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BIG NATE

Edith Summerskill,
a British politician in
n speech to the Mar·
ricd Women's As so·
elation, said, "Nag·
ging is the repetition
of
unpalatable
truths."
I nll8 my students,
in particular about
counting. Now it's
your turn. Last week,
J t~nve six deals in
whach it was hnpor·
tant for declarer ei·
ther to play his trump
·~uit appropriately or
to time lhe drawing of
trump~ correct!)'. AI·
most immediately uf.
terwardh I suw this
deal, w ich features
one of those themes.
lfow would rou phln
the pial . an four
heurts? West Icuds
the diamond queen.
You correctly duck
dummy's king twice,
but they take three
tricks in the suit, then
exit with 11 spade. No
peeking at the East·
•
West catds I ·
' I VU
V il Q P .I
CW
Z QPPMQI U
With nine of hls II
MN
ZUZCPMUN.' VMII
points in his short
suits, North might ·
•
OCNVK
'OYCCNU
Q
JMWU ..
have raised to three
no·trum~. but one
PQIYUP
YK
KCDP
UQP
cunnot say that usins
..
Stnym11n' is wrong.
'
IYQA
KCDP
UKU.'
With the opponents
••
having their book (all
- · IYCZQN
WD18UP '
the tricks you can af·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I llktd m~ oaddy lor I nn~
ford to lose), you
wtdal and ttn mtnut• IIIII' ht camt back Willi •.ham on I'Vf.
must pluy the trump
·- Ch1 Chi Rodriguez
.
.
suit wlthuutloss.
This i!l 1 the correct
':~~:t~~, scc~4{}~-J£r..~s· :::~
approach: Win trick - - - - l41to4 ~, CLAY l. POLLAN
four with dummy's
•Hrrariao lot!tra · af the
sp11de queen, then call 0 fa~r
acram.blocl 'NOrda bo·
for o low heart. You low to form lour llmplo words.
do this to accommo·
dote a singleton king __,.;N~O_,C-r-R..,Ir-Z-r.:'._,
in the ~list h11nd. (If
1
that is the position
:
and .you start with
SMY E S
dummy's 10, West
~~~~s ~~~~~) w~~~~ . ha~'"..,l-.,.,l'~lr-"1'1'""""1
East plays low, you :::~:;:;;;:;::::;
put m the gueen.
F 0 NET
Next, cross to dummy
After
to a panel dis·
with a club. Now Is
1 15
· ~~ cusalon
our natlon'~l .
the time for the heart
. . . . ., politics, I overheard cn.e felloW
1o, which here Bast
comment, 'Even when tha expert'
will presumably 1· · R E K S I A la;reetheymaybe·-······!
cover. You win with 7 I
Compfore the chuckle quoted
w
•
by filling In tho mlaaln~ word~
the ace, noting ,. eat I
you dovolop from atop No. 3 bolow, ';
discard. Back to
, dummy with another
PRINT NUMBERED
j1 ]1 J1 j4
club, you can plaY. a _:;;L;n;r~eR;s~IN~!~ou~,.~R:!!es~.~~-=~·
=1·=r·-=·~·

Richard S. Barton, 78
Emmett C. TUmer, 77
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and claim.

FOR

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ICIIAM-I.ITI ANIWIII
.

ITUESDAY

MAY 21

.

I

Legion· Quilt • Hitch • Edging· TOUGH HIDE
•.,
I told my eiderly aunt I waa going to get Involved In :
local politlca. She alghed and aald, "I Just hope you have .•
1 tender heart but a TOUGH HIDE."
. : ~

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WcdneAiluy. Mey 22. 2002
You mny spend much time
un•l effort In the yemr ahead
devoted 10 mulcrlul ma11cr1..
Dy thl~ limo nokt year you
couh.l find that your.flnnnclal
Jut In life IN considerubly bet·
ler.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
•• Conulllon• In aeneral nre
extremely aood for you wllh
tlte exception of materia1con·
· alderatlona. Sizable expendl·
lures should not be made im·
puiAivciy. Check ull contln·
acnclea concernlna the pur·
chase. Gemini, treat_your1elf
au u binhuuy gift. Send for
~our Allru·Oraph predlcllon1
for.thc yenr ahead by mulllnJ
$2 nnd SASE to Aatm·Oraph,
c/o thlA newspaper, P.O. Box
1758. Murray_ Hill Station.
New Yurk, NY 10 l ,6. Be
1ure m&amp;late yuur wdloc Alan.
CANCER (June 2l·Ju1y'l2)
•• There lA nothinJ.. wrona
with wunllna to fulnll your
peraonal ambillon1. However,
1n doing ao, you must luke
care lhut .you don't do thlna•
in u IICir•~ervina faAhion. · ·
I..EO (July 23-Aua. 22) -·
llc wi~c enouah to openly di~·
cu~s thinliA thai annoy you. If
)'flu dun I, you tlanll the

•

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ch~nce

uf leu ina thins• feAter
in your fertile imaalnullon.
Urina II up in an inoffensive
manner.
VIRGO (A us. 23·Scpt. 22)
•• Pinondul conditions should
be aooct for you personally,
but at work you-mlaht not 6e
aa lucky. When doina busl·
neu fur your company. atlck
to their tried and true procc·
durn
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) •
• You c4n charm your way
into aenlna what you want
from other•. but only if the
other penon doeAn'l feel manipulated. Explain your inlen·
tloni before implementina
them.
'SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
22) .. If you rely on luck to
accomplish your aoals, you
could make a coatly mistake
1imllar to one you made pre·
viou1ly. Don't let wishful
thlnkina override your loalc
and common sente.
SAOtTIARIUS (Nov, 23·
Dec. 21) -· An anoc:iaae
wantl you to join him or her
in ~omethina that could be
profitable. But. If you're unre·
al11tlc about the project, the
Invitation could tie promptly
· withdrawn.
•

•

•

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan: · '

19) •• Wlti\out the wlllinanesa

1

to compromise. you are nol •
apt to aal n the cooJ)4!ratlon of :
cohoru. Be prepared to bend:,
a little In the process. Self!" '
servin&amp; ways will not be tot· :
crated.
••
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Peb, :
19) •• You'll display a con· :
vlvlal manner in worklna with •
otherA, but only up to a point. :
U there is aomethln&amp; you per.....
sonully want, you could fail to
appreciate the needs of othen..
PISCES (Peb. 20·Marc~ ·
20) •• Subdue inclinations 10 •
. impulsively aumble in order'·
to upedlte mancn. A alow
but sure route wlllleod you to
succcu, while other wayr,
could lead vou 10 fall nat on
your llllle.
ARIES (Mw-ch 21·Aprill9)
.. Let Mother Nature have her·
way and muny pleasant npe·
rience1 could be In the offln1
for you. When rou negatively
1ituatton1, however,
r.1rejudae
could be another atory. ~
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) .. Altitude i1 alway• imponaht, but if you faltely be·
Jievc that taskt are easier than
lhey mtll y are, you could aet
your~elf up for a major work:
related failure.
I

fur filii sport~ g~s Md COO\Ptti·
tilw.
The scti(IQI lw,o; bwn witlloot ~
le~ si~¥.~ kist lull whM the lldvlsor
n:£igood and the activity wus. disbllnded followi113 son~ oonlllct bet~
two Qt tlu'e.o of the llitts.
Robin Dull~ spol&amp;s.tmtn tQI' the
group. said thllt three prople who ~
001 oo the sehool st11l't' nilve ~applied
IQI' the ~~tioo and l\ht~ld be ooo.~d­
eNd if 11 stlll'f member is not intllftst·

in

wm

wm

ed.

The l.'tln.o~ensus ol' the OOant Wtl.'\ lhltt

" .......... Al

Weallser

a difference

High: 70s, Low: 40s
Details, A2

Road dared

BY CIIAituNI HOINCII

HO~FI.IC~¥0AilVSENTlNEL.CllM

POMEROY - County
Rood 10 (SI.Iite Fann) in the
Carpenter community is
closed due to 11 slip.
It will remuln closed until
Friday afternoon, 111.'CO!ding
to 11 Meigs County Highway
Department spokesmun. The
alternate route is over Ohio
143 to the Appalachian
Highway, it wos reported.

POMEROY - "Thke the energy you use in worcy.

In~ about things 11nd put it into some~thin@ productive

EMS nn
· POMEROY - Units of
tlie Meigs Emergency
Service answered five ctills
for ussistance on Tuesdtly.
Un!ts responded os follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH

S:36 a.m., Ohio 124, Oaru
Saunders, Holzer Medicul
Center;
.
2:S6 p.m:, HMC Clinic,
David Milbourne, HMC;
4:1.9 p.m., Ohio 681,
Churles Mnrtin, HMC.
POMEROY
2:4S p.m., Hildlland Rood,
. Dhma Johnson,HMC;
6:23 p.m., Balltlelds,
Jeffrey Roush, HMC.

OHIO
Pick J: 1·8·0
Pick 4: 0·3-6·9
luckiYt S: 10·18-22·23-32
M• Numbers: 4·28-39-41·
44
M..l 1111:9
Pick J nlpt: 7·3·9
Pick 4 nlpt: 2-3+7

W.VA.

D1Hy I: 3-6·4
Dilly 4: 9·8-9·2
C11h 25: 5·7·8·10·11·22

Index
2~11-12,...

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaril!s

Sports

Weather

Meigs seniors

·told to make ·

•

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POMEROY - Action was rul:en to
reduce the teaching sratf in the element:uy nnd middle schools in preparation lor movin~ into the new build·
ings sometime m 2003 ut Tuesday
night's meeting of tile Meigs Local
Bonrd of Educution.
Superintendent Willium Buckley
noted thut implen1enting u reduction
in force is in u~·~orduncl.' wirh the
negotiuted agreement with tile Meigs
locul Te,K'ht'rs • AssllCiution.
Becuuse of declining enK&gt;IIment
and redistricting bltsed on locution of

the new schools. ll!ld reductk!o in the
number of classrooms
the new
buildings, the number of te~
needed will be reduced.
He explained that instead of eight
teachers pet gnl&lt;le. onl)f six tet~ehers
pet grade
be n«ded. The reduc-tion will be do.oo on the basis of
seniority.
.
.
Four teachers, three ut Rutlund Wid
one ut Pomeroy. huve ttl ready been
udvised that their Jl()Sitions
be
eliminated. Four others are expected
to be notil'ied this week:.
All of the tetichers losing their po..~­
tions will be kept on a list for PQoSS.ible

SERVICEMEN GRADUATE

.•.

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\

BY CtwluN• Hom.lctt

HOEFUCMOMYDAitYSENTII'IEL,COM

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udion

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Trump suit
FRANK &amp; EARNEST

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approves teacher

• Kll

AS
B3·S

86

AS
A4

A3

A3
81·2
A2

C1 3003 Ohio VIlli)' Pubtlthlf11 Co.

RICEIYEI DIPLOMA - .Earl Danny Jr. of Middleport received his hl&amp;h school araduatlon diploma
from John Hood, president of the Meigs Local Board of Education. (Charlene Hoeflich Photos)

Local veterans will get their diplomas
BY CHARLINE HOII'LICH
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSEf'·lTINEL.COM

OMEROY -

When Japan
attacked Peurl Harbor more
t.hun 60 yeurs · ago. thousunds of young men across ·
the nation were drafted or
volunteered to defend their country.
Many were still in their teens und unending
high school when Uncle Sum culled und lhey
responded.
When th'ey retu~ncd home after the war,
many entered the civiliun work force und
never returned to ccunpletc their high school
educution.
.
Among the Meigs County veterans who
didn't go bock to school after serving in the
military ure two residents of the Meigs Local
School District -. Guido J. Oiroli,IJUi of
Pomeroy, und Earl Denny Jr. of Middleport.
By virtue of legislation pussed by th,41 Ohio
Legislature last yeur. Girolumi und Denny
qualify for high school diplomas.
......
Thul legislation authorizes the board of
education of uny city, exempted village or
local school district or uny churtered non public school to grunt u high school diplomu
to any World Wnr II vetenan in Ohio wfio left
high school prior to graduation to serve in
the armed forces und re,:elved un honoruble
discharge.
·
It ulso provides thut if u qualifying Ve,leran
Is deceased, the schools muy uwurd u d\lllo·
ma to the veteran posthumously and may
· present that diploma to a living relative; of
the veteran .
.,
During Friday night's commencement pro·
gram at Meigs High School, GirolamL ~nd
Denny will receive recognition.
Oirolami, who attended the fort1ter
Pomeroy High School, will be partlcipatjl)g
in graduation. Denny, ulso a former Pom$y

- like vohtnteerlnt~."
That was the advil:e of Jo¥ Padg,ctt, director of the
Governor's Offit.~ of App~~lu~hiu, when she uddre~sed
Meigs countians Tue~duy nt the anmml l~h:bration uf
Senior Citizens Day.
In comments marked with humor, Padgett culled on
seniors to make u diffmnce in the "'Ommunity. und to
remember that positive thought produ~'lls po~itlve
action.
She emphlllll:r.ed the huportunce of hmghtlll', ol' liking
und beliovlna In oncsell'. uml of looking to loscn to
tlnd out What they are doing nnd then not doing thut. .
"If you plan t'ot bud things they will usuttlly hnppen."
· sho saW!, IUld then coutioncxt bet listeners thut todiQI
can be destroyed by wo!l1ingabout tomorrow.
"No one hus u contrnct for tomori'\IW nnd I would osk
thm you muke the most ofevery day. 'l)tkc the worry,
nnxiety und frustrations out of your life. think positive
ubout things, und go out und mnke u dill'erence in the
community."
. Pudgell wus introduced by Mlc~ Ouvenport. presl·
dent of the Meigs County Councal on Aging und 11
county commissfoi1cr. He comm1.1nded Susun Oliver;
executive director of the Council1&gt;n Aging, und noted
thut the ogency hud received mllionuluccreditutionlust
yenr.
Tho opening ceremony wus conducted by · the
Tuppers PlulnSVFW Post 905:1. uner which the me~m·
bers presented un $800 check tu the center for the
Meuls on Wheels program.
A program of music wus pl'llsented by the show choir.
of the Meigs Middle School. directed by Metru
Peterson.
lntmduced by Oliver Wllfll Christi Lynch, l'llpl'llsent·
ing U.S. Rep. Ted Stricklund. und Ryun Miller fllpre·
senting Spenlcer of the Ohio House Lnrry Hm1se~holder.
He presented the center director wllh un Ohio 11ug.
Also introduced and speaking bricl1y were stmo rep·
resentntlve candidates Jimmy Stewart und Jim
Puncuke. nnd severullocul ofl1clnls.
A flld, white ond blue color scheme wus curried In
decorutions for the cclcbrntlun which curried out the
theme "Amerlcu - ACommunity for nil A).!es."

TO PARTICIPATI - Guide J. Glrolaml of
Pomeroy will be participating In the Meigs Hl&amp;h
School &amp;raduatlon program Friday nl&amp;ht. Here,
Superintendent William Buckley &amp;lves him a peek
at the diploma he'll receive .
High School student, is unuble to uttend· for
health reasons.
Giroluml, who would have graduated in the
Pomeroy class of 194S, was drafted on Jun.
22, 1944, and served In the 261 sl lnfantry1
6Sth Division of (he U.S. Army. He servea
overseas in France. Austria and Oermuny,
and was discharged on May S, 1946.
Denny was just six weeks away from grud·
uatlon when he wus drafted . into the U.S .
Army In 1943. He served overseus 18
months, was In the Invasion of Normandy,
and was discharged in 1946.

FOR MIALI ON WMEILI - Acheok for $800 towerde
the Meals on Wheels for homebound senlora Will pr•
santed to Suaan Oliver. Council on Aalng director, dur·
Ina Tuesday's observance of Senior Citizen• Day,
(Charlene Hoeflich)
-

..
.

Holur M.d;cof CtMitrl In GaHrpol/1 and .loek1011, 011/a, OIW now cx:ctpH"II CJppilcoHonl
lor ~l11trec/ nurio1. Wt alftr ,_per d/t11t ra,.., luiHIIIl IWimbv,..,.m, 'll..lblt ac/!odv/1"11,
8 CJMi 12 hour 1hlfh, ln·hov.- opporlun!H.t, roiacCJIIan CJIIIIIG-. wttlrtM dlffertnHof,
anti o 1/gn-on honw ol $3000. PooiHon1 ,.,. CJVOI/oblt In fltt fo/low/"11 oreo~:

a

Medical/Surgery • Critical Ca,. • E111tt'pnC)' Department
Obat.trlca • Pediatrics

Discouer the Holzer Difference

Alii/•'-" poa/Hona roqu;,. Prtlf'll' il..,•urt In 011/o.
IF ln,.,.lltci, pleo.. conlrxt:
Human R110Urco• Dopartm1111, Holzer M.dtcol Ctnltr, 100 Jackson Pike, Golllpollo, Ohio 4.$631

....... I740I446·1f01 .

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www.holzer.org

C740I446·1106
·'

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The Daily Sentinel

'

Mark ¥·demolition

Senate approves cigarette tax

lkhlftlst... ....
REEOO\tltttl- ~~Shennan~ 18, Reedsvill(,
. died S\l~ M;,y 19. 2002., in St. ~'s Hospital,
P41\th~Q!. W.Va.

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f-&lt;'~

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. &amp;H. hlW:~ "~' ~n New \lowW. W.Va., SOl\ &lt;&gt;f tbe late
Owen and Wilhtmlna M\)ttt)&gt; Banon, be was • l~2 graduate
of ~M Plemnt (W.Va.) ffi$11 Sdlool, Vtd w.s employed as
. \l ~ ~catot !it the l'tlihp :Spon~ Plant
·
·
He was • 1\\el\\bet ()f the 0\e$\tr NWrene Olllrdl.
snvint .re his wife N' -45 ~ Mtcel Sillitb Bmon; a
.. ~ Wid ~n-law, ~ev\n and Llri D.trtun ()!' 0\arlotte,
N.C; • da~~ and $01\-ln-law, bt. Mmlyn 8, and Dr. JMOO
.SeiWllt ~ devebnd; • ·daughter, Cml)&gt;n S. Barton of
Jteedsville; two ~ildren; . a sister\ Mavis Bennett or
Amold, Md.; &lt;and~ and s1sten-in-1:aw, Owen and Jean
~ ()tRed Hoose, W.Va., Thol\\as A. Bartoli of Nederland,
'ftlt..S. and Bill and lt&lt;acltel lluton or Point Pleasant.

))

·. ~ will be 3::\0 p.lti. Wednesday in Fishel' F\lnetal ·
· · ft~ Poltieroy. with ltitot ftdbcrt Gnlte offidatillg. llurial
will be In Meigs Memocy Ga!dens. Visitation was held ill the
''1\n~l hMie ftom 2--4 aiid 6-9 p.m. 1\lesday.
.
(&amp;tl'for-~ Mft{ Tttt abol&gt;t Jt6t~ MUU ~~&gt;as to havt
t~ppMMi ill twsd.zy ~ Ddily Seltrilttl, bttr \&lt;las omitted. Ttte
· ~io ~ley hbli~l&gt;tg tb. updagi~s_Ji&gt;'f tile QlllissiOII.)

... . .

SCOI'IlSH RITE

C. 'hlmar

Thursday is next
target, penditlg .
agreement
BY IIRtAN J. R&amp;D
BREEOfii\'OAII.YSENTINEI..COM

MIDDLEPORT - The
demolition of the Mark V
building on the comer of
South Second Avenue and
Mill Street has been delayed
once again, and may proceed
later this week w1thout an
agreement between the
Viii~ of Middleport and the
buildlllg's owners.
· Demolition on the building
wa.~ first scheduled to begin
last Thursday, then Monday
ofthls week, bllt a«ording IQ
Mayor Sandy lannarelli,
delays in .securing liability
insurance and the refusal of
Carl and Kay Planer, the
building's owners, to sign an
agreement allowing for the
village to proceed with the
project, continues to delay its
stan.
The building was condemned by the village in
September and collapsed earlier this month. Since then,
trat'ric along South Second
and Mill has been detoured.
At its May l 3 meeting,
Village Council agreed to
borrow up to $50.000 to

demolish the building, and
one located adjacent to it on
Mill Street, and IQ clean up
the comer lot. Council also
approved a proposed agreement with the Platters requiring them IQ make the pay·
ments on the loan from
Peoples Bank, N.A:, and
securing the agreeme.nt with a
lien on the property.
As of 1\Jesday, the Platters
had not signed the agreement,
but lannarelli said demolition
will still probably begin on
Thursday. If the- demolition
begins without the Platters'
approval, the cost would still
be the Platters' responsibility,
lannarelli said, based on
infonnation from Village
Solicitor Linda Warner.
If the Platters were to fail to
pay the cost, the J?,roperty
could n:vert to the \llllagc in
90 days and a foreclosure sale
could be forced.
In the meantime, an assessment of damage to the nei~h ­
boring Wes1em Auto buildmg
continues, according to
lannarelli.
Cracks in 1he facade of 1he
building, located between the
Mark V and the Peoples Bank
property, have appeared since
the Mark V collapse, and
lannarelli said she and-owner
Janet Reeves will continue to
discuss the fate of the buildmg.

-

Six Meigs County Masons n:ceived their Scuuish Rite
Ambassador aprons Saturday when the commun ity's cottish
Rite members and other Masons, Order of E:ist,•rn Star members and Job's Dau~hters members gathered for a dinner at the
Middleport Masontc Loose. David Kern of the Valley of
Columbus Scottish Rite, prctured ~1bovc in 1hc .ha~k rn.w with
Larry Thomas, County Dn~ctor ot the Mergs Cfllmty Scottish
Rite, presented the aprons to, from left. Walt Manky. Charles
Wilson, Da~iel Spurlock, Harry t;&gt;uvidsnn, Stclll1ctt llnttchiM
and Glenn Kennedy. At the dinner. below. -:m ma lluntcr,
daughter of Douglas and Tonya Hunter of Rm·mo. pic'lurcd
with Thomas and David Fox, rend her uward-winnin)!. essay
selected in a Scouish Rite essay contest. "Wh) I Love My
Family." A dr.tmntic presentation by the Scott i,h Hil c players
of Columbus, "Maple Grpve," followed I he dinner and rc~og­
nition service, and examined the social dmngcs t&gt;f &lt;&gt;nc smu ll ·
community through the eyes of its Masonic Lodge mct11hcrs.
(Brian J. Reed photos)
·

DEX'rnR - Emnret1 C. 'T'unier, '77 Oexter, died Sunday,
May 19, l002 a\ O'Bltlle$$ Memorial ltospltallll Athen~.
• He was oom Sellt. 3, 192_., in Dexter, son of the late
'llmlilas E. artd ~ Nelsoo '1\lmer, He was a paint chemist.
He was a vetetal\ of the U.S Na\'y dllri~ Wottd War ll, and
a member ~ ~ney-Benl\etl PQ$\ 128, American legiOil,
MlddlqX\rt and the lllk:s Club in E~n, IIi.
• Surviving Mt fuur ~s 11nd dafuzhters-ln-law, Scott and
0\ane Thrnet, Jeff and Ratherlne 1\lmer, lind Craig and
' Valet\e 'l'llmer,·an of. North Adams, Mass., and Rlchard·amd
mlyl\ 'T\Iftll:t of MIIWllllree, Wis.: three sisters and two
· brotbers-in·law, L~y and tharles .H~s or Cal\lll Winchesterl ·
Sue 'l'\lrne
. r of ReyooldsbuQl, and Sotna and Latty Parsons or
:Poll\ei'O}'~ three brothers, 'fum 'l'UYIII:r of Lake Zurich, Ill.,
· t:larellCI'! 1\lmer of Dexter, lnd M~tlcolm Nelson of Georgia;·
and ei~t gtilndcblldren alld a great-~ndchild.
.
- Hewes also preceded in dellth by his wife, Helene Henson - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . T\lrner; hi$ stepll\00\er, Lillian ftlll 1Umeria brother, Clovis
'1\lmer: :and :an lnfl\1\t sister, Macy Frances 1umer.
Sel'VIces will be II a.m. Friday in 811\':hfield F\lneral Ho~e
in Rutl:and, with the Rev. Lamru- O'Bcyant omclatlng. Bunal
will follow at St«ndi~h Ctmetery ill Dexter. r:nends may call
Southern High School, or by
· at the fUneml home from 2·4 and 6-8 p.m. Thursday.
calling
Shirley Johnson at · • Memorial ~ntributions may be made IQ the American
CHilSTEiR - An open 843·5259. Tickets are $ l 2.
. Ca!i¢et Society.
house for the Eastern High
School Class of 1972 will be
held
Saturday from 2 to 6
ID cant system, which 'not p.m. onFor
class
ol\ly llllows access to certain member maydirections,
call 985-4108.
areas; but would be used in
POMEROY
'1 In . . _ a 1
the cafeteria and tnedia cenAppointments
are available
II rwr ft
ter. The cost for PUI\':hasing
for the June l 8 hearing clinic
it would 00 OOitet If someone . the equipment and maintainRACINE .
at the Meigs County Health
....
11'
""'k
th"
""•ltl"n,
lnglt
was
discussed
with
no
R
.
e/S
AI
.
On . ... " " ' " " " " v
1
·1 bel
k
h"
actn out 1ern
uqm1 Department.
l"ollowlng a live'" alld act on
ng ta en at 1-"' Association will hold its
Free services, Including a
,
OJ f...
meeting.
lellt!tby discuss.on, olle o me
Other action lllkeli by the annual banquet on Saturday hearing test and an examina·
mothtrs indicated that boaro Included:
at Southem High School in lion by an ear, nose and throat
phY,Sician, are . provided for
Jennifer Iones, who Is on
, Adopting 11 resolution Racine.
ch1ldn:n
under 21. Referrals
stall' :a11d was derle:adlng authoriting continued memDinner will be served at
lldvisor last year, mlght ron- bershlr in tlie Ohio High 6:30p.m. The theme is "Red, are needed to enhance clinic
· sidet taklfiA thil f:itlt'll\ Schoo Athletic Association White and Blue," and special attendance or the Ohio
If she were as _ and next year for both Meigs recognition will be given to Department of Health will
grven assurance of board 1-tl~h and Meigs Middle those who have served in the terminate the program within·
sugport
S 001
U.S. Armed Forces at any Meigs County. ·
'
1
c
;
·
Referral s are accepted from
uckley nld he woll d
• Approving 11 contract for tI me. Tl1ose auen d'mg are
contact Jones right away lind services for Educal.ionnl . encouraged to wear palrlotic parents, legal guardians,
If that didn't work out, would technology Services of Ohio colors, but it is not required. teachers, etc. Appointments
WASHINGTON (AP) - As Thursday to t.mdcrscorc the
-Interview tile non-staff appli· at a ~-ost of 55 cents per stuTickets are still available at may be scheduled through
he seeks to. counter European need for conrinucd coopcration
:cants and perhaps m11lre a dent equaling $1,223; . · the Home National Bank and · T.C. Ervin at 992,6626.
doubts
about the U.S.-Ied wur against terrorism . '-'1 knnw
· tkommendlltlon to the board
• Reviewing the Office of
on
terrorism.
President Bush is America can't win the wur on
at next 1\lesday's meeting.
Child Nutrition Services
appealing to the ollie.~· self- terror alone," he 1&lt;11d the ·
Mark Thomas, Meigs tech evaluation of the food service
interest, warning as he begins a Gcnmln TV slutio11 II RD .
te11cher, and a representative program in Meigs Local and
But a swrk rcmind~r · of
four-nation
tour that they too
.from Ci!ntuty Business offiring a commel\datlon to
European
skcpril:ism awaited
could
face
attacks.
: Products met With the oolird Marilyn Meier and her food
"Even though we've had him: Some I!Xl pn&gt;tc.' l' were
· IQ tllscuss equipment needs service stat¥.
some
initial. successes, then:'s planned across Germany on
:to Implement an identll'lca· Attel\dlng the meeting
still
danger
for countries which Wednesday and Thur~day 10 .
· tlt'll\ clird iiyslem In the Meigs were Buc'kley, Treasurer
COLUMBUS (AP) - No
Under the House bill. wel- embrace freedom, countries coincide with hi ' vi,i t, und u
l.ocal School Dl5trlct, Mark El. Rhonetnus, Roger matter
what the final shape of fare recipients would be such us ours, or Germany, demonstration ill Berlin on the
kindergarten through 12th Abbott, Niltmali Humphreys the latest
welfare required to work 40 hours a France, Russia or Italy," Bush eve of his urrival drew a.~ many
-grades.
·
Rtm Logan, Scott Walton and reform et't'ort,federal
state otllcials week, up from 30 hours. said Wednesday us he departed as 100,000 people. nH"t oppos: Seeurlty Is a (eamn: of the lohn HOOd.
said Ohio should be in good 1\venty-four of those hours the White House. "As an ing any expanston of tl1c wa1·. .
shape to meet the standaids it would have .to be in payin~ jobs alliance, we must to continue to
or commumty serv1ce, w1th as tight against global terror. · Joe Montegm1 t" l-t"t Mon·
wilt SCI.
Joel Potl~. welfare adminis- many as l6 hours allowed for We've got to be !Ough."
.
dBy") mauc his :tl'l ll&lt;~ dcht&lt;l "' a
trator for the Ohio Department education or training progniins.
Bush was nymg to Berhn, 1969 pruductionot "ll tllr," then
of Job and Pamily Services,
In addition, 70 pen:ent of where he was to use an addn:ss co·wrolc u i&gt;l ay. "llka,·hcr
suld 60 percent ol the state's recipients in each stale would to the Gennan Parliament on aums."
welfare recipients already meet have to meet the work requirecutrent participation-rate goals ment~ . by 2007, up from the
Comctlol'lltollcv
for work and training.
current SO percent.
Our main - m In 11H &amp;lolita Ia
"We ought to have more peo- The proposed changes In the
to I* allCIJrato, 11 ~ Mt\OW ole~
ple in work and training pro- federal law come a.~ Ohio and
ll!illln 11~, e11 tilt niWII'IIilm
.r (7401 Dtlll• 18il,
mw1y other states are slashing
gr.uns, not less," he said.
their
budgets because of declin·
Last week, the U.S. House
Newt ~rtmenla
passed n revantped version of ing state n:venues.
tilt Mitn num t " ii02·illlie.
