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P.II•TheiMIIyStl._

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Angels massacre Tribe. 81

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Racine wells CS-free

Whits

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Tum at bat
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Feb.rnarv
.March
• II
testino results
• .d
OU tltne

,fRANK &amp; EARNESr

GOT TIMf FO#t J.8 tiOLf$7

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-.
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.

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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

""

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sourHERN LOCAL

•
I

MEDICAL CENTER
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The Daily Sentinel

National spotlight tums on Cheshire

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Ill KIWI KruY
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SuMy Pl.~~

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let

Showers enter Thursday forecast
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Showers
and
thunderstorms. Rain may be
heavy at times. Lows in the
lower 60s. Southeast winds I 0
to IS mph becoming southwest. Chance of rain 80 percent.
Thursday... Showers
and
thunderstorms likely. Highs in
the upper 70s. West winds
around 15 mph. Chance of
rain 60 percent.
Thursday night .. .A chance
of showers early in the
evening, then becoming partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper 40s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.

Extended forecast:
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs
in the mid 60s.
Friday night. .. Mostly clear.
Lows.in the mid 40s.
Saturday... Mostly
clear.
Highs near 70.
Sunday... Mostly dear. Lows
in the upper 40s and highs in
the lower 70s.
Monday... Partly
cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
lower 50s and highs in the
mid 70s.
·
Tuesday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in .the lower 50s and
highs near 80.

·Charter: Gallipolis seniors
eligible for discount
FROM STAFF REPORTS

GALLIPOLIS - Senior
citizens and those receiving
full disability benefits who.
reside in the city of Gallipolis
are eligible for discounts on
cable television service from
Charter Communications.
That's according to the franchise agreement approved
March 22, 1983. The fr-anchise
agreement sets rates and
imposes provisions and conditions for cable companies
operating in Gallipolis,
Under terms of the franchise agreement - Section
12 , subsection B _ Charter,
or any cable company wishing
to operate in Gallipolis, is
required to "charge reasonable
rates, and shall maintain at all
times a copy of such schedule
rates with the offi1ce of the city
manager."
.
Subsection. B goes on to
state that residences in
Gallipolis in which the heads
of households are 'either senior
citiuns or individuals who are
· "permanently or totally disabled" shall be eligible to
receive a 25 percent discount
on service.
Senior citizens are defined
as those 65 yean old or older,
as defined by the U.S. Bureau
of the Census and Internal
Revenue Service.
Permanently disabled or
totally disabled individuals
must meet •requirements of
the U.S. Departmem of
Health, Education and Welfare
or the
U.S. Veterans
Administration. Disabled veter:ans are defined as those "suffering from a service connected disability exceeding 60
percent."

According to city officials,
the discount is nor currently
offered to eligible parties
despite reassurances in a letter
dated Dec. 14,2001, from M.
Celeste Vossmeyer, Charter's
vice president for governmental relations, stating that
Charter "agrees to be bound
by the terms and conditions of
the franchise agreement with
the city of Gallipolis."
Kurt Leachman, operations
manager for Charter, said
Monday the company intends
to honor the agreement. He
said the discount applies only
~o ~ubsc~ibers who purchased.
as1c an expanded basic service, not to those with special ·
packages.
"It's important that they
know that the senior citizen
discount only applies to cuitomen who have basic and
expanded basic service,"
Leachman said.
"Those customers that have
basic, expanded basic, digital
and/ or a modem are probably
in a package of some kind and
they are receiving a discount
anyway," he added. "So they
would not qualify. If they're a
basic customer only, then
there is no discount at all. You
have to have basic and
ext'anded basic.
"The discount comes off
the expanded basic pricing, so
you have to have expanded
basic service;' Leachman said.
· Leachman said those eligible for the discount should
contact Charter to request an
application form to receive
the
discount.
Charter
Communications can be contacted at 304-485-1700.

·G_P(Qee: t~-:~~ f5
Th~~ ,IJ dtJ

CHESHIRE - A nl~dia
storm. primarily from loc:~.l
and n-gional sources. followed th~ announcement
two \~eks ago of the agre~
ment · between · Americ-an
E1e&lt;:tric Power and Cheshire
allowin8 AEP tQ buy the village.
Now the story will hit a
broader audience when
ABC-TV airs a news f.-aturt!'
within the near futuft!'.
A small crew fronted by
narion:;tl
correspondent
Barry Serafin come to
Cheshirl' and the surrounding uea Tuesday to interview townspeople, ·Mayor
Tom Reese. G:11lia Com1ty
Local Schools Interim
Superintendent
Charla
Ev:llls' and others for thdr
perspective on the pending
buyout of the village.
" I think we'il be able to
give it 3 fair treatment,"
Serafin, a 22-year wteran of
ABC's newsgarheiing mn,
said while filming around
Cheshire.
,"As almys, we'll give a
fair, accurate and interesting
treatment," he added. "We
appreciate the openness of
the people here in telling us
their story."

enfin wasn't suR e:ncdy a-111!1"~--~-------~-:------..,
when the stury wil.lllir, but
\v:u to inform R~se and
other loc;U otlki:lls whttl to
watch for the pit¢t.
· When AEP and the vitb~
announced the aQfi'emtnt
April 16, ttporten, phO!Q8':Phtn ud vidtognphtn
lrotn Columbus, Athens 1/dld
Huntington, W.'Va .. routinely bumped into each othtr
seekin8 int.-rviews and
comments from offici:lls a.nd
residents.
•
The story w~· and is a
regional .-nsation, even.t utlly mra~ring interest from
.
s~1ch natioml 3.uditnce pub- GETTING 1M S10itY- With the Gen • ..,.., M. GIW'I Poii:Jir
hcauons as U:SA Thday and Plant In the becklroun&lt;l. ABC·TV News natlonll tonesponclel'ot
the IJallas Morning News, Barry,$8rafln, center, reh&amp;arsed a pwt of Ills story lbout 1he
struck by the conctpt of a proposed ~. of Cheshire wltll cernerarnan ~ Manclets,
smu\1 town bdng bought for left. and tecllnlclan Thorn Shafer. (Kevin Kelly)
$20 million. if all parties are
U!!rceablc.
but it appl':us people aft!' . Cheshire n~ptht Chutth,
· It was that unusu~l narure getting something · thi!y 011e of the properties
that drew ABC to the story. W\lnt," he added.
\'ltpt¢ted 10 join in the salt,
prompting Ser~fin's colSenlln and his co-worktrs gathered for A closed s&amp;ion
leagues to search for a mod- were.to wrap up their work to separate fact from filllty.
ern· duy ,·omparison.
with interviews at the Gen . "The church is exploring
"It's a very interesting and . Jam es M. Gavin Power options, butd on the !filth
unusual situation," Serafin Plant, the linchpin to the and nor on rumon Oying
s:1id. "We tried to remember dram~.
around." s11.id its p11stor, the
and can't lind anything like
A dosed meeting between Rev. Craig Furtick, prior to'
it except for the Mi&amp;souri those property owners and the meetins. "That\ why we
town of Times Beach chat attorneys
held Monday, feel it's imporiatit to stick
was bought out.
~nd while Serafin and his with our ttgular chutth
· "This is ' a hard situation, crew workt.'d in the waning members and attendees."
and it's not a done deal yet, sunlight ,
members
of

-s

lloftaldE..Hart

Bradford·Church
;·plans mother-daughter
:banquet for.May-11
P ME.ROY - Plu11 for

~

moth~NIAughter banqul!t to
~ hcld on May 11 at l p.m.

were made when the Bndfotd

Blind college students
using talking signs·
FAIRBORN (AP)
University of CaliforniaWhen Janae Miller arrived at Berkeley is considering buyWright State University as a ing the devices, he said,
freshman,
friends
and
Wright State, in suburban
acquaintances served as her Dayton, has installed 30
eyes,
transmitters in its student
Now, the 23-year-old union using $50,000 in state
senior is among blind stufunds set aside for improving'
dents using devices at .the
accessibility for disabled stustudent union that talk to
them and give them direc- dents,
tions to restrooms, elevators, Jeffrey Vernooy, Wright
stairs, the bookstore ami even State's director of disability
serviccis, said he hopes the
the food court.
"When I first came here as devi ces will especially benea freshmah, finding out ficial to new students unfawhere things were and hav- miliar with the union, He
ing to rely on friends and s:ljd the school plans to put
people you knew to get you more devices in the union
around began to be a prob- and then install them in the
can I Signed by creator Stan Lee, director
lem because •I'm not really library, camp us restauranu
Sam Ralml and cast members Tobey ·
one to want a lot of help," and tunnels used by students
said Miller, of Columbus. to 11ct to .classes,
· .
Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, Wlllem Dafoe and
"This is really handy."
':It's still hard to leam
James Franco!
"This" is a transmitter
resembling a smoke detector whure new locations are,"
that gives off a repeating said Samantha Broshear, a
voice nmsage unique to its 20-year-old visually impaired
location. The voice message student fron1 Hamilton.
is silently transmitted by
Broshear said the device
infrared light to hand-held or helped her discover a
, ·'II II () •II' lr I 1111' '' .._ ·' I' llilll r(
,
I
II 11', !IIIII .!V 1II
headphone receivers carried restroom in the union she
by nudcnts,
· didn't know exis.ted,
"This is a breakthroufth for 1"'________;..______________,..
people who can't see, ' said

S!l~!!':!~.!~!!~r

Ward Bond, president of the
·Baton Rouge, La.-based
Talking Signs In c.
.
Bond's . company also has
imtalled the devices in buildings in San Francisco and
New York City and is currently putting them on city
buses in Lansing, Mich. The

De.m· 0 crats·. Vot'e **. . .
Dr . Er I. C Ha5em.·e1.er *
·

·

•.

f or Qh"10 House o.f Representatives
·
Education

• Doctor of Otltopll~lc Modldrlt
• M1111n at lutl""' AdrnlniJtrotlon
•llchelor of klonco In lntlnttrl"'

It'S .·
. e.'
T tm.
Garden &amp;
Grass
Seed for
Spring
Planting

On Cell Modlcol Auocllllf, Alhent, OH
• Cllnl&lt;~l Ftcullr, o,u,-c.o.M.

Reader Services

••

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EJC1. 12

0111--.

NeWI

!xi. 1G

or

!xl. 14

Dilly
IIOoenlo
tublcriblll not dltlrlno 1o PlY lhl
01..., mav '""" In •~~'~•noe dlrtotto

Otn1tll

Hospital, Grovlf, TX

Clrou.lllllon

•

Clalllllld Aclt

Ta ""d Hnlll

tiOUII

IIWtllll
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WNW.mydailyMnllntl.oom

tiUII
t8UI
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· Aflet ,...,. ...

•
•

planned

Fill dluolutl'on

or •

or

Proud to be apart
of your life.

RENEWAL "

~ MORBLOOAL-i(0JttOCAl;FOIIS.
•

Banquet

"YES"

lluH4Inf ltu"-, Ill'...... f004l*

- lronlflll, ..., lltlniMti ...,.,.,
fffordlilt lllllllt CMIIO ......., Ololo.

Issued license

By vot1n9
forthetwot""lll, five-year

Df. ......... ,., ... .....,...., ..,......

Elect Dr. Eric Hasemeier Be
Put a doctor in the house!
' '

OnthiWtb

Leadership Experience

-~·· alllh ""'· Cllloy, ...,

1-304-773-5583

11 Wt1111

Meetlnr slated

OnMay7
Please continue to eupport
The Middleport Fire Department

IIIIIH oullllde Mllfl CouM~

niWtO mydiiYJIIIIInti,oom

Dr. Eric Hasemeler

..---

Wt1111

12 Wttlit

Court by uw~nte Willitttl
' McQuoid IV. Lutg!viU~, lml
POMEROY - Unit! tl( O~wn ll..~1we MtQutid,
the Me.. Bmergeney Servlee Lm~viUe.
'
answered nln~! calls for AMi!·
A dl\'ot&lt;:c hM b~~n l!flltl~d
tance on Tuesday. Uni~ ttl Huell\rlenc Gib~on frotn
Timothy W11ync Gibson,
Chrlstin Hull, Muy Bucld~y. ttapondtd ~~ foUowt~
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Michael Barnett, Jeanett
1:23
a.m., Cron)loin~
Oldaker.
Aputmentt, .Darlene Clu1d·
The board llao:
POMEROY - Tht Zon• approved ~hret year well, Holnr Medieal Center;
ilil!
App~~~~ Boat\:1 will meet
3:13 a.tn., Middleport,
teaching contracts with Purl·
cia Cook, Scott Wolf'e and Mindy Laudermllt, ~rused ~t ? p.m. on May 8 at the
l'omeroy Muuidp&lt;tl Buildinl!.
tttatment;
Christi Chaney;
7:43a.m., Rye P..Olld, PatriI ag,r nd to re-employ
Stevens,
O'lllene11
Debra Michael for a two year cia
Memorlll
Hospi!Al;
contract;
•
POMEROY - A m~rriagc
12:33 p.m., Dye Road ,
I . approved a continuing
lkensc hM becu issued in
contrtct With Thomas Thetas:· Gro.ce ChevAlier, CAmthm- Mei~ County Probate Court
I agreed to . 1\Pn-renew Clark Men\oriol HospitAl;
to Ch~rlcs 1\..k hat\:1 Olll Jr.,
3:00 p.m., Dr. Kunun"r's IB, ~nd Mdis5a Lee Hemsfey,
. Lelia Brownlna's contract
with the school diatrlct at the office, Luther Amos,. Pleuntlt 18, both ofl'o11teruy.
expir~tion of her current VAlley Hospi!AI; ·
5: 17
p.m.,
Gencr11l
contrtiCII
• approved Larry Smith, Hartinger, Jennlrer Kulm,
bm driver, for a aupplemenml HMC;
contract for the 2002-03
6:47 p.m., O hio !iB I ,
RACINE
.
school yeu ao as to transport Shirley Forriden, CCMI-l
students to Meigs Local and
Raduc/Southcrn Alumni
RBBDSVILL.ll
Eutcrh Loelll:
10:09 a.m., L11tmrt !lnlls, Assod11tion will hold their
ntu1ual banquet on Satut\:lay,
• appto\0\ld a supplen\ental . WIUlam Whltlo'ck, PVH ,
Mny 25, 1\t So uthern 1-llgh
cot\tract for the 2002-03
SYRACUSE
school year with R)llln Letu11 :45 Q.l\1 ,, Ohio 124, SdtollL blmll'r will b~ ;crwd
lcy as junior hllfh bo)'8 basket- motor vehicle nccidcnt, nt (,;3() p.1)\ ,
Ti~k~t! whkh •tr¢ $12
baU coach (7th gnde). The LorettA Goode, refu1~d trent&lt;'ach, cat~,. ptltch~!ed ot the
polltion Ia contingent upon ment.
hi!!h !t hou!, the Rndne
the necosury number of stuHoutc N•ttluu ,tl Ua11k, or by
dems wonting to participate
cn
llit1 g Shirley Johmlln ~ t
In the prosram .
In other matters, the boRrd
POMEROY - An Action 1!43-527\1. Ch~ cks (or rc~er·
approved January 7-8,2002, as for dl!solution tJf mnrrlagc vat10n1 l'MI be s ~nt to Shirley
calDnl!ty days duo to snow in hu b ~e n flied in Mcig5 nt 55590 Stntc l{.oute 124,
tllC entire district. Approval
County
Ollll11tl ll
Jllclli Portland, Ohiu 45770,
this motion I! neceuary when
ulting the Superintendent of
Thmala June~ (l'"rll' Yr11cr Liwt)
'
Public Instruction to excu111
wu~ voted tJnc of the I0 •~~leNt
women ur 2()()() und 200 I by
th.e school dlltrict fiom makl'~ud~ri of nlm:k Mtll MtiStr~llt~,
ing up , the · aforementioned
days instruction.

