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-

Page BIS • The D•lly Sentinel
. _..

'

Monday, M•y 20, 2002

www.myd811yaentlnel.com

aluoos

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Eastem advances to finals, 6

NIA Crouword Puule

PHILLIP
ALDER

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION- 'Every comedian working In hll Ill•
anllhadow owe1 him an enormou• debt' - Comedy wrller fill
Kenleron Milton Berte
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N1 L 0 G E

CHESTER - There will
be no meeting of the Shade
River Lodge on Wednesday
night. The announcement
of a special meeting was
made in error.

Salt canceled
POMEROY - A sher·
iff's sale-echeduled ror May
31 in the matter of Horne
National Bank against
Robert F. Bergman, and
others, has been canceled.

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my elderly aunt I was golng to get Involved In local politics.
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Declarer may try to
establish a long iliarnond or to ruff two
clubs in the duml1)y,
but West gets that
telling trump trick.
:~·
'
'

•

Band .reflects on past.
year at ·annual banquet

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

~~~st' shi~~e!~~dirh~~ ':~~:t:~' S@~~lA-~'B!fJS• ::::~

m~;~rUMBEREO IT

POMEROY - American
Legion baseball tryouts will
be held Wednesday and
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Meigs High School baseball field. The event will be
held rain or shine.
Information is available
from Danny Runyon, at

698.()()()3.

A

v ~~ft/~: ~~~h;h~~~:g q~:d~
you dovelop from ltop No. 3 below.

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Pick J: 3-9..()

Pick 4: 3-3..()·3

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Buckeye 5: 11·16·21·28-

Eldest· Unify· Rainy· Ledger · INTRUDERS

35

1 thought I had finally gotten my kids. to appreciate
clas.sical music when I arrived home and heard opera
on the stereo. To my dismay they said they were using
It to scare away any INTRUDERS.

Pick J nltflt: 9· 1·9

Pick 4 nljht: 3·1·1·1
W.VA.

DII!Y J: 2-4·8
DeilY 4: 5-2·2-4

Cllli 25: 4-6-7-18-20..25
-·l'

shine in again.

CANCER (June 2! -luly ll)
.. Unfortunalely for you, thai
mo"'y in your pocket cot1ld
be burning a hole. De carerul
nol lo burden yourself with

long-lerm financial obliga·
lions lhat could cause hard·
•hiJ!.·
LEO (July 23-Auf. 22) ·•
Companion• are wllhng to be
helpful. but only if you 1rea1
lhem wilh re•pect and don'l
lake lhem for sranled. If you
hope 10 make progreu on
your pel projecl, make 1hose
you're involved wilh feel importani.

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22) •
• This may not be the day lo
trade on lhe help or knowle(!ge o( colleagues. They,
m1ght be more aucceuful al
ahifting lheir burden• onlo
you 1han you shiflina yours
oniOihem.
.
LIBR~ (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) ·
• The lafl person you 1hould
discu11 a promising endeavor
with is a friend who lacks
your ima4ination and lends lo
be neaat1ve. You need encouraaement, not discouragement ·.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov.
22) • lt'1 very pooiible lhal
your ambiliou1 objcctivet can
be fulfilled. However, you
could neple lhe functional by
doina everything lhe hard
way. Circumven1 obstacles.
don't C~IIC diem.
SAGilTARIUS {Nov. 23·

Dec. 21) .. Don't ignore lhe suggestion of anolher jusl be• •
cause you have lillie respccl
for lhe penon who makn il. .
Remember Ihat 0111 of lhe .
moulhs of babes some1ime1
comes wisdom.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) .. A friend of yours who ·
has done you many favors in
lhe paS! miaht come 1o you •
for .one. II would be a mislake
not 10 honor the request No
mauer how busy you are,
make 1he lime.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Peb;
19) .. Should lhinp not run
as smoolhly •• utual with;
your male, look in lhe mirror
before pointing finaers. :
There't a slrong chance lhal .
1he image of the culprit mighr
be fllunillhere.
;
PISCES (Feb. 20-March'
20) .. It's wonderfullhal you
feel indusltious, but be careful "'" 10 take on more SJ·
signmenll that you can man- :
age. You could end up wilh a
mess O,!l your hands.
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
.. Perllaps 1he ISJI!hina you'll
want 10 do ia 10 atlend a 10eial
function . However, if you
don't, you could offend aomcone who is.impmtanl 10 your ·
immediale objeclivea.
.

...
'

,'
•
•

11rd'•• -10I'IIpl

calendar
aassifieds
COmics
DearAbby
Edhoria~

5
7·9

10
S
4

Movies

3
3

Sports

6-7

Obituaries
Weather

BY CHAIILINI HOII'LICH
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - Monday
night was an evening of
reflection and recogn1tion
murked by laughter and .tears
from senior class members of
the Meigs Marauder Band .
It was the annual end-of·
the-yeur banquet held in the
high school cufeterial where
the band members, rarnilies
und friends . gathered to
honor the graduates, many of
whom hud played in the bund
all four years of high school.
Several of the seniors rem·
inisced .ubout what band had
meant to them. They spoke of
the friendships they hud
·
developed of the struggles TOP AWARDI - Toney Dln&amp;ase, Meigs band director, prethey expe;iell¢ed, ancJ..of· tho·-·••nted .the . 4rll)~ward, the top muslc~!l'l award, to MlfildY .•
fun they hud. They told sto· O'Dell, and the director's ewerd to Delane Elchln&amp;er.
rles about the impact of band
on their lives and the disci·
pli ne und strength they had
gained.
They pruised · director
Toney Dingess for his
.patience and understanding,
and thanked him for giving
them some of the "best times
of their lives."
In
reponse, · Dingess
stressed that band is not just
about music and awards, but
about students gaining focus,
setting goals, and learning
about rewards from hard
work. He e11pressed apprecin· TROPHY WINNIRI - Reese Wyant received the outstanding ·
tion to the Band Boosters und musician's trophy,. and Monlda Moon and Matt Wlllamson, the
110 percent awards, lett to rl&amp;ht, from Toney Dlnaesa, baod
PhtaH ... Banquet. 1
director.
.

Bv TONY M. l.ucH
TLEACH.MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
SYRACUSE With
Mei(IS County 's . 2001-02
school )'eor corning to 11
close und summer officially
urriving next month, pre!JII·
rutions are under wa~ tor
thi s weekend's official
openin~ of London Pool In
Syracuse.
Bobbi Hill. pool munuger.
sold the pool will open for
business on Suturduy nnd
those who ullcnd this seu·
son's grund opening will be
permitted to swim free of
.charge. ·
"In un ell'ort to promote
the opening of the pool, we
ure huving {I free, swim duy
on Suturduy," slttd Hill. us
she checked the pool's wnter
levels during the t1111ng·up
process.
"We're really hoping for
good weather so thut u nicesb.ed crowd will turn out,"
she i1ddcd. "The weuther hus
recently been cooler than
normul, so, we're keeping
our fingers crossed." ·
According 10 Hill,. swim·
ming poor stuff recently

hired for the summer season ·
Include Lindsey Smith, he11d
lll'e guurd: Amunda Fetty,
Joseph McCulland Jennifer .·
Young, llt'e guards.
Also hired ns life gunrds,
pending certit'lcution, Is
Brundi
Dully,
Jesse
Huddleston, Crystul Le11Ch,
Thomas Shepurd und Amber
Snowden.
"W
1 1
e ure current Y P an·
nins severul activities for
th7 sum.mer•. such u~ swim·
mmglessons, teenmght und
wnter uerobics for senior cit·
izens, however, they ull will
· huve to be upproved by vii·
luge councl ,before being
ill]p,lemcnted, suid Hill.
In the meuntlme 1 we are
schcdul,!ng times for pool
P"rtie~. she udded.
London Pool's hours ure
Monduy through Suturduy,
noon-6 p.m.; Sunduy, 1·6
p.m. Oenerul odmission ls
$3 for udu Its, $2 for stu·
dents, $1 fqr pre-schoolers
and children under the oge
of three get in free.
Single season posses ure
uvuilnblc tor·$30 per person.

ALMOIT RIADY - Bobbl Hill, pool manager for London
Pool In Syrecuae, ehaeka water Ieveii durin&amp; effort• to fll~
up the pool on Monday. Acoordinl to Hill, the pool will offl.
clally opan on Saturday and those who attend the opanlna
will be permitted to swim free of eharae. (Tony M. Leach) :

Meigs joins in natio~al Eastern board .approves sta~
.EMS Week celebration

OHIO

.

Monday. May 20, 2002
Your lhousht processes are
vi1al aJ to whelher you are
~ucccufu l in the year ahead.
If you approach thin)!• wilh a
pooilivc frame of mtnd, !here
1on't anything you won'l be
able to succeufully accom·
pli~h.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) .. Your problems won't
COIJlC odl of family situations,
but lhrough outoide involvemenlo. De careful that you
don't bring your fru•lrations
home. Major changes are
ahead for Gemini in lhe coming year. Send for your .Aslro·
Graph prediclion~ by mailing ·
. 52 and SASE to Aslro·Grapll
c/o lhis newspaJ!C:r. P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Stalion.
New York. NY 10156. De
aure 10 llale your zodiac sign.
GEMINI (May 2t-June 20)
.. Chances are that you 'II
wake up wilh a wonderful optimislic ouliook. However. as
you gel ou1 and tlart mlivlng
aboul in lhc world, it mi.shl be
all too easy 1&amp;1)111 on gloomcolored glauco. Let !lie sun-

London Pool
opens for season
tliis weekend ·

'

lENlOR PLAQUES- Seniors presented plaques In recoanltlon of their band participation were
from lett, front, Sara Moon, Monica Moon, Caleb Ellis, Addle Hubbard, Matt Williamson and
Rees Wyant, and standing, Chavonne Barnett, Chelsea Montaomery, Bobble Burson, Beth
Russell, Shauna White. Delane Eichinger, Mindy O'Dell and Amber Snowden.

nex.t?
If West held the
club ace, he would
(should!) have cashed
it before leading the
,.._._., third spade. So, the
defenders huve taken
ail possible side-suit
tricks. To defeat the
contract, they need a
trump winner. When
this ts the position,
=-&lt;....._. give a ruff-and-discard. If East leads his
last spade at trick
four, the defense can
s~o~e'o ~o~Ave ROVNP
win . the battle.
EA~ LIKE TWO COOI&lt;IES,
Whether or not South
816 EVES LIKE TWO
ruffs in hand, West
MORE COOKIES ANI'
does best to discard a
A NOSE L.IKE A
diamond, although a
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COOKIE ..

l MONDAY

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37 Kind olg~~

Karl Kraus, an Austrian satirist, wrote,
"A child learns to discard his ideals,
whereas a grown-up
never wears out his
short pants."
.That is true, but
adult bridge players
have · to discard their
ideals .. rules learned
as children •· when
the situation de·
munds. In today's
deal, would you pre·
fer to declare in or
defend against four
hearts?
North's four clubs
is a splinter bid. It an·