the
welfare refonn overhaul it Potts said increasing the
O.p~~fttMnt e~ltonler.:
made in 1996. The Senate will required work and training
!tot 12
OWit!Nn...,
hours bener renects the typical
consider It in coming weeks.
work ·week, but comes at a
Federal
and
state
reforms
tiki.
~~
fttwt
'have reduced the welfare rolls ptice.
1!1&lt;1. 14
lit
In Ohio from a peak of749,000 "Philosophically it makes
In 1992 to about 198,000, a sense, but realistically, without
Other liMON
decline
of more than 70 per· the n:sources, it's going to be
llki. 3
.tl¥tftllllll
difficult," he told The
cent.
The bill pnssed by the House Columbus Dispa&amp;ch in a story
CINuiMIOn
1!1&lt;1. 4
contained most of President published Sunday.
c....tlltd Ail
&amp;Ill. S
Bush's plans for continuing the
Polls said additional money
changes begun six years ago. will be needed for expMded
ToaandHIIII
But what emerges from the training and child care pro·
ntwtlem~ll""nnne~ .com
Senate
will differ and Is expect· grwns because welfure rccipi·
OntheWab
www.mydellynnl1ntl.com
ed to include mon: funding for ents will be on the job or in
class longer.
child care.

-LOCAL BRIEFS

Plan reunion

.

-----------------------.
rei
Boa

Ex·suplllntenclent chlrpd
WARREN (AP) - A fl)l'ftlt!l' narthMSI Ohio $ehool supQrln.
tendtlnt hliS been obtlracd with oftW!na *11h1e «l 11 studootln
his uffite.
•
Joseph M. s~r. 36, of lliWby Cartltmd, Wtl~ ehal'lllll
Tulllld~ with I'Qiooy eoonts of eorruptitl&amp;lloothef with drop,
lltttmptma tu tum~pt 11oothw with tiJ\IIi 11nd lntlmldlltlna 11
vlttlm.
"

Old family.

Sund&amp;IY, wh\11'\1 she W\\1\t uflw thm&gt;th
with hw family.
Her husbnntl, Dvyl Mt:Clrtm, lt)ld n
tolevlslon stlltlan tlltll he whoo he St\W
oft11:1ll't! llpprollob, he tlssumcd he hnd
unlmowlnaly violated 11 tntdd"l! h1w on
thtleross-eoontry trip he'd just nltun\00
!'rom with his wrt'e.
"And all of 11. sudden they'nltwUna me
llboot thls wollilll\ I do not know," he tt'lld
WKRN·TV In NnshvUie.
Thm11_1Y F\'eshwutw, $2, s11w his sister
far the flrst lime In 36 years on the news.
"Thllt's my sister," he told The
AssOillllted Pruss on '1\II!Sdl\Y.
Franklin County Prosecutor Ron
O'Brien s&amp;dd Tucstt~ thl\l the wonum
ndmlttcd thnt she Wt\S Fnlshwntw.
Hw nttomey, Rlchnrd Piau, husst1ld he
will elmllenae flnallrorlnt cvld11nce nnd
flaht olttmdlflan,llllulna his clhmt's tOn·
. stltutlonlll rlahts werc vlolnted In tho

111'1'\ll!l, Ahet\rlt~&amp;IUthlldultd for Jun11 18.
Tho 'Thnni.\ssoo ~ptutmi.\nt of
COrrtlltiM s11ld the ~ It) sttll't
~tflldllloo Is 111\d\11' Wll)l.
AuthorltlQ3 Sl!)' Fmhwuror llwd In
sewml'l:ontflll Ohio tltlll!l and ~ her
trlmlnal reeord ele11n. She 11\lli'I'IOO, hlld
thl'llll thildt~m 11.1\d worked 11. vllrlety of

J*·

"I'm still numb about this ... It shookM
lni~ thti.t she MOl etmaht," sllld Thmlli)l
Fmhwnt.er, wlm Uws nl1ar Chllllrotlte
1111d wunls It) 111111 his slsror,
.
She would hll\ltl boon tll\llht lhhe had
tried to IJ()I\ItU:t him\ hi.\ Sllld, betlluse
nuthorltles IJ()l\tlnun ly followed und .
quesHOI\ed him [IOOul his sister.
Thu womtln 's dnu;hter, Anale
Hudkins, of Cnmbrldae1 N.Y., told
WTBN In Albtmy, N.Y., s.lust not her.
h's so unlmtllllnnblll It) think or 'lbnya
111\d tlmt wtllliiln 11s belna the stme."

"'t

'

which pntlcnts or their
aut1rdlnM mny lnstr111:t doe•
tors nnd nurses not to loove
pnllents dcpondcnt on life
support or nlSUSCillltC them
should they lose vltnl slans.
Earlier this mtmth, tho
HawuH Scnnte rt.~jcctcd n
Hou5e•pusscd bill tlint would
h11vc nllilwcd tloetor-usslshid
suleldcs. Only ONaon huM
sueh u l•w, npprovoo by vot·

Healthy Start
Healthy Families ·

2002
'=l.l1

AMIIIIliY

t.W\1111»

Ohio said to be in good shape
to meet new welfare rules

Houtty

1

$11.710 $1,4'77 $1.11

a

$13,100 $1,810

3

$$0,040 $2,104 $14.~1

4

$$1,aoo $3,017 . $17.14

I

$1CUI

'lr:»

en 111 1994and 1997.
OreaOI\ 's law allows the
ternliMIIy HI to reque~t 11
lothal dos1.1 of druas If two
doctors tonflrm they h"ve
les8 thnn six months to live
und the ptltlents 11re ment111ly
~ompetent to make the
request. Tho plltlenu must
tnke the llltnl dose by them•
selves.

1\lJ I 0 INSIIII/\NCI

2-ooorl 4-ooor. 6-ooor a Pickup.

AMIIIIliY

.,.17

a

.17,810 $1.483 $1.11

3

ua,S30 .1,171 t10.8a

4

$17,110 $1,H3 .13.11

I

$$1,'P'PO

"1\:'

Allli~IIIV

$1,HO

Tb lind out mort ~bout our auto
lnauranct CIII mt .. , Slop by... lt'a your ollolctl

a
.

.11,840

•
•

......
MollllllV

'"'

'"I

t11.40

HollriV

.....

-------

tue

s

.11,010 .1,111 .7.11

4

.,1,100 .1,101 ...77

I

-~Oil Wlillfl

Hll~rtv

$13,180 .1,101 ... 44

1

NltltftWII'
tnaur1nct6
Fln1ncl1l StNicH

t.W\11\Iy

1

One Call Covers them All.

C

President seeks to build
support for terror war

Reader Services

Doctors, nurses ~could lose licenses
COLUMBUS (AP) - requires eourta to Issue
Doctors tmd nurses could Injunctions 1\illlMt uulstln11
lose their licenses for nulst· In A suicide should one bC
ln'a In the sulcld of p~tlents aouaht by u rcllltlve or
au!Torlna chrcnlc pllln, under auaidlan of the person with
1\ bill the House overwhelm· an Illness.
lnaly Approved on Mond11y.
P ople In chroni c puln
The bill, sponsored by often develop symptoms of
Republlctln Rep. Merle ellni011l deprcsslon, mtiklna
·Kearns or Sprlnanctd, would · them 1nore susceptible to sui~
authorl:&amp;c tho Suue Medical clde, Kenrns snld. Trcntmcnt
Board, the Boord of Nurslna ol' depression should be
and the Resplrotory Cur explored in chronic pnln
Board to discipline he11lth cnsc3, s.he snlll.
care prnfcssionuls who t\SSiat "There Is a slrona eonnee.
In aulcld~ s.
lion ~etwcol\ sul!)lde lind
It nlsu would crctlll'! 11 trelltAble depression," KeArns
blpartlsun Compns lonate 111id. "Th deslrc for aulclde
Care Tusk force conaiatlna of Is of'len oil minot d."
lawmakers, profeaslonuh 11nd Rep. Dnle Miller, II.
the public to aludy problema Cleveland Dcmoernt, 111ld he
uaoclatcd whh chronic pain, reluctantly voted oaalnsl the
The bill al10 make1 mlatcd ' bill: Some patients who are
aulcldc "aaalnat the public nolau£farina from depression
P&lt;!llcy of tlic state."
· feel that suicide h the only
The Houae acnt the bill to way 10 end the pal n for themthe Senile on an 83· 7 vote. aelvea and their tamlliea.
Tho health care prorculon· "Deapltc our beat efforts, ...
al boards would be autho· puln Cllnnot nlways be offcc·
rlzcd to deny, revoke, sua· tivcly munnaed," he uid.
pend or restrict Uccnaa&amp; And
Kearns assured House
men nncs up to $500 for members that the bill would
each violation. The bill alao not aupcncde livlna willa, In

Plan ba. nquet

Ill!"'"

family dlsapee on woman's

COLUMBUS (APl - A wom1111's hus·
blmd swears she ls Thl\yll Mt:Ctlrtor, loY·
Ina mothw, business pwtnw, bttllroom
d11nw.
Hw lona-~stmnaed brothw wntcltl)sthc
newt~ 11nd sees Maraa Fnlshwatw, the
oldw slstw who looked aftw him until
she dlsuppeured without " word. ·
The wam11n Is In Jnil, tiS proseeuton
511)' she confessed ut\w her flnaerprlnts
mulched those of u lltllwletcd klllw who
cscuped from n 'Thnnessoo prison 32
years tljo. But hw tlttomey denies flnaerprlntund 1.'01\fession tlllke.
F\'eshwuter, 53, escuped by ellmblnJ 11
fence ftl the Nt1shville prison In 1970. She
hnd sei'\IOd 18 months of n llll·ytnr sen·
tcnc:e for tho murder of Hlllmnn Robbins
Sr., " liquor storc clerk In Mllmphls,
Tenn.
Authorities suld Frcshwntcr 18 the
wom11n urnlsted nt u het\lth club on

Appointments
available

tl1,110

,,,,..

No two people have exactly the same hearing loss. Approximately 10%
of hearing losses may be helped medically. And the remaining 90%
benefit from
aids,

•1o.ae·

mHV

•

•

�. The Daily Sentinel
•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court 81., Poi'Mro~lo
74D-H2-2~H • Fa•: 7411·2117

'

www.mydlllytentlnel.com

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dlckeraon
\-Publlaher
•

Ch1rlen1 Hoeflich
Qen.t rlil M1n1ger

,LRIIl
HIS...YOO'Rr; NOT
""1Nb bNOU6U IN mr;

DEAR AU~ FQr tbe 1*t throe
month$. I have had •lonl·dls~
relationship witb a man I met
· throuah 111 Internet da.tiq ~site,
He claims be's not intemled In
meetin1 IIIYOM el$0, but hiS not
·yet deleted his Internet profile. He
still receive&amp; e-mail from women
:-Uid hu continued to meet them
. ...:.. all the while insistina be wuts a
: $Crlous relationship with mel
~· This slluation is makina me very
' uncomfortable. While he Sl)'S all
. the ri&amp;ht thinas, I cannot eomplote:;ly trust hlm.
· When I confronted hlm, he said
these women m just lookina_ for
• friends (oh, really?), 11nd he feels
' sure about where to "draw the
" line."
What do you think. Abby?
•.Should I tNst him?- RANGING
·IN THERE IN TUCSON
.
DEAR HANGING IN THERE1

Mlt'ri\.&amp; ~CRISIS!
WJrfs TAATf.. ,NU~

.... !

r

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

htfm h• lit fflthH' 4tl'f ~ktNHt. 1JltJ tltdt~W t.f lt.u INN JUI woNt. Alll«ttn
NlriHI ltiUIMUUf H #IHtii•IMI IHtiiHif ..,..., .~ Nl~r IIIMifiiHr.
ltttrr. will IN! ,..lfll.rltH. /,#lttrt tlttu.llt k I• Jtiilil tatlt, ftlltiHul.,

ttff ,ffl~HI ta
/\'1t wtulpH

bs11rs. Ifill ,wnuHHtlrs.
'
l)f t'ltlHiurh' «'X/IrfuN J,. tltt tvfiiMII btluwrn tltt WftJ«ttsiU rlflw Oltlo Mtltry
I'HtHislt~rtl. &lt;O.. ~ f'flihtrlf!l Mnl. ""'"" fllltt't'wbr ,.,,...,,

NATIONAL VIEW

·tense

TODAY IN HISTORY
9Y THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Toduy is Wedncsduy, Muy 22, the 142nc.l duy of 2002. There
ure 223 duys left in the year. ·
·
Totiuy's Highlight in History:
On Muy 22, 1972, President Nixon begun a visit to the
Soviet Union, during which he und Kremlin leaders signed the
SALT I urms limitution treuty.
On this dutc:
In 1761. the tirst life insurunce policy in the United States
was Issued, in Philadclphiu.
In 181 ~. composer Richard Wugner wus born In Leipzig,
Germany.
·
In I!16!1, the "Greut Train Robbery" took place near
Murshfielc.l, Ind., us seven members of the Reno gung made
• otT with $96,000 in loot.
In 1900, The Associated Press (founded in 1848) wus lncor·
. porutcd in New York us u non-profit news cooperative.
In 1939, Adolf liltler and Benito MusRolini signed u "Pact
of' Steel" commilling Germuny and Italy to a military uliiunce.
In 1947, the "Truman Doctrine" wus enacted us Congress
uppropriutec.l milit~try unu economic old for Greece ond
: Turkey. ,
In 1969, the lunur mndule of Apollo 10 flew to within nine
mile~ of the moon's surt'uce in u dress rehearsal for the first
lunar limding. o •
. In 1972, the island nation of Ceylon became the republic of
, Sri Lanka.
In 1990, after years of conflict, pro-Wesiern North Yemen
und pro-Soviet South Yemen merged to form a single nation,
the Republic of Yemen.
.. In 1990, boxer Rocky Graziano died in New York at age 71.
•
: Ten years ugo: After u reign lusting nearly 30 yeurs, Johnny
: Cnrwn hosted NBC's "Tonight Show" for the last time, telling
: his audience, "I bid you u ycry heartfelt good night." (Carson
. was succeeded by Juy Leno.)
·
Five years ago: In a case that drew national attention, Kelly
: Flinn, the Air Force ' ~ first female bomber pilot certified for
: combat, accepted a general discharge, thereby avoldins court~
: martial on charges of adultery, lying and disobeying an order.
; The del'ense began presenting its case in the Oklahoma City
; bOmbing ll'ial of Timothy McVeigh.
: One year ago: Ford Motor Co. said it planned to spend more
: than $2 billion to replace up to 13 million Firestone tires on its
: vehicles because of 8afety concerns.
T6duy\ Birthdays: Movie reviewer Judith Crist is 80.
: Singer Charles Aznavour is 78. Actor Michuel Constantine is
; 7~. Conductor Peter Nero is 68. Actor-director Richard ·
' Benjamin ia 64. Actor Fronk Conver8e is 64. Actor Michael
Sarrazin is 62. Former CNN anchor Bernard Shaw is 62. Actor
Paul WinOcld Is 61. Actress Sarburu Parkins is 60. Songwriter
Bernie Taupin is ~2. Actor AI Corley is 46. Singer Morrissey
is 43. Country musician Dana Williams (Diamond Rio) Is 41.
Rock musk·ian Jesse Valenzl.lela is 40. Rhythm·and·blues
singer Johnny Gill (New Edition) Is 36. Rock musician Dan
Roberts (CrWih TeHt Dummies) is 3~. Model Naoml Campbell
i~ 32. Acrress Ali~n Eastwood is 30. Singer Donell Jones Is
29. Actress A.J. Lanaer is 28,
Thought for'foduy: "Tact is, after all, a kind of mind-read·
lng."- Sarah Orne Jewett, Americun author (1849-1909).

•

•

AOvtCE
No. You ue lootiq for Ill\ exdu·
sive relatioNhlp. whi~ he is still
lookin1 ...;.. penod. AttiOM speak
louder than WOlds, and it'&amp; cleat
that he's not levtlina with yo~~.
DEAR ABBY: LISt weei, I visit·
ed my Aunt Boss in MisslssiDDI.
She il a areat cook. and s~ a
delicious trifle to Ul and the 30 or
so relatives who CIUI\e for the Taml·
ly reunion. Althou&amp;h the dessert she
presented WIIS wonderM, I was dis·

"

-

COMMUNNITY CALENDAR

.,

·Easing trade flaps cannot
continue without leadership
. • The J)olly News, Lon11vlew; Wash., on trade .ttllslons:
:. Despite the conciliutory rhetoric, Presidem Bush's meeting
: . with Euro!)llun lenders utthe White House reportedly did little
to euse grnwlng tntns-Atluntlc trude tensions. The European
Union thrcut to retuliute In June for the punitive tariffs Bush
rc~cntly imposed uguinst steel imports is still on the luble.
Thut rctaliution, if curried out, will hit close to home.
Wushington and Ore~on ugricullurul products ure umong the
some $335 million m American exports in the EU's cross
huirs.
But this thrcut~ncd tit·for-tut retaliation, by itself, isn'tlike·
ly to hm1krupt Nnrthwest farmers or uny other businesses in
the nut ion. It's the frce·trude meltdown some economists fcur
it could lorcshuclow that should concern us most. ...
Now Congress is preptlring to ruis~ the stakes with an election-ycur furm bill thut drmnuticully increases subsidies for
Amcricun funnet·s und runchers.
The bill.'s proposed subsidy boost - more thun $SO billion
- ungcrs foreign trading partners. ...
·
Trude liberulizution cunnot continue to move focwurd with·
out America's leudership. And keeping this process moving is
critical to growing America's economy. The president hus said
us much. He should uct uccordlngly and cncouruge Congress
to do the sume.

Dear
Abby

...

PE'RKINS' VIEW

California governor ·takes cake in campaign fond-raising
Gray Davis is the most brazen buck·
ruking politician in America.
Onfy days after returning an ill-gotten
$25,000 campaign contribution from
Orucle Corp., Cnlifornla's governor
picked up u $260,000 donation from u
trade union lhut "wqn" u ~ey ruling ear·
Her this month from a state commission.
The California Building Stundurds
Commission, whose members are Davis
appointees, considered u proposal to
ullow the ·stale's homebuilders to use
plastic water pipes instead of traditional
copper pipes.
The state's Pipe Trade Council
opposed the proposal, not. the least
because plastic pipe is cheaper nnd ens·
ier to install than copper. It fretted that
the new standard would force its mem·
bers to lower the rates they chdrge for
installing copper p.lpes.
So the trade unfon was pleuNCd ds
punch when the state commission ruled
in Its t'uvor, prollibiting plastic pipe until
an exhaustive envlronmentul review is
done. Otlifornlu now remuins one of
only two slules thut do not ullow plastic
pipe In homes.
Of course, Davis denies thut decisions
mude by his administration ure driven
by fund-raising considerations. His
fund·ruising mentors - Blll Clinton
und AI ·Oore - ulso denied, denied,
denied thutthey hud anything to do with
the illegal fund•ruislng thut went on In
their numes during their 1996 re·elec·
tion. cumpulgn. And not even Clinton
. and Oore were as shameless In shaking
down political contrlbuton us Duvls
(save for muybe Gore's infamous
Buddhist Temple furid·ralser).
Indeed, the Los Angeles Times
recently reported a Valentine's Day
chit·chut between Davis und the pres!·
dent of the California Teachers
Association in the governor's private
Cupltol office.
· "We were talking about various kinds
of things, legislation und problems,"

quid pro quo. But if. in fuel, there was
no wrongdoing Involved, why did he
see nt last week to retum Orucle's cum·
puign contribution?
f!ten there's the governor's suspi·
clous tllp-flop on a tux breuk for the
state's Insurance industry. In 1999,
Davis vetoed u bill thut would have pre·
served the tux breuk, worth millions of
dollurs to Insurers, urguing thut lt wu~
"neither t'ulr nor in keepln11 with sound
taxation principles."
COLUMNIST
But after receivina more ' than
$2!!0,000 In campaian contributions
remembered Wayne Johnson. "In the from Fireman's Fund Insurance
middle of the conversation, sort of out Companies, the governor reversed him·
of the blue, he suid 'I need $1 million self. He now ls support Ins the Insurance
from you auys."'
industry's cusc before C111ifomia's tax
Me11nw11Ue, there ulso wns the recent board, arguing thut it is a matter of f11lr·
dis~losure thul Duvis offered students ut ness to Insurers.
the Univ!!Mty of Cullfornluut Berkeley Pcrhups the most obvious payback by
und other Buy Area colleges the pri vf- Davis wa~ his recent deolslon t(l shut
lege of mecfin~ him at u cocktail recep· down tlve of the state's nine private
when their contracts run out .
tl on if they mu e 11 smu It donut ion to hi s prisons
next
month.
und to close the remuinin11
cumpalgn.
"This is 11 great opportunity 10 Interact four when their operating agreements
with the governor for u mere $1 00," expire.
·
read the Davis fund-ruising Jetter.
Duvls denies thut the $2.~ million that
And, yet, however eyebrow-rulslna . state's prison gunrds union has donated
Davis' shakedown of the stale teachers to his election curnpulans hud anything
1 h
'f
i
to do with his decis1on.
un on, owever of ·putting his 8011 c Ia· Yet it is hurd to sec how Culifomiu
tion of cash-strapped college students, will benellt from closing its private
that docs not trouble neurly us much as
the number of lnstunces In which Davis prisons when the stutc's prison system
hus poc~eled cumpuign contributions remulns ut nearly 190 percent of capno·
from speclul hiterests _ like· the Pipe ity, according to the stute's Department .
11
h·
1
of Corrections.
·
T d C
ra e ounc - I Ill huve prof ted In u recent Sacramento Bee article,
[[g~ decisions mude by hiR udmlnistru· Duvls cumpuian Htrutegist Guuy South
Like ,the Duvis administration's no· claimed that hfs mun "docs not spend an
bid confruct with Oracle lust Muy. Only inordlnllte umount of time ruisina
days after the governor's top aides con· money us governor of California."
sum muted the sweetheart deal - which Yeah, right. And AI Oore didn't know
will cost Culifomlu tu~puyers un unnec- he wns uttendlng u fund-raiser 111 the
essury $41 million, uccorc.ling to the Buddhist Temple in Haoiendu Heights.
state auditor's oft1ce - Davis received (Joseph Perk/11s Is u · ,·olum~rlst for
n $2~,000 donutlon from the software Tire Sun Diego Union· Tribune and can
maker.
be
reached
c1t
The governor insists there wus no Joseph.Perklri.I'Vnlolll'rlb.com.)

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Malaa Count~
·Board ol Health apecilt · mHtlng
'Wtdntsdl~. !5 p.m. In the conference room at tha Health

Department. Purpose ot the meeting POMEROY - Mtlga County
Ia to dlawu peraonnellaaue&amp;.
Churchu ot Christ Women'i

they ~ltimutely get put in charge ol' n • Cirrhosis of the River
committee, or even become president of • Howdy YaWl
the association. There's u lesson here. • Ketch Me If You Cun
Keep quiet. Be satisfied. Even if it
means lowering your standards. I think • Breuklna Wind
Jhe some rule can be applied to relation·
Unbl111ed Juilae
ships. Now 80me people feel thut when If you're concerned about reducln11
one purtner finds fault with some aspect the costs of hcuting your house In the
of ihe llving arrangements, It's reully 11 winter and cooling It In the summer,
dcn111nd for the other person to solve the you need a new approach. Identify the
problem. I don't see lt that wuy. I huve ·fattest und thinnest people who live in
more of a Country Club approach. I your home. They are about to be alven
consider any compluint to be that per· specialstutus. The fat one will be solely
~on's way of uskfna for permbslon to in control of the heut settina for the
make Improvement~. Do you see how col,dest months, and the skinny one will
that can r.educe arauments and ~lmpllfy be at the helm for turning on the air conlife? I never cringe when my wife com· dltionlna in the hot times, The principle
plains about the color of the livina here is tbat you put the decision in the
room, because I Interpret that as her hands of the pel'80n who will benefit
8!1kina for permission to paint it. And least from the result. It's why they have
the answer is ''Abaolutely, lioney. eunuchs auardina hurems, and ta"payKnock yourself out. Whatever makes · crs decidina on aovernment apendlna.
you happy." It's also the reason I never. und men shopplna for engaaement
complain about onythlna.
rings.
NotHt worthy .
QuoteoftheDay: "lfyouwanttohlre
Otherwise 8ane men often lose all a sreat salesman, look for an ualy auy
sense when It cornea to picldna a nome with a beautiful wife."- Red Green ·
for their bouts. Alway• remember that (Red Qcen £r rht tld!if'''Tht Red Ot.m
other people will see. thut name. And Sl·-·~· ,_;_,_..-J- , ~--US nn"
they will anume that name means
""" n ~e.,,,.,
td'llrll""'
on r~
something. That can hurt you, Here are ~In CAIIlda m rht CBC Netum!, and tht
a few examples of bad namcis for boats: a111hor cf "'IIw lW C~m~ Ihlk" and "Rtd
,...__ 'TtiL ,..._ A , ~• Tux Dodge
'-"""'1 •auu VIII: w.... Slvry."J%thfor rht
•The Other Woman
foatu~r.film "R£d GlmJFD11tt11Jpe l'vrnlf!l"" at ·
•I.O.U.
a thea/i!rtlear }W.) .

.... ...,..

.

-

RlvtNlaw

Cl:,

m..t-

..

Winner

certmony to be held.
SATURDAY
.
POMEROY - ~r Ridge
Freewill Blptlat Churoh, PorMr
Rldgt Rotd, off State RQ!Ate SS4,
live. dllll'll., "Lift Behlft(f. Situ~
and Sllndo.y, 7 p.m. For mofl lntof.
mellon, call 388-9702.
MONDAY
RACINE - MemoMI Day UNlet
II the Rlelne Amlli&lt;:l.n l.ealon Polt
602 Monday at 10 e.m. SMk end
noodle dinner will follow 1t 11 t.m.

Cameo DAR holds
Victorian tea

IORIINING - Student Nurse Robin Shriver performed lluThla picture of the destroyer U.S.S. Simms beln&amp; refueled b~
coae acreanlnla for health fair partlolpanta.
aircraft carrier, Franklin o..Roosevelt In the Mediterranean In
Noveml:lar 1973 wu teken b~ Charles Center of S~racuae. He
aubmltltd It In a photoaraphy conteat of tha vat Elctre, a m...
azlna b~ veterans for veterans, and won flllt pleoe. His prlze
wu a dllltal oamera. Canter aerved In the u.s. Nav; from
· RIO ORANDE - The Ina prevention, stress rcduc· June 1972 to July 197!5. (Submitted)
' fourth Annual Health Fair tion, hand w11shina tech·
was held recently ut the niqucs, and cholesterol test·
:. Pructlcul Nursina School of ina.
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
Promotln1 wellness vla
As port of the Practical self-awareness is part of the
., Nursina service leurnina curriculum of the Practical
" ·activities, students performed Nursina School of Buckeye
' blood pressures; fot onalysis,
hel&amp;ht and wciaht checks, Hills CIIJ'eCr Center.
Jolnina the students In pro•·· EKO. in addition to alucosc
· screcninas and wellness molina wellncss was Bonnie
RACINE - The second
McFarland. R.N., Wcllness birthd11y of Surnh Kaitlyn
tcuchina.
ut
Holzer West, d11u11hter of Mr. und
The health fair ulso includ· coordinator
· Mrs. Sean West, WIIS cole·
· ·cd information about smok· Medical Center.
braled recently. She is the
granddllu&amp;hter of Mr. und
Mrs. James . West of
W11ynesville, and Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Johnson of
Racine. · ·
·

:BHCC conducts·health fair

Second
birthday

POMEROY - Anmt Cln:le
Clellll\d of Retum Jomuhnn
Meias ChiiPtllt\ Dauahtm of
the American Revolution,
attended tho Ohio Soch!ty
O.uahm Cllm\IQ Club nnnu·
. al Vletorilm to11 1.1nd meotina
held rec.ntly at the Morrlott
North Hotolln Columbu~.
Presld11nt June Dut!rk cun·
dueted the mootina whleh
· used 111 Its theme, "TM
Cups." Olni!QI' O'Mnlloy anvo
a presentation on ten cups.
buth new Qnd ontiquo, und
mwnbets dlsplnyed tell eup~
nnd pots aivlna of history of
'"~norod quests woro pro·
Sllllted Muril)'n Vwllht, Stute
Reaont: M11n:ln Siel'ort, St11te
Viee Reacnt; Llndn Wetzel,
Vice President Oonorul and
Honort\l'y Stutc Roaont .
Followlna lhe luncheun,
Clohmd, mcmoorship ehnlrmun, welcomed new mom·
bers and pro~cnted eertifi·
cutes to those present of the
34 new members. Three acn·
orutlon 11chiovement nwnrds
were proscnled to those who
were members of nth roo aen·
er11tion fnmlly In the Cnmoo

Societ~.
Sho 11l~o

noted the qualln·
ct1tlons for mcmbmhip In the
Cllm\IQ Society, An~ who
is n membor of tho National
Society Dl.lullhtcn of tlic
Aml!rltlln Revulutlon Ia ~Uti·
ble If they tlltt show jOint
ml!mbershlp in the DAR with
u
mother/dllughter.
Orantltlmtghtllrs m11ke up the
t.hlnl l!Ciltm\titm joint ntem•
bership nnd ji'OIIt lflll\d•
dnll&amp;hh!I'S tho lourth aenm·
tiun. Anyune wlshlna to join
thil. sooioty should ~ueat 1\n
opplic:ullon
from
their
Chupter Repnt.
A momorlnl service Wlls
held lu remember those
Cmnoo Society members who
died durlna the J)ll&amp;t ye11r.
Tho Cmn\IQ Society of tho
Ohio Soelcty Dtlllghters . of ·
the Amcrlcun Revulution w11s
llStllbllshed h1 1994 to promote untlcrstnndlna and fel·
lowshlp betwll n jtmenationa
nnd the piiSstlllc or aonealoai·
eul lnformution, fondly hlato·.
rles und plltrlotlsm to subae·
qucnt acncrntions.
Thoro uro 575 uctlve mem•
bcl'!l in Cumco currently.

Celebrates 3rd b~rthday

Monogamy is not hardship.· It's actually a lifesaver

'

REEDSVII.t.E

THURSDAY
~v:~I'&amp;TJ'~~~~-·~ Spencer.
:~~t
~~ =~
POMEROY - C.ringand lhlrina ato!Y pe,ntomlme
a~rt group, Thu1111~. 1 p.m. al
tha Stnror CiliuM Center. Slndy POMEROY - Practtptor Belt TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW
Clay from PVH Hospice to ..-k.
Beta Chtpter, Ball Slam• Phi, . lng , et .the hell, 1'11ppe1111 Pltlna
home of Joan Corder, Thu!llldl~, Ttiu1111dly, 7:30 p.m.
ATHENS - SuNiwf of .Suicide 6:30 p.m. tor 1 year-end Dlcnlc.
POMEROY - Ewing~ Ct)lpter,
~~~'!n~~tl:i:~~~r. ~~-~~ Everyone to ttka 1 covered dlah. Sona
of the American Revolution, at
Union St., Athena. Everyone wei· RACINE - Amtrictn t.eglon the Melga Muaeum, Thulllldty.
come. For mort InformatiOn, call the Awdlla!Y. ThCI!llldl~. 7:30 p.m. at the Thole with mervttlonl for dinner,
chun::h, !593·7414.
lealon hill. All 1Mmb111 urged to 6:30 p.m. Meeting which II open to
atfend.
·
the public, 7:30 p.. Annuel IWirda

