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'-1' Dl• •• , I.._..

01lllpoll1, Ohio

tbwJ

.star wan

Prep Baseball: Southem tops.~astern. B1

'Spider.:.Ma.n,' 'MIB,' 'Stuart' give
antves In stores - Just In ti-ne Sony colossal clout for summer
•

·for release of new release
LOS AN05LHS (1\P) - If
"Slur Wurs: Eplst"kll! II Athtd: of the Cluucs" b ubout
tn open in thcutcrs. it must he
time for "Stur Wm'S: Attock of
the Ttlys" 111 begin invuc.llng
stores.
Thm's just wlmt hlllli~IIL'll
1\1csdtt)l, when merchunllisc
tied tu the movie mutcrlullzcd
ttl Thys R U&gt; unll ~lsewhere .
Only this time the rollout wus
more subtlue,l. uflcr some of
the esoteric furc rclcuscd for
1999's "Th.:
Phtuth\11\
Mcnncc" lun11uishcll 011
shclv~s for m&lt;mths.
"We've sculcd It buck II
lot," suld Lucnslihn licensing
exc~utivc Howurd ~uil'nmn .
"We're !lOin~ to slick to the
busies - toys. vldcol!umes ...
the thin11s om funs prefer.
ruther thun S&lt;lfllc or the fringe
Items."
Thus you won 't sec Qul!cn
Amlduln's fucc on ymn· J.&gt;cpsl
cun this time Mound o1· ~
ublc ''' rclux. In 1111 Anukin
Skywulkcr lnllutul)lc dlllir.
You w.-n't huve uny Obi·Wutt
Kcnubl cllp·llll 1\rulds to

tlltuch to your huir.
Mcrchunllislng llXC~utlvcs
ut Lucusfllm Ltd. cut the
. number of p~tlducts c•mnect·
cd to "Attud:. of the Clones."
whkh npens Muy I (1, to
fewer thun 50 nl\cr relcusinl!
nbout HS fnr "Phuntnn\
Mcnuce.''
"Lu~t
time, they just
shipllC•I 11111 nwch ." said Ouw
Ocrurdi. senior editor of the
toy
trudc
mugut inc
Pluythings. "AI\cr u few
mnnths, rctuilcrs ht11l to put 11
deep discount on them· und
~till couldn'tmnvc them." ·
A ltllol' the surplus toys muny of which reutmctl tile.
mudl-llllllil!n~d Jur Jur Blnks
churu.:tcr - hung in store
ulslcs so hmg they cui·nlld the
\lubimts title nf "pel! wunn·
crs."
The "Stur Wut·s" ntcrdmn·
disl' line wns still wildly sue·
cessful. curnlng uboul $2 bll·
lion worldwide. ·
Titc third "Slur Wurs" filtH.
"Rcnu:n Ill' .. the Jcdl,'' hut!
come out Hi ycurs before
"Thll Phtutll\111 Mcnu.:c.'' untl

collvct·ted. 'The tolul untuxcd
rortimt or J')llr trutlitionul
II{ A 1.~ mldc to yolll' tuxublc
in,·omc lite yeur thul you con·
fvom ,....D1
vert uud you lllllst /'liY the
· whole ltiX liuhillly w ten you
tux ·cxcmpt Rnth docs 1101 file your it1Clll11c tuxes. If yuu
churi!C you lux on Interest huvc ltJ usc your uctuul IRA
curned. As hmg us yuu follow suvlngs 10 puy tuxes u·igl!crcll
the rules. you never puy tuxes by shifting them to u l~oth ,
on ynur gttlns. So puylng then you muy be sucl'iflclng
tuxes bcli~t·c contl'lbutlng to tllo mudt pl'ind 11ul up front
the Roth muy work nut tn h~ l'or the conversion to be
. better lui' ymL tlum I"'Yilll! worth 11 . But II' you huvc
them ltttel' on ynur nvcst· muny yem·s to mukc up for
mcnt profits.
tuklnl! the tux bite fron,1 your
The Roth is un cspcdully s11 yings,· usk .your tux advisor
sensible tool 1\tr 11cuplc oth· whether u· Roth still mukcs
crwisc limited to mnking .1cnscl'lll' you.
thlll ·~cductlhlc colllributlons
••uctorH tn ConHid~r.
to u rcl!ulur IRA. Single filers There Is uicl!itlntute pntcntlul
eurnlng up to $95,000 und for tux-free l!rllWth. so ewn
couples curnin11 up tn people with substuntlul IRA
$150,000 urc free to usc It u.1 bulunccs muy wunttu consld·
well . Plrsl·tlme homebuycrs cr convcl'tinl! ut lcust I)Urt. II'
cun ,ulso pull out $IO,IK)() In they •1uulll'y l'or cmwcrslnn.
lrotlts jJcnulty ft•cc und tux· 13ccuuse the dcdslon con·
'rcc II' 11c tll&lt;lltcy htiN hccn In tuln.1 muny vurlublcs~ It's t'CC·
the Ruth IRA for utlcust five unm1cndcd thlll you consult
lUX yeurs .
your Ill~ UUVisor for udultion•
Note: Burring ccrtuiM . ul lnfurmmlon before dccld·
cxceplionK, · prol'ltK with· lng whether the conversion
druwn before retirement ugc will be bcncflclul.
·
und bel'ore the tryoney huH Some t'uctorK you muy
been IM the Roth lor ut lcust wut1llo diHcUKK Include:
flve lux·yeurK will be tuxed,
• Current und future
pluH you'll uiKu Incur u. 10 i11come tux rutcK ugc und lite
percent penulty when those c~pcctuncy.
eurnllli!K ur11tuken before 1111c
• Antlclputcd Kpendlnl!
~9· 112 .
· nccJH durin!! retirement.
How Uoe~ On~ Convert'!
• Other HourccK of retire•.
Inform your 11\A cuKimllun lllllllt funu~ (including pen·
(or trustc~) thlll yuu wl~h w Hion JlitlllH).
convert your trudltlonul IRA · • Other Knurccs of uftcr·tux
tn u Roth IRA. When you l'llc muncy und lnvcKlmcnlN,
your tux returns, report the
• Bcncf1dury'K uge und life
~nnverHion Ill the IRS und expcctuncy.
puy the lncunlc tuxeN owed
• BenciTclury'Kplunned UKC
on !the IRA usKclK Yt1U'vc of the IRA l'undK on lnhcri·

Investing

l

Lucus111m und toy munufuctutcr Hushl\1 Inc. ucknowl·
edgud ovcrestlmuting the
IIIUI'kcl.
· "Whcit you huvc u lnrttc
bt·cudth ttf churnctcrs nnll
fll\xlucts Hkc lhut, you're mit
ll&lt;litt~ ·to hit 1111 llvtry slnl!le
one; Husbmmurkctlnl! executive Murtln Pidcl suld.
About 20 dill'crent "Attack
of the Clones'' uction ligures,
priced ut about $6, were
rclcusl!d Tlh.lsduy, with the
number incrcusinl! to ubout
~ll hy ycnr's end.
·
At 11 Tttys K Us in Los
At\l!clcs. ubout I00 lims were
lin~d up hy mldnl~ln to grub
their "Stur· Wurs' products
llrs.tthhtl! 1\.tcsduy.
Curlu DclluOuttu, 26, wus tl
little ulurmcd to be one of the
few peoplll In costume l'nr the
event - cspcclully since it
wus 57 dcl!rees und she wus
wcurilll! u custoll1·111ude
Pt·incess Lelu "sluvc ~lrl"
bikini l't'OI11 "Return ol the
Judi. " Luckily, she hud u
hluck lflJ)Coau .
1un~c .

• Bcncfidut·y's future
Income tux rutes.
• Rule of return nn invest ·
lllelll .
• Whether you curn over
$100,000 pet• ycur (If so, u
conversion Is IIC1l possible,)
Be minuful thut fimds ·
i'oilcu over Into u Roth IRA
C&lt;)I1Ul llllllcr greul~r rc'strlc- ·
liiJIIS i'&lt;ll' iJillllllty free lii1U lUX·
ft·cc dlstl'illuthm' UK ~om ·
purcd to nun nul Roth IRA
contrlhutlons. 13ut Koth II(A
contl'lhutlo11s . uno gt·owth
huvc udvutHugcs - they lii'C
not .1uhject to the minimum
dlstrlhuiloll rules during Ihe
ow11cr 's life so longer pcrimls
of tux -uxcmpt growth · ure
pussihlc (csrcclully for
weulthy tuxpuyers).
· If yuur employer gives you
the ~hoke of n1.ukinl! nott·
llllllchln!! contributions to
either un emplnycr plun (c.y,,
u 401 (k) plun) or ul(oth lit A,
you should consit.lcr Invest·
lng In rcllremcllt plun8 in the
following priority: (I) pluns
with cmployer·mutched con·
trlbutlonil. (2) Ruth IRAs for
yourself · und Y\)Ur spouse.
unt\ (3) plun ~ without
mulched cnntributiuns.
· DctcrminlnJ! eligibility und
welghinl! the Clli1NCI.jUC11CCH
shnuld he · done curcfully.
Cnnsult with your tux uc.lvisor,
before mukinl! .amy chungcs
to your retirement uccounts.
(/Jrvn' Smith 1.1 llll l11v~.ft ·
m~ttt' executive w/rlt $mlrlt
Parttwr.f

lit Adv~!.ll

Inc. In /u

Gul/1/lol/.r oj]1ce,)

FREE!

l.OS ANOBLES (AP) Sony Pictures Is splnnlna
u eomn1nndlna box-office
web this summer, with n
lln~up 11nchored by tllut
block bu ster· ln•the· muk •
lull, "Spider-Mull," untl
s~quels 111 " M~n In Bluek"
und "Stuurt Lillie."
Beyond thnse three frunchlsc films , tho movie ~tu ·
tlio hus Adum Sund: In .
"Mr. Deeds." u remulo..: ot'
the Frunk Cupru clusslc
"Mr. Deeds Ooes to
Town"; the Dunn Carvey
comedy "The Master of
Ol~l!ulsc": the Jennlrer
Lope~ thriller "Enough";
11nd lhe extreme-sports spy
~uper. "XXX," reunltlna
stur Vln Diesel. director

Kneen

ftom Pip Pl .
your's crops.
Our cunHnerclul ve11etuble
growers hn ve hud t hcl r
putlcncc tt·ied us cool tern·
peruturcs, gusty winds! ruin
und l!Ven hull huve he u up,
pluntinl! und "normal'
growth. 'Tutnlllo trun~plunts
huve sturted to mot out Into
the soli, especlully when
pluntcd In rulsed beds cnv·
crellin blu~k plllstlc,
The furcsl ol' stukes nrc
sproutilll! up to support our
trellised tomuto plunts.
Swect corn is growl ng, but II
too could usc wurmcr tctn·
perutures. Cubbuge .~ecn1s to
be the crop thul Is ei\Joyhll!
·this coni, wet weuther uni.l
should be uvulluble locully
1\J,r Memorlul Ony weekend.

...

Arc you lntereHted In
leurnlng how tn Identify the
trees In your · woods'? The
Ohio Wuodlund Stewords
progrum In cooperation with
the Ohio State University

Rob Cohen nnd producer
Nell Morltt, the teum
behind lost yeur's surprise
smush "The Fast und the
Furious."
"I've never seen such a
strong slute from any one
stud·lo In tuty given sum·
mer,"
sold
Puul
Derj~urubedlun, president
of' Exhibitor Relutions Co.
Inc., which tru..:ks the
movie
box
office."
"Everythin¥ came together
for them thts summer.'lk.
It even surpuss~s Sony's
1997 summer schedule,
when "Men In Bluck,"
"Air Force One" und "Mr,
Best Friend's Wedding'
propelled the Atudlo to u
record box-office huul of

$1.26 billion domesticnlly
for the entire y~ur.
Since then, Sony has
been u middle-of-the-puck
studio lit best, lugging well
behind recent box -office
lenders such us Worner
Bros..
Disney
und
Unlversul. Sony hus hud u
scullering of hits, lnclud·
lng the orl_gtnul "Stuurl
Lillie" und Sundler'5 "Big
Duddy," but plenty ot
.duds, among them "Finul
Funtusy : The Splril8
Within," "Ali.'' "Jukob tho
Llur"
und
"The
Messenger: The Story of
Joun of Arc."
Even some of Sony's
hils were quulifled sue\
ccsscs.

E~tenslo1; Is sponsorin11 un · MCPP, trlclopyr und metsul·
on·hunds workshop entltleu
"Nume Thut Tree' on Muy
17 from 9 u.m. to 3 p.m. ut
the
Athens
County
Extension Ort1ce.
The morning cluss cnver.~
tin lmroductlnn. to tree lden·
tlflcutlon Including pructic·
lng tin pr1.1pured !!pcclmens.
Lunch wll be provided on
site und then u field trip will
tuke you to ·locul forests
where you will identify trees
using the lechnlqueli tuught
111 you durin11 the mornfng
hours.
·
Reslstrutlon cost Is $20
per person und If wonted, u
copy of "Ohio Trees," u new
cx!J)nslon publicution thut
hus color pholol!ruphs of
trees, cnn be purchused for
un
uddilionul
$IS,
Reglstrutlon Is limited to SO
people; Fnr further informu·
tlon, cull the AtheMs County
Extension Office ut 740·

m-sm
... ..

furon ure herbicides found
either ulone or In comblnu.
tlon with euch niher In many
weed killers. Read the labels.
to ·muke su!'ll the broudleaf'
weeds you ure tryln11 to con·
trul ure on the lubel. ·
Also mukc sure lo follnw
uppllcutlon ·directions mixing rates und weuther
conditions. Be cureful not to ·
upply herbicides to plun£
muterlul you wunl to keep.
Dry grunuluttld weed and
feed products may be spread
using u fertlll~.er spreuder.
Note thut the luwn needs to
be moist so the herbicide
sticks nntn the weeds untl
then you 11ee~ 24 to 48 hours
or i.lry weuther for the herbl·
ctde lobe c:ffectlve In killing
the weeds.
If weed populations ure
high or difficult to control,
you muy need to upply her·
blcldes twice or three tlmeH
during the spring.
(Hal Kttmt Is Meigs

111 your luwn scattered Cmmty :1 Extelt .flon agelll
with weeds'/ Now is the dtnc for awlmllurt cmd natural
to upply broudleuf weed rP.fmu·c~.··· Olt/o Stute
killers. Dicumbu, 2,40, Unlver.llty. I

•

a1

•

Melp County'•

What's Inside

Meigs Co. fam1l1es
IV CHAIILIHI HOINOH

HOEFI.ICHOMVD~ILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The new
Kinship . Nuvlgutor . Progrum
of the Mela~ County Council
on Aging is now nfferlng ser·
vices to ussbt rehttlves or.
friends providing care for
another person'schlld.
Susan 011 ver, executive
director, said that Leslie
Rayburn, coordlnbtor, hus
started working with families;
assessing their needs and providing Information und refer·
rul118slstance.
She noted .thut about 800
fmnlltes In the county quullfy
for the services .becuuse they
ore curing for children not
their uwn who are under 18
years of uge.
· The services may include
respite care, financial and
legal assistance and . medical
care, according to Oliver In u
report [liven at a recent meet·
Ina of ihe Board or Trustees.
She said that referruls mny
be made to Rayburn ut 992·

Giants thump Reds, 11

June E. TUrner, 62
DNIIa, AJ

Hlsh: 7p~ Low: 60s
D~t~~la,AJ

.~·111~11• cops
· nabthltf
,

S~ond

1122 J,ackson Pike • Spring Valley Plaza • Gallipoli.r, Ohio

Call (740) 441-1971 or
v

I

434·4194

RUtLAND - A locul poet recently opened the
debut of u new unth(Jingy l)f Ohio poems with her
polgnunt poem ubout Chester.
·
Cathy Lentes of Rutland read her award-winning
poem, "Approuching Chester. Ohio" ut u reception
und debut of "I Have My Own Song For It: Modern
Poem .~ (lf Ohio" ul Olu Church or1 the Green in
Hud so n. The anthology was rece ntl y published by
the University of Akron Pre~ s. and abo includes
Wl!rks by Pulitzer Prize winners Jam es Wright and
Mary Oliver, us well as Robert Bly and former
United Stutes Poet Laureate Rita Dove .
Several of the poets whose works arc included in
the book were on hand . After Introductory remarks
by both editors, Will Greenway and Elton Glaser, .
Lentcs opened the program b)l readinl! her poem,
which paints a colorful portrait of Chester and the
old courthouse there.
The poem is the winner of the 2000 Appalachian
Poetry Competition in Now And Then Mugazine and
East Tennes see State University.
Lentes, a native Ohioan, writes and rubli shes work
about life in the Buckeye Stute. utH i• u frequent
· contributor In literary journal s and · 111agazines
throu)!hout the' Appalachian regiort .and beyond. In
addilton to her Meigs County poem in the anthology,
she currently has work in the April issues of Now
And Then and Northern Ohio Live.
Lentes is also a teacher of ~ritin11. workin11 with
children frnm kindergarten through the eighth grade·,
and with women in journal and creativity work~hops,
Other writen participating in the reading from
around the slate tncluded Maggi~ Anderson, J:?aniel
Bourne, Myrna Stone, Larry Smnh. Robert Mtltner,
Oiane Kendig, and Bob Fo~ .
· .
"I Have My Own Song For It : Modem Poems Of
Ohio" gathers together 117 poems by 85 poets for a
fresh perspective on the. Buckeye State.
Not si nce 1911 has there been a comprehensive
collection of pnems written about Ohio .. This anthol-.
o'y is especially relevant as Ohio celebrates its
bu:entennial in 2003. These poems offer a virtual
tour of peorle and places in the state, traveling
around Ohio M lakes and rivers, farms and open coun·
try, small towns and large cities. In resonant language and compelling imagery. the poems bring Ohio
to iu citizen~ and, beyond the borders of the state, to
Ioven of poetry everywhere.
"I Have My Own Song For It : Mndem Poems Of
Ohio," is available in both cloth and paper editions
from the University of Akron Press and tn-store and
online booksellen. Future reading~ ~ re flanned
around the state through 2003 as a part o Ohio's
bicentennial ce lebrations.

Abbie Houur, rl&amp;J!t, wat
proiJCI of the four-Inch bubble
&amp;Um bubble ehe blew durlna
e conteet It Saturday'•
Family Fun Felt, coordinated
by the Me~&amp;~ County Health
O.pertment. The event, held
It the Femll)' Life Center of
the Middleport Church ot
Chrltt, 'Included demonttretlone and bo&lt;lth extllbltl from
a number of local egenclee.
bullnftHI, and lndMdUIIII,
fr,. food end IOIIVtnlrt, end
tntertllnmetlt and contettt.
£1v11 Pretlt)' trlblltt ertltt
OWiaht lctnhOWfr and the

:a •••••• • 11,.,..

C.lend1r
Clltllfleds

A7
85·7

Dar ~

A4

Edltorlajs
MOYiet ·

M

Comlct

Obltulrlft
SI)Of1S

Wathel'

B8

A3
A3

Bl~~

""

e21110%GHot~"ltlfille&amp;

Lentes opens
poetry debut
FROM STAFF REPORTS

allejedly robbed Spu.dway
with what wa1 detcrlbed a8
"an edjed weapon" Juat
before 2 a.m. Monday.
· After recetvlna an ldentl·
tlcatlon from w11neue11
OPD oft'lcers located ana
amehended Mayes around
7:30 a.m. ·whhoutlncldent.
He Is belna held In the
Oallla County !all on
$20,000 bond on c6ii!Je• of
felony poueulon of ilruas
reladna to an arre•t by tile
Oallla County Sheriff'•
omce.

.... ...

MHI PROM ROYALTY -At Saturday night's prom at Meigs
High School John Stanley, son of Shirley and Daniel Stanley
of Harrisonville. end Ashley Burbridge, daughter of Bill and
Lori Burbridge of Pagevllle , were crowned king and queen.
Theme of the prom was "Completely Lost In You ." (Charlene
Hoeflich)

((Approaching Chester, Ohio" ·
included in anthology

Oall1!)9118 Perry, W.Va.,

Cookbook .
Whan
you gat
your
hearing
tasted In
May at•••
Advanced Hearing Center

FAMILY FUN FEST

STAFF REPORT

Cookbook

FREE!

261!1, Ext. 223, or informu· Wellington who hus ·been
tlon can be emulled to her ut working on u provlsiunul
klnshlp®meigsseninrcenter.c busls wus l!iven pennunent
om. The program Is funded stutus ulong with u 30 cent un
throush lhe Meigs County hour increuse.
Depurunent of Jobs und
A question of whut to do
Family Services.
with the . old but work ins ·
Oliver ulso reported to the freezer.~ the wulk-in rcpluccs
trustees that the new wulk-in wus discussed und It wus
cooler freezer, purchased with decided that ruther thon sell
u gift from the Slstel'll of St. them, they would be offered
Joseph Hospital, hus been i&lt;J God's NE!T. un lnterdenom·
Installed In the. room which lnutionul ynuth · prol!rnm in
previously housed the mltri- Mcll!s County.
tlon ofl1ce.
·
. It wus noted thut Dlunu
Oliver commended .Bellndu CollleN Is working on u phuse
Wellihl!llln, nutrition director of the county's hmnclund
for her work on the. Murch for security pro11rum und Is writMeals proJect which brought jng u,prnposnlttl "use seniors
In severuf thousund dollltrs, to truln seniors to get people
und her nianage111ent of food out dunger zone! 1n the event
costs since tuldng over the of nn disustllr", said Oliver.
prusram,
A new policy fur luundr~
The executive director suid Nervices through the Council
that food costs have been cut on Aging was ndoptell ut the
by about $2,000 a month meetlns und u suggested
through the use of buyln11 in dunutlon of $2 wus put in
bulk, using coupons, 011d .pluce.
making more meals from
"scratch.''
PI••• •• Coundl, AJ

: OALLIPOLIS
Officen from the Oallipulla
Pollee Department c:ap·
rured a man 8U8pected of
commlttlna armed robbery
at the Speedway conve·

For a limited time, D&amp;W Homee North le offering
YOUR CHOICE of FREE CENTRAL AIR
or
$1 ,000 FURNITURE PACKAGE
on any new llnglewlde or doublewldel

·--

MEIGS ROYALTY

Ave11ue In Oalllpoll&amp;.
Accordlna to a preu
release luued by OPO, .
Marvin Mayes, 47 of ·

740·286·21 01

•

Honattown Newapeper

•

!lienee store, 80 I

1000 Morton Street
Jackaon, Ohio

}

Aockln' Country dlllctft per·
forrnt&lt;l, Rocldn' Reale wat
the pit DJ, and e number
of conteltl for chlldrtn end
ldultl were held. Cathy

Lentft, en ewerd-Winnlna
· · poet from Rutland end ·
wacner of crei!We Wlffina
prolf'IIM for ldultl and chiidren, hid • popul• •Fun
with Worclt" dl•play. Here,
A.J. How«d, 4, mltl with
Ltntu. (BI'Ien J. Reed)

~--~------------~----------~----~----~--~------~

Nurses

[]nlbllt

lsMay6· 12
MEDICAL CENTER

.....
Hour•:

~11

..1

fun f:of ·

1000 Morton Strflt
(Sr At 93 &amp; US 35)
Jacklon, Ohio

740·286-2101

'

Trllde-lne .
Welcome!
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Budget plan ignores school funding

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather
T'Utlcl8y, ..., 7

COLUMBUS (AP) - Lawmakers
tryina to balance the state budget are
doing their best to ianore a pendina
coun rulina that could send them riaht
back to their spreadsheets.
Senate ReJ?ublicans and Oov. Bob
Taft are pushana a plan to pat~h a $1 .2
·
billion deficit thai
:---. includes tripling the
state's cigarette tax,
cutting the budget
and tapping the rliiny
day fund.
The plan doesn 't
mention the sUite's
decade-old school·
·funding fight, which
remains l)efore the
Ohio
Supreme
Tift
Court.
·The court has
agreed to rule llQain on whether Ohio
has fi~cd inequities in funding rich
and poor schools. Estimates of what
the decision could cost runge from
$400 million to $1.2 billion a ~ear.
'Faft. a Republican, has consistently
refused to include the ruling's poten·
tint price tog in any budget deliberations. He said there ure too many
unknowns, including the cost nnJ the
time period for providing udditionul
money.
"We have to deul with that when the

,............ ,...,..,,
.I COtumfiUI . , . . I

Showers, thundershowers
over the next few days
BY THE ASSOCIATEO PRESS

The National Weather Service is forecastin_g a chance of
showers and thunderstorms in the Mid-Ohio Valley through
Thursday. Temperatures will remnin mild through
Wednesday, with highs in the 70s and lows in the SOs..
,
A high pressure system which brought mostly sunny sk1es
and mild temperatures to the region this weekend continued to
do so overnight. But it has moved toward the East Coast and
is being replaced by a slow-moving low that will bring up
moisture from the Oulf of Mexico.
Forecast
Tonight...Mostly cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms until midnight...Then showers and thunderstonns
likely. Lows in the lower 60s. Southwest winds around 10
mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Tuesday...Showers and thunderstorms likely. Hiahs in the
upper 70s. West winds 10 to IS mph. Chance of ram 60 percent.
.
Tuesday night... Partly cloudy with scattered showers und
thunderstonns. Lows in the lower 60s. Chance of rain 40 per·
cent.
Wednesday...Partly cloudy with s.cattered showers and lhun1erstorms. Highs in the mid 80s. Chance of rain 50 percent.
.
Extended Forecast
Thursday... A chance of showers and thunderstonns during
the day ... Otherwise panty cloudy. Highs in the mid 70s.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 40s and hiahs 6S
to 70.
·
Saturday...Panty cloudy. .Lows in the mid 40s and highs 70
to 7S.
·
Sunday ... Partl)' cloudy and warmer. Lows in the lower 50s
and blahs 80 to 85.