EMS n1ns

MIDDLEPORT RESIDENTS:

13W-

a

LOCAL BRIEFS

Sulllerlbt todllf • 992·2156 .

~--~
121.30
21
18U2

l!wt, 4
EJC1,

l10ol

The Dll)' ltnllnel, Cftdll Will blgiVtn
01..., tlcl1 · No IUbiCiipiiOn 0\' •
mtll pti!!IIMG In IIIU Whlrt homt
01..., ilr'llll leiVIIIIbll,

I!JC1, 3

Adlltf1lll111

11.10

Dlllrtll'

Other Mrvlon '

AI....,., Dr. Hlffnllll(t flrlllly

HARDWAIU!
MASON,
W.VA.

fi•PIItAI

The Daily Sentinel

• ilft-tlofllf at world'' IIIli podlotrk splnol
card lnjurrcon11111 Shriner'I Hospilll,
l'llllldlipl!ll. '"

thok '""' -

Southem

..

.•

• A1htm COIH!Iy ,.,..,,
• Attodllt Ollnl1 Dfllo Unlvonijy,
Collog~ of Osloop11~1~ Mtdldno
• 'rosldiM W CIO at Dodor't

WASHINGTON (AP) - A ne\11, ~n-eytd eamet~ on
tht Hubble Sp&lt;~ce Thll'$c:ope is c.pl\lrlng vioews of dl~ttnt
lt'laxits \vith a cluity n~wr b\\lhm (ll».\ible. Astronomoen '!l'f
tbl.l ins!l'llment moy dnnmkally thM~ biisic knilwl~
about the unlwne. Th11 Advanctd Ount~n Rn SnMy&amp; "is
opening l wide new window onto the uniwrse," 'Slid Hot-·
llnd fotd of johns Hopltim Vnivenity, INder of the tell\\
that doevtlopcd the new cuuoert.
Spe11.1ting at a ne\'1$ tonfllttnce whm the 6rst four vit'M
from the ACS wert reltlsed, Fotd ~ld thll new .tamera
makes the Hubble\. vision 10 times shar~ and gives the
ciearen pieru~s yet of pllltiea formlna m the very mly
universe.

LOCAL STOCKS .

•
.•

Previous Positions

Hubble Cl.._. productive

toacher's contracts effective
June 30: Culas. Bailey,
Bethany Bay, Daniel Otto,
Amity Abigail Cauthorn,
April King, and Mary .Leach,
The board approved the
following people for supplemental contracts for the
2002-03 school year: Jon
Rees, head bo)ll basketball
coach; Scott Wolfe, head girls
Prtmllr- 10
'tdlral Nloaul--.&amp;a
· AEP - 41.110
basketball coach, head · girls
USB -- 23.1o
Ard1 Coal - 22.20
Radlwlll - 81.47
softball
coach;
Rusty
Oanniii-?UO
Akzo -- 43.20
Rooky Boott - 7.31
R.ichuds, head footbAll coach,
AmTich/880 -- 31 .oa Cltnttlll!llalrlc -- 31.811 RD Bhlll -- u,a
OKN~V --4.15
.Aahland lno. -- 40.83
auiuanr baseball coach; Scott
BHrt - 52.75
HaltiiV Oel'ldlon -- 11.111 Wai·Mirl -- sue
• .ATIT - 13,12
Wickline,
head baseball
: Bank One - 40.87
l&lt;marl -- 1.$4
Wlndy'1
-37.&gt;40
coach; Rebecca Bwns, assisKroger -- 12.71
• BLI - 1U8
Worthington - 14.110
1.anr11 End -- 110.ae
: Bob Evan• - 30.&gt;40
Daly ltook rtpi)rlt art · tant softball coach; R}Un
Ltd,- 18.10
·aorgwamer - 82.48
tha 4 p.m. cloelng Lemley, cross country coach,
N8C -- 21.43
Champion - 2.84
quOtlt
ol lhl prtVIOUI
Also approved for supple( ChinninG Bhopl - 8,84 Ollc HII'IWiclll --20.82
dly'•
tranHotlona,
pro- tnental contracts for the
• .OilY Holding - 1UO ova--auo
vided by Smith Parmtrt
BIT - 38,08
: ·Col - 23.82
at Adve1t tnc. or Oaf· 2002-03 school yen -• Ki111
Ptcpltl - 27 . .
• DG - 15,78
Romine, year book, Title IX
llpolll.
Ptp11oo - euo
: DuPont - 44.80
compliance officer; Dennie
••
Title I treasurer; Vicki
··.---------------------~ , HiU,
Northup, Title I parent
•
resource coordinator; Shirley
••
S11yrc, guidance; Diane Dun••'·
(UPII1MIO)
fee, FHA; Daniel Rlffic, tnnsOlllo Ytllley '•llllllllng Co,
portation supervisor; Aaron
,uiJIIWd IYifY llitmoon, Mondly
lhrOilgh 'rldey, 111 COil~ 81.,
Sayrc,
vowionlll PFA.
Correotlon Polloy
,omtroy, Ohio, · illollncNlillt
. T he following tuc hen .
peld II i"Omi!O)O,
oonotrn In aiiiiOriH II
•• tOOurblmain
IIIII
The
AIIOOIItiCI
Pr
...
IM
IOCUIIte, 11 VOU know olin
were re-employed by the
•
error
In
1 aiOry, oan thl niWiroom IIIII ONO NIWIIIIPII AIIOOilllon .
board for a one yeu contrnct
,111m1111n llild 1ddrtN oorrte·
•• 11 /740) eoa.atae.
,
lionelo
T~• Dolly S.ntlntl, 111 Coun,
effective July I: Ru11y
•
81., ,omerov, Olllo ~8181. .
Richards, Michelle CarpenNIWI DeDtll'lmentl
lubaarlptlon r•t••
The main ·num&amp;tr It 882·21 ee,
ter, Lori · Hill, Joy Neal,
lly 1 -OIIIIOIGrDepemnllll tlCIIIIIIanl ara:
·
Robyn
Vcnoy, Rehecca Evans,
011112

..

• ~end MIIII&lt;II.Diroclor of

Family Life

PICKENS

: Chureh of Chriu Lydia
· Council met in the activity
center.
"Gntldma\
Counuy
Kitchen" will ~ the theme
and the dinner will be
potluck. Committees are
Sherry Shamblin, Cherie
Williamson, and Tkacy
Davidson, pqrun: Diane
Maxwell, Becky an~rpr and
M11deline Painter,
favon; Cuolyn Nicholson,
pictures; Emily Bina, Sherry
Smith, and Paula Pickens, dec. orations: C~e.rie Williamson
and Tracy Davidson, special
aifb.
·
lt" was noted that Vacation
Bible School will be held the
week of June t 0.
Shamblin presided at the
. meeting with readings· beina
. given by Lillian Burt, 'Jere&amp;&amp;
· Wood , Eula McManus, knd
Lucille Raynes. who sent a

donation for sunshine buk.lc.
Ollicen' reports wen gi\!'&lt;ln
and Su:tie Will was named to
handle tOitullunion in May.
Hosting the May 6 Council
mtetilllt will be Nmc:y Morris
and Brenda Bolin.
Spring readings Cor devotions were givtn by Tkacy
Davidson · and
Cherie
Willian11on.
Re&amp;eshmenc were ,erwd
by the hostesses, Traty Davidaon, Misty DeWeest and
Willlanuon 10 Shttry Sham- .
blln, Charlotte Hanning, Su:tie
and Chrlati Will, Brenda
Bolin, Sherry Smith, Phyllls
Baker, Jackie Reed, Charlotte
Vanmeter, Becky Amberpr,
Diane Maxwell, Neva Chapman, Brittany Colllns, Paula
Pickens, Gerry Lightfoot,
Tracy, Amber and Dylan
Davidson, Cherie and Ctltlln
Willlanuon.
Sunshine baskets for April
were given to 'nimmy Ruof,
Scott DeWeese, Camille Bolin
and Eleat:~or Hoover.

'

Current Positions

U Taw

Soil

FOODDRM

2111

Ohio weather

o•.-

....,_

Levy which finances equipment for the
department. Thank You I

Subsc,. ~ • 99~-~1.56

Pd for by MlddltPQrt V~L F1111 Dopi

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The Daily Sentinel

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een~

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f4c.•l.a15T

~-com

Ohio V•lley Publlahlng Co.
DEAR ~Y: I am writing to
you as a last resort. Plca.se print my·
letter so I can get help. I am a )'QUOit
teen who feels like cOmmitting suicide.
My parents work long hours and
provide a· roof over our head$ and
food on the table, but we spend
hardly any time together. While I
have suffen:d no physical abuse, I've
been hurt by my ·mother's verbal
abuse. I think I'm depressed beuuse
in a survey I took at school, I
matched the profile of a penon suffering from depression ..
I can't tell my parents, although I
have ttied numerous times. When I .
told Mom I wanted to see a psychiatrist, she said "no." I've tried talking to teachen but nothing works.
Is there something I can do without
involving other people? No matter
what I say. no one takes me seriously. My friends think I'm joking
when I tell them how I feel.

o.n OlcMI ton
~

O..ltM~
a.-e~~

,.IIMQtl

'('OU

,._._e £\"0\E.R

v-41"0-\ U$ Oft "'f')U

AP-E A6NNt;T USm

NATIONAL. VIEW

)

,CeU research needs a watc~l
eye .front the government
• Lo~ A~les Times, on ~-ell research: There is almost no
support rut so...:alled "reptodllctive dolling," the mornlly
~~nnnt 11otlon of &lt;.'opying DNA for the pm·pose of creating
11 child, ll\lt what aboutcretlling a few hutmm cells that nliiht
ell~ Alt:hehner's, J&gt;arkit1son's; can"-er or other ~-enous diseases, without creating a fetus? That use, though it requires
ex;~mination, \.'ei1ilinly does not fall in the same class as babymaking,
~sidell! Sush thr~w out the medical with the Immoral .. . in
a Whit~ Hou~'e speech calling fur a comprehensive, no-exceptions han ol\ hUillatl dOlling, ...
bush called fur the support of Senate Majority Leader tbm
Daschle (0-S.D,), which is about as likely as Bush supporting
new taxes, There's a possibility that the president's speech
was really meant to score points with ardent abortion opponents, many or whom were in the audience, and provide
11mmunitioli to use against Democrats in November.
But eve11 if 1ha1 cynlcal scet~~~rio is true, Bush is rebull1ng
sdent'e, The Browttbt1ck bHl would bar federally t\mded ~ci­
etltists t\Qm ~ngaglng ill so-culled "lherapeulic" or "research"
c1oning: replicating the bNA of early-stage embryos to pursue
promising leads in disease trcatmenls, ...
Perhaps the worsl result of the bill would be to drive public
research Into the private sector, where no fe.deral ethics or
public disdorure rules apply and where scientists would have
110 official o.versight whalsoever, The· possibility of that out:
come should !rouble everyone ....
tliwn !he recetlt, Utlconl'irmcd reports that ltalitltl gynecol OiliSt Severino Alltinori had prodttced a cloned humah
embryo, the need ror regulatioll Is urgent ....

