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'

P1ge 110 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydllltyMntlnel.com

Graduation, llealth Cllre Edlllons Inside today!

•

at

Melp Cpnty"s

Whafs
inside
•

rk V demolition ·. del

,Gallipolis
Siege of Foit
Randolph .

Country
Grass

• The public is invited to w1 tness history
come to life the weekend of May 17-19
Fort Randolph.
Saturday at I p.m.,
Chief Cornstalk makes
his fateful visit to the
fort from which 'he
woul\1 not retum.
information on
event call (740) 446-

• Country
will
perform
AMVETS, 7:30
No alcohol, open to
public.

Third building
showing strnctural
damage
.,, BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

TVC Track and field
championship, IU

Deaths

Hometown Newspaper

MIDDLEPORT - Demolition
work on the Mark V building and its
neighbor was delayed Thursday, but is
el!.pected to begin "in a day or two,"
according to Mayor Sandy lannarelli.
Now, a third building on the block
may also be leveled.
On Monday evening, Middlepon

Vilhfge Council approved a loan
agreement with Peoples Bank. N.A.,
to secure the funds needed to demolish ihe building and the building adjacent to it on Mill Street, and an agreement for repayment of the loan with
the owners of the building, Carl and
Kay Platter.
The cost of demolition and liability
insurance has been estimated at
$48,000, but.the Platters will be ultimately responsible for repayment of
the .loan. As a term of the agreement
with the owners, the village reserves
the right to foreclose on the property
if loan payments are not made.
The Mark V building, so known

because of the grocery store located
there for many years, collapsed last
week after several days of heavy
rains: The village condemned the
building a year ago.
·
Just after the collapse, North
Second Avenue from Race to Mill
Street, Mill Street from Front Street to
South Third Avenue, and the alley
behind Peoples Bank were immediately closed to traflic and pedestrians.
and remain closed. ·
·
Demolition on the building was
expected to begin Thursday. but
lannarelli said delays in lhe processing of paperwork relating to liability
coverage for the project has set the

project aside. It is expected to begin
today or Monday. weuther permilling,
and take appro~ imate ly three days to
o;·omplele.
After the demolition itself has heen
completed, the streets will · be
reopened while clean-up work cvntinues .
To funher complicate the situation,
lannarelli said, last week's c·ollupse
has likely caused structural damage to
the foriller Western Auto building.
. which sits next dvor, and it may al so
be demolished.
No decision on the .S&lt;tfety of the
:)uilding has been made yet. lannarelli
said.

Vada Smith, 83

Phyllis Cadle, 71
.
Houdashelt, 66
Fern Smtth
· .
.Details, A3
Madelin~

• .. Bend Area. Gos:pelf
Jubilee, May 15-19
West Vuginia State
Museum. 1\velfth
event, featuring ·
like Together 4
Salvation, The
Kevin Spencer
Friends and many,
more! Over 70
and soloists will

BeautY

Pageant

• A tale of
Rabbit
by ·
·Cleveland Opera
tour Friday at 8 p.m.
the Stuart's Opera
House. For more information, call (740) 7531924.

.•
Fundraising
Beauty Pageant for
Juvenile
Diabetes
Research Foundation.
Registration at i I a.m.
Saturday at the State
Theater, pageant
12:30. Contestants
compete in a nurnbc~r
of categories including
most photogenic, patriotic wear and beauty.
Cost for registration is
$1. For more information, call (304) 7278523

npl
Workshop

Concerts
• POMEROY
Friday at 9 p.m., Mr.
Downchild will perform acoustic and Delta
blues at the Court St.
Grill, Pomeroy. On
Saturday Phil and the
Thrill will present electric blues and rock at 9
For more informacall the Grill,

Jackson
• Alan Jackson
will perform at the
Pulans Amphitlheab=rl
Saturday
8 p.m.
Ticket prices
$23.50 to $45 and
available at www.titck- l
etmaster.oom,
charge by
calling (6 4) 43
3600.

rhone

NeVIlle
Brothen

ackson
Museum

\Jo come. There is no admission charge

4 p.m. and
times by and the museum is handicapped
• Visit the Lillian Jones Museum appointment. School, church and accessible. For more infonnation,
during regular hours on Thesdays, other community ~rroum
Call (740) -'OO·.O:JO

~-

eome on Ofer to Bob's...
for all ,our plantin&amp; needs. .

WAYNE~S

PLACE

• Pat Ramsey and
the Blues Disciples
will play ·at the Court
Street
Grill
in
Pomeroy
on
Wednesday, May 22.
Rarr1sey, described as
a
harmonica
kamikaze, plays with
the Disciples- Dave
Renson, · guitarist;
Will
Ainsworth,
bassist, and Steve
Howell', drummer.
For more informa.
call the Grill at
992-6524.

·Merchants affected
by street closure

BEAUTIFICATION BEGINS ·
. .

.

Mill Street
· open to
·pedestrian trqffic

Weather ·

Bv BRIAN

REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

High: sos, Low: 40s
Details, Al

Yoga classes
POMEROY - A beginner yoga class will be
offered at the Senior
Citizens
Cfnter
on
Wednesdays fi'om 5130 to
6:30 p.m., beginning May ·
29 and concluding on July
31. For more informaton or
to' register for the class, residents may call 992-2681,
extension· 233.
·

,. Rutland
banquet
. R!JTLAND - Dwight
Icenhower will not be perfannin~ at the Rutland
Alumm Banquet on May
25 as earlier announced .
Judy McDonald reported
that she had been advised
that Icenhower will be out
of town at that time.

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 7-Q-6 .
Pick 4: 7-8-5-1
Bu~ ;; 12-19-28-30-37
Pick 3 nlpt: 3-5-5
Pick 4 nljht: 6-3-2-8
W.VA.
Dally 3: 1-3-5
DIIJY 4: 0·9-5·3
(lsJ1 15: 4-8-12-20-22-'24

Index
Calendar ·
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

A7
85-7
88
A7
~ditorials
A6
ty'lovies
A3
Obituaries
A3
Sports
81-5
Weather
· A2
•C lOOl Ohio Valley Publllhlll( Co.

J.

Members of ttie Wildwood Garden Club took advimtage of Thursday's nice weather to
plant some flowers near the entrance of London Pool in Syra9use. According to Joy
Bentley, club member, the flower planting Is just the first of many beautification projects
the gardeners have planned for the village over the summer. Pictured are,. from left,
Bentley, Peggy Moore, Kay Salter, Tunie Redovlan and Chris Chapman. (Tony M. Leach)

Special Olympians prepare
for state competition
.
BY TONY

M.

LEAcH .

TLEACH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE - In their
quest for a gold medal, athletes from Meigs County
recently traveled to Athens to
participate in the Area 8
SJX:cial Olympic Track and
Fteld meet.
According to Kay Davis,
director of ed11cation at .
Carleton School in Syracuss;
more than 300 athletes from
southeast Ohio competed for
an opportunity to qualify for
the State Special Olympic AT HIS BEST- Athletes from Meigs County participated in
Track and Field meet, sched- the Area 8 Special Olympic Track and Field meet held at
uled June 28-30 at Ohio State Athens High School. Matthew Beha launches the shot put
during his event. (Submitted)
University in Columbus. .
Athletes participatin~, their
events and placement m their place, softball throw, seventh Cade, 50-meter dash, second
division at the Athens meet place; Don Buffington, I00- place, shot put, second place;
meter walk, fourth place, soft- Deidra Carleton, I0-meter
were as follows:
ball
throw, fourth place; Jacob assisted walk. first place, softMatthew Beha, 50-meter
dash, first place, shot put, fifth Cade, 50-meter dash, fourth ball throw, fourth place; Laura
place; Ntcole Blumenauer, place, softtlall throw, third Clark, 50-mlier dash, third
SO-meter dash, second place, place; Mamie Cade, shot put,
softball throw, first place; Bill third place, standing long place, softball throw, third
Brewer, 100-meber walk, first jump, .third place; Margaret Pleue- Olympics. A3

afruid to enter the taped-off
area because they fear they
will be tined by the village.
"Business has heen really
awful," Swartz said. "This
really hurl our Mother's Day
business. h's usually one of
our best times for sales, but
I his year, Customers apparently felt they weren't permitted
to walk near our stores."
Mayor Sandy lannarelli
said the barricades apply only
to Mill Street and North
Second Avenue themselves,
and the sidewalk surruunding
the Mark V building and its
neighbors. and not. the sidewalk along·the "T," acro.ss the

MIDDLEPORT - Nobody
· feels the inconvenience of
Middleport 's d~lourcd truffle
more than the merchants
affected by ihc ci&lt;,Jsure of
North Second Avenue ·and
Mill Street.
Shopkeepers on the Mill
Street "T," in particular, have
. been seriously affected by the
clesing of tht;,strfet as li ~esuh st~7t'know it's an inconveof the collapse o the Jvlark V nience to customers, and I
building last week.
feel for the merchants here in
Sue Stone, owner of Sue's town," lannarelli said. "h's
Selectables, said Thursday important that the work get
her business has nearly come started and completed as soon
to a standstill because of the as possible so that traftic can
closing of.Mill Street lo lraf- be restored and business can
fie and pedestrians, and other con 1tnue
·
as usua1."
merchants say they, too, have
''II is also important that the
experienced slow business safety of the public be prodays.
·
tecled, though, until the wark
· "I think people feel they has been cumpletcc.l and the
aren't allowed to walk on the sites cleaned up, and that's
sidewalk in front of our why those areas are blocked
stores, but our sidewalk is off."
open to pedestrians," Stone
In the mcamime, Iannarelli
said.
said. shoppers are encoura~ed
Just up the street at to use the municipal parkmg
Acquisitions Fine Jewelry. lot .located jus! up the street
Carla Swartz said she has from the Mill Street mertalked to customers who are ·chants.

Commissioners
proclaim·CAA Month
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEDil&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

program designed to retrain
Coal miners and nthers affectPOMEROY - May is ed by the closing earlier this
Community Action Month , year of the Southern Ohio
and the Mei.\ls County com- Coal Co.'s Meigs Mines, and
missioners s1gned a procla- provides employment and
mation declar'ing a local related services to former
observation during lheir regu- cash welfare recipients.
lar meeting on Thursday.
"Galliu-,Meigs CAA has a
Trish McCullough and proven commitment to proTarissa Beaver of Gallia- · viding suppon and training to
Meigs C6A presented the help local people make the
proclamalron, which encour··
f
If
aues local citizens to recog- transitiOn . rom fe are to·
I'
work under Ohio 's new wel mze the services of the local fare reform initiatives,"
·
agency.
McCullough said.
Last year, Ohio Community
In other busine&gt;s. the comAction A.\lencies served more
· ·
· d
than 3 million disadvantaged miSSioners rev1ewe requests
·
1
· r
from
Engineer Eugene
residents by everagmg .eder- Triplett to vacate u n.mion of
al , state, local and private
e·
resources.
Snowville Road in Scipio
The local agency has over- Township, and Shumway
seen the operation of a unique
PI•••• sH CAA, Al

1st Mnlnuo,,

ftme Out wllh lhe Guys
Sunday, May 19 • 2:00 - 4:30 PM • HMC Gallip oli1 Edwalion &amp; Conl••a Center

A spedolewnt for boys and men in our community

·Crow's Family Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Frld Chiclcen
228M•InSt
DIM-Thna WiDdDw

992-5432

Keynote Speaker: Greg White, Head Cooch
Mens ~sketball at Marshall University

SP£C!A!. FEAT\JRE;

NON-FASTING CHOLESTEROl. SCREENINGS
FOR YOUNG MEN AGES 10 • 18+
(MuJI have parenff:JI con~e~~l ;I under 18.}
All agel are "'IICC(Ilel Molhers inviladl Dm1 is casual. Refreshments will be oerved.
for

cal

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

446-5679

r

'

•

�•

•

. Pa(8Al

The Daily Sentinel

,. ..... ..., 11. 211J

a

Polluted sites appeal to panel for deanup funds

Ohio weather
Slllunley, May ,.

Toledo, Akron and Columbus.
"Every one of these projects needs to
be done," said member BnJCC Cornett.
an environmental activist f'rom Yellow
Springs. "And it's going to be very hard
to say no to some of them."
·
The council also includes government officials and businessmen. The
panel plans to take into account the
potential for developing a site, as well
as environmental issues.
Richard Regula, of Navarre, grew up
on a farm. As a INstee in Bethlehem
Township near Canton, he brings the
rural perspective.
"Environmentalists and the EPA people kind of get tunnel vision, a.nd we
like to see the big picture," Regula said.
"My No. I priority are sites that can
be put into active progressive use that

said. .
Thomas Kovac:lk, a Thledo consultant and executive director of the
Transportation Advocacy Group of
Northwest Ohio, qrees.
Kovac:lk slid the brownfields must be
put into productive usc so jobs are ~
lUed and the lU base.intreased.
"I'm going to concentrate on a cOm·
bination of not only how it impnwcs
the local environment, but how, it
improves the local . community,"
Kovacik said. ·
Cornett said be brings the perspective
of the average citizen. He will consider
the extent of the contamination, i'iPw
close the site is to people and schools,
and Whether the site will be thorou&amp;hly
cleaned up.

court prosecutors. He has recommended the girls be chqed
with criminal mischief and disorderly conduct. Both chqes
are
misdemeanors.
HUNTINGTON, W.Vu. (AP)- A Cabell County woman
and her son have been indicted on first-degree murder charges
in u lire that killed her husband.
Tammy Adkins, 35, and Mnnuel Skaggs, 15, were indicted
by a Cabell County grand jury in the Nov. 20 death of John
CINCINNATI (AP) - The first citywide effort to educate
Adkins. Skaggs was 11lso indicted on a felony malicious residents about Cincinnat's agreements to end a racial profil·
wounding charge.
in~ lawsuit 8fld a fed~l. p~be of the police ~e~ent began
The suspects were arraigned Thursday by Cabell County th1s week With the dlstnbut1on of 5,000 cop1es of 11 brochure
9
Circuit Judse AI Ferguson, who ruled earlier that Skal!lls explaining the agreements.
should be tned us un udult. Ferguson set trial for Aug. 13.
The brochures are being handed out by police officers lind
. Adkins was ordered held without bond in the Cabell County activists through churches, schools, libraries and businesses.
Jail. Skaggs will remain at the West Virginia Industrial Home
"We ran out of brochures," said Jay Rothman, president of
for Youth near Salem on $100,000 bond.
Aria Group, who mediated the settlements. "All 5,000 copies
went out the door."
·
Though the racial profiling agreement hns not been officinl·
ly approved, Rothman said Wednesday that it is im~rtant for
CHARLESTON, W.Vn. (AP) - A Northern Panhandle the community to understand and accept it and begm to work
.
company that produces the popular Fiesta brand of dinnerware toward change.
will receive a $10 million loan from the state.
The Homer Luu11hlin China Co.. which introduced the
OKs
bright, bold art deco dinnerware in 1936, received apj)roval for
the loan Thursday by the West . Virginia Economic CANTON (AP) - A judge has allowed taped phone calls
Development Authority.
into evidence for the trial in June of James A. Schaar, charged
The company, based in Newell, Hancock County, has been with aggravated murder.
owned by the Wells and Aaron families since 1897.
.
Schaar, 20, of Orrville, is accused in the stabbing deatl) of
The loan will allow the Wells family to buy out the Aaron Oary Stoll, 63.
..
.
family's part of the business, said David Warner, the authori·
At a hearing Wednesday in Stark County Common Pleas
ty's eKecutive director. Without the loan, the 958-worker com· Court, Judge Charles E. Brown Jr. was told that Schllar's .
puny could have closed In Newell, he said.
brother-in-taw, sister and others helped Massillon pollee by
agrceing ·to tape phone conversutio11s they made witlt Schaar.
Stoll, a retired .mechanical en~ineer for Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Co., was found d.ead in h1s home Oct. 21. He had been
PAINESVILLE (AP) - A hiker in a Lake County park dead several days. His body was found face down on the basefound the body of a 22-year-old man police in Pennsylvania ment floor. A knife was against his shoulder. He had been
were seeking after a woman was killed.
stabbed in the neck.
Lake County Coroner Sal Rizzo said Jeremy Chapek died
from a gunshot wound to the head Thursday. .
Wrl.lat
Chapek's body ',VIS found about 5:45 p.m. in Hell Hollow . .
5 11 . .
.
·
Wilderness Area near a trail, said Lake Metro Parks police Lt: FAIRBORN (AP)- A two-tiered tuition lncrease propcised .
Scott Hoffman.
for Wright State University in Dayton would result In new stu·
· Police were seeking Chapek for questionina concernina the dents paying 12.2 percent more, while retumi.na students
beating death of Jessica Havel, 21, in Mount I.:ebanon, Pa. Her would see an 8 percent increase, university officials said.
body was found ei!I'IY Thursday when pollee responded to a The Increases would be in addition to a 4 percent midyear
domestic violence call at the apartment the couple at some tuition increase &amp;Jlproved In February, Unlverslty officials said
point had shared.
reduced atate fundlna and IUJe fee lnc;reasea at other state unlveraidealed to them tO IU88Cit the tWO•tlercd approach.
The propoaal wu announced Thuraday to 80 idmlnlatraton,
faculty and students durinaa board of tnlateea budaec retreat.
AKRON (AP)- A man who has served nearly four years of Under the Jli'C)poaal, full·dme underaraduatee atll'llna thla fall
a life prison sentence for a murder Ia seeklna to be released. A would pay $5,3611n annual tuition and feea, up from $4,780;
child who was a witness now says his eye color Ia not the aame Retumlnaatudents would pay $5,163.
as the attacker's, the Inmate's lawyer said. .
The Increase would remain two-tiered for four 1.ean, after
A 10-year-old girl now recalls that the killer had brown eyea, which nearly all studenta would be paylna the hlaher tuition
and she has lcfentlfied another suspect, lawyer Elizabeth rate.
Kelley said Thursday.
Clarence A. Elkins,·40, who has blue eyes, was convicted of
Strangling and bellling Judith Johnson, ~8. ·to death In her
Barberton home on J~ne 7, 1998.
XENIA (AP) - A fire that forced the evacuation of Greene
Kelley is asking Summit County Common Pleas Judge John Memorial Hospital in this southwest Ohio city was arson,
Adams to order another man to submit to DNA tests. She is police said Thursday.
.
also asking that Elkins' conviction be thrown out or that he
About 70 patienta were in the four-story hospital when the
receive a new trial.
fire broke out on the top floor Wednesday. There were no

City produces brochure

mph. Chance of rain 30 per·
The weather across the area cent.
will remain cool over the Saturday . nighi ... Partly
weekend, thanks to prevailing cloudy and chilly with u
winds from the north.
chance of rain showers. Lows
Highs will be in the 50s 35 to 40. Chance of rain 30
through Sunduy and lows in percent.
· ··
the 30s.
·
E~~:tended forecast:
The Nutionul Weather Sunday... Mostly cloudy
Service suid scauered frost with a chance of brief show·
was possible the neKt couple ers. Continued cool. Highs 55
of mornings if winds lighten to 60. Chance of ruin 30 per·
and some clearing takes cent.
place.
Sunday
night ... Mostly
Sunset toni$ht will be at cloudy. Lows 35 to 40.
8:42, and sunnse on Saturday Monday... A chance of
is at 6:14a.m.
showers during the day, oth·
Weather forecast:
erwise partly cloudy. Highs
Tonight. .. Cool with rain 60 to 65.
.
and drizzle. Lows in the mid Tuesday... Mostly
clear.
40s. North winds around 10 · Lows 40 to 45. H1ghs in ihe
mph. Chance of precipitation mid 60s.
80 percent.
Wednesday ... Mostly · clear
Saturday... Mostly cloudy and warmer. Lows in the
with a chance of brief show· upper 40s. Highs 65 to 70.
· ers. Highs onl_y in the upper Thursday... Partly cloudy.
50s. North wmds I 0 to I 5 Lows 46 to 52. Highs near 70.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Possible conflid
·means biomedical grants
could be delayed · ·
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
distribution of mlllions of dol·
Iars . in grants to universities
and busfnesses for biomedical
research projects could be
delayed several months
because of an apparent undis·
closed conflict of interest.
The · Ohio Biomedical
Research and Technology
Transfer Commission was to
distribute $31.7 million on
Wednesday to research pro·
jects from Ohio's share of the
national tobacco settlement,
but that timeline was put on
hold.
"It could be as short as a
delay of three or four weeks,
up to ihree or four months,"
Marc Cloutier, the commis·
sion's executive director, said
Thursday. "It depends on the
· course of action that the com·
mission decides to take."
.
The commission halted the
disbursement of money after
Frank Samuel, chairman of
the commission, said there
was an apparent conflict of
mterest. He said it appeared u

Fiesta gets W.Va. loan

Judp

Police check link In deaths

s••te eyeS tuitiOn

Llwyer: Wltn11s chanps story

Hospital fire tinned enon

int~:~

Three ..Iris face aCCUSitiOn

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consultant of the Washington
firm the state hired to recom·
mend awards for proposed
research projects also sits on
the board of INstees of one of
the companies Involved In a
project slated to be funded
and owns stock in the compa·
ny.
State officials wouldn't
identify the consultant, com·
pany or university involved.
"We believe there is a con·
flict of interest, and it is still
being investigated," Cloutier
said.
He noted tha~ the state does
not believe the individual
intentionally positioned him·
boxes of
filters stored in two areas a small
self to benefit.
a•
fourth-floor maintenance room were i·gnitedjust after 10 a,m.,
"There's no evidence or
MASSILLON (AP) - Police said three 13-year-old 11irls, police Lt. Daniel Donahue said.
·
indication whatsoever at this students at Longfellow Middle School, sprayed a classroom The fourth floor, which houses an equipment-filled meclian·
time of wrongdoing, and we and a cout with perfume hoping to cuuse their (Cachet an aller· ical room and sleeping quarters for medical residents who
believe there has not been gic reaction and breathing problems.
.
·
work in the lntensive·care unit, sustained fire damage. The
any," Cloutier said.
·
The teacher had left the room Wednesday. When she· third floor was damaged by smoke ahd water. · .
:.
However, Cloutier said, the returned, she smelled the perfume and reported the situation to .
appearance of a conflict the principal. Police said she had a slight reaction to the per·
threatens to cast a shadow fume .
over the entire .grunt process,
Students knew the teacher has asthma and allergies to per·
and such a conflict could vio· fumClli, said Gary Mead, a police officer who investigated.
The Meip Senior Center wl1hea to thank the '
late Ohio law.
Mead said Thursday the case has been referred to juvenlll

, :•···············~····················································•

:~ I

phone tapes

lnsld

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fu~ace

~f

following for their pneroua aupport .of the
dinner 1pon1ored y the Racine American
Legion Poat 602 on May 4. The proceedt of
$3200 wu donated to our Home Delivered
Meal Program. We appreciate your 1uppon.

Qualley Furniture Pl111
Crow'a StukhoUH
VauaJtan'a Cardinal Pciocl.
Kro1en 111d Kroser
Employea
PoweU'e Super Va.lu
Racine Home Nadonal
Bank
Tom'• Buller Shop
Pine HW. Golf CoutH
Shaft'er Loalna
HUI'a Cltp
HunreU H0111t
Olflu Stmce end Supply
Ohio Rlwr lieu Co. ·
Pea Brldda
Alw&amp;)'IIRd Pomer Gilt
Shop
O,hio Riwr c.nc11..
Aatlqulcy &amp;.ptlat Church
llodlli! American l.epon
Lo.lla A!Wilur

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M1dellnl Houd1shelt

POMEROY- Units of the
Meias Emelaency Service
ansWeml five cl1ls for assistance on Thursday. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:50
u.m., . Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Alice
Bush, Holzer Medical Cenll!r;
II: 17 a.m., Senior Building,
Opal Tyree, HMC; ·
12:5S p.m., Ohio 325, Gloria
Durrett, treated; ·
5:36 p.m., Sheriff's office,
Ronnie l..ambtrt, HMC.
POMEROY
I :24 p.m., Happy Hollow
Rood, Swn WiiUams, treated.

124 from a private driveway
Uld was struck by 1 westbouOO
minivan driven by Da~y D.
Wolfe, 6.5, 22766 Ducktown
Road, Rucinc. No citlltion was

Pecleslrlln
InJured ··.

Vada Smith

' lj

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O¥npics ·

REAP reaches out to learners

FemSmlth

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:·;Lawmakers demand answers
;~. about Sept

11 wamings

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• •.1 •

The Daily Sentinel

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(U*'IIIMID)

Reader services

Ohio Valier Publlthlng Co.

Publlllhtd ..,..ry 11temoon, Monday
F~day,
11 I Court 11,,
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lhrough

Coi'I'IOtlon Polley
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SPECIAL ATHLITU - Athletea fiom Melli County partie!·
paled In the Area 8 Special Olympic Track end Field meet held
at Athens Hllh Schoof. Oeldra Carleton, lett, with Carleton
School physical theraplat Laura Lively, competes In the 10.
meter asaleted walk. (Submitted)

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1101.12

fi•PipA1
Road, in Its . entirety, In
Oranae Township.
Public viewing&amp; and hear·
ings on the proposed roud
clo1ings will be announced .
The Ohio Diviston of
Liquor Control has noti fled
the board of a request to

Tmy S~eln

trunsfer the C I carryout
liquor license of Sheila
Whaley, doing business as
Whaley's Grocery, to Randall
1. Hill, doing business as
·Darwin's · .
General
Mercantile, and a new C2
carryout license for the busi·
ness .
Present
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets
and Clerk Gloria Klocs .

Of

The I

EaiJu ,

liar Faces

Pleasant Valley Hospital knows the importance offamiliar faces and
sumrundings when faced with an illness or chronic medical condition.

Pauy Sha.ln
Julie C....pbtll
Daw 111d Aaa Zldda

PIIIIIDI lallft Pi Inti DIIJIGRII Care provides:

Henld 1.&amp;-n
N.ncy 111d .R.opr Hubbard
Dan 111d Donna Smbh

t Penon~l C1re

tllllpltll Cart

HOIIMII18ktr Str¥kttl
• Prlva.. Duty Nu.-

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1 Support Ser¥lcel t Companlon~hlp
• F~e:illty St11mn1 • Sitter Service

•

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, MlDDLEPOR.T - Phyllis L Cadle, 71, Middleport, died
R.ADCUFF- Madeline Houdashelt, 66, of Radcliff, died
~'r~·. May 16, 2002 •t Holzer Medical Center in on Wednes&lt;lt.Y. May 15, 2002, at the Ohio State University
Hospital in COlumbus, following a brief illness.
issued.
~hODolwasl ~ July 3, 1930, dauahter of the late Walter B.
She was born in Boone County, West Vi~inia, on March 12,
uy ~ty. She was a member of ti'le Middleport First 1936, daughter of the late Milton and Less1e Ptrdue Mullins.
Wandu L. MeriiiW', 34, 909
Baptist Church.
Elm
St.. Racine, wiiS cited for
She was a homemaker.
' ~urviving are her husband, William ''Bill" Cadle of
unsnfe vehicle by the p11trol folSurviving are·her husband, Meryl Houdashelt; two dauah·
.. M1~dleport; two dauahters, Patri.cia Silver of Colorado ters and sons-in,law, Varina and L&amp;ury Woodgeard of
lowing a one-car nccidtnt
Monday on Ohio ·7 near
.• Spn~ MColo., and Viclti ~field of Dallas, TcxiiS; a son, McArthur, and Sheila and Steve Hashman of Albariy; a son,
11
: Wi.lham
• Cadle of Rhonda, W.Va.; and I 0 grandchildren Bradley Houdashelt of Radcliff~ ~ve lfllldchildren, Kimberly
Chester.
and 14 peat grandchildren.
.
Troopers said Merinar was
McClure of Albany, Travis McClure of McArthur, and
She w~ also pn:c:eed in death by her brother, Harold Fetty; Lindsey, Nathan llll&lt;f Dakota Hashman of Albany.
southbound at 3:23 p.m. when
and her s1ster, Mary Ellen Fetty.
she lost control OQ, min-slicked
Also surviving are seven isters, Glennie Hatfield of
., Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in Anderson Funeral Home, Monroe, Mule Knox of Crooksville, Dollie Ellis of Norwalk,
road, went off the right side of
., ... New Haven, W.Va., with the Rev. Mlll'k Morrow and Dr. Lillie Essls of Norwalk, Nellie Coleman of Warfield,
the road, and struck an w•tique
David Rahamut officiating. Burial will follow at Meigs Kentucky, Katheryn Quesinberry of Albany, and Margaret
steel wugon wheel.
• Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from Chri tion of Radc1iff: three b.'Others, Paul Mullins of Ray,
The car had nonfunctionul
• 2-4 and 7·9 p.m. Saturday. ·
dMluge, troope111 said, ·
David Mullins of Fremont, and Joseph ·Mullins of North
An online registry is available at andcrsonlb.com.
Cl~de 0. Harrison, 69. 3788
Fairfield; and several nieces and nephews.
Leading
· Creek
Road,
Besides her ()&amp;rents, she was preceded in death by her broth·
Middleport, wus cill:d for fail·
ers, Silas and Odell Mullins; and a sister, Mudgie.
RACINE - A Racine-area ure to control following a oneServices will be I p.m. Saturday, May 18, 2002 nt Bigony·
·• • 1 , LANGSVILLE- Vada Ann Smith, 83, Langsville, .died at
Jordan Funeral Home In Albllny, with Pastor Don Fairohild youth was injured after she was car accident later Monday on
nolzer Medical Center-Jackson on Thursday, May 16, 2002. officiating. Burial wlll follow at Mount Olive Cemetery. struck by a car on Ohio 124 in County Road 3 (Leading
·
1bwnshi p Creek).
She was bom June lS, 1918,in Garrets Bend, W.Va., dough· Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday, May 17, 2002, Lebanon
Troopers said Harrison wus
· Wednesday, the Gallia-Meigs
ter of the late Bevin and Flossie Gladys Bowels McCallister. from 2-4 and 6-g p.m.
westbound
ut the intersection
Post
of
the
State
Highway
Surviving arc three sons and seven daughters, Wanda and
Patrol reported.
with Salisbury Township Rood
•. Donald Nelson of Malta, Dot and Carl Smith of Langsville,
.
361
{McElhinney) at 9:50p.m.
Cassandra
M.
Hook,
12,
Ill
. Thm Wid Mickey Smith of Cheshire, James and June Smith
McCarthy, softball throw,
Cross
St.,
Racine,
wus
tnUIS·
when
he lost control of the car
·· • lll!d Jerry and Golda Smith, aU of Bidwell, Bonnie and Lmy
third place, standing long
·
he
drove
on min·slicked rooJ,
., . Cleland of Pomeroy, Stella 1111d Bob Blankenship of Shade,
jump, fifth place; · Lisa ported to Pleasant Valley
and Flossie and Milce Jude, and Geraldine and Skip Moore, all
Montgomery, SO-meter dash, Hospitlll by Meigs EMS fol· went off' the let\ side of the road
flam Pip AI
, 1 of Vinton: 33 grandchildren; 38 great-grandchildren; and two
first pluce, IQQ. meter walk, lowmg the 7: 14 p.m. uccident, and struck an embankment.
The cur hud nonfunctiom~
slste~, Pauline Pauley of Albany, and Vonda Lee (Tiny) Roy
second place: Kenneth the patrol said. She was later
place:
Mary
Jane
Curry,
I
QQ.
~. of Arizona.
N~pper, SO-meter dash, sec· trented and released, troopers damage.
She was also preceded in death by a son, Darrell Smith; and meter walk, first place, shot ond place, softball throw, sec·
,
put, first place.
·
a grandson, five brothers and two sisters.
plnce: Bill Neutzling, 50.
Bradley Donaldson, 100· ond
· • .. Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday In McCoy-Moore Funeral
meter
dash, second plnce, soft·
•• Home, Vinton, with l)urial to follow at the Temple Cemetery meter dash, fourth place, 4QO. bull throw, second place: Mary
·! .near Albany. Friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday !Deter dash, fourth place, high Rankin, tOO-meter walk, .
JUmp, second place, long founh place, softball throw,
from 7·9 p.m.
.
jump, second place, shot put, third place: Hugh Roush, I QQ.
Bv K~N Ka&amp;.v
. "The majority uf students
KKELLYOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
who enroll in REAP find thul
first place, standing long meter dash, fourth place, shot
RIO
GRANDESo
you're
when they get past the unccrjump, second place, pen· put, secbnd place.
twentysomething and you've tainty, they will conlinue on
,, .. MIDDLEPORT - Fem Smith, formerly of Middleport, tathlon, second place: Lesley
Chris Shouldis, I00-meter decided
Eblin,
so-meter
dash,
fourth
try college, or even and get a degree," said
, J recently died In South Carolina.
· ·
·
·
walk, fourth place, softball return totothe
higher education Bowman. "It's u busis for them
.. · Arrangements will be' announced by Fisher .Funeral Home. place, shot put, first place; throw, shi:th place: Robert
Christopher edwards, ttUllp Singer, IQQ. meter walk, third scene.
to continue with their educa· ·
If you're unsure about going tion."
roll, first place, strike with place, shot put, first place;
------~------------------------ hand, thircl place; Jennifer
REAP participants are
Charles · Sloane, SO·mjlter bnclt into the classroom,
Gray, 1O.metcr assisted walk, diiSh, first place, shot put, sec· University of Rio Grande/Rio charged $5 to enter, with text·first place, 30.meter motor· ond place: Maurice Smith, Grande Community College books provided . through a
\ .
ized wheelchair, first place; I 00-meter diiSh, second place, has on option available each gr.mt. Students ure ullowed to
11m Harris, SO.meter dash, shot put, fourth place: Tracy summer.
.
. take up to eight credit hours,
Rio Early Academic Program Bowman said.
first pluce, standing long Smitli, IOO.meter dash, sec·
jump, fifth place; Katie ond place, 400-meter dash, (REAP), designed for nduUs 25 "In a nutshell, you can take
.• d
" . WASHINGTON (AP) - to defend the president as Kibble, softball throw, first third place, high jump, first and over who have been in col- eight hours of classes for $5,"
. Democratic lawmakers are Democrats, and a few place, standing long jump, place, long jump, first place, lege or never attended, offers she added. "The only other
first place; Roger Lance, SQ. shot put, first place, standing specific courses over a 10-week expense is the time and the cost
insisting the White House tum Republicans, sought answers.
over top-secret documents pre- "Why did it take eight meter dash, second place, soft· long jump, third place, pen· period to introduce or re·orient of fuel to get here."
first
place: people back into the classroom. "The specific 111rget for this
pared for President Bush that months for us to receive this ball throw, first place; Wayne tnthlon,
Leifllelt,
I
00-metcr
walk,
first
The goal, said Luanne Rase crogram is the adult,'' said
Christopher Taokett, 100·
L . Indicated Osarna bin Laden information? And what specif·
Bowman,
vice president for
""
1 'd 0 tl··
place,
softball
throw,
first
meter d~!ih, seventh place, financial and
, wanted to hijack U.S. air· lc actions were taken by the
ndmini~trative
owman.
ror
anyone
ru
.
standing long jump, ·fourth affairs at Rio Grande from their job or needing u
·:, planes.
· White House ·In response?" place.
Luke Lowery, IOO·meter place:-Steve Titus, I 00-meter Community College, is for refresher, this is the perfect
· · They also Wll!lt to sec onoth· Senate Mqjority Leader Thm
dash,
first pluce, high jump, walk, second place, softball these students to determine place to start. With our local
., 1 erj)re-Sept. 11 document-'- an Daschle, D·S.D., said. "I'm
first place, long jump, .first throw, fifth place; Bill White, they can succeed at college.
; 1 , FBI memo that warned head· not goinJi. to Jump to any con·
economy as it is, a lot of' people
"I think REAP is a perfect are struggling with the loss of
i ,t:"ers that m1111y Middle clusions, but 1t's hard to under- place, shot put, fourth place, IQO.meter dash, third place,
tern men were training at stand why the information was standing long jump, first shot put, third place: Dirk upportunih· for lin udult to test jobs or impending job losses. so
place, pentathlon, thiid place: Young, I00-meter wulk,
''
this is u perfect chance for them
,•• f.l!lerlcan fli&amp;ht schools.
not released."
the
waters
of
hi$her
education,
make thut change ...
Randall
Mahon,
softball
fourth
place,
softball
throw,
10
•, Bush officials acknowledged House Minority Leader Dick
ut un inexpensive price, and 1b enroll for REAP, contact
! ' ; for the first time Thursday that Gephardt, D·Mo.. posed a throw, first place; Dakota first place.
prove that lher, can do this," Rio Grande's admissions office
, · the president was briefed about variation on the famous
said
Bowman. 'I think the very at 740-245· 7208 or 1·800-288. a possible hijacking plot In Watergate-era question: What
nature
of Rio provides the 2746. Registration for summer
,· , early August while he vaca· did the president know and
~lfs'~·~ity for them to be suc· · at Rio Grande is Juoe 3 on cam- .
,... tloned at his TeKas ranch. But when did he know it?
.
The tO weeks resemble a 1us, with clllSses beginning
the officials were deeply di vid· Republican Sen. Richard
ed over whether to release the Shelby of Alabama, vice chairtypical quarter at college, but at une 4.
documents.
man of the Senate Intelligence
a relaxed pace allowing for
The news of Bush's August Committee, Bllid, "There was a
individual attention In . such
.., .briefing set off a furor and pre- lot of infonnatlon. I believe
subjects as English and math
-'' .clpitated a public relations and others believe, if it had
destgned to introduce partie!· ~*;li
blltz by the White House, been acted on P.roperly we may
punts to the college classroom ..., which sent forth an extraordl· have had a different situation
experience and expectations.
1•· nary number of senior advisers on Sept. 11."

