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                  <text>AEP.Cheshlre

·stuns Galli school offldals. A3

•

a1

Melp County's

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\Vhlt's Inside

Did You Know That•••
Mattress Manufacturen Buy
Components From the Same
Our Manufactu.._n Buy
Fabric, Foam, Filter, lnsulaton
Lumber•••From The Same
As The Name •Brands.
We Save You 40%
National .
Franchise. Fees
Fe~ncy Showrooms

Persons sentenced
to five years in prison Cheshire
Chatges stem
.from Tuppers
.Plains theft
I\'

liliAN

J, RIID

BAEIDffMYDAI~YSENfiN£L.COM

JIOMEI\OY •• i)nvld M.
l'mom wus scntcncetl to llw
years In prlmn M9ndny fur hi!
mlc In the brcnklnl! 1111d ~liter•
ifll! 111 Little jt1hn'1 In fllpp~rs
l'lalm ami the theft
1111
ATM trom th~ cmwcnlcncc
nure.
Penult~, 40, of Maso11,
W.Vu ., pled l!llilty to brcuk111!!
nnd entcrlnl!, rccdvlnj,! MttJic11
pmp~rty,
vnndnlh111 1111d
ntr~mpt~d lmll!lldu!loll u11
April I, rel~thtH ro the l11cldmt. A co•defendant In the

ur

Astros besh Reds, 11

Deaths
Eleanor Edwards, 67 ·
F. Harold Drummond, 72
. Dltllll, AJ

Hometown Newapa,.r

cnsc, Roy Jnck ''Jkk" Neff, Is
now servln11 a prison sentence
for his role In the ~rime.
P~r10111

appeur~d

bcft~rc

t:uttHautl Pl~ ;\s Court jud11e luul rccmd, lududlng umltipl~
~red W. Cruw Ill, who set! - prh&gt;t fduuy cunvlctiqns nml
tcn~ed Pcrwits tu the llta~l - · huprismtlm·ut," Story said.
IIHIIH tertii 011 ~11th cnllllt, tn "His l11tcst wnvirtlu11 is 11
be scrwd tollicclltlwly, fur 1111 · !!Dod .'csn111plc of vnriuu .~ law
tt~~tCI!IIIC !CIItt•llcc of' · t1vt• Cllflltll'nll'llt lll!l'lldes Wllrkilllol
ycnrs.
tu11ethcr tu brhlj,! a ca•c tu "
At the tint~ uf his cttpturc suct'cssli.tl coudusi\ln. Utlkcrs
nnd 11rrcst corllcr tit!! ycnr,l'cr- with our shcrllr's dcpnrt~lll'.llt
sum wns being WLIJ,!ht by nud those iu Athens, Conlll a,
iiUthMitics In Athens, Mel~o~• Wn1hnt~h&gt;t1 nml j :t~km11 1111d
lll1d Wu•hinl!tul\ Cotllltb In Mnstll1 1111d Wuutl Couutlcs lu
Ohio nnd In Mason nnd Woml West Vtl~1111n pm hi In any
C::mmtics Itt W. Vu . ft&gt;r his huttrs nn.:IIIIIIIIY.IIlilcs to 111nke
the lii!C.
niiCI!It'd i11Vt!lvetllent 111 ,, scrb
.
•
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tk
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f\
i'erM
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the
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h•cct
of. 11
Of .cf' 01 1a
c' - 11~ at1l t 1C·
.
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.
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ll11111hunt
before
his
nrre•t
111• cld ~ 1 lt '• accun: "!! tu ''II' l'dmtttr" ~~ tl · Mel · M · ·IIll
Couttty PrtHccutlllg Attorney
"A. t'l 1 1' · I fl'1:l otc ' ·
p.11 St ry ·
s tc nvcst l(ll 1011 pm. 'I u ·
lolf&lt;'!!Cd In Dl•cclnl!l•r, (l'crC. 1Rri!CI RWflmt i'Ct!UII! llllty Will) WiLl ! )JOttCtl li lltllllbCr of
he pc11til1.1~ il1 thm~ other tilll&lt;'!," Story suit!. "llut cnch
cu,walcs, Sf;urr suld.
timt ufllcer! dmcd In, he fled
. rhc lnttllllllntiull ch:lt~c. ltlld llllfl'owly eluded cuptllrc."
Story said fllc!duy, IWII! frutil
The Pcbruary 7 lndlctlllcnt
threats Pcrsoll! lnudc tu otll- uguimt l'er•ol1! collt,llincd nh)e
cct! at the time of hi! tnpt11re. cuttlltl . lll(llti1st hhtl, l.ncl11dlng
"Pcr!tliH hal u lcnl!lthy crhll" . Jlrii!C!Iiotl of ctltulnnl tool!.

SOUTHERN ROYALTY'

Weather
Hl1h: 801~ Low: 601
Dlbl1l1, A2 ·

Elldlonletter
...d..dllne

.

enhan~e

of
Utility, village . our Gavintht•plantopcratiom
lit Cheshire,
the potential for
reach agreement
our
barge
on $20 million· fi1dlitatc fuel deliveries toto
the plant," said Si101110n .
deal
"It al!o arldrc!Sc! the conindudin~
cxp~ndiu~o~
unloadin~ ~apabilities

BY KIVIN KILLY

KKELLYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
CHESH IR E - Calling it
a "sul11ti o11 that 111 cets the
nced1 of ali invulwd," Amcrk:tll Ele~trk Power ,is buyin~o~ the vlllal!c of Cheshire
fiot $20 million.
.The Colu111bu.-based utility, whi&lt;:h operates the ncarby Gen. J.uncs M. Clavin
Power l'la11t, :n1nuunced
Tuesd.1y it\ rc.1chcd au
agree1nent in pri ndple to
buy lhe 2111) parcels of land
. thnt 11111ke up the villa~e .
Huw acq~ 1i sition and rclocatiou of the YO lmln es ur so
ill the village will be accompli •hed arc "1101 known
specifkally at this point;" 1aid
IIIII Slji;fllun,AEI' vice president fur unreKulnted power
gcnerntion, but he ad.dcd
that the. prucc!l Is expected
w be rumplcted bcfi&gt;rc the
Cl!d of thl~ year.
"The decision tu bliY the
property pmvidcs us with
laud that cnn be mcd to

cents of our neighbors, who
experienced unanticipat~d
w nditiom during the initial
operntion of new pollution
control systems at Gavin last
year," he added.
·
"Over the pa~t year, the
village has experienced very
difficult times," Cheshire
Mayor Tom Reese said.
"Thii al!rCei11CIIt will allow
the residents of the villa~ to
rclo~ate and resume their
normal lives.
"We believe this IS a fair
rcmlution of this dillemma,"
Reese added. ·
"Thh is a mlution that
meets the needs of all
involved," Sigmon said.
The "dilemma" Reese
referred to is an Olli!Oinl! dispute between the village and
Gavin official! over imtallation of anti-pollution control sy1te1m at the plant. AEI'
inmllc~l the equipment to
meet Clean Air ACt standards
by 2003:
Pltaii ... AIP,AJ

OALLII'OLI!f- 'the ·ta!t

day that lctt~rs to the editor
p~rtainilll! to the May 7
primary will be printed 111
T h ~ Dolly Sentinel is
Wedncld3y, April 24.
No .letter• regarding th~
clcetlon will be printed
alier that il3tc.

Cheshire residents
split over benefits
·of agreement .

Clothl"1·

IVIIIIble

iU!EDSVILLE - A £ree
clothlnl! day wiU be held
Saturday at Hum and
Handt Clothin11 Jlancry at
f11llowthlp Church
the
Naz.arene, from 9 a.m. to

*I·

or

IOUTHMN ,ltOM COUitT - Student• prepare to compete tor the title of king and queen dur·
In&amp; Southern Hlih Sohool'l. Senior Prom, which tekee place this Saturday night In&amp; Ide the
eohool't &amp;Ymnlllum. Thll yeer'l prom theme Is "A Walk to Remember" and will take place from
8 p.m. until mldnl&amp;ht. Candldetee are, from left, first row, Carolyn Bentz, Rachel Marshall,
· Amber DuffY, Llndaey Smith, Kim McDaniel, Stacey Mllll: eeoond row, Maoy Reee. Nate Martin.
Aaron Ol'lllnaer. Tyler Little, Joe cornell and Matt Alh. (Tony M. Leach)

noon.

BOARD OF ELEaiONS
OHIO

PldiJ: 2-3·8

Pick 4: 04·84

.luckey• Sl 8-11·14·29·34
Pick J (niP*): 8-3·7
Pldl4 (nljht): 4-5·3·8

W.VA.

D1I!J J: 8-2-4

Dlltr4: 7·44·8

C..li 21: 1·7·12·19-21·23

Index
2 ....... - 1:1 ......

·Calendar
Clatllfitdl
Comlct
Dear Abby
Edltorllls
Movlet
Obituaries
SPOrts

Weather

A5

83·5

86

A5
A4
A3
A3

.

81·3'

Al

o VJ02 0111o v-.y ~eo.

PaiCII GOOD rHaOUGH lUNDAY, Al'al&amp; 21, 2002
Most Stores Open :

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

•Mr 111111~ Isla 1 '

Check your local ttore
for Sunday hours!

Prlciii-V.,Iylton

IWOIIIIIN - '-YI., COunty Bolll'd of El~ior'll C11elrman John thUI, left, and board member
·Srtllde Rolleh wert r~ctntly twOrn In 11 board membert by Ohio Secretary of State J. Kllnneth
81eckwtlf at 1 ColumbUI ct~remony, (Submitted)

iM Q.J•M

Ho/.,.. CJJ,N/o 01/QYN· -·
Ai/dk11611111Ni Mllnittl

BY KilliN KILI.Y

KKELLYIIIMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
CHESH IR E - Cheshire
Mayor Tom Reese said pubHe !Cf1tlmcnt uvcr an al!rcc111CI1t m sell the village Is
united, &gt;~lthou~h COIIt111CIIts"
l,1eml · in and amund the
community of 221 people
appeared split.
"You've
I!Clt
both
extremes," Cheshire punmaster Buck Mulfiml 1aid
Tuesday aticr announcement
wa! made of an al!rccmcnt
in prlndplc bctwecll Arnerican Electric Power and the
villat~e to sell 200 parcels of
land - in cfl'ect, the entire
villal!C - to AEI' for S21)
million.
"Sollie arc fuming 1 10111c
arc tickled abe&gt;ut it;• added
· Mulford, who'! worked at
the Che1hire p01tal facility
for the pm 13 yean. "Some
of these people won't care
what'! offered to them they
wu"'t go anywhere. Others
will be dclit;htcd ."
Mulford uid talk of telling
the · village had ~ oa tcd
around for wme time before
Tuc1day'1 · announccmeltt.
Mulford Jives two milct out:1idc of Chcthirc, but ha1

been a resident of the :orca al)
.of his life.
He said there may be 10111~
questions from people
immediately ouuidc the viila!!C i1ot included in the
agreement.
"I think therc~4 two ways
of looking at it," Mulford
said. " It was taken on by the
village, and I can't blame the
village for not including
everyone."
The
agreement
was
prompted in part by health
and environmental concernt
over imtallation of anti-pollution tedmolo(zy at Gavin,
which uneKpectcdly produccd a "blue haie" \hattettied on the villai!C on hot,
humid dayt last !UI111ner.
The haze, Reese and other
village rcsidelttl charl!ed,
al!llravatcd re1piratory pr~b­
lenu and poml a ~calth mk,
a cnntcnt1on borne out by a
1tudy relea1cd · earlier thit
year from the federal Agency
fo~ Toxic ~ubttanm and
IJtt~aK l~e~l~try that urged
AEI . to rmugace problemt
cautcd by the haze.
·:we've had concern,!
•'Vcryone h;n.becn aware of.
JlluN . . lpllt. AS

lr4&lt;M

•M•••...I GII'IJIII Paku W... D••

...... kiJ ..........., , .
Soturday, April20, 2002 • 7:30AM • Registr¢lon and Breakfast
8:00 • 11 AM - t..dvra
'
HMC educotion &amp; Confer~ Ynter
&amp;,o14.Jioa: fh, 'd$.,, ~. po-IIIM/Jif, l«&lt;dd.r&gt;. l«kkl-*'•· ~aNI1r 1 211 - . . . UIMWr, 10 • Aubttltll DkwdtG , Ohio'** Mr•§/ ltNJni
4M Clwleillll• I lr, ....,_, o.,MIA, MS, IIPH • . , Dbl\:1 J
"'--r ..,.,, Ht1lur MrrMutl &lt;-ntw

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover• the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org

~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--------------------__J
•

·~

�•

The Daily Sentinel
ThurtdiY, Aprll18

&lt;::LEVELAND HEIGHTS (AP) -;- resident who heads the group. "A man
This Cleveland suburb of 5I,000 resident! eo~nnot be a woman and a woman cannot
hiLl become the first city in Ohio to be a man. What is your legal justi6eo~tion
!Xtend he:llth benefits to the same-!ex for redefining marriage?"
partners of city employees.
The Rev. Donald F. King of Hope
City Council voted on the ordinance Lutheran Church support! the ordinance.
Monday night after listening to a divided He said it's about justice.
crowd of more than 200 speak for about 3
"We have to have a lot more faith in
1/2 hours.
hetetQ!exuaUty. Those benefits will not
Some people closed their eyes, kneeled · bring people into homosexulllity," he said.
and folded their hands in prayer and quotRussell Baron, a 50-year resident who
ed the Bible. Others revealed their honio· has a gay son artd supports the ordinance,
sexuality to their neighbors.
· told council that residents have different
Residenlil opposed to the plan covering belie6.
city employees have organized a group
"This is not a city b11.1ed on the 'len
called Families First. They arc petitioning Conunandments;' he said. "This is a comfor a citywide vote on the ordinance.
munity of mixed wlues."
"1 consider this ordinance an affront on Jimmie Hicks wa.1 the. only council
marriage," said Tr.lcie Moore, a ' 24-year member to vote against the ordinance. He

. ol Cotumbut lu•/14' I

W.VA.

....

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8I'IO'N

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Very warm again on Thursday
10 mph.
The unseasonably, warm
Thursday... Pmly cloudy and
temperatures will comlnue continued warm. Highs in the
across the area through Thurs- mid 80s. Southwest winds 10
day.
to 15 mph.
A few more records could
Thursday
night ... Partly
('(Ill as the mercury. climbs into cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s.
the mid-80s, the National
Extended foreca1t:
Weather Service said.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with
1Wo 106-year-old re.:ords in scattered showers and !hunnortheast Ohio were broken derstorms. Highs in the lower
on T\1csday by .one degree 80s. Chance of rain 50 pereach, with highs of 84 degrees cel)t.
at Akron-Canton Regional
Friday
night ... Scattered
Airport and 85 in Cleveland. showers. Lows in the mid 50s.
Record high temperatures Chance of rain 50 percent.
also were rccordl!d in MansSatur;lay... Cooler and mostfield (84), Ttlledo (88) and ly cloudy with . a chance of
Youngstown (1!5). Findlay tied showers :ind thunderstorms.
its record of 82, set in ·1976, Highs near 70.
the same year as several other
Sunday... Mostly Cloudy. A
records for the day.
chance of showers during the
Scattered showers and thun- day. Morning lows in · the
derstorms are likely tonight. · upper 40s. Highs in the upper
Partly cloudy skies are fore- 60s.
cast for Thursday.
Monday... Partly cloudy with
Sunset tonight will be at a chance of showers. Morning
8:12, .and sunrise on Thursday lows in the upper 40s. Highs
is at 6:49 a.m.
in the upper 60s.
Wtather forecalt:
Tueaday... Partly
cloudy.
Tonight ... Parily
cloudy, Morning lows in the upper
lows near 60. West winds 5 to 40s. Highs in the lower 70s. ·
BVTHEASSOCIATEO PRESS

Study: Crack babies still suffer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Researchers uy they've broken
new ground with a study showing chat babies born to
cocaine users were still having learning problems at age 2.
The study compares children of women who used
cocaine during pregrbncy with children from similar lowincome backgrounds whose mothers did not use cocaine.
"We've documented that there's an increase in develop·
mental delay auociated with cocaine exposure that's nor
due to anything else, like poverty or other factors that we
can identify," said Lynn Singer, a Ca&amp;e Wmern . Reserve
University child psychologist and main author of che study
in Wednesday's journal of che American Medical Auocia·
tion.
·
Previous studies of fetal exposure to cocaine reached
contradictory condusiom due to flaws in their ·detign,
Singer uid. She 1aid her study followed strict scientific
guidelines.
'

Park to reopen this year
MONROE (AP) - The former Americana Amusement
Park will reopen in late spring or early 1ummer with a new
name and I0 new rides, park official• aaid.
The target date for opening the park, now .known as the
Great American Amusement Park at LeSourdsville Lake, is
Memorial Day weekend, marketing director Mike Mefford
uid Tuetday.
Owner Jerry Couch it leating .. the 68-acre park, located
about 25 milet north of Cincinnati in Butler County, co
:LeSourdwille Group Inc. of Lancaster, which will oversee
oper~tioru.

"It will be better than ever," Couch laid. "The new manag~m~nt team hat pur a lot of effort into the park."

. 4,

Michael Schifer ordered unauthorized changes to the
''weighted grade policy." The changes were never present~
CLEVELAND (AP) - One Duckeye 5 game ticket had ed to school's board of education.
the right combination for the drawing T\Lesday, and it's
worth the Ohio Lottery game's top .prile of $100,000.
The winning ticket was sold at Ameristop Food Mart in
Cincinnati.
·
·
COLUMBUS (AP)- Another day of summer-like temIn Buckeye 5, sales totaled $261,888 ~nd winners .can
peratures around Ohio made for long waits Tuesday at ice
share $177,912.
~
There were 79 Buckeye 5 tickeu with four of the num- cream stands and golf courses.
bers, and each is worth S250. The 2,865 ticken showing Just about the only summer places not crowded were the
three of the numbers are each worth S10, and the 29,512 Lake Erie beaches.
tickets showil)g two of. the numbers are each worth S1.
"The water is still freezing so nobody's swimming,'' said
Jim Brower, park manager at Maumee Bay State Park near
Toledo. "Everybody comes out ~nd thinks it's June, and
NEW MIAMI (AP) - Four boys, ages 16 and 15;. hav-" thinks there should be lifeguards in the chair."
There still were plenty of people golfing, hiking and
been arrested and accused of plotting to kill the police
chief of this small. southwest Ohio village, authorities said walking along the beach at the park :is temperatures
reached into the mid-80s.
Thesday.
"They conspired to murder me,'' said police Chief Duane
Pdfrey. "They. knew my schedule coming and going."
Pelfrey said he has dealt with the suspects in the past in
his role as police chief of the village's 10-member police
force but would not elaborate.
· ··
"I tan .only surmise there was some type of revenge or
removing me so I wasn't in the way," Pelfrey, 36, said. "We
were trying co break up a littl.e gang that was called 007."

Ohioans beat the heat

Teens accused of plot

I
Tl
Frlnclsl. hlll'l,

Principal quits over accusation

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
man suspected pf mailing at
lease 550 hoax anthrax let"rs.
to abortion clinics lou a bid
for a mitcrial on firearnu and
a.r theft ch~rges.
·A federal judge on Tuesday
rejec"d Clayton Lee Waagn- ·
er's argument that government
protecuton failed to give him
pretrial information he could
ha1'e used to defend himtelf.
The protecution planned to
present testimony Wednesday
from ill final two witneBet, an
FBI agent and a federal
firearnu agent, before concluding ill c.ue. Waagner, 45,
told the judge he 4id not ·
expect to call wicnesse1
because the judge has forbidden him to use the defense
1trategy he wanted.

