<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7024" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7024?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T22:05:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17428">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/63946ec27a8f1e2b7808c8c29260db68.pdf</src>
      <authentication>da4815a53c6351d48a17d37d5c368250</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23010">
                  <text>P1$t.•TM.D.-JitMta*

Prep Softball: Southem stops Eastem, 11

Nla\ Ct~altWOl'd Pu ..l•

llUDCII

•

a1

Melp County's

Hometown.Newspaper

.

Whit's Inside
week,

l.a1t

luukl.'tl

sville
woman dies
of injuries
from crash

EAGLE BAND EXCELS

-R

we

&lt;It thifl.l· h~ml

stt&lt;tt~gy.

To nm this
wtck, I wish to hlllh·

llglit one 1\\0I'l' eritlcal
pld)' ' th~t im 't w~ll·
knuwn bdow the ex·
~ltft r~t\b, llluk Qt

the North ~ud liut
l1&lt;mtls. AgAhm thrt!l!

llll· tt·ump·, your

pllfl·
w~u. I~Ad~ ."

Mr.

I
·lr

rmmh -hlghcst dianmml thur. Al\~r dt·
d,ll'l!r ctlls for tlutn•
my'! sl:t, what Wl:lllld
yuu dut

'

'J,

Mattie Pullins, 92
Ronald Hart, 87
Rex Marrs, 84

Whtltl'ver
Eut
IliA)'!, South witu

with hl!

j~ek, ~russ.:s

to the dummy In
1pMte1, And tak~~ th~
t\lltlll! dtlb tittl'!!il.
Whnt shuuh.l West do
next?
Yllu mLI I tll\ ~~~
th"t 1r Wl'st tashl's the
tllnttttmd aee, dedllr•

BAltN~Y

Detalla,AJ
,.·

'

IIG WINNIRI - These m1mbars of the Eastern Concert Bend brought home a superior rat·
/ng and flrst·place trophy at the Smoky Mountalna Music Festival In Gatlinburg, Tenn., on April
19. Front, from left, Stacy Smith, Jessica Taylor, Cheyenne Trussell and Llnsee Davis; second
row, from left, Amanda McKnight, fyler Simmons, Nichol Honaker, Alyssa Holter, Ketle Hoxsie,
Chris Davis, and Brittany Hauber; third, from left, Thomes Simmons, Denise West, David Max·
son, Becky fay/or, Jennifer Hayman, Chrissie Gregory, Erin Weber, MorganWeber, ·Kass Lodwick
end Carrie Crow;. back, Casale Nutter. Sara Mansfield and Carrie Elberfeld and director Chris
Kuhr\. (Brian J. Reed)

er's king drop!, nntl
W~!t
1\\tlf~

CAll CMh

thre~

CILEBRITY CIPHER

tliAI\IOntl trleks

by Lull Campoa

to tlef~11t the tOtllrAet,
Uut whnt If South
!turtllll with K·J· 5 tlr
K -J-3
tiiBI\It)nd!

Otltb!ll'; Olplltt Cf't!IIOQ!l_ll'll lit Cltllia 11om quDiliiOIII by fiii'IDUI
'*'Pit· ~~~t and pttttril. liCit tt«tr In tnt ~~., ttanHt till anetnet.

.
l'l!dfy'l eltlt: s t/111111 c
'IPOYOIIIQY
MU
I'POII

or

ro!t/1\~~!W.~
\IJII.l. YOU M~
TIZ-111\ "(OO!Z.
~t-INt.:, I

Rt\d East h~s the heArt
11ed Then enshln11 the
tlhuttuud ace wuuhJ
bl' rnMI \ll tht! d~fetue.
. lustcAtl, Wc~t would
hRvu ttl shU\ to the
hl'ort tthtl', putth1M
BR!Ultl lead ror R din-

OYO,

VOYIQMHOW

v o v 1 " o 11 •{o 1&lt;
noll

liD

I'O

TQ

buckle up

TC

In(-rl-"1...,1"'
T UJ S R I
'-;.1.-,lr-1
'-·::;;::;:;~~....._,

r-

I

three.
If llm hAl
1 0

l

! ...

CL A H

lls--r-'~~~4....,- - l

1 1 1 1

....~-;::;~·~·;::;~·~

,..

I

PIny th e tl lIAnlott tl

N

Poll taker to voter, "Co you
L A MB v I• N·:
18 1. 1 1i
think that the terma of Congr•••· ·
~~·;:;:·:;~·~·
m•n anould be limited?' V011r, ;