Other Htvlotl.

Kathryn Hut
Allen Graham
Barb McNickle
Ray Oliver ·
Theo Poullnt
Tim Baum
Don WeChrla Wolfe
Derrcll Norrla
Clyde Styre
Howud RDblntOn
Tom and Rote Wolfe
Radud l..epon

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS los calls said.Ttoopcn said Hook ran onto

.

can benefit toWIIships and citil$," he

1Wo lndided In fatal fire

local weather will remain cool

"ti.

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DAYTON (AP)- Abllndone&lt;l nearly
20 years ago, the GHR foundry sits
next to homes just north of downtown.
The site contains PCBs. loose asbestos.
volatile organic compounds and other
environmental hazards.
Its future is in the hands of 14 people
who must decide how to spend a limited pot of money to cleun up polluted
industrial sites arou.nd the smte.
The Cleun Ohio Council wa$ created
last year when Gov. Bob Taft signed
into law a bill that provides $200 mil·
lion for cleaning up brownfields over
the next four years. In July, the p&amp;net
will distribute the first round of funds
-$40 million.
However, it expects to receive
requests for $64 million for sites that
include property in Dayton, Cleveland,

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PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

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t._•t r\ U !) t V •

RACINE - Several RacineSouthern FFA Cha~ter members
were honored foe thear puticipation
in skills c:ontests and proficiency
awards ll the recent annual District
I0 Fl'A 8111quet.
First places in the district proficiency contests went to Lori Sayre,
accounting, agri-entre{lrem:urship.
diversified crop productaon and veg·
etable production: Amy Wilson.
agricultural sales~ and Tyler
Johnson. nursery operations. and
forest management. Sayre took 11 ·
second place in foruge production, ·
In the skills contest. Tim Cogar
took third ploce in grain merchandising: Amy WilsQn, third place, fami
business. monagement: Joe Adkins.
first place, agricuhurnl engineering:
Mario Schaefer. second place, ag·
science job interview: T.J. Moore.

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win
distrid co1alesls
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second plate, extemporueous
speaking: Lori Sayle. second plate,
prepared speakina.
The chapter rec:ei veri founh place
in ag-engine.erina, second pl.c:e in
gnain merdlandisina. second place
in form business manage:ment, sec:··
ond place in ~live education.
and fourth place m urblln soil judg·
ing,
Prior to the banquet. an officers'
trnining session wos given by the
state and district FFA officers for the
2002-03 chapcer officers.
The Rucine-Southem Fl'A's 2001·
02 otl1cer teum includes: Alan
Moore, president: Tim Col!ar, vice
presidenl: Cas.sie Cleland, Secnlltlt¥i
John . Bentz, treasurer: Mana AWARD .WINNERS - Raclfle:Southem FfA members reteMI&lt;I se\lflral Olstrlct 10 FfA awards. Pictured, fl'om left,
Schaefer. reporter: Trnvis Hart. sen- first row, lJ. Moore, Amy Wilson, John Bentz, Lori Sayre and Marla Scllaefer; second row, Tl'lvts Hart, Alan Moore,
TYler Johnson, Tim COllar and Cassie Cleland. (Submitted)
·
tinel: Adam Lee. student advisor,

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1'111\Ni Matt Mt\11\lW

fllh ,,., P.h'"'' St., MWI&lt;pott
Su~~&lt;lll)' Sci.. &gt;t • ~: t ~ o.n1.
llllt1hlp • 10: I~ o,m., 1~10 p.l\l,
ll'«h&gt;"'l&lt;\y Smt,~· l:UO p.m,
Mll&lt;l•• 11nl lltlpllot

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David C. Alldrewa
J11ly 10, ltii·May 5, 11180

May God'l qell
Qulde )'OU and
protect you .
throuQhout time.
Alwap 1ft our hearta,
Johll and Mona Alldrewa and
lamlly

3. Forever mined, never for&amp;ollen. May Ood hold youln the palm of
Hla hand.
4. Thank )'oil for the wonderful day! we iharcd 101illher. My praye11
will be whh you unlit we meet aanln.
5.1'he daya we aho!Od were •w•et. Ilona to ace yllti aaaln In Ood'a.
hcuvenly &amp;lory.
6, Your couruplnd bravery llllllnaplrt u1 all. and lhe memory of your
1mllc fili i ui wllh joy tnd laughter.
7. Thouah out ohl&amp;hl, you' II forcvor be In my hem and mind,
8. The day1 may come ond ao, hut lilt lhncawe •hated will etwaya tttnlin.
9, May lhc ll&amp;ht of peiiCe 1hlne on your fiiCI for elemlly.
.
10. May Ood'allllplaaulde you and pro1oc1 youlhroti&amp;hOUIIImt.
II . You weioall&amp;hlln our llfolhll bum1 fottver In our h01111 ••
12, May Ood'a &amp;I'IICCIIhlne over you for all lime.
13. You ure In our lhllll&amp;hll,lnd praym from momlna to nlihland from
yeur to yeur,
.
14. We aend lhla· me11ap wllh a loY Ina kl11 for etemalttll and happlneaa.
15, May lhe Lon! blm you wllh Hit ariiCtllnd Wlnn, lo•lna hean,

TO 8EMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • $121F PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop orr IO

·HONORED STUDENT- Bill Nease, president of Home National Bank, presents Lori Sayre with
a aavlnga bond for her achievement In obtalnln~ the Star District State In production.

m:..o

Slh~r Mon lltlpllol
Pc~~h'll': Ji\tm SwttnA~.In

Sumlll)t Sd\\IUI · 1()\uu,

11\oridilp , I to.m.. 7:110 ""''

, \\-'tJHti~dlty S~I'Vk~ll~ ll(X) !).Ill,

MI. Union Ropll•l
llMim': ·l&gt;i\lld Wlilfnum

Stmd!')! SChool·9:"'-' 111.1\l.
nY~nhi~~: • ~: Jn t~.tn.

ll'ud"'"''l' Setvl'~' • ~: !()p.m .
H•llllth•m llaplld Chorrk
Oftlll n~ml,

Mmu~

12.4, RttehU\ OH
IJ~tl.lor ; Ditnl\11 M ~*'
Sm}d")' S~hool · ~ ~.~{) a.m.
Su11tl~ty Wm11h1p • 10:;\0 • .m.
WOlh&gt;.,doy fllhlo Sludy • Mill p.m.

Old Htthtl I'm Will llopllot Chur&lt;h

lKOOt Si. MI. 7, Ml&lt;loiiOIX.I

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S111K111.y S!Jhii•JI • 10 ' ·"'·
Hn~nlny • 1:00 11.111,
11HJ00ay StrYI~II • 7:t{l

llllt•ldo Hopllol Clmr&lt;h

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St. MI . 14.1jUil Olf Rl. 7
ll118lt\fi R\1'1, J 11me~ M., 1\croo. Sr.
S ut\\1~ )! lJninru ~trY h.,
Wt.lftthll' • I(I:,UI a.m., b f) Ill,
Wcdn~~dit:Y Servll&lt;t~

•7 p.l'li. ·

Vl&lt;llll')' lopllll l•dopondtll
lll N. 21l\1 St. llltddlip&lt;111
l'u~tor: J ~1\II!N

H.

K~M.'C!

Wnl'llhlp . lt)",m,, 7 p.m.
Wednl!~di~ ~ervkes ~ 7tl.m,

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

..,

ll-~&amp;\lt~ M.i\;k ~UI\"
Su~'ldll,y SchoJnl ~ 1)•,\0 1.m,
'M"l.hl1~ •
tu11., 'NIO "'m
\\~h~li.~ ~~k.'l!\ • 't.t•l p.m.

Folth Boptlot Churrh
M1lh'HMI Sl ,.

•

•

•

•
•
••
•
•
•

M1 ~n

• 10 a.m.
WttrllhiJI • 1111.111" fl p.m.
Wcdne~tllly Si!rYlCi8 . 7tun,
.~u nduy S\:huol

••m'INl Run ll•ptiNI
PttMtor : Arh18llurt
Sundt&amp;~ ScMol • 11111.m.
WurM
hll' • II M
,m,

Mt, Morl•b Dapli!l
. Puutth &amp;. M11ln St., Middleport
PIIJmr: R11v OIIMtt Cr11l11, Jr,
SutliliY Sch&lt;ktl • 9:30 un.
WutJhlp • 10 :~! o.m.

•

-~~ • 111:3tl•.m.. l&lt;IO

W.OO.IIIloy

•

•
•
•
•

•

•

llllllond y,.. Will Hipllil
Hnl•nt !It,
l'li~llm ku\1, l"uul 'f'uyli,r
_Nundny Suh1K'll • Ill 11,11t,
BYtflllll • 7 D·lll·
Wi!t.lnc.Uay Setvlco- • 7 p.m.

SUooii)'Sd•"l · 10: 1 ~''"' '
Ylmth~ ! :,'l) pm Sll~
·ttlhl• Smoly ll't\Joo""y 7 ~~~·

Brotlboey rhun:~ ut Chiltl
· ~~~~tllf: Jim littW~tl

8follll111ry MOJI&gt;\I, MWI'I"'rt

U,..ll Ruo lloU..., thul'&lt;h
k!!v. M1u-t. Ml~~ ~
S\ltl\lay Sc hwi - IJ: ~n a.m,
~hi)&gt; ' 11114~ iUll,. 7 ~. ttt
limi'AIIil.y lllhle Study itt\~ Y01.1th . 1 1,,11t

Sultd~tt Sdtuu\. ~: 'tl 11o " '·

"'"'hlp . ll~jij ' ·'"·

Mollolld Ol•,.h utCkri"
Smllla)' Schl'IIJI• ~::UJ tt,m,
11\Jtihll&gt; • I0:lllo,m.. 1 p. n~,

J,•m..l CIIIT FM M•tbndl&gt;l Ckort~·
Mev. ~!! St1~t1tk ~md

R""'"'•rd Cho,.h nf Chrtil

I'"""''Mltlhlll!r:
fit St . ~~. ta&lt; &amp; tlto&lt;lbuty Ku.
nuu, Sllimlblln
Sumt.y Sdmol • ~~.~1 1,01,
llllrwhljl • 8:11!) . ..... 111:!0 ' '"'" 1:110 p,.,,
Wtmn~MdiJ)'

Setvll'ti • 7t(t) ~,m ,·

lllekoryiiU~ Chor&lt;h nf thrill

llYIIr~&amp;!!)l~t Mlh Mnnt't

Sund•y School • v•·••·
WOO!hlt&gt; • IU ' Ill,. ~:.Ill p.tn.
We\Jtte'Mtll)' 51!rVjl~k -. 7 tMft

t.on..•UI• Chrl!lllin Chur&lt;h

~•~lm: M.Q/)et1 Mu ~~~
Stltuhty 811 hLI~.II · ~ : 30 Uti,
w,lhlhll) · l.U: ~o •.tll ,, ?i.W\\.m,
'M!t.lt~"'luy s~rvkt~? : ~tl p.m.

M,.d,.uto Churth 111 t'hriOI
l'~t~IHI :

M ~nt

L, Sll1!1dl

1'·"'' '

Ntlrt111tll wm. ~lljWrl tuetlt.letl!
SUfti.ll&amp;)l WUI\111., • 10: ~0 1,1\1,

f'hurrh of thrill
hu~nl!tt~tl!l 1 ~ttld 12" W
H'fBnaell&amp;lt l'kuni·RS&amp;U'M\'!111
Sun&lt;l•ylltblo Sludy · ~: lO , ,,;,,

Ab1n1d1nl f.1r.l-t M.K i .
'f2j S. ·n,l!\1 St., r~~fllldh.!p.lr1
I•Minr l'c~~~~ t)a\-1~
Su11tlAy ~ervke. ill a m
Wtthtt~day \CI'YlCI!, 7 p llt.

11\blc Sludy. M1lllda)' HKI 11111

s....... ..

SuMny St;"htltll · IU.uu
'MI!lhlp • 9 a.m.
bettiltt'l)
..,il5\\Ji': bewayne Stutler
SUiulay Sd1tll.ll · 10 a.m.

\a111h

The Churth ••f Je11U1

Chrl•lut Lolle,.llo' Sitlol•
81. Mt. IIIII, 446-0241 &lt;Jf 445,14MO
S'"d'Y Sd&gt;wl IMil- it ' ·"'·
Relld Sod~t~lftrtntho.ttl ll :11~- 1 11110
tlotMI

Sik!tlllli!t\1 SetVIL't IJ· IO: I~ ~t .hi .
llrn11~11~11 klr.u ttl\.oeth1g, 1st 1lm~R .. 1 IMI,

ulht · l.tll
Ht, Jolin l.ulhfl'tln Cburth
IJine (jn.Jve

Wt&amp;lnm Aiill Hillir~ Sll .. M.nvi!!Hiwuud\

w,v.

UllYIJ MUNitl\
SU I'Itht)' .!ldklul " I 0100 1.111 .
Wutihlft • II 11.m.
1'11-IUf!

\

Mt, ~.. 1Loth""" t'lturrh
Cvrnt!f Sy11nmu11! ll Second 81.. llt!)Ui!MJY

\\\.&gt;"hlp: IO:JO o.m. onu n:JII Jl.m.
W.dn" "'' btbto !ludy • 7 '"'"·

lb4311.m.

SUn•l11~

· II 'O 1Ut1. and 1 ~ . Ill .
Wcdnc&amp;Uay • 7 1).m.

\I) il.tll .

EO!t Letart

Mlihllt~itt Culttniulilt)' Chun::h
37~ l\!a1·l St., Mltldl ~purt

WOhhlp • 9 a,m.
Wcdnc!ldll.y .. ' f'l •lll·

l--ul tH": Siun Atldcr110n
l1Jt%tdl HI u.m.
l\~clt htij · 7:JOp,m.
Wctl nc ~J d) 5crv-\cll . 1i.ln p.l)l.
~Uitdlty

~'11tlh

1-lolitnes~

Wedncsday.111.m.

Hmrneu H.11w~nn
Suutld}' lh·tnl11~ 7 ruu.
'Hthulla y Scrvlc~ . 7 p.m.

CooiYIIIo Uohod M&lt;~hudlot i'•~o11 ·

14 11 lhldwcmRtt St.. SynK'UIIC

Pa!t ur: U\'!le n Kline
Cikll\'lllc f'hlll\'li

H.tv. Mlki! llitJtHplllmY•~ Ic_ll'
~lmd~ y Sl'htll.ll - 10 a.ln .

~tft!Hil Flflh Sl,

llVuniriM • 6 p.m.

'

WlifshljJ . ~; ~{) R,fll , { t .~t A ~tid Sun),
7:30 p.\H, iJtd ll41h SUI! I
Wcdn\'!sday ~tn'lloe • 1Jj() ~. m .

llortfonl. W.Vo .
Pa~&amp;ur! Oavld dFHt'

.!unuoy S•hoot • 9:30 o,m.
Woolllp . 111:30 . ... 1.. 11011 p,,.,
Wadt~Mloy 8otl'lcto · M il p,1n.

Mt, Oil" Uoltftl Molh!ldtol
Oif 114 bclltnu Wtlk..,lttc
P1Ntur: Re\1, R11lrb Svlre•
~olllloy ~chwt • ~:30 ' ''"'
Wnnhlp • 1 ();~(1 a,ni ., 7 p,m,
'fhu11dAy 81!~ICI!Ji • 1 fMtl,

( IIIII ( " "' ( • ""
tllld
lllllo Hill Md .. R"lno
Pa~tur: lahii!RH~r.tlerl1eld
Hund11~ fMmol· ~~o4~ tt,m,

fl'"'hll • ll p.m.
WeUr!tllliK)' Ser'fl\!11 • 1 p.m.

l'llliliJt! Jlnlil UcAUll!
Sund~ty 8choul · !J1JO a.m.
Wr~tshlp • J It,ttl,, fli.10

r:m.

Mutlllnd thurth orllod

NrrHuH t'lnt t:hul'11h Dl Uud
AJ'If)ltilttd St!6iotttl !II•
Plt~lilf' l M t~v. Oi¥111 Mu~•ll
8umJ1y !Jt:hoctl lnd Wotlihlp- 10 un,

llvonh11 S•rvli:ll• ~:JIJ p.m
Wll&lt;k•&gt;~~•r 5•.. ~•• · ~·.lop'" ·

Jotllll
Putut: Uub Klir!Wif'h
Wur11hlp •lJr10 a.m.
8undoy8d100l-- 10:!0 ' ·""

L&lt;1111 Bfltl"'"
Stihdli}' SchiMJI !#:JO a.m.
Wmohlp • II&gt;JIIo.m.
&amp;

t hu,.h ttf Clod ot l'mplwly
().1. WhllaMd. off 81, MI. II'Jtl

Nlfd•tlllo

e~ tu \Jii s hcd .

Sa""n' ContnuJnflv t:hurch
llcvtng Roud; West Ct;lumbia. W.Va..
..u .~lor · Clyde 1-l!rt"ell
Sutulny Sl'hl"ti'I:JO am
Sundn) c~cnhtg !ltlrvlc~ !1 prn
Wcdnc"d11y ~cl'\'lce 1 pm

l't· uh't' ~"lal
l•enltcnllllll Autmhly
Sl. H.t 124 , l{~tdne
P~t~hJr: WUIIum IIIJbilck

Suudtty Schon\ - HI o.1n.
P..\'cnln~ · 7p.lll.
Wedtte•dll)' Scr\lke~ - 1 p.m.

~YI'ICUIM! l&gt;'l"tllnlied l1rt11bytfrhm
Pu~im

EIUcr Hnl'lc1t Crnw
Suntluy S~ hnul . ltl11 111
W11r~!1ip

• 11 lUll,

Htrril41rt~lll• 1 1 rt~~hyttrilth

Church

Won~IIIJI · \Ium .

Sunduy SchPul 11 :4_, 11111.
l\11ddlt'IH1rll'mbyltn1Mn
Sumhty Schl"-11 · ~ lt.llt.
Wurshl11 • 10 n.111

OlfRI. 124
l'ii ~lor : Ud~cl

Hart
Sunday Schtkll . Q:Jn n.m

Wt1Uhll1 · IO:J() 1Ul\, 11:.10 p,m.

'-rli' ltlh lla1 \~llt'Hii'

WedneMtoy !ller"ViCi!ll - 10 rt.111

Oyft'filll" t'ommunlly Chun:h
Munduy Schuol . 9::\0 lUll
Wtltllhl fl • lih:\0 itrtl., '1 p.m.

Mulhury I H•. W.d ,,' P~1tt1C1uy
l'n ~111 r ; H11y Luwlnshy
Sutunln y Scr-viCCll :
.~nhhalh Sch•K• I. 2 p.m.

llo&lt;kltlllport Churth

Mut'!le Ch1jH!l t:hutTh
Sunday ..elmo\ · llls.m
Wnt~hlp • II !till

Omnd Slrtel
!llurklay "chool· ltl i.ttl
·W•IU\IIti - II a.hl.
W~dneMla,. Senll.'i!l • 8 p,m,

We du cWa~

'finth Churth
Sund11y. •

Sctv!ct . 1 p ru .

Lunl! Hutmm
Sumluy School . Y..111 u.m.
Wotllh ll' · [1);4j 11.h1 , 1;30 p.m
Wcthtc~tloy 1 : ~0 J!.m.

c•. Hu.fil

• 1J:,\Il Uti.
t

ML Ollvt l 'ummunlly ('hurrh
i'tt!tnt' Uwreu,·e Utldt
Sl111~11y

Scltn111 • Y:JO a.h1 .
l~nmlng · 1 p.m.
W!.!tl!tet.luy "ctVIc~ . 7 pm.

Mlddltpurt Churth ol lht NMIJII'ftU!
l'lllkJf; Allctl Mldc•~
SUni.lil~ Sl'huol • 9i30 a.m.
Wu~htp -

IUi30.11,tn., ~ : 30 p.m.

Unll!!d Vollh Churth

. '1 ~. m.

.MI. 7 iliii~J1JII!tuy
1-'a ~ tur :

ltetdttlllr: Ftlh"••hlp
tJ.t~lnt :

Uy- P~t ~ •

Mev. Kuhert B. gml!h . .lir

.llulitluy !'iclmnl - 9 ' "'"·'"

Wur8hlp • HIJU a.m., 1 p. tiL
Wednc~tbl)' Sctvlce - 7 p.m

· thun:h of !he Nautene
1\!tttil Waltltck

Mufltiay Sehoul · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp · 10;0 a,m,, 1 p.m.
WC!dnl!Mllly ~f\'lt.u . 1 jUn.

'

'

l"•llh UtHIPfl Chu~h

Pa!tur; Alleft'Midcap

Sunday :4dloul • 10 ii.tn.
Thursday SerYil'e!l 7 p.m.

New l'hmch l'1kt Sum.lny 11crvice

lliwnNhl~ Nt.l., 4bt1C
suu~llti St!huo~ • 1.111 th.

Wtthtt~Jdliy Sr~h~.tl

t:ht~ter
Ptutllrt Jlltl!! Ul!llllle
Wo~hl~ • y 11.m.

MIMIUII

llltl!l C1immun1ty Churth

Mtll!i COOpot'OII&gt;t Porioh
Nuttht!a!ll Clu~ret

Alln!d

N)'t'IC!UM!

WcdneAdoy Servlct . 7 p.11'

:!U11U11}' Sdn}(ll - II) u.ru.
Wunhlp - II1Ut1.
'h.tc8dll}' Stf\llrtl · 1 p.111

Wuhhl~ - It) 11.m.

llortnortl Chor&lt;h 11f Chrlilln
Chrtollon Uoloo

V11Ury 1'Mhfrtuade ( 'hu~h
Halley kun NmtJ

Pt1~!111 : McY,

11 11.n1.

WttyiiC lhlm lttl

-

t:hun'h

PRMur: 'l'htron Durhnm

Btlhol Chu"'h

Wt1111hlp , II a.m.

Pa..~iur:

Service~; Thurs Nile' 7:00pm

7:J(J 11.1n,

ll•tti!IOhVIIlt! Ct~tnl'ntmlly

MomlhiSIOr

wl)!~hlt) .

~ I 00~ MdJulrt 1-tl.l . P•Jincmy, Ohio

W.\1kln~nn

SUthht)', 2JO '~ I . m ,

Sulltldy Schllill · lo t .m.

Our S.•lour l.oth""" Chur&lt;k

J.

,1\ervt~· l' •· WrJm!~dll)'.

l'tt11lot: Dewayhe Stutler
Sunday S~..ohnttl - 11 o.ttt

Paslnr: Hrlitil

Sdi111tl • ItlitXla.tn.

S1mda~ Scl~tkll •

Pa~tur: l{c y. Mnrgll.rc\

Wor~hl~ . 10:4~ s .llt.
~lblt Study Wtd . 1•1111 p.m,

Mod..

Wt;ll:tllp • \.I;UU ta.lll .
~Utll.l11y

.1'he l\tllt&gt;''fl'll 1 t&gt;'flt.,w~hltt Mlnl!tlfy
Ni!W Lime Rd ., ltl.nland

P.ll~lnfi llrliiH .litt~kHtll
$UIU.Iay S~'hool • 10 &amp;.in.

I

Ood'N 1\&gt;mple or PraiM

lhltMti
Stc\11! Reed
SumJ11YSchuul - 9::m tt.m.
Wllf!!hlJl · Y:JO a.t\1. 1111•1 7 p.m,
Wcllit~8diiy - 1 p.m.
\--&gt;!"Ida)•' fcUow~h-lp ~crvke. 7 p.m.

Ohlti

J-:~~t· M•mi ~

Service' Salunla~· 2 : 1~) ll.lll .

tJ-"1~

PABiot: Ocwayne Stullt!r
· Sund.tt SdllitJI · 9:.\0 aJu.

Wttt~hl~ -

H.t J ~K. Ami~) ll il)'
P1~h'lt

l'~~lol :

t'lllilltl~ &amp;. lJa ~h11n Rd ~.

I altn ll:l\

cun.m. w. v~ .
Sundu)' School · HI :llll,
Wt!t"Shlp - 7 p.m
Wcdttt~ ~.ta )' S~tvkc · 1 p.m.

Full UuNpell'hun:h uf' lhr l..h·lq Satlnr

l'ailh l'ull ll111ptl Churrh

Wll~~hlp • ~ il.h\.

Carmri•Sutlun

Clll'tnn l'~herruu· lt Church

Nelt· Llf't Vll1ory Cfnler

s~rvk&gt;t II nit: Sur~Ja)' 10:31) lUI\ ,
Wl.-thiC&amp;~.htY 1 pm

n,

WcdttcP.rlity Si!~tCif: . 1liM) ~.HI.

l'a&lt;(h\l' Mike Fon~ mRn
Jla,lur: hmcmm l..a...,rcnce Ftll't'mAn
\\\lf'lhir· 10 IM) am
\\!t'dl1~~lt )' Scn1ce~ · 7 p m.

:\71.1 CiC•IrgcN Crt1!k N:o )(ltl, Oalllp.)lil. OH
l'as!~ll': 1\ill Stltlcn
Sunday Scrvke~ - In 11.111. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wedi1C!nJay · 1 11m &amp; Ynuth '1 p.m.

· m . ~ll1

W~ducsda~ S~tt\'h..i!s . 1.0 a.ln .

liij.lur: Nalhilll M1!hin"n'1

M!huuii.I:JU 11,m,

Alflpe Lit\&gt; Cr:nttr
"F\111-tltlllptl Chu~h '1
Jifl ~h ~ J11h" l ~!\II}' Wade
(l(n Sa.'1l1\1l Ave. Mu!K.MI

7 p.m.

Sumtl\y Sd\1)01 • ":30 i\,m,
W\ltBh(!J • 10:30 a,m, tutU fl P·'"·

lllhl• SIOdj, ll'ulli10lkl'1' n:JO

IJ"I" Chu,.h ttl thrill

474.\IJ IMhei Htl.. Che~h!r
Rt\1. Mary and Han.t\d Cook
Sunday Servk'es: 10 a.m. &amp; t1 p.m.
Wedne~d11y SctVict~ . 7 p.m.

RejolrlnM Urt Chun·h
:'\flO N 2ntl AH'., MIJJh.'J"'lft

P!\~11\f'll:

WIHIRm K. Mmhmll

R~lne,

111U!'!tidny. 7:(.111 p.m.

llomol Out .....h Minllltrt,.

~unda y~~hn11l - ~O· ~~ ...
\\\»1hll) . ~: I ~ a.m.

