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ae • • tnr ~ • •• alllli.t

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fest

Is one big

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

stllclcs in which lhey wn
invtStliiJ. ~y didn't koow
tilt pnxlllttS. llild they didn't
appreciate 1M risks lnvol'ltd.
That's why it's always a
aood idea to buy what yw
inow. Before investina in a
company, make sure you
andmtand Its produ&lt;:ts, lts
fl"?Spects. the outlook f,tv its
mdustry and other key f~~e­
ton.
• Doll 't go it wane. It's
htud to beeome an astute
investor on your own. That's
why you may want to work ·
with a tlnandal J)rofessional
-someone who'knows your
risk tolerance and time hori·
aon, and who can help yo11
understand how your vllriws
investments can work
toaether to help you .ll&lt;lhieve
your objectives.
·
By followiiiJ these basic
auidellnes, you may not
tiecome 11 world-renowned
investor but you may
avoid a lot of those "pot·
holes" that trip up so many
people enroute to their 'lona·
term aoaJs. Ultimately, your
Investment suC\.-ess will be
closely connected to the
number of mistakes you
don't make.

. flaenAmy
....

D1

reaulir tiiiiQ intervals. in ll
diversified mile of Invest·

...!ments.

Dollar-cost av~Wgina ean
. reduce · your overall invest·
ment costs lind help smooth
some of the volatiht~ of the
marltet: however, thts tech·
nique Cllnnot assure 11 profit
and does not protect IIIJainst
loss in declining markets.
• Avoid ·~umpina in and
out" of stocks. A lot of people truly enjoy buyina and
sellins stocks. But frequent
stock trading has two m!llor
drawbacks. First, it's ~xpen·
.sive: You 'II rack up a lot of
commissions b~ constantly
buying and selhng. Second,
there's no evidence that
heavy tradlna can improve
.,your portfolio's performance. On the contrary, you
may well do better by buyina
hl&amp;h·qU!IIily stocks and hold·
ina them for the lona term.
• Buy what you know. A
· few yearr 1110, many
investors aot cuuaht up in the
technolo&amp;Y stoclc "craze."
They were attracted by
rllpidly rising stock prices,
.but, In most cases. they did
not fully understand the

Dllths
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Retums

around, accordlna to the
Investment
Company
Institute, the mutual fund
industry's' trade ussociation.
f1omP1pD1
By year end 2000, the num·
hi
1 f 2 a
ber of domestic BTFs had
I s aroup na 0 I di erent arown to " llnd &amp;lobal/lnterfund types was up 3·8 per· national BTFs totaled 2•.
cent,
"
The fund t~pe that took . · Today, there are many more
home the aold In this cateao- and come with br11nd names
ry was in fact aold runils. like !Shares, SPDRs and
They moved ahead. on aver- streetTRACKS.
.
ge, over 35 percent. Next in
HIII'Oid Evensky, chairman
..111
1
k 15 of Evensky, Brown &amp; Katz,
ne
were
emera
na
mar
e wealth mana~ers In· Cor•l
funds, up 12.2 percent; then
"
Pacific elt·Japan funds, up Oables,. Fla., s a big fan of11.98 percent; and Latin Exchange Trnded Funds. He
American funds, ahead 9.4 likes th.em for a numbet· of
reasons.
".IIETFs provide~ 11
perce nt. .
.
d
All but one of tHe Mixed· aoo comp ment to 11 port.o·
Equity Funds aroup .showed no because you Clln quickly .
positive returns - albeit the target a particular sector of
economy, or. the world,
1trld es ahead were ti ny and the
tha~ou'
d like to be invested
averaaed · 0.26 percent.
Balanced target maturity ln. en, lnvestlnaln then!' Is
funds were the losers In that very cost efficient, tax effl·
pack- they were down 0.62 clent, and you can move In
percent: Olobal Flexible and out or them quickly if
Portfolio Funds, the winners, you need to,'' he explains.
up slightly over I percent on · On the downside Bvensky
average.
says they aren't rlaht for
Leaving the o~n-end anyone using 11 dollar-cost·
mut.ual fund arena and mov· averasln~ investment strate·
Ins into Exchanae Traded IY· That s because buying a
if'unds, (ETFsl, you'll find little at a time means paying
performance there was bot· stock cammlsslon prices
ter, but only by a hair as the with every new purchose.
averase BTF w11s up 1.82 "They arc more expensive
percent during the first guar- thun funds If you are doing a
tcr. (E11change traded funds lot of small purchase&amp;. But, If
are Investment companies you're inveatlna for a long
. whose shares trade like period of time. the~ are
atocks do, on the exchanges, extremely inexpensive. '
and thus those shares can be
As for·the risks, of course
bouaht and sold all throuah· · they've got them. And, aiven
out the day.)
that the~e baskets of atocks
If you're lookin11 for the basically combine to form
hot ones, the top tl'iree ETFs various Indcxea, that sector
were iSharcs:MSCI S. representation mean• that
Korea, It's total retum was a there's likely to be more
poaitive 29.9 percent; volaiility that what yoU'd .
ISharet:Mexico Free, up find In a more divenlfled
17.07 percent; and, !Shares: portfolio. Then aaatn, Index·
Auatria, ahead 11.~ percent, type funds have often out·
Loaen Included !Shares: performed active manaaed
OS Network Idx, down portfolloa. So, once aailn,
19.41
percent: there are no guarantees, only
ttreetTRACKS: MS Internet, opJ)Ortunltles.
off 14 percent: .and, !Shares
(Dian Vujovlch 14 a nation·
Dow US Telecom, down 10 ally syndlcoted mutual fund
tar thla year, 16.2 percent. columnist, author, .and P.Ub·
ETP• are becomlna more lilhtr of an tdur:otlonal fund
and more popular. ln 1993, mutual Wtb 11111: www.all·
there wu one dome1tlc ETF boutfunduqm.)
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IIWI'I. l.llldlty Balin, diUil\ttf of 81t!lt .1\d Cimlllll BOIIt\, Willi a junior at Melgl!l High School,
aflfl Brad Runyon, 1011 ofetnny end Kll'l Runyon tmd Julie Petera, was a fl'eahmtin, The plant·
ln&amp;a were the project of tilt junior oteaa. Pl~llltd dolrt 11 little groomlnR on one or the trees
l'tfdty Ire \I'll CIIU othctfl, !YOm lift, HlU'IIIIh WOOIII'O, Allltl)n Wlllillmson, Brook Bolin •nd
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US.We .Cellular
connect with

Win net of Out111ndln1 Ou1tomer leN~• Allllrd
- WIIIIW RtWfw Mqallnt

membership

ReclneG
reviews

•

litom.·

Februnry, Ron 8urks, n din·
icnl rounselot for the center,
·
'
nppenred on The Montel
center UntqUe Williums Show.
Now, 11 new vldw pmjeo:t,
,
,
desl~l\ed to ''edUC\100, - pre· .
vent nnd rehubilitate" Is In
1v IMAM J. Rao
the works, At the heart or
a"EEDrt t.IV1&gt;t-.1LYSWT1tlEI..et:JIIN the video presenmtion is a
component,
ALBANY_ "I came here recovery
feeling sick and brnln dead. desl~ned to capture the
Now, 1 an\ I!Oinj~ home and respected
Wellspring
feel like I'm rendy to live nppmt~~h ttltrentlng cult surRtlllln.~·
vlvors for use by victhns
Helplnt~ cuh ~urvlvors who ~tre unable to trove\ to
tranform f'l'oll\ ho~less 10 Meigs t'ountY- l'or personal
ho~ful Is the go 11 t of treatment.
Wellsprln11. Retreat 1111d Allother aspec1 of the pre"
Resoul'\,'e Center. Nestled 111 sentation Is designed to help
one or Meigs County's I\IQSI protessiunnh understand
remote oorners, Wellspring nnd counsel their patients
Is the United Stares' only who nre t\:lrmer cult victims.
resldentlnl trentment pm· The video proJect is under
llflllll fur the survlwrs of the direction ol Lit Shaw, n
cults, nnd the t-enter Is see· cult survivor advocate at
IIIII lll'l:lWing numbers or Wellspring.
clients.
. "I want 111 put u t\1ce · on
Lust yellt, Wellspring the problem; Shaw said.
trenred a reeul'&lt;l·number !12 "We cull only treat a number
cult survivors, Those dlents of' people cnch year, but
came !'rom nround th11 ~:oun· there arc millions of cult
try and around the world, victims out rherc, The video
uml l't!r the t11'!1t time, t'eder· project is goin!! to 1-euch out
ul funding helped pny the to people whn '-'Ould never,
blHs for clients' extended in their wildest dreams,
stnys at the center.
come to Welbprlng!'
Dr, Pnul Mnrtln, the pro- For those cult survivors
grnrn's director illld a cult who can mnke It to
survivor himself, said the Wellsprintt. anhltensive but
country's cult pmblem - 11 ~ml'orting pmgrmn awaits.
probl~m whlch continues to A plcluresque lodge serves
pltiJ!Ue sudety at nil socio· as a hom~ awuy frori\ home
economic levels, education· for those who remain truu·
111 leveh nnd family bnek· matlted und uncet'taltl abt1ut
grounds, continues to be n h
1
·
·
serious and life·threntenin" t e1r post-cu t expertem.,-es,
e nnd u trained stall of'.counproblem.
"Our rocord number of se1on prov ldes answer~ to· .
clients lust yellf undel'!lcores questions ubout returning to
lit\! In the "rent world,"
the t'uct thut the cult problern Dawn Jenkins is the lutest
Is still here, and lt's not
~olny 11 way. And It certainly addition to the Wellspring
underscores the fuel that we stntl', u counselor who sees a
huven'lgone nwav either.
special cttlllnll In the needs
"One thin&amp; welre thrilled of women who ure tryinll to
nbollt Is thllt hlst ye11r, we recover l'rom their eltperi·
didn't tum anybody away ellces In cults,
· b\ltnuse of lack of funds . "Our Influence Is gmw· ·
I
.lng" Murtln suld. "We're .
Th I n I
.of ~~s~:ry.r,st nour 6 yeurs hlp\ng more clients. We're
Mnrtln hilS appeared on 11 nble to protlut.-e this video
number of natlonnl tele.vl· project. We're definitely
slon programs Including moving un und branching
Nlyhtllne, to ti\scuss cults out. And we're going to be
like the Branch Ouvldlans doing things this yellf thnt
- sc.weral of whom sur- have never been done
vlved their ordeul by vlsitlnll before."
. Wellsprln&amp;
only weeks "I' 111 quite excited ubout
before their fellow cult whnt we're going to be doing
members died ill ThlliiS. lu In the future."

Cult treatment

(Amy Bowma11·Moort Is

th1 Gallipolis ana rtprtstn·
tot/vet for Edward IoiilS

Wellspring treats
recorCI numbers

RACINB - A lively tlll\\llll~lun 1)11 11 wide
r11n1111 ur leyl~lutlva 188111!11 lnoludlny lhll Sool~l
S~urlty llygtem 111\tl thll ptl~tqe l'lltif luc~llllt
hlahll;hteil la~t wttk'8 m elllll! ot R11~:lne
Ol'llnae 11t the Olllt OMvt htill.
Memhtn fll!88etlli re8olutlon 118klllllhllt all
memben tlf Coli1JI'I!8M be 8Ubjeet tu flli 81\MI
retirement My~tem 118 tho8e ourrently tenl'tllled
In Stll.llal St\~urlty, llnd th11t th11 •y•t il1 be
11hana tl to 11 "retirement syate1n r11tl\er thlln a
tu" 1o k p It sound and lmpl'tlvt retlreea'
llloomoa.
·
According to Kl!llh Ashley, lealal•tlv•
ehlllrlftllfl, oont:el'l\ ov r the eurrenl Soolal
' Seeurlty ~y8t m Willi bl'tlught tu lhl noor Ill
reaponae to retent ll!lllllclll l.lommeNhlla
which point uut th11 dll'Fertl\tl In bllnents for
trltmben or Conattsi! and oelal Securl~

reolplenta.

au.

JiiiiiH IH RICint. AI

H01pltal Week

.

1...,41

They ret'u~e to be 11 purl of the current Soclul
Security systen\ due to the smull Income It
11\!lll!tntes for retlrel!~, 5nhl Ashley, and lnstend
el\,loy 11 prlvnte system thut puys fur better
bet\cl1ts.Concem wns ex pressed by the 0 rangers
about What Is aolnif to hoJ)pen when the
"bliby bootncr~". 1nuny of whom nre nbuut to
retire, begin tu druw bcncflts.
·
A.~hley reported .thut 11s of now no word hus
bl!en rwelved t'rum the Cont~resslonul ropre·
8enMlon regarding the OI'J!Unl~ntlon's opposl·
tlon ttllht lm:reklse In po~tut~e rutcs.
OI81.\U881!tl by Pntty Dyer, Meigs Cuunty
deputy muster, was the furm bill cul'i'llntly
Utlili!r llullillderutioll In Conyress, nml the ney·
atlv11 renectlon un consch.mtlou~ farmers
l'l!illlltlna !rom lh~ btld publicity or 13uckeye

May 12·18

Ce/el,ralfng ~0 Yeart on Jaclc1011 Pilce
Wl1d like to recognize thoae who makt

uac llular.com
,,

. Holzer Medical Center auch a apec:lal
place ·IM.Itaff, Thla week, and every wttk,

.

•"

'www.holzer.org

you help u"'iniOlCithe difference to those we serve.

••

I

'

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

..... ....-.

�PapAl

•

.The Daily Sentinel

M•dly. .W., II. 2002

Dems have rare ·chance to flex muscle

Ohlow.ltlaer

1\.tuJ.,.._,.

, ....... r...... , • .

•

•I Colum~~ut!44"11r I

•
Continued.wet and cool
BY THE ASSOCIAlED PRESS

'The showers a~ expected to continue across the Mid-Ohio

Valley Monday night and Tuesday.
Ttmperarures will fall to belo,w normal levels in the low 40s

tonight and stay below nonnaltn the 50s on Tuesday. Nonnal
hiJhs m in the UP.per 60s to low 70s.
.
Sunset today W11l be at 8:38 p.m. and sunrise on TueSday at
6:17a.m.

Weather Foreeast

COLUMBUS (AP) Senate
Democrats, outnumbered almost 2-to-1
by their Republican colleagues, have an
unusual chance to flex some political
muscle thanks to a deteriorating state
'!udget and an unpopular budget solution.
Senate Republicans, with the backing
·of Gov. Bob Taft, •~ pushing a proposal to balance the $1.2 billion deficit by
tripling the state's tax on ciga~ttes.
The plan isn't sitting well with all
members of the GOP-controlled Senate,
and at least five have said publicly they
won't vote for the plan. Two m~ said
they have strong ~rvations .
With a 21-12 majority, Senate
~sident Richanl Finan needs at least
17 votes to pass the plail. He's out of
votes on paper, although he insists he'll
have enough when the time comes.
Democrats aren't wasting any time
making their case for a place at the
table. Minority leader Gregory
DiDonato of New Philadelphia and Eric
Fingerhut of Cleveland, the top-ranking
Democrat on the Senate Finance
Committee, have offe~d to trade need-·
ed votes for- the ciga~ue tax for a short
laundry list of programs they want
funded.
"It's kind of a nice experience for me
this quick." said DiDonato, who took
over as Senate Democratic leader on

Man arrested for lying to airport security
t~e

concourses, which

The first time, a security

The busiest tenrunal at the serve Delta and Comair, were employee saw what appeared ·

Cincinnati airport wu shut
down for 90 nllnutes when a
man chosen for a random
aearch told screeners he· had
a amall knife, even though he
ap~ntly didn't have one. ·
However, pollee at the
C Inc lnnul/N orth ern
Kentucky
International
Airport said a small amount
of marljuan~ was found on
the man.
Charles Cowsen, 40, of
Council Orove, Kan., was
arrested Sunday and charged
with poueulon of marijuana
and drug paraphernalia. He
wu taken to the Boone
County jail In Burlington,
where bond was set at
$100,000 and arraignment
was scheduled for Monday in
Boone County District Court.
.'
Cowsert had passed the
main checkpoint but was
- - · · · - chosen ·for li search by
Comair employees at a sec·
ondUY. check})21nt, said air·
port Pollee Chief Chuck
Melvllle.
"He alleged he had a
penknife. tiut no penknife
wu found," Melville said.
The man 'a statement about
I knife prompted an evacuation order for the terminal
that handles 92 percent of
airport traffic.
"He said he had one, so we
have to take it as If he had
one," Melville uld.
A federal agency Initially
reported the man had a
weapon and ran from a security checkpoint.
'1'1\e Information we Initially gave ia laraely Incorrect," aaid Kathleen· Beraen,
a apoketwoman for the U.S.
Depanment
·
of
'l'railaportation In Atlanta.
"It'a over aa far 11 we're
concerned," ahe Kid. "ll'a a
pollee matter."
Cowaert waa supi!Oied to
board a Comalr ftlaht in
Dayton and connect in
Cincinnati on the way to
Florida, Melville 1ald, but
arrived directly at the
Cincinnati airport lnttead.
When
Cowaert
was
detained, the terrnlnal wa•
ahilt down about 10 a.m. and

more

jail accused of trooper assault
Trooper
ftom chemical
spray to face

Its

is actually the second time this year that
Democrats have found themselves with
some leverage.
During the winter, House and Senate
Democrats provided the votes needed to
pass the state's congressional redlstrict1ng plan in time to take effect immediately and avoid a costly second primary.
That allowed Democrats to demand
friendly districts from the majority Republicans who drew the map. ·
Senate Finance Chairman Jim Carnes
said he'd love a bipartisan budget bill,
but he's keeping the Democrats at a distance publicly.
''Other than the fact that a budget correction . bill that's bipartisan is much
preferable, 1 think we have the votes to
b' II " · d c
s
pass the 1 , sa1
ames, a t.
Clairsville Republican.
DiDonato said there are limits to what
Democrats will do. They won't vote for
a plan they feel will make the state budget even wors~:, he said.
"Half their members are not going to
run from their ~sponsibility and expect
the minority party, whom they've distespected for years, to step in and fix their
problems," DiDonato said. ''This taucus has strong reservations about being
put in the middle of something that
doesn't deal with the overall problem or
core issues Democrata believe in."

