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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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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

Don C. Becker, 71
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WOULD TI-lE JUD&amp;E
WANT TO SEE US 7

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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
.

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
· I~
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
lllllnl
In
the
Ce
a ·
...__,__,_....1.---'L.-.1......1
d I
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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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

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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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The Daily Sentinel

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'JJ dl:aldl" May I

Critics claim deal
is too costly
'

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5""'Y ... Cli&gt;ldy CIIAi&lt;l!

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Stormy weather continues
llV ·THE ASSOCLAltD PRESS

Showers and thunderstorms are forecast for the region on
· Wednesday and Thursday as • frontal system stalls, then backtrucks across the l~, the National Weather Service said.
Forecasters said some flash flooding was possible where
heavy ruins fe!l 01\ .already s~:turatcd around. . . ' .
Dr1er Canaduln 11:r was eltpected to reach the area by Friday.
Lows tonight were eltpected to be in the 60s. ·
Highs on Wednesday were predicted in the 80s.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:32, and sunrise on Wednesday is
at 6:23a.m.
Weather fol'ftut

Tonight ... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Rain may be heavy at times. Lows in the lower
60s. Light and variable winds. ChAnce of rain SO percent.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and
thunderstom1s. Rain may be heavy at times. Highs in the
lower 80s. Southwest winds S to IS mph. Chance of rain SO

pcrccm.

.

.

Wednesday night ... Pnrtly cloudy with a chance of showers
und thunderstorms. Rain may be heavy at times. Lows in the
mid 60s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Extended fonrast
Thursday... Showers and thunderstorms likely. Rain may be
heavy at times. Highs in the upper 70s. Chance of rain 70 per·
cent.
Thursday night... Panly cloudy. Lows near SO.
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs near 70.
Saturday... Ponly cloudy. Lows near 40, highs in the mid

.

7~ .

Sunday...Mostly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunder·
storms overnight. Lows In the mid 50s and highs near 80.
Mondny... Mostiy cloudy with a chance of showerS and
thunc;lerstorms. Lows in the.upper 50s, highs In the mid 70s.

.

COLUMBUS (AP)
.
The state ~ave Bank One
1 $2S.2 .mtllion contract
extension Monday to collect and disburse child
support payments for six
more months despite crit·
icism that the cost is too
expensive.
The Ohio Department
of Job and Family
Services
asked
the
Controlling Board, which
decides
much
state
spending, to give it more
12me to chose a vendor
through a competitive
process.
Last · year, the panel
granted a one-year ex ten·
sion to Bank One's unbid
contract for the same reason. The department had
decided to competitively
bid the contract after
being critlci:r:ed
for
granting several .unbid
contracts for human scr·
vices computer projects.
Christopher Carlson,
deputy director of the
Office
of
Contract
Administration.
told
board members
that
sollcltina bids for this
project has been complex
and the department w11s
being careful so the best
vendor is a warded the
contract.
"Our hope Is out of this
competitive process we
could get the most effi·
cient and cheapest sys·
tern that we can possibly
get," Carlson said.
Potential vendors have
until May 14 to submit
bids and the state n.pects
to select a contractor
within three to four
months.
Democrau Sen. Tom
Roberts of Dayton and
Rep; Sylvester Patton of
Youngatown told Carlaon

Media groups: New
pomography . Is
unconstitutional
sponsor, Rep. Iim Hughes, a Columbus
Republican.
Hughes said the bill was narrowly tailored to conform with federal court dec!·
aions on obscenity laws.
· His bill added to the 1974 definition of
the word "material," so that It includes
WORTHINGTON (AP) _ An anti- · images that appear on a computer monitor,
pornography law that prosecuton say Is TV screen or liquid crystal ilisplay, trans·
aimed only at sexual predators could affect mltted via e·maH .throuah 'the Internet, or
mainstream literature and movies,. says a recorded on a computer hard drive or flop·
group that sued to overturn the measure ·PY disk.
.
_
Monilay, hours after Gov. Bob Tart signed .Simply connectms to a Web site does not
11
vtolate the law, says an analysis by the
·The law adds computer images to the list Loalalative Services Commiaaion. The
of possible ways to display sexually expllc· image must be pan of~ "direct presentation
it material and other content deemed to a specific, inown JUVenile or group of
"harmful to juveniles." But opponents say known juveniles."
the law is unconstitutional.
The group challenalng the law says they
"The lawyers are tellinl us ... in all like· don't question the state's power to 110p
lihood the~ . believ~ the Ohio law will be ~hild pornography or enticing minora Into
sustained,' Taft u:d Monday after sianing :nappropriate activity.
the bill ut City Hail in this Columbus suli·
But bannins diuemination of harmful
urb.
materials on the Internet crimlnall~ea a
. "This bill leaves no doubt: If you exploit broad range of constitutionally protected
children in 'Ohio through any medium, you speech for users worldwide, Bamberger
will be punished," Taft said.
said.
.
.
. .
Attorneys for n Dayton bookstore owner,
Co.uns have ruled aaa1nst slmtlar lawa :n .
Ohio Newspaper Association, Video other states, he said.
Software Dealers of America and others
"The way the Internet is aet up, you can·
filed a challenge Monday in U.S. District not diatlnguiah between atates 1~ terms of
Court in Dayton. The group aald the defin· the people that receive transmiu:on• on the
ilion or "harmful" Is too broad and unfairly Internet, nor can you distinguiah and
ilpplies Ohio standards to the Internet, a exclude minora," Bam~erger said.
11lobal medium:
Huahea wrote the btl! because of a case
"It covers violence. It covers glamorlza. he han_died while an miuant proaeuctor in
tlon or crime. It coven brutality," said Franklin County. Mark Maxwell of Oxford
:Michael Bamberger, an attorrtcy for the wu sentenced to 18 years in prison In 1999
;opponents. "It coven many things, all of on 18 counts related to enticing minors into
aex.throuah Internet chat rooms and ~-mail.
:which are first Amendment,rotected."
Jim Latham, co-owner o Wilkie News Maxwell was arrested at a Worth:ngton
bookstore in Dayton, said he would be ice cream llore, where he set up a meeting
afraid even to display queationable materi· with a 13-year-oid girl, who wore a police
al and might have to card juvenllea or cor· wire.
don off aections of his store.
· But Hughes said four counts . were dis·
The ~'harmful to juvenllea" definition has missed because juror• said the law on dis·
:been law for 26 years, and police and pros· seminating pornography did n&lt;&gt;t include
:ecutors so far have not a_one after books or electronic images.
movies, countered Franklin County
A 2001 state law covers using the Internet
Prosecutor Ron O'Brien.
or telerhone to solicit sex from minors.
"This bill does not make an7thing else Severa police agencies in Ohio have task
Illegal that is not lllegal now,' agreed lts forces dedicated to Internet crimes.

Computer images now
within new legislation~
scope

- ------·-------

they were concerned
about paying $25.2 million to extend a contract
by six months when some
states pay much less for
an entire year.
·
Officials in New York
and Pennsylvania, where
caseloads are similar to
Ohio's, said Monday that
they are paying contrac·
tors about $16 million
and
$20.S
million.
respectively, to di.stribute
child-support checks for
one year.
Since December 1999,
the state has agreed to
pay Bank One about $115
million to run the system
in which county child
support offices send payments to the state, which
then deposits the money
in the Bank One account
for distribution.
Roberts said he was
appalled at how much
money Ohio has spent o.n
the contract when tl

Carlson said.
Still, he said: "Are we
assured that the price we
are gettins currently is
absolutely the best price
we can get, 1 cannot
assure you of that."
Under Bank One, the
collection and payment
system has been criti ctzed
for
computer
breakdowns, missed pay·
ments and other problems
since it began processing
child support cases in
October 2000.
Last year, Bank One
came under fire for
charging $3 to noncus ,
tomers to cash checks
drawn on the bank's com·
pulers, but it stopped that
practice at the request of
department officials. The
bank also printed more
than 1,000 child support
checks on the wrong-col·
ored paper, causing some

r~iPb~~~~c~n~~~d~~5g~~~P·

• Th1s proposal1s holding the pCH?ple . of th~
state of ~hto .. hostage,
Roberts satd. It smei.is.
I'll support it, but wuh
my hands· on my nose."
Carlson said It's unfair
to compare costs across
state a .&amp;a cause terms of
the contracts are differ- ·
ent in other states.
"It really Ia an apples
to o~angea comparison,''

The Dally Sentinel • .Pilge A 3

Obituaries
Don c. Becker

parents to be accused of
trying to cash fraudulent
checks. '
Also, a lawsuit is pend·
ing against Bank One and
former human service
directors. Parents claim
they were responsible for
frequent delays in getting
the:r checks.
·
. "Bank One's effort has
been
a
maturation ·
process over time," said
Tom Hayes, the depart·
mont's director. "They
are now paying people in
a timely fashion."
The · slate expects at
least three companies to
submit proposals.
Bank One is preparing
a bid, said Jeff Lyttle, a
company spokesman .
"We hope our track ·
record and our proposal
have earned us the right
to continue," he said.
· He said the state is pay·
ing Bank One milhons
less than the five-year
$218
million
bid
Lockheed Martin Corp.
had proposed at one time.
The state chose Bank
One in 1999 to operate
the federally mandated
system after Lockheed
Martin's was the only bid
received durins a com·
petitive bidding period to
find a vendor
.

-~~~~~~
.
~;. ·
F ~ ""T~ "'lf"'1JI!Ir '9f" ~ '9f"~ "lf'~ "W'~ '9f"~

•opF
. . .I ~ n· OUC.F~
Ll.,
OL

~oou~:y ~;~helpus:~ild~~~
other~

and fam:hes for

www.mydllllyeentlnel.com

PREGNANCY PREVENTION MONTH

.State extends Bank One's contract
for child support processing

Ohio weather

Q

•

•

THURSDAY • ONE DAY ONLY
NfiJII_.,L __ • ·~
t!f'
~ ,
,~{j.
~peda(.(J,
• Free Pfant To Eve,Yone
• Several Door Prlzea
• We Have PolnuHiaa

vee,

MIDDLEPORT - Don C. Becker, 71, Middleport, died
Monday, May 6, 2002, at Overbrook Center, foifowing an
extended illness.
Born Oct. 7, 1930, in Pomeroy, he was the son of the late
Delbert Becker and Theresa Henry Becker, and was employed
at the former Economy Savings and Loan, and was manager
. of Kaiser Credit Union.
·
.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Betty Lou
Becker; and a sister, Bettie Gladwell.
He is survived by several children, Randy and Geri Becker
of San Antonio, Texas, Greg Becker, Tresa (Lisa) and Joe
Thomas, Donnie Becker and Chris Becker, all of Middleport;
and seven grandchildren.
·
.
Services will be 2 p.m. Thursda)' in Fisher Funeral Home.
Middlepon.' Burial will follow m Ora vel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 2-4
and 6-8 p.m.

LOCAL BRIEFS
POMEROY- Units of the
Meigs Emergency Service Set
answered six calls for assisTUPPERS PLAINS- A
tance on Monday. Units
3-on-3
basketball tournament
responded as follows:
will
be
held on May 24 and
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4:29 a.m., Ohio 7, motor 25 at Eastern High School.
vehicle accident, Mike Pre-registration is required
Pephet, refused treatment; . by May 17.
Play will begin at 6 p.m. on
7: 14 a.m.,
Brownell
Avenue, Clara Kincaid, May 24. Age b[ackets will be
arranged as follows : ages 11
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
8:18a.m., Margaret Nunn, and 12. 13 and 14, 15, 16, 17
and I8, 19 to 25, and 26 and
PVH;
3:54 p.m., HMC Clinic. above. Four trophies will be
Reba Roush, Holzer Medical awarded to champions in
each bracket.
Center;
The cost is $25 per team,
. 7:10 p.m .•. Wolfe Pen, John
and
teams will be contacted
Dean,HMC.
·
by
phone
with their game
. PROCLAMATION - May Is Teen Pregnancy Prevention Month. Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets and Mlck Davenport,
9:42 p.m., Painter Ridge,
times.
and Brenda Curfman and leanne Cunningham, R.N., both of the Meigs County Health Department, joined In proclaiming the Deanna Swaney, HMC.
Infonnation is available by'
. local observance, noJing that the U.S. teen pregnancy rates are considerably higher than those in other Industrialized nations: .
calling
Howie Caldwell at
NearJy double those of Great Britain, four times those of France and Germany and more than 10 times those In Japan. Forty667-3368 or 985-3329, Rick
five percent of first births In the U.S. J~re to women who are either unmarried, teenagers or lacking a high school degree, and
PORTLAND - Oscar U. Edwards at 992·6174, or Tim
. children born to teen parents are at higher risks of ow birth weight, Infant death, mental retardation and other health problems.
Caudillo, 31, Mount Vernon, Simpson at 662-0 II 0.
(Brian J. Reed) ..
·was cited for failure to con·
trol by the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State Highway .Patrol
problems," Frazier said.
An April 25 meeting at following a one-vehicle acciHMC outlined the reality of dent Monday on Lebanon
REEDSVILLE - Olive
OxyContin abuse and its con· Township Road 139 (Lovett). Township Trustees will hold
:AEP.-46.31
Federal ~- .65 Pra:nler- 10.10
framPepA1
Troopers said Caudillo, their
sequences to an audience of
USS-23.40
Alth Call- 22
Rockwell- 21.10
regular
meeting.
hauling
a
trailer,
was
south·.
about
70
that
included
h.calth
Gannell-72.24
Alao- 43.50
Rocky Boola-7.65
cates for a treatment facility care and mental health rcpre· · bound at 2 p.m. when. he Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
AmTaci'I'SEIC- 31.08 Gen. Elldrtc- 30.W RD Shell- 53.41
to serve OxyContin and sub- sentatives, as well as some attempted to make a left tum . township garage on Joppa
Aahland Inc.- 39.74 GKNLY-4.75
Bllltra- 51.42
Road.
stance abusers in the. area.
Hn¥!liM:IIal-51.81 Wei-Mart- 53.99
AT&amp;T- t3.70
people
who
detailed
what
onto
County
Road
35
Armed with statistics prov· abusing the drug has done to (Portland) and went over a
Kmarl-1.15 .
Bank One- 38.98
Wer4/a37.75
ing
OxyContin abuse has not their lives or to loved ones.
·eu -14.811
l&lt;roglr- 23.10
brid,lle abutment. The under·
WorlhlngtOn
16.19
only.
fueled an increase in
·Bob evena-30.81
Landi End - 50.32
Before
and
after
the
meet·
carnage
of the trailer struck
POMEROY - Junior and
burglaries and thefts in the ing, Frazier said he's been the a6utment,
. eorgwarner- !12.57 Ud.-19.32
causing
dam·
Rita
White and Ralph Cooke
Ottly IIOd&lt; rapoll8 119 past two {ears, but led to the
NSC-20.71
Chlmplan - 2.94
besiesed
":ith
ques~ons !fom age to the road, the report will rresent instrumental and
the 4 p.m. ctoalng deaths o some people who
• Chilli i Ill Slqll-8.21 OlkliFITiil-21115
voca music at the Senior
quotll t:J the pi12'AcM have overdosed on the people lr)'tnll to ptnpo:nt a said.
City Hoki!IQ -18.82 OVB-23.?0
pro&amp;iem
tn
their
lives
or
of
There
was
no
damage
to
Citizens
Center, Thursday,
day'elrarwacllon8, pro- ~ainldller, Frazier and Gallia
BBT-38.83
Col-28.03
someone
the,Y
know,
and
if
the
vehicle,
owned
by
United
5:30p.m.
vided by Smith County sheriff's Detective
Peoplee- '¥7
00-15.32
. Pepalco -52
Partnel'l at Advelllnc. Chad Wallace arc pleading help in beattng addiction is Precast Inc., Mount Vernon.
·DuPont- 44.75
attainable soal.
. Curtis E. Hart, 26, Belpre,
· the case that the problem runs an"People
arc
callins
me
day
' .
.was cited for failure to condeepin the community.
and
nigl:t
about
it,"
the
ve~~­
"This situation has been a an officer and lead· cns1s trol by the patrol following a
long time coming, and when nesotiator for city P91ice said. one-vehicle accident early
TUPPERS . PLAINS
the fad of OxyContin is over, "Family members .and people Saturday on . Ohio 7 near
Tup~&gt;ers
Plains.
Dwight
Icenhower, Elvis
a facility will be there to con· arc rattlin,1 off symptoms and
(U8PI 21WIO)
Troopers
said
Hart
was
impersonator,
wi II perform
Ohio Vollly Publlohlng Co. .
tinue treating people with asking if tt's possible."
.
Publlohed ovory afternoon, Mcnday
northbound
at
1:45
a.m.
Saturday
from
7
to 9 p.m. at
lt\rough Frlday, 111 Court Sl.,
when the pickup truck he the Old Tuppers Plains Grade
Correotlon Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
Socond·cllll
drove went off the left side of School for a Tuppers Plains
Our main conoem In all etorlelll po111ge paid 11 Pomeroy.
.Emmanuel United Methodist the road and struck an VFW
Preu and
to be ICIClUrtle. l.f you know of an Member. Tho Post
benefit.
error In a atory, calllht n~ 1ho Ohio Newll&gt;- Aaoclltion.
Church
at
Beaver.
embankment.
Hart
told
Admission
is
$6
for
adults,
P-111: Send addren corrwc·
II (7ol0) 1182•21158.
The pancake breakfast is troo~rs he swerved to avoid and $2.50 for children under
11onolo Tho Dolly Sentinel, 111 Court.
St, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.
the first fund-raiser for the coihsion with a deer.
· 12. Refreshments.
•
fromPigeA1
New. Dtp~rtmentt
restoration of the academy,
Sub•crlptlon ratta
Tht main number 11 1182·21158.
ly cel'l'llr or mo10r , _
deteriorating two-story
• oepanment axttntlona are:.
Stewart's interest in oil abrick
OM$2
structure which is a
$8.70
• aen..1rnlftiGI'
Ext. 12 OM month
painting goes back to his companion building to the
OM Y..,
$104
childhood. He has been fully-restored
50 COnti
Chester
EJCt. 13 IIIMY
painting seriously and selling Counhouse. The courthouse
Suboarlboro no1 doolrlng 1o pay lhe
moy remk In ldvanco ·dlrec11o
his art work for more than 2S was btiilt in 1823 and three
• or
Ext. 14 earner
Tho Dolly Sentinel. Crod~ wiJI bt given
•
years. While he describes his years • later the academy '
carrier oaoh wttl&lt;. No aubiiCrlptlon·by
•
Othtr urvlc:ea
permlned In ereao wnero home
greatest ability as lying in building was constructed .
•
II IVI!IIblt,
portrait work, he is . known
Ext. 3 earner •' Advtlilelnll
Recently, the Chester•
for the inspirational lan4· Shade
MID
subsaiDIIon
H1storicai Society
EJCI.
4
Circulation
scapes he paints before audi· and the Daughters of
lnoldo Molgo cC4iriiY13 Wotka
·
$27.30
ences in churc.hes and at America joined together to
Ext. S 26
Claeellled Ada
WHkl
$53.82
other gatherings.
52 WHka
· 1105.58
. raise money to restore the
' •
Tound•mall
In addition to his training old academy, which has
, . _ outoldollelgl County
ney;a OmydaHysen1lnet.com
••
as an anist, he' is also a grad- played such an historic
13Wotka
129.25
On thtWtb
26Wotka
$58.58
uate of the Circleville Bible role in the ii fc of the
www.mydllllyHn1lnel.com
52Wotka
S10i.72
College and now pastors the Chester community. ·

toumament

--

Citations iSSUed

lth Slreet • Aeclnt, Ohio
Aoroet from Wegner'• Hardw•re
(.
)

Trustees

Solutions

LOCAL STOCKS

G•annl"'s
•,
'J G•eenhouse
•'

His vehicle suffered functional damage.