IJttiUp Sluttn

~Unc.ln)' S~:huuh 1.11,\0 li.\11.
Wnfilh~l' N!!rVll't! IOi ~tl il,l\1 ,

~ unlfil)'

PR~ Iut :

Sllvti'I\·Uie Om~munity Churdt
Pii5tQr: Wa)·nc R. Jcwt.' ll
Sunday Scrvk-e~e . IO·f"la 111 . &amp; 7· UO p.m.

ptn

A~h St.. Mido.Uc~- l'tstQr: Glttlil R·~·c
S ~Ullla y S~hdo l · 10:00 a,m.
Sunday S~rvict · 6:(1 I run.
WL'tlilt'sdll)' Strvkt · 7 .UO p.m.

S.lw1 Ctnter

5mltlty \\\)111\lp • ~:.\0 fUn., ' !.lU ''·""
Wct.h~,uay S~tvk&lt;e . 1 : ~0 pJn.

Wedtic'i\loyScnke 7 1llpm

AohSI-Cho....

Mullolld

l\!iltl Sl,·, Mlddlej)l;lt\,

l,.,., lnr: !otn. t&gt;oue l'm.

•

WV
P"lor: IJovtd W, MeCI•In
Nund11y S(lhool IU lttl•
MornlnJ wunhlp 11 -•m llYimlnj • 1 pm
W.dlllli&lt;IIY 7 p,m. •

N,.,.. "'"" Cothotlc Cho,.h

l~

l'•h·ny Kiblt Chun:h
Pt1111Cm) l'ik c. ( 'n- lhl.
l,ll~ l ur : Rc\ Rlad.wnod
Sundny S1. h•'"'l · ~ 'CJum
W•'lr'Ohlp IO :~l) am .. 7:.\11 p.m.

\\'etttlc!!o.la_y: i\~'Wer tnd Ptft~r 1 pm 1

'M~h:htp . IU: ~u A.ltl.

\\'.,ley•• Klblf llillt.... tktl.... ·

F'nmLJm l&gt;u:lrcn~
Ser'1'1\.'\' Fnday. 7 p m

c....,

Y1111th &amp;nii.IJ' ~

Suhday Schuol · 9:1h .m.
'Mnhip - m.....
· Yll,mh 1~\l,,w""ll), S\lhdll)' • f'l p m.

1,ull!tlll~ Se1:Ytcu .

Va~li'H ' R'-'~

..ftmlly l»lllse I!:CI"VI\.'t,: 6 tm'

Sutkhty Sth~11 . -.:J&lt;l a.m.

'M:!dt\\1!\lay Slit\ h.~ - 1;3ti i'Mt\,

f1llh "'r:llnwd\lp I'ru.-dt ror (..'brill

Sunday Wof~hi1, : IO·am

ll.icl. Sprtnp

\1\W!hi~ · tii:JU '""" ?,JQ p.111,

F•lr,·lew Ribll' Church
Ldart , W.Va Kt . 1
lla~lor : tJtian May
Sunday Sdt.:""l \V'\0 a.m.
Wnr,hlp , 7 00 p.m.
Wedne~da) Bi~lc Stul.ly . 7:00p.m.

As~b!Ml! l"'aortot: k1 1-e11 Oavb

~~lot: ktitl'! klk~t·

PIMiln!Y! Klbtt 111111- Churth
Ill "'It; \\IT ~1. Jll
l'ol&gt;lllt: M••·O'llell Monlcy
Sumky S~hi'tll • Y\ \tl Ul'\

t\lft\111\UJII.lt\ • Hltt,m,

nm Amhet·M~I'

~: ~t'le .m .

""""'r .

1\\"'ftlp l!&lt;fl'k.. . ~- ••111.

Y"uth Mlul~tt~r:

(k!·. ,,ty t:.1n11

Wnl'\hip IU 10 am.
Wt'dncsday Scnkc 7 p.m.

1\lppen Plains Ol'lldc School
Pa!llor: ftob barhct

Pa~ror: ktxt ~luwtr
~11'5hij) · 9'J0 111.m
Sunday Sd~}l- 10:33 1.m.

Sundoy
l p.hl.
11\!d.. •"'-Y ~~ •~Mh\i- 1 p.m

s,.,,,.... ' p.m.

St&lt;ond Bopll•l thur&lt;h

( .llllll(H

~~rot; R~t\)

Sunday I'!Chool·

p.m.

VM!tur: Hun H11ath
8und•f Wunhlp • ltl" en,, &amp; p.m,
WtdtMtiidiiY !'lurvk•~t • 7 p ttl.

RIYIIfttiWIIOCI,

"""' ut Silo""' llolt- t kurtll
'-•••li"' t't«k ~d . , l!otlond

1\ippoll Ptol• Churtll "'Ckiltt
ln!!tf\liM!tti!ol

.19~~~

~tllwl\1\)hhljl

Mt ..r.,ttlt

- . ..y

. l'll&lt;ll&lt;IU~ Hlll'll"""l'll~ Rd. IRI . t~:1)
Pt~tUI"' R.t'lfl W•tJOO
Smllloy s.llool • ~ : .lto ••m•

Anllqutlr Dopllil .
Suml11y S~:hnul • ~ t:\ ti11. 1M.
Wurohip , 10:4! ' ·'"·
8undu~ IIVIInhlll.• MX) p.m,
Pt1~!11fl Murk MI.'CtNtltll!

Wc'&lt;ln&lt;lol•y S..Vtc. . HIO p.hl.

fJoo t'llor&lt;~ l!tt'ltiltt

''"'"" ll, t,o..., ()'~l) ••t

Pt.5b.'lt: Rr..h "t'I)'Ait
Su~~ S\.'ho.Jt • 9:JO •.m.
'Mnhlp • II &lt;10 t .m.

I"Mil 1-'llopol
Smtday School · 9 1.m, ·
Wt~ip - In 111 .11\.

· 'Mnhlp • i I ' '""' 7&lt;10 ~m .

'M!tl~-.di\Y Set\!tctll ~ ~~31.) tl.m.

l!lnll S..thtto ........
~ t~ll
l'ikt

1\Wtle.~- Radne Rd.
P.rtur: Michael Duhl
Su!W.y SL'hool . 9:30 a.nl
\\'llnllip - 10.30 a.m.
WOOnelda)' Sco·k"ts - 7:00p.m.

\\\»'!~hip · ~I} Uti,

Sm~)' Sd'rt.Y~ll ~~ ~tltun .

p''""'""~
~··So..toy
~'lllllll -~:~!lo,m,
lll\101\1~ • IQ:.~o .m .. ~: lit~ - "'·

tltli&lt;'l t hnrdt~·,
toto.......,. .tChriot

Pll'llt'lf: Rob Robthron

1'8!1\uti ~i\fl~s Mct{~dt

h....U.w lt,.l,._ 'l/lt'lllist

Sund1yService -l'l: .~ p.m .

. Sumtay Sdmnl - 9 a.m.

l'thoey Plllrloo l'ltlfll
lt.11'1•l1Mtt. H...

P«lllt-kll\tt 11\lt..,,.
t ~ •11ll W Sumloy

Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Suntl11y Schl'IOI 1;U{) a.111.

Mornlui 'Mnh'ip · 10 :4~ a.m,

Httoth IMiddltpol't)

1""1-&lt;t ,.,,..,. •? p.nl.

11\!d,.~~oy

Sm•toy ~ , tll&gt;.IO' ••·

ti'A'St M~l n St.
Su~~tloy S.ltoot • ~~ltl•.m.
-~~ · IO:.lO,,m,

j-

(nHhrrlle N.iW
Pa~t\'lf :

Pol'lhoo;i •1nt l,.,....,,h• Ntr.lrtne
')•sror: William Ju~i~~
S\11\d~}' SChuol-.IO:OIJ a.m.

Sundty Scht.:W . ~0 l.itt
W1hhip -IJ 1.111.

:sm...,.-! p.m,

"'""'' O.fl'

w,,...,,P. 9,30\ .....