Man from Ukraine held in Ohio

Flood watch today .
Today... Showers and thunderstonns through early afternoon...Then showers. Turning cooler with temperatu~s
falling into the upper 50s. Southwest winds 5 mph becoming
northwest late and inc~sing to IS mph.
s~rs
Thnight... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s. West winds 5
to IS mph.
.
Tuesday...Cool with a mix of elouds and sunshine. A chance
of showers. A thunderstorm also_possible. Highs in the lower
60s. Nonhwest winds 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tuesday nlght...Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 40s.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny and wanner. Highs in the lower 70s.
·CANTON (AP) - A man
Wcdnesdiy niaht... Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 40s. - from the Ukraine is accused
Extellded Forecast ·
of assaulting a State Highway
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 70s.
Patrol trooper.
Friday... Partty cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderEduard R,Yumshin was
storms during the night. Lows in the mid SOs and highs in the charged With felonious
upper 70s. assault, tampering with gov-Satwday...Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thun- ernment documents, forgery,
derstorm&amp;. Lows In the upper SOs and highs in the mid 70s.
possession of criminal tools
Sunday...Partly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows in and resisting arrest. His
the upper 50s and hiJhs In the lower 70s.
arraignment was set for today

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) -

Feb. 28. '
This is a ra~ opportunity for
Democrats, who have been pushed
aside for much of this legislative sessian, said Robert Adams, a political scientist at Wright State University.
·
"Particularly in Columbus, w~ the
minority has been totally shut out of any
opportunity to participate much less be
consulted on key measures, I have to
think the Democrats ~ smiling sweetly, thinking, 'This is our chance to get
back,"' Adams said.
Democrats a~ willing to · provide
votes if the tax plan ~sto~s furiding to
programs such as PASSPORT, . which
allows the elderly to ~eive home care.
Senate Demtx:rats also want funding
restored to a program that lures top
scholars to Ohio uni~ersities, and they
want to speed up·the Implementation of
state fundins for Gov. Bob Taft's Third·
Frontier Project to bring m~ high-tech
jobs to Ohio.
·
There's no such thing as asking for
tQO much in a situation like this, Adams
said.
'"Frankly, you go as far as rou can,"
Adams said. "In any bargaintng situa~
tion you always ask for more than
you're goin~; to get. That's normal leg1slative politics."
Althou~h horse trading by the minority party 1s ra~. it's not unhel!!'ll Qf, This

evacuated and searched.
to be a knife when a passenThousands of passengers aer's baa went through an Xwere re-sc~ened, and those ray machine. It turned out to
on the I 0 flights that left the be makeup wrapped In foil.
airport during the evacuation
were sc~ned upon arrival at The second time, scanners
their destinations, Bergen revealed scissors In a bag.
said.
·
On April 26, two concoursNicole Sundgren, a Delta es at Cleveland Hopkins
spokeswoman, said flights . International Airport were
from Delta's two concourses shut down for 2 1/2 hours as
we~ delayed up to 4S min- passengers were ~hecked.
utes to allow passengers to
be · ~·sc~ned. Comair did A security guard overnot ~tum phone messages looked a screening machine
alert for possible explosives
seeking comment.
The Delta terminal was in a carryon bag, and screenclosed twice on the same day era were unable to find the
a month ago because of secu- bag. The guard has since
rity concerns.
been fired.

in Canton Municipal Court.
He was arrested after driving on Interstate 77 in
Guernsey Countr following
an attack Friday m a driver's
license station in Canton.
The patrol said Ryumshin,
34, of Kiev, matched the
description of the man who
SP.rayed the · face of trooper
Rayetta Calhoun. A container
holding a chemical substance
used in the assault was found
inside his car.
Calhoun was called to a drivers' exam station about a

man who presented a fraudulent Social Security card and a
resident alien card, hoping to
obtain an Ohio Identification
Card, said Sgt. Don Ebie of
the patrol's Canton-area post.
He said Calhoun arrived as
Ryumshin was leavin,11 the
license station. Accordmg to
the patrol, she asked him to
stop but he quickly turned and
sprayed a substance similar to
Mace in her face; Then he
left, driving away. Calhoun
was treated at Aultman
Hospital and was released.

Lt. John Born of the patrol's
headquarters in Columbus
said ihe state identification
card is available to people
who need some form of Ohio
ID, but it _does not entitle a
person to drive.
Ebie did not know whether
Ryumshin was in the United
States legally. The patrol notified the U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service.
If Ryumshin is convicted,
he could face eight ~elirs and
nine months in jail and a
$20,750 fine.

doubiP Y.our comfort &amp;sav~!
Right now you can bring home 2of your

favorite 1.1-Z·Bor styles for 1gre~t low pricel

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Will be closed Moy _14-18

·

• Monday, May 13,2002

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The Dlllly Sentinel •

\

-·HMC. Arthritis
·-Foundation s nsor
:·: local rock-aGALLIPOLIS - May is
·~ational Arthritis Month. To
- .mcrease awareness of this
. .,chronic disease, the Arthritis
:.: .F9undation®, in conjunction
: With Holzer Medical Center,
Holzer Medical Center• . Jatkson, Holzer Senior Care
. ::Center, .and Wy~gate of
J_ockson, 1s sponsonng arthri·
lis rock-a-thons at various
locations.
. · The mission of the Arthritis
. Foundation® is to iml&gt;rove
. . lives throu~h leadersh1p in
· the p~venllon, control and
cu~ of arthritis and related
· · diseases. In Gallia and
· ·Jackson Counties combined,
· · in e)\cess of 12,000 persons
are affected by the more than
·· 100 differennypes of museu• loskeletal and rheumatic dis·
·· eases.
.. · · These unique rock-a-thon
fundraising events feature
; persons rocking in rockin_g
· .. chairs in exchange for the1r
monetary support of the
Arthritis Foundation®. To
heighten community awareness, everyone is invited to
rock, $5 per. 5 minutes, and
.sponsors, in addition to their
: donations, are encouraged to
participate in the rock-a-thon
by . send in~ someone from
their orgamzation to rock.
The first rock-a-thon will
be held on Wednesday, May
15, from noon to 2 p.m., at
Holzer Senior Care Center, as
' an important activity in their
celebration of National

Nursing Home Week. Rock·
a-thons will also be held at
HMC and HMC-J, with the
cooperation of Wyngate of
Jackson, on Wednesday, May
29, to highlight National
· Senior Health and Fitness
Day. The rock-a-thons at
Holzer Medical Center and
Holzer Medical CenterJackson will be held simultaneously from I to 4 p.m. ·
The Arthritis Foundation®
is seeking donations and
spons?rs . for .participants.
Contnbullons are welcome
from both businesses and
individuals, with donations of
$25 or more listed as sponsors
on. all event publicity. Hope
Price is servinjl as communi·
ty-at-large chairperson. while
Todd Tucker, community
relations coordinator for
Holzer Home Care, is serving
as the Holzer Medical Center
Representative.
Checks should be made out
to the Arthritis Foundation®,
and can be mailed to the
attention of Price; 109 Left
Fork Road, Bidwell, OH
45614, or Tucker, _Holzer
Medical Center. 100 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 4S631.
They may also be given to
any member of the Gallia
County Arthritis Advisory
Committee. Your consideration and support is greatly
app~ciated ..
For infonnation about the
rock-a-thon, call Tucker at
740-446-9560.

Racine

been 111mo~.
Whitney Ashley reported
on the ~cent trip which she,
fromPipA1
Emily Ashley, and Rachel
Denais made to the Mid. She also reported that Atlantic Youth Conference in
attempts by residents in Jackson Mills, W.Va. Youth
Knox County to prevent a from several states attended.
· • swine operat1on from open- The national overseer,
ing there failed and that those William Steele, was also preresidents now owe approxi- sent.
••·mately a quarter of a million
Jean Alkire, secretary,
i·-: dollars in damages to the reported on recent fundrais1: ·fanner as the result of a law ing activities. A report on
· : suit.
plans to place a town marker
; ; . _The proposed massive for the Oak Grove communi: ·: inc~ase 10 the tobacco tax in ty was given and the sign will
' Ohio was also discussed but be ordered as an Ohio bicen: sentiment of the Grangers tennial project.
; seemed to be that the tax has
The lecturer's program
: no serious implications. focused on events m May,
• Members decided to table including the history of May
• any action on the istue. ·
Day and the May Pole.
; . Reparations for slavery Members we~ asked to men: · was also among the topics tion a humorous story about
• aired at the meeting ani! it their mothers for Mother's
; was concluded that there's · Day, which was started by a
little chance the courts will member of the Orange.
award these and that the stratMembers played "Name
; egy will probably move That Tune" answering with.
: toward forcms c.orporations the names of flowers men; to pay money m order to not tioned itt the songs. Mary
: • appear biased.
Kay Yost won the prize.
1 Chuck Yost, master, Harry Leffle, Keith Ashley,
, ; presided at the meeting and and W~itney Ash,ley present: • . Dyer was there for the annu- ed a sk1t on a spnng feud.
•; ; al inspection which followed
Emma Adams WM remem;: . a potluck supper
bered on her 92nd birthday
; · : The grange presented the and Helen Pickens · was
; , : second degree and received a reported ill.
· ; ; - superior rating on its inspecUpcoming grange events
; ! : tion report for its yearly include Pomona Grange
: •. work.
meeting at Star Orange, the
; ~ : It was reported that the district talent contest in June,
': • Meigs
· County and Junior Grange and youth
: ·: Commiuioners had. nothing- . camps.in-July..Included at the
: ·: to do' with the recent sus pen- nellt meeting will be the hon·
: . : sion of service by the RaCine oring of the area's outstand:: • Emergency Squad aa had ing community citizen.
I

Obituaries

LOCAL BRIEFS

Dorvlliy M. J1nldns
MIDDLEPORT - Doroth)' M. Jenkins, 78, Middleport,
died on Saturday, May ll, 2002, at St. Mary's Hospital in
Huntington, W.Va.
She was born on se.,t.l 0, 1923. in Middleport. daughter of
the late Earl and Hazel Lowe Manldn. She wu a graduate of
the fanner Middleport High School.
Jenkins was a member of the former Middleport and
Pomeroy Business and Professional Women's Association, a
'inember of the Drew Webster Post 39 Ladies Auxiliary, and a
former member of the Middle~ Fire Department Auxiliary.
She was a member of the Ohio Pioneer and Tele~one
Association, and was formerly employed as chief operator for
General Telephone Company. She was a former longtime
member of the Middleport First Baptist Church and was a
member of St. Paul Lutheran Church.
·
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, David and
Ginger Jenkins of Hartford, W.Va.; grandchll~n. David E.
Jenkins II of New Haven, W.Va., and Niki-Noel Roub of
Parkersburg, W.Va.; beloved comjlanion, "Joy,'' her pet
Schnauzer; and a special friend. Teresa Casey Carr of
Middl~port.
. '
.
I.
Jenkins was p~ceded m death by her husband, David Owen
Jenkins, in 1972, and her parents.
.
Services will be held at 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, May 15,
2002, at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport. Officiatin1 will
be Rev. William Middleswarth and burial will follow in
Riverview Cemetery. Friends may call on Tuesday. May 14.
2002, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions may be made in her memory to the
Middleport Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary, 286 Race
S~et, Middleport, Ohio, 45760.
.

Rio Grande

speaker often
aCivice to 2002
graduates
BY K!vtN KILLY
KKELLYOMYDAILYTFIIBUNE.COM

RIO
GRANDE
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
graduates we~ told by their
commencement speaker to
develop a plan for their
futu~. but lle adaptable to
change as they p~ss with
their careers.
Dr. Susan Tave Zelman,
Ohio's superintendent of pub·
lie instruction, stressed the
point during Rio Grande:s
126th graduation ceremony
Sunday, advising graduates to
"understand that success in
life comes from skillful execution of a strategy."
Zelman's theme, on how to
progress in an unpredictable
future, offered studenis several pieces of advice to remain
true to their life plan and still
succeed, by continuing to
learn, "put the why before the
how," focusing on their goals
and creating ,Partnersh!Jls.
·
"Change 11 occumng on
multiple fronts," said Zelman,
who's
led the state
Department of Education
since 1999. "The implication•
of these changes are sobering.
At you walk off this campus
today, begin to P.repare for a
future you can t p~ict by
accepting new challenges."
tlie speaker also focused
on educational quality and
excellence; quoting English
poe_t John Masefield's belief
m the "beautiful splendor of a
university."
"All of this beauty and
promise is n01 about hip
education, but all educatiOn,

.
1

Meigs Communi!&gt;' AJ
Aaency will be d1stribut1l
TUPPERS PLAINS - new clothinJ to income eli 2
Lois G. Pooler, 41, 54747 ble persons at the Olesh nOhio 681, Reedsville, was office on Friday, May 17,
cited for left of cetlter by the between 9 a.m. and '3 p.m.
Gl!llia·Meigs Post of the State
Sandra
Edwards,
HIJhway Patrol followina · a Emcraency Services director,
two-car accident Friday at the urged that any households
intersection of Ohio 7 and with children. which are eligiCounty Road 46 (Success).
ble under the HEAP program
Troopen said Pooler was guidelines: should apply. All
southbOund on 7 at 6:30 p.m. ciOihiilg is new and will be
when she turned left onto .provided to families in need
Success and coUld~ with a at no cost or charge to them In
wes~bo~nd car dnven by any wiy.
BenJamm R. Wolfe, 19,
This clothing has been
50802 . Joppa
Road. donated to the Oallia-Meigs
Reedsville.
CAA through a regional proW?Ife had seen Pooler gram called Kids in
makmg the t~rn and had Distressful Situation (aka
s.IC!pped at the lime of the col- KIDS). Edwards stated that
hs1on, the ~P&lt;?rt said. Both apflicants will be requl~d to
cars had f~ncllonal damage, fil out a simple application,
troopers said.
·providing income proof, birth
~arley .E. Stoops, 37, S~40 dates and social security
W1lds.mun R~ud, Coolv1lle; numbers of all household
was cued for 1mproper buck- ·
be
. ing by the patrof following a mem rs.
one-car accident earlr
~he. followi~ff income
Saturda~
on
Orange gu1dehnes
~~ ,
apply.
Townsh 1p Road 388 (Ski Allowable family mcome for
Run).
a one·8erson household is
Troopers said ~loops was ~~ 3.29 : two
persons,
one-tenth of a mile west of $17,910, three p~rsons,
Ohio 7 at 12:30 a.m. when he $22,530; four
persons,
backed down the road, went ~27, I SO; five ; persons,.
off the left side and drove up $31. 770; und .SIX persons,
onto the guide wires of a util- $36,39h0. Households with
ity pole.
m?re I at si~ !llemtx:rs should
His vehicle hud nonfunc- ud~ an additional $4,62() to
tional damage the report the yearly income.
said. .
'
For information, contact the
Cheshire office at 740-3677341 or 740-992-6629.

Ross to speak at
ovc araduatlon

GALLIPOLIS
Dr.
.Randall A. Ross will be the
guest speaker ut Ohio Valley
Christian School's senior
graduation

o

n

Saturday,
May 18, at
4 p.m. at
and that's reflected nowhere
P 1- r s t
better than here at the
Baptist
University of Rio Grande,"
Church
she said.
auditorium.
"You a~ not an ivory tower
Ross is
institution," Zelman added.
the
regional
"You have never lost siaht of
director
for
your viaion of servina the
RDH
the Ohio
people of southern Ohio."
i v e r
While recognizing current Valley Region R of
the
criticism of public education, Association of Christian
Zelman said the national
Schools International (ACSJ).
tem still allows all to real1ze The
River Valley
the "dream that is America." RegionOhio
is
comprised
of three
"I also refuse to ~main states (Kentucky, Ohio,
West
silent about the remarkable Virginia) with 268 school•
accomplishments of public ~presentina 47,042 atudenta.
education, a universal. nexiACSI Is the largest associable aystem that allows people tion of evangelical Proteatant
to set as much education as Christian school• in the
they want," she added.
world. Total membership is
Following her address, - inore that 5195 ~ehools with
Zelman received an honorary .student
enrollment
of
doctorate of public service 1,102,28S atudentJ.
from the university.
Ross served on the execuDr. BaiT)' M. Dorsey, over- tive board for ACSI from
seelna his lith commence- 1980 to 1989.
ment as Rio Orande'a presiDr. Rou and hia wife,
dent, said Zelman shma Rio Joyce, reaide in Malvern.
Grande's belief in producing They have three children,
graduates committed to edu- Kristen. Randy and Timothy;
cation, es~ially from its and one grandson.
teacher traming program.
"I pledge to you Rio
Grande will provide the best
teachell in all of Ohio," he
said.
The univenity and commuCHESHIRE Oallianity college then honored the
443 graduates, with 454
degrees awarded, in ceremonica held on the campus
green under partly cloUdy
akin and SO-des~ temperatures. Rain forecast for the "
reJ!on held off for the graduauon.