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'fuduy Is Wedl\esduy, Muy l,the 121.st day of2002. There
are :244 days left in the year.
'lbduy's HlghHghlln History :
·
, On May I, 1960, the Soviet Union shof down an Ametlcan
u~ l reconnaissance plune neur Sverdlovsk and captured its
pilot, Francis Oary Powers.
·
·
On this dtue:
b\ 17811, Mozart's opera "The Marriage of Figaro" premiered in Vlennu.
In 1893, the World's Columbl an Exposition wus offlclully
opened In Chicago by President Cleveland.
ln 1898, Commodore George Dewey guve the command,
"You may fire when you are ready, Gridley," as ~n American
nuvul force demoyed a Spal\lsll t1eet In Manila Bny durh\g ·
the Spanlsh-Amerlcan War.
.
· In 1931 , New York's I02-story Empire State Building wu
dedit:nted.
.
.
In 1931 , singer Kute Sml1h be~nl\ her lortg·runnlnll rndlo
program on CDS .
In 194 I, the Orson Welles moll on plciure "Clilt.en Knne''
premiered ln New York.
·
.
In 1948, the People's Democrutlc Republic of Korea
(North Koren) wus proclulmed,
. ..
,
In 196i, Elvis Presley murrlcd Prlsclliu Beaulieu m Las
Vegus. ('fhey divorced In 197·3.)
In 1971, Amtrak - which combined and streamlined the
operations of 18 Intercity pussenger railroads - went lnlo
service.
·
It\ 1987, during u visit to West Oermuny, Pope John Paul
ll beatltled Edith Stein, u Jewish-born Carmelite nun who
wus gmised in 1he Nutl death camp at Auschwitz.
'ren years ago: On the third duy of the Los Angeles rlots1 a
visibly shuken Rodney King appeared In public to nppeal tor
cnlm, usklrtg, "Cun we all get along?'' President Bush dellv·
ered u nutlonully broadcast address in whlch he vowed to
"use whatever force Is necessary'' 1o restore order,
Five years ugo: BrltonN went to the polls in 11 national electlotl that guve the Lubor Puny u resounding victory over the
ruling Conservatives. John and Patsy Rumsey, the putents of
gluln child beauty queen JonBenet Ramsey, publicly
declared their lnrtocence In the case, and asked ror the public'N help In finding !he klller or their 6-yeur-old daul!hter.
One year ago: President Bush 'corrtmltted the United States
ttl building u shlllld against .bulllsllc missile attack. FBI
Director [ouls Frech announced his retirement. Thomas
Blanton Jr. becnme the second cx-Ku Klux Klansman to be
convicted In the 1963 bottlb.lng of u church in Blrmlnghum,
Ala., that claimed the lives Ot' !'our black girls.
'lbduy's birthdays: Actor dlenn F'ord Is 86. TV penonull·
ty Jock Paur IM K4. Actor Dan O' Herlih,Y is 83. Former astronaut Scott Cu'rj)enter is 77, Coumry smger Sonny James Is .
?3. Jazz singer Shirley Horn Is 61!. Singer Judy Collins Is 63.
Actur Stephen Muehl is 60. Singer Rita Coolldg~ is 157.
Actor-director Dou11las Burr is SJ. Singer-songwnter Ray
Parker Jr. is 41!. Hull of f&lt;ume jockey Steve Cauthen Is 42.
Country Nlnger Wayne Hancock Is 37. Rock musician
Johnny Colt Is 36. Actor Charlie Schlutter is 36. Counlry
singer Tim McOruw Is 315. Rock musiclun b' Arcy is 34.
A~tor Oarlu~ McCrary IN 26.
Thouaht for Today: "If a mun will begln In certainties he
lihMU erld In doubts; but If he will be content to bel!ln in
doubt he shall end in certulntles." - f'raucis Bacon,
ltnaHah philosopher cI561-1626 J.

RUSHER'S VIEW

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
I want help - I want to live but if there's no . help. there's no
point. I've thought about suicide a
lot and put a knife to my wrist. I've
hurt m~lf by hitting a wall and
injuring my hand. Sometimes I cut
my fingen, but people always
believe me when I say it was an
"accident." I'm tired of living a lie, ·
Abby. Please help. - DESPERATE IN THE U.S.A.
DEAR DESPERATE: Since
you did not provide me .with your
location or telephone number, I am

BUNKER HILL

&lt;

'Extra points' can.help your admission to this college .
why a st\ldent should be penalized fo~
having college-educated parents.
'
Then there was the applicant who got
250 points for disclosing in his applica':
lion essay that he suffered from chnica'!
depression and was on Prozac. Eve(l
more persuasive was the case of a stu,•
dent wilh a fine academic record an9
membership in the student senate. H!!
earned an added 150 points because his
family income ' was only $26,000 iii
200 I. But what really put him over the
top was the disclosure in his.essay thai
his parents were divorced and that he
suffers from a neurological disorder that
affects his ability to learn.
The point is not thai such students
don'! deserve credit for overcomin~
personal disabiliiies. But have they
earned the righl to shoulder aside othet
applicants who don't qualify for th.os~
all-imponant extra points? Woe betid~
the student whose parents are happily
married, went to college themselves, ·
and earn too much to rate as "lowincome." Pity the poor wretch who has
no psychological or neurological disorder to confess to in her essa;r.
The guidelines for apply1ng to U.C.
San Dieg_o are cleur: Come from a dysfunctional family, preferably below the
poverty line; suffer from some learning
disability, even if it's only dyslexia; and
make sure that nobody else in your
extended family has ever been to col- '
lege. Your academic record and
extracurricular achievements will still
be importanl, but you 'II beat the competition with all those extra points.
·
(William Rusher is a Distinguished
Fellow of the Claremont Institute for
the Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

William

Rusher

COLUMNIST .
that has long been the cornerstone of all
evaluations.
Meanwhile, the eight campuses in I he
U.C. system have been instructed to
consider, in addilion to academic
achievement and family income, such
other. factors as family education,
school environment, community servlce, talents, and leadership. Most ol'
these have long been regarded as legltimute factors in evaluating a student's
over-all qualifications, but the various
colleges in the system cun and do g,ive
them difl'erent emphases. And last
month the Sun Diego Union-Tribune
reported that U.C. San Diego had been
remarkably Innovative in discoverin~
fuvorable factors in ils applicants
reThm~ssure, SAT scores. u high gradepoint average, and excellence in challenglng courses are still critical. And
being an Eagle Scout, a leum ca~tain, or
student body president helps a ot, too.
But beware if one or both of your parents attended college •• an applicant
gets up to 300 ex.lra (&gt;Oints for bemg the
first ~eneration in hts or her famil•y to
· atten college, though it'll hard to see

Wedneaclay, May 1
RACINE - Scottish Rite
meettnPt, 7 p.m., at the Racine
Mason c hall.
PAGEVILLE
Scipio
Township Trustee meetln~,
6:30p.m., Pageville town ha .

Red
Green
COLUMNIST

·

do something boneheuded, that's a
debit. When it gels to the point where
rour debits are greater than your cred·
tts, you now have a debt. This deb! will
draw a greal deal of interest •• especial·
ly from your wife. If you apologize sin·
cerely at the time of the debit, the
amount can be fQrgiven . If you don't
apologize or don't apologize properly,
the Interest will compound until such
time as 1he account goes dormant, and
then it will eventually be closed. So, I
suggest you get your accounts in order
Jong before It gets that far. Try to do it
during banking hours. Ex.pecttng to get
.an appointment with the credit manager
after bedtime is asking for foreclosure.
Last call
The concept of "last cull" Is a good
one. It lets you know that the end is
near, and if there's anything else you
wanted to order, you should do It now.
Here. are some other times in life when
"last call" would be appreciated:
• On yQur car's gas ~auge .
• When the truck dnver you insulted
ls making a fist.

sbimd at ~ tbu):JOOI ~a put)" that "~ held aft.-r In)'.
wik\ ~ One of the guem
proMdy thanked ME for do~
her to be of sei'Vi«! Shli $Ud it
taught her that true Mppl~ and
IWfillment comes only frum hdping others, and that her li£., '~bet­
ter for it.
T~ ~ so many nice people in
this world, Abby. I know bK'~mt'
IW met them! - ' JOHN· IN

ldiKWit to accept dW; ~.
but we; ~ relented..
Sooa the ~ got out. The soc-

m~ IJlOim -.e joined by lfUllllW"
schoollll()ms and others who wanted to help. Mally~ people
pitched in.
Each evening at encdy 5 p.m.,
our back d9orbell would ring and a

complete fully cooked mNI would
be there! Most of the time, th~
thoughtful people would lea~
before we; could answer the door,
beou!.C they didn't want to intrude.
We Were amaz.ed at what the$e fulh
did for u~ considering they were
busy with their own families,
· This unbelievable display ofkindness continued uninterrupted for
more than four months. Those
meals - and the overwhelming
generosity of the wiUIIt~rs meant the \Vodd to my family;
A surprising lesson from this

MELllOSE., MASS..

DEAR JOHN~ Thank you lar
an uppet of a lemtr. It\ important
to accept help when otfered. ~pl...
.· WANT 1:0 assist in a pati,.nt\ ~Ov­
ery. Providing me:lh or otf\"ru~g
tnnsportlltion llre pneti&lt;:;al w•ys to
help.
· (Amlirte P'liHipt ""II lu:r d"'\(ltlrr
pltrte l'ltilfipt tft..~ 1ft~· psntfi&lt;•Rf"'
A..,._., V"" Botmt. Wril&lt;' DNr "'flllr "'
-DNrAIIIIrro,..· "' P. 0. · llo\\"
69440, Lru A~lt\!; CA 90069.)

RUTLAND - Rutland Garden Club, 1 p.m .• at the home
of
Dorothy
Woodard,
Langsville.

clay, 7:30 p.m. Norm Coleman, Richland Avenue
Church to speak. Special
music, "The Upliften~" on Fri·
clay, talent n~t on Saturday.
arry Georga
TUPPERS PLAINS - The and the
Singers•
on
Sunday.
Nursery.
Ladies Auxlllal')' Post 9053 will
hold Its ~ular meeting, 1
SaturdlrPoMI¥ 4
p.m., at .the all.
MIDDLE R - Fourth
annual Mat Coun~ Family
Thuredly, May 2
Fun
Fast, iddle~ Church
SYRACUSE - Syracuse of Christ
Family lfe Center,
Village Cooocil, 7:30 p.m.
10 a;m. to 2 p.m. Free admls·
slon, children's activities,
Friday, May 3
entertainment, refreshments
RACINE
Revival, and health screenings tor
Carmel-Sutton
United .entire family.
Methodist Church, Carmel
building on Carma! Road,
POMEROY - Concert at
Racine, Friday through Sun- the Poplar Ridge Free Will

Baptist Church, 6:30 p.m.
"McComas Family" and "Forgiven 4" to sing. John Elswick.
pastor. invites public.
HARRISONVILLE - Hasr·
risonville Lodge 411 F&amp; AM • .
at the temple, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments.
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
township building:
"~\Mclay,

May 1
MIDDLEPORT - Middle·
port Communlly Association,
8:30 a.m., at Peoples Bank
conference room.

.Replica of church
·donated to
Chester museum
•

· CHESTER- A replica of the old Bunker Hill Church built
by the late Victor and Rose Genheimer has been donated for
display in the Chester Courthouse Museum.
The (our-foot church replica was donated by Lucille Gen"
heimer White, da11ghter of the builden. it was recently renovated by Edward Ball, a member of the Chester-Shade Association, with Ed Kennedy doing the required electrical work to .
.• light it. The wood to build the replica was taken from the old .
chureh.
·
Furnishing~ include pews, a pulpit, a pot-bellied stove, lamps
.and hymnals.
.
- According to Betty Milhoan the church dates back to the
-about 1897. It was build on a triangle shaped tract of land
donated by Harry Genheimer and was of the Methodist
''denomination. In the early yean of the church it was used by
memben of the Methodist Circuit for hosting all-day gathering~.
· ,
" At tint the attendance exceeded 100, but as the years went
·by fewer attended. By 1949, it had dwindled down to eight
"active members and was no longer able to stay open.
.. Accepting the church replica on behalf of the Chester-Sha~e
·Association for display at the courthouse were Millhoan, Patn"cia Holter, Peggy Moore and Anna Cleland.

There's no denying the buying power of teenagers
• When your employer is evaluating
your performance.
• When your wife Is evaluating your
performance.
.
• When the grim reaper is in your
waiting room.
Pressin~ issues
My wtfe has an Irritating habit.
Ordinarily I'd be hesitant to say anything, but r ve hidden her glasses, so
she'll never read this. These days, she
wears glasses for the odd tlme when she
wants to actually see something.- She
even has bifocals, which as far as I can
tell, are the optician's way of turning 11
flight of stairs i.nto an adventure. When
s~e d~sn ' t have her !!lasses ~andy, that
sttll wttl not deter her. She wtll ptck up
a cell phone, a TV remote or step up to
a microwave oven and, even though she
can't make out any of the wofds or
numbers, she'll just start pressing buttons randomly until something happens.
.That's why there are bits of pork chop
welded to !he inside waUs of the
microwave, and why my cell phone
plays God Save the Queen every time I
get a call, and why our TV has French
subtitles on every program. I don't !Jet
mad. I just smile and quietly J!•Ve
thanks that she c;loesn't work at NASA.
Quote of the Day: "A dog is man's
best friend, because it never smiles at
the wrong time."- Red Green
(Red Green is the star of "The Red
Gree11 Show," a television series seen in
the U.S. on PBS and in Canada on the·
CBC Network, and the author of ''The
Red Green Book" and "Red Green
Talks Cars: A Love Story. " Watch for
the featurt film Red Greens 'Quct Tape
Forever' at a theater near jou.) .

~ -.~

we;re

CHURCH REPLICA ....,. A rilpllca of the old Bunker Hill Churoh .
recently renovated bY Edward Ball was donated for display at
the Chaster Courthouse. Pictured with Ball Is 'Pat Holter. an
actlva member of the Chester-shade Association.

RED GREEN'S VIEW

When you watch TV or look through
maglllllles, II'S amazing 10 me how
many of the uds lUfJ!et teenagers. Or, at
least It was amazing, until I found out
that teens spend $154 billion u year.
Teenagers are a drellllt come true for
any ailvertiser. They have money In
their pocket and almost nothinl! important to spend It on. Most of !hem have
food and shelter and access to the family phone, so all of the basic needs are
covered. And, they haven '! been jaded
by 30 yellts of buying things that bent,
broke, blew up or shut down.
. Now; OK, maybe teenagers don't
make u lot of money per .capita, but
whatever Income t~ey hnve I~ disposable. So, they have no problem spendIng It on tattoos or body piercing rl)ther
than on heat nnd groceries, But, before
you parents go off on a huge rant about
how !he 11dvettisers ure tilklng unfalt
udvantuge of our naive offspring, let's
step back. for a minute 11nd realize where
most of thut $154 billion comes fromallowances from you.
I know you didn't mean for it to go
this way. Giving your kids an allowance
is you investing · In the future, Well, I
have seen the future, und It hus a safety
pin through one eyelid and wears its
pants lll'OUIId hs knees. I should probably criticize the teen spending patterns
more often, btlt J was up in the attic the
other duy and · came across my
Capricorn medallion and platform disco
boots,
-.
Bank on it
You can leam a lot about relationships
by looking at your bank statement.
Whenever you do something thoughtful
or sensitive,·that's a credh. When you

some m~ liw us. At 6nt, -

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community Calendar Ia
robllahed a• ...... HI'Vk:e
non-profit groupa wlahlng to announce meetings
end apeclal eventa. The calenclar Ia not dnlgned to
promote ..... or tunckalaera of any type. lmna are
printed only aa apace permlta and cannot be guarantlld to be printed a apecmc
number of clav-.