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W
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For M,.e lnfonnalioD Ple..e Conlact
Lethe' llayburu, Kbuhip Coordinator
at (740) 992-2681, est223

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AEP-Cheshire deal
~uns Gallia County
school officials .
BY ANDMw CM1IIt

4 ,

LOCAL BRIEFS
w\11 h..ll.l ~ fullik.w.~~~t&lt; \bnntt on Apnllt&gt; ~t 1\,Y.II'm 't
Vmu ~ R~:~)~ O..t R \1rt. $t\.'ll\~tkt

EMS ftlftS

LEclw.nk

PO 1\EP.!
tht Mt~ Eime~n • Sm1~.~
HARTfORD. W.\\, - El'"utor L £dwa.fth. 117. Hantbld, am~ :tttd \ t) Cilb. fur .t..~
died Monda April IS, lOOa, lt Hob.v Mtdiw Ctnl\'r.
lllncl.l an Th~"
Ill!$
Sht wu born M~h 10, t9l5, in H~. daugh~t aftht· ~ldtd u ibUI}\~ '
latt Willie E. and Evelyn G\bb$ Edwud\. Sht w .t n11rw iioo
CENTRAL DISPATCH
at Holh'r M~iical CC!ntet,
9:l4 a.nl.. Rocksprinll$
Su.rviving are a iliret and brotlief4n·l~"'' Ol.rol ~nd Jim W\U Rthllbthllltll!ll
·~nt&lt;'t.
of Pomtro}'; six brothtn and li$~-in-la~~o~ John tl\d &amp;nnte Del~:~m tlml1nan. O'Uitn~

form of unmonia - at ·the
· ACARTENMVOAIL'(TRIBUNE,COM
plant raised health con~rns
GALLIPOLIS
lor rcsid~nts of the village utd
"Extremely surprised. Wt had surrounding areas.
Edwards ofMason,W.v.a., Larry utd Marg.lret Elho.-.tdt of'Rut- Memort&lt;ll t-lt»pltoll:
Qbsolutely no foreknowledge," . Sald ·Evans, "We· \vere lutd, Durell and Donna Edwuds of Ntw Ha~n. W.V.,, Gll!n
l:ll p.m.. Uerth St~Wt.
: Th 3t\ how Oullia County assured as late u January by and Edwina Edwards of Clil\an, W.V.., R.alph and J~ntt 'BI}hby Kuhn. tm~l;
:J..o&lt;·Oil Schools Superintendent AEP that what th~y were Edwards of Cuttlllltville.W.Vi.and 'N.aytu\ utd Crystal Edwllrds
4:47 p.m.. hi\} 1~4. Cl~ra
,Char~a Evans described her doing had mitiW~ted the d.ln- of Hartford: and !.41\'eral ni«6 tnd ntpht\\0\.
Saundtn, Holur M~tdtc4l
reacnon
to
the
news
that
If
th
"
th
h
Sh
also
~ed ' d th b ·•
'American Elt!ctric Power a.nd ger.
ah e cue, w y are
e was
Ill \'11.
y mret brothtl1, ja!Q)d . Ctmt.r;
they moving? Why ~re they · Edwards, Berna W. Edwards and Marvin R , Edwards.
7:04 p.m., Wekht:o\\'11.
the village of Cheshlre had buying the village of
Services will be t P..t\:1·Thunday in ~lrong-Thclttr Funtr- Mirhu\ Adkins, Rimberl~·
reathed an ag~meuc aUow- Cheshire?"
a! Home, Ma$Un, \\~th th&lt;' Rev, Emmett Rawson officiating. F~ullmtt, BOObi Rittk l.k.mdt.
tng the power utility m purThompson said h11 had Burial wlU foUow at Zetlde Cemet.ry in letlrt, W.\4. Fritnds V&lt;ln&lt;l&lt;', 1)1-bra Kin~:. "'tus~d.
chas~ the entire municipality. "some indication Friday may c...
-'1 at th e tiune raJ home r.&lt;!Uill "'9
matmem;
"" toru·.11.1.
.. t,
Evans said she received through tht rumor mill" that
S::U p.m .. Unc.oln l:'t"l!thti.
word of the impending sale
h
Milt)' WiUIS, treMl'd:
via a fax that came to her an agreement
ad b41en
8:54 p.m., Diamond Ro~d .
reached bet\,'le\'n ABP and the
LOGAN- F. Harold Drummond, 73, Lo~n, diw Monda}\ Rosv R11mlolph; HM ·
office around 11 a.m. lhesday. village. bm did not believe the
"We found out, balically,
April 15, 2002, at. Riwrsidt Methodist Hospir.U, olmnbus.
POMEROY .
from the media that this wu rumors to be factual.
He was born July 14, 1929, in G~lia ounty, son of the l3t\!
\1:3 I a.m.. M~ple~ hl'~ft,
going 10 happen," Evans said.
"I just discounted it," h~ Floyd and n~lva Thormon Drununond. Ht \\·~s tht ltnmd~r
men!$,
Wilh~m llooth. HM ,
"We did not find out from said. "I thought it Wln far- and former. owner of Drummond Construction o., L~n.
REEDSVILLE
•
AEJ&gt; not the village of fetched. And here today He was ll veteran of the U.S. Army during the Korean Contlict.
10: II 4.m.. Ohio 7, ~ 1lh,•
Ch~shin', and hQd no inkling (1'1.1esday); we receive the first
mvivingare his wife, Jun~ !'rice. Drummond; ~ son. Scott Jon.-~. ~mden-Cl.trk Mt·nmthat this kind of agre~·ment notification that this thing i~ Dnunmond of LoQlln: ll daughter, Mma Hopklm of Lancast- . ri~l Ho!pillll.
.
.was going to be reached."
going to happen and we're not er: four grandchildren: ll brother. Joe Drummond of Addison;
SYRACUSE
For Evans and Gallia Loclll even in it.
and two sistl!l1, Jan~ Hess of Middleport and Jo ·ce jenron of
10:49 a.m.. 1\)lllt lan~.
. Board President Jon Thomp"They're using terms like Las Vctl'l'· Nev. ·'
.
.
J~cquduw Justi! , IIMC;
son, statements made in a 'impact,' 'claims,' 'resolving.'
Servk~s will be I0 ~.m. Frid~y in Immanuel Unit«! .
IQ: 14 p.m.. Smith Rtdl!",
news · release from AEP gave What is that supposed to . Methodl!t Church in Logan, with th~ R11v. Gmry Wh~el~r otll- Honwr IMt. ~~~~d on arril'lll.
:.birth to safety concerns for mean to us?' Thompson con- ciating. Burial will follow at O~k Grove Cenwt&lt;)ry, Fri~nds m~y
the more than 800 students tinued. "What are we sup- call M tlw C~rdilr~s Funeral Home ih LQ~n frurn :!-4 ~nd &lt;1-8
.who attend River Valley High posed to 11lenn from that with p.m. Thursday, and on Friday at tho: chul\'h an hour prior to th~
,School and Kyger Creek Mid- rc~r~rd to health and environ- service.
,
RUTLAND ll.utl.md
die School, located about a mental issues? And there's no
A M~sonic s~rvice Wlll be condu,ted ~~ 7:30 p.m. Thur8d~ · Ht~h Schr•.'l t:l.t-.~ llf 1'15~
quarter of a mile from AEP's mention of this. And. as Char- at the funeral home.
pla111 ~ Stith 1\'lii\IM May ~5.
Gen. James M. Gavin Power Ia said. our student population
Memorial concribuuons may be made to the lnunanuel The d~s_' necll• 4dllt\~~ tl11' thc
Plant.
in chat .area is four times larg- United Methodist Church, 6b E. Hunter St., Logan, Ohio tQUowmg: Hdon St~wm, Edtth
Evans pointed to a state- er than tht village of 43138.
and Loui~c Shailea-. Ma~on~
.
.
mcnt in the release by AEP Cheshire."
Justic~, I)Mty llicn:l! and David
Senior Vice President BiU SigThompson said he Vlasn 't
Clonch. Anyon&lt;~ 1vith inform~­
sonable solutioai to this tion about Carolyn Miller
mon, which reads, "As part of sure what course of action the ·
difficult prublem."
this agreement, we arc rcsolv- board would tak.e in response
Gantner at (740) 31!4-3')55 or
Cheshire, with a popu - write to h~r at HO Ho:~: 242,
. ing all claims of impacts that to Thesday's announcement.
lation of 221. includes Wl-llston, Ohio 45h92.
fnHn Pip A1
the residents have."
He had not had the opportuabout 90 homes and sevSaid Evans. ",Wt don't really . nity to discuss the situation
selective
catalytic
en!
businei!CI.
Uut
know what that n1cans. And with fellow board members as
reduction (SCR). designed to . Neuman, Kathy D. Bniwhat it meam to the safety of late Thcsday afternoon.
and well being of approxiEvans said the 800 students rcduce nitrogen oxide emis- Icy of Washington, D. .. . APPLE GR VE - A
mately 800 students on the at River Valley and Kyger lions nnd which began oper- and Ed Cochran of square dance will be held at
periphery of that village. That Creek represent nearly one- ating at Gavin in May 2001, Cleve land comtituted the " tho Red DArn At Apple Grove
unexpected leglil tcun representing on Priday from 8 to It p.m.
concerns us very much."
thi.rd of the entire enrolhnem created an
Potential lite of anhydrous of Gallia County Local byproduct - an increase in the village in the mnuc- Mulic by Happy Hollow
the love! of aulfur trioxide tion.
Boys. Lin• dancina, cloaina
anunonia and urea - a pellet Schools.
that on hot, hutnl!l days creat"Logiltics, timln11 and and round dancinl! mrc also
ed a "blue haze" that settled detaih auoclated with planned, along with a cake
60 years, ~elieves the situation on the village instead of dis- conveying property and walk.
is" going to be a mess."
paning into the air.
occupanta actually mov'11 don't think much of it,
SCR
h
operated ing from the village are
but I have to go along with between May and Sep- not known apeciOca lly at
it," the added.
SYRACUSE - A free
tember, considered . a thil point," Sigmon said.
clnthing
and food giveaway
:Reese taid. "It's a fair settleThe agreement was not a "high ozone" period.
"We will work on thme
;ment and retolves everyone's surprise to Little, who had
AEP announced in Jan- detaih with attorneys will be offered for !hose In
·concerns, and allows AEP ·taken the problem with the uary plana to reduce sui- representing . ro1idcnta," need at the Pim Churcl1 ol'
·
more property for future use. haze in stride.
fur trioxide eminiont thil he added . "A.EP did not God in Syracu1c, Se ond and
"I don't think anything year at a colt of S7 mil- negotiate with individuml ~pplc Street! in Syracuse on
We appreciate AEP doing
about
ic," she said. "It hasn't lion.
:something about this. ·
property owneu. We Saturday front It a.m. until
.: "Buieally, the people here bee,n a problem for me."
Concern• over the haze would expect to sec thi1 · noon . Information is availablr
:have been united all along;•
Mulford, however, con- and other health concern! process concluded by the by CAlling 992-1734.
:he added. "It's a fair agree- firmed the haze's effect from were aggravated earlier end of 2002."
:ment for our problemt. It his vantage point at the post thh year when DTE, a
Sigmon said additional
'enablet ut to relocate and get office on Ohio 7.
1ubeidiary of Detroit .Edi- 1pace i1 needed u Gavin,
CARPENTER
A
"I've teen it here," he said. son, filed with Ohio .Envi- opened in the 19701, for
:on with our livet."
: But Catherine Little, who'• "There's days when there'• no ronmencal
Protection environmental
control gospel sing with Proclaim,
;lived in Cheshire for . almost problem teeing it."
Agency for permita, co 1yttenu like Jcn1bben for Cross Creek and Claud~ttr
operate a 1ynthccic' fuel rc.ducing Julfur dioxide Harbin will be held at Carplant at Gavin ..
cmii1ion1 and SCR to cut penter lhptilt Church on
In a ltatement releued nitrogen oxide emiuioaa. · Ohio 143 on Sumlay at 2
by one of the village't
Gavin il AEI1'1 largest p.m. Pastor John El1wick
·'
attorney!, Barry S. Ncu - coal-burning phnt in invite! the public.
.
man ofWathington; D. C., Ohio, and the tecond
Prtmllr- e.45
Flldtrll Mogul - .71
AEP-47.70
ua.a -:n.H
RO&lt;lkwtll - 20.38
!'rOll Coli - 2.2-QO
.Reese uid the agreement largelt in the utility'•
G1nn111- 71.20 ·
AkZo - 43.05
I'IO&lt;lky Boote - e.:u
WU the rc1ult of ditCIU• SCVCn•tUIC IYitClll. .
Genlfll EJeotrlo-33. 10 I'ID Shell - 113.88
~mTtchi$8C- 34.57
POMEll.OY - Chc!tcrtiont with AEP on emil·
"Thh equipment hu
GKNLY- 8.12
Alhland lno. - #.20
&amp;llrs-641.28
AT&amp;T -14.88·
Hiller Cll'.lldlol' .,..!1'.38 WII·Mirl -eo
tiont caused by the anti- · made Gavin one of the Shadc Histori c~ ! A'suciatitln
l&lt;mlrt- U7
llank One-41 .18
Wtndy't- 38.74
pollution technology.
nation't clcanetc coalKroger- 122.38
IILI-15.08
Wotlhlngton- 1UO
"Relocation will not be fired power plants," Sis·
J10b Evana- 31.18
LAindt End - 4e.87
Daly ttook reporll lrt
Ltd. -18.17
euy,
capecially for some · mon nid, "but it hat aho
BorgWamer - 113.80
1111 4 p.m. c1011ng
NSC-23.n
ChllnfllOn - 3.05
ol .,. prtvlout whose families have lived extended plant opcuciont
bh.""lng 8hopt -II.CJ.f Olk Hll FIIIIIICIII- 20 quottt
day't
ltanNOIIonl,
pro- in Cheshire fl)r genera- cloacr to the prop~rty
OVS-23.70
City HOlding- 18.62
vldlld
by
Smith
Par1nei't
BST-37.74
,c:ol- :u.71
cions," lleese uid. "It will line. A1 a rc1uh of cxpanII AdVHt lno. ol 011• . be ud indeed to tee our lion, the property AEI1
Ptopln- 28.18
OG -14.88
PeptiOO- 81.IMI
llpollt.
puPont- 48.10
village dhappear. But will be acquiring it more
under the. drcumstancel, suitable now fur power
we believe thit agreement generation activitic1.''
rcprctenu the 111011 rea-

J

F. Harold Dnunmoncl

Need names

AEP

11

Plan !lveaways

Sln1 planned

;\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'
\
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Kroger Pharmacy
31 Ohio River Plaza
6alllpolis, Ohio

~

~

\
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~

I
I

Tuesday, February 26, 2po2

6 pm

~

\
\
\

I
I
I

\
\

I
I

j IPlea~ ~~b!c 8arru•l

~

Meet In the P~ Areal
Tour lm abou! 2 houa!

j

~
~

,.,lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllill~lllllllllllllllllil:,.

• Tour of grocery and pharmacy with a Registered
Dietitian and Certlfted Diabetes Educator.
• · Receive information on ~arbohydrate counting
and label reading.
• Learn about diabetes, blood sugar monitoring
and pharmacy products!
• Receive a complimentary Food and Pharmacy
Tour Guide!
\

LOCAL STOCKS

.

Plan fund-raiser

The Daily Sentinel

Reader services
Contctlon Polley

our 1111111 oonc1m In 1111110f1111t

10 bilOCUlate. H you " ' - al an
trror In 1 fiOIY, Clll tht -~~
It (740) 182•21118.

New•

.,..,.111Mn..

DtpMntnl.,....,.-

· Thll 1111111
Qen~~ll

numbtr II 182·21118.

11111111..

'
M

Ext 12
Ed. 13

Ex!. 14

Oil• HI'VIoel
Eld.3

Alh&amp;lllllnl

TM ,.lge County Klnthlp navigator program Is funded through the Melge
CoUnty~ of Job and Famllv Services.
,

• Fom:ly I"'Oe\Jt;ont~ who !'teen~14 ,..~;,..J
"~''" 7~ L
l'""' of dtJ1ct:1bd lt'I' Jiet to hi,.
pDtientl, commun1tlj ~nJ the f"cilltlj.
'
1
Thonk you fo• tho J:FFt•onco you modo ..

HOLZE
CLINIC

~

~

up

' I

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

w.cinlldt.Y. April17, 1001

Dance planned

.,

., Are you retpomlble lor another penom ehild
to the •
' elfJbteftl and provldlnfJ eare lor the ehdd in your home?
If you ....wered yet, you are deRned u a Kio.ldp Care,Pver and
1,. may beneRt from the Melp County Kin•ldp Pro.,am. Thl.t Ia an
1
Information and relerral 1erviee avadable to e8Pepver• ahout""w
.,.. '~ eei'Vteee available 10 you. 11aeee eervleet may lnelade retplte eare, ,,
\. l4!8al -lllanee, medleal eare, and an evaluation of your urund '
' •, nudl. All e.U• and eontaeu will be eonAdenttal.
[.,,,

, ..,..,

v.u.4 f..lorpitol. :nelwJong the

8o"rJ oF T,.u;hat, memb.r; oF th. meJicol
st.~tF. employ'"'~ DnJ volunleer,, wouiJ J;k, to
solute l=rGWci&gt; G. !=ug~ro. MD.

Waagner
doesn't
plan to call
witnesses .

"Putting the piece&amp; To8ether"

,

Pl••••n~

PORT CLINTON (AP) - A high school .principal
resigned after administrators said he ordered unauthorized
changes to the sc hool's grade policy.
Grade point averagu and class ran kings of nearly 550 stu·
dents over the pau three school years could be wrong, uid
Port Clinton City Schools SuperintenMnt Bart Andtrson.
School officials are hand-calculating GPAs for all students
who took .advanced placement courses during those years.
Anderson uid Port Clinton High School Principal

Meigs County
Kinship Navigator Program
•

said he opposed it because it WI$ to ofer
benefits to people who ue taking cate of
relatives' children or elderly partna.
Mayor Ed Kelley said recently tha.t he
thinks no more than 6ve same-mt couples
willlign up for benefits, which would c:o&amp;t
the city about $5,000 a couple per year.
The city has about 450 municipal
employw.
Kelley said the Qty takes pride in .its
r.~cial and cultural diversity.
Hicks called the legislation a political
paybacli to the Cle.veland Stonewall
Democrats, a gay political organization
that endorsed Kelley and councilwoman
Bonnie Caplan in elections last ran. Kelley
denied the accusation and said he supported the legislation because it is the
right thing to do.

One Buckeye 5 winner

~~~~w

J

....:

Wdttlldrt Af .. 11. 21?J

City first in state to give·gay couples .benefits ·

Ohio weather

8uno1 Pt Cioudj

PlgeA2

Ohio

..

.'. . . ext.
' -~··l·4 ..

li:;

~

ToNndiHNIH

l,.. ',

4 ) ~

_..., i

Wilt , " ' ,

•

-·~-,.,..­
OnttwWib

....

-.~.cam

•

Donn~

~~~ ~~~d l.j.\\'t\'1"-'t

"''ttt'-

libhll, ~ tll\1\l.~blll , \\'\ll
~m .

An &lt;ll.'bl.\11 wtU ~ h IJ
Pro..~ '"'"" th.- dmn.-r \\·Ill
boe nl4~~1 lk;ll.u i\.11' •klllu
~nd w1U b.- " "' 1\\ ' 'tltlll\1~
Ml\lf.j.tl~\11

\\''"'·

Set dink
. POMil.RtW - • M.-~
C&lt;)unty HN!th O..•pmmO'nt
will l"Omlu~t l \'li •U Child
dink 1)1\ Ma\' I t\&gt;r duldren
'
lrom btrth through ll \\'&lt;In,

.

1\ppl!llltlll\!llb mar b.- 1\Ud\'

by e&lt;~llm~ N«n~~· Un&gt;Jt'rt~k.
R.,N .. ~t 1Nl·hb.ltl:Mmld~

throul!h

l'ra~.t.~y

trom

~

a.tn.

11ntil 4 p.m.

S~~~lllll!-'l\ Will llldll,lt' &lt;I

n&gt;mpl~l&lt;' phl"&lt;l~~l · ""&lt;~lmn•­

tlon h)'. 11 ph\"&lt;1\'illn, nnmu·

mutil.m

~lhmm~trJmin.