•r•-

Free dothln1
from CAA

'West

VIrginians'

· In concert

VINTON - "The West
a show choir
from
Alderson -Broaddus
College in Philippi, W.Va.,
will be in concert lit 7 p.m.
Tuesday at Vinton Baptilt
Church.
For information, call 740388·8454.
Virginian~,''

·

Youths face accusations

ATHENS
(AP)
Authorities say they have
stopped three Athens High
School teens from arranaing
and videotaplna lifter-~ehool
fights.
Athens County Sheriff's
Deputy lim Childa aaid officers were called to three
lights within a four-day peri·
od last week.
Child1 said 50 to 70 atudenia would aather to watch
the fighll in The Plaina and
Chauncey, communitlea near
Athens in the southeast Ohio.
Several
atudents
were
stopped May I near the ~eene
of the third fight in Chauncey.
Deputie• confiscated video- ·
tapes and photographs of the
lighting recorded by studentt,
he said.
One atudent received 10
stitches to hia face from a
fight, bu! Chi,l~• ~w of no
othet .enou• IDJurlea.

The Daily Sentinel

DUE TO ILLNESS
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Correction Polley
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The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

.The Daily Sentinel

, •_

Ohio Wllther

::HMC, Arthritis

.Foundation
•,'local

Dems have rare chance to flex muscle

COLUMBUS (AP) Senate Feb. 28.
Ia actually the ucond time this year that
Oernocra11, outnumbered almost 2·to- I This Is a rare opP.Ortunlty for Democrata have found thllmselvea with
by their Republican colleaaues, have an Democrats, who have been puahed some leverap.
unusual chance to Rex soma political aside for much of this lealslatlve ses· Durlna the winter, Houae and Senate
musc:le thanks to a deterioratlna sttue slon, said Robert Adams, 1 politlcalacl- Democrats provided tho votes needed to
budaet and an unpopular budaet solu· entlst at Wrlaht State Unlvenlty. . pus the ltltO'I conaresslonal redlatrlct•
tlon.
''Particularly In Columbus, where the Ina plan In time to take effect lmmedl·
Senate
Republicans,
with
the
backlna
!Menlftllltli41VI•
minority has ~n totally shut out of any ately and avoid a coatly aeeond primary.
of Oov. Bob r.t\, 11re pushlna a propos· opportunity to participate much less be That allowed Demoerata to demand
.t lto balance the $1.2 bllllon deTiclt by consulted on key meaaure1, 1 have to more friendly districts from tho ~ori·
lrlpllna the state's tlllt on cigu.rettes.
think tlte Democrats are smlllna sweet• 1 R bll
h d the mal_).
The plan isn't siulna well .with all ly, thlnklna, 'This is our chance to pt .yse~~ F~~=~c~ oal:.n Jim Carnes
members of the GOP-controlled Sennte, back,"' Adams said.
· said he'd love a bl~iun budpt bill,
. und at least five have said publicly they Democruts are wlllina to provide b h • k i he De
t at a dl
ut es eep na t
mocra 1
swon't vote for the plan. TWo more said votes If the tax plan restores fundi~ to tance
publicly.
the)' have strona reservations.
proarams auch as PASSPORT, w ch ''Other than the fact that a buclaet corWith a 21·12 mi\Jorlty Senate all8owathe elderly to receive horne C'!fll· rection bill that's bipartisan 1 much
1
President Richlll'd Finan ne~s at least
enate Democrats also want fundana preferable 1 think we have the votes to
17 votes to pltss the plan. He:s out of restored to a proaram that lures tcp
'
..
c
s
votes on pliper, althouah he insists he'll scholars to Ohfo unlvenltles, and the)' pass the bill, 111d amea, a t.
have enough when the time comes.
w&amp;ntto speed up the Implementation of Clairsville Republican.
Democrats aren't wastlna any time state funding for Gov. Bob 1\aft'l Third- DiDonato said there ure llmi,ll to what ·
maklna their ease~ for 11 place at the Frontier Project to brina more hlah·teeh Democrats will do. They won t vote for
a plan they feel will make the state bud·
table. ·Minority leader Greaory jobs to Ohio.
O,IDonato of New Philadelphia and 'Eric There's no such thing as asking for get even worse, he said.
.
Fingerhut ofCieveland, the top·ranklng too much In a situation like this, Adams "Half their members are .not aolna to
run from their responsibility a~d expect
Democrat on the Senate Finunce suld.
Committee, hove offered to trnde need- "Fr!lnkly, you go as far as you can," the minority party, whom they ve dfsre·
ed votes foMhe cigarette tax for 11 short Adwns said. "In any bargainina sltua- spected for years, to step in and flx their
, laundry list of programs they want tion you always ask for more thun problems," DiDonato said. "This caufunded.
you're golnato ~et. That's normal lea· cus has strona reservations about belna
"It's kind of a nice experience for ll\C lslutlve politics.'
put In the riliddle of something that
this
quick,"
said
DIDonato,
who
toolt
Althou~b.horse
trading
b)'
tho
minoraoes~
't deal with the overall problem or
B'Y THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
over
as
Senllte
Democratic
lender
on
lty party 1s1nre, It's not unheard of. This core assues Democrats believe ln."
The showers are expected to continue across the Mid-Ohio
Valley Monday nlaht and 1itesday.
Temperatures wnt fall to below normal levels In the low 40s
tonlaht and stay below normal in the .50s on Tuesday. Normal
hlalis are In the Ul'per 60s to low 70s.
·
·
· Sunset today will be at 8:38 p.m. and sunrise oil Tuesday at
6:17a.m.
Weather Forecaat
Flood watch today
Today... Sbowers and thunderatorms through early after·
noon ... Then showers. Tumlna cooler with temperatures
· falling into the upper .50s. Southwest winds .5 mph 6ecomlna
northwest late~ und increulnato 1.5 mph.
In Canton Municipal Court.
man who presented a fraudu - Lt. John Born of the r.•trol's
Toniaht...Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s. West wlnda .5
He was arrested after drl· lent SociafSecurity card and a headquarten in Co umbus
to 1.5 Q!Ph·
·
ving on Interstate 77 In resident allen card, hoplna to said the state identification
Tuelday...Cool with a mix of clouds and sunshine. Achance
Guernsey County followln'- obtain an Ohio Identltlcatlon curd Is available to I'IIOPle
of showera. A thunderttonn 11110 possible. Highs In the lower
an attack Friday in a driver 1 Card, said S.it. Don Ebie of who need some form of Ohio
60s. Northwest winds S to 15 mpli. Chance ofraln 30 perce~nt.
license atu.tion fn Canton.
the patrol's Canton-area post. 10, but It does not entitle a
Tuesday nlaht... Partly cloudy. Lows In the lower 40's. ·
The patrol said Ryumshin, ~e said Calhoun lll'rlved as person to drive.
Wednesday.. :Mostly aunny and warmer. Highs In the lower 70s.
CANTON (AP) - A man 34, of Kiev, · matched the Ryumshln was leavlna the Ebie did not know whether
Wednesday nlght... Moatly clear. Lows In the upper 40s.
from the Ukraine is accused description of the man who license station. Accorclrna to Ryumahln wa1 In tho United
Extended Foi'ICIIIt .
of aasaultina a State Highway sprayed the ·face of trooper the patrol, 1he asked him to Statea .ieaally. The patrol notiRayetta Calhoun. A container atop o.ut he quickly turned and fied the u.s. Immiaratlon and
Thunday... Partly cloudy. Hlahsln the mid 70s.
· · Patrol troo~r.
holdina
a chemical substance aprayed a aubatance 1lmllar to Naturalization Service.
. Prklay... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderEduard Ryumshln was
used
In
the
IIUilult wa1 found Mace In her face. Then he If Ryumahln Ia convicted,
ltorml ilurlna the niaht. Lowa in the mid .50s and highs in the charae4 wfth felonloua
·
left, drilllna away. Calhoun he could face eiaht yeart and
upper 70..
mault, tamperina with aov· Inside hla car.
Calhoun
was
called
to
a
driwa1 treated at Aultman nine months in jail . and a
· Saturday...Moatly cloudy with a chance of 1howert and thun· ernment dociurnenta1 foraery,
vers'
exam.
&amp;tall
on
about
a
Hoapitaland
wu released.
$20,7.50 tlne.
·
dentomu. Lowa In the upper 50. and hi&amp;hl In the mid 70..
po1seulon of crinunal toola
Sunday... Partly cloudy with a chance of showert. Lows In and re1lst1na arrest. Hl1
the upper 501 and blahs In the lower 70s.
attalgnment was set for today

' ·

.

OALLIPOUS r- May is Nunlna Horne Week. Rock· Nationa! Arthritis Month. To a-thons will also be held at
• ,Increase awareness of this HMC and HMC·J, with the
. · .. chronic disease, the Arthritis cooperation of Wynaate of
:: .FQundntlon®l jn conjunction JaciCson, on Wednesday, May
; with Holzer Medical Center, 29, to highlight National
Holzer Medical Center- Senior Health and Fitness
. Jackson, Holzer Senior Care Day. The rock·a·thons ut
.·Center, and Wynaate of Holzer Medical Center and
· ·Jackson, Is sponsorina arthrl· Holzer Medical Centertis rock·a-tlions at various Jackson will be held simulta·
locations.
neously from I to 4 p.m.
: The mission of the Arthritis The Arthritis Foundution®
, Foundation® is to Improve is seeking donations and
. lives through leadership In sponsors for participants.
the prevention, control and Contributions are welcome
cure of arthritis and related from both businesses and
· diseases. In Guilla and indlvidunls, with donations of
'Jackson Counties combined, $25 or more listed as sponsors
· · In e)\cess of 12,000 persons on 1111 event, publicity. HoP.C
nre nffected by the more than Price Is servtn(; us communi·
" 100 different types of museu- ty-at·large chatrperson, while
,· loskeletal nnd rheumatic dis· Todd Tucker, community
. ·enses.
relations coordinator for
· · These unique roek-a-thon Holzer Home Cnre, is Nerving
fundrnislng events feature as the Holzer Medical Center
; persons roeklng In rocking Representative. "
. · · chairs In exchange for their Checks should be made out
· monetary support of the to the Arthritis Foundation®,
Arthritis Foundation®. To und can be malted to the
heighten community aw~~re­ attention of Price, l09 ·Left
ness, everyone is invited to Fork Rond, Bidwell, OH
roek, $~ per S minutes, and 4~614, or Tucker, Holzet
sponsors, in addition to their Medlcul Center, 100 Jackson
: donations, are encouraged to Pike, Gnllipolls, Ohio 45631.
participate in the roek·a·thon They may also be aiven to
by sending someone from uny member of the Guilla
tlielr organrzation to rock.
County Arthritis Advisory
Tho tint rock·a·thon will Committee. Your considerabe held on Wednesday, May tion a~d support Is greatly
IS, from noon to 2 p.m., nt appreciated.
Holzer Senior Cure Center, as For· information about the
' an lmportnnt activity in their roek·n·thon, cull Tucker at
celebration of Nntlonul 740-446-9560.

•

Continued wet and cool

Man from Ukraine held in Ohio
Jail accused of trooper assault
Trooper s'1ffers
from chemical
spray to face

-

Man arrested for lying to airport security
HEBRON, Ky. (AP) The bu1le1t terminal at the
Cincinnati airport wa1 1hut
down for 90 minute• when a
man chosen for a random
aearch told acreener1 be had
a 1malllcnife, even though he
apparently didn't have one.
However, pollee at the
Ci nc In natl/N ort hern
Kentucky
International
Airport uld a •mall amount
of inarijuana wu found on
the man.
.
Charlea Cowaert, 40, of
Council Grove, Kan., was
IITelted Sunday and charaed
with potlelllon of marijuana
and ilruJ paraphernalia. He
wa1 taken to the Boone
County Jail in Burlington,
where &amp;ond wat 1et at
$1j)O,OOO and arralanment
wu tc:heduled for Monday In
Boone County District Court.
Cowsert had palled the
main checkpoint but wa•
choten for a aearch by
Comair employee• at a aec·
~ cheCk~nt, 11id air·
IIDri Po:ice Chief Chuck
Melville.
"He alleaed he had a
penknife, liut no penknife
wu found," Melville taid.
The man'• statemont about
I Jcnjfe lii'OIJIIJted an eVKUI•
don order tOr the terminal
that handles 92 percent of
alrpon trafflc. .
"He uid he had one, 10 we
have to take it aa if he had
on&amp;t Melville old,
A ledml apncy initially
repor'kd the man had a
WlllpOII and raft from I ICCU•
rity checkpoint.
"The infomlltion we inl·
dally pve it latply iRe«·
rect," ial4 Kalhtun Ber&amp;en.
a apolruwoman f« the O.S,
J)eplrtment
· · of
.Tl'WpOIWioo bl AdiOCSI.
'1t'• ov« aa ftt u we're
COIIC«DDII," me ald. '1t'1 a
pollee metter...
Cow.en wu JUt;IPCHed to
board a Comair ·matu in
Daytoa and ~n"t in
Clnclmull on the way to
Pklri4a, Melville uld, but
anive4 direaly at the
Ciacin••d airpori iMta•t
Wbea OJwtert
Wll
tfeUiaed. the cermJIIII wu
..,. dowa about 10 a.m. and

Ita three concour1e1, which The t1r1t time, a 1ecurlty
serve Delta and Comalr, were employee 11w what appeared ·
evacuated and learched.
to be I knife When a plllenThOUIIndl of pauenaera aer'a baa went through an X·
were re·acreened, and those . ray machine. It turned out to
on the 10 tll;htl that left the be makeup wrapped tn foil
airport durina the evacuation
·
were sc:reened upon arrival at The 1econd time, 1eannen
their dutlnatlona, Ber!fen revealed 1cluors in a baa.
aald.
On April 26, two concoun· .
Nicole Sundaren, a Delta e1 at Cleveland Hopkins
1poke1woman, aald fllahts International Airport were
from Delta' I two con~ourtes 1hut down for 2 112 houn as
were delayed up to 4.5 min· pauenaert were rechecked.
utea' to allow pa•senaert to
be re·•creened. Comair did A 1ecurlty ~uard overnot return phone rneuaae• looked a screenang machine
aeeklila eomrnent.
alert for pouible explosive•
The Delta terminal was In a carryon baa. and acreen·
closed twice on the same day en were unable to find the
a month aao becaute of secu· baa. The auard has 'since
rlty concern•.
been nred.

doubiP Y,OUr

comfort &amp;savp!

Right now you can bring home 2of your

fiVorlte La·z.&amp;or 1tylts for 1great low prlcel

Racine

SUPPLY
Will be closed May 14· 18

•
•

.• •
•

•

o

n

VIrginians'
In concert
VINTON - ."The West
Virginians," a show choir
from
Alderson-Broaddus
College in Philippi, W.Va.,
will be in concert at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at Vinton Baptist
Church.
For inf9rmation, call 740388-8454.

Saturday ,
May 18, .at
4 p.m. at
F 1 r s t
Baptist
Church
auditorium.
Ross is
the regional
director for
R011
the Ohio
R i v e r
ICCUIItiOnS
Valley Region of · tbe
Assoclatlon of Christian ATHENS
(AP)
Schools International (ACSI). Authorities
suy
they have
The Ohio River Valley stopped three Athens
High
Region is comprised of three
School
teens
from
arranging
states (Kentucky, Ohio. West
Virginia) with 268 schools and videotaping after-school
representina 47,042 students. fights .
ACSI is the largest associa- Athens County Sheriff's
tion of evangeliciil Protestant Deputy Jim Childs said offiChristian . school• in the cers were called to three
world. Total membership is fights within a four-day peri·
more thut Sl9S schools with od last week.
student
enrollment
of Childs said SO to 70 stu·
1, 102,28S students.
. dents would gather to watch
Ross served on the execu- the fights in The Plains and
tive board for ACSI from Chauncey, communities near
Athens in the southeast Ohio.
198010 1989.
Dr. Rou and · his wife, Several students were
Joyce, reside in Malvern. stopped May I near the sc:erie
Tliey have three children, of the third fight in Chawtcey.
Kristen, Randy and Timothy; Deputies confiscated videoand one arandson.
tapes and p~~rapha of the
fighling rec
by students,
he said.
·
One student received 10
stitches to his face from a
fight, bu! Ch~ld,s ~ew of no
CHESHIRE Oallia- other aenous IDJunes.

Youths face

Freedodtlng
fromCAA .

•

Thieves Strike Letart
Falls Cemetery

••'
•

l'hlevH rtmOVM two tnctor wind chlmM from two
gt'aYIIIIOmetlme after Aprl121, 2002.
1 • F1mt1ll Wind Chime ·, •

or
W3
•

W4

•

•

fiMI YOU liCit YIAU 01 l&amp;ltii'IIH MD IUI'I'Oif

'

GALLIPOLIS
Dr.
Randall A. Ross will be the
guest speaker at Ohio Valley
Christian School's senior
graduation

'West

•

!Ill. 6

CIJJJIIINIM

-·~...,­
OriiNWtb

~~---------------------------------·--------4---~--

aCivice to 1001
crraduates
e

Ross to speak at
OVC lflduatlon

Read• Services

ToNnCI...,..II

55::55:5::55!1

Rio Grande
speaker

'

Monda¥. May 2Q. 8AM-3PM
Iues4A¥c Ml)' 2 I ~ Jbursday. May 23.
8;30AM-JPM
Friday 8AM-SPM
Will be closed May 25
Until Further Notice

liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

.