I

.

dec is.ion comes," Taft said last week.
''We don 't know when it is going to
• k
h 11 ·
~~~~~.::ve don t now w at t s goang
The case is named for Nathan
DeRoIph' Q CoI urn bus bus inessman
who sued the state in 1991 as a ninth·
grader in southeast Ohio.
The court has twice ruled 11galnst
the su1te's plun to create a constitu·
tional system of education funding. In
.d
, S
h
a th1r ruling 1!1 eptember, t. e coun
said the plan would be constitutional
with addat ional spending.
The state asked the coun to recon·
sider after estimates of the additional
spending hit $1.2 billion a year. The
stute argued that the coun had used
innccume datu and that the number
should be closer to $400 million.

Ohio'&amp; two-year budaet spends ~
rocord $14 billion on ac:hools.
The Issue before the court is the wa~
the state calculated the amount 1!
spends on each schoolchild annually;
Per pupil spending this year Is $4,8141
Ohio has about 1.8 million school~
children.
,
·
As an example, last year JUSt Sl,19Q
in IOc:al propeny tallCS were raised to
pay for each student attending school~
m rural Melas Local School Diatrlc.l;
By contrast, residents in wealthy
Solon in suburban Cleveland raise~
$7,S8S per student from local ta,Jtes. ..
Democrats, in the minority m th~
House and Senate, think any .budaet:
balancing plan should . take · tho
DeRolph decision into account.
Senate Minority Leader Gregory
DIDonato said lawmakers should try
to address the state's budaet problems
now, rather than risk the potential of
returning to the table aaain in 11 few
h
mont s.
•
The current budget deliberations
are the third in a year.
"Most of us think the DeRolph
decision will come down to bcin*
half a billion dollars or less ••
DiDonato said. "We're just saying in
the framework of a comprehensive
plan there needs to be talk about that ·
factor."

outofahome,andyou(do)not Wilson, for 10 months before
know who took the chfld?" the girt· was born in
Cash said in a telephone inter· September 1996. Wilson now
view Sunday from the Miami· lives in East Cleveland, Ohio.
Dude County Jail. He is being
Cnsh has been convicted of
held on churges of grnnd theft roughly a half-dozen charges
uuto, drinking in public and - robbery, battery, ·l'Osses·
possession of cocaine.
sion of coeaine - dunng the
Detectives ore now treating past IS years, according state
Rily11's disappearance as a criminal records. But records
possible
· homicide. show Cash was not In jail dur·
Investigators are waiting for. ing the 10 months leading up
DNA test results from Kansas tO Rilya's birth.
City (Mo.) police to see if a
A document terminating
girl found beheaded there last Wilson's parental riahts lists
April was Rilya.
Cash as the "prospective
Cash said he believes his father" of Rilya. 1'hat deter·
dauahter Is still alive and that mlnition came · after an
"somebody's got my child." . acknowledgment from Cash
He said he was dating that he waa the father, accord·.
Rilya's
mother, Olorla Ina to DCP records and Cllh,

www.mydlllytentlnel.com

EAGLES DONADON
JuneTunwr

'

Jailed man doubts reports
of Miami girl's d
nee
MIAMI (AP) - A jailed
moil listed on state documents
as the father of a missing S·
yeur-old girl said he does not
believe she could have disup·
. peared without a truce.
Man vi lie Cash doubts
reports thnt his · daughter,
Rilyu Wilson, wus taken from
the house of her caretllker,
Geralyn Oraham.
Oraham has said 11 woman
claiming to be a state caseworker took Rilyu for evaluation in January 2001 and
never returned her. But
Department of Children &amp;
Pami lies officials have no
record of the girl belna in
state custody.
·
"How c~ you take a child

Mond.v. Mav e. 2002

'

The state did not conduc,t
paternity tests, Cash said. . ,
Graham says she is Rilya'~ ·
grandmother and that her son,
Kenneth Epson, is the girl's
father. Wilson has refused to
disclose the Identity ofRilya's.
father.
',
Cash said he lost touch with
Rilya after Graham got custody ·
of the child. He said he l.a~·.
never met Graham or Bpson. · .
"I have had no ide11 where;
she is. 1'vecal1ed DCF, but they
have told me nothing," he said, .
Child welfare officials did
not return repeated jlhone calla .
from The Miami Herald on,
Sunday. Neither did Graham:
nor her attorney, Bd Shohat,,
lhe newapaper reported.

RAVENSWOOD. W.Va. - June Esther Turn&lt;'r, 62, of
Rav.mswood, W.Va., died on Saturday. May 4, 2002. at her residence.
She was born on May 17, 1939, in Great Bend, daughter of
the late Charles and Delcie Cleek Proffitt. She was a member
of the North United Methodist Churrh.
Surviving are her husband, jack L. Turner: two sons,1bdd L
Turner of Raleigh. N.C. and toby D.Turner of Portland; three
grandchildren; three brothers:Jack Proffitt ofWashington,Jerry
Proffitt of Coolville, and Jay Proffitt of Coolville; and two sis. ters,Judy Bruce ofWesterville and Joyce Ervin of Albany.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Monday, May 6, 2002 at
Roush Funeral Home in Ravens\vood. W.Va., where friends
MAKE CONTRIBUTIONS- The Fraternal Order of Eagles In Pomeroy recently donated $500 to each of 11 of Meigs County's wiU be received an hour prior to service. Rev. Tim Turner will
~uth leagues. Bruce Teaford, chairman of the lodge's donations committee, and Danny Robinson. FOE president, front teft, officiate.
Burial will foUow at Bicknd Cemetery in Portland.
made the contributions to coaches from each community: front, from left, Gene Wise, Middleport; Ken McCollough Jr.. Pomeroy;
Dee Kimes, Reedsville; and Randy Butcher, Harrisonsville; back, from left, Todd Kitchen, Mason. W.Va.; Dave Flfe, Rutland; Dave
Jenkins, New Haven, W.Va.; Ryan Lemley, Racine; Roger Riebel, Chester; and Pat Carroll, Tuppers Plains. (Brian J. Reed)

LOCAL BRIEFS

'

'

·seren· House . rt
resource we site

· dow of u 1994 Camaro was
broken and the stereo and
POMEROY - Units of the amplifier taken. The window
Meigs · Emergency Service of a 1988 Buick was also broanswered 14 culls for assis· ken.
• Randy
Butcher
of
tance over the weekend.
Harri sonville reponed that
Units responded us follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH someone had altempled to
Saturday,
2:42 a.m., steal 11 hydruulic pump off a
Goeglein Road. Chase log loader parked on Fance
·Taylor. Holzer Medical Road.
• Annette Russell of God
Center;
Ridge
Road filed a telephone
2:31 p.m.. State Route 143,
hurrussment complaint.
William Kennedy, treated:
OALLIPOLIS - A comprehensive brochures on how to represent yourself work stations ut three .Par:ticip~nin~ p~lot
• Josh Simpson of Ball Run
9:33 p.m., Beacon. Zack
web site, the Ohio Domestic Violence in domestic violence and stalking civil shelters - New Begmntngs m L1ckmg Bunon·Young, HMC;
· · Road reported the vandalism
Resource Center, has been launched by protection order cases, und links to state County, Serenity House (Gullia, Meigs
Sunday, I:06 a.m., South · of his vehicle.
Ohio State Legal Services Association, und national domestiC violence organiza- and Jackson counties) and First Step Second . Avenue, Mary
• Charlene Foreman of
and local domestic violence shelter tions.
Racine reported damage to
(Sandusky, Seneca, Wood und Wyandot Pickens, treated;
Serenity House is one of the panicipants
Extensive legal case digests and FAQs counties).
2:49 a.m.• Wolfe Pen Road, three toolboxes which were
in the pilot project.
are easily searchable by the use of key- OSLSA expects to open up the coun John Dean, HMC;
sitting in her yard.
The site provides court forms and words. These sections are accessible to fonns preparation system to the generul
• lfeather McCrory of
10:19 a.m .. East Muin.
information to domestic violence and anyone with a computer and a modem. public Inter this year so thut anyone will Leona Neutzburg, Pleasant Dexter reported thai a neighstalking victims, domestic violence she!- The court forms !reparation system be able to access the system for prepara- Valley Hospital; ·
bor had threatened her. She
ters, victim advocates, attorneys and enables victims an v1ctim advocates tion of civil protection order forms from
to
the
11:30 a.m., Spearman was referred
other interested parties on the ie~~tl served by those shelters to prepare com- any home or public computer.
Street, Charles ·. Hartford, Prosecutor"s Oftice.
.
• Every Douglas of Shade
r'ijlhts of domestiC violence and stalktng · plete and uccurate domestic violence and "The web site is un important step in PVH;
VIctims, and available resources. ·
lk'
· 'I
·
d ~
reported
a break-in ut his
I
:S9
.p.m.,
Beech
Street.
. The center .is the only web site in Ohio stu mg ctvl protection or er .orms increasing access to legal infonnation Violet Lee, HMC;
cabin.
Bocits,
tools and a tool_ and perhaps in the country _ that online by answering a series. of easily and resources for victims of domestic
box
were
reported
stolen.
6: II .P·m., South Second,
combines a computerized system that ~~~~~!~ndable questions on computer violence," said Phyllis Carlson-Riehrn, Mary: P1ckens, PVH;
• Timothy Combs · of
e"'ecutive director of Action Ohio
prepares and generates completed
h
.
Cottageville,
W.Va. was
9:07
p.m.,
Collins
Road,
domestic violence coun· forms and
T ose answers wall automatically gen- Coalition for Battered Women.
arrested for OMVJ. failure to
Howard
Searles,
PVH.
eKtensive informational resources for crate ·a complete and accurate ~omestic The project was funded by a
control and littering. He was
POMEROY
ahyone interested in teaming more about violence or stalking civil protection Technology Initiative Orunt from the
Sunday,
3: 12
a.m., involved in a crush that led to
Ohio's domestic violence and stalking order petition, child custody affidavit, Legal Services Corp., Washington, D.C., Middleport
··
Police the charges. Combs was cited
taws, available services. and domestic· and National Crime Information Center and supplemental grants from the Ohio Department. Gary Rose, to Meigs County Court und
Legal Assistance Foundation (OLAF) HMC;
violence resources at the state and (NCIC) database fonn .
released.
national levels.
The court fonns preparation syste.m is and the Ohio Community Technology
• Jackie Zirkle of Pomeroy
12:25 p.rn.• Wright S~reet.
The information and resource sections desi~ned to assist domestic violence or Fund.
Earl Roush, 0' Bleness reported three necklaces
at' the Ohio Domestic Violence Resource stalktng victims not represented by an The resource center is available online Memorial Hosl'ital. . .
stolen from her place of busi Center provide access to information on attorney to prepare complete and accu- at www.ohiodvresources.org. More
ness.
· REEDSVILLE
Ohlo statutes, relevant case law, answers rate protection order fonns that can be information is available through
• Jeff Parker of Tuppers
Saturday, 3:04 p.m., State
to frequently asked questions (FAQs), filed with the coun.
OSLSA, which serves 29 counties in Route 124, Jimmie Coleman, ·Plains was · arrested for
domestic violence shelterS and hotlines,
The court fonns preparation system is central and southern Ohio, at 614-22 1- St. Joseph's Hospital.
OMVl following u call from
prosecutors, a roster of legal aid offices, now only accessible through computer 7201.
a motorist. He was cited and
RUTLAND
•
Saturday, 4:50 p.m., Depot released ·pending a court
appearance.
Street, Terri Ruther, HMC.
•
Lambert
of
• Curtis
customers at the Center to
Rutland was arrested and
create some additional rev· ·
incarcerated on a domestic
enue. The cable service is
·'•
violence complaint. filed by
being provided to the Center
•• . hmPIIp!A1
Jamie Lambert.
free of charge since the com• Rodney Brooks of S.R .
••It was noted that the ser· pany's eq_uipment is installed
POMEROY Meigs
689
reponed a burglary at his
County
Sheriff
Ralph
tn the budding. No advertis·
e Is provided to help dis· ing
or solicitation for cusTrussell reponed the fllllow- residence. Several guns and
led and · elderly residents tomers
will
be
done
by
the
ing calls to his oftice last other items were reported
I'' NEW YORK (AP)- Wlth nO upbeat news to cheer
roaintain personal hygiene agency.
stolen ..
week:
Wall
Street,
inveators
treded
carefully
Monday,
leaving
\llhile at ttie same time pro·
• Jaymar
Ora vel.
of ,
Observance of Senior
. • Arika Priddy of Rutland
the
stock
market
milted
and
prices
·
little
chanaed.
·
niote their hadependence. Citizens
reported a telephone harrass· Reedsville reponed a breakMay 21 was
Technolo,ay iuuea advanced sligntly for the first time In
1\lany of the seniors who use noted and Day
it
was
reported
that
ment
complaint at her busi· in at the company's plant.
tile service do not have wash· Joy Padgett of the Office of
four seaaaona, while blue
puUed back.
1\vo telephones, two portable
ness.
In early tradinJ, the N
q comJ,X&gt;Site index was up
en or dryers In their homes. Appalachia, will be the
• Rhonda Cullums of T.R. radios and a charger were
2.86, or 0.2 percent, at 1,61S.8l), havang dropped 3.1 per·
'Ole center provides pickup speaker.
247 reponed a break-in at her stolen. Charges are pending
cent last week and posting losses for 11 of ihe 13 prior
IIJid delivery service for
residence, and reponed a against two.
Oliver
reported.
on
her
sessions. The Nudaq fell during the last three sessaons,
seniors who provide their recent trip to Denver where
• Herman
Taylor
of
firearm,
a safe with cash and
declining 7S.20.
.:Mon washing powder or liq· she attended conferences of
two Purple Hean medals, a Kingsbury Road reported a
But the Dow Jones Industrial average fell 8.79, or 0.1
14d and fabric softener. About the National Institute of
jewelry
bo~ with several prowler and damage to his
J'Crcent, to 9,997.84, after gaining I percent last week.
loads of laundry a day are Senior Center's Delegate
pieces
of
jewelry and other screendoor.
The Standard &amp; Poor's !100 index was off 0.04 at
ne at the center for about Council,
• Julie Moodispaugh of
1tems stolen.
National
1,073.39, having slipped 0.3 percent last w.eek. ·
seniors who use the ser· Council on the
• Jodi Bissell of Reedsville Middleport reported the theft
Aging and the
Lower stock pnces weren't enough !O convince
vSce.
reponed
that a semi tractor of items from a gruvcsite.
American
Society
on
Aging
investors to do much buying. To commit to the market,
•It was decided to handle Joint Conference.
• Paula McCrory of Dexter
trailer
drove
through her
Investors want to hear thAt business is improving and that
riaiatration of Ohio Hills
yeard and broke a comer reported damage to several of
the economy is strengthcrtina. There was no such news
fence
post. Charges are pend· her vehicles, and damage 10
,•. •
Monday to sugaeat eiiher waa the case.
her phone line.
in
g.
•
Investon have been unloading stocks for weeks as com• Brian Boling of Racine
• Craig
Echard
of
panies reported lackluster first-quarter earnings and failed
Washington, W.Va. reported reported the theft of tires and
to offer p!1Sitive forecasts for future results. Economic
that someone broke the win- rims.
news has also been mixed,
,
dow
out of his 1994 Toyota
• George Lawrence of
(UIPI 21MIO)
TechnoloaY
hu
been
on
a
lteady
decline
throughout
OhiO
VII'-Y
I'Ubllllllng
CO.
while it was parked at a local Home National Bank report·
·I ~
2002, beca111e the muket expects the beleaguered sector
PUbillhfCI IM&lt;Y •"•moon, Mondoy
service
station.
ed the theft of a four-wheeler
•
1nrougn frldty, 111 court 81.,
to be the Jut to emetp froin recession. B)' the end of
:
CorriCtlon Polley
Pomeroy, Ohio. Seoond·clus
•
Garnett
Bonecutter
of
from
the bank park~ng lot.
Friday'• seulon, the N!Udaq had plunged 21.7 percent
• Ollr main oonctm In allaiOrielll poottgo ptld 11 Pomoroy.
Pomeroy
made
a
menacing
The vehicle was chained to
from ita blah close for the year - 2,059.38 back on Jan.· threats complaint.
• 10 be acouratt. If VOIJ knOw Of en Mombor: n,. AaodMll.· Prill ond
another
vehicle and the chain
1111
Ohio
N-tptr
Auocl.lllon.
: error In a tlorY, oaO the ntweroom Potlmttler: Bond tddtt• correc·
4.
·
•
Riebel's
Used
Cur
Lot
was
cut.
: at (740) M·2158.
.
Oracle fell 17 cen~t a ahare to $8.26, adding to losses
11on11o The DaNy Senllne1.111 Court.
·reponed a break-in . An out• Melinda
Laudermilt
81., Pomeroy, Ohio 4&amp;769.
from
last week when
Sachs and SO Cowen
•
New1 Dlplrlmentl
building
was
entered
and
two
reported a telephone harrasS·
reduced their outlooka on the aoftware maker,
Sublcrlptlon
: The main number II 11112·2158.
tires
were
s.tolen.
The
win·
ment
complaint.
ly_...., .. _rat11
_
But Dow industrial Hewlett-Packard, which merged
• Depar1mtnl extendon• are:
One$2
•
Monday with Compaq, rose 38 cents to $17.82.
: Cleroelll
Ext. 12 Onemonlll
18.70

}Council

Wall Street figures
up in early trading

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MIDDLEPORT RESIDENTS:
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Complaints .
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�: The Daily Sentinel

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ones a

In

•

DEARADY~ My l'tu:;band a.n:d
l we{e- dinillg ou.t andi beard a c.ell
pb.one ri.og. A woman. seal~ in.
tb.e booth next to liS twk UJ ph.onc.
mu of hei7 purse and! p~eeded to
COIIQ' QOJ ll !Q.minule COnVt:t'Sa·
lion. liloy the ti.1M shec hung up-. we
knew l'tet name. uddless. phone
nu.mbe:r. tb.e age:&amp; oJl her three ,
da.ughtus and tb.llt tM giltls we~. e
home alone.
As. tbe couple prepittedl to
leave. I a.pproa.ched her an.d said
· we had ovetheard. net con~ersa.·
tion - and to pleii.Se tl'tink. of her
cb.ild:ren's sufety wneo tll.lk.ing on
her cell phone in public. Her
reply? "We keep· a rottwei(ell' {o
ou.r yard."
Het husband threw ll ~usines~
c~ down on our table, said,
"Here's ou.t address. Let's just
see you around our nouse!" and
stormed out. My husband then

:

Dear
Abby

State president speaks to
retired teachers in Pomeroy

I

POMEROY
John
Milhoan, president of lhe
Ohio
Retired Te~achers
Association, was the speU.er
at a recent meeting of the
Meigs
Count)(
Retired
Teachers Association at
Trinity Church.
Milhoan Informed the
retirees of the health cMe
ch~anges being implemented.
He also discussed addit!onal
benefits for all ORTA mem·
hers. Some of these services
are the long distunce telephone plan. the hellring care
plun, the long-term cure rlan.
and Legaline, a free lega ser•
vice.
·
Milhoan was. commended
for his work on behalf of 1111
teacher retirees, .and presented
with a gift by the Meigs
group.
Maxine Whitehead gave the
devotions before the luncheon
that was served to the2S
members and guests present.
It was reporte&lt;l that, at the
recent district conference. the
locat ~hapter of retired teach·
ers received . special awards
for new memberships and for
a retirement planning seminu.r
held in the coanty.
Graduation cu.rds were
signed for scholarship recipi·
ents Teresa Williams and
Christy Drake, who will be
graduatin~
from
the
University of Rio Grande this

IJ$Joc~~IQ-

'• ~II!IMi~~'IMIM&gt;

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~ ~iW11 %1/!Wl

~ 'fleai1!; with l-Nim

~I FAll

·'Colesi.OW

~tl;W

()Aollbe.,Y Juice

!Pears IIIJI!JI-{)

IBrownie
Wt.ae or Brown Bread

&lt;:om iB~

··~
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~:!.........1~

II Ult aiMW~Yt
rt'ltAi.

The r.d Cfoss aloodwlobilt .m
visit the Mtlgi Multl~
Stnior Ctntv on Wednddoy.
Junt lt frown
•~oo

--Support Groups--

Strategies to help protect
and grow your assets

Wtkomt to these"'" ~unttus­
SPIAKER - John Milhoan, l'l&amp;llt, pretldef'lt of the 01\lo Retired llttheft Assocla~ , IPOke
at the recent meetlna of the Mal&amp;s Count~ lfOUP. Pictured at the CK~ptlon table with him ...
John D. Riebel, vlca president of the Milas Chepter: Jene Mllhoenthe epeeltM's • • end ·
Perrin, local president.

sprina. Cards wCJC also
s1gned for members Mae
Young. Helen Williams.
Dorothy Woodard, and
Be-mice Carpenter.

M..nt ~ ~~ Mdl~~&amp; I')~IIUM ~at t\utlll~
~lllf1,

Wttllt#it SA!t'JI

Mllld~

Door pri11es of flo~ were potluck pienlc at noon at Star
presented to Dorolhy Chaney, Mill Plrk In Racine on
Pllullnc Horton. and Nadine Saturday May t 3, with a
Oocbel The next meetina or muslcfol proaram to be prethe Meias chapter will tie a sented.

~

•

Wlun\ftft at~~ Thril\ ~ ill

'' .~ Toot~.IIM ~ ~q hi tilt -~~~~1\ ~Iii.%*
dun~~&amp; Y"~'

TIMM G~r-M 11M Ill~

·

*" lltll)illl hi

·

N'utrilhm Educahon classes

·

tatlhtated by atcky Baer and
Unda King, OSU Extension

~tMiml\,

Ofllce, \llill be held in 1he
cqnference room ~~ 1he Ce•ner.
The dasses are as lbllows;
May 7· "Importance of

ctto Sill~ ~~' W111ntw lit tilt~ llt\tli~~&amp; mt~

Pomeroy

alumni plans
announced

&lt;ll'lict&lt;en •n llioodles
· lime IP&amp;rfedtioll Salad

llllilli.

areakf~sl"

P•m Sdl~tt~ UkQ I') tk) 1\nythlftl thllt llll~ ~ ~ with
lOWll\1,

*
~
Democrats: Vote * *

lllne 4· ' Ques1ion s and
Smml1ary or the Nutrition \"acts
or the l&gt;ast Pew 'Months"
All dasses are held t'rom II :00
a.l1\.·Mon . ~eslslration Is not

Yesteryear a Success

•

•

required.

Birthday parties

for Ohio House of Representatives

Vote May 7
d

th h

.

May 1·4 ."aeneflts of Soy''

ltttttt! Wlu'tfidrll-%1\o liM bttil \!(1\lll'l~l\1 h't IM dlnlfll
100m lind 1\tlpllll 001 with W\&gt;1111 tlllll\01* Ill lM Ctll~;

Dr. Eric Hasemeier

POMEROY - Plans are
underway for the annual
Pomeroy
High School
Alumni Association's reunion
on Muy 25 at Meigs High
School.
A social hour will be held
Education
from 5:30 to 6:30p.m. in the
• Doctor of Ottoopathk Mtdlclnt
high school cafeteria, fol·
• Molltro of luolntu Admlnlllrttlon
lowed be the dinner. A dance
• ltchtlor of kltnct In lnglnttrlog
with George Hall will follow.
Tickets for the dinner · und
·Current Positions
dance are $15 eaoh and may
• OWntr 1nd Mtdlcal OINt:tar at
On Ctll Mtdl..l AIIOCI01tl, Athtnl, OH
be purchased at Swisher·
• Cllnkol Ftcully, O.U.•C.O.M,
Lohse Phum1acy and Francis
Florist.
Previous Positions
Reunion classes this year
• Athtn&amp; County Corar11r ·
are 1927. 1932, 1937, 1942,
• Asooclett D01n II Ohio Unlmolly,
1947, 1952, 1957, 1962 und
Collttt of Otttopathk Mldldno
1967. Reservations should be
• Pruldtnttnd CIO ol Doctor'•
madetby May 21 .
Hooplltl, Grove~ 1~
• Dtvaloppr of wotld'o fl~t pt&lt;llllrlc oplntl
Again this year, ·scholarcotd InJury ctnllr 11 Shriner'• Hooplttl,
ships are offered. to students
Phlledtlphlo. PA
who are either a child or
'Hit,rtctlvld tVtry nuWipllptr tndOCIIIIItnt In
grandchild of a PHS gradu·
12nd Dllb'lcl giving endoraementt
ate. The application deadline
1
is May 18,
Dr. Eric Hasemeler
There are no official appli·
cations. Those applying
Leadership Experience
should send a resume, tran0., Hlltmtltr htl ltodtrthlp IIPtriOIICI
script, letter of application, a
Family Lift
bulldlng-uolnlllll, provltllng good fob•
current photo and a notation
At""""· Dr. H~~tmelor'alemlly
with btntfll~ end brlntlne q.. llty,
of their relationship to a
c011olote of hit wife. Cothp~d
aflordablt htallh ctrt to oouthtm Ohio,
Pomeroy graduate to the
their lottroono. Afterrolalng two
Pomeroy
Alumni
grow••••~ they havtttconti)'
Association, P.O. Box 202,
odopttdAitllndTimmy.
· Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Graduates who wish to
El ect 0r. Er1c
' Hasemeier Be
donate to the scholarship
fund may do so by sending
pt
t '
J
the donation to the associu· L--~====~=~= u a oc or m e ouse
tion at the same address .

'

The monthly birthday party
\llln be held o" May 23. c\ m;c

~elebrale your birthday al lhe
Senior Center with yoltr friends.

I•

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel _

• HOME OX\'GIJ:N

BINGO

I

"G_Pfac~ fe Gt ~

• Cl'Al' MACUlNli:S • WHEI~ LCl-t.AIRS

Prlll\8 Will 00 IIW!Ifd\lillt'l \hl\

wlnnen when we flliY DINOO
ooMiY30.

Tht t'un stlflt fit II :00 11.m.
M11ybll ytlu will bll lue)ly fintl
win I

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WIHONO"

•

•

• NI1UUl..IZ~l{S

\

QOl.DI!N IUOI&lt;IVI CARDS,

• OXIME'I'RV

HOME OXYGEN anti
RESPIRATORY E~UIPM£NT

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hiH,.a~e Olllt
· 4U l~rllqltiiiM41
POMEROY, OM

• HOSI 111'AL UEDS

Mill-. Olilt 41140

-

JACKSON
286·7484

'ffiS E. l\h1l" St.

ATHENS
.594·2100
MOW. lJttlnll St.

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PapA&amp;_

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

MonUy.-..

Moncllty, May I, 2002

2002

. Meigs County
Girl Scout Diary

~d)-~~-~~:'lll'lll'"l'tt!t&lt;,...,_ _....

The·Daily Sentinel

flU~ .._.

,., Court St., Po!Mroy, Ohio
740-elt-21$15 • F•x: 740482-2157
www.m~.com

POMEROY - April was a
busy month for many of
Mctgs County's girl scout .
troops. One planned a visit to
the Columbus Zoo in June, Troop members are workothers completed badge work, ing on inividual first aid kits
and sevenil made plans for and plans for a trip.
special sununer activities.
Reponing their various programs were the following
troops:

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
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Reedsville
Brownie 1067

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· Harrisonville
Juniors 1309

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Pomeroy
BI'OWIIIes 1271

it ~OMEPAY

• El Paso (Texas). Tlines, m1 Supreme. Court decision
virtual pornoRraphy: The Supreme Court's decision

to protect "virtual" pornographic images of children as
an extension of free speech is disappointing. Child
pornography. in any lorm, is not worthy of First
Amendment protection.
The high-court majority should have upheld the federal ban on computer-(lenerated images of children in
sexually explicit situauons.
The majority opinion of Justice Anthony Kennedy
demonstrates the general "disconnect" that exists
amon~ civil libertarians and the entertainment industry
when \t comes to issues of child pornography and bona
fide free-speech rights.
Kennedy stated that the law "protects · speech that
records no crime and creates no vtctims by tts produj:tion .... The First Amendment requires a more precise.
restriction."
Certainly, the Supreme Court must approach emotional issues with intellectual professionalism. But the
high court's view represents a sterilized interpretation
of the First Amendment that creates the erroneous
impression that depicting images (even if they are
"fake'') of children in sexually explicit acts is "OK"
because there are no victims.
Child pornography, again, in any form, is unacceptable. Just because the United States is a democratic
society .doesn't mean it should automatically grant
First Amendment protection to every form of perversity under the sun ....
The high coun was wrong on this decision.
'

TODAY IN HISTORY

&lt;

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, May 6, the I26th day of 2002. There are
239 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
·
On May 6, 1937, the hydro~en-tilled German dirigible
Hindenburg burned and crashed 1n Lakehurst, N.J. , killing 35
of the 97 people on board and a Navy crewman on the
ground.
On this date:
In 1861, Arkansas seceded from the Union.
In 1889, the Paris E~position formally opened, featuring
the just-completed Eiffe11'ower.
In 1910, Britain's King Edward VII died.
In 1935, the Works Progr¢ss Administration began operating.
In 1942, during World War II , some 15,000 Americans and
Filipinos on Corregidor surrendered to the Japanese.
In 1954, medical student Roger Bannister broke the 4minute mile during a track meet in Oxford, England, in 3
minutes, 59.4 seconds.
In ·1960, Britain's Princess Margaret ·married Anthony
Armstron~ ·Jones, a commoner, at Westminster Abbey. (They
divorced 10 1978.)
.
In 1962, in the first test of its kind, the submerged submarine USS Ethan Allen fired' a Polaris missile armed with a
nuclear warhead that detonated above the Pacific Ocean.
In 1987, CIA Director William J. Casey died at age 74.
In 1996, the body of former CIA director William E. Colby
was found washed up on a riverbank in southern MarYland,
eight days af\er he'd disappeared.
Thn.years ago: Former Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev
·delivered a speech at Westminster College iti Fulton, Mo.,
where WhJslon Churchill had spoken of the "Iron Curtain."
Gorbachev said the world was still divided, between North
and South, rich and poor. Actress Marlene Dietrich died at
her t&gt;aris home at age 90.
· .
Five yeats ago: President Clinton wrapped up his visit to
Me~ico as he and Meltlcan President Ernesto Zedillo pledged
closer cooperation on Immigration and drug smuggling.
Anny Sta~ Sgt Oehn~r G. Simpson was sentenced to .25
years In prtSon tor rapmg six tramees at Aberdeen Provtng
Ground in Maryland. World chess champion Garry Kasparov
and IBM 's Deep Blue coml)uter played to a draw in game
three of their six-game match.
.
One year ago: John Paul II, during his visit to Syria,
became the first pope to enter a IJIOsque as he called for
. brotherhood between Christians and Muslims. American
'i11111inessman Dennis Tlto ended the world's first paid space
vacation as he returned to Earth aboard a Russian capsule.
Toduy's Birthdays: Baseball Hall -of-Farner Willie Mays is
71. Sen. Rich~ Shelby, R-A la., is 68. Rock singer Bob
Seger is ~7 . Singer Jimmie Dale Gilmore is 57. Actor Ben
Masters is .55. Actor Gregg Henry is 50. British Prime
Minister Tony Blair is 49. TV game show host t~m ~erseron
Is 47. Actor George Clooney Is 41 . Actor Clay 0 Bnen ts 41.
Actress Roma Downey is
Rock si nger-musician Tony
Scalzo (Fastball) ls 38. Rock musician Mark BfYan (Hootie
and the IJiowflsh) I 35.
Thought for 1'oduy: "The people no longer believe in principle~. but will probably pertodica)ly believe jn saviours."Jacob Christoph But:Ckhardl, Swiss historian ( J818-1897).

w.

Troop members have
earned all their Daisy petals
this year and will be planning
their Bridging Ceremony in
the near future.

-•'
-

Child porn is not worthy of