~ 1!11'111 llotMht

~~~s - 7pm

Rader

am.

Whllt 'N Cb•~ \\'t~~lfy•ll

&amp;"ttooo- 9.30 am.

.,_, ""'"' ltadt&lt;
S•hday S.:hololl • 10 t .m.
~nhfp . 9 t .m.

1'-tM••

. SoMoy """"~ • 9,30 • m.
Sm.ioy """hip · tn•clllt.m. &lt;\ l p.m.

l l - tlto~thtl'llrlo.l

•w llot~~IM O..t&lt;ll

su~

Putor: Rob 1\ohln~m

llollllllt Holl- 0nm:to
J t~l Slat&lt; ~ ..... \l~. U.t&lt;Vtlt

""""''""Y ~"' .' ""'

S•lllllf Ol.'l lld ' l!:ltli..,
1\llMII~ • It • .m. 01111 ~I'""
\\WI~ S...i&lt;~ • l

S••llloy lkltoot • 9::10 o,m,
1\\..,.tp . ~: l~•.m.. ~~•m &lt;\ ?:00 p.m.
·
IIW\'"1\ioy S.rvt'"' . l~ ""'·

Suhday

Sunday~""")' · 9~ 30
WoBhi1~ 7 p.nr.

Chrdo .r tile NourtM
~sror kev, Samuel W. Bfosyt

1\\.lnlllp . II '-"'-

Sohday 11\l!1!1\lp--11HIO •··" '·

~ """ ~1i141
"'' Hon
\'ooll\"""""
Mllli""'
Silt...
&gt;lot""
s~ ~'llool . 'Iolii•.,.,
llllMiill· ~d~. ltl:.lllo ...., l p.m.

PI5~X" Re\' Rogt!r WillfOrd

IIIJnhlp I0,30t.m .• ~, l0p .m .

C...iMolt:IO......

lllt•ill'l'&lt;rl 0..,... ol'tltriM

•

It-

lbJd Kouh ~ \ltl ('o. Rd )1

~.daySM·Ice5 - 7 p m

S\lnday School - tflun.
Plt.lt\'li'~ ~ltW: ~·..
~hln Slred 1 1\utl~;v.t

......_ " - ' llllolion

[0.........

~!1\'M': k~ill\

~ S&lt;llo.~ , II ' ·"''
\\\..,..., ' lito..... ~" l't\.
-.~ ll&lt;fii..'H ' l p.m.

M•~-.

SUnday Sd'toOI - 9 : ~ a.m.
~ - lla.m .. 6p.m

ilot-·

}~~011-l -1\11.

-

••net

It••·

~ """""""u...... ol'tloriltl

•

II you wllh, ~elect one or the follow in I t'REE
below to
accompany your trlbule.
t. We hold you In our thouahtaand memorlc1 foreYer.
2. May Ood cradle you In Hlaa1m1, now and fore•er.

!lll ~- Mill• ~ , .......,~
l - . -'1&lt;1, !ltv. l&lt;tithorin -

Soo&lt;l&amp;y!ldorl · .,~· ...

\\\......,. 1\l&gt;lllo.M, ~ ~-'"·
~~S...Im · l~....

FFA members recognized

We will publlah a special page devoted to those who are gone but not forgotten. They will be
similar to the ~ample below:

~-~\\!: ~ Sl.

,U..N--

,_,toi':Rev. H~rt Grate

~ Bob li\tlhii\1!.WI
SUn.ity St.~ -1} :4~ t.WI.
%ni\ip . II un.
~Y Sen~"" -7•30 p.m .

I Ill'' "l',d
r.-. ~ t~to~tto

of l'IM!ol

~ifj- ...~ " " " '

s...~- 5&gt;lo 111m ... 41ol':IO .,,.,

$\It~~ ~ IJ~Mt '""''
llllMIIr • 10:"4:lo.nl,

RACINE - Members of Wilson with the Leadership Schuefer, T.J, Moore, and Tim
the Racine-Southern FFA Award, and Tim Cogar, Adam Cogar; Urban soil judging
Chapter were recently recol!- Lee, Lori Sayre, Aaron . team was Lori Sayre, Joe
nized for their ell'orts over the Sellers, Tyler Johnson, T.J: Adkins, Richard Murphy and
past school year,
Moore, Mario Schaefer. and John Bentz; the rural soil jud·
· Gr.eenhand Degrees were Amy Wilson with the scholar- lng . team was T.J. Moore,
presented to John Bentz, Nic ship award. · ·
Tyler Johnson, Alan Moore.
Richard
Career Development events and Adam Lee.
Nottingham.
Murphy, Willie Morris, Jackie allow students to demonstrate
Proficient~ awards were
Gloyd, CodY. Lang. Adam what they learned by doing. 'iven to Lon Sayre, account·
McDaniel, Nakki Riffie, Billie T.J. Moore was recognized mg: Tyler Johnson. forest
Jo Rizer, Aaron Sellers, Fronk for her extemporaneous management~ Lori Sayre,
Shamblin, Matt Strong, Derek speech and Lori Sayre, pre- diversified
crop: Tyler
Teaford and James Werry.
pared speaking. Members of Johnson, nursery; Lori Sayre,
Chapter FFA degrees were the Parliamentary Procedure forage production: Tim
presented to Cussie Cleland, Team, which placed gold at Cogar, lawn care: Lori Sayre,
Tim Cogar, Adam Lee, Kenny District I0 competitions, were vegetable production: Amy
McKnight, Richard Murphy, Lori Suyre, Tyler Johnson, Wilson, ag·sales; Lori Sayre,
Nic
Nottin$ham,
Joey Alan Moore, Maria Schaefer, ag-entrepreneurship.
Phillips, Maria Schaefer, Tom T.J. Moore, Amy Wilson, Tim
Class awards were present·
Sheppard, J.O. Smith, Matt . Cogar, Richard Murphey and ed to Adam Lee and Tim
Smtth, Matt Thomos and Joun Bentz.
Cogar, electricity; John
Robbie Weddle. ·
Richard Murphey partici· Bentz, Alan Moore and Frank
Tim Cogar received the Star paled in the Production Job Shamblin. small engines:
_ Grecnhand Award und T.J . Interview
while Marin Tyler Johnson, Lori Sayre,
Moore received the Star Schaefer was involved in the T.J. Moore. nnd Amy Wilson,
Chapter FFA Degree.
Ag·Science Job Interview.
ag·technology;
Derek AWARD RECIPIENT- Joan Wolfe, right, representing Peoples Bank, presents T.J. Moore with
· Recognized at the local
The following teams were Teaford, Nikki Riffle, Jackie a savings bond for obtaining the Star District State In agribusiness. (Submitted)
" level, but presented at the also recognized: Ag·engineer- Gloyd, f,lgriculturol science;
state level were State D~ree ing members were. Tyler Adam McDaniel, Maria
recipients .Joe Adkins,
ler Johnson, Jan Wise and Joe· Schaefer, Billi Jo Rizer,
Johnson, . and Travis art. Adkins; Co-op teum members Aaron Sellers, and James
Lori Sayre was designated ns were Joe Adkins, Lori Sayre; Werry, a~ ·ed woodworking:
Star District State in produc· Amy Wilson, and Jan Wise; · Nic Nottmgham, J.O. Smith
tion wwhile T.J. Moore was the farm business manage· and Matt Smith, ug-ed ~eld·
presented the Star District ment team members were lng.
State in agribusiness.
Amy Wilson, Lori Sayre, T.J.
Hona.ry Chapter FFA
Tyler Johnson was present- Moore, and Jeremy Hill: the Degree recipients were Drew
cd with the Travis Adams grain merchandising team Williams, Jim Essex and .Bub
Achievement Award. Amy was Tyler Johnson, Muriu Simpson.

IMO.,.,

I II) Clooftlo

~O......

Aoi&gt;W)' I'S)'""'")

~~ ' '"·"'·

.

... ll(ltlt Mti'UIIlltttlt..
""'"' koloitllt"' U...ltol.lt.......

~-•) Se!vitt• · 1 p.m.

~Ooioolt&lt;'

"""'"''
IAit)&gt;
~
~ ~':lt!UI

KtX1o KOlll.lt. llut&lt;lo
~ lh.llii.W"'OO"""
.....~........, 11\l':lOI'tl\.:- .._. l'lQ""'

-

Par.ror: Jll\ lAvtndtr
Sundar Sdlool - 9,30 LM.
Wonhip IO:!a l .i'A. t:ft!l t'lp.nt

I

ht\C..~~Owold.

Stlvtr Ridp
Btble &amp;~)' 9 1.m. Sundl)'
Cal"'eta .M~ttdtncNiil... doMI CUM
Klng5bury Rood
'Pt!iiOJ: Ruben Vanct.
Su,dd)' Schf)&amp;)! • 9·30 • .m.
~;n;t'llp ~rvk~ IO;)Qt.nt.
Evenina ~M.'f 6 p m•

.........yt:\ord, .... N_ _

1'11-.Jone lleonit .
Sulldly Sdlool • 9 ' ·"'·
\l\lhllt; 10 .....
11....t.ys.mc..-7,30pm.

( llllllli Ill ( 1111'1

.......'-

1llt Deily Sentinel • PtA! A5

""""" ......

•.

s-ay~ · IO:lQ~""
II\.._ ' f::!!l ....

ltotlootl

for achievement

h l..l\.011., \ f .... VJ t1C~~~ U.&gt;.t .... r,t

nw.mycllllvftnHDif.com

•

·Ra.dne-SoUthem FFA

i

I uilt·d Brl'lhn·u
Mtllnltwn Uillled 8rtthrtn
IH Chritt Churth
Th~nt CtJtnmunlly 3641 1 Widhnril Hd
PIL~ItJr . Mohcrt SMttdt!OI
Sunday SciHKII Y. \() ll.nt .
Wm shlp · 111:.111 run .. 7:nu I' ·"'
Wedncl&amp;lluy .~Ct\lke~ 7:00 p.rn .
Eden Unlltd Urdhrr:n In Chrl•t
2 l/2 mile ~ nmth ot k ccd~v lll c
on Shue H1•ulc 124
Pu~lur: Kc v, knhc11 Markley
Sundn~ Sd1110l · I J a.m.
SUtllluyWuu hiJI I UOOt~m &amp; 71JOp.hi.
Wctlnei'(IU)' Sc r v l d~• . L'() p.m.
W1.'tlnc!Mia)' Yuu!h Scrv k c 7::10 p.m.

Pull Ou•pel Ltplhoo..
:Hn4~

Uil.iiud ktlikl; l'umcroy
ltuy Hunlct
Surklay Sdtool - 10 a.m
1'11~tot:

Mrro'"'' ChuJ&lt;h 111 th1 Nw"'"'
Ptt81ut Mlkt Adklfi~
~uiKlly ~chuol • 9:M1 a,m

avenintl1 : ~ p.m.
ThttW)' &amp; 'thutAday - 1:30 p.m.

Wlit!!hltt - IO:Jd a.ttt 1 ft p.ttt
Wtdlitllda)' Sefllk.'i!s • 7 ~. tit.

St1Uth Bethel C?mmunlty Church

' .

The DaUy Sentinel
Wilh Fondeet Memoriee
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family Services ia aeeking proposals to
provide a summer youth program to eligible youth age 14·18 consi1tent with federal,
1tate and local guidelines for the Temporary A11i1tance for Needy Families (TANF)
program. Youth who reside in Meigs County and whose family in~ome does not
exceed 200% of the federal po~rty index are eligible for participation. Program costs
must not exceed $100,000.00 for the period beginning 1une 1, 2002. It is expected that
the progtam will enroll 60 youth and provide employment at $6. U per .hour. Actual
enrollment 'i t expected to begin no later than June lS, 2002. Adftliniltrative costs may
not exceed lS% of the total contract award . For a copy of the Guidelines for Propoun,
Profile of Proposer and Proposed Budget Format contact Jane Banks at the Meigs
County Department of Job &amp; Family Services at (740) 992-lll7 ext. 106.
Proposals shall be submitted to Jane Banks, Meigs Co~lty l)epartment of Job &amp;
Family Services, P.O. Bo" 191, 17S Race Street, Middlepo.t, 0Jl4576C&gt;'no later tlll111
May 29, 2002· at 12:00 noon. The Department reterves the right to reject any or all
propotals. In accordance with 29 CPR part 31,32 Meigs County Department of Job &amp;
Family Services is prohibited from discrimination on the ba1is of race, color, national
origin,""· age, religion, political belief or dilllbility.

' .

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS

DEADLINE: FRIDAY, )lAY 17, 12 Noon

r--------..------------..,..-------------·-·.
Plea~e

•

publish my tribu1e In the special Memory Paae on Friday, May 24.

Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

.areaforb
1\ea( estate

Relationship to me~------------­ Number'of selected ver•----11

21U.Ieoond

Dale ofblnh,~:------------...:....- Dllt of pual!t&amp;...-----i

here------------------------il

Addreu _ _ _.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone number.:-----Cily

Statet---- LIP---I
Make Check Payable to THE DAILY SENTINEL

L-----------------;...------------•.,--.. --·-···.11
·I

'

EastMaln
Pomeroy, Oh

White
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street

Coolville, Ohio

';MIH'I-41

~"'"

174 Layne Street
New Haven, wv 28285

L..l7~~~-6~6~7~·J~J~JO~_E==~H.:A~~~

filii,,~,

f'f,.riAI

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W

•lat ttl h;ld I,IOU~ lllQughll •1111 ti'Pf!l•l ellt~

812·3715

Nanieof~asell-------..;...-------------il

Print yourn«me

Mt•Yflf County~

212 E. Mlln Bti'Nt
Pomeroy

74().002-2844

Brogtn•Wamer .
INSURANCE
81!AVICEB
2141. Main
H2·1130

HOW

IWIIHIR &amp; LOHII
FLOWER
PHARMACY
106 BumRHUT AVE.
WI Fill Doctor1'
Po~OY,OH 992-6454
PrHCrlptlont
'Flowers for all occaaions"
892·2855 .
Pon,.ro1~·1

Dlffllty IIHI IMVIO. AIWIY'

1HN2ndAve.
Mldcl-rt, OH

882·2121

992·7028

tl!etlllii11Mc11 113

6naaflrr'•
~lrr '6alttp

lnQel's Carpet

NUl-. ..
t ...........

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

f'"l .....

.....

740·992-6298

arace
for thee: for m11
strenath Is made
Perfect In weakness.
II Cor. 12:9
Otflc1 S.rvlcE &amp; Supply
137.C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport~ OH
992-6376
•

�.
'

Page A&amp;

Opinion

· The Daily Sentinel

'

friUy, Miry 17, 2001

•
•

B=-f the Bend

_The_oa_ny_Sen_tin_ei_ _ _

'ava.

•

,

DEAR ABBY: The letter from
"Stephanie in Delaware," regarding
the compliment she received in high
• school, reminded me or a compliment that changed my life.
,
Last September, I was flying
• home from Pittsburgh. I am one of
those "oversized" women who take
up the entire airline seat. The plane
had , three . seats on one side. of the
aisle. Two .seats on the other. I had
the win~ow seat on the side with
two seats.
A $ood·looking gentleman (if you
constder a Cary Grant look-alike
good-looking) sat down beside me.
He r,-eeted me with a "Good inom·
. itig,' and a great smile. As he buckled his seat belt, he said, "I always
feel cramped in these seats. Would
you mind if I raised the armrest
between us?" l know he didn't feel
cramped. He wanted to make sure I

Ohio·Valley Publishing Co.

.

.

Den Dickerson
Publisher

'

Ch•rlene.Hoeflich
Gener11 Manager

.I

'

Diane Kay Hill

'

Controller

lAltlrJ to llrf! ftliltH' ,,. 14•doowre. Tll•y sho•ld b~ ltu tha11 J(J(j words. At! lfnfn
tlf'f twbjtd '" filit1111 and must bt siglf«&lt;.aftd lnclf1dt. adJr•u a ltd rdt~phot~f! lflllll~er.
No ddfrtft ldtBt wii/IH publiJir,/. Uttf!rJ !hould bf! in good ltlllt, tld4n~tllfl
fu~t~~,

A

1101 p«NrntflliHfl .

n, .lliDIIl f!%prtnld in tht column bf!IO.., an llrt constmur u/thf! Ohio Yaii•J

Mlilltlreg

Co.~

tditorlal board. u11l"'' othtnvist~ nutul.

I
'

NATIONAL VIEW

'

Hitch
Government as matchmaker
concept is flawed
, • Star Tribune, Minneapolis, on welfare to marriage: To
; - further reduce. welfare rolls, President George Bush wants to
· put $100 million into counseling the poor into marriage. Some
' members of Con~ress agree; they're looking to spend five
· times that much f1guring out how to nudge low-income part,: ners into matrimony. ... ·
: We're all for marriage and for preserving healthy, stable
: families. And. ... welfare policies should not penalize married
:- couples . ...
• But the government-as-matchmaker concept is flawed.
• State-sponsored marital counselors shouldn't be in the busi: ness of encouraging a spouse or unmarried partner to remain
'· in an abusive relationshtp, for example. ...
· ·
: A recent "Fragile Families" study of 5,000 children of
: unwed, poor parents found that most of the men lacked edu; • cation, h!id spotty work records and had drug and alcohol
: problems. They had a tendency to drift from partner to part;~ ner. Some 40 percent of them had been in jail, further reducing their employment prospects. Expecting marriage to solve
• all of those problems is unrealistic.
: Marriage ts a good thing, provided it brings together good
·: partners. But it cannot, by itself, turn bad to good ....
:· Government agencies could waste precious time and
: resources campaigning for .unions that are likely to fail and,
· worse yet, put poor families in even deeper trouble. A more
·. appropriate role for the state is to address the core issue, not
: push people down the matrimonial aisle.
• Low-income families, whether the parents are married or
.: not, need government help to earn a living wage. That's the
·' best, most effective way to combat poverty.
'

:• TODAY IN HISTORY
•
•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, May 17, the I37th day of 2002. There are
: 228 days left in the year.
.
: Today's Highlight in History: ..,
· .
:. On May 17, 1792, the New·'York Stock Exchange was
' : founded by brokers meeting under a tree located on what is
: now Wall Street.
• On this date:
.: In 1875, the.tirst Kentucky Derby was run; the winner was
"Aristides."
.
In 1938, Congress passed the Vinson Naval Act, providing
·
.
for a two-ocean navy.
: In 1939, Britain's King George VI and Queen Elizabeth
; arrived in Quebec on the first visit to Canada by reigning
·
.
: British sovereigns.
: In 1940, the Nazis occupied Brussels, Belgium, during
• World War 11.
In 1946, President Truman seized control of the nation's
railroads, delaying a threatened strike by engineers and trainmen.
; In·1948, the Soviet Union recognized the new state of Israel.
: 'In 1954, the Supreme Court ruled in its Brown vs. Board of
: Education of Topeka-decision that racially segregated public
: schools were inherently unequal .
.
: In 1973, the Senate opened its hearings into the Watergate
• scandal.
·
In 1980, rioting that claimed 18 lives erupted in Miami's
Liberty City after an all-white jury in Tampa acquitted four
former Miami police officers of fatally beating black insur: ance executive Arthur McDuffie.
: In 1987, 37 American sailors were killed when an Iraqi war: plane att;~cked the U.S. Navy frigate Stark in the Persian Gulf.
• (Iraq and the United States called the attack a mistake.)
: Ten years ago: Pro-democracy protests began in Thailand;
. in four days of clashes with troops, 44 people reportedly were
killed, although activists char~ed tbat hundreds died.
. Orchestta leader Lawrence Welk dted in Santa Monica, Calif.,
:at age 89.
·
·
: Ffve yeal'll ago: Rebel ·leader Laurent Kabila declared him·
: self president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, for~ merly Zaire. Russia's Mi! space station got a new o~ygen generator and a fresh Amencan astronaut, courtesy of the space
shuttle Atlantis. "Silver Charm" won the Preakness, two
• weeks after winning the Kentucky Derby. (However, Silver
: Charm failed to win the Belmont Stakes.)
.
,
: One year a11o: President B11sh unveiled his energy plan, ·
: bracing Amencans for a sum_mer of blackout~ . layoffs, busi• ness closings and skyrocketing fuel costs and warning of "a
darker future'' without his aggressive plans to drill for more
oil and gas and rejuvenate nuclear power.
• Today) Birthdays: Former Watergate special prosecutor
• Archibald Cox is 90. Opera singer Birgit Nilsson is 84. Actor: director Dennis Hopper is 66. Rhythm-and-blues singer
: Pervis Jackson (The Spinners) is 64. Singer Taj Mahal is 60.
· • Singer-songwriter Jesse Winchester i.s 58. Actor Bill Paxton is
47. Boxing Hall-of-Farner Su~ar Ray Leonard is '46, Actorcomedian Bob Saget is 46. Smger Enya is 4 L Actor Craig
: Ferguson ("The Drew Carey Show") is 40. Singer-musician
• Trent Reznor (Nine Inch Nails) is 37. Rhythm·aJ1d·blues
:musician O'Dell (Mint Condition) is 37. Acttess Paige Turco
: ("The Agency") is 37. Singer Jordan Knight (New Kids on tbe
Block) is 32. Rhythm-and-blues singer Darnell Van ~ensalier
(Shai) is 32. Actor Hill Harper is '29. Thought for TOday: "A
burning purpose attracts others who are drawn along with it
; and help fulfill it." ,;_ Margaret Bourke-White, American
pltotojoumalist ( 1904-1971 ).

. - ..•

MAPS to
~CRIME
==::::::::::::::::::::::::=1 SCENES OF
t~S7:4RS
.,

•'•

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
was more comfortable.
During our flight, he complimented me on my hairstyle and the
"lovely dress" I was wearing. His
remarks had a lasting effect ·on me,
Abby. Since that flight, I have lost
23 pounds, thanks to a gentleman
who didn't scowl at an overweight
woman, but instead, made her feel
attractive. - SLIMMING FAST
~FLORIDA

Furniture deliverers move heavy
DEAR SLIMMING FAST: It's would be in their best interest if
not the first time an attractive man their dad knew how they felt about objects like couches, armoires and
has provided the incentive for a their stepmom. Your advice would beds •• and they often assemble the
woman to do the right thing. Or the be appreciated. - «;:ONCEftNED items they deliver. Sometimes
MOM IN CENTRAL CALIFOR· they're also willing to haul unwantwrong thing, for that matter.
ed furniture and appliances off the
DEAR ABBY: Should I tell my NIA
DEAR MOM: Instead of being premises.
·
ex-husband that our sons (8 and II)
What's your opinion, Abby? Is
told me the~ hate his new wife and the town crier, urge your sons to
"can't watt · for them to get speak for themselves and tell their tipping necessary?- TWO GUYS
father why they feel as they do. If . IN MINNESOTA
·
.
divorced"?
DEAR GUYS: Tipping isn't
Although the boys didn't tell me it's possible for rour ex-husband to
NOT to say anythmg, I don't want encourage his wtfe to build a better mandatory. However. if the delivery
to break a confidence, or worse yet relationsnip with the boys, it would person has done u good job and
- make things more awkward than be a far more effective motivator nothing is damaged, and some items
they already are at their dad's than anything you could say.
required assembly. I see no reason
DEAR ABBY: My buddy and I why a gratuity should . not be
house. The boys are with them
have an ongoing debate about offered.
every other weekend.
Pauline Pili/lips and ller daughter
Their stepmother is very moody whether it's necessary to tip a per·
and seems to enjoy belittling chil- son who delivers furniture . Jeanne Phillips sllare tile pseudo·
dren - including her own teen- Everybody knows that pizza deliv· . nym Abigail Va11. Br~re11. Wrrle Dear
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other kinds of delivery peOple us P.O. Box 69440,
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ws

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

WEST'S VIEW

Hate speech is not dvic discourse} even on college campus
From San Francisco State University .
comes a report that should shock
America. It is an open Jetter from
Laurie Zoloth, director of the university's Jewish Studies Program, describing
a place that has become, in Zoloth's
words, "a venue for hate speech and
anti-Semitism" - namely, her own
campus. Such hmh phraseology must
not be taken lightly. "Hate speech" may
be a term sometimes slung around like a
careless cudgel to squelch deb"te, but ft
COLUMNIST ·
accurately labels the acid invective she
describes at SFSU. So, too, does the
more loaded term "anti-Semitism.''
dents that drew hundreds of people Zoloth conveys what it's like for ber when what Zoloth describes as "a large,
to walk the grounds of an American
~ampus she says. is papered with "maps angry crowd of Palestinians and their
· dl E
d
·
de supporters" descended on a group of
of tIte Mtd e ast that o not tnclu
about 50 rally participants who had
Israel, past posters of cans of soup with stayed behind to pray, talk and clean up.
labels on them (depicting) drops of The pro-Palestiman grd!p approached
blood, labeled 'canned Palestinian chil- the Jews, screaming slogans that SFSU
dren meat, slaughtered according to Pr 'de R0 be
c ·
Jewish rites under American license.'"
est nt
rt A. om~an has since
She recounts "poster after poster calling · described in his own r.ubltc letter about
out 'Zionisrnracism, and JewsNazis."' . tbe event as being 'too bate-filled to
repeat." Zoloth puts some of them on
"This is not civic discourse, this is not the .record: "Get out of here or we will
free speech," she writes. ''This is the kill you!" "Go back to Russia!" and
Weimar Republic with brown shirts. it "Hitler did not finish the J'ob'!''
cannot conttol. This is the casual intto·
f h
d' a1 blood J'bel
Zoloth goes on to depict a scene
ductton
1
and familiar from historic accounts of
o t e me tev
virulent hatred smeared around our
· ·
d'
h · czarist Russia or Nazi Germany, but not
campus tn a manner so or mary t at tt from life in America: She recounts the
hardly excites concern - except if you e~perience of being among· a group of
are a Jew, and you understand hateful
· words have always Jed 10 hateful Jewish students "trapped in a corner of
deeds."
·
the plaza, grouped under the flags of
·
f
Israel, while an angry, out-of-control
She wntes in the wijke o such a deed. mob, literally chanting for our deaths,
Last week, she contmues, "the hatred surrounded us."
coalesced in a hate mob.'' It happened
after a May 7 rally _ a peaceable proWhere were the ~lice? Where was
Israel gathering organized by Hillel stu- the administration? 'The police told me

Diana
West

that they had been told not to arrest anyone," Zoloth writes, "and that if they
did, 'it would start a riot.' I told them
that it already was a riot.'~ Frankly, the
rampage she describes sounds alarmingly like the beginnings of a pogrom.
Indeed, as SFSU President Corrigan
.wrote, "This group became so threatening in gesture and hostile in language
that we interposed a police line between
the groups.''
That same "we" - · as iil university
officials- however, remained at a safe
distance..
·
"Not one administrator came to stand
with us," Zoloth writes, adding: "I knew
that if a crowd of Palestinians or black
students bad been there, surrounded by
white racists screaming racist threats,
shielded by police, the faculty would
have no trouble deciding which side to
stand on.'' Her analysis is as troubling
as·it is insightful.
An armed ~lice escort was the only
way to provtde safety for the Jews. If
you call that safety. I call it an outtage.
It is not just the existence of such Jewhatted that poses a threat to civil society, but the unabashed, unchecked and
virtually unremarked-upon exercise of
it. Corrigan says disciplinary measures
will be taken against violators of the
university code. Good. More im~rtant,
though, is for one and all to dectde, resolutely, that such offenses against
democracy require acting, and not waiting to take a stand.

(Diana West is a' columnist and
editorial writer for The Washington
Times. She can be contacted via
dwest@washingtontimes.com.)

SAINTS AND SINNERS

At least one laugh on Sunday can do a world ofgood .
Most of us think we have a sense of
humor. You can get into a pretty good
argument, of course, over what a sense
·.
of humor is.
If a person doesn't. think something
is funny that we think is funny, we are
likely to say, ''The trouble' with him is·
tbat he doesn't have a sense of humor."
When people get philosophical about
what they consider a se.nse of bumor to
be, they will say it is the ability to
lau~h at oneself and not to take life.too
senously. The man who can laugh at .
his mistakes is a mao with a sense ,of
humor.
Most of us would like to be like that.
The trouble is, .we bave learned that if
you laugh off too many of your mistakes at the office, you will be fired.
So, we have found 11 wiser to defend
our slipups O( blame them on somebody else. It's a matter of survival.
But if we cannot afford to laugh at
our own mistakes, we can make li~ht
of other people's mistakes- espectally wben they affect us.
.
Suppose you are a husband and you
come home to find the house a mess,
no supper on the table and your wife
tells you the car is down at the end of
the street, out of gas.
You smile and say, "So, what else is
new, hoqey?" And you plant a big kiss
on her face.
..
Sir, you bave a sense of humor that is
guaranteed to make you a popular mao
and sure to give you a happy wife.
Humor in church is something else.
To some people that is no laughing
matter, amounting to disrespect for the
sacred.

Frtd•Y• Mlly 17, 2002 ·

Ubman sheds extra pounds on manS words ofpraise

The Daily· Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh.lo
740..892·2156 • Fex: 740..992·2157
www.mydellyaentlnel.com

· PageA7

Humor of Christ" (Harper .San
Francisco, 1976), pictures Jesus as ·
keeping his listeners in stitches whenever he told the story of the Pharisees
who had a habit of being overly particular about unimportant things while
. overlooking the tbings that matter.
They strain what they drink, said
Jesus, so they won't swallow a gnat but
ther will eat a camel and· not even
noltce.
To an Oriental, suggests Trueblood,
COLUMNIST
this could be "wildly funny," as he
ima~ines "the camel's long hairy neck
slidmg down the throat of the Pharisee
There are only three passages in the - all that loose-hung anatomy, the
Bible wbere God is pictured as laugh- hump, the legs .... " A real knee-slaping. And in all three instances it is a per!
laugh of derision, not a happy laugh.
Whether Jes'!s . told jokes or not,
There are no references to smiling or most of the arttsttc representations of
laughter in the New Testament except him reveal a solemn face and show
to protest against it. Luke warns, "Alas only the faintest smile.
for you who laugh, you shall weep and
Is the Reader's Digest right that
mourn.'' James advises, "Tum your "laughter i~ the . best medicine"?
laughter into mourning and your gaiety Autbor-editor Norman Cousins would
into gloom.''
vouch for that. In bis book, "Anatomy
Chrysostom told the people of of An Illness" (Bantam Doubleday
Antioch, "We are not assembled Dell Publishing, 1991 ), he tells how he
together to burst into peals of laughter used laughter tO help overcome a seribut to weep for our sins."
ous illness that threatened his life. Is
Wby these taboos against laughter? laughter also therapeutic for the soul'1
It goes back to earliest Christian times.
"'Seriousness alone is stultifying,"
Many early Christians in the Greek and says one writer. "It intensifies anxiLatin churches had pagan upbringings ety."
that made them naturally light-hearted,
If that is true, the minister who doesand the church fathers had to educate n' t give us at_least one good laugh on
them in the seriousness of Christian Sunday mommg may be compounding
behavior.
our troubles instead of helping us.
Did Jesus tell jokes? It depends on
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist
wliich Bible scholar you listen to. for
Newspaper
Enterprise
Elton Trueblood,, author of "The Association.)

George
PIagenz

Community Calendar Is service, Saturday. Family
published as a free ser· fellowship dinner at 6 p.m. MIDDLEPORT
vice to non-profit groups Praise and worship service, Middleport Church of lhe
wishing to announce at 7 p.m. Pastor William Nazarene will hold a gospel
meetings and special Marshall invites public.
contest May 19 at 6:30 p.m.
events. The calendar Ia
Th p·
cid Bo
·11
not designed to promote LONG BOTIOM - . e lne "" ge . ys WI
..lea or fund·ralsers of Forked · Ruo S~ortsmen's sing. Pastor' Alan Midcap
invites
public.
any type. Items are printed · Club's · annual ids fishing Refreshments will · be
only.aa apace p8nnlts and derby Saturday, 9 a.m. until
cannot be guaranteed to noon at the Sportsmen's served.
be printed a specific num- Club pond.
ber of clays.
SUNDAY
POMEROY- Steve Uttle
FRIDAY
RACINE .,.... Racine Board will be preach1ng al the
of Public Affairs, regular ses· Freewill Baptist Church,
sion, Friday, at the municipal Ohio 7 and Story's Run
Road, Sunday, 7 p.m.
building, 10 a.m.
E;veryone welcome.
SATURDAY
.
RUTLANo_:_
Revival,
RACINE - MeigS County
Retired Teachers, noon Rutland Church of the
Saturday, Star Mill Park, Nazarene, Sunday through
Racine, potluck picnic. Rain Wednesday, Sunday ser·' or shine, shelter ts available. vices, 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
Musical program by the p.m. Monday, fuesday and
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Rev.
"Uplifters.
Mervin Smith, evangelist;
singers, The Sisson Family.
WILKESVILLE
Wilkesville United Methodist Paslor Sam Basye invites
Church, praise and worship public.

Refreshments.
POMEROY
Veterans
MONDAY
LETART
Letart Service Commission meel· WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Meigs
Township Trustees, Monday, ing, 9 a.m. Monday, al lhe
5 p.m. at the office building. office, 117 Memorial Drive. County Board of Health spe·
cial meeting Wednesday, 5
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs · POM~.ROY - Pomeroy p.m. in the conference room ·
County . Right to Life, Chaple,J 186, OES regular al the Heallh Department.
Middleport Church of Chrisl, meeting, Monday, 7:30 p.m. Purpose of the meellng is to
Take items for auction . . discuss personnel issues.
7:30 p.m. Monday.

SATURDAY••• 10 AM TO 8 PM! SAVE!

SOCIETY NEWS
AND NOTES

:.cup

•'

Ribbon Contest for a second
year In a row. TOPS State of
Ohio 2001 Best Average
Weiaht Lon Chapter Award
COOLVfi.LE- TOPS OH was pretented to ToPS IK&gt;H
2013, Coolville, held Its 2013 with 11.32 pounds per
·· weeki): meeting · at the member.
' Coolvtlle Elementary School
recently, with 27 members in
attendance.
The weekly best loser .
award went to Stacey Scott.
She received a fruit basket
• and Certificate. Those losing
NELSONVILLE - Flat
weight for six ·consecutive
pick
~itar players can vie for
" weeks were ~ven a charm.
tbe
btle
of Ohio Flat Pick
•· Barbara Gilchrist presented
.
· Guitar Champion at tbe
a program on water.
The will move to its new Hockbocking Folk Festival on
meeting place at the Torch Saturday, June I at Robbins
Crossin~
on
Hocking
Baptist Chw:ch on May 28.
College
s
campus
irt
The group recently had 17
Nelsonville.
members attend TOPS Area
The contest begins at I p.m.
Recognition Day in Lancaster.
and
is limited to 15 contesThis year's theme was '1'0PS
tants.
Phone and e-mail regisHearts are Happy Hearts.''
Doris Buchanan was recog- trations will be accepted and
. nized in the Hike 'n' Bike if any slots are open, contesRecognition for walking tants will be permitted to reg4,200 miles in one year. ister until 12:30 p.m. before
·
Melody Cozart won second the contest begins.
The
competition
was
held
place for the Program Cover
Contest. Mary Franks was during tbe Paul Bunyan Show
recognized as Chapter Angel for more than 20 years, but
for being a supportive mem· wben the Hockhocking Folk
Festival was established the
ber to the group.
Gilchrist was presented event fit the music; culture
with the Coordinator's Award and heritage tbenie so the
for being a Losing Leadel' and move was made. according to
• having a weight loss ~ last Russ 1i~ dean of Hocking
year's ARD. Carol Bella was Colleges School of Natural
recognized as Chapter Queen. Resources, who formerly
Ben Franks n::ceived rea&gt;gni- coonlinaled the contest.
Contestants need not be
tion as being a Men's Area
Ohio
residents and there is no
Division winner. Beha. Patty
Gabriel, Gilchrist, Cindy age restriction. They will be
Hyde and Sharon Powell par- judJed on arrang~t, exeticipated in the Bef~R and cunon and articulation, sbow
After Parade and the Greatest value and overall impression.
Improvement
contest. Thtte is no entty fee.
The Ohio winner will repGilchrist was selected to present the Name Tag Contest resent the state at the National
Flat Pick Guitar Competitiiln
Awards to the area winners.
8eba l!lllli1Jattd wilh other in Winfield, Kan.. in .
area KOPS (Keeping Off September. Casb prizes of
Pounds Sensibly) in the $300, $200 and $100. providKOPS plualion cer:emooY· ed by Pit-Stop Drive Thna in .
Gilchrist was rccognized as NeiD!villc, wiil be awanled
being a reins~ KOPS. to fttSt through third place and
Both J)alticip;lted in the Circle plaques will be given to winof Liibt and the Cemuony of ners.
To regisler or for more
the Rose. All of TOPS OH
information
contact Ken
2013 members~ in
Bowald.
740-753-3591,
the Brown Bag
.
The chapfa" took first plaoc extensioo 2875 or via email to
in the TOPS Top 10 Blue &lt;bowald_k@lhocking.edu.

TO

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�Pllae A I • The Dilly SentiMI

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www.mydlllyaentiMI.com .

Frldly, Mly 17, 200,1

COLLEGE NEWS
RIO GRANDE - Six Meiss
County seniors have received schol·
arships at the University of Rio
Orande/Rio Orande Community
College.
Amber Duffy, a senior from
Southern Hi.Rh School, and Monica'
Moon and Leslie Runyon, seniors
from Meigs High School, have each
been awarded the Atwood Award for
Excellence Scholarship. The four·
year full-tuition scholarship. based
on academic performance, as named
in honor of Nehemiah and Pemnelio
Atwood, the founders of the inslilu·
tion.

Moon

Runyon

IIIII

Duffy is the daughter of Brian and
Amber Ellis, a senior from Meigs
Krislll Duffy. She will be majoring High School, has been awarded two
in education. Moon is the daughter scholarships. the Roben S. Wood
of Stanford und Jane Moon. She is Scholarshap, which pays half-tuition
undecided in her mlljor. Runyon is for students who show academic
the daughter of Jerry and Vannessn excellence and the University of Rio
Run~on. She will be mlljoring In · Orande Community College Trustee
nursmg.
Scholarship, a renewable, partial

scholarship awarded to enterlns
freshmen' who have earned a high
school GPA of 3,0 or above and have
demonstrated academic excellence,
leadership, and extra-curricular
Involvement.
Ellis is the daughter of David Bills
and Elaine Gueltig. She will be

. Food donation

Holter receives

in nunlna.
Kim McDaniel, a senior from
Southern Hlah School, has been
awarded the Racine Home National
Bank Scholmhip, awlrded annually
to a Mel&amp;$ County senior who
demonstrates academic promise and
financial need.
She is the dauahter of Jackle and
Saundra McDaniel. She will be
m.Yoringin elementary education.
Tara Wyatt, a Meigs High School
senior, has been awarded the
Peoples· Banking and Trust Co. 6f
Middleport Scholarship, which is
· awarded to a graduatina senior from
Meigs High School based on finan•
clal need or academic promise.
Wyatt Is the daughter of Terry
Wyatt and B111nda Phalin. She will
be majoring in education.

Usten up!

scholarship
'

•
~· '.~~~
... ..
4NJ:
, .
...

# .

I

:!:. j

._;,

· Ben Holter
percent of the score. The
other half of the total score is
derived from experiences in
other groups and activities,
academic accomplishments
and potential for .success. '
Other 2002 Ohio Valley
Bank 4·H Scholarship recipa·
ents are: Natasha Robinson, ·
Cabell County, W.Va.i .
Teballah Casto and Heidi
Sturgeon, Mason County,
W.Va.; Courtney Brill,
Jackson County; Jennifer
Buckler and Heather Rider,
Pike County; and Megan
Harrison and Scott Payne,
Oallia County.
A banquet honoring Holter
and his fellow winners WI!'
held recently at the Lew11
Family Restaurant in JackJon.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today;

Flfth·&amp;rade atudenta from Rutland Elementary help load
970 cena of food and other non·perlsheble Items they col·
lected during the fourth annual food drive, which was held
as part of the Rlght·to-Reed celebration. The food collection w11• 11 competitive event among claasea to aee WhO
could bring In the moat Items. The winner was Donne.
Jenkins' fifth grade with the students brln&amp;ln&amp; In 203
cane, The food goeat to the Meigs County Cooperative
Pariah for distribution to local famlll'a In need. (Tony M.
Leach)

Student
recosnlzed

uoot ne\NS7''
news®mydallysentinel.eom

LIITIN UPI - Amber Ohlinger, Recine, pta tier hearing test• ·

ed by Pleaaent Valley Hoapltel (PVH) Speech Therapist Heather
GOdllh during free apeeoh and hearing acreanlnp held at
PVH'a clinic In Middleport. The acreanlnga were provided by
the hospital ~~ a public service to the community In recogn~
tlon of May being National Better Speech end Hearing month.
(Tony M. Leach)

POMEROY - . Sara
Mansfield of Pomeroy
was recently named a
United States National
Award Winner in band
and science.
The Eastern High
School senior w.as nomi·
nated by Cris Kuhn and
Ginger Siden, teachers at
the school. She will
appear In the United
States
Achievement
Academy's annual yearbook...
She is the daughter of
Wilma Mansfield.

lEII

••••••••
.......
Nl1121

a

. . .H.all

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

"I enjoy working ln the Tupper~ Pl4inl
.location becau11 I know my cu1tomer1 by
IUlme, an41 know whaJ they expect from
their banldng experience."

.

1117

Page 81

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She lllyt JQ~ly !My witb her kidf, vo!unteerinJ her time 10 lheit vmout ICIMIIn
Bell)' mjoyt YllUIIJ prGple, llld hiiiiJO lllllde praen&amp;a~iont on die
P.mm Bri't behalf •~o~:at tdloolt, tdoor!MinJ the fiUdenU on bow 10
t.J.w i diK:4Iook elllcimly, l4how 10 , _ , lhelt money_.
fy. Betide• uym, KIM wid! her flmily.Beuy likes 10 hum and tlJII for
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Ill lilliE . Ell II IE
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Bell)' mjoyf W01tinJ wid! lhe publk:, and finds briq a mllly
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:•tl ._, and-'paiiOIIII kllnt.IXIC in her role 11lnncll _ , . . Beuy dan
It IlL Bell)' It pietl ICiy awvllcd. Rio &lt;lrli* CGikp 10 lake~ Mal • 111111. d.-10 (W.
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Frld1y. MIIJ 17, 2002

FRIDAY's

HIGHLIGIITS

2002~ TVC Track

Championships
Eastern

Marshall bto
selected for
Shrlne1ame
HUNTINGTON, W.Va The 2002 college football
season may still be months
away, but the 2003 college
all·star games are already
making their moves to lock
up the lop seniors for their
games.
.
A trio of Marshall seniors
have been invited to play in
the East-West Shrine Game
In . January. Quarterback
Byron Leftwich, offensive
lineman Steve Sciullo and
defensive back Chris Crocker
have all been tabbed to par·
tlcipate in the prestigious
senfor showcase.
"We are excited that three
of our guys will ~et il chance
to show off thear talents in
this game," Herd coach Bob
Pruett said. "The East-West
Shrine Bowl is one of the
oldest and most prestigious
of the college all-star games
and will be a ,reat experience
for our guys.'
The game is scheduled for
Saturday, January 11. 2003 at
t)ac Bell Park in San
Francisco. The game will be
tlllevised by ESPN with a 2
kickoff.
·
p.m.
TIGHT RACE -Meigs · hurdler Brook Bolin, right, fights for the lead down the stretch of the 100-meter hurdles at
Coaches for the game will
be Notre Dame's Tyrone · Thursday's TVCf track. and field championships. E!olln won both girls' hurdle.events (Dan Polcyn)
Willingham and Washington
Stale's Mike Price. Assistant
coaches will be former NFL
players.
·
. The Marshall trio will fol·
low former Herd linebacker
Max Yates, who played in the
game this past January. Yates
led the East team with eight
· tackles, hlcl uding three for
loss. He was signed by the
b~
Minnesota Vikings as a free
agent.
·
BY DAN POLCYN
(I :53.8). Megan Garnes,
' OPOLCYNOMYt&gt;AILYTRIBUNE.COM Cassie Lee, and Shannon
In addition to the East-West
Shrine game, Leftwich and
McARTHUR - A hand- Soulsby followed to ~ive the
Herd coach Bob Pruett will
ful of runners~med in big Lady Marauders thear thi.rd
participate in the Hula Bowl.
perform~nces o Thursday first-pluce finish of the night.
That. game will be played on
to help the Mei girls finish
Solin also finished sixth in
February ·I at War Memorial
founh at the 2
Tri-Valley the long jump (14 feet, I 3/4
Conference Trac and Field · inches).
Stadium in Maul. Kickoff ·is
set for 8 p.m. (ET) for that . Championships.
Garnes and Soulsby also
"Everybody cqme out and ranked individual placegame and it will also be tele·
had their job to do," said ments for Meigs. They finvised by ESPN.
Marshall's Pruett will join
Meigs coach Mike Kennedy. ished two and three in the
Texas coach Mack Brown
"I called them together 400-meter dash (Garnes before the meet and told I :04,l; Soulsby I :05.0).
and Miami coach Larry
Coker as coaches for the
· them, 'Everybody has got to Garnes also placed in both of
game.
get a top performance the other sprint events, taktonight, and get as high a ing third in the 200 (28.3)
. place as they possibly can,' and fifth in the 100 (13.9).
and everyone of them met
Soulsby was sixth in the
their goals."
high jump (4-4).
In those performances, Meigs distance runner
EAST RUTHERFORD, . Brook Bolin turned in a pair Emily Story brought home a
of first-place finishes in the pair of fifth-place finishes in
N.J. (AP) - One by one,
day:s hurdle events. Her time the 800 (2:46. I) and the
they hobbled off the field:
of 16.8 seconds in the .100- 1,600 (6:02.9). ·
.
Oreg Vanney. Kasey Keller
meter
hurdles
was
a
full
secJennifer
Chadwell
was
the
and Clint Mathis. The U.S . .
ond
ahead
of
the
secondonly
Lady
Eagle
runner
to
I!OCCer team was losing play·
place runner. She pofld a place, taking fifth in the 300- ~ --ers faster than it was scaring
31.4 in the 300-meter event meter hurdles (54.9).
goals.
. . ·
to claim her second inqjvid- Federal Hocking won the
For a while, it appeared the
ual crown of the day. ,,
girls' title with 99 points,
~-0 victory over Jamaica
Bolin
also
served
as
'
the
Vinton County foflowed 1--...:....---~MM
would prove costly to the
kick-off.
leg
on
the
Meigs
with 70, while Nelsonville- · L,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..._.,...
Americans, who leave next
4x200-meter relay team York was third with 66.
week for the World Cup. But
which smoked the field by Meigs scored 62. Southern HEAVE-HO- Eastern's R.J . Gibbs throws the shot put dur·
after the game, U.S .. coach
lng Thursday's TVC championships. (Dan Polcyn)
three seconds 10 win the gold did not score.
Bruce Arena didn't think the
players were seriously hurt.

for qfo.

•

Meigs girls finish fourth
Lady Mamaders small in number,
in performance ....

u.s. Soccer

wins •1•ln

.Southem slates
youth camp

••825,111

Beuy 11M been in bankina for
22 yt~t~. tn 19U lilt Wll hired by
· Pannm Bank. and hat worked for UJ
for 16 )'fin. Beuy tlal1ld 0111 wllh Pannm Bank 11 acoll«::lon
ollie«, and in 1993 the bel:ame • klan om•• our Potnenlt loclllioo.ln .1999 Beuy uwfllmiiO our Tuppm Pliilllloc.tiKin ID be
our Branch Mllllf#l'. Jl«cnnly the w11 appoirud 1tlhe bank's
newell

............
.....

Now$11,600 Now$11,382

Meet Betsy Keams, Farmers Bank'•
1\appers Plains Branch Manager.

•

Complete TVC results, Page B2
Diamond Roundup, Page B4

&lt;En

Your Friends
&amp; Nei bors

•

The Daily Sentinel

~orina

Rio IWards
schollnhlps

POMEROY - Ben Holter
has been selected as a 2002
winner of the Ohio Valley
Bank 4-H
Scholarship
Program. This year, the program celebrates over I 00
scholarships given as 4"H
reaches its I OOth anniversary.
Holter is the son of Alan
and Kay Holter of Pomeroy.
He is a member of the Meigs
County Better Livestock 4-H
Dairy Club and a Jraduating
senior from Me1gs High
School. He plans to attend
Ohio Northern University to
study pharmacy.
.
' The Ohio Valley Bank 4,H
ScholarshiJ' Program was ere·
ated in 1986 to reward out·
standing high school seniors
for their accomplishments in
4-H. When the ~rogram
began, four scholarshaps were
awarded each year. lfowever
as the bank grew, so did the
number of scholarships. Now,
nine graduating high school
seniors annually receive a
scholmhlp vilued at $2,000
over 4 years.
·
.To date, Ohio Vatter Bank
has committed $181,000 10
10!14-H members through the
program. Current recipients
will receive their scholarship
money during the county fair.
The winners are determined
by anonymous committees of
4-H advison and volunteers.
4-H experiences make up !10

Inside:

;

RACINE - The Southern
boys and girls elementary
buketball camps will be slated for the first two weeks in
June. The boys camp wiil be
June 3-7 from 8:30 to 11:30
and the girl&amp; camp will run
from June I0-14 from 9-12. ·
· Cost of each camp is $3!1
per. student-athlere and
should be submitted prior to
May 24 so that shim can be
ordered. Families with more
than one child in camp will
pay no more than $~0 total.
Each camper will receive a
camp ball and t-Shirt if preregistellld.
.
Registration at ihe door is
S40 with no guarantee of a
shin or ball. Camp forms
have already been distributed
Jt Southern Elementary
SchOOl.
· For further information
contact Scott Wolfe at 9921490 or Ryan Lemley at
Southern High School.

eighth,
Mei s
nint
Bv DAN POLCYN
DPOLCYNOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

McARTHUR - The
Eastern boys track squad fin· .
ished eight and Meigs finished ninth at the 2002 TriValley Conference Track and
Field Championships on
Thur$day.
In a football-like performance, the Eagles gathered
their points
in pure speed
and strength
events .
Senior R.J.
Gibbs was
the highest
Bas tern fin·
isher, taking
fourth in the
......_... shot put (416 1/2). He
also run leg
No.3 on the
4x I 00-meter
relay · team
which finished fifth
(47.6) while
g o i n g
against
teams with
much greater
numbers.
Lte
"Right
now, we are
competng against schools
quite a ·bit larger than us,''
said Eastern coach Jared
Spencer, "and at districts
we'll all be on an even playing field. I think compared 10
schools our size, we have a
very good trac.k team, very
competitive.
"The 4x I looked pretty
good, ~Ot their best time •1111
season. ' he added.
Eastern scored 17 points In
the meet.
Joining Gibbs on that relay
were Brandon Werry, Bryan
Minear and Kevin Marcinko.
Werry notched a pair of
individual placements, taking
sixth in the 20() (24.5) and
fifth in the 100 (11.9).
· ·The Marauders, with their
top sprinter, 'JYson Lee, still
unable to perform at his. top
level, scored 14 points in the
meet.
"Tyson has had an injury
since football.'' said Mei!JS
coach Mike Kennedy of has
senior sprinter, who has
endullld a groin pull since the
fall. "It's been somethin~ all
year long that he's been kmda
wanting to nurse it, but if he
feels it ~iving away during a
race, he ll just kinda ease up
Plf1MHI ....... I2

Lady.E~gles win Southern tops Fed Hock
B15coTT WOLJ'I
'

SENTI EL CORRESPONDENT

.

BY ScoTT WoLFE
SENTINEL CORRESPONO£Nr

TUPERS PLAINS - Th~ Eastern Ea_gles clinched a second place
RACINE- A Joe Cornell smglc ~IT
berth in the Tri-Valler Conference Hockmg divi~ion with a 17-5 soft·
the m1ddle brought home Dally H1 ~
ball win over the Tnmble 'tOmcats Thursday OIJ!ht at Eastern H1gh
the game
School. Both clubs were 12-3 in the league going anto the game in the
run a~
conference, h.ut Eastern (17-4) clinched the runner-up slot with a 13-3
the
mark and Tnmble (14-7) feU to 12·4.
· Tornadoes ·defeated
, Eastern hitters wm Tiffeny Bissell with a single, Jessica Dillon a
the
Federal
double, Janet Calaway a single; Kus Lodwick four walks and a douHocking Lancers 9·
ble, Jenny Armes two singles, Terry Wolfe two singles, Tiff any
8 Thursday night at
Spencer a single,. and Ashley Hager a single.
Racine's Star Mill Park.
Trimble hitters were Lindsqo Hooper w.ith a single, and Mandy ·
Southern is now 13-7
Russell a single. Both hits came in Trimble) five-run first inning as
'.
: overaU with a make·
Lodwick blanked Trimble the rest of the way with shut-out, no-hit ball
up of a suspended game
over the next six innings,
and full game Monday at Well&gt;ton ,
.Trimble went up !1-0; then Eastern came back to take a 7-S lead in
Southern took a 1.() lead in the first
the second inning. That wu really all Eastern needed. Calaway
on a Brice Hill triple and :.acrilice ny by
walked, Lodwick walkc:d, Armes and Morgan Weber walked, Nikki
Matt Ash. The Tornadoes then plated
Philli~ reached on a fielderfs choice, Bissell reached on an error,
four more runs in the second when Cun
Carrie Wiggins reached on a fielder's choice, sandy Powell walked,
Crouch walked, Dally Hill singled,
and ea.Iaway had a two-run single. Lodwick then walked for the sec·
Aaron Ohlinger singled, Joe Manuel
ond hme and Alyssa Holter reached on .an error to score the seventh , reached on a lielderfs choice. and Tyler
run.
Liule had a two-run single. Brice Hill
Eastern kept pilinJI up the runs and went on to the 17-5 win.
.
~ad an RBbingle and Ash another sacPicking u·p ihe wm, Lodwick fanned seven and walkc:d four, but
rifice, the score 5·0.
walked just one after the fltst inning. Allory Hooper suffered the toss
Federal made it 5-1 in !he founh, then
with five strikeouts and 1!1 walks.
.

Southern came back with two more on
a Manuel double and Lillie smgle, and
another RBI smgle by Jush~ All~n .. the
score 7-1. Then m. ahe hflh mnmg,
Federal pla~cd seven runs on ~hrec
walks and s1~gles by Gandee, Gnmm,
M~Cu~bcr and t':"o Soulhern errors.
That gave Federal a8-71ead: .
Southern ued 11 m .ahe s.1xth on an
error that &lt;~,II owed Bnce ,Hill to .reach
safely, Jusun Allen sacnficed h1m 10
second,. then Matt Ash hammered a
game-.tymg smgle.
Jusun Aile~ had come on to ()UI down
the Lanc~rs . m order m the &gt;l~th and
sevemh, mnm~s. selling 1he .slllge for
~omcll s heroacs and game-wmmng hu
m the seventh.
.,
, .
Southem h_mers we!~ Bnce H1II wuh
a tnple ~nd Mogle, Justm Aile~ a smgle,
Tyler Lillie a double and ~mgle, Joe
C'?mclltwo ~mgle': Dally H•ll_a smgle.
Aaron Ohlinger a smgle, and Joe
Manuel a doubl~.
Federal Hockmg was led by Zach
Ware~ wnh a tnplc.
Soulhern play\ .at Wellston Monday.

�Paae 8 2 • The Dilly Sentinel

www.mydallyMntlnel.com

.

Eastern dro· s district
tilt to S. We ster, 4-0

•

20111VC1Ndl

Preakness favorite to arrive fashionably late

•

•

' llALTlMORB (AP)- The
~ favori~ wlU arrive
! in Baltimore a mete t• houn
• before the race. It hardly
: sOunds lib a formula for sue:: ctss, but ttainer Bobby
' Frankel wouldn't havt~ It any
• other wa:y.
Most Of tho field is stabled
' In tho lites bam at Plmlico
I Race Coul'Se . this week,
: aclju tina to the sumlU.ndlngs
: an&lt;! tho tnck. Not Medqlia
; d'Ofo, who is sllellding nis
: time in New York, while
: Frankel Is in California.
• : The plan is for Mef1a&amp;lia
d'Oro to leavt~ Belmont by
i van at midnlaht Saturday and
: &amp;rrive at Pimlico UOilnd •
: IL.m. Horse and trainer will
: hook up Saturday morning at
• tho stakes barn, hours before
the second lea of tho Triple
Crown.
, : "We're just followina 11 pat·
we have, where we rou·
' tinely ·ship from · Southern
' California to Northern
: Callfomla for I'KC&amp;," Frankel
, ~d Th~ in a conference
' call. "We've won about 75
pen:ent doi!IJ that. This pat·
tern pf shipptna Is common in
• Burope."
; MedqUa d'Oro, with a ~w
rider In Jerry Bailey, will
: attempt to rebound from a
: fourtll-place finish behind
, winner Will' Emblem in the
, ·t&lt;entuclcy Derby.
· ·
, • Frankel didn't blame jockey
Laffit Pincay lr. for his colt's
· dlsappolntina run In the
Dertiy, but hoped a switch in
" jockeys would produce 11 bet·
ter result.
· ·
' "Jerry and I hllve been
, lucky over tho last two years,"
••.frankel said. "He's won a lot
Orade Is for me. Lafflt did
~ hothl~ wrona, but I'm on tho
. Ba
d I'll
·· sl 011st now .an
use
' Bast Coast riders."
• • Fr k 1
Med 11
,;~··o~n ~ :-ratsbetter~!
.llmder Bailey than he did with
"·ffl Ch hill Do
'' .!.. t. at · inc
wns. ·
·~rr Medaalht d'Gro had
broken well, thinas~robably
·
• -'· 1

SENTINEl COilAESI'ONOENT

MINFORD- South Webster broke open &amp;'Scoreless dead·
lock in the founh inning and went on to claim a 4·0 win over
the Eastern Eagles in the Division IV District softball touma·
ment aome Wednesday night at Minford. South Webster
1dvan1.-e&amp; to the District finals tonight. Eastern completed its
regullll' season Thursday with a 17·5 win over Trimble and is
17-4 overall.
·
.
Playing without its seniors. Eastern lost sornc of its offen·
· sive zap, but still made a great showing. Eastern threatened in
the first inning when with two out Sandy Powell walked but
wus left stranded. Faulkner retired the side on strikeouts and
funned four of the first six batters she faced.
·
South Webster ihreatened in the first as well, but left two
· runners stranded on a walk and an error. Kass Lodwick then
struck out the last liatter to end the rally and the inning.
Eastern loaded the bases in the third inning on errors that
allowed Tiffeny Bissell and Jenny Armes to reach safely. the
Holter singled and Bissell was thrown out to end.the inning.
A Hayward single, an error on right and a Oyout to left field
brought home the gamefs first run and a Jeep 1·0 lead. South
Webster went on to add two runs in the sixth and one in the
seventh for the 4-0 finale.
·
Faulker posted the win with seven strikeouts and two walks,
while Lodwick suffered the loss with four strikeouts and four
walks.
·
Eastern hitters were Holster with two singles and Lodwick
a double.

Scm WOLFI ·

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Indians brirtg · .
back Buddy Bell
CLEVELAND (AP) - Buddy Bell, fired earlier this
season as manager of the Colorado Rockies, was named a
special minor league consultant Thursday by the
Cleveland Indians, the team he started his playing career
. ~h
.
Bell, 50, will assist in the development of Cleveland's
minor lea~ue rlayers, coaches and managers. He also will
scout Nauona League players.
·
·
·~His presence, knowledge and experience cultivated
over 34 years in professional baseball will be an invalu·
able resource .for our minor league players and staff,"
Indians general manager Mar)( Shapiro sa1d.
.
.
Bell was fired April 26 after the Rockies opened the sea·
son 6-16- the worst start in their history.
He also managed the Detroit Tigers from 1996-98, and
has complied a 345-462 career record.
Bell served as the Indians' infield coach in 1994-95
under manager Mike Hargrove. Current manager Charlie
Manuel, who is in the final year of his contract, was the
hilling coach on that staff.
.
Bell was a minor league field coordinator for Cincinnati
for almost a year in 1998 before being promoted to the
Reds' director of player development.
. He began his playing career with the lndiims in 1972 and
sttyed with the club until '78 when he was traded to the
Teus Rangers for third baseman Toby Harrah .
Bell alto played with the Reds and Houston Astros
before retiring in 1989. He was a five-time All·Star and
won six consecutive Gold Gloves at third.
Bell's father, Gus, played 14 seasons in the major
league•. His son, David, plays for the San Francisco
Giants.

-

t , JeNmllh Rt~ml

new meet

Eastem
f1omPep11
so he 'II be able to come back
the next time."
Lee notched .a sixth-place
finish in the !()()..meter dash
· (12.1 ). In the 200, he pulled
up early and crossed the line
slowly due to the injury and
did not place.
·

I'ICOIII),

a.

The highest finish of the
day came from the Melas
4x IOO·meter relay team,
which finished fourth.
Marauder
Niclc
McLaughlin took fifth in the
shot put (40-4 112).
Ryan Stobart finished sixth
in the pole vault (9.0).
Kenriedy, whose Marauders
finished us the top squad last
sl!ason at the conference meet,
sees his squad's youth, as well .
as athletes who decided to

aive up track, as the reason for
the drOI).oft'.
"We havea lot of fteshman
and sophomores," he said,
"and they are just not ready to
oerform at thlt level. If they
keeP. with It, I lcnow they'U·be
up ihere next year. They are
just not ready yet."
Belpre ran away with the
boys' title with 170 points.
Vinton County was second
with 78, followed by Federal
Hocking with 62.

Wellston's Bl'lld Yo11n11
!lUlled a rt1re triple, winnl~
the 100 (11.3), the 200 (22.8)
and the shot put (48-5 112).
Belpre hurdler Ierernlah
Reams was a double winner
· In the hurdle events (300- .
meter - 40.1, a new meet·
record; 110-meter 13.6)
while taldna second In the 100
(11.6). Belpre's Guy Early
was also a double winner,
winning the long iumf. (18-6
112) ana the 400 (~1..5 .

SACRAMENTO, C..tif. (AP) .!... Dealing with Shaq and
Kobe isiOOJlb tftOORh, The Samamento Kings f~ :1nother
daunting taSk as wetl-Ktulllly bclie,•itll! they can ~at the
Lakm.
''They ean lllllkt ~ doobl yoorsel f." Sa.:r:m1ento !!U:u'd
.Bobby l:~tkson Sllid Th~ as the Ki~s prepared for the
Wcs!MI Con~ fin•ls.
· ''They're so tnl~ltd. but yoo\-e 1!01 turrusr youn;elfand
yoor ~!Mtes.," he lidded. "Otherwise, they get a lead, and
the)' ~~ rollina, and they get intu the founh qu:rrter.• and
yoo'\'e seen w'hlt happens It) e~body they play Ill the

·

.

. .

pt~...

The KinJS rtllite thert's much more on the line thnn

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FREE Hot Dogs To Flag
In rccogntion of National Hospital Week, Pleasant Valley Hospital will be offering
FUE hot dogs from 11 a.m. tao&lt;l p.m. to all flag football fans who come to watch the.
annual tournament on Saturday, May 18, lOOl (whiU supptils l.st).
· Set·up lawn chairs and cheer for friends, family, your physician or nurse. Games begin
at 8 a.m. at Ordnance Fields and continue throughout the day.
.Also present will be WBYG "Big Country" 99 and WYVK·K9l "The Frog" with
chances to wi!t t·shirtll
other great prizes!
'

and

•

Laker mystique

·Calil'umill_mgi~ riahts when the ~:uns tnt'et S:ltul\1:1)' in
Omne I of n tantlihth~&amp; series.
The Kings must draw on their consummate br:..nd ,,f team
pi~Y to neutn.lite the unrivnled star power of the t\\\l·time
~h•mplons. Sacrurnentu may well play the le:l!tuc 's most
exciting style, but the l.:lkers have Sh:tquillc O'Neal and
Kobe B!)'llnt. .
The Kings ;aren't quaking just yet. They've wair&lt;'&lt;i all year
. fur 11 third Stn\iaht pl~IT ~liot utthe champs.
. "~'Vii &amp;\)I t&lt;1 PI~Y our game nnd see if they can handle
•t..-n
tt,'' Kmgs gunrd Mik-e B115by suit!. "We know they' ll play
their Rfitnt.nnd then we'll see if we cun hundle that. We've
got to show the maturity and the growth thut we've got n.lw,
ff we don't, it might not be n lot\8 series."
The Kint!s, the NBA's top regular-season team. have
every rtason to~ CliUtioos. In 2000, the Lukers were t:lkcn
to five gnmes by Stltfll.mento in the first round, Last sc:1son.
the Lllkers swept in the second round. pun~tuated by
Bryant's 48-point outburst in the clincher.
The ~Ill of .Los Al)geies' ps~chologkul cdj!e are recent
- I0 vtctorles m ll meetings With the Kmg~ smce the :2000
pluyolfs. The Lukers also haven bit of history - 12 trips to
theeonfetence finnls since the Kinlls'last visit in 1981.
But fol'\!most. there Is the Lukers' &lt;.'llntidence - the regal.
utmost hnughty, biwint~ of u duunpio1i who bcliews no
tenm cl'ln lntllch Its wlllln May or June.
TAIUN' IT WYd'Oto, with exen:lse rider Jose Cuevas up,
''Ont-e nguin, hert comes the truth. They c:m '1 nm from
wol'lls out elona the
111t Chun:hlll Downs In this fila photo. Me&lt;la&amp;lla d'Oro Is the
the tnllh," Los Angeles forwanl Rick Fox Sltid 11mrstl:ty.
Preakneas favorite, ~t trelner Bobby Flenkel end the colt were no where ne11r Plmllco two days
"The truth is what lms hnpptmed in the past is u churucteris·
before the race. Flenkel w111s In California, while his assistants were w11tchlna over Medaalle
tic of theirs. They htwc to chunge thut. If they're to fullill
d'Oro In New Vorl\. (AP file)
wlmt th1.1y profess they want to t~ccomplish, they have to
change.
If nothing else, Mednalin
Medqlht d'Oro put in his months ugo, Meduglla d'Oro
"You huve to fuil to know how. They failed. but they
final breeze Thul'Sday nt - "Gold Medal" In Italian - d'Oro hus ihe udvnntll!!e or
fulled lust round. They haven't failed ut this round yet.''
avoiding the hoopla at the
•. ar
Belmont Park, worklna .three is 11 formidnblc foe.
The Kings ed.lled Los Angeles for the NBA's best regular"He
is
the
main
danger
In
Plrnllco stakes burn, where
fUrlonas In a shtu'P 35 seconds
season_ re.'Ord. Thut puts tl\e sllries' first two games und u
this," said Bob Baffert, Wnr trainers, horses and the
with Bailey aboaid.
potential Oame 7 In Arco Artnn, whert the famed noise has
Pirnllco. odd•m·"er "-nk Emblem's trainer. "He's a media have been gathering
• "" rru
nnuened
the enrs of everyotle from Dull11s owner Murk
CW'UIIl made Medqlia d'Oro younR horse, learning how to this week.
· .
Cuban tu the otl'ldnls who sometimes cnn't blow their whls·
the 5·2 momlna·line favorite. run. Thnt's why he's dnnger·
"A lot of people don't llkt~
ties loud enough to be henrd.
to come here. They go to
War Emblem, who went wire· OilS."
Not thut It's mattered recently: The Lukers huv&lt;: won live
to-wire in the Derby, Is the Trainer Nick .Zlto, who Other bnrnSi either here Itt the . of their lust six gnmes nt ArtO, and they've won un NBA·
second cholceat 3·1 in a field sends out long shots track or t~lsewht~re," Baffert
record I I struight roud plu~off gurnes.
.
of 13. 3•yelll'-olds aotna I 3· Crimson Hero and Straight said. "It would nice to I!O be
"It's u fun plncc to piny.' Bryunt suitl. "Sacramento feeds
16th miles.
Gin, also Is toutlna Mednglin isolmed somewhere where
oft' their energy. It's fun to plur on the road . Everybody's
:th~u~~~ =k~ s:l':.'\.1~ Although he hasn't won d'Oro.
the horse can relnx. But ut
ll!!llinst you. rr the horne telllll s ~luyi~g with conlidcnce.
1f\e Prealtness, Jerrv will ride . since lllklng the San Felipe "Very strona," he sold. lenst you have three dnys to
you huve to ch:vule your gume. J like s1lence, too - espcaet used to it."
Nm out of the atite~·
Stakes at Santa Anita two "He's the horse to bent."
c:lnlly ut the ~nd or ll bull game."

Southem girls win
in the second and third
innings, then added eight runs
RACINE .;_ Behind a one·
hit performance from veteran in the fourth on two home
pitcher Rachel Chapman, the runs by Kiser and Barnes.
Southern Tornadoes mercied Others hitting and scoring
the Federal Hocking Lancers were Ashley Roush, Holly
16·1 Thursday night in the Duffy, Ashlee Hill, and Katie
season finale at Star Mill Sayre, the score 12·0.
Plll'k. Southern ended the sea- Then Federal scored, and
son at "·II overall and 9· 7 Southern added three runs in
in the league.
The lone Federal Hockin,i the fifth and one in the si11th.
hit was 11 Julie Stover hit The garne·winner came when
down the left field line in the Nicki 'lUcker singled, Jordan
fifth inning. Stove came Neigler walked, and Brittany
around to score on a fielder's Denny slammed a run scoring
choice later that frame for double for the 15·run mercy
Federal's only run .
·
Starting three, sometimes Wl;~uthern hitters were Katie
four freshmen and three
sophomores, the Southern Sayre with three singles,
Tornadoes got a good start on Brigeue Barnes a home run,
the 2002 season and never Brooke Kiser a home run and
slipped behi~d .500. The double. Brittany Denny a
youth of th1s yearls. team · double and singles by Rachel
hopes to transform mto a
'
h'
h
good season next year with C?a~man, As ley Rous ,
the experience they obtained. N1ck1 . Tucker, Holly _Duffy,
The team also said good·bye Jen H11l, and Ashlee H1ll.
to .two seniors who played
Rachel Chapman was the
their last game· Rachel winning pitcher with .five
Marshall and Lindsey Smith. strikeouts, just one hit, and no
So~thern took a 2·0 lead on walks. Amanda Moore suf·
.
a Bngette Barnes walk and
Katie Sayre RBI single, then fered the loss :-v1th seven
Brooke Kiser had an RBI walks and two stnkeouts.
double.
.
The game was the last game
Southern added single runs for both teams.

a~

by~shake

1

IVSconWO&amp;.R

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..

The o.11y Sentinel• Pactt

Air Conllltlontng

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Prlclt Goad Idly 1•1h Thno.. May ltlh. ·

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PLEASANT :

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(exit t32) Tum North on AI. 21 ,
Dealtrahlp 11 3 mile• on lefl

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Baseba

. The Daily Sentinel
AROUND
THE
DIAMOND

---- , -- I.

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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lot AI\QOitl 4, Monl'"l 3
l'ttdly .. Oamtt
Ct\leaoo Cutit (Ciomenl 1-2111 MIIWaukoo
(RUICII 2-31. 8:05 p.m.
Pilllbu!llh (O.Wllllamo a..} II · Houa10n
(Rtynolda 3-3}, 8:1l5 p.m.
C-~ CDHiiont 14) II 81. Loula
CICIIo 14~ e:10 p.m.
._donlo (Gio'llno 5·21 11 Colorado
(Thornaor15'2}, 9:05p.m.
N.Y. t.ftll (TI'IlOheol 2_.1 ol San Diogo
( - 0 . 0 ) , 1 0:05p.m.

l'hllodalphlo (Adamo 1·31 11 Arlrone
2-2}, 10:05 p.m.
Mon""l (Armaa Jr. 5-3) ol Lot Angelo&amp;
(Nomo 2-S}, 10:10 p.m.
F'lorldo (lltmpolor 2-31 01 Son Frenolsoo
(Ortir 3-2), 10:35 p.m.

(Ba"""

Balunloy'tl Oomot
Clftall'notl CAIJo 3·1) ot8t•.Loulo (Morrio
W~ to10 p.m.
AHonta (MIIIWOO&lt;l 2_.1 ol Colorado (Stark
1.0), 3:05p.m.

Florida (Penny 3·21 al Son Frencloco .
(R..- 5•1), •:OS p.m.
Chtcogo Cuba {Ut~r 3·21 ol Milwoukoo
(Ctbrwrt H), 7:05 p.m.
.
Plttaburgh (B1n1on 0·1) al Hou1ton .

(-"G 2·2). 8:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mota (Ealoa 1·41 at San Diogo
(lbmko H), 10:05 p.m.
Phllodtlpl\11 (Duckworth 2·3) al Arizona
(Bolllllng 8•1), \0:05p.m.
Montre•l (Pavano 2·5) at loa Angalaa

(Peru 4·1), 10:10 p.m.
lundoy .. Oomoa
et.lotgo Cube al MMwauktt, 2:08p.m.
ClnolnnoH 11 11. Loulo; J: tO p.m.
Adanlo tl Colorodo, 3:05 p.m.
Florida at S•n Fr1nd1CO~ 4:05p.m.

Montroal ill Lilt Angaloa, •:tO p.m.
Phlladolphlo ol Arirono, 4:35 p.m.
N.Y. Mril1al Son Olago, 5:05p.m.
PIHtbulllh tl Hou&amp;IOn. 8:05 p.m.

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lo&amp;IOn 8, Oaklond 2
Anoholm tO, Dolroll 1
Clewlond i, lltltlm- I
Tampa Bay 10, N.Y. Vanoooa 1
Taxao 8, Chicago Whllo So• 2
i.llnntoota 8, Kon ..o City 8
._
· Thur~day 1 e G1m11
l.llnnttOta J.4, Konaao Clly 5
Anaholm ofi)tlroll, ppd., rain
Baaltlt I 8, l&amp;n;~nlo 2
~
Otkland 8, Booton 0
lalttmoro at Cltvolond, ppd., roln
N.Y. Yanktat 13, Tampa Bay 0
Chiotgo While So• 4, Toxaa 0
Prtdty 11 01mea

Botltlt (Halama 2.0) 11 Boalon (OIIvor 4·
2), 7:08 p.m.
Taxoa (Burba 3.0) at Dalrnll (Waavor 2·8},
7:08p.m.
Oakland (Mulder 2·2) al Toronto (Halladay
3-1), 7:08p.m.
t,linntoota (Flood 4•2) al N.Y. Yankooo
(t.luNino 8-2), 7:05 p.m.
.
Tempi Bey (Sturtzo 0·4) at Balllmoro
(t.loilllro 2-3), 7:05 p.m. . ·
.
leton- City (ayrli 1•2) 11 Cltval.nd

(Pl..., 1_.), 7:111 p.m.

Mllholm (Sohoontwela 2·4)' 11 Chloago
While So• (lioriand •·2). 8:08 p.m.

. ..... r~~tv'alhmtt

.

Randy Johnson fell behind on his
tirst pit.:h. It was his nex.t 119 that
gnvt the Philadelphia
Phillies so much trouble.
The Big Unit j!Dve up u
home run to Jimmy Rollins on the
game's tillit pitch. then shut oown the
Phillies for the next six innings to
lead the Arizona Dirunondb!lcks to a
4-2 victory Thursday night. .
"It just t~lls you wh:u ktnd of a
pitcher he is," Philadelphia mnnuger
Larry Bowli said. "He's a warrior. I
don't think he hud his greut sruft', but
when he had co reuch buck. he did

NL

uactly whm a great
pitcher does."
Not nearly as dominnnt llS u ual,
Johnson !7-1) till
struck out eight two when he needed
them most. He
·
allowed six. hits in
seven
innings,
walked u season' high four and was
.
• called for u bulk.
It was hi titst victory in three stuns
si ncc: n sore lower buck cQused him to
miss a ·cheduled sturt for the li111t

time in nearly two years.
"It seems like right now he's kind
of SIIViDg IMt 97 mph lilslbull for
when he needs it," Phillie ' catcher
Mike Lieberthlll said.
Erubiel Durazo. playi~ hi first
game this sea on after commg off the
disabled list, truck out in his farst
three ut-bucs. then doubled bome a
run in Arizona's three-run seventh
inning.
,
Johnson, whO threw 120 pitches.
struck out Liebenhul with the bases
looded to end the third and fanned
pi nell-hitter Jn on Mich~~els with run- ·
ne111 at second und t.hird to escnpe the

sixth.

The lefl-hll!lder lowertd hi ERA to
1.88. third best in the majors.
''I didn't have my be t location or

my be t velocity throughout the
course of the gonte, or my best bn:ak·
lng boll," Johnson said. ''But when I
hlld to make the pitch, I mllde it."
Byung-Hyun Kim got five outs for
his lith save in 12 chnnc:es this sell•
son. secting a fmnchise record with
his 45th ctueer suve.
Aller an 8·1 home&amp;!and, the
Phillies fell to 0-4 on their road trip
and 3-16 uway from Vetemns.
Stlldium ovemll.
•

Cincy out-smarts .Brew .Crew, 2·1

Oaldarld (Wdla 1•8) at 'lbloniO (t.lllltr 2·1) .
1:06 p.m.
Staltlt (Baldwin 3·3) 11 Booton
(~. Ma111ntz 11-0), 1:08 p.m.

=ill

1.11-. (~loto loCI) 11 N.Y. YonkHt
~~~), I :08 p.m.
City (AIIeldl fol) It Cltvol.nd
W), trOI ·p.nt., 111 ........_
CitY (~ IHI) It Cifv .... MI
(0..0. W), 7:01 p.m., illllltlllllt
Tallo (Porlo 1·11 11 Dolfol\ (llpartco 2-4),