•..

. This is about the time of year when
college applican~ fi"d out whelher they
made the cut. So it's too late fur any
helpfUl advice this year. But if you didn't get accepted this time by the college
of your dreams, J have a suggestion as
to how you can improve your chances
nex.t year,
First, furget about. Harvard and send
your ap~llcation ~ the Ulliversity of
Callfornm's San Diego campus. The
colleges In !he University of California
·system are lheoretlcally subject to
Proposition 209, which was passed by
the state's voters with a husky ml\forlty
· a couple of yean; ago. This initiative, ·
which now has the force of law in
California and has been upheld by the
•s
c F b'd
s!ale s. upreme outt, or ., s. any co,nstderulion of race us u factor u\ ndmts.
slon 1o the colle~es In the system. 8. ut
unybody who thttlks the admlnisttlitQrs
of the University ot'Califurnla are going
10 be lhwarted by any such trifling con·
slderatlon as the will of the people
underrates the ingenuit y of these obstltlute liberals,
on many California campuses, otl1dais at tlrst tried simply disregarding
the taw_ a strategy that was brusquety ~jected by the courts. Then they
decided to give extrn "polllts" to applicants from low-Income backllrounds,
naively Msllmlng thnllhis wouta be tan·
tnmourtt to giving extra points to black
applicants. But It soon turned out that
rb • h H
there were PIenty 0 rtg 1 npp cants
from Asian and Caucasian fumllles that
qualified as "low-income," so !hal idea
Had to be abandoned. In desperation,
top officials are now proposing to scrap
1
h h SAT
1\
f t
a to~et er t e ·
- t e test 0 u.s udent s likely performance In college

limited in what I em otTer. Pick up
the telephone and ask the open:t.orto connect you with the local suicide hodine. Tell them EXACTLY
what you ha~ told me. mel that I
su~ted you call. They wiU
respond to )'OUt cty lOr help.
DEAR ABBY: Three ~n ago
my beloved wife was dia.g~~oscd
with breast taJicer. The shock,
numbness and despair set in for
both of us while she pursued
aggressive and exhausting treatment.
The constant worry and tri~ to
and from medical appointments
t.ook their toll on both of us. Our
three young daughten and family
members rallied to help us in e~ry
way possible. but it all became too
much.
We were bucly holding our own,
when
a newfqund
friend
approached us about allowing a
group of soccer moms to prepare

"..
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The .Daily Sentinel

Pleasant Valley Hospital offers
first aid to area churches
th't )ut ~ t&gt;l&lt;Ct.. ~ '""' b\}n\
~ dl~ """" llleiul\t \\.th~ ~&amp;.. '""' ~ ._
H~tal
h•~
•lmll · ~ '1\Mpital il •n"l!
~It'd ~"
1M lt\tt ~
cl\mcM\
~ i~ u~ttt ~ IMm. within M~ Gllli.a .al\d

Meigs County
duudres amol{!
tlwse reaiving
fost aid kits

gt\'tl\

POINT
PUASANT,
\'\tVa. -The 1\'l&gt;ll$ of lii.UI)'
locll falllllit$
tt~'l&gt;ll
around thtit tl\ur.::h, •\1\d
now, Pleis.ant Valley H~t"ital h ~~hifii o11t ~ ma~
thlt oell\&gt;itQnn~tllt • littl~ bit
scti'oer,
"Woe w.;nt ahtad tnd
ol\k~ o'l&gt;llt tOO, :IS-ptr-.
$un first lid ltiti and \~ are
o~till\i them h&gt; loctl
publie $eNi« m ptt)ll~t
thoem ronny eypt of emer-.
gene}' th•t they . 111~ht
eltl"ttiellet whiloe th~yn- ~t
d1ur.::b," Ant}' Ltteh, PVH
mult\'lting
dl~tttl)t
el'tpllil\ed. "We'W: 11.IN11.dy

&gt;tdJ ed,

Otbbl~ tmnt ~St.

Wedneldllf, Mtly 1, 2002

WIDNBSIA\Y's

t&gt;""'

\J11i\'e'll Mtttrodin Chmeh
.~ $~Jl~ by ·t o pielt up •
1\nt ai.&lt;l \it ll&gt;t bu 1\!l~w

