Rockwell- 18.1!19
Rocky Boote- 7.20
AmTICli\I8BC- 37.20 Genlrll Electrlo- :rl.10 RD Shel- 56.48
SNra-49.20
,.
Alhllnd lno. - 45.02 .GKNLV-4.87
ATIT-15.30
~Davtdlcln-5-4.80 Shoney'1 - .35 .
lllnk One- 41.53
Kmal1-1.44
Wai·Mart- 68.93
IU-13.72
Kroger- 22
Wondy'l - 34.58
8Gb EYIIII- 27.G3
Lancll End - 43.40
Worthington - 15
llorgWI/nlr -111.63
Ltd. -18
Daly 11DCk report~ are
Chlmplan-3
NSC-22.72
tha
4 J.m. cloalng
a.~ Shopl-7.81 OlkHI Flwoolll-21l.25 quotn
tha Pfavloul
OVB-23.70
C1CY
lng - 15.35
diYI tranuctlona, proCal-211.30
B8T-:rl.88
vided by Smith F'artne,.
DCI-15.1111
Peoplte - 24.90
at Advftl Inc. of Gal·
DuPont- 47.35
Pepeloo- 50.82
llpolll.

SPRING

Gannttt- 75.79

The Daily
Sentinel
.
(U.... 21,_)

Reader Services
PICKENS

PWJI- WVIIY ~
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Ohio.
Seoond·ctlll
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:at (740) 882·211111.

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will be given

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CIIGUIIIU

corroc-

·

··· Agner-Widner

·them and the medical information' and picture of their
little princess was on Lusher's
flom ~~ap ·1
computer all while a hysterical Angie laid on the floor.
vice," said a winded Cliff.
. "I couldn't move," he said.
. "They also required us to
Pastor Jim smartly told the
take dhild CPR •nd child Queens to stay put and that
care classes, we had a two-d•y . he ..Wuld deliver the inforhome inspection by a social mation himself. Within secworker, a fire safety inspection onds, he literilly flew over the
and had to go through adop- hills and was pulling up to the
tion classes with EAC," added Queens' home. ·
Angie.
"I was Waiting for him at
In March 2001, the paper- the end of the driveway, he
work was in and in April the rolle(jl down the window and
Queens got an 1171 form handed me the envelope and I
from the INS, basically,a letter saw her (Katie's) sweet face
of favorable determination, and immediately dropped to
the key to moving forward.
my knees and cried," cried
"EAC was so thorough:' Angie.
,
said Angie. "Their paperwork
"Pastor Jim parked the car
was impeccable."
·.
and bent down and said,
"We. were hoping that we 'Don't you think you should
would be contacted by May show the daddy now?'"
with a referral (picture and
·Right before Christmas
medical report of a baby) but they got another picture and
. that's when all of the trouble video as well as a travel date
in Cambodia started. But of Jan. 15, 2002.
EAC said it should only lie · That mornirig, they took
around 90 days :ind we clung off from Cincinnati (forgot
to those words;' she added.
Katie's tickets on the bed, but
Months came and went bought new ones) met anothwith no word. ·
er couple in Cleveland, flew
Now here comes the excit- six hours to Los 1\ngeles then
ing part:
another 14-1/2 hours to,ThiAngie was calling their wan and eventually to Hanoi.
EAC contact Tom Droughton
After having been up for 40
every Thursday asking if there hours, they were met by G. T.
was any word and on Oct. 25, Le, the Vietnam coordinator
he told her that it would be who took them to their hotel
three more weeks.
for a quick shower. They had
"Angie just cried and another 10 houn ahead of
cried," said Cliff. "It broke them as they headed to
my heart. The waitirtg was · DaNang, · where Katie was
horrible."
born.
Then everything changed
"I have video of the first
on Nov. 1.
time Angie laid eyes on .her:•
"Cliff. came home aod said a teary ClifT. "We held
asked, as usual, if I had heard her for 20 minutes and then
anything and I said no," the next morning went to the
remembers an increasingly Ministry ofJustice in DaNang
excited Angie.
.. to get the Vietnamese paper"So we decided to go out work done and pick up Katie
and run errands and grab a at the 'Giving and Receiving
bite to eat."
Ceremony."'
(The Queens don't have a
No problems, so it was off
computer so they left the e~ to .the American Embassy for
mail address of their pastor, Katie's Vietnamese passport
Jim Lusher of Faith Baptist and an American visa. •
Church, as a place for EAC to
Nine days in Vietnam and it
send the referral.)
was official, Katie came home
" .... Well, wlien we came with her overwhelmed parhome I checked the caller ID ents to a slew of friends and
and saw th;tt EAC and Pastor family 'waiting to celebraie.
"Dr. Kim of Holzer Clinic
Jim had both ~ailed I yelled to
Cliff, 'Something big has hap- said she was perfect," smiled
pened!"'
Angie. '"Course we already
Cliff called · both Tom knew that."
"And we all lived happily
(EAC) and Pastor Jim and
found out that yes indeed, ever after;· added Cliff.
there was a baby waiting for

Katie

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

FBI spy-hunters·use
electronic tripwires
WASHINGTON (AP) "This is only a small piece
Tighter security ag:oinst poss.i- of what we're talking about,
ble spies inside the FBI will but it's an important one,"
require sophisticated "elec- Webster said.
tronic . tripwires" activated
The FBI -already is at work
when employees try to review on such a systen1, part of its
off~limits secrets, says a former "Trilogy" technology overFBI aad ClA director.
, haul, b'ut officials acknowl' The tripwires "will make it edge that it . is years from
niore difficult (for spies) in a widespre.ad use throughout
deterrent sense - knowing the bureau . The FBI's Robert
they'll be more apt to be Chiaradio s•id that the new
observed," said William H. system of tripwires will tell
Webster, who led a comntis- investigators "who left a footsion of experts investig:oting print in my case."
security inside the FBI after
It will closely limit access to
the February 2001 arrest of sensitive electronic docu•gent Robert Hanssen.
ments to only those agents
Hanssen pleaded guilty to approved to look at them, and
selling top secret information it will t,ack who prints.
to Moscow for nearly two copies, said Chiaradio, the
decades.
FBI 's executive assistant direcThe seven-person commis- tor for administration. He said
sion - some of whose mem- the FBI's current technology
bers met with Hans~en over can't keep track of who is
four days - expects to deliv- looking at what online.
er its report to Attorney Gen"We don't know what we
er;U John Ashcroft as early as don't know," Chiaradio said
Thursday or Friday. Webster is during a demonstration for
to testify·next week about the .reporters severn! weeks ago.
findings before the Senate. Even while bemoaning the
judiciary Committee.
FBI's inadequate computers
The commission's focus. -some of which are generaover 13 months was "to tiohs out of date ..;_ FBI
examine 'the (FBI's) security Director Robert Mueller told
techniques in light of what a congressional oversight
(Hanssen) was able to do, panel last month: "It is critifocusing on prevention and cally important that you have
earlier detection," Webster the adequate security.... We
said in an interview. Webster are in the process of doing it,
said he did not meet with but it is not a simple process.
Hanssen.
But we ~re getting there."
Webste.r said that in the
Anticipating Webster's
past, when sensitive. materials findings, the FBI also
typically. consisted of paper- already has reduced by
work tucked inside metal til- hundreds the number of
ing cabinets, goverflment agent s with access to the
librarians could prevent an · nation's most sensitive
investi.gator or employee from secrets and has adminisseeing off-limits documents. tered lie detector tests ·
In an increasingly digital that have identiGed possiage when documents, ble problems with fewer
maps or photographs reside than 10 of its employees.
on computers and can be Those actions are being
more easily copied or stolen co ordinated
by
Ken
- the FBI must rely ·on a Senser, a CIA employee
new generation o(compilter who was brought over to
tripwires that can monitor the FBI to improve inter.employees reading, down - nal security. He overse.,es
loading or printing sensitive the FBI's new security
documents.
division.

Relay ·
from Pip I
and collect donations to be
used for cancer research."
Some of the teams have
team events, like bake sales
and rock-a-thons, to. push
their totals up, said Crjsp, who
noted that · the name of the
game is to be the big winner
in the amount of money col-.
lected for the cause.
·Awards will go t.o the individuals on the team raising the
most money, based on a per
capita basis, but every team
will be recognized for its role
in supporting the work of the
American Cancer Society:
While the · relay teams keep

the track hot during the night,
the music which starts at 6
p.m. on Friday and the entertainment which doesn't stop
until noon on Saturday, keeps
them awake and moving. .
'Last month, t(} kick off the
fund-raising, a show featuring
Dwight Icenhower, Elvis
impersonator, was held at the
Meigs Middle School and raised
$1,600 for the Relayfor Life.
The goal for the event this
year is $20,000 and Crisp says
she's "confident it will be met."
Last year, the total was $14,000.
"The philosophy behind
the aU- night event is that
'(ancer never sleeps' and people who .have cancer can
never take a break from it. It's
all about a community that
takes up the fight;' said Crisp.

.....

...

..'-'
)·;,'

Wayne Knl1ht (Bieachu
Bums) was the rim person cast
in Jurassic Park. af1er Steven
Spielberg saw him in Basic In·
.rtinc:t.

lubtlcrlptlon r1111e

en 12

.w......

___ _

I'GIIrriNw. Sind -

tloolt to Till Dally Stn!lnfl. 111 Court
II., l'omlroy, 0111o 4&amp;7H.

TN 1111111 nurniJer II 882·21M.
Otpal1mlnt ext.nllolll art:

W.VA• .
1·304-773-!5583

-y

0No Vllltly Publlllllng Co.

Correotlon Polley
· Our main ooncem In lllttorlllll
·to ~ IIOCIA1I. 11 yuu ~ ol an

IJrlJm 2()()2 -j

Bush see
' ks.
presidenf help.

· rolls, pie and .pop, $6.

LOCAL STOCKS

Ex-police
chief arrested

Inmates charged
· inholdups

www.mydlllly..,.tlnel.com

.

member event to ~nother city, cbshing Cincinnati'seelting \lnipecified dam~gcs.
hopes of millions of dollars to city busiEarly Wednesday a tentative settleme~ t, .1
nesses. ·
.
· . was reached in a separate federallawstUt ."·l
1b fight b.2ck, Ruby bought a full- filed ag:rinst the city by octivists who
page ad the day before Cosby was to accuse police of illegilly tirgeting and..1
have performed in Cincinnati. The ad harassing bbcks for 30 years .
urged people to come downtown anyMayor Charlie Luken ·and others point: i
way and boycqtt the boycott,
to progress in the pm year, including
Patrons responded, but. had to Wlllk effom by a Luken-appointed conwis"' '•
past signs that read: "Eat, drink and be sion to improve education and ·job• ~
r•cist."
opportunities for blacks.
•.
The Rev. Damon Lynch Ill, an advo"Cincinnati\ getting a bad . rap. Some
cate of the boycott, ~d Cincinnati must of it may be fair. Most of it's not," said;,·•
first show real progress in improving the Luken, who is white.
I•
lives of its black residents before the
Valerie Lemmie, Cincinnati's tirst
protest will be called off.
black female city manager, and Alicia· •
'1ustice is healing. Thit's what we Reece, who also is black, are featured in
haven't had:' said Lynch, who has criti- a new brochure Cincinnati has distrib• l·!
cized police for what he says is use of uted to hotels, tourism and convention
excessive force against blacks.
groups to highlight the roles that prqmi·A year ago Sunday, 19-year-old Timo- nent blacks occupy in the city.
., '
thy Thomas became the 15th black man
Luken and Reece say the boycott 1s•!
to die at the hands of the Cincinnati ~ng and hurts employment opportu~-~
police since 1995. Thomas vr.~s shot by nities . for residents. The Cincinnati.Arts
Officer Stephen Roach, who was Association, open tor of three major. arts
acquitted of misdemeanor charges.
venues in the cicy, sued several boycott "i
The three nights of rioting foUowing advocates in March demanding almost
.
l~i
the .shooting led to more than 800 $600,000 in damages.
arrests ·and a dusk- to-dawn curfew.
One resident who opposes the boycotD ·~ ·
Forty-three percent of Cincinnati's pop- is Babe Baker, 86, who came to Cincinulation of 331 ,000 people is black.
nati 75 years 'ago. He operates a superOn Sunday, a march has been planned market and bar and owns commert:ial. f.
to commemorate the first anniversary of real estate.
:l
the shooting.
He said police arc unfairly criticized
The U.S. Dc;partment of Justice is when they try to fight crime in predonF .i
invesrigaling police proceduret and · has inantly black neighborhoods like his in', .
recommended numerous changes to Avondale. And, he s~id he doesn't underenhance training and shore u11 record stand claims that the city's blacks arc
ke~ping and vague policies. City officials denied economic opportunity.
have promised to adopt many of the rec"When (.first came to Cincinnati, you
ommendations.
couldn't go into the hotels, tlw ,cstau-· 1'.
T~o111as' mother, Angela Leisure, has a . rants. All of that has changed now," Baker• ·.
civil lawsuit pending in U.S. District said. "Progress has been m:tde, the wholc, ' '.
Co\trt against Roach and the .city of situation is different."
·
.•I

••

183.82

•1oue

- -....c-r
uua

13 w.o~~o

. 112-

7Hbe .falls ·
.to Anaheim

f61J.d8
f1011.72

.See story on Page 6

PHteslltltl AI 181,,9

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w.r•••d.,. Apltl s. 2002 :

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Den Dlcktraon
Publllher

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NATIONAL VIEW

Sha

•

Bush~

steel tariffs may be
on unstable legal ground

.