nounces game values
with four-card heart
support and a single·
ton or void in clubs.
West should start
with the spade ace.
After another lead,
say the club king, declarer win~ . draws
trumps, plays off
dummy's diamond
honor~. ruff~ n diamond in hand, trumps
a club in the dummy,
and cashes the dia·
mond five. His 10
tricks are four top
hearts, four dia·
monds, the club ace
and that diamond ruff
in hand.
.
Under the spade
uce, East signals encouragement with the
nine. Then, West
cashes the spade king
und continues with

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

M ...a County"a

11

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BY TONY M. LIAoH
TLEACHifMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - In an effort
to promote National EMS
Week. which runs through
Saturday, both state and local
EMS officials are encourag·
ing the public to pay tribute to
the men and women who pro·
teet our nation's health and
safety.
This year's EM$ Week
theme, "BMS: Help is a
Heartbeat Away," emphasizes
!he responsiveness of erncr·
gency medical services
around the . country, while
underACOrin g the importance
of the national 9-1·1 emer·
gency number system.
II al110 addresses the com·
mitment and dedication of the

750,000 EMS providers who

serve their community.
"National EMS Week hon·
ors the lifesaving care EMS
providers offer nationwide,
24-houts a day, seven days a
week. EMS Week is a greal
opportunity to recognize the
contributions of t~e past, and
to build upon them for lhe
future," said Laura Tiberi,
EMS executive director.
Gene Lyons, administrator
of the Meigs Erner_senc,Y
Service in Pomeroy, sa1d th1s
week's national recognition
of EMS r.r.Onnel is "very
impomint and "descrving of
America's true heroes."
"EMS is a vital public ser-

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

BY BIIIAN J, nno
BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Boord of
Educalion approved summer
school staff and certified
positions for the 2002·03
school year durins its regular
meeting last week.
The board hired Di ~ ie
Sayre, Linda Faulk and
Sandy Needs as summer
school intervention teachers,
pnd Carolyn ~itchie as a
summer school bus driver.
The following classified
employees were approved
for the upcoming school
'year: Kay Gillilan, Lisa
Sidwell, Lee Swain, Brad
Holsinger, Arch Rose, bus
drivers; Peggy Moore,
Denise Mora, Dorl nda
Thomp110n, Robin Eastman,

Kathy Riley, Laurie Ann
Barber. cooks·! Susy McKu~.
Charles Cr slip, Juckte
Westfa ll, Kathy Riley,
Bonnie
Battin, James
Orueser, cuKtodians; Janet
Life, S.heliu Connoll~,
Kuyleen Hayman, Debbie
Drake, Kaylu Pullins, Hecre·
tarieH; and Robin Dorst und
Connie Soulsby, aides.
The board approved the
foilowiniJ certified employ·
ees: Rotlert Beegle, Sllaron
Cunningham,
Lucille
Haggerty, Amanda Milhoan,
Tamru Linton, Mary Powell,
Maxine Whitehead, Rran
WilliarnH, James Yeru1n,
Grace Weber, Mary Ann
Moore, Catherin.e Creehan,
John Chilmonik, Nancy
Scarbrouah, Dale Hoocver,
Erin Hemmelgarn, Steve

Little, Oury Perrin, Mary
Hill. Cuss Cleluild, Dorothy
Faulkner, Greg Jeffers and
Mike Moore.
Shawn Bush was hired as a
high school math teacher,
and Heuther Wolfe us play
direclor the senior pluy for
the 200 1·02 !K!hool year, at
half salary.
Supplemental contracts
were awarded to Patrick
Newland, head football
coach; · Howie Caldwell,
head boys basketball coach;
Rick Edwards, head giri8
basketball coach; Samuel
Thompson, head junior high
football and elementary student council advi110r.
The following students
were approved for ' open
PluM ... hltanl, I

IMI .. .a vital pultllc ..rvlce, a -r•te•.
of care for vlctl•• of
ancl ·
••• leu• llln... ancl •~lury.

•.W••

#Wp II

Away

National Emergency
Services Week
May 19 • 25

Holzer Medical Center and the
HMC Emergency Department salute our
EMS partners during this special week..

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holze1· Difference

www.holzer.org

�'
•

The Daily Sentinel

••

1l32.

l'U*&amp;l-tt.••

•

LOCAL BRIEFS

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Ohio weather
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client $toys and could nol.c:ontlll:t him. TlleJe i&amp; no phone li&amp;tlna.
D...W -":! 25
·.
under
Rambo's
name
in
the
Cleveland
area.
-r-' •~ ..........
Dfugi\O!Ied 14 months 1110 with pwll:l'eAtic canc:er and al~
(AP) - An ex-c:onvic:t whose telephooe coli
100
six m011ths to live, Rambo spent four days last .wcCll: in toCLBVBLAND
his. latest 111p1 victim wu triCed by caller ID has. been senUniversity Hospltlll rec:elvill8 cl\emothertlpy and WIIS too ill to tenced to 25 yews in orison. .
..
·
1
•
~.o'Oittc to court. om snid.
Dennis Rus.s., 39, ofCle'lelllld. wu sentenced Monday 011 his.
guilty paw to , . . ki~na and felonious uslllllt In dWI
attack 011 a &lt;40-yeU-old Bruns.wiC:k \VOIIIIIIIS she walked ~
BV TH!ASSOCIATED PRES$
· warmer.. Hlahs in the lower
n In Cle'leland 011 Oct. 6.
6...;...
•
Temperatures in the 30s are 70s. Calm wlnds.
LORAIN (AP) - The city council hilS approved the pun:hase Interstate
Russ.
was
releued
from
prison
Sept.
6
011
parole
'""'"
~
likely .aallin across the. area Wednesday night. .. Clear. of 19 112 ntres of wutcrfront land that hllll 1111iron-ore pellet let- felonious Wllull and qaravated buriluy con'Actlons. in 11*.
early Wednesday before thl'l Lows In the mid 40s.
mlnlll th1t will be tllken 11part and reussembled 26 miles away In After rapina his latest Vlotlm, ho tOok IMlf phone number and
winds shift to the southwest
Extended foMut:
Cleveland.
laler tallcd tier se'lel'lll times. Pollee tnckild his num.- by
1111d start a warmup.
Thursday... Mostly sunny. The council voted Mondll)' night to approve the purch.se of caller
m and a phone ~.
By Wednesday unemoon, Hlahs In tlie upper 70s.
the Lnke Eril'l wnterftont she from International Steel Group.
the southwesterly breezes .· Thursday nlaht..Moslly The countllllt!telld to issue $3.2 million In temJIOI'Ili'Y notes to
fax
should bring Ohio tempera· clear. Lows in the mid 50s.
pay for it. .
.
·
.
..•••
tures a lot closer to normlll Frlday... Mostly clear. Hlahs Mayor Crllig Foltln snid the city must make Interest payments SILVERTON (AP)- A proposal to increase~ cll)''s I perwith highs runglng from the In the upper 70s.
of $80,000 per year and wlll use federal block arunt flinds,
cent earnlq&amp; tax, wbloh wu tied In preliminary VOte counts
mid·60s to low '70s.
Saturday ...Partly cloudy The pellel terminal structure und equlp1nent wlll be sold to the May 7, wu defeated by one vote aftei provisl011al votes were
Sunset tonight will be at with a chance of showers and Clevelund·CuyaltOgn County Port Authority and .will be counted by the Hamllton County Board Of Elections.
8:45, · and sunrise on thunderatorms. Lows in the reassembled In Cleveland closer to ISO's steel mill, formerly Of the idne provisional votes cast In this Onclnnati suburb,
Wednesday Is nt 6: II a.m.
mid 50s and hlahs In the operated by LTV Steel.
five were IIJiains.t the 0.25 percent tax inorease.
.
Weather forec:ut: ·
upper 70s.
Provlsloriil votes are thOse cast by voters who have moved
Frost advisory for early Sunday...Partly cloudy with
IIIII Jtliii ........
from one precinct to IIIOthef since the last electi011.11tey ~not
Wednesday momlna.
a chance of showen and thun·
.......
·certlfied fn the reaular count until the board checlts to see If
Tonlaht ...Clear and chilly. derstonns. Lows In the upper ClNCINNATI (AP) - City officials and several suburbs are those persons are reaistered.
·
Areas of frost away from 50s and hlahs In the lower baokina a low-Interest home Improvement loan crolfllll to tJy On May 28, all vriies cast on the tax Increase will be recount~ ·
cities and m~or river valleys. 70s. . .
·
to halt the outward migration of mlddll"class re&amp; dents.
ed, pendlna Silverton's approval, board of elections offici~
Near record lows of 32 to 36. Memorial
Day... Partly . Hamilton County's Investment Advisory Committee, com· said Monday.
'
•
Calm winds.
cloudy. Lows In the •mld 50s prisedoftwocommlsslonersandthecouncytreasurer,approved
•
Wednesday .. .Sunny and and hlaha In the mid 70s.
the plan MondiiY.. It will go Into effect June 3 uslna the counl)''s
investment portl'ollo to tilke three percentage polnta oft' home
•
rnn'
.
lm&amp;fvement loans for residents whose property value is ~low HAMILTON (AP) - Tho Federal Regul1tciry Commission
3
$ u ·~so,OOO can be borrowed for five years from any of five · has decided to reo~ the fi&amp;hl~ pier 11 tlie ~·s h~ectrlc
clpatlna banks. The proaram will Initially offer $28 milllon pl~o:.~~~~edV:e';~~ 't!t s~?.u ~~st ~
CLEVELAND (AP) - A member of the Cleveland pollee
SWAT team reslaned from the force after pleadlna aullty to
oana.
.
.
because of sifety concerns.
1
Qld
shootina out the window of a_pualna car In a cue or road raae. Commissioner Todd Portune drew up the proaram. which Is Celeste Miller, spokeswoman for the commission,
Oeoft'rey Stevens, 36, an officer for nine years, pleaded aullty modeled after a similar one in Cuyahoga County. So far, 43 of Monday the .,ency believes that reopenlna the pier at t1te
·
. Greenup Loeb and Dam would pose no safiit thrUI.
;·
Mond~ to felonious uaauli for ftrlna at the car of Oerald the 49 jurladlctiona In the county li11ve signed on.
Stueber, the Cleveland Eut Tech Hlah School football coach.
•1
· The U.S. Anny Corps of Enatneers ~·4 o pi!&lt;I:Sqli)CI fisbef&lt;
Stevens was off-duty at the time.
·
to
melt In advrlcatlna for the reopeninl. amlllon bfttclal•
In return for his reslanatlon and plea. prosecutors &amp;IJMI'd to
opposed the reopening because they belfeve terrorism Is still ·.a
drop a speclficatlon that Stevens used a aun In the crime, spar- XENIA (AP) - People Involved in both the delivery and threat.
hookup of a contulner of nitrogen that resulted In the dealhs of
Ina him an automatic three-year sentence.
four
nunin~ home patlents will testify In the trial of the gas
Stevens now could be plaCed on probation or be sent to prison
company,
a rosecutor said.
IUSped
from two to elaht years. Cuyahoaa County Common Pleas
.
lt
Stephen olaver, chief trial counsel for the Greene County
1udae Anthony .Calabrese 1r. wlllaentence him June 25.
CINCINNATI
(AP)
A
former
realstered
brOker
for .a
prosecutor's office, sllld he wllllllso cllll to the stand Food and
Toledo-area
securities
finn
pleaded
aullty
MondaY
In
U.S.
DNa ~dminlatratlon officials who investlaated the deaths.
District
Coun
to
a
charge
of
consplrlna
to
col'll!lllt
wile
fraud.
flctl
BOC Oases, of Murray Hill, N.J., Is Chlll'lled with four counta