First Amendment protection
011

· bad~e.

Daisy1334

ALL Of"n\\S WILL BE 'YOURS 10 CLEAN.UP If
C.ON6~ESS WESt-t'T MAKE fOLlU1'ER$ RE$ft&gt;tt~1Ste fOR f"'L.LU'fiON ''

Members met April 9 and
23 at Pomeroy Elementary
School. lncenllves from the
cookie sales were awarded to
those taking part.
An overnight at the
Columbus Zoo was planned
for June 29 and 30. ·
Girls will earn a Try-'ll with
the zoo·personnel and enjoy a
pizza party. Parents are welcome to attend but will have
to pay the $25 fee. Fee for the
girls in the troop will be paid
from profit earned from cookie sales and a donation
received. The girls, in tum,
plan to do a good deed for the
donor.
Troop member Bo-Dara
Powell
attended
the
Brownie/Junior Prints and
Graphics event at the Family
Life Center on April 27. The
Fly-Up Ceremony will take
place in early June for the
j!irls going into fourth grade
m,the fall.
Amy
Sister,
Ohio
·University senior and sister of
troop member Maggie Smith
attended the April 23 meeting
and presented a program on
Sign Language. She showed
the girla each alphabet l~tter
and let them sign their names.
They also slowly sang the
Brownie Smile Song, watching her sign each word.

----------------~--------------------------~----------

HENTOFF'S VIE--W

What do ·they have to fear from ·Clarence Thomas? '
In March, S~preme Court Justice
Clarence Thomas accel?ted an invitation to spend a day in dtscussion~ with
law students and faculty at the
University of North Carolina School of
Law in Chapel Hill. The school's five
black · law professors boycotted
Thomas' visit.
Few Americans, im;luding law students, ever get to see a SuP.reme Court
Justice in person; they can .t watch how
they conduct oral arguments before
deciding a case becallse the justices
refuse to allow television cameras
within their sacred precincts.
So why would any law professors, of
any color, give up a chance to join their
students in direct exchanges with one
of the nine Americans who make decisions that affect millions of us for many
years to come? .
. Marilyn Yarbrough, .one of the boycotting professors, told Tony Mauro,
the very resourceful Supreme Court
reporter for ''Legal Times:" "We just
questioned whether breaking bread
with a justice was the appropriate thing
for us to do."
After all, she contlnued, the only
black justice on the Court has "lent
cover" to his conservative colleagues
by joining their "anti-progresstve"
decisions. "Since we are all black,"
said Yarbrough, "we did not want to
lend cover to him. We have welcomed
justices we disagree with, such as
Antonio Scalia and Sandra Day
O'Connor." However, joining Thomas,
she explained, would have been seen as
an endorsement, or at least a tacit
approval, of his views.
rn their righteous self-approval, these
law professors clearly had no idea they
were failing their students. Here they
were, in fundamental disagreement
with Justice Thomas on a number of
crucial constitutional issues and in
front of their stu&lt;lents, they could have
challenged him directly. Talk about

Nat
Hentoff
COLUMNIST
being role models -- to ail their students

-- as professors with the intellectual

academic inquiry," said the dean:
"means you have a right to protest." •
Of course, they ·have a right to'
prote.st, but how free is academici
mquitY at his law school when thes~
professors refuse to fully instruct their.
students about Clarence Thomas' "anti-~
progressive" decisions by not showing~
up to debate him right then and there?.. ,
The irony of this abdication of pro-.·
fessional responsibility to students is;
Justice Thomas' record at the Supreme'
Court as one of the strongest voices for.
free speech. From the oench, he has\
said (as the lone justice who wanted tO:
review an egregious repression of freei
speech in Avis Rent a Car System v.;
A~uilar):
. 1
'A theofY deeply etched in our law is
that a free society prefers to punish the!
few who abuse rights .of speech afterr
they break the law than to throttle thew
and all others before-hand. It is alway!IJ
difficult to know. in advance what an:
individual "will" say, and the line~
between legitimate and illegitimate·
speech is often so finely drawn that the
nsks of freewheeling censorship are.
formidable."
i
While some students joined the five
professors . in boycotting Justice
Thomas' appearance, about 700 students revealed ~reater respect for free
speech by partictpatin~ in various quesllon-and-answer sesstons during the
day.
'
Professors who jud~e Clarence!
Thomas in ri~id ideologtcal terms arel
not engaginf m scholarship. l disagree:
with a lot o his opinions, but l would'
be foolish to miss a chance to tell him'
why, and maybe learn something in the.
process. And if l were a teacher, I'd bel
embarrassed before my students to
have fled the scene.

equipment to confront such a powerful
figure in the law!
Professor Yarbrough came up with a
lame excuse as a footnote. For some -not all -- .of the sessions, questions had
to be submitted in writin~ beforehand.
"That's not debate,'
Professor
Yarbrough harrumphed. "He does not
engage in the same wa~ that you would
expect at a university.'
I have participated in many debates at
college campuses, and at some of them,
the 9uestions were indeed submitted in
writtng beforehand. But that did not
prevent a questioner from asking follow-up points, nor did it prevent other
members of the audience from chiming
ih on the same issue when their turn
came. Would these five black law professors have stayed to debate Justice
Thomas if he knew none of the questions in advance? How could they, and
not abandon the purity of their boycott?
What surprised me was the attitude of
the dean of the law school, Gene
Nichol. He told Tony Mauro that the
boycotting · professors were "very
thoughtful" m their explanation for
staying away from the exchanges. He
.
saw nothing unprofessional in their
(Nat Hentoff is a nationa/1)1
refusal to engage the visiting justice. renowned auihority on the First
"Having a regime of free speech and Amendment
and the Bill of Rights.)

Southem

. Brownies 1120

.
'

BUSINESS MIRROR

•.

One corporate giant loses out, while another wins big 1
Bv ALAN CLINDINNING
with a halo, an expectation of growth
NEW YORK. He outlined his busi- and expectations of performance and a
ness plan in a Hattiesburg, Miss., diner willingness to build by acquisitions,"
in the mid-1980s, then turned a small said Robert Lamb, a management prolong-distance company into telecom- fessor at New York University's Stern
munications giant WorldCom Inc. with School of Business.
more than 60 acquisitions in 15 years.
lt all boils down to the "difficulty of
She was a star sales executive at making mergers work. Ebbers didn't,
Lucent Technologies Inc. who was and Fiorina now faces the test of
lured away to lead Hewlett-Packard Co. whether she can pull off the largest
in 1999 - and will be judged on her combination in the historY of the comability to sb!lpherd llP's merger with ,•puler industry.
•
rival Compaq Compu\er Corp.
Experts agree that Ebbers' downfall
The fortunes of these two titans of happened because he paid too much for
U.S. business took sharply divergent the companies he bought, gamblin~ on
paths on two consecutive days last massive growth in telecommunications
week.
and the Internet that seemed to materiWorldCom president and chief execu- alizing in the 1990s but disappeared
tive Bernard J. Ebbers resigned Monday when the sector crashed.
amid concerns over the company's $28
"His secret was getting capital. which
billion iri debt and an on$oing should have been hard, for absolutely
Securities •and' Exchange Commassion wild-eyed projections of growth,'' said
investigation into lending and account- James E. Schrager, professor of entreing practices..
preneurship and strategy at the
· HP chief executive Carty Fiorina got University of Chicago Graduate School
vindication Tuesday for the HP- of Business. "While it lasted it was
Compaq merger she crafted when a grand, but the party's over."
Delaware iudge dismissed claims that
Ebbers even owes millions to
HP bullied a big investor into support-" WorldCom, although he says he has
ing the deal and lied to investors about enough · personal assets to cover the
the progress of the merger plans.
loans.
1
At first glance, Ebbers looks like the .'There's no limo to take him ·home,"
big business loser and Fiorina seems Schrager said. "He's in a cab going
like the big winner. While management home and he has in his hand a VC:fY
experts agree that a comeback for large bill to clean up the mess that he
Ebbers is unlikely, Fiorina's future. is far left behind."
from cc!'rtain
After announcing the HP-Compaq
"In both caSes their initial effort came merger last September;Fiorina led a bit-

•

ter battle a~ainst Walter Hewlett and
other HP hetrs opposed to the $I 8 bil~•
lion merger. .But 1t would take a trial las~
week for Fiorina to overcome Hewlett's&gt;
charge that she arm-twisted Deutsche'
Bank into switching votes in favor of.
the merger.
·
~
Now Fiorina can concentrate on whar.
she ho~d be doing months ago~
Overseemg the massive process to inle"
grate the two compantes' operations•
while shedding 15,000 jobs from a
150,000-person work force.
It won't be easy. The company's competitors have already been hard at work •
trying to woo the HP's customers and
workers, and those efforts are bound to
intensify, Lamb said.
·
"It's not simply that you have a problem that there has been chao~." he said.
"You have a problem that there may
continue to be chaos."
Schrager gives credit to Fiorina fodl
having a vision that HP and Compaq
will be more competitive as a sinj!le~
company. But he says she's still making'
a big bet because computer industry•
mergers usually don't generate the kind;
of profits that executives initially
dtcl
.
.
. ,
· "In that regard, the jufY's still out," !tel
said. fiorina "is up against vefY longl
Odds in making a computer hardw~
meJier work. She's painted herself i;:j
a tit~ht corner and will ha\le to k
pullmg rabbits out of her hat."
1
(Alan Clendenning is a busine11!
writer for The Assocwted Press.) •

Gtrls were divided into two
groups and each selected a
blended beverage and healthy
snack to make at the next
meeting. The troop provided
ingredients for the beverage
and each girl was responsible
for an ingredient m their
snack. If an ingreilient was
forgotten, the group had to
decide how to make a snack
without using thill ingredient.
The troop is collecting
.canned goods .as a part of the
badge. Collected food will go
to help someone in need. ·
The troop will hold a lockin in May as they complete
badgework and hold a Court
of Awards.
The troop is in need of a
leader for the upcoming troop
year. Anyone interested
should contact Jerrena
Ebersbach, 992-7747, Shirley
Cogar, 992-2668, or Brenda
Neutzling, 992-6679.

Southem
·
Juniors 1204

April .was a bad month for
meetings. On April 1, there
was no school and no meeting, but the troop went to the
Service Unit Tea that was
held at the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy. It was for a leader
and her daughter who were
here from Florida visiting reiatives.
·
April 13, Ericka Cogar, Jo
Fetty, and Kay Ia Fetty went to
Athens to the Science and
·Engineering badge workshop.
They tied with ftrst place m
building a bridge. All they
could usc was typing paper
and a roll of scotch tape. It
had to hold magazines, and
theirs held 34.
·
They learned how to water
~J;!~t for a long period of

At the mectin~ on Aprill5,
, The troop's mee•.ing opened K 1 F It too
d
d
wt' th the Pledge led b$ attendance
ay a e Yand JoupFetty
ues an
read
Shawnella Patterson, the 0 the minutes from last meetPromise led by Allyson ing. Girls went to the Library
·Patterson. Olivia Murphy to do research on some of
took attendance and Brittany their badge work. Ericka
€ogar took dues. Ashley Cogar brought the refreshDeem brought the refresh- ments for the meeting.
ments.
On April 20, Ericka, Kayla,
. Badge work was complet- and Io went to the Second
ed. Members made a mobile, Annual Stream Sweep. They
a punch drink, and conducted took their brothers to help.
a balloon blowing experi- This also was a requirement
ment.
on·one of their badges too.
Tara Eakins was in charge The April 22 meeting was
of clean up. Chelsea Holter opened with the Pled$e and
retired the flag and Hannah Promise. Members dectded to
~ng started the friendship post a sign up sheet at the Post
crrcle.
Office for area residents to
Brittany Cogar represented ask for help. They need to do
the troop at the 2nd annual some community service to
Stream Sweep in Rutland. help with their Sign of World
This was her second year to badge. They made spider
help out.
webs with clothes hangers
, A meeting was held on and yam. While doing this
April 27 at die Raacine they · talked about how the
Library. Ashley Deem was the webs were used.
QDiy girl in attendance. She The last meeting for the
was reminded about the month was-held in school art
Music Maker workshop being room. Attending were Sarah
held in Athens and haitded in . Eddy, Ericka Cogar, Jo and
her paper for the GS picnic at Kayla Fetty. they finished a
Forked Run. Sbe made a r~uirement
on
Model
windsock for herself and her Ciuzen. They divided up and
~r.
worked on making rules,
laws, and regulations for two

·under the table funds can hurt
Bv JOliN LAMoni
SOCIAl SECURITY MANAGER ··

Reedsville
Juniors 1042
The troop members have
been working · on being
healthy, and learning 10 exercise daily, looking their best
and becoming a teen .
. Members are becoming a
teen and what happens to you
when you don't eat right. One
of the parents who is an R.N.,
visited the troop and discussed this subject with them.
Members are making plans
for a fun trip to a pottery
place, and a camp-in stay late
party with the Brownie troop.
Salem Center Juniors 1254
The troop turned in cookie
money on April 6. Members
attended the COSI overnight
April 20 and 21 and had an
enjoyable time.

Middleport

Juniors 1276
The troop was vefY busy in
the month -of April. Members
attended the Service Unit's tea
to meet Sarah Knight, a
Junior from Fort Lauderdale,Fia., and her mother..· We
exchanged ideas and Sarah
was a great inspiration to us
all.
•
The majority of the troop is
close to .completing the Sign
of the Star and the badges that
they have been working on
since January. We are making
plans for our end-of-the-year
ceremony. For the Money
Sense badge, the girls went to
Vaughan's to do some comparison shopping.
· Several of the girls toured
Farmers Bank and received
infonnation on several items
to complete the badge. Fifteen
girls and four adults attended
the annual COSI for Juniors
overnight.
Vicki Morrow of the Meigs
County Soil and Water
Conservation Office visited
the trP9P to highlight Earth
and Arbor Days.
Members attended the Service
Unit's Prints-N-Oraphics Badge
Event on Apr\127.
Birthdays from November
to April were observed.
Several trips are planned for
the troop for late spring and
summer. The troop has several girls playing softball this
year: Megan Dunfee, Brittany
Frazier, Chelsea Davis,
Chassidy Wills, Amber
Hockman,
and
Hailey
Ebersbach.
Jennifer Payne has been
chosen as April's Super Girl
Scout. She has attended all
launch and service unit events
as well as troop meetings. She
is very active m her troop and
follows the Girl Scout
Promise and Law at all times.

Would you like to take
home a paycheck with no
deductions?
If you're working "under
the table," as some people
call it, you get a bigger paycheck if your employer
doesn't ,deduct Social
Security taxes.
Sound good? Before you
answer, fhink about what
this means for your future.
First, it's illegal for your
employer not to report your
earnings to the Internal
Revenue Service, and it's
illegal for you and your
employer not to pay Social
Secunty taxes on your
earnings. Second, while
you're not paying Socil).l
Security taxes, you're also
not ea':"in~ the work c~~its
that wtll make you ehgtble
for Social Security benefits
in the future.
So what, you ask? You're
a long way from retirement.
However, Social Security

is much more than retire- of a worker with an average
ment insurance. There also income could have the
are disability and survivor same value as a $400,000
benefits. Disability can life insurunce policy.
happen to anyone-at any
Now, about retirement:
age-anytime. When you're my advice to workers of
payino into Social "·cun"ty any age t"s that "tt's never too
"
""'
'
you have a cushion of pro- early to stan planning for
tection that could provide retirement. ·Social Security
monthly payments for you never was intended to b!! ·
and your family if you are · your sole source of retireunable to work. Few people ment income. While you'll
have lon~-terrn private dis- need to supplement your
ability msurance. Every retirement income with·
worker who pays SO&lt;:ial investments and savings,
Security taxes has Social paying Social Security
Security disability insur- taxes is the first step in
ance. If you aren't paying preparing for your retireyour Soctal Security taxes, ment .
then you won't have that
Although you may think
disability insurance .if you you need the money more
·need it.
. ·
·
·now. you will need it even
With Social Security sur- more if you become disvivors benefits, you also abled or when you retire.
have the comfort of know- And your family will need
ing your dependents will it even more if you die.
have financial help when Thut's the reason you need
you die. Social Security to think twice before you
survivors benefits paid decide to work "under the
monthly to the dependents table. "

MEIGS CALENDAR
COmmunity Callndllr 11 pu~ Gospel Church revival, through
li1hecl 11 a flw ~~rme to non- Friday, 7 p.m. each liVening. Ted
profit groupa wllhlng to and Lisa Williams. of Little
IIVIOUrtea mMIIngl and apeclal Ireland Church, Little Hooking.
aventa. The calendar II not to preach and sing Monday and
dalgned to promote Nlel or Tuesday: Pastor Lonnie Coals,
fund.ntl~n of any type.lteml1rw Restoration Christian Fellowship
prli !ted only llapiCll PII'Jil)tllnd of Athens, speaking on
cannot bl gUBI'IInlllld to be print- Wedne1say Thursday and
ed a .,.clftc number of dlyt.
Friday. Special singing each
night.
·
Mond1y, M1y 6

SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township Trustees 7:30 p.m. at
Syracuse Vlflage Hall.
LETART - letart Township
p.m. at office building.

Trustees~

RACINE - Racine Village
Council meets In regular session
7 p.m.
RACINE - Racine Chapter
OES at7 p.m ..
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full

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FREE Speech &amp;

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Community Association 8:30
a.m. In conference room at
Peoples Bank.

•ttt

Cadettes

' Members ~lped with the
Prints and Graphics Junior
Badge event on Saturday,
April27.

ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees 7:30 p.m. at home of
clerk Osle Follrod.

POMEROY
Salisbury
Township Trustee meeting at
6:30 p.m. at the Rocksprings
· Tue1d1y, M1y 7 ·
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Road, Pomeroy building.
Masonic Lodge 363 at 7:30. p.m.
POMEROV
Eagles
Work · in the F.C. program.
Auxiliary at 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
Refreshments.
New officers will be elected.
POMEROY - Meigs High
Thur~day, May 9
School band boosters meet at
RACINE -· Dorcas Bethany
6:30 p.m. Preparation lor May
Sonshlne Circle meets at7 allhe .
events will be made . .
church. Members to take ''White
POMEROY - Childhood elephant" Items to be auctioned.
Immunization Clinic, Melga Letha Proffill and Jo Lee to have
County He.allh Department, 1 to the program and serve refresh7 p.m. Bring shot records.
ments. All ladles welcome.

Meigs COunty

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

RT.2
GAWPOLIS FERRY
WV25511

11 Sera

In recognition of Better Spc:cch &amp; Hearing Month, Pkasant Valley Hospital will be offering
FREE spcccll and hearing screenings at these locations on the following dates and times: ·

txe1

j

The Dally Sentinel• Page A7

.

situations. One group was the
first mayor on the moon and
the other had an amusement
park being built beside a
school.
Jo Fetty brought refreshments. Members made wind ·
socks for a craft. Friendship .
Circle ended the meeting.
·

Members continued work
on the "Lets Get Cooking"

Eastern

NATIONAL VIEW

I

www.myclallyaentlnel.corn

I£ II 7 II . . .UIMI.
• u•IF 2II!IIC..IIIIz

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5I Zrl• I 7111
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e'Ibcsday. May 7
• Thunday, May 9
Ripley Senior Center The: Middleport Clinic
Rip~ WV
Middleport, OH
(Hf41'i¥ ~ O.U,) 1 p.m. to 4:30p.m.
10 LID. to DOOD

• Thursday. May 14

• Thunday, May 23
Mason Counry Aaion Group PVNRC (s-t HiJ1 &amp;.4)
Point Pleasant, WV
Point Plasant,WV
(Huuittg ~ Otdy)
2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
9 Lm. to 11:30 p.m.

lffrlk-ins wlamu liT yqu IMJ tRI/. (304) 675-5250, Ext. 3502 wmRh~m appointment.
AppointmmtJ m being nuuk septu4tdy lit "The MUU/eport Clinit.1J Pluue uUl 7.W-991-4226for th4t i«.atUm .
,_

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�•

'Ihe Daily Sentinel

church
mortgage or . .
of pro~ to pay
abuse victims . ·

The DailySentinel

Midwest letter carriers plan to hit the
streets ~espite fears of pipe bombs
·OMAHA, Neb .. (AP) - Less thlln
sl~t months . uf\er un anthrn seart
n.lCked the U.S. Pustttl Service, mall
~urrl~rs huve u new form of tmorlsm
on their hunds: pipe bombs.
1\bll c:orrlers were expeeted to
roturn to their routes Monduy with a
heightened sense of cnutlon followlna
the discovery of 15 m11llbol pipe
bomb~ nc:ross the Midwest since
Frlduy, uuthorltles suid.
The postul service usked customers
In Nebru~ku, town ond northwest
Illinois with roudsldc delivery to
secure their mullbox doors open or
remove the tloors to ensure service.
''We ure lnstruetlna our curriers not
to d· eII vcr to uny eIosed rooepIuc Ics,"
sultl Mike Mutu:tek, U~S. · Postnl
Service district n~ono~cr fo. r Nebmskn
.,
und southwest town.
Mmutek enlled It u temporury pre·
cuulion while the investlalltlon con·
tlnues: Locked mllllboxes like the
ones In post omces will hove normnl
mull delivery.
''Ills deplomble." he stlld. "It brlnas
n lot of innocent peot)le Into the rru~
of this thinll where they really don t
tic long."
·
Six people were inlured by eltplo·
slor1s 111 Illinois und Iowa on Frlilny.
Two other bombs found 'In IOWII did
not eKplode. Then, slit bombs were
found Suturdny . in rurul ure11s of
Nebrusktl, und n seventh wni found
Sunduy. They were ulllnter detonnt.ed
hurmlessly by .ttuthorltles.

,BOSTQN (AP) - Fuct:d mlvoeute~ Frltluy wh~n the
wtth hundreds of potentiullil· bucked nut of tilt s~:lllement
igunts, Boston s Romun in the cusc of Gtloghun, who
Cutholic nrchdiucese is ~.~on- is injuil fun·hiltl molestutlon.
tetnpluting mortguging · or Luw cullod the ~mmdl's coneven selling its heudquurtcrs ~.·ern "luutltlble."
to puy the rising toll of Its
Lilli\ Wlin hus refused culls
priest ubuse scondul.
to ru~i!lll, uddrc~~etlthis lmest
Luwyers und ullaged vic- controversy us he h1unch~d
tims hove culled on the uruh· his unnut1l uppculm ruise SIt'&gt;
diocese to sell or mol'll!llll'' milliun 1\w the llt'thdioccse 's
the property since it bucked dny-•o-duy operating e~pt~ns·
out. of u settlement with 86 cs und duu:ltul'lle mis~ions .
plulntill's in u civil suit uguinst
The crisis will likuly dlmin·
defrocked
priest
John ish the umoum rulscd. suld
Gcoghun.
Luw. who ~:ncOUI'll~cd purish·
The urchdiocesll's Finunoc inners "to be hemtcnll¥ gen·
Council on Friduy rejected CrlJliS this ,Yeur." The t\mds go
the settlement bccuusc of u to nllmlllistl'utiv~ costs.
concern ubout the !lr&lt;Jwinll · utholic schools und mis·
number of viclims und the shms - nnt 1'01' luwsuit settle·
church's
diminishing mcnts. Luw snh.l.
resources . The deul would
lu developments elsowherll: ·
hu·ve puld pluimiffs between - The Archdim:cse of
$1 S mill ion und $30 million. Detroit suld two mme
Curdinul Bcmurd F. Luw. Cutholk priests III'C louvlng who celebrated Muss 111 the their purishes nmld ulle~tn ·
Cuthedrul of the ·Holy Cross tl\ms of sexuul misconduct.
on Sundny. told pnrlshloncrs The lll'c hdincese on Frlduy
thutthe number of udditionul gnve prosecutors lntcrnul
scxunl uhusc cluims oguinst rccmds of nbout ~ I l'll'icsts,
priests und the nrchdioccsa two dcucuns und n •·cll!!lclll!•
·hus grown t11 ISO. Hundreds brothel' uccused of sexunl
more have contuctcd uttur- misconduct in the lust I~
neys.
yanrs.
Luw, whose cur wus chn.1 cd - The New Orleun.1 urch·
out of the church purkinglot bishop suspended ll priest
· by ungry protesters ufter pending lnvcstlgut.lon of two
Muss, suid he would seck w scxuui nbusc . ullcgullons
reach
un "equitable
minors
on
in
coming
weeks. · solution" involving
Austin: 'fcxns.
diocese111In the
."1 trust. you cun undcrstund 1980s.
the dlsuppointment, the unger - The· Rev. · John E.
NEW YORK (AP) - it
and even the
sense
of
fresh
Lconurd
of
Richmond,
Vu.,
tl
ll
.stU I't•d
with •" Christmas
. h muy be 111
· tte
· puce
w
1 stU\· 1 1Ill 1·s be111g
1 d on Duy muNNU"e
betruyu I wh1c
ut 11. round
heurts of the 86 persons," udminlstrutivc lcuve while the
•
Lllw told puri.~hioncrs. diocese invcst.igute.~ ullegu- ?.I)N(~w. Duwno LoPiccolo,
"Nonetheless, I pruy thut us tions he cngu~cd in hnpro1Jer whtJ scJothcd eKhousted fire·
time goes em, they muy be &gt;exuul bchuv10r more thun f'luht•r· John Mr•z """ld the
ll"&lt;l
" ~
" "'"
1 to help 'n
1 the fr'llnirt~ two decud••
WI'll'ng
., ·
of
a wider ·settlement 'whic
- In· •• lndiunu.
the debris of the Sept. II terror
cun include the victim!! who Evlmsvillc Romun Cuthc11ic uttuckK, h plunnlna their
huve only recently come for- Diocese ucknowledged thutlt w~~%~f~John In 0 20 . bv·I:Z
ward.'' ·
fulled to tell nuthorltics more
'
Mitchell Gurabcdian, the thun 20 vcurs ugo about olle~ wood shuok 111 around zero:
'·
He wus the Justman 1 mos·
lawyer for'the 86 pluintiffs, gutlon~ thut two priests hod Hufj:d thot duv," suld
said he would return to court sexuul contuct with minurs.·
'
11 message theru·
Connecucut Lo1 lccolo,
Monday to ask a jud~e to set - The
h
h
d
d
a court date to conunue the Depurtmcnt of Chi ldren und P 81 w 0 0 vo 1unteere to
rescue workcrH ufter
litigation: includln~ an ilnmc- Fumilics sent o letter Friday help
the uttucks.
diate deposition of Law. ·
to Archbi shop Dnnicl A.
The sln .. le mother of u 2·
The archdiocese's chief Cronin seeking information
•
financial officer, Chancellor on seven complaints the arch· yeur-old (lrl and Mraz, the
David Smith, did nut rule out diocese has received since widowed ~futher of u 7-yeur·
a sale of the 16-acre chancery Junuury uguinst priest~. The old boy, want to cxchonae
Sunday. He said it will take urchdioccsc HUid it is deter- VOW 8 · under the cross·
months to determine how . mining if the compluintH, shaped me.tal beaml pulled
much will be needed to which involve conduct duting from the debriH:
After volunteering her
fimunce a HellIement fund·.
back 40 yeurs, are ere dlbl c. ' mauu~cs
for months wher·
Replacing 120,000 square - The Rev. James A.
feet of office und residence Forsythe, u priest in Overland ever I ey were needed In
space for less than 1he sale Park, Kun., served three the devustuted ell~, she
price would be difficult, he months in prison for molest- asked to go to groun(l zero
uld. But Luw wouldn't mind ing a 13-year-old boy but hus uauin in Decem6er.
living in a more pructical~~et- not registered as a fiCll offend"I WU8 driven. I laid, 'I
ting, he added.
er us required in South wunt to go buck to around
During the negotiation~. Dakota, where he is now a zero
on
Chr!Jtmu.'
Smith said. the arehdioce!IC Protestant minister in Rapid Somethina kept pull ina
"clearly · misjudged" how City, The Kans~ City Star me," she said:
many victims !tad not yet reported. Forsythe, 47, said
As LoPiccolo walked pall
filed suit. At le~t 430 vic1Jm8 he did not know he needed to the debrl8 on Chrbtma1
of clergy sexual. abuse have regiHter and plans to:
Day, •he 111~.Mraz "wlttina
come forward since January. . - A Mll~ouri
prie81 there, taklnfl'll break from
.aecording to published re~igncd after an alleaatlon rakinllthrough the rubble,"
repom:
Hurfaced that he Hlluall y Ahe reme.mber1.
Law's hand-picked ad\lilK:r» ubufiCd a . minor about 23
Havln11 ·loll 25 flreflshcer
on the archdioce~e'H Finance §ean a"o, th;e Archdiocese of · friend1, he wa1 In a lineup
-A
•
•
•
• ~:"
of
Counc1·1 olitrag.,..
VJCtJmH
I, .&amp;
.4Jul5 IIlii d•
f rescue workcrJ
"[ walt!
or a mauaae. 1 wa1 co1 ,
and I rubbed hit thoulderl,
hi1 hand1, I taid, 'Don't
, worry. 1weetie.'''
Then, before returnlna to
work, "he save me thl1 bul
that knocked my ~k• off!
· He 1cribbltd on her hard·
hal, "II wa1 worth the walt,"
an~ •igned it "John, Enalne
248.'' '
.
.
The 42-year-old firefighter. who loft hb wife of 19
·.lean la11 May, tald he
wasn ' t out lookina for
anybody.'' But he couldn't
BETHLEHEM. WeJt Bank Sharon. meanwhile. urived foract the woman who had
(AP) - The outlineJ of an in W~hinaiOII for lalkl with warmed his achins mutcle•
·
aveemem to re.olve the 35- Prc1ident Bu4h. Llrael and the on that wintfr day,
on the . Thru day• laur he
day standoff at the Church of United Swt~• .
the Nati\lity were Iakins need for rlldiCll refor.m in phoned another fireflJ)Iter
llhape Monday. but the ~ide~ Ya~M!r Arafat'l Pale"inian who knew LoPiccolo.
remained at odds. on te\leral Authority, but differ on Within I0 . mlnuut, not
Arafat'• place as iu head, knowinJ he waslookinJ for
'-•· irM:Judins how many Sharon
wanli Arafat ~ her, the called the ume
of the wank4 Pale~tinianf
holf4 up in the Chrittian away from future peace lalu. firefipter. "and J .aid. 'Do