HIGHLIGH'IS

im ~uttw Ill~.
K•y H·~~r of' .lotd.an
"I ~ • t.!l l'M\1 at\t ~ lkpttst Chutcll. in ~\\!poll\
~~~~ toc~ putoo; who indi- ~nv piebd ·"II ' kit &amp;r
t.ttotd thty hld • -$\t\lttion her to~~.ation .and
th\!y knew th•t t lot of prai.&amp;ed PVH\ outmch
tht ehuwehes In tht .:ount)l oeffurt,
ha\"t .:omn1unity ~nren
"l toolt: it h~me .a11d told
thu ..wu\d ht\"t l nted £\\t Ill,)' hu~nd what it W'U
~1)1\\~thing
like this," tbout lnd ht s.aid, 'That\
Sd1auet sctill, ·. "So w.; 1re.t, Vou ltl\1)\\l w.;
tlm~t it ..wuM b\! .a tt41lly nteded o11t or tb~ rot ~
j!aod opl"\l~nity. ,it\ float lofii time, but ttoOOd~ just
that oe~tUl\"t, ~t 1t rould thGql\t a~ut ll"lil\i alld
~ a ml niet thillg fur &amp;eh purehatit~~Mt and t"llttlfii
of the ehurebtl l)t ~rilhlll it in the ehureh,"' Hul"et
thilt ha'l&gt;ll lottted M}l\\tl"lilee u,id, "SQ. l think it\ a ~mt
II\ Use ortn ~m~~nt}\"
thilllt rot the ehutcl\1\s {1\
The £int aid lt\13 hl'l&gt;ll an this am b\!eaule t think
att\l)le *"l"PIY or band~, mMt orthen\ reel tb~ Uime
b.md litb, g~utt!, ~tt~'' w11y,"
amlllullia i11halant, robber
"1\lt h11d 11 pl\non thtt
glo\l'e$, ~}'\\ palls, lint llid . had :seiturti lt our ehuweh,
butll tl\!1111, seluon, 11.nti- we ha~ hall thlt \til\ll of
septic, rowlett\!,, &amp;1\ tl\ltal\t need fur th~t. klt," Huper

*""'

w

Presented trophies dul'll'll tilt
reeo&amp;nltion proarnm were these Southern stl.ldenta, 1\'om' left,
seated. Lynree 1\lel\er, lindsay Buual'd, Sarah El dabll,la and
John Bentz; and standln&amp;, Kl'lstln Williams, Bethany Ambtfl·
er, Codl Davis, l'yler Little and Rathel Mar~hall. Not l)fteent
wes Michael Menuel. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Pnalllkltball

and in ltet, .ab\)nt • _1\lontb
~r two ~ ~ut lil111iniurt~

ti\"t ~td 111~t u tht
.ehmeh and w.; w.;re t.alkil\i
aoout not hoVifii .an~lfii
ill ca!&gt;l! all~)' Wi1 hurt
dutillg '" areident ll\d olloe
or tht Q\1~ "ill, 'Well,
tnt~ I'll j!(IOUt and buy a
kit, but I lion 't think .any•
bod~ ht~ h1d t1 me ~ du
thlt, • lNilllt 'aid. "T~i$ ,t%
tttlly 1\Ht, I e.an't Wtlt h&gt;
dmw them."
Cbureh~' rron1 Middle·
port ll\d Pomeroy, and We$t
Colun1bla, leoti, · P&lt;lil\t
Pltuant, titllipl)lls Perry,
1-tartfurd, W.Va., h•~
altetdy re~eived klti.
Chur.::he:s tall urangt m
plek up " kit by eemm:tlng
Leath ilt 'tl&lt;4•ti75~.·Uo40,
tJott, 13'26.

THURSDAY· 12 HOURS ONLY • 10 TO 10

Pro .........
MLI

1\lllclly'a GlmH
MMIOMILMI\It

:
·
•

'
·

! HURRY!

M()!ltftel &amp;, Houaton 1
MltwaukM 4, Adanlll 3
Florida ?, Sl. 1.01111 2
Colorado 1o, PllllbufOh o
N.V. Malt 10, Arizona 1
San Dleoo 2, Chleago Cuba 1
Clnclnna~ 3, loa Angelta I
Phlladlllpnla 8, S. Fte.ncl•to 2
AIMfllllll LHQIII
Botton 4, aammo111 o
TtKtll 10, lbronlo 3
Anahllm 111, Clawlana 2
N.V. 'Vankfttlt 8, Olkllnd 12
o.mm &amp;, Kanua CIIY 3
Mlnnuo\a II, Tampa Day 3
Whitt SoM 8, Sullie 4

·. sponsor

hoops toumty
POMBI\.OY

The
· Marauder Thre~-on- Three
basketball murnamen't will be
held May 17 ~nd 18 at MeiQ8
Hil!h Schnol.
The cnn 111 ~nter a tburman team is $25 dnllars. Play
wiU take plac~ In Al!\len il.l!l!
brackets with trophies for the
wlnttert ea~h bmc:ket.
·• llnr mote irttimtudon, ton•
tact Carl Wolfe u 992-2158
or ~lck Ash at 91)2-51)60.

-

or

RICOGNIZID - Meigs elem&amp;ntery and middle achool at~r
dents recoinlzed were, left to rl&amp;ht, seated Latrlcla S!!'lth, Hal·
ley Williams, Celeb Davis, Mitkl Barnes, Scott Kennady, Tlll·
lsha Behe, Brndley Jonea; and standIna, Amy Barr, Llndaay
McKinney, Whitney Thoene, Bl'lttnay Jeoka, Miranda Bena,
Samantha Cole and Autumn McLauahlln. Ale~a Venoy waa
absent. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Art SChllddlr
- - .......k

In court

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)Indiana Court o(

The

HURRY1 PRICI CUTI·INTIRI
ORDIRID SOLD THURSDAY 10 lM •tO PMI
ALL PRICED TO UU ON liGHT· NOTHING FOR BROOM TO SWIIP THURSDAY• t DAY ONLYI

Afltr 10 ytll'l ol operating 1 ~IIOOtlllul furniture elol'lln 1111 MldclllpOrt ll'tl, INGILI AIIINITUIII APPLIANCI
aJIWILRY •llllnclltoly... WIIIIO Willi... Mil olf. Thl hHI'IIIrtllldng deolllon 1111 bllnlllldl...now tilt lhlnkiHI
lllk blaine. Thoullllde end thoullllde o1 dollera worth ol ftnel\lmlturt will be lOki lor whlttvtr purohul priOI
IIIVIIIIIblll Ablolutaly nothing will bllllllhll tilt broom won't IWII!II Tlllllllllt 0111 Ohlnot 10 ~~~~~ lilt qlllllty
1111111 blind l\lmlture IIIII fOII'VIIIwlp wtnttcllt 1111 prlat VOU Willi 10 PIV· lveryllllng IOid on I llrtt 0011'11
blele..noltllng hllcl baok...lll muel go, niiiO well, In 111111ttr of !llvellltlngle blllevlng... llrlng rour truokll
trllltrlo heul IWIV your "vlngtl lrlvelhl orowde... blllllr lhl 11001'1 When IIIey open. llll'l al'llllt dllkl
.MM you, QIT YOUR IHAIIIIInttle Pumlturt, AppllltiM aJMiry

I ,

But the tppealt eourt
tuled TuetdAy thAt the aen·
tence waA Allured Incorrectly. Two forgery eourtu,
·\\'hi~h · curled con1ecutlve
.tentencet, ahou1d have be11n
$11ured til one, the court
~ld.
.
• No dati! Will teti'or rtten-

don't be Afnid to do whatuv~r i1 neccuary to achieve your
gouls. It won't 3lwaya be u1y.
Thew will ~IWAYI be obmclea
fram,...A1
that 1tand in your way. There
From the thr~c scholar1, will alwaya be people who
Snowden was 1c le't~d as the challcn11e your boUcfa, but If
outstanding senior in the you believe in younel£, your
cou ncy and wu prc1cntcd the .dcternlination can uveteon1e
Fnnklln B. Walcer Award by gny obttacle.
"Jt.cnlclllber thll - only AI
Carol Hatem. secondary curriculum supcrvilor of the far u we leek, tan we JO.
Athcns-Mei(!l ESC. She will Only a1 mueh as we drum;
be a guc1t at a recognition can we bo," &amp;he added.
luncheon honoring the state's . Jadnlill Yonker, talented and
88 award wmnm in olull1- gifl:cd coordinator, planned
the banquet and crnceed the
bus on May II .
Snowden spoke at the bul- progn111. More than 200
quct on the impomncc of g:~thcrctl in the cafecerla for
the banquet and program
following your dreams.
"If you want something, honoring the ~eholan.

ill

AND

~CTURES

1nOFF •48

ten.dtlg In Marlon Superior
.Court.
: Schlichter pleaded . l!lll1ty
in Jtnutlry 2001 to money
l!lunderinll, (nrglng Jtcurl·
det and uaauchorlud ute o(
(redit cardt to pay gambling
4ebtt.
• A flrit-roUJid NPL draft
pkk out ot Ohln State in
I 9112, hi! Will tlllprnded by
the letii!UI! the neJU year Cor
fimblinll. In 19114, he
wjolt1ed the Coltt, who by
then had reloc:ued f'rom ·
lhldrnure co lndi1lupo1it,
and he WIJ rcleued In 1985.

Honon

II

utr.ll. Nl PC. OAK TAILIIIT, OAK IUTTIR"-Y
TAILil 4 CHAIRt-..;..._ _ _ __

. Appell. I! ha&amp; ruled the prl1on
sentanee beln8 terved by
!nrmer Cnln quncerba&lt;:k
Art Schlkhc~r Is tM lo'1t~·
Schlichter w~• aentenced
In Auguat 10 Alx ynn plm
254 t!Ayt for vlol.itin8 hh
probAtion frotn ~ 1997 con·
vlcdnn (nr forgery And

lhcf'r.

SEIINO IB BELIEVING COME PREPARED TO BUVI
Ianoe were there Mella Hl&amp;h School atudanta, from lett, eeat•
ed, Tyler Barnea, David Boyd, Jaynee Davia, Meeaan Oodaon,
Sarah Lee, Nlckolae MoLauahlln; and atandlna, Jcallne Allan,
Mindy O'Dell, Krlatv Puckett, Mlaty Puckett, L.ealle Runyon,
Amber Snowden and Tara Wyant. Not present waa Randlll
Hudaon. (Charlene Hoeflich)

11-AClNE ·- It was Christmas In
April fur the Vinton County lady
Vikings Th~!sday· night .ts the Southern
1btnadocs quickly turned 4 S-1 lead
lntu an 8-S Vintun County rout with
six etrots in the tilth Inning.
Any ol\t slllgle play would havesaved the 1bthadoes, but the error bug
Was ~'1)1\taglous .tnd Southern went
~own the tubes in the 1'VC interdiviSIOllaltttatch•\1~.

MINudento

MIIGI IINIOR HDNORIU - Honored for academic .IKCIII·

&amp;con WOLI'I

$a-11iNtl. (:OME$l'ONOENT

'

SOU'niERN HONORUS -

Late errors doom Lady,Tornadoes, 8-5
lv

~t • ~ tt)t ' lppMth&lt;N 1\.t~~ eoonti~ ml • llnta patl$\\i~l\l:!ts,
100\ Sth.a"~ PVH\ ittt&lt;et- t\ml.~, llftMt'tft bt'Si'l.
"It\ a .1.\"Glldttful progr.am

~~mu:Oto.~

£t.-e ~ehu~,.tl l

tl\

•nr

Bl ,_ Wl•m 1uc

~bur.::hlll

tway ~

Plge 81

$488
$998

RI!Q. t1HIINQL.AND QUliN ILIIPIII,
PLOIIALPNNT'-------RIQ. - PINIIUNK IIDt, TWIN arULJI. AYIUUIIII.I

•

UfiPIR AND fULL

Southern had six hits and Vinton
h
ounty ad twa. Southern had six
etro111 and Vinton County had three
with all eight o( the winners runs
being scored as unearned runs.
·
Southern hitters . were l:lngette
13arncs With a 2-4 mght and a twOtutt hmne r\ln, Deana Pullins a single,
Rachel Chapman a double and single,
and Ashley Roush a single.
Vinton County had two hits a triple
by Alisa ll..atdiff and a single' by
C

Megan Reed ..
·
Southern fell behind 1-0 when an
error and Ratcliff triple pushed across
a run. Southern catne back with a
run when Barnes singled, was sacrificcd to second by Katie Sayre and
Rachel Chapman singled to tie the
game.
Southern went up 2-0 on a Roush
walk, a Rachel Marshall walk, and·
Deana Pullim single. Southern led 20, then scored a single run in the third

when Sayre walked and scored on a
Chapthan double. So11thern went
ahead to load the bases but left all
three ~tranded .
Barnes hit a two run home run
with Pullins aboard in the fourth
inning for a 5-1 Southern lead. The
next inning is when the ceiling caved
in for Southern.
Southern hosts Waterford Wednesday and goes to Federal Hocking on
Thursday.

REVERSAL . OF FORTUNES

Reds spoil Brown's retum
lOS ANGELES (AP) -

A gaml! like this unnerves ·
Sean Casey.
"I've never seen guys get
hit In the head so often,"
said
the
Cincinnati

Angels banish
Cleveland,
21-2

.

CLEVELAND (AP) Ramon Ottlt got all the rum
ht could ever nerd and Troy
Gbul }tjd five
RBI• lb!Mday

eel
.
R S

_11n•be

flm basetn.m, who has beetl hit In

nitJhc u che
Anaheim Angel• roUed co
their lltth maight win, 21-2
over the reeling Cleveland
lndiaru.
It was the most rum .cored
by tile Angell in 23 yean, and
the l'ltott ever agalna~ the

the head twi(e this seasoll.
"It's just scary."
In a game itt which
Kevin Brown returned to.
the mound, four batters
were hit by pltth~s in the
1\.~M ~~I vlrtory over the
losl Angeles Oodgen Uti
Tuesday night. · • ·_
The worst otT was 1\.eds
rookie Au'nln Kearns, who
needed nltche&amp; after his
(aee Will ~;Mhed.
Brown, h\ hi! first start
off the dlaabled lilt, hit
Corky Miller In the !burth
Inning after Clnelnnad
&amp;tarter Chrh 1\.eitsmil (1·0)
plun~ed J1aul to Ouca.
The 1\edi wert~ tryln1 to , ·
atfd to their 2·1 h!ld In the
ninth when Kearn&amp; took il

llldiatU at j;~Cobt Field.
Si:ou Spietio added three
RBTt and Olalll went 4-.Cor-5
With 1. homtr (or the ArlpiJ.
who led 9-1 after rite tewntb
inning and then piled on wldt
a 1()..run rilbrh.

The lndlw, who have lolc
12 o( 14, suhd dKir 111011
lopsided honte 10M Iince tbe
JUte opened in 1994.
JeiF o.y.non hie • pii!Chblr, duwe-run baaw Ia 1111·
daftth .. the Anpll poun&amp;W
OUC a teal(ia..hJafJ ruN and 22
hit.. Anaheim komi i&amp;t IIIDit
rum in a g11111e slnu Au,. 2.5,

Olownnl Curara Co~nbAll
in the helmet 1111d Miller
Wll hit for the &amp;econd
time, -loading the· bam
· with flone out. Pinch-hit~
tet Wlltorl Ouerrero drove
in Todd Walker with a

1979, when the AnP beat
Totonto 24-2 in their IIIDit
loplldld win ewr.
Darin lrttlld lllo bomtrtcl
lor the Alltek, who ldve

bloop !Ingle.
. Kearn1, whn 81t1gled hli
6nt three rime• up to Nise
hh average tn .455, Will left

duq die winning streak.
Ot1U (2-J) aiiOMd one nan
and tlx bill in daht inninp to

ouiK&lt;mtd oppooears .54--1?

win Cor dte tlnt diM in ""'

with a cut «hove the letl:
eye. Manager Dob Bnone
uld the right fielder will
urtdergo precaudonary :XN)'i and a CAT tiCal\, •
;,1 kllow what KeartU lti
feeling." did Cilley, who
ffiilltd (our game; with a
contutslun ~f'rer gettlft'

The ~ . .
help fivm dte JMims.
who punded iJuo rbtu

ltltfll.
ICIIM

double plays.
Anaheim flnlly hit Wdiid
Ottil. too. The AnP hid
scored jUff nine tUIU iD
Ordl'l fltlt liNt .... but

dtey hid tied dw by the - -

tkulled by Philadelphlu

................ 12

.. . - ...-•-:-

c!alh innlila-

IIOUCIH Ul'J11 - Cincinnati's Austin l&lt;eams Wipes blood fnlln his brow after being hit by a pitch
1t0m the Do&lt;leefll' GIOVAnni Carrara dur1ng the eJ&amp;hth lnnlfW In Los Angeles on Tuesday. (AP)

PI

11'1-e

•

.

Vikings conquer Southern Bengals
I\' loon Wdi.N

teen wal.U and jun four hiu, but enough
ltNTINEI. COIIRtii'OHDtHT
tutti to t'fl.i the game after five framet.
1\.AClNE - f'i)t the tint time tltit Vinton County hitten wrre Dmky,
yc~r. thl! Southertl1brnad.oet were lt1~f­ Cecil two hits, and Walton a lingle.
ded, 10.:.{1. The VInton County Vlklnp Southtrn lud no hit1.
came In, got down to buJine11, then
Curt Crouch tuifered the lou for
quickly gar on the bUitrtOitly bdllnd the Southern, while Dutky picked up the
no-hit pitchlilg of OUiky, who hand- wi11. Crouch was il!lk-ved by Brice Hill,
cutfed the 1brnadoei ldr the duration.
and Matt A.h who got tome ·woti in
Me.~nwhde, the Southern pitching wir tlkr having .a day off yntenby.
Southtm hom W.-f~ Wednftday.
• bit tlllptd ioel( when It ~IJIIWed thlr-

CINCINNATI (AI') - The · ream's coachn liked a year ago.
Cincinnati lkngals have offered a
"Accuracy. arm ltrmgtb. tam
contnct to free agent quartnback managemmt," BratJu-ski Said.
Gus FtetoUe and
Bengali CO&lt;!Ch Dick ulkau lw
told him he could told Frrrotte he would be givm
compe te · for the the oppo1111nity to compete for
~Carting job held by Jon Kima.
the ,urting job.

NFL
Bengali

tpa~man j;~Ck

Brcnnan confimu:d Tuctday th.u the
bengali had prnenred an offer to
Freto!k, Neither the lkngals not
. f'letolte's' agent, Marvin Demolf,
rould £onfinn dte . IL'tltU of the
contnct. Oemoff did not tmtnedimly return telephone mnugt't
ldi at hil ~ Angekt offiu Tunday motmng.
A yw ljfO, dte Bmgalt olfcml
four-year ronrnca to both
F'1uo~U and K•ma, and KJtn.a wat
~ lint to .acapt. fiCiotk' ~JW!ed
With dtr D':'M'r ~roncm "" a
b:ickup to Brim Gnne.
Frerolk, 3&lt;1, who · .oiWJ ha.

The Bengal$ did not dr.aft a
quart.etfnck dtiJ year. Th.u givn
them Kitna, who Jlatl&lt;'d 15
gamn in 21JO 1 md thrrw kn: 1.2
touchdowm but 22 inten:eptions;
Akili Smith. who 6 recOYering
from lumltring . tutgny in
December; md Scott Covmgton.
Smith iJ ttill rtlubilitaring hill
leg and will miK dt~i wukend't
mini-amp.

had rc:conuructive
hil dtltM'ing 4touJder
Dec, 26. He uid he iJ 11-ty
r«ovcml but ttill relubilitatn his
4touJder twiu a w«k.

fK'R'IIk
""f};UY on

F1~1otk' il mtering hil nlndt
pbye~ for
hiilgron and . NFL IQIOIL He W.llt mjuml'" 1m
Dc:tlbit, WoltM out for the Bm- kme tWt Dec. 16 agaioe1 KamK
gab bit ~k. He ~Jd
he Cuy and mded the ~ on

w...

•

Comlnl'lhundly In thl SIJlllnll.

dltm

"6).)€Qe~ '" ~ (?
~: '" ;f)()..

would be _ '"~ '"
if .injured rnrrve,
be were glftll .a chma to comKtau ·taid 11e - - to me;«
pc;te fOr the ttamng·JOb. Ocher- QJR~pcriricm fOr ~job.
.... ht uid. he would focw on ul'm not it'.al ~ .1lbout
re-ttgnmg WJdt Denver.
......,.~. · """" It'
___.,_
"-·-1
-"'
.
--'
·
~'II my JO-• t .a -~-'110
...,,_, U1JCIKI\1C roorwJUtor uga." Kwu Uld. -r.
tbyt:
I
Dob Br~ wd F1ctl&gt;Ue dn.a. .
N I~
.,_
•-·--' .a.
,_,__
..__ w.as uoc guy. ow m m a QJIIIP-r""' me t.1lm """"1• ... u"' pd:IUorL. ,
1lSfUI1&amp;

-----

•

•

.'

�I

Page I 2 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallyeentlnel.com

WedneacUiv. Mav 1. 2002

Rio Grande sweeps Shawnee State
Red men
FROM STAFF REPORTS

·

grab a 4-1 lead . Two walks, a
double steal and a sac fly
gaw the R.edmen their first
marker and th~n Brassfield
Baseball rocketed a home run to
right field to make the score
squeeze bunt that scored 4 - 1.
pinch-runner Chris Good
Shawnee added a run in
and Fred Brassfield stole the fourth on a doubl e by
home to make the score 4-t.
· fi
Ryan Jones to cot the de 1cit
Shaun Runion executed a to 4c2.
successful bunt for a base hit
Rio scored a run in tho
that scored pinch- runner fifth on a sacrifice fly by
Adam Detwiller to finish the Ewing. Brassfield led ofT th e
scoring. A throwing error on inning with a s.ingle.. stole
a sacrifice bunt by Good set second and third and scored
up the final run .
on th e sac fly.
Tim Sutton (7-5) went the
C ontrov~rsy reigned i•1
distance for the victory. The Shawnee 's half of the fifth.
Wheelersburg, Ohio leftWith two outs and th e