Thomas McGhee, 71, of Swanton, slid he helpecs Paul
·
... ~.
1 ted l6 11
of reckleu homicide In the December 2000 deaths at Carrlaae· LaLonde,
55, of Cincinnati, obtain more than $880,00() In fees
BEREA (AP) - Aman who hu "'"'n conv c .
mea over by·the·Lake nunlna home In Bellbrook, about I0 miles south·
the past 20 yean for drunken drivlna mla!led a court date on a eut of Dayton.
based on false promises that certificates of cleJIOIIt owned ~Y
17tli count and· also faces an 18th DUI cbarae In nearby . Aner a sht·man alx·woman jury was selected In Greene other people could be ''rented" and used as collateral for loan~,
.
• Cleveland.
·
.. County Common 'Pleas Court on Monday, vlsltlna Judae prosecutora said.
Berea Municipal Judae Mark Comstock iaaued a WWTant Wllllum MacMillan recessed the trial for the day and ICheduled LaLonde received fees from Maaellan Entertainment Inc., of
Monday for the arrest of Daniel Rambo, 46, after he failed to opening statements for Tuesday.
California, which wanted loans for movie projects, the aovem·
show In court on ,his WTeatln nearby Brook Park on Jan. 2.
mont said. But Magellan never got the loans and LaLonde never
Rambo'il attorney, John 0111, said he wasn't aure where his
returned the fees.
·
~

..,..,

Warmer conditions will return

1,1110

..,..,

1,1110

Elml1a811!

County

to

Popu.•-r ..._ will

qultslfterplea

:·

rnr!:

· FDA lnY1Sd11ton

testifY'

Conspiracy

Man

lath DUI

..

truck-driving
killer · .
rr:;;=:ai.r.:l

Attomet

mother1s

· COLUMBUS . (AP) - she moved back to Ohio two
Tonya McCartor Willi hardly weeki after the escape but
hldlna.
never contacted her two
She and her husband traded etttanaed brothers ot an aunt
· ahit'ta drlvina his lrlletor·traller who ailllllves In the Columbus
ria crou·country, haulina area.
aciodA u far u California ana ''She never IIW anyone who
Maine. Before that, 1he wotlced 1eemed 10 retoanize her,"
in an lnsiii'IIICI aaency In her O'Brien said. "It's uncanny."
1uburban Columbut home· . She wu a bartender, a coun·
town.
try club manqer and lnaurance
But proteeuton II)' 1he qency worker. She kept her
avoided l'flatlvcs acrou town cilmlnal recotd clean except for
who knew her u Marao minot parldna and trllit1c viola·
freshwater, convleted of mur· don1, authorities tald.
der at aae 21.
·
But lawyer Richard Platt laid
AuthOrldea say McCartot 11 Monday that hi1 cllent "denlea
fre1hwater, who climbed a belna Marao freshwater. She
fence at a Tenneuee priaon 32 wlll challenae the circum·
yean qo ltld made a new life stances uncfer which she
under an assumed name In her alleaedly admitted the w-. 0 ., ...
. HT _ Merdo Fr••hweter
native Ohio. for the past two M~~r~o freshwater."
,....,
• "
years, she lived In an apanment The woman w81 denied ball 'it ahown In 11 Greenville, Milt.
eomplex 12 mllet froin where Monday, and Platt aald abe will · police photo on Dec. 27.
she arew up.
fiaht extradition and challenke 1966. Freahwatll', 53, one of
Her attorney called it a case · the leaallty of her a~re~t at a Tenneaeee'e orlalnel lOp 10
of m!JIIIcen Identity and said hearlnaacheduled lot June 18 fu&amp;ltlvea for the flrlt-de&amp;r••
lhe wlll challenp tlnaemrlnt In Prailklln County Munlcl~ murder of e Memphle liquor
evidence and fllht exlildldon Court.
. etore clerk, .waa arreated
10 Tenne11ee.
Piau said hi• client will deny . sundey In Columbu•. ·Ohio.
Aulhorlda said Preshwlter, that her flnaerprlnts match (AP)
·
53, w11 mated Sunday at a Frethwater'l.
health club near the llrport. lnveltlptors In Tenne11ee ·t"" Tennessee Bureau of
Tenne11ee inveadaaton abOut a and COJumbu• 1aJd the · tlveadaation
month sao traced her throuah woman'• =~n !Children Preafiw~ ei!Capcd from the
the .allu Tanya Hudklnt, IUid three
Jldren knew Tennessee PriAOrt for Women
Mcear!or'• widOwed name for ~n11 of, former life.
011 Oct. 4, 1970, alona with
more than a decade llefore nllt'· 'We don t believe her current another woman who wa1
ryllta Dlryl McCartot Jn 2000. hUJband or the son who Wid recaplllred In the early 1990s,
Priulklln Count): ProaecuiOr wllhheratthedmeofherlli'e1t Department of Correction

aon O'Brientold
.aid inveatlpton
Monday that tald
• Lauy
anythlna
aboutdirector
her pu~"
Prelhwller
WalllK1e1
of authoritles •ald.
(

Healthy.Start
Healthy Families:
·.

1,111111

1.$00

support for the EMS syst.tm.''
l.lOO
In R«~anhion of Ntent
heroic l\lltloos of mllll)' RMS,
1,100
f\re and other public satecy
peMnnol during 11nd fullow1,111111
vice, a system of we for vk:- lng the e~ts of Sept. II, l
tims of sudden and &amp;erious special, patriotic lo,a bas
..,..., 100 illness
or 11\Jury," said Lyons. been de$11.1\td.
Tho ~. white and bl~~e
''Tbls ncoanltlon Is an excel·
''EMS:
Praud to Serve" loao
lent WI'¥ to honor the men
and women who flee ldvet- ~- developed i.o be worn
sll)' every day while attempt· with pride by those lndlvidu·
als w"ho protellt the nation's
IRf to save human live$."
Durlna this weelc of bulth and safe~)' at borne.
Accordlna to statistics,
recoanltlon, we enco~rqe
area residents to stop by their Ohio bit$ over 36.000 l\lltlve
loc:al EMS stations and say EMTll at all levels that
.
bello," added Lyons. "We Include, Flnt Responder,
WASHINGTON (AP) 'COLUMBUS (AP) - effective.
cannot emphasl1e enou&amp;h the Basic, Intermediate and Bush admlillslrltlon pYedlc·
Wendy's fast·food company ''This Is an example of Importance of community Paramedic.
tlons thllt more terror
honor Its late fouiider, customers wantin&amp; to see
attack*
on Americans are
P.ave Thomas, by llddlna a Dave because of the areat
virtually
certain to attur are
loference to him rn c:ommer- respect be had amana con- .
'
.
'based In part on new lnteiH·
aence suaaestlna al·Qalda
rc
·
plottlna lsJln the rise lll!llln.
."i Wendy's lftternatlonll Inc. build on c~t ones ·par•
•
The latest lnfotmiitlon
the
·
ca~e
1will deScribe food as belna trayina D~blin shows an Increase In com·
'preparecl Dave's way" in upacaleColumbus suburb of
munlcatlons and other
tlie comrnerciala toutina the 30,000 people that is bead·
act Ivltl by Osam11 bl n
Laden s al·Qalda network
sloaan
"It's better
Wendy'scommu·
- as a
wblch promote
the bore,"
low- quarters
friendly, to
multiracial
over the piiSt few weeks,
~ced-"Super Value Men~," nity.
·
suilaestlng
new attacks may
company spokesman Bob The new commercials will
be In the works, said a
·&amp;eninl Slid Monda~.
air mld.June, Bertini said.
WASHINGTON (AP) - out of her bouse In senior U.S. ort'lclat, spe11k·
The company also will pay Some parents turned to rela· · N111uautuck, Conn., while Ina on condition of
1 Thomas, who died of liver
qancer In Janull')', was the tribute to Thomas In Its lives; others brouabt their studylna to become n teacher. aMnymlty.
'ljompany's premier pitch· stores with a new line of kids to work or arranaed for ''I dldn 't want someone else
But this sort of Increase In
man ln a 12-year advenislna posters that say "We'll job-sharlna with anotliOr par- rnl&amp;lna my children," said volume hns h11ppened sever· ·6ampalan that featured bls · l.lwaya do It Dave's way" ent. Mothers like Jayne Williams, who had continued al times before - even
Jolkay, sometimes self· and feature a picture of Wlll11111s quit office jobs to worklna nfler her son, now a 9lnce Sept. II.
.~ffaolna humor.
Thomas In his aianature start businesses from 1\ome. 7-year-old, was bom.
The official portrayed the
, The •d~ilina camPilian white short-sleeved shirt and · New 2000 Census data for · While at work, divorced ·lntelllaence as a new peak
·Ia a way , to acknowledge red tie, holdlna a spatula.
20 states shows no abitement prison auard Brady Marshall In a hlgh·llnd·low cyde of
ouatome~ connection to "Our name Ia Wendy's, but in the decades-old trend of bounces between having a terrorist threats that coun·
omaa, Bertini said. He we will always be Dave's more youna children arowina baby sitter 1111d his alrlfrlend tertermrlsm authorities have
d Wendy'~ has no plana to ·place," add the posters, up wlih all the parents In thefr watch his 3-year-old daughter trncked for yenrs. The l11st
e Thomas lmaae or voice which will replac•, exlstlna household wQrklna.
and l·year-old son.
peak was In March, when
·
the new commercials.
posters of Thomas which do
But il wide ranae of socloe· "Due to my work hours, ni·Qaldll flntlnclol nt tlvlty
'
,. ''There has been a tremen·
b
h
conomlc forces durlna the alternating scliedule, altcmat• and
communications
· ~ous outpourlna on tho part not ave 1 e 11oaan, 8 011 1n1 1990s allowed many of those Ina dAys otT, 1111d addltlonlll stepped up, That wus linked
:of
our cuatomen; people said.
·
working J)lltents to become duties, an actual day care cen· to tti·Olllda leader Abu
1
bo have been touched by He said stores can choose more Involved In child reath
1 "
~aue'a life and all that· he whether to hanJ lllladdltlon·
•
tcr is out of t e quest on, Zubaydnh, who was subs!!·
captured
In
Ill •
f f1' I
Ina! rather than relying on .wald Marshall who works at quently
tatood for," he aald.
. al packaae10 ve 1 ftns por- chl d·care centers and baby Port Leavenworth In KansM. Paklstnn.
.
•' In the days followlna trayina
tlmel ne of sitters. Some worked out Census 2000 data releued
Another pe11k In thrent
:bave'a death, Bertini laid a . Thomas' life, career and th~ more nexlble schedules with Tuesday for nine states details reporting took plat:t! lnst
'number of customers patron· charities he su'¥lorted, their employers, while others the number of children under summer and is now re11ard·
ltzed the atoree to expreaa lncludina his Dave homas •decided to open Internet• ne 6 with all parents either
llhelr sympathy, which led to Poundatron for Adoption. . bued bualnesses ot home.
worklna or looklna for a job.
ljncreased allea at the time.
The company had worked
The 1!196 welfare law,
th b ad
.
!· Roaer Blackwell, a mar- on the lid concept without which nudaed more peoJ)Ie However, e ro ca1eaory
llcetlna. profeuor at Ohio the reference to Thomas for from public asslstll!lce rolls did not dlstlnaulsh between
iState Unlveralty and a retail· more than two years, •nd Into the work force, also slnale· and two-parent faml·
llna conault1nt, aaid he commercials were belna played 11 pitt in the 1990s' lies, or whether the Jolil were
. ~ouaht the new ada will be nlmed when Thomas died.
~~~~~fCtW~~~~as lmpor·
~;~~~i release, 22
tant;" said Williams, who gult statel now have.,dnta from th~
ulx-day·II·Week office joli in 2000: census long form,
marketing when her dauahter whlcb also covered topics
reached her first birthday. She such r as education nnd .
now sella home-care prOducts inCOfliO.