EMS nans

to meet

To perform

740 949·2803

-~. .-~. . . . .

Every mother Is unique but ell mothers
have one thlnaln common: no metter
how busy they aet, they're always
there for you. This Mother's Dey, show
mom how special she Is • fill her dey
with love, leuahter, end warm
memories. ·

Icenhower
to perform

The Daily Sentinel

Reader ·services

Chester

mall

.

.

:L---------------------~

Wfllt!s hap,..lng this weekend?
Find out Thursday in lhe Daily Sentinel

,.

•

Eastern &amp;Meigs track results·
.,•

See today 's Spons section ... B2

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

=

FREE Speech &amp;Hearinu-Screen IS

In recognition of Better Speech &amp; Hearing Month, Pleasant Valley Hospital will be offering
FllEB speech and hearing screenings at these locations on the foUowing dates and times:

• 1\Jesda); May 7
• Thw;aday, May~ . • Thunday, May ~4
• Thunday, May 23 .
Ripley Senior Center The M1ddleport Clinic Mason Cowtty Action Group PVNRC (Sand Hill RDRd)
Ripley, WV
Middleport, OH
Point Pleasant, WV
- Point Pleasant,WV
(HellritrR Smmillgs Only) 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. (Huring 5tr!mi11gs Only)
2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
10 a.m. to noon
9 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.
Walk-ins weltime or yqu mRY call (304) 675-5250, .~· 3502 to make an appointment. .
.
Appointments are being nuuie separately at "The M.idJJeport Climr.» Ple~~Se caU 740-9~1-4226 for that wcatwn.

---·

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

•

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

PapA4
'IUIId,. M!f I, 2002

.

~e Daily Sentinel
.

••
•

The Daily Sentinel

I
•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ol'llo

••

7.t0-112-21M• FIX: 74CHI2-2157

www.myclelly.entlnel.com

I

••

: DEAR ABBY: The letter from
:'Hurting in Virginia," the distraught widow who discovered
her previously married husband
'till carried snapshots of his first
.wife in his wallet, resonated with
inc. She feared that it meant he ·
~as still in love with his first
Mfe.
~ I have been happily married for
'IS years. We have three great
children. My husband's walfet is
literally falhng apart, so I bou-ht
bim a new one and gave ti1m
ppdated pictures of the children.
They remained in his nightstand
arawer. After a few years, I even
!lUI the most current pictures into
the new wallet and mentioned to
him that I had done it ·so he
Svould throw away the old wallet
•nd start using the new one.
• You $Uessed iJ. The new wallet
is stilltn the drawer.
Please assure "Hurting" that
cleaning the wallet was probably
such a low priority 11 never

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publlaher
Chllrlene HoeHich

Genenl Menlgel'

Diane Kay Hill
. Controller

t4ttOf' .,., ..,....,....,, " " ' ••'*111 k l•n ,,..,. Jfll(l.,..,.b. Au l~«m
. . 1~ 10 ..,.,.. •ltfl ,....,, k tiJ~tH .,., it«'lt1M ....._., •llil r.l.,U.t 11111-'tr.
No _...., ,...,. will H ,....,,..,, 1 - . '""""' H I• JlHI4 Msto, -.,.,.,
luau. IIOII'fii4MIIIIU
1"h
U#Jiftlltl Ut til• Nlt~~~~JI Hlowvt 1111 C'MitiUtlf r,ifiAt CMio \oWley
l'diiiAllq
~ fflltorl.l H.N, ...w, .,,,...,.~ rtOinl.

I....n ,.,..
.,uu.ru

c..

NATIONAL VIEW

Defense
Sadl~

we must question those
who come to our shores
.

.

~

• San Gabriel Valley (Calif.) Tribune, on border and visa
safeguards: The Senate begun considerution of the Enhanced
Border Security and Visa Entrr Reform Act. At the risk of
offending this august body, we d like to advise that this is a
no-brainer, slam dunk .... Make it law.
Similar legislation has been OK'd by the House ...designed
to beef up homeland security.
_ ... (T)hose listed on known terrorist reports continue to slip
through our borders or, as in one highly publicized instance,
step off a foreign ship and quickly meld into the landscape.
While all four of the foreign nationals were eventually located, the legislation would lessen the likelihood of future .confusion by mandating all commercial vessels and flights from
international ports provide U.S. ofticials with passenger and
crew manifests prior to arrival.
·
Seen as the key to preventing .future security breaches, an
interagency electronic data system would be established. The
system would give the Immigration and Nationalization
Service, State Department and law enforcement immediate
access to intelligence information.
·
·
·
Thut meuns those issuing visas and checking on the alien
status of individuals would be able to get the information they
need at the stroke of a key. According to (co-sponsor
California Sen. Dianne) Feinstein, the bill also has safeguards
built in to prevent misuse of such data.
Under the bill's provisions, the INS would be required to
enter stolen or lost passpon numbers into the database within
72 hours of notification of the loss or theft.
· .
.
Fraud· and tamper-proof documents are additional require·
ments. While that's an important step, our government must
also work on developing bribe-proof employees. Long prison
sentences for those few unscrupulous wotkers who sell entry
to the United States to the highest bidder could go a long way
toward that end.
Importantly, the proposal would reform the student visa
. process. We dare not forget that some of those involved in the
Sept. II suicide attacks gained their flying skills from U.S.
schools and/or entered the country on student visas.
lJnder S.l749, sclfools that accept forei$n nationals through
study visas would have to notify the INS 1f those students fail
to repon to the school within 30 days of the start of classes.
Certainly most Americans would like to welcome all who
seek the freedom and self-determination afforded in our great
nation.
Sadly, we have learned .that we must .. in our own defense,
ask questions, check backgrounds and monitor the movements of many who now come to our shores.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ·

Today is Tuesday, May 7, the I27th day of 2002. There are
238 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
. ·
On May 7, 1945, Germany signed an unconditional 'urren·
der at Allied headquarters in Rheims, France.
On this date:
·
In 1789, the first inaugural ball was held in New York in
honor of President and Mrs. Oeorge Washin~ton.
In 1812, poet Robert Browning was born m London.
In 1847, the American Medical Association was founded in
Philadelphia.
In 1939, Germany and Italy announced a military and polit·
ical alliance known as the Rome-Berlin Axis.
.
In 1941, Glenn Miller and His Orchestra recorded
"Chattanooga Choo Choo" for RCA Victor.
In 1954, the 55-day Battle of Dien Bien Phu in Vietnam
ended with Vietnamese insurgents overrunning French forces.
In 1975, President Ford formally declared an end to .the
"Vietnam era." In Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon, the
Viet Cong celebrated its takeover.
.
In 1994, Norway's most famous painting, "The Scream" br
Edvarll Munch, was recovered almost three months after It
was stolen from an Oslo museum.
Ten years ago: President Bush visited riot-scarred Los
Angeles. The space shuttle Endeavour blasted off on its maiden voyage. A 203-year-old proposed constitutional amendment barring Congress from givmg itself a midterm pay raise
received enough votes for ratification as Michigan became the
38th state to approve it.
Five years ago: The Army accused its top enlisted man, Sgt.
· Maj. of the Army Gene McKinney, of sexual misconduct. (At
his court-martial, McKinney was acquitted of sexual miscon·
duct, but found guilty of obstruction of justice.) One year ago:
"Great Train Robber" Ronnie Biggs, who had eluded capture
for decades following his prison escar.e in 1965, returned to
Britain, where he was arrested and ja1jed to complete the 28
remaining ye;ll's of his sentence. California electricity grid
operators ordered statewide rolling power blackouts.
Today's Birthdays: Singer Teresa Brewer is 71. Sen. Pete
Domenici, R·N.M., is 70. Football Hall-of-Farner Johnny
Unitas is 69. Sin~er Johnny Maestro is 63. Actress Robin
Strasser is 57. Smger-songwriter Bill' Danoff is 56. NBC
newsman Tim Russen is 52. Actor Roben Hegyes is 5 I.
Movie writer-dfrector Amy Heckerling is 48. Actor Michael
E. Knight is 43. Rock musrcian Phil Campbell (Motorhead) is
41 . Rock singer-musician Chris O'Connor (Primitive Radio
Oods) is 37. Thought for Today: "When an old man dies, a
library burns down."- African proverb.
•

won't see new wa

•

I
I

KONDRACK'E 'S VIEW

.

Morton
Kondracke

crossed her husband's mind. VERY MUCH IN LOVE IN
PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR IN LOVE: You have
already done an excellent job of
that. Talk about letters that generate letters - read on:
.
DEAR ABBY: I have an old
boyfriend who was to be married,
but ri~ht before the wedding , the
"lady' riJlped him off. She ran up
his credit cards, wrecked his
credit and broke his heart. This
happened almost I0 years ago.
He still carries her picture in

ill.
My neighbor rushed to the hospital. When she entered what she
thought was her husband's room,
whom should she find instead but
her ex I When he opened his eyes
and saw her, he moaned, "Oh my
God, have I died and gone to
hell?"
It seems the former husband
hadn't cleaned out his wallet
after he got rid of his wife. She
was still the person named as his
next of kin!- FLORENCE IN
OTTAWA, CANADA
DEAR FLORENCE: Thanks
for an amusing letter ·with a useful message. I'm sure it will
inspire a lot of procrastinators to
clean out their wallets today.
(Pauline Phillips and her daugh·
ter. Jeanne Phillips, share the pseudonym Abigail Van Buren. Write
DearAbby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.)

..

cost and, Santorum said in an interview,
to boost charities hurt by a downturn in ·
giving caused by the recession und
diversion of funds to charities related to
Sept. I I.
·
Santorum said the most controversial
portion of the bill is the IDA, designed
to help lower-income persons accumulate wealth - and demonstrate that
Republicans are interested in narrow in~
the wealth gap between rich and poot
Americans.
:
Thoush probably well·intenlioned;
IDAs w11l provide little more than token
steps toward correcting the fuct cited by
Santorum - that the richest I percent
of Americans control more wealth than:
the remaining 99 percent. ·
:
Funded at $1.9 billion and offering a:
$500 per person annual match, th~·
IDAs represent a tiny fraction of th
funds allocated to rich people as part o
Bush's $1.6 trillion tax cuts and tile esti~
mated $4 trillion involved in making th~
tax cuts permanent.
•
Asked about this, Santorum said iC
was Democrats who wanted to hold
down the cost ror IDAs, not he.
..
He ulso dismissed the charge that per·:
manent repeal of the estate tax would:
result in a significant decline in charita~
ble givin~.
"
"I don"t believe that," he told mell
"Sure, some people give because of taX:
consequences. But, if you let peoplt:
keep more of. their own money, it'S:
going to generate more wealth and mort
money to give away."
t
Independent Sector figures that chari·
ties get $IS billion each year from
bequests at death - 75 percent
wh1ch come from estates worth overl
$2.5 million that are now subject to thC:
tax.
~
The consortium's board of director§:
says, "repeal of the estate tax woulq:
eliminate a strong incentive to giv&amp;
through an individual's estate. It woul"
remove un incentive for the wealthiest
Americans ... to make charitablil
beQuests."
•
The bottqm line: If Congress and
Bush really want to encourage charita·
ble giving, they will make ihe CAR~
Act permanent and leave the estate tax
in place.
.
(Morton Kondracke Is executive .edl:
tor of Roll Call, the newspaper oj
Capitol Hill.)

ue

•

'HARDBALL'

Keep that candle of Middle East hope ftom going out
WASHINGTON - The ~reat orator
Adlai ·Stevenson once said, 'It is better
to light a candle than to curse the darkness."
·
Last week, President Bush did just
that. By brokerin~ the release of Vasser
Arafat from h1s house arrest in
Ramallah, he ignited a flicker of hope
into the Mideast night. He showed that,
working to$ether, the Americans, Arabs
and Israelis can choose hope over
clesJlair.
·
The cynic will say Bush pressured
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon· to release
. Arafat because Saudi Prince Abdullah
gave America the .oil squeeze, but the
seasoned optimist sees the light shining
from that power play. ·
·
Israeli foreign minister Shimon Peres
detects something "positive" in the
Saudi role. It's not just the oil, he
argues, but the willingness of the Saudi
royal family to end the standoff
between the Arabs and the Jewish state.
''The Saudis are important to the
United States, politically and economically," Peres told me lhis week, "and it's
not a shame, because there's an interdependence all ovet the place."
Peres, at 78, said there is also a sharp
ray of light in the deal that is truly historic, the first-ever willingness of this

ADVICE

.
finally did.
There were membership cards
that had expired 20 years earlier,
sales· receipts, phone numbers
with only five digits ...., can you
remember that far back? Ttiere
was also the worst photo of me
ever taken.
'
I wish I had photographed the
contents of those wallets and that
"Hurting" could see it. It would
put her worries to rest and provide a much needed laugh. -.:
ANNE IN PERU, IND.
DEAR ANNE:. I believe it.
One reader related that when she
finally gpt around to cleaning out
. her own wallet, she discovered a
store coupon that had expired in
198.9.
.
DEAR ABBY: One day, a
neighbor of mine· who had been
divorced for many years received
an unexpected phone call. It was
from a nurse in the local hospital
emergency room calling to say
that .her ·husband was seriously

~

Loss of ~state tax may eliminate charitable incentive
After much angst, it a~peors that 11
version of President Bush s faith-based
charity initiative - "faith lite," some
call it - may be enacted into law this
year.
That's the good news. The bad news
is that even us Congress gives charities
$10 billion (over a two-year period), it
could take away even more over the
long run by permanently repealing the
estate ta~t, erasing an incentive for char·
itable giving.
.
.
COLUMNIST
According to Independent Sector, u
consortium of charitable foundations,
various studies indicate thut ending the gious charities will be 11 $1-50 million
estate tax could cost charities $1.5 bil· per year "Compassion Capital Fund,"
lion to $5 billion u year.
giving technical ussistunce to small
The House has passed legislation community and church projects.
makin~ permanent tqe 2001 tux cuts,
Another benefit is a set of nondis·
but its not going anywhere in th~ crimination provisions thut allow reliSenate. Now, OOP leaders are consider· gious groups to receive government
ing taking up just the estate tax repeal, grants on an equal basis with secular
which Senate Majority Leader Thomas charities even if their facilities display
Daschlc (D·S.D.) has agreed to allow a religious icons.
vote on.
The main portions of the bill, howev·
Meantime, a Senate relaunch of the er, are incentives for charitable giving,
faith-based initiative - now renamed whether religious or secular, and erethe CARE Act, for Chnrlty Aid, ation of Individual Development
Recovery and Empowerment Act of Accounts (IDAs), government.-subsi·
2002 - is scheduled to take pluce al u dized, low-income savings accounts for
rally today starring its co-sponsors, education, home-ownership or business
S~ns. Rick Santorum (R·Pu.) und Joe start-up.
L1eber~an. (D·Conn.).
Most or the measure's price tag- $8
The b1llls scheduled for murk up ncxt billfon over two years - goes for charweek by the Finance Commit~ee, where , itable incentives, especially one allow·
It m~y get pare~ back ~ro.m 1ts current ing persons who don't file itemized talt
fundmg . level of $12 b1lllon over two returns to claim a deduction for charita·
years to $10 billion over the same peri· ble giving.
od, the number approved last June by
The House bill permitted deductions
the House.
for contributions as small as $25, but
The House bill was deemed too Senators said it would be impossible for
~·faith-heavy" by Democrats, allowing the Internal Revenue Service to police
tax payer money to flow to church- such a provision. So the current bill is
based charities that engage in religious pegged to allow deductions starting at
proselytizing as purt of their counseling. $800 per family and may go to $1,000
Even more controversial, the measure in committee.
exempted religious charities from civil
It's not really cleur that the provision
rij!hts laws barring discrimination in would encourage much new g1ving, but
h1ring, which Democrats - including as a matter of fairness, lower-income
Lieberman - criticized as permitting individuals who don't itemize deserve a
discrimination· against gays and les· · charitable deduction every bit as much
bians.
·
as wealthier contributors do.
After months of negotiation, those
More likely. to s.timulate new giving
"charitable choice" provisions have are provisions expanding tax breaks for
been dropped from the Senate bill, corporate donations and allowing taxwhich the White House has blessed in free gifts from individual retirement
order to get one of Bush's signature ini· accounts.
tiatives through Congress.
All the incentive measures have a life
Now the principal benefit for reli· of just two years, both to hold down the