~~,~~··h

Jnd h~mnjl; t~\U.
\' l"'i.lll ~"\' I'C~IIIIIjl;. hl\\\1ll t~st
1\;r INd plH\lllllllif'. \Ifill"
teSt:\, 1\UtrltllHI l'lhWJtl\\11,

,l~wlopm .. nt ~l
•~n·,.nm~.
SO\'lOif ·~~S..SSII\l'llt, ht'lllht JillI
\\'&lt;'lith! lll&lt;'~S\Il'C IIl,.llt, .111tl
\'H~l Slllll IIINSUI'\'1\l,.ltt&lt;.
M&lt;'&gt;lt~.t.l .md pr''lall' m!ur~nc.- .tl'\' •~c.-pt.'&lt;l. ~.. f\'l~~• .re
oflt-t'\.'&lt;1 on a ~h•lm11 1\-t•
~~~r
~ hlldl'\'n whn .II'\' unmstnt•tl ur

.,.,,1 ,.

umlt•t'iiiSlll\'tl til' wht~t~&lt;' i~1111ly
~~ ll1&lt;'llllll' dlll;lblc. N11 dnl;l
wtlllw '''"''"" '"'"''''''' ht•&lt;'JliSt'
of m•b1hty tli p.ty.

Plans "nder
way ·
RACI Nil Plam ~re
tbr l~&lt;ldll,. AreQ
Cl)lllllllHIIty OfllillllMIOII ~
ninth Fl01wr l~stiwl, to b.. hdtl
April :!? tmin 10 a.m. ttl h f\111 .
How~n Wlll b,. awtlablo by
th,. )'ot, tlat tlf h•11k,.1.
A pamd,. will iwj.lm at Io
n.n)., with haw-up 111 1):.,0 ,,,m,
nt the old lili! dt'p111'11ncllt
ann,.~. SSO. S30 nml s:lll Jlrlr~&amp;
will bll nward~tl to pnrod,.
cntrlca, Etch ontry comid~l'lld
for judJilng nu~tt have ~01\'\'fl
included in th~ tt..sign.
RAcino United Methotli!t
}'()Lith grmtp will lund ~hil ­
drcn'a 8llllle&amp;. A kldtlid trmor
pull will be h~ld at I p.m.
Rock-N-Country C l~rs
will perform at II n.m.. utmary
Clrn.u at 12:30 p.m., Mike 1-l~m­
lnel~rn, nju~ling wntrillli.1Ui!t,
nt 2 p.m., Mounmin 1\iwr Diu~
Grn.u AI 3 p.111. nml St&lt;'W nnd
Dcverly 1\Jtuneyer ut 4:30 p.m.
A tl11wer fc!tlwl qu~rn, rhtJ·
1cn from M&lt;nil1r j.lirl1 11t S&lt;luth·
~rn 1-ligh Sl'iaool. will. be
crowned nt mmn. nmlthe U111t•
ctl Methodi!t dtoir will 1i11~
ntb:r th~ &lt;Jll&lt;'t'll '1 mJwnlnll·
Ari; nnd erath vendor• w1lf
ICt up thi! yc.tr AI 110 dtllfll&lt;'·
ltvllll ll.l b&lt;' wid AI\' hnndmnd&lt;'
nnd h&lt;IOih •p:la' rJ n lw
ro••·rwd hy t'.llllll!( J~nmtllr
1-lob:ark 111 •WJ-21I•').
In dw IIWIIL nf f;\ill, tlw 1~;.
rival Will he hdd ,11 Souther~~
lligh Schon!.
.
Additiunal inl\mu.lli&lt;lll 11
avallablt• by rnihn11 Allt•n (,rnltam at V\12~ 7735.
tmrl,.aw~y

�..

_The_D_aily_Sen_tin_·e_l_ _

The D ily Sentinel

__;ly the Bend

Page AS
Wada•diJ. Apll17, 2002

•

The Daily Sentinel

•

DEAR ABBY: My wi&amp; and I
have worb:d hard lll our live$ and
h.i$ed th~e wonderful child~n.
She\ retired now, but slill works part
time at ano!herjob. I pl~m to ~ti~ in
thtte yean.We ue at ' point in our
live$ !hat we can tab weekend !tips _
Abby
and one or two vacations a ytlt. It's
our way of unwinding and enjoying
ADVICE
each other.
The problem? My mother. Dad
died a t'ew yean ago and Mom
Mom is on the go :ill the time, but
thinks tllery•:me should think only of to hear her tell it, she sits at home by
her. I am !he oldest of thtte brother&amp; henelf ~by after day. When we call
t.nd, tru$t me, Abby, lll of us in the her, :ill she doe$ is complain that no
ramity do far mo~ fur her thtn most one ever c:ills or comes to see her.
families would. That doesl'l't stop Nothing could be further from the
Mom from throwing hints around truth. We h~ve a. schedule so that
about feeling le11: out when my wife someone · in the family caUs her
and [ don't include her in our get- every morning a!id afternoon. Hdp!
).ways.
·-·
- FR.USTRATBD SON IN

Din DlcDitoll

NIIIIMt

Dear

.........

c.•~
~

NATIONAL VIEW

•

NASHVIU..E
DBAR SON: Your mother may

be sho\1\iling the guilt your way, but
why ~~ you biting it to heart?
Complaining may be her way of
making conversation. Don't make
ex~uses and don't mke it penonaUy.
And if you .want to include her
·occa$1onally, by all means do so.
DEAR ABBY: I recently married a wonderful 'woman with an
adorable, energetic 3-yeu-old
lhughrer.
My concern is my wife's mother,
''Julia." She's a fine mother/motherin-law, and the greatest grandmother
in the world, but she hafbors an
intense dislike for my wife's ex-husband, "Trevor." Every time Trevor's
name is mentioned, Julia says some- ·

thing ne~tive about him. She ~fiu­
es to talk to him or be in his presence. If she happens to be at our
home when Trevor comes to pick up
his daughter £or visitation, she'U
leave the room and go to a back
bedroom.
E~~eryone in the fa~y has discussed this with Julia, indudif\g my
wife's grandmother. However, every
time we raise the · subject, she
becomes angry at us.
·
While my wife and her ex were
not good as a couple, this man has
been nothing but a loving, patient
and supportive father. He shows up
on time; almost. never cancels, pay.
his child support in fuU - and my
stepdaughter is always excited to see
him.

My concern is that my mother-inlaw's anger towanl Trevor will ev.:ntuaUy confuse my stepdaughter.
Although she is young now, there ·
will come a time when she'U be old
enough to know something is
wrong. What can be done, Abby? JEFF IN SOUTH CAROUNA
DEAR JEFF: Lay down the law

to Julia. TeU her she must keep her
feelings about the child's father to
herself.There is no reason the child
should be subjected to t.his. If Julia
cannot comply, she should plan
ahead to be elsewhere when visitation is scheduled.
(Pauline .Phillips and her daughrtt
jeanne P/rillips slrarc 1/te pstljdOH)'IIt
Abigail U.n Bu,.,.,: Wrire Dear Abb)l at
i&lt;'lilw.DearAbby.com or P.O. Bcx
69440, Lls Atrgeles, CA 90069.)

•

''

Oscar winners wisely paid tribute
to those who went before .
RED

• RClth~h!r (N.V.) IX\mt~el'llt 11nil thl'tll\ltk\. r!ll tile
O~t.'tlr.~ : It's ~ tl long hnul slm.~ the duys whtm 1\\t\St l'llm
prudu~-el'l! would mther ~nst whites In blntk fuoo thtln use
Atrlcmt-Amerl~nn nctol'!l. Then there wns the Hollywood era
when the few blncks who t'OUld ~et Wllrk In the Industry Wl!re
rele~nt~ til plnyh~ househt~ld hdp, minstrel tltll\l~l'l! nnd

Fo~et physical fitness

Suddenly, there Uft three blnck net~ whll hllvt Will\ til\
Oscttr fllr 11lend role - tWiliMre thnn there hnd beetl.In the
74·yetlr history of the Acnde~ Awnrtls. Delntetl fll'tll!tesS,
yes. Dutit's wdcoiite Pftll!tess nevertheless.
Anuther ont-elormldnble bnrrler for MrlcM Arnerl~litl~ hlis
~n hmken thmt1gh.
·
·
. At thll Acutll!my Awnrds, Hnlle Ben-y bel:nlllll the tll'l!t
At'rlcnii•Aillcrl~wl Wtlmwt to win nn Oscilf fur best tlllll'ess
nnd Dentiil Wnshln11ton fullowed In Sidney Pottier's fuotsttaps to win the best nt~tor prlte.·
Berry tll\tl Wushingtun t'Oultl hnve easily l!fnbbed their
Ost:ars, smll~d upprecltltlvllly, .r11n throul!li tfie 1Jbllg11tt1ry
th11nk-yous and gunenbtlut their business. But they knew better. They untler5tootlthe lmpurtwtce uf pnylnl! tribute to the
bln~:k ttttors who prec~~d thi.lm.
·
. There wns Polller, ur ~:ourse, whu won n 1963 Os~:llf fur
"t..llleM of the flleltl." Pltllnl!ly, he Willi present~ 11 Hfellllle
nehlevememnwnrtl during th~ mure LhM four-hour tele~ll~t. ·
But them wns 11 lt!nl! lin~ of other bhtek nctors, whose
nume~ Wdre not cnlletl, but who nu doubt were un tliii mind~
or B11rry and Wu~hlngt~n . Poople like Hnttl\1 M\l!JW\Iel, who
In 1939 won nn Os~:ur fur her role M Mnmmy ln "Clone with
the Wind" - be~:omln11 the tlrlit blaek Oseilf wlnner. Others
who might hove . eume m mind Wl!l'il Hilflhn Kltt, &amp;Idle
''Rochester" Anderson Md ~thel Wnt\11'8 ,
On 1111 uf their sht!ultlerg, Berry Mtl Washlnl!ton !ltMtl
proudly.

Red
Green

TODAY IN HISTORY
8Y THii A88001AUD PA£88

Toduy Is Wedne~dny, April 17, the 107th day llf 2002.
There IU'il lS8 dll)'~ let\ In the ~~~nr. ·
Totlny's Hll!hlll!ht In History:
On April 17, 1961, nbout 1 ,~00 CIA-trnhled Cubllfl ~xlles
lnunc:hed the dlsUHtl'tlu~ Bny ut' PI!!~ lnvlll!lt&gt;n uf Cuba In a
fllllild Uttempt ttl tlVilrthrtlw the government or Fidel Clliitl'O.
On thl8 dnt11:
'
Jn 1492, u c:ontrm:t WitS lill!ned by ChrlHttlpher Columbu~
und o repre~enuulve of Spiiln's King Fel'dlntlnd Md Queiin
hubullu, giving Cc;lumbus u ~:tlmmlsslc;n to ~eek 11 Welltwnrtl
ocean pnsMaie to ANio.
In I'24, Olovtlnnl dtl Verrnttltlo tell4ihed prelient·day New
Yurk hnrbor.
·
In 1790, American sttttelimlln Benjamln flranklln died In
Phllttdelphlu ot 1111e 84.
In 1861 , the Vlrgl nla State Conventlun voted to liecede
from the Union.
·
In 1941, YuJ!OiihtvloNurrendered to Oernutny In World Wtlf

(Red Green Is the star of "The Red
Green Show," a television series seen
In the U.S. on PBS and In Canada on
the CBC Network, and tile author of
"The Red Green Book" and "Rei1
Green Talks Cars: A Love Story."
Watch for the feature film Red Green :sl
"Duct tape Forever'' at a theater near
you.)
'

'

•

RUSHER'S VIEW

.

'·
.

Ground forces in Israel? It~ · a recipe for disaster :

The drive to put Amerlcllfl furce~ on
the ground, between lsr11el Md the
Pttle~tlnlllliK, IH pkklng up speed. Latest
u.
.
ttl
join th~ bMdwagon Is Zblgnlew
Ill J964, Ford Mt~wr Co. unveiled ltii new Mu&amp;tllllg,
brzezlnskJ, Jlmm): Carter's National
In 1964, Jerrie Mock of Cc;lumbu8, Ohio, became \he t'lnt
Se~urlty
Dltector. bn the Op &amp;I page
womM to ~omplete aliola airplane t11ght IIMund the world.
of the April 7 New York nmc:s, under
tn 1969! u jury In L&lt;Jii Anll~le8 canv1eted'SithM Sirhan ar
the henillng "Mural Duty, National
BNiillslilnnt n11 Sen. Robert P.-Kennedy.
ll\tetellt.'' Ifruzlnskl Jayli il out cold:
tn 1969, Czecho81ovuk Communist flany 4ihaltmllfi
The
United Stjlte~ should "Indicate Its
Alexander Dubeek Willi deP.08ild.
wllllrtglielis to deploy.!. with the tJonsent
ln 1970I the illitronllut8 c;f Ap&lt;JIIo 13 lipluhed down liafely
both of hrael and of Palestine, a pence•
In the Pile fle, raur dayli after a ruptured oxygtlll tllllk erlppleil
kaplng
(ol\lll to enhllllcll 81XiUrlt)' . fot
their lipueecroft.
.
·
·
btltfl partleN. NATO mlght aiKo chtltlse
Ten yenrli ago: Federal Resetve Chall'ltlllll Alllll (lreensfjllll
.
to
pai-tlclpate In any such deployment,
told the Senate Borikln~ Commlttee the mode8t pooe uf t410•
nomic ex panlilon wun t udequate, 11 remarlc Interpreted ali u - 11lven BUI't:IJltl'll interest Ill contnlnlng
the Middle &amp;st crisis!'
liiJ&amp;Oal he might cut lnterelit rllteli further.
. ·
There has been no deadller prOJ)!&gt;saJ
Five ye11ts ugo: House Spejjker Newt Olnl!rleh announced
ln the whole recent history of American
he would borrow $300,000 from retired Senate Mnlorlty
foreign ptjtlcy, It Is gullfanteed to drag
L.ellder Dob Dole to flll)' 11 nn~tlon lmpolied for vlolutfon of
Amenta lnttl war with ntollt, If not 1111,
Hou~ rule8. flornulr hroeU J)fe8ldent Chlllm Herzog dli!d In
Tel Aviv ut uge 78.
of' the Muslim wor1dl divide this coun·
try from lllo8t of ts allies abroad,
One y~lir ugo: !Jy 11 ncurly two•tO-one m~~tgln, MllililliNlppl
revl ve the wof!lt ex~:es~~es of anti-Semire~ldenl!! vot.ut to keep the Con(tderate emblem on their !JUlie
tls111 In the tJnl.ted Stale!l, llfld spell the
fliA. San flrllllcl~~to Olanl8 ~lugJer OM')' Dond11 ·becaune the
. ultimate doom of the State orJsnieL ·
17th mu~or leaauer ever to re~Wil ~00 career home run8,
Lilt u~ review the deveh:lf)lllelitli thut
Todays tJirlfidlly~: Aetor Lon McCuiii!Jter lli 79. R~k pw- ·
would follow lnexorubly rrom such 11
ml}ler Don Kirshner Is 611. Compo!ler-musltlllll 11111 Hammer
poUcy.
Is .54, A~:lfe8s 011 via H~81lY lfi ~I. .ROI.lk &amp;lnl!4lt·musklllfi Pete
First, It would lflin~fotnl Amerlcn's
Shelley (But~kJI) Is 41. Attreu Terl Au~tln 18 43. Actor
lonatJme
role In the Middle Emit front
&amp;lui Bclillls 4:1. Ro.:k slnacr M11ynllrd J~~mes Kt.ert1111 (Tool)
that or an ''honest broker'' between the
I• 38. Actre8s Lela ROI:hoo lli 38. Singer Llt Phair Ia 35.
Arub!l und the lsr11e1ls tu thnt of u millAetreM
s Jl!nnlrer Oarner Is 30. lllnJier Vfckltllt Adams Beck·
lllr)' defender 1111d gu!ll'antor of the sUIhdm (Sf'l~~e CJIJls) Is 28. Acttesll"slhlll!f Lindsay Korman I!J
tus quo lrllsrael. Oilce American troops
Z4 .
llfli
on lhe ground, !ICJ:IIIhltllig Jsrliel
Thouaht forTOOfly: '1f you wooltl not be forgotten, tiS 80011
from the Palestln.fM nrens and the
u you we dead llfid rOiten, either write lhlnp worth ~IIIII•
or oo thlf,llli.Worth lhc wrltlna."- Benjamin PrMklln (1706nelghbotfng Atdb stutes, Israel will be
1790).
lifl'ectlvely guaranleed against any seri·
I

..

·comfort is for more vital
Here nre n few that you should never
step intn:
·
•If we broke up, what kind of women
would interest you?
• Would you lind.me more attractive
if I lost weight? ·
.
• What's been the happiest moment
of your life?
,
• Should we invite friends over on
our llhnlversruy?
,
• If you had any regrets, would yol!
say so?
I've got you covered
'
I was looking at kinetic art in a spe~
dally shop the other day. They had d
couple of perpetual motion machines
and recycling fountnlns Md little dogs
with bobbin!! heads, and it occurred to
me how boring they get in a short peri'
od of time..I tlnd u good painting ot
photograph far less tirfng. So, I realized
that stntlc Items, although Initially fat
less. interesting, will eventually stand
the test of tl me. Therefore to make it
over the long haul of a marriage, a m1111
has a much better chance if he becomes
more llke a piece of furniture and less ·
like n favorite pet. I'm standing by. '
Quote of the Day: "A friendly sntlle
from a stranger is a sure way to frighU
ett smart people,'' - Red Green
:

f

•

• ....

·--

help frOm our fonner friends in Euro~
and elsewhere.
,
Finally, ·and most disastrously, d
major segment of American opinion,
probably a weird coalition of America"' hntlng leftists and anti-Semitic rightists,
would then demand to know how many
lath Altiericllh lives the Bush admlnlstratiori
Is prepared to expend to protect Israel
US er agilinst the overwhelmingly Arab popu~
la.tion of the ;Middle East. The parallel
COWMNIST
with VIetnam Is slllttllng, and the out-'
come, I predict, would Die the same. 7
Mr. Bush Is said to have been
.ous pressures to negotiate further con• immensely Impressed with Israel whert
cessiolls. Since the Isrnelis would have he visited it several years ago, on one of
no lhterest In attacking the Arabs, the his few ·foreign trips before becoming.
American guns would be pointed per- president. Thlit Is all to the good, if ft
llilltlehtly outward - at the Arabs. gave hirnll solid understanding of what
CaiUn¥ our troops a "peacekeeping Israel h1111 achieved in the past 30 years:·
fotce,' or adding a few Canadian sol- But if It leads him to abanaon the even"
diets to alve the operation 1m lntema· handed policy In the area that h1111 beerr
llonall1avor would be purely cosmetic followed by nine successive American•
gestures.
· J)resldellts, he will have led this counuy
Second, unable to colitlnoe Inflicting Into a quagmire that will make VIetnam
,;
damage on their I!Jrnell foo, the Arab look tame.
Fortunutely
there
is
no
sign
yet
that
extretitlsts would Inevitably tum on
llirael'~ Anterii:an protectors. Cllf the Bush administration has decided tq'·
bombs, ~ulcide bombers, and all the make such u towering blunder. On-thegrisly pheiWillena that have made Ufe make newspaper columnists like Toni'
in Israel almtl!lt unbearable for it&amp; civil· Friedman, and warmed-over "eKperts" ·
IIIII population would be focuAed on the like Zbignlew Brzezinski, may think•
United States: t1nt on the American they are being refreshingly innovativci•
"pelleekeepel'!l," and then - you ~1111 But in fact they are architects of an
•
bet on It - on tlie American people almost unimaginable disaster.
here at home, We would, of cou11e, (William Ru1her Ia a DWinguished.
retaliate as best we could, quite possl- Fellow of the Claremont Institute for;
bly by declaring Will' agalmt ntost of the Sludy of SratesmahJhlp and Politi~
the. M'usUm worfd, without the slightest cal Philosophy.)

..-.-- - --...

. ...

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ill
W

R h

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_;_. . ..

·~

$1 0,000 REWARD
offered for the arrest and .
conviction of the person or person
responsible for the death of

o estero : Stic wit
est

VIEW

A lot or tnen nre n little vague on
exactly when middle age begins. ll has
nothlnl! to do with your chronological
~~ und It doesn't .htutter If yoor 1\nlr
hns gtlne 8!'11Y· whlre or AWOL. You
hnve oi'tldiilly nnivetl at mltllll'e when
th~ must ltnll\)rtllllt aspect of any given
lliltl vhy Is comlbrt. In 1nltlllfu, elldte•
ment, tttlventure 11nd even tlnMces, all
take n btlck seat. What you're looking
lbr Is ~Jumfurt. You're nol Interested In
physical fllhess, yoo want ht!iitlng tll\d
COLUMNIST
ulr t'ontlltluning,
You Wlint padding - on your fuml•
.
.
lUre, ~:~n your paycl!eck 111td on your thllt WIIS a whole different kind of dig!uwn butt. Even yuur lt&gt;Ve life Is affect- tal signal. Andihthese cell phones don t
etl. Forget p11sslon what you wnnt now iust ril\11, No., ey play. little tpttelllind
Is a "comfortiible'l llllt1tlo1tshlp, where · . Ingles and gt1 off at the worst limestUJbtltly yells 111 11nybudy, Mthlng Ike In church. 1 mean, lt s not even
thllft!W~ 11hd nlfte times out of 10_you your qhone, but everybody still tutns
fullll$leep befure your wife titles. Your tlfOUnu to see where lt's comlng !'rom,
wild ontll hnve turned m Wild Ont- and there yuu are, sound asleep. 1b me
Bmn. As middle nge pronresses, you'lt acell phon~ lsjust nlensh.
,
probtlbly even bet!oinc 1\:omt'ortnble" Antf, you d \letter come when you re
with your5elf. Sontll clill h 111vlrtg up. r clllled, or yuu II lose your spot as top
~lllllt true sutJcess. When you can sttll\d dog. Whenever ,r see somebody on 11
In front of n mirror or 11 banker tll\d say cell phone, they re always alone, talkpmudly 'Thls Is ns good as tget • hey, lng to somebody lis they wlllk tlfOUnd
thttt htt~ to be a i:\omfottln~ thought.
'tte room trying to get n.c.lenrer slgt~tll.
Fur whum thll cell toll~
l II tell you how to get a clear signal.
1 Wllrlt to talk about cellulllf phtlnes Oo to the person's house and talk to
for n minute. ln the old dnys, wliel\ you them. Cell phones nre OK In fill emer~uw ~tlmebtldy wlllklng down thii stteet 11ettcy, but rr you use them to commu·
jubberlng 11wa~ Into th1n nlr, vuu nevi!r iilcate with friends lllld loved ottes, ~ou
thou~~;ht uf the word "phone,~'Just the will , eventually get disconnected.
Wtlrd "cell." Now, we have · 1 these That II ruin your weekend, no matter
nut$ drlvln~ nround talkhtg on the how mllhy free trtlnuteil y.ou get.
phone wltlt ust one hand on ihe steerAft · , . r&gt;f_u_~tep
illl! wheel. ure, In a flt of rond rage " er you ve oeen marr1ed for a
you've uften tiikettll hand off the wheel whlle, you rellllze .~at your wife lay~
to ~ummunloate with other drivers, but down what i call verbal landntlnes.

bullt~tms.

..... -

GREEN~S

FAMILY MEDI'CINE

.

Mlchael"Sig" Sigler.
Contact the Sigler Family
at742-2279

.

· Queltion: I have had high lipid) HDL and LDL and their with production of cholesterol have a ptoVen benefi,t for you?
cholesterol for 30 ·yean. My subgroups a~ used to mo~ in the liver just one metabolic If it were my liver and 1 had
total was 230. The past six accumtely assess risk. General- step ahead of the spot where good lipid values, I'd minimize
'
months I have been taking ly HDL levels of 30 or higher Stlltins, like the Lipitor that
· ble whU· e LDL 1evels you are taking, work. Since it the risk by avoiding :ill unnecsuppIements of fi sh 01'l an d .a~ d. ema
flaxseed oil. My ~cent blood should be 130 or less.lndivid- is a deriVIItive from a food sub- essary p~scription or nontests showed a dramatic drop uals with a previous history of stllnce, polycosanol sidesteps presaiption medicines until
to a total cholesterol of 197, heart disease should try to get the Food and Drug Adminis- there is a clear reason to
. my HDL was 54 and the their LDL below 100.
tration's scrutiny as a drug.
change.
triglyceride! we~ 124. These Triglyceride levels over 200 · However,just because a sub('Family Medicine" is a weekare the lowest ~ading I've had are .aho associated . with stance is classified as a food ly colrjmn. To srjbmit questions,
in thirty yean. I have been inc~ased risk so those with supplement doesn't mean that
'
· 1ycosano 1. mu1 tip
· 1e m· k f:acton or eXIst.
a. , or, con- write to john C. Wol!{, D. 0 -,
rea dmg
abou.t po
1t. cant, be euechve
Can I take this supplement ing heart disease should try to (versely, potenti:illy dangerous. Ohio University College of
with my Lipitor? A~ the~ any get their levels to 150 or less. ---evrrently there a~n't a lot Osttopathic Medicine, RO. Box
ponlble conflicts to taking Since most ch(!lesterol within of scientific papers add~ssing 110, Athens, Ohio 45701. Past
both? ,
the body II made the~. it is the efFectiveness 'and safety of · columns att al'llilable online a.t