·America must neutralize further Middle East risk
.

.

.

1

wro

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I

fierce

'

4!.

•

lious. My dad just thinks they look
trashy. Abby, this is how I want to
express myself. It is who I am, and I
don't think my parents should pte·
v~nt me. What should I do to convmce them? - .DEPRESSED IN
DECATUR. GA.
OllAR DEPRESSED: Thngue
piercing may seem like a terrific way

soft yellow color and ferny phia. He traveled roads that habitats:' said Jay Pruett, .AEP's
foliage which complements wete barely mote than wood- manager of environmental
almost everything, and Russ- -land trails and fotded or fer~ stewardship, who will lead the
ian sage, a large perennial ried a~ross many streams. The group on its expedition to
which can tower over gatden second trip was Adams' 1778 Noel
Kempff Mercado
RUTLAND - The spring ·beds in much the same way as trip to France to seek aid for National Park.
'regional meeting of the Ohio o~namental grass~s,
.
the revolutionary effort of Students and teachers were
Association of Gatden Clubs
Betty Lowery s top1c was the new country. Accompa~ selected by their schools on
will be held April 27 at 9:15 "Give a Robin a Hand." ~he nied by 10 yeat~old son John the basis of academic or teacha.m. at the Senior Citizens sa1d that robms naturally like Quincy Adams, he was taking ing excellence and a keen
Center in Pomeroy was to build nests in·shrubs, wind- · his .first-ever sea voyage amid interest in arid commltmeni to
announced when the Rutland sills, and under the eaves of peril of capture.
the environment, accotding to
Gatden Club met recently at your house: but give them a
The third trip discussed · Pruett.
hand by budding them a nest- was one . taken by Abigail
The group will leave the
the home of Pauline Atkins.
Anyone planning to atte.nd ing box. All you need is some Adams along with her !J.S, on the eveningofJune 17
should send in their reserva~ good wood a few screws and a daughter Nab by to join bus- and teturn on June 27.
tions and $12.00 if they plan little of your time, she s~id. band John in 1784, afler his
to stay for lunch. There are Once constructed the nestmg appointment as ambassador
two · programs planned one in pox should be moun.te11 on a in England. This was also a
the morning and another in tree trunk siX to 10 feet off the difficult voyage.
the afternoon.
ground.
Hackett said the biography
TOPS
The spring boatd meeting . "Spring Time Fairy"· ":as has the sweep and vitality of a CHESHIRE will be April 13 at p.m. at the . tead by Wooda.td, and the hmt great novel. McCullough tells (Take Off Pounds Sensibly), a ,
Methodist Church in Chester. for the meetmg dealt w1th the story of ~dams from not non-profit, weight-loss supFin""r foods are to be taken planting seeds indo?rs in. a only his point of view in his port group, will hold its
for ';;freshments.
small amount of soil adding . letters, but from that · of annual Area Recognition Day
It was noted that donations extra as the plants grow . to famous people such as (ARD) at Lancaster High
to Wahkeene
Mohican make them more sturdy.
George Washington, Ben~ School on Saturday,April13 .
School, and O.S.G.A. Founda- . The Ap.ril meeting will be jamin Franklin, Aaron Burr,
Registration begins at 8:30
tion will be made by the club. held at the Woodatd ~orne and Alexander Hamilton, and his a.m. with the session to start
A teport was given on the members wete renunded to own son, John . Quincy at 10 a.m. Theme will be
~cent _ workshop held at the take a plant for exchange.
Adams, who would become "TOPS Hearts Are Happy
President also.
Hearts."
Vet~rans: Memorial Ho,pital
RD · 1
· 1 d
A very important part of "A 1 11d nspirat1ona
extended care faciJ.icy with 19
ti d "', e u·
the story revolves around the cationa
residents attending.
h an a un ay".or the
,
amS 0
relationship be~een. · Adams JSout ern
· A history of St. Patrick's Day
ThOhio area,
s
hsaid
omas,
out ern
and a discussion on Easter was
RACINE - Phyllis Hack- · and Thomas Jefferson, who anet
were
born
opposites
but
were
Ohio
coordinator.
Counties
held. Residents were asked ett teviewed "John Adams" by
· h s h
Obi
also
friends.
The
book
is
hisJD t e out ern
what aU takes part in March David McCullough at the
Ad
Ah
B 1o area
.
tory on a grand scale, but is are · ams,
this year. Thete wete many r~cent meeting · of the'..;;Mid·
t1t ens, 1 e mont,
"
also
about
human
nature,
Brown,
Bu
er,•JdC ermont,
items spoken of and most of dleport Literary Club, held at
Cl'
F 'rfi
F
· participated .' the Racine Library. ·
love, religious faith, ambition,
mton, ~a1 1e , ayette,
the ·residents
Gallia,1 vvene,
Eac h.· one was given a 1ape1 Vice President Frankie friendship and noble ideas.
hi Guernsey,
d
k
ackett
concluded
by
say.
Hami
ton,
Hig
an , Hoc •
H
bird house ·wit h a Bible verse Hunnell introduced Hackett
on it, a treat basket, an d a for her review of the Adams ing Adams' biography is the ing, Jackson, Lawrence,.
"' d biography. McCullough, from story of one of the most Meigs,
·
replica of a pot of gold .oun
k' Monroe,
N bl Morgan,
p
at t he end of a rainbow.
Pennsylvania, was educated at important and fascinating Mus mgum,
p k o e, erry,
· were played and Yale University, and has often Americans who ever lived.
'Pickaway, i e, Ross,
Games
d Scioto,
h
Leah
Jean
Ord,
president,
Vinton,
Warren
an
Was ingrefteshments tiurnis hed by gar- appeared in TV documenton.
den club members were taries. He received the led the 'club collect.
served.
National Book Award for his- Jane Ann Aanestad was wei~ . Area Captains are Marty
The traveling prize fur- tory and biography, and corned as a guest, and a card Gotschall, Stockport; Debbie
nished by Betty Lowery was received "the Pulitzer Prize in was signed for former mem~ Walters, . Ironton; Debb1e
won by Dorothy Woodard. 1993 for his biography, "Tru- ber Sister Fidelis Bell, who Rohl, Bndgeport; and Con~
Mrs. Harold Rice is to furnish man." He has a long list of was reported as ill.
nie Compton, Blanchester.
The group responded to
According to Thomas; the
the April traveling prize. popular non-fiction books to
Devotions by the hostess wete his credit.
roll call by relating stories program . Will open With a
taken from Luke 22 with read- · - McCullough's
"John about movie-going, or a welcome from her, a song
favorite movie from 'child- titled "Welcome to TOPS"
ings "In · The Garden" and Adams" was highly recom- hood. ·
written· by Gayle
Easter Morning." Roll c1u was mended by the reviewer, who
answered by: "What do we said it should be required
Next meeting of the group
Knapp of Hamilton will be
.celebrate in March?"
reading by every American, will be held April 10 at the presented by that club; the i
h pre- 1
A program on spring was for a better understanding of home of Ida Diehl. Jeanl)e Middlc;town group will
Bowen will review "Jane sent a skit and Pat S annan ·
presented with Rice reporting our country's past and the Austen."
.
of Amanda will be the song
on the 10 top perennials. She difficulties of its founding.
leader with selections to
said that gardeners can have Much of the information in
ftCOn
include a ·song she wrote.
flowering perennials in their the book is taken from the
r_w
Contests will be included.
yatd or gatden aU season if Adams family's
private
•·- th gh 1 ·
11
f
w·
Jean for
Terpstra,
regional
they mau e ri t se ectton. papers, a rich co ection o
director
Ohio will
be a
She listed those known for letters and journals covering
the most lasting beauty: Blue two centuries of history. The
special guest at this event.
Speedwell, a . spoke plant letters, numbering in the
MIDDLEPORT · \
Among those ~ecognized will
which blooms .from early thousands, were very candid, Stephanie Story of Middle~ be queens and kingst division
-• heIp the tea der get to port, a. J'unior at Mei""
KOPS
summer to Iate r.n
, ..... ; the pur~ anu
.,. High winners,
(Keep offroyalty
PoundsandSensibly)
pose · cornfi()wer, · a prairie · kpow the members of the School, and Tim Simpson of
bl
r
'1 H k
·d
. Gu.,.ville, an agri~business and alumni and graduates, and
w·ildaower whi ch
ooms .anu y, ac ett sal .
'.
others who have lost weight
midsummer to early autumn;
The relationship between horticulture teacher there will
'the black eyed Susan, another Adams and his wife, Abigail, represent t)le school on Anter~ in the program, along with
· ., was 'In unusuaUy c1ose one ican Electric Power's Philip tenThe
blueCircle
ribbonofchapters.
prairie wildaower bloonung
Light Ceremidsummer to late fall. •
for those days. Adams consid- Sporn Plant .on a sununer trip
Othen me listed were the ered his wife his "dearest to Bolivia.
many and the Ceremony of
purple-leaved beatd tongue, friend" as shown by the many
AEP will lead a gro'!p of 12 the Rose, winners in ARD
))ink tinged white Bowen and !etten exchanged over long students and teachers from contest will be recognized,
. red foliage blooming early to months and years of separa- Ohio and West Virginia to a along with membert in the
late summer; the pink astilbe, tion while Abigail raised their South American rain forest for "greatest improvement confeathery plumed top ferillike four children and supervised ·AEP's Environmental Learn- test."
foliage; the blue· pincushion the house and lands and john ing and Adventute in Bolivia
Committee members are
flower; the corepsis moon- was away in Philadelphia, Pa. (E·LAB) program.
Thomas, chairperson; Charbeam, a blue.yellaw combina- or abroad in France, and later
uDuring and after the ~ 1· lotte Smith, co-chairpenon;
fion which blooms midsum- England, as America's new day trip, the students and Connie Compton, KOPS
mer to early fall;.
representative.
teachers will use their obser~ registration; Marty Gotschall,
Also included were blue
Hackett concentrated on vations to develop a learning KOPS registration; Debbie
perennial sage not to be con- three trips taken by members plan for their school curricu- Walten, treasurer; Deborah
fused wlth the herb garden o( the Adams family. The fint lum on subjecu such as tropi~ Rohl, luncheon; and Diane ,
sage, with a blue~black Bower; was a cold, snowy winter cal rain forest ecology, climate promotional sales.
purple corabells, which journey on horseback by change, development that can
Anyone wishing informablooms aU summer long and John in the early 1770's from be sustained 'in the future and tion on TOPS may contact
likes partial sun to partial Massachusetts to .the «?&gt;nti- the diversity of plants and ani- Thomas at 740-367-027 4 or
shade; threadleaf tickweed, a nental Congress m Phaladd- mals .that fiourilli !n tropical call toO free 800-932-8677.

Ad

.