Dear
Abby

his wallet - so he can sit on h·er
face. - LISA IN INDIANAPO·
LIS
DEAR LISA: Or maybe it's to
remind himself where he ielt the
pain.
DEAR ABBY: For some reason, we seem to want to look for
·hidden or ulterior motives rather
thari simple, straightforward
ones. Being a man, my first
thought while reading that letter
was, "I bet he hadn't cleaned out
his wallet in years." It's the same
thought that was echoed in your
P.S. - AN UNTIDY MALE IN
L.A.
DEAR MALE: Many readers
said the same thing.
·
DEAR ABBY: My parents died
within 17 days of each other. I
had the grim task of taking apart
a household and sorting through
personal belongings. It was a
year and a half before I could
bring myself to go through their
wallets, but I had to laugh when I

t
••

most conservative of Arab societies to the Crown Prince to Jerusalem? .
recognize the right of Israel to exist.
"I think this will be a verx positive
"The Saudis, who are really coming step, but I. don't thlnlc it Will happen.
from the depths of Arab traditions, have tomorrow morning," figures Peres. J
decided to change their traditional way
E~tperience has taught the Israeli'
of looking at Israel and say the time has statesman and Nobel laureate that th~
come to make peace by all Arab coun- pessimists are sometimes confounde4
tries with Israel under certain condi- by reality.
·•
tions." ·
Peres recalled the 1977 visit of the
The man who fou11ht as a leader in great Egyptian president Anwar SadaC
Israel's 1948 war of mdependence and Just four years after waging war agains(
served twice as its rnme minister Israel, he came to Jerusalem offering
admits the difficulty o translating the the hand of peace.
'
Saudi vision into ~ specific peace plan.
"You know, when I look back, the
Yet he also sees the hope offered visit of Sadat to our Parliament came at
through the breakthrou$h Saudi propos- a surprise," he said. The great hope fo(
al for Israel to give up 1ts occupation of Americans, Arabs and Jsraelis is thu~
the West Bank and the cre'll10n of a President Bush, Secretary of State Colin:
Palestinian state in order to win Arab Powell and Peres can build the tunnel:
recognition of its own nationhoocj.
· The great dread is that the enemies o(
"If today we see a tunnel without a peace- the pessimists in Washington, ,
light at the end of it; in the ca~ of the Jerusalem and the streets and capitals o(
Saudis, we can see the light, but we can- Arabia will snuff out the light before the
not see the tunnel that lends to it."
good guys can get it.
~
Peres knows the modern instrument
Chris Matthews, author of "Now,
for bringing the Saudi land-for-pejlCe Me Tell You What/ Really Think" (Free
proposal to fruition: television. the Prm, 2001) and "Hardba/1'1
Saudi royal family needs to broadcast (Touchstone BookJ, 1999), ls 'a nation·
the idea that strikmg a deal with Israel aJly syndicated columnist for the Sati
ends the hated occupation and gives the · Franci.1co Chl'(lnicle and the ho1t of,
Palestinians their own country.
"Hardbpll" on CNBC and MSNBC,
Could that mean a dramatic visit by cable channels.
1

Le;

..

·•

Meigs Notebook

MEIGS
&lt;

•

\

CALENDAR

Ashleigh Sayre', Ashley Jeffers.
Cam Sandell, Kyle Scouten, Alex Trent,
Pomeroy: Deem, Stephanie Stanley, Andrea VanMeter, Tara Workman.
Tess Phelps, TYler Price, Werr, Alex Or&amp;~de 6: Richelle Blankenship,
Community Cllltndar 11
Morris, Kendra Haning, Chris Jones.
Lindsay Carr, Zachary Carr, Matthew
pulllllhld u a frle Ml"ollae
to non proiii•D up a Wllhlnt
~ POMEROY _ Alex Morris and
Rutland: Fetty, TYler Eblin, Shane Christopher, Vaneetha Christopher, Tyler
to aniiCIUIIIII meetl!~g~ and
· s 1 bo h 0 f p
Engle, Benton McCloud; Gannaway, Kearns, Heather Moran, Nicholas
$tephante
tan
ey,
t
omeroy
Mesan
Dyer,
Bryan
Pridy,
Kasey
Stevens,
Laurel
Ston.e,
Brooke
Taylor,
epeolll evente. 11le oalendlr
Elemen~ School, and Rachel Oayle
II liCit clellgned to ~
Williams, a student in the CHOICE Napper.
·
Heather Wagner, Christopher Williams,
ulae
Ill' fullfloi'lleeri of any
Home School Oroup were the county·
Salisbury: Hillary Slone, Cody A honor roll; .Jonathan Beaver, Sarah
type, ltlme . . Pl'llltecl OJ!Iy
wide winners of the Meigs Soil &amp; Water Casteel, Chps Folmer.
Clarke.
II 1pet11 (llmlltl and aan·
·
' Conservation District's
Mid-Valley Christian: Karlle Hall, Orade 7: Kalee Edmonds, Emily
eoloring contest.
Matthew Ke~see, Billy Duvall.
Eldridge, Kayla Frantom, A honor roll; i nol lit IUitlnteecl to be
prlntecl 'a epeolllo n"*' Ill'
· The theme for the CHOICE Home School: Rachel Gayle · Kalee Edmonds, Emily Eldridge, Kayla
contest was ''Trees and Wllliams, Elizabeth Bearhs, Isaac Frantom.
CIIYJ.
Me," and was directed Williams.
·
Grade 8: Sara Beckley, Vanessa Burris,
1\leadly, May 7
by Meigs S&amp;WCD
Kristi Davis, Jacob Eldridge, Joseph
MIDDLEPORT
Education Specialist
Esmaeili, Sarah Dawn Jenkins, Cory
.
Middleport
Maeonlo
Lodge
Vicki Morrow. It was
Kelley, Keith Peck, Zachary Weber, A
7:30, p.m. Work In the
held in conjunction
OALLIPOLIS _ The following stu- honor roll; Joseph Barnhart, Kelli Irwin,
F.O. dlgr~t. Aefleahmlnta,
with the agency's dents were named to the honor roll for Johanna Jarvis.
observance of Soil and the fifth six-week gradins period at Ohio Orade 9: Annie Carter, Hallie Carter,
Water Stewardahip Valley Christian School:
Kaleb Eldridge, Sarah Eldridge, Sarah
Week
Smith, Eliza))eth Stevens, Chits Terre·
Each of the county· Ortide I: Sara Absten, Cory Barlow, Blanche, A honor roll; Aimee Agustin,
wide winnen received ~~hua Welina, R~hard ~ow~an~ Aaron .Beaver, Kerry Carter, Andrew
$10 for their entriea A
ance ur eson,
eaan oc ran, Holcomb, John Husaell.
total of $190 wa1 Madlaon Crank, Brady Curry, Alexander Orade 10: Brod~Biankenship, Dianna
Haddad, Ella Lona, Riley Nibert, Crala J I Li d
I AI
Zlrill
awarded in the "~ontell· Terre-Blanche,
A honor roll; Jordyn arv s, n sey
ee er, yna
e,
I
1
I
I
P nt-p ace w nnen n Benldn, Caleb Curry, Oliver Lentz.
A honor roll; Hannah Burleson, Joahua
each clan won $5,
Orade "· Branaen Barr Jennifer Jarvil, J.P. Lindeman, John Moran,
with aecond and third·
"'
'
Crystal Taylor.
·
place wlnnen recelv- Blevlnr, Katharine Blodaett, Chaae Orade II: Kelsey Sallabury, Chriltlna
lng $3 and $2 relpec· · Caldwell, Peter Carman, Michael Taylor, A honor roll; Ryan Carter,
tlvely
Fahmy, Ale~t Oagucu, Joaeph Jarvia, Jeremy £vans.
.
Winners In each Samantha McClure, Paul Ml11er, Erin . o ad 12 A it A
I Ad
clul were·
Mitchell, Micaela Owena, Kimberly · r e : m
arawa • n rew
Beth Sydnor, Ben Tillis, Blankenship, Demra Brown, Brian
S 0 U 't h e r n Sallee, Sarah
y,
s h w,eat~a11• Michael
Oordon, Sara Henry, Oabe Jenkins,
Elementary ·School Andrew 011 • amant 1
Jenks, Olnny Miller, Chad
Guinther,
Chrli William Workman, A honor rol1; Hannah Mourning, Rachel Tucker, A honor ro11;
Storms Jaclyn Mees Bromfield, Vlctorlanna VanFossen.
Stephanie Buffington, Elizabeth Rice.
and 'Mary Hunt·
Orade 3: Zachary Barlow, Joahua
Harris, Ashley Deem: Curry, 'Tyler Eastman, Allie ~amilton,
Odeua Jacks ahd Alexla Henry, Daniel Irwin, Ehcla Irwin,
Manin Cummins; Kathleen Lons, Lindaay Pennington,
Norris,
Shelby Kyle Scott, Divya Shenoy, Valerie TerrePickens
Jennifer Blanche, A honor roll; Aaron Dillard,
Wlllllllll
McCoy' and Jessica Olivia Kostival. ·
HARRISONVILLE "- Harrisonville·
. Stines.
Orade 4: Hall Burleson, A~hley Scipio Alumni Association wi11 have its .
Eastern: Hill, Mallo!)'_ Nicodemus, Coughenour, Rebec,ca Evans,. Heather ·annual dinner and dance on Sunday, May
Melanie Miller, Zakkary Heaton; Jones, Mahan, Lindsey M1ller, Natahe Stone, 26 at 6:30 p.m. at the Harrisonville
Timothy Minear, Breanna Hayman, Melissa Stump, A honor roll; Amanda School.
Katlin Clark; White, Larissa Riddle, Allen, Joseph Beaver, Brooke Bowie,
A baked steak dinner will be served.
Randall Armes, Savannah Speelman- Amanda Jarvis, Chclsi Keams, Cameron Reservations are to be sent to Joy
Hawley.
.
Lentz, Ricardo Maldonado, Julie Tillis, Wiseman Clark, P.O. Box 706, Syracuse,
Middleport: Ashley, Matthew Casci, Jonathan VanMeter.
.
4S779 by May 20 or by calling Harold
Kyrie Swann, Rachel Payne; Brauer, Orade S: An nee Carman, Orant Foster, .Oraham, 742-3033.
·
Jacob Braley, Emily Kinnan, Keanna Quinton Nibert, Jasmine Owens, A Officers are Oraham, president Larry
Robinson.
honor roll; Joseph Absten, Jasmine Clark, vice president Virgil Reeves, !reaHarrisonville:
Savannah
Heu, Oibeaut, Henry Patrick, Koby Queen, surer; and Joy Wiseman Clark, secretary.

SWCDwlnnen
announced ·

MVCC honor roll

*•

Alumni dinner
·anddanceW

Baahan. Road, through
Sunday, 7 p.m. each evening
except Sunday, 10 a.m. and e
p.m. Guy Mallory of Winter
Garde~. Fla., speaker. Public
InVIted.
ThUI'IdllYo May I

RACINE - Doroa1 Bethany
Sonehlne Circle at 1 at the
ohuroh. Membere to take
"White elepi\Mt" H•ma to INI
auctioned. Letha Proffitt and
Jo Lee to hiVe the program
and ..rve rafrellhJTIIntl. All
ladl.. welcome.
POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Chaptar, Beta
Sigma Phi 8:30 ·p.m. at St.
Paul L!ltharan Church,
PotnefOY. 0.1'01 Ato&lt;:ulloligtt
aJ'Id Olio! Adami, haiti II••