Joseph
Perkins

REO GREEN'S VIEW
I read in magazines that there · arc
some men and women in this world
who, although married, carry on longterm, Necret affairs with other women
and men. I don't undentund how this is
possible. Oh, sure, .I know liow u one·
night stund works, but I'm talking about
week ufter week, month ufter month,
YIW after year infidelity. I've been mar·
· ried a long time, and I think I'm In rea·
sonable physical and mental condition,
· und I can tell you I could never come up
with the time or, energy to fulfill my
·obll~utions to two different partnm. A
relationship is a full-time job.
If you have two at once, those are two
part-time jobs. Nobod~ ever aot suc·
cessful in a part-time ob, not even In
two part·time jobs. pecially these
kinds of part·tlme jobs where you have
to keep your lies straiaht, und your
eneray up, and everybody happy. 1
don't why these people do it, Maybe it's
fun for them, but it would kill me. On a
aood day. I'm keepinJ my head above
water with one relauonshlp. 1 would
never survive two. Or more. As far as
J'm concerned, monoaamy Is not a
hardship, it' a a lifesaver.
Squeaky whee I 1eta the.J0 b
You always hear about people who
belong to clubs or orgunizutiona, and
they have problems with something, or
they point out where some aspect&amp; of
the operation are unsatisfactory, and

:.· Community Cltlendlr 11 pub• lllhld 11 • ,,.. aervlce to non1' profit groupe wlthlng to
ennounoe mettlnat tncl IPHIII
eventt. The oaltncllr Ia not
dulgned to promote 111e1 or
tuno;ralura of 1ny type.ltama 11'1
prlntecl only 11 epaoe permlta end
· cannot be aueranltld to be Pl'lnto
ad 1 epeclfro number of cllye.