In new fitJ!tma. thru you remember that JUY
Jhrine would be deponed.
Palntinianf.
mcJu(JinJ. an John frOJg Chri.rnw1"
The PlikitlnianJ want no activi~ in the l6lamic militant
Their fir~t date, jult after
more than eiJht of tlkHe in smup Hamal. were killed New Year'•· latUd II
the Clwtch IC!IIt into e1ile in early Monday in cWII« with hourt.
llaiJ. while ltrael reponedly f•raeli 1roop. in the Gau
In~U!ad of the planned
ln~JfU that at l.wt a dozen be Strip: Four Plile•tinian•. dinner 111 a lA&gt;nJ JjJand
depol'led.
AIWlher
:W including three children. ~ "houl, Jaid LoPiccolo, "we
Paleltinian milltiamm would 3. 4 md 9. were killed Sunday •at at the bar from 7 w I :30,
be .scm 10 the Oaza Strip. by f•raeli lank lire in the Wett Then we went to the lubbt'
IICCOOflnJ to the P;deqinian•. Sank in two . q.ulttf i~i· ~nd ~jjl there t:Jik~J tifl
,
fi:JO Ill the IIWI'AIIIJ.
Prime .Mini~ Ariel dellb.

An llntl-aovernment not. found
whh the tiOmbs wame4 of mm
"attention aett.~" and feder~l
authorities desai
the bomb!la&amp; an
act of domeslie ttrrorlsm.
"The lndivldulll dalnu that they're
tryln&amp; to contict the aovernment or
aet In touch with them, but uslna l
me11ns like thh with pipe bomb!l ...
that's not..the wly to aet the mmaae
across," PBl oaent Jfm Boanu told
CBS' "The E11rty Show."
.In llddltlon to the retd bombs, one
fake bomb wu found Sundiy In
Nebruka, and 18-year-old man waa
nrrested In the prllnk, the .U.S. Postil
Service said, ·
Ro""'
""rv'""
... Humphrle•,~ •.. .."""1"1
.,. " ...
'""
spokesman, declined to describe the
lutest devlees. The Postal Service
doesn't want to deil with iny mort
houes, he said,
Officials on Sunday renewed ple11s
thnt whoever planted the bombs con·
tact them 11nd make their arlevincea
clear.
"! hope whoever Ia responilble
would respond" said Thayer County
Sheriff David Lee whose i:lel!artmant
received ll call on 'one bomb found In·
n rurnl mallbolt near D11venport nn
Snturday.
·
. Pastil omcll\18 81\ld the bombs were
ueeompanled by typewritten notes In
clear p1utlc baas flilit said, lnp11rt:
"If the aovernment controls what
you w11nt to do they control wh11t you
cnn do .... I'm obtalnina your atten•

Page 11.
~.-1.2002

MoNIA\v's

tlon In .the only way I tift, MOlt In
Iii 01\ It&amp; way, More 'attutlon Rttteri ·
are on the way."
Let's request on SundiiY that th
bomber oont110t authorities 1\llloWtd
slmllllr messaae from the FBI o
SltUrtltiY.
"You have IOtten bur attention.
11re not certllln we undentand ytl'
mess~. We would like to helll' fro
you. We lirt llstenlna," s11ld Weys11
Dun, iSIIlstlint &amp;Pf.l\llllf qtnt-ln·chll
of the fBI's Omllha omee. "You
not nted to send ~~~ more 11tmritlo

HIGHLIGHTS

I';

Pro

S11tul'd~

(lilt-of.?)

':f.

Israelis, Palestinians
nearing agreement on
·resolving Bethlehem
church standoff
afee

flnttelt
'

INDIANAPOLIS (APl -

Motor
Spl!edway'~ new "!loft" Willis
pn88ed their l'lr~t 1'11111 test.
Robb~ McGehee became
the tlut driver to crush Into
thl.l Willi~ Ulld llmP,I!d IIWII~
with only n cut on lilslet't leg
11fter ~r11~hlng lfl tUm thre~
during the Indy !OO'K tlt!it
practice ~eKslon .

Mlnneaotl
wln1 llt"Tin
.pHtftlt
IOWA CITY, Jowa (Al')
- Mlnrtl!lllilta tllme ftom silt

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· ·=•llii,MIIIWI1¢'Q
lift 51 1 at -.&amp;.I
•s -.ow a rrlft;
' ' '1 r •••
rurfl
cao r 11 u
.. ca
I

•
'

strokes bock Sunda~ ttl win
1)8 flnt lila Ten men's {!tllf
chtunplonlihlp In 30 years.
With lu top four golfers
8hootlllA ?3 or better on
fowu'8 pat·72 fllokblne
COUt!ie, Mln11e&amp;Oiti Wllil 3 .
ZOINKI - Clnolnn~~tl'8 AaroN SOol1fl Is hit by a pitch from the Giants' Jay Wltaslok In S11n Franclsoo,
Sunday.
The Giant!! won ll-8 In 10. lnnlnga. (AI')
under for the duy 111id
jumped put three team8 In
flnlllhlng 111 I, 1! 2.
1111nol!l wu llll~ond at
I,U6 und Purdue, which
held the leod by tw6 8trok~s
heading Into Sunda~'8
round, flttl8hed at 1, I!7.•
· Mlehljjlln Slllte'li ~rl~
Joraen8en 8htJt. 11 69 In the
SAN PKANCISCO (At') - 'rltese iil'e the kinds gle in the eighth off Danny Oraves, who had contJnal round to win the medal·
of hit~ David Elelllllu!li:
.
verted nine straight save chances.
ill eruwn with lin S·under· . Dcllll~d the score iH the ninth with lin Klll sit1gle With one out In the ninth, Rumon Mmtinez., pinchand the San Ftallclsoo Giants rallied past the hitter Rich Aurilla and Bell ail hit consecutive sinpar 280. Nurthwe1tern'8
Cincinnati Reds 6-!1 lri lO l11nlngs gles to tie I
ves stt'llck out Marvin Benard, then
Scott Hurrlngtun shot a 66,
Surtda~.
loaded
th
buses
with an intentional walk to Barry
tlie be8t round tlf the d11y, to
"it'~ very Important when you· Bonds, ho earlier homered for the second straight
~nl&amp;h ueond 11t 282. .
·
s
truggle,
if you come up with some day.
• Mlnne81Jtll W611 the te1un
hit~, a sacrifice f1y/ anythlng,"sald Bell, who was 0Jeff Kent grounded out, sendin4 the game into
Qtle tM the f!nt time since
for-4 agaitlst Cit1t: nnatlthe previous dny,
extra innings~ it was the third blown save for Graves
I 072 11nd fur just the fifth
Hll was lll8tl sick,
it1 I 3 chances.
time overall. lu8tln Smith
"1 didn't think he was going to play at the start/' "Hits like that are more important than getting a
dlo8ed whb a 70 w lelid the
manuj!er Ou~t)' Buker suid. "He WM vomltlng at1d I lot of hits," Bell said.
~ould~telllds eqUilibrium was off.''
After Robb Nen (2·0) pitched a 1-2-3 top of the
Oophen. Mlnne8uUi'8 Slmllft
'J'he Giants, Whd trailed ;.J going into the eighth, lOth, Pineda (0-3) came m for the bottom half and
l!lt8h 8h6t a 71 In the nnal
have won four straight overall alltf six d( their fast gave up the game-winning single to Santiago after
mund, Malt Ander1011 a· 72
&amp;ilvi!ll after dropping a sclason•hlgh four straight.
willkihg Reggie Sanders and J.T. Snow.
.
and Wilhelm Sellauman u
NdW
f
9·
1
t
and
lJ
h~J(.game
behind
flrst•f:!lace
1
Bonds,
who
hit
a
record
73
home
runs
last
season,
73.
Atlwn~ Ill the NL Wtiilt, tlie Olant&amp; head to New ho!Jleted off statler Chris Reitsma in the sixth.: it was
Purdue, whleh Wilt 9 under
York lot a three-game scirlell with the Mets stllltlng the NL MVP's second homer in as many days and
a("r th• flm round 611
Tut!kllly.
.
.
.
Friday, wall 8 ~:~ver (M the
J.T. Sft6W had nturowed It tli ~-4 with an Rhlsln....... IIH 1.t1, 12
AnAl 18 hole1.
Nbi'thwll&amp;tern, winner of
{he 'lnt three tltlu, wa~
fourth ac 1, I til. Mlclllalln
tttf wn nfth at I,166 and
flldl•n• abth at 1,167, (ol·
lowed by ' Ofllu 8tatll
Sayre•. Joanne l'kkem then hit a two and singles by Ashlee Hill, Emily Hill,
(1,168), MlchlJ•n (1 ,170),
rtill double, and A!lhley Roush ~ored Ashley Roush and a double by Brooke
tow• (1,172), Peno 8tate
ot1 Ashlee Hillis sacrlllce ny, .IlK; score Kiser.
(1 ,1ff(J) •nd Wliilotisltt
Jackson hitters were Brittany Henry
~-I.
(1,2{13),
Jacloon added one in the second, but a triple, Erica Osborne. Tara Meredith,
Jiimet Upp 61 fill !Wit
Soothem
got lt back 011 a B~s walk Taru Riegel, and Sallie Greer. ·
lftlrd In the mUallst tlluld·
and Brooke Kiser double. Rachel Rachel Chapman was the winning
II!Jf It 283, ()111! ittokll
ChllpiT1llll sat the side doWn l-2-3 in the pitcher with three strikeouts and eight
Wid (J( Ha;h, Mltldpn'&amp;
third atJd Southern came up with four walk.&lt;~ in the rain-dampened affair. Amy
Andrft Matthew&amp; wD fl(tlt
big rum in their half the inmng. Blllflh. Cardiff suffered the loss for Jackson
• It 211!1.
'
Sayre, Chapman, l{oosh. Emily Hill with one strikeout, aJJd nine walks with
lorJ.n!llfn had stifled tile
and Ashlu Hlil had big hits in the relieffrom Waugh in the sixth.
U)' 81JatinJ the leid with
rtatne, the .wre f 0-2.
Southern fell to a 4-0 deficit in the
Miitll.w!i ind Purdu4'&amp;
Sooihem held oo for the 12-6 win. first inning but nearly battled back to
Ctlrl&amp; May~~~m, Matthew&amp;
Soutltem hitters were Barnes who lake the nightcap. Jackson held on,
t1w1t • 7.+ oa 8uliday llld
wu 2-2 with a triple and three walks, however, to claim the 7-5 win.
May!IOit (ell out l1f COil•
Sayre a pair of slngla, Chapman a pair Southern hitters were Deana Pullins,
tflltlmt 1¥'1th • 76,
of slnJiet, Joanne Pickem a double, Rachel • Chapman, Brooke Kiser,

Bonds and Giants come back
to
In 10, 6-5

(EM.lmaled value over $700)

CINCINNATI (AP) - Seun Brewer was
deeP. asleep at his offseason home in
California when a reporter culled with star·
tling news. .
·
· The Cincinnati
$ Bengals had just
released tight end
Tony McGee: Thut left the starting job for
Brewer, even though he 's never even
uppeared in an NFL game.
"I said, 'Whoa,"' Brewer recalled Sunday
after a minicump workout " It kind of threw
me for a loop. I didn't expect that."
No one did.
By releusing McGee on April 25. the
Benguls cleared the wuy for two unproven
druft picks to take over at one of their
biggest problem areus. Brewer, a third·
round draft pick last year, .~ pent all of last
season on injured reserve after injuring his
groin curly in training camp.
His backup is Matt Schobel, a third-round
pick from Texas Chrislian lust monih.
Schobel also was taken aback when he
leurned that McGee was gone.
·
"I was surprised," Schobel said. "I don't
know the offense very welL Anytime 7,ou're
learning. you're hesitating a little bit.·
After scoring the fewest points in the NFL
last season, the Bengals decided they might
as well start fresh at a vital position.
.
Brewer has bulked up to become a better .
· blo~ker. Schobel is tryrn~ to learn the pass
routes so he can use h1s ability tn· make
tough catches.
That's a lot of responsibility for two guys
with no NFL history.
· ·
"It's important that we have u tight end
who can hold his own," quarterback Jon
Kitna said. "is it necessary that we have a
guy like Shannon Sharpe? I don't think so.
W1th our receivers, the tight end just has to
keep people honest.
:oBasically, he 's just going to have to be
able.to catch the bull because he 's going to
be in one-on-one cove~age all day, given
the receivers and the running back that we
have."
·
The tight end became little more than a
blocker lasl season. McGee led the tight
ends with 14 catches - a total that ranked
lOth on the . team. behind three running
backs.
McGee started for nine years' in
Cincinnati, fini shing · ninth on the fran·
chise's receiving list with 3,795 yards.
He also was known to drop the bail
when he was uncovered :
McGee missed the last five games
because of a knee ·injury, and backup
Marco Battaglia was waived following an
appendectomy, so the Benguls had to
improvise at tighl end for the final month
of their 6·1 0 season.

Benga I

1 l!1dh1n11poll~

Drawing to be held Friday, May 10th

•
'

Soft walla pa11

I

Eastern threatened with a Lyons
single in the third, but he was left
stranded as Ash fanned the Eagle
number two and three men: Southern
added two more runs in the third on
walks to Aaron Ohlinger, Wes
Burrows, and Joe Cornell . ull off
reliever Ken Amsbary: Brice Hill
then popped a two-run s.ingle and Ash
was hit by a pitch to load .the buses,
but two .b;msbary strikeouts eliminat·
ed another big inning by Southern,
the score 9-1.
Eastern added a rlln in the fourth on
an Amsbury walk and Cacy Faulk
PIH11 IH Pound. 12

nghtends
.unproven
· Queen
City

lundiY'I GIIMI
NIW J1my 1111, OlliriOtti 9a,
New Jtruy leaduerlea 1•0
·
Detroit De, l!oaton 84, Dlltrolt
illdt llrill 1·0
~.~. l.lkilri lie, ifl ~flltihlo
80, ~. ~. l.ikil'i lilld 8@1118 , ·0

Mother's·Day

~.

'
then he rode home aboard a .Bnmdon
Pierce double: Curt Crouch singled to
pllt runners on the comers for Coach
Scott Wickline's crew, then Dully
Hill had an RBI single, Aa.ron
Ohlinger walked, and Wes Burrows
foll~wed with a two-run single for a
5· I SHS lead.
Southern hurler Matt Ash then
fanned iwo of the three butters he
faced in the second Inning, but
Southern again brought out the big
tlm.bers. Brice Hill reached on an
error, Justin Allen doubled him home,
then two errors on a pick-oft' allowed
Allen to scored the inningfs second
run, the score 7-1. ·

NIA

Sold Mraz: "It was like I her an IRIIIIIement rlna.
the 11181 bodies of vlotlm~
knew her my whoIe llfe,
BuI the 3•"·year-tl I·'.. "uo I1111 bur Ied an d Mru "ttl ~·•
Ilk 1 k
h f
h
h 1
• h bbl •
e new er rom II ~u 1 woman W o ~rew- up on Ina t e ut li• t e ru e,
life. She II m~ anael 0 .the Lona llland, dn't wan,t II said hl8 flancel.l.
ashes."
diamond. lnltetld, her rna "We want to lhare ou
Last month, LoPiccolQ II 111 with 11 aold·Chllrm storv becaule we want 10
1
m"ved
Into the Brooklvn
Malt11e cro11 - the btld~ lhow
"
'
""Ople •hat
flreflllhter's home:
emblem of the New Yor
,..
' . 8omethln1!II
With a Septemblll' . wed· Plre Departmept _ and aood came oul of the ter1
dina In mind - 11 Roman .. Mraz• 8 four·dlalt btldle ror," 1he said, "tn the dark~
Catholic ceremo. n" under number.
. est of pltlCI8, we recelveet
'
h
d ·· r
I" • •
the around zero crou, the~
The debri111t around zero . 1uc 11 won er u1 a n ro~
hope .- he decided 10 "IVe II almolt cleared now, with .Chrl8tmu"
•

G

Into .the tournament this coming
Friday, when Southern hosts a tournaniel\t game with either Nelsonville
ot 1\'lmble. The win also marked the
se&lt;.-ond stralgN victory over the top
two teams 1n the league and has
poised Southern for a secol\d chance
at the title.
·
·
Eastem took a 1-0 lead In the fttSt
Whel\ Chris Lyons tripled and scored
on an error. A~~pther Eastern runner
reached on an error, but both were
ld\ stral\ded With the score 1-0.
Southern had five straight hits In
the first ltmlng, starting with a Jusiin
Allen double wllh oile ollt. Matt Ash
followed with 11 run-scoring double,

I'IIVO"I '
conflrtl'lnat laml'l

(On the Net - U.S. Postlll Servle
www.usps.e6m; PDf: www.tbl.gov)

'

l:i-2,

ltt\ernoon

Radne s Star Mill
Southern Is now 11 ·
,
• nn the season.
1' h e
St~uthern ·
avenged 1111 elll'ller loss
to Easlllm 111\d eniibl~d Southern ·to
win Its fourth sttnlaht l!llille golh&amp;

se~~ry."

Basket

plt~blng

Brtd .went on to
men:y the ieague-

E~~gles,

Romance blossoms •Into mlrrl... I fte r ·
h
d
a.c. enco·unter.1t l'OUft zero·. . . ·.

~

sre~t

contentilnl! E11stem

prn

·

.

RACINE - SQlfltm ti'Ve runs In
the tlt5t lnnlilg, Soutliem got s!lme
.

omclils de~trlbed the bombs ·
·h
1 h
1 1
tt h
tt rtt·~u&amp;uterne
stee
lieth"
0 i -vo It blittery, an 881..
u
"'
appurtd to be trlaaered by · bel
tou~hed or moved.
Among the silt people Injure
Friday, ()nly 11 61 -ye~~r-old woma
remilned hospltllll~l.ld Sundav, Dorl
~
Zlmmermnn, who lives ne
Animou, Iowa, w11sl15ted In flilr eo~
dillon.
Mill enrrler 4'le Bartels ofOhlowll
Neb., said he'll be etlutlous whell . h
rtturna to hls route. 1\Yu of the pi
bombs found S11turd11y were In til
delivery llrti.
·
·
"I'm just aolnl! to try to look th
boles over f1 little bit befort I ope .
them," Bllrtels 111ld. "lt'1 kind

·-

aeon Wout

SENTINEl ~~~T

getters."

.

Southern boys pound Eastern,.12-2

11

•

I'

Ashlee Roush, Emily Hill, and Ashiee
Hill. Jackson had only 1wo hits but the
14 Southern walk~ led to their demise .
Jackson hitter~ were Harless and
Meredith.
Ca~sidy Snyder (Sally Greer catcher)
picked up the win and Brooke Kiser
suffered the Joss with relief from
Brigeue Barnes in the third (i&lt;ntie
Sayre catcher). Jackson pitching
fanned 1hree and walked none.
Southern pi1Ching walked fourteen and
struck out two.
Southern goes to Trimble for the
Sa:tion..l Tournament Monday. Earlier
the two teams hauled to a 3-2 !!COre
with Trimble coming out on top.

�Monday, . ., 6, 2002

wwvi.mydallyaentlnel.com
•

Visquel celebrates Cinco de Mayo
CLEVELAND (AP) - nobody can beat us. That's the
Ornar Vizquel found the per· way it was when we were 11fect way to a:lebnte Cinoo de 1."
.
Mayo.
C.C. Sabathia (3-3) won for
Cinco hits.
the first time in four .starts and
Vizquel went S-for-S and Travis Fryman and Jim
Matt Lawton Thome added two RBis
homered as apiece for Cleveland.
the Cleveland
Bill Haselman had three
Indians final· hits for the Rangers, who
ly sna~ped out of a monthlong went 4-2 on a road trip and to
offens1ve slump Sunday, rout- Toronto and Cleveland.
·
ing the Texas Rangers 9-2.
Texas .manager Jerry
Vizquel singled in his first Narron expected the Indians
two at-bats, and doubled in to break out some time.
his next three as the Indians
"You don't start the season
got a season-high 16 hits and
·r
• b d II 1 b"
won for just the fourth time in 11-IJ you rea a ba c u ·
19 games.
Narron said. "You know that
"It's good to see 16 hits," with their pitchin*, they're
Vizquel sliid. "We haven't had not a 2-15 club. I m disapthis feeling in a long time. pointed going 1·2 after winThis kind of game should ning the first one."
bring a lot of confidence back . Sabathia had given up 19
to everyone."
earned runs in his previous
The streaky Indians scored three starts, . and lasted just
their most runs since April 10
and had their first four-run
inning since April 13 when
they rallied to beat Kansas
City and improve to 11-1.
Cleveland roughed up
Kenny Rogers (3-1 ), who
entered with the AL's secondlowest ERA,. for live innings
and has won two straight for
the first time since April 1213.
.
.
The modest winning streak
hasn't cured the Indians, but
Vizquel says is has · them
thinking positively again.
"I really believe .that when
you come to the ballpark
happy and positive, good
things are gomg to happen,"
said Vizquel. "When you're
sad, you don't think you're
going to have good results.
"This is whr. the Yankees
win. And that s why Seattle
wins. We've been through
that, too, where we think

Tribe

five innings when the Indians
were routed 21-2 earlier this
week by Anaheim. ·
However, the lefl-hander
was sharp early, striking out
the side in the first and coasting before tiring in the seventh. He allowed two runs
and nine hits in 6 2-3 innings.
"I used mr fastball more,"
said Sabathu1, 3-0 in three.
career starts against Texas.
"l've .been getting too picky
and trying to hit the comers
too much. That's not what I
did last ¥ear."
Lawton wasn't in the original staning lineup, mostly
because he come in 1-for-16
against Rogers. !lut manager
Charlie Manuel inserted
Lawton
when
Brady
Anderson was scratched with
lower back spasms. .
Manuel, whose decisions

have come under fire with the
Indians struggling, couldn't
resist a chance to fire back at
his critics.
After hitting an RBI triple
in his first at-bat, Lawton led
off the Indians' four-run
founh with his sixth homer
and first since April 17.
The Indians added three .
more ·runs · in the inning on
Vizquel's RBI double and
Fryman's two-run single.
Cleveland made it 6-0 in the
sixth off Steve Woodard on
Vizquel's second RBI double,
and .a run-scoring single by
Ricky Gutierrez.
Rogers allowed six runs and
I 0 hits in a season-low four
innings. His ERA jumped
from 2.03 to 3.07.

Reels

fi'OIII r

r a1 ,

1Oth this season.
Bonds' homer in the sixth
was his 577th, and he
watched as it sailed into the
seats at the top of the right·
field wall. .
On . Saturday, Bonds.
became the fourth player to
hit 400 horne runs for the
Giants, joining \Villie
Mays, Mel Ott and Willie
McCovey, It ended a homerless streak of 33 at-bats
since.April17.
Giants staner Livan
Hernandez allowed five
runs - four earned - and
nine hits in 6 1-3 innings.
Reitsma (2·0) gave up three
runs and four hits in six
innings.
Cincinnati took a 2-0 lead
in the second when Aaron
Boone hit an R.BI grounder,
stole both second and third
and scored on Corky
Miller's single. Coming in,
the Reds had scored just
one run in the previous 25
innings.
Juan Encarnacion tripled
and scored on Austin
Kearns' sacrifice fly in the

third inning and hit his
team-leading eighth ho~
to make it 4-0 in the fifth.· ·
San Francisco cut the
deficit in half in the bottom
half after a throwing error
by Boone at third when
Santiago hit a run-scorina
single and scored on Bell'~
sacrifice fly.
•
Encarnacion had an RBI
single for a 5-3 lead in ~
seventh.
•
It was the Reds' fourll}
straight loss. They returnl4
to Cincinnati 2-4 on the!(
latest road trip.
"I'd love to come to the
West Coast and at least
split," Reds manager Bob
Boone said. ''Cenainly, thi$
was ours for the taking. Bul
we've got to tum the ~~RiC
and go on to the ne;l!:t one,".'
NOTES: Reds SS Barry
Larkin left after seven
innings because of tightness
' in his right hamstring. ,.:
Mays celebrates his 7 ~st
birthday
Monday~ '·
Cincinnati IB Sean Casey
was in Ji 1-for-20 slump
until his single in the fifth.

Pound.

singles by Curt Crouch~
Dally Hill. · and Wes

from Pllp 81

Eastern hitters were Cht:ls
Lyons who was 2-for-3 with
a triple, and Cacy Faulk
with single.
Ash picked up . the wio
with eight strikeouts an ju$
one walk in scattering ju!t
three Eastern hits. Jimmie
------.
Putman suffered the los,s
with · relief from · Ke11
Amsbary. They ·combined
to walk seven, strikeout
three, and give · up twelv~
hits.
· ··
Southern hosts Federal
Hocking Monday.
'

Burrow~.

single,
but
Southern
unwound for three runs '"'m
put the mercy rule into
effect at 12-2 after five
innings. Brice Hill, Allen,
Ash and Cornell all had big
hits in the frame.
Southern hittin~ was led
by Justin Allen With a 3-for4 night' and two doubles,
Matt Ash was 2·for-3 with a
double, Brice Hill 2-for-4 .
with a pair of singles,
Branc;lon Pierce · a double,
Joe Comell a double, and

Fol~ow yqur teams

the

HI THERE BUDDY Cleveland's Jim Thome falls
to the ground after e close
pitch by Rangers ptlchar John
Rocker In the eighth Inning
Sunday at Jacobs Field In
Cleveland. The Indians won
9-2. (AP)

the

Sentinel

.

1/2%

r

.• RICHMOND, Va. (AP)- Tony Stewan has change motors after qualifying and was penal·
no idea why he rules Richmond International ized, goina to the back of the field.
~aceway.
He was 27th when the race resumed for the
He has three victories in seven career stans final 334 laps after what amounted to a 14at the track and has finished hour rain delay, and gradually worked his way
in the top I 0 in three of the forward.
other raa:s.
He passed Mark Manin for third with 67
"I don't have any secrets laps to go, got by Jeff Gordon for second with
here," he said after pulling SS laps left and then set his sights on
away from Ryan Newman on Newman, a rookie who ran in 'the top five all
a restart with 17 laps to go day and was strongest on lpng runs.
Sunday to win tile rain·
Afte.r following on Newman's bumper for
delayed Pontiac Excitement several laps, Stewart finally sneaked his car
400. "I guess I just get around underneath on the 372nd lap, rode side by side
here good." .
with Newman for a lap and then pulled ahead
The victory was Stewart's for good entering the first tum.
.. Stewtlrt
second of the season and 14th
Newman held on for second in his Ford, fol.· .
of his career.
lowed by the Fords of Jack Roush teammates
::• "I probably ran one of the most patient races Jeff Bunon and Martin, and Jeremy
I~ we ever run," he said. "And it wasn't because Mayfield's Dodge.
1,wanted to but because I had to."
. "From the drop of the green flag last night to
·• There were a track record-tying 14 .caution the checkered flag today, we knew we had a
periods and a record 103 laps run under the good car," Newman said. "We had a car that
yellcokw... flag on the track billed "Th.e Action was capable of winning, but sometimes you
'lh1
can't finish what you start." .
..·''There were a lot of $UYS that were being . .Count Stewart among those impressed by
:y,ery couneous, a lot of g1ve and take going on Newman.
out there," be said. "And then there were a lot "He is probably the smartest, most calculator guys that were in a big hurrY, imd it seemed ed young driver we have in our series right
like the guys that got in a hurry, sure encugh, now and he's not got his win yet," Stewart
u time went on they were dropping out like said. "But a day like today, when you lose it in
mes."
the last 20 laps. is the day that really makes
. Stewan's car wasn't cooperating early but you appreciate it when you do get that first
crew chief Greg Zipadelli kept the faith.
win."
. "Greg will listen to me whine and carry on
Burton, meanwhile, rallied for his best fin·on the radio and he'll let me get depressed," ish of the season after cutting a.tire with about
Stewart said. "Then he'll come back and start 100 laps to go.
pumpina me up and the next thin' you know,
"I think we came out 28th with about I 00
we're back where we need to be.'
Iars to go and drove up to third, so that was
.The victory lifted Stewart from lOth to al we had," he said. "That was all we could
l:ighth in the points race, and came from the get.''
'
.
~~ck of the field. He qualified third, but had to
Matt Kenseth, another Roush driver, came

K.J. Choi becomes first South
.

. ~·

' NEW ORLEANS (AP) . For K.J. Choi, this victory was
for South Korea.
,·He won the Compaq Classic
by four strokes Sunday; bccoming the first
'
golfer from his
1
country to cap:tltl'e a POA Tour title.
; "It is ~oing to give the younft
xeneration a lot of confidence,
thoi said through an inter·
lpreter Sunday. "fn that sense,
llhis win is very special because
~w the Korean people ·know
tWhat a PGA Tour victory is
like."
1 Choi closed with a 5-underpar 67 for a four-round total of
17-unde,r 271.
:Geoff Ogilvy and Dudley
J11ut tied for second with 68s
fqr 27S. John Cook (66), Chris
~Marco (68), Mike Sposa (68)
~d Dan Forsman (70) were at
76 .
.
~'!thought if I shot 30 on the
ick, like I did.on Friday, I'd
hlive a chance because I hon'ettlY expected more people to ·
·~ gettin$ up to 15 and 16, to be
~6nest w1th you," Ogilvy said;
; ,Choi eamed $810,000 and
'lltid he will give part of his
~~1nnings to charities he slip;~in South Korea and in this
~untry, through his church in
·Woodlands, Texas.
·
:· .."Every year he donates a big

PGA

~

- 1 CENT ON 2 DOLLARS SPENT

A. Everyol'e, residents and non-residents (a fair tax)
Q: Who would benefit?
A: The whole county, I.e.:
Safety to county by belilg able to adequately staff Sheriffs patrol.
.
Bring Sheriffs office up to a more professional standard through training and equipment.
Q: Could this create Jobs for the county?
A. Yes
By flUing needed positions in.Sheriff's omce.
By operating a needed corrections facility (funding Is available for construction firm Federal and State monies).
.
On an average $ 134,000 a year is spent on.prlsoners housing outside of the county. This does DO include cost of transportation and
loss of coverage provided by deputies leaving the county.
Monies that could be well spent in our own county. A medics contract and possible laundry and food contracts could possibly help
secure a hospital at Veterans.
Q: Can Sheriff's office g~t grants for law enforcement instead of a tax?
A: Sheriff's omce has applied for several grants and has received some including an overtime grant and has an employee working on a
grant but the county has not qualified for several grants due to not being able to match the funding which has cost the county in the
longrun.
.
'
·
Q: Could Fire and EMS benefit?
A: Yes. Monies for
antiquated radio system. Added coverage cutting response times to emergency calls that a deputy
has to clear a
.
.
scene.
Q: Have any other counties ever done this before?
.
A: Yes. Washington County has a 1% tax that operates It's Shtriff's omce. Any excess monies can so back to general fund to support
other county operations.
Fact: Sales taxes are higher in adjacent counties. Food is taxed in West VIrginia for the most people are already paying taX outside of
·
tbelr own (Ounty. ·
Q: How II Sberlft's office funded?·
A: From county ,general fund which on most part Is through property taxes.
Remus Is forecasted to decrease in coming years. Other than a sales tax, the only maw o( generating additional revenue II to min
property tues.
·
·
·
Athens County • 18 MD = $18 per $1,000
Melp County. 4 Mil+ $4 per$ 1,000
Q: WUI the Sberlft' get a raise in salary?
A: No. The Sheriff's salary is sel by state law.
,
.
The Sheriffs oftlce budget is a Public record and it is encouraged for public to be involved. Arter all they do provide a service for your
family and comlnunicy.
':1
·
·
'
·
Poidf~r by Ohio fatrolmens Bene11olentAssoc., 10 Beech Street, Berea, Of/ 44017

•

WE BUILD EXCITEMENT - Mike Skinner (4) spins out In front of Ken Schrader during the
NASCAR Pontiac Excitement 400 at the Richmond International Raceway In Rlchmond,' va: on
Sunday. (AP)
from three laps down curly to finish sixth, und
Jeff Gordon finished seventh as the top
Chevrolet.
.
For much of the duy, it looked ns if Ricky
Rudd would make history in style in his ·
record-tying 655th consecutive start. He led
90 laps and seemed to have the dominant car
•

'
until he crashed
with 91 h1ps to go.
Marlin finished lith and remained the
points lender. He is 132 ahead of Kenseth,
who passed Kurt Busch for second. Busch is
third, 191 behind, and Martin isfounh, aiving
Roush ttlree of the top four. Martin 1s 193
back.

Crew blows two-goal lead, falls 3-2

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) .. Ramiro Eastern Conference.
Corrales scored a last-minute goal as the San
Sun Jose substitute Manny Lagos, who
Jose Earthquakes battled from a 2-0 deficit missed most of the ~ame with a calf strain,
Saturday to beat the.Columbus Crew 3-2.
assis.ted on Corrales first goal of the season
The win, a rematch of a 2001 playoff in the 90th minute. Corrales initially fired a
him at 13 under. He had a series won by the Eanhqunkes, kept the them 16-ynrd shot ·that was deflected to Lagos,
chance to tie for the lead on 12 · atop the Western Conference stan~ings.
· who passed back to Corrales. He finished his
but missed .a short putt for
The defending Major League Soccer second chance.
birdie.
champion Earthquakes (4'2-1) played
The Crew built a 2-0 lead in the first half
Defending champion David
without forward · Landon Donovan and when Dante Washington ·hit a short-range