••

ICE

Club.reviews

TODAY 'IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, April 3, the 93rd day of 2002. ~ere
are 272 days left in the year.
·
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 3, 1860, the legendary Pony Express began service between St. Joseph, Mo., and Sacramj:nto, Calif.
On this date:
.
.
In 1865, Union forces occupied ~e Confederate capital of
Richmond, Va.
"
·
In 1882, outlaw Jesse James was shot to death in St. Joseph,
Mo., by Robert Ford, a member ofJatnes' gang.
In 1936, Bruno Hauptmann was electrocuted in Trenton,
N.J., for the kidnap-murder of the Lindbergh infant.
In 1946, Lt. General Masaharu Homma. the Japanese commander responsible for~the
Bataan Death March, was executed outside ~tanila.
In 1948, President Tru
signed the Marshall Plan, which
allocated more than $5 billion in aid for 16 European countries.
·
In 1968, the day before he wa~ assassin11ted in Memphis,
Tem., civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his
famous "mountaintop" speech to a rally of striking sanitation
workers.
In 1968, North Vietnam agreed to meet with U.S. represen~
tatives to set up preliminary peace talks. ·
In 1982., Britam dispatched a naval task force to. the south
Atlantic to reclaim the disputed Falkland Islands from
Argentina.
.
In 1996, an Air Force jetliner carrying Commerce Secretary
Rori Brown and American business executives crashed in
Croatia, killing all 35 people aboard. .
· ·
In 1996, Unabomber Theodore Kaczynski was arrested.
· Ten years ago: President Bush, speaking in Phifadelphia,
SJ!id members of Congress should shorten their annual sessions and retire after 12 years, callil:lg for changes in "a failed
status quo"; Democratic leaders accused Bush of "scapegoat- ·
.
ing."
Five years ago: About 2,000 youngsters in California and
Georgia lined up for shots to procect them against hepatitis
frOm a contaminated shipment of frozen strawbenies.
One year ago: President Bilsh warned China it risUd damaging relations with the United States unless it quickly
released the American c~w of a damaged Navy spy plane.
(The plane had made an. emergency landing in China after
collidmg with a Chinese tighter.)
.
'
Today's Birthdays: Actor Marlon Branda is 78·. Actresssinger Doris Day is 78. Actmls Miyoshi Umeki is 73. Former.
Getman Chancellor Helmut Kohl is 72. Country singer Don
Gibson is 70. Jazz musician Jimmy McOriff is 66. Actor
William Qannt is 65. Singer Jan Beny (Jan and DQn) is 61.
Actress Manila Mason is 60. Singer Wayne Newton is 60.
Singer Billy Joe Royal is 60. Singer Tony Orlando is !18.
Singer Richard Thompson is 53. Country musiciaR Curtis
Stone (Highway 101) is 52. Rock' musician Mel Schacher
(Grand Funk Railroad) is 51. Rock musician Mick Mars
(Motley Ctue) is 46. Actor Alec Baldwin is 44. Actor David
Hyde
is ~~· ~ian-actor ~~ Mw,Ph&gt;: is
· Rock smger-tnusJCWI ~ Ness (Social J;&gt;isto11ion) 1s 40. ·

. ADV

Recopltlon Day

dent's action, even though the three-year temporary tariffs,
ranging from 8 to 30 percent depending on product category,
ace less than the four-year, 40 percent across-the-board tariffs
industry officials were describmg as absolutely necessary earlier this month, ...
Bush is gambling that this long-entrenched industry will
take advantage of this temporary tariff shield to do so. But it's
clear that the tradeoff is a hidden tax on American consumers
and industry in the form of higher prices for steel products.
Meanwhile, the president runs a risk that foreign natiohs
will hand him a
defeat or eJI,ploit loopholes, such as
simply shipping relabeled steel throu$h a developing nation.
He also risks a loss of jobs if domestic manufacturers decide
to assemble steel products or make steel parts overseas. ;,
Because of this protectionist tariff, Americans are about to
pay more for a wide array of products that ace made with
steel. And to think it's all because of a so-called free-tnider
who vowed not to enact a tax increase.

I'

Abby

•
stay in a motel when they do come. time the visitors call to tell you
We have friends who invite them- they'te corning, your husband should
. selves once a year to . spend about say:."Wonderful! We're looking for~
five nights in our home.
watd to seeing you. Now give me
I have a serious medical condition your ctedit catd num ber because I'm
and have undergone several opera- making motel teserntions for you.
tions. I make subtle hints about My wife's doctor has said she's not
being in pain and not needing com- up to entertaining houseguests this
pany, yet they never seem to under- year, but you're such good friends I
' stand that I am talking about them. know you 'II understand."
Even though they often take us out
Their response will tell you both
to dinner and pick up the tab, I am how strong that friendship is from
not up to having them stay With us. their perspective. I hope they don't
I hate to lose their friendship, but cancel their annual visit, but don't
I cannot take another one of their feel~t~~ilty if they do.
- visits. If•I tell them they cannot stay,
(Pa11lint Pltillips and htr tlaughttr,
they are going to be very offended. jtanne Pltillips, share tht psmdonym
- HURTING AND SOCIABLE Abigai/11tn Burtn. Writt Dtar Abby at
IN FLORIDA
www.DtarAbby.com or PO. Box
DEAR HURTING: The n~xt 69440, Los Angelts, CA 90069.)

10.PS dubs plan

tryTh~ st~el industry and its unions are happy with the presi-

II
'

Dear ·

to "express younelf," but it can lead
to chipped teeth· and a speech
impediment, not to mention a nasty
infection if you'te unlucky.· While
your patents nuiy seem excessively
controlling, they have your best
interests at heart. (They probably
think )io)l alteady have enough holes
in your head.)
.
Your intelligence is far above average. When you ate 18 and out on
. your own, you can pierce to your
heart's content if you wish. I'm sure
you can find a less radical way to
express your inner self if you put
your mind to it.
. - ,
DEAR ABBY: How can you
make friends understand. that they
'should wait for an inVitation before
coming to visit? They also need to

...

.• '

RED GREEN'S VIEW

The more frivolous a huge thing can be, we like it
'

I've had a chance to study many of the
inexplicable aspects of male behavior
throughout my life, and the one that.
continues (()impress me is man's ability
10 stand and wonder at some ~ing
feat that has absolutely no ,PraCtical
application to life as we know 1t.
·For example, there's an annual cdntest
where men build huge catapults and
then use them to see how far they can
throw a Buick. I've never been there,·
but I'm guessing the spectators ace predominantly male. Men will always
choose magnitude OVeJi content. Give us
a hu$e fireball or an, earth-shattering
colliston or even just a leally loud noise,
and we'll line up for tickets, We don't
care about the long-term benefits. The
more frivolous the liuge thin!! is, the bet·
ter we like it. Most men believe that no
matter how useless something is, if yoti
make it big enough, it becomes worthwhile. That's probably why most of us
· overeat
•
Evolutioo ~ 11•n.,.
We didn't have vidoo games when I
was a kid. We were stuck wilh having to
play football or baseball out in the sunshine with our friends, r.ither than having the luxury of being able to sit alone
in a darkened room playing Bloodlust
with a joyscick. To me. the biggest dif.
ference ts not lbe social or-financial
repercussions of these diffCm!t
approaches ~ etlffttaint:nmt - it's the
rOfe of lbe _player. One il active, the
other is pHSSIVe. When you .,.., a video
game, no matter how many tunes you
get killed, it doesn't hurt nearly as much
as taking a foul ball in the groin. That's
because in a real game, yoo 8ft! handson participant; bill in a video game you

a

.

Red
Green
COLUMNIST
are merely an involved spectator. This is
a .dangerous precedent. From the games
I learned as a kid, I knew that I wanted
to take an active role in my own life.
You should all.want to be a participator;
not just a spectato( - especially auring
your maniage, and even more so during
conception.
.
·
.
We know what we know
Middle-aged men think they know
everything. Their wives think the Complete opposite. The truth lies somewhere
m between. Here's a short list of things
that middle-aged men always know:
• Where the benches are at the mall.
• What lhe government is doing

wrong.

• How

fD

make a really loud fashion

statemetlt.
• How to grow a good lawn.
• How w pass the time waiting for

.

~:
-,

there have been many examples of what .. ·
I call the beauty and the beast syn- •
drome. Cyrano de Bergerac, Quasimo- , •
do, Henry VIU, etc. l'm talking about '
the stories where a really ugly guy is .
going after a very beautiful woman. · •
Now, at first it seems like a cruel twist of" '
nature that ugly guys would be the most '.
virile, but I don't see it that way. If you "1
take a man and give him an over-active · ~
libido, and also make him good-look- '
ing, well, we all have a pretty good idea
of what he's going . to waste his Ufe ·'
doing. So, in order for guys with over- :.
active thyroids to lead productive Jives •., ·
where they make a contribution to soci- ···
ety, nature makes them ugly. Women ' ;
need to find them somewhat repulsive · ·
just so the men will be free to find jobs ··•
and join service clubs. On the complete_.:·
opposite end of the scale, ,vou 'have men . ~
wilb almost no .interest ID· women. fn . t
order for them to have a chance to proliferate, nature makes them handsome. .
So, my theory on men is that the better- · •
looking they are, the less virile they are. · ,
I'm not sure how scientific that opinion .. ;
· is. It may be largely bQed on me look- •.
ing at my passport picture. ·
., 1 .
QUOTE OF TilE DAY: "You don't .. ·
have to think fast if you move slow."- ,·
Red Green
I •

(Red Green is the star of "The JWi
Green Show." a television series seen in. ·
the U.s. on PBS and in Canada em the .
CBC Network, and the aulhor of "The. Red Green Book" and "Red Green • .
room.
Talks Car.s: A Love Story." Watch for : ;
the
feature film Red Green :S "Duct Tape ;
~ n.fure
Wben ~011""''""'
look back
through history, Forever" at a theiJler Mar you.)
.,

your wife to cool off.
• How w make a complete hairstyle
out of dwindling resources.
• The location of the nearest men's

I

•

MEIGS

Po-roy

•

RUSHER'S
VIEW
'

• The BuiTalo (N.V.) News, on taxing imported steel: By
imposing tariffs on foreign steel, President Bush -who casts
himself as the anti-tax president - has imposed a tax on
· American consumers that erodes his free-trade credentials
and offers only a temporary reprieve to the domestic steel
industry. Worse, the tariffs may be on shaky legal ground. A .
challenge to the World Trade Organization, which has international jurisdiction in such trade measures, is inevitable.
Bush insists he has broken no law. Instead of accusing other
nations of dumping steel at below-market prices, he has
invoked a WTO provision that allows nations a tem1;10rary
"safeguard" tariff 1f a surge in imports hurts a domestic mdus-

DEAR ABBY: I am a sophomote
in high school and the middle child.
I get good grades, do the laundry,,
and u,ually don't complain when.
my parents ask·me to do something.
OveJ:all,l'm a ptetty good kid.
I asked my patents if I could get
my tongue piereed if I got all A's on
my teport catd. They won't even
consider it. My mom said she would
never change her mind. Every time I
· talk about it, they change the subject
and it's really annoying.
I just got my progtess teport back
today and I got all A's.ln English and
math, I got 100. Most of my friends
didn't get straight A's.
_
Don't' you agree my patents ~re
being unfair and unreasonable? My
mom is scad:d of my being rebel-

OAGC meeting
·
to be held In

••

bi

Stoto
Slm '
ry, lraueJ
to Bolivia

,,

r;;,;..
2;; .; ,002,;,; s

ea ears

•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 812-21 H • FIX: 740-tl2-21 57
www.mydallyMntlnel.c~m ·

Ohio

Wed~n•;.;.;d~.,~·Aprl,;: .;~ ,; .

_Th_e_n_a_il_y_Se_n_tm_·_el..;....._ _ _ _·=I::;;;.J._I..;;;;;;;;,I_II
___.....I;;;;;;;;..•,;;;:;;C;;.;;;n;,;;;;,;d;;;...._ _ _ ___,;..-

TitE NEW NORMAl.,.

The Daily Sentinel
S&lt;

Pap4 ~

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

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CALENDAR
Community Calendar
II publllhld I I I frH
llrVICI to non-profit
groupe wlahlng to
announC. mMtlngM Mnd
lpeclll IVInta. Thl Cll·
endar Ia not dlllgned to
·promote 11111 or fund.·
ral11re of any typ,e.
Item• •re printed only
ae apace permlte and
cannot bl gu'eranteeci to
be printed 1 epeclflc
numbMr of daye.
·

VFW Post 9053 Ladles
Auxiliary, regular meeting,
7 p.m. Election of officers.

·FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs
County PERl, Meigs
Senior Center. Noon luncheon with meeting and
speaker to follow.

. WEST COLUMBIA
Gos'pel sing, 7' p.m. West '
United
Columbia
Methodist
Churc.h.
WEDNESDAY
Singing will be Two for
"PAGEVILLE - Scipio Jesus, Every Thursday,
ToWnship Trustees, 6:30
p.m. at the Pagevllle town Earthen Vessels, Glory·
land Believers.
hall.

THURSDAY

SATURDAY

POMEROY _ William • HARRISONVILLE
Mayes to teach Bible at Harrl11onvllle Lodge 411 at
Faith Valley Tabernacle the hall, 7:30 p.m. Master
church, bailey run Road. . Masons welcome.

SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Village
MIDDLEPORT- AserCouncil, regular meeting,
7 p.m., Syracuse Munlcl· vice of hope and healing
In memory of Lindsay
pal Building.
Bolin and Brad Runyon, •
REEDSVILLE - Olive First Bty&gt;tlst Church, Mid·
Township Trustees, regu· dleport, 7 p.m. Special
lar meeting, 6:30 p.m., testimony by Jennifer
· township garage on Walker, special music.
Joppa Rd. ·
Service Is especially for
teens, others welcome.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Mark Morrow, pastor.
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·
R
ebate
I Montht
· Caah
Warm winter-Hot summer??! Don't give your hard earned
dollars to the utilities. Anew Lennox HP26 Heat Pump Cln cut
your LP, 011, Electric furnace or older Heat Pump heating
nionlhly bills literally In half! 50% off your cooling bills
tooiiReally! (Stop In the office If you want to aee the fiQUI'III and
talk to real life references.)