bander scattered e1ght . hils, . bases loaded, Pat Loon ey
y1eldmg two run~ , stnkmg shQt a line drive grand slam
out four and :walkmg two.
over the right fi eld fen ce to
Josh McM11len and Jason giw the Bears an apparent 6Wheeler each had two h1ts 5 lead . .Looney mi ss ed third
for the Redmen..
.
base. while rounding the
h. Both teams collected e1ght bases an d was called out 011
1
~· S .11
k h
appeal leaving the game tied
ohm p1 e too t e 1oss at S-S.
for t e Bears.
Rio plated three runs in
Shawnee
State
got
the
h
th t o rna ke th c
.
.
t e seven
scormg starc.ed m game two score 8 _5. Shawnee had
With a run Ill the .first on a ba•:k-to-back errdrs, which
led to the go-ahead ·runs.
Ryan Wells base h11.
The
Redmen
scored
four
McM'll
. sea 1ed · th e
.
.
·
1 en th en
times m the second frame to game with a solo shot to left

RIO GRANDE - Rio
Grande rebounded from losing a doubleheader on Saturday in a big way on Tuesday afternoon with a dou bleheader sweep of Shawnee
State at Stanley Evans Field.
The Redmen captured the
first game, S-2 and held on
to win a wild second contest. 8-7.
Rio Grande (26-24, 10- 10
AMC) wa1 aided by poor
Shawnee State defense all
afternoon .
The Redmen scored the
first run of the game on a
throwing error that plated
Jason Wheeler to give Rio a
1-0 lead.
Shawnee State (16-12, 11 9 AM C) took the lead in the
second inning on a two -run
single by Trevor Vaught to
make the score, 2· I.
Rio tied the game on a
sacrifice fly by Brent Ewing
in the third inning that.
scored Gabe Devono.
· The Redmen would take
the lead for good in the fifth
with two runs and added an
insurance run in the sixth to
close . out the ~c oring.
Devono laid down a perfect

·

.

Tops
from Pap II
well and Haley.
Adam Rickard kept .his
pitching record urucathed in
notching his sixth triumph of
ihe spring for the White Falcons. Rickard weni three .
frames and struck out six
before giving way tO Aaron
Davis who fanned seven Rebel
· batten over he next three
innings. Chad Zerkle mopped
up with his varsity debut on
the hill for Wahama in the seventh. Brandon Caldwell \WI
tagged with the loss dapite
fanning 12 WHS bitten with
six w.alks, three hit baaen and
four Rebel erron contributing
10 the South GaUia demise.
On Tuesday. Federal Hockingjumped out to an early 3-0
advantage in the tint fnme
before the White Falcons a!-

hnaPapll
Robert Person on April13."If
it hit him a liale more down
the faa, who knowJ what
would have happened? ·It's
never fun to watch something
Jikto that.
Carur.a wain't h1ppy about
il, either. He had noc hit a batter in his tint I 6 1-3 innings
chis season, and hit only one
Jasr y~ in 85 1-3 innings.
Adam Dunn, who set an Nl
roob! IUOtd for homm in a
month Jasr August with 12,
pvc Brown (1-2) a.rude welcome lnck fiom the Dl with a
two-run homer in the tint
inning on an 0-2 pitch.
It ·w.:as the fifih homer chis
season for Dunn. who homeH

..... IIZJI.. -

____

.........
,...• ...-..e,_.,.....

t!IW ........... , . .. . .

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

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

-----JOHNSON'S

B~

1\P

.,.

same 104ln&amp; $1mk.

Mike Piazza came back to jinuny Rollins hit a fm)the lineup with two bangs. run hornet in a five-.run ninth
Kevin Brown Was done in by inftina for the Philli~ who
one in his return to the also ended 111 eight-gmte skid
mound.
on the road.
t&gt;iazza homered in his tint
two at-bats Tuesday niyht and
t-drove in six
-..
runs after mmTtGiiRS 9. RoYALS 3
.
ing five gmtes
Steve Sp;uks (2•2) pitch~ a
with a strained hamstring as
two-hittet,
md Damian JaCkthe New York Mets won their
tifth straight with a II);. t rout son drove in four runl as
of the Arizona Diamond- Detroit spoiled John Mit~
rock's debut u Kansas City
backs.
. "He doesn't hold the bat in m~gcr.
his h:unstring, I know that."
Mturoc:k was p~mor~
Diamondbacks manaFr Bqb fiom bullpen coac~. t~ mterun
Brenly said, "and we made manager by the YISitmg Roysome bad pitches to him."
· als, who fired "':ony Mwer
· Brown returned liom the earlyThesday to r.me baseball's
disabled list and gave -up a total t~ a n:cord four in the
two-run homer to Adam seasons tint month.
Dunn in the first before setYANUES 8, ATHLBTICS 2
ding down with four scoreless
Ron Coomer hit a th":e- .
innings in Los Angeles' 3- 1 run hom~r '!tat capped a llX'loss to Cincinnati.
~n lint mnmg agamst Barry
· Piazza's homers gavr AI Ztto (1 - 2), and, New York
·Leiter (3-1) the win at Ari· sn~p~ Oakland~ four-game
zona, making him the first :-vmnmg streak . m a game
· ·pitcher to beat all 30 major mterrupted by ram for 1 hour,
·league teams.
47 minutes.
"I believe this is the only
David Wells (4-0) a~owed
•Stadium where 1 have not won . two runs and six btts m five
in the major leagues," Leiter innings. ythen the game
said. "I was jokiny w.ith the resumed m the fifth, there
· guys and said 'I've never lost were only about 250 fat~s ln
with 10. Get me 10 and 1 57,000-seat Yankee Stadru~1.
.think I can win this one,' and but it was a vocal crowd, w11h
they did."
many regul~n from , the
Piazza homered twice off bl~achers fillmg t~e htgh• Rick Helling (3-3) and drove pnced rows behtnd the
· in six runs, his most with the dugout!.
Mets and one short of his
Eric Chavez hit his ninth
career high.
homer this season, ~tvmg
The Diamondbacks got Oakland home runs m 16
ntore bad news after the game comecutive 8ames.
:when they found out Randy
WHIT&amp; Sox 8,
~ohnson . would have to miss
MARJNiiRS 4
:Wednesday's start with a lower
Magglio Ordonez hit a two. back strain. ·
run homer as Chicago ended
·
BJUiWERS 4, BRAVIiS 3
Seattle's 10-game road win·
. At Milwaukee, Nelson ning streak to start the season.
Counting five wins away
: Figueroa (1 · 1) settled down
: after a rocky first inning and from Safeco Field to end la~t
: hit a two-run single off Greg season, the Mariners ' road
: : Maddux (2-2) for the Drew- winning streak had actually
•: ers.
been IS games.
; The Brewers snapped a sixFrank Thomas broke out of
game skid in Jerry Royster's a slump with three hits,
• · 'tim game as manager after the including a two-run double.
: ' club removed the interim tag
RANG&amp;Ils 10, .
: from his title.
BWB jAYS 3
:
ExPos 5, As'l'ROS 1
Alex Rodriguez hit his
: : Javier Vazquez pitched a 250th homer, and Kenny
; five-hitter and Peter Bergeron Rogers (3-0) had another
drove in two runs as Montreal strong· start as Texas sent Ian•
·. won at Houston .
place Toronto to its sixth
Vazquez (1-1) struck out straight loll before the smallest
:
: 'nine and didn't walk a batter crowd (12,571) in Sky Dome
.
: . in his 11th career complete history.
·
.
Rodriguez became the sec: : game.
• : Roy Oswalt (3- 1) allowed ond-youngen player to reach
• five runs in seven innings.
250 homers, at 26 years, 277
; • MARUNS 7, CAllDINALS 2 days. Only Jimmie Foxx (26
:
At St. louis,AJ. Burnell (4- years, 269 days) was younger.
; 2) gave up three hits in eight
Rafael
Palmeiro
abo
: . inninSJ and Cliff Floyd home- reached a home run milestone
• ·. red twice for Florida.
when he paned . Carl Vas• Mike Lowell also homered trzemski for 25th on the
and had two RBii while career list with his 453rd.
• matching hil career high with Rangers rookie Hank Blalock
• four hits for the Marlins. •
hit his first major league home
:
llocJI.JE1 10, PIRATI!t 0 run.
.
RED Sox 4, OJUOLBS 0
: Mike Hampton (1-3) won
·:: Tor .the first time this season,
Darren Oliver (3- 1) pitched
· : pitching seven scoreless the first shutout by a Boston
; ; innings as Colorado stayed lefty at Fenway Park tince
: .- unbeatell under new manager Frank Viola in 1993.
.
• Clint Hurdle.
The Red Sox won for the
: Colorado, 4-0 since Hurdle 1Oth time in 13 games and
; • replaceP Buddy Bell on Fri- snapped Baltimore's four•. day, got homers from Todd game winning flreak.
·•
Helton and Todd Zeile at
TwrHt 6, DJML RAYI 3
: Coors Field.
Tori! Hunter hie. his ninth
PADDI 2; Ctllt l
horne run, and Kyle Lohse (2: •
: . Rookie Sean Burroup hit 1) pitched teven srron1
•; a Nd.-hop RBI triplt off Joe innings at the Metrodome.
: : BoroMki (1· 1) in the eipch
Tampa Bay's GreJ Vaupn,
: : inning ro litl: San DieJO over hitlet~ in 33 ac.-bau, went 0: • visiting Chi"&amp;O·
(or-4 co dtop hit IW~IJ' ,to
;
Plm.UIII; GIANT• l
.099, the lowest among INJOr
:
Vicenu Padilla (3-2) retired league regulars.
;: the lirsc 15 batten and
Eddie Guardado soc his
· : : Phibdelphia llllf'P'd a •bl- 1Oduaw in u many triet.
••

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Advertise

:'141

.J:•
~

3•

SERVICE

ChiC-lUI

new
In the

ae
::f.'

The
Daily
Sentinel

-

'="

mEIGS counTY
MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE STATE STORE

Rq111tncl Nune/Lictnltd

Pnctlell Nunt •
Fulltlmelpart lime fle~lble aehedule.
ltaJtltncl Nune/Llctnltd

Pnctlcel Nunt •
Pullt,lml mldnlaht Supervltor

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

(10'x10' &amp;10'1120'1

[740) 992·3194
992·6635

Clo11d lundly

100 west main st.
Pomti'OII

882·0008

4111/t .... ,..,

Alk about our MW Salary Scal1!

Cottlld Hu1111n Rnotsmtat
(740) 992-2104, Ill. 1215
OPEN HOUSE
Sat. May 4

I 1111 •I pm

. Glortl Olltr
St. AI. 22lJ LlngiYIIIt, ~H0741
740-742·2018

nOW HIRinG

*new Location*
fill positions
full &amp;Port-time

Window• • Roonna
(OMIIII(IAI lfl4 IIIIDOOIAL

FFIEE ESTIMATES

74o-H2·71tt
lUNDAY

flpply In person ofter

3:30pm

II holding tlectlon of off~,,..

t.:.lcenlld 1 lneurld
1 Hlelth Problem•?
Wllnt Mort l.llaur1 Tlm1?
Tlrld of Mowing?
Not A ljlrln.g Chlokln?

Monday, May 6, 2002
7:30pm

•

,...,..a: ·

•:::::d

LIMITED OPENINGS

WllmartPiau

•

eo.....,..

llllreM... HilMa!!

11M
illlliltt• oo
hllnnllll In tha.
- of tl\a ....
... flqu:lsect to
Run 1168 In llat'f
•n•w•r the •••..
..
_... .. h ................. ·~ tMnft
complaint bV tho 7111 ..111111111 111or11 1• proauood fro111 • clown _., w.ttan'a
...1 of Juno or
Co. ofOIIIO
Wllllrwell- IOUtM 11110 alll ..... to 1M
Ju .. aamut
by
Pllllntltt
on roal oatall t111\ol o1 w.u. lllltlt
Dafautt will be
·
tllaotlltoil In 'IliUM thann dawn Willa
l'lllclltlcl ...IMI you,
..,..
, .., ..... Ill, . . . 1111114*- .._In
llaoo.-.a ,, ...... cllrHIIosl to .... lloHt
MAliK K. lloCOWM,
CAll MO
Coli~
In
man . . _ 'MiltlltiJ 1101111
IIIG. NO. 00.114~,
01 CV 101
IICIIfti'MIII with~~ ..... Willa 111111 .RoH
ATTOIINIY 1'011
Gran-, llwlr lltlro ·• flat to 1M ...... of
PLAINTIFI'
1.01 A- Mualolt, at. and
It Ia ~~atlnlllftl. llllll 1M
II.
IIII'IMI
bJ aMI a•m• re•l . .1111
~II 1, 1, 11, :u, 11, (il
DatanclaiU,
~~a-n tho partial .....,lnd In ella..
IIIII tha p!lr11H wUI 1forn llo, W.Ul an..
In p!lralllnoo of an wre 1111 ..,...... , 1ft I'M
uwrPubllo Mottoo
Order of a.la In lho aq11al proportion Willa 7IICI ,....._ ·~11•
allow tnlltlecl 1011011, I perlalnlng to lha f rooorcl '" Votiii'M
NOTICI: Ia 1\areby wiU otlar tor .... at 1111111711111 of ukl wallf ~'It page 111 Da1!1
van 11101 on pubUo auction, 11 tho troni the Will tncllha llaaorda of 'Mala•
rdlly, May 4, Co11rthou..
In malnllnanao of ..ld Collntv 01110. Whloh
a I rl 10:00 ··"'·· • . Pomaroy, Ohio, In tho wen. ,urtllormore, ...e .. . aontalne.. lha
pllbl 0 aale will ba obovo namtcl ~ounly1 tformar) Granlora tollowlnl 11111__., It
In thla apace
hald 11 111 WHI on tht Urd ..,, If htreby grant to lha
d 1 d 11
111
00
ltoond
llrul, Ma1, 1001, II 10:00 Qrantooa, thtlr holra It un
~.,11 II
for
PCIIMI'Oy, Ohio, The o'olook •· m., lha and "''•'" lila fllhl Hill ~':.'" ,..., nol
'25 per month
~~
Parmara aenk and following daaorlbed and Hnmenl to lay, ""'•
malnttln, opera to, lbovo M11·- 1 ,..
11 1111 Hilla, to wit:
.. I
C
v IIIJI DIIIPIIIIY,
Situated In tha rapalr and reman plaou of '"1 Hille,
"~ tor 01111 the Tllwnlhlp ot Ltllllnon, walar Uno over and haraln d.. arlba.. ,
tot 1111 oollaiii'IIT: v County of Malge, and aoiOII 1M .... utatt ..1111111 1111 na111re1 lilt
1.. 0 llllll
Stall of Ohio, an .. d..orlbad In Voluma of grentor'a ' llloy
~~~~i~ HOM I funher dllorlbacl 11 til, Pll.. Ill, Dal!l WIUI and Iva Willi).
lleoor ..a of lltlgl unltll .. ld grentora
12 X II 2 IIDIIOOM, toUowt, 10-wlt:
aalng
In
100
Aora
County,
which ttld 1"'- their 00111111\ lloy
1 IATHI'
1 k Lot t .u, "'WIIthlp ~N, waler ll•• 11 to 11111 to Willi dtoa11e.. the
•r;:': 111 ~1 lllnge11Wotlho0hlo tha ho;,. ot the tlnd dey .o t Au£1111,
COmPIIIIY, Pomaroy, ComPIIIIY'I PIIIOhllaj Orant..a on 1dj101n1 till, and Iva dllll
baing • para• ....1..11111
daotanlllha 111 ay
Ohl o, raawrvet lh • and
or..ted Olll ot lht ''Parot~o?.ooua.oo . ot oo,obtr, I Itt,
rlghl to bid II lhlt • o~er 111.. VIolet
• , I O
T HI Iaing Traol I ot
lilt, end to withdraw "
" ~
CII'IIIIOIII of Tranaltr
the ebove aoUaltlll Wll lord propart~ I'O~~OWING
rlor · lo ..... Further, (Volumai!O PIIJI IH, OIICIIIIID lilA~ No. I from lttlll 01
~•wrenot Walle of
• k Mtlgo County o..a IITATI·
• ~·d fltrm:~'v 1n-;, llaoarda) bllundlcl•nd
lltueie.. In the raaorclln VOlume 303,
company rlltrYII daoorlbed "tollowt: Townthlp of ~tbanon, ~Ill 4?7 j
1•d
thl rltht to relootany
Beginning In lhe In 1111 COIIniY ot Malgo aaordt0 ,!
•
II
.......
ctnttr
of
Wtllt
ll11n
••d
••·tt
ofl.bhlo•
C011nty,
Clhov.
or 111 ldt tubm.......
llord rllht nor1hHtt ~PIMT fiiiiCI: hlng lllbjtollolll ltatH,
Th•
· 1 b 0 v 0 corner of tho Tlltll 1 111111 of 100 Aara ~ol tlltmtnla an.. right
Welle
/.roparty ,.1 Town 1 llanga11 ofwa~olrtCorcl.
tVOiumeiO , Pill'! 477 1 otth. 01110 com 1111 ny'•
fltratl Not., 07·
Mtlll County D11a flllrchrn
end OOtii.OOO,
07•
lleoorda); lhtnot, dllorlbtd 11 followe: 00111.000 •nd 0?·
along Ttlllt Wtllt ltglnnlna rt the OOta7.000
tlllllnt Iauth 111.01 Ncrlhwttt oorner of 1
I'AIICIL NUMIIII:
1•000
f1tt to the atnter at emell lot heretofore ON10111111
v
Wtlla llun Creek, . aonvtytcl by the uld Pll0 P
,
Pilling Iron pint HI Htltn Mltn to llllllld AODIIIII.
by thll IUI'YIY II 11,00 · IIOy and lvt Willi., Weill llun II01d
• "oom Alldlllona 6
end lt.QO '"'I lhlnot 11111101 Wilt 1101111 1111 Po r11a ~c1, 0~ 41".0
"'modeling
1
1
1
ram •n
following tho
Wtllt llun lloed 71
• Ntw aar•a••
m..ndere ot Walla teet 10 1 oorntr ~ootttd 11 U110
• lleot•loal 6 Plumalng
llun 11 approxlmtltly lhlrlae Iauth 110 ltet Wtllt llun llotd,
by tht following 1 flvt to 1 oorntr lhtnoa Por11tnd, Ohio 41770
•
• ·
ltld Promtttt
oo~,..Jcirth et de ' 1111 to tht lint o! Appralltd II 11,000.00
34'22" I tit n fHI •II tbovt mentioned lot, end otnnat ba told tor
a I • th •73
than at Nonh to the '"' lhtn lwo•thlrde of
II' ~7" ;u UUI
plra• of bt~lnnlng, lhtUmount
ec:~h
ia
clag',
:~~~~~~~~~
I 10 "• I TI 11 M1 01' JAL::
3)
It' 11" IIIU7.00tttl; IICOND JtiiCI: I, 0 0 0 ' 00
ow ' ~------,
4) Iouth 31 dag, ltlnQ In 100 AOII Lot rtmllndtr
upon rvOUf
12'113"1111 18.0111111; 141 Town a "'"II' 11 tender of d.. d.
11
. ll North 77 deg. otth. Dlllo company••
lherlff ot Mela• Con~rete
33'31" 111124.44 fHt; pur oh 1 u ,
end County, OH
•
I II cl
C
ti ' 1.:'~'0
Tllance IHYing llld b 0 u n d 1 d
crltk Nonh 07 dtg. dttorlbad 11 followe, ,.'lANKA
ODDeC OD ,,
II' 11" Wltt2U1
a.lng 1 lot 10 fool WOOLOIIIDOI CO.,
fttt lo 111 Iron pin ttl Will tncl 110 fill ~·110
P.ArM•I for l'lllnlltl
by thlt eurvey 11 the Iouth; thlnat 3D fHI "
,
n11l •hi11M 11110 11\IW'&lt;I
Alao aarvlng
louthwtlt oorner ot lilt tnd 110 North out too lOuth Plarlltrltt
t740)14f.80 I~ .
the Cltrenot tnd of lht North.. tt Columbue, Ohio 43201
I IUI gt gravy
&amp; bltcultr
J o V ot
Wtcldlt oorner of tilt fOllowing (t1 41121 ' 1102
(H11·lU·T022J
property (Volurnt 321, dttarllttd
11nd :
Cally Lunch
111111 321, Mllll ltglnnlng et lht (411,10,17,14,1002
Calljr1~mm~·
Speciale
County
Dud Northwttt oorner of (I 1,1001
ii!{O/jrtJ~ r.\'1/mti/C
ll10orcle); then ot - - - - -·-:-:-:--:-:::--:--:----w ! ll'
tiona Wlddlt'e Wett
Help Wlnttd
L._..;.;.v;.;0;;.;· -...J IIIIWIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIII
lint North 07 deg. II'
11" Wtll1at.oo fltl to
tilt otnttr of the Wtlll
111111 llold, PIIHing an Veterans Memorial Skilled Nursing
lrOII pin by thll IUI'Yty
Center a 3·tlme deficiency free
11 110.00 filii; htnot
Now Open
tlong lh1 otnltr ot
11 a.m.· 8 p.m.
Welle llun IIOJICI Iouth state 1urvey tactllty has immediute
12 dag. 07' at• Well
Mondey lhru
opeliinis .for the following:
110.11 fHIIo lilt point
BltUrdly
,_...... '".. lot