: Annnr: Cholesterol Is an · often helpful to ~strict the polycosanol, but that isn't par- . ~~~~~~===~~~~~~~====~~~~~~=~=~
important chemical that Is raw materials the body uses in ticularty surprising because of 1
p~sent In every cell of our this manufacturing process. the way tliese very expensive
bodies. It II the ''raw material" The important ingredient Is investigations .a~ (or a~ not)
for building hormones, cell saturated fats ··- these a~ funded. Those studies I could
wal1t and other components principally animal fats. You find indicate polycosanol may
that a~ necessary to sustain didn't mention If you are be an important addition to
life, As you miaht surmise being attentive to your diet. I the treatment of high lipids. In
from its importance, It li man- hope you a~ since.medicines, these generally small and
ufactu~d within the body and including prescription and short-term studies, it was a&amp;
It is a!Jo abtorbed fiom the non-p~scrlption types, work effective as the 'stalin class of
foods we eat.
·
most efFectively when com- cholesterol medicines. It was
' As I'm sure you know, bined with a low saturated fat also safe when taken in a dose
Increased levels of cholesterol diet.
range of 10 to 20 IIIi• but the
•re associated with heart The non-p~acrlption drug studies only involved a relaattacka and other circulatory polycounol is also marketed tively sm:ill number of people
problema such as strokes. Gen- under the names of poli- for only a few months. Your
,orally a level of the total cho- cosanol, octacosanol and octa _ current lipid values are just
lesteiol over 240 mal d1 is cosyl alcohol. It is a 28 whe~ they belong. You didn't
associated with this inc~ased straight-chain carbon com- mention that you are experirlsk. Unfortunately, the total pound (for you chemistry encing any problems with
cholesterol alone isn't the best types) that is usually extncted your diet and medicine.
predictor of heart diseue. Lev! from sugar cane wax, honey or TherefOre, why do you want
els of other lipids (cholesterol wheat germ oil. It is proposed to take something else, partieis ch~mically classified as a that policosanol interferes ulady something that doesn't

spedtll
you!

The Daily Sentinel

740,-992-2156

'

Rogers-Evans

museum for sale

•

VICfORVILLEf Cali£ (AP)
-Mer losing money for leWI'al yean, a"for !ale" lign hat gone
up at the Roy Regen-Dale
Evans museum in the Mojave

·De~ert.
, The sian• reeendy went up
on the building and the surrounding 50 acres along
Interstate 15, but the property
hu been on sale for about a
)'ear, ·listing agent Bob Tinsley
taid last week.
' Museum officials said they
wiU stay open unleu they
receive an ofFer for the property and the 33,000-squarefoot building es~~ted to be
worth S8 million.
' The contenu of the muse·
um, including Rogers' stufFed
and mounted horse Trigger
and dog Bullet, are not
included in the sale.
Acco!ding to tax returns,
enues from admiuions
dropped from $402,568 in
1998 to S209,484 in 2000.
There are no other attmctioru
near the museum, which is
halfw~ between LOI Angeles.
and LuVegu.

.
NUMBBl Or PIOPLI OUIUNTLY

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

UIUIIIR friiiiJ'I IMIIPirl
•aiUpoUI :mall!' otrlbune
t)otnt tlleasant ~egiJter

Comins 'Thursday_ in the Sentinel _

AWAmNG O:lOAM TIANIPLANTSI 80,000
NUVBU Or PIOPLI ADDID TO THI
WAITING UST IACH DAY1 l a

NVMBI:R OP PIOPLI WHO
DIIJAQH DAY WAITING FORA DONOR1 17

Ju liD orpomcl tUN~ cloDOr, you can aave the Uva of MVtn people and ratore
htlltb to clousumon. Be a hero. Stp up when you renew your driver' sltcan.H
or l&amp;ate JD It any BMV, and tell your family about your declllon.

--.s(Sf;rc

o

' . . .,..,.....,...., • ltllhl ~~~&amp;·

~t.(;.&amp;~,,·~·"

--- t-------~~----------~--------------.~----- -----·~--~------------~---

. ,_,lllellaeofoltJ.o.ol'l

�'

Page A&amp;

•
DeMocrats push filibuster
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Democrats :ue maneuvering for a quick vote on oil drilling in an Arctic wildlife
refuge, confident they can turn back , ~e of the Bush
administration's top energy prioriti~s.
A proposal to allow oil companies to develop the 1.5 million-acre coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge in Alaska was introduced Thesday by Alaska's two
Republican senators.
A group of Democrats immediately made clear they
intend to filibuster · the amendment. With Republicans
believed to be short of th~ 60 votes need~d to end it,
Democrats moved to force a · vote on the filibuster by
Thursday.
,
Sen. Frank Murkowski, R-Aiaska, accused the Democrats
of ste~mrolling the bill; noting that the Democratic maneuver to force a vote came "after only three hours of debate."

Watercraft rules set
· WASHINGTON (AP) - Personal watercraft enthusiasts
will have eight areas in the national parks system open to
them this summer with park officials banning motorized
vessels in more waterways starting next week.
Park Service Deputy Director Randy Jones said Tuesday
his agency would put five inore sites - three national
seashores and two national recreation areas -permanently
off-limits to the watercraft starting Monday, as a result of a
lengthy review and extensive public comments.
Another eight 'areas in the national parks system will ·b e
temporarily dosed to watercraft also on Monday, but could
be reopened if the individual parks adopt rules for their use.
A hearing on a watercraft industry suit challenging the
ban was scheduled to be heard Wednesday before U.S. District Judge John D. Rainey in Victoria, Texas . The suit
~lieges the Park Service arbitrarily discriminated against a
class of park users: those who enjoy .riding personal watercraft.

Pentagon overhauls command
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon is rewriting its
master plan for assigning war-fighting responsibilities at
home and around the world in hopes of better managing
.
defense of the U.S. homeland.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld planned to
announce the changes at a Pentagon news conference
Wednesday. .
.
The new approach is supposed to streamline a command ·
structure that is complex and, in many respects, rooted in a
Cold War-era approach to fighting standing armies, air
forces and navies in predictable parts of the world.
As the suicide hijackings of Sept. t 1 showed, the nation
faces unconventional threats from unpredictable sources,
and former adversaries like Russia are now partners in the
war on terrorism.
'

wattl1 in Cltwlarid ~ B2
Carr, 'IlxGIIS clast to tltal, Awt B2

ALBANY. N.Y. (AP) - ~on down a few degrees.
dtgsu: high. bmking the 1896 Pule near ~ \\., and
Strolling through a park with
The temperature in Albany record for the &lt;by of 88, New WJshington's Rl\gm National
her 6-month-old daughter, hit 89 degrees TueW.y - Jtrsey's Newark InternatiOnal Airport peaked t a recold 92.
April Harrison worried that some 32 depes a~ the Airport passed its record of 82
Other recon:k fell in Pimwinter had melted into sum- normal high and 1 degtee during the morning and kept burgh, which broke by 1
mer, bypassing spring com- above the previoUs recOid set going to 92. Williamsport, ~•• degru: its old teemd of 8S
pletely.
106 yws ago. said mett'orolo- hit a recOid 90, :as did St. Louis. degrees set in 1896, and ~
"I don't want it to be this gist Bob Kilpatrick of the
Civil War re-enactors in N.D., which smashi!d by 7hot so SOQn," Harrison said
National Weather Service.
wool uniforms Sllfl'md at 95 depes its old madt of 82 set
Tuesday in Albany's 'MshinsNew York Oty jlosted a 92- ~ at Pamplin HistoriQ! in 1913.
ton Park. "I .like it in the 70s.
When it geis in the 80s, it's
unbearable."
The Meigs County Family and Children First Council is seeking applicants for
For much of the East and the position of Council Coordinator, under a Personal Service Contrllct, for a time
Midwest this week, it has
been almost that. Summer- period ending 6·30-02. The Council is a public agency, comprised of individuals'
like temps ha~ people across and represen.tatives from public agencies. The mission of the council is to
the region playing hooky, coordinate. the delivery of social and health services to families and children in
replacing their trousers with Meigs County and to administer programs not provided by local agencies.
shorts anct feasting on ice
Service Provider shall perfonn the following Services for Meigs County FCFC:
cream instead of so11p.
".I . c;ouldn 't wait to bring 1 . In accordance with Meigs County FCFC policies and procedures, monitor
the ltids out," said Carolyn
Meigs County FCFC grants, contrllcts. and programs to assure compliance-:
Kennard, who brought her 2with state"ltnd federal guidelines. SerVice Provider shall also ensure that such
year-old daughter, nephew
contracts, grants, and programs are . being complied with by third party
and two other children to
Washington ~rk. "When l
vendors with whom Meigs County FCFC have contracted with.
·
mentioned the word 'park,'
they were at the door."
2. Prepare grant applications as requested by Meigs County FCFC, including
After an odd winter th~t
identifying potential sources of funding for Meigs County FCFC.projects.
saw rulips sprouting in Janu.ary in Iowa and a Maich 3. Prepare on behalf of Meigs County FCFC, reports required by federal and
snowstonn blamed for more
state agencies rehiting to grant, contrllct and program activities.
than 20 deaths from Texas to
the Great Lakes, temperatures 4. Prepare monthly and/or other tinimcial reports as .requested by Meigs County
FCFC Administrlltive Agent.
turned· balmy Monday and
Tuesday.
.
Prepare drafts of responses to findings, questioned costs and citations issued
"It's freezing one week and
by auditors of federal and state agencies.
roasting the next," said
George Smith, who moved to
6. Other related clerical activities.
Albany from Victoria, British
Columbia, two weeks ago.
Minimum qualifications for the position are college degree or an associate
"Last week, it was freezing, degree with extensive course work in the social sciences/or public administration
and I thought, 'What's going
on? It's supposed to be and no less than 2 years experience in an administrative position in a private or
public agency which derives substantial portions of its revenues from federal,
sprmg.
More hot weather was state, or private, foundation grants.
expected for the Northeast
on Wednesday. while thun- . Resumes detailing the educational background and work experience of the
derstorms over the Appalachi- applicant and three letters of recommendation should be submitted to: Meigs
ans were forecast to cool that County Family and Children First Council, P.O. Box 129, Middleport, OH 45760.
Post marked no later than April 23rd, 2002. The Council is an EEO Employer. · ·

s:

tit

NEW YORK (AP) -The estranged wife offormer New
York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani wants $1 million a year
tale-free to support herself and her two children, Giuliani.'s
attorney says.
I
That's about $950,000 more than Giuliani is willing to
p~
.
·Giuliani, 57, now pays a court-ordered $1,800 a month
and half of all the living expenses for television journalist
Donna Hanover and the children. He has offered to double
that amount, Raoul Felder, Giuliani's attorney, said at a
divorce hearing Tuesday.
Hanover's lawyer, Helene Brezinsky, told state Supreme
Court JustiCe Judith Gische that Giuliani earns $1 million a
month.

~

WEDNFSIA\YS

HIGHLIGHTS

lancers roll past Marauders
BY JIM SoP.un
SENTINEL CORMSPONDENT

LATI~OBE, 11~.- Th~ Rio
Grande Redmt~n L'Wll~ aw:ay
\vith ~ split in an An~rkun
Mid~.1st Con!Crenc~ doubleheader Tucs,lay afuornoon
l.l!f,linst Saint Vim:ent College.
Th~ Rt•dmcn used !\Om~ late
g.1111e lllll!lic 'ro win th~ first
!f,llllt' 3-2 but dropped the see;.
ond g;.unc, 9--l.
Rio Gmnde (2()...19, 5~7
IIMC) And ~inf Vincl'nt (1713, 5-3 AMC) were deadlocked
1- 1 after the ll!!llll~tion SL'\11!11
innings. Redrncn catcher J:alre
Sperry dubbed :a two-run
home run in the top of the
eighth &amp;.nne to give R.io 4 3-1
lead. The bllllt \V.IS the IOth of
the sea.~on fur the Ashland, KY
mniw. It \V:l~ the tl1ird home
run in ft&gt;ur g,uncs tar Sperry.
Jmmtlum Ervin retired the
linal two batters of the go~me ro
s:1w it lor Tim Sutton (-l-4).
Ervin started f:l'\lliC two fur
the R&lt;!tlnwn and did not h;~w
the s:unc SU(C•~~ ns the lkarcats
slugged their \V:IY to a 9--l win.
J:~son Wlwek•r went 2-!0r-4
with a solo home run nnd
Uret'lt Ewing w.~s 2-for-2 anti
knocked in a p:1ir of teammates
to le:~d the Rcdmen att.,ck. ·
Rio . Crand~ will return
hom~ lor :1 Utlll· ,onferen'e
double dip on Thursd:ty niter·
noon wrsus llluc!Mtl Srote.
. Gnmt• time is set for I p.m. ;It
Sronlcy E\1(\ns Field.

STEWART - Mis~ries continue ttl
mout\t fur the M"r.1uders di"moml
men 3S th(y went down !Ur the sl'CQntl
consct:utiw ~:r~me. In the mer&gt;: rule,
Fedem.l Hocking\ lo~nce!ll ~I 7-1\)
bl.~sted the Meigs nine (141, 1- 5) lti-6
3t tt'W"Jrt.
Meigs turne-d out ro .1 3-\) lead in th&lt;'
sl'CQnd on a lead ott" wo~.lk to Ur-o~ndun
R~msburg. Kyle H3tlll~ rollnwed with
the first of hi three ·singles but was
tllsgt"d out on ~ . rundown. Derrick .
Kn~pp ~nd J~cob smith hit s.1rdy. following .t second out. Jiminy Smith
b:mgtd one to right but again thl·
Marnudcr runl)er W\ls trapped oil' base
ro end what could hQ~ been a mon·
pruducti~ inning.
Tht lancers nmched Meigs run out
put in their half as a boise on b~lls. to
Mnr.1uders miscues~ a round tripper by

Roo nelanccy ti~l the srore. Inning
tltrc.•e &gt;\;IW one more chall.'\'11 up !Ur
Mei~ "~hen l)oug l)ill single-d to right,
~ml Ralnsburg anti H~nu~n ~"&lt;-.:orded
b.1ck to b.lck hits sroriug })ill.The lead
w~s · short liwd, huwewr as rour~een
l~n~-ers nun:hro to the pl.ltt pushing
~cross nine nms !Ur .1 12-4 1'-dgc. Six
Wst' hits, tWO \V'Jlk , J b.lst• on errors
.Inti .1 hit b.ttsman led to the outburst. In
the tlli:h, Casey Dunk·e slasht'"ll .1 doublt•
to tll&gt;t'p right .md lluu Fo~cklcr ~ o~s
;1boan.l on ,1 fielding t'rror. With t&lt;IW
;IW'.I}', Hann.1n pit:ke~l up his thin) s..~t&lt;·ty
platill[l; two ru11s. Thrt'c base on lllllls, ;t
M~rau&lt;lcrs error resulted in '' Lmt·er
score. Meigs cnuld not l!CIIet.ltt any
olk11se in the upper sixth while Fcder.11 Hocking pluted three runs by 'wy or
tlll'et• walks the second hit b:tttcr and "
single. The Marauders had ditliculty
fielding th~ b;~ll on grassle~&lt; intldd .IS
they committed six miscues. Meigs

r.1cked up thirtt'en hilS led by Jacob
Smith .md Kyle Hannan with thre~
e.~ch . Hm1fec doublt-d o~nd singled,
Jamb Smith had a p;ait with !)ill,
R~msburg and Knapp hitting sali!ly.
l.tncer hitters were Ron Ddanc~y
with a homer ,md twO singl.:-s, Darren
Bond with a p.tir of singles and Clint
S.:ars,Jason Mccumber and St•th Dillon
&lt;.'ach a base hit. Fetleml Hocking committed two errors Dill took the loss
with Fackl~r and Dunfee doing reli~f
duties. llond pickc'"llup the win in relief
of Dehmcey
Ml'igs JV boys recorded .t win Friday
uv~o•r Wellston 13-6 jeremy lll;lckston
'""' the pitther. They ·also won against
Fed~o•r;tl Hocking Tut·sday mght 3-2
playing') innings Eric Cullmns pitched
7 of tht· inninss and Mike Davis
pitched the hst 2 and tlmndon F;~ckler
It it a home run to right t1dd to win the
g.llllt'. The JV is now 9-0

BASEBALL
.

.

Houston
slugger hits three
homers in win·
(M1 Reds

Mets sale

pending

ChiSox rough

Meeting spurs new hopes

•

WsJu•••""' 1l- 2112

Junior takes
battlnc practice

•

ALEXANDRIA,Va. (AP)- Prosecutors in the case of an
American-born Taliban are offering defense lawyers 13
summaries of interviews with ai-Qaida and Talib~n
detainee·s but insist the material remain secret.
· The summaries are unclassified, but public dissemination
could give terrorists valuable information about the direction of investigators, prosecutors in the case of John Walker
Lindh said Tuesday.
They asked U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis Ill to order protection for the information. The written motion said sensitive material should be deleted from versions provided to ,
.
defense lawyers.
The interviews were conducted with suspec.ted operatives
captured in Afghanistan and Pakistan and detained . at the
U.S. naval facility at Guaritanamo Bay, Cuba.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -The King has been gone
for 25 years, but Elvis Presley's phenomenal marketing
power has everyone all shook up at the world's largest furniture trade show.
Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Co., based in Galax, Va., plans
to introduce two new lines of Elvis Presley bedroom pieces
at the International Home Furnishings Market, which gets
under way on Thursday.
Company officials insist no green shag or red velvet 'will
be used in the new "Graceland" and "Elvis Presley's Hollywood" bedroom lines.
,.
Still, they did try to have some fun with furniture that
ranges from refined to downright ostentatious.

Plp81

CINCINNATI (AP) Lance Berkman b~came
the first major le;lguer this
season to homer three
times in a game, ddving in
five runs as the Houston
Asttos hit five home runs
in beating the CincinnQti
CINCINNATI (AP) - K~n
Reds 1!-3 Thesday night.
Gritfey Jr. took batting practice
Richard Hidalgo folfur the first time since partially
lowed
Berkman's three-run
t~aring the pnteUn tendon in his
homer in tht first with a
right knee.
solo shot to the same spot
Griffey was injured in ngilln~
· over the left-field wall.
April 7. He said he heard his
JdT Bagwell's · two-rutl
knee pop. Team do,tors said .
homer in the second
along with che partial tear, Griffey sustained a dislocated
inning, his .first of the senkneecap, which us\t:illy docsn 't
son, made it 6-0, and Berk-·
need surgery.
man followed with his
sixth homer, clearing the
·40-foot "batter's ~ye" in
celiter.
He also had a solo homer
in the fifth otT Jose Rijo,
NEW YORK (AP) - Fred
breaking · a 24-inning
Wilpon is ready to buy the 50
scoreless streak by the
percent of the New York Mets
Reds' bullpen.
held by longtime co-owner
· Houston's .first four
Nel!on Doubleday.
honters were off CindnDoubleday &amp; Co. bought the
nati starter Jose Acevedo
Mets in 1980 for $21.1 million,
(2-1), who lasted just I 2-3
with the company owning 95
innings, the shorMt start of
percent of the team and
his career. He allowed
Wilpon owning 5 percent.
seven rum on six hits.
BREAKIN' OUT THI BIG BAT- Houston Astros' Lance Berkman hits his second home run
When Doubleday &amp; Co. was
of the game In the second Inning against the Cincinnati Reds on Tuesday. (AP)
P1111e ... lecll, IS
sold to Ilertelimann AC in
1986, the publisher sold its
shares of the team for $80.75
million to Wilpon and Nelson
Doubleday, who became 50-50
owners.

Govemment presses secrecy

Elvis fumlture line coming

OSU lticlttrs optimislit, Po.ft B2

r--------------------------..,..--'1

Mrs. Giuliani seeks S1M

NEW YORK (AP) -The Vatican's unprecedented summons" of U.S. cardinals to a meeting on sex abuse has some
insiders hoping for big changes in church policies, including the standardization of rules dictating how American
bishops respond to misconduct claims.
Cardinal William Keeler of Baltimore said he will
encourage church leaders ~t the meeting to support that
approach. Bishop Joseph Galante of Dallas, who is on a
panel overseeing U.S. bishops' response to the scandal, said
the idea will likely be on the.,..nda:
-Speeding up the removal of errant priests will also be discussed at next week's gathering, Galante said.
Observers cautioned against high expectations for the
assembly. The church is known for its deliberate style, and
the gathering next Tuesday and Wednesday should be seen
as one step in a long struggle to restore trust in the church,
they said.

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:
Hurrica~

Parts of the nation see temps soaring into .the 90s

'

.

Lewis In civil
court
BALTIMORE (AP) - A
civil court jury is being aslwd to
decide · whether Baltimore
Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis is
liable for injuries twO women
suffered during a brawl in a bar
in 1999.
Catrice Hill and Sherica A.
Willlams are suing Lcwi.l for S6
million . Their attorney, A.
Dwight Pettit, said hospital
record! support his clients'
claim that Lewi$ punched
them.

Cutting·edge Ultrmound Technowgy.
O'Bieneo Memorial Hospital reuntly acquired an ultruound ')'Item 10 advanced that it's t~e lint
of its kind in the entire state. The new tyJtem prodUCCI high-re10lution images of almoJt any part