IL-l Sl.lver Planned
, . _ MalnteoaConract
~ (Retail $1291)

IL-l

a.

F11110UI Super 90
Superflllerlncluded

.EB;t (Retail $2951)

11-1 ~Thermoltal
..a.
~ (Retail$3411)
Olwl...,......
,.,..
f,...

446-4940
1~0~247.&amp;180
David White Strvlce1 welcome• all cu1t0mers
of the two Lennox dealers that have ~tone out
of bu1lnna. We can handt. all manulacturer
warran~ clalm1. 25 Years of. contlnuoua award
winning aervlce. · We are the largnt dealer
Hrvlng Getlla County.
Oi!CQ•w Ltneal152- w.t•~•m I'MXlDi8

.71te Daily,Sentinel
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· Ktnrh Ires a co11ch, Pllge 7

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HIGHLIGHTS
MLB

ru.adlly'a Oame,
Nltlonal LeagueS. Francisco 9, Los Angeles 2
Milwaukee 9, Houston 3
Montreal 7. Florida 6
Arizona 9, San-Diego 0
American League
Tampa Bay 9, Detroit 5
Oakland 3, Texas 2
Anaheim 7, Cleveland 5
Seattle
,_ 7. White Sox 4 •

then slammed a two run home run to
deep left center field and Da)ly Hill
singled and scored on an error,
River Valley came back to tighten
the score at 4-3 with the big blow a
home run by Allen. River VaUey tied
the score in the second when Chris
Jackson reached on an error and
scored on a Rose RBI single, 4-4.
-Southern then took a lead they
never relinquished with a four-run
third tnmng. Singles by Ash and

Ohling~r

fUeled the r;illy 3longwith a
walk and three Raider erron, the
score 8-4.
'
Brice Hill picked up the wi,n in
scattering six hits, ' :ing out eight,
and walking just four. Southern made
nine errors, compared to the Raideris
15.
Gibbs suffe.red the loss while fanning eight ~d walking three.
S.outhern hosts Trimble Wednesday.

Indians not so

Pro Basketball ·
NBA
Tu11d1y'1 011MI
Cleveland 101, Phoenix 96
Boston 105, fndlana 94
Atlanta 100, Milwaukee 92
Detroit 90, Miami 87
Sacramento 107, Memphis 83
. . Lakers 113, Washington 93
• New York 91, Charlotte 85
Houston 100, Seattle 98
Denver 98, Utah 90
Golden State 107, Portland 90

hot on day two
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - second major league season, .
Kevin Appier liked ,he way his p'rovided.
_
teammates pla)'lld, although he
"He set the table,and-that's
wasn't
wh~t we're looking to do," the
pleased with manager said. "We scored
the way he seven · runs · against a good ·
pitched in his Angels debut.
starting pitcher and a good
."Our guys did ,a great job. pitching staff."
They were stealing bases left
Cleveland starter C.C.
and right, manufacturing Sabathia, who went 17-5 last
runs," he said after Anaheim season and finished second to
beat the Cleveland Indians 7- lchiro Suzuki in AL rookie o(
5 Thesday night for its first · the year voting, allowed four
win of the season.
runs in 5 1-3 inningt. He
Appier, acquired from the struck out five and walked
Mets in a December trade that onf.'
.sent M.oVaughn to New York; · 'C. C. had good stuff, but he
got no decision, ·giving up got in trouble with i:he walk
four runs and four hits in five to (Adam) Kenneay in the
inningt and leaving with the fifth, then Eckstein and
game tied at 4.
(Darin) Erstad had big hits;'
"I'm not thriUed wit~ my Indians manager Charlie
performance," said Appier, Manuel said.
Anaheim · reliever Ben
who walked four, hit a batter
and threw 106 pitches. "I did- Weber (1-0) gave up one hit
n't think l threw all that badly, in two scoreless inningt for
but ihey did a good job o£ the win. Troy Percival allowed
running up the count and t~k- a leadoff homer to Russell ·
ing pitches. They were very Branyan in the ninth but findisciplined at the plate."
ished for his first save.
Anaheim manager Mike
David Riske (0-1) gave up
Sciascia knows Appier can be an unearned run in the sixth
sharper. ·
Inning.
•
"His pitch count was extraThe Angels went up 5-4 in
ordinarily high by thi:" fifth the sixth when Cleveland secinning, bitt he batded and ond baseman Ricky Gutierrez
made some 'Pitches," Sciascia dropped Bengie Molina's pop
said. "I'm ~ure he's going to fly- which would have be~n
give us a lot of inningt as the the third out - and Troy
season giles on."
Glaus scored from second.
"I ju!t dropped it. l should
David Eckstein went 3-for4 and scored three times to have caught it; Gutierrez said.
lead. the Angels' offense. ·
Then Glaus' two-out, twoScioscia was pleased with
·
COUNT IT - · Cleveland's Matt Lawton scores In the fifth Inning while Anaheim catcher
Bangle Molina looks on Tuesday. (AP)
the spark Eckstein, starting his
PIIIM ... 'ntbe. 7

,.
Tribe

Wahama wins
a wild one
MASON, W.Va. - The
Wahama White Falcon baseball nine ·found its four game
winning string in jeopardy before staging a pair of shock~ng offensive rallies over the
fli1al two innings Thesday,
:Pulling out a come-frombehind 12-11 diamond win
ovrr Gauley !}ridge.
The error-filled contest had
:19 bases on balls, two hit bat- _
"ters and nine errors to go
:along with 22 base hits and
seven unearned runs. Adam
Ricka'rd blaste3 a grand slam
to highlight an eight-run
White Falcon sixth inning a!
Wahan1a erased a 9-3 deficit •
before Ryan Mit~hell 's base
hit in the bottom half of the
seventh brought home the
winning tally to give Wahama
it1 fifth maight win.
WHS totaled 14 hits on the
day with three of those going
for extra bases. In addition to
Rickard's third round-tripper
of the spring were Ryan
Hodge's triple and ·a two-base
knock off the bat of Jared
Long. Hodge, Bryan Cromley,
Rickard, Bradford Clark,
Mitchell and Long all had two
hits apiece with Gabe Lambert and Ryan Roush co\lecting one each.
Gauley 6ridge gaineg the
early lead in the third after
plating one run on Neal
Sears' RBI single. The Travelers increased their lead to 5-0
with four more tallies in the
fourth a~ Wahama committed
four errors in the frame.
Trailing by a 9-3 count the
White Falcons came up with
an eight spot in the si'xth to
turn a six run deficit into a
two run, 11 -9 advantage.
' It} the Falcon seventh,
Cromley and Rickard drew
lead off walk~ before Bradford
Clark singled to fill the sacks
with . nobody out. Ryan
Mitchell then ended the wild
three-hour affair with an RBI
single to drive in Cromley
with the winning run and

McFann, Raiders
blow by Southern
BY ScDn WOLFE

OV~ CORRES~ONOENT

Meigs coaCh optimistic
BY JIM SouLSBY
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
ROCK SP!UNGS
Meigs head · baseball coach
Dan Thomas . is optimistic
rcgardiitg this years team with
the return of
lettermen
Derek
Knapp, Josh Napper, Jacob
Smith and John Stanley who is
recovering from injuries suffe~ed in a car accident.
Meigs graduated eight
seniors from last year's team,
including catcher Matt Stewart and second baseman Nick
Dettwciler, who were both
All-TVC tint team selections.
The pair also received district
honors. Dettweiler has gone
on to play for the Rio Grande
Redmen.'
Zach Glaze, Jamison John-

son and Josh Lynch will round
out the seniors for the
Marauders. Juniors taking the
field will be Buzz Fackler,
Brandon Ram~burg, David
McClure, Chris Smith, Jimmy
Smith, Kyle Hannan and
Gasey Dunfee. Sophomore
Doug Dill will also see playing
time at the varsity level.
Thomas indicated that the
team would miss the hitting
and play of John Stanley who
was the leading hitter for the
Marauders last season. "We
will sti.ll rely heavily on his
leadership" Thomas added.
· The underclassmen on the
team will be a big plus,
according to Thomas with the
pitching corps looking strong.
"Every position is open at this
time and seniors are providing
strong leadorship and the play-

CHESHIRE -The 1\iver Valley ltaiders tMk advantage of eight Southern walks in posting a nine-run third
inning, a frame that boosted -the hom to an 11 - 1 nonleague win.
Southern is now .3- 1 and River Valley 1- 1.
Southern went up 1-0 in the first when Deana Pullins
drew i lead-off walk and scored on an RDI single by
Rachel Chapman.
Raider pitcher Geri McFann then settled in to fan five
of the next six batters, while Southern's Rachel Chapman
was doing much of the same for the Tornadoes,
Suddenly, without warning Chapman's control evaporated along with Southern's chances.
· ·
Chapman who became one of the best control pitchers
in the area lase year, and 1et the tone for a similar seasor\
this year had the game taken away with the loss of her
control. lWo errors also contributed to the downfall, then
River Valley came on to get three of their five hits off
freshman hurler.Brooke Kiser.
. Kiser settled down for a strong finish, but the damage ..
had already been done. Besides the seven wallt1 in the frame,Aihley Caldwell and Amy Hood singled, and Nicki ·
Tracewell doubled.
Kiser strl.!ck out two ·and walked two in her first v~rsi­
ty stint, while Chapman walked seven and fanned two.
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) -- Arkansas
_ McFann picked up the win in a great outing, giving up
-guard
J.J. Sullinger, who has been contemplatthree hits, walking just four, and fanning twelve Southern
. ing-a departure frum the Razorbacks, now says
batters.
he wants his release from his scholarship so he
Raider hitters .were Tracewell with a double and single.
can play fn his native Ohio,
Nicole Watkins a dou~le, and singles each by Amy Hood
"I came 800 miles to play for coach (Nolan)
and Ashley Caldwell. Southern hitcer1 were _Katie Sayre,
Richardson,
that was my compeii.~ation for
Brigette lJarnes, and Rachel Chapman with singles.
being Sjl far away from home," Sullinger said
Southern hosts Trimble Wednesday at Star Mill Park,
Thesday.
"Now that coach Richardson is gone,
while River Valley plays hose to Fairland Thursday.
I'm going to play for a school that's closer -to

Prep

I· ...;:;.;;:..

starts
off hot
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LOS ANGELES (AP) After hitting · a record 73
homers last year, Barry Bonds
opened 2002 with his 6rst
multihomer game on an
opening day.
Bonds hit No. 1 of 2002 on
hi!' secon(l swing of ihe season, a three-run shot o~
Kevin Brow1,1 in the second
inning that gave the San Francisco Giants· a 5-1 lead over
the Los Angele! Dodger's on
· Thesday.
Bonds had a run~coring
single ill the fourth, then hit a
solo horner off' Omar Daal
leading off the seventh to
make it 8-2.

1

Soutntm 100
RV

008

,.,.., Ytllty 11 , loiiiMm 1
000
o
002
x

WP-Gtlt McF1nn 111(1 Krylfll A&lt;tldnl
LP·- Chlljllllllll11(1 Kl11e Slyrt.

Arkansas fired KichardiOfl on March 1, and
Stan Heath was hired away from Kent State'as

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·sullinger wants.to come home

home."

1 3 4
1150

ers are striving to be the best
team they .can, be. These players are committed to continue
the strong Meigs baseball tradition," Thomas said.
,
Coach Thomas feels Alexander • the defending Ohio
Division ChampiollL- will be
strong again this season as they
return every player' from last
years' squaii. Wellston and· Belpre will also co~inue to be
strong tearns in the division.
Thomas feels his squad will be
in contention for the league
crown as well.
Chris Ste)Nart will assist
Thomas, Chris
will be 'the
pitching coach, as he was an
outstanding pitcher at Kentucky Christian College. Jared
Stewart will also serve as an
a11istant coach for the maroon
and gold.

his ,replacement.
The 6-foot-5, 200-pound Sullinger said he
wanu to play at Ohio State, but it is unclear
whether there is a scholarship available for
him.
The Buckeyes have three scholarships to
offer but at least four top prospects, including
Sullinger. The spring signing period begins in
a week.
·
Ohio State coach Jim O'Brien cannot offer
a scholarship to Suilinger until Arkansas releas-

PitiN ... HI•e,7

Kent State .names Jim

•-S.