'"1
...., rellet ••
ahall 1M 1ua1 and

FOE AERIE 2171

(304) 773-5305

~

"'
•••pact ........... .................
i .., ~·. . . . . -,

992·5500

...,.. ~

.-

)

•••••• ••· • uss1» an'Mr 11

ot ,

"',
Ml I Uj. h?l! i
' I I tMl»INift. .

834E. Main

..-·
Me'. . .:.............___
...... ....
.....
-.-·-----

: .. ,777 •

CIIIJ.CI( THE ·
W'ANT.ill)S FIBST!

.... ...............
..... ......,...
.-..... .... __....................
.....
"""'
..
....
...."•"··..............
.
Business
Services
..,.._ .......
....,..

Fritndly Pereonal Strvlcf
FrH Delivery

(740) 992·1182

7 .......

-..c. •

LUMBER

I

I

THE ASSOOIA'ltl) PR£SS

-II

.....,

Pomlroy, Ohio .

•

for PiazZa. Brown

t:

1

=--- \1
..............
. -..,,
. --..-, ........
::...'i
.-••
_.
-- 0·
II n ..._ • • , tllli

1Wo different Ntums

••
•

..............
I!MI.~--·

Glaus homertd in the first
inning ofT C.C. Sabathia (3-·
3), who lasted jun five
innings and bas a 13.17
ERA in his last three starts.
Meanwhile, the' . Indians
are heading in the opposite
direction.
Cleveland, which opened
the season 11- 1 a.nd had a
10-game winning streak, .
have lost three in a row and
12ofl4.
Jim Thome homered for
the Indians, who are 13- 13
and falling fm . Cleveland is
also growing concerned
about Sabathia, who was
lifted after five innings.
In his last three starts,
Sabathia has allowed 20
runs and 22 hits in 13 2-3 ·
innings.
.
. Ricky Gutierrez ground. ed into two double plays he leads the majors with
eight - and Omar Vizquel
hit into another for Cleveland.
If things weren't bad
enough, the Indians were
also without Ellis Burks,
their leading hitter. Burks
strained his right hamstring
on Sunday and ,is expected

lied for six runs in the third to
forge ahead by a 6-3 margin.
The Lancers came right back
in the bottom ·half of the
inning with six tallies of their
.own tO regain the edge and
puU away for the 12-7 triumph.
Wahama had seven hiu on
the day with Ryan Hodge's
three run homer being the big
hit for the White Falcons.
Ryan ~oush continued to
wield the hot bat for WHS
with a double and a single to
give the senior infielder seven
safeties in his last I 0 tries. Brad
Roush, Bryan Cromley, Gabe
Lambert
and
Anthony
Mitchell rounded out the
Bend Area offense in the tive
ruti setback.
Jared Long took the l011 to
fall 10 4-2 on the spring with
Long going three and a third
innings allowing I0 runs on
seven hits with three strikeouts
and seven walks.

...........
......
..,.....
..............
1

, .........1

red in his final two :at-bars in
Sunday's 5-4 loss 10 San Francisco. It made him the tint
Reds hitter co homer in three
conseaative plate a~ncn
since Brei: Boone did it on
Sept. 20, 1998.
Brown allowed two runs and
five hits over liw! innings in his
tint 1tm Jince April 13, whm
he left in the serond inning
with tom llal' riiRie in his surgically rqnired right elbow. He
threw 84 pitches, ICr.lnding
runnm at third bate in the
second, third and fourth.
Reitsma allowed one run
md eight: hifJ om~ innings.
Danny Gr.aves got three outs
for his 10dt taVe in 12 chances,
tying him with Piruburgh't
Mike W'dliamt and Minnesota's
Eddie Gwrdado for the major
I q~ne lead.

Reds

. . . . ., ,

.

•
field .
Shawnee had one lm
chance 111 the bottom of the
seventh .
Shawnee was the home
team , despite the game being
1 d I' ·
p aye at "10.
The Be ars would score
two runs on a two-run blast
of th e bat of former Redmen Keenan Perry.
J a~o n Williams was summoned from the bullpen to
get th e fin al out and induced
Jason Spiro to fly out to center fi eld to secure the onerun victory.
Jonath an Erv in (6-6) got
th e win in reli ef. Brian
Hin es absorbed the loss .
Ri o Grande only had four
hits in game two . •
Ewin g knocked in two
runi with a pair of sac flies.
Urassficld was 2- for-2 with
three run s scored and two
stolen bases.
Rio Grande will close out
the regular season on Thursday hosting Cedarville .
The Redmen are in position to nail down a post-season berth with a sweep of
th e Yellow Jacket,.
·
Game time is set for I p.m.

Banish

to min the next few games,
Glau•' two-run single in
the third gave Anaheim a 31 lead ofT Sabathia, who
struggled with his control
and had his third straight
awful outins.
,
The Angels added three
more runs in the filth, scoring the la1t one when
Cleveland's
outfielders
failed to catch an easy fly
ball.
.
Anaheim agairi loaded
the bases ofT Sabathia and'
took a 5-1 lead on Bengie
Molina's RBI . single and
Spiezio's sacrifice fly.
·
With two runners on and
two outs, Brad Fullmer then
hir a routine fly that l~ft
fielder Brady Anderson and
center
fielder
Milton
Bradley watched drop .
between them for an error.
allowing Tim Salmon to
score.
The Angels added two
runs in the seventh off
Charles Nagy. They added
another in the eighth on
Entad's firs! homer, triggering' their biggest inning
since 1997.
Glaus put the Angels up
1-0 in the first with his fifth
homer.
Thome led off the second
with his seventh homer.

40) 992·1536

�•

1,2002

CLAS

~eu\l1ter

(304) 675·1333

O~H~
Monel
a~oo

y

.rn.

thru F..-lday
tQ 5:00 p.m.

. . . ==

1811 $10 - · 4,$, vs,
$1,-100.00

080..

3111

1811 GMC Silml en. 350.
s..-,N'I£....,_

-~~
$4500.
(740
:n twtniii!QL

=

l - .. -

tapper,
Food

fils Ul97 0t -

'*"......

$400.00

oao.~···

t

I

V~&amp;:

+~

--"""
t993 .FGIU Von, -

~. Low=-c

P/1
aJIIIUmiiS, IIC.
Racine, Ollio 45771

740 815-31141

_.u•a
Cellular

COIIOlMlOMIKI
• Foot&lt;n. Walls, SlqJo •
Floi\\Ut,
RtpiKtmtiiiS, • w.tb
ond Dri¥« • Stencil
o.te

FlteEsti......
Senoina Ollio ond w.v.
WVII031112 - 1

Jeft' Warner Ins.
AuthoriudAgent

992-5479

.,,

Plltl
All Mikes Trachlr &amp;
Equipmenl Parts
Factory Aulhorizcd ·
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 Sr. Rr. 7 Sourh
Cool~illt, OH 45n3

740-667·0363

11194 2 Tbno Rod Cua1om

Hill's
Self Storage

Lota of ••tret, Stl,OOO.
(740)44&amp;·8413, .(740)388·

740-949-2217

So" Till Harlay Dtovlaon. 29670 Baahan Road
E"'*lont Condition. Cuatom
SM~ Whtol, L.-ina K~ &amp; . Racine, OH 4Sn1
t$79.

Slzea 5'x10'

to 10'X30'

11-~
High I Dry .........