-

Woodnlln (lllllualc ..
Wilt! him Md ohlo!C·
and 111111 .....
Motlltfl to bl
AAOINI!
Aetum .
Jonathan MfiO• Chaplet,
Daughtlrl Ill' till ~
Aellolutlon at 10 a.m II 1111
~~~~ Ubtary. Ellla Young to
epeak.

Lauryn Hill's new album due out next week
: NEW YORK (AP) - soul.lt won the 1999 Orammy· ed, slrlltegized and llflll)yzed." craft and presentation."
Lau?'n Hill was on top of the for album of the year.
.
Yet the initial critical reac·
Robert Hilburn of the Los
mu11c world with ner last So MTV wu excited last lion Is mixed, at best.
Angeles Times wrote that at
album. ''The Miseducation of · aummer
when
Hill Jim Farber of the New York . times, it was hard to tell
l.auryn Hill" wowed critics, approached with the idea of Daily News wrote that the whether the album came from
sold 6 million copies, earned taping a version of its long- disc "sounds as though it a concert or news conference.
five Orammys and influenced ru~nil!s "Unplugged" seri~s, should have been called ''This kind of daring is all
an entire school of new soul s~d Tom, Calderone; .semor 'Lauryn Hill: Unglued."'
too rare in pop, but the boldBingen.'
v1ce pre11dent of music and · "She's
giving Alanis ness isn't accompanied by
· Walt till you hear what she's ta!~nt proJfamn;ting.
Morisette a run for her money any consistent discipline and
done ne~tt.
.
We had no ldei when we in the self-indulgence depart· craft," Hilburn wrote.
On her new album, due m_ sat down to do the show what ment" Farber wrote "Both Rollin~ Stone gave the
itorel Tuesday, Hill dramati- kind ?f ~!rection she .was miatake disclosure f~ revela· album 3/z starl, however, say·
¢ally changea her. style, Inter- goi~gmto, Calderone •wd. lion and bald expen'ence for ing "the resultJ are eometimes
• - s tono:a with sermons
Hill came armed only with
•
, . .
~-doesn't hide a raspy an acouatic pi~. S¥ sang ~ 811. ~ 1 nusstng ~m m~ssy, but '!!ore often they're
voice It instantly_ becomet none of her htll, · tnstead Hlll'a equatiOII .are matters like .!!"~~ulo~s:
one of the most bafflins career debuting all new lOngs in a
·
CLY111. LUllll. -----~~~~~
moves in music hiatory.
folk style. She apoke at length
u
,
The music industry !s cloae- about personal and artistic
'"' WERE RIGHT HERE AT HOMEI
ty watchinl to aee. whether prol)lema between the 10n1~·
Set your
fans view MTV Unplugged 1 MTV. aired a one-hour elltt·
LOCAL HOMETOWN
2 O" u brave or crazy, and ted venion of her performance
V.:hether it torpedoel a Jut week, and ill SJlinoff
Insurance agency!
~miaina career.
MTV2 channel has show~ the
DoWNING CHII Dl MUUIH M1111111
When relea.sed four yean whole thina. 1be album 11 an
't'IIM
IHIUIIMC« AGINCY
aao, the 10l'? debut by ~ for- un~ed recording of the
111
(740)JF.·3381
mer membef of thc.!1 trio the enure concert.
fiUT fi.IIOII _,
&amp;::. ..;;::;..:::...
Fuaees wu Jlrll
for ill Caldeione called it • ''bold
~"tlftlt.111 filM
&lt;·~ ....--::;;~
incialve lyrics and ground· move in a day when album
CAM MOT IIU.f YOII.
18tll!ut leooncllt. • Pomeroy
breaking synthetia of rap and reiCIIICI and videos are calcuJat.
'•

- ..

mt~~her 's 'DaiJ Specials

54886 S.A. 124
Portland, Ohio

• (7 40) 843·5571

�••
•

•

•

•

The Daily Sentinel

ii;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;=:;:=========:=:::=:-:--:-:===~w~w~w~.m~yd!l~~h~¥~••~n~tll~~!.!.a~COigm~l.._.-----------..:..-----...!!1' udtlll!rf,lll!,

*

. -" ocloer IIOisily - cloy bt*
Soot-.: the Gilly~

•

w

The thin! and ... stap Oft OW'
mini·tolll wu Cambriul Ridp. i•
Grteaville. 111 11011r $CMlm ol MoiiC'
pncll\ Cambrian Riclp ila compler
ol !Me replation DiMs. The (IIOpCft7
l w - _,,.~~m. and Gnnd
National', serpentine - · but inuocluca a new element: bilh. The CanJQO
niM a rolkr ride ol eleYa~
~ ancllanclina in the elbow o1

Pap81

........,...,,2111

.u.

'TtJFsn\Ys

is

cloglqs, wim .-a~ wrirs -calflsh.
roilt'd wa.ter. The Loblolly ni~
unoomes our a bit. wim genetoUI fait;;
ways and niCk-bard pcm. Loblolly'/;
polisht'd air ia said to be the cbest roost
momls will come to pla}'in&amp; AU&amp;Uftl
National.
Jones' ~tly touch wim the blueprint and the SUI'V&lt;)"'t's map was IO!t aD
wee:kencl long. With amoeba-like
bunkers and taisecl. mwti-rieftd gteCft$1
only a true wiwd wim me Oat ~tick will
play much golf hete wimout putting off
one of the gteens.
••
Bur what self-respecting hirdcote
. golfer would back down ftom mal
challenge?

if1Ce

opt'ning for business in rl;c
early '90s. the Robert lrenr jones
GolfTrail in Alabama has built a reputatiOJl as paradise on ea rrh among a t:cr·
rain breed of person: those whose idea
of light reading is GolfDigm instead of
Daw Prks l'utti11g Bib/r, who absorb

·of finding someone who thought we
wert' credible. •

es in rhc country in 1993. Thc Unks
course at Grand . National regularly
' rhc' mosr outrageous llotmc on · cracks the csteemt'd publication's annu·
Bronner:s, wish list got his gist. He
al public top- I 00 to this day.
found a kindred spirit in legendary
The professional golf tours have .rhe
architect Robrrr Trent Jones, Sr.. who
Trail on their radar as well. The LPGA
emerged from semi~rcrircmenr to take
tour visits Magnolia Grove, in Mobile,
their doses of national news vi~ the
on rhe challenge of developing the
each year. Thc Buy.com tour held its
Golf Channel, who view any reflect ive
TraiL By then, jones' legacy as one of
season-coding Tour Championship at
surf.ii'ce .as an opportunity ro examine
the great golf course architects of all
Capitol Hill in Septembcr 2001. Plans
their swings.
rime was secure. Bur rhe opportunity to
are in the works for both to ~turn this
Of course, non-golfers and begindevelop all seven original sires (an
fall.
ners are welcome along the Trail. A
eighrh,. Capitol Hill, came online in
recently renovated Marriott Grand
2000) proved irr~isrible to the octoge72 HOLES, 72 HOURS ·
Hotel at l'oim Clear, ·on the Gulf of
narian Englishman, who designed or · My o:ovn taste of the Trail comprised 72
Mexico, has a tricked-up pool for the
renovated an ·esrimared 500 courses
holes in three days at three facilities
kiddos and a European-style spa for
during a seven-decade-long career.
within · easy driving distance of ·
men and women not set on tackling rhe
Jones' zeal for the project was obviMontgomery, Alabama's capital and
course. Every golf hole on the entire
ous in his hands-on approach as well as
roughly the state's midpoint. Typical of
Trail was designed with forward tees to
rhe quality of the final product. He
the entire Trail, each course had quali·
accommodate golfers of various abilionce was quoted in Busi11tss Wlek as
ties in common, yet was distinct from
des.
considering the Trail ptoject a once-inone another, despite their proximity.
But at its e·sscnce, chis is
The judge, our first
hardcore golf, featuring
course, is onc of three at
beefy, long layouts with lots
Capitol Hill in Pllluville,
of drama. Trail courses, 21
on the outskirtS . of
in all, arc sited on sprawling
' Montgomery. The Judge's ,
tracts of land at eight f.1Ci lielevated first tee box affords
cies rluoughout che scare.
views of Montgomery and
There's room enough at
the Alabama River in the
each facility for backless
distance, a skinny band of
driving ranges, stately clubfairway below, glimpses of
houses and anibirious 'short
plea.tures to come beyond
courses'--don't call them
the steeply sloped first
pitch and putts-ideal for
green. It was a grand, and
settling wagers that run
appropriately daunting,
into overtime.
way to christen the trip.
In Scotland, luxury motor .
"When you enter The
coach"' car.rying CEOs from
judge,. you enter The
sca.;idc links ro luxury resorts
judge." our starter told .us.
are a common sight. Here it's
"We'll bring sandwiches out
four dudes in a SUV: clubs
to you, bur you won't see
stacked to rhe ociling. The
much of anyone else for the
competition flows thickest
rest of your round." Down
during the spring high season,
we plunged.
when hardcore golfers whose home clubs
A rdentless latti.:e of difficult golf
still are encrusted in ioc head South en
holes ~nsued. The Judge Is the most
masse for their first golf fix of the y.. r.
recent Trail course to come online and
The ·crowd "is frorn out of town , and
was designed to expand on the most popthey're here to play golf" says an assistant
ular feature~ of its predecesson. Namely:
pro at one Trail complex.
their difficulty. The Alabama River's
opaque backwaters provide much· of rhe
IF YOU BUILD IT •..
trouble; the number of water carries
Above: Grand National
Not surprisingly. the Robert Trent Jones
reached double-digits early on the bade
GolfTrail spr~ng from the imagination of
Inset: Cambrian Ridge
nine. Dry corners of the course were
a golfer, Dr. David Bronner, CEO of
• guarded by colonies of fire ants. The
R..tir&lt;ment Systems of Alabama.
a-lifetime chance "to paine my Sistine . round was punishing bur enjoyable, and
Officially, Bronner is an appointed
Chapel."
blew past in the blink of an eye.
money manager for the smrc's teachers
Jones, who died in 2000 at age 93,
Our resting spot, Legends Hotel, is
and other public employees. Unoflkially,
designed the lrail to capitalize on
conveniently dose to the local Waihe's Alabama's self-a~pointed tourist minAlabama's diverse topography while
Mart, which i• handy,when re-loading
itter, ambassador and one of the main
keeping his foot relenrle..Jy heavy on
a supply of golf balls.
playen in the stare's development S&lt;ene.
the ga.. "He cold me a couple times, .
· The following morning we drove an
The idea of building a network of
·we're making '.em coo hard,'" Bronner
hour and 25 minutes due east, through
world-class golf courses first occurred
recalls of the early give and tak~ between
cotton fields, beneath a promuing sun10 Bronner in the late '80s. An inveter- ·
the architect and owner. "I kept telling
risc, to the Grand National golf complex
are B.ig Thinker, Bronner stt his sights
him, 'No, we're not.' , .. Everybody in
at Aubum/Opdika. Here we llUived anothon enlisting a conspicuous archirec1,
the country complained about Pete
er warm greeting at the bag drop, and
and letters were sent to S&lt;Veraj of the
Dye's course at PCA West when it first
mounted the stairs of another stately
m&lt;:-st prominenr names in the bu1ineu.
pune online, that ir was so difficult.
clubhouse. A trend dearly was developMost couldn't comprehend what w""
And every time I went rhere, all I Jaw
ing.
being proposed.
were people standing in line with $200
Grand National ftatures two rcg~~la­
"They'd try to correct w : 'Clearly
in their hands. They want punishment.'
tion courses, Links and Lake, and a
you don't mean you're going to do
All I8 original Trail courses w&lt;re
short course. Trent Jones, Sr. is rtporred
sevrn sites: at
same rime
constructed in one frenzicd push. The
to have characterized the property as
more than 18 holes at each
fim, Oxmoor Valley in Birmingham,
the best for golf he &lt;ver saw.
lite", "' Bronner recalll.
opencd in the fall of '92, less than two
We played the Unks coune which,
"We were trying to do
years from when the idea for the Trail
.rrue to ir.sl1lll11e, w., Scottilh in character.
10mething that had
fim had occurred to Bronner. The la&amp;r
Six-hundred-acre Lake Saughahatcbe, in
never bun done
of the original seven complexes came
play on 24 of Grand National'• 36 regulain the world
online within a year. Total pri.:e rag:
tion holes, is glim]&gt;ICid for th~ 6m time
.. . it was a
approximatdy $140 million .
behind the Unks coune'• ~«Dnd hole and
•
matter
Acclaim for }oncs' handiwork began
reappears intcrmitrmrly throughout the
rolling in ooon aftcr the a:remonial firtr
t~ No, 6, a twisty par 5 that play~ to a
drives wcre muck. Golf Digm listed
remote oomer of the prope:ny, w., a par·
both regulation courses at the Grand
ricular favorite. And the water carry to 18
National complex in Auburn/Opdika
W2ll ., hard, and good. ., it geu. Everyont
among the top four new public coursin our group hit the guen in regular:ion,

r'

•

BYSconWoLn

SEMJltiEl CORMSPOMDEm

Pro . . . . .
~

...,MIA
......

_

DlliH 110, s.a.m.nto 102,
MriMIIed1·1

NEW YORK (AP) Major league ba~ball attendance dropped sllahtly from .
last year in the tilTh Week of
the season and the average is
S percent below 2001.
The averaae attendance for
the 30 malor leque teams
was 26,626 through the first
453 dates of the season, down
S pen:ent from 28,013
through a similar period last
year. The average was down
3.4 pen:ent after three weeks
and 4.9 pen:ent after four
weeks.

STEWART- The lOth ranked
Eastern Eaale&amp; remained' hi contention · fOr the Ti-i-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
crown with 1 7-0 division win
over Federal Hocldna during a
recent airls varsity softball con·
test.
Eastern is now I S-3 and 12-3 In
the league.
Eastern took a 1-0 lead in the
first when Tiffeny Bissell reached
on an error and ~cored on · a 6-3
Sandy Powell ground out•
Meanwhile, Eastern hurler Kass
Lodwick. sat the Lancers down in

otder over each of the first three
inninas. until fin111ly Mo.ry Fossett
aot the first Lancer bit in the
fourth inning. ·
Eulem threatened in the second
and third but could not muster a
run. They maintained the 1·0 lead.
however. Eastern thre11tened 1111ln
In the fourth inning, but again
failed to score. Finally, Coach
Pam Douthittrs crew managed two
run in the fifth when Jenny Arms
singled, was advunced by MO!Jin
Weberfs bunt, and 11 TiiTeny
Bi sell bunt. Carrie Wiagins
reached on 11n error, Powelf was
hh by a pitch to load the bases,
.then Janet Calaway shtmmed o

two-run double for 11 3-0 Eastern
loud.
Federul loaded the bll$es in the
sixth innina, but Lodwick buckled
down to aet out of the jam.
Eastern plated three more runs in
the sixth when Nikki Phillips
reached on lln error, Alyss• Holter
sinaled, Weber had 11n RBI sinale,
Bissell slnaled, 11nd Cnrrle
Wiggins had a two run single, the
score 7-0 &amp;stern,
Again pitching well, Kuss
Lodwiek ~lcked up the win for .the
Elgles wtth a three hitter, !lliven
strikeouts llnd thrM walks. Amundu
Moore suffered the loss for Federul
Hocking · with seven hitter, three

strikeouts, und ane w11lk.
Eastern bitten; wvre Bli&gt;-~11 a sin·
gle, Cllrrie Wigins two s.inales,
J:met C1htw11y ll double, Ko.ss
Lodwick 11 single, llnd Holter,
Arms, nnd Weber otl singles. .
Federlll hitters were Mary
Fossett with two singles. and B.
Cossin 11 slnllle.
&amp;stem hosts Suuthern In the ,_,,
Sec:tionul Tournament ch11mpi· .
onshlp ·
atune tU Eastern
Wednesdny.
Southe.rn 11dvnncedto the sec:tionln flnul hy def~atlng Trimble1
29- 1a In the open ina I!UIIlt or
Division IV 1\ectlonul play on
Monduy In Oloustcr. ·

msBrewen

Dunn

....

~fo
THE CAUSE

Bv Soon W0111