Mortllllolltll dt~Mt!Gn M.C: .ltiMe: tMIIM 111 rtlllllftder. upon · It
ra Ft
IIIIIMIMttiMofiM o
Morthwuterlw ......, .. ...,.
1007C:I)
.
Chorlot Ctmplllall dll.ctloll~rodl • e lhorltf of llolga it.~ flit Pllilllllllf
praputv ~- 300, atallla In alta IIIH'I Countw. Ott ·
100 WMt St. Ctlllr

which llolila ttao bttlftftlne at .tht
louttscctl - - ol
1 lot 1\0W owi\Ld
111111 ltaatatatn tt1e
tiMe btll\e ll)t '\

toulh I ....... oM'
- t 111.4 fl&amp;l " 1111 -~~~•••• - of Lot Mo. 101, wlelole
wu termer~!! o•ftOCI

4'.., llotga Rood;
Ill ·
A-, S.aond
Noeth-1 corner of
II n l'f
D 0 L Cl l!oeterly cllnlctlol\ t 4 PIIAMIC&amp;
FIMr
V tltl.-a Lot Mo. 113; tMI\oe
Roeonla), anel am I'OCit 10 tho p1tM of WOOLDIItDGI! CO., Cltilltnd, OH 44t13 II)' ,
l!lltrtNch l!altta; South l t · 30" lfttonelad only to b&amp;elrnlllllo -talnl.,. t..M.
tlllll-1130
thal\ca
along
llooth
uprUI
ane~tttr
Altome,llorPiolootlll
11111-'l't411alt
KENT, Ohio (AP) - Kent State decided it was time to put n
I!XCIPTIMG tilt CMI, IDIICMilll _......
:riLOGS.C .,.nack81Nattoulh »30' Weal t40.1
an end to all the surprises.
S c~ae- end 44' IMI, to tilt Norltl IIIII
Alto tho rtehliO - 0 II end gu oo Coli 4 b ., 0No alGI 01111
-17.1
flat;""'- ol " - Ettlletaln'a
-"elf
of~~~~mn
oae1
bJ
JamM
J
•
(tt4)U1·t102
Less than two weeks after its improbable March tOIU'nament
SWORN
TO _.. 74 \lllguu and tot; ltlonca ltorth 70produoad from • W.taon lftd Mlnftle
1'1111, ~ncluded and~ust four days ~r coach Stan Aeath left ...., ... ._lot: ..ld Wl4 h
•
14)S,10,f7,14,100t 81,0111 Ill!, and 10' _ , *-3 Mt to . 30' leal 113 foal to
aulltortllad tn mv 1t1t
lll\e~..Kent State found his replacement sitting right on Oft real aatlta ••••• tha oamo I) t, lOOt
Noi'UIIItt
ol REt....tlln'e
praeenca thl111th ot Lot No. SU; lilt
d
..
erlbacl
In
\'alums
prontltlt
-veyaelto
its blnch. '
·- •
.
·
thence 1\orth 1 lot; " - • South •
tet, PLIO 315, DaH ·Melon Atllft by IIIIey
Public Notice ·
........ 10' 11t1 tiD 30' W.at tiO !oat 10
Jim Christian, an assistant under Heath this season when the Recorda of Melgt Coahnn Md WtleiUICI
IMI
atone 1111 -•• the • ptan of
Colluely,
In
man
rocoreltd
II\
Daad
Till!
STATE
OF
OHIO
Golden Flashes advanced to the NCAA tournament's round of
ltna ot Lot No. eta • btatmll\g contalnlna
COiftliiOft with (lormer) Boolll 111.5, P1gall,
COUNTY OF
Mltll Landino
eight, on Tuesday was named the school's 21st coach- and third Grantore, tt11tr helm Recorda of Doaclo, . CUYAHOGA
Nollry Public, Stell 1 ltrst locual poet; • IOiiOO acre, m010 Ot
thence •outh 70 ttu.
otOhto '
in th~e years.
and aaalgn, It Ia ...... Couftty, Ohio.
tN TMI! COURT OF
dlg_a, - • 118.1
AIICIItor'a ·. Parcel
lly
Commlaalon
fllrthar
LlrMCI
by
trld
THIRD
PII!CI:
latftl
.
COIIIION
PLEAS
Christian takes over for Heath, who in his tint season led the
'"'
10
tha
ptoca
of
No.
t Htue •
axplrtt
t041-04
" ' - " the parttto tn Sactlorl t4 and 1S. . .. s cou·~
Golden Flashes to .a 30-6 record, the Mid-American Conference lhat lhl perlita will 'lbwn 3, Range t1 of • 110
bttlnnlne.
The Dalandanll
"' '•
OHIO
CITI8ANK N.A. AS contatnlne 12/t OD nemod above .,.
tide and victories over Oklahoma State, Alabama and Pittsburgh 1tlam 1111 ttiptr.ea In the Ohio Company'a
acm.
I'ICIIIII'Id to ana-r
TRUSTEE
aquat
proportion•
P~trchaae, bounelacl cAS! NO ~
in this year's NCAA tourney, before laking the job at Arkansas. partatntna to tht tftCI
EXCEPT .tho 011 1M' baton till dey
• following from lha ol, 2002.
Christian, 31, recei~d a five--year contntct from athletic direc- flllmplne ol cald elotocrlbed 11 IGIIowo: · AFFIDAVIT FOR •
AGNI!S.L abQvt Claacrlbad CITIBANK N.A. AS
from
lila
-tl
and
the
Betlnntne
In
tha
SERVICE
BY
OHLINGI
tor Laing Kennedy, whose priority in finding Heath's successor
matntan•nca of _nld cofttar of the Wtlla
PUBLICATION
AGNES OtiLI
A'S prtmlaaa cold to TAUSTI!E
was to bring stability and continuity to the program.
UNKNOWNH 8, A1ymonel l!lctlalaln
wall. Furlharmort, ' Run lload tn Mary PURSUANTTOOHIO
by Cited dated IV:
CAI!DITORS,
'1iih is the person we need to continue at the championship (former) Grantor• Wetaon'a liM; thence
RULE OF CIVIL
February 24. tl31 SHAPIRO I FELTY,
DEVISI!ES.
hereby
ertnt
to
the
down
Mtry
Wttton'l
PROCEDURE
4.4(1\)
level," Kennedy said. "If we were conducting a national search,
.
at lh• L.L.P.
baglnntne
LEGATEES,
Granta.., their helro 'nne alx roda to the
Samantht
s.
Joaaph,
we would' loo.k at Elite Eight-type prograQlS, and we have one and ••elena, the fleht canter of Watts Run;
IOIIt"-t
c
of
a
ADMINISTRATORS,
emBANK N.A.
lot
formerly
ownad
All-yat·ltw
EXECUTORS
AND
and
eaumant
to
lay,
thence
down
Walla
AS
TRUSTEE
right-here:jim is the right man at the right time for Kent State.
by- Rena Elntcteln All-r lor Pletntlft.
ASSIGNS tiel.
maintain, operata, Rul\ ... leal; tht- In
Ptelntll!
.
·
"He is part of the family."
~he
acme lltlng tha ~ltl-r
repair and remove dll-ectloniO tha Road;
•VI•
northwlll comer of -100 Wast St. Ctalr
LEGALNOOOE
Chris~an's deal is similar lo the one Heath got a year ago water line over and thereca Waaterly
AGNI!S GAIL
Lot No._113; thence Avenue, 2nd Floor
acro11 1111 mal tittle Hid Watts Run Rood
-OHLINGER
whe~ hj replaced Gary Waters, who left for Rutge..S.
claacrlbad In Volume 4$ fMt lo ttM place of
aka AGNES
Ag n t1
G til nonh 7e dllmtt and Cltvoland, OH 441t3
111, page 355, Deed bagtnnlne. Baing tha
OHLINGER'S
Ohlinger aka Aenaa 30' wtat so feat; (111) 1121-11130
,
Recorda of Mllfll-a•l!IT rn t stlato ·
UNKNOWN
Ohlinger'• Unknown thence north 20
"Now it's time for me to do County, which eald daaorlbad In dead HEIRS, CIIEDitoiiS, Haire, Crldllora, dlgmaa and 30' weat (4) 3
laal to lha - - - - - - what's best for me, and that's watar line Ia to run to from Roy Walla and
DEVISEES,
Dtvleua, Llfltltal, UO.S
nonh llna of what
tn Memory
"
tha
hOII&amp;t
Of
thl
EYe
WIIIIIO
ltwmnco
LEGATEES,
AdmlnlttfeiOS'I,
to get c1oser to home. J
Grantaea on •dJactnt WollundTeultWetla ADMINISTRATORS,
Encutort and wee formerly ~ana
Iat ;
One . of Ohio State's roat ••tete._
of reoord In Volume EXECUTORS AND
Aaalgna, whose faal Elaalateln'•
fromPIIp&amp;
north
70
thence
prospects has been invited to
Pt!WI 07-oot22.00 171, page 127, Dead _ASSIGNS at at.
ptaca of reelclanca sa dagmaa and 30' aaet
.play for the Buckeyes.
ALI 0
T HI! Recorda of Male•
Dttenclanta
watt u
who sa
him from his scholarship.
FOLLOWING
countY , Ohto, which'
present place of 1h' lest to iha
northaalt corner of
.t• &amp;."'
Marcus Morrison, a 6-foot- DESCRIBED IlEAL dead contained tho Samantha
a. raetdanca ara what
Arl,ansas athletics director
wae
formerly
following longu•ga: 11 Joaaph, betne ""' unknown, will lake Rena El~tleteln'a lot; .I. "' ...... llfi4 ""
FranK Broyles has not yet 6, 190-pound guard from St. ESTATE:
'·
'd
h
h
Sttuatad
In
the
Ia undtratood that duty 1wom, dapoaaa ftotlca that on
A;IMII. ,,1
b
F
released SuUinger, and may Peters urg, "'·• S3.1
e as Townahtp of Lillanon, uld gr•ntaa ah•ll not anclaaya lhll aha II January 15, 2002, thence south I
dagmac
and
30'
walt
pia 1nt 111 'a CITIBANK N.A. AS
not make a decision until late been offered a scholarship and - In tilt County of Meigs mnt, 111at or call utd the
1eo lett to tht place
lianr Mollutr )'liN nr.
plans
an
official
visit
to
Ohio
and
811111
of
Ohio:
above
deiCriiMd
lhrH
Allomay
In the above TRUST!! flied Ita dl
in the week. Waiting a few
beginning,
S
h.
k d
.
FIAIT Pti!CE: Baing pieces of roat ltlalo entlllad cellon tor Complaint In Cast containing
nnt /u'fUUf'lh
201100
. days would give Heath time
tate t IS wee en . He satd he a part of too Acre Lot horatn d .. crlb•d' Foraolo•urt, Money No. 02·CV-CIOIIn the
7lta ..... 1111 llflliA yt•N
more or Ita&amp;.
dH Htt tHO,.,
to try to persuade Sullinger to will sign with thtl Buckeyes if 142, Town 3, 111nga ~1 during the nalurcl lilt llallet 1 Judemant, Court ot Common acre
Alae
a lormar
he
enjoys
the
visit.
,
oflllt
Ohio
Company
a
ol
grantor'•
,
(lloy
thll
aarvlca
of
Piau
of
Meta•
Stllt
'"
ttU0h'1411)' , ... u ,,...
remain,
II to IItva
P II rc h • ••
• n d Wells and Ev• Walla) •ummona cannot be County, Larry E. grtnttl
M'llb ....
and undl1putad
SuUin~er said his first transTony Stockman, a 6-foot-1, claacrlbed as follow.: unt••• ltld er•nlora m•d• upon the · Silencer,
Mtlga lma
At .)'UN 11hroya Klf!rP
usa
along
the
north
fer chotec is. Ohio State in 165~pound guard who has Beginning at th1 etvathltr eonaanl Roy Dtfandanta Agnes County Clerk of atda of whit waa
bt~/l)rfl ,
been released 'from his sch 0 1- - Nortt1w1at corner of • Well• dacaaaad tha Gill Ohlinger akt Courta, P.O. lox 111, formerlY.
Sunwfny,
aorn .. tlnlfl'
Columl:fus, his hometown.
.
.
email tot htralolom UnCI d•v 01 Ayguat, Agn•• Ohlinger's 100 Second Street, Elatllltln a lotRena
Utfr lf)'f'l M;#f lfl'f',
of
a
"Buf they can't talk to me -arshtp at Clemson so he can conveyed by the said use, 1nd Ev• Wall• unknown Hairs, Pomeroy, OH 457et,
Tltft {n~"- .,.. '"'f'P
rlght•OI·w•v aa now
and I can't talk to them until .play closer to home in Medi- ·Helen Mien to lha ukl dacea11d the 111 day Creditor•, Davlttll, lttklng- foracloeura IOCIItd
U. ltltltttOry,
IO
PIIOOCk
and Eva Walla, of October tltt Legal-.
and llltelngthal the Stmat.
I get my ·release," Sullinger na, sat·d M on daY t hat he a1so . Roy
GQ&lt;j ••Ill link th•
thence Watt alone tht Baing Trao't 1 0 j Admlnlatrttort,
Deland•nta, -Agnes
Rtlaranca Deed·
lm•k.i11 rludn,
said. "That's all I'm waitihg wants to be a Buckeye but has Watts llun lload 75 cortlltclta of Tr~nater l!ltculora
and Gall Ohlinger aka Votumc
~v•, P•tl•
Wltt~H
N141 11 ahnll
been offered a scholar- leal to t corner, No. I from Etlllt of Allltlna; tbal plaintiff Agnes Ohlinger's 111, Mato• County