llni!IV•

~~~~r~ t'T. ~~~bn~~ ,~.

:;!:.,
s td As A I~~~~J::r.:haonuJd. ~~ ~u,~t ~~~~ ~~-:

1 1 1 1 1 0 C:oM~Iata
tht . ehucklt
bv filling In tht Milling word1
YOU
lrllilt
No, 3 btlow,
.
• PNtNT NUMD!M!O
tmm IN sgu.ms I' I' I*
I' l'l't

lnydown, 10 Welt
1
I
ahould mu me hh '-""·-•·
-1.
. ....1.-.a.. .....1
pmnor hu A 1riphnon Alld C~!h the diAIIlOHtl .
ace when In with the
club king.
Are you worried
that Souch mi!Jht win
A cheap nnt trick!
Maybe he wlll, but lt

Qualtd

GtiiiO~

Mt~

I I. I...J
•

I I

·

IC:RAM·LITI ANIWIII
Filthy· Oils/s • Uncut· Jul'lg/a • A~l.lhe FUN
"When I wu B boy," lectured tha grandpa, "I had to
won't make .J~U¥,.dlr· · do chore~, 1v1ry morning and rldt 11 horte or walk a mile
ference In ..the rani!
to 1ohoo1, The gr11ndeon rftplled, "Gee Grampa you had
'
run. Oec out D deck All thl PUN .. '

I MONDAY

Driven better .

ova

tludRrer. H11w rlllfl
enormoutiV tultabltlor my partonallt~.· ·Katharine H~pburn
Welt know the layout?
· ·
The nnswer Is thot If
third hnnd dt1e1 not
hAve R enrd higher Oh~riCI~It 'lotion of tht
fo~r ICIQII'Ibltd I/IOtcil bt•
thdn the eil!ht, he
low 10 form fovr alm~lt worda,
should ntlt nuttltt\UI·

with three, AI hew, hu
drups th~ lowell. At
trkk one, Em 1hould

1 DO ' ISELI!VIIT .. vou've
8EEN .SILECTIO FOl JIJJ.'( OUTV!

PO

- IDPK I'DDWQK
PIIIVIOUI SOLUTION - 'llhlnk I Wit bOn\ at I Umt that wu .

piRys t.he higher, but

PEANUTS

High: 70sl Low: 50s
114111111.. AJ

0" 11.0 y u ' '

c3lly piny thlfl.l hnntl
hll!h; hut eQtl' he
"V'VWI/\Nl shtluid give count. So,
, with two cArds, he

'•

'JMXO

JQ~QIIC

MU

ll\01\d return throush

r-------....,

atld

try It

your~etr

see.

•
.
:

.•
.'

______.:..

ta
'

...
••

"••

••

Ttlritlay, April 30, 2(HJ~
II

lillY bwurd~lolluttret Ull

HI''" fur yuu lu tht · yror
nhud thot will f'urthtr your
Atttblrlmu 111111. II tttdY Ill•
vu/vv • bohltwnM who \VIII
rruVi · tu be VII f)' luuky for
you.
TAUI~US (1111111 2tl· Miy
211) •• A ~rltl&lt;ttl!ltuatltln lillY
b~ ho11dlrd r1thvr ltlilll!tly by
nil II~Ud~tu, 111d you'll I!UII•
t/011 whrthtr It wu .dutll
riMht. 'Tha iiiiWtr It Mffifllll•
rlvv . Tryl1111 to pitch up 1
brukrn romounl Tht AllrO•
Clraph Matchm•ktr &lt;111 lttlp
you undtntnltd wh1t tu du to
mnkt thr rtlatluuthlp work ,
Mall S2.78 to Muthnt•hr,
c/o thllnaw!p&lt;lttr, V.O.. U11~
175M, Murroy Hill 8tAIIon,
Ntw York, NY IOJSI,,
ClllMINI (Mny li ·Juno 20)

.. Uu your dtdurtlvt •bllltlo
to miVt II I tltc/1/M COH•
"Itt iliA IH iltUII YOU 0VI b1e11
ptttttltrltt~ •• rvru If your
• thlttklnl! takra yuu lntu 1 dl·
r••tlon you dldtt'texptct.
CANCI!Il Outtt 2 hjuly
22) •• tlood thlu*' can hap•
pun (ur ycu wltrrr your ,.ork
ur rarur 11 tull&lt;rflllll If
I

'

31, Long Bottom, tim was
TUPPERS I' LA INS - A southbound on Success.
l~ccdsville wontan died of Mays collided with Collins'
injuries suffered i11 a two- whide, the report s~id.
vehicle accidc·nt Monday
Mays was transported by
that left four others injured MedFiight to Cabell Hunton Meigs County Rnad 4(, inj!ton Hospital in Hunting(Success) at .Olive Township ton, w.va., as· was c n II lit!,
'
. Road 265 (Nllmber 9) n~ar Collins' two · passengers,
1\1ppcrs }'lams, the Calha- Lawrence Collins, 9, and ·
Me1gs I ";'t of the State · Baiylcc Cullins, ll, were
Htghway. I atrol
reported.
1 k. l EMS t o .St . Josep h's .
.
41 , a ra en lY
C 011111e L. G•llll:!!S,
• • •
.
h' 1 d . · ror treatment of IIIJUrtes.
passenger 111 a ve 1c e rtvcn
.
1n add'111nn
to EMS. Tupby C,an dy M oys, 24 '
/'/ ·
I I' d 'II
Reedsville, was transported pcrs 3111 ' an&lt; ' ."" HVt c
by Meigs Cmmty EMS from fire department&lt; asmted the
the scene of the 4 p.m. aash patrol at the scene.
to St. Joseph's Hospital in · The cr.ash marked the
Parkersburg, W.Va ., whne third f:11ahty of the y~ar 111
she died, tl(lopers said.
Me1w. and the fifth m the
The patrol said May! was pon's two-cnunty coverage
eastbound on Number 9 arca.Truopcrs noted there 10
Road when Hll\' rcport&lt;·dly fatal accidents with 11 killed
failed to yield to a whiclc in 2001 in (;,;Ilia and Meigs
driven by jayne A. C&lt;lllin!, countks .
FROM STAFF REPORTS

ynu'ru op111 u1 tuygmlttnl
oud ltiW W4YI dol1111 tit/Hill

or

tlt1t tnoy br 1 bit dlll'oront, ll•

uMprrltttrtttol,
LllO Ouly 23-AuM, 22) ••
An untKiloe!ftlmelil MlltHtlll•
tar ct!uld hold lmtmtln• de·
vulupnl•llh r,, you, Tltl• pft•
tun 11118/tt ltttruduco yuu tu '"
IIIIAtt/VI

ptriCH,

Vll\00 (Aut!, 23·S~p\ . 22)
•• Wurkl1111 with your ltattdl
eou put you Itt 1
fn1111
u( mind tttd hrlp you Itt yuur

II"""

Other

well.
Wh•n you're hippy. you'rt at
your bt11.
Lllll\.11 (5tpc. 23-0tt. 23) •
• A Mprllt lnvllttlon rotlld
bt WiltiHll· And, whtn It ~
~1111, It behmw11 you to tlllt
adYJntagt or lc. 8otlltthlttl
dllfmnc wlllron11 out o( It,
IHdliYllrl

II

SCORPIO (Ott. 2~ · N&lt;~• ·
22) •• Ahhou11h 1 prietlu/,
IIO•IIOIIIlllllf tnodut uprt111dl
• It •lwJytlllltttlblt way td ll'l·
IUIIIdhln~ httllillfHM

fOUid
be dht&lt;lvtrrd when you 111
ofT the btttrn 11'11&lt;k.
51\0ITTAI~IUS (N&lt;)v, 23·
Dec:. 21) •• ill It &lt;&lt;wid bn111
o( your brtt•r jll&lt;lblllll•IOIY•

;

bt lure to (ttl/ow
throuf!h 011 111y sulutluus you
eoutr up wilh •• •••n I( onr
111oy be • bit bizarre,
CAI'I~ICORN (Ott, 22·
J•n. 19) •• A thlttg or v;/ue
that yuu'vt ;/woyt Wlllttd
euuld (•II In your honds, ll•
.on yuur toot, io that yuur
ho11d1 Utt hovr 11 tltillcl ru
hang ~Hto lt.
~
AQUAI\.IU~ O•u. 20· Ptb.
hill II•Y••

'
'

10

IY) •• It eould l!li 111011 w•tl•

f\llllli fur you I( yuu pby
thln!li nltt ~nd loo~e. Somt•
thlnalntmttlnll eould pop up
In whkh yuu nuy Will! ru
ptttieiVat~ .
1115CI!S (Pob. 20· Mmh

:

'
•

.•

"

COLUMI:IUS (AP) The State Highway Patrol is
planning a statewide crackdowtl all tnotodsts who
dan't buckl~·up.
' 'Qinclals say lmprovlttg
O~la't l~cklust~r rtcord ill
ll'dt-belt . uoage could save
perhaps 120 Hves per year.
It's expected that troopers
wUI inue an additional
50,000 tkkeu this year for ·
seat- belt vlolat!Oils·, 111any ·
during the buw travel thne
between Mchtorial bay and
Labor Day.
Until now, troopers have
had the flexibility to issue a
seat-belt warnillg ill!tead of
a tkket. llut l'atrol Superintendent Kenneth Morckel is
tnaklng the ticket tnandato·

ry.
The seat belt cantpaign
ofl1dally• begins on Thurs•
day,

Lotteries
Ohio

Pick J: 8-6·6
Pick 4: 0·6-3·2

·~ 1: 3·10.17-30·36

Pick Sl!aY: 3•3-4

Pick 4 d!IYI 7·4·7-11

W11t Vlqlnla
DallY 1: 7·1-6

DallY 4: 4-4-4·1
Cllli 21: 1•2·3·12·14·21
'

Index
2 •••••• - 12 .....

Cllendar
Cla11ified1
Comlca
Dear Abby
Editorial•

Movlll

ObiWeries

·

Spotts

Weather

A3

BH

B6

A6
A2
A3
A3
x·x
A3

Ill 20112 ottlo Vfllfv l'ublllhinl CD.

Eastern band·completes
successful·season
Wins awards at Tennessee
Festival} state contest
lv tiRtM J, RIID·.. •· • · • ,
BREEDO"!VD,-ILVBENTINEL.COI\4

Eastern High
TUPI'ER.S PLAINS School Concert band recently brought an
armload of trophies home from the Smoky
Mountaitts Music festival in Gatlinburg, Tenn.,
recently, Including a tim-place award.
The band, under the direction of Chris
Kuhn, C()nll'ictcd their competition season on
Friday at the state 'competition in Gahanna,
rctelvittg a superior rating in Class C. The .

Eagles band wmpctcd with 13 other l&gt;ands in
their das•.
Gallia Academy High School's band, under
the direction of David Phillips, competed in
Class Band was the only other band in south-..:
i!aatertl Ohia, besides Easterh's, to receive a
superior rating.
.
The Eastern band competed with .50 other
bands earlier this month ·at the Gatlinhltrg
Convention Center, with six other bands in
their class, including bands from illinois, N()rth
CamUna, Alabama, Mississippi and TcnncHsec.
The tint place award was granted on rhe
basis of balance and intonation, technique and
interpretation. The band received a superior
award and a· first-place trophy.

Bend Area Gospel
Jubilee May 15·19
at farm museum ·
More than ·70 groups
expected to appear
STAFF REPORT

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The 12th
an11ual Be11d Area Gospel Jubilee, touted as one
of the Iargen attd m011t udting gospel tings in
Welt VIrginia, is scheduled for May 1S- 19 and
wiU once again feature a full slate of cntertaintnellt, prayer and preaching.
.
·
The event will be conducted at the State
farm Museum and will feature more lltan l'
groups and soloistt, 1ingin11 from all outdoor
open pavilion.
·
Ort Wednesday, May 15 1 fettivities gc:t under
way at 4 p.m. with a prayer walk on the farm
muteum grounds for l011t touls. At ' S:45 p.m.,
Rev. Bill O'Brien will conduct opening ceremoniet and at 6 p.m. the mu1ic ttaru With an
open 111lcnt forum (two 10ng limit).

On Thursday and Friday there will be a jam
seuion at noon; on Friday at noon a potluck
dinner is slated and on Saturday at 5 p.m., a
special program Youth in Gospel Music will be
held, under the direction of Dcni~c Bonecutter.
On the linal day, Sunday, May 19, there will
be a morning worship in the Log Church with
Evangelist John Elswick.
Some of the performer! . slated to appear
Include . Kevin Spef1cer and Friends, Jody
Urown indian Family, Melody Trio, Singing
Echoe1, Haire family,J.B. and Uarbara Spencer,
The Freeman!, The Browders and many, many

more.
The admi11ion is free btit love offerings will
be held daily. On every day with the exception
of Sunday, gift drawingt will be conducted.
Concessions will be available as well as camping with shower and restroom facilities.
for information, call Evelyn Roush at 304-

882-2049.

Need

2m

•• You hove • unlqu• knack
th1t shuu/d work til your aJ.
v;nugt. It lt yuur lnttlijtn
tnobilllll yuu ro put yourtel(
In tht rlllht ~lice ot •••&lt;tly

Industry promoting
tire safety with . ·
national observance
BY ToNY M. l.ucH
TLEACHIIPMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY In an
effort to educate Meigs
C()unry. and other motorim
about the impnrtancc of tire
safety, the Rubber Manufacturers Association (RMA)
has officially bunched
National Tire Safety Week ,
being observed all this week .
The purpose of the safety
campaign, which includes
radio
public
service
ann()uncemcnts, print advertisements and brocltures, is
t&lt;l stress · the importance of
proper tire inflation anJ
monthly tire-check-ups.
"National Tire Safety
Week i1 · very importanr
because motorists need to be
reminded that keepin~; their
tires at the recommended.
inflation pressure will hdp
reduce the risk of tire f.1ilure:· said Wilbur Ward, m'mager of General Tire Sales in
Middleport.
"Checking your tire pressure can literally mean the
difference between life or
death. As a safety precaution,
we encourage all motorim
to check their tires at least
once a month;' he s.aid. ·
Ward added the "right
amount" of air for one's tires
is spccilicd by the vehicle
manufacture and is shown
on the vehicle door edge,
door po.r, glove box, fuel
door, and owner's manual.
Research
recently
obtained by the ' ll.MA

Holur lxtaa Care

lnfor.matluu you 've bftn
looklnM (ur th•t would htlp
you lntllll!lltt'ly.

(740) 446·9560
or toll free (800) 920·8860

...

ei, employee for General Tire
Sales In Middleport, checks
a customer's tires to make
sure the recommended Inflation pressure has been met.
(Tony M. Leach)

reveals that H9 percent of
driven don't know how to
check their tire pressure
pr()pcrly, and furthermore.
the Nati()nal Highway Traf.
lie Safety Administration
(N HTSA) has diJCovcred
that one quarter of ail passenger cars have ar leout one
significantly under-inflated
drc, which can cau5e !treu
on the tire and, ultimJteiy,
lead to tire failure.
A• a result oJf rhe&lt;c alarming ~tatiltic!, the llMA ha1
created National Tire: and
Safety Week to further iu
commitment to educating
and encouraging driven on
how to properly maintain

,. ............... AJ

·Help?

Taking care 'of a lOved one, or need personal care For yourself?
Does housework have you down' Feeling overwhelmed? Let us
helpl A P,.ofe11ional, private-duly home care agency, we offer
personal care, homemaking and respite services in your home.

the rt 11ht little.
Allll!5 (Morch 21 •ApriiJY)
•• Ut •••ll•blr tu uke ul/1
atld Hi people. Sutnol!nt wltu
11 tryln1 to t lllltltt you hu

TIRE SAFETY - VInce Ollv·

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
•

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel .
11-1 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.892·21H • Fex: 740."2·2157
www.mydellynntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publl•hlng Co.

IN A '-"ANC~ MliJI NG
IN~ \aPlTAL....

S.AM~A~

ru..tv. Allftl 30. aooa

PapAl
'nllldl'f. Aprl

JO. 2002

www..mvdl:ltvaantlnal.eom

rles

Ohio weather
. ·Wtdnttday, May1

YlP..... lTs •CAMOOGN FINANCb

POMEROY - Vnltt fi:!f
th.t M... £mtfltl\e\' ~fl'i«
COOLVILLE. - Ma.Hit LtOitl · Gillian Pullim. 93, o( lll$\\'t~ ll ~ &amp;r mn..
CooNilk, di~ Sunda}\ ,April 38, lOOa, at (Amdll~Clilrk tan~ oo Ml)ftdl Units

~ ~\N. 'tt:)U KNON
~ROJTINb..

YO~"''

A l.'-~\CJ,l,
.1 Cllwtt •14iWP I •

Diane Key Hill
Controller

Untn lu lit, nlltur "" w.komr. Tl"1 1ho.U bt 6.11 llutrt JOO worrll, All lfltm

Ml J•IJ}ICI tu HH/Irtf fltld mUll bf IIJnttiiiiUI l,.tiW1 iMIIJn11 aiUI t.t.,..,; ,.,...,,

ND lltflllffld. llltlf:l t~~UI IH pllblllllltl. Llt11n 11foll~ 6t Itt ,.,. Wll, IIMIIIIMI
lllllllt 1101 ,,{Jifllllllll.
1'111 opltt/4111 IXJH'II•Id In tlu tolllrnllkiDwiiN till tiHUIItlfU Dftlt# Olllo \W/11

Pdlllldn6 Cu. 'r tdlturl11l ~~ un/•11 othrwl11 tUifld.

NATIONAL VIEW
·'

Gone
Logic has been among first
casualties of stalemate

I

Showers in forecast
Wednesday

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Quick fixes aren't the answer for solving health crisis

Memorial Hospital in Pubnhuft,'Mit Virainia.,
Sl\11 wu born Dtwnbw 1~. 1909, in Sindy\&gt;ille-, 'Mit Virginia., tkllgl\tet o£ the late Eiu a.nd Annict DuW!y Gillia.11.
Sllfllivina m eight 110M.Tltcodofll (&amp;dty) ofloog &amp;ru:~m,
Bill, jamtS (Ka.y), Robert ()ani~). Rll@Ot utd Dtln, Ill of
CooMllo. Muvin (Raehtl) of Wd\wll, and Wilb11r (LiM) of
MariN~&amp;; ll.igln daughten, lnu Windland of G11~villt, &amp;rnkl!
(Ray) of ~villt, Mary Loo ff)lllr ~~nd Willlll (M~mn)
B11cldey ofCoolvill11, f~ Cmty ofAthll11$,j\ldy (8ill) LNeh
of Mintral 'lfklh, Wtit Viralnia, jllnl\ Oim) Rldtno\lr of
Cll.:sttt, utd Donna Slit (I.Wie) Um.:nlllttllr of'IMWfl&gt;illt: 311
. gRndthlldmt, \3 lteppnlkltik!Nn, and nUill\'IU\1$ &amp;mt•
gntndt:hlldflln utd llflllt~QNat-gl'lll\ddUidNn: a brotlttr, Hmy
Gillian ofPomoroy; • spi!Qal frlond of60 }'\1\\n,j\lnt Ga.ttoo of
ColumbiiS; and tit- sptcial neigboon. Pilm Hendmoo, Aliell
Hawthorne and Hcltn Findll111, .
,
·&amp;$ldtS Iter ptNnu, sho Will pl1ll:lldlld in dNth .by htr h\1~
ba.nd, Ok.11y; a son, Eln "Criclttt" P1lllins; a da.\ljlltet, Ullill
Ra.ndolplt: a sbte.r; fu11t brothen: agr.mdion; 11 stopg~~~ndron:
and 1\!10 som-in-law. and two dallil\ten-in-law.
Sorvicl\s will bt held at 1 p.n\. Wcditllsda~ May t, 3003, at
Whitll Funl!ral Homt in Coolville, with Oavt Cogar officiating, Burial will follow at Mll.iQ$ Momory Gudtm, friond&amp; may
Witt tht f11neral hom11 on Thtsdll)\ April 30, 3003, from 3-8
p.m.

Deaths

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Showers and thundcntor1111 will spNad across the area on
·Wednesday as a warm fiont approaches from the south, the
National Weather Service said.
High temperatUfiiS will ntnge in the low 70s.
Thnight. it will be mostly cloudy with lows in the 4~. Some
showers are forecast.
'
Sunset tonight will be at 8:25. and sunrise on Wednesday is
at 6:32a.m.
Weather foracaat:
Tonight...Mostly clo11dy with a chance of showen and possibly a few thunderstorms after midnight, Lows 48 to 53. West
winds 5 to 10 mph becoming east. Chance of rain SO pcreel\t,
Wednesday...Variably cloudy with a chance of showen,
Highs 70 to 75, Northeast winds aro1md 10 mph. Chance of
rail) 40 pen:ent. ·
·
Wednesday night...Showers and thunderstor1111 likely, Lows
in the upper 50s, Chance of rain 60 percent.
Extended forac11t:
. Thursday... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms, Highs in the upper 60s, Chance of rain 40 percent,
Thursaay night ...Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the upper 40s. Chance oftain 30 per. cent.
friday... Mostly clear, Highs in the mid 60s.
Saturday... Mostly clear. Lows40 to 45 and highs in the upper
60s.
Sunday... Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 40s and highs in the .
lower 70s.
Monday... Pardy cloudy. Lows 46 to 52 and highs .67 to 73 ..

Surging health costs and insurance
The crisis was drumntized lust week
premiums -and increases in the numby the decisil;&gt;n of the L:Z million - mem ~
. ber of uninsured Americans sure to folber California Public Employ¢es
low - cry out for Washington politi· Retirement System (CuiPERS) to ruise
cians to begin thinkin,g comprehensive·
premiums by an astonish in~ 25 percent,
ly about America's Impending health
forecasting an even bigger mcrease next
care crisis,
year.
Sometimes
incrementalism
in
CaiPERS is the second-lurgest buyer .
Washington prOduces good .results, such
of health insurance in the nation after
as creation of the State Children's
the Federal Employees Henlt~ ijenetits
Health Insurance Program that widened
Program. whose own prcmtums urc
Medicaid benefits for lower-income
going up 14 percent this year.
COLUMNIST
families,
Such masstve premium increuses will
B·ut often it simply results in efforts
be d11plicnted for employers all across
by one group in the health care industry Whit Ayres showing thai two-thirds of the country -· and will lead some to
decrease coverage or drop it. swelli,ng
- say, doctors.or hospitals - to get the 1h
ed hi k h
k ·
upper hand over another. such as phar·
ose · survey l n t at wea enmg the rariks of the uninsured nbovc 40 mil- .
maceuti.cal or insurance co.mpunies,
patent protections for new prescription·
drugs will hurt research and Innovation. lion.
Even CaiPERS; which theoretically
A huge. multibillion-dollar battle of More than 8S percent of the doctors
has
huge bargaining power with henlth
that type is set to surface in earnest this credit .new prescription drugs with
week when the Senate Commerce,
insurers and providers, has been unable
Science and Transportation Committee reducing the need for surgery and short- to hold down costs. Most employers
begins hearings on legislation to limit ening hospital stays, which lend to lack that power.
•·
reduce overall health-care costs,
So CalPERS hus joined the National
. current palent protections for drug com·
Part of the battle between the brandon . Health Care in urging u
paT~e:, bill's sponsors, ' Sens, John name industry and the generics is legal, Coalition
new comprehensive look at the health
McCain (R-Ariz.) and Charles Schumer revolVing .around the 1984 Halch- crisis- the first since the ill-fated 1993
D Ny
Wallman Act. That law gives generic
~ - , .), say tllat their bill wou1!1 has- companies access ro brand companies' Clinton health .care plan, The group
ten the arrival of g~ne'ric drugs to mar- trade secrets and allows them to get comprises business, labor, consumer
ket and "achieve monumental savings products ready to market lhe moment a and religious groups, and J~rge -stnte
for seniors and families ... upwards of brand's patent expires, usually after 12 pension plans.
President Henry Simmon~ says the
$71 billion over th~ next I0 yea~s." .
years.
On_ the o~her s1de, Pha~mace_ut1cal . The law also extends the patent for an group has no/lun of its own. but lh!\1
Rese~rch and Manufacturers of additional 30 months if the brand-drug debate shoul. start over three basic
Amen~a (P_hRMA ) ar~ues that further company sues a generic. McCain and models, One is "play or pay," in which
reductwns m already-fallmg pr?fits of Schumer contend that the brand-name employers continue to provide mos1
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
, brand-name drug compames ':"~.11 pre- companies regulurly game the system to insurance covera~e and would receive
vent development of new med1cmes to ·extend patent protection and that they government help 1f they cun't do so.
Today is Tuesday, April30, the I20th day of 2002. There are
245 dayt left in the yeur.
cure d1srases.
aim to restore the intent of the 1984 A second, favored by liberals during
the 1993 debate, is a single-puyer sys·
t.o!cCasn and S,chumer- who have an law.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
unlikely ~ollectlon of hb~ral consum~r
Which side is right is a murky matter. tem in which all citizens would get their
On April 30, 1945, as Russian troops approached his Berlin
groups,, ms~rance com~am_es, U~lons, But it is true thai rising outlays for health insurance from Medicare or
bunker, Adolf Hitler committed suicide along with his wife of
HMOs and auto compames Ill their co~· drugs is the largest single contributor to anolher government prugmm.
one day, Eva Braun.
The third, · proposed by some
ner - conlend,. correctly. ,th~t generic exploding health·care costs.
On this date:
Republicans,
would impose 1111 individ·
d~gs
cosl
cons1derdbly
less
than
brandBut
according
the
Kaiser
Family
In 1789, George Washington took office in New York as the
10
ual
requirement
on all citizens to have
first president of the Uniled Stales.
··
name drugs.
.
Foundation, the most important reason
But PhRMA, the pharmaceutical. for rising drug expenditures is increased health insurance and offer government
In 1803, the United States purchased the Louisiana Territory ·
lobby: argues -. also c~rre7tly - t~~~ usage and ever-newer products, not subsidies to those who can't afford it.
from France.
Democratic presidential contenders
genenc comp~n!es don t have to rrsk price increases for individual drugs.
In 1812, Louisiana became the 18th state of the Union.
~undreds of '.mlhons of dolhtrs develop·
There's clearly a balance. needed need 10 be heard on this issue soon, and
In 1900, Hawuii was organized as a U.S. territory.
mg
and
te~tmg
new
?rul!s,
only
onebetween
saving money on dru~s and they should pressure President Bush to
In 1939. the ~ew Yo~k World's fair officially opened.
tenth of wh1~h e~er make I! to .market. saving lives. What's allio cleur ts that be heurd, too.
In 1970, . Pr~ stdent N1xon announced the Umted States was
To bo~ste~ '.Is ~ase. PhRMA is about t!J drllg outlays are just part of a system- (Morton Kondracke i ,\' executive edi·
sending troops into Cambodia. an action lhat sparked widetor of Roll Call, the 11ew.1paper of
r~lease a nat10nal survey of 400 physl· wicfe cost crisis in health care.
spread protest.
Capitol
Hill.)
'
c1ans
conducted
by
Republican
pollster
•
In 1973, President Nixon anno11nced the resignations of top
· aide s H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, along wilh
Attorney General Richard 0 , Kleindienst and White Houf!C
counsel John Dean. ·
PERKINS' VIEW
In 1975, the South Vietnamese capital .o f Saigon fell to
Communist forces,
In 1990, hostage Frank Reed was released by his captives in
Lebanon: he was the second American to be releasecf in eight
days,
In 1991 , an estimated 12S,OOO people died as a cyclone
The Center for Responsive Politics, a in the media and Congress - refuse to instead blocked schoolhouse doors
struck the South Asian country of Bangladesh,
.
nonpartisan
research group that tracks address: That the votes of millions of from black youngsters. Fortunately for
Ten year~ ago: As rioting in Los Angeles entered its second
money in politics, lists 980 organiza- rank·and-file union members are being those black youngsters, they had the
day, President Bush condemned the violence, and said the
tions
that gave $100,000 or more in' soft effectively nullified by labor leaders.· power of the federal government on
Ju ~tice Department would intensify its investigation of police
money
during the 1999-2000 election
And lh1s disenfranchisement of polit· their side. Federal ' troopers made sure
conduct in the beating of Rooney King.
.
cycle,
· ·
ically
dissenting union members will the high court's Btown decision was
five years ago: The Senate approved the nominalion of
You'd
think
Enron
would
be
at
the
become
even more pronounced in this enforced.
.
·
·
Alexis Herman.to be labor secretary. ABC TV aired the "comvery
lop
of
the
list,
given
pronounce·
year's mid-term election because lhe · Employers can be required to post
ing out" episode of the situation comedy "Ellen" in which the
ments
by
cru88ding
editorialists
and
AFL-CIO,
which boasts some 66 affili· notices concerning workers' compensa·
title character, played by Ellen l;)eGeneres, acknowledges her
reforming
lawmakers
lhat
the
energy
ate
unions
including
AFSCME, plans to lion, or the presence of asbestos, or sex·
homos::xuality. President Clinton reopened the newly reno·
giant's
rise
and
fall
is
somehow
raise union members' "voluntary" polit· ual harassment in the workplace. But
vated Thomas Jefferson Building of the Library of Congress
emblematic
of
the
corrupting
influence
ical contributions beginning in July, they can't be required to inform .work·
in Washington. D.C.
_
of
money
in
politics.
The
labor federation's aim is lo build a ers of their right, under the Beck deciOne year ago: California businessman Dennis 1110 arrived
You'd
be
wrong.
Enron
ranked
14th,
$35 million war chest to beat sion, not 10 pay fees or make "volun.
at the international space station abourd a Russian sp~M:ecraft. ·
In
fact,
four
of
the
five
biggest
softRepublicans.
tary" contributions for union political
Intern Chandra Levy was last seen at a health club near her
money
contributors
during
the
last
elec·
Of course, unions have every rightiO activities. That means most politically
apartment in Washinglon, D.C., before vanishing (her disaption were labor unions, beginning with participate in the political process, to dissenting union members aren't even
pearance remains a mystery).
·
the American Federalion of State, raise and spend money trying 10 elect aware of lheir entitlement to a refund of
Today's Birthdays: Prill&lt;iCSS Juliana, the Queen Mother of
County
and Municipal Employees Democrats. But the bosse1 have no right the portion of their union durs and fees
the Netherlands, is 93. Actor AI Lewis is 92. Actress Cloris
(AFSCME),
which handed out three to finance their political activity with that go to political activity.
Leachman is 76. Singer Willie Nelson is 69. Actor Gary
·times what Enron did' ·
the dues, the involuntary contributions, · And that's the way labor leaders want
Collins is 64. Actor Burt Young is 62. Singer Bobby Vee is S9.
Of
course,
almost
all
the
campaign
of
the one-third of rank-and-file union it. As long as the rank-and-file remain
• Actress Jill Clayburgh is 58. Movie director Allan Arkush is
cash the unions gave went' to memben who prefer Republicans.
54. Actor Perry King_ is S4 . Singer Merrill Osmond is 49.
in the datk, AFSCME and other unions
Democrats.
Yet,
ai
least
a
third
of
union
Indeed,
14
years
ago,
the
U.S.
Movie director Jane Campion is 48. Actor Paul Orms is 43.
can continue 10 throw all lheir soft
members cast votes for Republicans Supreme Court declared that union money at lite DemocniS with no con·
Ba.~ketball coach lsiah TIKmlas is 41. Country musician
during the last election, according 10 members can be compelled only 10 pay cem whatsoever for the one-third of
Robert Reynolds (The Mavericks) is 40. .Rapper Turbo B
pollin~ by Peter D. Hart Research dues and fees that are directly related to union menibera who vote Republican,
(Snap) is 35. Rock musician Clark Vogeler it 33. RhythmAssociates.
.
the cosI of collective bargaining and One need not be Republican 10 find
and-blues sing~ Chris ·:choc" Dalyrimple (Soul For ~al) is
And that was no fluke trend. More contract administration, that they can- that pt~M:tice Odious. Voters, no matter
3 L Rock mus1c1an Chm Hender8011 {3 Doors Down) IS 31.
than a third of union households voted not be forced lo finance a union '1 polil· their party, never shoilld be compelled
Country singer Carolyn Dawn John8011 is 31. Rock singer J.R.
for
Republicans in the 1998 mid·term ical and lobbying activity.
• Richards (Dishwalla) is 30. Rhythm-and-blues singer Jeff
10 furnish P'llitjcal contributions 10 canelection, accord in&amp;.. to Voter News
Yet the 'AfL.CIO and ill affiliate didates or causes with which they disTimmons (98 Degrees) is 29. ActOI' Johnny Galecki is 27:
Service. And neilrly half voted unions refuse 10 comply wilh the high agree.
Actress Klrsten buns! is 20, Country •singer Tyler Wilkinson
Republican in 1996 congressional elec- court's Beck decision, much as bigoted
(The Wilk insons) ls 18.
tions,
·
public officials in th~ Old South refused (Joseph Perkins is a columni.~t for The
Thought for Today: "In America, gelling on in the world
And
therein
lies
an
injustice
that
10
accept lhc court's landmark Brown San Dtego Union-Triburu: and can be
means gelling out of the world we have known before," advocates of campaign finance reform - vs. Board of Education decision and fr!ached Joleph.PerkinsUnionTrib.com.)
Ellery Sedgwick. American editor ( 1872-1960),
• Chicago Tribune, on terrorism: By any logic, . the
Palestinian suicide bomb that slaughtered six Israelis and
wounded more than 80 others in a crowded market in central
Jerusalem recently was an utterly futile act.
·
Was it designed to intimidate Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
into making political concessions or removing the lsr.teli mil·
itary from Palestinian territories? Suicide bombers - or
"homicide bombers," as President Bush dubbed them - only
underscore that 'Israel has a massive task in trying to protect
its people from terrorism,
Was it designed to thwart Secretary of State Colin Powell's
peace mission'/
. All it did was place in jeopardy Powell's planned meeting
with Palestinian President Yasser Arufat, a meeting that the
besieged Arafut desperately needs to retain his legitimacy.
No, thi s was murder, stark and awful and breathtakingly
illogical. ...
... By what logic d()(:s the Arab world champion such
killings? .
There is such anger on Arab streets about the fate of lhe
PaleSiinians, many Arabs can hardly contain their satisfaction
when Jews are slaughtered, ,..
·
Yes, there is futilily on all sides. Israeli incursions, tanks and
bulldozers have lefl hundreds of Pulestinians dead in the We.st
Bank ,..
One can find haired and dealh and despair in the Middle
East.
But logic'/ It has disappeared.

EMSioaa.ls

Millie'. . .

Den Dlckereon
Publlehlr
Cherlene Hoeflich
Oener11 M1n1ger

LOCAL BRIEF

Morton
Kondracke

RexMins
RACINE - Rex D, Mnn. 84, West Laf~~tt~. Ind., f&lt;lrm~r­
ly of R~d11e, died Saturd~y. April 37, 2002, M St. lllitab~th
Medical Center in Lafa~tte, Ind.
Ammge-ment$ will be announced by remcem Funo:1111
Home, Racine.

Ronald Hart
RACINE - Ronald Hart, 87, Racine, dil!d Monday, April
27, 2002, at the Vote111ns Admlnistrntion Medical Contllr in
Dayton,
,
Arrangements will be announced by' Cremootu Funornl
Home, Racine.

Lawson named
CEOatPVH
IY MAliK HAU8UIIN
MHALLBURNtM~D~LYREOISTER .CDM

11res

TODAY IN HISTORY

INmPipA1
their tires and to remind dri: vcrs that it only takes a brief
moment to check their tires.
"Our research shows a signiflcant need for tire safety
education throughout the .
country, especially as we
·approach the busy sununer
· driving season," said Donald
Shea, RMA president and

chief executive officer.
"National Tire Safety Week
is a crucial reminder for drivcrs nationwide that it only
takes five minutes a month to
check their tires," he added.
founded in 1915, the
1\MA is the national trade
association of the rubber
industry and is hoadquarterod
in Washington, D.C. Its mcmbership includes more than
·tOO companies who manu- ·
facture tires and other rubber
productl.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-45.83

Alch Coal - 22.08 ·
Alczo-42.88

AmTeoh/SBC - 30.18

Alhland Inc. - 40.8e
AT&amp;T - 12.88
Bank Ont - 40.&lt;48
BLI - 15.21
Bob Evan•- 29.81

Unions bank on uninformed workers for backing

BorgWarner- 81.33

Ftdtral Mogul - .55

Prtmltr -

10.&lt;41
Rodcwetl - 20.58
ROQicy lloott - 7,75
RD &amp;hall - 62.01

usa- 23.113
Gannett- 73.88
G-al EJeQirlc - 30.111
GKNLY-4.75
Bllfl - 52.88 ·
Hlttly Davldlcln ~ 62.1111 Wai·Mart - SUO

Kmart -' 1.25
Wtndy'l - 37.8t
Kroger - 22 ..18
WOI1hlngton.- 14.68
Lal1dl End- 80.23
DaNy ltoclc rtpOrll are
Ud.- 1U8
tht
o4
clotlng
NBC-21.01
the prtvioul
Olk .. AwUII - 20.87 quotfl

champion - U8
• Chlnnlnll Shopl- 8.68
ova-:u.1o
CI1Y Holding - 1U3
BeT-37.80
Col - 23,23
'
Peopltt- 27.28
DO - 15.0&amp;
F'fllllco - 82.31
·DuPont - 43.27

J.m.

~~

tranaaC1tcna, proby Smllh Partntra
·at Advttl Inc, ot Gal·
111)0111.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correotlon Polloy

Our main-mIn all tiOriN II
to bt IICCUrlte. If you know ot an
Iff()( In lllofY, calllle - -·

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The board of 'trustees of
Pleasant Valley Hospital introduced the now chief executive
officer Mondlly in Alvin R. Law1on.
Lawson, &lt;48, is currently the CEO of Wetzel County Hospital. He holds a law dcgNc from Capital University Law School
in Columbus, a master's degree In the science of managtmenthealthcare adminillration fM1n Mar~hall Uniwrlity, and a
baeholor of nrts degree in buainc11 administration from fairmont State Collolle· Lawson grnduatod .from Rilwnawood
High School. He.il abo a Ucemcd nurling homo admlninl'lltor
in West Virginia, a board-cortiOed hcalthcarc executive and' a
Fellow In .the American Colleae of Hcalthcare · Exocutiw
(fACHE).
He il a charter member of the Klwanis Club, a member of
the Rotary Club, a Boy Scout volunteer, a past Chamber of
Commerce Chair and serves on various committees for hla
church.
'
·
."We're happy to haw AI aboard,'' PVH muteo chairman
Mario Liberatore said. "We've been neodin~ some manal{ement
since Genesis di1solvod . It was A long search, A thoroul!h ICArch,
and we think we've got tho right per1on to move the ho1pital
forward."
·
One of tho firll bsucs Law1on wUI de alia the medical malpractice ilt1urancc problem facing ho1pital1 throu1fhout Wen
Virginia .
·
·
"That ittue il bigger than jult PleasantVaUc,y Hospital," Law~
10n said. "We need to look at some sort oC captive liability
arrangement and explore that po11ibility to cover tho hmpilal
and to cover the phyaicians. I think that we need to con!lnue
to work with the atate Legislature for additional reforms that
will be beneficial. It's a crisis that ha1 not yet been rcsoivod,"
Conung from Wetzel County, Lawaon has experience with
small rural hospital!. He fcell that back11rou nd wiU serve him
well at Pleasant Valley Hoapital.
"A lot of those arc the aome i11uea that arc a!Teeling Pluuant
· Valley Ho1pitalo" Law1on 1aid. "And I've boon very Jucccurul at
that other hospital. As f~r a1 all the rcgulationa, laws, and atutT,
they apply to all hospitals, no matter what si:io they arc."
Law10n and hi1 wife, Ktren, have two 1001,1)o1h, 24, who il
married and the father of two, at well as Robbie, who i1 15.
Law1on starts work at Pleasant Valley June 24. Chief financial
officer Tom Schauer said information regarding La~1on'1 compcnlation package wa1 not available,

lll~dt\1 " ron~ ·
BASHAN

~1\\lll \lt' m~m~
1\~ httll lllt\.1 ·Ill
:\;;~
Coonrt
\)1\\tll&lt;•tl
Ill~\
Coott h )m H ~n:h.-r,
jt,, l.~ ~\\, «1\J .....~..
SWclltt, l\ll\ll Ulltt\llll
DI~\\Mn&lt; h•~
~~~
~llllltl'tl ru lklrl
l\artt&gt;tt