2:08p.m.

Tampa lay (Wiaon N) o} e-'tlmott.
(l"onaon 2-3), 7:05 p.m.
Anohlm (Ortll •·3) at ChiO&amp;QO Whlla SO•
(Oiovor 0-0), 7:08 ~ .nt .

lundl)o'tl GlmH
8ot111e II lloi\Oft, I :08 p.m.
Ooklond at 'lblonto, 1:08 p.m.
- a t N.Y. Yank-. 1:08 p.m.
Clly 11 Ctao...,.,t:OI p.m.
lllmpo Bay ollllltlmo,., 1:34 p.m.
Ta•u lt Dttron. 2:06 p.m.
Anll\tlm 11 ChiCago WN!t Box, 2:08 p.m.

the place for
baseball news

NATIONAL LEAGUE CAPSULES

.
DoooiiRS 4, EXPOS 3
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
time in 13 gumes. Zito (4·2) struck OUt six und
Marquis Grissom atoned for a critical error with a gameMike Cameron did a litHe bit of everything ·walked none.
tying RQl double In the eishth, ·and pinch-hitter Chad
in Seattle's eight-run seventh inning.
Jermaine Dye hit u two-run double in the
He started the outbit111t wit!\ a siqgle, stole nrst inning ror Oakland, which avoided being · Kreut~r sinaled home the ao·ahead run two batten later lit
Dodaer Stadium.
two buses and capped it with grand slum as swept by -Boston for the second strai~ht week.
Vlildimir Ouerrero hit a two~ run homer off Kevin 'Brown
the Mariners routed the Toronto Blue The Red Sox lost for just the third hme in II
for
the Expos, wbo loat their founh slrliJht and ei&amp;hth in
Jays 15-2 Thursday night.
games.
row on the road.
Cameron homered for the lirst cime
The A's took a 3-0 lead before Frank
Omll DaaJ (4.()) got the victory in relief, and Eric 01Jne
since tying a ml\ior lea~ue record With four Castillo (2·4) got an out. Eric Byrnes, who
earned
his 13th save. Tomo Ohka (3·2) wu the hard·liic:k
uguinst the Chicago While Sox on May 2.
hud u career-high three hits, and Randy
loser.
"I try to do us much damage us I Clllt when Velarde opened with back-to-bnck singles,
Mm 3, PADIU!IJ 1
I get out there," Cameron sa[d. "I think I had and Eric Chavez wulked to load the bases
u pretty productive night."
bet' D •8 d bl ·
AI Leiter (~·2) wa.• dominant on the road aaain, oi!~~~,!:J
All of the Mariners did as they !~roved to
ore ye ou e.
.
six
strong iMin&amp;s and drlvina in the so-ahead run· aa
WHITE Sox 4, RANGERS 0
York won its third straiaht since dropplna eiJht
u major league-best 16-3 on the ro .
. A Ch'
D w i ht 't hed fl hit
·Mark McLemore went •-t'or·S wich a three·
t tcago, un r I! PI c
a tve- •
Roger Cedeno &amp;nd Edjaldo Alfoazo hid dUee blla apbllole, I
~
ter for his first career shutout.
·
for
the Mets, who beafBrlan Lawrance (4-3) to
run homer, matching the franchise record in
Wright (4-4), who gave up eight runs.in 2 2·
hits. Carlos Guillen also homered and drove 3 innings in his last start, was sharp against. Dleao's four-pme wiMina atreak.
Tl\e Padres put alutaer 1'1111 Nevill Od tile .uabled IUf
In three runs and eight Marinen sccnd.
R
H
k
•
d l"ed
''That's the toughest lineup I've ever faced, the angers. e suuc out .our an wa"'
with a tpralned let\ ei&amp;Ow,
.
Ali
Mil
3,
Plll4TU
l
that's for sure," Toronto starter Luke onWright struck out Alex Rodriguez to end
Prokopec said.
•
Lance Betlanan hit hil 15ch home 1'1111 to til $"""1)'
Seattle's Joel Pineiro (4-0) allowed two Chicago's second shutout of the season. The
fot tho ~or leque lelld. llld Roy Olwlll
III'IIS
runs - none earned - on four hits in seven Rangers have been blanked Just twice.
I SWOII·!Illh ll . lft lilbt IMinaa MAlli'OI
innin~s . The 23-year-old right-hander struck
Paul Konerko extended hts hitting streuk 10
J01e VlzCalao'• two-'11! _~ la 1111
out 51 x-und walked none. He has wdn three 12 games in the fourth inning on a double
Houston to Ita MIIOII•beat flflh iiiilllbt wlo,
straiaht decisions since being Inserted into the down the left-field line off Kenny Ro¥ers (4&amp;at hia sixth nw.
rotatTon April 30.
2). Carlos Lee followed wich an RBI smgie to
3
YANKEES 13, DEVIL RAYS 0 .
give the White Sox the only run they would
Mike
At New York, Alfonso Soriano hit a leadoff need.
·
·
home run on the first pitch, giving David
TWIN~ 14, RovAt.S 5
·
Wells all the support he needed.
.
At Kansas City, Torii Hunter homered twice
With Wells (6-1) pitching a three·hlner, the as Minnesoca hu fl ve home runs against the
for the
Yankees posled their most lopsided shutout Royals for the second time this season.
a six-nan
since beating Cleveland 14..()" on April 18,
Jacque Jones, Cristian Guzman and Tom
all and nine of 10
1992. Wells walked none
tll'UCk out in Prince ulso connected for the 1\vins, who set
his II th career s h ! t
in runs and hits (18). Kyle Lohse
Milk DeRou
J01111
Jorge Posada,
,!blec - - one earned - in
added I Chree·run
leiW I
Williams kept up the ly h&lt;tlte·l1
split of !he four-game series at
The Yankees lead the m~ors
homers,
Hunter. 4-for-6 with four RBis and three
Jason Marquia (3·2) aave up one run aeven in_!Uop,
including 14 in four games.
runs scored, homered off Chris George (0-4)
IIIIi John Smoltz allowed a thne·tllll ltomlt to BtaiiO
· A111LETICS 5; R£D Sox 0
in the first inning and had a three-run shot off Santiaao •fore fi.Ui"' out of a j11111 Ia 1111 nlnCb.
At Boston, Barry Zito allowed live hits in Brian Shouse In the seventh as the Royals fell
Jason Schmidt (0.1) pitdled well in dlllou.
eight innings as Oakland wori for just the third 10 0.2 under new manager Tony Pena.

AL

....... 1 • .

,.,. ........."-'--""""'·~~~~'~"'"' ~~...... ,.,

at the

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

FORT WORTH, Tlrus (AP)- All of that tinkering ml)' be
c:omint to&amp;ether for Bob Estes, wbo shot a 5-undef...pw 65 in

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DII'INDANT.