TUPPERS PLAINS - new ciOihinJ to income ellaiLois G. Pooler, 41, 54747 ble persons at the Cllllhbe
MIDDLEPORT - Doroch)' M. Jenkins, 78, Middleport Ohio 681, Reedsville, was office on Friday, May 7,
dHicd on Saturday, May II, 2002, at St. Mary's Hospital i~ cited for left af ceiter by the between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.
untlnaton, W.Va.
Gallla-Meias Post of the State Sandra
Edwa 1,
She was born on Sept. 10, 1923, In Middleport, dauallter of Highway Palrol followina a Emergency Services direct
the late Bart and H~el Lowe Mankin. She waa a araduate of two-car acc:ldent Friday at the urged that any household
the former Middlepon Hlah School.
interscctlan of Ohio 7 and with children, which are elialJenkins was a. member of the former Middlepon and County Road 46 (Success).
ble under the HEAP proamn
Pomeroy Business and Professional Women's Association a
Troopers said Pooler was guidelines; should applf.. All
lJ!ember of the Drew Webster Post39 Ladles Auxiliary and a southbOund on 7 at 6:30p.m. clothing is new and will .be
10rmer member of the Mlddlell!)rt Fire Depa,rtrnent Auilllary. when she turne~ left ,onto provided to families in need
She. was a member of the Ohio Pioneer and Telephone Success and col ltd~ w1th a ·at no cost or charge 10 them in
Association, and wns formerly employed as chief operltor for westbound car dnven . by · any way.
Oenernl Telephone Company. Slic was a former Jonatime Beniamin R. Wolfe, 19, This clothing has been
member of the Middleport First Baptist Chun:h and was a 50802 . Joppa
Road, donated to the Oallia-Meigs
member of St. Paul Lutheran Church.
Reedsvtlle.
CAA throu h 8 re ional
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, David and
Wolfe .had seen Pooler gram cafled 'kids ~
Ginger Jenklns of Hartford, W.Va.; grandchildren David B. making the tum und had D'
· .
Jenl(lns II of New Haven, W.Va., and Niki-Noei Roub of stopped at the time of the col- •stressful Situation (aka
Parkersburg, W.Va.; beloved coM)lanion, "loy," her pet lision, the report said. Both KIDS). Ed~ards stat~ that
Schnauzer; and a special friend, 'teresa Casey Carr of cars had functional damage, uprllcants ~Ill be req~•re~ to
Middleport.
.
troopers said.
fil ~ut a ~•mple apphcatt,on,
Jenkins was preceded in death by her husband David Ow~n
Harley B. Stoops, 37, 5240 providing mcom~ proof, b•!1f!
Jenkin~. In 1?72, and her parents. ·
. '
Wildsman Road, Coolville, dates and soc1al securtty
Serv1ces Will be held at 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday May IS was cited for improper back- . numbers of all household
· 2&lt;X12, at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport. Offlci~tlna wiii ing by the patrol following u members.
.
.
~ Rev. William Middlelwarth and burial will follow in one-car
accident earlr The. follow•~g mcome
Riverview Cemetery. Friends may call on 1itesday, May 14, Saturday
on
Orange guideltnes
w11l apply.
2002, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Township Road 388 (Ski Allowable family income for
Memorial c~ntrlbutions may be made in her memory 10 the Run).
a one-person household is
Middleport F1re Departtnent Ladles Auxiliary, 286 Ruce
Troopers said Stoops was $13,290; two persons,
Street, Middleport, Obto, 45760.
·
one-tenth of a mile west of $17,910; three persons,
Ohio 7 at 12:30 a.m. when he $22,530; four persons,
backed down the road went $27,JSO; five · persons,
off the left side and dr~ve up $31, 770; and six persons,
onto the.guide wires of a uti I· $36,390. Households with
ity pole.
. more that six members should
His vehicle had nonfunc- add an additional $4,620 to
'ti'!nal damage, .the report the ye~rly income.
satd.
For mformation, contact the
Cheshire office at 740-3677341 or 740-992-6629.
IIUI'

°

i

~~:~,~

The Daily Sentinel

Wt.NHd Anyon• Who Hal
Equlptntnt1h.t 11 Wtltlna To a.
Flxtcl, Or H•• BHn Flucl Alrudy,
To Pick Up AI Soon AI Pot1lble
STORE WILL K OPEN

Sttte Routa 148 • (740)

lbsoll1y M. ••••
JlnkJftl

LOCAL

..

r------------------,

DUE TO ILLNESS
Jbe store Will Soon Be C!osins

Ridenour Supply

0 ituarles

beenrumored.
.
Whitney Ashley reported
'·
on the recent trip which she,
fromPipA1
Emily Ashley, and Rachel
Bv KIYIN KII.LY
and that's reflected nowhere
Denali IllUde 10 the Mid·
KKELLYIII!MVDAIL'ITRIBUNE.COM better than here at .the
She also reported that Atlantic Youth Conference in
RIO
GRANDE
- University of Rio Grande,''
attempts by real dents In 1ackaon Mills, W.Va. Youth University of Rio Grande/Rio she uid.
· ·Knox County to prevent a from several states attended. Grande Community · Colleae "You are not an ivory lower
' swine o~ratlon frOm open· The national overseer, araduates were told by their insticutlon," Zelman added.
.lng there failed pnd that those William Steele, was also pre- commencement speaker to "You have never loat slhl&gt;t of
. residentS now owe approxl· sent.
develop a plan for their
1
f
..~
••• mately a quaner of a irillllon
Jean Alkire, secretary, future, but lle adaptable to your v 11on
serv1na the
&lt; dollars in damaaea to the reported on .recent fundrals· chanae as they progreu with people of southern Ohio." ·
•Z farmer as the result of a law ina activldel. A report on their careen.
While recoanlzing current
·: suit.
.
plana to_place a town marker
Dr. Susan Tave Zelman,z.e
crilticism oifdpuhbllc eiduca·tion,
:; · The r.roposed maulve for the &lt;Jak Grove communi· Ohio's superintendent of pub·
man sa 1 e nat 0011•Y•; : increaae n the tobacco tax in ty was aiven and the sian will lie instruction, atreued the tem still allows all to realize
; Ohio was alao discuued but lie ordered as an Ohio oicen· point during Rio Grande:a the ''dream that is America."
• sentiment of the Granaera tennlal project.
!26th araduatlon ceremony "I also refuae to remain
'• seemed to be that the oov
hal
Th
1
•
s
silent about the remarkable
""'
e ecturer I proaram Unday, adV1I 1ng grad uatel to accomrcilahmentl
Of public
.~ no 1erloua lmpllcatlon1. focused on events 1n May, "underatund that succeu in
• Membert decided to table including the hlatory of May life comes from akillful exe· educat on, a universal, fiexi·
• any action on the iuue.
Day and the May Pole. cution of a strategy."
ble·1y1tem that allows people
: . Reparation• for alavery Members were uked to men·
Zelman's theme, on how to to aet 11• much educatlon ·as
: wu al10 amona the to!'ic• lion a humorous story about proareu In an unpredictable they want," ahe added.
: aired at the meeting and It their · mothers for Mother's future, offered stucfents sever- Following · her addreu,
• was concluded that there'• Day, which was 1tarted by 11 al pieces of advice to remain Zelman received an honorary
' little chance the courts will tnember of the Orange.
true to their life plan and 1till doctorate of public aervice
: uward these and that the alrat·
Members played "Name succeed, by continuing to from the university.
: eay will r.robably move That Tune" answering with ieam, "put the why before the Dr. Bal1')' M. Dorsey, over, toward fore na corporation• the names of flowers men- how," focusing on their aoals .seelna his 11th commence; to pay money ln order to not tioned In the songs. Mary and creating partnerships. . ment II Rio Grande'a ~si: · appear biased. ·
Kay Yost won· the prize.
"Change fs occurring on dent, said Zelman share• Rio
1 Chuck Yolt, ma1ter, Hatl}' . Leme, Keith Aahley, multiple fronts," said Zelinan, Grtlllde's belief In producing
· ; pre1lded at the meeting and and Whitney Ashley present· who's led the 1tate araduatea committed to edu:•. Dyer was there for the annu· ed a 1klt on a spring feud.
Department of Education cation, eapecially from Its
1
;i: al ins_pection which followed Bmma Adali1J was retnem· alnce 1999. '1'he implication• tett£;her tratnJna proaram.
, . • a potfuck 1upper
bered on her 92nd birthday of these changes are soberlna. "l pledfte to you Rio
'l'he grange preaented the and Helen Pickens was As you walk off thla campus Grande wi provide the best
•' : 81!Cond dearee and received a reoorted ill.
today, bealn to F.epare for a teachers in all of Ohio," he
;; : auperior rating on Itt inspec·
lJpcomina arariae events · future you can t predict by said.
:: · lion report for it1 yearly lnc:lude · ~om on a Orange ac~eptlng new challenges."
The university and commu·
meeting at Star Grange the
The speaker al8o focuied nlty college then honored the
: · work.
:1: It wu reported that the district talent cotUelt in June; on educational quality and 443 araduatet, with 4.54
r• • Meigs
County and Junior Grange and youth excellence, quoting Englilh degrees awarded, in cere·
: ·: Commi11ionen had nothing camps in July. Included 111 the poet John M'asefiefd's tilief moniea, held on the campus
: ; to do with the recent lUI~· next meetina will be the hon·, In the "beautiful splendor ot a greea under partly cloudy .
~·: lion of ter~~ke by the RaCine orina of the area'• out&amp;tand- univeraity."
lklet and 80-dearee te111pera·
i: · Emerpnc:y Squ1d a• had ·ing community citiun. ·
"Ali of this beauty and turet. Rain forecut for the
I
ptomiae is but
not all
abolit
hiaher atfon.
region held off for the ifadUeduc&amp;tion,
educatton,

!:

RIDENOUR

b

FREE
Perkin
Moft•letltol

-~-··-

FLAIR

FURNITURE 4 DESIGN
"'IRAA'fD IIAM&amp; PIIAMTIIA&amp; Jtf DtiCOUfr'l' Pinel••

wv 875-1371

••••

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

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p-, 1nc1 nota pt- for a!MIIftt•

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WHEREABOUTS OF THESE CHIMES

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�~~Th;e~D:a:il~y~~:n~t~m:el~-----------!()!l·ft~I!II~~~C)~II!__·____~------· ~··~·d~~~~~~~~·~~~~~;

~The

A5

Daily Sentinel

·----------------------~

••
•

Skinny-dippers shy
from spying eyes

The Daily Sentinel
· 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-112-2158 • Fail: 740-1102·2157
www.mydlllyaantlnel.com

'"AND IT

_CUTS AIR
RESISTANCE.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Den Dlckeraon

DEARABBYI When !Ill
hilSband .and I purchased
our naw home, we mada
slire the swimm.lna pool
was private and conc:uled
from lbe"houses on eithet
side. We en loy sldnny.&lt;JippliiiJ IUid aidn 't want to
offilnd our neiahbors. We
believed we'd m•de lbe
right choice until the boy
noxt door began climbing
the fence to spy on us. ·
Unfortunately, his parants refuse to discipline
him. They insist that we
cover up. We have since
found ou1 the previous
owners had the same problem, but failed 10 disclose
this to us when we bought
our home. We had made It
clear to our Realtor that we
wanted to be nude In our
back lard - and he
assure us this was the
''perfect" place for it.
Abby, we want to be able
to el\)oy our back yard either naked or fully
clothed - without being
spied upon. The neighbors
are threatening us with
le,al action because they
thmk we are corrupting
their son. Have you an1
advice?- NO TAN LINE
IN SUNNY CALIFOR·
NIA
DEAR NO TAN LINE:
You are overdue for a talk
with your attorney. . In
California, the law requires
full disclosure about
"problems" when property
is bouaht and sold, and you
may have a valid complaint
against the former owners
of the house.
·
Also, the neighbor boy
who is preoccupied with
your sunbathing to the
extent that he's climblna

•

Publlahar

Dl1n1 Kay Hill

Chlrlene Hoeflich
OeMI'II Manager

Controller

•

'

LMtttt lG liN Hitor ,,.. wt/C'O#tff, 'I"A•y 1llutlld H ltu .,,..~t JOO ....wds. AU,..,.,.

..
••ldfet,. tt~UU~r tuul r•uur '" ~~'"'d •rtd l,.r,ud• addm'''"*'•WpiiOitt
,..,..-.
N• . . . . . lttrm wiU H p11IIIIJit1d. fAnrn
IHI l1t ttlltd
aMrtulltl
~ltmlld

'

.,...,, ftfl ,.,rfHMittln.

IGJif,

·

nt .,U.Iofu IXprtnwJ llf llifll'fl4•mn ~/flllt' Iff 1#1r C'Uff.Jfl,.llll fl/tltt tJit/11 Mill.,

,.,..,,.., Co. 'I ftlltnrlaiiHHinl, ,.,.,,u wh,,.:,s, ""'"'· .

'

·

NATIONAL VIEW
;

Blunder
Israelr~:eeds

to cooperate with
UN to save foce with world

• Seattle Post-lntelllgencer, ·on lsrael/Jenin
: investigation: The Israeli government blundered by
: attempting to delay arrival of the United Nations
: team to investigate what happened during Israel's
: attack oh the Jenin refugee camp.
· Israeli officials complained that Israel was not
. consulted in the team's selection. And they protested
: that Kofi Annan, U.N. secretary general, exceeded
; his authority when he said the United Nations would
; reach "findings and cqnclusions" rather than merely
: compile facts ....
· ' The protests served only to giye the impression
, that Israel has something to hide. At first, Israel
: opposed Arab calls for an investigation, but then it
: reversed course ....
; But Israeli officials then expressed unhappiness
· with the te~m Annan chose for the task. It had too
. much of a humanitarian bent and might set Israel up
' to defend itself against war crimes, according to
Israeli officials ....
. Annan rightly refused to change the membership
of the team ....
Israel is the party with the most to gain from a full
: and fair investigation of the events at Jenin. It con- .
· ; tends its military had no choice but to proceed in the
: manner it did against the residents of the camp, and
· that may well be true. But the confused events need
to be publicly sorted out. So Israel, for its own sake,
. must give its full cooperation to the U.N. team.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

PRDINTID AWARDI - Middleport/POmeroy Rotary Club presented awards to students at
Mel&amp;s Middle School, who had shown tha most lmprovemant with respect to acedamlc and parsonal achlevemants. Rotartan Dick Vau&amp;han, fir left, presantac:t plaquaa to, front, Michel
Hudson of tha Dolphins class taam, and Ashlay Enala, CIA, and, back, from left, Tlllnlaha
Thomas, Pathflndars, Josh Grant, Jquars, Ashlay Samar, Mlndbandars, Amber Blna,
Trailblazers, and Laure Millar, Adventurers. (Brian J. Raad)

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Moral equivalency ends with escalation in violence

'

With Yasser Arafat free to leave his
her JJUitor over her shoulder, too."
compound, the April 28 murder of ~Fnmet Roth mnke$ 11 point lhnt I wish
year-old Danielle Shefi in·a bedroom in
ull the interviewers on cable news lele.the West Bank seltlement of Adora will
vision would ask those of their guests
soon be forgotten, if it hasn't already, by
who speak for Vasser Arafu11o answer:
the world's media. Israelis will remem"None of the 46S lsrueli families .
ber, and so will 1he small but growing
bereaved during this war has ever con·
number of Palestinians concerned with
templated terror as an option. Not one
the chilling reverberations for their war
'despemte' Jewish suicide bomber has
for independence.
materialized. The reason is that the
On tliat day, Palestinian gunmen,
moral ·1urf cannot be equalized. We
dressed as Israeli soldiers, cut through
Israelis do not want to see innocent
the fence at Adora, a community of SO
COWMNIST
Palestinians murdered, while they've
· Jewish families, and began shooting ·
demonstrated time and gain their yearn· .
through t~e windows of t~e houses. In in Adorn was Vasser Abed Rabbo, the ing to see Israeli$ killed." .
on~ upsta1rs bedroom: Sh1ri Shefi was information minister in Arafat's srovernNot all Palestinians share this murder·
trymg to protect Damelle and her !WO menl. "Everybodv must know,'~"Rabbo ous yearning by the, suicide ~ombers
small sons when gun~en broke mto told Newsday, .•rthat" the war crimes llfld those who recru.rt and t~am them.
their home, rushed upsta1rs, and opened commiued br Sharon will lead to lhe After on~ ,14-)'e~·?ld Palestmian sent
fire. Her hus~and, Yaak_ov Shefi, was at kinds of actions that occurred today, on a su1c1de miSSIOn, turn~d around
lemple, praymg at the time. ..
and he is the only one who will bear halfway and went ~om~, bts moth~r
When he saw the _body ~f h1,~ daugh· responsibility for what happened."
s~kc on Israel televiSion s Channel 2.
ler, Mr. Shefi,. crymg sa1d, Anyone Therefore, according to the lnforma~
'They take our children when, theY.
. capable of lookmg ~t ~ 4-year-old.boy tion minister, the actual murderers of are too young t? u,~derstand, to dectd~ tf
and a 5-y~ar-old g!rl 10 the face and Danielle and lhe other Jews hi Adora they want to d1e. She then! accord10g
lhen shooung tbem IS not human.
bear no responsibility 81 all. They are , to "':orldNetDully, ~old t~e ntervlewer
At another home, gunmen stood ove~ freedom fighters.
thai .'The Gaza Strip is f~ll of women
a bed .and shot an old ~o~an. Zv1
Two of the olhers killed In Adora ~eermg a tight hold of 1he1r young sons.
. Baruch!, he~d of the assoc1auon of I~ were Nutan Oreenberg, 14, and his AI of us here 11~ badly traumallzcd.
~ettlements m lhe ar~, told Newsday: mother, Katya, killea in her bed But, lhere is nola smgle psyc~~logisl in
Th~r, shoot at people 10 lhelr be~s and upstairs. In The New York Times, tl}c whole territory to help us.
~~ chl!dren. People who shoot ch1ldre~ James Bennet reported that outside their
They need Vasser Arafatto retire and
1n the1r bed are not people y~u talk. to. home, "a 36.year-old neighbor .of the be repl~ced by new leade~hip, no less
~n. the New York Observ~r s April 29, Oreenbergs, who declined to give his dctermmed lo achieve an 10de~ndcnt
ed1t1on, Ro~. Ro~nbau~ c1ted an inter• name, bridled when asked if the state, .but also unable to send k1llers ,10
view in lh~ sem1-offic1al newspaper of Oreenbergs were originally Russians. look ~n!. o the face of a 5-ycar-old gtrl
the Egyfllan governm~nt, AI·Ahrom 'Originalfy Jews,' he said."
and d1s10tegrate her, Twenty-four-year·
Weekfy, ~ith. lhe w1dcly admired It didn't rnauer to the gunmen old l~an Jawabreh, 11 m~mber of
Oxford UmverSity professor and P,OCt, whether they were from Russia or ~rafat .s AI Aksa Martyrs Br1gade, was
Tom Paulin: "He called for Amencan Brooklyn
,
k1lled m Be1hlehem during a firefight.
Jews,, spe~ific~I1Y 'Brooklyn-bo~n
In lhe April 28 edition of the New He w~s hailed as ~ ~er.o in his village,
Jews, to be shot 1f they were found m York Post, 'Frimet Roth, a New Yorker b~t. h1s father sa1d. ~ wi~h for the
lh~,We~t Bank.
. . ,
who moved to Israel with her family in k1lbng 10 stop on both s1des. .
.
. I th10k they ar~ Nazt rac1sts! ['aulln 1988 , wrote of the killing of her 15 • To George W. Bush: lhere w1ll be ~o
sa1d forcefully. 1 feel nothmg but ~ar-old daughter Malki by a suicide durable peace, so long as Arafal Is tn
haired for them."'
' ..
'·
power.
This British academic will not have to
m~r.. She. was stand\ng next lo .a
dirty his hands wilh the killings. He can Palestmlan With an explosive-laden SUI· . (Nat Hentoffis a nationally renowned
. enjoy long-distance gratification.
~ar case. My Malkl played seve~al authority on the First Amendment and
A commentator on the assassinations mstrumenls and often went around With the Bill of Rights.)