Krls
Kanleckl

LICENSlill MASSAGE

THERAPIST
10 Yc•rt El!.pcricnce
·
in : Deep

SeU-Storage

Loca1114J.Sl64
Supplement; Life IJI!Iunnce;
and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;:
Retirement,
&amp;: 401K Rollo"'rs;
Major Medical

I
reneltoloay. Myor'lsclal

and

Yoa• Therapy Gil\

Certlnc:atcs AYui lablc
S3Q-o13 minutes

33795 Hi/aJ Ri.
PolllmJ&gt; 0/Jio

740-9,2-5232
Shade River AG Servltt
"Ahead In Servltt"
35537 St. Rt . 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
• Golden Bow l6.000Twinc ...;......... Sl8.65
• Golden Bow 9,000 Twine ............... $16.65
• 20,000 Plastic Baler Twine ....... ,..... $15 .75
• Top Dress Pastures with Sulfur
Urea........ ............................... $120 per ton
Equine 12 ................................. $5.00150 lbs
Sweet Stuff.................... .......... $4.40/50 lbs.
Stoll dry for barns. pens. cuges. &amp;
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Lady Eagles ranked ln.state softball poll, 81

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MEIGS ROYALTY

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Read the lead
All so:hookhildren
rdat~ to this
connncnt by Snmucl
John~un : "/\ man
ought to re~tl ju~t :Is
hi~ indinntion lends
him; (or · wh~t he
rcntls a~ n t'dsk will do
him little good."
One ·important .as~
p..,:t of tledarer-piAy
nt trick one is to rent!
the lc:"l -- to nnalyze
your 1&lt;-ft-hnnd opponent's opcnin!l salvo.
Evt•ry cnrtl tells n
story, espcdnlly urly
in the tlcnl . Of tounc,
remembering the bitltliill! nml huw that
mi11ht affect the inter"
pretntion of tht• lend is
important too. Wlut
would you do here?
Agnimt your four ~f&gt;:odc contract, West
lends the dub two:
liw, ace, three. Uack
wmc~ the dub·. nine.
How woqiJ you continue?
·
East wautcd to bid
his c.~ ~clll•nt club suit
u !ccond time, but
decided four clubs
was too adventurous.
If he had climbetl that
hit~h. South would
prolmbly have still bid
lour !putlcs, but four
dubs doublet! costs
1,1 00.
You start with 10
top trkks: six spades,
three hearts and the
club' king. However,
you had better presme that last winner.
Given Enst's ovcrcnlt,
Weu's club- two lend
lnll!t be a singleton.
(He would have led
high from a doubleton.) So, if you put
u~ the dub king at
tnck two, West is going to ruff, and thn't
will be your contract
down the drain. Jll!t
plny low. ·East will
pro bnbl Y lend " third
club . Jliny low ngnin,
allowing West to ruff
ti1•J1
tile
hl'gh•r
•
•
d u 111111 y.
Then,
though, you can win
West's return, draw
nll the tnm1p1, and
tn~e those I 0 winn~rs,
th~· cl1tb king stiU sitting nrely in your
hand.
De inclined to read
every lead, whether
you arc .declarer or a
defender.
,;~n

FRANK &amp; EARN EST

THE BORN LOSER
.~

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ASIC 1-lER

AIIOUT~E

COOI&lt;1!5 ..

IWEDNESDAY

MAY 1 I

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFliCHCI&gt;MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM
- A corttr~ct for installation

L.erkln young in Reds' win, 11

·Deaths
Ronald E. Hart, 87
Marion Porter, 83
Lawrence E. Hilldore, 78

Cut1mmn u•w1e -· cou}'led
with tl"· knowl~d~c yuu'vc

ocquirt..•d o\lcr tlml.'

you n lim.:t

t~,

b.:

~- mnkr1
rt!cknu~U

with in thr Y"'' ahrad. It con
be """ of your b&lt;•tt&lt;·r years for
111:\ltri.•l ;~rqui&lt;ltion.
TAU llUS (April 211-M,,y
211) •• What 11111k&lt;• you 10 ·cf-·
lhtivc i• tl1.1t y&lt;&gt;u tilkt• In·
volv~u1c1m 1crluu~lr, yet yuu
he )'hllo~t~;)hkA cunctm·
in~ their outcome'. Know

CJII

, \vlum.o ru look (or rvmanc:c

o11u y•n•.'ll find it. Tlu• AmuCr .. ph Matchmaker in•tontly
reveniA whid1 "ip:m Atr rum.mth·ally pl!'rfe:c.:t for you.
Mnif S2 .75 ru Matchmakrr,
c/u thil ncw&lt;pnprr, 1'.0 . llox
17~H. Murray Hill StAtion,
New York. NY fill% .
(:EMINI (Mny 21-June 20)
·- llr
111i11drJ. b··cnuse

"w•·

l'Uti.•nti~l fur.tmcC~AI "111101 thr&lt;&gt;u~h litu•tlonl

your Krc.mtc't

whort you short an lntorest
wilh .111\ltll&lt;f 1vlw b c~u•lly
rt•I'OIUihlo n&lt; ym•orlf.
CANCI!R Uun~ 21 -July
22) - Thi• i• ""' ~uio111 tu be

0114.1 n1'1hcu:r tl,,yJ whcrt!' you
1:11u,i c.:umlttrf in IH.'IIIK a' lun~r.

MHI PROM CANDIDATES - These Meigs High School students are candidates for king and
queen at the prom Saturday night. Announcement of royalty will be made at 11 p.m. In the gymnasium, which has been decorated In a green. white and btaok color scheme carrying out a
'Completely Lost In You" theme. Candidates for queen, from left, are Amber Haning, Kara
Musser, Ashley Burbridge, Carrie Abbott and Tara Wyatt, and for ktrig, Tyson Lee, Darrick Knapp,
Zach Glaze, front, and John Stanley and Josh Napper. back. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Dehllis, AJ

·.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

by·Lula Campoa

CMbllly Ciphtf GlliDIOIIII"" lrl CMIIO lfOm qucllliON by 111!10111
pocple, pool ond """"1. Eech ltbr In 1111 clpMr ollndlloi anC&gt;Ihlf.

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form four olmplo wordo.

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One Old timer to inolhar·. "T~""
~:;:~:;:~:;:.., point of living and remaining an
,...
optlmiet,lato be foolish enough lo
A N C 0 D E . believe the best II ••• to----.:
A Compltl1 til1 h kl 1
d'
1 V'
by flllng
1
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quole
In lhec mloalnJI
word1
·you develop from IIIP No. 3 below..

I

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:·Patrol checks
2-:_vehlde qash

L

ICIIAM-LITI ANSWIII
Impede - Yield· /deal ·Voiced· DECADE
:
The famous football player had a logical explanation:
lor his poor showing for over ten years. "Wall," he smiled,!
"anyone can have an off DECADE."
:

•

•

•'

It ml~flt b• wl•• to tnkr the
lnltlntlvc nn,l mako• 1•lam thnt
h1cl1td~ nn l'lljn)•nblc compnniun.
LEO Ouly 23-A"M· 22) --

your 111\IU Llo'' lls1 out,
hL•tnmL' yllu'rc M(1i11g to he in
i1 IIIUI'L' lnduurluus 111cloiJ thnn
11

" ,.,ci,•l our. Tnkc advntllll~e
of lhh and nccnmplish some·
thing worthwhile.
VlllGO (Au~. 23-Sopt. 22)
•• Handled Jkillfully, buoint:JI
cnn be bf&lt;nd•d nicely with
pleasure. Arrnn~e sun1rthlnl!
Joclal with t•mona with
whom yott shllr.e n common
cununerclnl objrctivo.
. LIIJRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) • It's tin• to l1ovo ouuldc In·
mem, but •whcn duty calla,
put yoitr kith nnd kill nru.
Mnke them the mo&lt;t Important people In your titr.
SCOill110 (Ocr. 24-Nov.
22) ·- Your rrulc" nnturr
makes this nn cxtcll~nt dny 10
toke tart of errnud• ur tuudt
bases with nil those you've nr·
Kleetcd la~dy . The more
you're on the 1!0• the better
you'll like it.
SA(;ITTAIUUS (Nov. 2j.

•

••
••••
•••

l&gt;ec. 21) "· Thio io a sood dny •
fur you ro involve youqolf In :
fiunnclal or motrrlnf tuuta, b~- :
Cnli!C you p0!1C81 n sreat dco( ;
of cummun ICII!e whether •
you're b11ylng or !citing.
:
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·:
Jnn. 19) •• Tnk• total conlrul :
n( how

you Rpcnd ynur timr, :

b"'"""' being oblo to do whnt :

yo\1 want wlum yuu wnm wUI •

b~ of utmost imponnnctJ to :
you .
!

AQUAiliUS U111. 20-Peb. :
fY) -- If lclt tu your own de- •
vicos, there ue n number of ;
private concern! thAt cAn be·:
denlt with. You'll utilize your :
time well If you keep outtid- '
••
ers nt bay,
PISCES (Feb. 20·MArch 20) '
•• You'rr • hopeful realht
· wllu will be oblc to dul "'llh '
thlnp 11 you find thtlll. Thua,
you'll have a bettor than mual
chance to realize your wishes
And de1lres.
ARIES (March 21·Apr1119) .
... Ont

or )lOUr innov:alioiU

may gJ~rrtcr you untxp&lt;ct&lt;J
ro•o1111itlu11 fru111 a notable ,
pmo11. The opprtdulon w111 .
II lUll fl

lot,

Pick :s: 4·2·6
Pick 4: 5·1·3-3
Buckeye !1: 2·11·18·20-36
Pick J (nlpt): 3-2·5
Pick 4 (nljht): 1·9-1-5
W.VA.

Dai!Y J: 6-7-2
DallY 4: 2·2-9·5

Put..tr.l: 3-26-32-45-48 (6)

Index
2 leellon• • II ......

Calendar
Classlfleds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials

Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
'

A4
84·6
' 87
A4
A6
A3
A3
8 I;2,4
· A2

• o 2002 Ohio ~"'"" Publlthlns co.

POMEROY
of the sanitary
sewer system at the new elementary sc!u&gt;ol was awarded,
permanent appropriations for school operating expenses
were approved and several teachers for next year were hired
by the Mei~ Local Board of Education in Wcdm·sday's
meeting.
D. V. Weber was awarded a contract to construct a waste
water lift and pump station at the new elementary school at
a cost of $142,850. The system will .connect the school with
Rutlond's waste water facility.
·
1\vo construction change orders were approved. One was
for a $27,430 change by Wesam Construction at the new
Middle School, and the ocher for a change by A.J. Srockmeister for $28,069 at the new elementary school.
A revised permanent appropriations for the 21101-02 fiscal
year in the amount of $45,374,462 was approved by the
board, with Sup.erintendent William Buckley expbining the
amount includes new school construction costs.
Teachers hired included Morgan Bral!g as high school
chemistry teacher;Vicki Bragg as high school special educotiqn teacher; and Kristin Keiter as high school French
teacher.
~upplcmcntal contracts were awarded to Mike Kennedy,
head track coach; Ron Hill, assistant high school track
· coach; Jesse Vail, Middle School track coach; Don Dixon,
assistalll Middle School track coach; Dan Thomas, head
baseball coach; Jeremy Grimm. reserve baseball coach; J;m
Haddox, Middle School golf coach; Nathan Hansen, girls'
· softball coach;Jennifcr Jones, girls' reserve softball coach, and
Jeremy Grimm, boys' Middle School baseball coach. ·
Brinn Howard was approved as a volunteer to assist with
the girls' softball team; Ryan Williams as a substitute teacher

PIHH IH Mel~, AJ

·National Day of Prayer in Meigs County

Judge: Not all
kids drink

POMEROY The
Statt Hi11hway Patrol wa!
lnve!tigatinl! n . §erious
it~ttry accident on Wipple
Road near Five Points this
morninl!. ,
The ~ccident involved
tWO vehicles and unofficial
~ports had an occupant of
one of the vehicles ejected
after the collision. The crash
occurred around 6:30a.m.,
and troopers altd Mdl!s
EMS responded to the
scene.
Further details were
unavailable from the GnlliaMdg~ Post befo~ presstime
today.

OHIO

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Man II naturt't 1011 mlltlltt.' • :'
W.s. Olllltn 'Man It tnt only creature that rtlu111 to bt what
ne Ia.' - Albtn Camua

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Thur«lny. Mny 2. 20112

School sewer
plant contrad
awarded

Parents who host parties bear
liability, crimina.lpenal[ies
.

.·~

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDCI&gt;MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

While today Is the National
Day of Prayer, local church
members are continuing a
week-long celebration of the
theme, "America United
Under God.' Joe Brockert of
Pomeroy, right, and his wife,
both members of the Sacred
Heart Church, are among
many local people who have
participated In a week·long
Bible reeding marathon on
the Pomeroy parking tot. The.
week's observance was
kicked off locally Sunday
afternoon, as mora then 150
people joined 111 a circle of
prayer, surrounding the his·
torlc Meigs County Courthouse ~ above, Prayers for
public officials and the
nation will be said during
· tOdey'l prayer service on the
courthouse eteps. Local pas·
tcra and laity, musk:lans and
local officials will participate ·
In the hour·lonasarvlca. to .
be&amp;ln at 11:30 a.m.

POMEROY -· "Kids may tell their parents that all
teenagers drink, but that's nut true." .
Meigs County Juvenile Judge Robert Buck said the criminal penalties, legal consequences and moral dilemmas posed
by providing alcohol and a place to drink it to their children
should be enoul!h to discourage the practice.
Buck said parents who host prom or graduation parties for
their teenagers should think twice before they all ow alcohol
to be served. Not only is it illegal , but it creates problems that
could outlast the prom or l!raduation event being celebrated.
It is. estimated that junior and senior high school students
drink a billion cans of beer a year, and the revelry of prom
and graduation seasons adds to the pressure to drink and the
availability of alcohol to underage drinkers.
Many parents and other adults host parties for their minor
children and their children's friends, many because they feel
it is safer than the alternative, and Buck said. because they are
convinced that drink.ing among teenagers is a common

t
•

occurrence.

"It happens, but it's not as common as mme parents are led
to believe;' 13uck said. "To a teenager with friends who
drink, it may seem that'everyone' doc• it. but everyone does-·
n 't."

"It's often a tactic that kids use to convince their parents
that drinking is acceptable behavior, or to convince their
paren~J to provide them with alcohol or a place to drink . In
the bit! picture, it's not true."
·. The legal comequences awaiting both teenagers who
drink and the adults who obtain alcohol for them are high .
For example, Uuck said, a juvenile IJUI charge carrie&lt;&gt; a
$250 fine plus cost~, a $400 license rcin5tatement fee, and a
one-year licerue suspension, not to mention the cmt of three

PlltH.-IIrDIII.AJ

.

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Sponund by HolzM M.clkal Cenlflr and Hoi., O'lllic

Sunday, M.ay 5, 2002
2:00 - 4:00 pm
HMC Edoca~on &amp;Conference Cenler
A celebt"ation for babie~ born in 2001 at Holzer Medical Cenler
For more
call
446·5030.
,.
•
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.,

.,

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