of the body. A. imponant :u cutting-edge technology are the regiatered and skilled ultruonography
tcchnologisll who provide O'Blcneo' accredited ulrr:uound services. Advanced technology and
experienced, credentialed, and attentive staff- that'• radiology services at O'Bieness.

DePaul fills
coachlna

O'BLENESS
Mem~Ho.pital
www.obleness.org

Excellence In Community Healthcare
., ... n.rr

•

•

vaa~ncy
CHICAGO (AI') - Dave
Leicao, an as istant under Jim
Calhoun at Connecticut, was
selected DePaul's new basketball coach, ending a rix-week
search for Pat Kennedy's successor.

up Finley, Tribe
CHICAGO (AP) - The
Cleveland lndinm' winninl!
streak is over. And in spectacularly ugly fad1ion, no len ..
Chuck Finley (1 -1) gave
up nine runs - eight of
them earned - and sevetl
hit! in just 1 .2/3 innin"
Tuesday night as the Chicago
White Sox beat the Indians
10-5, mapping Cleveland's
t 0-gamc winning streak.
"Everybody kind of -said
we're going co lose eventually," said Finley, whose ERA
soared from 0.00 to 10.57.
"Obviously; I didn't .want it
to be this way, where we get
pounded in the second
inning and pUJhed back to
the seat so quickly.
"It was just one of those
nighu where I just threw a
lot of bad pitches."
Magglio Ordonez hit a
,grand slam to cap a nine - r~n

second inning for ChicaK&lt;J.
Roy'c Claytun added a twontn humer, and Sandy Alomar Jr. had a two-run sin~I.!.
Kenny Lo(ton had a beauti ful c:ttch in the fourth inning
that robbed Cleveland of at
lean one run.
White Sox rookie Jon Rauch
didn't get the win in hil tint
major league start, lilted in the
fil!h inning aficr throwing 89
pitch•"'· Dmrutw Marte (1-0)
l!Ot the win by allowing one
run on one hit in 1 2/3 innin".
Not••: The nine runs'
were the 111011 scored in one
inning by the White Sox
since Sept. 3, 2000, when
they scored nine in the first
against Anaheim . ... 13rady
Anderson's single in the
fourth inning broke an 0- ROUGH NIGHT - Cleveland pitcher Chuck Anley slta In the
for-20 slump.... The crowd .dugout after being pulled from the iame during the ~econd
of 23,502 included 13.2011 after giving up a grand slam to the Chicago White Sox's
Maggllo OrdOnez on Tuesday In Chicago. (AP)
walk-ups.

Jeffers,
Lancers
..
Defense key in
Marauders' win
Bv JIM Sou1.1•v
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

STEWART ~ Katie Jeffe"
pitched a shutout behind an
excellent defensive perfor•
mance. by her Marauder
teammates as they topped
Federal Hocking 3-0 as they
post a 4-2 ttcol\i in the lh
Valley play (4-5 overall).
Tite maroon and gold posted t\VQ runs in the second
tbme. jaynee Davis led off
with a free pass followed by a
Jeffers single to right Ashley
Burbridge reached on a fielders choice as Davis advanced
with a stolen base. tlurbridge
promptly stole second and
third with Davis crossing.
Carrie Abbott walked and
Burbridge crossed the plate
safely when a play was made
on Abbott as she stole second.
Amanda Fetty tallied the third
run for the Lady Marauders
drawing a walk and taking
second on a steal coming
home on the overthrow by
the lancer fielder.
Federal Hocking's only
threat came in the fourth on a
walk. fielding error and a base
hit that went for naught. Jeffers allowed for hits fanned
three and walked one three
errors were charged to the
Maroon and Gold Moore,
Lancer hurkr gave up only
two singles, stn1ck out ..five,
walked four to go along with
. three miscu~s.
Meigs hitters were Kara
Musser and Katie Jeffers. For
the Lancers Moore, Cossin,
Rupe and Stover hit safely.

Southern
resetves
topple
Trimble
Bv Icon WOLI'I
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

TRIMBLE Trailing
early" in the garne, the Southern Tornadoe;' reserve team
scored a 5-2 come-from behind victory over the Trimble Tomca~~ Thesday night in
J!iris softball action.
Southern is now 4-0 on the
season under Coach Rebecca
Evans.
Brooke" Kiser pitched the ·
Tornadoes to victory with
one strikeout and two walks
to her credit. Nichols suffered
the loss for Trimble.
Southern hitters .were
Brooke Kiser and Nickt Thcker, each with a double and
single, Ash lee Hili two singles,
and singles by Holly Duffy,
Nikki Riffic and joanne Picken!.

Southern plated three runs
in the sixth i ~ing to take the
lead. The r.1 'Y st.lrted when
Pickens singled, Duffy •ingled, lliffic singled, and Kiser
had a two-run double. Ki1er
then ~eored on a double by
Tucker, to make the !Core 52.
Hesides JhO!e getting hill,
Mirinda
· , jordan Neigler, An11ela Hayman and Jeri
Hill au · contributed to the
win, Hill did a good job
behmd the plate for Southe-rn . .

I

�hge 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Hunicane

ing:

Davis has

BUCKEYES FOOTBALL ..

"~t

OSU kickers

is cl~arly ~ unique, unbelievabl~ ath-

.memory of poor
•
2001 campa1gn ·

lete for a big t11llll," said llivis. "I told him at
his YA:~rkout, 'I almost ruined your ca~~:er.' I
toyed with the idea of putting him at deknsive
end. I \Vas thinking Too nll Jones."
After picking in the top ~ in e:lch of the
past ~ ~ars - they had the top- OYerall pick
in 1999 and 200), and the third in 2001 - the
Browns' mm this yw: ~'t come until 16th.
That\ p~bly too late to get McKinnie,
who probably will be sel~ in the top five.
But Davis, who hasn't tipped his lund, hinted
""''t anything is ~ble.
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
Huston.~ sophomo~ from 1 just wunt 'em through the
"He nuy be there:' Davis said. "W: m:~y
year ago, Ohio State coach Findlay, didn't attempt a kick upright!"
move up. He may filii.You nL'Wr know."
Jim Tressel
cominu:illy in the l~st five games, He Treuel h1red Luke Fickell,
The Browns.can find someone in a MWni
preached
that
good
teams missed
his final
four a former Ohio State otTen- ·
jersey for whatL'Wr they need. ·
alwuys start. with a depend- attempts, indudiug tries siw lineman to oversee the
Cornerback? Phillip Buchanon YA:~uld be
from ~2 and 40 ~rds ag(lin&amp;t Bu~kcyes' ~pedal teams .
nice. Tight end? Jeremy Shockey is leaving .- , able kicking game .
school a year early. How about a running oock?
All that preaching ~ppu- San D1ego State. .
While coaching last yeu ~t
Clinton Portis :llready Ius played for D~vis.
ently w~·s wmecj· on his kickAfter thu, he was all but Akron, Fickell wus aware of ·
There's ,jso Ed Reed, a b:111-hnwking, hardcrs. They promptly went out forgotten and the kicker the Buckeye kickers' probhitting s:~fcty who is the quintessential Davis
and had a season-long case of position wos Nusent's job to }ems. He hasn't seen eviplayer - hard-nOSt:d and hungry.
the shanks.
win or lose - and he didn't dence of l~st yeu'! f~ilures
Sitting in the middle of the round gives th~
The bottom line wus a 7-5 exact1y 1oc k, up t he .N o. 1 this spring.
Browns flexibility · tltey didt1 ~ have in past
record that might have spot. He mmed a 34-~rder "From what J heard from
dralis. It nlso has led 'to wild speculation about
become 10- 2 · if ·Mike in a 29-27 loss to .Penn State lm year .and from what I've ·
what tl1cy'U do.
d
ff I'
ki k
Nugent and . josh Huston
would have converted kicks an was o
me on c s seen on film, they look to me
Running bock appears to oo a pressing need
from. 36 and 40 yards that a hell of a lot ·better," Pickell
for the Browns; who were unable to land ~
they missed in narrow
1
mig 1t have clanged the said. "I don't know if it's
nmning bock in free agency. The twO topdefeats against UCLA. Wisf
3
consin and Penn State.
ten~r 0 • . 4- 22 defcnt confidence or just because
rated backs, Doston CoUege's William Green
and Michigan State's TJ. Duckett, both are
By the end of the season., against lllhtOIS .
it's spring ball, but they've
expected to be awilablc if the Browns stay at
the coaching staff had so litTressel said he doesn't care got another yeu under their
No. 16.
tie confidence in the kickers who wins the job this year. belts. They've got the hard
Green's speed - 4.68 second' in t)le 40tlut the offense frequently He just wants some produc- stuff out of the way, hopefulyard dash at the Indianapolis combine ..- is a
ly."
was forced to go for it on lion.
concern for Davis, who loves g:~me breakers
"We just want to kick 'em Nugent said he hu no
fourth-a11d-long iltside the
and still thinks Jackson can be a solid NFL
35 or would insert punter through,"Treuel said. "If that doubt . thu .things have
back.
Andy Groom, whose kicks means alternating them, fine. turned around.
Green has a history with Davis, who unsucusually would pin the opposcessfully recruited him for Miami.
ing
team deep in its own terDuckett is ~ bruising runner in the Jerome
. ritory.
Bettis mold whose only question mark is his
As the Buckeyes go
ability to catch the b~. He had 21 receptions
through
their spring paces,
during his college career.
the mte of Ohio State's
Duckett had a strong personal workout in
kickers again is a major quesM•rch, clocking a 4.39 in the 40 for scouts and
tion muk.
the Drowns, who sent Davis, Clark and wis''We've got to be much
tant coach Pete Garcia to see it.
better,''
Tressel said ominous~
Garcia was Davis' chief recruiter at Miami
ly.
before joining the Browns and has kept tabs on
many of the players he couldn't convince to
Nwgent didn't convert a
become Hurricanes, just in case they became
field goal until . the fourth
Browns.
game last season, then hit
three in a row. He made 6of-11 attempts in the laic half
of the season to finish 7-of14.
"It was a tough year. I kind
of let thing~ get in my head a
.•
..................
little bit," said the sophollftN, MTV, TNT, OlftNfl Nttwtn, OfNMery
more from Centerville. "I
Chonnol ...J CNN, Ptw, Mllftl ftllfll
missed· my first , field goal
ever as a Buckeye and I kind
of let that get. to me. I can't
let that happen. You're going
Pomeroy, Ohio
,:..o a x
to · miss. That's one thing
Capers said. "He's goirig to about kicking - you're not
need to have all the dimac- · going to make every one
Maton, Wett VIrginia
·
tions out of th " way and .:very time."
focus on football."
That was certainly true of
Carr will also be among the Buckeyes' tag-team kickthe. honorees at the National en.
Quarterback Club Awards
ceremony on Thursday. On
Saturday, he will become the
12th quarterback selected
ately return phone me11ages. with the top overall pick
IUD
'JWo wecoks ago, the Texans since the NFL-AFL merger
proclaimed Carr the team's in &lt;1.970 and the fourth in the
top pick in Saturday's dtaft. last five yeau.
Later that week, Carr bought . Carr led the nation with
a home in Sug2r Land and 4,839 passing yards and 46
relocated his family from touchdowns in 2001 while
California to Texas.
leading Fresno State to an
"We wanted him to gee in 11-3 record.
here and get chingt taken
,.-care of so we .can have his
fuU attention;• coach Dom

Texans close to deal
with top pick Carr
$60 million deal
under review
by NFL
HOUSTON (AP) - The
1-Jouston Texans are close co
signing Fresno State quarterback David Carr to a sevenyear contract that would pay
him S60 million if he reaches all incentives, a football
so.urce said.
The NPL is looking at the
contract but had not yet
given its approval early Thesday, the source said, speaking
on
the
condition
of
anonymity.
Carr.'s agent, Mike Sullivan, who also negotiated
quarterback Michacol Vick'•
contract with the Atlanta
Falcons last year, was re-turning to Texas «l get the final
details of the contract ironed
out, the Houston Chronicle
and KRIV- TV of Houston
reported Monday night.
Carr would earn $45 million as a sabry base over ·the
seven years and chat could
increue co S60 million if he
meeu all incentive•.
. Carr would be paid S16
million in the fine three
yean of the deal, the mOJt in
NFL hillory for a player in
the first three yeau of a contract.
Vlck, ~elected by the FalCOIIJ with the top pick in Wt
year's draft, will make S15.3
million in his fir.c three
yun. Vidt signed an eight" year, $62 mlll1on deal with
the Falconi.
Sullivan d1d not immedi-

•

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

JOHNSON'S
(740) 992·1182

AlSR
tf,...

(304) 773-5305

the

..,,_ "M 14

Bearcats stop OU ·

eye on fonner playen
BEREA (AP)- Buti::h Invis d~'t need
scouting ~pons, game films or test scores tQ
tell him what type of pl~~r he w.mts on the
Clevebnd Browns.
·
He c:taVI'$ young ones, big ones, fast on4!S
:md nasty One$.
D~vis knows whe~ to find a bunch of those
players. He cotched dozens of them at the
University of Miami.
"They\oe got
some phenomen~y wented
players," Davis
said.
Don't be surprised if Davis,
in his st:cond
year with . the
Browns, s.·k..:ts :1 few former Hurricanes during tim w.oekend's NFL dr:aft or signs a few
otlters afterward.
13-L'Ccntly, a rumor n12de its way to the
Miami can!pus that Davis, who coach~'&lt;l allhe
school from 1995 to 2000, would use ~ nine
of the Llrowns' picks this year on Hurricanes.
So when Clc-vcland is on the dock, will
Davis utilize a oost- 'Ome~w:illablc philosophy?
" Well," said Dwight Clark, the Browns'
director offootball operations. "There's a lot of
good ones out there, I know that." ..
·
Last year, Davis picked twO former 1-lurricai!L'S - running back Jam~-s Jackson (third
round) and wide receiver Andre King (seventh
round), and signed or claimed four other former Miami .players.
Aftcr this year's draft, the Browns may look
more like the Cleveland.'Canes than ever. And
Davi~ knows the Miami pipeline isn't drying
up any time soon.
"Of the 84 or 85 gu~ on scholarship at
Miomi, at least 40 will be in a pro camp:' he
said. "They'll probably average somewhere
between nine and 13 for the next four yean.''
As many a1 12 players from Miami's 2001
national championship team are expected to
be drafted, and five of them are ptujected firstrounders. One of them stands out above~ the
others - offensive tackle Bryant McKinnie.
The 6-foot-8, 343-pound McKinnie didn't
· allow a sack in college.
Cleveland fans arc dreaming about McKinnie as the dub's cornerstone left tackle, blowing open huge holes and protecting quarterback Tim Couch's blincbide for years.

•r c•••looto!l ""-1110
llut ..,._
••.!i ~-- .t
1\0t tll nl LM t16. 111; ~
....
. . . . 1M •• _.. lcMII.,. . . . . . .

CO.LLEGE BASEBALL

ATHENS - Ohio IIMllour
~ - With ~ than one hit.
induding l time-~ day
lioot Junior .).\son Shoe~)\ bUt
th~ &amp;bats fdl tu i~Htate rM1
Cinannati, 11-7, on Thcsday
~moon at Bob W~n S!:ldiurn.
Th~! too ends a three-game
winning stre.Jt lOr Ohio.
Cincinn~ti (16-1~1) hit 61111
home runs md totlled 16 blase
hits in the gwe ~t four
Ohio pitchers. Starter W.Ut
Novosel pitchl!d tour solid
innings, taking a 3-1 lead into
the lifih. when he ran into the
lkan:tlt bats. Cinclnn~ti sco~
61111 runs on four hirs - including a pair of home runs against NoVO$!:! to take a 6-3
le~d.

In th~ bottom of the fifth,
however, Ohio chased Cincinnati -stllrter Rob Reel and tied
the grune.1bny Gandee. Shockey and Brandon Wheeler ~
singled to lead off the inning,
and tltc Bobcats then sco~
when senior Mike Arbinger's fly
ball to center field wns milplayed, adwncing each of the
runners and cutting the deficit
to 6-4.
. Kyle Markle relieved Reel
· ·and, after giving up a run-scor•
inK single to sophomore Adam
Fox, he proceeded to limit the•
tl1magc from there. Freshman
B~n Crabtree drove in Wheeler
wtth a sacrtfice fly to lle the
gnmc, but Markle induced a
double play ball to get out of
the inning knotted at.six.
Cincinnati then wusted no
time regaining the lead in the ·

Reds
from

Pllp 81

Berkman's homer over the
blac.k wall in straightaway
center was only the second to
clear thq wall ht the two years ·
it has b~en ilt place. The flnt
was hit by St. Louts' Albert
Pujol1lm 1eason.
Berkman baa thrived on
Red! pitching, hitting .420
(37 -of. 88) in hi1 career with
eight home run1 and 29
RBI!.
Dave M~cki (1-2) allowed
four hiu in 7 2-3 innings, the longelt outing by an Astros
!tarter this year, jncluding a
fifth-inning solo home run
by Ruben Mateo. MHcki
walked one and itritck out
six.
Todd Walker hit a two-run
double ofT Ricky Stone In
the ninth to bring the Reds

sixth innin&amp;·TM Btiunts tallied
1 pair of'Nfi'l with 1 solo home
run by ~dwl FWt ud a ACrifice 8y by Jumn Nite&amp;r.
Th,·y then tllcnd on t\vu
mo~ in the R\\mth inning,
with jUe Smith md A:uun
Moll delivering back-tu-back.
home runs against Ohio niliev~
er Dm Cobb. Sophomore
Aaron Smigelski, the Bobcats'
6ttal pitcher of the afternoon,
retired Ill time Beuat hitttrs
he faooJ in the seo."enth tQ keep
Ohio within fuur.
The . Bobcots (12- t 7) had
their chan~ in the seventh
inning. but rould only manage
one run despi~ having the
bases lo:.ded. Pinch hitter lJrian
White walked with two:&gt; out to
folt.e in Crabtrue With an
unellrtled run, but Ohio could
not muster any more olfense ns
Cincinnati elmer Nate Bouldin
shut down the Bobcats &amp;om
there.
.
Ohio went hitless in the finlli
twO and one-third innings
aguln!t Bouldin and Cincinnati
Qdded an insunu1ce run in the
ninth on Geoff Gordon's RBI
double to !en! It! folll'-run win.
Slt\ith and Erik Eitel each
had three hits for the Be:lttats.
Smith belted two honte ruus
and drove in four, while Eitel
scored twice. Nlefer ~nd Fish
each finished with twO hits.
Shockey, Crabtree and Greg ·
Meyer 1111 recorded multiple hits
for the Bobcats. Meyer laced a
pllir of doubles, while Crnbtree
hit his secQnd home run of the
season and scmcd three· of
Ohio's seven nl11s.

within 8-3.
Not•t:Thc
first-inning
hotners by Berkman and
Hidal11o were the first consecutive homen by the Astros
this season ... Bagwell and
Berkman duplicated that feat
one inning later. .. .The Astros
extended their club record to
114 ~onsecutivc games without being shut out .... Reds
CP Ken Griffey Jr. took bat•
tlng practice for the first tinie
since partially tearing a patel·
lar tendon in his right knee
on April 7. He is not expected to need surgery, but will
be out 3-to-6 weeks. . ..
Clndnnati t:B Sean Casey
was not in uniform, and has
not played since being hit in
the head with a pitch Saturday in Philadelphia.... Reds
bench coach Ray Knight will
miss the Houston series. He Is
In New Mexico for the
funeral of the father of his
wife, golfer Nancy LopeZ.

f'uhll, '••llri·~ h• "'"'"~l'~~'f"' "" ·
l••tu Nluhllll f...•H•M, l•d1Hrt'lll4ijjlu w \mn !IIHif,

ZAP YOIJB

••""' laave more
lal;wtomeone with HE.t\LTB
•o•tomeone who 11 Ju•t not
CHICKEN BD)'IDOre?

OHIO 4U1t•104t
. (11LIPHONI:
l44•2t2f), "PINAL
ACTIONI:
ARI
ACTIONS 01' THI
DIIIICTOR WHICH
Aflll IP'P'ICTIVI
•ft110POIID
ACTIONI"
Altl UI'ON IIIUANCI OR
A
' IT ATID
WltiTTIN
I,ICTIVB DA11.
ITATIMIIITI
I'UAIUANT TO OHIO
f!IIVIIID CODB
IICTION t74U~1 A
I'IIIAI. ACTION MAY
II API'IAI.ID TO
'rHI
PUILIC MIITINO
RIQUIITI MUST H
IUIMITTID WITHIN
to DAYI 01' NOTICI
01' THI DRAI'T
ACTION.

If You Answered
To Any Of The

tt•·

.._,............._...

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c:muttiC M.A. AI

1tiUITII

499 Rldlland Annue
Atbelll, Oblo
. . . .

O,. .I.O.M ·---

..

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7

1 ,....,.,.,",.,

1·30471MIP

:•&amp;

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:~:. ROC*~~

COLUNtUa, OHIO
43111.. A COPY 01'
TNI AI'I'IAL NUS'f
al URVIO ON THI
DIRIC1011 WITHIN $
DAVI AmR FILING
THI APPIAL WITH
THIIRAC.
PINAL IIIUANCI OF
RI:VOCATION OF
MMlU I'IRNIT
ASHLAND aftANDI!D
NARitiTINO AIIMI

Ia ullihftloH tlltt

......
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dan••••
wlltc
IIIIIOH
tMI ......
011 IMIIIel IWW,
eoftdutlod ar ,_,

h•roln

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dul1ntJ

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Danlihr, 11N, ·llld w.tla llld be w.tll)
NOIOIItbtl -

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N tio'i:t;:;

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ptno

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1M llfMIIIIIIUtlld lCIIIOQ - . ot

doaerlbod,

lt.-.. 1!1 PI 74111 dllflnlltco ftltlnlllll

UM lloftt 1tco IIOftll

Ll'""' NO-

......

.....

aide of who\ Wll
•..-....... l'ar~ot
tormortr., Rona
~~~~~~ tot ot' Tht Dotond1nto
.,.ht-o
••v •• now '""'" obova art
~tod IO PURCII . -utred to ona..t
_._.
• -..,
. Ro~ronao Doad• on 01' llefolo lht do\1
Vl»lumo IN, P'lt• ~T:Nit N.A. AS
lit, NOIQI COIIIIIV TfliUSTII
Doecl ftaao,._
A dlt 0
p11001 IV:
u "
SHAPiftO I FELTY,
tl6. IH1Itl
P1rot11WO: hint L.L.P.
1 pelt of Lol No. 100 S.OMntltl $. ~onpil,
In 111111 Run In lho AIIOIMyii-Law
Llnooln
Hill AttotMy lot Plllntnf.
A
t1
Petitioner
nnon on I II1do tOO
Pomeroy,
Wtll II. Clair
IIIII Mini II tht Avtnuo, lnd l'loor
.. ~- t
f
1 Oilt.,..,
OOtMr o Clftoltnd, OH 4411~
• lot now ownod (111)01•100 .
Rena 111011111n tho
11mo btlnQ tht (4)3