&amp;t

n

p.m., l~ntt Rt)ild, hly Ill '"II tt.m~n'' A lkttt&gt;tt,
UN, n\1 llljllfiH.
11.11d ttlmb.lrl)•
H~\111'~ and
5~34

CENTRAL DISPATQI 'llmt~thy L H~~·'""
\ \ ~ \5 ao,m,, Statt R\1111.\&gt;
tlllt. , utlim, Cimdl&gt;n~
Chd: M\!m\lrl~ H~taol:

Tlnner·
Slldenced

ta:54 p.m.. M11t~rry
A\'tnllll, UM H~1 H.r
M«tie.~l

~!111.\&gt;t:

IMlbt\!
3:55 p.m:, NOOII:' Summit. Thnnl't \\"~' Wlltl.'ll~l'tt m
Maorcia Cl~hiiort, ttl:'lMI:
Ml:'t~ Cm\1\t\' t\mmmn
4:\0 p.m., N~ II R\liioct, l•lm t:\lllft M I~ mtmthnn
.twtw whidtaceid~nt, ~:1\l~t~ . prima\ fur i'-Wtltm~~; a 11\llil'\!
oo by Rtt&gt;d$\•\UI!, Thpptn mllet't.
Pl11int and fuml!roy, I)Qk\)t;a
Cl)jllni, &amp;ylllll Cullini and
SUits
Conn\\\ etrl~, St. j\litph\
H\lipiW, Cindy Mil)!!&lt;, C11~1l
IIQMtill..tW - 1\11 ~nllm
Huntlt~n H\lipttaol:
. ·m quil'l fl:'al .-~wt' titlt' hM
7: \3 p.m .. Dro&lt;~th\'\1)1 C::\lr- 00\ln IUI'tl ill Ml'l~ t 'mmt)&gt;
riile Dr)lllnt, HM :
\llll\11&lt;11\ 1'1""' t 'uurt by
tJ:~ p.m., Vlll~ Mllii!Jf, t&gt;!Jtlllldll, \l'au11,ha11, 1'1.1111\'1\\ ~
S&lt;llly D11ilo)\ l'lell~ llt Vallt-y 11n1l ~Jthl'n, «)lall"t NU
H\lipitll. .
MTG llrp.. ll..ldtutttml. l•a.
POMEilOY
A pl'ntlll«l 11\1111'\' l~wsmt
1:\\) p.m., Roek~prin~ hM b~l'll 1111'11 lw 1-t~rultl
Rllh~bilitaoti\ln Cllnh!r, Vir- Hook, 1\\nWI\1 ; "-))~ll l~l )&lt;IIIII'$
!Jinia Shirllly, O' Bll'nll~ It H~ll.l\lmt&lt;nl)\ all~~-t"'l,l P"~'­
Miltmnial H\\~pltaol:
· ~on~l huurtt's )\t'l~ll\t'\1 m a
7:04 p.m.. IDm\\'t'lod 'tl&gt;r- lllt!ttlr w hldt ~~~l' illt•llt IJII
' I'IIC~. Vieky l}ll(IQ, trn~tl:'d:
April lb. l \1\\tl,
PaM ll.RO

flit

8:5 I ll,m,, llMC Clink.

Plan reunion

Kelly Klein, HMC.
RUTLAND
RUTI.ANI l
lh1tldnd
3: \ \) p.m., . Edmond!on
Rood, Betty Calllwllll, treated: A.lumm A !.\lll'hll\11\1 11'\ll hnld
!&gt;:37 p.m., VHiagt Manor, \tl ~llllll~ll'l'lll\1111\ \II\ M~~ .l5
~~ t• p.1n. •t th ~ Rlltl.tml Civil:
LllMI'r lcwb, llVH ,
Gt-ntN, H.t&lt;!~f''•lll\1\l~ m.ty bl'
SYR.ACUSE
·1:34 p.m., 'Mtl't' SlNI't, m&lt;tdll hy !l'thhn" $1 ~ pl'r
1111'~1 t\l thl' ll..ll tl.md Alumni
Mlldllltl Hubbard, PVH, .
A~~oela lh:m, I'.0. Ho~ I .l5,
1\utl~nd, Ohill 45775, Buwrtainuwut will he IJI\II'itlll&lt;l by
POMBROY - Mmi31&lt;11:' l)wl~&lt;~ht kl'nhnwt-r.
license! have bllon iMul!d h1
MeiQS County Probate Court
to joNmy Ildon E!tllp, 19,
Oloust~r. and lllit~beth Ann
l~u !8ell, 18, llomeroy: Daniel
ll..IHmsv u LH ~ ohw
William Youn11 II , 30, Middl~­
Vlllimt~l'r
Pit'&lt;' I l~l'"rtm ~m
port,· and Holli11 Jl!an Wulch ,
\9, Middleport: Ronald Allan will hold it! •HH\lhll nb tlin11~ 1'
SpaUI\. 29, 1\aehw, and jQn• on Satul\l~y &lt;\l tiw lh~ h11u~~.
nlror Lynn Blnmba~h. 18, Rccdsvill~. wHh ~NI'I\111 ttl
·Racine: Zaekary Peek lJYI:', 24 b~~~~~~ at II &lt;\.1\\ , I )\1\\I C I'~ w\11
and Janlill Maureen Wocyt~n. b~ SIJ ~ae h &lt;1\\\1 &lt;'&lt; 11'1'}' out is
22, both of Albany: jmtin milal1k.
RobQrt l~oblmon, 23, and
Crystal Oayle Dtmon, 36,
both of Alhllny: and ChriltO•
A lir!t t~;t oJ' 1 1ll\\\~I~IY~
phur S. Burke, 3t\, Ullpilr Sondmky, and Joy Ann Spann , J 4, \Wt~f !Upply rew,IJ~d t:~ il•v"
ds ul' U.\)(, w (l.tiH5 pMt&gt; p~ r
Racine,
billlu11 in it! wdl~ •ml it~ di!"
tributiun ~Y!tl' \1\ ,· 'l'h~ ll•vd1
were innlr\t'l'tly 11/p urt~ d ill
JIOMEI\OY - An octlou th~ Suud11y Tinl~i"S~ IItind ,

Ucens• Issued

Firemen plan
.rib dinner

Correction

File dissolutions

MEIGS

•

CALENDAR
I'

CommunljY C1lendar pub- .RUTLANO - F1utlaml G~rtlon
lllllld 11 1 rtt urvlal o non· Club, Monday, 1 !J.m., at tho

profit group1 wlehlng to
1nnouna1 milling• 1nd IPI"
allltventl, Tht oelend1r 11 not
detlgned to promote 11111 or
lund·relure of env type. 1t1m1
lfl printed only II IPIGI per•
mill 1nd oennot blgulrtntnd
to bl prlnllcl 1 epeolllo num·
blr of deye.
Wtdnttdey, Mey 1 •
RACINE - Saotllth Alto
moellng, 7 p.m., AI Raalno
Mllonlohtll.
PACJEVlLLE - Solplo Town·
ahlp Truatu moollng, e:30 p.m.,
. a.t Plgtvllle Jown hill. · ·

homt ol. Oorolhy Woodard,
Langevlllo.·
TUPPEA!I PLAINS

Tho

J.adloa Auxiliary Poat 90B3 rogu·
lar mooting, ? p.m., Atth@ hnll .

l1turcl1y, M1y 4
MIOOLEPORT r'ourth
Annuli Molga County J!amlly Fun
Foat, Mlddlopon Churoh ol Chrllt
Family Lllo Co11tor, 10 a.m.•to 2
p.m. Froo 8dmllllon, ohlldron't
oollvhiOI, ontortalnmont, rolrolh·
manta and honllh eoroonlng• lor
onllro family.

G•kl ltlruld ((JII~tr " ' l·lilk),
who hnlla lrnm tho Atluntu, (lu,
ArOA, IOVOI IO rOI\01'0 ftallan mo• .
Jorcyclai In hiMapare time,

II (740) 882·2158.

Nlwl DICIIrtmii'IW

The main nurnbtr II 882·21 H .
Dtpal1rntnllxtMIIIOnllfll:

OI!Mnll _...,

e.t. 12
1!111. 13
Ell. t4

or

Olhtr HtYICII
Ext, 3
Allv.lllllltl
Clrolllllllon

Eld. 4

et.elfllll Ada

e.t. 5

See

-·""'Tonnd..mall
..,..,tlolll.oom
OntheWib

..r•
apottllectlon for
details ... Page 81

www.myddyNI)IIrlll.aom

AI I

,, .
·'

Af ~ l

=-.

AI I

liMI t; '11'1 f ill

•

�•

"••

.

•
t

•••
••

Candle Creations

.

l.oolclnl for aSPecial Motber's Du Glftl
look no furlhlrl

•

••'
••

-'{

tfCllect out ov llllct• heut
cudle bolder wltb oholoe
of eceatecl cmdle.

•
''•
'

l1t bat Mill\ StflM

83elrlck StraM ·

. , . ,. . .S'IU

()No

742·2512

•

~""'1A,I
:

:•
..

'

·with a retan·value over $700,

FOX'S PIZZA DEN

Friday, May 10, 2002.
QCiark' s J etuelr!'
Mid Valley Chrisdan

..,.,,,

, , . . . . . ,,41tf

''

Treat Mom to a Gift
Certificate for
Mother's Day
from Fox's!

One lucky patron
.will win this .basket,

.. A

~t

'

RUTLAND, OHIO

Middleport, OH
Provldiftga Cllrist Centered Education
11.r
Students ln pdes K·6
Sinct 1985
Ettroll now for 2002-2003 school year

MaTHEft.~a

1\INOI .
11\f\\ot.u .l

Call 991·6249
.
·for free
_· . information packet. .

Contest Rules:

•t
· CJ.rlls Jftllfiry
Store

· 113 Court StrHt In

...dt5ii

Hlatorlc Pomero Ohio

Perfect Sifts for your ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;iiiii.t
Nalls by
· Perfect·Mother
• 8adroom Sultu
• Llvf~g Aoorn Suftu
• Curto•• ·• Entartalrunant Datk

. Mother's Day Special
Hot 011 pedicure tr manicure $25
O'eg. $40)
Houre· 1\lee•llt I 1m • Tpm

~

,._""""' "·*'" ..

.14......
· 8e,..... • IN41~oi1Mt. :&amp;.uJ,
IJt•ci.hl
HIIUI'tlt Mun•'l\le•Wed 9 am • ~ pm

112 Court Bti'Ht
·
Pomeroy, Ohio
?40.tol.el24

Jl. ·~

""\1' .

NIKE • REEBOK· ASIC$
EASTLAND· DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES· DOCKERS .
1•

002·5432
_218 N. Second

Shop Local
'

a new Sewing
machine

Mother's Day

'

We have a nice selection
of jewelry, Furniture
and Appliances
106 North lnd Avenutl • Middleport, Ohio
(740) 992·2635

Middleport Department Store
' I

·

• Flap • Candll!ll
• New line ohprlnll elothlnll
arriving dally
• Fret gilt wrap
• .Fret p•rklniJ

.'
'

Pomeroy

100 E. Main St.

Rnclno!

; 4 ,,,,,,,,,,,,1 \\

Pomeroy, Ohio

Check out our
selection of Russell ·
Stover Candies, cards,
perfume and other
gifts for mom ..

OH 992-3322

The

Shop

Candles &amp;Candle Making Supplies
Rt. 124 Mlntl'lvlllt, OH

992-4559
Tuti-Frl:10·&amp;
&amp;Sat.: 10·8

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Mlddl1port

88 Mill 8t!'llt
Middleport, Ohio
(rAO) 812
10~00 em to

-ozee

pm

Mcnctey through llturuy

HOUri• 10 1111 • 8 ,m • MOII•'I'u..W.clol'rt.
10 em • a jllll Ill• Clo11Ci Thur1d1y
38474 PHon flork Ad.
Pomtroy

Antiques- I/. Collectiblea ,
make "reat Gifts lor Momr

740·882•8513

1\

1•• 4.,.1,.

Stop In~ 786 North 2nd Ave.
Calli 992·6491
. Online Store~ www.frillhpharmacy.~cim

Sue j Selectablea

Weaving Stitch~
Gift Shop 1

992·2955 .

...

tdJM.e

"'IH. ,_ '-·ettlt'l"""' .

195 N. Second Middleport, Ohio

992·1622
Mon·Sat 6 am • 8 pm Sunday 8 am • 4pm

A Cut Above
Beauty llTannlnQ

Happy
Mother's Day

NEW SELECTION OF MOTHER'S DAY ITEMS
• Lots of Americana Home Decor
• Matchln(l rup, shadet, place mall,
valances
• Haskels &amp; basket sleeve•
• New candle line
• Angels
• Hand carved rsbbll.ll
J021t Main St.

I

Gift Certificates
make Momhappy!

253 N. Secoad Ave. Middleport, Ohio

~.·....

·-"' 7/.
~

Pomeroy, Ohio

992•1702
IJ.

.eDo~

949-1009 .

+ •"'-•••
umw
• ~-~t•.e AN~
• ~ s~"",. ·

0

• Dtlloner fraorance• avalloblt

"

u.
~u... o/ ""'"''·
.144 "'- '!'* " ,uc/,J

• ';.u4 ''""'

992·7696

¥ NIW Ttlllllrtd !IIIIa...
• Cake Cut OUb
' Frotled I'IIIGI'I

740·992·3148

1/uJ /,fUI(f "••
G 4pteJD/ prvJ Uf,
MDJW.t

Tlalrd St"""'

, . , ,.,. H

~J4Bf/JfJJ
C11111ifu t!t f}ijts

on lhe 'T' In Middleport

992·5827

MoiJ,,,," l&gt;Gf

112 E. Main Pomeroy, Ohio .

• Larenda Pursei
• Camille Beckman Lotion
• Boyds "Mom" Bears
• Assorted London Chocolates ·

992·2284

• Free lli)'MWIIY

•

$15999

110 W. Main

Shoe Place

~·

HARTWELL HaUSE -·

Starting at .

. Pabric Shop

INOELl

Dmi 't forget Mum!

•

Buy Your mom

s

Hqura;

Bring, Mom in for
. a special meal *'
"We Love Mom/" o ..

Middleport ·

. 228 WEST MAIN ST POMEROY

www.oourtatrttttrlll.com

220 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, ()H
(740) 992·9115

(140) HIJ.1009

RaciAl, Olaio

405 Purl St

Take mom to Crow's
for a delicious Meal
CROWS FAMILY
RESTAURANT

tiM
1930

. 992·6376

VAUGHAN'S

Middleport, Ohio

Don't Forget Mom
This Mother~ Day

.: ~~Hice Service &amp;

Collectibles

HART'S KOUNTRY KITCIIEN

992·3471

~~

'l'hur &amp; Hat~ 11m • 2 pm
131 t Nurth Sl!l.•tmd Mlddl~port, Ohio

•

992·9947

• ·992·3671

I

Give Mom a break
· for Mother's Day

I~

1?1 112 N. ltoond

· Antiques &amp;

~!II !!11~-Siii.!t1!_ii.iN • Sun 1-5

Pam&amp;Mandy

• Much mol"a

.by Hearth and
Candlelight ·

.

1) Can register at participating businesses only.
2) Must be at least 18 years of age.
3) No purchase necessary.
4) Employees of the Dally Sentinel &amp;.. their Immediate families are
not eligible.
5) Contest ends May 8th.
6) An entrant will be randomly drawn May lOth.
.
7) The winner will be contacted to schedule a promotional photo at
the business location from where the winning entry was drawn.