EMS

ru.,...1

·•

Latest tenorism wamings .

tied to real intelligence as
well as new Bustl strategy

Wenc:Ws to pay tribute to

·founder in commercials, stores
will

. :~:w.~:;~:c:.=~ ·u~e:n~~~':nerc~a~swm . Work·tn~·

arents finding
more c I d •. o·ptions
l•nvolved •In cht.ld-rear•tng

ed 11s evldenee of ai·Qalda's
preparations for the Sept. .11

111tncks on New Yotk C11y
and Washington. Other
peaks h11ve come and aone,
lind no nunck has taken
place.
Publh:ty, officials are
mllkllll sobering warnings,
"There will be another
terrorist attack. We will not
be able to stop It," FBI
Director Robert Mueller .
told 11 meetln~ of the
National Association of
Di mlct Attorneys on
Mond11y. "It's something we
all live with."
He said suh:lde bombers
like those who have
llttncked lsrnell buses and
l'llstaurallts are Inevitable In
the United States. His words
~ "I wish t could be more
optimistic" - came one day
after Vice President Dick
Cheney said It w~s almost 11 _
certainty the Umted States
would be attacked agai11 by
terrorists.
The blunt new warnings
are designed · to give
Americans better notice and
protect Bush lll!llh\SI second
J!UesslnJ! In the event of
nnother nttnck, s11id a senior
administration official with
knowledge of U.S . lntelll·
gente and White House
strategy.

tutt,3:'
.•
I

· Call u.s or stop in. ·

Vf1'/l COPnl to JOUr hom1 and mlllmrt
for ll frt• no obligation quott.

'

Healthy Start offers no-cost or low·cost health Cllre coverage
for kids (birth to age 19) and pregnant women.
Healthy Families offers no-cost health care coverage for the
entire family- parents AND kids.

01

992 2117
1• 800• 992• 2608
1

· -

L-------------------...,--~
J

II

I•

•

�The Daily Sen~el

_The_o_any_Se_ntin_·e_l_ _

, 1 Coun St., P'IMIIIIOf, Ohio
,_, Ul.atiSI • hlt: f40o.. N111

DEAR ABBY: On Sept. 10, 2001,
QIY husband and I flew to Las Vegas

WWW.III)'JLRIII!Itlllel.cam

for a

'

c.'tGJ.

YAc;t;ER!

..

..

..•• ''

-·...

C..leo~eltoll'lcll

• •

tlilllllftiiN....- ·

•",. •

NATIONAL VIEW

.,.
.•.
I ~'

Lost
now admilll itlo.~l a child.
That doesn '1 refer to a child who was killed because of
abuse while supposedly under OCF protection. That's
happened tnany times. This time, the child was simply lost
from sight.
lt happened 15 months ago, but the depanment just
noticed the omission in the·past week. For the frrst time in
all tho.~ months, a caseworker went to the child's last
known address in Miami and asked whete she was. Her
grandmother thought she had been with DCF all that time.
... The counselor and supervisor directly responsible
have both lei\ the department, having resigned under pressure for apparently mishandling another case . ...
... Ironically, during the recently concluded regular legislative session, lawmakers failed to pass a bill that would
have made it a crime for case workers to falsify documents. Now, Gov. Jeb Bush has added that bill to the call
of the currel\t special session. Perhaps this time, lawmakers won' t be too busy to see to it.
... TWo years ago, an advocacy group, . the National
Coalition for C~ild Protection, said "There is probably no
place In the Unrted States where it is worse to be a foster
child than the state of Florida." This latest incident certainly doe.~ nothing to dispel that notion.

TODAY IN HISTORY ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, May 21, the 141 st day of 2002. There are
224 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 21, 1927, Chlll'les A. Lindbergh landed his Spirit of
St. Louis near Paris, completing the first solo airplane flighl
across the Atlantic Ocean.
On this date:
ln 1542, Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto died while
senrthing for gold along the Mississippi River.
.
In 1832, the first Democratic National Convention gol
under way, in Baltimore.
In 1840, New Zealand was declared a British colony.
In 1881 , Clara Barton founded the American Red Cross.
In 1892, the opera "I Pagliacci,'' by Ruggiero Leoncavallo,
was first performed, In Milan, Italy.
In 1924, 14-yelll'·old Bobby Franks was murdered in a
"thrill killing" committed by Nathan Leopold Jr. and Richard
Loeb, two students at the Universily of Chicago. ·
In 1956, the Unlt~d States exploded the first airborne hydrogen bomb o"t_er Bikini Atoll in the Pacific.
In 1968, the nuclelll'-powered U.S. submarine Scorpion,
with 99 men aboard, was last heard from. (The remains of the
sub were later found on the ocean floor 400 miles southwest
of the Azores.)
In 1991 , fonner lndhur Prime Minister R4\iiv Gandhi was
assassinated during nationnl elections by a suicide bomber.
In 1995, former Secre.tary of Defense ~s Aspin died at a
Washington, D.C., hospital after suffering a massive stroke;
he was S6.
Ten yenrs ago: The Coast Guard announced that high-seas
Interdiction of Haitian refugees was being drastically scaled
bock because refugee camps at the U.S. naval base at
Ouantonamo, Cuba. were tilled.
Five yelll's ago: Prosecutors at the Oklahoma City bombi~g
triftl of Timothy McVeigh rested .their case. The sp~ce shuttle
Atlanlls undooked from the Russtan Mir splice station.
One year ago: The Mitcbell Report on Mideast violence
called on Palestinians to jail terrorists and Israel to freeze settlement activity. Cardinals from around the world gathered at
the Vatican for n three·day meeting to ponder the challenges
facing the Roman Catholic Church and who might lead it after
Pope John Paul II. The Supreme Court ruled, six-to-three, that
a rlldlo host cannot be sued for airing a phone conversation
tnped lllesally by a third party.
Today's Birthdays: Actres~ Jeanne Bates ("Ben Casey") is
84. Actor David Oroh is 63. Rhythm-and-blues singer Ron
Isley (The Isley Brothers) Is 61. . Actor Richard Hlltch
("81Utle8tar Oahtctlcu") Is S7. Musician Bill Champlin
(Chicago) 18 ~5. Sl.nger Leo Sayer is S4. Actress Carol Potter
is S4. Actor Mr. T is 50. Music producer Stan Lynch is 47.
Actor Ju~ Reinhold Is 45. Actor-director Nick Cassavetes is
43. Actor Brent Briscoe Is 41. Jazz musician Christian
McBrlcle l1 30. Actress Falntta Balk is. 28. Rapper Havoc
i1 28. Actress Ashlie Brlllault ("Lizzie
i).cltlr Scott Leavenworth ("Philly") is 12.
like stars; you will not suc·
But like the seafaring
them as your guides,
~· - Carl

~Y

mini-vacation. Then
9111 happen.-.cl. ~ with millions
of othei American citizens, any plans
we had were changed.
Our three-day holiday extended
into . five days of utter confusion.
Guards were sllllioned everywhere in
the casino of our hotel. It was necesSitY to make many trips .to our room
to assure family members by phone
dlll we were all righL Each time we
used the elevator to go to our room,
we had to show proof that we were
guests of the hotel before being
allowed to proceed.
·
We also had to rebook our flight. us
our original departure had been canceled. Pinally, on Sept. IS, we were
able to schedule a flight home. As we
left our room for the last time, I
looked down and saw two shiny 2001

•••

Ohio V•lley Publishing Co.

• The GainesviUe (Fla.) Sun, orr tire missing 5-1!_ar-old,
Rilya Mlson~ The. Florida Depanment of Chrldren &amp;
Families, which never had a reputation for high efficiency,

Bend

1Uesd.y, Mlly 21: 2002

Stranded travelers encounter kindness ifmany strangers

The "Qaily Sentinel

Missing child incident doe.sn 't
help Florida spoor image

___;B~Y- the

Page AS

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
pennies lying in the doorway.
Somehow, finding those pennies
made me less apprehensive about flyinj!. They are now tucked away along
wtth the story of where we were on
that fateful day.
When we got to the aiiport, we saw
weary travelers standing P.aliently in
line for blocks. I would like to offer
special thanks IO the airport employ·
ees who worked diligently to get peo-

pie to their departure gates.
My husband must use a cane for
any extended walking or standing,
and a nurse in our line alerted airport
personnel that he needed a wheelchair. One was provided as soon as
~ible. He was then directed to wait
mside the tenninal while I was.told to
go to the end of the long line and meet
him when I got to the doorway. A
wonderful young man close to the
front offered to trade places in line so
I could have his place. Abby, he had
been waiting there for hours.
Those are just two mcidents of
kindness and generosity we experienced that day. Whoever and wherever you are, thanlc you again. - MR.
AND MRS. GEORGE CULLINS,
GRATEFULOIDOANS
DEAR MR. AND MRS.
CULLINS: Thank you for sharing
your experience. It shows tliat some- .

times tragedy has a way of bringing
out the best in people.
DEAR ABBY: .I debated, but I
finally decided the woman who wrote
about wanting a "sparider'' on her
2Sth wedding anniversary . needs to
know my story.
My friend, hero and love proposed
to me by quoting Shakespeare in a
valentine. He was finishing his mas·
ter's degree and there was no money
for an engagement ring. Instead, he
gave me his fraternity pin, and we
married with matching gold bands in
1953. Each year, on Valentine's Day,
we woold mention something about
renewing our marriage contract for
another year. It was our ongoing joke.
On our 25th anniversary, he took
me to dinner at our favorite neighborhood restaurant. ·The conversation
that evening covered many topics our pride in the accomplishments of

our four children, their upcoming
marriages, etc. He then asked me if I
would be engaged to him for the next
25 years - and presented me with the
engagement ring he couldn't afford
25 years earlier. We planned to renew
our vows on our 50th anniversary, but
God called him after only 47 years
together. ·
·
Ab~y. it certainly isn't the bi~t
...sparkler'' in the world - but it s the
most precious possession I own. KAY BELL, WESTMINSTER,
COLO.
DEAR KAY: I'm not SUJ]lrised. It
symbolizes the wealth of IQYe and
accomplishment you and your
beloved husband shared together.
Pauline Phillips and her daughter
Jeanne Phillips share the pseudonym
Abigail Van Buren. Write Dear Abby
at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
69440, ws Angeles, CA 90069.