..;;.a •

Help W.nted

!'! •

=·=·
:.r:
=·
.,!:""Hortlt ,. :I.

Micheal

·.
.

lltlfnnfllf, Rttottlo of Mtlft

Longaberger«'
Basket Bingo
Thursday, April 18th, 20021

6:00p.m.

·

Middleport American Legion
Mill St. • Middleport, OH
$20.00 for 20 Games
Held by the
Guiding Hand School
For Tickets
Call740·367·7371
Split the Pot • Refreshments
Dobbers - $1.00

• Thl Long1lltrg1r Company or
11'1 IIIII l'IPJ'IItnlali\111 .11'1 In 110
oonntottd 10 or rt1pon1lblt for lhll
bingo event

Dwight lcenhowtr aa ...

ustg"

ELVISII1

Sigler

Friday, April 28, 7:30 p.m.
Melg1 Mlddlt School
Auditorium
Adml11lon $5.00

...apwltha
~ovtna...., for
demllmtand
. bappllll&amp;

Advance tlektlt IVII~I from lily
Pomerov Eltrntntlry Fifth Grldt

lludtnl or II Pomeroy Eltrntnlary.
NJ pt....... "" :OWitd ...
~ ;~~~n Grlde lpMg

,_til
,lold 1np.

at the

Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene.
Beginning April 17 • 21 .
Evlllling 7:00
Sjln. 10:30 &amp; 8:00
Roll. Pit McOut from HurriciM,
w.va.ll lht evlll(llflll.
Pillar Jan LavtndtH lnvilot

·

e1l1llf:.lf OAt ...,., COt ttt , OMo, tdiiOfll 11M.......,..
-.,.....
. . . . , OOitllllltCf "" llotarr ,.,.,., .....

....,..,"................ -·11$··;.