AHiiii/Jk

..J

742·7405

,~

School

Ftm l'l.AKb

Rutland, Ohio

3rd Strltt

949·2817 · Recine, Ohio

--- -··- --------- -

_

_.__

(740) 992-405!

Baker
•ue@ohlorl~erhean.com
SUIIID

__________

,

- ··--·

.....

�_Th_eo_an_ySen_tin_ei_ _____;;B;;;;;;;;;.J

•

the Bend

PI~'! AI

......., . . 10.2002

t

DEAR ABBY: I WlS inspi~ by
the "Old-Tim~r\ Bedtime" pot'IU
about the elderly couple who slept
in their birthday suiiS. It inspi~ me
to share what happened to me:
The poem about the couple
Sleepmg in the nude
Was really qu1te revellling
And it put me in the mood.
I Illked about it to my wife
And - tried it, bit by bit -:But with "br:~nch~s entwined:' we
quickly ~w
Our legs just didn't fit.
And then wh3t happened, Abby,
Is soml'thing that we :ill dread Our br:~nchl'S got so tangled
That we fell right out of bed! .
VIC MA8RY, LAKE
HAVASU CITY, ARIZ.

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
DEAR VIC:
· I don't doubt for a minute
What you've ~id to me is true I oruy hope the tWO of )IIlli
\Wren 't bruised all black and blue.
I offer tllis advice to yo u And t1ke it, please, I plead.
1b you and your beloved - ·
Don't try everything you read!

DEAR ABBY: My mother-in·
law has t\\10 family pictures of my
husband and his ex·wi~ hanging on
their living mom wall. We have been
llllrried £or neuJy three yean and
haw a 2·yeaMlld daughter, She is
starting to look at the pictures, We
would prefer that she not find out by
looking at pictures that her father
WlS married before, (There were no
children from the previous mar-riagt'.)
,
I told my husband that I would
like the photos to come down, He
apes, but his family doesn't deal
well with "family dynamics," He still
has not told his parents how I feel
about the photos, and we are sched·
uled to visit them again next month.
I trust your advice. - LOOKING

place which qualified him for ners in cosmetology were,
the stlte welding competition Brandi Hicks, first; Krista!
held in Columbus Friday.
Johnson, second; and He~ther
Also attending the stMe · PhAiin, third, The electronics
winners were Heather Fetty,
contest was Shawna Man Iey, first; Jason Miller, second, and
who holds the . office of CrystAl Jacks, third,
Southeast Regional Ambas- · The welding winners were
sador fcir VICA (Yocational Zach Butcher, fint;Josh Glue,
IndustriAl Clubs of America.) second; Zach Davis, third; and
At the regional contest win· Jameson Johnson, fourth.

FOil HELP. IN PBNNSYLVA- invite II\IHb on the "A" list. Unlbr-tunately, I mistakenly sent "st~ve th~
NIA .
DB.All LOOKING FOil date" cards to everyone on the "B?
HELP: Piclt up the phone and list,
:,.
explain to your in-laws that your
Is there any way I ctn undo tht
young dauptet is old enough to dallllge I've done1 I teel tertibl~
notice her father with another about it, - GUD.TY MOTHER
woman in the photoS _;_ but 100 OF THE BRIJ)B IN NS'W JBll·
.
young to undenblnd prior mar-- SEY
DEAR. GUD.TY M·O-B: There
riages. That\ a reasonable explant·
tion to justifY your request that the is no gracefUl way to "take back" thi
pictum be ~en down - at least implied invibltions .without offend~
ing people. Either take out a loan or
when you 'te visitinJ.
DEAR. ABBY: I am the mother downsiu the reception to •ccom~
:
o£ the bride and I just made.a whop· modare everyone,
per or a rnisbllte. When we were · (Paulittt Pltilllps aNJ her Jauglt~tr
planning the wedding, the groom\ }tiiNIII Pltil/lps Jllllff tht . pnuJotl~
parents pve me an ''A" and a "B" llb(f11il fiiH BurrH. Write Dta, Abby dl ·
ll\ltlt list, After budaetlng care£ully, wwm.DtarAbby.wm o, P.O. B~
we realited we could only afford to 69of40, l.m tlltgtlts, CA. 90069.)

1Ught to Read' observances
planned at Meigs
POMEROY - Meigs
Loc:U School District will
observing "Right 1b Read
Week," May 6-10.
Activities have been
planned at the elementary
schools, Meigs Middle
School and Meigs High
School to emphasise the
importance of reading, ·
At Bradbury, where the
theme will be "Chocolate:'
daily trivia, crossword puzzles, chocolate activities, and
vlewings of "'J!'illie Wonka
and .the Chocolate Factory"
will be f'eatilred.
At Harrisonville, the
theme will be "Reading and
Math Under the Big 1bp"
with math trivia questions,
clown dre11·up clay, clown
, art, circus music, school
. wide re~dlng projects, and
popcorn and mo\tie treats
included.
·
Middleport's theme. will
be "Reading is Out OfThis
World" wilh. daily trivia,
alicm binao, lllien movies,
games, Mark Wood Magic
Show, "Reading is Pun,"
·door decorating contest,
.and gueas the UPOs in the
jar included as a part of the
observance,
Pomeroy's theme will be
"Read Acrosa America
Prom Sea 1b Shining Sea.''

RIGHT TO RIAD -The Melli Local School Dlltrlct will be
.Obaervlnl May 8-10 a• "RIIht To Reed Weak, • Meklna up
the dlatrlct'a plannlnll committee are, left to rlllht, front,
Liz Story, Melli Local Superintendent Bill Bucl&lt;ley, Aiel• ·
tent Superintendent Wendy Haler, and Barbers Crow; and ·
back row, Jennifer Hoffman, Pam Vollt, Kim Berrett, Bryan
Zirkle, Ron DreKiar, Tereae Carr, Paula Chancey, Linde
McManla,· Shirley VanMeter, Kathy Seraent, Not pictured,
Janet Hoffman end Beth Leweon~ (Tony Leech)
There will be questions of aasorted theme days, and
the day, book judging, book meals that coordinate with
fllir, family fun night May 9, the theme
story telling, and Drop
At the Melp Middle
Everything . and Read School the theme II
(D,E.A.R.) each day.
. "Reading America's Free·
'1ourney Through The dom" featuring patriotic
Rain Porest With Reading posters and bookmarks,
And Math" is the theme of door decorating, writing,
Rudand's obsemnce, A reading, sharing poetry,
canned food drive, decora. and Native American
tive door contest, creative dances
writing with Dr. John
"Prom Beads to Bytes"
Becker, drawing rain forest will be the theme used at
animals will be features of Melp High School. There
the week's observance,
will be ·a uguen the numSalisbury will have a ber of beads" contest,
"Safe-Read" silent reading, problem aolvlng, computer ·
decoralive door contest, and Internet leuons.

COIMITOLOGY WINNIRI - Brandl Hicks, lett, placed first In tha coamatoloiY competition,
Krlatal Johnson, center took second, .and Heather Phalln, third,

*
""'IIII
Democrats: Vote * *

Dr. Eric Hasemeier
for Ohio House of Representatives
EduCitlon
•

• Doctor ol Ott..,elhk MadlciM
• Mftltn olllcMIMia -UIIIIIIM
• ........ olldeftct 1111...........

Current Position•

• OWMt IIIIi MNkll OIIICIIi ol ·
011 callllldlcll AllodiiM, - . OH
• CNnlcll Pawlly, O,U..C,O.M.
'

TuEsi:A\Y's

HIGHLIGHTS

·
WINNIRI - Placlnll In the elec:troillc.a contest were left to rlllht, flrst to -third
reepeotlvely, Heather Fetty, Jason Miller and Cryatal Jacks.
·
.

· Indians waive
OF Cordero
CLEVELAND (AP)
Outfielder Wil Cordero was
released Monday by the
Cleveland Indians; who were
tOrced to eat his $:4 million
~ontract after they couldn't
trade him.
Cordero was designated for
. assignment last week. He bat·
. ted .222 (4-for-18) with one
RBI in six games this season
tOr the Indians, who were
reluctant to play th~ 30-yearold because of his lack of produaivity.
"He didn't really fit into our
pkture anymore," said lndiam
manager Charlie Manuel.
Cordero, who was in his
second stint with the Indians,
signed with Gieveland as a free
agent In 1999 after playing for
Montreal, Boston and· the
Chicago White Sox.
Pittsburgh traded Cordero
back to Cleveland in 2000, but
he never !!')t it going upor his
return to the Indians. He
struggled while adjusting to
being a part-time player after
starting for most of hi! career.
Cordero· broke his hand at
the ehd of the 2000 season.
· Last year, he batted just .250
- . his lowest · average since
1993. During one stretch, he
went 86 at-bat! without dri·
ving in a run.

.

""*

ctnllnjwy tt!NtMI'I HfiiiiUI,
Plllladtolp~lo, '"

Dr. Eric HaMmeler
Leldtf'lhlp Experience

F1mlfv Ufe

Dt. HIM,..,.r Mt IM~tliHf; l . .rtiiiCC

AI liMa, DI. IIIIIMIIII's IMIIiy
-'Ill tlllll will, ~. IIIIi

.,_--hoot

IINIIMw-. AIIItNitlnfiWo

rftlllltr

..,._AIIIIfliTirMir,

IMIIIflllt WINIMI, ll'ttllillo...... JoN

WIIIIIMMIIt, - llflolloll .-N~r,
.......................... 'AONt.

Vote May 7.

Elect Dr. Eric Hasemeler Be
Put a doctor In the house I
WILDING WINNIRI - Mel&amp;• students wlnnlnll In tha weldlnll competition at the hllh achool
recently were, lett to rl&amp;ht. Jameson Johnson-, fourth: Zach Davia, third ; Jo1h Glaze, eecorid;
and Zaoh Sutohar, flrst.
·
I

•

'

•

Will .

The Spartans loaded the bases in the lint inning
when Mike Hawk singled to left betweeh twO free
passes issued by Knapp. Knapp fanned Jake Hale to
record the second out of the inning before Justin
·Brooks ripped a double to left scoring twO runs.
. The Spartan offense was held in check the rest of
the way however as three of the .four hits collected

Meigs baseball
sectionals announced
WELU.TON -The se..1ional pairin~ for the
area Divi1ion II high !Chool basl.-ball sectionals Wl.'l'e
announced.
Mei~ 6-10 when the brndu:ts wcre picked, travels to Gailia Academy (8-5) on May 13.
Meanwhile, Rivl:r Vall&lt;')' (4-1C.) travcl1 to Ath&lt;'llS
fl-11) on May 9 with the winnc'T playing at Wam'tl
(9-7) on May 13.
The winn&lt;'T of the sectional coumamc'tlt will play
the winner of the ~ sectional May 21 at Unioro.

PluH IH Knipp, 12

BY &amp;con WoLF!

OVPCORRESPONDENT

-

MERCERVILLE -With
four runs in the tilth inning,
Wahama pulled away from
· South GaUia in high Khool
bil!lebaU action Monday, 13-5.
The White Palcoru only led
6·2 going into the top of the
fifth.
Brandon Caldwell pitched
the complete game for the
RebeiJ, striking out 12, while
allowing 12 hiti and eight
walks in the loss.
At the plate for South Gallia,
Jake Workman had a triple,
while Caldwell ~nd r&gt;ustin
Halley each had base hits.
Anthony Mitchell went 3.
for-5 and scored four ruru·fur
the White P:Ucom, while Ryan
Mitchell WlS 2-for.&lt;l and lan
Smith w.as 2-for~3.

·Falcon -rls
. sweep Rebels
ME.I~CERVILLE

- Hot
off a doubleheader win over
Wirt County Friday, the
Wahama Lady Palcons ktpt
the aluminum batt cracking
Saturday with a doubleheader
romp pver the Lady Rebel. of
South Gallia, 26-1, foUowed
by a I 4-.5 comfortable second
game wm.

Colittl of OIIIOjlllllk lilldlclllt
• PrHidlttt 1114 CIO of Ooctor'1

"""""a-

ROCK SPRINGS - Senior hurler Darrick
Knapp pitched six shut out inninQll and got plenty of
defemive help from his teammates as the MciQll
Marauders posted a 4-2 win over the Alexander
Spartans at Meigs High School Monday night.
Knapp allowed twO first inning runs and then shut
out the Spamru the rest of the MY in posting the

by the Spartans were infield singles.
·
Freshman pitcher Jake Hale through 27, innings
held the Marauders hitless.
Jimmy Smith reached base on a walk to open the
third for Mei~ but was cut down,attempting to steal
by catcher L.C. Grisby. Jacob Sn~ith got the fint hit
of the night for the Marauders when he singled to
left with two out in the third.
Chris,Smith followed with a smash up the middje
that seemed denincd for centerfield but second baseman Wayne Dicken made a great diving stop and
Oipped to shortstop Terry Holbert for the final out of
the inning.
Knapp cruised through the third and fourth
innings as he sat down all six batters he faced. The

Wah11111 blasts
South Glllla

· • AIIIIM ·COCHity cer• Altodatt Dtlllll Ohio llllnnltr.

rx Rltt uclllllk
• Dtuolop11 of..tf'1

Knapp KO's Spartans in Marauder win
' BY JIM louLIIY
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Prevloua Poaltlona

1

PapB1

.•• '

Meigs students excel
at VICA competition
POMEROY Meigs
Career and Technical Center
students at Meigs High School
competed in the District Vica
USA Skills Competition
recently with one student,
bch Butcher, advancing to
the regionAl welding contest.
Ar that competition held at
the Washington Community
College, he finished in third

Meigs, Southern tnuk results, Page B2
R.lo softball splits rwlrtbill, Page BJ •
Ohio State linebacker charged, Alge B3

.''

ne

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

• TAMl'A, Fla. (AP) - Darryl Strawberry was tentcnced
tD HI montlu in prison Monday for violating probation, a
punishment . he
calmly
accepted by iruUting. "My life
it going in the right direction.''
Dressed in an orange jail·
l~tued uniform, the formet
major league star uld he
would "just like to get this
behind me."
"I would likt to do my 18
months and move un:' Strawberry uid. "I don't want tO
havt dili over my head."
In the Iaten in a long lilt of
his lc!gal problems, the o!Oyear-old Strawberry was
orderni behind ban for viO·
latlng probation for the sixth
time foUowing hiJ 1999 conviction on drug and solicitation of pi'Oititution charge..

COMIIACKIJt- P!Ulher Jose RQo acknowledges the crowd at the start of the Reds' game against the Giants, ·
Saturday In Clnclnniltl. He pitched abllmpreeslve Innings In the rain, beating San Francisco 84. (AP) · ·

Rijo hasn't.
lost knack for winning
CINCINNATI (AI') - Jote Rijo gets the sign, them with a ncow repertoi re and the same old flair.
dmps hi1 head, twiJtl his body and goes into the ume
"He topped out at 82 mph. out there, but it waJ the
deliberate motion that he used when h·e W;H the same old Rijo," former u:ammatc ll..eggie Sanden
1990 World Series MVP.
said.
Once the ball leaves his right hand, the simibrities
Rijo can no longer throw the hilling fastball or the
hard-breaking
1lider that W;H one of the lx.&gt;tt in the
e lid .
"He has the same windup and the u me arm speed, pme. A few weeks from his 37th birthday, Rijo lw
but different velocity" Giants manager Dusty Baktr to rely on a decent forkball, a f;Htball that leav~.,; the'
uid.
.
'
(lo;ubr gun bored and a slider that lw loo mou of it~
That's not surpriling. Five operationt since_I~ snarL
, .
,.
_
hav&lt;~ carved a prominent 4-inch scar on the s1de of
Usmg h11 w11J, RIJO nuw It work.
hit right elbow and dranuticaUy affected what he can
"He's not a~~minant ;H he wa~ back th~?· .~' he
do with a bmball.
.
sure can pitch. shortstop IJarry l:arkm grd. It• great
Remarkably, it hasn't changed what he can do with co see. He's a danic example of how yo~ don't have
a hitter. Seven yeafl after he was the Reds' best pitch- tO throw 99 mph to get guy• out. You JUS! have to
er, llijo is ftal'ting again and getting them out. 1 pitch."
.
·
He pitched six impressive inning~ i~ the ':'in SatAlter ~ layoff so long that ~e got a Hall of Fame
urday, beating San FranciiCO 8-4 while getting one vote, ltiJO 1m do~c wmeth1.ng rare fo~ a powtr
ovation after another fium an ~ndianted crowd. He pitcher. He has remvented hmll&lt;!lf, S''tnng by on
1w made ~0 starts in the last week and won both of guile and guu inste:ul of a good fallball.

RACINE ---: Scoring Ieven run! in tt.e
third inning, the Southern Lady Tornadoes
poned a stunning 9-2 up1et victory over the
Ea1tern Lady Eagles M9nday night in a .
Hocking Divi5ion Tri-Valley Conference
roftball pme in Racine's Slar Mill Park .
Southern is now 9-5 overall and Eastern is.
13-3 overall.
!'itching and defenliC proved to be the
name of the game, as Southern's Rachel
Chapman Kattercd four hits and the Southern defense made just two crron ro &lt;'lltablifh
the tempi&gt; of the pme. · What pushed
South·crn over th4' hump were &lt;cvcral
momentum building ibig playsi from iu
defense."
The lint such play came in the first inning
when Sandy Powell reached on an error,
then Southern catCher Katie Sayre gunned
l!owcll down with time to spare .U siJc
·attempted to !teal second base. Urigctte
llarnes made some heads-up plays ar shortstop, but one in particular wa~ an inning
ending double play to end the Eastern sixth.
UarneJ leaped high to map a Jenny Arms
line drive then throush to fint to nail Nikki
Phillips who had wandered nff the bag.
Emily Hill made s~-veral big pla)-s in the
outfield a.nd the reJt of the Southern infield,
·consisting of Brookt K i~er at third, Deana
Pullins at second and Ashkoy ll..ouJh at fim
all made !K.:Yeral big plays.
Eanern Kored lint when Alysfa Holter
walked, J&lt;'ltica .Dillon reached on ari error,
and Holter Korcd on the on-rthrow at tim
base. the score 1-0.
Southern scored two runt in the second
wh.-n Brook~ Kisc:r led niT with a single off
Eastern •tarter Katie Robertwn. Ashley
Ilou•h doubled KiiCr home with SoutherniJ
first run, then alter a strikeout freihman
outfield.:r Mirinda J&gt;avis singl.:d home
Roush with the tic breaker. 2- L Southern
went on to load the ba"-&gt;t, but a all third
strike ended the SHS rally.
Eanern ti.-d the ;core· in the third inning
when with two out Sandy Powell doubled,
and Janet C..laway followed with a booming
triple to bring Powell home. llarn(J nude a
good play on a hard-hit HoltL-r ball co end
the inning, the ~re 2-2,
·
Southern unloaded in the third inning.
when Rachel Chapman rnched on an
· error. Kiwr walked. and A•hlry ll..ou•h
, ........ ~a..... l l . li

.

Meigs girls defeat Alexander in league win
IIY JIM

1111••

rNP COIIREtPOHOEHT .