SYRACUSE Cody
Bruce Campbell celcbratcij
his third birthday on AP.ril 20
with a party hosted by his parents, Jeff and Tabitha
· Compbell. at their home in
Syracuse.
.
A Bob the Builder 11nd
Blues Clues theme was car·
, ried out. Sandwiches, chips,
.' and cake were served .
. Others attendina were his
· · arandparentl, Gary and Jo
' Willford, his &amp;relit· arand·
· mothers, Olorla Manuel and
'. Elizabeth Willford all of
' Racine; Ailsa and Jeff
•: Caldwell, Amy, Timmy und
Cocl~ Cempbtll
'' Halley Triplett of Portland;
·. Kay Allen and Emily Grahwn Racine, Jim and Sally
'•·· of' Syracuse; John Manuel Caldwell, Trenton, Colby anij
·· and Krlsti and Moraan Andrew Roseberry, Dave and
" Nottinaham of New Haven. Maraaret Yost, and Roberta ·
• . Other there were Nancy Ridenour.
· Russell 'Mandy Mackenzie
und Nathan Redman, Jpn Hill,
• Riley and Aua_uata Rosh.
· Katelyn Hllli Bmlly Ash,
Renee Powel , Maraba and
Ted Ru11ell, Robyn, Ed und ·
Matthew Werry, Nancy Prater
and Macken:r.ce Maynard,
Katie Wooda, Brian, Weaton,
' Tanner and Braxton Thorla
and Jimmy McRhea and
Bonnie.
Subscrlb1 today.
Scndina
alfta
were
li92·2H6
Oeoraian and Wilson Whited,
Roacr and Edle Manwcl of

. PROUDTOBE
APART OF
YOUR LIFE.

'

larah Kaltlyn W..t

Healthy Start
Healthy Families
Health Care Covera1e for
Ohio's Worklnl Families

I•

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Htllthy F1mlllt1 offers no·cost health cart ·

covereae for the entire family · parents AND . klda.

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·Htllthy ltlrt 6 Htllthy F1mlll11 COVIll:
Doctor Vlella
Hoapltal Cara
lmmunlzltlona
lubatanoe Abuea
Praeorlptlone

Vlalon larvlOM
Dental Cera
Mantel HMilh
And Muoh Morel

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�'

Habit explains loyalty to

..

Carter~ pills

The Daily Sentinel

I

AL. NL rowtdtq&gt;s, Page! B2
lnbe lostt ugain, Page 82

\

Plp81
V::&amp;ditlldly• . . , D. 2102

Former
Buckeye
Carter retires

Amlrlcan .

.

tryouts

announced
ROCK SPRtNGS Tryouts for the Meigs/Oallia
AMerican Legion ~e~~m will
be held Wednesday and
Thursdny at fi:30 p.m. at the
Meigs tfl".h School bllseball
fteld. .'tl
Tryouts win be held rain of
shl~.

For lll(ft Information, call
Denny Runyon at 698.0003.

.."•

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Hiring a household worker?
Know your responsibilities.

~

lAws protect Ohioans from purchasing ~emon'~..

.

l'f ,l lu'tlln

If yoo rcttlltl)l purthl&amp;ed l 11\\W Clll'
~tnd 1111~ hitd prtibl m a~r problem
with It, ~u m~ Wlnt to look lnro
01\lu's "Lemon l11w."
,
Ohio f)lls~ed the Leml)n Law In 1987
11nd addM e~n mo~ tonsumer p~
tloo tu It In 1m. Ohll)'s venit)!\ t)fthls
IIIW Is t)n\\ t)f the best In thl! tt!Untry. n
deftnes 1\ "lell\00" as "ll 11ew motor
ADVICE
vchltle that has -problenl(ll), to~retl
by the wllrrlnty, thilt aubstlntlally
lml)llln the u~. 'illue t)t &amp;llfety of the true for yt&gt;ur v hltle1 you may quality
vel\ltle."
fbr )'OUt m~:~ney_ blott ~:~r ~ may be
If ~bl~ll\&amp; be!lln ttl })hiiUe your able Ill Bel a dlffe~nt Clll'.
' pen~:~nal vehicle ifurlna_ the l\nt year Allow thl\ mlll\ufacturer or dealer an
{)('. lll,OOO miles, rtturtfit Immediately ll}pramiate amount of time to fill the
to the dnlet, (The ht.W does not ctwer sftuatfon. Afttr &amp;lvlna ample tlma to
trucks over ooe ton l01td lllpaclty or repeatedlY tty to cot'l'ect tile ~blem1
buslne s vtl\ltllt~.)
the dealer or manut1ctu~r shouh:1
t-l~tve yt&gt;u m11de three or mort lnfbrm you abOut the mediation
atttJNjtt to hlive the tlet'tllt ~~red. ~u to t~olve the dlsqreement. Thl•
but It atlll tloean't work properlY' Haa irbltr1tlon .process allow• a neutral
the ear been In the lli'IP. lW rtpaln thlnl party to welah both aide or the
. meJre thlill 30 d~&amp; durlna the flnt year vaument &amp;l'ld retolve the J!roblem fair"' 18,000 mlle5'1 Have yt&gt;u hlld the llll.t . ly and In il tim.e))' manner. It Ia possible
In the shop elaht or mort time• fbr var- that you must ao throuah thla arbltta·
looa fla.ws an(! defects? l-la1 tha deal· · tiOII before you can take your caie to
er'&amp; 3ervlee department failed to nx a wurt. .
·
ierlllus I!Nblem that tould CllU5e a When you buy a new vehicle, follow
l'atallty?lr 1my or these qul!stlons are these steps to help ensure that pmb-

Becky

Baer

len\s ean be OOI'ffilted, in case the cnr:.ls

hampered by m1111ufacturlng defecD:
Maintain the car according to the
owner's manual. Keep accur"te
~s of each oil chonae, tire ro~·
tlon, engine check, etc. If the manufae·
tu~r can prove that you have not tahn
proper em or the cnr, ~ur request (Or
a rel'und mil)' be ~ected.
Hold onto all tePtlr orders and find·
inp. Make su~ the aarap aives you
1111 ltemlaed llat of repairs, with all
ellplat\atlon of how lona the car Wis
belna serviced. Bven thouah It may be
warranty wo~k. you &amp;till need the proof
that thlll&amp; an on-~lna problem.
List the vehicle's naws each lime
you take it In for repain.
If the car Is talten ln for repaln,
deacrlbe the P!'Oblema the aame way,
For more intorm1tlon on Ohio's
Lemon Law, contac.t the Attorney
General's omce, 1·80M82-0515. YQ\1
can also write to the attorney aeneralat
the Consumer Protection Section, ~()
B. Broad St., 25th Floor, Columbui,
Ohio 4321.5·3428.
••
(Btr:lcy Btitr Is Meigs Cou~tty'.!­
E.ltttll$1011 agent ftJr /dllllly tJIId con•

Sllllltr Klt~tce.rlcOirtmunlty
'"'"'• Oltio SttJtt University.)

Direct deposit - the safest way to get your benefits
l't JOHN

•

UIINOTTI .

l.au . )'tar, after Mwcral
CaleS llf l\nthtllt·Contllml·
nated mall were dlaeovered,
I!IOple 11.sked me If t
thouaht
their
Socl11l
Security checks ml11ht be
delayed or If h wa8 111fe to
handle those ehecks. Wi!ll,
Social Security checks
were received on time 1111d
our mall wu nfe to h11ndle.
But In the future, the beAt
way to allevhue any worry
Ia to sl11n up for direct
· depoall.
Direct · doposlt ia the
aafeat 11nd most conv11nient
way to aet . your benefit
paymenta. You don't hnve
to worry about loat or
uolen checks. You don't
htlve to stand ln line 111 the
bank or ao to the bank In
bad w1ather. Your benefit
paymentautomatlolllly aoea
Into your account for your
Immediate uae. ,
I alto tell people that If
they 11.re not llalna direct

dl!podt and their oheck Ia
llltt, lt can take up to sht
week8 to lnve~tlante and
reph1c11 11. ~heek. Why t.ake
the ch11nce?
More than 4S mlllllln
people receive monthly
beneFit pll)'ment~ frllm
Soel11l Security, and more
thl1n 80 percent or them use
dlreut deposit. In the put,
people h11ve bten rehtcuun
to sian up bet:11use they did·
n't 1\ave 11 bank aeeount,
they thought It wnw too
eostly to maintain lin
11ceollnt or they preferri!d to
aet cash 11nd "control" their
1\\ill\ily.

In additilln to belna &amp;life
11nd ellnvenlent for benefl ·
clariea, direct deptlslt ls
more efficient ani! uve!!
money for the tuptlyen,
becnuae it's leas expen~ive
th11n preparing and maiHna
cheolts montl11y. The aov·
ernment saves 40 centa
eaah time someone Ulll
direct depbah .lnateatl of 11

develo~·

·

· Comln1 ·~
"'

"dlunday ~ ·

check. It co&amp;ta 42 llenta to consumer protectlona. BTA wlthdrawala.
'
"
proceu and mall eallh featurea Include:
· To find out more about
check, complred tl) 2 cents • a maldmum coat or $3 thla option1 call 1·888·382·
for dlrtllt tre~oalt. If 1111 of per month;
3311, toll· rtte. Or look for
the Soulal Security and • at least four eash .with· the BTA lopo In the window
Suppl11mental
Security dtllwals per month\
or lobby ll any local bank,
Income beneflellltlea who · • no minimum bal-noe 1 uvlnaa and loan or credit
currently re11eive a chtck unleu required by federal union. · ·
In 'ftNt Dlly S~nil
sl;ned up fllr tllreet clepo8lt, or state law; and
·
(John l.ilmottt Is manag·
the tupnyers would nve • a monthly statement tr D/ tltr Social Security
$8.4 tnllllon a month I ·. listing all dl!poslta and t~Jflct In Atlttns.)
Slanina up ·fl)r dlrett
deposit IS eU)'·call So11l11l
Security's toll·free number1
l· H00·772· l:m or visit
the llltal Socli1\ Security
~ We're Your Bankfor(~
offlee. Banka, aavlnaa 11ntl
lllan auoclatlona, and cretl·
It unlon8 also ean help you .
slyn up ror direct depot H.
f )'tlu till not have atl
11ccount and cnnnot open
one, thi! Department of
Treaaury
hu
apee Ial
•.
accounts IIVIIIlable to any·
On~ WhO liit8 II federal ben•
•
•
eflt [layment. Blectronlc
Ttllnlfer Aecount8 (BTA),
which are federally lnsur11cl;
provide the 1'1111 ranae o

'.Pfaee&amp; f• 1• ·
lf n. .,, ,. ~·

(F:II) Farmers Bank

•• ·APPRECIATION
•
••
DAY! •

At the Pomeroy Location.
BASKETt BEAR BINGOf
r•anday, May 23

'tOO pm

tlcketl $20.00

299 Mllllllrlll, MM''ll(- a.iD

1111 at lltlnlllll tf

aoou......... ,.. .. •

ONe._ .... ••IIIIa ••M ......, II IIIII I ' I7t
. M:.~
\

Eaal•hoops

camp schlclulecl
TUPPERS PLAINS ~
The fourth annuul Eagle
Basketbllll Camp will be .beld
lune 3 through 7 for boys und
girls entering grndes three
throuah sht. .
The camp will focus on
drills und fundementals und
will cost $30 per camper.
For more Information contact coach Howle Caldwell ut
667·3368, or send registration lnform11tlon (includlnf t·
shlrt slu) and fee to Caldwell
at 40878 Old Seven Roud,
R!!edsvllle Ohlo 45772
The deadline for pre-regis·
tratlon Is May 30; Checks
should be made out to
Bastern basketball.

IIIII• hoops

toum•y sl111d
TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eagle Three•on-Three
bMketball tournament will be
heldMay 24 and 25 111 Eastern
High School.
·
For more lnform~ttion, con·
tact Howle Caldwell at 667.
3368(home) or 985·3329.

Luf floats on
hom• to
W11hlnpon
SEATTLE (AP) ...... Ryan
Leur Is getting another shot In
the NFL, returning to the
8tate whete he rose to proml·
nence as .a college quarterback.
The Seattle Seahawks
sianed
the
former
Washington State star 11nd
No. 2 overall draft pick to a
one·year contract - one duy
after Leaf was released by the
OaHu CQwboys.

Stop tn and vialt with have aome reftoeahntenta, ei\Joy
alive radio rentote with prlzea and tell 111 what we ce
do to make )'0111 ballklna experience work better for
)'OU. Farmen Bank wantt ill or 0\11' CUitomera to know .
juat how much we 1ppreclate their b111lneaa and their
loyalty to "' throuall the yean. Farme11 Bank lhould be
your bank for life, not jual beca\lh we're In )'OIIt
· nelahborhood, but becaUie we provide the
aervlce and quality, you've come to 0011111 on
1lnce 19041
·

ail game baskets will hold "BfnQo"
an exclusive Ohio Rivet Bearl
JILUI•IIwuslnllllle

VINCI:!NT - The Warren
Local school district has
hired ~nt Grider • a grndu·
ate of Western New Medco
State Unl\1\!rslty • to lead the
warrior ·football progrum Ill
2002.
.
.
Grider, who has nine yenrs
of head coaching experience,
wlll take over for Kevin
Welsh, whose coaching con·
trnct was not renewed after u
4·6 season in 2001.
Orlder 's most recent
couchln{l position was as
hetid coacb at Oreefield·
Central Hlah School In
Indiana, where he led the
Cougars to records of 0-10,
1·9; and 4·6 ln the past three
seasons.
Orlder Is considering
Installing a spread or runand-shoot offense for the
Warriors next fall.
Grider has coached ut
Cumberland College In
Kentucky and at various high
schools In · Indiana nfter
recelvlna his master's degree
from Cumberland. He will
teach mathematics at Wurren.
He will be formally hllro·
duced at 11 reception on
Thursday morning at the
Warren Local IJourd of
Education office.

Htre It Fannera Bank we want to ahow our cua.
tomera how much we en. On Friday, May 24th our
Pomeroy location will be holdlna Cuatomor
11_ ~
Appreciation Day.
•~,p•

••.-••1 a.,.........., Door...._, ·
II N*l'llt Arll1•l41111 .

Wan en Local
. hires Grtcler

•••••

For More Information Clll (740) 992-2136

Send your 8ports news to us
at the Dally Sentinel 111
sports lit mydai lysentlnel .~ om .
I
1- .........

'

I I

J

I

TIEING OFF- Cincinnati's Austin Kearns watches his grand slam off Florida Marlins .pitcher A.J. Burnett In the
flfth Inning Tuesday In Cincinnati. (AP')

Keams
~throws ·em back
R. kie' . d s·lam
0
· 0 • S grqn

"It broke up the gume .. said
... .Chris
Reitsma (3·0), who w~t 7 2. . stnner
3 innings, the longest by u Reds
this seMon.
Pvwt:,;,rs Reds'
,
The fifth-inning at·bnt also
6.. 1 Wtn
showed how much faith the Reds
Af 1

CINCINNATI (AP) - Austin
Kearns hus n nice swing - und li
good idea of when to use it.
.
Given u chance to swing uwuy
with the buses louded und a 3-0
count Tuesday night, Kearns decld·
ed to take the next pitch, waiting for
sontethlng better. He didn't have to
wait long.
The rookie wuited for u fustbull,
got it und hlf his l'lrst career gmnd
slllltl ofr A.J. Burnett, sending the
Cincinnati Reds to u 6· 1 victory
over the Fioridu Murlins.

huve developed in Kearns, who is
butting .362 since his first promotlon to the major leagues on April
30.
Burnett (.5·4) hud struggled with
his curve all night, forcing him
deep into counts. He walked five in
five innings, including Barry
Lurkin with the buses loaded in the
second, und got himself into more
trouble In the fit\h.
"Everything was off," said
Burnett, who hus walked 34 in 69
-1 ·3 innings. "I got it buck one
inning, then lost it, then got it buck.

I've got to be consistent."
Burne!! opened the fifth by walkIng Larkin, then gave up singles by
Juan Encarnacion and Sean Casey
that made it 2-1. The right-hander
walked Adam Dunn on il full-count
pitch, then threw three consecutive
balls to Keams.
At that point, manager Bob
Boone decided to let him swing
away. Keurns decided to wait.
"I didn't feel too good on the first
two pitches," Keurns said. "If I
would have swung at that pitch, I
might huve swung too hurd und hit
into u double play."
He took a strike, then fouled u
pitch buck, bringing the count full.
He anticipated a fastball and turned
· Jtlt1H IM KMm1, 12

.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Cris Carter
felt he had some football left in him.
The NFL apparently didn't - at l&lt;:ast
at the price he wanted.
So the 36-year-old receiver retired
Tuesday, ending a decorated and
tumultuous career in which he caught
more than 1.000 passes and scored 129
touchdowns in 15 seasons. He trails oncy
Jerry Rice in catches ·
and receiving touchdowns.
He leaves without a
Super Bowl ring after .
failing to hook up with
another team followin' his split with the
. C1rter
Mtnnesota Vikin~s. He
will join HBO's "Inside the NFL' show
as a co-host.
·
"I wanted to play football, .but I had
to be In the right situation, and I did not
want the opportunity with HBO to pass
me by," Carter said.
.
Carter voided his Vikings contract
before the start of this year's free
U!Jency. period because he w~nt~d to
stgn wtth a team closer to wmmng a
Super Bowl.
But he blew his best chance when he
tried to postpone n meetin~ with the St.
Louis Roms while he was m Cleveland
talkin~ to the Browns. The Cleveland
deal tell through, the Rums refused to
reschedule and the Miami Dolphins
·passed.
Carter said the Dolphins couldn't pay
him what he wanted, He also said he
regretted making the trip to Cleveland
that ultimately cost him u shot ut playin~ for the Rams.
'I think that I maximized my ability,
I did nil that I could do . ... lien everything I· had in football. Could I have
played longer? Of course I could."
Carter will join Bob Costas, Dun
· Marino and Crls Collinswonh in the
studio show.
After playlns at Ohio St11te, Caner
spent his first three seasons In
Philadelphia, where he admitted to
abusing drugs und alcohol. '
The Vikings claimed him off waivers
in 1990, and Carter was u standout in
Minnesota for more than a decade. He
ranks third behind Rice and James
Lofton in receiving·yards (13,833).
Before last season, In which offensive lineman Korey Stringer died and
the Vikings·went 5·11, Carter played in
eight consecutive Pro Bowls.
In 1994; tie set u league record for .
receptions in u season with 122. On
Nov. 30, 200(1, against the Detroit
Lions, Curter caught u 4-yard touchPiult Itt C.rttr, 12

Marshall tags interim athletic director
HUNTINOTON, W. Vu, (AP)
Retiring University of Mussachusetts
Athletic Dlre11t0r Bob Marcum,
uppnlntcd Tuesduy us Murshuli
University's Interim uthletic director,
will provide un "outside eye" tLI the
sc:hool reviews its athletic progrums,
President 9un Angel said.
In u news conference ut Murshull's
Cum Henderson Center, Mun:um suid
he hus no purticular plans for the depart·
ment, whlch hus been placed on four
years probut1011 by the NCAA tor violu·
lions In bolh the footbull und basketball

Marcum repiuces Lance West, who
becomes vice president for alumni
development on July I ntler six yellf!l as
athletic director.
West offered no comment during the
news conference. ln a news release, he
said, "I am proud of the department's
accomplishments, academically and
uthlctically, involving student-athletes.
"Finunclully, the department has doubled its operuting budget und has experienced the addition of three new
women's programs to 18 -- the most
ever otl'ered 111 Marshall University,"
progrums, ·
West said.
Mun:um said he will tackle "anything "I believe the deportment is poised for
I Clln look ut to muke It better."
·the next chapter of growth and prosper-

lty," he suid.
Marcum will serve us interim athletic
We~t was 33 when he was named uth- di.rectorfor at least u year, Angel said.
letic director In 1996, one year after he Asked by a reponer to explain what
cwne to Marshall from Moscow, Idaho, "interim" means _to him, Marcum
to tuke a job as associute vice president replied, "I think I'm a ~ood alternative
for institutional advancement.
until people sort outlherr careers."
·
· Marcum, 66, is retiring effective June The NCAA penalties levied aguinst
14 from the University of MQfl!hall stemmed from an investigation
Massachusetts.
into athletes receiving extra work bene"Bob Marcum brings a wealth of · fit~ between 1996 and 2000 and othel'li
experience and knowledge," Angel who received exwn answers from a prosaid.
fessor in 1999.
"Bringing him iri gives us a chance to The NCAA also told the school that
have an outside eye review our pro: the athletic program must sever its ties
grums. He'll serve as an expert Internal with Marshall Reynolds, chief executive
consultant and help us plan our athletic officer of Champion Industries and a
future," he sold.
·
Thundering HenJ booster, for five years.

Celtics win Game Two
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) - Jim percent and score 104 points in Game I,

0' Brien stood in front of a boatd in the 0' Brien spent the next 48 hours tweaking

Boston Celtlcs locker before Gwne 2 and
wrote the keys to winning. Most of them
were about defense and rebounding.
. The coach's advice was not lost on the
Celtics.
On a night when Paul Pierce and Antoine
Walker struggled with their shots, Boston
excelled on defense and controlled the
boards to beut the New Jersey Nets 93-86.
The outcome evened · an Eastern
Conference final in which the teams have
displayed split personalities. The Nets had
their up-tempo offense in gear in Game 1
and mllde the Celtlcs' defense look nonexistent. Ownc 2 on 'fuelldiiy night was just 'the
opposite,
PENETRATION- . Boston 's Paul Pierce, center, drive• throuif1
The teams wlll have three days off before
the defense of New Jeraey Neta' Lucloua Harrla; left., and playintl Game 3 on Saturday in Boston. .
Jason Ktdd on Tuesday. (AP)
After watching the Nets shoot almost 50

the Celtics' defense and stressing the keys
that had limited Detroit to an average of less
than 80 points in the conference semifinal.
8Qston, which didn't shoot much better at
34 percent, was there for the rebounds on
bodi ends, holding a 60-.50 advantage.
Walker had 26 points and Pierce 18, com·
bining to make 14 of ~2 shots. Pierce really
struggled, making 3 of 20 from the field and
II of20 from the line.
•
Despite recording his second straight
triple-double, Jason Kidd never got the rfets
offense in gear. Kidd finished with 23 points,
16 rebounds and I0 assists. Martin added 22
.points,
For Boston, center Tony Battle had 12
rebounds, five blocks and u couple of bia
baskets. Tony Delk had I0 points, includinJ
a big three early in the founh quarter.