on. i hope I get it as soon as not
h'
thanca South 110 1111 Lewranct Walla ol hu
aurcltad -Unknown- Haire, Dead Racordl.
possible."
s 1P· .
to a corner, thanoe mcord In Volume 303, maaonabla dlttgance Craclltora, Davtaaea, -Auditor• Parcel
Sullmger and Stockman Eaat to tilt Una of pee a 477, Dead to ucartaln _the L~gstua,
Sullinger, who averaged 9.4.
IHttllly "''""" hy IIIII
No. 11.01211
&amp; wlft~, IA!rry &amp; Joy
mentioned lot; Record• ot Malga mcldanca of the acid Admlnlatratore,
points, 4.0 rebounds and 2.0 would not be- eligible· to play above
Parcel
Two:
Baing
lhanca -Norlh to the county,, cOhio.
d '" d n1 1 1 dl
Exaculorc and a part of Lot No. 500
Cl,.rlt.
assists as freshman, making next _ season because of place ol _beginning, Sub)lcl to 111111·aaa, 1•·~:rc:· "oct u ~~= Aaclgna hava or
(i
rmulrllll!lr"'''
Tmnnt.
Sugar llun In lha
con111n1ng 1112 acr~, •••aments and right Probata recorda, tnd cltlm to hnl an tn
him a top returning scorer for NCAA transfer rules.
,,""''Y
&amp;. w.mlr
Ltncotn
Hill
to
th.e Razorbacks. He said he
~hun Je:kins, a 6f,foot-6d ms'Eco'~~· PIECE: of;:lc:l ~:~·. 07 _ ~': t::,!::~~c:r:~ :.":~!:;t 1;.~~~~~:~ Annexation
Pomeroy,
•
n
d
enjoyed. playing at Arkansas,
-poun power otwar lltlngln 100 Aero Lot 00121.000, 07· other t~an harotn ••• below:
llluatad In the
but that without Richardson, from Itawamba Community 142, Tow_n 3, Rtnea t,1 -OD!IU.OOO and 07- forth, unknown, and
Miss.,
also
otthe
Ohio
Company
1
00827.000
_
u
"
w
II
h
Vllllga
ol Pomeroy,
College
in
Fulton,
1
0
0
whom his father has known
...
Oh
'
S
.
Purohall,
and
PAACI!L
NUMBI!A·
"'aonabla
dlttgenoa
Ohio,
county of
1 to vtstt
- Jor .20 ye:m, it's time to leave. pans
to tate ~hts boundt,d
and 07-ootll 000
' bt 11 certll,nad; and Meigs ancl lllte of
.
claaorlbtd II lollowa, PROPim
.
lh&amp;t thtl 0111 II 0111 Ohio:
?A lot of people around weekend.
1 lot 30 fool ADDIIIII:
The
signing
period
runs
Baing
33tao
olthou
mllfttlontd In
Percel O.na: Baing
here have _been doing what's
_
Wetl end 110 tact Walla Run Road Stoll on 2703.14 a fNirl of Lot No. 500
.best for them," Sullinger said. Aprtl10 through May 15.
South; thane• 30 feet Portttitd, OH 41770
tndlor 3101.08 ollha tn Sugar Run In
Eaatand ttO Norlh out Sal~ Premlcn llavlud Cc!da of Ohio L1no o In
HIll
of Ihe Northuat Located at 33110 1nd pureuent to Ohio Annaullon
to
oornarollhaiOIIowlng Wot11 Run Road, Aula of Civil Pomeroy,
• nd
'
dau rtlled land: Portland, Ohio 48770 Procadurt 4:4(A).
daacrlbtd 11 follows:
the second inning.
Beginning
at
the
Slid
Promlua
Beginning 11 a atske
Appier went 11 - 10 with a North weal corner of Apprll-.«1 at $1,000.00 SHAPIRO 1 FELTY,
In the aaet aide of
3.57 ERA last year in his only tha Ianda ot lloy and cennot ba cold tor L.L.P.
·
Peacock Slretl,
season with the Mets. The 34- Watts; thence 8 outh 21 laoa lh•n two-lhlrda of
-------Basket Bingo
to a rock oorn11 that •mount
year-old right-hander. signed rods
In
Memory
between n lend• of TERMS OF SALE:
Basket Bingo Fundralser
cun double in 'the seventh a $42 miUion, four-year deal Jamaa J. Wat1on and SII,OOO.OO down,
April4 at 6:00 p.m.
gave Anaheim a three-run with New Yo~k in 200i.
Middleport American Legion
NoTES: Cleveland RHP
-... cushion. Mark Wohlers intenMll1 Street.
tionaUy walked Garret Ander- Jaret Wright has 'returned to
Sponllored
by the
son to pitch to Glaus, who the ~tended spring training
MEIGS BAND BOOSTERS
lined Wohlers' _next pitch progtam in Winter Haven,
Water's
Edge
of
Syr·ac11s~
· Admission $20.00
deep· i9t9 the gap in right· Fla. to begin rehabilitating his
2-16-14
3-28-95
Taking
Applications
For
for 21 Bingo games.
right
!houlder. Wright
center.
No
Smoking. Concession
Eckstein had an RBI single pitched just four innings this
1 Bedroom Apartment
Memories
stand will be nn~·n
off Sapathia, then scored from spring afier feeling discomfort
Seniors,
disabled;
handicapped
of Dad
~ ff!· ,.:Atad's double into in his shoulder." Exams were
Daddy
was
a special man,
AJC,
on-site
Range,
refrigerator,
inconclusive
.
...
The
Indians
th,friahttf1tl4 c~rner for 4-all
Longabergere
So gentle, loving and kind.
ih tlfi '!!fill affer the Indians played the second game of an
laundry, community room,
He was just a little farmer ~
Basket Bingo
scor~d, twice in the iop of the · eight-day, six-game road trip
In the prime of his life, j.
24 hour maintenance provided.
Thursday, April 18th, 2002
to Anaheim and Detroit.
Making his children happy...,_,.;~•
inning.
Call
or
Come
By
Our
Office
6:00p.m.
also, his darling llnle wile.
Eckstein also tripled, ' had Since 1994, Cleveland has
Located At
Middleport American Legion
another 1ingle; and made a opened the season at home
I
He
had
a
IIUie
old
.farm
fine diving play on Gutierrez's only three times ;_ in 1994,
Mill St. • Middlepot1, OH
2070 St. Rt. 124
Way back In the country
grounder deep in the hole in 1996 and last season. _
$20.00 for 20 Games
With horees and cows In the barn
Office Hours:
And pigs In the pens.
Held by the
Tues &amp; Thurs . Noon· 5 pm
·
With some cats and dogs
Guiding Hand School
and ducks and turkeys and hens.
992-6419 • TDD ## 1·800-750-0750
For Tickets
I
He always emell of work, of dust and sweat,
From the newly plowed ground,
Call 740-367-7371
The newly mown hay,
Split lhe Pot • Refres,hntlmt~ll i&gt;
Help Wanted
. The rustling of the com
Dobbers • $1 .00
from being In the fields all day.
.. ·- ~~
- - ..,,
- .v
• The Longaberger com,.nv or anv of
- ~
'.fto
·''
-- ..
11'1 calif rtpreuntatlvli ara In no
Daddy had the nicest lace
1111ng In 100 Acre 5) North 77 dtg.
. ·r---·-.-ccnnaeled 10 or riiPQnlilble lor thll
The biggest, warmest smile,
81ttrllf't .... of Rill Lot t42, Townlhlp 3N, 33'31" 1111 24.44 IMI;
RN~S
bingo event
. . l!elltl
Bul moat of all, I liked the best
llanga 11W of lllo Ohio
Thenoa tnvlng tlld
WE
WANT
YOU!
My
Dad's
homespun
style.
Company'a Purcthlll, orHk North 07 dell.
~~
The IIIII 01 Ohio,
and being 1 p1roal 81' 18" Wall21.11
And though, his tales were ~ometjmea tall,
Mllg• County.
oraatad out ol the IHI to en Iron pin Ill
HUNTER SAFTY COURSE
.he made the day such tun I
r
· Areadla Nurslns Center Is a
lloaar •nd - Vlolll by thla aurvey at the
&amp;11lllll raclllty nestled In the hllll
at Forked Run
lltMflclll Ohio, Inc. Willford property louthw••• corner ol
He tried to accomplish what he had lo do ,
of
Coolvllle,
Ohio.
We
pride
dill
Sportsman Club
(Vol- 310 PLIO 2111, the Cl1rance 1nd
Without a murmur or regrets,
ourselves In placlntlhe need•
llenaftol•i Morlglga Melgl County D••d Joyce
Waddle
He
triad
to
live
a
life,
he
felt
wae
pleasing,
F-riday:
Aporll 19th 6 pm-10 Pm
Co. Of Ohio
and wants or our residents ftnt.
lleoordiJ bounded encl property (Volume 321,
To
God
and-4lllhose
he
met.
Sat. 9 am· 5 pm
Platntlll ·
dHcflbadnlolowt: page 321, Melgl
Wcotrcr:
••otnnlng In tha County
Dead
He felt he ahowild love and compasslo!l
VI.
center ol Walla Run Rtoord•); thenoe
Waan up to $18.50 P.r hour
To each and everyone. IIOild at lhl nort11t111 .Ilona Waddll't W111
8 hourohlfta ·
He
lived
his life to It's fullest peaR
CAIENO
oornar ot tilt Tlllll IIIII North 07 Cllg. H'
30
mldmulo
1
nuno
raUo
And
all
his
taskt,
they were all complete.
01 CV108
Weill, property 11"Walt121.00fillto
Laid
back
environment
.
It
wasiuat
the
lime
for him to leave.
(VOl- 803, f11111477, 1111 otnW of 1111 Wtlll
A
!elm
of dedlcaled and carina co;
Hla
work
on
lhla
earth
waa done.
llalga
County
Deed
llun
IIOild,
paling
an
~ 1""-.~ualolc, 11. ,
worken
ll•oorde); thanoa Iron pin by thla aurvey
can eat
Daddy's whiskers had grown grayer,
I'Mtenclanll,
1tona T..ela Wile' II tt 0.00 IHI; lianoa
And his hair the same
"' We rumgdy bare thc followiQs
lilt IIIII Iouth t t2.02 along Ihi Olllllr Of
with beverage
In pureuanoa of •n IMI to ,lha canter Of Wellt Run lloild Iouth
And wrinkles were etched POl' lin• eyeflehlc;
Order of ltlt In the Walle Run Creek, 12 dig. 07' 21" Will
On a tlied and leeble lrama.
1 Fuii·Ume 3·11
$5.00
lboft entitled action, I paaelng Iron plna tit 130.11 fait to lila POint
Oh, how I long lor thlt
I Part-lime 3-11111·7
will otter. lor ula 11 Dy 11111 aurvav 1111.00 ol
beginning, ·
whiskered hug and kl..
publiC euctlon, II the ancl 11.00 1111; ~~~~- oonuttnl"' 0.42 aora,
Chester Vol. Fire
ot
Of
a dear sweet gentle Dad
II fOUl ert Interested ln applylna you
Courthouee
111 1o11ow1na 1111
« .....
.
I dearly do miss.
11111 apply In penon betll'ftll die
Pomeroy, Ohio, In tilt mea ndara of Wtlta 'ub)lot to •II tegal
Dept.
I love you dad.
above named COIInly, Run • 8pprDXItnltlly llllllllli...
boun of P:OD-4:00PM or you CID call
on tha 23rd' day of Dy thllollowllll I llvl Th I
I b 0 VI
StKey Duncan It (7401 667·3156.
:April 6, 2002
Sadly mtsiS8d by hll wife Elizabeth,
May, 2002, at 10:00
daaorlptlona were
-·
"
sons and daughter&amp;, Leonard, A111e, Belva,
o'clock • · m., the t) North 81 dag, made In aooordanol
·· 11:00AM to 6:00PM
ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
following deecnbtd 34'22" 1!8111.11 - ; with an IIDIUII IIII'Yty
Irene, Alvin and adopted son Paul; ·
Eut Main Strnt
Fund .Drive for
to wit:
2) •outh 71
condUIDted by Jamaa
Sona·ln·law and daughtera-ln·IIIW, Drew,
lllull'ttd In the 26' tr lui G.U ; ltlwlrt, PI 7421,
Coolville; Ohio 457l3
Butch, June, Mary and Wanda;
Air Lifting Bag System
TOI\II'IIhlp of La!Mnon, 3) Iouth 1:1 dll, durtne ,._,....., and
(740)
667-3156
11
Grandchildren,
10 Greit Grandchildren
County of tllllg•, and 11'11"1u117.00IIII; ou•mbar, 1H3, and
Lola of nlecet and nephews
EOB
ltata of Ohio, and 4) Iouth\ 31 dig. January arid ,lbnlltry
·
·
.)/
2 Sltllers, Focle and Velva
lurther claaorlbael •• nu• 1111111.o1 - • 1114. aurlna• ara
_
baaed on aaaume_d
101._, IO-WII:
,
~"
- .