In tMI • - of ~ 11a: 111ALPH IIIOWAIIO
Allll Onltf of Sale IIOSI. .111 ..._

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UH -.!'· In tilt
.. teet h!MI'I
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OMDOII
windy conditions Thursday to take a two-stroke le4d in the
ot•nllool voutll.
~IJCA110N
. .
Colonial.
li'fOJIOIIII lllllat
'*'*0»1 ()hlo 1111 '11111 IHI lltreb
CIOIIIOIIItrttt tho
li'la~•llllllnotiM
Es~ had a bo$6Y·free round to matdl his best
Mat . . " notlftld lltat JOII ~
npalllllty to mMt lhlt IItie 11111\er wltl 'nlurllllyt.
tO:SO t ,M, lilt bltn l'llmtd I
score of the year and finish a stroke ahead of a
come on tor
0
group of nine players. The fonner Univen.ity of Ttxas player
1 , chtortllod Dtftnd1n1 111 tha
tdiYCIIeattoil 1nc1
SltutcU
tftthl
......_ Uti on tntltltd
Dirdied the first two holes and also closed with two stnigbt
Clllllltlly INOtrtlll llmllftatlon hwrklg
• ._,.. lav.rtv Illat "'"•
OII'IU mea I'Or I t11111V 111r . any
birdies.
.
other of fiiiOint, COtlllty
of Pltllltltr, va. lltlpll
(S)
,
..
11',
11.
11,
U.
of
Ill&amp;
......
&lt;*11\IJ
''The winds were difficult, hut I managed to combat the 13, 14, R, It, liO, It Wolllfo.OO 1'11111, Ill&amp; =Jirlatl rtlllt
State
ol
ldwanl flloea, Jr.,
lllo Honorlbll
wind for the most pan," Estes said. "A lot of good shots didlaglllnl"' al tilt Dlttndalll. Thle
Judge Dl'llld M •
(1001)).
. olollltnta,
- .....n't tum out good. or some mishit ones turned out OK. It was (l)l.lliCII
tlfo li'llllllkt, Jlldlt lilt _,in-. of 1 lOtion hll linn
difficult to pUll the right club."
Clmllt Court ot o.tetn tot *'•dad lit a~ttgnacl Caae No,
~~ tho 111o
""·'"'lo ...........
atalldarda,
Cltlell Coullty, ..... II.D. won. a.c..~~e~, oa-a11-o "· a11d ••
The breeie was blowing llS usual over the historic 7,080- ___..
_.;;.-_;;..•..-.;....;-,.;..._ llrUarta und In
to Mtllncll Doblllna; Plfldllltl In tilt COUit
yard layout known as Hogan's Alley, but the 10.2() mph wind
Vllglltll, 011 lllo ""'
ovalultlnt tho day
oflrlly. lliCII. at t1t1nce e~tt Ont of Com~n~~~n '"'' of
·gusted throughout the day and swirled in diffmnt directions.
MQUUT I'OR
Mllga County, Oltto.
a.m., at whletl
d d. 111 natttn· The
llld • 1:00
ollteot ot the
David Duval. Steve Jones tmd Steve Lowery: were at 67,
"'CICIOtAL
llmt 11td place y1111 "(11un11 "'
t11111ce
come'"'
.. to _..
l'otmll li'ropout, 11111. lit llflttnt to -th It hi lfttlle,
1110111 with Esteban TOledo, Scott Verplank, Bob Tway. Brandt
MttGt eountv oontact
Tlttt. .a
Slatytwo
IMI; lilt II~WIIIt ra.ttat
protect II you
'""
Jobe, Frank Lickliter tmd Joel Edwards.
DetMrtllllllt ot .1011 a Lavtndtt at tho lnt-te,
10
thllloa
watt
at
rltltl "a:'.you, ~1
Lowery was 4 under through 10 holes and then had seven l'amll1 IOnic" le Mtlll
111
CDIIIII~ dlltrt. 'IIIII lrt 1nglt 0110 Hundred
ronST, '""'
•
stnight wrs. But his round-ending bogey at the 402-yard
11"11101111 to D I' lltt'Mnt Df .1011
,...
•ttl)
....
of
a
dlvorOI
tilt
flllthtf ldVIIICI tllllt N1 1111
,,..
'
''"'"1• Dtllncllnt·
.nintll hole. when his approach found a bunker behind the ~w rou~ ::::.. (740) . . lha 111t111t ohltdran · thtnot
IIOitlt at ~t
81C:OND, that the
llld "'IIOIIdenlt · In
·green, tOok away sole posse sion of sec&lt;'nd place as the last of llfOiflm to -'lllllt. 1111 en ti7.
IIIII llfOO..dllltl ehiU •nalt,10Slxty.two ( 0 Plalntllt 11t trlnted
the 67s to finish.
.
·
1out1t 11oe 1 4·11
li'fopoaala 1llo11kl hiVI tht tight IO tell 1 thl PilOt · temp111r1ry and
Only 34 of tho 124 players were able to break par.
-'-""' _.. ...... 1M aullmttltd to IOIIIIIeC It thll
NUMIIflt. parmantnl o~ttllldy
Tlll!otl Love11dar, hMtllll llld tVtf\' IHO:Ji74.000 .
llf tho p~~ltlta IIII!'Of
Sergio Garcia, playing as a defendina ch1111pion on the POA
....,aiiiTY
chlklrln;
lteiO
Of
JII'OO"dlfttl;
Mate• county
"'"
TOur for the first time. shot 1 76. He began with an eagle on provllhttna ot '"' ll'amtly
"..,..
TIIIIID IIIII tht
aarvtoaa,
If rou cannot Ill\' !Of ..ADDIIISS:
70S Main Platnttn '11o grantad
his second hole, the 609-yard No. 11, but hlld eight bogeys tadtrlt Woeldotot 171 " - atn.t, 11'.0. 1111
ltfVIOtl Of Slrttl lllclnt,
OH llmponrv and
and no birdies after that in his worst round of the year.
Aot (W1A), Ioiii I, MldiiiQIDrt, aoun .. t, the Court 417711
•
: ''Thm's not much to talk about," said Garcia, who hit just •nd ralatad ladw11 OH 41Tt0 110 Iaior 1111111 'FfDint count-'
P~rmantnt paroel perman1111
ohlld
than.l-4,teol,at
lltlfftblt•
•
1uppott
from
the
tor
you,
and
tlld
·nine of 18 greens in regulation. "What can you say about a . ::--.:::.:..~:= 4:00 Jl.m. All p!OCIIIIItng 0111 .-.It tHon4
Datandallt
tor
.
tt1t
00
:76? I got to playing bad, then got worse."
·
~ell¥ 111M undtr wtA, aullmtntona rnuet 1M In
p~
' lddrlll'
partiO'
mInor
parmant11t
Benllogan, a five-time Colonial winner, is the only person '""'" JII'CWidara ara ~-'Ytd lly milt Of termination of 701
· ohllclren·
MlOltlo
II 41771
Strttl, I'OUIITH • thlt Ill
to win the tournament in consecutive years. and he did it twice exp~etacl to link llllnd tlellvwy lly 1110
.
AICIInt,
rlfllltl.further
Prior lnllrllmlnt ·1qutt1bta diYIIIon ol
.
JII'OIIrtma with tooal ......,. dito and ttmo. '11111 1ft
( 1946-47 and 1952-53).
leiiiOr nMCie, pnavldt No lllllelllla I'OIJIINd advtaacl that If 111 rtltrtnOt: Volume
Even when Estes is playi~ well. such .as when had two 1 atrong connaouon Iller tilt elate Will lie enewtr
or
...
:wins and four other top-10 firushes the last six tournaments a !Mtwttn ao1demto lncllldtd In prwloua appaaranea le nDt 721,11110
AppriiMCIII:
:yell ago to complete his best POA season, he is constantly and 111ooupallon•1 au11111111tone nor 110 maclt lly you 1t llld Slf,OOCI.DO
. c1ubs •-"'
lurnlng,
and coneldtrocl. Tho h1arlng, lhwMttar,
TIIIMI 0' IALI:
·malci ng changes to hIS
auu h'IS game.
111,blllh progl'llme
Judgment
up111n
Tllllt
aolll !Of no lilt
"That was good, but I'm looking for sreat. I want to be pre- whteh Pfllllrl youth .....rtment - · " " proper hHrlng 111d 111111 fwo.lhlnll
tilt
""
rltlll
to
l'lltot
"''
pared to play any course in any conclit1ons. 111td be adaptable tor 1101t e~eonelary Or Ill PPOJIOIIII. Ill trill m1y llo Itkin lppralltd Vlllll.1111Tilt
.and be ready to change," Estes said. "I've spent 13 Le~ in aduoatton
or acconlanoo with at IQIIIIIt you t&amp;r tilt purahlltt(l) ehall
Cl'tl pan 31, 31 ~r~~tta ralltt dtmandacl ln dapoalt U.ODO.OO
·R&amp;D (research and development). I'm planmng on p aytng a ~:~\"~kl::'nt 11 county
Department th• petition. An Willi lilt lllllriH 11 tilt
:whole lot better."
IIIPflll 1tt. lerYiotl of Job • PamUy ortgiMI
onel coplaa of
: Estes, ninth on the money list last year but 44th this year, 1h111u d lnoludt: IINI- laiii'Gitllllltcl tilt patttton hu btln lllftlofeatd .....
· :played much better Thursday. The straighter shot that has Clahlrrntnlnglllgllllllty from dlecrlmlnatlon flltd In lhl OIIICt of A I h I T
II
May 31 ·June 1
replaced his high fade was better adapted for the windy con- tor WIA Jlrcgrem•, on the 1111111 ot me. the Clroull Clerk 1111 s~~~~ · · rueaa ' Maplewood Lake
color, nallonal ortgln, Cabllll County, W11t
ditions, and his new Pllttin&amp; style worked.
~~~:.Yve 1,.~ •••·
ega, religion, V)fglnla; II tilt Cabllll · F II AN K
I
Spaces Avan.
• Three of his birdie putts were less than S feet. but Estes ot 1erv1oe• to atlgllllt JIOIIIIotl llaUat or County Courth111Uit1 . WOOLDitiDOI CO.,
· )llnde a 25-footer on the 400-yard second hole and a 40-foot· r, o 11 t h
• n d ctlaalllllty.
and 1 oopy of tlla La • DL Moina Jr 949~2734
er on 'the par 3 8ch.
ncorporatt'!Y the tan
pttltlon II IVIIIIIIII 1;;d"i:euren01 • 1:
~17,24,S1,1002
Refreshment
lor
uoh '"pondant Landon, Attorney•
: Estes. changed his putting after f!nishi_ng n,o better than 23rd • . e~w:mwr.~me;:
11
"ld
111tllo1
upon
lor
Plalntlfl,
100
Stand Open
'and bemg 44th or worse four ttmes, m hts last six tourna· progrema will bt
- - - - - - - - - - - - NqUML
South
P11rl
811Wt,
ments.
award1d
'"d
Columbue, Ohio
Public Notloe
• "I've been hittlnf the ball real well for the most part, but not 1H0f"m ooata muet
ITATI OP WitT 43201; Tilt: IU·221·
GIBSON
VIIIGINIA
1e••
:puttina thataood.' he said. "So I fi,gured I'd better try some· ;toso,aoo.o:•,::~h~ ·
:xc:ounetl
""'
IN Tltl CII'ICUIT
GRAPHICS
3Jling new, so I revamped my puthn&amp; ... got a new putter, a
COUIIT
OP
CAIILL
A.
NOLAN,
.
(4)
II, (0)3, 10, 17,14 : Wt undtntand your -~~
ionger putter, standing taller and changed my grip."
""qutlllf ......_
COUNTY, WitT
p!Odutlut ,.,, """"·
: He needed 27 putts in the first round.
Allllllnl
VIIIGINIA
\\'1 1Im to nMtlyour
• 1'1'0-.rtlng Attomty
Pullllo Notlca
Jones, the 1996 U.S. Open champion who has had rotator
. - Lrlourrrlalrltrlp
Cabllll
county,
w
..
t
CIVIL ACTION
cuff problems since his laat win at the 1998 Quad City
, .. "'lht
VIrginia
NO.ONA-+1
IN THI COMMON
onloOIItna ro•
·Class1c, waa S-under par through II holes .but couldn't mainJUDOIPANCAKI
Our oonl&lt;tO lodudtl
PLIAI
COURT
OP
tain the pace.
·
~ 17,14,11102
auo~- cam.. r.. co ...
MilOt COUNTY,
s-.LtuorhNd, Siano.
: Jones had a bo&amp;eY on his 13th hole, the 246-yard par-~ No.
WilT VIIIOINI~
OHIO
EnYOiopol. •11tra, Ltbtll.
OIMIITMINT OP
OOMIITIC
:4, and gave up another stroke two holes later when he m1ssed
lmthUrtl
HeALTH AND HUMAN
IIII.ATION8 .
'II two-foot putt.
Contact ua at
IIIIOUIICII, ax rtf .
DICIIION
''The last year or so, it has felt a lot better und I'm able to
JMeloeiiU, 1oo111
740 112·7122
Public
Notice
practice more," Jones said. "It just takes time. It takes months
ltntiOt Worker,
NOTICIIV
·and months and months, sometimes years. to get that stroke ·
Petitioner,
PUILICATION
IHIIIIP,'I IALI 0'
IIIALIITATI
:t,ack. I feel like I'm staning to tum a comer_a fittle bit.~'
VI.
COMMONPLIAS
: In 12 tournaments this year, Jones has m1ssed seven cuts,
COUIIT, MilOS
Happy Ad
:Withdrawn once and finished no better than 3S~.
.
CHIIIVL LUCAI
COUNTY,
OHIO
.
TOm Watson, who skipped this week's Seruor POA Tour
NATAIHA LUCAt,
I.AIIIIA
LUCAI,
event, Corey Pavin and Carl Paulson were among 13 players
JOIHUA LUCAI,
at 2-under 68.
,
KILIAY LUCAI,
· Duval and Paulson were both 4 under throuah che1r first II
JACOa LUCAI, anCI
~oles before gettin&amp; to Colonial's famed "homble horseshoe"
. ANV UNKNOWN
PUTATIVI PATHIII(I)
:._ Nos. 3·5. where the founh hole is sandwiched by the
01' NATAIHA LUCAI,
:Course's longest par 4s.
.
I.AIIIIA LUCAI,
• Duval had bogeys at Nos. 3·4, getting one of the strokes
JOIHUA LUCAI
'pack with a birdie at No. 8. Paulson had a bogey at the long
KILIAV LUCAI, ANO
JACOI LUCAI.
Pll! 3 and then ended his round with another bOaey.
IIMponeltnll • .
DIVOTS: Robert Damron and Fred Funk, both citing injury,
withdrew after opening 77s .... Shiaeki Maruyama. the winner
IN THIINTIIIIIT OP
at the Byron Nelson Classic last week, had four consecutive
, . . . . . . .1
THill MINOA
-birdies on Nos. 9-12, but also had seven bogeys in a 72. Ben
CHILDIIIN IN
IIIIPONDINT'I
Hogan' in 1946 is the only player to win the Colonial and the
CUITOOV:
Dallas POA Tour stop in the same year.... Pavin, who got the
Nltllhl LUCII, DOl:
last of his 14 PGA Tour wins in the 1996 Colonial, had a hole·
0+17...
Llrlue LUOII, 001:
in-one on the 178-yard 13th.
WANTI!D: Emergency Rtllaf
(Subelltutel) needed 10 work
Individuals wtlh mtnlll rttardaCion linn,:;~~~~
County. Houra art tchlduled 11 nt
Requlrtmanta: High- echool dlploma/GEO,
valid drlvtr'e lloenlt, three ytaarrs~.~=:l
driving experience and 11
PIIISBURGH (AP) - The Paytas said. "We are more th111t
aulomobllt lneuranct coverage.
Pittsburgh Pirates plan no comfortable with the seating for
Stnd raeuma to:
ThE CRAFTY.
changes 10 seating for people our guests .with disabilities....
luoktyt Community ltrvlctt
BUND SPOT
with disabilities after a woiiWI "The pwpose of our seating
P.O. lox 104, JICkton, OH 4H40.
(Factory Outlll)
in a wheelchair was hit in the plan is that people with disabil·
~line for tppllo11t1: 51241112.
head by a home run.
. .
tties are included. We don't
AU vortleol blludt are
The woman, seated behind a rope off a section 111td say 'This
n1ode to order at
The Farm Museum
protectiv!l rallln&amp; in right ,field, is where you have to be.' You
our locollun
was sthick by Anzona can 10 anywhere you want in
Board Meeting
• Vertlealt • 1'ood
Diamondbacks outfielder Steve thli park."
Will be held on
• Mlnll • Elc
finley's homer Wednesday Fan safety has come under .
nlaht.
increased scrutiny since 13·
nngv 21st
144 """-·· o••,•••
44HH5
~ woman who wu . 110( year-old Brittanie Cecil died
identified, reCeived aeveral ' two daya after she waa hit in the
Wanted:
ldtdlea In the head but other· head by a puck at a Columbul
.
Experienced construction
wlte wu not aeri0111ly injured. Blue Iac~ P,M in March ..
Pleasant Valley Hospital
·
·
workers
The Pirat.ellllid Thunday thai Some. IJIC!IIdina F'tnley, ~tl·
l&lt;nOwttdgMbltln OIIJ*IIr;, tltolrio,
Pla..ant Valley Hoeplcal Home Haalth
lhe wu reooverlna at home.
clzed ~ ~ .for _placina
plutl'rblng httl)ful.
It
currently accepting reaumee for:
The Pirat.el lllid the accident wlleelchair seating m a rrequent
8112·71M3, 581•7DC2, 581·4&amp;11
wu unfonunate, but not home nan area. Finley'• homer
pHXIICAL THIBAPIIT; Full llmt.
UIICOI!IIIIOII and defended fan came one .batter after Luis
Current elate PT llcaneurt, graduate or
llfety at PNC Park, which Oonzalez'a two-run allot landed
Fry
an approved IIChool of PT or graduate
opened lut ys
only a few feet away ftom the
Detipen. w~t beyond the woman In the rijht-tield ~lands.
or aocrtdlttd coli~ cr unlvtrelty with
~·'-II under the federal
''111at wu a hell of a place 10
1 ctrtHicataln Pt. Currant BCLS (CPR)
~;·with Dilabililiea Act put thai," Finley laid
.
cartlflcttlon. Currant WV flcanu.
and wen an award from the But advocate~ for the dife
For more Information:
Rutland American Legion
·United
Cerebral
Palsy abled gy that while ~ accl·
All you can eat fish, cole
Pltulnt ValltV Hoapltal
A11ociation, Pirates apokea· dent is unfoctu~ 11 shows
woman Patty Paytas laid
thai teama are 11VIlli ~~
clo Human Fleaource•
slaw, baked beana, $5.00
"1 believe we have a very IIBfe fana the wne opporiWUbe&amp; 21120 Vallty Drlvt
Hot dogs alao ivallablel
environment at PNC Park. We and expolun: 10 hAzards - that
Point PluHnt, WV 2111110
have not had any difficulties in other baaeball fana have
Meals to gol
(304) 1711-4340
particular wit!' thinp like this," enjoyed for years.

PGA

.............
.............

!::. :l:f

=-=.

------------"'*

C:"''·

"*••"r.a)

C'

"ct:'c:1:

'*"'"'

'

cameron does it all for Mariners

·-

Ia I 'IIOIIIIIftL.

'"-'"*'•

Sheets took a two-hitter and a 1·0
lend into the ninth after he drove in the
Brewe111' only run with his first career double. But he surrendered u leadoff homer to
Sean Cusey, und Mike DeJean (0·2) lost it
in the lith.
Royster said Sheets should have had u
cushion of several runs if not tbr the
Brewers' ineptitude, exemplified by
Sunchez's luck of hustle. Also, Alex Ochoa ·
was picked otl' first, Ruul Cusunovu wus
thrown out at the plate on u play in which
he might have tom liguments in his left
elbow.
"That's terrible. That's bruhtl. We made
so many mistakes. We got picked otT. We
didn't run. We get thrown out at home
plate." Royster said. "Hey, it wus 1·0
because that's what we did. We made sure it
wus 1·0 going into the ninth. I melll\, that's
all urou nd bad."
The Brewers fell to 12-29 with their 16th
loss in 22 gumes.
.
Things ure going well for the Reds
because they're doing the little things the
Brewers aren't. Tuke Boone's heads-up
play.
"He did not punic. He let the ball fall,"
.Royster suid admiringly. "He's got the
fastest guy in baseball running to first. He
throws to tirst. And then Clasey makes u
perfect throw to second. Double play. See
you Iuter."
Sanchez suid he didn't run because he
didn't see the ball nnd tigured it was foul.
Sanchez will huve plenty of time to watch
the ~ume Friday because Royster said he
won t be in the starting .lineup.
Gube White (2-1) pitched a perfect lOth
for the victory and Danny Groves worked u
1-2-3 lith fur his 14th save in 18 ch111tces.
In u game marred by three ejections,
Sheets walked three and struck out ocareerhigh nine in 8 1·3 innings. Reds starter
NICE GAME -Reds' catcher Jason LaRue, left, congratulates pitcher Danny Graves, right, after beating the
Chris Rei'tsma allowed . four hits In seven
'
'Milwaukee Brewers 2·11n 111nnlngs Thursday. (AP)
innings.
B~n

first-rOund

to

CaM···-· . CaMN&amp;.•••tt
=....
r.c..•
~
......
.,~

g::%":m!!r=

Red

uguin."

••com

••••m"'
w • - 11• ..... _.

Mtldn,

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Never mind Todd
Walker\ decisive I Hh· innin{\ single. A
pluy in the eighth inning epitomtzed the difterence
between
Cincinnati . and
Milwaukee.
• ·
Brewers rookie Alex. Sanchez didn"t run
out u bunt thut he popp.ld up in front of
home plate und Reds third
$ baseman Aaron Boone alenly let the bull Iilli, then threw
to li111t to begin a double play.
"TI1ut's u heads-up play on his J)llrt. It's u
bonehead play on our purt." Milwaukee
manager Jerry Royster fumed after
Milwaukee lost its seventh straight · to
Cincinmni. 2·1 Thursday.
"Thut won't happen on my team ever

1

\1
18

Mlnnooota

FtldiJO ..., n, 2012

Big Unit bears down after first-pitch homer

NltloniiiAque

.-,,,,

Page B4

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FLEA
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p......,,..

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Pirates defend disabled seating
after woman struck by ball

.

Walleye Fish
Sunday, May 19
11 :OOAM-6:00PM

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• Golden Bow 16.000 Twine ................... $18.65
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Stall dry for ~ams. pens. cages, &amp; truil&lt;rs
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r

I

Ooiltlr..

r:t

.740-667-0363

It:"'

FOUNt!
~ound : In ~oanay ,.,..,
oaonthund, ~ld In oolar.
Qoukl 111 dlljllaOod b'l tha
IOIIIIICIO. (I&lt;IO)U5·5180

ATTINTIONIII
II Your Own loti.

·

I
rttf•
milo

M ·'ff
t21.•$81,/11r, POIIII1111
No lxptrltrlol NtctMry
Mill Orellr
Clll ToiiPrtt
HI lnttrnall01111 .

1·188·471·0..111
.

AVONI All Arlllllb lluy or

,....-,.,..,..,..,.,....,...- ttl. llttnay lpear~, IICM•

=.·

Dunllll Yllld llle Llllovllti 1:.:7;1•.:.;
:; 14:::21~.---~

~ prton, Cilllelolrl WOII!trl Mtded

7~~~~o0
~

Allltnl

on Page B-5

Self-Storage

mEIGS counTY
.STHTE STORE

Delivered
&amp; Spread

•

1

1884 Chfvy Camoro 1 own- -""="'===--.
ar/Ortvar. tleroge Kept, 85k r·
P"'!~~'!!"~!"'!!--.
Block, bflok, plpaa, mtttt. Brand now llrlt. T·
YO
NG'$·
.
.
window~, llnlola, olo. Claude TOpt, FUlly ltllded. E1ctl·
Wlnltra, Rio Grande, OH 11n1 Condlllon. $6800.
. ·
'
Call740·245·8121. , . (304)678-2881
1 ieee Chfvy camaro. 3.4, •
A••111
,
va, /1/C, Till Sloar2n , • " - - ono
New Homes • Vinyl
Fllll'l!IA'I.E
.
~
··
· • Qround EHecll, Aur s 1Ram-lng
or, HOOd Scoop, High · 11• • QlroOtl
Siding • New Onrnges
2 yHt Old ltmlto brown &amp; lormanoo E•hau1i, Blue, • Eltclrlaol A PlumblnO ./
• Rcplnccmenl
wliilo ahlh·ltu
1200. Roolly Nloe Oer, 18DK • Roottno• ounara
WI do
R ti
, (304)882·Be~B
. mllea, $4500 OBO. LOCII • Vlnyllldlnt• Pointing '
n WS ' 00 Jng
, -•• Fill•,..•'·
,__ neu- ;:Ctl:;l~(7;.,:40
_ ;;:l3:.:3:;.8•.::;21H1=9-:---: , Polio ond Porch Dtcko
COMMII&lt;IAL 1111411YDIIII1Al
2 yl. olll .....
tlrtd, ltoaltlty, lrttndly, 1986_Oodga Noon, 2.0, B
Free Estimates
' FREE ESTIMATES
natda 1 good ltoma, taking 1peed, 411,000 mlloo. Now V. C. YOUNG Ill
7-""-"92·7699
tiiO, ~304)882-i!t80
Palnl Job. 13800. (740)448·
992·8215
...,..,
- 7428 or (740)4411·2310,
0
lnllhlh
Fimlto, 1887 Chivy Cavalier, E•· l~...i-iliii.L'Ii!"""'tiliL...,;TtfJFN!!J ._
(N_SUNDAY
CALLS)
at.KC
lab,o1C11100.
(740)441·
___
...1-'1111
0831
......, Condition, 2nd Own·
;;.;.;:.;..,._____ tt, 7D,000 actual mlln. 2
At&lt;O RIQ Slbl~an Hu1tcy Door Air, TIM, CNIII, Pow·
PUPIIY Black/WhMo female tt Mlrrotl, P-r Sur\IGOI.
f~OO. ~-713-5730
. CO Player, Mull-10 IJ4&gt;proolalt, .Aeklng $4288.
In this apace
t.KQ Aoglltlrod ChoOCIIIt ~740)245·8007 (304)713Llb Pupa, RtodY May ..8. 8188,
'
for
lltw Ctawo, ShOll. a P• :....:."-:-.,_,--,....,---.,.
mall, a Malo. (740)4~1- 1m S·IO Pickup, 8 11101(1,
*25 per month
0013
4cyl, /1/C, ntl(lt boay
work, 13000, l&gt;ookl for
At&lt;C Reglatorod Mlnlelura $8000. 1082 S-10 Blazor,
Plnoohora, 8 wHkl, block &amp; :.;N;;:;Ico;;..;:;13:::900::;..:
. (,;..740;.::1:.:,448.;.:..:·B~17;.::2
lin, boouillul rnlrktnQI,
1250 firm, ~ 1tmat11, 3 2001 Cevatltr z-24, Black,
millll, 304-n:!-&amp;380
loadtcl, Power E•tr;~lttng,
8,000 mtloa. Muel S..
COCkor Sponlll Pupplnl t98D8.00 080. (740)441·
8itcluW1tllo Poronla on 1&amp;.41
Proml11a. Full Blooded . .;.;:_-· -~-=-:1180, (140~·2111111
2001 Ford E11Cl011 SE. 1~.

i

••

BISSEll

10 warll Wlltt IIOVIIOH 12•
17 In • rollcMntltl Mttlng,
- ·
.org
Nt •parlonot rtqwlrod.
Mo¥1ng Nil- GGGI 1110 Mull ha•l Hlgtt IIOnool Dl•
. . I fllllt Ill ~ piOml. 0111 1740)&amp;.4UI-!2,
lflt, lllld I!Ht. tiJII dl/1&lt; May 1111 lor 1.!11 Clonlay,
•11111 ' 11111, cf I
Dtrrtlll Mygilnlll neecled In
•• •
progrtlllv.Jc:tvlnilan Ill·
lllllld pr
In Cllltpolllo
P111 firM, lind rHIII!It 101
~~~~t~t• CLA 188. o/0 IIIHIOO!il Oil&gt;
II' TriiXHit, t-25 Tltlrd Alii.,
llllipollt, OH ole831.

Wa hevt
Immediate
fUII•tlme
ouatomer
eervlot poeltlon
opanlnga in our
m1ln office.
luoce. .ful
1ppllcant1 muat
.,_people
oriented, enJoy
ueln.g the .
phone, ·
computar
lltar1t1, end
tnJov working
with numbtrt.
Potltion offert
111 oompanv
btnlfltl
Including
htelth and lift
lnturenoe, 401 kr
paid vacation,
and pe...onai
dave. Por
employment
oonalderatlon,

-

largo Rlbbil HUIChll,
GoOd COncll1ton, tnoludot
broeclot boxoa, load &amp; wolor
llll!IPiioo, (140)2ee.MI7
Jack

·

Cl\ltoe, -

W I -. liM,

08 Ford Pllntlfr KLT,
laf85. 84 Ford Atngor
~Itt, Ext. Cob, V-8, - ·
Air, $3886. II&amp;D ~IG &amp;aloe.
II Hwy. 150. (740~-1185

I''

Licensed 8r Insured
Health Problema?
Want Mora leisure Time?
Tired of Mowing?
Not A Spring Chicken?
LIMITED OPENINGS

(740) 992-1536
~ . JN~:
~?:.~!~~~!~e:
Spedalizing In l:..og Homes

ill:\
' \il.
1

IE.x:cluMsiv."ec;;ealer
actory Direct

•

-~)

Ill•'f

~

'1

&amp; Rubber Roofs"
~
Garages. Pole Buildings. Concrete
Roofs &amp; Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
.-.
. (740) 992-3987
\te.•.
Owner &amp; Opera1or, John Dean TFN

fljt't'

··~~lir.--..lf#:..~
ftl!!1IJ\!!' m!•: (Jill tJln Ifill fJ[U

Replacement Windows

American ur•mJ~t
Patio Rot1msl

LIME-

STONE

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING I
Le' me do tl for yout

Delivered a

Spre1d $15.00
per ton, 8 to 10
tona, llmltad
area, call for
details. Cell:

. (740) 591·2173
Or leave name
and number

TI'N

(740) 742-8015
Quallly Concrel&lt; Work

• Tonneue Cover
• Ventvlsor • Bua
!Shiel~ &amp; Full Line
Other Ac.essor!H

(10 yr. parlli &amp; labor warranty)

Service all Brands
Financing Available

glrdon IIIII),

wttl! Qenlrot Ajr,
boOk. iiiiiiOIIICI

I

'I'

IHlona

(7 40) 949 - 1521

'

(740)

''

(I

992-~822

.......o'S-

lllllla,etl lwllllll-

RESIDENTIAL &amp;
MANUFACtURED HOUSING
HI·Emclency Heat Pumps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

••..
,
,.

.... 611etNMel'ltlll

free [ SII11131CS
411 11!1'1 11 \1 ·Mut!lhllnrl

740-9!12·9138

INJfltiB1.
Worrohll" ~~

'*'111111111111
hit" 1'1111116 lllnMerw

.

28 yeer1 Experten~
FrM E1llrllltw
~tolllrM)

an-353-7022
1

R.l.IUOIRY
AU. TV'U OP MAlON"'

lftiCK. ILOCK l ITOHI
II YIWII UI'IIIIIHCI

FREE ESTIMATE

(304) 773-9550

HERBALIFE

fiELDS
PLUMBING

·1715

Diatrlbutor

I Lost 27lb.
in 32 days.

.a •

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas,
Sidewalks, Floors

Cllll&lt;l ....

Independent

Ht.UIG

Pomer111 Eaoles
810602171
Every lbursdoy
6 SUnday
Deors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Prligresslve top Une .
Thursdays
Pr09resslve
CoueraiiiR SUIJdMs

YOUR COIICRETE
CODOECTIOO, llC

24 Hr. Emergency Service
Licensed • Insured
Thermal ZoneT"' equipment

~

111M OMO tflrrl TNOk, M
aln, "'"' ooll, duofly1_1n •·
ooltonl ~.... 740-

740-992-5232

WOLFE
Heating &amp; Cooling

oUIO,
32,000
mllol,
111,760.00. 740-742-t3t1
==:.::..'-""..;...;;_c.._
114 Nlaoan Maxll, gaocl
ooncl. loadld 110,000 milia
$8000. :104..75-1132

renexology.
and Yoaa Therap)' Olt't
Cenificiltes Available
$30-4.5 minutes
$45 - 7.5 minutes

M.lfno../11':\1/fii:\llr.-.;...r,..
~H•! IIJ.I.~ ttl!!! ~ill! II!!!J fll.!!. !jj II

CARPENTER '
SERVICE
BUILDERS me.

-.,

Jlmltmy. Ohio .

LICENSED MASSAGE
THERAPIST
10 Yean Experience
. I
In: Deep
I
.

Tree Service

(740) 742·7037

r••-!!!!,.-,_____- .--.

33795 HiwnJ u

Krls
Kanieckl

JONES' .

Advertise

l..cwrANII

on

More Business Services

,,..