�Ww..mydllllyaentiMI.com

P 11 8 2 • The Dally lentiMI

Tigers put it all together against Tribe

l

DETROIT (AP)- The Detroit 'Jiaers
knew that they eventllally would aet
' aood hitting. pitching and defense at the
same time,
·
They just didn't know how much fun it
would be.
Tuesda~. the Tiaers beMt the Indians 5·
I for thetr fifth ~ht win. putting a
grin on the face or thtllr manag_er.
"Winning is fun," said Luts Pujols.
"Thut's why I'm smiling,"
Detroit got the first complete game of
Mark Redman's career, two more double
plays stuted by new third baseman Chris
Truby and homers by Dmitri Young and
Randall Simon.
·
"I know everyone is trying to lind reasons for this winning streulc- the pitch·
inJ. the defense, the hittin~. but I don't
thmk it is any one thing,' said Young,
·who hit his fourth homer in the last
seven &amp;llllles. "We are just playing total
.team baseflall."
The Indians have lost five of six.
"We just aren't gettln$ the job done,"
Indians manager Charlie Manuel said.
"We had chances tonight and we just

didn't take them."
Redman (1-5) scattered I0 hits in his
45th start in the majors. He gave up an
unearned run, struck out three and
walked three.
"I didn't win this *arne- the defense
did," Redman said. All I did was make
Pitches that the auys could hit ,into play.
They made some areat plays behind me.
It takes a lot of pressure off • pitcher to
lcnow he can thrOw the ball over the.plate
and let them hit it."
Redman, traded ftom Minnesota to
DetrOit last July 28, threw 121 pitches to
win for the tint time with the "Tigers in
II starts.
"We had an opportunity to let him fin·
ish the aame. ani:fhe took it," said Pujols.
"I knew he wanted that first win In
Detroit, and now all of that Is off his
shoulders."
Charle$ Nagy (0..1) took the loss In his
first start since Aug. 17, giving up four
runs on five hits and a wallc in four
lnntnas. Nagy held the Tiaers hitless
throuah three Innings but strugled in
the founh as Detroit scored four times on

the lwtl homtrs and ,Trubv 's triple.
''I fell aoocl out there,'1 Nqy said. "1
~ust made some bQd pitches In the fourth
mning and they hit all of them. Youna
went down and &amp;OIIl plitter and Simon
and Tru~~t balls that I let\ over the
plate. Su
ly, I'm down 4.0."
Truby has been outstandlna defensively but entered the game hlttliiJ just .083
since comina over ftom MontMal on
Frid .
.
"~en you ven't hittina, you want to
contribute, so it felt aood to be able tq.
help the P.itdlers a little with my glove,"
he said. 'But the triple felt aood· too. I
knew the hiltlna would c:ome."
Truby was a little shocked when his
400-foot drive to ·left-center fell short of
the wall and bounced behind the flag •.
pole.
·
"Holy cow, it's bi&amp; out there,'' he said.
"I played in a huae stadium In New
Orleans, lind 1 never expected to see •
bigger one, but this place is ridiculous. I
thouaht that ball was aone, then I suddenly realized I better start running.'' ·

Kennedy gives comp~ perfonnance for D~Rays
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Thanks to J~ Kennedy,
Tampa Buy pttchers now
own a streak worth boasting
about.
Kennedy ended the Devil
Rays' major teague record·
string of 194 games
without a c01:nptete
game, throw:mg a
four-hitter Tuesday. mght to
be,~t the Sea~tle M~nners 1-0.
To ~o thts agamst a are~!
team hke Seattle is ~rent,
~enn!ldY said. "This ts th~
htghhght of my short career.
Ken~edy 's li~t complete
gam~ tn the majors gave. the
Dev1l Rays twkio stTrratg~t
shutouts. Roo es
uvts
Harper and Steve Kent com· bined to blank Baltimore on
Suriday.
"I've pi!ched pretty w:ell
lately, but 1t was all workmg
tonight," Kennedy said.
Tampa Bay had !lot gotten
a complete aame s1nce Albic
Lopez did it on April 13,
200 I.
·
Kennedy (3·3) . struck out
seven and walked one. The
left-bander funned Ruben
Sierra with a runner on third
base to end It at Safeco Field.
"I thought he could finish
it, and I wanted him to finish

AL

it," Tampa Bar, man~r Hal
McRae said. ' Every ttme he
threw 11 fastbull, I knew he
wanted it. He even got it up
to 96 (mph) down tfle home
stretch."
·
Kennedy, In his first full
season in the ml\iors and two
days shy of his 23rd birthday,
.got the only run he needed on
Brent Abernathy's RBI single
in the eighth innina. Jamie
Moyer lost ~espite ufso pitch·
inga four-httter.
The Devil Rays won their
third in a row and sent Seattle
to its third stralaht defeat.
Since losing 15 In a row ear·
lier this season, Tampa Bay Is
6-3
,
"We learned somethina
durimz that stretch " McRae
said !!We're startlni to feel a
litti~ better. We'll need to win
more than three in 11 row to
feel like we're really on 11
roll. But this is a start."
·
ORtot.ES 6, ATHt.iiTtcs 4,
14 INNINGS
. Chris Sinaleton and Gary
Matthews Jr. hit RBI singles
in the 14th innina and
Baltimore won on the road.
Singleton singled home the
go-ahead run; stole secbnd
and third and scored on

Matthews' hit.
. Oakland has lost four in o
row and 15 of 19. Befor,• the
g11me, the slumpina Athletics
sent rookie first baseman
Carlos Pena, second busemun
Frank Menechino and rellever Jeff Tum to the minors.

Mussina held 'Ibronto to
four hits In 6 2·3 lnnlnas at
Yankee Stadium. Jason
Glllmbl and Rendell White
hit solo shots for the
Yankees, giving them a
major le1111ue-leadina 74
homers in 43 games.

ANGII:l.S 5, ROYAI.S 1
Troy Gl11us hit a go-uheud
single and Garret Anderson
folfowed with a three-run
homer in the eighth inning as
Anaheim won for the 20th
time in 23 games.
A pair of errors set up the
Angels' bia inning at home.
Kansas City rookie Miguel
Asencio made his first ml\lor
league start· and held the
Anllels hitless for 4 2•3
lnnrngs.
.

WutTK Sox 8, RED Sox 3
Muggiio Ordonez had four
hits and Chicago roughed up
Darren Oliver at Fenway
Pllrk
Oliver, startln on three
days • rest for the ~rst time In
his career, was tagaed . for
five runs and nine hils In 4 1·
3 innings · Ordonez had an
RBI single us the White Sox
scored three times In the first.
,Boston manaaer Grady
Lutle rejoined the club after a
YANKEES 4, BLUE JAYS 1 two·gllme absence followlna
Pitching on three days' his mother's death.
rest, Mike Mussina got
home-run support and Jed
TWINS 8, RANGERS 2
New York to its sixth stralaht Tori I Hunter homered, dou·
victory.
bled und tied a career high
Mussina moved up in the with five RBls as Minnesota
rotation because Davld Wells won at the Metrodome.
was out with a strliined lower David Ortiz added four hits
back. The Yankees also put as the Twins stopped a threestarter Orlundo Hernandez on game ioalna streak and lent
the disabled list because of Texas to fts fifth straiaht
bock trouble.
defeat.

Th1 CRAFTY.
Bl.IND SPOT

lhoiUIOP Rloll Aurtll.a 011 tile
15~ clillbltd llat.
PliA'III u. 01111. liT

• Vertkllio • Wood

GAMI

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Sola hit hla ftrtt
hclll!er la 10 ~ •
Cbl~ plaed 1 double

1;·•
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=-~rt,.. hit Ill , • . _

lhe-park horni "!"J lftil .
AliClenoa (W) lftd
Seln l.owe comblilld 011 1
thne hitter tor the Plratelln
lhe flrat aame. CUba ltft
flelcltr ,.-olsea Alou waa
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:i~ dlvlq tor au~·

down

Soo'a~~
homer, •
aliot offloah
(5-2) ln

~~~(740)992·3194

Prao11110 , Olllltl 9-4 beoolllq lht flrat Oatil
~...."!"' ill the 1t1- Dl.tcher to bqln.,a aeaaon o-.
i:NL..:U'dna between 8.

YOUTH
FISHING
DERBY

NL

f!::k
~ •• •• Poa
A r h on
1

992·6635

~hov.-theSan ==~tl~=
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~~inack

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10 to ~ 3,500 for hla l~aue debut W~dll,y
career incl ~ team•
tor the Cuba, who have
mate Ct11t Solllllilli • the loat 10 ot 12.
:.
only eiaht-JIIIII wfnnera In
;
lhe ~ thla~~~~q~~.
. IXI'OI 51 8JtAVII 4. '
"That'l Pl't«~ lptclal,"
10 INNINGS
Johnlonllla. "I au~ the Brad Wilkerson drove in
reuon l!ve never ~V: lhe wiMI.na nan wllh 1 two.
much
'Vve0 done out dribbler h1 the 10\11

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In othtr NL 1111181,

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the Cuba teJdq t1H1 MCOIId
4-3
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· ftlll,

CLEVELAND (APJ Brady. Anderson, who hit SO
home runs for Baltimore in
1996, was released by lhe
Cleveland Indians after starting
the season batting just .163.
The 38-year-old Anderson
had one- home run and five
RBls in 34 aames this aeason.
DALLAS (AP) -The Texas
Ranaera sent erratic reliever
· Johri Rocker to the minora for
the second dme this season, yet
another setback in hit troubled
career.
The IW!gen, unhappy with

Keams
,.........1
it into the Redl' third Jrlllld
slam of the aeuon.
''Austin's reallr, tettling
in," Boone said. 'He Jot a
tltuation where he pretty
much know• it'I goina to be 1
faalball. When ft' • 96 mph

Rocker's performance againll
left-handed batten, optloned
him to Triple-A Oklahoma.
PHf:...ADELPHJA (AP) Respondina to qucatlons and
rumors abOut his IICIKUal orien·
llllion, Mike Piazza 1ald that
the major leaaues are ready for
gay players but he's not one of
them.
PHOENIX (AP) - Barry
Bonds repeated hit stand that
hia body has been built up
throuah tttenuous workouts,
not through the use of atrength·
enhancing ateroida.
and in the middle of the plate,
he know• what to do with it."
The win reatored the Redl'
good feelinat. They were
comina off a denatina seriea
- three Jouca in four pme1
in St. Louil, which whittled
their NL Central lead to three
game1. .
The Cardinal• remained
three aamca back with a 3-1
victory over Kouston on

eras cauaht him araulna with player• and
couchea. He apoloaized after a tldeline:
tirade aaainst the Chlcaao Bears In Week 2
and tanaled with playen and former head
coach Dennie Green throuahout the tea·

down pass from Daunte Culpepper to join
Rice as the only players to catch I,000
passeA for a career. ·
"When I went to Minneaota, r was a
youn3 kid. When I left, I was a full-arown
man, Carter said. "1 pined my sobriety
there. There arc to many thinJS about
Minneaota I will never foraet. I wnt alwar•
be indebted to the people of Mlnneaota.'
But Jut aeuon, Carter became known as
much for his antics on the tldellnet as he
was for his one-handed araba in the end
zone. Durinaseveral •amealast year, cam-

Tuesday, but the Reds felt
they had reaalned a little
momentum.
The Marlin• haven't been
able to aet anything aoina on
their lonaett road trip In fran·
~hill history - four citlca,
14 pmet. They're U on the
trip and their pitchera have
· liven up 17 homers in the
eipt pmea, lncludlna three
jl'lnd Jla~.

11tah, 1nd IIIIi!

lOR,

Carter taid 11111 season'• trouble• were
not a factor In hit. decialon to retire. He
alao thlnka he enjoyed 1 1 aucceuful
career, even thoup he did nol win a champlonahip.
·
·
"Look at Andre Rlaon, who won a champlonthip with Green. Bay," he tald. "Arc
you 11r,lna hla career It more t\IC«atful
than m ne? Look at Alvin Harper, who won
a couple of Super Bowl• with the Dalla
Cowboyt. Are you nylna hl1 career It as
succeatful aa mine? I wouldn't aay that.''

To The Voters of Meigs County:
Thank you for your compllmem.ry
y_,g on May 7, 2002.
Your1support Is appreclltld.
Nancy Ptrklr campbell, .
Meigs County Auditor

I

PI I a OH
II n ,
CALL 667 .c;329 ·

Your

. Connection LTD

'

.ALl'iL

1

Jeff Warner Ins.

IIIUk to 16&amp;111181.
.
Plllt.uU 4, MITI 0 .
Vloeate Padllli (6-3) went
tl.lbt ahutout lnnlt!IIIO out•
piTch Jeft D' AmiGQ (3.4),
ud Pat Burn11 hit a
run hQmlr In the ellhth at
Veterw StadiU!JI.
•
The Phllllea are 15·8 It
home llld 4-ll 011

SIZtl 15'X1 0'

tH?M~M022J

to 10'x30'
Hours

Call for mort!
l•rfo/freP ostlmllle .

""*

Cellular

992-5479
..
•NtwHomll
•Garag..
•Complate
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compara
FREE ESTIMATES

740.992·1871

AIIO ltrvlng
IIUIIQI gravy

biiCUitl
Lunch

AII Make! Ttnctor &amp; ·

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Cnse-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St, Rt. 7 Soutli
Coolville, OH 45723 I

,740·667·0363

H11ol,\ I{ .J lupp Jn, .
Bo, IS'I
:\litldlqwrl. ( li11o 1:'7(,0
Locai843·5:Z64

1':~~~~:. sur.plcment; l;lfe Insurance;
and F nnl Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Retirement,
&amp; 401K Rollovel'!l;

In

Now Open
. 11 a.m. : 8 p.m. · Delivered
MondiY thru : &amp; Spread
81lurday
' 11UO par Jon
Cloltd 8und1y
8·10 lone
100 West main St.
llmlttd area

Pomeroy
892·0008

Mlljor Medlc11l
..

i1J
-.......

$.\0 - &lt;l~ 111inutc&lt;~

$45 - 1S minute.,

740·992-5232

a

n

Ill:\ .

d
, "
n ows " 00 "I!

tllll j

Commerr.:iul &amp; H.csident 1ttl

~

(740) 992·3987
Owner &amp; Operator. John llcun

' I II

. fll~~ 1ft!!! !Jl'.li [1\ 11, f) ', 11 I

(NO BUNOAV CA~~S

LIMESTONE

In thl1 apace
for ·

Delivered &amp;
Spread $1 s.oo
per ton1 8 to 10
tona, tlmlted
araa call for
1 C1ll:
dttala.
: (740) 691·2173
Or IIIVI nama
· and number

•25 per month

Lift" !h'" PAIN
r,ul0f PAINTING!
L•·' tr'" ·I• · tl I ·• yvul

UII1PIImiB

• Htollng

I' 11

Pomeroy Eagles ·
BIRG02171
fuery Thursday

6 Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
tarly birds start ·
Progressive top Une
Thursdays
Progressive
Couerall on Sundays
T

VOURCORCRETE
CORRECTIOn, llC
(740) 742·8015

An!llnc'l!Cif

Quality fnnnetr: Work

• Air Condlllonero
$~
• lt~·vloe On All'lrande
•ll11ldent111 a ~lght Commero111

• ToMeue Cower
• Ventvi!Mir • Bug
IShl;!ld It Full Lint

• 10 ~r. pan• &amp; ~IIIOr
• Htallng " Air ConCIIIIOIItng

Olhtr Acci!IIOM

www.lmerloanttahdardolr.Gom

"8ALI!8 AND SERVICI!"
t

11

6:30

17411

AMI!RICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONINQ l HeATINQ

949·2734

for ftll
Your
Lawn and
Garden

rFN

.lh.,~Jn.,.I/Ji:t,.Jlr...lif:;. "'-'Af:..

740·882·75110

Sp1011 Avail • .

See Us

/ln.

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
lt! 1:1
"Speclulizing In Log li\JillC~
&amp; !lubber Roofs''
I:\
fj{II] Onruges, Pole Buildings. Concrete . ~~ It
Roofs &amp; Sidin~

May 31 • June 1

•

,,.,.;., ,., Sw ec ll ~ h. Shillt~u .
C'runitl1tncrul ,
rcfli!Xn lngy. M )'ofn~c i11l
nnd Yoga Th ei'l\['1)' C1i fl

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

MapltwoQd bake

•

10 Yenr&lt;. H"'perle nce
Specln liting h1 Deep

A . . . .~fn.. ·~ ~I:\
~IV.~J lli!!J flt!!J M_
•!: fi1u_r~ .11 ! t~ u

Advertise

Business Services

~ti\SSMa.:

TIIEM.t\I'IS'I'

(740) 992-1536

LHVI n1m1 &amp; No.

.,,tr.Froo••dEllimAto•
'"'"" o.oh COMM£1CIAiallli l!llbiNTIIt
' FREE EjSTIMATES
:!~J!

u cto:Nstm

Ccrti ficnl l.!~ A\lailahlc

33795 HilAnd Rd.
PommiJ, Ohio

• 8uc.kct Truck

Now HtlnlllN • VInyl
Siding • New OnrnKe&amp;
I NIWDIIIQit
• Replucement
• 1110trlo111 ,tumblng 1

002

· Kris
Knniecki

Llclinaed &amp; Insured
Health Problema?
Want Mort Lelaure Time?
Tired of Mowing?
Not A Spring Chicken?
LIMITED OPENINGS

lltmodlllng

V. C. VOUNO Ill

High Bl Dry
Self-Storage

• Top • Aemoval • Trim
• Stump Grinding

BISSEll

WI

~1:~

Tree Service

CARPENTER :
SERVICE
BUILDERS IDC.
• ho0n1 AddlllonTI
• lloollng • Oulltrt
• Vln 1lldlng • ~11n11no ,

750 East Stale Street Ph one ( 740)593-667 1
Athens, Ohio

JONES'

(740) 742·7037

&lt;111011 ff!o. pd.

&lt;118/01

1/l!olfPN

' mEIGS COURTY
STHTESTORE

the-

740.742-3411

ROBERT BISSELL DIPOYIAO
CONSTRUOION . PUts

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM .

WVUJ1l~6

Bryan Reeves
New HomH, Room Additions,
Geragea, Pole Buildings, Roofa,
Siding, Oeckl; Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

Authoriztd Agent

29870 Bashan Road
Racine, OH 45771

740•949·2217

33337 St Rt 7 North • l'umemy, 011 4~720
Golden Bow 16,000Twlne ................... SI8.6S
• 9_o~d_e_n Bow 9,000 l'wine ..................... S 16.95
20.000 Plastic BolerTwine .... ., .. .,.,.,"·"$15.75
Dress Postures with Sulfur ·
~"'" ····:·~····················"'·................... $120 perton
I L ....... ., .............. ............. $5.00150 lbs .
Stulf... ... "·"··························SJ!JIJ/50 lbs
for barns, pens, cages, &amp; trailers

Sunset Home ·
··Construction

?40.1185-3848

Hill's
Self Storage

~Concrete

HAMILTON READY TO RETURN
Right-hander Joey Hamilton threw off
the mound for I0 minutes Tuesday and
had no problems with his left hamstring,
which he pulled on May 6.
·
The Reds plan to activate him off the
disabled list Wcdne.sduy and start · him
Friday in Atlanta. Humtlton was their
opening day starter and went 2-1 with a
3.10 ERA in seven starts.
.
•
"Based on what I saw today, he'a
ready," pitching couch Don Gullett said.
Rather than have Hamilton make a
rehabllltatlon. start In the minors, the
Reds will put him right buck in the rota·
don.
.
"He was pitching well when he lot
injured and he hasn't been off lona
enough to auffer that much," Gullett aald.
"I think he can throw 80 to 90 pitches the
first time out without a problem." ·

froni .... B1

MOll

man. Ooct, btvtl'l '
lni IIIII
1111'1
=t.•r::iodor.J.~

I'm allttie concerned with are Junior and
Larkin. They're big factors on this ballclub and two guys that were injured last
year. This gives you the leeway to do
that.
"It will be a real nice situation for us.
I'm looking forward to it. I think we'll
just gel better."

carter

=-·

"I~IWit'lllclt

lnt\~~~~o ~~';.

==~~==~~~--========~~~~~

BASEBALL NOTES

Open 24 hours.
7 Davs ""t week
'I o~
St. Rt. 7 Tuppers

Aaoint Gun Club

In Service"

1

j

HOWARD L.
WRITESEL .
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Free Estimates
. 49-140 TFN

hu oponlnga, 15 yr.
axparlance, Certlflad
In Malga, Athena and
Wa&amp;hlnglon oounflea,

8:30AM Sunday,
June 9th 0 The

Dlnth on Joae Vldro'l tW6bt In the """'P"'J that I've out RBI alnale oft olOIII'
~In"
1o1m Smoltz."VVdro well~. 3·
· Pirat·ii\•Arllonl moved fot-5 with two RBia, exteid·
•. 112 ..... lblacl ot lhe tna hll ·carttr-hlah hltll..
Qiuta,

Connie's
Child CARE

4

Aaolnt, Ohio ~8?71

Flot Work,
1\eploc•ntcnta, • Walks
uttd Dtl ves ~ Stencil
Crele
Free BStlmiuea
Serving Ohio ond W. V.

610'xlO't

UDlt

1· 4

~~~~2:'!~~~~-~:~ I

middleport, OH

-Ill""'

only 94¢ Htlll
Morntno Star f1011d. CR 30 • Racine, Ohio

CONTUCTORS, INC.