Meigs Notebook
Houdashelt
birthday

Nat
Hentoff

POMEROY Shayna
Beth Houdashelt, daughter of
· Brent and Beth Houdashelt
observed
her second
birthday
with a party.
A
zoo
animal
,.
theme was
carried ou1
for the party
wilh p1zza,
cake and ice
'· 1111rna HOUU.hllt cream being
·•
served.
r Altending
or sendlna
remembrances were the hon·
. oree's grandmother, Marcia
Houdasltelt of Pomero~: her
· areal-grandmother, Myrtle
Grover, Pomeroy; her mater,. nal grandparents, Bob and
• Ann Carevile and her at:eat·
grandfather,
Delben
. Lichtenberser, all of Marion.

c

. Today is Monday, May 13, the I33th day of 2002. There are
: 232 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
. On May 13, 1981, Pope John Paul II was shot and seriously wounded in Sl. Peter's Square by Turkish assailant Mehmet
Ali Agca.
.
.
•
On this date:
·
In 1607, the English colony at Jamestown, Va., was seuled.
. In 1842, composer Sir Arthur Sullivan, who collaborated
: wilh Sir William Gilbert in writing 14 comic operas, was botn
KILPATRICK'S VIEW
'in London.
: In 1846, the United States declared that a stale of war
· already existed against Mexico.
.
In 1917, three ~asant children near Fatima. Portugal,
repo~ seeing a v1sion of the Virgin Mary.
·
.
· In 1918, the first U.S. airmail stamps, fealuring a picture of
In October 1997, ScOtt Brooks and his and come apart, Brooks investigaled and workmanship and affums or promises that
: an airplane, were introduced. (On some of the stamps, the air·
family moved into their brand-new manu- found that the dishwasher was leaking such materl81 or workmanship is defect·
: plane was printed upside-down, making them ·collector's
factured home near Montgomery, Ala. because a hole had been drilled through it; free or will meet a specified level of per1tems.)
Before a week had paised, this muclt was the floor buckled near the washer; plaster· fonnance over a s~ified period of time."
· In 1940, in his first speech as prime minister of Britain,
They were not happy=Nine board and floor covering in the utility In its appeallo lhC U.S. Supreme Court,
: Winston Churchill told tile House of Commons, "I have noth- . clear:
months later they took. ilieir u
loess room turned different colon; water leaked Horton Hc&gt;mes argues that the welcoming
. ing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat."
to court, and thereby hangs this c.
in the wall between the kitchen and the assurances were not warranties under lite
In 19~4. President Eisenhower signed into law the St.
. The Brooks' house was a custom-built, utilitv room; and the furnace was lean- federal act. More Is required, in the peti: Lawrence Seaway Developmenl Act.
.
tioners' view, than a mere certiffcate
double-wide job put ~ by Horton ing/'
: In 19S4, lhe musical play ''The Pajama Game" opened on
Homes
and sold to !hero Factory Direct The manufacturers sent crews to correct attesting that "your new home has been
·Broadway.
· ·
Homes Inc, It cost $63
delivered. As the problems, but lo no avail._ When the carefully inspecled to ensure quality and
. ~ In 19.58, Vice President Nixon's limousine was battered by
the family moved in, they found a friend. last crew ~ on June 20, 1998, cleanliness.'' The phrase "Built for a life: rocks thrown by anti·U .S. demonstrators in Caracas,
ly message on a kitdlen counter. This was Brooks said h1s dreain house was in worse time!" is not a promise of "a specified
Venezuela. ·
a
''Certificate of Quality Assurance!'
condition than it was before the crew level of perfOI1llllllCe over a specified pniIn 198S, a confronlalion belween Philadelphia authorilies
arrived.
·
The
certificate
included
a
comforting
odoftime."
, and the radical group MOVE ended as pollee dropped an
statement: "Your new home hill been
"Brook! testified that when he arose on The manufacturers argue thai in treating
: expl~ive onto lhe group's headquarters; II people died in the
carefully
inspecled
1o
ensure
~uality and the morning after the repairs, furnishings the welcoming stalemetWI as written war: resultmg fire.
cleanliness." Moreover, it was Built for a were stiU where the service crew had ranties, the Alabama court has opened the
· Ten years ago: A trio of astronauls from the space shuttle
moved them - the kitchen table was slill door to all kinds of advertising materials,
: Endeavour captured a wayward lntelsat-6 communicalions · lifetime!"
in
the den, the refrigerator ·was stiU in the promotional literature and IOjlOS. If the
Alas,
it
was
neil
so.
Brookl
sued
and
~ satellite during the first·ever . three-person spacewalk.
won
a
jury
verdict
of
S
I
SO,OOO
in
comdining
room. and the freezer was still out· high court leu the Alabama opmion stand,
· President Bush announced a $600 miiJion loan package to
pensatory damages and $600,000 in puni· side. He said that the dishwasher no such "certifiCates of quality assurance"
help rebuild riot·f!Carred l..ol; Angeles.
tive
damages. Tfie builders appealed 10 the longer wOibd ~use it had been dam· will lnlmp fonnal disclaimers, and a key
, Five years agD: At the Oklahoma City bombing trial, prose~ Coun of Alabama, which aged when a cabinet feU on it; that the provision of Magnuson-Moss will be
~ cutors showed jurors the key lo lhe Ryder truck used to blow
the punilive award to SISO,OOO 510\'e had a gas leak; that the new floor weakened. Scott Brooks would argue that
: up the Alfred P. Murrah federal building, alle~ing Timothy
but
otherwise
afiirmed the judJDICnl. covering wu wrinkled and had big perbaps the provision needs to be weak·
: McVeigh left it behind ill the same alley he'd ptcked to stash
Now
the
ca~
is
in the U.S. Supreme gouge$ around the perimeter; that the new ened.
• his getaway car.
Court on the manufacturers' petition for flooring was 10ft and that a hole had been
My own sentiments in this case lie ·
: One year ago: Basque nationalisl~ won a key election in
review.
·
accidentalJy
drilled
in
the
new
flooring
entirely
with the aggrieved buyer. No
: Spain's semiautonomous Basque rejlion. The center-right won
What
went
wrong?
ln
the
SupiCIIIC
and
had
been
filled
with
wood
putty.''
amoun1
of
lawyer-speak can get around
• Italy's parliamentary elections, seumg the s1age for the return
Court
of
Alabama,
Justice
James
G.
In
addition
to
the
welcoming
assurance
the palpable facts. 1'his dream hou.'le was
, to JX!Wer of media magnate Silvio Berlusconi). Actor-playleft
in
the
kitchen,
Horton
Homes
gave
Houston
Iecounted
the
sad
SIO!y:
a
nightmare. The manufacturers promised .
: wridtt Jason Miller died in·Scranton, Pa., at age 62.
Brooks
a
"Home
Owner's
Manual"
that
"Brooks
and
his
famil
immediately
Brooks
a house lhat had been carefully
• T'oday's Birthdays: Actress Beatrice Arthur is 76. Crilic
contained
a
"Limited
OneYear
began experiencing :bleiDJ - for
inspe~ed .. Some inspection! They
. : Clive Barnes is 7S. Ac10r Harvey Keitel is 63. Actor franklin
elUUIIple, water from the washer would Warranty." Here the rnanufactuJU souaht promised hllll a house that was built for a
: Ajaye is S3. Sin_ger Stevie Wonder is 52. Basketball player
back up iniO the kilehen sink when it was 10 exclude all "implied." warrunties, 6ut lifetime. Some lifetime!
·
: Dennis Rodman IS 41. Country singer Lari White is 37. Singer
Jll5t~
Houston
was
not
impressed.
discharged from the washer; water
(Letters 10 Mr. Kilpatrick should be sent
j Darius Rucker (Hootie and the Blowfish) is 36. Actress Susan
dripped under the howle; floon were not
Under the Magnuson-Moss Act. a writ· in care of this new paper, or by e-mail 10
, Floyd iJ 34. Actress Samantha Morton is 2.5.
. •
level; and the shower stalls cracked. ren warranty is defJI)Cd in pan as anl writ· lcilpatjj(at)aotcom.)
: Thought for Today: "So yoo think that money is the root of
• aU evil. Have you ever asked whal is the root of moneyr' Additional ~ 10011 developed - ten atfumation of fact or promiBe which }~s I. Kilpatrick ;, a columnist for
when the kitchen cabinets began 10 warp relates 10 the nature of the material or Universal Pre1.r Syndicate.
Ayn Rand, Russian·born author ( 1905-1982).
.•
'
•
•

No amount of lawyer-speak can reverse thefocts

.

'

Beta Sllftll Phi
observes
·Founder's Day

•

POMEROY - "Weave a
Web of Priendshif" was the
''. lheme for the 7 at Ann~al
Founder's Day celebration
held recently by Meigs
County Chapters of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority at the
Riverside Oold Club in
Mason, W.Va.
The celebration was hosted
by Ohio Eta Phi Chapter with
Karin Johnson, presidenl, giv·
ins . the welcome. Tina
Hoskcn led the Pledge of
·Allegiance and opening ritual,
and Kristi Riffle gave the
invocation. During the social

lion.
What Amy is doina is not
witty, llor is it well-intend·
eel. .Tell her that unless she
kn&lt;)tks off the wisecracks,
you'llavoid her. And If she
· doesn't stop - follow
throug_h. You won't miss

Dear

Abby

the pam.

DEAR ABBY: This is in
respOnse to the letters you
have printed about tha
the fence to spy on you ''drunken geese. "I may not
appears to be a buddina know about drunken geelllll,
Pilepina Tbm. Rather than but I know about drunken
allowlna him to get an eye- fish.
·
ful, his parents should be
My Uncle John was a
giving hlm an eorful about cook on a Mississippi
peopla's r\Jht to privacy.
River towboat, and one day
DEAR .\BBY: I have a he had planned to serve
friend 1t school I've been fried fish for lunch.
close to for about a year.
As the baraes headed
I' II call her Amy. Recently, upstream on tho Illinois
she has become cruel _ R1ver toward Peoria, the
toward me -making fun • Hiram Walker distillery
of my learning disability, caught fire, and a areat
hair, weight, etc.
deal of whiskey suddenly
My oilier friends and 1 · flowed into the water
sometimes joke around by around the boat.
.teasing each other, but
Drunken fish flopped up
Amy takes 1hlngs way too onto tho deck of the boat.
far. When she says hurtful The crew became so
things, there's a look In her amused by their antics that
eyes that says, "I want to when lunch rolled around,
damage you emotionally." they refused to eat the fish
When I II{' to lalk to thai Uncle John had . pre·
Amy about 11, she says, pared!
STONE
"Well, YOU slarted it,'' or SOBER
"Why are you taking this
DEAR
STONE
so seriously - you let the SOBER: I can understand
other girls tease you I" why. There's somethlna
Abby, I want to keep Amy redundant about frylna flalt
as a friend because whon lhat are already fried to the
· she's not being rude, she's gills. Thanks for the flah
pretty cool. Please help. s1ory.
·
TEEN GIRL IN TEXAS
( Paullnt Phillips and hlr
DftAR TEEN GIRL: daughttr Jtannt Phillip&amp;
There Is a difference shant tht p~tudonym
between a leasing com, Abigail Vd11 Buf"n. Wrlt1
ment and one intended to Dear
Abby
at
wound. Teulng can be www. DtarAbby. com or
lauahed off- and is often P. 0. Box 69440, Lo&amp;
a sfgn of intimacy or affec· Angeles, CA 90069.)

ADVICE

hour and dinner, members Carolyn Orueser, Jean
were entertained with a Powell, Jane Brown, Donna
melody of Instrumentals by Byer, Joan Corder, Vera
Jim Sundquist, pianist.
Crow,
Norma
Cus1er,
New pledges were wei· Charlotle Elberfeld, Clarice
comed 6y · Dena Roseberry Krauuer; Robena. O'Brien,
and include Denise Orimm Velm•. Rue, Ann Rupe,
and Angela Payne to XI Margaret Stewart, Eleanor
Gamma Mu Chapler, Brenda Thomas, Jane Walton.
Merritt and Teresa Varian to XI Oamma Epsilon Chapter
XI Gamma Epsilon Chapter, -Judy Williams, Olna Pines,
and Elizabeth Schaad to Ohio Oeri Walton, Charla Evans,
E1a Phi Chapter.
Tammie · Mash, Carolyn
Belay Jones read the mes- Buckley,
Pam
Diddle,
sage from the International Eleanor McvKelvey, Patty
Beta Sigma Phi office, and Pickens, Brenda Roush;
each chapter recognized their Karen Salisbury, Jenny
current and new officers, Smith, Darla Staats, Brenda
Valentine :~~ueens, and pre- Merrht, Teresa Varian.
sen~d Pledge of the Year and . XI Oamma Mu Cha~ter Girl of the Year Awards.
K · kl
Oirl of the Year.waa won by Dobbie Loweey, ay · d ns,
Carolyn · Orueser of the Linda Batea, Anale Loaan,
Boyd, Marale Blake,
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter; Donna
Debbie Plnlaw, Paula Oaul,
Gina Pinea of XI Oamma Dhronda Hoover, Jackie
Epsilon Chapter, Anale Hoover, Kathy Johnaon, Kav
LOgan of Xi Oamma Mu
i'
Chapter, and Karin Johnaon Logan, Marilyn Pout n,
of Ohltl Eta Phi.
Denise Grimm, Anaela
Patty Pickens and Sheila Payne, Lynn Wriaht.
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter Hartl 1 were recoanIzed •.or 2•"' Karin
Johnson,
Dena
year memberahlp In Beta
Slama Phi witll a sn ver Ro~eberry, Krlsll Riffle,
Circle Ritual. Chaptera Belay Jones, Tina Hoaken,
awarded prizes lncl.udlna a Gretchen Anderson, Tammy
Vera Bradley baa by Xi Bachner, Sherry Bibbee,
Gamma Epallon; a topiary Paise
Cleek,
Cheryl
tree created by Re6ecca Pacemyor, Cindy Facemyer,
Pacemyer's Oarden VarletL Rebecca Paceroyer, Jennifer ·
Greenhouse by Ohio Ell Ph ! McBride, Elizabeth Schaad,
and a wooden shelf by X and Gall Saraent. .
..______;.,;,_ _ _ _.................,.........-____...__ _ __..._......,.
GammaMu.
The 2003 1heme of
Gateway to Friendahlp' wail
announced by Kristi Riffle
and the members were led in
the closing ritual by Tina
H;osken. Favors were gerber
daisies in a clay pot from
"Strategies To Help Protect And Grow Your Asseta"
Oarilen Variety Oreenhouse.
Members attending were:
Preceptor Beta
Beta
Chapler - Carol Adams,

NEWS

Fl NANClAij SE

AR

Thursday, May 16, 2002
10:00 Arv1 &amp; 3:00 PM ·

...

Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center
l"'l":"!r'!' li"MM"'!"MnT-um:,lberry Helghts,
.OhIo
Jason
with
King
LPL Financial
Services,
Parkersburg, WV

in the Sentinel-

"'

RESERVE YOUR SEAT BY CALLING 1-800-345-778&amp;.
Limited Seating Available • All Age• Welcome

Ob~etrician

I

IIIII 2M
......1. . . . . _

................
......-:•a
•

URRY, MD

- Gynecolngist
•
COMPLETE
WOMEN'S
. HEALTHCARE

john P. McMur,.,, MD will a./so be serving the ]a.,ltson County, WV a.rea.

PLEASANT
' VALLEY

HO

•
---------------- . . .--- ---·----:------------:-----;.r-----·---- -- -- ------

�Pa(eA6 ·

•

Bank towns

tours
•

BEmD.BHBM West Bank (AP) - Palestlllian leader
l!f&amp;uer Anf'll ~ the West Bank fur the fint time in sht
mooth&amp; Monday testi~ the recentlif\ina or Israel'&amp; uavel ban.
Meanwhile PriiM Mimster Ariel Sharon's Likud Party overwbe\r$&amp;1y aft\rmed !ts opposition to Palestinian statehood in
a tumllltuoua c:anvent1on.
.
,
The va~e, taken euly Monday, wu a ~or politiCal defeat rot
Ukud leader Shar,oa, wll\'l lwd ~sked the party to avoid ~ decl·
sion that could tie his .hands tn future negOtiatloos wtth the
Palestinians. Sharon was booed as he left the convention center.
Anfat respondoclangrily to the vote. '1'his is~ desa:uctl~
of the Oslo ac:conls, whtch they h11ve signed, Arafat hid,
referrina to the lntorim peKe ag~nts he reached with
Israel in t110 mld·l990s.
Monday morning, Araf~t le~ the We&amp;,t Bank town of
Ramallali aboanl a Jordaman atr force hchc:optet. lt marked
the flnt time in si~ months that Arnfat was able to leave
Ramallah. 1n Detcmber, his helicopten ~ destroyed in
lsraeli air strikes that dfec:tively groundlld him.

AI·Qalda
Pakistanis

Diamond Roundup, Pagtt 82
Mttigs track nsults. Page B3
NIM playoffs, Pagt 83

Thunderstorms cause at least three ~
av THE ~sSOCIAlEO PRESs
Thundentorms sttetched from Texas
to New England for a second day
Monday, causing deadly fl.oodin$ and
leavi"" thousands of customers wnhout

electrl~ity.

·
better
attention. · We're ao•na,to
have prOblems throughout the week. ,
ThOusands of custometS 104t power m
Missouri's St. Francois and Ste.
Genevieve counties when wind-blo~n
trees lOOk out power lines, utilities said.
AbOUt 35,000 customers lost power
Sunday in Maryland, where thund~
storms produced wind austs up to 4S
mph said Nancy Caplan, tt spokeswoman for Baltimore Gas and Bfectric.
Service had been restored to most of
them-Monday. ·
·
.An estitnllied 45,000 custornen lost
power in Pennsylvania on Sunday as
thundentorms generated wind up to 60
mph. And a falling tree ~lied one ~
about 30 miles east of Pittsburgh, satd
Westmoreland County Coroner Ken
Bacha.
.
"I iooke&lt;! out the wmdo~ an~ saw my
lawn funuture take off. satd Ll!"?'
Foley in western ~ Pennsyivanta s
Chester County.
,
.
. A 12-year-oi~ boy stru,ck hg~tn1tn~
at Urbana, Ohto•. remante tn ~ t ca
condition ,Monday. ~mho Lewts ~~~~
~~?r'~:~~= =ksow~~n t6: tlgh~i~g
.
htt.
p
.
a y

radial ·
front In Paldstan

North Korean asylum seekers

· embroil China, forelp ·.
. covemments In taiiCs

·

:Y.

t

MONDAY'S

Elsewhere in Ohio, one man died
~ben his raft went over. a small.
. darn on •
"
Ch
R
ar
the swollen
agnn tver ne .
Will0111hby, and his c:ompanioo was
still missina Monday.
·
"l saw them ~o over and act thro-:vn
out of the raft. ' witness Arney Price. ·
said. '1'here were a lot &lt;!f loas. s~ :' bigger than I am, just beauna on them. :
Rain fell at lll()te than an inc:h an hour ~.
in parts of Indiana early Monday and
flood warnings were postlld for .streamS
including the, White River, whtch was:
already above flood slap on the north
side of Indianapolis. A trailer park had·
to be evacuated near Vincennes because
,of floodina. water up to 4 feet deep
flowed over a highway near Freeman,
and some roads were washed out.
In Ellettsville, Ind.. Jack's Defeat
Creek flooded the police and fire
department offices.
"I'm lookina at muddy water with
leaves, sticks and debris in the back
offi~:es " Detective Marshal Tony
Bowie~ said "We have 10 to 12 inc:lles
of water sta~ding in the police depart-,"
ment. This matches about the worst
flooding we •ve had."
.

U.S. diplomats and Chinese officials were discussing the
fate of three men who climbed over the wall of the U.S.
Consulate compound in the northeastern city of Shenyang last
week.
· Is wh'lt e talk s
The North Koreans were given beds and mea
are under way, a conslllar official said on condition of
anonymity. · ·
.
.
.
A Canadian official said discussi~ns wtth Chin~ ove~.!' man
and woman who go~ Into the ,Canadtan. ~bassy tn Be'l!ng ~
Saturday were "posttive and construcuve but added, We re
not at the endgame yet."
·
,
The pair . who say they are married, asked for .passage
abroad, said embassy spokeswoman J~,nnlfer May. She said · . ·
they "seem to be very average people and not government ·
officials.
.
fi
Also Monday,· South Korea said it was wtlllng to accept ve
people, said to be North Koreans who were detained by
Chinese police at Japan's consulate In Shenyanalast week. .

'HIGIDlGHIS
Ramlruout ·
wllb broken
finger
SEA'JTLE {AP) - Boston
Manny Ramirez is
expected to miss at least 4-to, ~ weeks with a broken left
tndex finger that could
require surgery, Red Sox
team physician Dr. Bill
Morgan said.
Ramirez, leading the
Jll&amp;jors in batting at .372,
broke the finger Saturday
pight when he smacked into
Seattle catcher Dan Wilson's
shin guard on · a headfirst
slide.
~lugger

DENVER (AP) - Major
league baseball has sent an
official to investigate a temperature-controlled environmental chamber used by the
Colorado Rockies for storing
baseballs, according to a published report.
The commissioner's office
indicated that . it · was disnp·
pointed _the Rockies built and
used the chamber without
taking necessary steps for
approval, The Denver Post
reported.

u.s. Soccer

·a.ln nixes Indy
qual~n1

•

..•

we wou d ike to hdve a word with our employee&gt; ...

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Rain washed away the second of three days of qualify·
.· ing for the Indianapolis 500
and increased the pressure on
drivers hoping to fill the
remaining nine positions in
the 33-car field.
Twenty-four cars qualified
on Saturday. Thanks to the
nrst complete rninout of an
Indy qualifying day in 12
years, the remaining con.fenders will have to wait until
next Sunday to fill the field
for the May 26 race.

Coverage of the TVC Track
and Field championship
meet.

•

'

•

Jerrod Arms wtts first in the 800meter run (U&gt;6.58). Tim Syke .was
the tO(l finisher in the I,S'OQ.meler
run (4:20.33), Sl'Ott McNutt WitS fii'St
in the 3.000-meter steeplec:hu.se
(10: 10.36). Tim McCoy was first in
the 4QO..meter run (54.67). McCoy
ran 11 25.03 in the 200-m~.tter dt~sh and
cleared 5-9 in the high jump. Sean
Plummer w~ts lirst in the tona Jump
(20-0). Plummer also went -lJ-3 tnch·
cs in the triple jump.
Other results tor the Redmen:
Sykes, second in the 1100-meter run
(2:06.81) tind the . 3.000-meter
steeplecht~se
(I 0::!3.75):
Scott
Littrell, second in the 1.500
(4:25.35). third in the 800 (2:10.84)
fla•HIHIIo.ID

Comeback win
gives Cardinals
a touch of hope
CINCINNATI (AP) - For to stuy in third place. 4 112
one disheartening month, the gmnes behind surprising
St. Louis Cardinals hove been Cincinnuti.
looking for u The Reds' biggest collapse
turnin~ poin!. since 1989 tllught them 8 few
Thetr btl· things ubout stnying in first
gest comebuck in 10 years plut.-e.
.
- might be it.
They thought they hod it in
J.D. Drew's two-run homer h11nd 111\er they sent I0 batters
in the eighth off Danny · to the plate for six runs in the
Groves set otT 8 high~ fiving. first inning oil' Travis Smith.
fist-pumping celebration In who guve up three wuiks, hit
the dugout Sunday as the o butter und surrendered
Cardinals beat the Cincinnati Reggie Thylor's lirst cureer
Reds 10·11 in their most stir- grund slum.
ring game of the season.
Two more runs in the secDown 8·0 nfter two ond mude it 8·0 und got mun·
innings, the Cardinals started nger Bob Boone thinking
their comebuck in the middle ubout tomorrow. He substltut·
innings and completed It ed for shortstop Burry Lurk in,
against the Reds' closer. tuk- who hnd singled nnd doubled
lnft two of three in the series. in the tlrst two innings.
· I hope we can get healthy
Boone is being cautious
and good things will keeP. with Lurkin to .uvoid Injury
happening from now on. ' and decided this wus u Rood
safd Fernando Vlna, who time for some rest. Ftll-in
whose bad-hop double drove Gookie Duwkins went 0-forin the tying run in the eighth . . 3.
II was the Cardinals'
Eimer Dessens unruvelcd in
bi~gest comeback since they the middle innin~s, giving up
traded Atlanta by nine runs on five runs. Pi_uctdo Pulonco
May 9, 1992 and pulled out, bud a pinch RBI single und
12-11. It couldn't have come Drew smgled home two more
at a better time.
runs to get the comcbuck
The Cardinals were one Of started in the fifth, und the
the preseason fuvorites to win ·Cardinals ndded two more in
the division, but found them- the sixth.
selves stuck in a rut after five
There were two outs und
pitchers went on the disabled two on in the eighth when
list. They haven't won more Boone summoned Oruves.
than two consecutive games making his first uppeurance
since April 9-13, when they since he guvc up u decisive
won five in a row.
two-run no1ner to Ed~nr
Despite ali of the injuries, Renteria in the eighth inntng
SALAMI - Cincinnati's Reggie Taylor connects for a grand slam on a pitch from the the Cardinals have managed of the opener.
Cardinals' Travis Smith In the first Inning Sunday. {AP)

Reds

Lady Marauden d ch TVC Ohio
IY JIM .IOULIIY
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ln a doubleheader that closed their
season, Meigs' Lady Marauders
clinched first place In the Tri Valley
Conference Ohio Division with a 42 win over the Vinton County
Vikings in a contest that had been
suspended due to inclement weather.
Vinton bested the Marauders 7-2
in the nightcap. Resuming plaY. in
the bottom of the first inning tratli!lg
2- I, Meigs; behind the pitching of
Katie Jeffers, shut out the Vikings en
route to picking up the win.
On Monday, at McArthur, Vinton
County tallied their two runs as
Aiisa Ratcliff, Susan Eberts and
Melanie Jones put• together three
base hiu around two Meigs erron.
Marauders, in the top of the second,
acored one on a Mindy Chan~y
walk followed by bacl!; to back sin-

gies from Jeffers and Kristen Napper
&amp;efore the game was suspended.
Resuming play in the bottom of the
second at Meigs, Jeffers and compa·
ny limited the Vikings to just one
htt, ·a single by Kayla Jewell, as
Jeffers sat ten batters on the pine by
way of strikeouts and strong defen·
sive play by her teammates.
,
Credit is due Eberts, Viking hurler,
as she turned in a good performance
on the mound. Despite the loss.
Eberets ran into some difficulty in
the fourth when. with one out,
Jaynee Davis hit safely and · Jeffers
and Nal'per drew free passes. A
pitch htt Ashley Burbridge and
Alicia Werry was safe on a fielder's
choice as Burbridge was out at third.
Renee Bailey drew a base on balls
but was nailed at second for the third
out.
When the dust had settled, Meigs

To

had a 4-2 lead and mounted no other second into right, driving in two
threat as Eberts kept the locals in runs as Meigs avoided the shutout.
check for the remainder of the ~arne.
Vinton. on the other hand, jumped
Jeffers and Eberts reiinqutshed out to a 2-0 lead on successive sinonly four hits each.
gles from neth Mace and Jewett,
Although the second game did not Ratclifrs sacrifice and Ebert's douaffect the Marauders' Ohio Division ble down the third base line.
title. it did ex11ct some revenge for
Holding the Vikings to just one
the Lady Vikings. Eberts, working more run, Meigs kept their hopes
. the mound again, turned in a stellar alive until the roof collapsed in the
performance holding the Maroon seventh. Ratcliff hammered 8 sinfle
and Gold scoreless and hitless to left, Ebens was safe on a Me gs
tlirou$h seven and one third innings, miscue Jones hit safely and Pruter
aliowmg only five Marauder base reached first on 11 fielder's choice.
runners while striking out ten.
· Reed popped an infield fiy, Burris
It could easily have been a no-hit
shutout but for an error at shon that grounded out and Brooks went down
allowed Bailey to reach first with on strikes to end the rally but the die
one out. Alicia Werry hit a nubber to was cast as the Marauders could not
the left of the mound. which resulted overcome a seven-run Viking lead.
in some indecision on the part of the . Meigs overall reco~d for . the seafielder. puttin~ runners at first and son stands at 12-9, mcludmg their
second. Burbndge drilled one past . tournament game.

'

In recogntion of National Hospital W«k, Pleasant Valley Hospital will be offering
fBEE hot dogs from 11 a.m. to I. p.m. to all flag football fans who come to watch the
annual roumament on Saturda)) May 18,.2002 .(while supplies IRst).

Set-up lawn dJairs
~y, )WI' physicli!Jor
at 8 a.m. ilt Ordnance Fields and continue throughout the day.
Also pment will be WBYG "Big Country" 99 and WYVK-K92 "The Frog" with
chanca to win t-shirts and other great prizu!

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

••

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande track and field squad JlQSied
some strong performances II\ the Rio
Invitational on an idenl da:t• Saturday
afternoon at the Stockmetster 'hick
and Field complex.
Junior Ashly Roberts set a new
school mark m the shot put. The
Ewington. Ohio native ntellliured 42
teet, 7 inches in the event to take fint
place. Senior Mindy 'Gardner Willi
sec;ond (38·5). Roberts olso won the
discus with a throw of 138-6, outdls·
lancing Caridtice Swann of
Charleston (WV) by nearly two and
half feet. Roberts Willi second in the
hammer throw ( 14S-.7).
Logan, Ohio senior Amy Kline

won the hummer Lykins, a Pottsrnouth, Ohio natiole,
throw with un etl'on meusured 91-S. Esther RlltTerty wus
of 149-S. Freshmun 3rd (80-11) und Lesley Roberts was
Kristen. ~amen set a 4th (.75-9) in the javelin.
personal record in Glenn Arnold scored 11 pair of fiRt
the 3.000-meter ntce pluce finishes in the men's discus
wnlk with a 15:20. throw (130-2) and the hammer throw
The
Webster.
A« ~) • ··-"'· wus fi rst 10·
Ohio South
native
has ( 1""""'
· .....,.....,n coute
nlready qualified for the men,s shot put (43-4) tllld second
the NAIA Nationul in the discus ( 129-0). Jeremy Cron
Meet. .
. took first in the juyelln (131-3) nnd
He~~tlter Mace was Adam Grim was seoond (94·1) in the
strong in winning the 3.000-meter javelin and the shot put (38-10.5).
event with u time of 10:40.72. Grim also placed third in the discus
Amanda Wolfe,wus second (II :39). (II 5·0).
Rio went 2-3-4 in the j1tvelln. Mutt Boyles seta personal record
Jenny Lykins was runner-up to in the 5;000-meter ruce wulk with u
H~na Sumi&lt;:la of Churleston. time of. 19:26. Boyles outdistanced
teammate Jim Robinson (25:30).

lnvest11ate
Colorado balls

' WASHINGTON (AP) Starting its final run of World
Cup warmups, the United
States finds itself in an unusual position: The offense looks
good and the defense is shaky.
Tony
Sanneh
and
DaMarcus Beasley scored
first-half goals in a 2-1 exhi·
bition victory over Uruguay,
whose speed exposed the
Americans' problems with
their outside backs.
' On a down note though, the
United States lost a key
· defensive player for · the
World Cup tournament when
midfielder Chris Armas tore
the anterior cruciate ligament
in his right knee.

n recognition of Nationa Ho&gt;pita Week,

BY MAliK WtWAMS

MLBto ·

overUrupay

'

Rio tr~ck gives sbong ·perfonnance at home
SPECIAL TO OVP

wins 'friendly'

'

PlpB1
MDI..,. lily I:S.llll

·deaths b flooding, falling trees;
thousan s.lose power·.