I

;•

-

Atlln
Gall
HIM on 111um-..
W.Ua
Cloooalld
tho
Ohllngw
olta
~~~~~
.,.
-~......._,_ Un ..no-•
Nortltllollltl dl-'tOn IIIICI dof Of Atlllllll. --..- •
" wn
lot tlto l:ut 1111 01 ttao tMI, .end 1.,. Willa Noht, Crtdltora,
Cl'iatlta Campboll daa10aad tlto 111 do\1 ==·~'1011 •
P..,.PI"V l'ci'DIIIIMI 300, of Ootobar, lilt' beolltora ond
11, 110 •••· Motto '''"' Tteot I ·ol A••...n• ..... _ ••11
C 011 n t \1
Dud Coi'tlllooto 01 'IIOIIoltw ....., _, ""
,.
Rooordtl, tlld ,,. No. I hom lat•IO of flllft 01 , . . , . _ "
• o1 woll
oa , whoao
MCIUTY NO 4110
lnlllldld oiiiV to Lawrenoe Wo,la
pro~tnt 111101 of
IIOUTII1M
upron •neutar NOOICIIII Vlllllmo 3113, rotldtnot
.,1
NINIRIVILLI OH
mtiiiiii!MIIt.
pogo U?, Dnd unllnown, will talto
IIIUI
DATI Alaoltcorlllhttou'M Aaootela of Nolea nottoo lhll on
IMIII111001
one-hall ol ·il:o
Wllllr cc;::~,:'lo.
toaUitl."tOdllood
from
~anuai'J 1~rt.A.
IIICIIVINO
1 1001,
1
,.
AS
WATIRI: UNT TO Wlllw wd now tootlld llllmtniO and right CITiaANit
TRUITII Iliad lit
OHIO ftiVIft
on . roal ntote of way of rtcorol.
PIRNIT
NO d••~rt ..·d •n y·•·~ I'IICOI Noa., 07· Complelnt In COli
• ... • "'~·~ ootu oo 0
o7 No. OI.CV.OOIIn ttao
OtN001M'AD
' Co11rt of common
111, Pill 311, Dltd
·
'
THI8 ACTION WAI Rooordt
of Nelge OOIII.OOO lild 07• Pion of Molga
PRICIDID IV A Colli!~ In man 00117•000
Larry 1.
PIIOPOIID ACTION. oomm:in wllh (lomtlt) PARCIL NUMIIII: Collntv.
11111100!,
Mtlgt
~~ n, 1001
Or~ntott, 1th•lr ~·~r ~-==~
county . Cltrk ol
i,..
tn . IIIQn,
I a AODIIIII• UteO Collrtl, P.O. lox 111,
- - - further egrood by 1nd
•
100 h•ond lllftl
botwun tho partlu Willa Run Road Pomeroy, OH 41?11:
lhll till Plrllll Will ~:'• ~~~~~li lllklng fONDIDIUN
:hq~':1 tltt11 ~=~P~~!~~ Loaol•d 11 31180 and lllltlngthat the
partolnlng to thl Walla Run ftoad, g::~ng:~~~~ 0 fg!'::
Pllmplng ot uld wattr 110: 11j:;c'• Dj:10 41770 Agnu Ohllngar'•
from lht won •nd th1
romlua ·Unknown Htlra,
mtlnltnlnOO
Of
tlld
Appttlloel
It
DOVIIOII,
and cennot 110II,OOO.OO
aold for C-dltora,
••
• .•
·
WI I•· rilrthtrmDrt, lllllhln two-thlrdl Dl Lttltotl,
Dully Sentinel (Iormor) Gran tort lhll amount
AdmlniiiiiiDN,
hartby grant to tht TI•Ma 01' I'Ll· luouton ond
Qrarlltll lhtlr holll
"
" ' • I
h
ond 111lgn1, lh1 :lght U ,OOO.OO down • ;1~1.:n:o h~~: :~
11'1 your news ...
and UIOMint to lay, ::-~rl :fd~. Up 0 n lnt1111t In Ihi till
11'1 your sporta...
It's your f'tlvorltt!l ... m11n111n, opor111, lharlfl 01 Mlllt tallll duorlbad
OH
below:
rtpalr and 11mov1 c
Tosttrtyour
Willi lint ovot and ounty,
llluot1d In lh1
sublcrlpllon,
IOtOII lhl :Oil 11t1t1 FRANKl
Vllllgl of Pomtroy,
duorlbtd In Volllmt WOOLDIIIDOI CO Ohio, County of
callll92·21!!
111, p1go 311, Dttd LfilA
., Mtlga tnd Still ol
===!!!1!!~~..1 Reaord1 of M1lli1 ,.u;,~,. for Plalnll" Ohio:
Publlo Notice
Collnty, whloh ttld 100 IOIIth PllrlltrHI
Paroal Ona: Iaing
w1t1r Ina 11 to run to Columbua OhiO '3110t 1 ptrt ot Lot No. 100
lho houn of lht
)
'
In Sugar Run In
lhorl"'l ltltol Rttl Ortntoot on ld}latnl (l14 UHIOI
L1no o 1n . HIll
1!1t110
tlllellato.
·
10 17 I' 2001 Anntutlon lo
Porool 07..00111.00 • ••
' ' ••
Pomaroy,
1 nd
1
Thl IIIIo ol OhiO,
A L II 0
T HI I ' IOOI
·
dttorlbiCI 11 followa:
M1lg1 County.
FOLLOWING
lleglnnlng II o atek1
DI8CIIIIED IIUL
Publlo NotiCe
In tho till aida of
l•nt!IOIII Ohio, lno, · t!ITATI!:
Puoook 111111,
dbl
Sllulltd In Ihi THI! ITATI OF OHIO whloh ttlkt lilt
1onat1o111 Moilgage Townlhlp of Lobtnon,
OOUNTV.OF
IDIIIh 1 diGIIII 44'
Co. at Ohio
In lhl County ol Malge
CUYAHOGA
Will 11 u !tot !rom
Pial nil"
1nd ltlll of Ohio:
IN THI COURT OF the nolthwllt aornor
P'IRBT PIICI: l1lng COMMON PLIAI
of Lot No. 101, whloh
VI.
I ptrt ol 100 AON Lot
Mt!IQI COUNTY,
\vii formar~ ownld
Ul ToWn 3 Rtnge 11
OHIO
b
111"11 nt
of lh1 Ohio Compt1ny'1
Y
CAll NO
Purohln
and CAll NO.OI·CV.OQ8 t!llortiiiDh lltltt;
01 cv 108
lhonn
•long
diiOrlbld II fOIIOWII
PtiODCk ltrHI IOUih
LH Anna Mualok, tl. lllglnnlng It Ihi
AI'I'IOAVIT FOil
8 dl,llll lnd 44'
11.
Northwoll oor111r of I
IIAVIOIBV
Wilt 7 e"--'· thlnDiflildlnla,
. email lot horotofor•
PUILICATION
,..., lnd
••
lOUth 14' dltrHI
·
conveyed by lh1 11ld PUIIRIUULIANOTI'TOCIYOILHIO 10, 0111 IIU ftol to
. In purauano• ol tn Hol1n Mltn to lht llld
tho northwut oorn11
Order of 1111 In lhl Roy tnd t!v1 Willi, PROCIDURI U(A)
f L 1 N • 1•
above en11tl1d lallan,l lhtnct Wilt tlong the
~htno01 n:~th" ·~
will oll11 lor 1111 11 Woll1 llun fto1d 71
CITIIANK N.A.
, 1 1ao
publlo auollon, 1llht l11t to 1 aarnor,
AI TAUITII!
dtgrttl 10 '"
In theno• Iouth 110 1111
Pl•lnllll
fill
thl8111o
wttl '
CDu rtnouu
uno ofolong
Lot No,
Pomeroy, Ohio, In till to I oorntr, th1n01
-VIllrlll
IOOUII
POIIi
1
lbOVI nlmtd County/ 1111 to lht llnl of
AGNI!I GAIL
thlnot toulh 70
on lhl 13rd day o 1bov1 mentioned lot;
OHLINQIII
dtgrHt, wul aeu
Mty, 2002, It 1OiOO thano1 North to Ihi
lkl AQNII
fill to 'tht piiOI of
o'olook t. m., lhl pltoo ol beginning,
OHLINQIA'I
beginning, .
following d11orlbtd oon111n1ng 1/la 1aro,
UNKNOWN
oanttlnlng 82/100 .
rtlltlllll, to Wll:
more or 1111.
HIIRI, CRIDITOIII, 10
llllullld In lhl UCOND PIICI:
DIVIIII8,
l'xCIPT
lht
Townthlp ol Labtnon, lllngln 100 Aoro Lol "DMLIINQIITAT111~:r•..t. , following tram tho
county ol Mllga, and t42, Town a.~. Rtngt11 "
" 11ft1
above duorlbld
IIIII of Ohio, and ollht Ohio ~;omptny'l IXI!CUTOIII AND
prtmltte I Old to
furthtr d11orlb1d 11 Purobtu,
tnd
AIIIONIIItl.
Rtymand IIHIIItln
IOIIOWI, to-wit:
bound I d
I II d
Defond1nll
by dlld dllld
aelna In 100 Aort d1eorlbod •• lollowe,
l'tbruery 24, 1131
Lot Uf, Townthlp IN, ltlng I lot 30 foot llmtnthl
I. biglnnlng 11 lhl
Range11Woftht0hlo Will and 110 flit Jollph, bolng llret IOUthWIIIoomtrolt
Company,•• Purohlll Iouth; lhtno• 30 ltll duly tworn, dlpalol lot formerly owned
and bt ng 1 perotl 11111nd 110 North cut 1nd 11y1 lhtl 1h1 It by Ron• 11111111111
Otllltd out of lht of th• North .. tl tht
Plllnllfl't 1111 llmt btlng thl
flo,., 1nd Vfolol oorMr of 1111 following Attarn~y In lllltbovt northwttl .oorntr ol
WI! ford prop~:ty dlurlbod ltnd: tnlflltd •allan lor Lot No. 8u 1 lhlnol
(Volume 310 Pill' alt. ltglnnlng 11 the P'ortoloaure, Monty nonh 71 dtGrHI lnd
Mtlgl county Dood Northwtll oorntr of Allltf I JuCigmtnt, 30 • woet lo lttt;
AHOt'Cit) lloundtcllnd the ltndt ol Roy thll ltrvlot a! lhtno• north 20
CleiOrlboeltt IOIIowt· Wtllt; ll:tnoaiOuth 28 1ummon1 oannot bo dtgrHI lnd 30~ Will
ltglnnlna In lht roe11 to 1 rock oorner m•d• upon lh1 140 ,1 1111 10 lht
Olrlltr til Wtllt Run beiWIIII n IIndt of Doltndtnll Agllllt north Uno Of Whit
Road It lht northutl ~lmll J. Wilton lnd 0111 Ohlinger aka w11 formtoly Rtnt
oarnt; of the Tlltlt H.O. Jon11; thenGtln Agnu Ohllngll't
W•llt
llrlfptrty t Northwut11ly Unknown Htlrt,
(Volume aot. , . 471. dlreotton at ro.dl to • Crtdllore, Dtvlttll,
Mtllt County DHd tltkt In Wtlll Run .LolltiHt,
Ruotrdt); thtnot Roedl thon11 In en AlfmlnlllllttOt'e,
1long TIIIIO · Willa' l ..ltrly dlrtotlon 14 luoutore and
1111 lint Iouth 112.oa roda to 1111· pilot ol Alalgnt;llllt pltln1111
lttl 1o " " otnllr o1 beginning, oontalnlng hll
.. trolud
Wtllt Run Crttk' -1011,111011 or IHii, rHIOnollll cllllgen~a
ptllfng Iran plnl ..i IXCII'TINQ till aoal, to uoortaln lht
by lhlt au111011t 11.00 all 1nd ga• 11 rHidclncrt of lht lttd .
tnd H 00 ftitl lhtnH rtHrvoel by Jlmtt J. dtfoncltnte, lnohldlllf
tfllowl~ lht
WaltOII and Min nit a ltlrOh Of lht
.,.
f W 11 WltHII.
Prolltfl -cit, and
mtancltrl 0
It
llllll tht · 111111 IIIII tlrt tltldlnDI ol
Aun " epproallllllltly omiHt oonveytcl to IIIII cltflndclnlt '"•
by 1111 followlllf f fktt ~ltn Allen bY 111101 otlllr lhan 11111111 HI
"1f'rN1 11 tt ..
CHIItan tnc1 WHt a:Hf f011h, untcnawn, and
.,!w ~ 1.u ,;1,1• rtl~rcl•cl In Ottd u n no 1 wIth
I) ltuth 11
look Itt, Patell, rHtonlltlt cllltllncrt
W11" lltUUI
; Rtottdt Of Dttdt, Ill ttHrlllntdj anll
I) · IOUIII II
Mtlll COum,., 01110, 11111 lhlt CIIH 1! Ont
WIt" 1111111.00
1 THitO fiiiCII lltlnt OIIIIOM llltllllonld In
•1 Iouth H
In 11111011 1' and 111 Iutton 1101.1•
wtr 11111e.o1 · 1' Town 'I Ran11 t1 or llld/01 ltOt.ot ollht
July U, 195'7·
11 N rtlt 11 dt lht 011 o Conrptny'l lltlllttd CoCit of 01110
Apr1117, 2001
wtrl-.lttMI
UM
Purthllo, uundtd lind ,.,_c to 01110
IIIII •
Ault of Civil
ella Cle"rllld t t followes Ptaudurw4.4(A).
Your courap
Wtt" w..c Jl.lt • ltllllnlnl In tht
fltl fa 114 1r114 l'fn HI Hnltr or thO W... IHAPIRO I NLTY, . and braverr •till
by dllt 11111101 ill tlrt Aun Road In MIO'J L.L.,,
lntplre U1 11~
loutltWttl ..,_ ol WllliJon'l lint; ~
Joupts
•
tht Clare no• ariel dOWII hry W.._ • (0070124)
and
the manory
J ot u
w
odclll lint ''' rctclt to lht Allorllly lor Ptlfnllfl
II'OPil'tt CVDIIHitt Ut, 110n11r o1 walla Rwn; ·tao w... 11. Clair
at your •mile
pogt •• I, IIIII II IIIOIIH down W... ANr!w, I liOnel .
IIIII Ul with joy
C 011 llll'
0 01 II 111111 ... 1111; NICII In l'loot
·
ttnor-.)1 tlltllit .,_..,.,to 1110 llcMdl Cltuloud, Off .U111
andlauahtu.
11101111 w...... WMI lfllnttWflttJfy .....
lint Hortll t1 ... W Mt1 WIM lt1111 AOiil It) 121-71.. 1111
Hlldthll
ti"WMit:IIAIOMtto ... fHttoiiiO,....OI
Am&amp;.T.LOGI.C

of

594-6333

_ _ .....

of
··•'""'"'·
............
OOIItolnlllt
101100· ot
.._,,.._
"'-oo
....... •.

'Ill

lrtollllftbyMIUIIfiW dtNrfNd In dtod IWOAII
TD
It 1t0.10 Mill; lllnCIO , _ f1or Weill IIIII III'ORI 1111, and
..... tlrt HfiiOr ol ._Wclllltol.oswo•ICII IUIINrfiNCI In lilY
w..................... ,.... .... prtHnH llllt12tlt
It ... or ill" WMI ot r-11 1r1 Y'*- lily 1ft
tJ0.1ffHtiD ...... f7t.,... lf7. DHcl ,._,,IG02.

W.VA.

1tco tiOIItlllll OOtMf

· Tile lb0¥1 Mid......_ IMIIIIDI
RIVIIW AI'I'Ull dtaetlptiOIIt W.te iW, .... 0t . . Mid
COIIIIIIIIIOMt 1~1
W.

wmt:

..
..,..,.., ....... "'"'"~Ill· ..... t1rt OM
ltllflllootl, p1 nl 11 on unrt real tllltl

HAaWAIIII
MAllON,

" " to tll:t . - .

~============~~~

11111100 1011111 I

W"IJNUO

PICKENS

10 Ml 111-llwtll
»*!' Woel 1...1
MI. lo tho"""" 11110
o1 11t111 IMitltln-.
tot; " - ~«aft~~ JO.

=···-- .... . ,., . . .

..... , _

..,.,_I.

~rr
·
~!fi~J.0Je9Y

Ut ttot to tllo
IIOIItcllat IIMIIDI of
whet· ..........14\1
IIIIIMIIulmln't lot:

'

•

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O'IONct

•

------------------~--~----------------------------------------------------------------.

.

. '

�'Wectneed1y, Aprll17, 2002

Apr1117, 2002

h 11 • 4 •1M Dalfl I at'lttl.a

r.

•

.

tltribunt - Sentinel - l\e

WsrocK

11"3 rw&amp;

'--..-..;;.,....~

I 3 HMd Of Blocl&lt; Anguo Allonllon Controcto

Eloc
•Heiltft.
Wolaho
t~•·PI
:
~.
0'"=·.
800 lb Cal (7tlo)2•S. 12
·-~. un-ra,
·
-lhll would UN a rgo
· ~ Ataitllt'ICI au.n.r HorM van. 2 Cargo llano in oiOOk.
............. (140)211H610
Call Amv Carttr ll 1'\Jrnpll&lt;t
. -....
Fon:t. (740)448-11800

t:::Ol!·

MACK'S

:Zyeorokl-~
.
""" lllo.. 00 a ploco.
2000 DOIIgo Durongo SLT,

"1·7fl0.885-38118
:
, 30th Annuol 84ntloy Pig
•Solo. Ftlday Apnl I a, 2002,
, 1:30pm. Foyono Co. Fair·
groundl, Wolhlngton Court
-HouH, Ohio. Selling 200

V8, L - . E&gt;CIIIonl Con·
dillon, Sllvor, Tan Loalhtr
lntonor. 54,000 miiH, Son·
OUI
lnqulreo
Only
(00.)57G·ol0oi
·

new In the

93 1'oyobo truck, 4 whoal

!'Mtld ot barrowa &amp; glha, dr., ext ca~ lots of 8)11raa,
; t:onolgnori Rogor Benlloy 1001&lt;1 &amp; runs good 00.-895·

!.\4802..

F.,

.

Monday thru Friday

All

DlsP~•y t

12 Noon 2

BUIIt\ttl Day• PrlOt' TO

- 8:00a.m. to s:oo p.m.

~ubllcetlcn

Swndey Dlapll'f l 1:00 p.m.
Tnu tUitW fOI' Sl.if'ldhl

Includes Free Yard Sale Slgnl •
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

•·

I

·

l:tt1gh Q- Roglotorld An·
l aua Bullo. R&lt;71 .Cummlngo
;;'[304)875·8248
.
lmouolna Bulla; 4· 18
onlhl, 1 Roglolorld 4
' oaro old. (740)448-2158

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 1 Doyo • Eech Item Priced
• No commerCII I Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sale1 • limit 3 J&gt;er Person
Moll To :. Oh io Valley Publishing, B25 Th ird
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Four whttlor lor oalo 98
Hondo 200 Rocon ,ullllly
Uklng $2200. 304·875·
8185
.

·r

I

R!ii!!"'-~~~-"1

BoATS &amp; MO'RJRS

~k\gl.

t'ORSAI.t:

--()lifo
• h... lhllla

00 - - 1 • 1 ....... rotlo
Laid blok onvlror.tne~~t
A 1o1m al clod- ond
Cll'lng ..............

..

DtiCtl~tiOn

• hu:hUit A Pl'ltt •

A~Oid

ADI)tt¥1ttlof'ls

• tntludt ~nont Number And ~ddrtll When Needed

Compotlllvt blntfll fiiOkagl

• Adl St\Outd flun 1 Dtys
........, htVttllt
following poolllon available:
11ulltlme 3-11 ohllt

1985 Chov. Chovotlo 4 dr.,

r A~ I

clean no ru11, runt good, - $400. OBO muol 188 304· 4.3 Chevy

87S.1185 ·
1985 Tornodo 85K Good
Condition, S450 , OBO.
(740)379·2111 .
1888 Ford Muotang GT, low
mlloago 58,000, llkl now,
SMOO.OO: 1geg Tourlno
GT, 82,000 IICIUII miloo,
oolltolofo liom,4241 ofloro
OOCIIplod. 7fl0.992·1072
19g1 Hondo Civic, 125K,
Good Condition, $1200.
740 379 2111 · _ _ _
:;.&lt;.;;::.;1:.:.:..':...;;:.:.
1992 Pontiac Flroblrd, v.a,
auto. air, run good, $2,000,
(?40)742·2357 _ _ _ _
:...;.::.:.;.,::.:.:;:_
11194 Grand·Am GT, 13498.
1990 Borello GT. $1995.
11194 Buick Centuty, 4 Door,
12485. 1998 Noon Sport, 2
Poor, 13795. 18 ollltr ooro,
&amp;lucka1 veRI In ltock. COOK
MOTOIII t?40)448-0103
1998 91uo Chevy Cevallor,
J.ooka Good, Runo Good.
t400Q. (140)4411·158&lt;1
,199? Ford Eoc:orl LX 4dr.
Stdan, 83,000 mMoo. Powtr
WlndOwlldOor Lockl: Air
Condition.
,5,200.
(:104)87S.7133

molor laulo
trano. out olt91J2 Chov. S·
10 $400. 1or motor can hear
run 304-875-2938 ellor 5
_om_·---~-lludgll Prlotd Tronoml ..
olona All l';poo, Acotlo To
Over 10,000 Tronomloolono,
Rebuild Kilo, 74l).24S.58??, '
Cell: 339·3786.

r

-;;;;~~~~

~=~·.,=:•,:,:;

l r ltl1d """"· For lrH
;..-J -Hllmtll
ceil Chot, 740-992·
1991 Ford Ranger. Low

!'!""·
5 splfd, thorp,
...200.00 080. ?fl0.992·

=:....:........:.---....,=

3283or7fl0.742·205e

'

r

8323.

F.ucnuc.uJ

114 Ford F·100, e cyt, 5

-

~

roof good bOdy, l1lgt1

mlln. t4000. (740)992·

VANS&amp;
4-WDII

WERRY'S

•
.
R_,tol or """'rnerclll
w1r1ng. , _ . . . - or ,.
polre. LJaenaed lloco
lriCian. R - Eloclrlcal,
WV000308, 304.e7S.t780.
-;;....._ _ _ _ __

•

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flail '1.10
10" Hanging Baskets '1.80
Wide Aoeortment of Herbs, Annuals,
Peremlals In 4" pols for

only 94t each/
Morning Stir Road • CR 30 • Racine, Ohio

1·7

49·2115

L~: t mf;

JGII fo

740-985-3948

'"' Foi mol91nfQrmallon celllt2-4061

Sunset llome
Construction

CeUular

CONCRrn/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footer&amp;, Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,

Rcplac:ements. • Walks
and Drives • Stencil
Crete
Free Estimates
Serving Ohio and W. V.

1

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole.Sulldlngs, Roofa,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

Jeff Warner Ins.
Authorized Agent

FREE ESTIMATES!

992-5479

740-742-3411

29670 Buhan Road
Racine, Ohio

Clll relieve 1 debtor

of financial obliaationaand

IITIIlJe 1 fair distribution of useu among .
CRditon. A person JOiDJihrouJh blnlcnapley
may rewn certain property, known u
"exempt" property, for his or her pefiOIIII use.
Thia may include a car, a house, clothes, and
household Boodt. You should direct any
questions reaerdlna banknlptcy 10 an attorney
before proceeding. for infonnation regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
WIIUam s.true~ Attorney

(740) sn-5025

Cool~il/e,

OH 45723

740-667-0363
;;;;;::;::;:;;~~

BISSEll
BUILDfRS IDC.

New Homes • V'myI
Siding • New Garages

JONES' .

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
. • Bucket Truck

5

:r:orne.

.,_..rna
•G.._

,,. ......... WWJltlt

(740) 992-2753
(740) 992-1101
Kris
Kanleckl

Onion Set~

J.D. CONSTRUCTION
'

11 ,

•

. Owner &amp; Operator,
992-3987
John Dean

~~

.

~

LIME-

STONE High&amp; Dry
Delivered &amp;
Spread $15.00
per ton, 8 to 10
tona, limited
area, call for
detlll•. Call:

(740) 591-2173
Or leave name
and number

• 11oom Addhtone •

llemodlllng

·-~

• Eloclrlcal I Plumbing
.... Qun.rt

• Vlnylllldlng • Pelnllng
• Plllo end Porch Dec;lla
Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

f'GmlroV, Ohio

TFN

HERBALIFE
lndepeudent
Dlttrlhutor

1 Losr271b.
in 32 days.

RESIDENTIAL &amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING
Hi-Efficiency Heat Pumps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

'!..11!:.!:.'1!! l:m:r=:.

SeH-Storage
33795 HiLznJ RJ.
PD111lN1Jo ObW

74().992-5232

1 1\!~

TFN

•

HAVUNGaad

.· EXCAVATDIG
-tlalllngti.JmJiblt
~et • Sand •Topeoll

ofllt Dirt oMulcll

Pllmel D1J fl!lles

BIIIGO 2171
Everg Tllllrsda!l

6 Sllldly
Daors Open 4:30
Early 111m start

i:30
ProgressiH top One
11llrsUys

Pntresslue

Ceuerall on Sllldlys

YOUR COOCRfTf
CORREOIOO, Llt

WICK'I .D

• Tonneue Cover

• Ventvbor • Bus

~ Jl!ft 5 It R Vrar l'ort Wer,..nll.. ~~~

• Fne lllptat Thrrmot1tat
•
.
• Vm II Vtar Cnmprnutr
,
Warranty On S.l«l MndriJ
·
I'KY.E ·~~' I'IMIITI'.S • II liM( lovrnfnl')'
• Bonk •·lnonc:lna AYOIIoblt
• Prkeo To Fll All Bad..ll

1/J/';\

(740)

.lin\.M:o..I:\..,...M:o...ilr.o.llf:o.
!it!l lii!!J !IH~J ll!•l Ill••. [f ! II 1111

Uvi~1gl

CARPENTER
SERVICE

11

Commercial &amp; Residential

m~· :

YOUNG'S

O
.
t
, .

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
. H
'"Specializing In Log omes
&amp; Rubber Roofs"

Garages, Pole Buildings, Concrete
Roofs &amp; Siding

A

Patio Roo•ms I

•-

TF

f@ff.j~~~~f;.'

7~" ""2 7599
...,....., •
(~SUNDAY CALLS)

c

1

Agronomy Association Standards

FREE ESTIMATES

Ntw.._.•Rrect" 1

Anyllme.
All tbe Time."

PLUMBING.
ELECTRICAL
APPLIANCES
RESTAURANT
EOU.MEtfT

• Full Line of Bulk Garden Seeds
• Fertilizer Specifically Designed for Garden Crops
• New Fertilizer Buggies
·
~All buggies have been pattern tested to moet

RepkwementlVindows

COIIMflCUL . . lEliDOOIAl

. SERVICE
"One Price.

HEAT!N(l
COOLING
REFRIGERATION
COMMERCIAU
RESIDENTIAL

rabbits.
• Seed Potatoes

------=y;u'

Bryll)l Equip.

Heating &amp; Cooling 10 Yr. Partol
F... EollmliH
24·HR.
Labor Warr1111Y

741).992-1671

rr•c J'; 1' l:i

HENDRIX

35537 St Rt 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
1 4-H feed for lambs, hogs, steers, chickens and

Tree Service

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

' Lf;'

(800)853-3110

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

• Complete

Tale the PAIN
GUt ::,f PiiiNTINGi

(740)U7-3311

We Service
All MakH
• Modlll

\ gt'll(

~

Advertise

Replacement

"QuaJJJ, Home
Improu1111nt1"

Athens, Ohio ·

sell .

Loca1843-5:z64
Supplement; Life Insurance;
snd Final. Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Retirement,
&amp; 401K Rolloven;
,...,;, .
Major Medical
llJ!

youl

Windows • Roofing

.......
-A-

.

\liddkpnrl. ( )lti" .t.:'7h!l

45771
740·848·2217

.

.

750 East State Street Phone (740)593

Albe•

Hod,\ R. llupp.
llo\ I S'l

in this
or email@
-.ytOchgaltiii.Cam
space
for
DIPDYIIO ROBERT BISSELL
PD!I
CONSTRUOION sso per
All Malccs Tractor &amp; •New Homes
Equipment Parts
month
• Ga111ge1
Faclory Aulhorized
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7 South

"""'"

BANKRUPTCY

992;.e975

Casc-IH P811s

for your yard aale.
8 mllee long through Midcleport &amp; Pomeroy.
Hundrada 01 mope dislribuledl
Advertlaed &amp; promoled wldwly on redlo,
newspapers, flyers &amp; poatersl All for $5.001
Sponsored by The Middleport Community Assoc.
and The Pomeroy Merchants Association.
,
To s!Qn up, Stop In Ohio River Bear Co. or
Middleport Dept. Store or Office Service &amp;
Supply In Middleport or Chapman Shoes &amp; Ohio,
.
Val(ey Bulk. Store In Pomeroy.
•

Racine, Ohio 45771

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

I .

Rr.niGFJIATJON
. . . . .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiillr

19911 Toyota TIOO SRS
lOng Cob. l.Diclod, •x4, 70K
mlltt, tii,QOO 080.
(7!1())He&amp;982
2001 Dodge Ouiy. 4x4, 8
IPHd tranomlooli&gt;n, loldlld, 38,804 mllol, $25,000.
(740)387.()810, (740)339·
3352.
ATIENTION
sg Sil..,adO 112 Ton, 811
LPN'S
Bed - liner and 1001 bOx. .
005 Auto. tran~mllllon, ARCADIA NURSINOI
CruiH,
A/C,
$4!100.
CENTER

{740)245 5Qj6

Business Services
Now accepting
children
Day, evening,
and weekend
care av1llable

"I H \1! I'&gt;

j

·CONTRAaOIS, INC.

Hill's Self
Storage

01110::41:72:3~====

t..·,.;;MiiOiiTiiOiiRiiiHiiiOMI!Siiii;,..t1
~
•
2000 Wlnn Motor Homo,
9.000 mileo. Colt over
$8(),000. Sell lor $35,000
duo to falling heollh. 740·
742·3033
------8 112 ft. truck cempor, ole,
bathroom, TV antenna on
roof, $6800. 304·875·3353

(lpm
Watorproollng.
83
Lumina,
Air,
Powor
Win-GtMral
'--- -Mal,.
-dowa, LOCke, Now Tirol.. CIC
Homo
$1200 080. Cal (740)448- ,.,.,.. Pointing, vl"''l ofd.

•

COolvlllo,

CAMw.lls &amp;

Poor HIIHh 202811. Cempor
ult wttruok or without.
(304)67S.18()3

'

P.O.Io1111
Ellt Meln Btr'MI

WmLE0NES

All typn of maoonty brick,
biool&lt; .&amp; otone 20 yro. IXJ»'
rlenct, frH ••tlmate,
2000 Ford Rongor XLT, Ext. (304)773-11550
Cab, 4x4, 3.0, V8, Automat· .;_.;.....- - - - lo, Air, Cruloo, Foolory CD,
.AIIMINT
10,000 miles, 112,800.
WATERPROOFING
1995 Dodge Ceraven, 3.0, UnoondHional. lllellme guer·
ve, llillomaiiC, 1\Jr, Crulll, ontoa. ~I rtloronceo fur•
Tin, Powtr Lockl, AM•FM nlohod . Eotobllohld 1975.
Coooollo, 85,000 mil11, C.l 24 Hro. (740) 448t400Q. (740)258-6707 ehtr 0870, Rogoro SaHment

ili3200r'...;hl-!r:--.....- . ·,

Arcadia Nur·aln,g{
Center

'

Yard Sale! May 3rd l 4th.
S5 IIIII you on lhe miP &amp; a yelloW Illig.
An IICidftlonil $5 Hyou netd an ln·towri locallon

I .' '

P/8

HOWARD L.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Free Estimates
949-1405 TFN

Columbuo - " '

-

• I

lhat'e Uel

WV IHJ3171Z

WE OFFER

·· , St~rt Your Ad• Wltk A Keyword • tndudt Co mplete

Item a

WE WANT THE BEST,
SO SALARY IS
NEGOTIABLE/

•

• I •

" " " ' - • - - w)llrt-lostll-...t

(740) 992-5908

1993 Kawaookl KX8() Mo•t Stud· 'St"kl eo~· torcyclo, Good Kids lllko,
·
" ng - · • New
Englno,
$700.
:OOHA gray 18 hlndo, I300 (7 40)441-lll27
, tbo., 2001 Rooorvo Roco .;._....:...,.--=-.,..,.- '::===~;;::::;:;:;:::::;=;:::===-:::!
l Champlon In Michigan and 2002 Sporlllt&lt; 1200C 3300 l Ohio. Oulot, booutHul con· mlleo. Black/Chromo.' Vary
Help Wanted
\l&gt;rmtllon ond color. Uva Sharp, Mt.ny Exlraa, Gotllng _ _ _ _....;,....;,.:;,.;.;,.;;;,;,;,;..;;_ _ _ __
Oloal 1500.. 740·992-7888
Biggar · Blko . $10,800.
"flood 4·H and FFA Fait (7401379' 2380
;.1&gt;1g1. Hamp, York and Pol· For Sole: 1997 Suzuki
•rain Crooobrld . (7401388· Kalane GSX·F 600 Cuolom
•to33, (740)388.0178 alter llghllng, Now Avon Tlroo.
,f:OOpm
13,295. Col (304)875-5708

l\egt~ter .
(304) 675-1333

Ads

classmeds

1

QIMflltY. Vllrlety, Low Prices

altor

!,5:00pm.

DlsQia)'

.

MIJJ'ORCYIUS

.4·H Club Lambo lor Solo.

~ 740)882·8238

,

t

Pocket KniYII
I Collec:tlblaa
~A Cut Above
4Eiliiltt the Rest•
Houra:
Mon..Sat 111-4
·217 E. 2nd St•
Pomeroy,OH

Checl out Whlfs

:;:--;;-"':-=-:--:--:-~

•(a3?)58&lt;1·2398, Leroy ~r· 3508.
tick I Family, (937)7&amp;0 ..

Join ttw 5th .Annuli Y_.IO* Filii

" Full Une

(740) 742-8015
Qu811tr Con&lt;rdo Worl
Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas,
Sidewalks, Floors
28 yMrl Experleilct
F-Elli(toll,..,

(740) 992·347

an-353-7022
I

AB Video

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naturaVGIW'IIIteed

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992·6635

(SyracuM, Ohio)

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land &lt;learinJ. Sepli&lt;:
tonk, dilclling, water
li~ 1ite work.

fiELDS
PLUMBING
405 5111 Street
New Hllven, WV
•Retldenllol
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740 9924885

e;:(304~

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wv Uo IOZUQ

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,... 8 t • TM Dilly Stfttlnel

Weclneedly, Aprll17, 1001

www.mydlllytlntiMI.com

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BARNEY
HOPEI=ULL'&lt; MO~£
WI!:.L ~IPEN

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MA.W?

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TO A51: you TO GO
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PECC-"BLE .

DOWN .
1 WhHollo
2 Amoalnat.
3 Col"''
4 Alc•d•d
5 Markol

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NOW, 600\IT THERE, AND
SIK&gt;W EVER'I'ONE THAT VOII'RE
KIN6 OF THE JUN6LE !

colloct

thert
o11ly at the West
triumph
7 Fumb!W't
hand . What would
31 Fnaway
word
C\oggar • I Lola
out
14 Rock'a you lead (a) against
Loppard
1-.0rande 34 Put on tilt
37 Ouraun
fo, -r 'fladt•s after a seblock
31 Maloratto'a 10 Naval o".
31 Rtlllacl, In .
11 Plgmont
gaH
qut·ncc i.n which the
opponents have. bid
only th.ot suit, or (b)
alter ont! no-trump -tlm•c n!)-trtnnp?
Against a no-trump
contract, you hope to
win several tritks
from one suit and one
"r two elsewhere.
Aijainst a suit contract, thou~;h, notwithstanding the evidence from this deal,
you rarely win more
than tWo tricks from
any one suit. lmtead,
you hope to get one
or two tricks from
cno11gh suits to defeat
the contract. So,
short, strong holdings
CELEBRITY CIPHER
make great leads
by Lui• Campos
Ctlebrity Cipher cryptogram• 1ra created from quotallonl by tamou1 .
agaimt suit co11tracts.
people, past and prooont. Each loner In the cipher Olanda for another.
North's three spades
Todsy's clue: A equals K
is a limit raise, show' K FZ
J UZB KZ Y K
V T z·a Y C U Z
ing at least four
tnui1ps and I 0-12
L y
XH
B
KH
L
ASHO
support points, countYKZBTKF,
10
J H H X BMKLHS
ing one point for a
doubleton and three
N H C S .X
L. K
F BE Z
BSX
K H
for a singleton.
BMMLXZSK.'
HCK
I 0
Against · three notrump, West. should
T B WI
MFBUTZY
lead the heart six,
fourth-highest from
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Success has ruined many a man.'
his longest and
- Benjamin Franklin
strongest. And that
'Thai's what lame Ia: solitude.'- Coco 'Chanel
could prove best
woa~
against four spades
OAMI
too, but I much prefer the diamond king.
A.. decent partner will O Roorrongo lot1or1 of tho ·
fou~ ''rombled words be·
have the jack, and an low to form I Jur 1lmplo word1.
excellent partner will
hold the ace. Here, if .
L UR E DY
West leads a spade, 11
2
heart orwin
club,12declarer
=·~=·=~....J
should
tricks. ~=::=·
r·
Dut the diamond king ~.......,.:G...:L;....:UT.:F-TN--1
gives the defenders a
13
chance. Under the ~-=·=~:::;::::::~
diamond king, East I
N 0 V E H 1::":;:
As a kid Ididn't do many things
encourages a con- .
· 11 · b
s 1
ld b d'
· t d
tinuation with his I 0.
~
ecau e wou e ISappoln e
If I failed. My dad said it was okay
Now West can cash
t f 11 b ·
1f ·
the diamond queen r~--T:-:R"'":':'E-E~L-::T::---,1 t~ -~ :. ut It was a rea allure •..
and play a third dia- .
5
Complote tho cnucklo quoiOd
mond to East's ace. L-L
. .....J.L-.J.-.J.-..L. ......l V by filling in the miuing word1
What next?
you d"olop from step No. 3 below. •
If West had the
.A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
club ace, he would
~
THESE SQUARES
have cashed ·it before
... UNSCRAMBlE LEITERS TO
leading the third diaV GET ANSWER
. ..
J
mond. SG, the deSCRAM-LITS ANSWERS
_
fenders have surely
Idiocy· Class- Ensue - Script- ACCIDENT
taken all their side. Woman driver to passenger, "The brakes don't work~ :
suit tricks. This signthat's why I'm driving so fast. !.want to get you ho~
posts the lethal debefore we have an ACCIDENT!
fense: a fourth dia.
••
mond, which promotes a trump trick.
•••

I I I' I I ...

I

!WEDNESDAY

APRIL 17l

I

.
'

•

••
Tlu u·,,l,,y,'ApriiiN, 21Xl2
f n llw Y";tr ahe.1d. there arc
-.rnmg ind•,ations. th3t good
1hings rnullt de\·clop fi1r you
throu~h lovinK ties and do~
honJ'Ii. look for rour base of
operarions to ~m.•ngthen con·

like a l&lt;"ct will take a runo fot
the better ·and may even
pfumi1e to brin~ ·' in more than
you had lwpcd. Tlois might
inVolve a financial matler.
CAN\.Eil Ounc 21 -July
22)- IJon't be afrJid to auert

sidcr:obly.

younelf if cont.lilimu warrant
it. If you 1lon'c m.;aintain 'oncml ovrr things. you shouldn't
expl"Cl them to tum oul du:
way you· d like.
LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22) -Your imuitivr inJtincts could
be working well . which

AlliES (Mmh 21-April19)
-- Forhw :··1y fitr you, even i(
yC~u w .1kt" Hj'

on the wrong
side of thr l&gt;cJ, a lucky oc&lt;urrrun: Will turn your mood
. 3rnund 1 :md ypu·ll end the!
tby on a good noce. Know
where h• look. for romance
21'' ' you'llfind it. The Auro-

Gr.tJ'h M;,tclun·akt'r i1u1antly
n··. ~· .•Is whkh signs art ruuu.nrjnl1y perfect for y,-.u .
M•il S1.75 "' Matdwuker, ·
c/o this ncw'l"rer. 1'.0 . Uox
I7&gt;8. Muruy Hill Sutiorr.
New York. NY to ISlo.
TAURUS (April 20-May
211) -- Think big, bold and
ro~1tive,

ami subu.auti:ll strides
can be madt- in aJv2i1cing
~·nur penouJ1 intneu.s. You'll

Ju, ky 11 rou think lucky.
c;rMINI (M&gt;y 21 -June 20)
-- WI"' stJrt' out as I&lt;H&gt;king

!(&lt;'I

would noake you likely to
foreasf; tht: OUtcOme Of t'VI!'IlU
with renurlc.tblt accur.ocy.
VIRGO (Aug.

--

Ev~n

23-Srpr. 22)

though your beliefS

might be rcu~d, what transpirrl will nrrngtbtn your

confidence in larg".,- ~uc.uure.
Ketp the uith.
LIDII.A (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -You shouldn't waste the day
on petty objectivu Go after .
something brg. beuuoe nujor
Jcc:omplithmenu are possible

now.
SCORPIO (Oct.
22) -• L•dy Luck

11

24-Nov.
hkdy to

Charter drops
WBNSfrom ·

Interactive Education

27 Qulttar'o
50 Tractorwon!
trti!W
21 Homoatoacl 12 Taro dlah
28 IIINChtd- 53 Pravloully

I I I I

WELL, SURE .. VOU MAV MAVE
TO CROSS THE STREET ..

Hometown .._..,.,.,

5Yon""

I I, I

PEANUTS

Whet's Inside

20 Add
43 Conlllet
22 Four-lootacl 45 D"'rlat
Romoo
Frank
24 MoniO Park 47 Hlblt
nama
41 Pop'a

rl
I II I

I'!&gt; IM·

Melp County's

51LoUStew
lng..cllenq
5I " " ' - ' • 13 The
1M army (t
-o!Ht
............
wdl.l
57 Fridge
tvll
42 COOk In
atlcltlf
embart
18 Klndolchop
5I Burglar