971eed1St.

Ual

Wide A11or1ment of Hlrbl, Annuala,
P~nlaleln 4" pott ror

(740) 992-5908

MANLEYS
SELF STORACE

That'~

,._s1
Bidding &amp; Vegetable Flata '1.10
10" Hllnglng Baskets 'fi,IIO

i171!. 2nd St•
Pomtroy, OH

446-4..5

Slmmy

·

"Ahl!lld

1 r'
r .· · •\
QIMI!tJI, ~. Low Prlca

oloot't- .. - - . . .

Mon·Sat 1G-4

• Mtnto • E1c
144 11tH Ave. o.....

Shade River AG Service

.

Pocket Knlvu
(hctory Outttt)
I Colltctlblta
All verltul hltndo ore
:.b._A Cut Above
11111de m Oldet Ill
tEiillbtheRut•
our looalloit
Houre:

Griffey could ·return this weekend
CINCINNATI (AP)- Ken Griffey Jr. don't want him to return and rclnjurc the
looked so smooth while catching fly balls knee.
Tuesday that the Cincinnati Reds project· He didn't run at full speed during his
ed he could be back in the workout Tuesday, but was able to
lineUJ! this weekend, . . smoothly chase fly balls and lhrow to
Griffey tore the patella third base from deep in center field. He
tendon in his right knee on April 7 and was noncommittal about whether he felt
has been confined to batting practice and ready to play, deferring to the team.
therapy.
·
·"I reallr, can't answer that until I 110 out
· He caught fly balls Tuesday for the first and play,' he said. "We'll see in the next
· time since the injury and had no prob- couple of days what happens. We'll see
lems. A coach hit balls from side to side, how 1 feel tomorrow and take it from
and Griffey even ran one down In the gap there."
on the warning truck.
·
During Griffey's absence, the Reds
"I was very impressed by the way he have had one of the most productive out·
moved in the outfield, the way he's fields In the majors - Austin Keams,
swinging the bat, the way he's throwing," Juan Encarnacion and Adam Dunn. Dunn
general manger Jim Bowden said. "rm also has filled in at first biiSe for Sean
very encouraged and optimistic that he'll Casey. .
be able to be activated sometime this When Griffey returns, the Reds will
weekend in Atlanta."
split time for those five players amona
It's the firs~ time that the R~s have set tfle four positions.
a target f~r hts re~um. Fol!owmg a .three· Having the eKtra player will allow
g~ senes agamst Flonda at Cmergy manager Bob Boone to go slow with
Fteld, ~e ~eds play a three-same w~li- Griffey, much as he has dcine with short·
~nd ICI';'es m Atlanta, followed by a $Ctlel .stop Bany LariQn. Larkin missed most of
mThFlonRdned,
be:
tr
tl · last season with tom aroin musclea and a
e
s are ma eK erne1Ycau oua hernia
with Griffey, who was hobble!f most of "It's' goin~ to ~low you to baby Junior
last season by a tom hamstnng. They a little bit,' Boone said. ''The two guys

MACK'S

'

'

1 I II

WOLFE HEAtiNQ &amp; COOLING

'II ,

( 11()) 'J'J/

~&gt;022

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Ar9as,
Sidewalks, Floors
28 year• Experience
Free Eotlmaleo
(toll fret)

877-353·7022

'

HE.SIIJ~NTIAL

MANUFAC.:TUHE.IJ HOUSING

Free Esttmates
&lt;1 11 flr:l'f II \t · fllnlrll~flllrt

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740 992
(olt&gt;mant1

'

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HERBALIFE
••
Vl'hbva'

PICKENS
HARDWARI
MAlON,
W.VA.

; Haning's Construction

Slllng
~

WIJ

!innj rwl'el )OU (81

lrut .

Independent
DiBtrlbutor
I Lost 271b.
in 32 days.

r4~992·703&amp;
~

1'1111 "" "' Ceridflflllj

405 5th Street

New Haven, WV

•Retldenlfal
•Commercial

100%

natural/Guaranteed

1·304-773·1113

fiELDS
PLUMBING

e;f:(304~

882·2343
wvue~2,14

•

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In One week With US RUC.. OVER 285,000 PROSPEC1'S
~. ltUUI
NOW
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Today...
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Or Fu To (740) 912-2157

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Otflftce, ~~~
Mo r'l~9P y

th ru

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1"6

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•fEDERAL POSTAL
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Upro $18.35/-rPoulble.
FrH C.ll·appllcallol\loxam
prep lnlormollon. Govern·
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+ ATF, INS, Air - I a ,
Alrpo&lt;t Sacurlly All 10 Part·TI""' Ollloe Pt&lt;aonnol
Stotta. Ctll Woohlngl'on ChlropracllcAIIIolllll, Sena
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peroon, Crow a
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cepllonol Fringe Benolit
Pfr-FIT
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lance lo lho Aatoolaro
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ildmlnlslrator lor Optratlono
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provkara. Aoooolatae Doroqu!Nd. Mull lype AVONI All AIHSI To Buy or
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nd
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day, Prlvare and ~cne lor THING NEW ???
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rooumo lo
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6pm·
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R.Y:s Nollonwldo? Up to lions Ospertmont; 90 Jock.
START DATING TONIGHT! !lOK+. Call free 877· 520· aon Pike; Galllpcllo, Ohio
t007 x4oo 1
4~831 · 1662, lax lo 814·
Hlavol luln moeollnageaollg~loll
. 4~-5~. Equal Opportunl·
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ext 9735
Call (740)448·8715
Admlnlatrallvt Atol&amp;tanl IO
Why wall? Slarl mooting Admlnlotrouvo Aaaocltlo ~~~·'~r~.~~r.\Lc
Ohio slnglestonlghl, call toll I· EHiolonl and experloncOd has an lmmodlato Ofienlng
Iroe 1·800·766·2623 ext admtnlalrollvo anoclaro lor lor an Aaolllanllo tht f.lan·
1621 .
Gallla·VInton Educotlonal ulacruring Managar ar their
SoNioe Cantor. Neeos t&lt;• laclllty In Apple (Ira.., WV.
ANNOIJNl'EMFNI1i collenr compu1ar lkllltln Ml· Thll pcllllon will lupporl t
. ·
cr~,:0:1Word J:~x~·~:
Iorge Ptoductlon dopen·
1
w
orga
menl and tholaclllt)''llal»
11
C·t lloor Carry Out permll publlo relatione sk II. Sand ralory. The succeaolul aplor sale, Chester Township, l~ner ~equeat:n~ an appll~a- Rlloonl for lhla poolllon will
Meigs Counly, send lollaro ~o n ~ng W 1 R~o~me.~: avo dom01111ralod txperi·
o! inlorost to: Th e Dally
lC
'
r
ence with Microsoft OHice,
Sonllnel, PO Box 729-20, OH 45674·01 78 · Appllootlon as wall 11 succe..lul per·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
deadline May 3t , 2002.
lormanoe and ablllly lo wotll
In a lall·pacod environ·
ment. Salary will bl oom·
Emergency Preparedness
CAN 911 FINO YOUR
monaural• with oxperlenoo.
Ploaoa oend reoum11 lo
HOME; WHEN EVERY MO·
Humin RIIOUICOI, M&amp;G
MENT MEANS LIFE OR
Polymers,, Stala Aouta . 2,
DEATH?
SENSIBLE
Apple Grove, WI/ 25502.
PRODUCT SAVES LIVES.
M&amp;G Polymers USA LLC
VI SIT us AT: euee.com or
SuppD&lt;Io Dlverolly and Ia An
Call: 877-764·M90
Equal Opportunltv Employ·
Longaberger Bua Tour!
or.
Dresden and Homeataad
A&lt;lmlnlolrollvt execullvo
P.rlzeal Braaklaat! Fun!
Aaalolanllo Plant Managar:
Only 5361 Seating Limited.
We hiVt
Call Nowl 740·742.2824
M&amp;G Polymoro USA, LLt
hll an lmmodlote opening
Immediate
Mr1. Aahlay Palm Aeadlng
lor on Aoololonl to lho Plan!
full-time
and Mind Reading. For an
Manager al lnolr llcllltv In
Entertaining
Experience
Apple &lt;lrovo, WV. In addl·
cuetomsr
VIall Her. Cal l (740)773·
lion to lhe Plan! Manager,
1712, Chllllcolho, OH.
Blrvlce poaltlon thla pcslllon will auppcrt a
dopartmonl
opening• In our Producllon
along wllh providing admln·
GIVFAWAY
lllrallvo 0uppcrt to olhtr
main office,

I

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r

17 8

Bortlndtr. $300 par aNII
pottntlol.
"'' mlhanocHIIry.
available.
NO t&gt;tPIIIionOII
Call 1•800•806 •0082 axl

· House , Pomeroy, OhiO.

208

COL In 15 daya, $2495
COMPLETE 10014 TUI·
TION FINANCING ANDRE·
IMBURSEMENT.
YOU
START WORKING IMME·
OIATELV
BIG MONEY
GREAT BENEFITS, 401 K:
1•800 • 55o• 48 18
www.cdllrolnln~com NO
APPLICATION EFUSEDI
Chlldcare Workora needed
t o - wllh boyo egos 12·
17 In o rooldlnllal 11111ng.
No oxperlenoo requlrod.
Must have High Sohool Dl·
ploma. can (740)S.II-0842,
oaklorUsoConley.
'