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

•••l•ls' ·Stille
undei)Ois
surpry
CINCINNATI (AP) Cincinnati Bengals defensive
lineman Olen Steele under·
went arthroscopic surgery
Monday to repair tom cartilage
in his right kriee.
·
He is expected to return to
preseason workouts in about
ihree weeks, team spokesman
Jack Brennan said.
Steele was injured Saturday
during the first day of rniru·
camp at Paul Brown Stadium.
He has been with the
Bengals since being drafted in
1998 in the fourth round from
Michigan. The Bengals have
used him mostly as a backup at
defensive tackle.

Toledo ousts
softball coach
Ont Of mOle "maybe we can play thiJ
game after all" momen~&amp; that keep the
golf economy humming.
Overall, Grand National 1eemed
more forgiving, le11 overWhelmingly
huge. man The Judge. The back nine
featut'CI aeveral craggy par foun that
were downright cozy. Not that my KOre
reflected any improvement. In the after·
noon we played tbe •horr coune, which
featured all the regulation coune'• quali.
ry; sans tbe option to lay up. A father and
lOll tw01qme on the horiwn and ~Je~~end
etiquette-indifferent tquirrel• clwing

•

gomtry and Muscil Shoab, Northwtltpljd
you in ~Ill} driving mngt of 21 fobtdoW
coursn on tight magnificmt Thill 1itn. :
Norrhwm Airli1111. aiMtg with N~
Airlinlt parmm, F.xprtu mrli1111and Met4bil,
AirliiUI. rmw Birmingham daily jiwll.
.Detroit and Mnnphls; tm1t1 ~
Hunttvl/k, MoiJiil and MM~go~Mry ~
ti- J.ily ftom Mnnphil; and 1m1t1 ~
Sho.W IWiet dailjftom Mmphil.
••

•••

wldo pc,.INioa &amp;o.:
firUn...lw ·...-'· S.. Slhtaa' '• _.:

a.prlated
1

fv ' ,,. wriMr bued lA Sen Fterdx,, ...

TOLEDO
(AP)
University of Toledo softball
coach Michelle Fagnant,
whose teams won just 9 of 67
Mid-American Conference
James in her three seasons,
will not have her contract
renewed, athletic directOr
Mike O'Brien said Monday.
The Rockets went 41·98·1
under Fagnant, who previous·
ly had been a head coach al
Allegheny and Providence
colleges. Toledo completed its
IC880II on Sunday w1th a 7..0
home Joss to Eastem Michigan
to fall to 13-36-1 with a :z;.21
record in the MAC.

Urbana hires

ALABAMA'S

1.800.9&gt;49.-4-444

•

••

www.rtjaolf.com

-

•

foolball coach
I

URBANA (AP) - Todd
Murgatroyd, an assistant
coach' at Youngstown State,
was aelecled u head football
coach at Urbana University
on Monday.
Murgatroyd worked under
Ohio State coach Jim Tresael
when Trease! was at
Youngstown State. He also
worked for Johnny Majors at
·Tennessee and was an assis•
tint coach at:. Hawaii and
Kent State.

'

romps 1n
29-12

CONCORD, N.C. (AP) Ricky Rudd, one race away
from breaking the NASCAR
record for consecutive stans,
might not have too many
more events in his future. ·
Rudd, In his 21st season of
Winston Cup racing, said he
has n9t ruled out retiring at
the end of this season -pan·
ly because of the changing
face of NASCAR and the
way the sport is being mar·
keted.
Rudd is set to make his
~6th consecutive start at the
Coca-Cola 600 on May 26,
which would break Thrry
Labonte's Iron Man record.
He tied the mark Saturday
when he staned the race at
Richmond
International
Raceway.

.

Southem
•

sectional,

retlrtltltnt

1

•

Lady Eagles shut out Federal Hocking

RlckvRudd
conslclerln1

'

•

H!GHIIGHIS

OUnA HIIJI- Cincinnati Reds' Adam Dunn hlta a grand alem off Milwaukee Brewers pltohar Ruben Quevedo In the first
lnnlnl Monday ln Cincinnati. (AP)
•
CINCINNATI (AP)- Adam Dunn by clutching the rulllngs.
Milwaukee hus lost II of lis lost 13
hit his first career grand slam in front There was no indlcution how long gumcs, leuvlng it with the NL's wmsl
of Cincinnati's smallest crowd in 10 the Reds' opening duy starter will be record ut 9·23.
years, and the Reds overcame Joey sidelined. Humlfton's injury could Dunn's slum extended the Brewers'
Hamilton~s hamstring inJury
they solidify Jose Rijo's place ln the rotll· first-Inning problems. Opponents
beat the Milwaukee fl'rewers 8·3 tion us the flflh starter.
hnve scored In the first Inning in six
Monday night.
Jim Brower (2·0) guvc up u run In of their lust seven gumes, hllting
Despite returning from a West 2 2·3 Innings ufler Hamilton left. homers in five of them.
Coast trip in first place In the NL Scott SuHivun. struck out Richie Ken Griffey Jr. wus umong those
Central, the Reds sold only 12,867 Sexson with the buses loaded in the who congratulated Dunn when he
tickets for the game, their smallest seventh, und Dunny Oruvcs got the reuchcd the bench. Griffey, sidelined
gate since 1992.
last three outs for his lith suve In 14 by u torn potellu tendon, complulned
before the gume .ubout the wuy funs
Sean Casey hit three doubles and u chances.
single as the Reds emerged from an Milwaukee's Geoff Jenkins became und the mediu huve treuted him since
offensive slump and a four-game los· the third pluyer to hll u homer over he returned to his hometown.
ing streak. Cincinnati had scored only the 40-foot wall in cen ter, a solo shot Alex Ochoa had u pinch RBI dou·
six runs In Its last 3~ Innings.
off Sullivan lhul cut it to 1·!5 ln the ble und Eric Young si ngled home two
In addition to his slam, Dunn had a eighth. The drive wus estimated at more runs In the second lnnin~, cut·
sacrifice
with the bases loaded in 463 feet, the longest this seuson Ill ting it to .5-3. Tyler Houslon s RBI
double .off Brower mode II S·4 in the
. the eiahth mning, leaving him with a Cinergy Field.
.
career-high five ~Bls.
The Brewers never recovered ufter fifth.
Hamilton pulled his left hamstring the Reds butted around in the first Casey hud 11 two-run single in the
while covering first base In the Inning for flve runs off Ruben slxlh off Roy King, leuvlng hlm 4·
fourth. He left the field and gingerly Quevedo (1·4), who left for a pinch- for-4. He also got an intcntionol
walk.
·
eaaed himself down the dugout steps hltter in lhe second inning.

as

nr

GLOUSTER - Tnking
udvnntli@C of eighteen
Trimble wulk~ und thirteen
timely hits. the Southern
Ludy_ Tornadoes hum me red
the Trimble 'fumcuts 29·12
Monduy · nll!ht in tho
Scctltll\nl senll-t'inuls ut
Glouster Munldpul Pnrk . The
win broke u seven-l!ume win·
nlng streuk by the 'fumcuts'
uncf knocked them out of the
2!102 tournmnent bunt with n
13·6 overull record.
Southern, now 13·9 und 8·
6 In
the Tri· Vutley
Conl'erence, now ud vnnces to
the Scctlonul finnls ut Eustem
ut S p.m. Wednesday. The .
two teums split durh111 regu·
lur seuson pluy. Lust Moncfuy,
Southern upset Eastern 9·2. ·
The Southern win wus
quite ll. shock to Trimble
cspeclully un the Thmc:utsr
home field. Trimble hud
gulned tho four seed In the
tournument und hud one of
the best records In Southern
Ohio l!OinF lntu the MUme.
Trimble took ll 2·0 leud In
the tlrst lnninM when Allory
Hooper slummed u double
nnd scored on the next pitch,
when Emily Oltl'in pounded 11
long single to left field.
Giffin tnen scored when
NIcky Vore pounded 11 sinllle
up the middle for a 2·0
Ti'i mble leud.
Southern . meunwhlle, wenl
down 1·2·3 ht the first inning
then threatened whh u Jeud"
off wulk to Chupmun in the
second, Chupmun udvunced
on u Brooke Kiser sucrlflce
then udvun~cd to third on u
pusscd, bull, but wns left
strunded. Trimble threatened
in the second but len two
runners stranded.
In the lust four gumeli
Southern hu.1 been swinging
the but very well . The timing
cou ldnlt huve been better. In
the top of the third lnnins,
Southcm MOl lhings rolling
when Jounnc Pl.:kens reached
on un error. und Ashlee Hilt
.~ lmn111ed u 1wo-run double.
Deunu Pullins reached on un
error, then Brigettc Barnes
PltiH Itt lomp,, 12

·u1 can give them the direction~ but the bottom line is they've got to play. "
- Rio Q,.,de hlld OCHtOh lrld W1mlmon1

Redmen make.iinpressive tu_
maround
Rio~ for ttl rBlllallffi [)
AMCINAL4

tion to win."
He alao anrlbuted the turnaround
to lhe playe{l. "The kid• have done

ffJ1{otull tournament

I

I I.

b. II

IUo Held Colch Bl'lld Wamimont.

an outatl~lna Job, they warued

to

do thlna• the naht way," be lllkl.
"They've bouaht IntO it (the ay..
tem}, ~ belfoved that they could
•• It cloDe and they did lt.
e111
them tho direction, but
tbly'VI Jot to

IIW. tint uuon will! 1ho Redmla,
llfDelal" Ia 101011 In new r... llld
oflheliiiiii.Por
1111 6ft IIIII die lollll't DII.Y, llo
""01-wde•• Jrllllle~ die No. 61ied ID
Ol'lllde wu faciiiJ
wlaa .
IJie • AMCJNAIA Ropon IX wcllt edllc," added. ·~
to tlltlldont In Its tlnal. four ,_..IDd
"lbamuulnt.
·
have contldence in their wolk ldlic, then hid to wilt ror aome belp.
WII'IIIIDcmt llid die chup In lid· tblt they bid II!" die time llftdJhe
............ IIIIo II
lillie WMIIII billlll ~that d'ort IIi to putlbomtelvnln • potl-

•=......

mutt

'

�•

Baseba

www.mydlltt,..ntfnel.com .

The Daily Sentinel

sixth,at Raider

Are the Indians back on track?

SlJRMJIOIIl

RIO GllANDE - Eutem't ~
lnd: te.'lm turned In a balanocd

to finl!ll $hUh In Saturd~'s
Rlidtr lnv\tatlonll held II !hoe Uniwntty
of Ria Onnde.
The &amp;ales stoml ~ points in the
boys' meet, while MeW was tiahth with
ll points. A pair of SEOAL scllools led
the dayl with River Valley postlna ll-4
points tor the win, alld Jaeltsoo titltina
steond with Ill. Vinton wu third will\
8!1, fallowed by Al~and« (67), Cool
rovt (!14), and Eastern.
·
.
Eastt:m's best llnlsh of the day wts in
the 411.100-meter rebcy, where the Eqles
finisMtl serond to Jllcltson. The Mel~
County quartet of Bntndon Werry, Kevin
Mlll'clnlro, R.I. Olbbs, and Bryan Minear
mmtd In a time of 47 .9. .
Mlll'tlnka also earned one of the h~h·
estlndi\'ldullllinishes for Eastern, taking
third In the long jump at 19·S.S. Gibbs
was third In the shot put (42·11) behind
a•pair of Coal Grow throwers.
Sprinter 'tYson Lee took third In the
IOO.meter dash (ll,O) to post the hiahest
flnl~h of the d~y for M~lgs.
·
Evan Shaw took third In the discus
( 138· 11) for Meigs, while ll.astern 's Ross
Holter threw into sixth place (121·8).
Werry and Minear finished fourth and
finh (12.2 and ll.l) In the 100.
In the ~hot put, Nick McLilughlin was
fourth (40·5.75) for Meigs and Darren
Scarborough was seventh (39-4) for
Enstcnt
Ryan Stobart was fif'lh in the 200·
meter du~h (:25.4) for Meigs.
·
Ryan Wachter was shllh In the II 0·
meter hurdles for &amp;stem.
·
Meigs' Grunt Arnold was eighth in the
1,60!l·meter run.

BALTIMORE (AP) - Brady Anderson, leaving tt") early while tagging up on Jeff
making his return to Camden Yards, dou· Conine's fly ball.
bled and scored jhe
RED Sox 5, DEVIL RAYS 3
tiebreaking run on Jalbert The Boston Red Sox, escaped a bases·
Cabrera's bad-hop single in loaded jam in the ninth and won 5-3 over
the eighth inning as the Tampa Bay Monday night for their sixth
Cleveland Indians beat the straight victory and now lead the majors
Baltimore Orioles 9-4 with a 21· 7 record.
Monday night.
· The Devil Rays are speeding in the oppo·
Jim Thome, Russell site; direction, tying a club record with the
Branyan and Matt Lawton losing streak. The streak equals the longest
homered for the Indians, in \he majors this year. Detroit began the
who have won three straight season with II losses in a row.
Thome
following a six-game skid.
In the ninth, Red Sox manager Grady
Travis Fryman had three Little decided to stick with knuckleballer
hits and Anderson, released Tim Wakefield. Little wanted to rest closer
by the 10rioles in November Ugueth Urbina and give Wakefield some
after a 14-year run, went 2- work.
. for-4 in his first game back Tampa Bay loaded the bases without get·
in Baltimore.
,.
ting the ball out of the infield on Wakefield,
: Jay Gibbons homered and Chris Singleton who hadn't pitched since April 29. Greg
hit a bases-loaded triple for the Orioles, Vaughn walked, Wakefield threw wildly to
whose four-game winnmg streak ended.
second on a comebacker and then gave up
With the score 4-all, Buddy Groom (1·1) an infield single to Chris Gomez.
got the first two outs in the eighth before
The Devil Rays' hope for ending a slide
Anderson doubled. Cabrera then hit a that matches the club mark set in 1998 fiz.
bouncer to short that took a high hop off the zled when Russ Johnson grounded into a
glove of Mike Bordick and rolled into cen· ·game-ending double play.
·
ter as Anderson scored.
Wakefield took over in the seventh after
Branyan hit Groom's l)ext pitch over the Darren Oliver (4-1) gave up a two-run
right-field wall for a two-run homer, and homer to Toby Hall, cutting Boston's lead to
Lawton homered with a man on in the ninth · 5·3, Wakefield retired six straight batters
to make it 9-4.
.
.
before running into trouble in the ninth.
. Ryan Drese (3·3), who lost hts preVIOUS
TWINS 3, TIGERS 1
dlree starts, $ave up foqr runs and seven hits
At Minneapolis, Jacque Jones drove in
in seven inmngs.
.
three runs, and the 1\vins' bullpen picked up
Orioles starter Sean Douglass, who came for injured starter Rick Reed.
in with a 9,45 ERA, allowed four runs and
Minnesota improved to 15·2 at home.
seven hits in five innings.
.
. Tony Fiore, Mike Jackson and J.C. Romero
Douglass blanked the Indians on two sin· held the Tigers scoreless for three innin$S· .
Eddie Guardado pitched a perfect mnth
gles throu~h three innings, then yielded five
straight h1ts to start the fourth and fell for his 12th save in 12 chances. Reed (4-1)
behind 4·0. After Ricky Gutierrez and threw only 62cfitches in five innings but left
Lawton singled, Baltimore pitching coach with a straine right forearm. Knuckleballer
Mark Wiley walked to the mound to settle Steve Sparks (2·3) allowed three runs on II
down Douglass, making his seventh career hits in his second complete game of the seastart.
son.
· Thome promptly drove the next pitch over
RANGERS 6, WHITE Sox S
the center-field wall, his eighth homer of At Arlington, Texas, Gabe Kapler made
the season, and Fryman and Anderson sin· up for two errors with a key defensive play
gled before Cabrera hit a sacrifice fly.
and a game-winning sacnfice fly in the '
Gibbons hit his eighth home run in the ninth inning. · . · ·
Orioles' half to make it 4·1.
.
Kapler's short fly to left scoted Rafa~l
. In the Cleveland fifth, Omar Vizquel . Palmeiro, who led off the ninth with a walk
walked, took second on a fly ball to left and off Antonio Osuna (3·1). Palmeiro had gone
moved to third on a wild pitch before being to third on Rusty Greer's single, his third
tag~ed out trying to steal home.
hit:
, Smgleton hit a bases-loaded triple in the
Hideki lrabu (1·2), the sixth Texas· pitch·
bottom of the inning, but was called out for er, worked the ninth.

m~J~Ct

AL

IARI.Y
- Eastem'a Ke~n Merolnko (with baton) starts the second leg of the
4x101).mater ,.lay es Brandon Werry, center, winds down during Saturday's Raider
Invitational meet. Eaatem flnlahed becond In the rece. (Dan Pole~)
·