Meig~' Lady Maraudffl cue .their
playing tlme in half after a three hour
win in their last outing lJ they bested
the Alexander Spartaru ~-2 bringing
their rerord within Tri- Valley Conference play to 9-3 (10·7 overall).
With the lou, Alexand« now IUndJ
at 3-7 and 6-12. Despite chilly ternperaturet, both tumt played a fairly
noenly matched JFII11e.
Laura Canurllury led otT tOr the
Alex nine with a tinl!le co lefi: adv.ancing co tecond on a tte~. jnfia jordan
drew base on balls then ara Kau6nan
wn sale on a fidder'• 'hoke 101lth

Canterllury being nailed trying co
reach third.
With two on, a ground ball and a
saikeout ended the Spartan threat. In
Alexandn's portion of the ~econd and
third inningt, the Sparuru garnm:d a
sinJile and double, producing no rum.
After I!Ointl down in order in the
lower tteond. Curie Abbott kd otT
the third with a walk.
Ashley Burbridge · beat .out an
Infield tingle then Alicia Werry hammered a double tO deC'J' ldt plating
Abbott and Burbri• . Werry tcored
on an error giving the Marauden a
tfuee run advant:.ap. Alexander cut
into the lead in the fourth. lf, wich

one out. Miranda McLaughlin w;H
ufe on an error, ~eoring the Sparun'f
liBt run following jmic Whid.:rtch'•
triple. .
.
A umlicc by Ehm Conover ""''
Whidar:th home for the ~econd Spartan run. Mindy Chancry singled for
the Maroon and Gold m the fourth
and continued co tecond a1 the
deknte Wal caught napping.
W1th Jaynu IJ.Ms ~ the plate,
Ch.lncey Waf cut down rn an attempt
to 5tul third. Davil then doubled bur,
W;H left.wanded a1 two lly \J.alls m •'ed
me mmng.
.
.
The Mauuder•, behmd Jetfer1i
pitching, held the Spartant in check m

the 'final three &amp;ameli allowing only
four banen co re.Kh baw.
Followin~ a li'uitk... lilt~. Mrip
~ a ,PaJr of run• m thnr h.llf of
mmng fiX. W11h one .JW.ay, Dutcher
ripped one to dcC'J' center, wmding
up on third followtng a collis1on W1th
the second faCker. Butcher croMed the
plate when Chancey reached ufely
with the final Mnp run cormng a
the rnult of a ucnlice ground ball
from IJ.M~,
Credtt ii due- both te~m• fOJ" putting
fonh wch j9)0d dfort,Jdf.-n, 111 J"Cktng up another wm, ~ up \C\'m hll~

PI•••
...
Mda;J. n
·,

'

�. ... . .
P-ae B 2 • The Dally Stntlnel

Kn•pr.

HIGH SCHOOL TRACK &amp; FIELD

Meigs, Southern compete at
Federal Hocking J.R. Ogg meet
IV JIM lowlY
(Warren) 38·6 1/2, 5. Mlchatl Hunttr (Fed&lt;lral
SENTINEL CORRESPONO£NT
Hockl"9) 37-7, e. Rob Slgltr (Ntlaonviiii•York)
n·:r·
37~ 112
·• STEWAt, -The Meig! Marauder 110-METER HIGH HURDLES • 1. Joe Eckert
track and field teams competed in the (Morgan) 17.5, 2. Greg Bray (Ftderal Hocking)
21st annual J.R.. Ogg Invitational Meet 18.0, 3. Hickory Oglt (Logan) 18.1. 4 . Kanton
t F d J H k'
H' h S h00 1
Butcher (Fecleral Hocking) 18 . ~. 5. CMa Jtfftrt
·a e era
oc mg ag
c
on (A1htnt) 111.0. e. Andy Hlckerton (Morgan) 19.2
S
rday.
II)O..METER DASH • 1. Dartk Olllnn (Fidlral
a'he Marauder boys placed eighth in HOCking) 12.1. 2. Tyaon Lte (Mtlge) 12.2, 3.
the team scores while the girls finished Chrla Young (Athlnt) 12.3. 4 .. Sttphen Rtecler
fifth. Top indivuial perC.ormances r 0 r the (Fort Frye) 12.3, 5. Jaoon Moade (Ntlaonvllle·
"
York) 12.4, e. Joth Sturgell (Logan) 12.5
Marauder men· were, Evan Shaw who t,eoo-METER RUN-!. Ltt Botratler (Trlmblt)
placed third in the discus. with Jeremy 4:53.2, 2. Dylan Blrt (Athtna) 4:54.1!, 3. Halnea
n
h fi · h' · li'h 1
CMorgan) 5:03.0. 4. J.D. Depoy (Federal Hock"- 0 ~ S
ana mg m lit Pace.
·lng) a:04.0, &amp;. Juatln Hamilton (Warren) 5:05.8,
,Ntck McLaughlin placed third in the e. Grilli Huck (Warrtn) 5:27.5
shot put competition . Tyson Lee .4x100·METER RELAY · 1. Ntltonvllle-York
grabbed second in the 100 meter dash (BrandOn Malden, Gary Edwarda, Jaaon Meade,
. h . h
(
d h L . Blake Klint) -48.0, 2. Federal HOCking ~8.3. 3.
an d 11xt an t e 40 J meter ai · ee Morgan 49.5, 4. L911an 411.e, 8. Athene 80.3, e.
layton placed fifth in the 3200 meter Fort Frye 50.8
400-METEA DASH • I, Oertk Quinn (Federal
run .
83.0, 2. Chrlt YOYng (Athene) 55.2, 3.
For the M~rauder girls, Brook Bolin Hocking)
tan Butchtr (Federal Hocklng) ·57.8, -4. William
tini ~hed lint an the. 300 meter hurdles Welleprlng (Warrtn) 88.0, a. Jaaon Lewey (Fort
and second in the 100 meter hurdles Frye) 58.8. e. Tyaon Ltt (MIIge) 58.8
RUN • I. Brad Glldlrt (Trimble)
while lini1hing fifth in the 200 meter 8oo-METER
2:09.4, 2. Erie Cornwell (Athtnl) 2:14.3, 3.
dash .
Andrew Chlkl (Athent) 2:14.e, 4. DerriCk Tucker
Shannon Soul1by finished fint in the (Logan) 2:15.3, e. J.D. Depoy (Fidlrat Hocking)
400 meter dash and fourth in the high 2:1e.1. e. Halntt (Moraan) 2:18.3
300-METER INTERMEDIATE HURDLES • 1.
jump. Emily Story placed second in the Tony Bltvlnt (Warrtn) 45.3, 2. C.J. Wllliamt
(Feclerat Hocking) -45.7, 3. Joe Eckart (Morgan)
1600 meter run.

21tt Annual J.ll. OW
Track and l'lalcllnvltlllonal.
IOYI DIVIIION
TEAM SCORES · I. Fldtral Hocking 1111, 2.
Athtne 87, 3. Logan 75, 4. Morgan 81. 5. Ntl·
aonvllle-vork 51 , 8. Warren 38, 7. Trimble 28, 8.
Melga 25. 9. Fort Frye 12. to. Southtrn o
HIGH JUMP • I. Clayton Hall (Logan) 5-8, 2.
Sam Fluharty (Fed&lt;lral' HOCking) 5-8, 3. Rttldy
Cook (Logan) 5-8, 4. Gary Edwarcle (Naloonville·
Vork) 5-4, 5. Brandon Malclen (Ntlaonvlile·Yorlc)
5·4, e. tan Butcller (Federal Hocking) 5·2
LONG JUMP • 1. Srlndon Mlldln (NeltorwllltYork) 17-6 114, 2. Blakt .KIInt (Ntlaonvlllt·York)
17·2 112, 3. C.J. William• (Feclerat Hocking) 11111, 4. Ian Butcher (Federal Hocking) 15-4 314, 5.
B.J. Hughes (Lagan) 15·10 314 1 8. Alan Afklnaon
(Fort Frye) 15-9 114
POLE VAULT· I. John Huntabtrgar (Logan) 12·
3, 2. Sam Fluharty (Fidtrll Hocking) 10-8, 3,
Dana Vales (Federal Hockl"9) 10.0, 4. Evan Dill
(Atllene) 9-6, 5. Trtnt VohO (Warren) P.O. 8. Ailll
Conatlef (Aihent) 9.0
4X800-METER RELAY • 1. Atllene (Oyfln 84rt,
Andrew Chlkl, John Kulchar, Erie Cornwall)
8:52.4, 2. Trimble 8:53.2, 3. Warren 11:09.1, 4.
Logan 9:30.9, 5. Morgan 9:31 .2, e. Ntltorwlllt·
York 11:64.1
DISCUS THROW · 1. Tyler Edgar (Logan) 13111, '2. An4Y Hartl (Morgan) 127·1, 3. Even .SIIIw
(MIIgt) 128-2, 4. Rob Sigler (Neltorwllla-York)
123-8. 5. Jertmy Rou•ll (Melga) 123-1, 8. J.D.
Depoy (Federal Hocklrl(l) II o-2
SHOT PUT· I. Andy Hartl (M&lt;Ifgan) 43-2 112, 2.
John Slurgell (Logan) . 41-lO 1/4, 3. Nick
McLaughlin (MIIgt) 40-10 31&gt;4, 4 . Mlchaal FHnn

ffilt• Pl&amp;t I

York) 35·8, . 2. Jordan Battman (Nelaonvllle·
York) 32•e, 3. Tabllha Van Dyke (Btlprt) 30-8
11~ . •· Shtlla Gllchrlat (Ftderal Hocking) 311-7
31~. 6. Tiffany HYbb (Fort Fryt) 29-e 11.-. 8.
Mykal• Staphlna (Btlpre) 28·8
HIGH JUMP · 1. Brittany Flowtte (Federal Hock·
lng) ~-10, 2. Canlt Roblntttt (Trimble) !1·10, 3.
Cartua Miller (Fort Frye) 4·8, • · Shannon Soull·
by (Melgt) 4·8. 5. Jordan Bateman (NtlaonvlUt·
York) •·e, 8. Jtulca Cranford (Ntlaonvlllt·York)
4·2
4r800.METER RELAY - I, Federal Hocking
(Emilia Vtrglntlll, Krlatl Ochn, Amy Stovtr,
Megan Ltuachll) 11 :11 .2, 2. Warrtn 11:41 .8, 3.
Fort Fry• 12:09.7, 4. Btlpre 13:00.8
tOO·METEj'l HIGH HURDLES· t. Taylor Carr
(Btlprt) 1H, 2. Brook Bolin (Melga) 17.8, 3.
Carlua Millar (Fort Fiya) 111.4, •· Emily Hill (Nil·
aonvllle-York) Hl.4, 5. Roxanne Burnt CWarrtn)
19;8, e. Rachel Bright (Fort Frye) 20.3
4x200·METEA RELAY · I. Ntltonvlllt·York
(Jeatlca Cranford, Aohley Po.well, Emily Hill,
Tmany McDonald) 1:59.1, 2. Ftclerat Hocking
2:05.2, 3. Fort Frye 2:08.8, 4 , Warrtn 2:07,3
1,800-METER RUN · 1. Krllty Ochll (Fed&lt;lral
Hocking) 5:41.2, 2. Emily Story (Mtlgt) 8:11 .e,
3. Amy Slcvtr (Fidtrll Hocking) 8:13.11, 4. Alii·
eon Ktnntberg (Ftderal Hocking) 8:24.7, a.
Alana Comba (Fort Fryt) 8:24.9, 8. Zena Grecnl
(Warren) e:31 .0
1(10·METER DASH · I. Ranclee Patton (Net·
aonvllla·YOrlc) 13.3, 2. Tiffany Hubb (Fort Frye)
13.8, 3. Trudy Matlal (Ftderal Hocking) 14.1, 4.
Roxanne Burnt (Warran) 1.-.3, 5. Athlly Powall
(Ntlaonvlllt·York) 14.4, e. Tiffany Glldert (Trim·
bit) 14.4 · ·
·
48.3,-4.HiekoryOgle(Logan)~7.1,5 . Grtg8ray · 400-METER DASH· 1. Shannon Soul.by
(Federal Hocking) 47.4, 8. Bttphtn ANder (Fort (MIIge) 1:08.4, 2. L-.lty Vannoy (Fort Frye)
Frye) 47.7
•
1:07.3, 3. Megan Leutehll (Ftdtral .Hocking)
21)0..METER DASH • I. Dtrtk Quinn (Federal 1:08.3, 4 .. Santana Barrarlo (Btlprt) 1:11 .1, 5.
Hocking) 24.4, 2. Blake Klint (Ntltorwllla·York) Erlh Ytrke (Warren) 1:12.2. e. Ltah Lackey
25.3. 3. Chrit Young (Athena) 2&amp;.3. ~ - Mat1 (Ftderal Hockl"9) I :t 3.5
Brokaw (Morgan) 25.e, a. Juon Maadt (N41· •xiOO·METER RELAY • 1. Ntlaonvllle•York
aonvlile·York) 25.8, e. Mlehall P1rry (Federal (Jtlllel Cranford, Tiffany McDcntld, Emily Hill,
Hocking) 2e.o
. Ranclee Patton) 54.8, 2. Fort Frye 58.4, 3. Btl·
3,200.METER RUN • 1, 0yt1n Slrt (Aintnl) prt 58.8, .-. Federal HOCking 59.7, 5. Warrtn
10:49.9, 2. John Kutcher (Athtnt) 11:02.3, 3. 1:02.3
Ky~ Witton (Morgan) 11 :30.8, 4. Brad Arnold 300·METER LOW HURDLES · I. Brook Bolin
(Warren) 12:00.0. &amp;. L11 L•ron (Metge) (Metge) &amp;1.7, 2. T•ylor Carr (Btlpre) .52.3, 3.
12:04.7, II. Grtgory Huck (Warrtn 12:12.1
Rachel Brlghl (Fort Frye) 57.2, 4. Ltura Wigal
4X400·METER RELAY· 1. Fldtrll Hocking (C.J. (Federal Hocking) 58.0, &amp;. Jordan Bittman (Nil·
Wllllamt, fan ·Butchtr,' Mlohlll Parry, Derek aonvllla-York) 88.7. 8. Nloole Smltlr(Btlpre) 8U
Oulnn) 3:40.0, 2, Atllene 3:58.6, 3. Logan 3:58.0, 800-METER RUN • 1. Krlttl Oehll (Fecleral
4. Warren 4:01 .4, 5. Nelaonvlllt-York 4:09.4, 8. Hocking) 2:38.~. 2. LIIIIY Vannoy (Fort Frye)
Morgan 4:12.7
.
2:47.7, 3. Emilia Vergtnelll (Federal Hocking)
GIIILI DIVItiON
2:50.7, 4 . Aehley Perry (Warren) 2:82.3, 8. Kalil
TEAM SCORES • I. Flcleral Hocklng 120, 2. Dowler (Warren) 2:55.2, e. Tracla Wtblltr
Neltorwllle·York 100.8, 3. Fort Frye 110, 4. Belpre (Trimble) 2:67.4
84, 5. Warren 50, e. Mllgt 42, 7. Trlmblt ltU, 200-METER DASH • 1.. Ranclee l"alton (Nil·
8. Soutllem 3
. aonvllle-York) 28.0, 2. Tiffany Hubb (Fort Frye)
LONG JUMP • I. Randle Pallon (Neloonvllla- 28.2, 3. Tiffany Glldell (Trlmblt) 2U, 3. Athley
York) 111-7114,2. Sarah Rlchlrdl (Fort Fryt) 14· Powtll (Ntltonvllle·Vork) 211.8, 4. Brook l!lolln
3 1/2, 3. Taylor Carr (Belpre) 14-1/2,-4. Aoxanr11 (Melga) 30.5. 5. Erin Ytrlcl (Warren) 30.7
Burna (Warren) 13-1 314, 8. Brltllny FlOWers 3,200.METER RUN • 1. Krletl Ochll (Federal
(Ficleral Hoeldng) 12·11, 8. Alltley Powtll (Nel· Hockl"9) 12:34.0, 2. Amy Stovtr (Ficleral Hock•
aonvii~·York) 12·10 31-4
lng) 13:-48.8. 3. Alllaon Klnnel!trg (Wirren)
DISCUS THROW ·I. Mylclla Sltohent (Belpre) 14:05.4, &gt;4. Zana Grtcnl (Warren) 14:&gt;44.8, 5.
108-8, 2. Sllella Gllchrlll (Ficleral Hocldng) 104· Amy Lee (Sou1ham) 17:53.7, e. Sunn lrauer
1, 3. Wl1llllly Mlldtn (N41101M1a-Vorll) rt-o, -4. (Sou1ham) 19:34.3
Tabitha Van Oyka (Btfpra) g.f-8, 5. Leura Blair . 4X400·METER RELAY • 1. Neleonvllle·York
(Warran) 86-11, e. KaiMy Lack.,- (Fidlrll Hoell- (Emily Hill, Tiffany McDonald, Chlilll Grimm,
lng) 70--1
Jlltlea Cranford) 4:6S.&gt;I. 2. Fort Frye 4:5e.8. 3.
SHOt.. PUT • 1. Whllnly Mlldln . (Ntloonvll,._ Flclerll Hocking 5:10.0, 4, Btlp;t5:1e.1

LAGUNA NIGUEL, ~if. (1\P) -·An innobehalf of aclmf Tawney
Kitaen on Monday, for aDept domatic violence
injury to her hubnd, Cleveland lndims pitcher
Chuck Finky.
Kitaen, 40, who appeared in the movia "Bachelor v~rty" and "California Girh" was flO( in
coun when her :urorney, Bblr Berk, made the
irmocmr plea. Superior Court )udp P3mela Des
let aJune 3 pretrial hearing on_ two mildemeanor
charges,~ injury on a spouse and bauay.
Police who mpOnded to the couple'J Newport Beach home April1 said they - CUCJ and
bruilef on Finley, who formerly pirched tDr the

Atuheim An,ls.
Berk declined comment Monday on published
1epoi1J that Kiraen lllld voluntarily dJecked into
a 30-day reh:abiliwi011 trealiJient program last
week, reWed to a gl'OWing addiction
two
yeao to pn!llaiprion mediation for deprntion
and mignina.
A maximum 5eiltence upon conviction in the
two charges would be one year in jail and $6,000
in liiiCI.
. .
Finley, 39, 6led divorce ppm in 0rm,
County Superior Court on April4 and obalned
a tempor.u y racraining order preventing Kitaen
fioin seeing him.

over

,
Maraudeu scored all the
runs that they would need
in the bottom of the fourth
inning.
Buzz Fac:kler walked to
open the Inning: John Stanley singled to left putting
two .men on with nobody
·out. With one out, Brandon
Ramsburg singled to center
scorin11 Fackler. Stanley and
Ramsburg •dvanced to
third and second respectiveJy on a wild pitch. David
McClure grounded to third,
the Spartan third baseman
threw to first where the ball
was dropped scorins Stanley.
Ramsburg scored when
McClure stole second and
the throw went into centerfield. Jimmy Smith then
brought McClure · home
when he lined a lingle to
right giving the Marauders
a 4-2lead.
·
Knapp got some help
from hit teammates in the
cop of the fifth. Third baseman Jimmy Smith made a
beautiful diving catch of a
Dicken fly ball in foul terri·
tory lading in a qu·agmire
cauJed by the weekend
rains.
Mike Hawk reached on
an infield single, but was
doubled off first when
fackler snared a Warren
line ilrive to end the
inning. Fackler jull missed
a round tripper in the bottom of the fifth when he
belted a double otT the base
of the centerfield fence.
·
The Marauders weren't
able to push him acrou and
went to the tixth w\th a 42 lead. Knapp made a huge
defensive play in the top of
the •ixch. With one out

Bu~~:her

tripled and tingled, Davit and Werry
doubled and Chancey and Butbridge singled
tDr the Maroon and Gold. Canterbury led the
over seven innings, struck out (we and pe up Spa rum with two Jinllltt jorcbn and Whida~~:h
doubled while )erma William~, Kaulinan and
only two walla.
.
The Marauders had one miKue and·Krand- Conover chipped in with a base hit apiece.
Meigs wilf ir.avel to Welltcon on Wednesday
td only two playen. Kritcy TuUiut, on the
JliOUnd for Alex, fanned two; waJ1ed one while and if td!tdultd to face Ja.:bon in upcoming
the ceam had cwo emm. Seven Spattam were toumammt play.

,.
reached on an error to load the bates. Britrany Denny reached on a lielderit choice
with Chapman out on a force at home.
Mirinda Davis then stepped to the piau (or
. another single UJ bring home Kiter widl
· balft ttiiJ loaded. Emily Hill walked to foru
home a run, thtn Deana PuWm had a two
run Ji.,gle. Barilef walked UJ again load the
·balft; then Katie Sayre and Chapman walked
to force home two more rullf, the fCOI'e 9-2.
.Eattem threatened by pu«ina the finf two
on in the foonh inning on a J-ica Dillon
tingle and ·a Nikki Pbilli~ double. Jenny
Nlflf was out on a S-3 pnd out from
Barna to Ashley Rou.h. Routh then tired
home to
Dillon at tJu, plate :II JCat;e Sayre
held on in a ~ng-bmg pby at the plate.
AlthouJh there was plenty of action, thece
wiU no more fCOI'ing. Southern loaded the
bate~ in the fourth, ben three lly ouu and
good deUiut . tiom the £agla ended the

sec

rally.