I

~~~~~~~··:~~~~~an,T~~ •,~f~

ADVERTISING
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE
For welleslabllshed·
Local Co.
SERVING THE
TRI·COUNTY
AREA
• Mull have good
Communication lkllll
• Mull have good
driving record &amp;
provide awn
ltlntpofllltlan
• Mutt hava lblllty to

Help wantod coring lor IM
tldorlv. Darst Group ~.
now peylng minimum waga,
now milia: 7am-Spm, 7am·
~pm. 3pm·11pm, 11pm·
7am, oall740·992·5023.
lnatruclor, Buolnou, Com·
munlcotlons, Modlcol Ollloo.
Send reoume lo Gollloollo
Carllr Collogo. 1178 Jock·
oon Pika, Suite 312, Golllp·
olla, OH 45831 .
Lllollmo 1ncomo1 lmmodloto
casn Flow! Ground Floor
0
nunll I
Full
T~nglrJ,I M~M Call
Now: 868·268·4278

fet required

.

RN (lull·li'l") M·F dlya.·
Full btnolll peckagt; l\ealth

ond 1-.nco. 401k
endllrstyurvocotlon.
on- (luli-11""') M·F dlya
1011\t SatrirdiVI. fuM btn•
Ill peokagt: noolth tnd denIa I lnaurance. 40k and llret
year vacollon.

~'!J~c~otSom:i: ~
•

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u

~1:,"::"; ~ ~~ue::;
887 • a!11rpo11o OH 4W1
'
'
811 Competlllvo Stlary and
Excopll01111 Frlngo Benollt
Paokogo-PtrtTI""'poaltlon,
tor Urgent Cart whh

.

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IID.I'WANll:O

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stNico !Mia and lomalo es·

r

liw'WANIID

1~
· ----'

CHRISTIAN
SINGLES
DATING CLUB IN SERV·
ICE SINCE 1989. THOU·
SAN DS OR RELATION·
SHIPS. SAFE &amp; CONFI·
OENTIAL. CALl FOR
FREE PACKAGE. 1·800·
438·1G77
----,----Moonlight

lbU'WANliD

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•

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Frld aiy

8 : 0 0 a . m. to 5 : 0 0 p . m .

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an.s

~lve In Nlghl Clttl&lt; lor
and PA~S praltrrod. WHk·
Mason Molal. t304)773· ands: 1-9pm and aomo ova·
. 9000
rilngt: 5-Vpm; 1'-. lind
rtlumo to ~~or Clink:: Hu·
LOOKING
FOA
A man Rtlollonl Doportmonl:
CHANGE? We have an an· 90 Jackton Plk~: Golllpollo,
IWOI. Be oetl·amployt&lt;l. Set Ohio 4&amp;831-1582: lox to
own houre. Turnkey proven 81 4•4.S·5532, Equal Op·
bus1nall . Complota Train· pcrtunllv Employor.
lng Provldod. FrH lnlorma·
lion,
·
~N IUPERVIIOR lo ••·
.........-l,,.,_..,.com
IPODIIblo lor tnt dollvory Ol
1-888·22&amp;·0709
all nurotn~ oervlcos In lour
MaCiuro'o Rellaurant now ~:·:~pe~;~1110 •r~~~
tllrlng all 3 locations, lull Or Auloll In nuralng IIMII•
pert-limo, pk:k up aPIIIIca· intnto, HASSP Alllll•
tlon allocation &amp;bring back mtnll Care Plana and
between
9:30am
&amp; PEER "Rovltwl Admlnlotero
I O:OOam, Monday thru Sal· modloallona and 1roatmen11
urdoy.
whan noedad. Muot bl
MYSTERY SHOPPERS: avollabla loton·coll houre,
$25/hour. lor local 0180 moell~ PM onl!t. Conlact
buslneoltl. FREE mer· Oorolny
Horpor.
AN
•·ndl11
11 d
1 (740)~·7148
•·~
• moo on more
'' ·

IID.I'WANrm

Ir·

•

SUCCIIIfUI
applicants muef
ba people
oriented, anjoy

bee TEAM player

, ..

Find

-

SUlCI Pet Ho!lt. IIOml,OIIi- Bod ~ Gel Nlw •
IIIIIU - Lll1lt DIQII I . ·E-...1 Nlw
FIH C.. fii&gt;PI'&lt;Mb ....lll\ irlll liml pays s.l l o r - ~~~ 1o(S1t)

job•••

"11.1. POI'IIIL-*•

Up 10 $t ll:li5!Houl -

_.,.llor,

F._. -FUll........
1-8QO.a.2·2128 t•t 130
FH-Wt 1od CMtllol AIn :
.
len W. Rou ar t740~
87011
,.. ~

~ Mit li d. ·
tl4l\nl
.
$41&amp;$500 "'~ In""'"'-. LIM!tod~ 1 DEBT ~lllo\TIOM.
-2sa-o~U Ellt &gt;100 t2ol S:UOO ' 1100.000. ~
hro.)

' pllcotlon -

s...

Elitnlllat. HIQII , _
_
S1000WHk~ SbiH\nQ EPIC.. NOw 1·
\lllopatt &amp;art-~ - I·DEBT ~~ Ul.

Non . - ·

~ b ratrltntt tlaaOtcU· .101 ....._lilbttrin5Mcioom
FREE CREDIT nowt
1
1;;:illi~':'::llona.u.,
a..
lmolt
tNngl
G&lt;IKIIng
~~· 1eG+ c:l
" ~•:rtENTION" Qrow!::s -VI No .,_
~ ,._,.,
. ....lOU!:
'
Compe~~ Ntodo fletp 100-7&lt;10-1414 1014
Woftt From Halne. NrJ Lo- i1jf4;;~;i::L"1
...lion.
t.la~o SSOO/pt·
$4500111 FRE.E -~~~ &amp;
·FREE Trolnlna. - .mon- '-••
.
tyonl7a~"·"""' or 1-888· S FREE ~·SH ·~I~
707-1
~.. ,_,
WHIII&gt;y lamlllto u - . g
ADUlT HIGH SCHOOL Dl· OHIO V~~~~UILISH· : , o : . = . _to~=
~~ly·..!::llodNow~:: lNG co, 1,., 1....-ltlj: I. G.I., Ho-84
onl-1 Falluro-PrOot Low you do bullnou with paaplt QUEENS 8LVD.. ••1 I .
Tuition FREE Brocll~ra 1· you know, tnd NOT to Mnd FOREST Hl~~s. NEW
•~86-,__3~7
. mont~lhlou8hlhlmallunlll YORK 1137H3ol7
~ • · ..,
you novo lniiHIIgllod 1111 :':"::::"'::-:"':~~~"!':::':"'
EARN YOUR C~LEGE ofttflng.
FAST CASH LOANS! U00.
GREE QUIC
Baa
CANOV VEND1NG
$125.000 Crodll Probltmo
DE
K~V.
h· A ·
no.
OUI Sl&gt;oolaltyl ~tl . uo l\tlp
alotl, Maatttl. Dootorell, Eem $80K. Wotll 4 h,._ lodlyl Guoranraodl t-eooby 001"'lPOndtnct balod Gtotl
~ocallont.
SO ota-480&amp;
~:~ ::~J. ~011~ ~ndor ~~~~~~':;~').~•• 1'1GO- NEED •N E'R'" p•"·

cr.:

TlwNJNG

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car•••
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FR. EE lnlormallon borlkltl A ~OCAL
VINDINQ OAV?? Up $500 lnltanlly
phone .
CAMBRIDGE
by PIIOIIOI 1·(177)·EAA~Y·
STATE UNIVERSITV 1· ROUTI. tOO~LOoltlona PAV. ~lcll76000e 111AO.
800·1164·8318
="~~~ 1~~ VANcE FAEEI
·
11717
QUICI( CASH
SSOOI
MISCEIJ.AN~XlUS
·
N
, ••
up 10c
A+ M&amp;M MARSINEST~E a:~·
a":'.~~
Vending Routa. Unlqut ma· DE Mombtr FDIC/EO~
Dollalouo HaaHhv PHnut chino. Groat opporlunlty. Chocking Account Rt·
euttar Natural, orgonk:,IIO· Prlmt locallona avollablo •ulrod 1.8QO.so7•1008
llovonao, euonllol folly nowl Excellent prollt poton· ~·::.::.::::·;.::;:;;.::::.;.:.::::__
felda, anlloxldanlo.. FRII tlal. lnvtotmlnt roqulrtd, STOP ,FOREC~OSUREIII
SHIPPING ond 1.1Q0.741· under
S10K.
Toll Behind on Mangoga? Don'l
0111
Fru"'"(888)
460· Flit BenkNptoy.. Sovo YIIUI
www.wyoong.ntl
4200~....
=:~;~"'~lt"lco.
DISNEY VACIITIONI . Rl· Abaolullty · A SOlid RHI ~~::7::::::':"~~~IIIVI Now, Stvo Hundrt&lt;lll Dtlll Do you Hrn $2K a TAX REVIEW SERVICE
5 daya lncludto Oloney - k now? No lllllng. Wotl&lt; WOUld you 11111 1 0 Toucn of Magic p11111 ond 4·8 noure!WHk rollocklng t a&amp;% ol your 2001 taxtl
Malngoto Holtll. Entire 1'1• local CANDLE rou11. SO back? 1-811·227-oo-ooH.
calion only $148.00 per per• down"'! ? .A.C.. t-80().813· · TURNID DOWN ON
100
1-8B8·&amp;84•38S2 Ext. 7•oa, 2• ,ro/7 deyo,
IOCIA~ IICURIT'IItll'
402
An Eoto"llohod Vending No FH U·'··· Wt Wlnl
"
·,REI Dltbtllo lupplloo Roulol Eomo 81g $$. Mull
1·118-582·33r1&amp;

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Oi'R:=

:.!~.Er~:.~~o~llrmcom ~:~. ~: ~~n\\: ~~": ~~:llllod

r'~~ 1·868-571-022&amp;

Medlcoro Reclpl·
FIH QIUCOit motor, ll~pt,
lancall, lhlpplng (100)
4S3-1017 www.dlobtlll·
ca!Hndlroatmont.oom

lteCOWN,
0011?41,

11011

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~~::~~=~R~~~~

1
Exl.
pcalllon wMI have damon·
Naod 5 ladlao to 1111 Avon. lng Alllallnll lor Ill mllll.
BRANCH OFFICE avalllblt !rom $5 OOQ-150 000 •
away to a good famiiv.
llrolod the oblllly to"" rollo·
Send Reaume to:
~740)448·3358
woarea progrllllvolaclllty
In yout ..... Help ·cllenit NIVII repey, ""'""''· bull·
(740)441 -1707 aller 4pm. .
blo, approprlalaly hondle Gelllpolll Dally Trlbunt
wllo apprtcllloo our Iliff.
ocniiOIIdoto dobll lnlo one noaa, oducotlonal. - 1
oonlldonllal . lnlormallon,
St 500 A MONTH PART vou nawr grall opoortunl·
lowtr monlnl• pa•mtnt. tlo. Foil oppro~al 1•100 :
Kittens; 1 black &amp;.white. 1
adaPI 1o ononga and lunc·
AE: Advertlalng
TIME. $4,500 • 17,200 111111 Soanlc Hlllal PlooM
'
'
yellow &amp; wh1tt, 2 black.
lion
auccnalully
In a alroll·
S
1
A
FULL
TIME
.
Worl&lt; In Homt. call Jono Dotllng 11 MODEL
lor
FASHION
Training,
ouppcrt,
lmmodl·
_7atl
~·7.;;1_14=~==..,.u•lrgthe
740·992·58, 8
1
11
lul. fut1"'c0d environment
I II lp
ln1trnallonil
company ~740)4411-71~ Todtyl Or ADS. Adull,a!Bablta/Chll· ~~C~~~~~~
~~~-~
iz"
USA
CONSOLIOA·
0
4 · TOR ~1 BILLFrom
1
pliono,
In addlllon, domonllrolod
825 Third Avenu1
noodl oupeNioora I auto· llop by and liM ou1on applr dronl C&lt;&gt;nlaot
.
'
. 12,000·
Lo!;rAND
oxperlanco
wllh
Mloroooll
Ollllpolll,
Ohio
45831
llnll
.
Trelnlng.
FREE
clllon.
llookOounllnk.not
COMPUTER
ACCESS?
·
12&amp;0
0001
(8'
1
41
Avorago
complltllr
FOUNIJ
Olllce, managing callrdors,
~_:~~~~n
..You~~~o~~a:~ IINQI~8f ; cHRISTIAN Ann : LINDA: Fax Blo~ 1· Eamoxoollonllncomtwotll· ralo).' Bod Crodll No pfOb.
lltarate, and
wotlllng affectlv~. with ell·
· MUIIC OR CLIAN COUN- &amp;70·74 3· 105&amp; Prill &amp;1. lng lrom hOmo part·llml or loml For 1111 roeullo, OAII
J.alj 1 Golden Retriever
ers
and
proaollv;'*
v.ilh
viol·
D~vora
lo
ltenspon
0111
10
m
TRY I Sing Of l'lay vour co·, Ann. LINDA (BBB Momblr) luO·tlmo.
loll ~H 1·8QOe&amp;t 1"'201
enjoy working
and 1 Black Mhted Breed.
11 1 mual. Sa ry will bt &amp; from oucllon. Call bl· DATA ENTRVI Could Earn Cu11111 oval tho telephone NIID
lora
A,ORDAI~I
www.BeBoaeFroa.oom
U I \I I '. I \ II
Al-2 Near ~oosevelt Ele·
with numbera,
:;'.~~=~:~~~hr=
,_,
10
arn
&amp;
6
pm.
740·
$15/Hr
and
Up.
Modlcal
to
audition
lo
00111110
Bran·
HtaHhcaro?
5&amp;4.~15/mo.
lor
EARN
SQO,OOO
VEARLV
rt·
::mr;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
monlory
(304)875·2157
Po1ltlon offera
to: Human RHOUrcn. M&amp;G 9112.oe&amp;7
Billing eo. Noodl People to oon MloiO~ri lor 1100,000 anllro lamlly. No Llmho· pairing, NOT roplaolng,
Jbmi
Loot s. t 8-02
Polymora, Sla.to Roulo 2, DRIVERS/COL CLASS A Procou Clalma. Will Train. rooordlng conlraCI oonlool. Ilona. No Pro·Exllllng 001&gt; Long Cracka In Wind·'
I'OK.,,, ~
111 company
Apple GrOIII, WV 2a502 .
WITH OVER 3 MONTHS PC Roqulrod Cell Now 7 CALL Sondy 1-504•886· dlllonll"olualona . CALL lhllllde. Frtt vldiO 1.8()(). looo-lllliiii,;;""iiii-iioo_.l
Yi\KDSALE
b1n1fltl
M&amp;G Polymare USA, LLC OTR Training or E•perlo"'o Doya
1·800·935·39 71 4 ~8
UNITED FAMILV NOWIII 828·8523
US/Canadl. •
Suppolll Olvarolt)' and loAn 'Wall Cooll Tum Runs E•t.0219
SPECIAL
SHOPPERS! ~~;~~·0201 ::~.~~~ www.glttlmtcn.nill.oom
3(-~~7~~~••on ROUII a.
Including
Equal Opportunity Employ· 'GrHI Mlltl, pey &amp; llonollto OliO Enrry: Modlcol Billing. Chock atorU In your 1111. CE04657
EARN UP TO $e50 WEEK· :.;..,.,;,;,,.;..;,~.;•,;;
...
;.;.._ _ __
haalth and lifo
01•
1 ·800-263-51~
Prooan Clalmo. Will Train. Evanlngo ovalloblt. No ••· •
•
LV Working tnrough lho lnsuranc:o, 401k, SUSI WEEKLY! Stay·at· Duke Cleanor•. 8158 and pc Required . Groal In· perionoo ntct111ry. Groal Pool Toblao Manufacluror govornmont oart·llmo. No t78V Addloon Plkt. 3 Bod•
Homo
ProcHslng AYI .. Galllpollo. Apply Wid· comolll 1-800·240·81117 blnllltol 1·888•478·1~2 ovorolookod. O.k or Mtplo. oxperlonot Alol of oppcrtu· room, 1 Bolh, Ful Bell•
Carpori Sale. .Rain or
paid VIC:atIOn,
HUO/FHA Mortgage Re· nnday·
Friday
from Dlpt 417
ext M333
1' olala . . Llllllmt Worron~, nlllu
. 1-800·211 •0781 mtnl, frH Gu to hOUM.
5·24.. 5·27 lrom
and pe,..Onal
Iundt, No Exporltnca Re· 1o:ooam. 2:00pm.
SUMMER JOBS
Rololl 12886 From IVV . CodtE8
Newly Ramodolod . 12
ahlna.
NHd on ooolllonal -k·
8am·Spm. Three mllao out
d FREE 1 f
www.Poolllbloaull.com 1·
oor11.
178,000. · Coli
1
Stale Route t 43 oil of
d1y1. for
?~~OO.Sol-8832 ~x~r~on. EXCELLENT INCOME PO· end bablllllltt In my hOlM
NO EXPERIENCE
, 800·640·!11*
Growing lnlomallonol Corn· (740)384·0013 .
Rou1o 7. Look lor ligna.
1
nt
TENTIAU lltcomt a midi-. lor 2 112 and 11 year old
fe·l9 TO START
peny not&lt;lo holrl Eam Big '
emp oyme
www.protectrolund.aom
:al biller. No oxporltnco boya. Mull have roltronou
1·88$·874-JOBS
WM"J'ED
~SIS lrom homo PT/fT For 1VV7 4br. Doublt Wldt
11
Donlle Vard Stlt Lollovoro:
C:Onlldorltlon,
StOOO!WEEKLY POSSI· nHdod. Compulor roqulrld. (740)441·1417
URGENTLY
NEEDED·
TO Do
lnfonnallon. Call Toll FrH ~:1'~~ 101
f~ =rgrt.
Snop ol yard tole prlcot
BLEI Mailing Brochuroo Training
1-886·MED·
.
$
1·800·248·7424 or villi
''
O
· "'
. RtUIO lndullrleo, "'bany ~
lrom Homol No Experlti)CO CLMS i 1186-633 21587 txl Nigttl Deok Storotory Ml· plaama dOnora, oom 50 10 C lo B Mdlh &amp; Rornod' hllo&gt;:llwww.hevlngo-oo.oom watar. Within I mllol lrom
0
3
Alneno.
740·6V8·8200
Naco~! FrH Dollll&amp;l 101 • •
•
. croooll Word, Typing, .11- 10 ~..""..:..W:kc~r ~o [n~ oiY~g. m F~oo g ootlmllll HBO OH IS HERE I
IOyOII l'lenl. (304)V 7e2120
www. rouoalndullrlta.org
c a11 1• 7••
Monday· Tnurlday.
,.
" new
._.2027 (24hrl) EXPERIENCED CARPEN· RtiUmo
10: GalllpolllStnd
Ca· Plaama StNico,
740·6~2· FuII y 1nourod, For· I II your· Llvl · c I llo crovo 1hlo w I· 2br, ~~
~·~· CantrII "''•
Garaga Salt: Fri.ISat (May
''GDY'T POITAL JOII" TERS NEEDED· Mull novo '"'College, 1176 Jaoklon 8051 .
"'"'\I r~olr nHdo• • Ctl~ ltr. opolro DNA. (i'tuman, balh. LOCIIIO AI 211 7111
24·25). 8om-4pm, 2411 LH
To 116.311/hour. ftft Call· a dtl\ltr'l llconlt &amp; Iran• Pike Galllpolll OH 415831
7411'882 .1119 or 740 441 • Animal, &amp; Plan!) Stoking Strttl,
Ntw
i'tavtn,
Circle, Ruotic Hill&amp;, Syta·
pclllllon, tootl &amp; knowlodgo
'
'
WANTID: IIRIOUI PliO- 8614
lllatperoono notlontlly. Llo· 138,500. (304)112·3772
cult, Ohio. 1111'1 a Trtal·
:.'~"!'~= ~~:~:: of realdenllal romodellng. Nurolng
PLI TO WORK FROM
lin to 800·804·1125, lhln , a llldroom HouH lor 1111
ure ..., May nave It
Full Bonlltlo. 1·800 "42· Ouallllod oppllconlt can
HOME Up To IUOO , Goorgn Porlablo Sawmill, • ·mall
Ktllh
al by owntt ~
Llvl
~
pick u an ...,.lcatlon al
COUNT ON
11000+/mo. PTIFT 1 - don't houl your logo lo tho FrHOOOIBmlfl,com .
·
tgoKl "I
Yard Solo: Dorcu ilolnonr.
2128 o•t 125 fH Requlrod Chrioll:n'o eonorrucllon, RECDQNITION AND 227•1410
www.your• mill jull call304·8f5·1057,
l:~ry/Sunroom.
Church, Thursday 9·•. Fr .
Appllcotlonl are btlng ac- 1~ Eaotam Ava .• Golllpc·
RESPECT
lraok21UCCtlt.oom
In homo Child cate ao yearo NHd 10m1 E•tra Cam?
Shlnglod rool, oily Willi,
doy 9·2· Frlday..:lolhlnQ S1
CfPit&lt;l lor ~&gt;tome Htaltn llo. Open 8·&amp; M·F.
COMPUTER/INTERNET Expenonco. Rofotenoll Slort your own Bullnou10- Sllttalod on 1/3 1011 wlh
~=g. :~~!"';;"~:"';:~
Aldll. Appllcanll mould · (740~451.
HCR Manor Cart hlo bt· PERSONS Nlododlo Work AVIIItblo. (304)8711-2020
day. WI will provkfo you oulbulldlng on Ullll 81X!Hn
Will . dlonoa' pans · l&gt;ooka
.
llaWr a hfr1laollool diploma
como one olllll mool wkfo· Onllnol '7a-1145 Hr. PT· Mowl ••~
·
with 1111 flnanclolllllalanoo rd. Soul~lkfl. 13&amp;,000.
• lbl
' k 1 k 'k k '
or G.E.O., rellablltraniPOf·
ly rooognlzt&lt;l and roo;&gt;t11d FT FrH leCook
,
ng, r-mng, and Diner you nood Calllodly 1·886· (304)1!18·7308
·
11
1
8
co eel ' · n c • nac • $2,000 WEEKLY! llllfln8 tatlon, toilpllono In tnt ,..,_ C- Olvort nomto In lnt oonlor noolth· mPCToWork.oom
odd. lobt. Hauling away 122o0113tl
'
:"':-'·":--'-...;;.":-~~~
canning
Avoo, clotnl::p,, 400 brochurool SOIIIIIC· homo tnd willing 1o work od lltcomo o lhrrrapeul~ care flold . Our Hoortland 1•7o8.802· 1943.
.
brulll. Will Elllmalo Work.
3 bodroom. 2 balh brlok
~-M ~~· R~ lion Guaranlaodl Pootago &amp; -·onda , &amp; holldeyo. fostor care giver, you will bt Vlotorlan Vlllaga loclllt)' cur·
call FIUoly (304)77:J.atl34 Stan Vour Buolnooo To· tonch on 1.5 flal ecru.
lao· •r
· rooo
Suppttos pr011ldodl Ruth Mull bt mollvolod tnd flex~ rolmburlod 130·545 o dly rently hao lnt following op- TraniPOII drlvtr lor 100 bod ond .llwy.
cloy P~mo Shopping Con nowtr ca'l)ll lind vlnvl, lull
to go 1o conslrucllon fund. Seii·Addro11od Slamped blo. Wllllraln. Expe~""'' for 1111 care o1 a ohHd ln. pr&gt;l1unlt)':
.
lklllld. nuralng laoiNt)', Pro- •
tor 'S,... Avalll.bll At ,_,· btlamonl ( parllally llnlahEnvelope! OICO. DEPT. 5, In providing dltec1 01111 or your homo, yoo will rocelve
•
vldt .lranapcrlatlon lor ;,OJ!.. 10 Bollom Cleaning fordlblo Roll 2 Nloo E~ , od), new aPIIIIanoH, 2 car
~,,..
BOX 1438, ANTIOCH. TN. -ng wtth oiQor odulll a mileage rolmburllmtnl &amp;
NURII
phyllclan oppolnlmonll,
protHIIonal. 1'111·
Oft '
gtrlgo, Rf il3 1boYe Htw
1 37011-1438 Sllrt tmmodl· pluo. Slate terbd nurolng peld rllplto. Trolnlngo are
TO 8vY
IUP!AVffiOII
. coniUIII 110. Mull hiVI dlnllal, Olllco ciHnlng II
't'.~~ ~· Hovan 304-112·38117
a1ely.
anlolanfl orocDoJragod 10 beginning In Juno. For
RHILPN
good driving raoord, enjoy tn
oflordablt
prloo. 1 Call (7 40)~ 34e1.
•
Aboolule r.
Dollar· u s
·
apply. Appllcallono ore morolnl&lt;&gt;ooiiOASISThlro· Weno,.ono_,lngforo wotlilnll with rnldtnlland (740)882·2117Vor(740)882• z •
·
•
·
3bodroom, 2bllh,2corll·
Sll\lor, ~ Colno. ·ProOf: =·oo-~ooo.~omw: available aflho Mofgl Muhl· peullc Foolor Core Networl&lt;, day ohlflond one nlgllllhlft ftmlllot. Pooillon Ia pan- 1381
THE ULTIMATE MONEY :ac=aar~,
Hll, Dlamon&lt;ll. Gold
~~~· p oduC1I No purpooe San1or Conlar, Mul· Albany, Ohio. Toll free: 1· n~relng -loor.
llmt, IIlii IHiod nurotng Will do Lawn mowing, MAKER 1o NOT MLMI Ita 1 ry
ng, 11 ~&amp; OOO ~
Ringo
u S Currency .
I
~
·
barry H.olghfl, Pomeroy, 877·325·15158
aalllllnl prtltrrld, .not ro· palnllng ond ointr odd jobt BRAND NEW SVSTEM
M.u : Coin Shop. 151 s.C. rir,:{'l:~ N,00:'1~~Z: OH. An EOE Employol.
llovommenl.rotro
'!;I• offer;
q,;r~ ':"": ~':: coli »i·773·atl34, elk lor called EMMI Eam up 10 ~':'-eo.le
~~,.;· ~~-~
ond Avenue. Q"llpoita, 7.00· dlaltly. Call Sundance Dll- ASSEMBLY AT HOME II S11 .01J.l33.00 per hOUr I» • $2500 SIGN·ON BONUS ~:v Ron: canter' Ruoly,
.
101&lt; WEEKLVI Try k FREE 3 BR, LR. Kltcllon, ond
&lt;4411-2142.
trlbulvr 1·868·362·2208 24 Crolla, Toye. Jowolry, lonlltl. Pold Trolnlng/Full :~=our rtloco· · 38759 Rooklprlngo Rood: WIH mow yorda 11 rHaona· 8()().242.()383 (EMI 180e)
btth. ldnyl aiding,
Wonlodto Buy MoOIIt Hro Toll FrH.
Wood.
Sawing, - . .. For mort Inform&amp;· "Nurot ~n
Pomorov, Ohio 45788.
blo rain, (740)1182·7310
v.indowl and roof, Largo lot,
Home. Calf (740)441-0175 S529 WEEKLY! Mailing let· Typi~ ... Grool P•t ~I · : ' ~ -1·800·228·3952 Program
Ropaymonf Exlondlearo Hullh Berv··wln ptOIIUrt Wlllt houltl,
MoNEY
::'rcn10
or (304~75-51H15.
lttl from homo. Eaoyl Any m hrar- 0380
xll 201
'
•Nuroa Scholaronlp Pro• ~~~- : : :· lfallora, and dtclcl. Coli ~
10 loAN
Locolod on 81111 Aoull
HOurel FuiUpan·llmo. No
GOVERNMENT
JOBS grem
__, _,.,_,.,
,. &lt;lol1-4238 Ilk lor Ron or ~
215- Morooovlllo. lrntl10dlo10
~
~~ oxperionctt IIICIIIIry. Cell ATTENTION! Wo NHd "HCNI HIRING" for FIAE
='D:""ploco dlvorolty, m1111g1.
II CAIIH•BV·PHONII H Polllaolon, 112.000. Call
Heallh Dip! ,., U.S. D1gtat 1-8118·38i-f790 Htll&gt;l lntomallot1ol Mall Of· FIGHTERS/POLICE OFFI· To apply oontocl:
. $100 • 11 ,000 No crldll (740)285-1275
...,
( .00) .3
24 hOur recording.
do&lt; Compeny Raf)ldiV Ex· CE~S/WILDLIFEIPOSTAL Hoooi1taild·VIc10rfan )lllfaga, TNIIIU.., · en~ltnland u·
clllekl 5-Min. Apprewt~ll
...,romento, 7 247 752
.
pending Etrn Uj) to I1DOO- $4011( a y-. Paid Training 1120 Thurbtr Dllv8- W,
p!!llncod pari-llrnt Tr....
Money dlf&gt;DII1od 1n10 your 0HH HOUII aoo:1e U
S89.1582.797.87 Owod In S71l00/M0 PTIFT Complott &amp; Full llonoflll. C.H TOLL· Cofumbuo, OH 4321&amp;
uror lor 1111 &lt;llflla·Jd
aoooun1 Calf Todlyll TOife f2002 00 Calh Book
u'1'imod Rolundi.HI~ Tralnlnl)'frH lnfonntllon I· FREE lor Info. Mon·F.rt. flh; 814~2273, fu: 61&lt;1- VlniOn E&lt;fucllional BIJsiNillls
FtH i-8ee-42&lt;1-M44 Eld. r,ou """I
dUr·
I 11'1 I I 'l ' II '\ I
ISS
Weakly Thlo ...-·0 888-270.20911
iam-10pm/EST.
.4M-3037. EOE
Conlor Trouuror llconal
OrFolm.Mn' . 74
ng our _ . houM FrH
I I' I r I '
:'0'::,4 Rf,'::;,-~ www.CalhF-.oom
1-801).48.j-IOQ1 x1203
•
roqulrod. sena lollo&lt; ro·
•
r o f • -· Ma 2f lhrll
iftjr;;;;;;;;;___..., qulrod 1·800·4•9·4625 ATTENTIONII
Governmonl Jo1&gt;1 Wlkflllo
HCIIquHIJng an tppllcollon t1 Home-Buod Bullnno CAN'T GET A SANK 4C- Juno 1• Fronoh;:; - ·
UQ
4sSo
Now Hiring let 2002 Pootal lnd POitll -·per yHr.
lfong " 1111 '""""' 10: PO Opportunity Around! AI· COUNT? Wo QUARAN· Inc..
Oofllpotll, Ohio.
IIDIWAHllD
Jo1&gt;1 lt3.21 to !124.50/Hr. Full -111- Paid llalnlng.
llolr 171• Rio Cltondl, OH crolvo t&gt;ll)lhlug you nHd TEE you a - (
~
7-"
4
"'"'-":"~;,...--.,0)44H340
SQ87.8a WEEKLY! Proc- No E~. Paid Train- No , . , . _ nteltllry. OWN A COMPUTER PUT 41587A.OI78. Appllcallon to run your own homo· It blinking
No Crodf1 Ouoflty 8r1o1&lt; Aancf1 Mafr&gt;.
•• · - ,~ WOt1o
••ling morlgago rofundo lng. Full Bonofltl. 1-886- Fe&lt; applfotllon tnd tXIm IT tO WORK. $215/175 per ~.
balod Ttovef Agoncy. Earn ChockaJTu;ndowno/Minl • FrH.
Bula·
1
- - • •~m
rom from homo no ~~ 72111-8083 Ext 2000 C.. 7 c:atf 1011 frM 1-886-711HZee hour. PTJFT. Full Trpq, TURN SPARE TIME INTO Big SS$. AwoiOITMI T1ovol mumo ' Dibll Cord with t1111t - · 1eoo.c. ft. pk1o foAl
homo, PTIFT ftoo · rf&lt;IUirod, FOI dooiOile calf I· Ooyo 1 II
nl. 140
FrH lnlormollon: C.. 01 SSf . Mall _ / 1 _ -ltet PTIFT. Nomlllll ATM Ctoh Wllhdrowt '$200 b a -. Full 1tng11t
1-$l0-250-2* .
81i'·260-a488 n1. 50UCP
.roil _,,....,.100_ 1· ,.... PT/FT frH f11f0 Slar1up Colli 1-8118·244· Overdroft PrMitgo Corll 1· porch. 2 cor
301140
1118
..- . .. ANNOUNCEMENT ...
F,;i Ttllnlng
100·281•1144
liorto0114dg. f7".:o"f:em37
.
ISIS$ W~Er&lt;L.YI PIOCIII' HOW HIRING FOR 2002. CREECH BROTHERS 'E•· 1011 ot _,unHIHI Be• Own A~ Pul ft 10 ~~zono.oom
11 ,000'1 WEEKLY with CASH NOWI Fet Owner Fl- Rentodllod Ranch Home.
1n0 HUDIFHA MOr1QIOO A. P...., Jobl S13.21 · ca11tn1 Pay 'Qrlll HOme oomo o ~ trll\t """"'· Up 10 l1000e
.
NEW SYSTEM! Roploco · nonca Morlgogo, Court Sel· ThrH Bodroomt, Beth,
fundi. No ~ A. 124.50/hr. No • -lonco T""' "'Top -~~~ ' Lala tcrlpllorlill, par•-'· OO&lt;fe 17!100/Mo PTIFT. 1-888- www .41olburn lng .com lhrr old MLM -.,.y way tlttnOnl ond LCII1oly Poy· l.ttgo Kll&lt;:htn ond Dining
QUirod. For MOll 1 -· M!'· P&lt;l T~ull eon. Model Equlpmtnl. 1 )'Ill or~ Coli "*'- 1• 235-15888 24 IV Rocotdilrg l.QOit 20 10 400 poundo 101111 lhl EMM MONEV rnento. C.. Todlvl Toll Room, 2 Cot Garago, 2
lion Coli 1-too-atl1.e832, 1110: CoN 7 D•ro 1 (11811) oxp. "'"h CDI.eA 100-727· 877e:l36-4072 or •1111 Free
-loll and -..m SS$, 1-211• MACHINE! FREE Info 800· FrH 1·1177·221-1712 A.A. otoragt Bulldlngo. - Ext. 7105
721111083 Ext. 1155
21118 www-oo.oom -.modl10c.oom
www.-4younow.com
1374
242.()383 Ext . 3041
W-. Noll Spoclollol.
Prtc.. 4740)44114478

4 Beautiful Kittens to Give-

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r 1 only·ulld &amp;lh WhHI
• • compar, 34' lnnlbtuok Su·
,. pramo by Gullllrllm, 811&lt;11
rt•. ~I room, llr, 'oft up IWnlng
• ' and mort. lllaulllullnaldl
v and ou1. Aa1oa111 only
"3,100.00.
: 1 only·ulld IOOilonol homl,
~O&lt;ttl Pork by Holly Pill&lt;
• Homtt, abedroom, 2 bllh,
•:• wllh oonlralalt, only
• fZ&amp;,IIOO,OO Ill on your
,.' foundlllon. Phont &amp;H•
' 1V72.

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Lunchaon

I

Pomorov Onlo
Cell CArol lleton tor fniO 1na

I

\
•

MEIGS CO. BIKERS
· 17th Annual
MEMORIAL RUN
Sunday, May 26th

lllurdly J un1 t, 2001
G riCI pltoOPII Churah,

·- ·""l::

I

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

tm

2046

~0:,.,~~· -~

Furn11ntd EIIIOianoy, All
Ulllhlol Plld. Shirt lllh,
1150/mo. V1t 8IOond Avt.
(740)~·3H&amp;
•'

Open MondAy • SAturday 8·11
Clo11d BundA~

No entry Ill, I Wllldl
blkll wolcomt

~~

I•'"·

L.------_.j

I

I

1br. Aporlmonl In Polnl
Ploa11nt. ~oltiancll ~•·
qulrod,, 1 IHiolt"'Y Apt~·
menl In Polnl Ploeunl.
(74Q)•.S·2200

Flats Now $5.00
10" Hanging Baaketa
$4.50
All other potted plant•
25% off ·

Pomeroy P1rklng Lot
F'omoroy, Ohio ·
Mill I I noon • II IVI 1:00 pm
Enct l l l.lkl vlew ~vorn
Albt ny, OhiO
Live muelc, Mel flood, T·Shlrte
R1tll01, Rodoo Evontl
111.00 por p1reon
lllkl 8how

,.!t
;;',;;e.,

r

In lht

'./,. Alhtnll, Ohio

r""

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Buy, 8111 or Tr1d1

IIIH 14•10 Nor~l lllandar
Mobllt Homo. Ovar and
aoro ol land In Polnl Pltol•
ani. 3br. 2 bllh, aonlrll air,
1axe Iron! poroh, e•l blok
porch, 10.12 mtlll bull!flng,
oplll rail lance. MOilinG oul
olatalo. (304)e75·742f
Colo"a MOOIIt Monltl
" 1e211 us ao ea11

..
·
,,
·
...
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.•

2 Avg . Slzo R09m1 Cl11n1d
$2UOea. rm..
Captain Steamor Carpot Oloantr
Toll Fr111 ·B88·338•7847

�..•
~~~~~~~--------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~==========~~~MI~y~U~,~~~~·
•