Toms, who started the day Ill defender Jeff Agoos, who are with the U.S. shot in the 23rd minute, and Jeff
209, five shots behind Choi,
national team preparing · to play in the Cunningham scored on a penalty .kick in the
had four birdies on the first
World Cup.
.
43rd.
seven holes - lhe first time he
The Crew (2-4-0) was without U.S. World
But $Oats by defender Wade Barrett in lhe
had back-to-back birdies in the Cup forward Brian McBride.
44th mmute and Ronnie Ekelund in the 47th
. Columbus remains in fourth place in the began the San Jose surge.
tournament.
An IS· foot tirdie putt on No.
9 put him a shot off Choi's ·
pace. But a bogey on No. 13
and a double bogey on No. 16
ended his chance of repeating.
He finished at 278 along. with
Phil Mickelson, Tim Clark and
Molder.
· Molder, playing on a sponRight now you can bring home 2of your
sor's exemption, was in contention for the lead early in the
favorite La·Z·BOf styles for 1great low price!
day. After bogeying the first
hole, he had three birdies·on the
front nine.
Molder then looked as if he
were done by the I Oth hole,
where four putts, the last three
from within 4 feet, left him
with u triple bogey and dropped
him off the leaderboard.
He rnllied with birdies on
Nos. II, 13 and IS only to
bogey the final three holes for a
73. He tied for ninth at 278 to
earn a spot next week in the
Byron Nelson Classic in Irving,
·Texas.

Korean winner on PGA·- Tour

.
I

.

Q: Who peys the tax?

I

again at ·Richmond

Tony Stewart

A

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailyaentlnel.com

'.
•

•

portion of his income to chari·
lies and he is just going to do
the same with the money,'' the
interpreter said.
·
· Choi took the lead in the second round and never ttailed
after that. He played steady golf
in the 9l·degree heat as the
field surged toward him.
He had two birdies on the
front n!ne for a one-stroke lead
at the tum and sank a 20-foot
birdie putt on No. 11 to move
two shots ahead of three play·
ers.
Choi increased his lend with
a birdie on No. 13. His second
shot on the 16th rolled to the lip
of the .cup and sat there, a
breath away from an eagle ilnd
a five-shot lead.
·
Choi chipped in for his final
birdie on l\lo. 17 - a 3S·footer
from out of the rouah. By lhe
time he bogeyed f8 he had
nothing to wotry about. .
The tournament turned mto a
race as the wind subsided for
the first time in the week. By
early oftemoon, nine players
were within three strokes of the
leader. An hour later, Choi 's
birdie •at No. 7 put him at 14
under, but 12 players were
within four strokes ilnd two,
Sposa and Bryce Molder, were
within a shot. ·
·
Sposa moved up with five
birdie: on the front nine to put

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www.rriydallyaentlnel.com

Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

.The Daily Sentinel

Lakers start semi's with win
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Both sides agreed
it was a missed opportunity for San Antonio.
That could be perilous for the Spurs consid·
ering how the Los Angeles Lakers respond in
the playoffs. ·
The two-time defending champions sur·
yiye~ 39 · perc~nt shooting and
mJunes to the1r two superstars
·
Sunday, beating the Spurs 8680 to open their Western Conference semifinal.
. "It was a perfect opportunity for them to get
a game from us today," said Lukers guard
Derek fisher, who shot 2-of-13 but · scored
five of his eight points in the final four min·
utes.
·
"I think we did (miss a chance)," San
Antonio's Malik Rose said. "They're not
going to shoot that bad Tuesday night."
That's when Game 2 will be played before
the best-of-seven series moves to San
Antonio.
The Spurs shot even worse than the Lakers
did, making 32 percent from the floor.
"We're still pretty confident," said Tim
Duncan, who had 26 points, 21 rebounds and
four blocks but missed his first -10 shots en
route to a 9-of-30 effort. "Our game plan was
there, but it'sjust about putting some balls in
the hole. We do that, it's a whole different ball
game."
The Lakers won for the 20th time in their
last 21 playoff games and .extended their winning streak at Staples Center to 18 games.
In other second-round series openers
Sunday, New Jersey topped Charlotte 99-96
and Detroit beat Boston 96-84. Dallas plays at
Sacramento on Monday night,. trying even the
series at.l-1.
Playing without the ailing David Robinson,
the Spurs are trying to avenge the sweep
inflicted by the Lukers in the conference finals
last spring.
Shaquille O'Neal had to leave the game for
nearly 10 minutes because of his second
injury of the game. He had 13 of his 23 points,
four of his 17 rebounds and two of h1s four
blocks after returning with 10:50 left.
.
First came a mishap at home, when he cut
himself above his left wrist and needed four
stitches.
"I fell on some glass playing with the kids,"
he said.

A
.
NB

Page BS
1.2002

:Berkman acing
~he elite s uggers

Then O'Neal sliced his right index finger
early in the third quarter. That meant three
more stitches.
.
"L blocked a shot and hit it on the rim or I hit
it on the backboard," he said.
The Lakers got another scare when Kobe
Bryant .bruised his right knee in a collision
with San Antonio's Bruce Bowen. Bryant
went to the ·locker room for treatment just
when O'Neal returned.
"As I tried to walk it off, the knee just kept
on s~elling," Bryant said. "So I had to go
buck into the training room, pursome ice on it
to see if we could get the swelling down and
to also see if I could bend it.
"You've got to play through injuries. If you
can walk, you should be out there."
Bryant returned with 4:36 left, as O'Neal
made two free throws to snap a 71-71 tie and
put the Lakers ahead for good.
A jumper by Rose with 1:13 remaining cut
the Lakers' lead to 79-78, but a dunk by
O'Neal with I :03 left and a,jumper by Bryant
with 24.6 seconds to go sealed the victory.
·
"We tag-teamed it for a little bit and were
able to survive until (O'Neal and Bryant) both
got out there, and we were able to carry this
game home," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said.
Bryant finished with 20 points and Samaki
Walker, a former Spur, had 12 points and nine
rebounds.
Robinson has a nerve problem in his lower
back from a herniated disc that affects his
right leg. It's unknown when or if he will
return. He played only seven minutes in ~he
first round against Seattle.
.

•

BY THE

,t,~SOCI,t,TEO

PRESS

. Lance Berkman might be
m?re th~Jf just a long shot in
lhi.s year s home run race.
; for more than a month, the
.Pouston Astros outfielder has
kept pace with
Barry
Bonds,
:
Sammy Sosa and
the rest of baseball's elite
iluggers.
: Berkman homered twice
:Sunday to tie Sosa for the
major league lead with 13,
&amp;ending the Astro~ to a 12-1
rout of the New York Mets.
• "Check with me in
~eptember and we'll see
lYho's still up there,"
Berkman said. "I'm not anything like Bonds or Sosa."
Except in the batter's box.
: The 26-year-old switch-hit·
1er ripped a solo homer and a
three-run shot for his second
rnultihomer game this season
lutd the. ninth of his career.
Berkman, who hit .331 with
34 homers in an All-Star seaj;on last year, also drove in a
·run with a double and leads
the majors with 35 RB!s. He
went 3-for-5 Sunday to raise
l!is average above .300 for the
first time this season at .301.
"Sometimes the swing is
there. Sometimes it's not,"
Berkman said. "It's kind of
frustrating . It's just been
peaks and valleys this year. I
JUSt want to be consistent, and
~hat hasn't been the case. I'm
tinkering with my stance and
swing all the time. I went up
there with five different
approaches and I only felt
comfonable twice."
: In other NL games, it wa~ :

.
NL

NETS 99, HORNETS 93
Jason Kidd hit a go-ahead jumper and
scored six of the New Jerse~'s final eight
points to lead New Jersey past undermanned
Charlotte.
.
Kidd finished with 21 points in leading
seven Nets players in double figures.
Baron Davis had 23 points to lead the visit·
ing Hornets, but he wasn't a factor in the crucial final minutes. Elden Campbell had 22
points for Charlotte, which played without
Jamal Mashburn (illness) and Jamaal
Magloire (suspension).

El:
t:::.-

0

Sun Francisco 6, Cincinnati S
in 10 innings; Atlanta 4, St.
Louis 2; Chicago 3, Los
Angeles 0; Philadelphia 7,
Colorado 4; flonda 7,
Milwaukee 4; Arizona S,
Montreal 2; and Sun Diego 6,
Pittsbur~h
This IS

Mill-

=..

=Cily

-....

S.

not the first time
Berkman has put up eye-popping numbers. In 1997 at
Rice, he hit 41 home runs
with 134 RBis in 63 games . .
He was drafted No. 16 overall
by the Astros that spring.
five years later, Berkman's
quickly becoming one of the .
most feared hitters in the NL.
"He's a great hitter," Mets
pitcher AI Leiter said. "And
he's going to get better. It's innings.
Gary Sheffield broke a long
not a surprise. We stop on his
slump
with three hits for the
name and talk about him
extensively when we're going Braves, and John Smoltz got
through the scouting report." his 11th save.
In the worst of his seven
CVBS 3, DODGERS 0
starts this season, Leiter (3·2)
gave up five runs - four Mark Bellhorn homered
earned -five hits, two walks and drove in three runs as
and a hit batter in four Chicago won at . Dodger
innings. His ERA rose from Stadium despite losing start·
an NL-best 0.92. to 1.67. · ing pitcher Matt ·Clement to
Roy Oswalt (4-1) combined an injury after. four hitless
with two relievers on a four- innings.
hitter. Houston matched a sea· · five Cubs pitchers comson high with I5 hits and bined on a four-hit shutout.
scored the most runs against The Dodgers were blanked
for the sixth time this season,
the Mets this season.
most in the majors.
Clement couldn't get out of
BRAVES 4, CARDINALS 2
the
way of Kevin Brown's
Greg Maddux (3-2) pitched
six shutout innings, Andruw fastball in the fifth and susJones homered off Darryl tained a bruised right biceps.
Kile (1·2) and Atlanta took Brown (1-3) lost his. second
two of three at Busch Stadium consecutive stan since comdespite scoring just eight runs. ing off the · disabled list,
The Cardinals have lost 14 allowing three runs in seven
of 20 and scored six runs in 34 innings.

NBA

0111111~

$10.00 1X5

Friday, Ma~ 1o

Follciw your
pmeand
teams In the
S111llnll!!

-Tlie
Daily
Sentinel

·(Your
Mother's

Name)
Kelli ~justin

Love Terry,
Kelll &amp;. ·
justin

Off·Leale Car Disposal

SIX•Day Sale To The Public
Atheu, Ob. •
' only, a local auto
For alx day•
dealer will u.e his facility 10 .ell
O.M.A.C.. Ford Credit and Toy·
ota Motor Credit off-leue vehi·
cles and fonner rental can to the
public. More than 600 vehicles
have been amassed for this special event. You'll find new and
used Chevrolett, Pontiaca; Fordl,
DodJet, Linwlna, · Toyotaa, Ca·
dillaca, Buickt, OMC TNcb and
much, much more.
Jeff Wood, owner, tays, "We
ll't e~tremely mited about thia
opportunity 10 .ell former rental
and o«-leue vehicle• from 10me
of America's top name lendm
l!eeau• it will draw hundreds of
people 10 our dealership who
have never been herii before and
and hopefully anrac1 them 10 our
new vehicle Inventory u well. I

have directed our aale1 ~earn 10 will be available for fiiiiJICina
sell new vehiclea regardlm of and will be ccmpeting for buti·
profiu. We are confident thai neu. In order to expedite service
once a customer of Don Wood and 10 enturc ccmplete lllitf~~~:·
Automotive you will want io re· lion, pros~ve buym 1111: en·
maln one for life."
couraJed 10 bring their payment
Without a doub~ h.undredl of - boob or tide and l'iigisru at the
car an~ truck buye11 Will ahow up dealmhlp 10 eliminate confution.
fol" th11 tlx-day event becautc of All prospective buyers who wish
1he ~ndoua value of buyina tO have a trade·in appraised will
former ren~ and off·leue v~hl· be &amp;lad 10 know that special apc~etl Most 1f ~~ all of these ve· praltm will be 011 hand to offer
h•cle• ccme wnh ~e remalnder them full market value for their
of factory warranty mtaa.
eh. 1
To diltinau!•h the off·leue v ~~~ event take• place Mon·
and rental vehicles from othm, da lh ah Thunda 9.00
all vehicle• will have larae red or , •Y. l011.,. F 'da ~ · •·~ti·l
areen ta11s posted on the win· ~ 17·00 p.m., n Y9·00 .•.m.
dows. The areen tags aianify an ~:00 p.m., and Saturday 9.00 a.m.
off·leue, pre-auction or former u,l S:OO p.m.. at the Don Wood
rental .vehicle and the red taas Auto Store• m Athens and Losianify other sale vehicles.
11an. Oh10. .
National and local lender•
IIMRnSEMENT

(Your
Mother's Name)

Deadline for thlt Special Mother's Day Tribute 11 Tuesday, May 7, 2002

Fill out the form below and drop off the payment to
The Dally5entlnel "Mother's Day''
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

-CIRCLE-ONe:'A:-iXiar..tTn'i:::iio:OO-ai. 11.XXi5i'GrHiiina::i1':3i~.ooiO·

Mother's Name_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Your Name {s): - - - - - - - - - - - - - " - - - - Your Address - - - - - . . , . - - - - - - - - - - -

Phone# ~. . , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ads Must Be Prepaid
Make Checkl Av•llableto: The

Sentinel

0

&amp;--

-I

I

---

•
•~L

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RED SoX 2, DEVIL RAYS 0
: The Seattle Mariners understand that
Fra:nk Castillo (2·2) allowed three hits
iweeping the Yankees in May isn't the in eight innings and Jose Offennan hit a
same as doing it in October.
go-aliead sacrifice fly off Steve Kent
"This is the re¥Ular season. ilfter Trot Nixon doubled off Ryan Rupe
The postseason IS different," (3·3) in the eighth. Nomar Garciaparra
.
Mariners reliever Jeff Nelson added a solo homer oft' Esteban Yan in
pid after a 10-6 victory Sunday that the ninth.
coml~ted a three-win weekend at
Boston, which leads the AL East. has
Yan
Stadium.
won five straight and has a 20-7 record,
· Ruben Sierra homered and drove in the best in the major leagues. Tampa Bay
four runs I!Dd Joel Pineiro held down the 1w lostlO in a row, its longest skid since
Yankees for six iMings. The Marinen Sept. 9-20 2000 and one short of the
have won 11 of 12 at Yankee Stadium in team record.
'
·
!he reiUlar .seuon. but Seattle baa lost ~ Ugueth Urbina 101 three outs for his
~ew Y~ in the last two AL clwnpl· 11th save, finithing a four-bitter. V'uiting
0111hip senes.
.
. Boston baa pitched four shutoull in its
: "We beat them up pretty 1aod in the last nine games and leads the major
reau'-" season last year and they got Ul leagues with six shutouts.
bll:k in the postseason." second &amp;aleman
·
Bret Boone said. "We're not pu~J too
ATHLmcs 3, WRJTE Sox l
tnuch into this. To Jet to where we want Barry Zito (2-2) allowed two IUI1J and
to be, Which is the World Series, we will six hill in six innings, and Davia Justice
~ve to beat these JU)'•·"
.
bo.me•ed as visiting Oakland avoided
• ln other JIIDCI, 11 was: Boston 2, jettin
ept. Rand~ Vi Janie and Scott
Tampa Bay 0; Oakland 3, Chi~b 2;
1Jso
i~ rwu olf Dan
Cleveland 9, Texas 2; Detroit 7, WrisJ!t(!-3).
.
Minnesota 6; Anaheim 8, Toronto 2: and
Frank Thomas homered for the White
SoX. who took two of three after losinl
Baltimore 3, Kansas City 2.
Chicqo OUIIcored Oakland lS-6
• Bernie Willi8J!IIIIonlmd twice for the
Yankees, who w~ ·swept for the first in this series after being outscored 32-.5
time this seuon. They fell 4 Lf2 JI!Detl at the CoJileum last weekend.
.
flehind Boston in the AL East - their
TUD Mecir pitched two inninp, com·
lataestdeficit aince September 1997,
bining for hidesa relief with Billy Koch,
"We've ctot to start winnino some who Jot L:. ~enth save
"
"
..... -·
·
. garnet obvioualy,"
he Aid.
Pineiro (2-0) allowed two runs and
TIGW 7, Twnws'
five hits in six inninJI as Seattle Jeff Weaver (2-4) gave up four ruDJ on
pproved to 14-2 on !be road. David six hits in six-,PIIIJ inninp to beat the
Wells (4-1) ga\fe up six runs and qine Twins for the Just the thUd time in 10
hits in six innings.
career starts and end Minnelota'• 10..
' . •

AL

Hatt!l.!:'

dro!e

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12

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10, O.klonJI2

Cllu_l,,.._l

Pu!LLIES 7, ROCKIES 4
Reserves Tomas Perez and
Jason Michaels each had three
hits in support of Vicente
Padilla (4-2) as Philadelphia
won at home for its first threegame winning streak this sea·
son.
·
.
Mike Hampton (1-4) gave
up six runs on eight hits in six
innings.
MARLINS 7, BREWERS 4
Charles Johnson hit his first
home run this year, and A.J.
Burnett (5·2) doubled twice at
Miller Park to help himself
win for the fourth time in five
starts;

DIAMONDBACKS 5,
EXPOS2
Luis Gonzalez homered and
Junior Spivey drove in three
runs as Arizona completed a
three-game sweep at Bank
One Ballpark, winning its
fourth stratght.
·
The · Expos, swept for the

Lampkin had a two-run .tri~le,
and Ryan Klesko and hit
Nevin each had three hits to
buck Brian Lawrence (4-1).
The host Padres took two of
three and have won eight of 11.
Trevor Hoffman got his II th
save in as many o~rtunities .
Reliever Sean
we (1·1 ),
makin! an emernency start for
injure Dave Wi iams, lasted 3
1-3 innings. Pittsburgh has
PADRES 6, PIRATES 5
Light-hitting catcher Tom lost nine of 12.

first time this season, lost the
last four of their six-game
road
Javier Vaz~ez ( 1·2)
allowe just three its until
the seventh.
Byung-Hyun Kim, ~itching
for the fifth straig t day,
struck out all three in the
ninth for his eighth save in as
many chances.

triJ'

PUBLIC

NOTICES
tN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT.
PROlATE DIVISION
MEWS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THI! MATTIA OF
limLEMENT
OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT
MEtQI COUNTY,
OHIO
Acoounta
and
voucher• or the
fotlowtng named
fiduciary hte been
ftted In the Probata
Court, Malga County,
Ohio lor approval and
1111!-1. .
.
UTATE NO. 31711
• Firat Account of
VIlma Rue, Gulrdlln
of the paraon and
•lila of Ettzablth J.
aurkllt akl Elizabeth
M. Burkitt
Untlll IXCIPIIOnl
era flladlhll'llo, uld
accounl witt be 111
for htartng before
uld Court on the llh
day of June, 2002, al
which ltma aald
account wtli ba
contldertd and
continued from day
to day unttl ltnalty
dllpoaad of
Any
paraon
lnttrlsled m1y ftta
wrtllan axo.,llon to
ailtd account or to
maltlrl patlllnlngto,
lht axeculton of the
trual, not ltlt lhtn
nva Claya prior to the
dlillll for hllrlng

three:

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

14

181-IO. .... CIIO
tlollon 7, ~I
Mllillmw
a

f\llariners enjoy (but not too much) sweeping.Yankees

Love Terry,

- =•

GlltiiMIII~,-.0

J'VE GOT YOURS HERE, BUDDY- Baltimore's Marl)' Cordova (40) Is out at second base trying to steal as he Is tegaed out
by Royals shortstop Nelli Perez, left, during the fourth Inning of the Orioles' 3-2 win, Sunday at Camden Yards In Baltimore. (AP)

(Picture)

.....

L
7 .741

..... I.N..~I

$13.00

Day

..... ~'111111111

lllllllnl.
llyO
I 'I 11~--CIII
a..&amp;?. I
I

'lllfare4,AI.... ••1

scored at least 20. The duo RE:ACHIN' HIGH- San Antonio's Tim Duncan, center, goes up for a shot as the Lakers' Kob~
did it for the first time in the Bryant, left, and Samakl Walker defend In the second quarter of Game 1 of their Western
playoffs on Sunday to extend Conference semifinal series In Los Angeles, Sunday. The Lakers won the game 8~0. (APJ ;
the streak.
Detroit made five 3-point·
ers in the fmal 6:48 of the,
third, including Curry's shot'
as the quarter ended, to take a
78-62 lead and essentially put
Boston away,
Non:s: The Celtics are 2·9
in their last II playoff games
on the road . ... Robinson
made six 3-pointers, which
tied Bill Laimbeer's team
playoff record from the 1990
NBA finals against Por)lund
...:S Day, a heartfelt ''Thank You" could be
during Robinson's rookie season. ... Detroit rookie C
·IIII!!J."C'• gift you could ever give your mother.
Zeljko Rebraca will miss the
Don't miss this opportunity to say lt.
senes because he broke his
right hand during practice
Saturday. .... Carlisle played
.
for the Celtics from 1984-87.
The last time Boston beat
Greeting
Greeting·
Detroit in the playoffs was
1987. Carlisle was on the
team but injured and his boss,
team president Joe Dumars,
·Happy
Happy
was the shooting guard for the
Mother's Day
Pistons.
Mother's

,
To BE! Published X3

•II

II

Anlllllnl

Pistons attack Pierce, win 96-84 .
AUBURN HILLS , Mich; alterin~ his defense-first role.
(AP) - The Detroit Pistons
"I m1ght not hit another 3made sure there would be no pointer this year, but I know
rest for Paul Pierce - on I'll be playmg defense," he
offense or defense.
said.
Michael Curry took care of The Pistons made a team
that.
. playoff-record 12 3-pointers
Curry scored a career play· and Jerry Stackhouse had 26
off-high 15 points and played points and set career playoff
a big p~ in highs with II rebounds and
s I o w 1 n g eight assists.
Pierce as the
But this game was about
Pistons beat the Boston defense. The Pistons held
Celtics 96-84 on Sunday in · Boston to 38 percent shooting
the opener of the best·of· - Antoine Walker and Pierce
seven second-round series.
combined to shoot just 14-ofCurry, in the starting lineup 39. Walker finished with 20
for his defense and leader- points.
ship, averaged just 2.6 points
"Despite what we did offenin the first round against sively, I don't want anybody
Toronto and just four points to overlook what we did
. during the regular season.
defensively," said Curry, who
. "It's a big bonus," said played a season-hi~h 40 min·
Detroit's Cliff Robinson, who utes to be Pierce s shadow.
scored 30 points. "Paul Pierce ''That's goinfo. to be the key
is guarding him, so it's going for us if we re going to win
to be important for us to find this series."
Mike when he's open to make Pierce said his scoring was
sure Paul is not resting on the down not because of what the
defensive end. Paul is a · Pistons did but because team·
tremendous offensive player, mates· took some shots away.
· and you don't want to allow He was 7-of-17 while players
him to take a break on such as Kenny Anderson, who
defense."
scored 17, and . Rodney
Curry made just seven 3· Rogers took a combined 27
pointers this season. On shots.
· Sunday, however, he hit all
"I just didn't have the num·
three of his 3-point attempts. her of opportunities that I've
"It was definitely surpnsing had," swd Pierce, who averto me," said Pierce, who was aged four more shots a game
limited to 17 points one game against the 76ers.
after he scored 46 in Game S The Pistons were 11·0 dur·
· against Philadelphia.
ing the season when both
Still, Curry doesn't plan on Robinson and Stackhouse

...:

•

Mortgage Co. ol
Ohio, l'lllnllll

Ill.
Ramon .Ortiz (3·3) came within one
nmolhy
T. Killin, ..
out of his fint career shutout before Jose
Ill. .
Cruz Jr. and CarlOt Delpdo hit consccutive home runs at Toronto.
In pUrl- ol ~n
Order
of lela ·
· Ortiz (3·3) finished with a five-hitter
dii'Mttd
to
and tied a career hip by 1trildn1 out 10 aald oaurt, metn from
tile
as~ won for the ninth time in 10 lllovll'tlllllecl ......

garnet.

I will otr.r lor _,. Ill

Luke Prot,.._. (1-4) allowed four
-......3
runs, five hits-~~ walboftJ_n 1 2inninp- the ..,... .....tstart
career.
Toronto has lost 10 of 11.

public •lOtion' .. the.
door ol lhe Malge
County COtlrthOIIN,
Poo_ay, Ollla on
TIMndlly, June
HOZ, 81 10:00 a.m.
tile
fallowing
ducrl~tll,... ul : •
•l?ualld In tilt
County ol ....... In

SS-16. •

~-

lr• ' ''"'lli•l•tr'

1111; !hence North 55
degrata Wnl one
hundred and 11vanly·
lour (174) f1tt;
thence South 35 (ale)
W11t alxty·two and
ona·hatl (12 112) to
the North earner al
uld Jonah R1111 tat:
thence ·South ftfty·
live (55) dogrHt Eatl
ana hundred IIVtnty·
lour flit (174) to lha
pltca or btglnnlng
excepting lho coal
lhtraln tnd lha rlghll

to mine the aame.

Parmanant parcel
numbtre: 16.00750
end 11.00741
Property addrau:
32045 Welahtown
Roed,

Mlneravllle,

Ohto45711
Prior lnatrumant
rafaranct: Volume
11, Page 207.
Appreload
ol :
15,000.00
TERMS OF SALE:
To be told for no teat
lhan twa-thlrdt or '"'
appratted value . The
purchaaar(t) thtll
dapoall 11,000.00
Wllh lhl lhtrllf II lhl
111111 of llld tall.

vtz:

Trunaii,
FRANK ..
WOOLDRIQE CO.,
LPA, D.L. Maino, Jr. ·
and Laurance S.
Landon, Attorneva
far Plalnlllf, eoo
South Pa•rl Street,
Columbuo, Ohio
43201: Ttlt: 814·221·
1882.

(4) Zl, (5) 8, 13

Publto Notto.

diNia-llcUI

theYJDR.oyl: ~=IOII,m:,:u...:.,!"r::

' " I WI''

Help Wanted

game home winning streak.
Robert Pick and Wendell Magee each
COURT, MilOS
hit two-run homers as part of a five-run
COUNTY, OHIO
fifth inning that gave- Detroit a 7-11ead.
CaNN..-:
Juan Acevedo got five oull for his sec01CV-GI7
ond save. Kyle Lohse (2-2) gave up six
111owna111 Ohio inc.,
runs in 4 1·3 iMings.

.
OaloLD 3, JloY.AU 2
Jeff Conine homered off Chris 0eorJe
(0.3) and Mike Bordick lllkSrd an RBI
sinJ!e in a three-run 1ixth iU Baltimore
completed a four·pme sweep, droppina
visiting Kansas City to 0-6 since John
Miurock replaced Tony Mtiler.
The Orioles, who tnikd :z.o before
rail . . .... ,_.., fi .-L--' 7 "
·

Two ond Rongo No.
Thtrtttn ntlf lht
$outh Eaot earner or
..ld' Stclton on tht
North Wtal aida of
the ll,rot ravine Wnt
of the B.E. corner of
. . ld Section end
daacrtbtd ll.latlawa:
Beginning .at the
Eael earner of a lal
told and conveyed 10
Eblne~ar Walkln't of
Mlneravltla; thence
North 35 dtgran
Eatl 12 1/2 fill ;
thence North 15
dtgran Watt 174
fill; thence South 31
dagrna W111 12 112
flit lo lha North
corner or uld
Ebenezer Walklna lol;
thence Saulh 55
dlgrHa Eat1174 faat
to . the ptace .or.
btglnntng.
Excepting lha coal
therein and the right
to mlnelha tame.
PARCEL2:
The following real
Illite attualed In the
County of Melga,
S - of Ohto, and In
the town of Pomeroy
and bounded and
daecrlbtd 11 foiiowt,

Stcllon No. 1 In
Tawnthlp No, 2 and
Range No.1 3 near the
Southtaat corner al
aald ttctlon on the
Northwtli aida of the
ftret revlna Will ol
the eatd South1111
comer of aeld Hctlon
dlacrlbtd 11 lall-a:
Beginning et the
Eaat
corner of half
Rablrt Buck
ecra
lol aoid and
Common
Ptau
Courl,
Probaia conveyed lo Jonah
R11t1 of Mlntrtvllla;
Dlvltlon
thence
Norlh 35
Mllga County, Ohio
d19rHI Elli 12 1/2
(I) 5, 2002

$HERIFF'I SALE OF
AI!AL I!ITATE
COMMON PLeAS

ANGIU 8, BLUE JAYS l

l'uhlll'

luur Wh:hltu "-11''''· l!i·ll•t•n•cl l&lt;ruhr 111 l mu llnHr.

WANTED:
PIJ'I.u- jiOIIIJGn avalloble In Molp Coonly, 15
Dulin IJJCiudo latbl111
IJid p&lt;nonaJ tldlll 1o .., lndMdual
trldJ 111&lt;11181 rdanlalloa. Requlremmll: IIJp
dlpl.o-'GED, •olld dr1..r'o au-, lhnc
,,.,.. pod
IJid llleq..U

-··kJ

bnlwl&lt; Mllllflb.

clrl.,.,. .,..,..._

- - - . . . . . . . ......... S1Mihr. Send
-to:

lk1ckeye Community Servk:et
P.O. Boll604
JacllloD, OH 45640

Dudllne for appllcaau: 5/U/02

..-a,..._..,..,.,

zo,

1ht ..... ol 01110, and
In till TctWIIelllp ol
lallallurr l'ameray
llllllgel Mel PIOUndl II
and deaorlbld 11

tala use;

MRCILt:
Tillfollowllll-'
...._. Ill till
County ol M1111, 1ft
t i l l - ol Olllo. and
In 1M T-niiiiJI ol

• r' ..,,

_....

and
Calvin Maduro (2-3) allOwed two runs
bounded
1nd
-one earned- and IeVen hila in 6 1·3 Cla!'Drii!N!.• tala••;
innings, and 1otp Julio worbd !be ninth Till followllll - '
~
for his sixlh uve. BllliiiKR (16-lS) is
Ellfllln TOilillhiJI Ho.
over .SOO for !be fint time it was 1..0.

....

FOE AERIE 2171
is holding election of oHic:er&amp;l

Monday, May 6, 2002
7:30pm

�p ..... The Dally Sentinel

www.mydlllyMntiMI.com
The Dally Sentinel • Page 87

Qtribune .. Sentinel - ~e
D

E

Join the 5th Annual Yellow R-a
Yard Salel May 3rd &amp; 4th.

With U8 RIACH OVIR 111.000 PROSPICTI

·

$5 J!11s you on ~ ....., &amp; 1 yoltow !log.
Art lddollonal $5 ~ you need an ln·town locotion
for your yam sale

:

e mila&amp; 1ong H!OOU!Ih Middleport &amp; Pomoroy.

'•

Hunilr11ds Iii mapa doslnbutodl
Advertised a promolod widiiY on flldio,
nawspapefll, flYenl &amp; postaflll All lor $5.001
Sponsored by The Middlepoo Cc&gt;mmunlty Assoc.
and The Pomeroy Morohan!S Association.
To siQn up, Stop In OhiO River llear Co. or
· Middleport Dtpt. Slole or O"lcil Sarvlce &amp;
Supply In Middleport or Choopman Shoos a OhiO
.

~egilter

YOur Ad; 'atribune(740)446-2342 Sentinel (740) 992·2156
Today...
or Fax To (740) 44NOOI
Or Fix Ttl (740) 112-1117

t/llf;,~ ~~
Vo~o~r

Or Fax Ttl (304) 87W234

Vltloy Bulk Store In Pomeroy.
For lllllft lnlonnlllon clllltNOSS

0-ad'A~4&gt;4

~~

Monday thru Friday
B:OO a.m. to 5:00p.m.
• St1rt

(304) 675-1333

lncluelea
Up To
Over" 15
Aela

P/1
CONTIAC'IORS, ltK.

l"r"ee V•r"CI S•l• Slgnl
15 WOr"Cia, 3 Deya
Wor"Cia 20¢ Per" WOr"CI
Muat l!le Pr"ep•ICI

Racine, 01\io ~771

74Q.H5-3D48
OONClm/llOCX/IIICK
• Ftl&lt;lt&lt;r., W•lls, Step. •

... a. With A Ktyword ·• lnchut• eomplttt

Otacrlptlon • lncluelt A 'rlct • Avoid A.bbrt-.lltlol\1

• lnctudt Jt"ont Number And A.ddrtlt Wtltn Ntteltd
Run J

\'\'\t) l \t I '1 1 \ I "

r

I

1\o

1

Pt:RSONALS

.

HI:J.P WAN'I\11

'

11118

.

HFJ.P WANnll

r'o

I

I rib

OI'I'OR'I1JN!I'Y

r

lklo\11!8
tlllt SA.ut

-

R.eplllcen~nls ,

• Wtllks
and Drives • Stencil

A~-·roHROO~

'

· AES~ITE

01\RE
WOR"ER(~)
NEEDED:
Would vou bl willing 10 cart
tor an lndl,lduel(t) wlln
ltarnlng llmlllllono In vour
own homo lor 1 low hourt
tach month? High oohool
dlljrll rt&lt;tulrod. II lnlttlll•
ad contact ChrltiV at 1-800·
&amp;St ·a302. Eouol Opportunl·
IV Employer.

•Nic•

SS 1\CT NOWII WOflt from
home, PTIFT trn bool&lt;ltt.
1 ·800·25~·2~
·
www.dclltWOiryMrtch.MI
Otnlll HVOIII!\111 .E•OIIItnt
pay w11n benelltt. Stnd Rt·
eume 10: P.O Bole 380 Me•
oon, wv or coli (30.)??!·
ao:ao

:~ ~~~~~&amp;. :=...:.~~: :·~~':~~.:. ~· ·~o'n'~ ~=~~~~on:•r(~04~1~~~

...

flU S•T ll111r ••• In
condition.
11384 antr lljlm. on

r

TIM:;Jg: "

~304)171-aMO

1M1 fiord lllplcm, •we.
!IW, 1'1., rod, aunrotlf, .,.

:~~ 1800 Llramlt,
•••· Quaa 9~~. \.oodlld,

,,e,oco. ~?40,...·R211

I? Pllftl F•IIO, 4M., \1&lt;1:
Au~ Air, Good COndition.
~~~al·lm or (1.0)lll·