At least two people died in flood ina,
one was killed by a falling tree and a
boy was In critical condition after being
hit by lightning.
Heavy rain fell on already saturated
ground in Missouri, where flooding
along the St. Frnnc:is River meant severHAVANA (AP) ._ As the strains of the "Star-Spangled
al people had to be evacuated by boat
Banner" faded in the wind at Havana's International airport, · from their homes in Ironton . Roads into
· ·President Fidel Castro turned to his visitor and said, "It's been
Ironton were flooded, the Iron County
a lonatirne since that happened."
.
·
sheriff's office said.
Jimmy Carter, the U.S. president. who did more tha~ .any ·
One man died near Itonton on Sunday
other to ease tensions with Cuba. amved Sunday for a vtsttwhen high water swept him from a tree
the first time a U.S. head of state, in or out of office,_hns come
that he had climbed to escape the flood,
to the communist island since Castro's 1959 revolution.
said Iron County Sheri~ Aile~ ~a~es.
· While both men spoke or the. desire to Improve reiati~ns,
At St. Louis, the Mtssisstppt Rtver
Caner's visit comes at the latest tn many moments of tenston,
was forecast to reach 1.S feet 11bove
following allegations last week ~y Undersecretary of S!ate
flood stage later in the week, a~d water
John Bolton that Cuba is seekanl! to develop biologtcai
already was creeping up the nverfront
steps that lend to the Gateway Arch.
w~rs:·denounc:ed those claims as "lies" in a ~peec:h Friday
''We're not out of the woods yet," said
and challenged the Unitlld States to r.rovide evtdence. When
OS aiel Be;htold., a rnat~naLo~~at~~f
,Caner anjved, Castro promised him' complete access" to any
erv ce ,orecas er .
·
·
Cuban biotechnology laboratory.
.
you've
got
interests
along
the
river,
you
Carter is schi!duied to visit 11 major laboratory Monday, the
Center of Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology on the outskirts of Havana.
three Pakistanis in Karachi might be li~~ed to other violence,
including execution-style killings of Shutes..
.
. .
fu~ves,
While most of Pakista~ 's majority Sunm ¥,ushms hve m
harmony with Shiites, radtcal Sunnls revile Shutes as heretics.
~pen
It's 11 dispute throughout the Muslim world that dates back to
the 7th century and centers on the rightful heir to Islam's leadKARACHI Pakistan (AP) - Foreigners in Pakistan are ership following the death of the Prophet MuhaltlltUld.
failing victin{ to bombings and other savage attacks, and the
country's Shiite Muslim minority is being terrorized by death
squads.
h
· 11
. Pakistani officials and analysts bia~e t e surge ·~ v o ence
on ai-Qaida fugitives from Afghamstan and thetr radlc~i
Pakistani allies. The intention appears to be to sow chaos m
hopes of undermini~g the J.overnment of Oe':'· Pervez
MushaJTaf for supporttng the .S.-ied war on terronsts.
(AP) -A rash of asylum bids by t,'!orth Koreans
A former Pakistani army general calls the al-Qaida and at BEIJING
diplomatic missions in China plunged Amencan and other
Pakistani militant coaiitio~ an "axis of ~nte."
Security officials said Frtday they beheve the perpetrators of forei~n diplomats into sensitive negotiations with Chinese
Wednesday's bus bombing that killed II French engineers and offictais Monday.

Jimmy Carter In Cuba

The Daily Sentinel

1S. 2111 '

•

VALLEY
HOSPITAL
••

'•

�'
•
•
•

The Daily Sentinel

Marlins soak Dodgers

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Quinn

I

Roya~ls to

I

life

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (A.P) - Mark Quinn wuted no time
pumplna life into the Kansas Clt,y Royals.
QUinn. who missed the first :J3 aunes with • broken rib,
rewrned to the lineup Sunday and h[t a two-run double off the
riaht,field wall In a tow-run first Inning to
heJp belt the Cleveland Indians 4: l.
Quinn was 2,for-14 with five strikeouts off
Indians stll'tllr Chuck Finley before the double.
.
"I talked to him this momlna about Finley and the numbers
. he had," Royals Interim manaaer John Mizerook said. ''He
didn't have a whole lot of sucoess aaainst him and snid he'd
really like to start aallinst somebody else other than Finley, but
Mark said he'd take that as a challenae. He won the first bllt,
tie."
Neltl Perez doubled and Finley walked Mike Sweeney and
C1rlos Bellrlln to load the bases for Oulnn.
"I haven't had I lot of success aaa1nst him In the past, but
the first day I threw that all away and just saw the ball and hit
It," Quinn said. "I knew I hit it good. I didn't really think It
was aone, but I knew It would aet over his (right fielder Matt
Lawton) head.
·~He threw me a hlah fastball and I went with the pitch and
aot it."
' .
.
.
Finley (2,4) said the pitch waa not a strike. .
"It was off the plate and outside and way up there," Finley
said.
.
·
Oulnn, who also slnaled In the eighth, walked only 12 times
In·~73 plate ap~arances last year.
The foUI"'run first was enouah for Paul Byrd to claim his
sixth victory, tylna Mark Buelirle of the Chicago White Sox
for the moat wlna ln the American League,
The Royals have won three straight and four of five. Byrd
has half 11\e Royals' 12 victories.
.
WHY'D I DO THAT? - OltYIItnd'll Ricky Gutierrez, left, reecta
Jim Thome accounted for the only run off Byrd with ahome alter atrlklna out ea Royale catcher A.J, Hlnoh locka on thli
run In the sixth, snapplna a 16·1nnlng scoreless drought for the el&amp;hth lnnlnll Sunday. (AP)
Indians.

Tribe

trww.m)'lltltytttlllntlcom

.:Meigs, RV compete before league
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\ 01om· kljjlt t1• Ktm"~ Fltl~l' l'\"ti -~~ ~· \ tMU' lkwtl.

MA.IIUNS 11, DooGIIS 3
.
Ftorida beat Hideo Nomo (2-5) rar the lOth. consecutive
time, with blc:tup catdter Mike Redmond homerina llld sc:oJ':
ing '~ilh fOOt ruM.
The Marlins concluded a 5·1 homcstand that
vaulted them into first place in the NL llasl.
Ryan Dempster (2·3) .Uo~ nine hits in his second c:omplet!: game or the SCliSOII and hit his f~nt career triple
to drive tn a run.
·
·
.

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his ERA to 3.09,
''That's the flrst time we
needed to lean on him in a
lona time," catcher Jason
Varitek said. ·
R.amirez went back to
Boston before the game and
was examined by Dr. Bill
Morganh the teilin physician
and a and specialist The
cleanup hitter was Injured
Saturday nlahi when he
smacked Into Seattle catcher
Dan Wilson's shin guard on a
headfirst slide.
Ramirez leads the AL In
slugaing and on~ba8e percent·
aae. Bven without h1m, the
Red Sox chased Jnmes
Baldwin (3·3) and piled up 16.
h!U and seven douliles,
lncludtna three by Varitek,
· The Red SoK finished their
road trip 8·2 and Improved to
17·4 away from Fenway Park.
At 25·9 overall, Boston 11off
to its best start since 1946.
Martinez, limited to 18
starts laat season becau1e of a
shoulder Injury, improved to
9..0 career with .a 0.91 ERA
aaalnst the Mariners,· The

three·tlme Cy Young winner
reached double·dlgft strike·
outs for the 80th time and the
second this season.
. "That's probably the best
he'! thrown so fur this yeW',"
Little anid, ''We're kind of
getting the feelllla like we
used to have wl!ll the Red
Sox: When Pedro's got the
ball, you've got that sensntlon
that you don't get on other
days. We're starling to gain
that feeling every time he
pitches,"
'YANKEES lO, TwtNS 4
New York hit five homers In
nspan of eight batten to com·
plete a three·aame sweep at
the Metrodome and Mike
Musslna (5·2) 1mproved to
18·2
career
against
Minnesota,
Joe Torre became the I 7th
manager to win 1,500 games,
The Yankees have won 8IX
stralaht - all on the road.

ON~OF

Sk_...L=
{111-

Appllcenl lt...O'

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.

Cllan . . ol Name: In · Calaw•, :/~:1•·
IMProllaiiC-'of Ctt.. lla,OK
...... co.sntt. OfiiO., (74tl·l&amp;'t·ne3 .

•

Application · lor

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Unload a cluster of
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You'll break par
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•

•.• lakers, ·Nets, Celtics playoff w1nners

garage
sale ad .

The Daily

Sentinel

"

BREWERS 13, CUBS 4

kaul Casanova and Richie Sexson hit grand slams in con·
secutlve innin~s as Milwaukee muted Chicago, handing Jon
Lieber (3·2)his first loss at Wrigley Field in almost a year.
Glendon Rusch (2·3) won for the first time in seven starts
since April .5.

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Plll'k (I , I) came off the dis·
abled Ust to lead the Rangers
to their fourth con~eoutlve
victory.
Tllxas (18· 19) Is within one
game of .500 for the first time
slnco Park lost the season
opener at Oakland on April I.

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center is a ·
dynamlc Lon¥· term care facility that provlcieo
interllk.-diate and skilled ~are needs to residents .
Come joi n our heollh ~;arc orpnization where we

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·

Carlos Delgado h6mered
twice to drive fn five runs, and
Eric Hinske added 11 tWo•run ,
shot to back R.Qy Halladay (3· ,,.._;..:
ll as vilitlna Toronto handed
Oakland its eighth loss In 10
aamel.
DIVIL RAYI d, ORIOL£1 3
John Flaherty and 1ared
Sandbera hit RBI double•
d11rin1 a three·run tourth
lnnlnJ, and Paul Wllaon (2•3)
pltohid Tampa Bay to itt Heand 1trllaht win at Troplcana
flleld followlnJ a tranchlterecord
loelna •treatc.

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'f!lrz..fo l:m::=.
R1lph

•

and Sth in the 3,000-meter
steeplechase (10:48.74);
McNutt was aecond in the
long jump (17·2), third in
the 800 (2:12.51) and the
I,SOO (4:30.26); Derek
Baker was third in the
steeplechase (10:23.87),
fourth in the · I ,500
(4:40,26), fifth in the 800
(2: 14,22), sixth in the ahot
put (24-4): Joth Foate wu
founh in the steepleclwe
H0:44,S6); Robinson wu

1

Pltchlna at home In Texaa
tor the flrat time, Chan Ho
. •flllll DILIYIR¥
•1'1111 IIT•II"
•flllll 'AIIKIHO
•1'1111 LAVAWAY

PHONI (304) 175-1371

Fl4AIR
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
"'lL!.liD ~Ar•l• nllllii'I\IU AT DIICOUIIT PIJCU"

' oAW:U:,.,....
WV 11111

'

Tru11e11,

lllerlfl

faomPipB1

t5·aam•
RA~OIU 5 TIOIU I

In&amp; th• flret lnnlna In Stattll
on Sunday, (AP)

N01'ICE Of tiEAIIJNG; l'or .... CINL

''

ANGELS 5, WlitTE Sox 4

TAKIN' Ult THIILAOKBoaton Rid Sox'a Pedro
Martinez dellv•ra 1 pitCh dur·

....111111&gt;

Proi!Ma c - er
lleiea
C•••tr•
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Floe~: • • ......
C4ounly Cou .• - ·
Setoao: au.. t.

1n1....a - panou
.......~ Ott41M
lllal 1M II nor It liD
(740)
llllcllll .
lls!q .... Qt
. ....

Troy Olaus singled home
the winning run with two outs
In the bottom or the ninth 118
Anaheim won Its fifth In a
row and sent Chlcaao to Its
fourth consecutive loss.
BLUE JAYS 11 1 A'8 4

QUUHCASE NO.
321QO (Doc!IM 0..

· · - I\Otlee

Pedro picks up the Red Sox
Mlaalna Manny Ramirez
for the trrst of many aames,
the Boston Red Sox had the
riaht pitcher on the
mound.
Pedro . Martinez
1tn1ck out a season·
hlah 12 as Boston began a
lona atretch without Ita All·
Star aluaaer by beatlna the
Seattle Mlrlners 10·4 Sunday
ntaht to avoid a three·aame
1weep.
"I was just tryina to pick up
the team and tum rtri&amp;ht back
around because we don't want
to aet any lona loalna
atrealca," Martinez said. "I
wu Just tryina to ~o home
with a ~tood wln. It 1 a aood
feeling."
Ramirez, battlna a ma.lor
lea1ue·best .372 with n[ne
homen and 35 RBh, Is
expected to miss at least 4•10•
6 weeki with a broken left
Index lln1er,
·
Worklna on four days' rest
tnatead of live for the flnt
time thl1 1e11on, Mllrlinez (5·
0) allowed one run and four
. hh1 In elaht lnnlna• to lower

'IO:!C!MIASW

Clf . . . . . . . . .. .
o'~A . . . . .

NAME

PIIILLIES.3, DIAMONDBACKS l

Travis Lee went 4-for--4 with a homer against his former
team and Terry Adams (1 ·3) pitched six strong innings to pick
up his first victory for Philadelphia.
·
·
Miguel Batista (2·2) took the loss.
.
'·
AsTROS 5, PIRATES 1
· Shnn,ll Reynolds wasn't going to let ~e Houston Astros go_
home winless from a weeklong road trip, no matter how long
It took.
Reynolds shrugged ?ff an 86-mi~u!e ~ain delay and
Houston's l1ve-g~e los1ng streak to hm~t Pittsbu.rgh to two
hits over six inn1ngs, and the Astros avmded a wullcss road
trip with a 5-1 victory Sunday,
Jeff Bagwell hit his fifth homer in nine games to give the
Astms a 2-0 lead, and reliever Mike Fetters • throwing error
scored two more runs as Houston dodged a second straight
three-~ame sweep, They be'an their weeldong road trip by
dropping three in Philadelphia.
Reynolds (3·3) is traditionally tough on the Pirates and was
again Sunday, holding them to an unearned ron on a double
steal created by third baseman Morgan Ensberg's two-base
error in the fifth.
·
Dave Wllllami (2-4) took the loss,

...........
ssR II , . . . .

NAIEOEMI!!MVI
Silt' LAIIOUIIt :r

EXPOS 4, GIANTS 2 ~

Bnd Wi.lkenon hit a foul ball that ~ a lass pane bellincl
seventh inning
as Montreal o~ Bany Bonds 579th career homer to
beat San FnntiScxl.
.
2
Vladimir Guerrero homered off Russ Ortiz (3- ) as
MontrQI's Fhnk Robinson ltCOI'ded his 700th victory as •
.leqile manager.
. .
,
1bnY Annas Jr. (5-3) allo~ two rons in seven mmngs.
PADRIS 6, BRAVIS 5
Delvi Ctuz si~~gled home the go.ahead run i!' the seventh
inning, helping San Diego snap a five-11ame losmg streak.
The Padres avoided an 0-6 road tnp. Jason Boyd (1-0)
pitcl\ed I 2·3 scorelesS innings for his first ~r victory;
'Ibm Olavine (5-2) allowed five. runs - foor earned - ln
six•plus innings.
ROCKIES 4, METS 3, 13 INNINGS
Larry Walker hit 11 two-run homer off Kane Davis ( 1-1) in
the 13th inning and Col0111do won at New York.
"Former Mets pitcher Rick White (1-4) was the winner. Jose
Jimenez pitched the 13th for his ninth save. giving up an RBI
groundout to Mo Vaughn.

S . Uuta _..it

Tile'
..,. Qc~ll!.
__
-~~~~· llle

PRANK.
WOOLDRIQI CO.,
(16· LPA, D,L. Milne, Jr,

third in the long jump
8) and fourth in the shot put •nd Leurtnoe I .
Lindon, AIIOrfttya
(27·1); Arms was fourth in lor Plaintiff, 100
tho lona jump ( 1.5-9) and south Purl llrott,
fifth in the lhot put (26:1)' Columbua, Olllo
Chris Watll was third in th~
r•: "'-221 '
shoe put (33·11) and founh ,
in 4M diiCUI (99-3).
(4) Jt, (I) I, 11
1be 4 x 400-meter relay
lelll1 timed out at 3:!12.83.
Rio Grande will now prepare tor the NAIA National Buy, Sill or T11dt
In lllf
Meet, May 23:25 In Qlllbe,

1::.';

Kalas.

CLASSIFIEDSI

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,Monday t:h r u F rld ay
8 : 00 a. m . t:o S : OO p . m

Business Servi,es

S.-•

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l:neh.locll- .,.._ V.HII
s-.nup ...-o :lS WO.IIIs. ~ ~va
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7f0.992·5232

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Delivered

......
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(740)
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111\lltctfN:

RACO SChOiorohlpa Yard

Salt. Sllr Mill P111&lt;, Aoclne:
May 10 ,g 10 4:00. May , 7 •
t to 2:30. l.awn - .
• bed, rugt, llnen1, Gllll·

~

...... '*hie. .... dQth..

pu.-.

• Kattiryn Hart e.a.2e68. Am
: ~ZIlo e.ll-2031

______,

•
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Wi001!D
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DlntOnda,

·'l.' ·t P ~I NTING '
L1 ' r· ~

1

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10

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Ootd

U.l , Currency.·
• M.T.S. Coin Shop. 1!1 Sec·
: ond AytnUI. Gelllpolle. 740• ..e-28:12,
• !lingo,

f'.~IN

8prHd 11tos.oo

ptl'ton~·

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AbiOiutl 'roo Oolllr. u.s..
Gold. CCIIII. Proal·
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LIMESTONE
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tng. - ·
loll ot
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1, ootttct-. mtec.
•
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I

(740) 511-2173
Orleaven1me
1ncl number

I \11' 1 0\ \II'\ I

"- 1 IC\ II I "

WOLr[
HcotinQ &amp; Coolinq
In thll lpiH
tor ·

-as per month

24 Hr. Emetatncy Setvlef

IQol••htyContl'ole Wukl

Llrt!'sed • Insured
Thermal ~oneTM equipment
(lO yr. parta It labot warrancy)
Strvh:t all Branda
Ftnanclna Anllable

Oiil/eways, Patios,
Parking/play An1111,
Sldawalka, Floo,.
II Y'l" l!xpll'llt&amp;OI
ltrttlllllriiiiM

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( ; l I I) ' I 1 ' ',; l,' , '

HERBALIFE

....