411&amp;101

~====::~~;;;:::::==~

~'R~
High 8l Dry

Business Services,

· 8tJJo1oLtm

FREE ESTIMATES\

DIPOYBIG
PUtS

Hill 's
Self Storage

80Uihtlll OhiO II CUI!tniiV
IIIMnQ Mome HHIIh Ald1a,
IIN'III\CI LPN'a, Call 140.
181·1111
lnllruotor, llualnu~ Com·
muniOtHona, Modlal Ottlot.
1111\d mume 1o aeul:a
Carw
1178
•
11011 Pike, au • 311, aautp.
olle, OtU&amp;eS I.
Lllllt 0tt11r1 11 now hiring
DIIIYifY Drlvlft, ln•IIOrt
Peroonnlll, and tloo Man•
Afttmanl. '111ible houra
w lh nlrchly comptllllvl
Como otn lnt '""I App v11
tnt Clllllpalll Llttlo C111111
Todlll
Live In Ntl' Citric lor
Muon otol. (304)773•
DOOO
MOCiurt'l ~tlllurant now
nlrln~ 111 3 tooailona. lull or
lme, ~lck u~ IPI)IIOI•
n Allocalon &amp; rin; btok
bllwun
8:30ern
I
1O:OOtm, Monday !hill ~~~
umay.
·
· MIDIOAL IMINQ
No ";P,IMinOI hOCIIII'I'•
Will rtln. COmP\IIIi PI•
iulrtd. DrHIInoomtlll
1• 00·140·8 117, Dtpl. Ill
,Night Dllk SICIIttty. Ml•
oroloh Word, Typing, a•10
Monday•Thuraay. lend
Rllumt to: ·CiliiiPGIII Cl•
raur Coillga ma JIOIIIIOII
Plkt, !l&amp;lllpolia, OH 48831

Dally Sentinel• Page B 7

The

t-24'1'000 eu. 111na,
Gamoa.... wiVU dryer a tan, &lt;lou01oooldlllor SIO blo llirra!Or, i!lylng ol-yo.
~ ...
(7~ ..... ~· .3 .......d« a dryfng floor,
~
I " '
•n_,.
..,,......, 1u ttaQO, One 'Oillrylng floor
• •
I
•
,
I •
Pocket Knives
t•ti
tor aoto ti50 &amp; tan, $1!000. s.- g111n
QNAtlty,
Vlu1ft:Y.
Low
l'rlcu
Collectlblea
... :104..7&amp;'3000
. ctaanor, 01&lt;1!1 tsaa.
52' ljfllln . . . . tii!OO. 301 (304)e7~
lhat'e Ual
• A Cut A bt&gt;v&lt;d
t.l 1bp Bolt, FtM Din for erom · hy&lt;ldrlYo tsaa. 1888 CIIWt - . , . El&lt;1 83 Nillln snort Truck Bed
IIM'I-to--.
w}Mrt-tosd-...tl
the D••r+"l
~=: =~i ~111!00d"=';,!!.~ ~~:s~.:'too sui.ooo ~:O'o $500. 17401448·
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flata ••10
ltflllill, 'lltlclor Equipment. 18'o, ooml·mounll(l $850.
ludgal ....,.... 'honomlo1o• Hanging Baskets ••10
Mon·Sat 1 D-4
(740)441-Ge18
18' chain harrow tl50. 10' 88 Ford Eoplom XLT, V-8, -All Typos. Aocou To
Wide Asso~men1 o1 Herbs, Ann1J8Is,
··
cullipacklf $800. 21 ' har!O- loadl(l, gara\ll ktl)l, now OYer 10 000 TrtnlfMIIoionl
217 E. 2nd Sl•
Perennials in 4' pols lor
t.IR CONDITION~RS· Can· g&amp;lorl150. 10' culllmUicher Ureo,
33,000
mlloa, Robulld 'KMo, 740-245·56n:
Pomeroy,OH
Coli· 338-3765
only 94¢ eacht
lrollild Window, (740~- $1000. 4 row 30' culllvolor 118.500.(740)882-7557
83081lnd t-800·281.QOIII. 1100. 13' rota!Y hot s:seo.
·
· 1 ·
Morning
Star
Road • CR 30 • Raelne, Ohio
(740)
992·5908
_
· _.
· JO 850 or 750 12' dUal lilt 88 FOIO E•plarltor loadl(l,
CAMPER&lt;; &amp;:
iluutUul Hanamade AJ· do~trtllade IIOOO. Ravola• lop cond. 70,000 mlloa
1·741J..949-2115
~ Oreen Eonh TOna, lion nlla .243 w/Buahnoll 112,000. :104-675-&amp;132 .
MotoR HoMES
..a, AllP&lt;oxlmatotly s ooopo sm. 740-&amp;88-1254
112 • 5 112 n: piuo F~nge.
For Sale 25" camper 78
P/t .
tao. (304)878·52114
· e· Ktng CUIIt&lt; Ftntllh Mo.,.
MorollcYa.ES ..-. i..c. ~;.nt1111 , E~c.t~ PIMlrto compul- -~~belli. $800. 13041675- ~
. tant condllton. !740JU6- CONTRAOORS, INC.
01, Ptnllum Proconor,
•
11185 300 KawaMkl biiOU 9854· CoR anor 5pm
Racine, cit)lo 45n1
Hard omro. lnciUdoa Key•
14•4. great cond. 12600.
7-""·98e3948
I&gt;Olm, monitor, and Cenon
LlvostOCK
304-1!15·3332
...,. ""
pr1n1.,, !74012M-Illl47
·
·
CONCJElt/ILOCK/Bli(J(
,
1088 Honda t.mancan CIOI- iiir;;;;;;~~--.,
Grubb. a Plano· tuning &amp; 8 monlh old Black Muul alo Special Edlllon. 1100
J1oME
• Footera, Wolls. Steps ,•
~epalre. Probllfna? NHd Bull. Call (740)245-03~1 . CC wl1h Sa~ a loll
IMPMoVEMt;M'S
Aal Work.
TUnod? Ctll Tho Plano Dr. PIHM LH... Mo ...go
of 111101· 4800 mllll. , . .liiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiio.l Replacemenos, • Walks
740-448•4528
. . 15000. (740)248-0383
~
and Drives• Stencil
Hoi point Elool~c Range. Shllllnd Pony, $400. Goel, 1i88 260 Vti111hl4· -1w~:::::::INO
Crete
135 7
1150.00 Hoi Polnl dryer
' ( 40)388o81144
If. ilaln In ll011Qf 2 1/2 Uncondlllonal lllollmo guar- .
Free Estimates
1128.00, (30-1)875-6683
yaort. Haa b11n run for omaa.·Local reloroncoa 'tur·
lndipandem Hlfblllle Dll·io
about 1 hour. 12750. nlllhod. Eatabllohod 1975. ServlngOhioandW.V.
l~bUior, Coli For ProdiJCI Or
Auros
(740)248-0383 '
. . Call 24 Hro. (740) 448·
. wv 11031712
Opporiunll)i. (740)441- 188_2
nJR S.\IJI
81 Honda CB 750. Now 0870, Rogers Baaomonl ~,o.....;;.;.;;.:;;;.:.;.:.;....l.llllol
JET
Tl .... Runa &amp; l.Ookl Good . Walorproollng.
, - - - - - - . , r===~==., r~~~=~~
~ERt.TION MOTORS
1981 lnlomallonal 8ua. Full 8500
mllu,
$1500. =::-::---:-:-:--:--:--:-:ROI)olrod, t.t.w &amp; Rob&lt;llll In Slzo, Runa Good, Looko (740~-8305
C&amp;C General Homo MalnleSiaok. Coli Ron Evana, 1· Good . $1800. (740)370· For &amp;ale or Trade: •81 Hon· ,.._ Palnllng, vinyl tid·
800·537·8528.
8287
dl Goldwtng, lull)i loaded, lng, carpontry, dooro, win-_
__
tii.Ctllent
condition, doWI~ blthll mobile home
All Makes Trac1or &amp;
· _
1984 Cullaoa, 307 4bbl 12800 00 740-742·2210 ropelr and more. For tree
•New Homes
lane Ctdlr, Challlr, aolld (Brokl HHU 8011), 350 TUr·
oallmolt coli Chol 740·982·
Equipment Parts
• Garages
r'"tri~·
~".!!.
on bo (Bad), Stock Rime Wllh
bTS
&amp;:
MoroRs
e:la3.
.
Faqlory Authorized
op
, 740) ..... . newer Urea, ootid body Wilh
FOR SALE
•Complete
Case·IH Parts
Lo-y tor otto bill hitch llnlod wlndowo. S.. ol2018 '--lliiiiiiiiioo-"
Remodeling
Dealers
304-1!78·3000 '
~=~H:'-; 1~(::.l):;:~'.; 1881 Willi craft 211112', 1/2
NIW AND UIID ITIIL ovontnga.
oabln, IIOvo, •54 onglne, ~r::EUocriiiC'Aijl
/000
St.
Rt. 7 South
Stop
&amp;
Compare
·IIHI tlhmo Plpa Robar
Eloollont
Condlllon.
Coolville, OH 45723
For Oonartll.' t.nglo, Chon- !985 8·10, Rtbulll 2000 •15,000 firm. Hand Hlld
FREE ESTIMATES
!ltl I'll! aar Slltl Clrallng mllol ago. •1200 080. Morine ~adto With chargor,
Dralna,' Ori ... waya
1888 Ponlloo Grond·Am, SilO. 2 Solin Skl'a, J1,50 Rlaldonllal or commorclal .
740-992·1671
TI'N
W.lkway1. LiL &amp;crap Mil· Runa GOOd, Ntoda , work, aoch. Ski RI&gt;Pl, $50. 18 6 wiring, new ltNic:t or ro- .._..--.,~-.-.1.
...:::.:.:.:;:;:.~ L..----..JCI:I.I
ola 0pon Monday, Tuoaday, $800 080. (740)446-1036 panli Qflt, 150. Saare Lug·
Malllf Llotnsld lioc·
Wl(lnoadoy &amp; Mlay, 8om_· 1987 Mercury Grand Mar· gogo
Cantor,
S10 .
tan. Aldanour Eloclrlcal,
4:30pm. Clcood Thuroday, quia, """"""' oar, , 1200 (740)387-0850
WV000308 , 304-1!76-1786.
m· ,, {. upp lth.
8a1u7:l a Sunday. OBO ~740)742-2081
(740)
7300
~:.:.·.:,.-:.:~:..;::;:.;..,,...,.,..,
llo\. I S'l
1888 FOld Tompo, 411,000
Plano, Whitney by Klmblll. milia, ono owner, 4 - ·
U Gallon Aquarium. Corn- oulo llr llko now garagf
\ iiddll-po r (, ( lhio -1:'7hU
29670 Ballhan Road
piolo with Fl1h. (740)387- kepi; rnu;, ... caN 740·982•
Racine, OH 45771
7115.
4484 dlya, IVInl"'ll, 740·
liON "IIIU- Ulod
882·5238 or 581·1078.
740·949·2217
Qondola 1kttvlng,
18110 CulloM Supreme, 4
Door, Loadl&lt;i, 11200.
llhowo-a, ooOiora,
lrootora, counloro,
(740/•48•1815 dayllmo,
Sizes 5'x10'
mloo. dlljlliy ll•luroo, ulto. (?40 448-1244 oftor ?pm.
Ltmllod 'l1mi Only I
"'-'-"-·-· ;....;;....-"'-o......:.__
to 10'.x30'
'
Oaiiii00-839·3233
1881 Fol(l Touru1 GL.
www.tlldU.....,naciton.oom Loaded wllh optlona. Cl~tn.
Hours
Thrtt Pllll Tlblll Sal 1 81,000 mlltt. 11!000 OBO.
7;00 AM • 8;00 PM '
t7e. Baml~ Mtc:rowa:. ~ 7401441 ' 1083
Ntcl. t20. ~rnuglll Iron 1911 Ponllao Flroblm, 3.1
Cllolr S100. 2 Crool&lt; Poll, V8, auto.. 1·1op, ••oollenl
iloltl 1
or te. (740)448·11429 condllk&gt;n, 13.500.00 080.
1'1 I I 11 WONkS •
.
140·742·2215
Tloltot, 18 H. alnglo ulo en• '-"-....;:="---clolod wlbulll·ln ooblnll, 1881 Z-24 Covallor, 88,000
/JONIIT S'/10/1
ltahll. 11.500.00. Ctll740- mMH, ono owner, lady driv·
Now Open
Sl Al681 &amp;
802-4310
111, iUIO, 1/o, partocl: 1_983
11 1.m. • 8 p.m.
Connely Drive
- - - - - - - Cavlllar
Convertible,
• Top • Removal • Trim
Walot11n1 Spacial' 31• 200 89,000 mllu, ono ownol; Tuppers Plains,
Mond1ythru
• Stump Grinding
PSI t-21 .00 Par 100; 1' 200 1988 Neon, rod, 4 door,
Alao serving .
Slturd1y
PSI 135.00 Ptr 100; ~I! tharJJ; 91 Mu11a~ GT', au• BuckEt Truck
115,00 QJr ton
Brail ComprHiion Fitting• to, elr, ••Ira nklei ) 1HI 2
sausage gravv
Cloetd Sund•y
I~ Sloe~.
dr. Clvllltro Iii wll~ 6
8·10tona
&amp; biscuits
liON IYANI INTII'IPI'II. monlh 7,500 milt wonenty
100
West
main St.
Dally Lunoh
limited area
11 JackiOn, Ohio, · t·800- Matlc'l. (74019112·3011
Pomerey
837·8528
Specials
188:.1 Cadillac STS, Loaded,
992·0008
Good Oondttlon. S&lt;.•oo· l~:~~~g.l
4126'1 mo. pd.
Dl)lLIIIM;
(740)245-9007
Letve ntme &amp; No.

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BOOK. ?·----t

lilit Witstl, who
wroto so ,·om~IUnyly
about th~ Huloeau~t ,
~il.l in 1.11\ il1ttNiiiW,
"Writin11 i' not likt
p~intinR wh~:rt you
add. It h not whit
1
you put on the 1:111\'n$
that the rtader $\lt$.
Writing is mort lik.- a
" sculpture wht~re you
remove. you elimi·
natt in order to m~ko
the work visible.
Evtn thf.llt pagos you
remove ~omehow rcmllin."
It might be useleu
flltnOVilll! a lmtr rrom
the dununy If you rc•
mnin with a lmer In
your hand. In this
dcnl, how would you
try to mak~: six
spade$? West lends theclub king.
Who KI\I.IW&amp; how to
bid that South hand?
After starting with a
stron11. artificial and
rorcing two clubs nnd
receiving a neQatlve
reply, South miQht
'T.ITIIK
NUIIAIIM
jmup to three spndts,
M I Ill e C. HGIIIYUN
II
GIH
which would 1!113rantee a 1olid suit. Um if
.Q I I'
UNTH
file TeUI'I'ULH
North has, say, j11ck·
YTOC,'
sixth or heuu, that
could bo the beat
• Ill •
DUI'TYK
NIIICTI'
0 Ill X
trump ~uit . After
North shows dia- ·
eCTJi
Ue
OTI'XT
I'IXCUe
mo·nd lcn11th nnd ·
some 4-7 point!,
PIIIIVIOUI SOLUTION - 'Ht will wrllt ana direct anot~or
matttrpltot In ~tt\llln , ' • S~lfltV MIOLIIIll 011 IIIIV Wlldtr
,
South bids whar he
hopes he cal1 makq,
THAT tAIU
You have l I win•
PUUIII ~L'""
nen nnd two club loaen. Uut as dummy hAl 0 ho.,•n•o lotto" of t~o
Rllmblo~ wo1d1 bo·
only two hearts, your .low ra~r
to !orm fo~r tlm~lo wordt.
plan should be to discard one of dummy's
S ELTED
cl~1b losen on ·the I
I~
th 1rd heart, then to
·;:;·::;::~·;::;;~·~.--1.
ruiT your lut ctub in I"'
the dummy. So, win
FU1 VN
ihe first trick with tho · h~l"""il;...;·;.,1ir;..,l~;.,.l~
club ace (thou11h you =-~~-:;:~·~·~
can aiTord to duck 1•
,.
1
R
A
Y NI
hero), cash those three
.
""ld1 to ~~~~[~:~~~ o11l1tlcll
heart trlck1, discarding I 1 1
1
when I 1
""'"'•
hurd
a dub from the .
optrl on tho etereo. To my dll·
dummy, and concede
m1y they llld they wtre ualng It
a club trick. Win
D R E L E G ·1to aoareaw1y 1ny • • • • • • • • • •·
whatever 11 rocurned
I· 1I 1 1 1' O Com~l111
1h1 ch~cklo quolod
by llillnv In lho mlnlna word1
~nd rufT your 1m club
· vou dOYtlo~ trom 111~ No. ' ilolow,
with dummy'i spade • PRINT NUMIPR!D
~~
eight, 10 thoro i1 no
L!TIUS
. . . . . . . . .
. risk of an ovcrruiT by
UNSCAAMILI 10~1
Ealt.
ANSWFR
.
.
.
After drawing
trumps and claiming,
.
. ICIIAM·LITI ANIWIIII
.
, ,
rctncmbcr to thnnk
Orphan· Knoll· Error • Srvtll• OUR SANK
partner for havin11 the
"I r1memb1rwhen Iflr1t went out on my own," amlltd
spade eight and West
my neighbor, "thlt I Wll lfreld I would bounce 1 chtck.
for not having a
Now I worry Whit will bounc1 will be OUR BANK I" .·
crump co lead at trick
one.

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I FRIDAY

MAY 17l

Sat&lt;n'1lay, May IH. 200Z
Thl!rc'• a •trnn~ ~: hanco yuu
could yet lnvulv•d In twu
'"l"'"t• cutcrJ!rlll•• ln.tht yur
•head •• bnth cmoJ,J oll'or you
JUIHC' ve-ry unu"u11l reward•.
Vun'll find nch tfevolu~ment
•~cilln~.

TAUilUS (AJ•ril 211-May
29) •• Give J•rlnrlty to ygur
hPIIIV Mill rarnlly llld VUI their
no edt •bovc your frlendt' ,
Thoro It •omethinM you un
brinK tn tho hou.,hold that
wlll b• loukotl on at volualtlr.
TryinM «• I'Mfh up 1 broken
runt•nce? J'hr Allro•Clnph·
Mmhrn1ker nn ht•IJ• you un·
dii!WIII wlfll tO du to ntakt
tht rrlatlnn•hiJt wor)l. M•ll
t2.75 tQ Mmhrn•k•r. c/" tld1
now•J••per, 11.0, Uu~ 175H,
Muruy Hill St1tion, New
York, NV lUI ill•.
C~MINI (May 21 ·Junr 21~
•• Allii&lt;IIIMh I!Wdtlct rniJI'tt
view the un~t tnmm you rr
•n•lyzlnM throu11h ,.,.,.,.,,.
orrd ijl•tm. you ikm'tluvt 111
do cho """· K••P ywr ••·
.."lll&lt;nti rr•l'ln•ll&lt; •nd ,..,.

l•dc.

U.O{CC)

{; ANCilll Qu111 ZI·July
22) •• Evtll lr you find yo•'rt
1101 up w d ahns with • 101 or

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proplt, your Jt~reoJlllom rt•
~ordln~ bualrtou ur n11ancl•l
llllllffl CIIIIIJ ba IKCtptlmtally
UIUtl,

.

LEO Uuly 23·Au~; 22) ••
l!ndeavurl you pCriOIIally
rnann111 or e&lt;llltrnl h•v• Jl'IOtl
Chln &lt;VI O( lueeevdlrtt', OVOII
1hu11 tlut 111 IUIIMllfr llttn
uaual. Vuu uu y como "I'
chore 11 tlrnoc, but not by roo
IIIIlCh .

VlllOO (Au~, 23·Stpt. 22)
•• Thtrr may bt 111m• lm·
ptdhntnlt that .,. bloeklnJ
your rllh, bullll rullry, rhcy
ari Jtttnly ptpcr drtJII!IIJ,
l&gt;on'tlll them ccora or OYtr•
whtlm you.
Lllli~A (Sept, 23·0CI, 23) •
• Co to 111 old frltnd who h11
ol\rn hrlptd ynu by r•lklnll
thlnjp out with you I( you
lint 1 probltnr ch11 yoo &lt;Jn'r
r~wlvr youflrlr. A !li~eu!liun
will rfYtll tht Jntwan,
SCOilPIO (0", 24-Nov.
22) •• To .chi••• 111 lmpor•
11111 objective, kup yourfllr
dtMiblr, 10 I( yw oho11ld r..J
Jlylllitd 11 thn11 or unlblt Ill
cir&lt;u"'vrnl 111 ubttult, you
,." llllkf lht

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SACITTAI IUS (Nuv. 23·

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1 nnt, bill II blhOOYII you 10
1111111 to ynnr mnli'c erldt]Ut
or o J•o•ltion you'vt liktrt.
S/be will hovt Willi txnllanc
IYM9111iOIJI,
CAPI~IC:O l\/11

(Dte. 22·
J•n. I !I) .. You won'l mind
ruiQj!itlllli your l"lorlcloc to
tht raar rtnln 10 that you nn
hcl11 •«moono 0111 for whom
you'rt rOtpmotiblt. You'll un.
dmtond th• .1111d It lnuntdl·
•te,
AQUAJ\.IUS U•n. 20· Ptb,
19) •• Whtn In thr prtctnet
of ochvn, II wouldtt'l lntrl for
you Ill bt t llrtlt mort dt· ·
fliOilltrldVt thin YIU!IIn IUP•
pori o( dtotl you lnvt. II Clr•
lllnly will htlp d11111 0111.
PISC:l\5 (Ptb, 211-March 2tJ)
•• l'ln•lly, • pmjt(l lltol may
hlvt lfOIIIfU 10 loki (vrtVII

to eotnplllt 1nllll!t now bt
nmlna ccllnpltlron. l!vtn If
yoo'vt b1111 drt~dlnllt , 111111
don• onn •nd (Ill' 111.
Al\.1 llS (Mtreh 2I•AJ!fll l'I)
•• To a6v1nn your IIWn In·
11r1111, you rnlaht htYf to
look OUI (or lhr tfTIIII of
IOrntnnt tflf, Thl• pmon'1
lnvolvtrtHIIItl mlfl)ll lnlirmin·
ij!r whh ym'"'

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Jafnt tllea8nt 1\egi•trr
ttrtltune

Dally Seatln I

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                  <text>rKei§J 9Ttgll cfcAoot
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At Pleasant Valley Hospital· we treat you like ·
fam.ily ... because that's what yoU are. ·
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A Special Supplement to
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.PLEASANT VALLE
2520 Valley Drive .
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

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675~4340

TAL

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, May 17,2002

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Southem graduation remonies Sunday
IY Toti\t M. WCM

Mr. llnd Mrs. Blltt)' Marshall, Sayre, daughter of Mr. and
I fiNfi NM StAAl
and slihllttorillll Matthew Justin Mrs. Aaron Sayre; Lindsey
RAClN6 - Membe of !he A h, son of Mr. abd Mrs. Kaye Smith, daughter of Mt.
Stmthem High S~hool Clus of Michael Ash, will pelk.
~nd Mrs. J~es Smith; Amy
2002 will recti e their dlplo- As ()aft of the comftlence- Michelle Wilson, daughter of
mas during tomblned blc· ment, OOJtloh Fisher, principal, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wilson.
tllhlUrt~te and wmmencement will make pedal tecognitlons,
Graduate
are Michael
exerel on Sunday lt II p.m, ll.nd, Dobby Ord, lllteri'm super- Joseph Adkins; Amllilda l&gt;awn
In the Charles W. Hayltllh intendent, will pre nt the dus As~worth, Richard Anthony
Oymnll51um.
to Ron Cartunatata. Southern . Lee Barber, Cherlssa· Lynn
The Rev. Dewayn, 0 . · Local Bollfd of t!ducatlon pres- Batne , Etlz.abeth Louella Bird,
Stutler, p tor with Southern ldent, who wlU then awata the Stetanle Jean Chapell,
· Chll!1e of the United Methodist raduate their dlpl
An
Cia t .r.... ~~ A
hureh, will tive the.blcealau· g Honor-.Jtns
-~~~--c~-lwn
h)'
IY ouman, mber
u•
....
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Nicole l&gt;uffy,
Robett · Ray
rtllte address ollowlna the pro- Chevoh bentz, dauahter uf Forester, Roberta Renea
mslonal llnd mu leal selec:· Mrs. Mary Nht; Sheri Lynh Forester,
A hley · Lynn
tlon by the choir under the Cummlm, da!!ghtet of Mr. lbd Hli.lllllton, Brite Taylor Hill,
direction · or Janette Oldaker, Mra. Oeorge Cummins; Joseph Dllllas Arthur Hill, Mntthew
choir dlrtett&gt;r.
Paul Mlhuel, son of Mr. .net l'aul Johnson, '1\tler Joseph
Fo graduation, the trio of Mrs. Sid Manuel; Khnberly Johnson, Ru sefl William
Vllledletorlw, Jo~~tph Wlllilllb Nicole McDaniel, daughter u( Krider, .1'homu Nathaniel
Cumell, JOn of Mr. and Mti. Mr. llnd Mtt. J~~ekie McOltllel; Martin, Stacey Ann Milia.
Bill Cornell; Auatln Tyler 'rtavanna Jo Moore, Mr. and Richard Antholly Murphy,
Llule, on of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Richard Moore: Ahthoftv Aaron 'JYlet Ohlinaer, Rathel
Douglu Little; and Rachel · Brandon Plettt, SOh of Mt. tnd L)'t\h Aflen Parson•, Jeremy
Mnrle Marshall. daughter of Mrs. Mark Pierce; Lori Anne Guy Pullin , Macy Scott Rees,

The Dally S8n'tiiiet •'2002 Graduation EditiOn .;:·Page 'l'hrw i · · -

Mansfield is Eastem valedictorian, Brannon salutatorian
BY IRIAN

J, RIID

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

-A·

. ., OP THI CLAM - Southern High SChool' a valedictorian and
aallltlltortan, alona With honorartans, prepare for Sunday's araduatlon In the Charles W. Haymen gymnasium. Pictured Ia, flrat row, I·
r, Salutatorian Matt Ash, Valedictorians Joe Cornell, Tyler Uttle and
Rachel Marshall; second row, Honorariana Carolyn Bentt, Sheri
Cummins; Joey Manuel, Kim McDaniel, Travanna Moore, Srandon
Pierce, Lori Saytf, Lindsey Smith, and Amy Wilson. (Tony M.Leach)

TUPPERS PLAINS •• Sara Mansfield
is valedictorian of Eastern High
School's Class of 2002, and Bradley
Brannon is the salutatorian.
Mansfield is the daughter of Dr.
Wilma Mansfield of Pomeroy, and
Brannon is the son of Paul and Joy
Branon of Reedsville.
·
Both will address their classmates during commencement exercises on May
19. As is tradition at Eastern, the names
of the remaining Tof 10 Scholars of the
~raduating class wil be announced durmg the school's annual awards day on
May 17.
Members of the graduating cl~s are:
Theresa Sharlene Baker, Jessica Lynn
Bartels, Jessica Marie Bartimus, arandy

Nicole Bentz,
Tamara Diane
Bissell,
Nick
Roscoe
Blackburn, Jr.,
Bradley Dean
Brannon, Holly
Nicole
Broderick,
Jennifer
Lee
Buckley, Jtnet
· Marie Calaway,
Tricia
Lynn
M•nsfleld
Congo, Darlene
·
Joye Connolly,
Jeremy Michael Connolly, Tina Mane
DeLaCruz, Jonathan Dav1d Duffy, Erin
Danielle Duvall-Gerard, Kayla Marie
Gibbs, Randall J. Gibbs.
Jennifer Dawn Goeglein, Ashley

Alexis Hager,
Timothy Ryan
Hawthorne,
Tiffany Irene
Hensley, Jacob
Paul Holman,
Ben Alan Holter,
R~hael Renee
Hupp, Garrett
'Clayton Karr,
Wh1tney Layne
Karr, T1ffany Jo
a.:.-.;....;., Kidder,
Holly
Br•nnon
Renee Landes,
Alissa
Rose
Larkins, Christopher Allen Lyons, Sara
Ann Mansfield, Kimberly Dawn
Marcinko.
Mary LeAnne Damion Marcinko,
Joshua Adam Marcum, Amanda Nicole

Brittney Ann Rlffie, Mary Joy Nicole . Williams, Ian Michael
Rose, Mandy Sue Schaefer, Wise, Vonda Rene Wolfe,
James Allen Smith, Tiffany Raymond Dana Canter.

McKnight, Jason Christopher Miller,
Evan Matthew Needs, Ryan Patrick
Nelson, Anthony J. Nutter, Bradley
Ryan Parker, Nicholas Gregory Perrine,
Nancy Ann Pickens, Elaine Elizabeth
Putman, Jimmie Lee Putman Ill.
Jeremy Lee Reed, Janet Leigh
Ridenour, Danielle Nicole Rucker,
Patricia Jean Shields, Rachael Dyann
Smith, Tiffany Ann Spencer, Michael
Aaron Taylor, Stacie Marie Watson,
Billie Jo Welsh, James A. Westjohn,
Thomasina White, Jonathan Andrew
Will, Derik T. Winebrenner, Francis
Howard Wood, Jr. Amanda Grace
Yeager, Charles Ryan Young, Corey
Reuben Young.

Leaders ...

2002!
Happy
Graduation Day

Congratulations zooz Graduates
An exciting thing Is about to happen in your community •
the children of the future are about to make their mark. We
at the FARMERS BANK care about the future. And we
care about youth and growth of the community. Not only
do we offer student loans and free checking accounts to full·
time students, we are willing to discuss any of the financial
n~ or answer any questions of the younger generation.

No matter your needs, we at the FARMERS BANK and
SAVINGS COMPANY can help . make the sometimes
confu.sing world of finance .available and understandable.
We're dedicated to the advancement of our community, and
would llke ·to start with the GRADUATING CLASS OF
2002. After all, who better to help you plan YOUR future
than your "Bank For Life"?

Stop by the Farmers Buk • no matter what your needs, let us be your ·BANK FOR LIFE!
I

Crow's
Family Restaurant

. .

We Are Proud Oj'Youl

992·5432

kiMMh Mc:Cullotlth, R. Ph.
Cha..... Rlffte R. Ph.
Molt • Ft11Gm •tpm
Pretetlptton Ph. H2·2tSS
Sat. lorn· s pm
112 t Main 1trMt Open Wttknl9htt 'Till I S&amp;M. I Dam .. 4pm
Pomeroy, Ohio
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The Dally Sentinel • 2002 Graduation Edition • Page Flvt

Pqe Four • The Dally Sentinel • 2002 Graduation Edition

Meigs High School prepares for grad
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY-- The 124 graduating seniors in the 2002
Mei~s High School class will
rece1ve diplomas in the 34th
annual commencement program May 24 at 8 p.m. in the
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
The seniors are expected to be
joined by at least one World
War II veteran who attended
school in the Meigs Local
~chool District and was drafted
mto th~ armed forces be.fore
~raduat1~g. Rece~t state legJslaliVe act1on prov1des for such
v~tera~s to be awarded a graduauon d1ploma.
Following the processional of
graduating seniors and National
Anthem by the Meigs H' h
School Band directed b T~~y
Din$eSs, Mindy O'Delr. class
president will extend the weicome, and Brittany Lynne
Williams, treasurer, will make
introductions
Numbers ·by the .school's
music department will include
"~entucky tsoo•: and a powerpomt presentation of Meigs

memorable moments.
Jonathan Andrew Acree,
There Will be addresses by Joeline Marie Allen, Chavonne
Amber Nicole Snowden, vale- Lynn · Barnett, Lana Ann
dictorian of the class, and twin Barrett, Joshua David Taylor
sisters, Kristy and Misty Bass, Ryan Alan Bates, Bradley
Puckett, salutatorians.
Allen Baylor, James Anthony
· Spe(\ial recognition will be Bearhs,
Dawn 'Black,
given the class honorarians, Sarah Nicole
Ann Blankenship,
Joeline Marie Allen, Joshua Brandon Russell
Blake Glaze, Nickolas Adam Ellen Bonecutter.Bobb, Garnett
Mclaughlin, Monica LeAnne • Nicholas Preston Bowles,
Moon, Mindy Ann O'Dell,
Leslie Nicole Runyon, Mary Heather Marie Brooks, Erica
Renee
Bryan,
Danny
.Beth Schultz, and Tara LeAnn Christopher
Buffington Jr.,
Wyatt.
.
Ashley
Renae
Burbridge,
Dennis R. Eichinger will pre- Bobbie Jeanne Burson,
Erin
sent the class, and John Hood,
Bush, Zachariah C.
president of the Board of Gayle
Butcher,
Wayne
Adney
Ed
.
.
.
ucatJon will present diplo- Capehart, James Olen Childers
mas . as KrystaJ Dawn 11, Jennifer Sue Clark.
Penmngton, class secreatry,
Jessica Patricia Davis,
read~ th~ .class r~ll. Am~r Zachary Carl Davis, Trista Ann
~anmg, VICe rresJdent, will Doerfer, Jesse A. Dubbs,
~Jve the symbo of the gradua- Charles Edward Eakins, Donald
tJC?n, and the co.mmencement Ray Franklin Eakins., Delana
will . conclude With the band Eichinger, Amanda Jean Ellis,
playmg the alma mater Amber Nicole Ellis, Caleb
"Maroon and Gold" by Lohse Zechariah Ellis, Heather
and Lohse.
·
Eileene Petty. Heather Friend,
Members of ~he graduating Rachel Lynn Garey, Joshua
class are Came Jo Abbott, Blake Glaze, Zachary James

Meigs residents eam Rio Grande
RIO ORANDE - The fol-.
lowing Meigs County students
gr~uated May 12 from the
University of Rio Graride/Rio
Grande Community College:
College of Graduate Studies,

Meigs...

master of education in
Classrom Teaching - Chad E.
Griffith, Tuppers Plains; Carol
Ann Mahr, Rutland.
College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences School of Social

Science, bachelor of science
degree Coulter Cass
Cleland, Racine; Lis'a Marie
Stethem, Pomeroy; Teresa L.
Williams, Pomeroy.
College of Liberal Arts and

continued from P•g• 4

Glaze, Jessica Darlene Gray,
Taiha Nicole Green, Robert
Benjamin Haley, Tiffany
Danielle Hall, Amber M~e
Haning, Joshua Adam Haning,
Erin Rae Hartson, Jason D.
Hershberger, Corrie Hoover.
Ashley Burke Hoschar,
Adrian
Marie
Hubbard,
Rebecca Elaine Jacks, Darrell
Gene Jenkins, Jameson H.
Johnson,
.Staeaha Dawn
Kennedy, Oreaory Glenn King,
~~:I.Oi
Jr., Mehsaa Dawn Kirk, Darrick
Quentin Kna~ Ryan Keith
TOP OF THE CLAU - Special recognition will go to these
Krautter,
hery
Lane
achievers of the Meigs Hlih School class of 2002 at the May
Krautter,
John
Louis
gradutelon ceremony. From left down In front are Nick Mclaughlin Krawsczyn, Christopher Tyson
and Josh Glaze, and standing are Tara Wyatt, mlndy O'Dell, Monica Lee, Daniel Allen tenlaar, )ohn
Moon, Amber Snowden, valedictorian, Krlsty and Misty Puckett,
Robert Lentes, Jr., Jessica Jane
salutatorians, Jollne Allen, Nlchole Runyon, and Mary ,Schultz.
Lucas, Antoinette Tanell
McClintic.
Brian Scott McKinley,
Continued on Ptgt 5

Nicholas Adam McLaughlin,
Jason Allen Miller, Chelsea Rae
Montgomery, Monica LeAnne
Moon, Sara Elizabeth Moon,
Erin Nicole Moore, Chelsea
Ronique Moss, Kara Michelle
Musser, Joshua Scott Napper,
Christopher W. Neece, Mindy
Ann O'Dell, Krystal Dawn
Pennington.
Beth Ann Phillips, Travis
Edward Powell, Kristy Dawn
Puckett, Misty Sue Puckett,
Erin Kaye Ralston, Richard
Harold Ramsbura, Jennifer
Lynn Reeves, Jodi Reeves,
Melissa Amanda Richmond,
Jessica Lynn Roush: Leslie
Nichole Runyon, Joseph
Franklin Rupe, Elizabeth Ann
Russell, Aminda Adel Saxon,
Jessica Renee Schuler, Mary
Ann S'lnder, Mary Beth

'.
Schultz, Evan Lee Shaw, Travis
Siders, Stacia Dawn Sims,
Jacob De~ane S,mith, Marc
Do~ald Sm1th, M1chael Glenn
Sm!th Jr., . Rebec~a Marie
Smith, Terry R.ay Smlth.
Amber Nicole Snowden,
Crystal Jean South, Jason
Stanley, John Scott Stanley,
James Tyler Stewart, Allison
Rae Story, Clayton Allen
Taylor, Scott Edward Taylo,
Ryan H.. Terzo()plous, Joseph
Perry Vanan, DillY Jean White,
Shauna Marie White, Brittany
J..y.nne Willi~. Matthew Lee
Williamson, Jonathan Joseph
Wilson, Thorn~ Lee Wise,
John Thomas WlthereiiJ_,Sean
Tyler Wray, Jason Rees wyant,
1'ara LeaAnn Wyatt.