'

~

..,,.,

.

011
0 2 1

·--

000 0
000 •

.......

_,..,.,.,. 0"111 Nl Mil -

- 241
- ' . 'l
,_,. IP- Rotc - .

. . . . 5 (' . . . . . . . . . . . _

•

•

Day

(Your
Mother's
Name)
Love Terry,
Kelll &amp;. Justin

Mother's Name)

Love Terry,
Kelll &amp;.
justin
DeadUneforthfsSp•CialMc.aNr'JDayTriiMMis.Tuesdoy,Moy7,2002

Fill out the form below ond drop off the payment to
The DollySentlnei"Molher's Doy''
111 Court
OH 45769
3.00

______________~------------

~~e(sName

Your Name (s): - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - YourAddr~s ~------------~----------------

City, State, Zip ------------------------

Phone# _____________________________
Ads Must Be Prepaid
..... CblcU AviiiiiM to: The

•

Sentinel

or

had the big hit, rippina a ~dur­
ina double to ld fitld, l~nney and hi\-.
ley Phipps lbo added RBI slna'M In the
innina.
On the mound, jmica Ttmpl11 (S-8)
was mMttlful. The senior &amp;on1 1\icllwood, Ohio went the distlll't"t-, llivina up
only two hits and one run. Temple Abo
fanned two and walked N.'\.l'Ilngy Laudermltt was 1-lbr-3 with
two runs scored and Dennty was 2-lbr-2
with a run scored and an 1\UI. ·
Denaye Hilty took th11 IOM for the
Lady Jaekl!u, yielding seven hits and seven
runs In 3 2/3 innlnjp.
Rio Grande huds to olumbus to fuce
Ameriean Mideast Conftl'llnce leAder
Ohio Dominican on 1\1esdAy. Game time
I&amp; sot for 3 p.m.
.
tr

DIAMI
-"~
..10..11
DOl

u~

IIMr;tlllt
-..• \
_..
. at - ·DIA"I

M'-"'M.._IIIl
..... ot "''....,.. "
~ .. " lwtll
1'1\ltd, "~'· , •• .
lllddlttott, OM
UHO, IIIII wlloao

~ttttll\
~··" It
•• .
t ... ~ ..,..
1111~1\IWII

llttltt

will 110
til

tilt\

tkwlllltt~

==·lltMCIMO

001111., !Itt 0111111
Tllll I'INAIICIA" Whtlt lilt ltiiOwtl
IIIIVICM
·
liil.ltt It: " lolltll
COIIIIOIIATION IIIH Third, A~t. ••·
Ita CW!Iplllm "' c... lllddltpon, OH
Mo. OloOY.tlt Ill tilt 41?t0, IIIII the
Coutt ot Ctlllllltll prttll\1 tddMII ot
IIIII altlldtnl(t) It
IIIMI=t.llllty.
Olllt
tlltt 1M lllllmoWII IIIII 1111110\
Dthlllllllt{t DIAIII Willi tiUOftt.lt
II Inti
bt
IIL"IIIOM 1M ~~~
Tlltlthl
----------~------------------------------------------------------------------- IPOIIIt,
DOl, UII-IIOWII
tl til~ ot
DIANI III""IIION lllllllt It tallfttlll
hlw 1t 1111111 111 hlw till 111dtttt ot tht
alllldllltlt)l
'" "'''""dnorllltd
Ill till ""' , taaroh of Co11rt
••••••

or

Ohio State .linebacker charged with having
gun, drugs; suspended from team

~Royals fire

Happy
Mother's

Keithley tingled, stole stCOnd utd Korell
on a hit by 'Iln Munson.The Lady ]Kket3 added a run In the fOurth and broke
the ptne open with fOur runs in the fifth.
A throwina error by Marie Denney ll'Vf
Ctdarville it3 final two runs.
'Iln: CaudiU (6-6) sutrered the loss.
Caudill yielded tO hlt3 and &amp;lx runs in
seven innings.
·
ln pme .rwo. Cedarville scored lint
with a run In the lint. Keithley stnsled,
stole second uid third and then aeoml on
a sround out by Annie Sl\ltrord.
Rio Grande answered with two runs in
the bottom
the lint, plnina the lead
for IJOOd. Amy Conn plated two ru111 ·
wich a double:
The Redwomen would blQw the IJ&lt;Im~
open with a live-run fourth . Krista Thclc-

l\10 GRANDE - Great pitching
busintSS in the. Rio
Grande/Cedarville softball doubleheader
at Stanley Evans Field on Monday afternoon. Both teams came away with a vie·
tory. Cedarville won lllllle one, 6-0 and
Rio Grande claimed the second aa.me, 71.
1\.lo Grande (15-17, t2-10 AMC) was
defenseless against Natalie Fox in the lint
game. Freshman Carrie Laufer prevented
.a no-hitter with an infield hit In the bottom of the seventh. Laufer hit a hard
ground ball in the hole that was bobbled
and legged the hit out. Fox fanned elsht
batten.
: Cedar\'lllc (23-17, 14-6 AMC) srabbed
the lead in tho: third inning when Ginser

'vas the order

(Your

a heartfelt "Thank You" could be
·vou could ever olve your mother.
mt11 thl1
to
lt.

OUtconiC!.

FROM STm R(IIOIITS

(Picture)

Subscribe today.
992-2156

Happy
Mother's Day

.Redwomen split with Cedarville

•

ToYourMom

.

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

COLUMBUS (AP) - Linebacker Man:o Cooper was suspended from the Ohio Stare
football team · and barred from
campus Monday following his
arrest on felony charyes of drug
abuse and carrying a con~caled
weapon.
The junior ftom Detroit is
accused of having a 9 mm
handgun, ammunition and
Ecstasy pills hidden in hb sport
utility vehicle when he was
stopped by police for a traffic
violation on Saturc.b.y nil!ht.
In a statement rclea~ed by the
univenity, head coach Jim Tressel said, "While I still have not
been able to talk to Marco,
based upon the information I
do have, he will not be a member of the ·Ohio State football
team in 2002.And the outcome
of the legal proce11 will ·determine If the suspension f.lei
heyond that period of time.'
Cooper also was suspended
by the university's Oflice of
Student Affain. He has three
days to appeal that ruling,
. which prevents him fmm
attending classes or being on
· campus without permission
from university authorities.
Earlier Monday, ·Cooper was
released on SS,OOO bond after
spending two nightt in the
Franklin County jail. He kept
his head down and thawed no
,emotion as Franklin County
Municipal Court Judae James
Green added a S500 bond on
mildemeanor traffic charget.
A preliminary hearing was set
for May 7.
· Cooper, 19, was stopped
hours after the Buckeyes played
their annual intrasquad scrimmage at Ohio Stadium to conclude spring workoull. The 6foot, 225-pound junior 'expected to contend for a itarting petition thb fall - w111 the
fourth-leading taclcler in che
pmc with .three solo and two
milted ta(Jdes.
According to the arrete
report, Cooper was driving
without a license and gave ofli~rs pcrmiuion to retrieve a
~emporary permil from his
glove .:ompartment.
The handgun and a plastic

MORE LOCAL SPORTS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

left on the pond, an importa!lt factor in the

An error .and walk put two Eastern runnen
on in tM seventh, but two ground outt and
an infield dy ended the rally as Southern
J«Urtd the 9-2 win.
Chapman was near lbwleH, buckling down
at cnu:ial poinu in the count, and getting out
of potential jalflf with sood pirching. She
walked six, JUUck out one, gave up foor hiu,
and had tJu, SHS ~ had jusc two errors
behind her.
Robenlon JUlfered the JOB dapiu a sood
dfort with relief Mlp ftOIJI Kast I.Ddwick
who helped .E.1t«ern gn out of the jam in the
Southern third. The combined for ten walb,
sa hill, and tive tttikeouiJ, while hitting two
SHS~uen.
Southern hittm were Mirinda Davit 2-3
with two singles, Dc!ana Pullim 2-S with a
pair of •insJet, and Amley Routh a double,
and Brooke Kifer a tingle. For burn, Sandy
Powdl had a double, Jma Calaway rtipltd,
Dillon doubled, and PhiD.ipt doubled.
Soucbern bosuVinron CounryTunday.

.

:so. aooa

.

Brooks ruched second on a
M&amp;igs uror.
'
Holbert bounctd back to
the mound with Knapp
gunning Brooks out at third
base u he tritd to advance
on the play. Wooten then
grounded to second baseman Kyle · Hannan who
uepped on the bat~ to end
the inning. C:rhby looped a
single to right field in the
seventh before Hawk flied
·o ut to right fielder Chris
Smith for th e games fin al
out.
Knapp wc~H the. dimnc-e
allowing two rum on six
hits, iuuing thre.e walk s and
fanuing two batten.
Jake Hale pitched well in
absorbing th~ lo~~ ·for the
Spartans. The freshman gave
up four runs on five hits
walking two and fannint~
five Marauders.
Hawk led the Spartans at
the plate with three singles.
Fackler doubled for the
Marauden with Ja cQb
Smith, Brandon Ramsburl(.
Jimmy Smith and John
Stanley all getting !lni!lcs.
After the game Meigs
coach Dan Thomas praised
his team . "This is a good
win for us: they (Alexander)
arc a good team and· a nutnber one se.ed .in the tournnment.'' Thomas added,
"Darrick pitched a heck of
a game and Hale did a good
job for them, he is one ?f
the best freshman pitchers
you'll see."
"Defensively we played a
real good ballgame, the
players really hustled and
got after it and made some
nice plays, Jimmy (Smith)
made a good catch in the
fifth inning, I am really
proud of the team."
The Marauders will travel
to Welbton to face the
Golden
Rockets
on
Wednesday.

yThan

·Actress.pleads innocent to ·striking
Indians' pitcher husband .Finley
cent plea was made on

1\ltadly, April

1\le.Uy, April 30. 2002

www.mydlllyMntlnel.com

.manager
KANSAS CITY (AP) Tony Muter became the
fourth manager tired in the
season'• opening month when
the Kamas City RoyalJ ditmilted him early Thesday fol· lowing another slow start.
The RDyalJ (8-15) haven't
lllld a winning record tince
che ttrike-thortened 1994
te:II()Jl. Muter, the losingest
manager in franchise hiA'ory,
had a 317431 record (.424)
since raking over the team in
the middle of 1997.
Muter Wat told of the tiring
by general manapr Allard
Baird in a "very. very emotional" convertation after the
team beat Oetroil 4-{) Monday niibt- Muter was in the
final year of hit .:onu:act.
h '• been open teaton on
wnager1 50 l'ar with three
othm tired in April.

''

bag containlna t2 white pills,
which ofllcen later determined
was Ecs14sy. were hidden in the
center console, pollee laid. An
officer found a marijuana pipe
in the passcnser aide door han·
die, d1c n:port nld.
"The decisions he has made
have made It necessary to
revoke his privilege of partlclpating in the tport,"Treuel said.
One Cooper\ two pallensen, Jeffrey Howells, 24, of
Columbus, was charged with
ponesslon of drug paraphernalia. The other passenger, an
Ohio State student, was not
charged.
If Cooper appeals being
barred. from campus, Ohio
State\ student atrain ollice will
determine If hu should be
allowed back on camput.
"One of the thlniJI we wUI
have to determine il whether
he I&amp; a continuing threat to
other memben of the univenity community," said WIUiam
Hall, vice president Cor student
affairt. "Given the fact that
there's a weapon invol11ed, lt'l
going to be looked at very 1eri~
ously. That talcca it to an entire·
ly different level."
. .
Cooper Is the fourth Ohio
State player to run into trouble
with the law since Tre11el
became head coach in January
2001 with a mandate to clean
up the otr-lield antla of the
Buckeyes.
Starting cornerb"k Derek
Roll Will sentenced to 30 dayt
in jail for speeding and then
giving the officer a false name.
He was tutpended from prac-

or

==
"-"""' -

Find
Sunny
Savings
In the
Sentinel
Classified
Ads

Dooultltnlt,

llloWt

lllutltd Ill lilt 'ftltpiilllwntihlp
ot Dttlllotltt, Optrtlor
The Duily
llllalllliy, COUIIIy Of Aultttntt and
and
lltllt end lttlt ot Ctttllltd
Senti
llnldtnn
Mall
He
did
not
soc:
aetion
•oolnst
Ohlo1
ltllll
111
tlce last spring but playtd hlst
.....
ltlltbllry Tovitllhlp 111¥111 11111111111.
season, electing to leave scllool Mlc:hiiJlln In the l'llgl.liQf•lmon tllllt Pllt ot l'tllotloll Tlltt thla ttll It
992-2 1.,.~&lt;:;:
Oftl
II
111011
a ytar early for the NFL drat\. finAle but playtd most of Ohio I, 1liWII I, II~ 11
He was taken in the third round Sane\ Outback Uowl lou · ro ~!.~~ ~ulth~~ 11111111011111 In llotlon
by the Dallu Cowboyt t 0 MY1 South Carolina. He later serwd 11111 bealnnlnt 101
1@10'
.
a weekend In ~U.
tttt North ot 1111
"'·~
~-hi
lolllhweat
ot
TWo dAys before Ohio State • wu l\IOnt I AIJO, l'lllll rt l'ttOtiOII IIaomtt
thlllot
wa.\ to play Illinois hlst Novem- fl'llahman llnflbacker 1\edt;le 1111 t 111 '"''
ber, sl4rting quarterbaclc Steve Arden, IInce moved to tl~;ht thtnat North n
drunken dlltttt
Wtll 110
Bollisari WM mested for drunk- end• pleaded ~ilov
., 10
filii 11111111 North 40
en drivlna. He wes smpended driving In h • hometown of diiMtl Wttl 111
indefinitely, and ml11ed the IUi- Ironton, Ohio. He WM atn- totll thenot Iouth
41·1/4
dllt111 WHI
nols pme, but the ntspension tenced to thl'lle dAw
· ,. In jail and uo
filii 11\tnot Wtlt
WIIS lit1:ed three MY1 later.
fined.
111 '"'' thtnot
Iouth UO flit to tilt
plaoe ot llttlnnlna,
oontalnllll 1.11
Hoffman Ctmtltry
I
101111 IIIDtl Dr 1111. ·
lx 01 p 11.11 I
I II Cl
Mtttlng at tho otimlltRry on
""wing t111ttfro111 .
' May 4th at 1:00. Anybody
I Olrllln 11r011
lntlrt.ltd In II lot or hiiVIl any
oo11ttln1111 .1 . ot tn
1011 In tilt Nonh 11111
concorna, ploaa~t como .
thtraot, whloh waa
WI havo hired 1omoone to do
oonve~ICIIo Mtnnllil
D. Wtlltltr, bV dtlil
mowing and any donations
cllllel ~IIIII 1t 110,
would bt approolntod,
rtlttlltd lo wnloh It
On ltlulday, Me~
!Iotti thet tht htttb~ llltcla. Tha
Sammy
HollmAn, ~roe .
4, 1001 at1Di00 a.m.
appiiGIIII hll tlltd In 1010101111 btllll ''"
Otbblt ~OUIIl
lht Home Natlontl llnotrtly,
AppiiOIIIOII lor
1111
1111
"''''
lank will oHtr tar HOMI NATIONAl. Cl'ltlllt Of Ntlllt In ot
(Rouah'l Bodv Sh"op) 9@olT'rti68.
oonvt~tel by dttcl
111t at publla auatlon lANK
lhl l'rollllt Coull ot r11oreltd III Dttd
on lht 111nk parkllll
Mtlll Count~, OhiO, look 1141 P111 101
lot tht · following ~~la,aa,aa,aooa
requnllna tha llld DIID .lOOk U,
Ylhlollll
Ohlngl Df n11111 Of 1'111 111 ol the
1111 Chtvroltt - - - - - - - IC.~. ~- !Iotta to IC,J, Mtllt Count~ Deed
5
1Rooting
Mitro YIN
5 Clal Alum. Aoot CoatiNg.·
Publlo Notloe
L11 laahtal. The IIHOICII.
ICIMIIUUW1717...7 ~~..;,;.;.;.;.;,;;,;;.;;,;;...Tht l'tlllloner
II
II
I
I
II
'
0
n
I
h
t
$27.40
1UI MtiGIIIY \'IN . I'IIOIATI COUIIT IIIPIIDI lon will be further alltllll that
81 Vlnt Sl446·1276
IMII'MHX11'1M440 0~ MIIQI COUNTY htld on Ihi I hi day II~ ttlton ot clttaull
' of May, 1001, 11 11~0 of lilt Dtflnclant(t) In
834 E. Main St 1192·1.11500
1NI Chtvroltt I• 1D
OHIO
'
o'otook p.m. In tht tht IIIVIIItlll Of I
ltloku~ YIN
IN lilt CHANQI 0~ llrobtlt Court of prom111ory nota,
1QCII1414KII14111 NAMI 0~ K,J, Lll M1111
Count~, IOIOrclllll to Ill
Tht terma of 1111 IlOTTa TO IC.J. Lll loaaftd 11 llomeroy llnor, tilt oonclltlona
lriOIIh.
Court Houu.
Of I OOnOIIItllll
IACHTIL
Tht Homa Nlllon11
mollgaa• ciHd glvtn
ltnk rettrv•• tht
Kendi
May
laahttl
to
IIOUrt the
CAll NO.
rltht to rtltot any or
11..0 Otkhlll 1101~1 pay1111nt Of aalcl IIDII
U100
IR llldl or to llmtYI
Lonlbollom, o.. anil oonvavlnl tht
eny unit from tht 111t
tltiiiiiHI cl110rlbtd 1
4174
NOTICI
01'
11 any 111111.
Exptrltnot In ttltl, lumber,
have bun broken,
HIAIIINQ
ON
Arrtngtllllnta mey CHANQI 01' NAMI (4) 10, 1001
llld lht 111111 hll
pltn rttdlng, computer aklllt
be malta to lnap1o1
lllaoma alltolula.
any Of lhl lltOYI Applloant htrtbV
Tht l'ttlllontr
tnd tltlmatta
Ylhloltt prior to lht glvaa notloe to all
· praya that the
Apply In ptraon at
1111 by aalllng lnltrttlld p1r10n1
Dalendtnt(t) ·ntmad
ancl
to
.loth
L.ero~
Otorgl I.IWrtnat ••
1110¥1 Ill IICIUirtd to
lniWII lllcl Ill Up
their lllltrtlt In tald
1111 little or 111
Chtattr, Ohio
forever biPracl from
1111111ng tht tame
Ctll 885·3301 for Information
for fortGIOIUII 0 1
IIIII morttlll1 lhl
marthalllng ol any
lltnt, and tht ltla of
aald r111 11tataJ 1nd
tht proo11d1 or 11111
1111 applied to the
IIIVIIItnt
of
l'llftloner'• 0111m In
the propar orcltr of
111 priority, and tor
auoh other and
lurthar rtlltl 11 11
)uttlnd ICIUIIIblt,
THI
IUpplift ji(OViclldl l'lulll
DI~INDANT(I)
Addrtlflld lttli1Pid lnvolcptl
NAMID AIOVI Alii
4, ~.o. 11oo1 1431, Antlootl, Tn
IIIQUIIIID
TU
.ANIWIII ON 011
431 Ita" lmmatlillflyl
reduce payment• up
IIPOIII THI 11 DAY
0~ JUNI, 11102.
to ~0%, lowerintcrcst.
IV: IIIIMIII I
LOIIIIII CO!I L.I'.A,
Nonprofit, liccn8ed,
CONIICO ,INANCI
IIIIVIOINQ COIIP.
bonded.
ADAM L. 011011,
Wtlmart Plaza M11on,
OWN A COM~UTI~ ~UT IT WOI'!K. Call 1·800·847
Attornev 11 LIW
Attornev tor' PlalniiK• =============~
Nflf1t,., !loUr. t'TirT ~~:.'!:,ul~=~~~g~~=
ttltltlonlf