Christian head coach

Pill

C0

--.-orltee.

10'"' ...,_

:::,.,1002.

--•-nor

c-

·-

•lo"'

·ttome

~·s.

a

23

Tribe

......,

William
"Wally"

-Stover

l

..

··~

SPAGHETTI
DINNER
all you

rill-.

--= =·

--

--

--

.:~;,

~,~

(

The Dilly Sentinel• hge A 7

www.mydllltyuntiftll.com

••ot

.

BY Scon WoLFI
l10me run , Justin Allen a single, and
OVP CORRESPONDENT
Urkc Hill a single.
CHESHlltE - Behind a twdve- - Riv-er Valley ' hitters were Dustin
hit attack and a barrage of River Val.- Gibbs ;~ith a triple amYslngle, BJ
ley errors, the Southnn Tornado~s Rose '3 single, H.ayscan Allen a home
rolled over th~ R aiders 14-8 Tuesday
night in a non'-league baseball -game. run, and singles ~ach by C harlie HoiSouthern is now 2-0 overall and lanbaugh and Jamie Thevenir.
Rivd Valley is 0-1.
Southern went up 4-0 in the first
Matt Ash led the attack with three on a Brice Hill single, a stolen base
singles, while Dally Hill, Brandon and an error and an R.Bl ground out
Pierce, and Aaron Ohlinger t•ach had by Matt Ash. That was followed by a
two singles, B.J. Marnhout had a Brandon Pierce single. Marnhout

Pro.Baseball

I

•••ny. Aprl ;s. 2112

Southem drills River Valley, 14-8

WEDNEID\Y'S

'

'

Wtcln11dly, April 3, 2002

'/)

""

�•

•••

•

..
w.c~neactay,

~Ill A. I • The o.My .ltntiMI

April 1, aooa

.'

11tribune -·Sen
. C L A S S I F I 1!.D

We Cove
Mtlgl, Game,
And Mason
Countlea Like
No One
lse Canl.

TJ~e lhe PAIN
•juf of PAINTING!
Lt'! llrl~

~LLtliL

Jr..! 11 fr)l Y'jUI

Ce.llular

Ull'S Pllmla
0401

renuoloM)'.
1
und Yoau 1 hernpy Oln

Jeff Warner Ins.

CtrllOcuh:li Avu11ubh:

Authorized Agent

$)0·4!5 nlinvlr:"
•.7,5 tnlnU1 CN

~45

992-5479

FN

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

Place
vour .Ad, .

To

call Todav•••
fJIIIe~; "tJoJ~&gt;,,
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Display Ads
All Oloploy: .U NOOn I

eualn••• Dl'fl Prior To
,ubJltltiQn
Sundoy OI&amp;PIIy : 1100
'fhurtdl'f ror SUMI'tt

Includes Free Yard Sate Slgnt
up To 15 words, 3 Oays
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepetd '

I •

Prlvitl P*tl'f Adl Undor $100
20 WOtdl 1 blyl • hch Item Prlted
• No Commercial Ado
• NO Tltklti/Purobrod Anlmoll ..
Or GltiiOt/VIrd Sol11 • ~lnitt· 3 Pot Ptrton
Mill fo : Ohio Velloy Publllhlng, ea5 Third
AVInue, GolllpOIII, OH ~5&amp;31

YOUNG'S
DIPOYSAO
G&amp;R
CARPENTER
PARTS
Sanitation
SERVICE
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Paris
Factory Authorized
Casc· lli !'arts
Dealers

• Stttt Your Adl WJth A. KtywQrd • lntludl Complttt
DIICI'IP.UOn t ln t:l udt A Prl ~t • A.¥Oici A.bbl't'llttlonl
• ll'lflul1t Phont Nwmbtr And A.adrtll Wlltn HtldtCI
• Adl Should "-un ? fliiyl

. 1000 St. Rt. 7 Snutl!
Coolville, Of/45723

740-667-0363

• Room Addition• &amp;

Remodeling
• New 01r1gt1
• Eleotrlcal &amp; ~lumblng

• Roollng I Guttera

• Vln~l Siding &amp; Pointing
• Patio •nd Porch De&lt;: HI

33561 Bailey Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
"Service You
Can Count On"
Owner

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·621 5

Pornerov, 0/110

'

it-N

'

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Baahan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
740·949-2217

, SlzeJ 5'x10'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8:00 PM
1114.1 1 mo pcJ

Gene Arms

992-3174

HOWARD L.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
Maintenance·
Gutters· Down
Spout
Free Estimates
949•1405 TFN

•t'.,

BlliiJj rwres ~ CM

fruit

.

~.smrvon

Sellttaclla1 g.mvteed,
LIEtine w.vr.ny
Free Esti tllte8
740-371H1349PO 2

.Sunset Home
Construction

I AKC Poodlo Puppy. Ador· ~
.
able AKC Oolden RotrloMrr 11$i Toyotll T100 tr1Hlfl,
Pupploo for E11tor. Vol VO, IUIOL-~C. 1 owntr,

~·
t7.tll)319·2il3tl
....:100; lw&lt; T~ - ·
,
IUtlroof, NC, Cb, 12,000:
0 Full Stoodod St. S.rnlld 11187 eorotl&lt;l, 4 do«, outo,
PUiltJi81, 8 lllale•. 1 ltmlllt. AIC, fl.400: 11181 Coroll,

'litO each. Both paoronll on 4 - , aull&gt;, AIC, Ioiii (1111H,
premll8o. Call j740)258• t2,400. 740-:z&amp;HCJ12
l85.2 alter 5prn.

"

line~t,

. (Insured)
Free Estimates

740-992·3985

.
r-:"B~ISS~fl"!!'"""''L
BUILDfRS InC.
Winduw• • l{,.,r.ng
COMIIII!lAiand ll!IDOOIAl.
FREE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES!

(NO SUNDAY CALLS

Racine. Ohio 45771

740-985·3948

COHCRETE/BLOCK/.BRICK
• hH Jt~·r~~. Wall,, Stcr~ .
I J,d Wr11~.
l&lt;cplau.:ll ll'llh, • Walko;
nwJ /Jrno('" • "'wnd l
( 'n;tc
lt ~t· l ~\l lll lllk~
:-il't \Ill!! (

)lllo ;uul W V.

wv llln1 7 12

A(; ~crvlcc

,,S537 Sl, Kl. 7 'nrth • l'umt ruy, 011 4!i720
• 4~11 ked f11r J;,mh~. h~·~'· •.lnt flll.. kc.:n., omJ ~
,mhhtlfo
• Seed l'ulai•X'!o

e;t (3011-)0
882·2343

• foul I l . tnc uf llulk, ( Mnk:n .l.ict'd"
• l'l:rtdtl(;r \pn.tfl~,dly ,_,, oljtri&lt;:d Jr,r ( '•lnkn ( mpll
• New h~rlth1 cr H tH'J!t~·~
• !\II huie~tc" have ll(·c:r1 p;mcm l('ql'd tr• m4·ct
.AJrr ~tltJmy_ A\\41li.dlnn ~IIIIJrl;rrdo,

lF-N.

WYLtoi02JW

Pomeroy Eagles
BinGO 2171 ·
· tuery Thursday
6 Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
farly birds start
6:30

• Replacement

Progresslue top line
Thursdays

740-992·7599

1SO h st Stale Strccl

l'honc(740)59l-h671
Athen•, Ohio

Progresslue
Cot~erall on Sund4ys

"We M:/1 Chcv ·. - (nr len"

740-742-3411

t

Wtllorvlce

(7~) 861-3.118

Ail Maktt

(eoO) 1153-3110

~~ ,_,
HENDRIX
High&amp; Dry
fluting &amp; Cm•llng
FrttEtliOIIIIH ·
24-HR.
SERVJCt:
SeH-Storage HEATING ' "Onr
!•rile.

HESIIJENTIAt &amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING

HI-Efficiency Heat Pump11, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnace"

f4l'Zll!J 1::;::::=1.

P/8
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Ptge A 10 • The Deily Sentinel

www.mydallyHntlnel.corn
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ALLE-YOOP

Wedneeday, April 3, 2002

&amp; ,

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.What's inside

BY TONY M. LEAcH
TLEACHGPMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY- A new project geared toward replacing
an aged water line on Lincoln
Hill has been planned; however, the date for the new
line's construction has yet to
be determined.
Village administrator John
Anderson said last week a
new' water .line will be

'EVAIPV

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Hl&amp;h: 50s, Low: JOI

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BY BRIAN J. REED
BAEEDC&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM.

Details, A:Z

SK
•

I

I

30-member troupe
'superior' at contest

Weather

YNL

•

kii0\\1 ~tHIIt..'rhint:t :~bm1t. Tht:rc

up to you determine which
can bring you thr grcatnt rclurn for your time and atten1

tion .

ARIES (Marth 21 -April 19)
- You love a clullf'nRr, but
don 't be oagrr to jump into
sitwations whrrr: the odds arc

•110in11 you ··you'd~ octting
yuunel( up for a fall , Kno"(
where to lo9k fur ron,.nce
and Y"" "II find it. The AotroGtaph M•rchmaker instanrly
rcvoals whkh •itp~s art ru-

m•nlic•lly pttf&lt;ct for you.
M.til $2.75 to Matchn,.k&lt;r,
c/o tl1i~ 11cw1ra1~'• 11.0. Do:c
17511, Mnruy Hill Station,
N&lt;w York, NY 101 !M't.
TAURUS 'April 20-May
20) -- Th.re 's a fin&lt; line ~­
tween asking qutstions and
~ing nosy. Know the differr:ucr. and Jnind your owt\
business.
GE~INI (May 21-June 20)
-- Linlil yuur fin~nci.ll invC"tcmr:nu to things you 've

chr.-kod out thoroughly and

senus··r\S.A
Honor Band
concert
~~

· Today'l clue: R equsls H

•

tht yr-ar :.htad, btu it ~ill be

"We will definitely try .start
the project as soon as possible,
however, I can't say when that
will happen ."
Anderson said the village is
still s:earching for grant
inoney to fund the project .
and once the engineering
plans . have been approved,
permits will be sought from
the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).

Eastem
band
·. . ','i.l': ,. . .
to

poople, putlnclprtHnl. Elch ltlllr In lhe cipher standi for tnolhtr. . ·

10.

mual might cumc your way in

nectors and upgrade offshoots
to other streets.
Anderson said the project is
currently in the engineering
phase and a date to begin
· construction has not been
· scheduled.
.
"Right now, we have other
projects to complete and .a
specific d~te for the new
water line's construction has
not been arranged," he said.

Spotlight: ·Tobacco Dangers

Stocks fall
. NEW YORK (AP)
Worries that rising tensions
in the Middle East could
qua'h the economi~ recovery 4rovo · 1\t;lCk , prices
sharpfy lower Wednesday,
with the Dow industrials
dropping more than 100
points in their · fourth
straight lming session.
The Dow dosed down
115.42, or L1 percent, to
10,198.29. The blue-chip
index has lo.st 228.62 in the
past four sessions.
The broader market also·
stumbled. The Nasdaq composite
index
&lt;)edined
20.05, or 1.1 ,;&gt;ercent, to
1,784.35 after falling 58.22
Tuesday to its lowest dose
in a month. The Standard &amp;
Poor's 500 index fell 11.36,
or 1.0 percent, to ·1,125.40.