Sciences School of Social College of Professional
Science, bachelor of social Studies, School of Technology,
work degree - Terri Lynn bachelor of science degree Fife, MidClleport.
Beverly
Dawn
Stewart,
College of Professional Rutland.
.
Studies, School of Education, College of Liberal Arts and
bachelor of science degree - Sciences, School of Social
Debra
Dawn
Dillon, Science, asso~iate of arts
Reedsville; Christy Dawn de~ree - Colhn Clay Roush,
Drake, Racine; Maria Darlene Middleport. .
.
Precker, Racine; Whitney College of Professional
Corrin Haptonstall, Pomeroy; .. Studies, School of Education,
Jeremy Allen Hill, Racine; associate of applied science
AmanCla Marie Milhoan, Long degree (Early Childhood
Bottom; Michelle Leigh Development) - Myrta Lynne
Miller, Middle ort; Danfel Arms, Racine; Tina Elaine
Jacob Otto Po~eroy· Nicole Cotterrill, Pomeroy; Bobbie J.
Dawn White,• Tupper~ Plains; Harris, Pomeroy; Linda Lou
Melissa
Ann
Wilfong Rathburn, Pomeroy; Shirley
Middleport
' Ann Smith, Middleport; Vicki
College of Liberal Arts and V. Woods, Pomeroy.
Sciences, School of Science, Co.llege of Professional
bachelor of science degree ...._ Studies, Emerson E. ~vans
Christopher E. Bailey, Chester; School
of
Busmess
Kyle David Ord, Pomeroy.
Management, associate of
College of Professional applied business degree
Studies, ·Emerson E. Evans (accounting) Michael
School
of
Business Willard Walker, Pomeroy.
Management, bachelor of sci- College of Professional
ence degree ~ Steven Paul Studies, Emerson E. Evans
Rice, Pomeroy; Adam W. School
of
Business
Roush, Racine.
Continued on Page 115

--~~~~~----~------..

we•re Proud
To Honor the

2002
GRADS!

You're Graduating?
'The rung of a ladder was never
meant to rest upon, but only to
hold a man's foot long enough to
put the other somewhere higher."
-Thomas Henry Huxley
A Uberal Education, 1868

Our ·Very Best Wishes to the

Valley Lumber

&amp;Supply Co.
~.
.......
"" ....
•••
••••
~

992-6611
555 P1r11 • lddlepan,

Class of2002.

How WonderfuH
Best Wishes. to the Class of 20021

White. Funeral Home
2817 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

Bob's Market &amp;
Greenhouse's, Inc.

740-667-3110

2nd Street
Maeon, wv 304-773-5721
Eattem Avenue
nan1IDOIII1, OH 740 448-1711

• ••••••••

•

�Page 81x • The Dally Sentinel • 2002 Gl'lduatlon Edition

OVCS graduates 1&amp;on Saturday
GALLIPOLIS Ohio
Valley Christian School will
graduate 16 seniors this
Saturday at 4 p.m. in the First
Baptist Chureh auditorium.
This is the 21st commencement exercise in the school's
25-year his(ory and brings the
total number of graduates to
248.
"Pomp and Circumstance"
will bring the graduates in and
Pastor Alvis Pollard, associate
pastor of First Baptist Church,
will give the welcome and invocation.
First Baptist Church is the
sponsoring church of the school
that has students from 54 different churches this year. Dr.
Fredrick W. Williams, adminis·
trator since 1983, will introduce
the speaker.
The graduation speaker Is
Randy Ross, the Ohio River
Valley representative of the
Association of
Christian
Schoola International.
Williams will then introduce
the valedictorian and salutatori·
an to s~.
Virgania Alice Miller, daugh-

ter of Phillip and June Miller of eighth through 12th grades. He student government and year- Stephanie Marie
Patriot, attends Faith Baptist was active in basketball, band, book. He is a member of Who's daughter of Leroy and
Church. She has received the choir and student povernment. Who Among American High Buffington of Leon, W.Va.,
Valedictorian Award with a He was president o the student School -students, and the attended OVCS since
GPA of 4.21. She has attended body.
American Christian Honor grade.
OVCS from kindergarten.
He is a member of Who's Society and has received the She attends Cross
She, was involved in band, Who Among American High President's
Award
for Community Church, where
yearboOk and student govern- School Students, the American Educational Achievement. He is active in her youth Drn••n
ment as well as her "burch Christian Honor Society, and has received the school's citi· choir. She has been
youth group. She was selected received 'the President's Award zenship award.
cheerleading, yearbook and
as a Gallipolis Business and for Educational Exc~llence and He plans to attend Cedarville dent government.
Professional Women's Club the school's citizenship award. University and major in phar· She has received the school
Girl of the month and was voted He plans to attend· the macology.
citizenship award. She plans
the OVCS homecoming queen. University of Maryland major· Demara . Denise Brown, attend Marshall University
She is a member of the . ing in pre-medicine.
daughter of Keith and Deana m~or In nursing.
American Christian Honor . Withams will present the Brown of Galllpolis, attends fohn Brian Gordon, son
Society, Who's Who Among senior class for graduation and Church of Christ in Christian John and Paula &lt;Jordon
American
High
School Jeffrey E. Smith, charter Union, where she is active In Gallipolis, attends First BaPIIISI
Students and received the Governing Board member, will her church youth group. She has Church. He attended
President's
Award
for present the diplomas.
attended OVCS since ninth from kindersarten to th
Educational Excellence.
. Other graduates of the 2002 aracle.
arade, and 11th and I
She has received the school's class in alphabetical order are: . She has been involved in Jracles. He has been active
citizenship award. She plana to Andrew Keith Blankenship, cheerleacling, volleyball, stu· socc~ and the church
attend Ohio State Unlveralty son of Keith and Sue dent aovernment, and year- aroup. He has recei
and ~ajor In pharmacoloay.
Blankenship of Gallipolis, will book. She Is a member of the school's citizenship award.
Amu Suresh Agrawal, son of graduate with honors with a American . Christian Honor
He plans • to attend the
Dr. Suresh and Pooja Agrawal GPA of 3.73. He hu attended Society. She has received the Unlveralty of Rio Grande and
of Point Pleasant, W.Va., hu OVCS since fourth arade.
achoors citizenship award. She m.tor In lnedlcal technology.
received the Salutatorian Award He attends First Baptlit plans to attend Marshall
fesalca Danlelle Hamilton,
with a GPA of 4.20.
Church, where he is active in University or the University of daugllter of Robert and Bonnia
He attended OVCS from his youth group. He has been Rio Orande and major In ele- Hamilton of Vinton, hu attend·
kindergarten to third grade, and involved in socc,..er_,_bu_ke_tb_a_n,_me.._n_tary
__
ed_u_ca_ti_on_.__. ---Continued on Page18

Congratulations to the
Class of 2002

Congratulations to the

Class o 2002

RIDENOU
TV, APPLIANCE AND GAS SERVICE
CHESTER OH

·The. Sky'- The Limitl
Your hard work and
dedication will make all your
dreams come true.

Good goingl
ROSE'S EXCAVATING
949-2493

ChereslaBarnes

Robert Forester

AmbtrDuffv

' I

Good Luck In The Future!

3rd St.

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL 2002 GRADUATES

Racine

BAUM LUMBER
•

CHESTER

.Congratulations Graduates
CONGRATULATIONS
TO ALL AREA 2002 GRADUATES!
•''tr.
,{j

443 General Hartinger Pkwy.

992-6545

.Gngratulatloris

.,_. ;:COIIJUnLiftOII
:. .;

TREVOR BUCK

Mom &amp; John, Dad &amp; Dee

"

tH'I"'

HAftTWELLH0U6£

or Court &amp; Main

In IIIIIOrlc Downlown Pomcro

740 992·7696

Jan)~&amp; "tyler" ~te.wart

Christopher ''Tyson" Lee
We Are Proud Of You
And We Love You!

Corner

'

on your Graduation from
Zane Trace High School
We are all very proud of you I
P.rm11: ,,, tmJ T.,l Bwll
Gtwu,.rmll: Pml 11u P,,JJ, Ht~./fitwt 11/Mlillll'lflrt
AIIJII Bwll ""-·"

It Iff'""' Of You lnd It"'' You I
lo• &amp; llkt, D1d &amp; ltldtfl
Congratulation• Cl111 of 20021

The Future Is Yours/

·
I
ngels
Radio
Shack
108 North Stcond Ave. • Middleport, OH
740.992·2835

�•

PIQtllght • Tht Dilly Stn~ntl • 2002 Gl'ldiiltlon Edition

P•ge Nine

The Daily Sentinel • 2002 Graduation Edition··

A Moment to Remember

· Alhltv Hamilton

As you take one last trip through the hidlowed halls
of your alma mater, stop for a moment and reflect
with pride on all that you've accomplished here.
We would like to wish every graduate the best of luck.
Tvttr Johnaon .

JoeManutl

Vaughan's Supermarl&lt;et

Congratulations

Holly

..

2002 EHS Graduate
.

-~

Richard Brian Hill - Manager
Richard ~ Ruby Vaughan - Owners

Conarat~atlona
~ ~'

ua

--,...

I

Beat Wl•he• ·

Qtongratulatton• Qtla•• of 2002!

1

Catering To You

1M

SHOE PLACE

from your frimtlJ at

QCiark's ~etuelrp &amp;tore

'

Mark Michael - Deli Manager

992·5827 MIDDLEPORT, OH
. LOOK TO THE MURE

Congratulations

Whit did you Wlnt to be when
you were little? You hld biJ
dreamt then, and you still dO
today. Now's your chltice to
make thote dreams • reality,

GRADUATES!

Go get'em Gr d I

Dairq

Queen

c,,.~ a., •f200J
1ft'""INM •/IHII• /11M. 811/, Gl.rl, HIIJI, JNU/6 d- 1ArV

.

••~~~~1-M-:-.1~1-:-S'!"'"":
. t~!""'-llt~•89--:-:-~~~-~o:-.50~•M"'!"!'l~dd~le~po~rt~..

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Dairy Queen
Beth Schneider - Manager
Richard~ Ruby Vaughan- Owners

Downing-Childs Mullen·Milsser

~.=~1;96~E==;ut~2~nd;,•~99~2~·3.~~~~.'~
. ~~~~~

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�. .'

Pege Tin • The Dally Sentinel • 2002 Graduation Edition

,, ' '
\

l

J

'

\

HIGH

Nathan Martin

·).
Rachel Parsons

MacyRHI.

Well Done
Class of 20021
Congratulations!
.

IDUllS

II
111 North Second Ave. .
. Middleport, OH

740-182·7028

: KING HARDWARE
.

992·5020

408 N. Second Ave. Middleport, OH
HOURI: Mon • llrt

lit.

&gt;Dr. A. ]Millo• &amp;lila
Opltnlmrin

co,,..,..., tJ-

GofHl

Lwll to 11112002 Gwuhl

Wire Prowl ofYo.U

OmCE
SERVICE
fl
Noeth
137

Second Ave.

'
OH 112-1378

\

740-182-3278

0
2520 VIJlley Drive
Point PleRSantJ WV 25550
304-675-4340

••

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------------~--------------------------Th-e-Da-lly-Se-nti-ne-i·.-200-2-Gr-ad-ua-tion•E-dit-ion-·~P•~~-n~lrt~Mn _

Page 'TWelve · The Dally Sentinel · 2002 Graduation Edition

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL 2002 GRADUATES

Lori Sayre

Tiffany Williams

Mandy Schaefer

Amy Wilson

rr1c1a Lynn Cono9

lanWise

~....,~

.e

..... 'lliiir

gje1I ·CJfJt1M1
Btt~~JJ 'If 2002
Eastern • Southern • Meigs
WITH OUR HIGHEST REGARDS

·GOOD LUCK
Best ofLuck to
you in the future!

.......CiRADUATEJI
• MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
SOUTHERN HIGH
• EASTERN HIGH ·

jf t~btr jfuneral ~ome

We would like to rise to the occasion to say,
"Congratulations on making an educated
choice!"
.
'
May it serve you well in the years ahead.

264 S. 2nd • 992·5141 • Middleport

~qmerop ~bapel
590 E. Main • 992·5444 • Pomeroy

Bruce A. Fisher, DltWCtor

42123 SR 7 •

..

.

Tupper~ P/4;,,

1-740-667-7388 • 1

OH ·

�..',
• Page Fourt•n • The Dally Sentinel • 2002 Graduation Edition

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL 2002 GRADUATES

••

Jonathon David Duffy

Meigs residents ••. _eon_tJ"-""-'-'om_P...;;.•ge_s_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•

I

Garrett karr

Whitney Layne karr

Tiffany ICJdder

Manaaement, a11oclate of
IPP.lleCI bu1lne11 · dearee
(Information Technoloay) Elizabeth Nell AncJer1on,
Che1ter; Paula S. · Pink,
Middlepot!; Tammy lo Queen,
Pomeroy; Patricia Lynn Iouth,
Middleport.
Colleae of Profeuionat
Studle1, Emerton E. Evan•
School
of
Bu1lne11
Manaaement, 111ocla~ of

applied bu1lne11 dearee Cheshire; Rebecca Mae Wickline, Racine.
(Microcomputer Application• lohnson, Middleport; Rebekah Colleae of Profeuional
fn Bull nell) - Linda Sue Lynn Smith, Lanaavllle; Laurie Studle1, School of Technoloay,
Lane Broderfckl Pomeroy.
Su1anne Wayland, Pomeroy.
au~late of applied science
Colleae of L beral Art• and Colteae of Professional dejree (Plant Maintenance
Science•, Holzer School of Studies, School of Technoloay, Technoloay) - Matthew P.
Nur•ing, u~oeiate of applied ·as~oelate of applied bualne111 Caldwell, Reed1vllle.
science dearee (Nurtina dearee (Office Technoloay) Technoloay) I(Jmberly Nicole Dawn Hill, Racine;
~
Shawn Bailey,
Bottom: Suzanne 1. Milhoan, Lona .
Pamata Croll,
Bottom; VIolet Francl• VIola
llll
~
Renee
Racine; Carrie P.
~ -

ffA

Congratulations to the

l

CLASS OF 20021

FABRIC SHOP

R&amp;G FEED SUPPLY

110 W. Main • 992·2284 • Dft.,n•r"•" Oh

OH • 74Mt2-2184

Middleport

we Salute The Grw 0{20021
IIIU CIIITIUCnll

TrophlttatT...
1to N. 2nd Ave.

It' Your Daylll

~'::=&amp;"

Wishes

otzooz ·
•

CLELAND REALTY
801 E. MAIN •

992·2259 •

POMERO~ OH

124WIIIMIII•
112-1101
•

I

Best Wishes
Class of2002!
We are proud ·of you!

BROliN WARNER

RANCE

214 EAST MAIN • 992-6887 • POMEROY, OH

�Page llxtttn· Tht Dally Stntlntl • 2002 Oriduatlon dltlon

.

OVCS. •• Contlnutd .from Ptgtl
•

He P.lana to Itt nd But m
Kentucky Unlvenlty and m.Vor
In nsh and wildlife manaae·
ment.
Harold Mlehul Jenka, aon ot
Randy lenk1 of Bidwell, wlll
araduate with honon with a
OPA of 3.79, He attendl Pllth
Bapt11t Church where he Ia
active In the youth II'OUJ'.
He hu attended OVCS •1nee
klnderaarten. He hal been
Involved In band, baaketbalfl
.and ~occer. He Ia a membertheo
Who 1 Who and reo lved
Prtlldent'a
Award
for
Bduca\lonal Sxcellence and the
1choola cltlzenahlp award. h
. He plan• to attend t •
Unlver11ty of Kentu~ky and
m~g~nt;:·~J~1:;, aon of
Jamea and Carol Moumlna of
Middle~, wlll_araduate with
honon with a OPA of 3.87. He
attend• Hope Baptlat Church,
where he 11 active In hl1 church
routh ""up. He hu attended
ovcs alnce klnderlll1tn.
He hu been InvolVed In band,
track and aoccer. He 11 a mem·
ber of Who'• Who Amona
Amerlcan
Hlah
School

ed OVCS since 1eventh arade. received the Athlete of the YeiU'
She hal been lnvolvedln baa· 11ward and the achool'li citizen·
ketball, 1occer, student aovem· ahlp awiU'd. He plana to attend
ment 11nd yearbook. She Hocklna Technical Colleae and
received the 1chool'1 citizen· maJor In law enforcement.
ship awiU'd. She Ia a member of fennlfer Renee Hutchlnaon,
Wno'a Who Amona American dauahter of Byron and Lonna
Hlah School Stuilenta. She Hutchlnaon of Jackaon attenda
plans to attend the Unlve,.lty of the Qood Shepherd We•leY.an
Rio Orande and Shawnee !tate Church. She hal attenCSed
Unlver11ty to m.Vor In apeech OVCS 1lnce ninth arade.
patholoay.
She w111ln choir 11nd active In
Sara Anne Henry, dauahter of her church youth arouP.. She
Donna Keenan. and ·Randy received the achool'a citizen·
Heney of Point Pleuant, W.Va., 1hlp awiU'd. She plana to enter
attenaa the Pint Church of the the work force upqn araduatlon.
Nazllfene. She hu attended Oabrlel Stephen Weber
OVCS 1lnce eiJhth arade.
Jenkln1, 1on of Steve and
She hu been actfve In band Donn11 Jenkin• of Rutland,
and her church youth JfOUJ). attend• Plr1t BaJ)tllt Church. He
She has received the ~enoor• hal attended OVCS 1lnce the
citizenship award. She plana to 1eventh arade and 11 active In
attend Mount Vernon Nuarene hl1 church youth aroup.
Colleae and her m.Vor 11 unde- He hu been In the band and
clded.
. choir, baaketball, 1occer and
Adum Mar1hall Holcomb1 track. He 11 a member of Who'•
10n of Lee and Jan Holcomb or Who Amona American Hlah
Oalllpolla, attend• Vlnt()n School Studinta, the American
Baptfat Church. He hu attended Chrlttlan .Honor Society and
OVCS since third
hal received the Pretfdent'•
He hu been Involved In bu- Award for
Educational
ketball, JOCCer, track and hl1 Achievement. He hu received J~:=:t'land
church youth aroup. He the school'• cltlzen1hlp award. Educational

"ude.

I

Wll the reclpl nt of the Holler
Clinic clence AwiU'd. He hu
received the achool'a cltlun•
ship award.
He pllan1 to attend Ohio
Unlveralty 111d m.Vor In com·
puter 1clence.
Bllzabeth Jo Rice, dauahter
David and Denlae Rice ot
01111~111, attenda Pint Church
of the Nuartne. She hu attend·
ed OVCS 1lnce ••nd ll'ldl.
She hal been lnvofved In
cheerleadlna, volleyball and In
her church youth aroup. She hu
received tf\e acliool'a citizen·
ahlp award. She phtn• to attend
Mount Vernon Nazarene
Colleae and major In prt•nun·
In ,
.
~erbert Paul Cody Smith, ton"
of Herb and Rita Smhh of
Oalllpull11 hu attended OVCS
alnce thlra lftde,
He attend• the Bnd Time
Harveat Church. He wu llCtlve
In IOCCtr and w
.. u a lunch work·
er. He hu received the 10hool'1
cltlzenthJp award. He plana to
llttend thi Unlver~Jty of JUo
Orande. Hla major Ia undecldedRachel Blaine Tucker, dauah·
~:::~Jed ~~ ter of..._~!~atoflpJ'ucPiker and .
"cellence. He Aile a •'""'"" UJnt euan1•

will raduate with honotl With\
a OP. of 3.65. he has attended
OVCS alnoe klnderaart n.
She 1ttend1 St. Joaeph
Catholic Church. Sh hu bein
lnvolv d In choir, hoapltal vol•
untnna, and ltlltlltlolan for IOC·
cer, She Ia 1 member ot Who'•
Who Amona American Hlah
School Studinta, the American
Chrlltllln Honor Society and
received the ~•ldent'a Award
for Bducatlonll Bxcellence. She
hu received the achool'a cltl·
unship awiU'd.
She plana to attend MIU'Ihall
Unlveralty and m.Vor In prt•
phyalcal tberaJ)y,
·
Larry s. MIDII' 11, Pftllldent
of the Oov mlna Boitd, w111
alve the benedlctfon tor the lit•
vice.

ME

SCH

UATES

1

Donny luffln9ton

We're Proud of You

Erin lush

Class of 2002!

COMGbAr.ter

Crow&amp;Crow

Attorney• at Law
.
'110 w. 2nd • tl2.eoH • Pomeroy

Ryan ICtoutter

ICryttal Pennlnoton

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Page Elg_htMI1 o1 "'TtM' Oall~ Sw.l'lllnil '4 200S!'Otadi.latiOI'I ~ron ' ' · ' '

•

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 2002 GRADUATES.

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN HIGH SCHOOL 2002 GRADUATES

Andy Blankenship

Gabe Jenkins

Jessica Hamilton

CodySmlth ·

$tephanle Bumnvton

�•

BUSINESS

INSIDE

Early Care open
for children, 81

Alaslil-a
f1ietdship. (1

Oash injures
two, A8

,.,
nnes
•

IIpolis
Rick Carter starts
job]une 1

new

under the city commissioners
and
provides leadership and manage·ment for the city's
daily operations.
including oversight
of nine distinct
departments.
He will begin his
duties June I .
Carter
Commission
1.
President
Gary
Fenderbosch said Carter fit the bill in
the commission's search for an experienced administrator familiar with
management issues and interde.part-

BY KMI Klll.'t
mtlY~VDAtli'TI!tBUNE.COM

GALUPOUS - Rick Carter, a
22-year U.S. Air Force veteran, bas
been chooen the next Gallipolis city
manager.
·
Carter will succeed E.V. Clarke Jr.,
who's been city manager since April
1998 and announced he would be
stepping down hast month.
·
The city manager serves as
Gallipolis' chief eJtecUtive officer

1.15

1

•

manager

•

mental Communication.
"We were extremely impressed br,
him
and
his
experience,'
Fenderbosch said. "We had two differenr imerviews with him as a candidate, and we wen: able to come up
witb a package that was accept.able
to him and the commission."
Carter was among the top six of
around 14 applicants for the JOb. The
list was winnowed down to six that
were called in for interviews.
''The other candidates were exceptional too," Fenderbosch said. "It
was a difficult decision to make."
Carter comes aboard as Gallipolis
looks at attracting additional popula-

I

HHith fair set

UNIVERSITY OF Rio GRANDE EXPANDING?

r..y2J

D

a ,._
0

•a

0

0
0

a

7

•
a

0

0

I
a

Congratulations
•

c

~0 2002

To All Our Local GrtulUAtes••• .
Here's to all the young mm And women
· who hAve worked so hArtl towtJrJs
comm171M11111t J.y. Sliu tbl tl4y and
""'Y all your dreAms come trtul

a

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Comny Health Department is
otrering a free heallh fair fur
residents ofGallla County on
ThursdaY,, May 30, From 8~30
a.m. unttl 12:30 p.m.
The health fait wlll offer a
variety of servk-es and educational Information fur the
participants. Scteenings that
will he offered include cholesterollgluoose, blood pressure, hei~htlwelght, body fat
analysis, computerized stress
evalualton, Derma Scan,
hearing, and osteoporosis.
Community members that
· will be assisting with the
health fair include; staff from
the Gallla County Health
Department)
Bonnie
McFarl"nd, Ho1ter' Medical
tenter Community Health
t~nd Wellness; Beclcy ColllM,
Ohio State Extension Office,
Gnllia CounLy; Marissa l"ulk,
G-J· M Bonrd of Alcohol
· Drug Addiction and Mental
Heallh Services; Debbie
Btircus,
Holzer Clinic;
Amlmda Carter, Medconnex;
Melvin Mock, Advanced
Hearing; and Wyngate of
Gallipolis.
For those . interested in
recelvinll the cholesterol
screeninll, it is required to
call the he~lth department
and make an appointment, h
is recommended to be fasting
for 12 hours prior to your
appointmellt.
Rellularly
scheduled medications 'lila)'
be taken wUh a sip of Wllttr.
Call the Galha County
Health Department at 441·
2950 to schedule a cholesterol appointment or with
any questio11s you lila)' have.
· the 1\eal th fair will be loellt•
ed In the Ga,llla County
Setvlce Center Conference
Room tit 499 Jackson PIke,
Gallipolis.

lndax
•••cttona-nPI...
Calendars
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c 2002 Ohio Vallev Publlohtni Co.

tion. downtown revitalization and
overcoming the etTects of the August
2001 fin: in the Second Avenue business district.
Carter recently retired from the Air
Force after ~erving in numerous
leadership positions, most recently at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
near Dayton.
Carter served in multiple leadership roles as di=tor of the Mission
Support Directorate, director of
human resources, and as the
squadron commander for the Air
Force Institute of Technology, the
PluH ... "-n•pr,M

'

Group eyes
La
Lands
•
.preservation
•

BY KRII DonoN

be remembered," she added.
With much persistence
GALLIA -The Lambert and research, Matthews and
Lands
in
Greenfield her· righthand pal Charles
Township are in need of Murray enlisted the help of
attention, with its cemetery their friend Virginia Garnes, .
dotted with unmarked then Glenn and Corliss
11raves, many of them sol- Miller. Bufford and Calvin
diers'.
Minnis, and Barbara Scott.
A newly-formed commitTogether they formed the
tee of concerned citizens society and found there
that recognize its ~istolicll!. wet;e 16 destroyed or missVlillle and platls to i:lo some, ing markers for soldiers,
thing about it.
and many unmarked graves
The Lambert Lands of others.
Preservation Society was
With the help of Denver
the brainchild of historian Curtis, service ofticer and
and community activist lej!islative ·chairman of
Estivaun Matthews.
Dtsabled
American
What are the Lam bert Veterans (DAV) Meigs
Lands?
Chapter 53, and Ellen
"Three men named Frank, Darby, its adjutant, the sociMiller and Minnis Lambert ety received permission to
were plantation owners in get government markers for
Virginia,"
explained the black soldiers.
Matthews. "And in 1843, 20
The Society. has three
years
·~fore'
. the goals in mind: To purchase
Emanctpatton the soldiers' markers; make
Proclamation; they decided a map of the Lambert Lands
to not only free their slaves showing who settled where;.
but buy them their own land and pay for and erect a monnorth of the Ohio River, ument for the others buried
where they and their fami- there ·that don't. have marklies could start their new ers.
lives in freedom."
"It's always been an ache
This is one of the most in my heart - those
unique settlements in the unmarked graves - those
U.S. and it is receiving were some of the finest peonationwide attention.
ple I knew," Matthews said.
Around 30 African- "My mother always said to
American adults settled on me, 'Esti vaun, make the
the property, ali taking the world a little better place
first names of their owners ·because you've been here.".
as their last names.
And this is maybe the last
The families thrived and thing I could do in rememstill have relatives that live bra~ce of my parents."
there todar. Matthews' famThe · Lambert Lands
ily lived JUst over the hill Preservation Society is
and befriended many actively looking for donaMinnis and Miller family tions for the monuments
members.
and encourages anyone that
"I lived by the Lambert wants to help in the effort to
Lands and they were some call or send a check payable.·
of the sweetest ~ople .+ to the Lambert Lands
they were and sull are my Preservation Society (a nonfriends," said Matthews. profit orsanization) in care
"When I went to their ceme- of Corhss Miller, 3680
tery about six years a11o. I Clark
Chapel
Road,
was deeply saddened to see Bidwell, Ohio 45614, phone
all of those sunken holes in 740-388-8648.
the ground· where people
The group plans to have a
with the same value as you massive celebration someand me lie in rest with no time in early fall with local, .
marker to remind the world slate and national dignithey were hen:. · .
taries in attendance when
"To me, if you lived and the markers will be dedicathad a nP me, you deserve to ed.
KDOTSON&lt;G&gt;MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TOUR FACILITY -:- Meigs Local Superintendent Bill Buckley, Bill Childs, chairman of
Middleport's Citizens Committee, and Dr. Barry Dorsey of the University of Rio Grande are

l)lctured during their tour of the Meigs Middle School Friday. Dorsey said the university and
village should continue consideration of the building as a potential site for a university
branch. (Brian J. Reed)

Dorsey tours middle school facility
Will consider.expanding
Rio branch in
Middleport
IV liliAN

J,

RIID

BREED&lt;I&gt;MVDAILYStNTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Officials with the
University of Rio Grande will .continue to
meet with Middleport residents and officials to determine If and how the university can make use of the Meigs Middle
School building once It is vacated.
Dr. barl'l' Dorsey, president of URG,
University Trustee Jack Frutl\, Community
College Vice President Luanne Bowman
and others met with Middleport's Citizens
Committee and key development leaders
Frldlty to tour the building and ,discuss its
possible use as art expanded Me1gs County
branch.
·
'rhe Village of Middlepon will assume
ownership of the schoor and two others
once Mei11s Local students move into their
new schools. The village has determined
the best use of the former high school
building would be . education ..related,
hopes Rio will find a new home there.
The unive.rsily is not actively seeking a
larger site for its Meigs Center, but Dorsey
said Friday he and the Middleport
Planning Commission and Citizens

Committee shou ld continue to pursue the
possibility of the university's usin11 the
space, either exclusively or in a sharing
agreement with the village .
Middleport plans to convert the
Middleport Elementary School building
into a new village hall and jail facility, but
has no concrete plans for either the Middle
School or Central Building on the same
propeny.
.
"This Is a center for the commu mty and
the village wants to keep it that way,"
Economic Development Director Perry
Varnac;loe said Friday. "Education has been
determined the best use for this buildinl!,
and it's a great opportunity for the
University of Rio Grande to expand in. the
community."
Dorsey and two of his maimenance and
buildings and grounds administrators said
the bllildinll might be too large for Rio
Grande to use exclusively, but agreed they
and the village should continue to discuss
its potential.
The 41 ,000 square foot building on
South Third Avenue could be available by
the middle of next school year, according
to Meigs Local Superintendent Bill
Buckley, who attended Friday's tour. It
includes II classrooms, offi..:e space and
an auditorium with seating for hundreds.
Bill Childs, chairman of Middl~pon's
PIMM ... Doney,M

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M«/i.:o/ Me.,_,...,, ond RecuiTIJnl Slrob ,..o:dioo

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•

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