r

tM~I
11M I Toni Rod. Cullom
SOli Tall Hartly DIVIton.
IMOIMtnl Oondillon. Cuatom
8111, Whlll , Lowtring Kit &amp;
LOll Of IXIrll, Slii,OOO.
7•0)4.e•UU, (7.0)aet•

1m.

r

rio

I

I''

1'.

r

18Qt Vltmahl Wlfflar aeo,
ar.. t sllllr, uaoo.
(7.0)«8·180

0;

aoco Horl11 Davleon 1200
CUllOM, 11 10 mlill, f'Mri
Wllllt, l•trtt, Atklng
111 ,100 ORO. (7.0)318•
1371. Call alttl7pm,

rio

2

mo,•

r

r

7

=:

'*

::f.::Z•

classlfledsl

lottom loll.
Mtroury,
Trllflr,
uooo.U (740)2.1•
8108
83 l'tllltOon bOlt I II Hp
motar wl tralftr ., nttdl
101111 wor~ ttaoo. 304·914·
21H
Toto WIIHI HOrN AidinG
Mower, 11000. 11.01~•r·
. t108

a

11

r

w•

=·

SElF STORAGE

· Call
97 Beech St.
The Dally ·middleport, OH
Sentinel . 110'K10' 610'K20'1
992·2155 [740)992·3194
992·6635

740•949·2217

f2i7 ti

f.='"

=.,

lllttranot

SIZII 5'x101
' to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00PM

STftTE STORE
NowO~n

11 e.m. • Bp.m.
Mondeythru
Saturday

AIIO liNing
11uaage gravy
&amp; blaeultt
Cally Lunch ·

Cloled Sunday

100 Witt main st.
Plfllii'O!I

992·0008

y

=.'a!: = :p:;:: =t~S"":: ~:~ ""::..~~ :~,.ue.ooo.oo. 7o4().818. e-:: 1·100427·1111 r,~."r.l =~).:::
Gold

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1tor11
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«1~2al . . 101 ..... ..,
CIHflnrll .
(r40)441-:1846
1Oraoloua living. I and 2
••• up•
1M•.,.
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ontv II tflje
, New 3
• - - ~ II Vito
01111 ·
, HuntlnQion. wv Will 1tlkl Olft d tldeoly, lllliroom, 2 W I 1101 Mllltll and , . _
4414t42.
~~~~~-CIO'f.f4WOIII
~ &amp; - - _...,_,_IIIN Ill Arlle P~tm, leelr1Hul ~Itt MlddiiPOII.
ltldt lo Truct ~. 111. (170)fll-7f21010t40t
1-7 1
~-Nr;uot21cu- ::r..::,~...:: l'romll1ua41. Ctll740C7o10)1411112l
IOI 20- 110 lliOuland. ,11111 II HUOe4. lqulf Mauling
Wltrll-' 1o lilly: liNd 1o1c1&gt;111 0!11U Worll In l'orfMitOII,
_ ,, Onft' M,IOt.OO dMIIttlllr Dodrill !lei, lllirll ()ppor1unttlll.
·
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- · I Ill Apt., No-·
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Wo&lt;Vutl/,..,1
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T_.,,...,. Schld. ,..,.
lm'U«TY
cow·~nallta 1100 dtpCtlt, (1.0)&lt;146I II' I r ,
II
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lnriiiiiiOd potld,
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,
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1NOM AI
To IIIII&gt; CIO' Cllloliel ~ Do4t C...
turH. 122 KJ&lt;Ifon Orl'll, Ser1cul
Iff Olfy.
11o11. 8llltlly IJitn. »4- w.y• MaC«"** - · ~: lrwPI!Ifttd .,. (740l+IH310 01 (740)U1· (740)
., (140)414- - n 1 lodroom Apor1o
1711-Jo!ZP,
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_71. .

t»rltoo-. Mllteof. iiii'-:Aiiie:L"j · - it&lt;, 740-t82o0013 Ill 91· f

40tf
·
1'rlll0 and Cfll1smln Tooll.
Cllt - , , 1740)441-Heo
Two lloroln V1ty Good
~VMy U11M UN.
. II .,_j ~ 1t1t1t
Hit ' Hlft.

11~ie

,._Hood.

11N CMy ar4 ltlriiO.OOO
mtltl, nsw tltll. Guel .,..
Keyboard VK7 lflotand 2 fllull, Oll'btJ- up.
Gtrtlllr1 V10f1n1, 2 .,0,..
(:104)17..
bYd IIIOirlo 1tHt Ckllllr ~~~~~--=-~
and ~Zlng'
81
-:
I 1i1Nr:
ltlllrumtrll
It!
~~'!0 f1~~~~
11&gt;1012.48-ftH
Old, i10UU·&lt;k41 .

• Aoot11 Adattlont a
Aomodltllng
• NtWGIIIOII ·
• IIIOIIiell I Plumbing
• !looting ' 11ulttra
• Vlnylllatnt ' l'atnuna
• ~•tlo and Paron DHka
f!rea eatlmalea

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·8215

P-,Otoio

\

All Makes Traclor &amp;

•G1ragt1

Factory Authorized

Cuse·IH Parts
Dealers

Stop a Compare

1000 St. Rt. 7 Soutlt
Coo/vi/It, OH 45723

FREE ESTIMATES

740-667·0363

740-992·1671

Delivered
&amp; Spread
1111,00 per 1on
B-10 ton•
llmlled erea

Local 843·Sl64
~~~~~~a~ Supplement; Life Insurance;
II
and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;

ReiiRment,

·

Ma,Jor Medical

F

'l ' ln~ MAI 1 IS1'
Experl e nc~

10 Ye11n

Sre cl nl l tln~ In:
I
Sw ccll!!h,

.,./!!,.

Deep

ShiO&gt;oOSu ,i

C'mniUSIICrlll,
ref1eKolugy, M)lofnsclul
nnd Yow.n Thernpy 010
Certlf'it.:utcs Avl\iluble_

33795 Hii.Jnd Rd.

·

&amp; 401KRollovers;

I,ICt-:NSI.:U MASSAGE

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

$ ~ 0 · 4 ~ rtlii\U\1:18

..n

Pomtroy, Ol1io

740-992-5232
Shade Rlnr AG Servlc•
..Ahea.d In Scrvll'l•"
355J7 St. Rt. 7 Nmth • l"nmcroy, OH 45720
• Golden llow 16,!M~l '1\•inc ....... .. .... $18.65 ·
• Golden Uow 9.000Twinc ............... $1fi.65
·, 20,000 l'laslic Baler Twinc ............. $15.75
• 'lbp Dress Pusturcs with Sult't;r
Ur·cu ....... .... ........ ,, .........·......... $120 per h1tt
Equine 12 .. .. .. ............................ $~ . !MII~fllhs
Sweet Stuff. ..... ... ,....... ,............ $4.40/.lfl lbs.

JONES'

Tree Service

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump 'rlndlng
• Bucket Truck

Shtll dry for hurn ..;, pens.

~o: ngc ., .. &amp;

trullcrs., ,... ,,,....... ,... ,.......... ,............ $1 [) . ~[1/bug

(740) 742·7037

Mnrton Sy.11 tcm Suvcr Pellet!! for scptks nnd
wuter soliencrs $&gt;1 . ~()/hug

Ltlvt ntma A No.

'

'

~~~f.;'~~~
111:\
tiJ Ill

J.D. CONSTRUCTION
New 'Homes &amp; Relllod eling
"Spedulizing In L1'g llumcs
&amp; l&lt;ubbcr RLlofs''
Ourugcs. Pnle Buildin g~. Cuncrcle
Rnor~ &amp; Sidin g

I nf!UI

Replacement Windows
American Livimll
Patio Rotlms I

lfr.\

(740) 992·3987

11c11.

Owner &amp; Opcrutur. Jol111 Dctltl TFN

LIME·

erea, call for
dltalla. Cell:

l'onda,
DrlvtWIYI
IIHfllltnlttlf'aotore
lnturtd,
Pllllla1111111el

Cmnmcrciul &amp; Rt:!&lt;t ldcnllul

[I! 11

llil:\ 1/r.t. IIi:.. ~if:.. I!!:;- Jlr.r. ltr,\ .
!il~! 111•1 fllu: [ll" 1) 111 111u :1111 :

Delivered &amp;
Spread $115.00
per ton1 8 to 10
tona, limited

•

....
1

Mirror
COMMIICIAL and IISID001AL IE.1:cluslve Dealer
FREE ESTIMATES Jr'ac·toi'J Direct
740~882-71589
(NO SUNDAY CALI.S)

Krls
Kanleckl

~~~

New Homes • VInyl
Siding• New Garages
• Replucemcnl
Windows • Root1ng

"''""'

Equipmenl Parts

•CDmpitlt
Remodeling

•~•Work,

(740) &amp;91-2173
Or leave nama
and number

Pomerog Eagles
BIDGO 2171
fuery
Thursday
L•!l mo! do tt for you'
li Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
~arlg birds start
6:30
Progressive top line
Thursdays
Progressive
Coverall on Sundays

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

'

YOUR COnCRETE
connEcnon, LLC

WOLFE
Heating &amp; Cooling

lOt pi'OIIIIId
Alltlll!l)'t blut,

Ploller41'1111 Pfl*wt)'l
.U 011r Nr1tlll1'014111
GH lull• lOt pniJDIIItl

Buwllboll nli,
~ llldMit MII'DII1

8trnllll ,.,.., .,,
... lOt ... ....,,
L11W lor t11e ..,,
Grw lor tile tnlll,

RESIDENTIAL &amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING
HI-Emclency Heat Pumps, Air ·
Conditioners &amp; Furila~ell

· f!!l'MIJ fltffRT:I::M.

(ol~mantJ

• flt"tlll! A AYoHr l'•rt W•rrlntiM

• lirH

111~11•1 'l'hltfiUI!hl

. (740) 742.•8015

24 Hr. Emergency Service
Lh:e1111ed • lil1ured
Thermal ZonetM equipment ··
(10 yr. parts &amp; labor warranty)
Service all Brands
Financing Available

(740) 992·1536

• Tonneue Cover
• Ventvloor • Bug
IShiteld &amp; }' ull Line
Other Accearorles
I

(7 40) 949 - 1521

'
II

I

I'

f I ill '

'192 - ~&gt;822

Quollly Concrete Work ·
Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas,
Sidewalks, Floors
28 ytlrt EKptrltnCI
Free Eellmat..
(tolllrH)

877-353·7022

R.L MASONRY
ALL TY!tlt OF MAIONM
I~ICM , ILOCU ITONI
ao VI!A"I Ulti .. IINCI '

Free Es111na1es
11 111\1•1 111 \t

FREE ESTIMATE

f~ttiiiii 'I IUII

(304) 773-9550

140-!1!12 - !11~8

HERBALIFE

'·

V.'ldowe'
Siding
I'

~

1

Cettal1aa d, SSilrTI*'•.P.wrr
SeJf:b1~

IJetna Wlmi1y
F111 Ed 1111188
. I

I

\ 11 I II I

Bnnl ntmll )W tWI
1!1-.