~~~~t.'='
12 Well.)

01)('nlnalcad: 7'!'

&amp; EARNEST

Poetic

advarb

Vulntrable: f'.lst·Wtal

a ·t

Citing"
41 Stun
41-clock

17 O..rhltd

A ,\KQI~

r:"'
...........

41 Country
ldclr.
43=:....
44 "-Tt

Ianford
14 Grlla
15 type of

~,,..

.. A Q It I

llettlll

41

u=.
,.a::
..-

I I I

•••

WtR

...

• CMII.-11.
• llaulltt 01

be w•lking in . familiu footpaths, so trust what you"ve •
learned •nd have faith that tra-

dition., I mechods will work
out well for you.
SAG ITT All IUS (Nov. 23-

IJec .. 21) -- · A significant :
change in &lt;Ondiliom could
occur in an important matter.
Tho new 1hifi brings hope and
promisn of good fonunt .
CAl1RICOilN (Dec. 22- •

jan. 19) •• The

ICCid

to IUC·

ccn li11!1i in cooperative and •

collective efforts, so this nuy
not b&lt; • day to go it •lone. If
somtont w:mu to team up
with you. rake him or her up

its lineup
BY ANDRIW CARTIR
ACARTEROMYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

Astros beat Reds, 81

Deaths
Granville Lyons, 98
Martha Koker, 86
Homer Belt, B1
Detiiii,AJ
Nursing students In the Meigs High School Career Technology program, along with members of a newly formed club for students Interested In the healthcere field, spent
Wednesday morning watching a live heart surgery taka place at Mount Carmel West Hospital In Columbus. Students watched the surgery, part of COSI's re11l·llfa, rear-time
surgery experience titled ·surgical Suite," from the school's newly renovated learning ·
laboratory. (Tony M. Leach)

'

Students view

Weather ·
High: aosl Low: 60s
Dltl11l1, A2

surgery in 'real time'

Wall Street
.stumbles •1•ln
NEW YOR:K (AP) Wall . Street faltered yet
again Wednesday, stymied
· by mixed earnings reports
from Intel and Boeing th~t
· ·failea00 to convince investon
that the buJirJCSS teCOVery ,o
will be solid and strong
enough for stock prices to
go higher.
-· The -Selling came a day
after a 207-point gain in the
Dow Jones ·industrials and
63-point surge. in the Nasdaq compo!ite index.
· The Dow closed down
80.54, or 0.8 percent, at
1'0,220. 78.
Broader stock indicators
also backtracked. The technology-centered Nasdaq ·
composite index lost 6.12,
or 0.3 percent, to 1,810.67,
while the Standard &amp; Poor's
500 index feU 2.30, or 0.2
percent, to 1, 126.07.

OHIO
Pick S: 11-3·3
Pick 4: 5·8·7·8
Suptrl.otto: 4-17·25-29 44 47
llonUI . .11: 19 ·
ICiclcer: 8-0-11-4-7·1
Pick s nlaht: 2-o-4
Pick 4 n!Pt: 3-1-8-3
W.VA.
lhllfr S: IJ..Il-1
Dally 4: 1·5·1-4
PuaedleU: 2-3-22·23·36 (22)

Index
2lld •• - ........

calendar
aassifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A5

84-6
87

A4
M

A3
A3
B1,2,4
A2

0 ::IOOl Oflio Vllloy Publlrlolo. (o.

I

BY TONY M. WCH
extensive question and answer s~ssion."
TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
The entire surgical procedure was vicw~d
POMEROY-· Nursing students in the from· inside the school's newly renovated
MeiS'I High School Career Technology learning laboratory, which, said Thomas,
program, along with members of a n.cwly- was mostly funded through a recently
formed club for students mterested m the obtained Ohio School NET 11 rant.
·
~ealt~care fie~d, can~e IO(!(I)"le~ Wedrlc!day , "A good d~al of the grant money went
rnornmg to v1~w a ltye heart surgery. . . into pi1rchasing the high-tech video ct]Uip·
In collaboration wrth the Center of Sc1- ment needed for this type of interactive
ence and Industry. (C~SI1 and Mount exercise," he said. "This laboratory creates
Carmel We.st Ho~plt~l . rn . Columbus, .stu- the perfect cnvironnmH tor studcms to
dents parttctpated 111 a hve mteractlVe vtew- interact with other institutions throughout
ing o~ COSI's r:.al-lif~, real-~in~~ surgery the nation for a complc.te educational
expenence utled Surgtcal SUite. .
experience."
Mark Thom~s, technology _coordmator at . "This is an incredible opportunity for
the school, sa1d the educational program students interested in the health carc field,"
aUows st~dents from aU ove~ the country to said Margie Blake, vocation:1l nursing assisvtew a hve operauon, 111 this case, an open cant instructor, as she watched the surgery
heart bypass surgery, so those interested in unfold before her eyes.
the medical profe~sion can get a mor~ in"With 'today's technology, it's almost like
depth understandm~ of the human ana to- the students arc there inside the operating
my, as well as operatmg room procedures. room," she said." 1t gives them a better per"This special program lets our .students ccption of wh;~t 01ctually goes on during a
~teract ':"ith the sur~eon.s and ask qu_es- surgery."
uons :bile the ope~~t10~ II actually taking
"You just can't get this kind of education
place, satd Thomas. It !llV~s students, who by looking in a book," she added.
normally wouldn't have thts type of expoPrior to watching the surgery, IJ!ake said
sure, better insight into the intricacy of the students were involved in special activities
cardiac s~tem and _the prof;,ssionalism of a to better prepare them fiJr the viewing.
ht~hly~tmned ~urgt~alstaff.
.
"Our nursing student! were sent various
Besrdes Me1gs H1gh School, other h1gh pieces of medical equipment so they could
s~hools !". Ohio, .Michigan and, l'e~nsylva.: practice suturing techniques," said Blake.
ma partrc1pated m Wednesdays v1ewmg, "After watching the surgery, they will
he added. "Following the s~r~cry. st~dents eng;~gc in further activities to see what they
from aU the schools partiCipated m an learned from the experience."

Auditor candidate
to address·local
Democrats
Bv BIIIAN J, llaD

BRE£a.MYOAILYS£NTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Helen
Knipe Smith of Cleveland, the
Democratic candic:bte for state
auditor, will be the keynote
speakt'r' at Saturday's JelfeoonJacbon Dinner.
The dinner will be hosted
by the Meigs County Democratic Parry at the Meigs Coun-

ty Multipurpose.
Senior
Center on
Saturday
evening.
Smith is a
former
member of
the CleveKnlt» 1m1t1t land Ciry
Council,
and later surprised observers
with a strong grassroou campaign for Cleveland mayor.
Since her nuyonl campaign
in 1998, she haJ worked as an

administrator in the office of
the Cuyahoga County crea~ur­
cr and as a member of the
county's 13oard of Revision.
In 1999, she established and
led the state's lint Linked
Deposit program, a $40 million effort which has provided
low-i nterest loans to more
than 5,000 residents in 32
communities.
"Make no mistake about it
- Hdcn Knipe Smith knows
how government workl, and
when it doesn't," Democratic

PlaiN ... DIJIJIIr, AJ

.U vlna WMI o.ae~a .
LaM Ill...,_ Life

atnbitiom is where you'll be

Wednesday, April 24, 2002 • 1 PM • 4 PM
Hol%er Medical Center French 500 Room•
Spon10red locally by Holzer Hospice .
McuMwub: Cold.lloh. II ·ABC Newt
FfiCJiuring o pone/ of expertJ on the subject,

pr&lt;pared to work hard to
gratify your nbjecuve• · and
the metal.

·

PISCES (fd•. 20-March 20)

-- It might br wiJC ro · reorganize tomething t1~u i' IUrt·
ing off on the wrcing foot, instead of sraymg with • I&lt;Hing
b.r.tle. It'll rum thongs around.

•

BRIDGE PROJECT.

to keynote J.J dinner

on h.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb.
19) - Situations whtre you're

&lt;he lucki«t. Put the pedal to

'

POINT I)LEASANT,W.Va. - Charter Conununicatiom
nnnounGed W~dn&lt;'1iday that it has emlt-d its rcl:~tionship with
WBNS I0- TV of Columbus.
According to Kurt Leachman, operations manager for
Charter, the decision to drop WBNS, a CDS affiliate, was
purely financial . He said that WIJNS had requested that
Charter pick up the Ohio News Network (ONN) , a subsidiary ofWUNS. However, Charter officials said they could
not dloe to the cost of the added channel.
"WBNS has beeri available on the cable system for owr
30 year~ by mutual agrccmcntt said Michael Kdeman,
director of government relations for Charter. '' Now, the
owners nfWHNS have demanded that Charter add a new
channel, that they also own, to our lineup in order to continue to carry WDNS.
.
"We feel this is uncalled for and Charter camiot agree to
this type of arrangem~nt," he added.
Leachman said WUNS was seeking a 7-year •!!reement
with Charter to pick up ONN. He also ·said that Charter
conducted a survey of 1.000 current subscribers who indicated they did not want ONN if it would mean an increase
· in mtcs.
. Leachman said W13NS will be dropped effective 12:01
a.m. 1\.1esday, April 23.
.
.
C-SPAN 2 will take the place ofWDNS in the basic 'ervice package on chant1ei10.Thc Game Show Network will
be moved to channel 55, where C-SPAN 2 is currently
located.
Charter !erves about 38,000 customers in West Virginia
and another 18,000 in Ohio. Service areas that will be
affected in Ohio include Addison , Cheshire, Gallipolis, Middleport, Pomeroy, Racine and 1\.utland.
Leachman said subscribers concerned about not having
access to news from Ohio will still be able to get news from
the Buckeye State on WSYX, channel 6 of Columbus.

CEUs gre gvgjlgbJe
For more information or io
call

Roadblocks and detours are a part of the spring and summer landecape. Crews from Dial Constructlc;m Co., Stock·
dale, are wot1(1ng to replace a bridge on the county portion
of Union Avenue just outside of Pomeroy. The $142,611
project requires a detour of traffic over Hiland Road and
Mulberry Avenue. (Tony M. Leach)

·

446•S074

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

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