nt the University of Rio Grande on
SaturdllY.
.
Meil!s scored nine points to finish
ei&amp;hth. ·
.
TbeJ.ady Eagles' 4xl00.meter team
finbhed second (l:OM), and their
41tl00-meter team was founh (2:08.!1)
LAO\' itAGLES FINISh SEVENTH
Kimberly Martinko WU fifth In the
RIO ORANDE - The Eastern girls long jump (13·6.75) and seventh in the
track team scored 31 points to finish sev· IOO·meter dash (1S.4) for the Lady
enth nt the Rnlder Invitational meet htld Eagles.

Freshman Katie Hoxsie was founh In
the 100 (IS.3) and fifth in the 200 (33.1).
Jennifer Hayman, another Eastern fresh·
man wns seventh in the 400 (1: 13.6);
· For Meigs, Cilssle L.ee took fourth
(31.5) in ihe 200 and Brandi Thomas
was nrth (6:SO.Q) in the I ,600·me.ter.
Eastern '.s. Kayla Nave was eighth in
the 400 (I :23.S). Jessica Howard Willi eighth In the :200
(3.5.9) for the Lady Eagles.

Rio Grande runners have a d~y of K-C Racewaya to open gates on Saturday ·
personal records at Butler Tw1hght
STAFf R£PORT

lNDlANAPOL.IS - The Rio Grande track
and field squad sent silt participants to the
Butler University 1\vllight Meet an Saturday.
All si)( participants came nwny with personal
bests.
Anmndn Wolfe Willi the lone Redwomen
performer, The former Amanda·Ciearcreek
stnlldout rnn her best time in the 5,000,
(19:03/ finishing 24th.
On t1e men's side, Mutt Boyles ran 18th in

Redmen
INmPip81

.

'

They won the: last four con·
tests nntlthe walt was worth
It us the games plnyed out,
Rio found its wny Into the
post•senson.
"I told the kids if we win
12 (In the AMC) we're in,
we hud the tie-breaker on
(sweeping) ·
Ohio
Dominicuri and the other
thlug is, when y11u pluy and
you're done and we were
done with our schedule on
1'hursduy;
there
was
Friday's
games
and
Saturday's games, the pres·
sure doesn't mount on us,
we've done our part, the
pressure mounts on the
other teums when they look
and see whnt we, ve done
then they see whut they
have to do und thut adds u
lot of pressure," Wnrnlmont
said. ·
Rio Orande will fnc:e

·the .5,000-meter event, finlshinA_ with a time of
1.5: 13.44. Derek Baker was 37th (15:.59.96)
and Scott McNutt (16:06.68) finished 40th.
In the men's 800, Jerod Arms wns 4Sth with
a time of 2:04.68, and Sean Plummer was
15th In the triple jump (41 feet) and 25th in
the lona Jump (20 feet, 4),
Rio Urande will host the Rio Orandc
Invitational on Saturday at the .Stockmeister
Track and Field CompleK. The meet wilt
begin at noon.

AMC champion and top
seed Ohio Dominican on
Wednesday .at 10 a.m. In the
flm round of the tournament nt Panther Valley.
· The Redmen have won
three of Its last four 1ames
with the Panthers, lncludlna
a sweep this year at R.lo
Orande.
"I've always been one
those ·coaches that I wei·
come the challenge, nobody
thinks you can do some·
thing and so that's the rea·
son . you should do It,"
Warnlmont said. "Ohio
Dominican Is 30·9 and we
gave them two of their loss·
es,
"They have problems
with left-handed p1tchlng, I
threw left-left at them (the
first match-up) and we'ro
golna to throw a lefthander
at them again."
Sophomore Tim Sutton
will get the ball at game's
beginning. "(He's) been
throwing the ball renl well
lately, he aot a win and a
save lut week and he's

Romps
•fromPipBI .
pounded 11 three run home run over the left
field fence for 11 4·2 SHS lead. Chapman
scored on 11 Brooke Kiser fielder'• choice for
the f1 fth run of the inning, .5·2 Southern.
From that point on, It was a scorel'll night·
mure. Chapman retired the aide for Southern,
but the Tornadoe1 whirled up another 1torm In
tho fourth.6hen they walkc(lslx timet, Katie
Sayre had.ln RBI sfnale, Deana Pullins had a
three-run double, and Brlaette Barnes ham·
mered her second home run of the nlaht, this
time a two-run shot. The nlne·run frame left
the score 14-:2.
,
Aaaln Chapman was touah, setting two
atrllteouts and a ground out to end the frame.
Then Southern came back with a venaeance
with five more run1 In the fifth Inning. ·
Slnalea by Aahlec Hill, A1hley Routh, Joanne
Picken•, and a two-run 1hot by Rachel
Chapman brought aero•• tho run1, the score
. 19·2,
Southern had a 1hot at the mercy rule win,
but idle time on the sideline Iced Chapman for
a while and she walked five batten the next
lnnlna as Trimble plated 1lx runa to cut the
score to 19·8 and out of the .reatralnll of the
mercy rule.
i
\·
The saaa continued, Southern p ated five

done outstanding job.
- ''He spots and locates real
well and that's goinl! to
give any . team problems,"
he added. Sutton scattered
seven hill and gave only
one earned run In a 3·:2 win
on April 6 versus the
Pan then.
"I got to think that we
have
their
number,"
Warnimont added. "If we
think we have their number,
baseball's 90 percent men·
tal, that's a great advan•
tage."
''The kids are excited
about play! ng them, they
want to play them, so that's
a good thing."
The double·ellmlnation
tournament fields
six
teams. Other first round
match-ups pit No. s seed
Shawnee State versus
Mount Vernon Nazarene
and No. 4 seed Walsh
against No. 3 seed Tlrfln.

more In the sixth for a 23·8 tally, then Trimble
came back with four runs for il 23· 12 score.
Southern added sht Insurance nlns In lhe sev·
enth Inning, and Chapfi!an regained her earll·
er form by retiring the side In order. to pre•
serve the win.
Chapman fanned four and walked sill in
while scauertna ten hits in plcklna up the win.
Allory Hooper auffered the lou, while aolna
four and a third lnnlnas. Allison Christman
flnlah.ed the fourth and went another two
lnnlna• before Lindsey Dec:ore came In to fin·
llh the aame. The) combined for flve ltrlke·
oull, eighteen walka, and thirteen scattered, ·
but timely hltt.
Southern hitten were led by junior Briaette
Barnea wfth two home runs, four walkl, and
alx RBI; Aahlce Hill with two ainalea and a
double; Rachel Chapman. a d011ble and alnale
and five RBI; Joanne Pickens two slnJies,
Dtana Pulllna a double, and alnalea by Katie
Sayre, A1hlcy Rouah, and Brooke Kiter.
Trimble hlttera were Nicky Vore with a
triple, double and tingle; Allory ~opper two
doublet, Lindsay Hooper two alnales, Emily
Oiffin two alnalel, and Allaon Christman a
alnale.
Sollthern goea to Eastern WedQesday after a
schedul~d aame with South Gallla 1\Jesday.

'

•

CHILLICOTHE- After
couple weeks of uncertain\Y•
K·C Raceway will reopen us
gates under new tnanlll!einent
and new . ownership · this
Saturday night. May 11 with 11
complete slate of Super
Sprint, Late Model, Street
Stock, . and Modified racing
Action. The trllck has been

sola for the second time this
senson with Jim Nier now tak.
lng the reigns of Ohio's fnstest
high banked 318-mile oval.
The complete racing schedule
will run as scheduled throughout the rest of the season.
Pit Rates are slated to open
at 4 p.m. 'With spectator gates
opening at 4:30 · Warm·

ups begin at 6 p.m. and racing
at 7:30p.m. K·C Raceway is
located twelve miles south of
Chillicothe,OH on U.S. Route.
23, two miles west of Alma,
Ohio on Blain Highway.
For further information
phone K·C Raceway at(740)
663-4141.

We remember those who have passed away
. and are especially dear to us.

w, will publish a spacial page devoted to those who ara gone but not forgotten. They will be
almllar to the umpla below:

you wllh, Hlect one of the foltowln1 FREE Yentl btlow to

_ _....,
Dt.vld C. Alldtlowa
olutr lO, lHl-Ma, I, l810

May God's &amp;1\i&amp;ela
~&amp;ulde

you &amp;rul
protect you
throul&amp;hout time.
Alw.,a II\ our het.rt.,
lolul t.nd MonA AftdNwa t.nd

lamttr

l•ccom1oany your tribute.
I. We hold you in our thoughiS and memories forever.
2. Moy Ood orodle you in His 11l111S, now and forever.
3. Pllftver mined, never foraotten. May Ood hold you in the palm of
His hand.
.
4. Thonk you for the wonderful days we •hared toaether. My prayen
will be with you until we meet aaoln.
s.'rho days we sh,..d were sweet.' tiona to aee you aaaln In Ood'• ·
heavenly &amp;lory.
'
6. Your couraae and bravery stlllinaplre unit, and the memory of your
smile foils ua with joy and lauahter.
7. 'rhoujh out of slaht. you'll forever be In my hean and mind.
. 8. The daya may come and ao, but the times we shared will always remain.
9. May the liaht of~"'"'" shine on your fiiCO for eternity.
tO. May God's anpla aulde you and protect you throusJ!out time.
II. \'oo were allaht In our life that bum1 fllftver In our heuu.
12. May God's lf"'el shine over you for all time.
13. You ore in our thouahtsand prayer~ from momlna to niaht and from
ytarto yur.

14,We stnd this mmap with olovlna kill fore~emal re11 and happine11.
IS. Moy the Lon! bless you with His graces and wann,Jovlna heart

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • 1121F PICTURE INCLUDED
Fl1l ()Ul the form below and drop orf ~()
'

'

The Dally Sentinel
With Fondeel Memorlee

lll Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
DEADLINE1 FRIDAY, MAY 17, 12 Noon

r------------------------------------Piease publlah my tribute In the apeclal Memory Paae on Friday, May 24.

Nameofdeceased----------------------Relatlonahlp to m e ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - Number of ~c:lwed vene _ _.__
Datcofblrth-------------- Dateofplllln..__ _ _ __
Print yournamehcrc----------------------Addre•• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phonenumbel:~----­

C i t y · . - . · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - State---- Zipl'-r•- Make Check l'lyable to THE DAILY SENTINEL

L----~--------------~-~--------------•

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=-:.;

Griffey's feelings hurt by fans

CINCINNATI (AP) - repeatedly bristled at all first place in the NL
Ken Griffey Jr. is tired of · the attention he gets. He Central after Griffey got
how he's being treated in had been in more of an hurt, but had lost four in a
his hometown.
upbeat mood this season- row heading into Monday 's
game against Milwaukee.
The injured Cincinnati until Monday.
. Reds out·
Part of his an~er resulted
Griffey said he's been·
~...., f i e I d e r from a television station treated worse in Cincinnati
lashed out poll asking which player than he was in Seattle.
Monday at should sit the bench when
"It's not even close," he
the
way Griffey is able to play said. "You talking about
fans
and again. Griffey was one of little New York here?"
the media the four choices, and 74 ' Asked if he wants · to
have kept percent of the fans picked leave Cincinnati, Griffey
him in the him.
said, "I just want to play. I
spot IiI! h t The Reds went on a win- just want to get back on the
he ning streak and moved into field."
since
c a m e
Griffey
home in a .
February
2000 trade with the Seattle
Mariners.
With Griffey hurt .ag~in,
·some fans are quest10mng
whether the trade was
worthwhile.
"I get consistently beat
up for no reason," Griffey DIAN!! MILLIRON eniwer and ••• up Dtreclarlae, Operetor
"d · · · h' 1 k end. JOHN . DOl!, lhtlr tnltrllt In utd AUIIIInCI and
sal ; Slthng In IS oc er Unknown SpouH, 11 reel uleta or be Certified
and
after batting practice. ''It's enr, of DIANE forever barred from Rutdence Mall
been happemng since the MILLIRON whoteleet 1111rttno the ume, Borvlct returned.
That lhlo Clll II
ve'J first day I got here, e••c• of reeldence II lor lorecloeure of
one
of tho••
an I'm tired of it. You try T~i~:. ••A~~. So~~~ =~~.h~~~~·a:,· ~~~ mentioned
In Section
to bend over b~ckward t~ Middleport, OH u1 n1, end the eello of 2703.14 of the
do the nght thmg, and 1t 41780, but whoa• uld reel eetate, end Rovl11d Codo ol
just seems to get thrown in pruant place ol the procatde of utd Ohio.
mv face.
. reeldence
11 •••• applied to ·thl
''I came here to play unknown wilt llkt P • Y men I
o I Adem L. Qrou •
notice that on Pttlllontr'l Claim In 00055382
baseball. I took less November 2 2001 0 the proper order of
mone~. I didn't whine or 2:10p.m., CONSECO II• prtorltr, and for
SWORN
TO
CUBS 6, CARDINALS 5
anythmg, and this is the FINANCI! IERYlCINO IUOh · Other and BEFORE ME, end
At Chicago, Alex Gonzalez
thanks 1 get? 1 don't need CORP., Ike OAEEN rurther relief •• to aubecrlbed In mr
hit a solo homer with one out
TRI!I! FINANCIAL ]UIIInd equlla.blt. . preoencelhle
in the ninth, and Bill Muetler
that."
· ·1 S•RYICIN~
THE
der of 2002.
homered in his first game
Griffey tore .the patella COF\PORATION flied DEFENDANT(&amp;)
tendon in his right knee on Itt Comptelntln C••• NAMED ABOVE ARE Nolloy Public for the
back from the disabled list for
April 7 and is on the diS· No. Ot·CV·III In lht REQUIRED
TO Stele of Ohio
the Cubs.
Th
,
Court
of
Common
ANSWER
ON
OR
.
I
Gonzalez, who had been 0·
abled tSI.
ere S no tar· Pl111 MtiQI Countr BEFORE THE 11 OAV
Public Notice
for-3, hit a 1-0 pitch from
get date for his return, Ohio altegtnv that the OF JUNE, 2002.
which is expected some· Dtlendent(e), DIANE BV: REIMER &amp;
Mike Timlin (0,2) into the
, ne Aroe Agoncr on
time
in the next few MILLIRON and JOHN LORBER CO., L.P.A.
left-field bleachers.
k
OOE,
Unknown
CONSECO
FINANCE
Aging
11 BucJcare Hille
Jeff Passero (1·2) struck out ·
we~ s.
.
Spouu, II any, of SERYIClNO CORP.
• H"ocklng Volley
one in one inning for the vic·
Stnce he agreed to a DIANE MILLIRON ADAM L. OROBB.- Regional DIVIIapmlnl
nine-year, $116.5 million have or claim to have Attomer at Llw
Dletrlcl, llouto 1 Box
tory. Jim Edmonds and Edgar
280D,
Morlelte, Ohio
contract
to
play
in
his
en
lnllreet
In
the
retl
Attarner
lor
Plelnlllf·
Renteria hit two-run homer-s
45750
It raqultllng
hometown,
Griffey.
has
~t'ow''~.
du.crlbed
Pllltloner
for St. Louis.
·
...,
P.O. Box HI
prapaoele
for
Situated ln the Twlneburg, OH 44087 Alzhtlmtr'l Dillltl
To w n 1 h I p
o I (330) 4211-4201
end Releltd Dementia
Satlebuoy, Countr or
Stele Funded ·Program
Meta• end Stele or IN THE COURT OF In Athene, Melge,
Ohio : Being In COMMON PLEAS
Monroe,
Morgan,
Sallebury Townlhlp
MEIOS COUNTY,
Noble and Wuhlngton
end a pert of Frectlon .
OHIO
cauntlu.
Smell,
2, Town 2, Range 13
mtnority·ownod and
of tha Ohio CASE NO. 01 CV15t women butlnee•
Campenr'• Purch11e
anllrprlltl 111
and beginning 301
encouraged Ia eubmit
AFFIDAVIT FOR
r..t North ol tile
SERVICE
propoeale. Dttallt of
Southwell corner of' IV PUBLICATION
eervlcll end funding
Fraction 2; thence
ere Included In the
l!aet 1215 fill; CONSECO FINANCE RFP.
Technical
thence North 33 SI!RVICINO CORP uelatence will be
dear•.. weet ua
flea OREEN TREE
avalleble upon
1•1; thence North oiO
FINANCIAL
requeot. Completed
d1gr111 Wtll 122
SEAVICINO
propo1111 deedllne
POIIIIQI. oupplloo provld&lt;IGI Rush
1111; thence Iauth
. CORPORATION
5:00p.m. June 7, 2002.
Add,roJoood Stampod Envelope!
43·1/4 degre11 Wtel
Cell Dobbie Brown,
4, P.O. Bo&gt; 1438, Antioch,
320 1111; thence Wilt
Plaintiff
Plenner at 740·374·
I l l 1111; thence
VB.
11431llar RFP Packet.
1-1438. Stan lmmodlatelyl