•

KONDRACKE'S VIE"W

VVhats ahead for Arcifat? Only VVhite House knows

COMMUNITY CALLENDAR
Community Calendar 11 publlthed aa a tree urvlce to non·
profit groupa wlahlng to
announce meetlnga and apeclal
eventa. The cafendtr 11 not
dealgned to promote aalea or
flln~rtlura or any type. Heme art
printed only 11 apace permit• and
cannot be guartirtlld to be print·
ed • apecttrc number or daya. ·

••

·...
Palestinian "reform"' has become the
latest Middle East buzzword, but the
more it appears like an Israeli-U.S.
device to displace Yasser Arafat, the
less likely it is to happ~~n.
Israeli .Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
claimed last week that he and President
Bush agreed Arafat should be moved
aside as the top leader of the Palestinian
Authori~.

edly said that it's not the business of the ' :
Unrted States to choose the . ·
Palestinians' leader and that, however .. ;:
"~sappointi~f he is, Arafat now occu- · ~
pres tl!at posttlon. ·
·
••
The first step toward incremental ~ .refonn is the plan to send CIA Director
George Tenet to the region to work on a
v ~~ consolidation of the Palestinian
NAJ.Ili'.I,;N;; Authority's segmented securit}' services. .
•
,
Such a step might strengthen Dahlan '
COLUMNIST
and/or Rajoub vis-a-vis Arafat and put
one or the other in a position to succeed. Sharon to ne$otiale with Palestinians. him if constitutional change ever ;
The problem rs, if it's seen as a u.S.- occurred.
·
li
Araf
l'k
.
be
bl
The
orher
alternativethe risky one ·
1
1
bi:k\r. oy,
at 1 e1YWI 11 a e to - is for Sharon to respond to continu- - ~
Arafat has ~t~ade a career of playing ing suicide .bombings by sending Arafat .'·
p
into exile.
··
. . f
one a1esttman action against another This, Mideast ex~ns say. would cer- ~ '
and
most disaslrOus
. - a posetbasurviving
k . 1even
d'1 the
. blood
tainly be followed y turmoil
1.
from cJ~~!~c i~ ?9~ 0 an/Le~~~~~~ sible breaking of diplomatic ties by
Jordan and Eg~fat and ~ssible resump1982.
&lt;
At the moment, he does show signs of tl'on of He zbo ah roc· et attacks .rom
feeling pressure _ as demonstrated by Lebanon.
his strong denunciation last week of the
Worldwide pressure would fall upon
latest suicide bo.mbing south of Tel Aviv Israel to allow Arafat back into the
and his ordering the arrest of 10 mem- country, but Sharon conceivably could
of Arafat's return ht"s
bers of the extreme lslamr·c ~roup make taa condt'tt'on
f
Hamas, which claimed respons1 ility accep nee o a ceremonr'al prest'dency.
for the atrocit~.
.
Sharon wants to make his idea of
"re'onn"
Moreover, uropean .and Arab gov''
- Ara·•"at's dr'splacement ~ a
emments are expressing .reluctance to prerequisite for any peace t.alks.
contribute to humanitarian relief and Washington is resisting that idea. ·
reconstruction of Palestinian Cities after
Besides the danger that Arafat could
Israeli incursions, fearing the money use Israeli eagerness for "reform" to· •
will be stolen.
stay in power, another potential prob- •
1
· 1s: A successor
· mrg
· ht be even ··,·
Even an Arafat associate. Saeb em exts
·
more rad1'cal than Arafat t's·
· •Erekat, was forced to assure European
Raioub
&amp;or
one
r's
"n'ends
w'th
1 ·diplomats that "maior changes are due
'
• ,.
•
"
in the coming weeks" in the Palestinian Marwan Blll'ghouti, the now-arrested : ·
boss of Arafat's Fatah parta r'n the "'
Authori~'s operations: "You can expect
nesdt "·•·
Bank
Barghouu·
has
pub
icll
cl•;m
results. · e don'l have any choice."
.·
.
~ e ·•·.
If Arufat is to be displaced or "kicked credtt for ordenng attacks on sraeh tar- . ..
gets
upstairs," there seem to be two altema- G:
Ar f •
f I
.
-'
tives for enuineering it _ one subtle,
rven a at s past re usa to make · · .
P
· 1ence, • ·
one highly nsky.
cneace and ht' s orc hes trat'ron of VIO
The firsr. whtch the Bush adml'nr'stra- 1t's wonh taking a . chance on an ."
tion seems ·to favor, is to concentrate on unknown successor. But Bush needs to •..
incremental refonn and de-emphasize be careful how he d!'Cs it, or the effort ...
the notion of replacing Arafat anytime could end up bolstenng. Arafat. .
. •'
soon.
(Morton Kondrack~ 1s executiVe ed1· ...
Administration officials have repeat- . tor ~I R~ll Call, the newspaper of 1~
Capitol Hill.)
,~
_:___.,•

Mm:t

Bush enied it, but Arafat is sure to
seize on Sharon's assertion to claim that
any effort . to reform ,his regime is a
U.S.-Israeh plot.
It isn 't. A consensus is developing,
shared by Arabs and Europeans as well
as the Bush administration and Israel,
that the Palestinian Authority needs to
be democratized and made less corrupt.
In fact, the consensus is also widely
shared among Palestinians, 83 percent
·
one 2001 po11 that
of whom al!reed tn
Arafat's reg1me is corrupt.
After meeting with Sharon last week,
Bush said.· "The Palestinians need to
develop a constitutior:t, rule of law,
transparency ... and a treasury that is
able to battle corruption."
Among some diplomats and scholars
on the Mideast, "reform" and writing a
Palestinian "constitution" are code
words for reducing Arafat from the role
of an all-controlling dictator to that of a
t1gurehead president.
After Bush's meeting with Jordan's
Kin~Abdullah, an Arab diplomat told
The ashi~gton Post that refo!'"' mi$ht
mean creating a new ~sl of pnme nunister to run the Palestinian ~ovemment.
Some nongovernment .S. expens.
even have in mind possible successors
for Arafat: Mohammed Dahlan,
Palestinian chief of securit"~ in Gaza,
and
his counterpart in the
WestJibril
Bank.Rllioub,
'
Both were panicipants in IsraeliPalestinian neace talks during the
.
...Cl tnton
· admmistration, and Dahlan,
especially, ·was understood to support
Palestinian acce~tance of Bill Clinton's
proposals, whic · were agreed to by
then-Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Blll'ak,
but rejected by Arafat.
·
Displacing Arafat certainly is a good
ideo, and it would open the way for

MONDAY .
LETART - The Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the
office building.
, MIDDLEPORT - Meigs County
flight to Life, Middleport Church Of
Christ, 7:30 p.m. Monday.
· HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville
Senior CHizens, Monday, 11 a.m. at
the firehouse. Linda King, speaker;
Diana Coates to take Dlood pressure. Potluck.
·

·,I
•
I 1'

U&gt;ters get little firsthand knowledge ·to make dedsion

..·'·.

BY WILL LDTIII

ST. PETERSBURG BEACH, Fla. Many voters didn't have firsthand
knowledge about the campaigns or
issues in top state political races in 2000
because many debates were not tetevised.
Political analysts question whether
televising more would have sharply
improved that situation, however,
because public interest often is limited
about races at the state and looallevel.
Many people gel their information
about politics from local television
news, which has cut back coverage of
local races "because it's not a good
draw," said Andrew Kohut, director of
the Pew Research Center for the People
&amp; the Press. If debates were shown and
seen by more people, it would change
the public level of kno~ledge, he safd.
But he also questioned whether such
programming 'would have good audiences."
Under current practices, voters often
don't even have the option of watching
political debates, said a report released
Thursday in Washington.
Hundreds of debates for m~or offices
such as governor, the U.S. enate and
the U.S. House were held in the 2000
elections, but many voters couldn't 8ee
them if they had wonted to.
The survey of debate coverage in 10
states was conducted by the Committee·
for the Study of the
·Electorate. It found that
the debates in those
vised

~~·

t;'r,

':l~ •·"'

,~·

Make Donation

How to deal with ·stress
,,

BY BICIIY BAIR
immune system can break
Stress, which is caused by down, causing allergies, skin
a change in our environment, rashes and the increased likecan directly affect our health. lihood of catching colds and
When we lll'e in a sudden the flu.
·
stressful siruation, honnones
There can also be indirect
are excreted that prepare ·us effects of tension and strain
for "fight" or "flight." Along on the body. During times of
with this honnonal release, stress, we tend not to take
· our body systems react in a Clll'e of ourselves they way
variety of ways. The cardio- we should. We may not eat
vascular system responds properly, get enough exercise
with a poundina, erratic or or sleeP., or resort to bad
racing hean, cold, sweaty habits ltke smoking more or
hands, or a throbbing drinking alcohoL We neglect
headache. The signals of our health because the stressstress on the respiratory sys- ful incident takes up so much
tern include shallow or of our time that we feel we
unsteady breathing, shortness must not dwell on ourselves,
of breath, difficulty talking but instead, concentrate on
because breathing tsn't con- resolving the difficult situatrolled, and even asthma tion.
attacks.
Many components come
Stress may trigger an into play to determine how
upset stomach, nausea, vom- we respond to stress. Among
i!ing, constipation, diarrhea, them are: what the stressful
or sharp abilominal pain in situation is, how long it perthe digestive or gastronin- sists 1!-nd what may happen
testinal system. Arthritis, because of it. Personal qualconstant headaches, back, ities such as our physiologineck and shoulder pain, and cal state, our mosivation,
·• muscle tremors, such as how we evaluate the situashaking hands, may. material· lion, our coping mechanisms
ize in the skeletallmuscullll' and our social suppon s:ystem
system. Problems of acne, can also have a connection to
dandruff, heavy perspiration our health. Our genetic hisor excessive arynes.s of the tory, our lifestyle, economic
skin or hair may occur with . and social resources, and our
the skin when we are under health in general can conperiods of distress., The tribute to how stress affects

The study focused on major candidate CBS and NBC agreed to televise one of :.
debates - for the U.S. Senate, U.S. three debates between Sen. Mark •
House and governor - in California, Dayton and fonner Sen. Rod Grams.
Florida, fndiana, Massachusetts, · In Minnesota two years earlier, a gov- ··
Minnesota,
Montana,
Oregon,
•
db
bl' 1
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and emor s race e. ate on pu tc te evision ';
Washington. The committee conducted helped elevate the chances of improba- '~
the study with help from the Pew ble candidate I esse Ventura, who was ·.-.
Charitable Trusts.
then running under the banner of the ·:.
· ·The debates televised by outlets not Refonn·Party.
.:
affiliated with a network averaged a 2 • Members of the public who don't fol- •
percent share of the market - or less low1 politics may tell pollsters they
than I percent of the eligible voters in kn~w more thll!' they do, said Paul
the district or state where they were Lavrakas, a longtime political pollster
shown.
who now . works for Neilsen Media
Two-thirds of the ·debates for Research.
statewide offices in those 10 stales He recalled a poll experiment In
for governor and U.S. Senate - were h' h
televised. But only half were televised w IC a bogus candidate was included
on network outlets, the report said. Only in a question to the general public.
three in I0 congressional debates were
"Twenty percent knew of this per- ••
televised on any outlet.
. son," he said, "and when asked who ,
That means many voters, especially would they vote for, some people said .';
those who don't closely follow newspa- they would vote for this person." .
per cover11ge, got their information
Many people get scattered political •
about candidates and .the races from information on local races from televi- :,
campaign ads and the scattered cover- sion news coverage and political ads, ·
age they get from local television sta- said Tom Outerbock, director of the •:
tions.
Survey Research Center at the . •
"It's a huge problem, especially in University of Virginia. A televised :
New Jersey where you have two domi- d b
.
nant medii markets that are outside the. e ate mtght be their only chance.to get -·
state_ in New York and Philadelphia," a ~'Thetailed tq(&gt;k at the candidatesd.
·,;
said Monika McDennott, a pollster and
ere are some states an races
researcher at . \he Eagleton where that opponunity doesn't even · '
of Politics ~t Rutgers exist," he .said. "That really worries me. •
,
Where are people going to get this , ,
i~=~directo~:r of 1J1e ~mmit· knowledge?"
.
·:
· u~bti fn 2000
(Will Les,er covers politics tu:td ~. ·.
. oulle~alt... !13(:, p(jl/lng,for The Associated Pt;tss.) ., · • t ,
. ,'\·