In tilt

I

( 1~0)

~:~j

•II,..• Ill \'tor (:tlflft&gt;,..,.or
Worroh17 On Htrled Mod11t
·
JIKI/,11, ~JI'I' IMII'I 'Jo:N • 1111111-: IHt•niMt
• •llonk Ill~~~~;;_
• Ptkt~~_'fn

Buy, Stll or Tl'ldl

-

•NawHomtl .

STONE

Help lnlltibtwt,

:Jr· 010
11tpa'1 !..':

740·742·3411

01

, _ wiiMtll lila,
htGodllllll,..r.d

,...,,_

992-5479

BISSEll

F1F.E;;M:R~

!Mdtd:

I H0 a.!· Nr, I l 12 tool
111e1t 1t1 u~ 01111Pf'· wtt11
ltrllf ~b owr bed. lltf
oorillfnttl or.1t11 fllrnaoe, 1fr1
rtlrlgarator· trnzer ana
111111111 jlolt tit tfownl, TV
Mel trill wlrod 101 llllor,.
. -liOn. · In uooo.
1111\1 good ,,...
eondi·
(1.o)N7-7210.

FREE ESTIMATES!

CARPENTER
BUILDfRS InC.
SERVICE

Lloented 1 lneured
Health Problema? ·
Wtnt More Leisure Time?
Tired 01 Mowlna?
Not A 8prlna Chlolten?
LIMITI!D OPI!I!IINOI

J&amp;'/1!;Uf"Mil,

~m.= a:t: ~Oo~,.~

N1aJ,

"=r, ,..

l:w

&amp;More

Raolnt, OH 45771

mEIGS counTY

Wlnttd

.,eJ;fo101"HIII,

=

:=

Authorized Agent

71:12/TFN

211670 Bashan Road

.Htlp

•

Bryan Reeves
New Homea, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Bulldlnga, Roofa,

Hill's
Self Storage

MANLEYS

,
,
•

•

Siding, Decka, JS.Itchena, Drywall

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

•

•

Jeff Warner ins.

25 per month

:;r

rl!.(

Gutters· Down
Spout
Free Eatlmltn

I

Cellular

1

•••o

7

.I

for

In on the

1an Start aem1v with trill•
er.
oaa a !l~etrto motort.
Fltll Plndtrt, tlo. tHIOO In•
v11t1d, Taking ott1ra.
(740)14fo01111
1171 Cltrytltr oullxlard 10
Hp motor, tlto. 111~, ~lior
week.
~tm&amp; fllmoto clbltt, runt flor more lnformntlon
GOOd, 1111 or ltl&lt;to 304·
171·1717 Olin D. Hantn
PLEASANT
1811 Polarla XL 1eo Jtt Sid
VALLI!!\'
with trtlltr. Good oooolllon,
HOSPIT'
•L
Low
Moure,
13000,
,..
(7.0)708·0141
dll Hum•n
1811 20ft, lunoruiHr l'on•
RIIOUI"CIH
10011 loll. eo lip. Jof1n10t1,
V II D I
wllh tralltr, lilt /IOktlt,
••• I If r ¥1
dtPih llndor. !to. Phone Jlolntl'leUint, WV
(304)Irl·ft:l8
.
(304) 67!·4340
111'7 Aauatron, 11ft. opsn
·
·
~.~1
Mtrorulllr
1/0,
~==;:A:A/'1,::0:1!:::=~
Auna gooo, manv tMtrll.
H.ooo.oo. 1.0.0N·3231 .
2000 Mal Fllher 18' V· ,_...;;ln;.;.;,;MI; ;,;.;,m;,; OI; .:'"Y:.,_

1

r
r

In thla apace

.

PART·TIME
ACTJVlTIES
ASSIST'ANT.
Day/F.venlna,
l8•32 houn per

f: .i:ta

l'ltm

Cash

npplicatlona for n

•••t;:v.f,

r.:"'"'"''"'"'·

·

Advertise

11 ~ul'l'intly 1oeeptlni1

I

ri&amp;

WVOl125e

Plealltlnt Valley
Nursing and
Rehabllllatlon
Center

I

r

Col/for moi'V!
ltt.fo/f'l't!t tstimotr

110,000 mHH, laking

1888 ~11, 4WD, 111.
OlD. 138,000 mllu, QOOil
oantlltlofl, 11.100.00. '140·
- 81J.:I08o
1881 IMplortr X\.T, 4M4,
IOIUIII, ~~ avtrythlng,
rtiW llru, u.ooo.oo. 7.0·

..

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
Maintenance-

lm·3S3·'71122l

IM,IOO.OO. 7.0.881-11113

amo~I'\'JI'I!tf.l~~:

S:

G}··

IMQit,

=

~~.~ ·r:.~~tlt ~=l:d~

(:104.)!:;

QOOil

uf3

.

r

wv 110Jl712

"'tell

10

c.....

Free llstimale•
SetllihB Ohio and W,V.