South 320 fill to ,.,. DIANE MILLIRON,
reduce payments up
(5)71TC
plect of beginning,
1111.
to 50%, lower interest.
A COMPUTER PUT IT WORK.
ct~ntelnlng
t.lt
Dlfandlnt
ecr11,
more
or
1e11.
121111·75 por hou•. I'TIFT HI00·086-H14
THI!
BTATE
OF OHIO
Nonprofit, licensed,
l!xoapttng end
rtHrvlng therefrom, SUMMit COUNTY:
bonded.
Help Wanted
a certain rarcet
containing .1 of en
acre In the North pert Adam L. Oro_I!J,
theraof, which w11 being ftret dulr
aonr::,::: Mann~ · eworn, depo111 and
uye lhll hi Ia lht
dDitWtd •'UM ~. 112, attorney
fa.r
mNIII IOUtPMINT ILOWOUT!
rlflrfllll to whtoh It CONIICO "NANCE
Sovo 111 Hugo Hltcllonl
htrtbr made. The II..VICINO CO .. P., In
Pleasant Valley
Trtadmilo, muilf:gymo, llllr cirrO.,I,o~. I
foreoolng being pert the ebove enlllltd
Nursing and
W1rr11111H, Delivery.
of the real. 111a11 a 0 1 10 n
f0 r
www.l~no-lt4-.oc&gt;n&gt;'Z437~
conveyed by d11d farecloaurt, money.
Rehabilitation
recorded In D11d retlll end judgment,
Center
look 114, Page 101 thll 11rvloe of
is
currently
acceptin&amp;
and o..d Book
11,
....
canna1 ...
P.f.. 131 of the eummona
applicutions
for 'a ·
made ur.on the
Mt Ill County DHd dllendenl 1), .DIAN!
PART·TIME ·
Reoorde.
'
The Petitioner
111LLIRON and JOHN
ACTIVITIES
DOE, Unknown
further alleg11 that lpou 11, If any, of
ASSISTANT.
by re11an 01 default DIANE MILLI .. ON
conlent. PleaM
of thl Dlflndant(tl In who 11 1..1 known
Day/Evening,
the payment of a eddreee II: 11 South
to contact our Mia•
18·32 houn per
proml11ory note, Third, Apt. u,
1t the
aocordtng. to ill Middleport, OH
week.
•
·
""
condition•
41110,
that
the
For
mort
information
nuntber llatld below
of a concurrent preMnl addr.. l of
PLEASANT
~~ ~~~:; Hid dlfendant(tl 11
unknoWn and cennot
VALLEY ·
peymentolealdnoll with ,. .. onabla
HOSPITAL
and conveying the d lllgt n01
be
preml- -rtllld,
_. .... _ 1111
tlo Human
have btln broken, eloerlll.....; ,,.,
RtJOurta
and the ume h11 following'"...,.
madiiO .-rtaln
1510
Valley Drt ..
biDOmt alitolutt.
lhl tddrtll Of lhl
Point Pleuant, WV
Thl Petitioner dlftndtnt (al:
pr•r• that the learch of Court
(304) 675-4340
O.ftndllnt(a) named . Docu-,
AA/EOI!
abOYI be ,.qutrld to Ttllphona

Pirates beat the Big Unit, 3·1

'

.

PHOENIX (AP) - Randy
Johnson can be. beaten, especially when the Diamond·
backs' defense breaks down.
Second baseman Junior
Spivey's throwing error
allowed
J a s o n
Kendall to
score the go·
ahead run in
the seventh
inning ns the
Pittsburgh
Pirates beat
Arizona 3·2
on Monday
Jahneon
nil!ht.
Y.l
guess
I'm the goat,"
Spivey said. ·
The Pirates
won for only
the second time in eight
games and stopPed Arizona's
four-game wlnntng streak.
Kendall wns 3-for-4 with an
RBI double and Brian Giles,
l·for•l7 against Johnson
entering the game, homered in
the first inning for the Pirates.
Kendall, a .375 lifetime hit·
ter against Johnson, had no
explanation for his success
against a pl11~er he called "the
best pitcher m the game."
A lower back strain caused
· Johnson to miss his first start
in nearly two years last
Wednesday. He wasn't at his
beilt in his return, although he
grew stronger as the night
went on.
Johnson (6· 1) struck out
eight and walked none while
scattering six hits in seven
innings.
·
Counting last year's post·
aenson, Johnson had won his
lut 11 decisions - I0 starts
and one memorable World
Series relief appearance and IS of his lnst 16. His lnst
reaular·&amp;easO!I loss was Aug.
23 at Pitllbunth.
Johnson safd his back felt a
little stiff, but he wns encour·
aged about how he pitChed
after a I0-day layoff.
Josh Fogg (4·1) matched
Johnson's performance before
being lifted for a pinch-hitter
in the seventh.
The rookie allowed two
runs on six hits in six innings.
He struck three, •walked one
intentionally and hit a batter.
keeping his coot in a showdown with the winner of the
last three NL Cy Young
Awards.

Reliever Scott Sauerbeck
shut down Arizona for two
innings, and Mike Williams
pitched the ninth for his 12th
save.
With the score 2·2, Kendall
and Mike Benjamin singled
with one out in the seventh.
Wilson hit a - bouncer to
Womack at shortstop, and he
threw to second baseman
Spivey for the force. But
Spivey tried to tum the double
play and his throw sailed over
first bnseman Mark Grace's
head as Kendatl scored.

NL

GOOD WEEKLY INCOME
Moiling Our Saito Sroohureol

Free Suppllo1, Pa1tagol
Start lmmodlatolyl

Genuine Opportunity!
For FrH lnfonn1t1on,
COIITOIIFrM;
1

-800·3&amp;7·11 70

&amp;

,.

•••

f

()

�.I

www.mydlllyantiMI.com

Mly7,2002

tltribune - Sentinel - Re

Mon-Sit 1Q.4
1111.1nd It.
Po!MfoJ, OH

.YOur Ad, 'Qtrihunt(740)446·2342 Sentinel (740) 992·2156 !ltgilttr.(304) 675·1333

Today...

.

Or Fa To (740) 44H008

l//ift;:,e ~~
Mondey thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00

. · Or F11 To (740) 8t2-2157

Or fill 1'0~304) 175-S234

(740)HNIOI

9"a,-c:('~~
Includes
up To
Ov•r 15
Ads

-

CtniNIAI!',

bHtt. lleiiiiiH I
lilt Ills - I l l

Alclnt, Ohio "5771

'740-115-3141
CONUmJILOWIIICK
• Fooltn. Walla, Stepa •
Flat 'Mlrtt.
Rtp*tmenti, • Walkt
lnd Drllltt • Stencil ·

Crete

Fret Sltlmatet ·
tndW.V.

1'8QO lilt• ~r, t Ill loot
likll In tMio 01~. wllh
largo cab ovtr bed. Stlf
(8T7·3S3-'J021)
conlalnld wttll lu.-, tlr.
Call "'r mol'l
"'"iefrator- frtlllll and
JU
304·N·I488
hiWI IIOit tit · TV
lnfol/rr.•
tsrlma~t
oullti and wlfld tat miCfo.
M GMC Sonomo SLS, 1.1 wt'lll. In 'lilY goo&lt;~ condl• L-...;;;W.;,V;;;03;,;;12;;;;5,;:.6-..1 L.~.;.;.:.,;.;;;.,;;.:;;.:.J
liter, Automatic, 0-lvt. tlon.
UOOO. . Phon•
85.000 mllaa, AMI FM At· (740)387-'IHO.
dlo, Air conditioning, 1111 :-::~~----­
Liner end FlbtrQIIII bad 18H · Loyton 14ft. 51h
00\/lr, IUOO. (U0),7t• _,_ LOidld, Top Concll·
~411
.
~~. II 1,000. (?40)158·
~tonard I' raltlll topper
fila 1817 or ntwar Foiil IHI &amp;lh whttl Prowltr.
pick-up, alklng 1~00 . 00 17ft, Llkl New. Slttlll e.
010. ~·eaa·SC~
81;1
Grotn
lntorlor.
~771•1111, (UO),II•

II Sll'ltflelo. CI&amp;QO, EMt.
Olb 8 ft btcl, new 3150 ang.
l trltll., to !Mny new peMa
t9 lilt. lltOIItnt to&lt; towing
1&amp;1180. ctll anyiiM

•lllif'G

Advertise

In thla apace
for
'25 per month

AN vau tired Dl tho11 hlr•
atalng phont callo? COn't
know w_htrt to turn? Call l
fln&lt;l out your optlono, Bronoon Ctplan a Auoolattl, 1.
8U-8QHQ74.

'-TlENTION: Patltntt ot Dr.
Cltna -'IIIH. I am not rt~tlr·
Ifill In the ""'I llvt )'llrt.

I \1 1\ 1 ', I 1'1'1 II '&gt;

,\ I I \ I "

Accepting New Pallent1·

Llmllld IO Httrt Dltlllt,
Corontry Mtry Dlttne,
HHrt Flllurt, Hyportlntlon.
Chollllerot Prol&gt;ttmo. '-"Y·
thing AIIOOittld with Oil··
batH tnd Ant-gulttlon.
Our ollloe ollora on tltt X·
Rty, EKQ, Ultruound ol
tht Htorl, Ctrolldt, .S titH
Ttlllflll, tn&lt;l Coronary ,t,r·
tiF)I Evtluttlon. 2~ Hour
HIIM Monltorlflll. 24 Hour
81ood Pratturo Monltonng.
Sirtu Echo- EKCI. Compro·
htinJIVI Lib Tilting on
Sltt. For '-ppolntmtnl Con·
ttot Mtdlcal Pltzl, 938
Sttlt Routt teo, Clalllpollo,
Ohio II (740)'"li•M20
C·1 Bttr Ctrry Out permit
.fo&lt; ..Ia, Choator Townohlp,
Molga Couniy, una lonara
of lnttrotl lo: Tht Cllly
Stntlntl, PO Bo• 72HO.
Pcmoroy, ONo ~5788 .
I Cltrtnct Rill' DtWIII will
not bt rooponlll&gt;t lOr 1ny
dobtt othor than rny own •
011-03-02

II II I\

..· rio

~r--~l~":n.~"- 1iiP=~==:;
~

1HI 8·T 11111r Ck~ In
aood condition. (1104)878·
S3U aliar &amp;pm. on Wttk·

dlyo.
1001 Fclrd E•plortr ~WO.
PW, PL, rtd, oun.O.I. IP•
PfOI'• 1&amp;0,000 mlltt, liking
~.1100.00. 740·Q02-8273
1t8S Toyota, ~WD, e.t.
cab. 138,000 mlln. ~
~=S IUOO.OO. 40 •

lnfoCislqn is proud
to be u part of the
Gallipolis
community!

&lt;., I II\ H I "-

. HOMit
IMI'RO\IIIMKI'&gt;II'S

IAIIMINT
WATIIIPIIOO,.NQ
Unoon&lt;llllonll llflllmt

guar·

~~-=ir~O::I.~:::r~0~~:

Call ~ Hrt. (UO) ~~~·
0870, llo;trtl Bnamtnt
Wllorprootrflll .

MANLEVS
SELF STORACE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'111' 610'1120')

~,..---.,...---

~M4, ~~~=· ~]~~::~
32 3

AIIO llrlllng

1au1aga gravy
&amp; bltcultt
Dally Lunott
Speol1l1

17

II

Pllf8

• All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Pans
Factory Authorized
Case·IH Pans
Dculcrs
Stop Comp1rt 1000 Sr. Rt. 7South
FREE ESTIMATES Coo/vi/It, OH 45723

a

Spout

Free EatlmatH

740-H2·1871

East Stute Street Phone (740)S93·6671
Athens, Ohio

.740-667·0363

Krls
Kanleckl

11-~
Highll Dry

Hill's
Self Storage

Self·Storage

811tii'X10'
to 10'x30'

J.J795 HU."J Rt
JloHtrroy. Ohio

Houra
7:00 AM • 1:00 PM

740..992-5232
"Ahead In Senice"
St. Rt. 7 Nonh • Pomeroy, OH 4~7 20
•Ooldcn Bow 16,0001'wlnc ............. SI8.M
• Ooldon Bow 9,000 1'wlnc ......... ,.... ,$l6.M
• 20,000 Pln•tlc BnlorTwlnc .: ........... $15 .7~
• Tup Ore•• l'murcs with Sulfur
Uren........... :...... :.................... $120 per tott

Now Open

Mondly thru
811Urdly
Cloald 8und1y

111.00 per ton
8·10 ton• ·
limited 1r11

100 Wtlt Allin St.
P01111111!1

882·0008

Equine 12... .. ....... ..................... $~.00150 lb1
Swcer.lt StuiT.............................. $4.4!W50 !b•.
Stull ry fur bnms, pens, CllijCN, &amp;
trailers ........................................... .. $1 0.50/bull
Murton System Sover l'alfetN fm Neptlc!l und
wutor !Ohonct'l $4.50/hujj

(740) 742•"M'tl
LHvt Rlllle

a No.

· ~~~~~~~

2 Tone Aid CUllOm
Bolt Trtll Htrlll)' DtYiton.
E•otlllnl Cor1&lt;1Mion. CUllom
lttt, WhHI, ~owtrlng Kit a
~Otl Ol lktr&amp;l, 114,000.
7.-o)~CI•U 13. (7~0):188·
. \ &amp;78.

-

J,D. CONSTRUCTION

[1111[

New Homes &amp; Rcmodollna
"SpedsilldnM In Low llomOA
&amp; Rubber Roof•"

1Jif1t.

If:-.

fj(il j Onr~gcM, Pole 8ulldlna•. Concrete [1Jil

A

•

liM Ylmthl Wlrrltr 350,
, ar~•t Bhopt, ueoo.
(740)441·2804
.

HIY tor Salt. &amp;quo"' 111111.
!7.-o).+lt-1 018 « (7.-o).+lt·
~eso. canoHer eprn

.......

740.742-3411

ttl~

1Itt HIMIY Dtvlton, I 200
Cuelom, 10000. (7~0)378·
27111
2001 •150 For1m1n ~ - 1·
er, Oullaw th·•· Qrul Con·
Ilion. Clll (7~0)~~1 ·0181
(740)+1H311 .
or ltlt or Trtdt: '81 Han~~ Qoldwlng. lui~ IOICitd.
lkOIIItnl
Condillon,
12,1100.00. 7.-o·7~2-2210

FREE ESTIMATES!

992-5479

HOWARDL.
ROBERT BISSELL
WRITESEL
CON.STRUOION
Roofing- Home • Ntw HOIIIII
Maintenance- • 011'11111
•Complttt
Gutters• Down Remodeling

Delivered
&amp;Spread

11 1.m. ·a p.m.

a·~ob,.,l

&amp;Morl

Shade River AG Service

STIITf STORE

Are you iooki ng !'or
a cureer und not just

I~

. Authorktd Agtnt

3~~37

1tH Cttavy
ZAaVott10
51.000
mlltt,StO
auto.,
1181 PW, P~, 111,000.00.
74o•llll•l571

Dlai·Up Succeu
With lnfoCialon

BrylnAHvel
New HOtnM, Room Addltlonl,
Olrlgtt, Pole 811lldlng1, Aoofl,
Siding, Otckl, KltchtMII, Drywell

Jeff Warner Ins.

IOidld, _ , 1111rytNng, CloWI, batho. motllle hornl ,new tim, H,OOO.OO.· 740• ropalr and mort. For 1m
D&lt;lt-2221
lllimllt call Cnel , UO·H2·

company?
Dlai·Up Success
With lnfoCislon

hr.

Cellular

2a870 Buttan Road
Racine, OH 45771
740.849~2217

(140)
992•3194
CIC Cltnorol Homt Malnlt.
_6635
992
:::::::::=---...,--ntnot• Pelntlf111, vinyl tid•
1He lkptOflr XLT. Ck4. lng, carpentry, ciOOrt, win· '------..K•

Are you looking for
a carccir with u
strong, growing

1 - ~77 - lh 1 - h~

sunset Home
Construction

...-~~~~~~

,.,..e Verd Sate Slgnt
15 worda, 3 Deys
Worda 20¢ P•r word
Muat Be Prepeld

Call

The Dally
Sentinel

992·21 5

Help Wanted
l II\ \ .1·1 H I I I Ill 1

WANTED:

P81'1•1lllll potlllon nllllblt In Mtlp Couatr, zs
hn/wk M!l'ufl'll,
Dutltl lndudt teuhlnl
comnwllllr and pmon811ltllll 10 10 lndMdu•l
wllb IIIIDIII nwdallon. Rtqllinmonllt llllh
' ldloel dlp'-ti/OED, V1tlld drlwer'lllctall, 111rt1
, ,..,. pod drll'llll nptrltlce lllld lllloquall
lldoiiiObllt lnluiWKI -...... .7.0V/bt. 8ttlll

_.

ll4oool ~- lolrolllrtr

LIME·

GIBSON

STONE

GRAPHICS

Woundt-7our11Hdf

P""'·
.Wulm
. 10 "*' roor

-.........,

... . ,..

....,IAiourJtaiiiMip
,... ... "" prodU&lt;I70U

L•

t II I•" I·&lt;JI

I .. t y••IJI

...

11111- Cordoo, rao Co"'
-.~.o~
81....
In'"'- PUtn, Ltbtll.

. (740) 591·2173

Contact u1 1t

6 Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

Coverall on Sundays

Or l11ve n1m1
1ndnumblr

lrochM,.

Pomeroy Eagln
IIDGO 2171
fuerv Thursday
ferty birds start
6:30
Progressive top line .
ThUI'IdiUI
Preareulue ·

1r11 0111 for
d1t1h1. Cell:

Our ""lcto lnoludos

740 112·'7822

WOLrE
Hcatinq &amp; Cootinq
Llo1nHd

a lnaurld

Hllllh Problem•?

LIMITI!D OPI!NINOI

'(740) 992·1536
RESIDENTIAL &amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING
Hl-Emcleney Heat Pumpt, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

(304)6715·3524

T,th! Ihi! PldN
oul 0f PI1INTINGI

8pre1d 818.00
perton 8 to 10
toni, limited

Not A Sprln; Chlokln?

Would the tath1r/10n who
had the Beagle puppy at
Saturday'• New Haven
block eale pleue call

i tt!•.

Owner &amp;.Oporotor, John Dcun T~N

DIIIVIrld &amp;

""qtllllt7 .,.,_
productltl ftlr

Tired of Mowing?

Window &amp; Screen Repair
Fast, efficient aervlce
634 E. Main 992-5500

IJI:...

·

Ill!~~ f.)~ ~f.;'~

SUNDAY

W1n1 Mar~ Lel1ure Time?

O'DELL LUMBER

(740) 992·3987

-

740-882-7589

,

Buckeye .Community S.nlt:n
P,O, Box 1104
J Kklon, OH 456-CO
Deadline for applleantlls 5/13102

.

11J IIi

Wlndowa • Roonna
COMMEICIAlonriUgDIMIIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

RtxsfM&amp; SldlnM
Commorolul &amp; Ro•ldonilul

'!4rzlm. IIITlmBr1. .

( olm1&lt;Jn 1:1

•11-16 RVdr l'"rt WurlniiM ~~
• ''" INIII ..I 'l'hornNiillll

•"'" u1 Y••' c...,,_

Wlrrl!nl7lln Htltcl Mo....,
JIIUt.lt JISI'IMI\1'1'.8 •lllJ&lt;Itt: lnron11t7
• IJotnk Yluncl•• 1\rollrlblt
• Prtr:• To Fit AUI_!ooo~

24 Hr. Emeraeney Senlee
Llt:enud • ln1ured
.Thermal Zone1'N equipment

Btdllnol'l •Nert B•r

•Tonneue Conr
• Ventvl10r • Bua
II Full Line
Other Aee100rlee

(10 yr. parl.l II labor w1rnnty)

Servlee all Brandl
F!nanelna Available

I
I

(7 40) 949 - 1521

I

' 1

(f'1tJ) '1'1/

•,a n

Qu.llly Conn•ele Work

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas.
Sidewalk•, Floor•
21

V''" bfMrltnot

l'rHIIllmllll
(toll frH)

~

.

an·3&amp;3-7022

R.E.MIIOIRY
ALL T"U 0, MAICJMnr

....

I"ICK, II.OC~ 6 lfOHI

10 VIA"IIlii'IIIIIHOI

FAEI! 1!8TIMATI!

~- ~~~=

(304) 773·9550

HERBALIFE

....

IFA!LUW '
"lltd
• ,p I

llfrsd IWIW)CIUCWI
INit

Independent
Dletrlbutor

PLUMBING

I Lost 271b.
in 32 days.

eAitldentlal

40111h etrttt

New Hlven, WV

I

100%
naiUrai/Ouaranteed

740..992-7036
II

�•

'1\JU ·~., 'J,IRACIIII. . . . .

to

Dunn.

P••al•

B1

•

a1 ................,.

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

-

"' -~ '"
• '&amp;'

'ttl.,, .. . ......,.

•..,...

Gift of

Wlmt~71

on
Ul at tht ag;~
of 78, He WQH I 3
m~jor national ttam
titles~ one Chic~go
(now tl1~ R•dsing;~r),
five Rcisittrrs, three
Spingultls &amp;tld four
Vnndtrbilts. He was
twice runnt~up in a
,.,0, NY $TOMAC~ ~lf),.,'T
world ttam chamtli·
GltOvl L.;··· NY
on$11i1l, His record is
1mlik~ly to ~ btaten
ICII&gt;H&amp;Y 1$ A