453, special meeting, Wednesday, attend ..
7:30 p.m. Work in lhe fellowcraft
degree.
REEDSVILLE
Riverview
Garden Club, Thursday, home 8 .
THURSDAY
a.m. at the home of Delores
ATHENS •• Survivor of Suicide Spencer. ...
Support Group, Thur$day, 7 p.m. at
the Athens Church of Christ, 785 TUPPERS PLAINS ·- VFW meetWest Union Street, Athens. ing at. the hall, Tuppers !plains
Everyone welcome. For more lnfor· Tt'iursay, 7:30 p.m;
.
.
matlon, call the church, 593-7414.
POMEROY •• Ewings Chapter,
POMEROY - Meigs County Sons of the American f1evolutlon, at
Churches of Christ Women's the Meigs Museum, Thursday.
Fellowship.!. Thursay, 7 p.m. at hie Those with reservations for dinner,
Pomeroy vhurch. program, a Bible 6:30 p.m. Meeting which is open to
story pantomime
the public, 7:30 p.. Annual awards
ceremony to be held.
POMEROY ·• Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter, B~la Sigma Phi, home of
Joan Corder, Thursday, 6:30p.m. for SATURDAY
a yearend picnic. Everyone to take a
POMEROY - Popolar Ridge
Frewill Baptist Church. Poplar Ridge
covered dish.
Road, off State Rolute 554, live
RACINE - American Legion ddrama, "Left Behind" Saturday and
· Auxiliary, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the Sunday, 7 p.m. For more informalegion hall. All .members urged to tion, call 388-9702.

TlME OUT FOR TIPS

____________________
WASHINGTON TODAY

POMEROY ·• Veterans Service
Commission meeting, 9 a.m.
POMEROY ·• Senior Citizens Day
Monday, at the office, ft7 Memorial to be observed Tuesday beginning
Drive.
at 10:30 a.m . and concluding with a
luncheon . .Joy Padgett from the
CHESTER - Chester Township Governor's office ol Appalachia to
Board of Trustees regular monthly speak.
meeting
Tuesday, ·7:00 p.m.,
I
Chester Town Hall.
MIDDLEPORT •• Brooks-Grant
Camp,. Sons Qf Union Veterans of
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter the Civil War and the Major Daniel
·186, OES regular meeting, Monday, McCook Circle, Ladles ol he Grand
7:30 p.m. Tiike Items for auction. Army of the Republic, both meeting
at 7:15 at the Rlverbend Arts
Refreshments.
Council, Middleport. Speaker James
Cline on his new Civil War book.
TUESDAY
POMEROY •• Childhood lmmu· Public Invited.
nlzatlon clinic Tuesday, 1 to 7 p.m. at
the
Meigs
County
Health
WEDNESDAY
Department. Take child's shot POMEROY - Meigs County
records. Children must be accompa· Board of Health specfal meeting
nled by parenVIegal guardian. Wednesday, 5 p.m. In the conferChildren enrolling In klnCiergarten ence room at the · Health
who need a TB s~ln test shouiCI plan Department. Purpose of the meeting
to attend the clinic before 4 p.m. at Is to discuss personnel issues. •
which time the. Tuberculosis Clinic
closes.
CHESTER •• Shade River Lodge

our well-being. A genetic
pre-disposition for certain
diseases onll accounts for
about 20% o the probability
of contracting an illness during stress. The other 80% is
due to our environment and
personal behaviors.
Even though stren can be
positive (a marriage or a
vacation), negative stress is
the type that causes more
health problems. Type A personalilles who lll'e competitive, ambitious, impatient
and driven are more likely to
have heart attacks, especially
if those people · tend to be
cynical and angry. This
occurs because they may be
in a perpetual stale of distress
with large amounts of hormones being excreted. These
honnones scratch the inside
of the arteries. Cholesterol,
then adheres to the scratches,
clogging the arteries. ..,
People who are susceptible
to this· condition can reduce
their health risks by managing their anger. During a
stressful event, they should
ask themselves if the situation is really important, if it
is appropriate to be angry, if
there is anything they can do
about it and whether or not il
is wonh it. By taking a few
seconds to ask these questions, many times the per-

ceived severity of the problem will lessen. An estab·
lished social support system
of frieods and family can also
serve as a buffer to help diffuse strained incidents.
Having people who care
about you and who will listen
to you dramatically eases
volatile circumstances.
· Other co.Ping strategies. The Ohio Educational Support Group has donated $1,000 to
include writtng about stress- . the Meigs Future Farmers of America. Half of the donation will
ful events·. Puttinj! emotions go toward scholarships for summer FFA camp at Camp
into words or usmg artistic
and the balance to send delegates to the
expression can help some Musklngum,
National
FFA
Convention
Ky. Matt Salser, FFA secpeople deal with traumatic retary, and Justin Gilkey, InFFALouisville,
president, accepted the dohatlon
experiences.
from
Allsha
Myers
of
the
OESG.
(Brian J. Reed)
Being sensible about diet,
exercise and rest, along with ....-;;.-..;-.·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
time management, can help
prevent stress from becoming
HEALTHY START
overwhelming. It is important to remember to set reasonable goals for a healthy
HEALTH
lifestyle and .to avoid "all or
nothing" behavioral changes.
Many times they contribute
to sense of failure if there is
backsliding, thus, resulting in
even more stress.
Relaxation techniques of
I
deep breathing, positive
imagery, hypnosis, massage
and biofeedback can also be
used to manage distress. By
learning about the different
coping methods and using
those that work best for you,
you can deal with stress in a
positive and healthy way. .

OHIO'S
INSURANCE
.OPTION FOR CHILDREN
Health Insurance
For Your Kids
Is Just A Phone Call Away

NEWS AND NOTES
•
-eels
UMW 111

a Gingerbread Man, accord·
ing' to Isaiah 55, taught by
ALFRED
Alfred Mary Lee Sonander. She
United Methodist Women read from Isaiah and spoke
met recently at the Alfred on the world longing for
United Methodist Church.
love and how all could help.
Ruth Brooks opened the
It was announced that
meeting with prayer, and the Caldwell had been lionored
$fOUp read The Purpose.
for her volunteer hours at
President Nellie Parker the Meigs Cooperative
'conducted the business Parish.
by
Mary Jo Barringer had the
meeting.
Repons
Secretary Martha Poole and prayer calendar, and chose
Treasurer Osie Mae Follrod Jean C. Jacobs of Pubela,
were read and approved; 76 Mexico,' who works in edutriendship calls were repon- cation. The society signed a
ed. The reading program binhday card for her.
' was discussed.
Hender.&amp;on gave the mis' Sarah Cl!.ldwell, ThelmJI sion re~n from "Response"
'llen"I'Son, illd Parker on 'Mexico Domestic
' ~eporred . od the spring Workers l!ijht for Rights."
'i'e~ "'eeting on May 4. · Putor Jean Beattie led the
' Th•~~ on Theology of ptoJflUD on wom~n·s atrug~

~

.;.-.:

.l

l,j '

~

gle for rights through the
ages, with all taking part in
the discussion on building
an open community where
all arc treated equally.
Compassion, fairness, equality, kindness, and working
together are some of the
qualities needed.

Beanie was hostess, and'
gave grace and served
refreshments to those mentioned and to Florence
Spencer and Nina Robinson.
The next meeting will be
June 11, with Henderson as
program leader and Brooke
as hostess.

Call Today!
992-2117
1-800-992-2608

- - - - - • C.I.Y11&amp;. t tA'Dii _ _ _ _,
BliRUUClAC Y,.. WE'RE RIGHT HERE AT HOME!

See your
LOCAL HOMETOWN
Insurance agency! 1

Meigs County Department .
of Job and Famlly Services

OOWIIIIQ CHILDe MUUIII Mull.l ll

tNIUIIANCI ACIIHCY

(740) !-3381
1M~

E ..v#3

81a0ild It• P~

·.'

175:Race Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
,.,

'.

-.

�•

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

-

,,

•

•

.......

MLB standings, Page A7
River Valley eliminated, Page A7

11&amp;a1d1y. lilly 21. 21'1·

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

HlGHLIGIITS

Eastern advances to district baseball final~
BY ScoTT Wou:
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

'

Prep Schedule
Soltbllll
Division II, Region 7 Dlatrlcta
at Unloto
MCllldaY'I RIIUitl
Hillsboro ', River Valley 0, 8
.
Today'a game
Warren vs. Circleville, 5 p.m.
Thuraday'a Game
District Championship, 5 p.m.

Ba1eball
Dlvl1lon IV, Region 15
Dlatrlcta
at Wellston
Mondey'a Results
. Eastern 7, Trimble 6
Thursday's Game
'District Championship
Eastern vs. New Boston, 5 p.m.

Americen .
Legion ·tryouts
announced
ROCK SPRINGS
Tryouts for the Meigs/Gallia
American Legion team will
be held Wednesday and
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Meigs High School baseball
field .
Tryouts will be ..held rainof
shine.
For more information, call
Denny Runyon at 698-0003.

WELLSTON - With a dramatic
finish . and garne-~innin~ sin&amp;~ by
Cody Faulk, the htgh-flylllg
tern
Eagles soared out 'of Wellston with a
7-() first round boys baseball District
tournament win over the Trimble
Tomcats Monday night.
Eastern will play New Boston on
Thursday at Wellston for the District
Championship.
Trimble and Eastern (15~4) will
meet again Wednesday for the league
champiOnship at Eastern. Trimble is

one game down on Eastern .. An
Eastern win would give the Eagles
the Hocking Division championship,
while a loss would tie the teams for a
co-championship.
Eastern led early, but a. fourth
inning rally by Trimble gave the
defending district champion Tomcats
a 6-4 lead, a lead that held into th~
seventh. In the seventh inning, Ben
Holter led off with a single, Ken
Amsbary walked, and Cacy Faulk
sacrificed them to second and third
before Chris Myers hit a game-tying
double, the score 6-6. Then Cody

Faulk stepped to the plate and drilled walked, Cacy Faulk walked, .an4 1
a one-out sin~le to wm the game, 7-6. Myers walked off Trimble startctl
Coach Bnan Bowen said, "The Jesse Brunton.
kids stayed tough and never game up.
Cody Faulk then had an RBI•
It has been a while since an Eastern groundout to third and Brannon had•
team has reached the District finals. I an RBI single to give the Eagles me..
am proud of the kids for battling one-up.
back."
· Trimble took advantage of a leild..
Trimble went up 2..() in the first off error on Bobby Trace's groundetl:
innin\a~ walks and an error, how- • then got a walk to Fouts and ariother ~
ever,
tern got one run back in the error to load the bases. Dan Stier had!
second on a Cacy Faulk walk and sin- a two-run double and Adam Faires ll•
gles by Chris Myers and Bradley two-run single for the 6-3 THS lead.
Brannon. The Eagles took a 3-2 lead
.,
in the third ·when Ken Amsbary
PIIIH AIIYIIMII. AJ
·~