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New Havtn, WY
•fl..ldentlal

1Lost 27lb.
In32 days.

740.882·7038
'•

PLUMB.ING

Independent
Dutributor

100%
natuni/Ouarailteed

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fiELDS

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y/fltitiT ·''II · . I
GONT~OL

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wttAT PO YOU 'A'-L A
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TeLI.. ME wHAT'S lwtiSSI~'

WHO CA~

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KOW CN-1 YOU Te:U.? .

"'-C.Tll'o\C:&gt; 000 \'OOI&gt;o-'&lt; !

•~
It

I

•

This week's theme,
loosely, i~ the h~ndling of trumps.
When shoultl you
draw trum~? The answer is enigmatic, like
the smile on the face
of the Mona Lisa .
There is one key
factor, ·though, which
is highliglated in thit
deal. You are in fuur

\

Owners to pay

off bank loan
to village
BY BluN J. RID

spades. West cash~s
three dt•b tricks, then

exits with a diamond
to itumnty's king.
How would yuu continuc?
North's two~ notrump response (un. less you use the Jacoby Forcing Raise)
shows a balanced 1315 points with, in
principle, no five-card
suit. South, with a
singleton and a
known eight- or
.
nine-card fit, goes for
CELEBRITY CIPHER
game in the m:ijor.
by Lula Campoa
Cottbdty Clphtr cryptogromo ,,. .,_tad trom quototlono by lomouo
·Regular reader$ will
poqllt, poolond pttunt. Eoch '-""r In the cipher olondelor onolhtr.
know that I am
Today's Clue: U equals 8
strongly again&amp;!' lc.ad.. .x . DXDZ NHYXG U Z B 0 8
ing the kin'S from
both an ace-kmg and
TKDYKN
xoc
TNA UOAHSNK
a king-&lt;JLieell holding. ·
Uridge is hard enough
TNA POZT
II AI'
KA xvv
without introducing
N I Y.'
UVXPZ
ZCTXDCJ
unnetcssary ambiguity. And leading an .
AQ
XOC
IIHVIZ XGCDZTJ
unsupported ace is
usually a bad choice.
CHC:VZI' YAADZ
Uut you might like to
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Shl'l llka a dlliCIIt lawn .:.
know that some pairs ·
Crouad with 1 Buick.' - Jack NlehoiiiOn on JMIICa Lange
lead specifically the
queen .front. ll; suit
headt!d by the ace,
king and queen. This
is a sensible idea.
Roorronge lotti11 of lho
four tcromblod wordt b.·
Since you have no
more side:su.it losers, low ro form four tlmplt wo1d1.
draw trumps as
F L rP U T
&lt;tuickly as possible. 1--,lr,.l..;;lrTf:..,l;.....;l~l.......j
With eight spades · . . . . . .
missing the queen, ~~~:;:~;:~.....1
you should plan to fil NS 0 y
ness e . Howe vcr,
rs- niir-tl-i
1 :;!·~
should you finesse ~~-;;:::~·::;:~·
now or cash the ace rfil'$t?
p· w A M· 1
.
Professor to pilot, "In my pro1f the missing spades
5
8
fesal 0 n lh t 1 dl
d· ·
are splitting 3-2, you
.
'"'.,1 .
'C"aThan ng woul only
':··:;~::;~~;:·:., ~arn a . e pilot grinned back,
will be all right if East ,.
'In my profession It Isn't a graded
has the queen. But if
A F E D E C . course. You either •••• or ..... "
West has a singleton
Complete tho chucklt quottd
spade, cashing the ace
. . . . .
by filling In the mining wordt
works when it is the
you dovelap from lltP No. 3 below. '
&amp; PRINT NUMBERED
a
queen and loses when
it is a low card. Since
i~L~ET~T~ER~S51~NiS;O~U~AR::E:;s~~~;::::;:=:;~~:!:::::!:~
West is four tilnes as
UNSCRAMBLE
I ·
I.:'
likely to have a low
IIN$W!R
.· . .
. or . .
.
spade than the queen,
SCIIAM·LITJ ANSWIItS
you should finesse
Heroic· Vying· Awful- Matrl~ • WITH YOU
,
Immediately.
·
"Don't try to stop me." yelled the teen. "I want to go ·
When the finesse
where ~h.era·s ~xcltement and where 1 can make real . ,
wins, re-enter the
money! I wont try to stop you." said the dad "But can
dummy wi1h a heart,
I go WITH YOU?'
·
'
fineue again, draw
trumps, and claim.

~SM ...

~

, , , . . . ($'

'
Dtt1lls,
AS ·

Weather
High: 70s, Low: 40s
Dttllls, A1

sheets to taik

I

I

?VI ..,,............,;....-, .. - - •

Thelma Hoy Collins, 84
John Nelson 81
Fred Edward Smith, 77
Betty Ward, 60
James Milliron, 51 .

POMEROY Jared
Sheets, M.D., board-certified in internal medicine
and pediatrics with River
Valley
Medicine and
Pediatrics at Parkersburg,
WNa., will present a 30minute program on obesity
focusing on chlordane, on
WTAP Parkersburg Sunday
at 7 a.m.
Sheets graduated from
Meigs High School and the
Ohlo State University
College of Medicine and
M~igs County is one of his
pnmary serv1ce areas.

I

KNOW ~AMEN I CAN
MA\f VO\IIl SVPPE!t.

Deaths

on obesity

I

TI-IEu'S NO HURII.V,
t 6UE55, BUT LIT ME

.

0

I1---ri-TI

' ..

Reds slam Brewers, 11

I

s

1:

I I I ..

I. I? 18 1 1 0
FORI .

11

I

I

Chif. . :

~.~-------...;

OHIO
Pick 5: 6·8·0
Pick 4: 2·4-2•5
luckeye 5: 4·7-12·17·22

Picks n!Pt: B-7·2

Pick 4 nljht: 2·6-6-5

D•I!Y S: 7·6-3
Dllty 4: 4-5·8·1

C.sli 21: 5·9-11·12·19·22

In

pun~1it1

that mny luave

previously moe whh (oiluro

or
rejettiom, you'll tind it much
ea~lcr to achieve success in the

ym nhcnd. Monly it will be
due tu thr determination you
exhibit.
ThUll US (April 20-May
20) •• llg•ln, with a liulo of.
(ott, you mnd a 1100d chance
o( adding to your motorial resources. lc won't ju!t happen,
howevrr: you'll havo to pul
your nri~d t!) the 1&lt;11k. Ttyins
to patch up a broken i'O·
monee? The Astro-Graph
Matclunoker can help you Uti·
dcntand what t" do to make
tho rolacionthip. work, Mall
12.75 tu Matchmakor, c/o thil
ncw•p•J•cr, 1'.0. Dox 1758,
Murroy Hill Station, New
York, NY 10156.
GEMINI (May 21•Junc 20)
•• You mlsln h•vo a clser by
the call concnnlns an enter·
prise or venture you've con•
colvod, so take tho lime 10
plan accordingly so that lc
doem'c exhaust you.
CANCER (June 21-July ·
22) ·- The key to your succns
will be predicated upon your

1
1

soldesmeu. The more you tlO
ouc of your way for othon,
the mucc lheylj_l back you up.
. LEO ijuly 2\oAug. 22) -·
Allert younelf more socially,
be&lt;au1o once you're 0111 in
the flow .of things, you could
link up wilh sonacone who
mishc cur.,. ouc to be one of
your bll!llest boosten.
VIRGO (Aug. 23.-Sepl. 22)
•• The rewards you've bun
anticipating could be forth·
comins. Even If ouuide
evenu ettablilh rho tlmelable,
hans In 1here, becaute 11'11 be
worth 11.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0&lt;t, 23) •
- Skill• and knowledge you've
developtd will be wolloerved.
Your expenlse will find a
number of positive appllu·
lions where the reward• can
be hiaJ!.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2•·Nov.
22) - One o( your busine11
dtolinp millht take ofT and
kcop you quito busy holdins
up your end. The ramifications may be greoror than you ·
fint'lhoullht.
·
SAGll"rARlUS (Nov, 23Dec, 21) •• A dole frlrnd
rmy be risht chere when you

nud him/her the mote. the.
two of you will handle you(
incerescs. more efTectivoly than
you could have dono on your
own.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) •• Don'c be afraid r.o:
incroas• the number of ambi"
lious objective• you plan for,'
bocauso rhoy won't boa you
down. lnnead, th,y'll se..Ve to
enhance your rate of pro]p'Ctl. ' ,
AQUARIUS Uan. 20-Fcb. "
19) •• Should you be asked to
1.1ke on the c.ck of handling a
social event, know aolna in '
Ihat you 'II do a good job with
it, which is somtthl~.f.!h.~so;
who asked llready knew,
' PISC.ES (Feb. 20-March 20) '
-· Before moving on to • new
endeavor or enterprbe, tine

Gnish whal you'vo already get
started. You'll be more efficienl when tho decks are
cleared.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
•• Keep lookln~ for chat·poslcion or job you ve betn hopIng to flnd. It II out there
wallins for you. Today nuy
be the day it could happon.

Index
'
ll lldiiR
•12 ,....
calendar
Classifleds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
83-5
86
AS
A4
A3
A3
81-3
A2

C 200l 0/Jia Volley Publiohlnf Co.

.

Council authorized Mayor
Sandy lannarelli to enter into a
loan with Peoples Bank, NA. to
pay the cost of the demolition and
cleanup. A proposed agreement
between the village and the
Platters, who own the building,
requires the Platters to pay principal and interest, directly to the
bank; secured by u lien on the
property, which is already subject
to a mortgage by Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
Some member.s of council, ·
PIHH IH M1iltc V, A:S

.

READING To HAwAII AND BAcK
Students at Bradbury
Elementary
School
enjoyed
a
"Hawaiian/Mexican"
celebration last week
after reading 4,085
books
in
the
· Accelerated · Reacter
(AR) program.
At the beginning of .
the year, the student
body decided they
. would
"read"
to
Honolulu. Books were
assigned points worth
so many trlp miles and
the reading began.
The students reached
Hawaii in February,
d~oided to read to
Mexico and then back
to Bradbur)l., . • · '
Their prize for rellching their goal was to
have
an
AR
"Haw a Han/Mexican"
celebration for an entire
day. It was there tha~
the top reading class
and the top five readers'
of each class were
announced and present·
ed awards.
Achieving the most
points through reading
books were from the
left, Chris Kimes, fifth
grade, 214 points:
Jennifer Fife, fifth
g_rade, 234 points; and
TYler Andrews, fourth
grade, 211 points.
(Tony M. Leach)

grant funds·
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMVDAILYSENTINEL.COM
MIDDLEPORT - The Village of Middleport
will pursue Community Development Bluck Grunt
formula funding for street paving projects. snid
Mayor Sundy lannarelli.
lnnnarelli received authorization from Village
Council to pursue an application for tlnancing for
the puving of North F1fth Avenue, und Fisher,
Olive, Maple, Hendley, Russell. Fuirview. Purk.
Page and Rutland streets.
The ~DBG formula pro~r~m is udminl~lered by
the ,Metgs County commiSSioners lind lunds are
available to Meigs County subdivisions for paving
projects, sewer and water projects, th.e purchuse of
emergency equipment and other infrustructure.
The village may apply for up to $35.000 through
the grunt program und gram awards wi II be
announced next month. Additionul funds will be
sought through the State Capitul Improvement
Program (Issue 2). If approved, additionul streets
will be included in summer puving plans, lunnurelli said.
..
lannarelli urged dog owners to keep their animals
leashed or penned in accordance with village ordi·
nances. A number of dog bites have been reponed
in the village, mostly from walkers in the village's
residential areas, hinnarelli said, several from
smnller pets. Citations will be issued for those who
do riot abide by the ordinances, lannurelli said.
Resident Mary Wise encouraged village officials
and residents to promote the community in a posi·
live way. especially toward members ol the
Cheshire community who may be interested in purchusi ng real estate.
She also urged council to consider "stricter" ordinances in order to ensure a sufc and attractive liV·
ing environment, ancl enforcement of those now i1i
place.
·
Councilman Bob Robinson said the ordinance
committee is now con~idering several ordinunces
to address concerns such us.Wise's, including revi·
sions to the villu41e's zoning regulations.
Council authorrzed an application for grunt fund·
ing through the Governor's Off'i~c of Appulachia
for $8,500. The funds, if approved, will be used to
proceed with design plans for the ~onvcrsion of
Middleport Elementary School illlo a municipal
building and holding fucility -type jail.
·
Council approved payment ol bills in the amount
of$24,222.52, with Mayor Sandy Jannarclli voting
"yes'' to break a tie vote. ( \ ILmcilmcn Stephen
Houchins, Roger Manley anil Robert Pooler voted
against the payment of the bi lis. following a discussion about bills for work clothing for street and
. other village workers.
·
Council also approved the mayor's report of fines
and fees collected in the amount of $4, 166.79.
· Council's next meetin~ will be held May 28 due
to the Memorial Day hohday. Present were Cuuncil
members Linda Haley, Stephen Houchins, Roger
Manley, Robert Pooler, Robert Rohinson and
Kathy Scott, and Clerk Susie French.

Mansfield is Eastem valedictorian, Brannon salutatorian .
62 to graduate

Sunday ·.
BY llltwl J. Ibm

W.VA.

•
Tuosdny, May 14, 2002

BREEDIPMYI».ILYSENTlNEl.COM
MIDDLEPORT- "This is the
only thing we can do."
Middleport Solicitor Linda
Warner met with Middleport
Viii~ Council during its regular
meeting Monday evening to dis. cuss an agreement between the

vill~e and Carl and Kny Plotter,
holding the Platters responsible
for a $48,000 bank loan for the
demolition of the Mark V build·
ing.
·
The loan will also include the
cost of liability insurance.
The two-story ·19th-century
building, which the village condemned a year ago, collapsed lust
week, leaving the village with a
safety problem, confusing traffic
detours and the ultimate responsibility for demolishing the remainder of the building, and another
adjacent to it.
·

SREEDOMYD-'ILYSENTINEL.COM
TUPPERS PLAINS
Sara
Mansfield and Bradley Brannon .will
address their classmates as valedictori·
an and salutatorian at Eastern High
School's commencement exercises
Sunday.
. Eastern High School Principal ~ck
Edwards announced Mansfield and
Brannon as the two top students of the
Class of 2002.
John Rice, president of the Eastern
Local Board of Education, will confer
diplomas to 62 seniors during the com·
mcncement
to be held in the
hi&amp;h school gymansium at 2 p.m.
Mansfield. is the daughter of Dr,
Wtlma ManBfseld of Pomeroy. She has
been an active scholar athlete. She
played varsity basketball and softball,
and was on the Tri· Valley Conference

prosram.

Second Team,
All-District
First Team and
All-Academie
TVC.
She has been
honored as a
Re g i o na I
Scholar, having received
the
Holzer
Science Award
and the Meigs
C011nty Academic Award.
Mansfield has also been active in the
marching and concert bands, and participate&lt;f in District 17 Honor Band. ·
She was a delegate to Buckeye Girls'
State, and recently was honored in
WSAZ-TV's Best of the Class program. She has been a member of
Student Council, served as National
Honor Sociel)' president, junior and
senior class v1ce president. and sophomore class ~sident.
She attends Sacred Heart Catholic
I

.........

Church, und Theresa Sharlene Baker, Jessica Lynn
plans to at· Bartels, Jessica Marie Bartimus,
tend
Ohio .Bnndr. Nicole Bentz, Tamara Diane
University as a Bisset , Nick Roscoe Blackburn Jr. , - ·
pre-law stu- Bradley Dean Brannon, Holly Nicole
dent.
Broderick, Jennifer Lee Buckley,
B~annon, son Tricia Lynn Congo; Darlene Joye
of Paul and Joy Connolly, Jeremy Michael Connolly,
Brannon,
is Tina Marie DeLaCruz, Jonathan Davtd
also an accom- Duffy. Erin Danielle Duvall-Gerard,
plished· athlete, Kayla Marie Gibbs, Randall J. Gibbs;
havi.ng played
Jennifer Dawn Goeglein, Ashley
loii!L:ivarsny basket· Alexis . Hager, Timothy Ryan
Bridle)' Bramon
ball, varsity Hawthorne, Tiffany Irene Hensley.
·
baseball and . Jacob Paul Holman. Ben Alan Holler,
varsity golf. He has received the All· Rachael Renee Hupp, Garrett Clayton
Acade~mc and A!11YC a~ards.
Kart'. Whitney Layne Karr, Tiffany Jo
H~ IS also vtce .pressdent of the Kidder. Holly Renee Landes, Alissa
Nat1on~l Honor Soctety, ~nd has bee~ Rose Larkins, Christopher Allen
recogmzed as a ~eg1onal Ment Lyons, Sara Ann Mansfield, Kamberly
Scholaf:. He ha~ rece1ved the State of Dawn Marcinko·
.
Ohio's j:Old and silver certificates for · Mary LeAnn~ Damian Marcinko,
academic achievement.
. Joshua Adam Marcum, Amanda
He attends St. Ambrose .Cathohc Nicole McKnight. Jawn Christopher
Church. He plans to study b1ology at Miller, Evan Matthew Needs, Ryan
Manetta College.
Patrick Nelson, Anthony J. Nutter,
Members of the graduating class are:
,..... - Eutem, AJ

We ell

May 12·18 is National Nursing Home Week.
Holzer Medical Center recognizes our
long-term care partners during their special week:

HGher Ienior Care
V.taran1 Meneorlal •ltletl N•nl.. C.at.r
•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
www.holzer.org

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