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 9-7-0
Pick 4: 4-5·3·7
5upiiLaiD: 9-12·27·31·36-42
Bonus Bell: 34
.
Kicker: 4-8·Hi·3-8
Pick 3 dlfY: 6-9-7
Pick 4 dl)': o-9-9-8

~

than

"Besides being old, the
water line is not reliable, has
had breaks in it and is difficult
to find parts for. It's literally
fajling apart," he added.
"Once the new line is in
place, it will reliably supply
clean water to residents in} he
Lincoln Hill area ."
In addition to repla cing the
old line, Anderson .said work
crews will install new co. n-

by Lule Cempoe

APRIL 31

Mor~ ON,orruni~its

installed on Lincoln Hill to
replace the current line,
which is considered an
"antique" and falling prey to
general deterioration.
"The water line on Lin coln
Hill is very. very old," said
Anderson. "I believe it was
installed sometime· before the
1900s. It's c~rtainly not performing to capacity like it was
intended.

c-ty Clj&gt;llor cryplagromt oro crtlltd from quollllono by lai!IOIJo

..

· Thu,..l•y. April 4, 2002

·Lincoln Hill vvater line to ~ . replaced

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1 I' I

!WEDNESDAY

I

Lilah Frecker, 84
•
George B. Hudson, 75 '
Raymond King, 81
Charles Sayre, 59
rAargaret V. Barber, 76
Detau.; A3

f P~ar

· - ~- -

Hometown News,.per

•

Deaths

'::~:~.~, S~R~lA~~t-~s·

i~~~~

I

Tribe beats Anaheim, 11

major. Then South
•
, HVNATVCIV.'should have bid three
di•monds, aiming for
FNRY
AVKTVZ
duce
no-crump, but
I
tl1at would have pin- ·
PREVIOUS SO~UTION - 'There lit a lot 01 heavy heartl In '
pointed the lethal
tl)e locker room.' - Trevor HoHman, on lhe dtalh ol Pldre '
heart lead.
leam!lllhl Mike Darr
'
With rwo· heart los~----------~~--~·~----------~~---J en, it looks like South
WOlD
GAM
I
needs the spade fi. !Olio~ ~y CLAY l. ,CI.1AN _.;..._,_ ___
r-----------~ · r------------.
nesse to work, but the
Kelly.
spade
nine improves O rlearranae letrers of rhe
PENCIIl.
four scramb.l•d wordt b•·
his chances.
low to forrr. faur simple ward.l.
'
0
After winning with
F
0
the diamond ace,- de~I EDAMO
clarer draws the missing trump, cashes the
diamond king, and
exiu · with a heart,
C0 K N K
The defenders take
I~
two heart tricks, but
;
=--:-.~•"'- .
. . what then? If East is
on lrad, he will be
DU A L
cndplayed, forced ei5
ther to lead .into dllmTWE SECftef TO ~SIN6
. my's spade tenace or
A 1.06 LIKe 1'~15 IS NOT TO
to concede a ruffLOOK OOWN .. JOS1'1.001&lt; Uf..
and-discard. So, West
wins the second heart
and returns the spade
four.
However, declarer
plays low from the
dumm)l. Here, South
is home, but even if
East could put in the
SCIIAM-L~S ANSWERS
.
'
spade 10, declarer
Openly·
ExpelQuest·
Viscid
·
STYLE
;
would win with the
Fa"mous comic on fashion: 'They should put expira- 1
ace and finesse dumtion
dates on clothes. That way people would know when :
my'• spade jack.
what
they are wearing has gone out of STYLE."
..:
South gets home if
...
Wc•t has either the
••
spade queen or the

~~~~~

t

. Melp Cou,nty's

buy

1:'- ::se Got
=~
up

21 '1--

r..

denied · a fuur-.can..l

BIG NATE

nontld'l
roiMI
'" Dlllry ....

t ...lmllll

r..111

We give nu 1mint
value to nine• and
\(J,. However, they
Ilene rate lots of trick•. ·
J&lt;ut imagine the difference between tbrse
two ham~.\:
SPADES A 3 2
HEARTS -A 3 2
DIAMONDS A 3. 2
CLUllS.A 4 3 2"and:
SPADES A 10 9
HEARTS 1\ 10 9
DIAMONDS A 10 9 ·
CLUJJS A 10 9 8
The second band
will umally be worth
two ur three tricks
more in the play :
Give partner SPADES
J 5 4. Opposite
SPADES A 3 2. that
· will rarely b.: worth
. twu tricks. Due uppo-.
site SPADES A 10 \1,
it i~ a 76-!&gt;Cre&lt;'lll shot
for two tricks ..
In Imlay's dr•l,
Sollth w:~s ilcalt 01\e
valua~lc spot card.
Wuuld yuu h~w med
it to best dli:ct? How
would yotl plan the
play in five clubs after
w,•st lead&lt; a diamond?
..
North's three -dub
l'csponsc woa~ a limit
raise showi1ig 10- 12
&lt;uppurtpoint&lt; with at
l&lt;•ast five dubs, .111&lt;\

600P

44 DIMrt

23 Kind Of

Opt&gt;nlna ~•d : • a

"5ALTH

lltp II¥
'lwWII

tennlnal

41 Frulllulce
nulllltll
53 .Ice hockey
18 Playground
localn

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~•Ill ~ W~•l

43

Nerve 0111

11 ~
ng illlor
17 lliiNIIII

AI 2 ·
J , ..

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=-""

CIIOit

fundi

•

¥1f,Q71

• Q ...

Mlaf,bor
Hillel

is tou mtu.: h uncenait~ty lingcrin~-t

nt thi~ rime .

..

CANC:ER Qu11c 21-Julr
21) -- E•t:~l&gt;lish P'"ICI""ic pri -

uritil.·• c-.rly · in thC' day, and
dun 'c allow }'Oursl'lf ro get off

tra,k. You could end up \~a~t­
ius ;all uf ruur tinu.• jousting:
with windmills.
·

LEO Quly 23-Aut~. 22) .. If
you allow your ego to over• .
co1nt common sense, yoU i..t.
eould end up matchint~ tall •
tales with o pro at ttlling '
whopptts. You'll lose.
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22)
•• Have eompecenr people
re1dy to aHisl you at a monlent's noriu if you hopt to
finish in the black. Without
th&lt;m, you're not likrly to

succeed.

·

LIBRA (Sqlt. 23-0ct. 23) -

An atlftnpt to pltalt everyone
could 'cau~e you to be indecisive, and allow auothrr who
doa not have your.,.;, int&lt;r~
nt1 at hoarf r&lt;&gt; coli the •huiJ.
Takt allancc.
SCOI~PIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) •• J)on't say anything
ncptivc about anotht'r co-

wOrker, evrn if ic's deserved.
What you say will go directly

••
f
,•
•

into the pipeline and "" diitonrd in tho proceH.
SAG ITT Al\.IUS (Nov. 23- {
Dec . 21) •• Oncr your fman- I'
cial alfai11 get muddled up, it'!
gC'Iing IC'.I he difficult to gL't ~
the~n straightened out ag:~in. '
Tlnngs could end up costing
you more dun they ~lmuld.
CA\IIli,CORN (Dec. 22- :)an . 1"9) •• You've got to be
pr~pan·tl to ~lo for n~ur~"'l(
before you can ;ask w'mething
. of othrn. Set rh&lt; proper examp!&lt;, and p&lt;ople will follow
your load.
·
AQUARIUS (fan. 21!-Fd&gt;.
1"9) -· The"' mi(llot "" a ttnlggle betwten your negative
imaginario11 and your positive
conceptions. Takt control of
your thinking, and don't let ,
..If-doubu crowd out opti· .
milna.
_
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
•• If there is money involved;
consider any situation that
yoU manage for ano,her as a
sacred trust. Live up ro their
'rust, and y&lt;iu won't betray

younelf either.

·

W.VA.
.
Dilly 3: 3·8-4
Dilly 4: 1-1·4-8
jll;uJbll: 8-14-17-29-36 (3)

Index· ·
' 2Sedllnt-ll~

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3
84-6

87
A4
A6

A3
A3.
81-3
A2

D 200l Ohio VOlley Pul&gt;llshinJI Co.

....

.....

•

j

•

•

WHAT'S RUI:LY IH t~- '~"" C(~l&lt;l11 (:r~w· ·-"· fifth! griiilnt' Salisb1.uy Elementary
couldn't believe how much'?!fid' atiltf" t11ere .ls lrf cigarettes·- like arsenic, butene, and acetone. Here TraCey O'Dell, tobacco prevention nurse for the Meigs County Health Departmf!nl.
talks to Crockett about the harmful Ingredients In cigarettes and ·the health dangers they
Impose, iiS"teacher Karen Walker, left, listens ln. (Charlene Hoeflich)

IC in' utts
BY CtwuNIE 1tOEFUCH
HOEFUCHGPMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Wjth statistics showing that
90 percent of people who smoke started before
they turned 18, the goal is to keep kids from
getting hooked on tobacco products by making them aware of the health dangers.
· That \vas the emphasis of programs carried
out in sevefill Meigs County schools Wednesday by Tracey O'Dell, tobacco prevention
director for the Meigs County Health Department, in observance .of"Kick Butts Day"
She traveled to several· elementary schools
where she c"o nducted interactive presentations
and displayed a variety of products - like
Decon which contains arsenic, fingernail polish which is made with acetone, candles prepared with stearic acid, and butane "lighters
filled wit~ butane - all ingredients in tobacco
which are known for causing major health
·
problems.
O'Dell visited Mid-Valley Christian School,
Southern Elementary School, Meigs Middle
School and Salisbury .Elementary telling the
story of the health .haUrds of tobacco use, and
sent educational information to the other elementary and. mi~e, schools in the county.
Materials w~ d,Stti~utcd to students to lJSe
in counritigl ,tlie ' ~er
tob;tcco related
message,. they. see, as they go about their daily
activitid. Not only will they be recording the
number of smoking relerences, but the names

ot

of brands they see being promoted.
On April 19 the score sheets will be collect~d and the number of references to smoking and other tobacco use and the sources of
promotion will be tallied and reported through
the newspaper.
·
As explained by O'Dell, smoking messages
·
are everywhere.
· "It's not just posters and signs, it's bumper
stickers, book covers, briefcases, calendars,
magazines, CD tape covers. hats and jackets;
and scoreboards;' O'Dell said. "Everyday kids
are bombarded with ads from tobacco compa- '
nies encouraging them to use tobacco products.
"The tobacco industry spends $8.2 billion a
year on advertising and marketing to attract
new smokers and to keep people addicted, and
many of those dollars focus ·on attracting
young people to tobacco," she added .
During Wednesday's program, the students
were given the opportunity tci sign the "Kick
Bum Day Pledge" stating that they want to be
a "youth advocate who ·will sta nd up against
tobacco usc and all its dangers."
·
"Concerned youth can ·make a difference;'
said O'Dell,.not only in their own lives, but by
helping others. "It's a fact that approximately one
out of every three kids who start smoking will
die prematurely from a robacco-rclated illness.
"Isn't that enough reason to try and make a
difference?"

TUPPERS PLAINS- Fresh from a successful competitive season, the award-winning Eastern High
School Marching Band will send six of its 30 members
to Saturday's performance of thr Ohio Music Educators Association's (OMEA) Honor Band .
The small, but powerful band, under the direction of
Chris Kuhn, is just back from the OMEA District ,17
~and ~n~ ~~qi~ I,~rge Group AdjLdicaled - F\Ient in
Po.rwitoutH, where ;jt was one of only five bands to
receive a superior rating . .
•
Athens High School, Vinton County High School,
Portsmouth High Schpol and Gallia Academy were
among the 16 other schools _c ompeting. The contest
was ·held at Shawnee State. University.
The band's award-winning program included three
songs: "Miss Liberty March" by John Edmondson;
"Encanto" by Robert W. Smith; and "Heatherwood
Portrait" by James Barnes, according to Kuhn.
The group's superior rating now qualifies them for
the opportunity to _c ompete at the OMEA's regional
contest in Gahanna on April 28 and 27.
Seniors Sara Mansfield and Amanda McKnight and
juniors Thomas Simmons, 'Tyler Simmons, Nichol
Honake-r and Carrie Crow will don their green and
white band uniforms to play with the honor band. The
concert will be held Saturday evening at Ohio University's Templeton-Blackburn Memorial Auditorium on
Union Street.
The rest of the Eastern band musicians still have
work to do, as well. The band plans a trip to the competitive Smoky Mpuntain Music Fenival in Gatlinburg,
Tenn. , April 18-21.

HONOR lAND MEMBERS -

Thomas Simmons. Carrie
Crow, Sara Mansfield, Amanda McKnight, Tyler Simmons
and Nichol Honaker are Eastern High School's. members-of
the OMEA Honor Band, which will perform at Ohio Univ~rs~
ty 's Memorial Auditorium on Saturday. (Submitted)

Did You know that the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation is
offering gri:mt monies for Transitional Work Progr-ams?
Did you know this program coil reduce your workers'' comp cosls?
Call Holzer Work Unk tO see how this program can be prO'(ided Of
no charge lo slale funded employers.

Call
•
446·5733 or
'
....... 1·866·308·2266
·f

MEDICAL CENTER
·Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holZer.org

...

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