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NAIA TRACK AND FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS
....
..
Five Rio
athletes
head
'
:.:
Matt Boyles one of
"

.

nation~

top .race
walkers

BY DAN POLCYN

.

to nationals ·
STAFF REPORT

RIO GRANDE - The University of
Rio Grande trac!' and field squad will .
have five participants in the NAJA
National Outdoor Track and Field Meet .'
on May 23-25 in Olathe, Kan.
·
Sophomore Matt Boyles (see related ·
story) and junior Jim Robinson from . : .
Lakeview, Ohio, will compete in the ·
5,()()()..meter race Walk. Both participated ' ·
last year in the outdoor meet and also this .
year at the indoor championships.
"Matt and Jim have had an outstanding
year," said Rio Grande track coach Bob ·
Willey. "Jim has placed fourth in the
Penn Relays this year; he was seventh at
the USA Indoor Championships.
''They've worked very, very hard this .
year, and so we're hoping for good .
things," he added.
Boyles also earned a provisional spot in
the 5,000-meter run:
,
Another Rio race walker, freshman . ·
Kristen Barnett will compete in the ·
3,000-meter race walk. The South ·
Webster native is coming off a personal
record of 15:20 at the Rio lrivttational. "'
She also qualified for the race walk in the
indoor season.
"Kristen hasn't been walking more
than a few months," said Willey. "from
the time she walked at the indoor nation·
als until now, her time has dropped three
minutes.
.
"We're pretty excited about that."
Barnett is battling an injury which '
causes her to limp, which is a concern to ' ,
the coaching staff. "I'm afraid they (the·
judges) may watch her very closely."
,
The rac.e walkers will compete on ,
friday morning.
'
Senior Amy Kline is returning for her
fourth consecutive outdoor · champi- '
onships.
'
Kline, who is the Rio record holder in ·
the hammer throw, will compete in the ;
hammer in Olathe. She is also a four·time
qualifier to the indoor meet in the weight
throw.
. ·
"She's missed being an All-American· ·
·several tinies by one place," said Willey.
"We'd like to see her have that opportu- , ·

DPOLCYN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
RIO GRANDE - Thrower
Ashly Roberts isn't the only
University of Rio Grande athlete
with a good chance
of placing at the
2002
National
Association
of
Intercollegiate
Athletics track and
field
champi·
onships later this
week in ·Olathe,
GALLIPOLIS- Following
several years of discussion
Kan.
about establishing a Gallia
In fact, sophoAcademy
High School
Boylu
more race walker
Athletic Hall of Fame, a IOMatt Boyles, a 2000
member committee met
graduate of Eastern High School in
recently to plan for the inducMeigs County, probably has the best
tion of the first 20 alumni.
shot of any Rio athlete to bring
A list of 16 football players,
home · a national championship
seven basketball, two basemedal.
ball, two track, four golf and
Boyles qualified for the national
three overall names were sub·
championships in the 5,000-meter
mitted for male prospects
event earlier this year by running a
along with three girls basket21:49 in a meet at the University of
ball players.
Cincinnati gi viqg him the best time To be nominated, a canidate
by six seconds - in the nation going
has to been out of school for
into the championships. But that
I0 years and earned a minisn't his best ttme, as he posted a
imus of two varsity letters.
19:26 on his home track at Rio
Others to be considered are
Grande just a couple of weeks ago.
former coaches or athletic
Race walking differs from condirectors.
ventional running in that a race
Anyone interested in nomiwalker must always have-ene foot in
nating an individual may
contact with the ground. In running,
obtain information by calling
the athlete constantly breaks contact
Tom Meadows, committee
with the ground. The race walker
chairman, at 446-7570 (home)
must stride and contact the ground
or 446-2265 (work) or Danny
· with the heel first, instead of on the
Mink at 446-1708 (home) or
toe like a runner. The result, as Rio
446-3643 (work).
coach Bob Willey puts it is "a
funny-looking run."
Boyles agrees that race walking is
less natural than running, a fact that
he painf lly learned after his first
race.
DETROIT (AP)- Wendell .
"First all , race walkin$ is a lot
Magee's tiebreaking single in
more diffi It than runnmg," he STRANGE GAIT- URG race walker Matt Boyles works out prior to the
the seventh inning Monday
NAIA national track and field championships. Notice that the runner
PIHH- Flv.. A7
•.
IHFunny,A7
night gave the Detroit Tigers a
must have one foot on the ground at all times. (Dan Polcyn)
4-3 victory over the Cleveland
Indians and their flfst fourgame wmnmg streak of the
year.
Julio Santana (3..()) picked
up the win in relief. Jamie
Walker pitched a scoreless
BIQ HITST. LOUIS (AP)- Woody
ninth for his first career save.
Williams
threw
another
gem
Cincinnati's
Detroit trailed 3-2 heading
for his new team.
Jason ·LaRue,
into the seventh, but took !he
The
St.
Louis
right-hander
·
COLUMBUS
(AP)
-The
sponsor
of
a
proposal
to
elimi·
left,
Is congratulead with a pair of unearned
worked
six
shutout
innings
in
nate
the
requirement
that
high
school
athletes
sit
out
a
year
if
lated by Austin
runs off Ricardo Rinco~n (0-2).
a 7-3 victory over the Keams and other
· they switch schools backed off on Monday after getting
Cincinnati Reds on Monday teammates as he
assurances thai the Ohio High School Athletic Assix:tation
night, and hasn't aiJowed an enters tile dugout
would review the matter.
earned
run in 12 innings since · following his
· Rep. Jon Husted, a Kettering Republican, asked the Ohio
comin~ off the disabled list.
Senate last week to include language in a bill setting salaries
threEHun homer
Willtams was 58-62 before against St. Louis
· for school board members that would allow athle~s to
SACRAMENTO,
Calif.
coming to the Cardinals last
become immediately eligible if they transfer from any school
Monday. (AP)
(AP) - Blame the cheesecake.
August. He strained a muscle
1
back
to
their
home
district.
The Sacnimento Kings, takin his left side in his season
He said any student should.be allowed to play sports in a
ing. advantage of Kobe
debut
AprilS. He's 8·1 with a
district where his parents pay taxes. ·
·
Bryant's food poisoning and
2.02
ERA
since joining the
That conflicts with an OHSAA bylaw that requires transSh!l'luille O'Neal's foul probteam
in
a
deal
that 5ent Ray
ferring students to give up a year of eligibility.
lems, defeated the Los Angeles
· Lankford to the Padres, and
OHSAA Commissioner Clair Muscaro said 83 percent of
Lakers 96-90 Monday to even
beat Randy Johnson in the
the principals and athletic directors who make up the associthe We.~tem Conference finals
playoffs last fall. ·
ation voted to pass the bylaw because athletes were switching . Williams said · the differat a game apiece.
schools
for different sports.
.
Chris Webber had 21 points
ence with the Cardinals is
Muscaro cited the example of a football player attending a
and 13 rebounds to lead the
preparation. Pitching coach
private or parochial school who then decides to transfer back
Kings,
who
overcame
Dave Duncan and bench
to his home public school after the season because the basO'Neal's highest-scoring game
coach Mru:t_y Mason keep him five hits, striking out five, eighth. The homer ended a
ketball
team
is
better
there.
of the playoffs (35 points) and
well supplted with informa- walking one and throwing 94 IS-inning scoreless streak by
Husted
said
thai
after
meeting
with
Muscaro,
he
was
satispitches. He had to be the St. louis bullpen, which
a sloppy contest thai included
tion about the opponent
fied that the association would study the issue. He asked
28 turnovers.
Jim Edmonds and Albert resourceful, stranding two hadn't allowed an earned run
Senatt President Richard Finan, a Cincinnati Republican, to
Bryant, who scored 30
Pujols homered for the runners in the fourth and ~t­ in 27 innings.
remove
the
language.
Edmonds . hit his lOth
points to lead the Lakers to a
Cardinals, who took three of ting away with allowmg
three
consecutive
hits
in
the
homer, a two-run shot off
"I believe the OHSAA and I have a better appreciation
106-99 win in Game I on
four from the NL Central
fifth.
Jimmy
Haynes (3-5) in tbe
about
our
respective
positions
and
I
hope
we
can
work
toward
Saturday, needed three liters of
leaders and outscored them
The
play
loomed
larger
third,
to
give the Cardinals •
a collaborative solution," Husted said in a news release.
23-12. They' ve won nine of
inuavenous fluids before
after
Jason
LaRue
hit
his
flfSt
4-0 lead. Pujols hit his sevMuscaro said the association and its board have agreed to
II , shaving the Reds' lead to
Monday's game after food poi-.
homer
of
the
season,
a
threeenth
with two outs in 1/Je fifth
three
games,
give
"serious
considerations"
to
Husted's
concerns,
but
.made
left him severely dehy·
run
shot
off
Dave
Veres
in
the
for
a
5.0 lead,
Williams (1-0) allowed
no promises.

CiAHS sports

hall of fame
planned

11ge•·s edge
Indians

OHSAA to review Woody Williams stifles Reds::

new transfer rule

Kings even
·· series

I
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=
,

inates RV. 1-0

BY 11un:1t CaiiPIIII

•

The O.lly Sentinel • Pege A 7

www.mydeltyMntlnet.com

lsboro

~

Page A&amp;
· TuEsDAY'S

"11ulldlly, ..... 22, 2002

IICOOPEMM'IOM.YTRI8UNE.COM

CHJWconm - If defense does truly
Win dtampionships, then Hillsboro might
&gt;ery well be on the path to the Division 0
swe title.
·
River Valley played the Indians even for
aeveo iMin~. but in the eighth, Hillsboro
ICORd the au-ahead lllld eventual game win·
~
to 6ear the Raiders, 1..() in the Region
7 distritt semifinlls at Unioto Hi~h School.
For the Indians (2().1 ), and pitcher Casey
Cannon, it was their third shutout in as many
playoffg~.
.
For Cannon, who threw a no-hitter against
tie Raiders, it was her 12 shutout pitched this
season. Along · with the no-no, Cannan
allowed no walks and struck out 10.
"I was pleased to see them play so well ...to
come out and play well against a team that's
1'9-1," said River Valley coach Rick McFann.
'"fhey're a good ballclub with a good pitcher.
0\Jr pitching was well. Our pitching was equal
to theim tonight."
"rm not disappointed in them. I'm proud of
them. They played a good ballgame.'
· Meanwhile, Geri McFann pitched a solid
~ame of her own for the Raiders (16-9), strikmg out 16, while allowing four hits and two
walks.
"We knew coming in that (River Valley} had
a good pitcher and she meet all our expectations," said Hillsboro head coach Glen Bums.
'/She kept the ball low on us, kept us off bal·
lnce. Moved in and around the plate."
: With the game scoreless in the top of the
eighth, McFann struck out Shannon Wright to
'