\.tnd h - pactttgll
GrowlnQ Buolnou Nndt \.andl Hamil \.and~ I - · ~78 IIIIIIV Run 1 ana I bedroom apa!l• It' Aluminum Co'llftd Tall&lt; AapaJqUt ~pm!lfe pall!otl)
Htlol WOrk from homt. mtnta In one lOW PllVfllll!\1 Ad., •" Ohio 114, 1/a mil• mtnta, fumltlotd and unlul' dim roce"'"' conalllon. orwanlo grown l llowtrt.
Moonlight E10orte. Full
MllioQrdlri!·Commtoot Up Loan otl!olrt on hind 1 WHt of Routt 7, V"Oitr a nlthod -.rltv dloolll ,.. 1•
VIrGil• ~
on 111
Mlltana ltt!\11"''
10 IW+ ......, . ~T. 11000. daU 1 - •· (7401••8· 11ptlo nltHdy In 114,800, quirod,' no pela, 140.881· ~ 0)3?8·8IU
1114 1. 01 lytiOIIH, 7~
oortt ond donetrt. Prompt
1•000/WHk FT. FrH boot&lt;• ~
bGelltnl bulidln• aile, 1111
a•- ITU w
••- -• """
end Protnolo1111l and Conll·
lat.
1-100·•28·0111. oN ·
(137)381·01al
•
'
"'"""
~•nrroa.. ~w ....I,_,
\ ll \ I •, I I I I II '&gt;
dlntiol. We aloo do lllrth·
www.NawFulu,.,.U.oom
Naw houe• tlnonclng a'llil• ·
I Do&lt;lroom, I tlorY apart• =~~."~~~\1J ~~
,\ I I' I •. II 11 t,
city, Private tnd Baohtlor
.
IIIII to qutllllod bu-ro. O'Mo I LOll, 314 IOfl IIOh, ment lor !1111 In lyrtOUM t 1 1t 11 1 (
Part111.
Opm·
1om.
Start '1tlur lluelneu To· down . 1800 10 tC a 111 Rudy to buil&lt;t on. NOrth 1100 cttpooll, U:SO par
or
· !!14)1?1• iftjiOOi;;;;;;
(740)388·17~~.
dly... Pnme Shopping c.,. both 3 lodrccmo outtorn Qallla Ettatll on Tnolat month rent, rent lnoludll ~~~~=~~
ltr Spsot .A.alloblt AI AI· ook 'trim &amp; Olbintt'1 gaa Rd. (7.0)448·1•00
Wlllf llwtr I tra·• • """" 1•••• ••• I ~tr
Wl'r; walt? Sttrt mntlng
Oomlno't now taking IPQII• lol!lll&gt;lo Role. Sprlng Valli)' 11 • 11
11- kltontnldln
'
"''' • ,.,...,., - · .... ,... Lw-til
111
Ohio tingles tonight. coli toH ANI LPN neodod tor Home cotlcnt lor monogemtnl ~lira, con ?40·440•0101 . l. n~" 1~Ia oi'rgoraga on ;
AcrH Hlndtraon, WV. (7•0)37Io$
:T~d l•;:o~!?·
lrtt 1·800·78H623 ,., Cort In tnt Gllllpollt Artt. and 11fe dlllltrt, Qolllpollo
·
acrta
tUOO
l'orlor
on
Ntw
!our
lint
with
Oily
II~
Aplrlmfl!ll,
1
Ill
hth,
~740)1al•llal•
1817 Cue lnltrntiiOnltl :Ill
111
11
1121.
· FTIPT houri wltll l!entlltl. ond Pomeroy looallone only. pzt
MONK\'
I•'"· 17..0)«e·oi51 i 1111 lpm watar. 180,000. (00.)545· lnd Ave., Oalllpolla, Ohio.
Trtotor, 1-1 GIIUI, Low
PltiHclll Phylllll11·800· Applylnporeon;
I .
TO loAN . 'or~ 7 ·b)• 48• 3 Uhlltrlpm 1411
(7.0)'4.1.01M.
· So$• 10doaklnnttttncta.• HOuri, IMOIIII.nl Bhlpt,
518
173
704
1814
ANNoUNCI::~II:N'I'S I 'a or ) -ooeo. Orlvert wanlad. no CCL. 23
••
luullful wooded noueo •.a 111 •In Ave. 1:100/mo., 7• 0·8IHI(t
(740)I41·ate4 lher 111m
8
Ttlomerkotora wonlld to yre. or olaar, good clri'llng 81111 Qlltlng out ot nond? :!~'.':~\ 1t~~ a ~~Y b~o~, loll, 1111, 3 111 ollacrte. $110 dopoelt. Stove, Rllfrig· Ill ~lng_Cunor Flnlah MOw• 8f JD 1800 73 Hp caD. hell
help ue ouallly peopltlar • raoo~. btntllta, drug
N"HCio tutloon?
Kll herl. a 1,a B 1 ~ CIA' 1.? mllet 0111 Sf~ Ill. Call tralor ~urnlant&lt;l, Wllar In• or, 1!00, 1113 1ft CIIIY~ lAO Wgte. u.-o houra lllle
..
1 Pomlly llltr I :OOf)m. (740)448· eluded. (7.01••1·8011 .
"" vou llrtd ol tnoeo har· dltcount prttorlptlon pro· 10resn, nnlort wtloomt. I•
No uplfO'll F111 . Ga~ hNt '
TIUok ·lad, 1100. 1881 8ft MW 'oond.lnlklt &amp;out~· ·
aulng pnont calli? Don't g'lm. Tlltpnone, oompullr, 800·&amp;31-0&amp;&amp;3.
can Toll FrH
Rm/FP, Butment, 4•0., 71el
S·tO TrUCk Bid, 1300. 400 an..a11a
know where 10 turn? Call &amp; prlnltr 1 nll&lt;ll&lt;f. $&amp;8. Ot·
l·lal·7fa.ea•a
Goragt Mt Vtrnon 1\ve• For Sole· SO 10,.1 of ltrm Taking 1\pplloatlono. Mod· John Dtlrt Lawn Tractor, ;:.:::.:::~~-~I'KOt'l'li!IIONAL I nul. coil
lond, eom• woodt, pond:
In
13800. (7.0)387-?0U
88e.&amp;99·2974.
line &amp; 'llundtd tf.tr 1 1743 or 1740)4.e·110. atlar
SERVIC&amp;'I
ATTE!'lTION INVIBTOABI i::.atltr I p.m. 740·882· 1•?8/mo., (?40)«1·1871
lid Old 71 Rtoorua. 1\lllar ~7.0)RI8·881a
.
wooko. II lnltrallod coli Jllf 5:00pm for Interview.
• SIM Atnllll For hit, 1\lllrt
1121. Cell (7.0)111·3•at. ~~::-:::==-~~=
ATTENTION. Palltnto o1 Or. II 304-17o-ron or lttllt I H I
ad I lo h
TUII
DOW O
prtttntly rtn!ICI. SlrfOUIIn• Lot lar Slit• 1\pproot. I Ill Twin Alllllt Towtr IOOt!)l· no antwtr, illve MtltiQI. White !'llrm neotor, 'IOHP,
Gtno Ablulam not rotlr· meattQ111877o87H882
,~f,woonl
':!'rng Hr I I ·-t·LNIIDicu•tTNwiiNII? QuiratOntu !7•0I••e~eoa lcrtt oiHrod &amp; tHdy tor
lngollf)lklllicnt tor
•t ... • II Fit Dl Ia looalltnl
Conlllllon.
lng In tht n"t live yeort.
• -r y, '"' ~roue ome, ....... ~
" •
,.
, b lldi'
I dI
" ,..,. ~o ' I rl r (7.0)371•8381
1\cctpllng Now Pollentt· Trtth Houltr Ntodod. now paying minimum WIQI. No PH Unites WI Wlnl Ranch llylt brick houu, 1 w~ltrng, .H~'t::o 1r1vt111wbla1y, tbt. Hud Sul&gt;lldl.tod opt.111 1111. IQulpmenl lltntal,
Llmllod lO Hearl DIHIII, co~. Atqulrod, Nlghtt, nWt/ lhllia: 71M·3pm, 71M·
1·8al·ata·3341
bdrmt, 3 lull l!elhl, I•Oir l'orllr. .-r.. • •• kin' uti!. paid lar aldorly and DOltr, laokhOO, lObeii
I. . .
•
I
Coronary Aroerv Oluau, Mull h.a'" a yesro uperl· apm, 3pm.f1 pm, 11pm·
garaga, tlnlthod bailment, 113 111 0111 ' (7• 0\•480
ur•r.:·
nto!OI
lqu+prnent.
_
o.~VtliiOCK
•
4 441 1
Hearl Failure, HVPtrltntlon, tnca driving lop hiiYy 71m, CIH 7·0·~92•1023,
2 lrplot, htrdwood lirt , 4at4 lrotn 1• 8 or (?40 44
(? 0 •08 8 ·
Cholotoorol Problomt, Any. lruckt. Mull be II Itill 2! lmmtdlall opening pari•
740·082·1 I8~
32.tialltr lpm
Alii CONOITIONIRS• Ctn• 4·H and "" Club P~lfor
thing Aoooolotod wllh 011· yurt ol 1~01111 :00•5:00, llmlitull lima AN In phyll·
'
lrll nd WI d ('·~··I 0 1111
I MI
balto and Anticoagulation. 1740)388·
'
.
Atmcdtlld Atnch Homo. MIIQI ca. Ill"
•
n ow. ' 11. •., Count tat. ••••
ond
on
• '-~·ND
, I:IOiand
1·100·111•
(?.0)1188•lld:lm
or
olen
ontot.
com~ttlll'll Ul·
Our otflco otloro on olio X·
Thraa
Bodroomt,
Bath,
on
lht
Marktt
Four
38
I~
6
blnltltl.
IIPOnd
1
0
Ray, EKG. Ullruound ol . URGENTLY · NEEDED·
Kllontn lnd Dining tO ocrt trtcll turroundtd
Ctii•PhOnt AudiOYOJO· COM.' (?.0) I•.017I,
-lolnt Large
lht Hearl, Carolldt. Slfllll · ploemo donort, torn SaO to J 03, 200 Main Strati. AllInrnl•tote
Room, 2 Oar GlfiQI, 2 llV Sntdl Alvtr Still Fortll
130 Oar ldiPttrl OtHIInt. QOATI FOIIIALI
.
lhlo
nowopsporlo
Tolling, .and Coronary Ar· seo. por wtok tor a or 3 Point Pt••••nt, wv aaaao
llcrtgl Buildlngt. Roducod and only mtnulll from
Anllnna lilt !han I ytar loor, FtmtiH Wllh
oubjnt
to tilt '""""'
llry Evaluallon. 24 Hour hour• wllkly. Call Blo Ult lmmtdlllo opining Part· Fllr
Prlot. (740)&lt;I•e.D&lt;~78
Forked Run Stall Park. ldt•
old. •100, (7.0)388·11441 or kldl tar tilt. Purtbrod II•
H..olnt Aolo11HI
Hearl Monitoring, 24 Hour Plllme Strvlet, ?40·811· llmt/Full·llmt nur11 P'lcll· -horolfoltMIIItplto
M
'H
I' al lar tho OUidOOII lcvtrl
(7.01••t·2·7
thlr. Vary rtllonablt.
Blood PrtiiUrt Monitoring, 8181 .
OIIILE.,. Oo\1tll
Atk obcul our Cltlranoa
17.0)110 0.11
h
llonar In Pnyelolan oltlce.
61
ldvtrtiH
1"V
Slrlll Eoho· EKG. Compro.'011 .,.LI!
IIIII Ctll Ul tOdl)' tor
Orubb'l PllnD• Tuning &amp; 8•:10
'
I tr
Cornr.llllve
111try
&amp; bon" prolorwn-. llmltlllon or
htntlvo Lab Tilling en
Filii MA,_ &amp; Dlff\ILI,
1100/mo. 7.0. lltpalrl. Probltmt? lfttd ~·;:t:P'":::·~~-:-:'-~
1111. IIPOnd to JA04, 100 dlto~mlnlllln bootltl tn
Sill. For Appolnlmtr11 eonm• 1••10 Htmpahlrt, a Anthony Lind company
·
'!'until? 0111 Tnt Plana Or. umoualn Ollllt• 11 rtglttar
M1ln Strtll, Point Pl1111nt, ,..._ 1otor, retiJion, 111
1101 MtdiOII PIIZI, 138
lodrocmt,
2
lllhl,
Rl•
Ltd,
I•IOQ.I1a
..
Hil
7•0·•41•4821
COW ... I wloafvel, I VII 10
wvawo
lttr~WIII-• or nlllontl4
Sioll Rouot 1eo. Galllpolle,
modeled. Call 10 view. W\WI.alcilnd.oom
lndlf)tndenl Harbllllt Cit Ollvt: 8 yumng btJIII, 110111
origin, ., .,, fntontlon to (740)38?·7117
Ololo •• (7&lt;10)4.e·l620
HCltJSEHOLD I trlbulor, Ctli For Product rod. bltOil, (74D)IN•R711
........,_h
B\JSINilllll
C·.t Bur Carry Out permll
1
112
t••eo
OIIVIOII
a
Dod·
Goon&amp;
Qj)portunltV. (740)« 1•1 Ill At g. liiOk Angul IUIIII
praltotnH, limitation •
1'11.\ININO
for sslt, Cholltr 1ownthlp,
room,
t
bath,
walherldlvtr
JIT
~arllnge I oldtr, out o
lllurlmlnttlol!l'
Mtlp,t Counly, ttnd !tlllrl lnfoCision Is proud Galllpollt Caflllr OOIII9f
lnaludtd, rtl. ••oollilll
HOIJSIIli
110'11 Ott Salt on allappllan•
AI~ATICN
MOTORI
0 ~~~:: ~~~~ ~raat
00 m~~a::
Thlt nswopsplr will nol
~~n~~:r."~cio~:.h~ ~~~ IO be a part of the
:~n~~~~~·S::
I'OK
RIM
cet.
SkeggaAppllanan
11
Atpalrtd,
Ntw
&amp;
Atbulll
In
navelor
1 WLC lollpu
t.,artlfl CIOH To Hom~
knowtn11r _.,
Pomeroy, Ohio
,
Oallipolis
• Vlnt St., (740)448·7381
SIODk, Can Aon l'llnl, t• gtntlt guaranttld t~oco:
11 Todavl 740;«0·&gt;1311 ,
0457
48768
ICI-tl\lnll tar fill
1 1
800·!31·8521.
uoh oan :104·371·8318
1·800·214·04!a,
H1111 Whloh !tin
commun ty
1815 Skyline 1••10, 2 bod• 1 •3 Bedroom• Forto1o11d OJ:PIItnou: Raoondltlonld
'
Alljflld·08·1174B.
I Claronct Roy OoWIII will
Vloflllon
lithe
laW •.OW
room,
vinyl
elctlng,
thlnglt
Hamil
From
1188/Ma,,
4'
M
o
Uhtrl,
Drve'!t
Aang11,
NIW
AND
UIID
ITIIL
Whllt
il)llng
henl I Ill yr.
nol lie rttpontlblt for eny
root, Call ~lrtnl 740-311• Down, 30 Ytlrt II U~ Aolrlgratort, Up TO lid Dlyt BINI Ill
Fl . • b Old tor 1111, 801 HOh
-•rtllffHV
dtbll othtr tnan my own · Are you looklna for
9948.
1\PPI. For Lllllngt, 800•3 II• Guaranllt&lt;ll WI 8tll Now • C ame, PI a"' If (740)111-3111
lnt-lltfllll
WAN'J'FJ)
op-o3·02
3323
IMI.
I
701.
Mayllg
Appllanoll,
Ffllnoh
rOr
Oncltlt,
Angle,
hen• ~;,;,;.;;~~-~~
-llngl -IIIII It!
a career wllh a
To
Do
1817
t4M70
Mant!on,
Htat
Oily
M"aytog,
r•o·•4a·t7al:
~11,
Plat
lllr,
llnl
Orating
Whllateylng htna 1 111 yra
lftll MW IPIPfl' . .
New Orleans trip, Ath•n•
Pump,
Building,
31A,
2
lull
a
IIR,
Galllpollt
Araa
.
C
lo
..
ror
Dralna,
Drlvtwtyl
6
old
eo oanfl 11011 7.0•811·
llrona,
arowinll
County gr011p, July 21·Aug.
twlllllllt:;,an l((lltl
1blu• 01
bathe.
Pavon.
(740)a41·
(740)2at·l7oa
cott"'m
..
nd•"
••P
Walkwayl.
L&amp;L
lorep
Mtt·
31st
All
Ml~ll
Lawn
Mowtfl
3, lor
1n1orm111on c111
. company?
1411
H •• •· 1
Tabltt, ale Opan Monday, Tueldly, =;·-:-~"':':"-~'=
and
Outdoor
Power
EQuip.
7&lt;10·814·2708
OJIPIIIIltrl
·
mont
Aapalrod.
Fflll
PIOftup
asR,
1
112
Both,
Wnlto
lola
Tablt. (7.0)3?8-Jiat WldnHCiay 1 Prldav, lam• wn~1 !.lying .,.,,.., 1 111
Dlal·Up Succne
.,., delivery ovallabll Ctll
3 ltdroom, 10111 tltotrlo Avo., 1378/mo. Dopolll I
•:30pm. Clotod Thurtdly, ~,. okl, 8(r otnll 1 p~ao 1
With lnfoCitlon
•
'
Mike (7•o) 4.a.7104 , '
trtlltr, mull movt from lot. Pltltrtnoll. ~7•o)•.e·t071 DI~!!J~ !IIlii I Ohllrt; Hldt
Iunday. (7.0)8II·HII
'
1 laturday
_
_:_,.;,.:....;;_~,;_- jijjjiii;;;;;;iiiiii~~=:; Call 740·992·2272
•·-· 4 po, Do&lt;lroom tu II, (740)«1-7300
I II \ '\ , I'! i l l I 1 I II 1 ,
A
I k' ~
Q10rg11 Ponablt BawmllllO
HOUH In COtlntry, Nlot tar Gill 7·0·Qg2•1181 afltr ~:::;:=:-.:;~~~~
re
you
00
InS
or
don't
haul
0111
I
•
to
lht
HoM£8
I·
3br,
2
bath,
t4.eo,
IQH
f'llllrod
Cout&gt;ft,
Pltllrtnot
•.
:10.
Old
FunlofMid
Iron
lain
Frto Puppy, 10 month oltl
mR SAI.t:
No"ll ltllndtl. ltrQI lOt In plut di~OIIt. Call '"" For Slit' RIOOndlliontd Tub. ~:10.)171·:1481
Atmlll
Blactt end Ton Mtlt, Medl· ~career and not jusl mill just Otlr304.e"il·1817
u "lob'"l
· ,
town. 2 poroltft 1 btJIIdlno. 1:00pm. (?40)318·2208
•• dr,
um Slzt. MI ..~ B,.od,
'
Hlndymen
Otnlfll air 111111 rail ltnot
- · ,.,., Ytll and . retrlg• Polaroid camera, Likl Now,
1'011 !lAY
Pleounl
Oltpoeltlon.
Dlal•l1p Su«m
WIN mow graH, wtod·tll I Aorta rlvtr Irani, lrlaW v~ Moving out of IIIII: Naw 3 Btdroom Homt triiOrt. Thompoona Allf)n• 110. 2 Crock Pole, II teol),
(740)379·9278
With Jn•oC'· Ion
n river bahkl build nyt, 3 PI, 2 Bath, a Fl,.pta· I:IO•Ie71·7•aa
OloH to Town UOO rent anct. a•o1 Jaokaon •••· Small mlorowave, Nlot, ' 1818 01, tltr 1111 A
0111
Frtt-Kitttnl 10 good nome.
1'
10
goldllth pondt oan' do 11, cot, Hardwood tloort, Apptue depotll. (740)2al·l874 rn.t, (:10.)811·1:141.
111. ~740)4•5·1-428
1110 ( 7~..41 ea•• vtnue,
D·• taii·J ons gr- ··*itt
a"""hl
'D
bl
prox
1,000
eq
H.
Ful
ae
..
Country
homH.
nlot
lOll,
·
,. ' ••
- · ""·
••'"" ,
.. ~.1 ..,. ng. ntatona • ment It eo 000 (7401••e. lcoalt&lt;l on Rl 33 btlwttn Taking applloallone
I Ql WUhtr &amp; Dryer, 11!
ontyoflow·whHo,ontblack·
rat11. Call'140-992·al21, 0138:
' ·
l'omlrov/AIItfnt. 0111140, bedroom lloma tn
1 Itch. Twin Bedroom ault, WaterlifMI lpaclal: il/4 100 1818 Ford 111f10!~.4ovf,, I
whlll. 7.0·99H248
Ilk tor Don or leave m11·
1300
I
.300. Mlplt Dining Room P81t2t ,OO i'tr 100; 1' 200 IIIHd, 113eo. I~ ChivY
882 ,2187 foldlllflt
Klltlnt to glw away, vory
Hgt.
3 lodloom homo, plut 1
'
Ttlltt with • onalrt, till. Pll UI.OO Ptr 1001 All •·10 IMt. Cab,
ptaytul &amp; cult. -7.0·84P.
Interior/ E•ttrlor Painting Do&lt;lroom nom. bc1h on ant Ju11 galling lltrlld? 111
(7.0)4.e·2510
11111 Comprttllon Fltllngt PAulo, tl800. 1112
2803
e porltnc d Rtf
101 In Mldctlaport In good tlmt il0r!1tbul'trt? No orad•
In IIIODfo,
- · ~" I "Plod, uti&lt;
Lorry't t..awn Core neodl A~atonaJo ' Aalt~··~· ocndllion, 158,eo0.00, IHn II? Cell (7.-o~:,.e 31'10 tor
=~~~~~ .,,:n::ar:~ liON IYANI
INTIIIPIIII- root, U1 · (7&lt;10)1111ol011
1
1011
I{!!Ir ANI&gt; I parl·llme taborer, .,peri· Elllml!tt. (H0)381·1041
7o!O·eel· moralntormlt
!ltd. Wuhlrt; cry111, 7
• Ohio, '100- 11110 luiOit l!fOII, ?.O·HI·
~
rOI.INil
, .... with cornmorolol mow· Alit tor Mlkl.
Lite MocJt1 ueod 111110 on 14M70 2 br. tralltr, 1271.00 Rlngtt, 1nd Allfrl~fllltlll,
.
;01:;11~=-~---=
.
••• preferred. 740·742· Lawn Care
3 Bedroom on Roull 2, rtnltd 101. 1.111 modtl tmall ~r!IOJ)· ·:~J2 u~~ Hart· lomf ettrt . . US. lkeaal
1112 Ford Mutlang OT
LAlli· Gormen Shorl hslrod 2103
Commercial' ruldtnllal, N· (304)178-1332
rJN Will oontldtr tradl on
y • ' '
~:lancll, 71 VIne 11.,
BuuntNo
I vorttO tlJPir charger, wllli
Polnllr Bird Dog. Whitt with Uvt In fill Aohton Meson otneod, lnourod, ratOIIIIitt 3 bedroom I bath brlok r:::rl~~i ~ I((Utl VtiUt z bedroom molllll home lor ( )ol.e•?JII
Stil'l'l.ml
, nsw llrlt and Gltromt pony
brown lf)OII, (7o40)245·lld20 County /lin? Aullsm Strv· raiH, trn utlmatot upon ranch on \ .1 1111 ""'·
•
rent, no pill, ~7.0)882· Mollohan CarPI!!, 202 Clark
whettt, CD player, many
Missing Cot Cfttm colored lett Clnttr It IOC&lt;Iilllng Ill' viii! 304-578-4044
- r carPI! and VInyl full Lcl3b100118713 Dodrccm aiH
Chapel ACid, l'orllr, Ohio.
brjolt, _.r plpn, llfl(ll, Hklng U,QCO,OO,
melt 011 Family Plf Fair ptlcotlonl tor psrt lit~~~ tm· Lawn Cllrt
( partially tlnllh· Wlndeor mollllt llomeloOit·
11•01•41-7444 1•117·130·
llnttlt ate. Ctaudf 7.0·8•1·1211
grcundl
'1111
coH ployottlnfltnlld n provld· Looking 101 Quellty work? Ill), nsw aPQIIIIIOII, 2 oar od In Mlddltport, on., In· ~ be~:'~ =·D~' 1182, 'r" llllmltet. 1111'
Alo Grandt, CH 1992 HO/Idt Aooord IIIGII
?40 eel.e:IZ~·
tng dlroct Hrvlceo lor lndt· Call Ul LoofoJ, 1c ·•-· Qllfllll, At. U tbc!Vt Ntw oludll
IPPIIInGII, WV a,..,
• 1,....1 financing, lid daye lime II
ltnl Dondll!on 4 .,•_ Ali
•
vktuolt wllh tltVt1oprntfttal woflc? ·Clll thsngot~'""""" Mavtn 304·all4117
•z1 ,000.00. Day coil r.-o. Aaqulred. HUD approved. o11h. VItal Mutar Cord.
l'owM N:l Ml.. Tl"""rJ.
1 guye.
ib
I diHbiiKIH !lYing In fill All!992.SU1 Ilk fer 811aron· (7.01281·8711 or (7.01••1· Drlvt• a· little. UWI &amp;lot.
• • ,..., rat, VfiV
yAIIDSAJJ!
ton Muon county trta. =~n~:'· - ':; 3Do&lt;lroum,21lelh,2cart~ avtnlng aftlr 1 740·t82! 0813
:'/~mr~~~~n~2~1 1 0 ~·
,
• Oontlc1: Ptreonnol P.O. 992•1131
'
~~~~r~ ~,:
41•1·
Av1H1blt Now, 21R, Galftp. Naw 1 Ueod turnltur• otore
(740)iz4e.HM
•
8o!o 807, Huntington, Wll.
'•
MalOn Co 1 p 1 1 olio 1111 t2711mo 1200 below Holldt)' Inn, l&lt;lntu• 12 wtt Gkl 111111 Aottwttllr ~:::=;;;:.=;=.::--:-~
il VAIIDSA!z. I21710orpt-phontl21- Non•Bmoklng, Ohrlltlln
!26,000. 7
Aolct ~~~~~~~·4 :,:',: dapotlt. water &amp; 1rltn In· ga. Utod oouoht!, mtt· JIUI), tull bloodtcl, •1eo.oo. lfl• Cavalier,
door,
GAWI'OIJfl
eot4r~byl.1ondlyl- Mom wiN bfll&gt;vtlt In mv
bllt home OIICII'I :lbtd oludld. (140)4•1·0•11, fr-.dr-ra,Oawtlfl. ?40-t82-H1•
12211. 1HI ltrllf!,
13-02
homo. Clll Klm•t (740)«f. 3 - 00111 In Mldtlltpotl roon&gt;'2 bluW ~ Mtlon: (740)oUI·lld41
tr, ·TaP~In~ Qlt rl!IQt,
2111, 1110 lltltta QT.
1.o011 Homo Htaltlo Aatna\1 3111
•
lotoool btJt. Cllfllloflt, OhiO. Adorable AMC FOIIIIIIH, IHI. 1111 cavalier, :1
01u Tom MG.,.., a111; ., Dtk 01111,a,., t porehH,
Garage lett. Orat&gt;am now hiring tor tull.flmi RN. lprtntiiVtnge
apm,(1.0)tf2.N&lt;JI.
JMNod roao, pl~101 1001, ~or-=~oom( Tralttr (7.o).ue-4781
Ooldtn lltlrllvtrt. 1 Min11- a,oor, tiHI. 1111 •10,
lohoOI Ad 011 141 . V1r1cul l'rM home hssllll ~ Homo rernodlllrit' and 11
t!on CION to HUmlnQIOII &amp; lOti
•
• 40)3Uo
turt l'ooalt, loltert. VII ( 3;4,.81• COOK MOI'OIII.
0000 buyt. Ill)' 4- ltOC&lt;I but not - . y. w1 pelro, rootint, Dhlln link • uHCI hcmH ltfl, Mutt Pt. lo!H..nt 11 mlntMt 1o
•
Sloolri'IM
Oheakld. ~7.-o)318·2Ut
7...~ot
lth, ~~.
Ollar oomptlltiYI Wlgll, flnoi,CIItltorn wood I _, 1740~ 70 ·
1oyota, (:104lH2•1140
GooiJI
AI(() Cltow.Qiow l'upj!ltl, !Itt Qhevy Lumina, H 000
vard 1111. 11t Mabetlns hlstlh lnt~rano., lnd ·a ftnott, lnturanot rtpalre. e lloorJII. Plfti'IIOt, 1 112 Ntw too2 3 111120111 OrliY
e Wllfcl okl, Ctllaftar ~ mlltl, 1.1 WI 111{11111, Hi,;
Dr., Monday 811102 1 1,.... trt.ndly work atmoljllllra. CIIHk our pi'IOII Nlwt ball!, lull bell- or.1t11 1 IHI down and ' onlY
Prill leer VO.UI lOW Ce• w..-e, ~lmt W.. Tlflll, Alklnt t40QO,
dloV 117/02.
~:''f:.~l ~;'\t =--~::: ltttmeiH
'r.~.O: ~":: UOUI Ptl month. Call 4t0 111 1Wt~ •• 1 111, mo. Drtw 28, WIIGM 411 tndt. ~7it0)44f•IIU
(:104)!11·1121
l'ttd 1111. May 11. t:ooem-. Alit., Cllltlpotll, OH or Hnd
Hill l'~m, Ptnottl In· NIIIMI 740-HI-7171.
U81;;~f'll! - 1 ~111· Loll d l~lrll, UNCfCtlty 1 AKO lltg, GoldtrllltlltMr IH7 I'Ontlao Grl"d Am.
l :fiOPII!, ,o,lllr O'dtll't rnumo 1o: PO eo. 101, ~ ~••:f Ofound
, 1 112 011 ga. Now Doublowlda on 1•1
jiN.74
Fto-~'f Conclltlon. f'llllllfll, vtt oheakld, Ill II. oldrl-:l:looviH, 14,111.
LIWIICMeiiUIIdlng- OIINpollt, OH 4H31. Ft~~- ·~ •• 1 /
r~.a'
aore,lmllll!e!Ow
.
(7.-o)44f-UI4.
·
_ , l l 1 i l l i w o r r n t d. rttldv1o (:104)1'1
14
lloD'I Marltll
an
IPI)Ointmem 0111
• ~·- 0 11" ng I 1 QIIIIPQIII.
NO 000
IIAUTII'II~
APAII'I'
1110 now •121.00 M :104v..~·1117. AltO lli&lt;lnO an llfllldl~ ptiOI. (7.-o1aaa. 1841
' ' No Crodltl lid Cltdltl Ill MII4TI /loT IUDGIT , 11;
AHr1Q1Ja
17~1141
~ IIWrn ~I tllleod,
4 VAlli) SAtz.
I
ear. AlciN, no ... C7rm' ., (7&gt;10)112·
Tltlll Homt llllytrt/ ~AI Cll AT JACIIIOH ••
•
:::-:;:·;:ti:::;IOO~,j1~:!!!!!:c:.:;MIII:.:,::;..
~IMmoc.£ ptr1tno1o ~· Agonoy lilt
!Mntl GO\Itrt11111111 ,HA TATI8 l2 V'-ood Drlvl
1\KC !ltgillltrttl CflooDtltl !HI !Cia IHI'IIGt I~
1 ~ tf'-~ltbll. Call trom
dlrlift. 101.
llfusll 11oa PO.OO 1 ht
C:m;"
1113, Walfl to luy or HI. ~IYtrt"" Arlit•
~
p~ 4WO, IMK mltN,
1 4
DorW ~ flit..,_.; Moelutl'l " - - " 0111 ZH71-~'84
itltGIOfr1 or.1111101t Of Olbtnt1l
'
I rnoviH. Ctlt 140- J'l."i~ ~
Maftl1: Milt, vi"'Malf, •(T.-o)441• (1.-oiMI-0141,
tnoo • ....., Nil prtcet. 11111n0 dl k¥lh0001, toAt 111 w•doer_IIUIIJna,otllft lnd doOIOit _,., 01n1111 Want • ,... l1otlll7 0wt1 ~ lqual H0111ing 8IHI2I. · ~~~H "t.oore, 0011
· 1111
lrNu
l!eOH - · Atbenv • paMrroa, ptdl up ~ ,_, _,. ,.. """- ltr, Otrllrat IIHI, 4 bod• Y!lfjr 0!¥!1 ltnd1 WI dot Ctlt =:: Y·
GWM«
4Difl
tto Till'
· · - 1·112 llathl, Ml
·
r.o-.e20o 11on 11 _ . , &amp; 11r1ng- C:I04)17Wa71
tM4 101 vour ,... Furntll1ltl 3 roome beth
'
·
CtCC.efiii.MitiiNit Oooflo cru~le A1HoM11f0 Dw
bttwHn
1:a
""'monl, o-tiQI. on one
~~ Trldt IN ...,. CIHn, No - · 1
"T" ~nltl f'll~, tall LOOitl 6Wlt1cJoWI, CD 1'111'•
IO'.oo.m. Mondtr lfl&lt;lr laf. Will 00 Lawn mowf11{1, ICII'e 101 Mil II.... Wtll .,
dlpoflt
rfqutrod.
U!!!n9
tt (740)+11·NOO
uruay,
WI W apprfllt-.ty 10 (1&lt;10)44follll
and
'
4HI
HonCII Aoltlld 1JC T/wlno
MOOII.8
Ausly.
'
11buf1 7 fMitr CI!Hflt, Afk. uHd •homH 1111 IHtdtt Purnlallld lftloll
All
' FuM IIDDdttl IIIII MMitl
, 1'41111) AIIM!1fnllt11
-

l

1'1at Work,

BIJSIN&amp;\'i

Sunset Home
Construction

•

lndependenl

PLUMBING

Di•lri hnto r

4055th SII'HI
Ntw Haven, wv

I Lost 27 lb.
in 32 days.

•Residential

100%
naturai/Guaran~eed

740·992·7036
-~

e;:;
882·2343

�...
www.m.,. ; liJ'Il
rtlnel com

p . . . . . The Dally Stntlnet

a Melp track results, 12

IIIlA Ca 11. .014 haal•

.==-.

MIMII

•

=i¥'.

at

...,......
,-....
....
·····-··=~,.
n ll
,,.,.

....

-...... .
-.,,,,,

-

V'trl

,.
""

bb

....

- . t.
~­
•• ...
xr"-

t

MtlaiCIIIJt(l

Rio Grande

CiiloolOI- ••

Two of the superstars of the game died
earlier this year. First,
on j~IIUnl)l \7 If U\e
age of 74, w:~s Norman Kay. He was
recoiJniud as one of
the llrc:~t gentlemen
who tver played
bridge in this -- or
any ~- country~ Healways had a kind comment for every.one,
and never c:ritic:ized
anyone.
K"Y and Edgu
Kaplun nre arguably
the best p4ir never to
win a world title.
(They (Ollected two
silver iuedah.) Kay
had I0 mll)or national
FRANK &amp; EARNEST
team victories: four
p.;;:::.;,;:..::.:=.=:...::..:..____~-~----......,--::-"':""'---~-~---., ·.RoisinQe11, two Spin/tiOVT TyiO TfolOUI/11'10
golus and four Van1
.J'
llJGJC$ S"'OV
..O !!,.
tlerbilts. He also won
r
r&gt;
~
· 17 other North
l&gt;O IT • ~~~,
American titles.
This deal occurred
~luring the. 1986 Vanderbilt, which Kay
J ami Kaplan won with
~
teammates Richard
i&gt;11VIicek and Bill
Root.
-&lt;
K:tplan's opening
THE BORN LOSER
.
was a weak no-trump,
"
...
.
~
promising 12-14
...r.lf\(&gt;..\ f'Jl.f.. 'l'OU UP 10, CHieF? .. C.I-IE:(.l(jJ-1~ Ttl£ J..IE.W Re:ce~
fN.J(.I~~ ~ ~u_ ffiE. i ~
points.
~€, C.f/!0~0 N'-10 {"JJ.. "11-\€:
Of QI...IR. we.e ~m: ee:FWE we:
After winning tric.k
~ NI!E DOTitO,
one
with dummy's
~:-:::::::::i:~r a.~LtNE.! J
El-\?
· dinmond king, ·Kay
· culled for the spade
I
kin11, which East won
with the ace. A club
switch looks auto•
matic now •• ~nd defeats the · c:ontnc:t.
West ta'ltes South's
king with his ace an.d
leads a trump. However, East returned u
.diamond.
Kay didn't givtt

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ACAAIIItlhl'IONI.'nRIIUtii.COM

IUO ORAND£ - 8. . tilts ln

hi&amp;her education at the state

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Rio Orandt/R.Io Orande Community
Colltae, forti~ the tllmlnllioo Of
1\....e .aministntive staff positions last

Reds win _ ·.-. .HDunn, 11

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WOULD TI-lE JUD&amp;E
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PIIIIVIOUS SOI.UT10N- 'II I'd- me at a pany, I'd M\111'
lll'lt a- up ancl ""1""·'- Duttin Hot!mM
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Momentum builds for
OxyContin solutions
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them a second
cUF T EA
cl.tnnce. He won. with .
~
1
Ius ac:e, ruffed h11 last . . . . . . .
diamond with dum•
·
my's spad!! que~n, ~nd
R 0 ME W
led a. heart to has mne,
1
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keepm11East.otTplay.
~~·~-~·~=·~ ,..
Maybe tha avotd· . .nnce play would force
Mu B v p
I hid driven
out the heart queen;
I
find my dog. latopped
l-IE PR08A8L'I' WANTS M'f
or perhaps the hearts
.. en old pent II he hld IHn tne a01a.
'Sure, he leughed , 'For
OPINION ON SOME 085CUitE
If
would
be
3-3:
or,
_6 m
__ln_u,ttl h1'1 been following
POINT OF l.AW ..
all · else failed, East
DR YL UE •
1
might have the club
tho :h·~~~~~~ ~:~~~~~
1 G Completo
by
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In
the
Ce
a ·
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As you can see, the , you ••• op rom 1'-P
second of these possl·
bilities worked out.
Kay's 10 tricks .were
four spades, three
hearts, two diamonds
·SCIIAMoi.ITS ANIWIII
and a diamond ru.lf in
Enough - Queah • Ounce ~ Locate • HE 00/!S~J'T
the dummy.
'What's the metter?" one c'bedeaked the other.
MAYS
How many people smiled the coed, 'my boyfriend end I are worklnp
are known instantly cur wedding plena. I went one lnd HE DOESN'T.'
by only ·one name?
Norman was one in .'
---bridge. ---~

idi11 tu a1k UUIII!OIII WhO hal

.

sonnet policy, individUltls had 1.() be hijjhet education 1\el\t ~ar. because
notifltd lhll.t their tontl'llt~ ~ not we wont on a t\11()-~ar. biennial bud•
being renewed as of Mil)' I.
get.''
DOrsey said se~l po.~itions th11t Olney said Gov. Bob "1:.11\ has stat- ·
will btcilme vocant by the end of the ed that 1\mding for the next contract
cu~t fiscal ~ will not be filled liS pe1; 00 will be the same as it has beert
the university and community coll~ge for the cumnt period, inl:loolng the "
c:ontlnue 1.() seek funds 1.() mllke up fur ~t cut, meaning no further cu~
the shortfall in the budget.
should be mnde.
tn spite of the budset crunch, Durlo'eY snld n la~:k ·of funding for
Dorsey said he did not foresee drnstic state colle.,..s nnd universities is a
in«ellses in tuition.
.
e"For the privnte instit.ulion. 1 wtluld national problem, but added that the
soy no," he said. "Our nveruge will be probltm set\ms to be more serious in
abOut the same thtlt it's been in the Ohio.
pu ·t, probllbly 111001td 5 pe~t.
'"Ohio is particularly hard-hit,
"Wh11t the con1munity collel!e bet:IIU1\C its funding bnse for hl8her
im:reuse will be we don't know," he edm:ution is not as strong, not BS large
Added. "It depends on how ntuch to begin with us most other stateS," he
money' the state takes back from the suid. "We stun from n very ditllcult
money it's already ttpproprinted for · position.''

WORKIN'MAN

.....

Tuooday; Moy 7, 2002
You'll br ri~l1t if you lfllle .
thO! your dolllny It In your
own hand• In tho yrar ahend.
With you In &lt;c&gt;ntrol, exciting
tl1in~• coul.t bo In tho offing
(or you both ponun•lly ond 01
the wurkplac:r .•
TAUitUS (April 20-May
20) •• Sue&lt;ru and power
wo11'1 come (rom thiniC', but
from ponplc who can help
you fuiUU yu\lr hol'N!~ :.md 11\1hitiom. ·Fortunately, you'll
dr•w them to you. Trylllg 10
1•otc·h up • broken rontonce1
The Amo-(:roph Match·
maker cnn "''II' you under·
1tmnd what tu du to mnkt the
rdntinll!hlp work. Mall S2. 7~
to Matchmnker. c/o this
new1papor. 1'.0. llox 1758,
Murray Hill . Station, NeiY
Ynrk. NY 101~1,,
GEMINI (M•y 21-June 20) ·
• Snccc" IYill be Inevitable If
jyom ohjc&lt;tives are dearly de·
fined. If you ouempt to feel
your way throu~h thinll', it'll
be Another ltOty .
CANCEl~ Qune 21·July
22) •• It may not be • bod

'"llle . community college contnltt
. decrwtd O\'lf 6 percent In the middle .
of the yur- tti11t's about. $302,000
- and that's a hit that we took In
J111~~~ry," said Dr, Bwry M. Dorsey.
•·so wh11t we have is n dimcult
flnnntinl situation which i~ sh11red by
~!dent of UROIROCC.
''So thnt's a ·slanlfi~t amount of all the Stllte institutions in Ohio. And
money to lose In the middle of the what we hnd 11&gt; do this week - for us
year when your budget's lll~lldy set," it wa non·renewul of positions - is
budded. "And that'safter 10 yem of being done by most, if not ull, of the
· steadily deteriorating sltlte suppon for statelnstitutions," Dorsey !lltid.
Under terms of UR.GIROCC perhlallor education.

staff positions

'·

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le~l

lllVe tUell a toll on the Unl\'tl'$lty of

==-

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lla•dtR N&amp;Wiflf It'

your thlnklnJ. He or 1he
could point you ·111 tho rlalit
direction.
·
LEO Quly 23-AuK. 22) ·•
Your illltln&lt;lo con&lt;trnht¥ 1he
manaMement of your cnlnntercl•l or Jinonclol art"aln
mlaht be riQht on ur•et.
Combine them with your
loalc when hondllna a delicate
lnu1. ,
VII~CO (Aus. 23-Sepl. 2:1)
•• De explicit and dtllberalt
with your. one-on·ono deollnp, and don't take anythina
for granted. When people are
confused about your lnlfn•
tiont, they're not opt to be
followed.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) lr you ahow klndneu and
conolderation 10 your eoworken, it will be returned to
you two-fold. Deoldt1, productivity goet "P when til
work together In unlton ,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) •• Even though h ml1ht
take 1 Ont baloncln11 tct &amp;e.
tween work lnd ploy, you'll
adroitly know how to junJe
both Important lllAittn ond
lime to 11\IOY younelf,
' SAOITTAiliUS (Nov. 23Doc. 21) -· It'll be huponant

r

to both your egu and hnaa•
10 cr01
. atht nl1h 1\ne Intact - ~·
• 11'11 @IVt you the SratiRca- ·
lion you need to IUtcanfullyl ·
conapleto what you nan.
·•
CAt•RtCORN (Dec. 22-1,
Jan. 19) ·· Your perception of•o
people and thlniJI could bo 1
extremely occtlrRte. Utlllle~.
tlllo ability to your advanuse •
and make cmaln no one
makn any judgment calli for t
you .
•
AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb,l
1\1) -· While quietly workln1 •
on your nwn, you mlsht ;
IIUIIlblt &amp;CrOll IOMielhlnl that •
you didn't ahlnk you could~
acqulr• lndet•endenlly of oth·
en. 11'11 bo you11 for the tak f
.l

'"11·
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mmh 20) :

or ..tr-

- Your mona ''""
awarenen cou ld bt aood.
However, bo coanlunt of the
lntorato ofothrn -- don'tla·
nore anyone In ahe proce11. .•
ARIES (March 21 · Aprll 19) •
-- You mlsht be extremely
lmprtnlpnoble, and thit ltn'•;
all bod, provided thai thote
with whom you Involve
youraelf Art upbe11, proptt~\
live and know where they're~
goln11,

•

OALLIPOUS - Col.
Kenneth L. Morckel,
superintendent of tho
State Highway Patrol,
announced that troopers
wm operate a checkpoint
to deter a!)d Intercept
drlnklna drivers thls
weekend.
·
Curreritly, the location
of the upcomina chock·
point Is undisclosed.
"h. is our intent to
Inform people that troopers will be vigilant in
dotectlna and apprehend. Ina Impaired drivers,"
Morckel said, "As part of
our helahtened enforce·
ment efforts, this year the
patrol plans to more than
double tho 19 sobriety
checkpoints we coordl~
nated ln 200 I.
· "We want to Impress
upon those who will be
consumlna alcohol to
plan for a Cleslanated driver or to · make other
arranaements," Morckel
said ..

........
Wilt Vln~lnla

.

Cilli 21: 2-5·1o-11-17-19

lnclex
I lldlllll • II .....

Calender
Cl11slfleds
Comics
Deer Abby
1
Edltorlals
1Movles
Obkuaries
Sports
Weather
• 2002 Olllo Vtllfr

P11111 1H Solutlotlt. AS

OLD TURTLE!?

Exhibit highlights fund-raiser
for restoration project
IV CMAIILINI KOIIILIOH

Picks: 1-7-6
Pick 4: 2-3-4· 7
lu~ 1: 2-25·26-31·32
Pick 1 n!l!d: 3·2-6
Pick 4 nljht: 1·1-8-i
D1I!Y S: 1.0.2 ·

GALLIPOLIS - The momei'ltum Is building to tackle
problems cnused by OxyContin addiction In Gnnin County
nnd th~ surrounding nreu following the rec~nt public rneetinll cnllilll! for solutions.
Potential volunteers to s~rve on n tusk force are expected
to meet Thursday nt Holzer Medical Center to determine a
membership lisl.
·
·
V\llunteors 11N needed to serve on PQtcntinl committees
linked to the tusk force focusing on m dlcul, finnncilllttnd
spirltunl approuches, umong others.
"We've got u core of Interested tltl:tens smrted," said
Oalllpolis City Commissioner Rithnrd Moore. one·of the
nrguni:ters of u community-based response to Issues rulsed
by OxyContln ubuse. .
"They know wh111 the problem Is with OxyContin, and
with this cross-section of concerned citl:tens, this wl11 happen," he udded.
Moore nnd other orgAnl:ters referred to tlndlns short-term
treatment options for OxyContin ubus11rs, especially .those
tunllng to crime to support their hubit. Once those options
huve been estubllshed, the tusk force will pursue the possi·
bllity of creutln11n treatment center.
"We huvc to look nt immediute, short·tcmn help to keeP.
these fltOple ulive und work on u long-term solution,'
uddtd Oulllpolls Pntrolmun Greg Fru~ier, one of the udvn·

HO!FI.ICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Ohio

DII!Y 4: 2-()-9-5

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KKELLYeMYDAILYmiBUNE.COM

A5
83-5

86
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CHBSTER - An exhibit of oil polntlnas by
Horman L. Stewart of the Hlglter Images
Studio at Oak Hill will be held at the Chester
Courthouse Saturday to complement a project
to raise money for restoration of the old
Chester Academy.
·
The display, which will Include a do~Ji or .
so pieces of art, mostly portraits, Is an "lidded
attraction" to a pancake breakfast belnf
served In the academy bulldlna from 8· 1
a.m., accotdlna to Dale Colburn of the
Chester Shade Historical Society.
Cost of the breakfast Is $4. VIew Ina of the
Stewart's oil palntlnas Is free .
The breakfast will be served by Chester
Council, Dauahters of America, who for near·
ly 50 years has been meetlnaln the Academy
))ulldlna.
. Stewart is an awa.rd-wlnnlna artist who
araduated from the New York Institute of
Photoaraphy before studylna an under the
well-linown oil portrait artist l&lt;.aren Patton of
Ooddntd, Kan.: land$cape artist, Dorothy ART DI.,LAY- Artist Herman Stewart of tlie
Dent of Mlasouri· and 0111')' Jenkins, who spe- Hllher !melts Studio et Oak Hill will have en
cializes in oil palntlnas of flowers on televi- art
1haw feeturlnl partralta In on Saturday
llon.
from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. et the Chester
· lll1111 1M Cite.,, AS
Courthouse. (Submitted)

Robert Scarberry ol Pomeroy thlnka thla bo~ turtle Ia 80
yeara old, end !rom the carved Inscription found on the tur·
tie's undaralda, he'a right. The turtle was discovered on the
Ocu1 and Audrey Howard property near Willow Creek by
Oou1 Howard Jr., 16, of Johnstown, over the weeKend .. A
carving, '1922- C.L.C." leeda Scarberry and the Howards
to believe the turtle hea lived the better part of a century In
Meigs County, meklna It one of the Broderick Hollow oom·
munlty'• oldnt residents. (Brian J. Reed)

Hoi.. M«/lcal C111Jirl '" Oallipo/la and Joclcton. Ohio, are I!OW accopllne applicaH011•
far Nfiii!Mtl ""-· ~ olltr - per Jitm raMI, IUIH011 P'llimbui'HIMflt, flt.lciblt tchtcWI/11(
8 cmJ I2 ho.r J.iflo, ln·hooN CE opportunltltt, rolocallon auiJiance, weelctfK/ JllferenHol.
cmJ a •lfn-cHI bon,. ol $3000. l'ooiHont are ovallohlo In !I.e following ortat:

Medical/Surgery • Critical Care • EmervlfiCY Department
ObsWric• • Pediatrics
Allllttecl poJIHon• roquirt praptr ''-'"'"' In Ohio.
IF ln~ertated, pleo~t conroct:
Human RtlouiW! Dap~rlmlt~. Holm Medical Cent.r, 100 Joeklllft Pllce, Galllpolit, Ohio

,.......

446•1' 01 ••••

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
www.holzer.org

~5631

446·11 06

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I

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