by llnyone so tall ••
tl......~ VfNTitiLOOUI$T.
Root stood at 6'II'\
He wrote several ex·
••
CI!IIPilt book$, and W~S
a highly lUCCtsWI in·
•
smt~:tor , (He was
more a lecturer thln a
te~cher, lllllkinll use
of ovl!rhcad.;projector
trn11sparencies.)
This is my f~voritt
Rout d~al, not bt·
eauul it futures Any
great piny, but bt·
cause of the lin~l ron·
trn~t he and his putt)tr, Harold Harkavy,
· managed to reach.
Many
Norths
would open one 110·
trump, evct1 if ming n
11111~ of 16·18 points.
ICA,'
That
1100d five~-c:ud
I"eui Til,\~ I~ E.~Kil.'&lt; eN.~~
dub suit makes the
~ . . ~\'~. c.rz.e:t::~
NKNWit
HGTVIIOVIIItG
·
hand
worth
t
6
points.
~~~~~x. ~u~!
South had on auto'IWNPVTitt
w IUNATL
•
matic: response of one
GVIIV.IKIIt
w 1111 ~
VVNit
spade. Uut when
•
West ovcrc;olled two
THitll.'WOHGTNit
HVItG.IX
diamomb, North had
a m(\jor headache. He
couldn't bid notrump without a dilmond stopper. . He
,..,....,.,=,...,=,....,,...,,....., r::=:::---::=:::~ didn't want to rebid
in ~ five-card suit. O Rtarrono• ltttera of the
H"rkavy '"solvcd" the
fo~r acrambltd wordt bt·
low to farm four llmple word1.
problem by passing.
Root balancc:d with
GWR I tU
~~~~:~vit~tional three h,r--~1.;..;·"I*r-;.,1.;..;;.1~~r-1

~.~

t.HA'POt..lCIMA~'&amp; ·
. Jl, t..t..,SMIF .

-

BIG NATE

,...,..,,....,......,...____

I

Hukovy was strong ~:;::;::;;:~~::-...1
enough to accept the
US Y 0 R
invitation, but what hjl""''l-,.....,~,...,.....j
should he bid? If . . . . .
Root had a diamond ;::::;:;:;;::;:;;::~
stopp11r. maybe he I T U C 0 N 1:~: · Philoaophy profe11or to c1111:
would have rebid two
I i
"People lrl IIWIYI ready to ~·· .
no-trump. not three . . . . .
llav1 you when you apeek biQiy
11-115 15 A NICE ROOM .. IT clubs. So Hukavy
ofyoureelf. It Ia 10 ennoylng w~n
ltEMINtiS ME OF TI-ll! TIM! opted· to support
0 T I R A D . th1y take you 11 ........,' .
I WA5 CALLEt' IN TO
spAdes with his strong
I
Compltlt t~e chuckle QUOtld
. . . . . . 1 by flllln' In the mlatnJ Midi
ADVISE 6ENERAL Pelt5111N6 ... doubleton!
ll..oot, buoyed l&gt;y
you dt~tlop rom lltp No, ~ below, •
his powerful spades,
went on to game -the only one that can
be made.
Welt cashed three
ICitAM•LITI ANIWIII
.
,
L---..1 diamond tricks before
Faucet· Mower· Bumpy- Rudely· YOUR CAR
shifting to hil tingleI hid driven around trying .to find my dog . I atopMd
and ••ked an old gent If he hid 11en thl dog. 'Sure,'iia
ton club. Root won
. laughed. 'For the 1111 e mlnutea he'a btln following
with dummy's Ja.ck,
YOUR CARl'
•
drew trumps, and
•
claimed 10 trtcks: four
•
!lla•dcs, one heart and
•••l

I

PEANUTS

/:

YES, SIR ... NO, 'fOUR .
HONOR, 11VE NEVER MET
A JUD6E &amp;EFORE ..

1 1 1

I I I I

I I' I

I I I .e

~

ITUESDAY

MAY7l

•

•
Wcdncl&lt;hty, Moy 8, 2002
Sue•·cu or n•I•Mncament In
Y'"" c hu1~11 Ocld II reochobla
In the y&lt;nr ohc•d If you ore
l''"l"""d to l"'Y tlic pri&lt;'e u(
pl 1uuliu~. ~runmiiiK nnd hurd
· wurk th.u
into any en·
den \lor.
TAUIWS (April 20-Moy
20) -· Something I! rcncrlna
beneath the tmraco tim could
erupt ir it I• opened up.
Should thnt IOtnetlt\ng be n.
nancial. the retulu m!J!ht bc

K"•'

. pnrtlcul•rly tlll!l'ttlln~. Tourut,

to

jltrform o iervlcc (or Ill·
uthor thot yuu 1110111 doh!M,

l!a

c~rcl\ tl

Or

h

huw you

CO llfd CA \IIU

han~le

h,

rGitlllllllllt

ufyo11.
.
LJlO Uu\y 23-A~ty. 22) •• A
(ow b11m 1h011 In IUCh thing!
" golr nr ~ennl• 1houldn't bt
nllcwccl to •vull the day (or
everybody cite , Try not to
take youmlr or lltll!ciOIII too
teriOUIIy,
VIRGO (flu8, 23·Sopl. 22)
·· Normally you're one ortht
lim tu Kl•c credil whtrt
cre&lt;lit II due, yet, ~tnchira ctll•
llllcnlly, yollmAy not be ugar

tranc ymtrtolr co n birthdny
Hlft. Send ror ynur Amo·
(iraph prcdlo:tiom fin tho YfAr
tp •h•r• ncknowiodyment
ahead by mnllh11112 nnd SASE · · wllltthme who dt!lrvt lt.
to Auru-Grnt•h, . e/o thi1
LlllRA (Sepr. 23-0ct. 23) •
ncwtJ•npcr, 1'.0 . UoK 175M,
~ h'1 OK to 111nd up for your
MurrAy Hill Statlnn, N•w
bellcrr whet! chollen11ad, but
York. NY lUIS~ . lie lure to
don't dullbmtc~ brlnJ up a
1tate yuur ZudiAc IlK"·
eontrovenlalrub ect. lrr,ou're
(:i!MINI (Mny 21 ·Jtme 20)
iooklns (or a lia1t, you II Ond
lr.
,
•• Vuu'vc h.. rd abuut the
· maw thRt bruk~ the umol'1
SCO"PIO (Oct. 24-Nov,
b~~k. 111 renlrmbtr not- to
22) • r Whtn btln1 forced to
place axtrA demand1 un your
do bu•ln111 whh 10n11one
cu-wurkerr. Their own prob·
who lt11 nuns you prcvlourly.
lrn11 Arc A huvy anuuKh bur•
keep your suard JIP· Thl1 per·
dart ,
ron ltarn't ch•ni!Cid and could
&lt;.: AN CER (lune 21 -July
bt looking tu hoodwink you
22) -· tr you ore called upon
apln.

.

SI\GITTAI~IUS (Nov. 23..:

l)ce. 21) •• lryou'rt not pr..,
pared co let unplullltt thlrifii;
Kilo

you could

CIOI! IWOI• .

whh 1 1lmllu penon and end•
11p lnr "no-win" ·rhuulon. .:
CAPI\ICOI\N (Oce, 2~.:

Jan. 19) •• What you neal•~·
mry bt cotnroundtd and
nu1o addition• compllcrllon.
Serlou1 ruponllbllllitl rhoulll'
not bt lynored In hoptt that

they'll take o( thernllfVtl,
AQUARIUS O•n. 20-Ptb,
19) •• It would be rn emba....,
r11111tont (or you I( you llkt
upon yourlolr to 11lect tht tn •
' tertalnllltHI ror frlendr . Vciur
pair could collo·ctlvely havr.
other ldtll,
.
~
lliSCES (Ptb. 20•Much 20)
•• Take mtaiUrll to avoid
cotnpedtlvc thulllonr I( poll!•
ble, becau11 they're no1 a~tto
be your llruna 1ult. Ln othtn
Jourt with tht wlndmlllr.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll19)
•• Thl1 II t ttrrlblt day to II•
tempt to dtbate rtlllion, poll·
dcr or any 1110111 oplnlon1, 10
whrn dealina wlr~ a penon
who h11 1 dlll"trtnt viewpoint
from youn, hold yollf tonaua.

·Fisher

literacy

M~n:h

CARE. TO 'I)QNA"TE. TO

ELECTION 2002

commissioner

race
Stricklc1J1d; Halleck, Hasemeier
carry Meigs County

School
CIMIIId

BY Blti"M J. Rim

ltMHS

!!REED/I&gt; MYOAIL~EtiTitiELCOM

POMEROY - County Conunlssioncr Mick D:t~npon
will fuce otf i\8:1111~1 John Fisher and Jilll~t Howurd in the 1(111.

POMRROY - Stu~nt~
In 1M Mei.R&amp; Loot\1 Sthool
Dlstri~t hnd lin utmpttttd
tl~ of VOOIItiOil 1\itstltl)'
bet:llUSC of . the heli\IY
downpour of ruin which
re~mlltd In c~ks overtlowil\ll tmltl rounty rolltls.
Buses wtre tlllltd bllck
In ~hortly 111\w I) 11.m, to
retum the students to their
homlll!.

Fisher detlmted Don R: Hill in
Republlc11n primury. by u Vote
of I,355 to 1.16 7. Dawnpott, who was
uno~posed itl the Dem~mtk primary.
reL'elved I. 191 votes. The Republican
commissioner ra&lt;-'e was the only cOiltest·
ed coumy-wide prinwy, How111\l, u former IJemocrutic commissioner, filed
Monday us un Independent cundidnte for
the ot'ike.
Pllhtt
Yesterday's l~tl.l voter tunmut is esti·
..--- ---. mated at 30 percent - low, but above the
~'CCI'etary ot stute 's predicted statewide
und ltlCIII voter turnout of ·27 percent
Unotlidal results show uturnout of 2.837
Republicans and 1,504 Democrats. · .
Probute nnd Juvenile Judge Robert
Buck received 2, 172 votes in the
Republican primary. John Lemes, the
Democmts' cundidnte for Probate and
Juvenile Judge, received 99(i votes. They
will be joined on th~ hallnt by L Scott
Powell, u Pomeroy attomcy who filed us
MIIIHk
an Independent ..:tmdidtltc on Monday.
Meigs County Auditor Nancy Pttrker
Cumpbell, 11 Rcpubllcun. was unopposed
1ilesdtly, She received .2.J3 7 voles.
Detnocrutk U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland
eusily won Meigs County's nomination
In his th~e- wuy ruce nguinst &lt;WkliiCI\Is
from
the not1hern put1 of his new Sixth
t
District. Strick lund rccciwd .1,316 votes,
Lou A. D' Apnlhn, 19, und Charles
Brown, 92. Overull, Strickltmd won the
Democratic
nominution, garnering 67
Davenport
percent uf the vote to 0 ' Apolito's 22 percent. Brown picked up II percent
Republican candidate lor U.S. Rcprescnunlve Mike
Jlllu11 ' " l'rlmery, AS
'l\te.~duy's

llneflt
pllnntcl·
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
benellt for Nt~thnn Murphy
will be held Ill Tupl}trs
Plt\hls Elemt~ntnry S~:hool
on June I from noon !6 II
. p.m.
Muf11h)', son of Chnstldy
nntl lU , Murphy of
Reedsville, suffers from 1\

purtidputlng chlld~n. ·
They 11l~o send mtl[!l\thles
und liook~ tu th~: ~ter11ns
Afftlit's hos~ltuls, God's NET,
the ~unty s lntel\lei\OmiM·
tiMnl youth progrtll\1, tlnd the
Homeless SheIter.
Copl11s ()f "Oootlnlght
Moon" lll'l! .pr'twldetl tn the
Meias
CuulltY.
Henlth
DllPIIrtmcnt for the puckets,
which ~~~ glwn tlut tu new
tnothers ~celvlng servlce5
through thnt agency.
Meetinas ure held on the
n~t Moniiuy ut' ench month,

aonetle ·dlu11se, Niemann·

Piek Type C, nntl PI"OI.'eeds
will au for medic:uf expeM·

llS. .

A

go~pel

food, and

sing, uuctioll,

cuke wnlk ure
pl11nned. lnformutlon Is
t\VIIIInble by cnlllng 74th
378·9808.
11

Ftesdua
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plnlns Chrlstlun
Cemetery mowina tllld
trlmml11g 1\\es are aue, ut
$25 per IJrnv~.
Fees must be rec:elv11d In
order ror mowin11 to con·
tlnue. Puyments mny be
mnde to Murvene Culdwell,
41036 Stutc Route 7,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.

Ohio

.

Pick :S: 1·5·3 ,
Pick 4: 3·&amp;-8·1
Iucke" II: 1·7·17·19·20
Pick S dey: 2·2•!1
Pick 4 dey: 3·8·6·2

Weat Vlt'llnlt

Dei!Y s: 2·'!·S
·
Del~ 4: 3-5·2·2
Cllli 21: !-8·12·1 3·17•22

lnclu
I hctJo11 a l:l ......

Clesslfleds
Comics ·
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
~

83·5
B&amp;
A5
A4
A3
A3
Bl-3

A2

2002 OMio Vrlley P~blllhlnt CD,

with the plat-e rot11tlng nmollg
the librnrles In Enstern,
Middlepurt, Pomeroy and
M.uclne. Dues tlhl $3.60 11 yeur
for sltl[!les or $6.30 for 1\itl\i·
lies.
Tht~ officl!rs lite Putty
Pi d~tiN, prosidetlt: the Rev.
P11lher Wnlter Hehlt, vice
president; 1111d Murjorle
Wulbunl, secrotnry-treasurer. ·
New tnetl)bers 11re ulwnys
needed and one wuy of being
it friend to chlldn:n Is by join·
in111he Prlel\ds of the Lll&gt;rnry,
safd Walburn.

.,.._.;

;

L-

••

Teleservlces offers ·
Incentives for new employees Health levy, sales tax
-~~M.~

TI.I!AOMeMVDAI~VS!NTIN!~.cOM

POMBR.OY In an
uttempt to lure new workers
to Its unll c~nter In Pomeroy,
Millennium Telilservlces Is
now offering more money to
pulentlal empluyees. ·
A~o-cordinll to Mull Shtll:key,
cnll tenter tttnnnl!cr, tlie
nntlunnl telecummunh:ntlons
uompuny hll8 rlliillld WIIQiiS In
certuln deportments liM 1111
incentive to draw l)¥ll'\l wurk·
ers to un alreudy rupltlly
arowlnalndu~try.

"We ure ulwuyR looking fur
lndlvlduulK who ure lntere~ted
In the cver-arowlna tclecom·
munlcntlons Industry," suld
Shockey. "So, In un effort to
recruit
more
workers,
Millennium 'teleservlces hus
rulscd wages In vtlrlous
depurtments. For example,
the hourly wnae for un
employee who works In our
fund· rul l!lng depllrtment hns
jumped from 58 to $9.
"However, be8ltle8the nddl·
.llottul money, one will dlsc:ov·
cr the fumll&gt;:·llke work envl·
romnent to be lll'ltlther usMet
when conslderln11 employ·
mont options with Millennium
T\lleservlcet!," he uld.
·
Considered the firth loraest

rejected by voters
POMEROY

NOW HIRING -In an attempt to lure new employees to Its oell
oanter rn . Pomero~, above, offlclela with Millennium
. Talaaervloea hAve rAiled W&amp;ill!l In oerteln departments. (Tony
M. ~eeoh)
telecommunlcutlons company like Millennium ThleMervlces
In the nution, Millennium uperutlllll within our county,"
Teleservice~ employs uver suld Mefgs County ikonomlc
7,000 workers und operules Development Director Percy
30 cull centen in II stutes . . V111nndue.
The nrm sl)eclnlltes In con· "Sin 11e openlllll In 2000,
dueling tefemurketlng cum· Millennium has boosted the
ptlii!M, inbound und outbtlund lucul economy and helped
lelesnles und E·commerc:e luwer unemploym11 nt," added
related services for Fortune Varnadoe. "We would encour·
500 cumpnnles, und nun-prof· 1\ftcl unoune who Is interested
it uraanl~utlons.
•
'
Tlie Pomei'QY site, opened In the tele~Jommunkntluns
.In Oc:tober 2000 und currently Industry to 11lve them u ct\11
employ Inil tl\tlre thfin 100 and check uut whut employ·
people, , Is
the
rlfth . ment JJOMIIIbllhle~ u~ avull·
Millennium 1\lluervkeil cull ublc at the call center.
uenter lm~ute&lt;lln Ohio. Othen Those Interested In seeking
are In Warren Canton, ertlployment with Millennium
Ponsmouth Utld Wellston.
Thleservlces cun obtuln mo~
"We ore very happy and for· lnformatiOII by call in!! 1·88!1·
tunnte to huve 11 flne bu~lness 974·JOBS ..

IY IRIAN J, RIID
aREEOCIIMYO.ItLYSENTtNEL.COM
- \btt:r.; rejet1cd the Mcil!s

County Heulth
1&gt;.-•plll'lntent's repiocentellt levy tuld u pn1po'illd htcre:.L'ie in the
county sule~ lllll lor luw enfon.'emcnt In Tucsduy's prinuuy election.
By 11 t1nul vote ol' 2,228 against the levy to 2,(){)4 in favor,
\lt)tel'!l ~jected the one-mill levy for the board of heulth.
and by 11 vote of 3,003 lo 1,17S. denied the county com. mlsslotiel'!l un uddhlonul hulf-perccntln sules tux revenue,
which would huvc been used to supplement the budgcl of
the county sherlll' und the operation of the cuumy Julf.
01Jponems of the health dcpartmcnt's Clcmt Indoor Air
rcgulnHon. Imposed lust full. vowed to cumpuign uguinst a
health depunment tu~ Issue. That ~gulutlon, which was
modeled ut\er tl slmllnr regulullon ln1bledo now before the
Ohio Supreme Court. outlaws smoking inull publk places,
Including restuurnnls und prlvute businesses.
.
Now, townships und vlllul!es musl beur the cost of basic
heulth depunment services, whkh .will pluce u serious
struln on the ulrcudy-llmlted budgets of those 1&gt;olltkul sub·
divisions. A hculth depurtrnent levy hus funded operutions,
nnd thuMclieved townships und villages from the burden,
sln~e the curly 1980s.
.
County commissioners huve the uuthority to Impose un
uddltlon11l sules tuK for lnw enforcement und coun udmlnistrutlon - und lor uthcr purposes - without un Election Day
mundute, but hnve·refused to do so without voter upprovul.
A 2·mlil levy In Mlddlcpott, for tire protection, wus ells·
lly renewed. with 297 voting for the levy. und II 0 votinl!
ngulnst it. in Rudne, the repfucement of u I.7·mlil levy for
current expenses wus also renewed. by u vote of 123 to 73.
Two liquor options In Racine Precincl were rejected, one
by n vote of 114 to I 33, und the other by u vote ol H3 to 132.

It Al\r\111'11

lime out wllh lhe Gup

Sunday,May19 • 2!00·4:30PM • HMCO llpa.llducallan&amp;Col._aCinllr
A 'l*lal Mtll lor boy. cwl
Itt our commuttlfy
l&lt;lynote Sp.oker: Gr.g Whit., HIOd Coach

"*'

Min• Baaketball at Mal"lhall Unl~~trtlly

IPK'!' fUilJU:

NO«HA'DNO cHOtJmRQL scBEEN!NGS

~MEN

AQIS 111..08+
tMIJJJlCMPO'WnifconNniiF ufldli. 1B.}
All C1QM ort welcome! MOthen lnvlfldl Dtla&amp; I&amp; co&amp;ual. R.lrethrntntt will be 1erv.d.
111M

MEDICAL CENTER
Discouer the Holzer Dijje1·ence

www.holzer.org

cal
I

I

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