••

Sales Clerk Wanted

BAUM LUMBER

now HIRinG

*new location*
ftll positions
full&amp; Part-time
Apply In person after
3:30pm

QOOO WUIU.Y IHCOMI

MIHitlg Our ltltt lrochurHI

''" lt;;.fl, PotliCJif
Ita" lmmtelltlf!\'1

Otnulnt Opportunllyl ·
~or~rHI-.
Call Toll ~rH:

l.eoo-H1·1110

wv

!1,0, loft HI

'!Wtntbu!IJ OH 440e1
(N0)12...:101

~~~r.:

tlllolo, N,tiO. Alto, ""' 4'tlnlotl-.
ttiffln .,..., 1110. lhlppl, 1'1~.
~MatH Ollltldt o l - At

MIIOI COUNTY,
OHIO

f2H)"H4"

•
---------------~-------------------

.

CAll NO, OICV1H
A~"DAVIT ~011

IIIIVICI

1\' IIUILIOATIOH

"""IIIII* It not rttiNIII•

CONIICO "HANOI
UIIVICIHQ COIIP

fof ICiftllnL ,,_.

flta MUN TAll
~INAHCIAL

IIIWIOIHO
COIIIIOIIATION

..,.,

. VI,
DIAHI MILUIION,

.....
...
'*"""

D11tnlltnl
THIITATI OP OHIO
COUHTYt ·

Ad1m L. Oroet,
--.....:..----~

•

PleuM
ont V•lle~ HllNJlllul, u M1111 fltN11t
he1l1hearc ft~CIIily, ~urr~nti y hu~ ollcM
potlllon8 for the follow In»:
I) QoQ Pari-time MLT/M'f
ror Hvenlni!i!Nlghh (30 huur~ 11 wcrk
or mo111) Mu8l huvc m h~ lmlll~d ltti~l y
ellalble for WV ll ~en ~c
l) ~Part-time llKJlllrlcN~rtl

Phlebotomlllll fllf Hvonht~•INlght ~
(30 hour11 11 week or murc)
Send re11ume to:
PU•!A8ANT V.U U:\' IIOHI'I'fAL
rio Humin Act10urre~
·
.U2b V•llef Drl.-c
Point f'lf1111nt, WV 25550
Or on (304) 675-43411, ll.~t. 1414
Or JIAX w1304&gt; 67M#75
AA/101!

�'

..

.

April 30, 2002

•

C ' LA

I- lor, S20;

"

t
t:l;

Sage
Gre.n
lrUriof,
C7..0)776-e122, (740)362·
-

"
•

iij;p;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,

r.

p

I"'UW,

.

t

JET

II:

Ropolrod, Now &amp; Robulft In GOATS FOil SALE
o, IJOO.!I3?-e528
• ISO% Boor, FtnlaiH with
kldo for oolo. Pu-... lo~
111of. Very .-blo.
-'-IIIIo '!lkt J slid~ $10., (7401245-0485
oftor
"""'C_, curtains $10., Blue 5:30pm.
Q,ompo S10., 8 place
-t/)&gt;l.no S10., (304)674· Umoullin caflle- 11 roglaotr
~
-..a wlr:alves, 5 yeo to
-.
caN~~; 6 yearllng buns, both
::t!:-~ $60. Cho~. $25. rod &amp; b!Ad&lt;, (740)698-2765
\ill Sile Mlflraao, $50. FUll Polled Htrlford 6 10
Silo Bod, Comploot, $125. 12 months old
Coil
Mlc:ruwavo, $35. (7401«6- (304)882·2&gt;4211 aftor .6:00

=

You•
••· •••. (740) 448-2342 (740) 992-2156
Call
rodav

gt~ter

(304) 675-1333
Or f'•x TO

·

n
=

871S-81tM

O#oe.#~

" 074.2
•

Nt!W AND USE_D STEEL
,. SIMI Bolma, p,_ Rebar

Mondey thru Friday
: 00 a . rn . to S ~ oo p . ~ .

==-= i:&amp;

Fllir pigs for aole, (7..0)9492808 0&lt; (7401 1148-2017
USED IIOot.TS

AERATION MOTORS

.. Stoall. Col Ron £Y0111, I

Sentine

" " ' -·
Sloopo 6.

" oft pon, S20: box lon. $3: (7o!Ol388-0t7t.

~
•

'Utrihune ·

~-~

mlol 4-H """ FfA C1ub PQ tor 12ft Soort SomiV with trail- 11180 5th r:olina
llln, S20: Galtlol, Mo1ga ..., Muon or. Gu &amp; Elactric moiO!L 27ft, Lb Now,

~1~ Courttaa (7..0~388 1033 or FW\ FiAr;ln. etc. S1300 in- · 'lllklng o~Wa.
(740)81N521
~--~
-·
(7..0)245-0611
-.muo 3 year Old Goldo&lt;1 - - - - - - ; - hodopondoo&lt; I-IIIo 011- Potomlno atud pony, not tUn Thundtrl&gt;lnl, ' 165
· Col For PraWct Or b&lt;okon to rldo, oololng SASO, - . Runt GooO.
Opporl\lnlty. (7401«1- 11162 (7401742-3033.
$1700 080. (7401«6-~1

-. '-fVil

.........

t

lntsnn

riO
~

HoME

lf.ww}VIM!NfS

~

IAIE. .NT

MACK'S
PocntKnlvM
ACollecllblea
• A Cut Abo11e1

·
WATI!IIthe D••!i-"1
tr tloh &amp; lkl, 1711, 4 cyi., Uo-idltlaclll 11f1t1m1 QO!Ir•
Meft:rutaor &amp; lnlllor. 11180 ontH. Leal ,.,..., tur15ft Ployllmo with 88HP ntahtd. Eollblllhod 1875.
Mon-Sat 1G-4
Evlnrudo &amp; traiO.r. 1881 eon 24 Hra. (7401 «6·
Moxum 17ft with 70HP 0870, Rogora Boaomono
217 E. 2nd St •
F.,.,. &amp; Troller. 1998 Mora· Wo1tfP!I&gt;OIInQ.
~y.OH
do 18ft, 4 eyl., lolorcrul10&lt; &amp; if.~~::f::::=::-:::=.:oralltr. tm Morodl ztn. e&amp;cGonorat.-Molnto(740)
992-5908
Sport Cuddy IN! Meft:rulo- ......,._ Pollltlng, vlnyt ol&lt;lor a. troller. tm Mirada lnQ, carpentry, door8. wln21ft, V-8 Motrcrulsor &amp; trol~ doWI. bllho, mobile hO&lt;no
" · All bolto oro PRICED 11!111r ond moro. FO&lt; Croo
TO SELL. J.S. Morino lllfmlto cllil Cllot, 740-882·
.
(7..0)2Sil-e16Q
8323.
Rou. Blaot&lt; Mgua Bulla,
·
·
- - - - - - - - ·COIITRACIORS, IlK.
yeartlnga &amp; oldtr, out of
SUporlor . Homo Molnto·
Racine, 01110 45771
Chomplon Hill Wldtoprtllll
CAMP£RS &amp;
norce. We do aH Rtpolro on
Cllamplbo Hill EXT
MoToR llotlmi
Homoo, lnaldo ond Out.
740-885-31148
Traveler &amp; WLC Eclip.. .
• C.rpentry,
Plumbing,
gentle guaranteed $ 1000•
Tronchlng, ~o. Build· rotiClEI'f/ILOO/IliCl
each oail304-3?2-Z3&amp;9· · 1876 C.mpor,, 25ft, Excel· lngo. (7..01«1.0113
. • Foolen, Wolls, Soepo •
·
liN Condition, A/C , Awning ..

80CC

P/1

I

I""'

;. FO&lt; Conc:lole, Ango., Chor~&gt;
~not. Flat Bar, StHI Grating
"' For Orolna, . Ort.ltwaye &amp;
" -Walkwaye. L&amp;L Scrap Mit·
'l- ola Opon Mondoy, Tueldly,
Flll Wortt.
~edntllday &amp; Friday, &amp;am- While laying homo 1 112 yr. (7..0)446-9954
.
liH.cnuc.uJ .
Replacements,
• Wilks
:30pm. Closed Thurldly, old tor Hit, 50c each
Rllt'RIGIIItATION •
Satunlay
&amp;
Sunday. (740)985·3838
.
1995 Layton 24ft., 6th "-IIOiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiorl
and Drives • Stencil
~(7401446-7300
wheel, Loaded, Top Condl· Realdonllol or commarolal
C..oe ·
'
.
tlon, S
Free &amp;timates
• Ott Fumroct Bumor Motor
=~-"'---- wiring, ,_ 10rvlce "' re'""•nd Tranoformlr Comploo.,
1998 Jayeo pop-up camper, pelrs. Mllll&lt; Llctnlld tlee·
$50. Mons Joana, $1 ond
many txtru, $3,800.00. trfclon. Rldtnour Elt!:trlcal, · Servina Ohio ond WN.
WVII031112
$2. 2 Vacuum CIHnert '"'
;_.1 740.992-8914
WV000308, 304-87{5-1788.
·: Parla, $6.00 (740)387-1729
•
'
•
1882 GMC sonoma. Ekltrly
18&gt;&lt;46 Abovt Ground Pool. Owned, Glrage Kopl, Ful~
1 yoar Old. Nelda liner. Loodod, 76,000 mHea. 1997
•,$250. (304)882·3973
Mon11 Corio, Fully LOidld,
••
55,000 mUaa, 2 door, Excel. 2 - · 4 pc .. Hrve·a·anack, lent Condition. (7401448" $20 H .: blthf'Oom heater, 6464
.. $20; 2 Ironing llOinll, S2 = ::-:--,-- --,' 'loot; 50 pc. punchbowl 111, 1996 Olda .t.chleva, 88K,
-:'$3!; (740)982-2529
$2795. 1996 Cavalier,
: 2001 Gltoway Computer 108K, $2795. 1885 Monte
&lt;111111~ 1' 04 1 St · Mull\11'111111
CD Burner, comoro and lOOt Corio, B9K, 54395 · 111117 s'OC extra 5850 OBO 10, 62K. $4395. 15 other
.. 13041875-7240 or i304)675: eara, lru&lt;:ka In lfock. COOK
·' ~232
MOTORS (7401448-0103

r

I

Business Services
Free EslnnCJies
740 -992 9158

• 28 000 BTU Kenmore .t.lr
, co~~oner. 1260 . Hot point
" Electric Range. S160. Rt·
' frlgerator $125 . (3041875·
·" 8893

1996 Pon11oc Grand Am SE ,
V-8, .t.lr, Loaded , 84,000
mllol, "·000 Or Take Over
. Paymonto. (304)578-4170.
1997 Seturn SLI, 6 opoed,
lo.C, $3500. p40)379-2766

3·6 x 10 dOg kannollencoa .
" 1740-992-!181
1998 Plymouth Noon E•·
.•1
presao Sport, exceMent eon" 8 hp Snlpper Rotoolller, re- dillon 32 000 mlleo, PW PL
vortlblo lines, $500.00 firm, &amp; eu~rooi. Aoklng 1o la~ng
~ 740-742-3708
over paymonla, $194.00 par
.., At Top Soil . Fill Din 1or month. 740·982·9579
, Sele . Equipment Rental, 20o 1 Dodge Straoua AT,
, Dour, Backhoe, Bobeao 40,000 miles, 2 dr., loaded,
·\ aoraper, Tractor Equipment. leather aaata, aunroof.
·-(7..0)441-0819
$19,900 OBO, (740)949·
_ AIR CONDITIONERS· Can· 2501 titer 4:30pm .
-r tral and Window. (7401448· 96 Honda Acconl tK TIWin·
8308 and I·B00•291 ·oo98. dOWI, ~Oiilh Aluminum
.- Baby Stroller, $25. Baby Rima, CO Player, New
·"Bounc:tr, $20. Baby Welker, Tires, $4,800. (304)676·
$10. Baby Car Seal, $20. 2029
.. Precloua Momenta Bedding, :.98:.:..::,:C-:-he_v_y-:-C:-a-va-:ll-:-or. -::F'-ou-r
$50. (7..01«6-9742 .
Door 47,3QO.milaa, Loodld.
Cub Cadtl garden Tractor 99 Chevy Z-24 Cavalier,
17HP wl1h 42" mower dock: 41,300 mlloo, Loo~od.
Spin on oil filter, $1900. (7401«6·91 17
'· (7401446·8816
TO BE SOLO AS IS. 1881
Mercury Tracer, 107,000
mll11, need• olutQh, Alklng
$500. If lnttriltod conttot
at The Qaii!X&gt;·
825 Third
I I

Ohio

St Rt681 &amp;
Connoly Or!ve

u011•ra Plains,
Alao serv!ng
sausage gravy
&amp; biscuits
Dally Lunch
Specials

Cellular

Concrete
Connection LTD
Quality Concrete

(877·3S3-70Zl)

Jeff Warner Ins.
Authorized Agent·
992~5479

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
.Roofing- Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Free Estimates
949-1405 TfN

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

All Makes 1\'lctor &amp;
Equipment Parts

Stop &amp; Compire

I(}(X) St. Rt. 7 S111Ath
Coolville, OH 45723
.740-667~0363

740-992·1671

WV031256

Sizes S'x10'
.to
. 10'x30'

Dealers

111!21Tl'N

~~
Local 843-5264

~~~~~·.:: Supplement; Lite Insurance;
and Final Expenseli; Cancer &amp;

II

Retirement,
&amp; 401K RoUovers;

.

Hours

.,....

740.742-3411

· Casc·IH Pans

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, OH 45771

740-949·2217

FREE ESTIMATES!

Factory Authorized

Hill's
Self Storage

Call for mon
infolfne estiinate

BryanRaevea
Naw Homae, Room AdclftloM,
Garqte, Pole Bulldlnga, Root.,
Siding, Oecu, Kftchena, Drywall
AMoN
.

Plltl

• New Hornea
•Garagaa
• Complete
Remodeling
FREE ESTIMATES

Sunset Home
Construction

M~or Medical

.Krls

Kanlecld

High I Dry
Self-Storage
3J795 Hu.M RJ.
IUiroy. Ohio

7:00AM·

Now Open
11 a.m.· 8 p.m.
Mondaythru
Saturday
Cloaed Sunday

101111'

Tree Service

Delivered
&amp; Spread

100 west m11n St.
Pomeroy
992-0008

_L---=::.:::~:J

Shade River AG Senlce
"Ahead In Service"

• Top • Ramoval • Trim
• Stump &amp;rlndlng

35537 s~ R~ 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45730
4·H feed for tamba, hoaa, ateen, chicken• ond
rabblta.
l'olatoea
Onion Sets .
Full Line of Bulk Oarden Secda
Fertilizer Specifically Ocslaned for Oarden Cropa

• Bucket Truck
,......-;:'i.=

New Fertilizer Bugle&amp;
All bupiea have been pattern tealed to meel
Aaronomy Associa1ion S1andlrda

ft~~ft~C~

Room Addlllono I
R-llng
NtwOor!loatrlool I Plumbing
Roo.lfng &amp; Oultora

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

J/A.

New Homes &amp; Remodellna
"Speciillzina In Loa Homeo
&amp; Rubber Roofs"

· ·
~

·
ft
j1

· ..o

A

111.111

Reploeement Windows
American UPJ!ngl .------''----,
Pallo Rooms

LIME·
STONE
Delivered &amp;

Spread $1 S.OO
per tonl8 to 10
tona, 1lmlted
area, call for
detail a. Cell:

Oarases. Pole Bulldlna•. Concrete

Roofs .&amp; Siding
Commercial &amp; Residcn1ial
(740) 99l·l987
Owner Operator, John Dean

fii!!J
. . j1
····

II/A
S!!J

TFN

ft:~ftft

ftC

T.Jl'" 1h•" P ~IN
Gu! Gt PAINTING
l 1· 1 rr11

j,-

r'

f,-,

Y' \• 1

lii'S Pllllll

(740) 591·2173
Or leave name
and number

RESIDENTIAL &amp;
MANUfi'ACTURED HOUSING

2000 Oodl)l Ram 15 pooMnoo&lt; van, looded, 21 ,000
I \ U \ I .., I 1'1'1 II ...,
mllao, 0011 over 130,000
A ll \ 1 '\ l ll!h
ntw, aoklng
$21 ,500,
.. ,.;;-_::""'....- . . , (740)742-303!

HI-Efficiency Heat Pumps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces
lmr:Dfti£DII ( olemanl:l

,· r'"'B
F~RM
1
.
EQv:PMEI'll' -41-·- - - - . ,

,

:· 16'•8' H.O. Tr•ller (Liko
I NIWI with dovellil, 11600.
Ntw 81 H.O. King Cutttr
., Box Blldl scr-. $350.
., P401441 ·3131
.
1987 Coli lnttrnltiOnol 385
Troctor, 2 WhHI dlolli, Low
Houro. EKOtlitnl Sllape,
(740)245·158&amp;4 aher 9prn
,,
, Fordo 2600 011111 Traotor,
4800, 5000, 245 M.F.
~ (7..0)288-&amp;522
: Fordo· 2600 dtaltl UICIO&lt;,
' 41100, 1!000: 2•5 MaOIIY
• Ferguraon. (1401288-8522
., W~llt Form Tractor. 70HP,
,, Excollanl
Condition,
(740)379-8381

F
~

·----~...

L,
,

pl.

.
11180 MoriU, 3 hortllllnl.
Lood Dttlllng Room Troll·
or 'Likl ~ow. $4000.
(7:.0)387-7237·

•

I,

•1n•nc:ln~ Mailable

•l'rkd 'fo Fit All Bud.ell

Advertise

;;.4440
=--~-:--"'"-:~
11180 Horloy D•vloon, 1200
Cullom, t9000. (740)370·

;.27..;;88.;;....,-~-::---:-:--

r-..,.
OBQ.

barrlngt. $3.40().

(304)882-3426,

(304)882-3878

.

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beedist

middleport, OH

'

AU. niiiiCWM~earun

for
'25 per month

8YIAMUI • • JCI

III!CK. rLOCC a .,.,..

FREE ESTIMATE

(304) 773-8550

HERBALIFE

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

LlcenHCI a lnaured
Health Problem•?
Want More Lel•ura Time?
Tired of Mowing? Not A Spring Chicken?

(10'1110' &amp;10'11201

[740) 992·3194
992·6635

In this space

BISSEll

White, Ex1ru.
Alklng
111.500 ORO. (7401385·
Colllftor 7pm.
COMMIIOAllllllll!SU)INIIAl
2001 VStar Clealfc 1100.
FREE ESTIMATES
Cranbrory/ Crllm. Yomlftl
740-992·7599
w l -. l1uddodbiQt. coora tong ahooo
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
plpu, 2220 mlln. 17,000.
(7..0)A44-7527 ...... 8:00. .__ _ _ _....~~ '------~~~

I~5.
______

"flor !!
~

• Bonk

1886 Hortoy Dovldoon 883
converlod 10 1200 oo. 3600
Actual Mil... L01e ol Elllra'o
and chromo. E,..lltrol Con·
dillOn. •7600 . (740)448·

Moe.. cullom,
2000 Hortoy Oovllon 1200
1150 miO.O, Purl

. lid
Wanood to buy. U
175
Homo. CoH (7..01448-0
304 7 5985
'"

• •·rl'e 10 Ytlr OmiJU'efllfMM'
W•rranlr On Select M11dell
JIIU:t: Jl.~'l'lltM1'F.S • If lila: lnnnlorJ

111114-1200 Sporllotr 10,000
miO.O COJolom point, forward
controil 1 big tank, wind·
11\lllld, oeddla brogo, Loll ol
Chromo.
S7i00.
(304)875·8993

I

WANIUl
BUY
TO

---

• l'reo S'&amp; 8 Yoor I'Mrt Worrondeo ~~
• Free IJI~Itol 'rherm ....t

MOTORCYCLI'li

2000 BanlhH. GooO Con-~000::::-'~--, dillon. Nevor Racld. Nttdt

·. r ·

ftiCIIIIKIIIII,

LIMITED OPENINGS

{7

992·1536
\

Independent

PLUMBING

Diltrihutor

40111111 lllrMt
NewHIIwn,WV

Slard'*'- ~C&amp;'I

I Lost 271b.
in 32 days.

til&amp;

100%

CeiMI I 1, S.!int·n~DII

fiELDS

nalural!Guarantted

740-992·7036

~
882-2343

�• •

P.II•TheiMIIyStl._

AH.Ji:Y

UID"R

Angels massacre Tribe. 81

RIA Cro11worcl Puaal•

PHIUJI'

•

A!MR

a1

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

. • 1'

M1lpCGunt(a

•HI

--

't • K
• o\ It'll

Racine wells CS-free

Whits

.....
..,. ........
:t ~ :t li:
~
...,."
Tum at bat
\-trHit: .._.