N•A cro••word Pu••••
;',
------~~~~~----------------~
.~

aaaoa11:

PHILLIP

ACftOII

ALDER

I Rl •1 I llty 4a

IPJiw

·Reels slam Marlins, 81

41 C.Lifllll
41

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Intermediate

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Perhaps this is the
pcrfcd tlUOtation to
~um
up learning
lrridgc. h . was written
hy Thomas Babington
Macnulay. a I 9thccntul'y l:lnglish historian. "Time advances:
facts accumulate;
doubts urise. Faint
glimpses or truth begin to appear, and
shine more and more
unto the perfect dny.
The highest lntellc~ts,
like the tops of mountains, arc the first tu
cutch and to re fleet
the duwn. They are
bright, while the level
below is still in dark-

.ness.''

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What's
. Inside

38 """"""
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1111111Ollln
• 1'llllr,
IOUnllol

BY CIWtuNE HoaucH

40 -IJII ••• II ._., 1141 ,.,..It
dllr .
.. MtWed on 12 lhlololt\, u

HOEfUCHOM't'lliYSENTMLCOM

pE},~-5!-If\Pil

Delmar D. Alexander, 81
Detlllls, A3

· Patterson, secretaries; Linda Monis, Rhett Milhoon, QySial
Ridunond. Earl Pickens, Jack McDaniel, Joyce Jewll, Olen
Kennedy, William Thylor, John Gaus and Jolm Tillis. bus dri-

I "( r--,r--.lr-'.IT2

I
I

n:,.,.

I WEDNESDAY

the clubs
lished
club'aren't
seven.3·3,
(If
you must hope East .
has the diamond ace.)

Buy, Sell or Trade
In tht

CLASSIFIEDSI

I

I' I I I

II

'

recognition of their personal achievet1ent and
1
Wilfong and Kelly Johnson were selected to receive Danforth A~ards. They are pictured here with
Dennis Eichinger. principal. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

·

must

.

I I I I

I

!~· JL~E~TT~E~Stt~N!S~a~uAjR~EsiJ:[]i~[II~'·i
.
SCIIAM.&amp;.IfS ANSW~IS
:
Z/roon - Messy- Often - Kaiser- MIS TAKEN . •
Aller listening to a panel discussion ·concerning oui '
hatlonal politics, I overheard one fallow comment, 'Eveii
when the experts agree they may be MISTAKEN."

=.
....•••

...
~

•

Meigs seniors earn recognition
High: 80s, Low: 50s
Detl:lls, A:Z

: List released
•

POMEROY
The
Ohio Department of
Transportation (ODOT)
has released its comprehensive list of highway
construction· over the
Memorial Day holiday
weekend.
In Meigs County:
• Ohio 143 · will be
CioJied at thejunction of
Ohfo, 684 in Harrisonville
for• cui Vert relllacement.
Motorists are advised to
use 684 to Ohio 692 to
Ohio 143 as an alternate
route;
• A 1,000-foot section of
Ohio 338, just south of
William S. Ritchie Jr.
(Ravenswood) Bridge Will
be closed rlue to new construction
of
the
Ravenswood Connector.
Traffic coming from West
Virginia to Ohio will be
required to turn right onto
338 when. exiting the
bridge. Travelers must use
Ohio 124 as a detour.

OHIO
Pick :S: o-3-5
Pick 4: 9-4·1·6
SuperLotto: 9-18-21-22-2431
lonUI 1111:23
Kicker: 4•5-o-9-3-2
luckeye 5:8-11-17-27-30
Pick ;1 nlaht: 5-3-5
Plck4 ~ 8-2-2-7
W.VA.
Dilly :S: 6-9-5
Deily 4: 2-7-7-o
P;~M•IIN:I: 5-2D-22-23-34 (19}

•
1'hu,.tltly, Muy 23 . 2on2
E~citiug il&lt;tlvllics could be
111 ~wte for you In the year
ahead h(•th In your cun~cr and
vnur personal life. 1'hls may
c•utte ilhtltil through n new
ft'lehJ wh,,'lllntn.xluce you to
nnew wny or lire.
OI',MINI \Mn~ 21-June 20)
.. Add u lilt e ptzzazz to your
Involvement With ull:ers and
It cllll be a jltcut deal 111ore
run. Yuu 're Just the gul or guy
whu cnn do h. Know where 1&lt;1
l&lt;tltk for rutnlince. and you'll
l'lml II. The Astro-Oraph
Mat~h:n:tkcr insrontly revcnls
whkh signs ure .romnnlicully
p~tfccl furY''"· Muil $2.75 to
MUl~llln~ket, •lo till• UCWSilo•. '
·cri 1'.0. Box l HH, Murray
. 111 Stullnn. NY 10156.
.CANCER (June 21-luiy 22)
.. Sulncthing different 1s In
the .works concctnins a 11nuntlullnvolveniehl ynu'Ye been
tlnkming with. Whatever It is,
don't discount it just because
Ills different . II could wurk .
LHO (July 23-Aug. 22) -fhc mind Is o power tool
when used properly tlhd
whclht•r ("" succeed or fail
muy firs be uetcrmincd In
your own :nlnd , Vi•uulizc

r

' I

I

POMEROY - Peoonnel file SUIIllref and fall pugrams
were bired and several resignations accepted at 1\:tsday
night's meeting of the Meigs Local Board of Education.
'Resi~ for retirement
were accepted from
Doo Dixon. Jeannie Thylor and~ Zwt:her. Also resi~
'~Glace Olen as a special education teachef at the Meigs
School.
'11:aclas hired to handle summer school pogran~ ~IM}ing .
enrollment were Step!anie Ash. malh; Joe Bailey, t:.ngJish.
Kathy Hudson. science, and D.!rin Logan. history.
Hila! a.. substirute employees pending certification were
Melissa CoOOe, Connie ~y. l.eah Rose, and Karen
Mllllim, aides; Cindy ShWI, Jayne Humphreys and Thresa

Deaths

When I saw this
deal, it was lullelcd as
an intermediate play
problein . . I wonder
,.
what you think, because I feel It is ad·
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Vtlnccd and only
by Lull C1mpo1
those who have rec.tfiMftY Clphtr CtYPIOII&lt;lmt 111 C!Mitd from quotollcno by ramo... '
pooplo, poll and-'· Eoclllotttr In lllo ctphtt otandl tor enol,.,,'·
flcctcil the dawn
. TIHMt• clue: 0 flll.lll" G
• :'
would get it right.
......
· You are in four
'K X
KZMWL
DIYNK .
spades . and West ,
leads th,e heart king. ·
8 y
KZXFOZKI
I!XF . JFIK
What would be your
rlun, l~spccially given
ZYiliYI N I PYCC Nl
that West probably
has the diamond ace
MHYNCMIKI.'
for his overcall'?
If East gets on lead,
XCMRYI
PYWHYCC Z X •
he will shift to the
(llnmolld jack and xou
c J y l
a •.
will lose four tricks:
one heo.rt, two dinmunds o.nd one dub.
You
stop East
from willhing a trick
With either his dub
queen ot heart 10.
There is only one
way to do that. You 0 ha;rongt letters af the
1eromblod wcrds bo·
must duck the first low ''""
to form lour simple words.
tri~k. Let's assume
I MA N E
West shifts to . the
club jack. Win with f--,.,:.j-:
-1
dummy's ~ing, 1 draw . . 1
. _ . .
two rounds of trt:mps, ~:;,~:;:~~~--~
and continue with the
\f E E K 0
heart jack, du~king .har-r-T'I-,
_,
uguln m the dummy
· 1 1
nfter West covers ~:;:~::;:~~:··~
With
You
W0 L F N .~~~~ · Abuddingactresshadexcusts
win the
the queen.
next club
With dummy's ace, !
fornolrehearslng.l reminded rrer
discard your lust dub .
.., ·that a true professional was somoon the cor!! fully preone who could do their best work
served heart a~e. ruff
V I T T ( R . whenshedidn't---- ---- w.. .,
a club in hand, cross ·
7
B
G Comploto tho chuckle quottd:;
. by filling In tho mining words • ·
back to dummy with . . . . . .
U trump, and discard 11
_ _
you dovolop from IIIP No. 3 below.
dlnmond on the estilb- 49 PRINT NUMBERED
t

't 01 t&gt;t&gt;\'1 ME~

Meigs
approves hires.

'

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1::
llhtdlr
&amp;IIIGIIII
I M1 111111......
. 14
» 1111MY
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yourself us u winner, and you
will be one.
·
·
VlROO (Aug. 23-Stpt. 22)
.. So long a1 yuu slay focused, it' ll be OK tu do something dlfrercnt wllh whatever
it i~ you're working on. But,
kecr, In llllnd that c~tru effort
cou d pay extra dividends.
Lllli{A (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)-

• Once yuu decide thai you
arc determined to get a certain
objective underway, you' ll
see obstacles us opportunities
fur creativity . You'll' not
buckle under for any rea.•on.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov.
22) :· You understand thut if
you w~nt to realize a dream,
you'll more effeclively
achieve it by making oS!&lt;Iciates who are pertinent to your ·
plans feel important
SAOITTARIUS (Nov ..230ec. 21) -- Keep YllU r tni nd
on your soals, willie at the
snme tl me bel ns a team
player. You need both assislo~ce from others and the
cotmant reminder llf whut
you hollt to uccompllsh.
CAPRICORN (Oct, 22•Jon.
19) -- Conditions arc favorable for you. but especially so
when you put all Y'?ur effort

toward accomplishing youi
goals. Roll up your sleevu·
and getto work.
"'
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·FeD.
19)-- Although you'll wan~ 10
take in all ~onsideration~.
you're not likely to belabor.
your decisions once made.
Sometimes you have to let the
chips fall where they m!IY· ·
PISCES (Feb . 20-March
20) -- Outside factors rna)'
help you achieve your goat;,
but you are nol likely to mind
one bit. You 'II sense that yoiJ
can derive substantial benefits
from that which others inltl•
nte.

.

•

ARIES (March 21·AJ1rrl 19)
-- Grt a hold o( a frle~d or 81soclnte who possesses information that you sorely need.
He or she should be readily
available ntlhls time, and will
shore with you the infor:nution you need.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Don't let any doubts
pcr.meute your thinking. Your
ambitious objecti•cs can bo
grntil1ed and rewarded, pro-.
vldcd you believe in ydurself,
und what you are ullempii'!J
to do.
·

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- Recognition for academic and
athletic accomplishment~ were included in the
annual awards a~sembly Wednesday at Meigs
High School. ·
·
.
Amber Snowden was presented the Air Force
math and science award as the most outstanding
senior in those two areas by St Sgt. Christopher
Gildenast.
· An officer from the U.S. Marines gave special
awards to Mindy O'Dell for scholarship and
Darrick Knapp for athletic accomplishments,
and presented the Semper Fidelis Award to Reed
Wyant for his musical accomplishments.
The Archie Griffin Sportsmanship Awards
went to Kara Musser and Evan Shaw, .with-Nick
. McLaughlin r~eiving the scholar/athlete award
·
.
·
.
·.
for the year.
Melinda Chancey and Kelly Johnson were
recognized as the outstanding bOy and girl in the
junior class by the Ohio University Alumni
Association and were presented di~tionaries.
Johnson, along wtth Elizabeth Wilfong,
received the Danforth "I Dare You" book
awards in recognition of personal achievement
and outstanding leadership skills.
Matt 0' Brien, Michele Runyon and Emily
Story were recognized as regional scholars and
presented certificates. College Preparatory
Awards of Merit went to John Lentes, Nicholas
McLaughlin, Monica Moon, Mindy O'Dell,
Kristi Puckett," Misty Puckett, Jessica Roush,
Mary Beth Schultz, Amber Snowden and Tara
Wyatt.
Receiving career Technical Awards of Merit
were Joeline Alhm. Chavonne Burnett, Nicole
Black, Zach Davis, Amber Ellis, Heather Fetty,
Corrie Hoover, Brian McKinley, Kara Musser,
Erin Ralston, Jennifer Reeves, Elizabeth
Russell, Rebecca Smith and Daisy White.
Danny Lenigar was recognized for four years.
of perfect attendance; Greg King was named the
outstanding work study student; and the Jack
Slavin An Award went to Jason Stanley and
Donald Eakins.
The key for the highest average in English
went to Amber Snowden; wit~ the key for the
highest average in speech going to Mindy
O'Dell.
.
Drama awards were given to Shauna White,

BY CIWII.INI HoEFucH ·.

~dltorials

AS
84-6

. 87
AS

A6

Movies

A3

Obituaries

A3

Sports

Weather

hour.

,,,.,. l"o•t

.

..PoPPY DA~AR.E . ·......
HERE AGAIN

!•.

ATHLETE/SCHOLAR AWARDS
Nick
Mclaughlin, center, was the recipient of the athlete/scholar award at Wednesday's awards
assembly of Meigs students. Presented the
Archie Griffin Sportsmanship Awards were Kara
Musser and Evan Shaw. ·

for "made the most of m.Y part," Anthony
Bearhs, best actor, and M:ndy O'Dell, best
actress.
Allison Smith was recognized for having the
PleiHHISenlon,A3

For more than 70 years, the American Legion Auxiliary
has sponsored Poppy Days to remind Americans that
millions have sacrificed their lives and health to keep
our nation strong and free. Today through Saturday, auxIliary members will be on the streets taking donations
for poppies made by hospitalized veterans. All of the
money contributed will go back Into helping the veterans and their families. It's a Memorial Day tradition In
which Gladys Cumings, left, and Marge Fetty of the
Drew Webster Post 39 Auxiliary have participated In for
years. (Charlene Hoeflich)

The co-salutatorians of the class, Kristy and
Misty Puckett, were each awarded full tuition

POMEROY - Scholarships totaling more scholarships by the University of Rio Grande.
Awarded
the
Atwood · Scholars'
School graduating seniors during an. awards Scholarships to Rio Grande were Monica
· assembly Wednesday.. ·
Moon and Nichole Runyon. Those scholarPresented the Ohio Board of Regents ships are valued at $2,600 a year for four
Academic Scholarship of $2,204 a year for years.
Darrick: Knapp was presented the Ohio
four years was Amber Snowden, 2002 class
Valley
College of Parkersburg,.W.Va., scholvaledictorian.
arship
of
$5,250 per year for four years, along
She also received. the Ohio University
Presidential Award of $6,330 a year for four with the Parker Long Memorial Scholarship
years, the MoDpnald's Employee Scholarship of$500.
Other scholarships presented were:
of $1.000, a Linnie Taylor Scholarship of
•The ,Ohio University Earl and Evaline
$750, the Meigs Student Council Award of
$150, and the Holzer Science Award of $250.
PleiiH ... Scholenhlpl, Al

than $140,0Q0 were awarded to Meigs High

2 le:lllll - ........

Calendar ·
Classifieds
Comics
Deer Abby

Also bired were Dennis Ttllis. Steven Cotterill, mechanics;
Thmrny Jarvis, Fllora Patterson, Dorma Buffington. Rebecca
Frechette, Thresa Bin:hfield and Atonda Young, cooks; and
Marvin Roush, Leland Parker, Robert Moore, Fiic White,
Steve Shull and Stanley Watson, custodiall'i.
.Marie Co:bitt wsas hired as a custodian at Meigs High
School on a one-year contract effective June I.
Hired a.. substirue teacher.; fir next school year were Lisa
Averion, Robert Beegle, Dse Bunis, Maria Frecker, Mary Hill,
Lisa Bca:wkef. ~topher. Kennedy. Stev~ Little, Melissa
Love, Michelle Miller; baniel Otto, Gay Penin, Ma:y Powell,
Herllett Redman, Kimberly Roush and Bobby Stanley.
Substirute employees who did not have their contracts
renewed due to other employment or emploYment conflicts
were Jeanie Allen, William Lijvender, Stephen Rife, Hairy
. Rire, Gina Thomas, Beverly Allen, Diana Bowles, Anna
Darst, Lawson Higgins, Pearlie JeweU, Michael Hawkins,
John Fmk, Robert Brite, Rick Hoover, Chris Neece and
Rodney Walker.
Carol Evall'i was hired to operate sununer makeup classes
for middle school students, and Catherine Han and Ann Barr
as tutors for a health handicapped students at the rate of $15 per

.Scholarships top $140,000 for seniors
HOER.ICHOMVOAILVSENTINEl.COM

·1nc1ex

. ._ __
JUNIORS
Ohio University Alumni
Assoclatlonjinntlally recognized the top boy and
glri . I~Jlle junior class o!}v1elgs High s, c~~!&gt;l and.
pl;sents them with a dlctronary. Here, Mllilf
'tVJifon~, guidance counselor, presents the books
to Mindy Chancey 11nd Kelly Johnson .

. vers.

81·4

A2

0 2002 Ohio Volley PubllshlllJ Co,

Need

ICitOLf.RIIM' WillERS- These Meigs Hillh school seniors who will gradlJ.
ate In ceremonies Friday at 8 p.m. In Larry R. r\brlson G)mnaslum were awartled scholalshlps totallr« more than $140,000 In the. awards ciaY program
Wedneflday. From left, fmnt row, are Monica Moon, Mindy O'Dell, ·NIChola
Runyon, Amber Snowden, Ktisty Puckett, Misty Puckett and Tara Wyatt: second
row, Nk:k Mclaughlin. Evan Shaw, Carrie Abbott. Delana Eichinger, Mary Schultz
and Joellne Allen; and tnlrd rCMI, Matt Williamson, Zack Davis, Darrick Knapp,
Erin Hartson,

Daisy White and Brad Baylor, (Charlene Hoeflich)

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•

I
'

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