) H'f

.....

Feb.rnarv
.March
• II
testino results
• .d
OU tltne

,fRANK &amp; EARNESr

GOT TIMf FO#t J.8 tiOLf$7

\

-.
THE BORN LOSER .
P"

. W~t COl/If.~
1-11\f\ 1'1-'£ T~
PlJ,~?

Now that we hnve
looked at thll opening
leader and third hand,
it is time to turn to
the ' second and la5t
playen M trick one:
thr dcd~Nr.
•'
The two most comIlion trick-one ~rrvn
tire playing · too
tluickly and ph1ying
without forming a
plan: You ~hould stop
nnd think, coum your
winnurt and losers,
and scluct a st!'lltegy.
In this deceptive .
deal, yo11 are in three
no-trump. After West
· ' leads the heart queen
and the dummy ls ta1
bled, how would you
· proceed?
That North hand is
close between a
game-invitation and a
game-force. The
three-diamond rebid
CELEBRITY CIPHER
is invitatiotul. In the
by Lula Campoa
CtlebriiY Ctpl\lf atypiOallme •~ ar~~ltd 1n1m quoraliollalljlllmG~~t
old days, it was gamePIQPII, (JIIIIIICI ~l . IIICh ltlttlln lht Cllpher tllndtiGi anolhtr.
forcing; but with a
Todty'l Ml fl tqlll/f G
powerful one-llliter,.
''HC
.II
CHXNVW'I
IIZW
,..
~~~~le,Q"' either mnlte a strong
•'
'(t~T'E:.IlJ.?'''1', Tfl€.:fWUE."'
jump ,hift on the fi11t
U • I • P J I A W V II ·
'.lliiHTW.'
tot::l\'1', iKEY'IlE
round or go via
TKm· F~e:t&gt;!
fourth-suit forcing on
XDW
ICZG
'' H C
round two.
.. You have seven top
IIVWHXNVW
X D H X VWMNIWI
' tricks: OliC srnde, tWO
J I.,
DW
UDHX
AW
XI
hearts, two diamonds
and two clubs. The
HZAWVX
IIH,N ·I
immediate reactlui1 II
PIIIVIOUI IOLUTION - 'Chltlaltr II Whit
are, while,
to duck a dlatnond,
rtPUtaflon 11 merely whl1 wt art peroal'ltd to Ill Dy othera.' John Wooden
keeping communication with the dummy, TIIAT DAILY Q 17';1 'Q .I\.,. .( _)) 't! b Q.e WilD
but that ia wrong.
PUIILII p~ P..liiU ~"' '8 lJc;ri:J IAMJ
The other two tricks
Ulle4 ~Y ClAY •· POLLAN .....;;...;...._ __
·might come from elorra•o• liner• of tht
•
thor minor 111it. And
''"' scramblod word• b•·
although 1 3_2 dia- law to form ''"' 11mplo word1.
mond break ia ti1uch
P I D'i ME
.............;,-,..-1 more liltely than a 3-3
1
club split, you can try ~~·:;·:;~·:;;::·~-..,....J
both chancu Start ,.
with dummy's two
L I DVE
top diamonds . If the
misscrs(l) divide 3·2,
. . . . .
concede a dianrond
..
trick and, uaing thu f--nA~D;,.;;L~Er-IT-~1 ..
:.,',
·Thtlemouelootball pleyar hid
spade ace u the
I
1 logical exp11n1tlon lor hie poor
FAILUilE TO llESPOND CAN llESU~T
dummy entry to the
. . . .
eh.owlng lor ovlr ten y11r1 . ~
IN ATTACIIMENT AND FINE "
diamond winnen, end ,
Well," he emlled, 'anyone can
c,..
,with an ovenrick. Dut
C I V 0 D E ,.hlvtln off· •••••."
· ;
1
·1
Compill• tht chuckl• quoted
when the diamonds
s~lit 4- 1, shift to '-.....&amp;..
-1-.L.-t.._.__
~Y lllli•o In th1 mllllnt word1 ,
you ltvolop lrom tttp No. ~ below.
c uba, getting home
•
since they are 3-3. • P-INT NUMBERED LETTEU IN
I~
59
This line wins if el· :;~~TH~!~S~E~~Y~";•;,!S;;:;;;=;:;m;;:~·~·;:::~·=~·=·~~-~. ther diamonds are 3-2
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE L!TTUS
or clllbl are 3-3.
TO GET .+.NSW!R
. . . . . . . These combine to
ICIIAMoLITI ANIWIU
produce a 79.2 per- I
Jur/11 ·/.etch· Be/my· Here11 ·STAY In JAil.
'
cent chance of aucPoll taker to voter, 'Do you lhlnk that the ltrml of
cen.
Congre11men · 1hould be limited?" Vottr, 'No!" They
· ehould be )u1t like every-one elat 1nd STAY In JAIL.'

.

· .

BR!E~MVDAIL'I'SENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Preliminary .
testing of drinking wnter in
the Villal!e of ll..adn~ ~how!
no indimitm of C8 cont~mi­
nMion, according to test re~uit&gt;
released Thesday by the Ohio
Environmental
Pro tc~.tion
A~ncy.

I

I 12 I ·1i:

PEANUTS

I' 1 1 1

I

:c..··

1

II

8

I' I' I" I' r I '
1 1 1 1 1 1 1"_

6

'

..
.,

•
Wrdnrlday. May 1, ~IJOZ
1n tho ym 1htad, do 111 thor
yuu c•n to lncreo., . your
knowlrdgc In yuur pment
neld uf end..vor. You'll bt
rewarded In muldplt w1y1 I(
you capitalize on your opportunltln.

T r\UI~US (April 20-May
20) •• It would be WIN 10 lh
on any Initial dedtlon you
makt involvlnJIAII imporunt
mllter. Anor • hord .,cond
look, r.ou &lt;ould lilt rhlnp In 1

new I sht. Tourut, trur your·
..tr to • blrthdoy Jlift. Send (or
your Atrro·Or•ph prediction•
(or thr ym 1ht1d by mallliiJ

S2 and SASS to Attro-Or•ph,
e/o thlt new1poper, 1'.0. Dox
1156, Mumy Hill Sutlon,
New York, NV 10156. Dt
wre 10 llalf your Zodiac: Nil"·
GI!MINI (May 21 -Junt 20) •
-- You may think it 11 mort
beneficial to II" it alone, bur
after much coercion by ochert
to join their cndeavor. y011'll
dltc:ovtr that they oll'tr tht
llftllt&lt;l rcwltdi 111hit rlmr.
CAN C£ 1~

(Juno 21 -July

~) -· J( !&lt;ffllflilh1J "''"' d"-

blout, du nolhiull untol

•••rr·

thl11f1 bctolllet clear to you ••
whoch it will, i( you JIYI

thlnllf eno111Pi dn11 to m•terl·
•llze.
LEO (July 23·AUI· 22) ••
l!ven thouah you n1ll&amp;ht be 1
!low llarlfr, thlt coufd oven•
tually lurn luto 1 rathtr rt•
wudlna day. The ltnpomnt
thiiiJ It not !0 dr•J your feill

r., tao lon~~o

Vlli.OO (Au.. 2l-S.pt. 22)

•• Vou miflht lllrt out with
llulo in•plrotlon, but eh1nct1
llf lhal I rrovocadvt COin•
p1nion wll comt tionJ and
lljllll 1 1111 under you. Ho or
sht will Nnd you In dre riJht

diiiCIIOrl.

'

LIBRA (kpt, 2l.0Gt. 23) •
- It'I pottlbli 10 1chltvo your
dftlrrd rHUIII, but fOil mlahl
h1vt 10 11kt 1 dUI'ertnt rotlte
than you fine lhouJhc. H•v•
1n olrernllivt pion r~..ty.
SCOI\.PIO (Ott. %-1-Nov .

22) • You may ho .. a fOOd
contef.t or ldu, but that
doltn 1 ""'" 11 un't bt improved upon. Lillen 10 till input o( Othtrt •• chtnCit Ill
thll dlty can make lmprovo·

mtnu.

• SACliTTAI~IUS (NO\'. 23·
Dec, 21) •• When 1hoppln1
for 1n rxpentlve piece of mtt·

eh1ndl1t, do11'1 Nlllt for tht
flrlt ono you Iff. There 11 o
bener dell out chert If you
look around 1 bit.
CAPI~ICOR.N (De~ .

22·

Jan. 19) •• When dcalinJ with ,
111 oplnlonolrd ·cumptnlon, ~
l,.vo your JIUOrd up and don't •
tllow hlmlhrr to lmpa11
vltWI on rou In which you
know 1ren 1 produclive. Kttp :
your own counHI.
AQUAI~IUS U•n. 20-feb.
19) • Even with Jll(!ll lnttn•
tlont, 11 !"ill be un\IIH 10 llkt
It upon yout'HI( 10 hrlp •n· •
olllfr when y6u h1vtn't bttn ,
otlltd. Put your fOOd dttdt ,
ttmpororily on tho buk •
burnu.
PISCES (Ptb. 20-Morch 20)
• OvtrinduiJinl either Rn•ncltliy or phytlt•Jiy lt t1w1yt
bad. o,. will
you 1 poln
in cht puM, die other 1 p1ln
In till tummy. HJvt llln, but
11k1 lhln11 In moderation.
AR.Il!r (Mitch 21·Aprll1'1)
-· AtchouJh you m1y
r.u flirt, your owattntH will
•har11•n u ""'" litkl on. So
fOil could tllll ond up mokina

The Ohio EPA made avail·
able the result~~ of February
and March testing tlf the water
mpplie~ tlf the Thppurs Plains·
· Cht!ster Water Olstrlet Qttd th~
VUia!!tl of Pumemy, Radne
and Syracme in MeiS~~ Ctlun ~
ty and In the City tlf Bdpre in
WMhington Ct'lunty.
The result! show lower lev·
d~. t'lf C8 in March than in
February at the TP-C wells in
Long Hottont, where the con-

Reds beat Doda•rs. ''

·Deat11s
Ronald E. Hart, 87
Connie L Griggs, 41
~Ill.

AI

.'

Weatl1er

..

.'

'

•••
.. '

-i'll'll~·

Nltional-iJht

I

shines on Cheshire ... A2

and Water Stewardship Week ... tsJ

1 Soil

banquet planned at
Bradford May 11 ... A3
1 Chester museum

receives donation ... AS

Pleasant Valley helps
area churches ... NJ

1

Lottlrlel
Ohio

lllck 117·3·7
.~ 4: 8·6·5·3
.
lucklyt 1: 5·10·11·15·28
Pick 1 nll!tt: 5·3·8

Pick 4 nljfd: 1..a.8·1

Wilt Vlt~lnl•
Dally 1: o-1·2
D1IIY 4: 7-S-6·8
CHii 21: 8-9-12· 16·18·25

lnciiX
llldll•l-lllflpl

Deer Abby

A5
83·5
86
A5

Movies
Obituaries

A3
A3

ClaJiifled•
ComiCJ ·
Editorial•

SporU

A4

81-3

Weather

A2

• 2002 ONo V*t 'wbllthint eo.

.

0.1166.

Cli is a dctL'r!!ent-like mate- ·
rial used as a processing aid in
the mnnuthcture of fluo ' ropolymer resins and linishcs,
It has h&lt;·ctt ust·d at the Washington Works 1itdlity for ovt·r
50 years nnd is considered' a
biopcrsistcnt
compound,
mcanitll! it remains in the
body or environmenl for
extended periods of time followinl! exposure.
There are cumntly no gov• ·
crmncnt rel!ulations govcrulng public exposure tO the
chenticnl, ami while DuPont
111aintains that there arc no
hu111an ht·alth iutp;tcts relating
to exposure, the company has
. set :1 couuuu11ity exposure
guideline of .'l parts per billion
when nddrcssing exposure
through wnlcr sltpplics.

ce
Ord to serve as interim
superintendent
BY TONY

.

IY CMAIILINI HOIIJILICN

HO!I'I.ICH.MVDAILV81NTINIL.OOM

Pit••• 111 Southtm,
Award as the top senior student In Meigs County was Amber
Snowden of Malga High School. She was presented a plaque
by Carol Hatem, seoondery curriculum supervisor of the
Athan•Melge Educetlonal Servloe. Center. (Charlene Hoefllot'l)

fllttUINTIO TIIOfiHY - L.atrlola Smith, Bradbury Elementary
ltudent, wet the flrat of 50 etudentl receiving trophies at the
Melp Coun~ Aoiidemfc Excellence Banquet Tueadey "'~t.
PrtHntln&amp; the trophlee were Mike Struble end Jeanette
Thomas of the Athlni-Melge Educlltlonel Service .Center Go\1·
ernln&amp; Board. (CIItlrlene Hoelllchl

'lnniMH•an.M

'Relay for Life'
·begins Friday at
Eastern H.S.
FROM STAFF REPORTS
POMEROY - The cntcrtainlllcllt and schedule ofactiv. itics for tht· annual Mci~ County Relay for Life, a fu;;d raiser for the American Cancer Society to be held Friday ~nd
Saturday at Eastern High School. has been announced by Jo
Ann Crisp, chairmatL
.
Music will begin at 4 p.m. with the County Road 5 Dand
to perform at 5 p.m. Survivors will begin registering at5:30 .
and at .6 p.m. the welcome will be given by Mike Moore,
emcee. The flag will be raised by the Pomeroy Boy Scouts
and after the plcd11e Katie Reed will sing the '.'Star Spangled Danner" to cnndude the opcninl! ceremony,
. Dave Diles, honorary chairman, will give a cancer survivor
teJtintony preceding the introduction of Jurvivors who will
make a walk around the i:rack before the parade of teams.
The I1Jminary service will be held at 9 p.m.
The entertainment Jchedule includes 7 p,m, the Hocking
Valley Drifters; H p,m, the .Rhythm Station; 9:45, Alison
Rose and High Country; and 11 p.nL Dwight Icenhower
with a "Tribute to Elvk"
Saturday'• music will begin at H ac~n , with the South
Bethel Church Group; 9 a.m., the Mountain River Dlue
Gran Band; I0 a:m. Tammy Taylor and D&lt;."Verly Grate,; and II
a.m. Delivered. The dming program will take place at noon.
Tho•e attending are reminded to take lawn chain .

Help?

Taking care of a lov~ one, or need personal core for yourself~
Doe. houMWorlc have you down~ Feeling overwhelmed~ Let us
help! A professional, private·duty home core agency, we offer
. peraonal core, homemaking and respite services in your home.

*" •

,.

......, r.viJtlbl. Ill••·

Holur.lxtaa Care

C7•oJ •••·•••o

...... ..... (800t 920·8160
..,

A•

TOP IINIOR - Selected to receive the Franklin B. Walter

Neecl

ai••

WCM

RACINE - A ncw ·superintendent and interim superilt, t~11dent wt•re nam,·J during the recent meeting of the
Southern Local Board of Educalion .
M&lt;•mbcrs of the hoard selt•ctt•d 13ob Grueser as the district's m•w sttperintendcnt of schools during the organization's regular tm·eting on Monday.
Grueser will repbcc former superintendent James
L:twrcnce, whose wntratt renewal wa·s voted down by the
board in January.
·
Grucscr: who is tlw· current supt•rintcndcnt of the Warren
Local School District and a former n·sidt•m of Mcig.; County, will begin his duties on-August 1.
Afltor meeting in a brief cxcctttive session·, Bob Ord was
selected as the district's interim supcrimcndcnc. Ord will
nssume the res.ponsibilities of tht· position until July 31, after
which, he will be replaced by Gruescr. .
In other personnel matters, the ,board approved a motion
to non-renew the following supplemental positions as necessary under the terlns of the cuntracl with the Southern
Local Teachers Asmciation effective June 30:
Roma Sayre, varsity volleyball coach; Pete Sayr~. reserve
volleyball coach; Becky Adkin~,junior high volleyball coach;
Lee Codner, high school head cheerleader advisor; Tina
Recs, junior high head checrleadc" advisor: Jonathan Rees,
head boys hasketball coach; Kyle Wick lim•, junior high 8th
gr:tdc boys lmsketball coach; Jaime Evam, junior high 8th
grade girls basketball coach; Heather Dailcy,j lminr high !!th
grade girls basketball coach; Tamniy Chapman, reserve girls
basketball coach; Thlilllas Smith, assistant football coach;
Allen Papc,junior high football cmtch;Tonya Huntcr,junior
high volleyball coach; Scott Cleland, assistant boys basketball
coach, freshman boys ba•kctbaU ci)ach .
The board also agreed to non-renew the following

ACADEMIC AWARDS

POM£1\.0Y
The
accompllshmenti of 50 top
tcholm In Meiss County
tchoob were celebrated at the
.18th Annual Melt;~~ County
Academi~ Ex,ellence Ban~
quet held Thesday night at
Meil!l High S~hool.
Each of the scholan was
pretented a trophy by Mike
Struble and Jeanette Thomas,
member! of the Athent-Meil!l
Service Center Governing
Uo~rd.
·
Pre~entlniJ their ~cademlc:
achiever! were Oeryl Well, of
the Eastern Lo,al district, 11
ttudenca: Wllliant Buckley,
Meise Loclll superintendent,
29 tcholm; and Or. john
ColtllllZO, esc IUperlncendent, 10 academic achlevel'l
from Southern Local.
Costanzo congratulated the
tcholara and described them
a1 the top 50 out of the 4,000
students enrolled in Meigt
County 1chools.
He called on them to be
proud of what they have
achlc11ed, and to always
remember who they are and
where they came from. ·
AltO honored were the top
three lettiort, one from each
. tchool dim let, !elected o11 the
buia of academic achieve~
ment and leader1hip tk i111.
They were Bradley H~nnon
of J!a11ern, Tyler Littlt of
Southern, and Amber Snowden of Mcil!l.

M.

TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·hori.ored
1

1 Mother-daughter

Calender

.

to so
sc ol.ars

Inside tocley's
"· '

dmcted);
No. 2, ND;
Well No. 3, ND: Alter tre:ilmcnt, ND.
Village of l'omeroy, March
2to: Wdi No. 4. 1Ul85; Well No.
2, 0.069; After crt•atmem,

County's

Hlah: 701~ Low: 601
INIIJ, A2

w•

I I I I I.

.

lv IMAM J. Rno

"

0 ..

(5

talllinatiocl. ?f Mdg.; County's
\Vllter ~upphes was first n\ade
public t)Wr a cllottth "!!'&gt;·
Cll li a chemical used by
.E.I. Dul'mlt DeNctuom·,;, In c.
at tn Washhtl!'"on Works plant
neur Parkcrsbut·l!, W.Va., and
has bet•n dete~tcd iu sewral
water supplies downriwr tto111
the plant,
Thc EPA reports the fol ~
lo'Yilll! C8 levels, in parts p&lt;·r
biilion,ln local water supplies:
TP-C, tested Feb. 6 ;nld March
25 (shuwn in parentheses):
Willi No. I, 0.0726 (0.0705);
Well No. 2, 0.0417 (IJ.0327);
Wdl No. 3, NQ (Not qunntiAabie) (NQ)); Wdl No. 4,
0.0734 (0.070); Well No. 5,
0.0201 (0.0201); Well Nn. li,
0.0(\49, (0.0(o34); l'rc"treMment, 0.0372 (0.0347); After
treatment, O.U361 (0.035M).
Village of Syracuse, Mardi
2'1: South well~ 0.02UB; North
Well, NQ; After treatment,
NQ.
Village ot Radne, March
26: Well No. 1, ND (Not

Cirueser
s

~ell

""

~

sourHERN LOCAL

•
I

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
WWw .holzer.org

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="464">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9909">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23012">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23011">
              <text>April 30, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3939">
      <name>gillian</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="725">
      <name>hart</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5418">
      <name>marrs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1207">
      <name>pullins</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