nm

:. =

nat~
lead off the innin•• walked Debbie Kibler and
struck out Beth Rtchlll'lls.
~
~bier stole second lllld got to third before
IS
11
t..,!
IS 10 .111
.,.
MeliSSI M::rsh singled to eventually put runII 10 'Mf
•
ners on second and third.
II 10 . I
a...
River Valley's lone mistake of \the game
w &amp;. N •
carne when catcher Krystal Adkins tried to
C' P ~
pick off Kibler at third, but the throw was
•
11 s
Hot IU a
II 10 . - 4111
wild, allowing Kibler to score.
10 10 .at
I
"In a one-run ballgame, anybody can get Ctlkaigo
14 1'1' .... 10 111
. . I '11
1 14 SO .318
II
that fii'St run," said Rick McFann.
River Valley managed to get on base only
W L N
8
once on the afternoon when Nicole Watkins
•
11 ...
Sen'* 111 1 17 11 .. .
reached first base in the fourth inning on an
LoiA1911M II It .188
error by Marsh at short.
.
. SenDii[ID
1111.100
C:':IIID
10 14 .481
Besides that, Hillsboro's defense was flawless.
a Lou1a ?.LCIMIN. . I
nu•w'a..._
It wasn't until the seventh when River
~ CJ.Ai•wo• N) at Clilalgo
Valley was able to hit the ball out of the infield C\ilo
(lw l&lt;t), 1:011 p.tll., Ill Ill"!
off Cannon, twice to Kibler at centerfield and
-:~H)
al - once in the eighth to Julie Mihalik at right~
, . : ~ II l'Ur' IIJ)olli
field.
7:011 ":., .. ctolelnollll
''They were shots that were easy to catch,"
(llallwo&amp; MI. 7110 p.&amp;
said Rick Mcfann. "If the bats had been a litLol ~ (loVMII4j .... l ....
tle sttonger, then the outcome could've been a
~:s~"" Clilalgo C\ilo
little bit different."
-p.m.. tnd Qllnt
The Indians, who will play in the district
HlmlndN 4-1) It St. ...,..
ISimiOiLOOiiiito,;;aoitii'tl 1.(1), e:IO p.m.
finals Thursday, await the wmncr of today's
$on Diogo ('1Wibultlv 0.0) It ColaiiiiD
semifinal game between Warren and
Circleville.
'
''The season's been tremendous," said Rick
Mcfann. "I've been extremely pleased with
this season. I would've like to have went a little bit farther in the district."
River Valley closes out its season with n
makeup home game against Logan
Wednesday.

...""''*
........
. .. . ,.. .. ...............

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=

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former Buck~ye liable in lawsuit
In the lawsuit, Walter said he
was injured when Bentley
punched him oti Feb. 17, ·2000
idler winter conditioning drills.
Walter's attorney Todd
Neuman said Monday they are
see~ about $100,&lt;00 in dam·
ages for injuries that included a
rractured nose, a fractured
cheekbone and broken teeth. No
dale has been set for the damages hearing.

. ; COLUMBUS (AP) -- A
Judge found a fonner Ohio State
1ineJnan liable in a lawsuit filed
by a Conner teammate accusing
him of assault and battery.
· Franklin County Common
Judge John Connor on
friday told lawyers he was
arannng Tyson Walter's molion
for SU111111111'}' judgment in his
· Civil suit against LeCharles
Bentley.

t'leas

Bentley admitted in a deposi·
lion to JlUnching Walter in the
face, but said they bt?th agreed to
fight to settle thetr differences.
The lawsuit was filed just
before the Buckeyes' loss to
South Carolina in the 2001
Outback Bowl. Coach John
Cooper was fired a day~ that
game, and Walter's lawswt was
citedasanexampleoftheteam's
problems under his leadership.

'

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Otmandt t-703·•0H315 Dooo308.
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Call l·twiii·IS'I7-!!i'ISC

combined and eight walks. Trimble's Brunton
went the distance in fanning two and walking
eight.
·
Eastern
hitters
were
Holter
a
double
and
..
fromPIIpAI
two singles, Myers a double and single,
'
Brannon two singles, and Cacy Faulk a dou: . An RBI·double by Cacy Faulk brouJtht ble, while Chris Lyons, Amsbary, and Cody
borne Ben Holter with a single run in the firth Faulk euch had singles.
for the Eagles. All was quiet until the finale
Trimble hitters were Stier with a double,
when Cody Faulk and teammates Holter, Faires two singles, and Fouts a single.
l\msbarr, .and Cacr ~aulk delivered the
Eastern plays the Trimble make-up at
¥ame-wmmng combmation.
,
Eastern Wednesday and goes to Wellston for
, Jimmie Putman came qn in relief of Oharlie the District champiOnship Thursday.
young to record the win with eight stri~eouts

Advances

L

I'

.• ,,.,

I'

'

"

""'

Funn.t

••

,.

•

there."
"His success has been phe. nomenal," said Willey.
11
.._
Because race walking is
ti'Oin . . . .
such a specialized event,
Willey and other coaches •
'aid. "Ji's really weird, like Wisconsin-Parkside's
pecause running you can do Mike DeWitt, who Willey
naturally. Race walking you refers to as one of the ~urus
really have tO Jearn, and you of the sport - get the maJOrity
have to discipline yourself.
of their athletes from the rolls
: ''That first race walk, it was of long·distance and cross·
terrible, As soon as I crossed country runners, which might
!he finish line, this is no lie, I suggest that race walkers are
fell dow.n on the track in the made, not born.
nfield. I couldn't move my
Coach Willey attributes the
egs. they were so full oflac- philoso.l'hY of developing
ic acid that I could not move competitors to Mark Cline, a
l:ny legs. Seriously, they were former runner for the
pa:;alyzed," he s01d.
Redmen and who now coach·
, Boyles, who came to Rio to es the girls' track and cross
· run conventional track and country at River Valley High
r;ross country, took up race School.
walking while a freshman at
"He said to me, 'Coach, we
Rio. 11iat decision has placed bring 1hese people in; we
· Boyles into a small fraternity h
1 10 d Io some
'of athleres,· and he has quick- people."'
ave go That
eve
" · now
thinkmg
ly risen to the top of the sport. penneates the Rio program,
' "(Race walking events) are as the university will be sendvery few and far between," ing competitors to the NAJA
said Boyles. ''That's the good nationals in events like the
thing ~ut race walking: it's hammer throw and race
qne big community and !here walking, events which most
ale some people out there high school associations do
metimes who are just crazy not sponsor.
t it. They'll go an1 dis·
The success of Boyles and
if !hey can get it.
!he.other Rio race walkers While many track athletes such as Jim Robinson and
am of competing at the Kristin Barnette, who will
lym &lt;ic trials, Boyles has also compere at the national
i[ready ~ that right for . meet • has given Rio some
e trials 1n Jun~ 2~ . national recognition. Athletes
lympic race walking IS a from as far as Utah and New
lloinpleteiy different endeav- England .have expressed
Br, lhouF.J. TI!e shortest ~ interelt in coming to southalk at ~ highes! levels 11 easrem Ohio to race walk.
K (abPW 12.4 nule~).
Boyles will compere in the
Boylclil posted ~ ume of race walk on Friday morning,
.26 at, ~ ~sla!Jce to and Willey is expecting goOd
his tnvttatton to . the conditions (70 degrees) for
eat level of A~e_ncan the event. Boyles is also
and field competition.
expected to ron m the ~.OOOK
~ "I'm loo~ng forward to ron that afternoon.
Dtat," he wd. Its always . Even though Boyles will
~n one of .my dreams, run. and race walk. Willey
pver tbpught I would get acknoy;ledges where the
~ .
I

I

Redmen's eggs are kept, so to
speak. "Most of our eggs are
in the r11ce walkers, no
doubt," he said.
Boyles will also race at the
United States Championships
in June in California.
However, Boyles' outlook
for Friday's race is pretty
clear.
"Obviously you want to
win it," he said. "I want to go,
have fun, and compete well.
There's a lot of great competitors in the race. I'm really
looking forward to it and just
hope for that national championship and pra1 for it.
That's alii can do.'

AT LAITII Eooy Buolntll, Alak Fret,
NOT MLMII Stnd name &amp; addrna .to
Aldgo lnduo1rloa. lno .. P.O. Box 8333.
Chot!lnoogo, TN 37112 or

·~~

oupplltt provldtdl Ruon
SUtrnptd Unl/olopol I
4, P.O. Box 1438, Antioch,
1·1438. Stlrt l"''"tOIIttlyl

I

SAVf TIME AND
SIIOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!
Help Wanted . ·

17th Annual
MEMORIAL RUN
Sunday, May 26th
Pomeroy Parking Lot
· Pomeroy, Ohio
Meet at noon • leave 1:00 pm
End et Lakeview Tavern
Albany, Ohio
Live music, Hot Food, T-Shlrts
Raffles, Rodeo Events
$5.00 per person
Bike Show
No entry tee, awards given, all
bikes welcome Sign up at11 :00
am on COurt St.
742·1513

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i

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10" Hanging Baskets
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All other pottEkl plants
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holds the school record in
both the diiCUI and the shot
put. RQberU will challenJC
ibc nation's best in the dis·
fi•F Jl AI .
CUI, lhot and hammer throw.
"AJhJy has had a Vel]. 10lid
year," Willey said. She'll
Ashly . Roberts have a tluowina event every
return~ for the third llnight day. She'll be a very busy
time in the outdoor meet. yount lady while we're
The l!winJfDD, Ohio, native there.

rtve

Open Monday • Saturday 9·5
Cloled Sunday

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

lt&gt;'j:nior

WANTED: Emergency Relief Workers
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valid driver's license, three years good
driving eKperlenee and adequate
automobile Insurance coverage, $7.00/hr.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Service•
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llome Medical Equipment is 'urrcntly
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(304) 675-4J.40
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---~

\

r

'

�n..dey, May 21, 2002

Pllge A I •l'lle Deily SMtlnel

1'1le Deily Sentinel• P-oe A t

1\IIIRy, May 21,2002

--Tht CRAFTY,

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of nflroll to: TM Doll~
Sontlnol, . PO Bo• 728·20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 41788.
Longoborgar Buo Tourl
Orot&lt;lon ond Homolfotd
Pn1111 Breokftlll Funl
OIIIY $3&amp;1 Sooting Llmltld.
Ctlf Nowl 740-742·2824

r

giYMwo~.

Flrot

located at
tho roor of the building It

oomt1 flrtl 1erw.

r

lho Oalipollo Dally Tnbu.,..

YARDSALE

Apjollelllona tre bolng

NECCO

ctplld lor Home Health
Ald11. Appllcanta ahould

1M PowM of Famuy

have o high ochOOI diploma
or CI.E.O.. rollaDIO tronopor•

FOITIR AAR1!NTI

I"B

liEu&gt; WANnD

I

~

i1992 Pol&gt;llloc SUnbOrd, olr,
4
1IIOOd
auto,
wt&gt;lto,
ohopo, cyt,
$2,1
85.00'" 080.

740-985-3948

.

(10'111' 610'1120')

992·6635

r-------.

YOUTH ·
FISHING
DERBY

I

TO~ .. (740)441-0103

r.

·El.Ernuc.uJ

lll87 Chevy Ctwallor, Ex·

Rl!f1UGERA.110N 1
•

u-. --- _ _' .. ..

...

Nursing

COUNT ON
RECOGNITION AND
RESPECT
HCR Manor Care haa beoomt o.,. of the moat wldo-

recoonl•ld and riiPotod

names 1n tl'le Ienior health·

care lletd, Our Heantand

Vlolortan VIJiaga taclllly cur·
rontly Ml lha following op·
portunll~ : ·

lntht

·1871 Ford F·150 Sho~
'WhHI blu. 4 opood.
U500. (304)875·3935 or
(304)875-3441

CLASSIFIEDSf

•11184 Fonl F•150. 8 cyt, 5
opood, good lhapo, hiGh
mlloo, l4, 150.00 oBO.
'(7«1)1182-5832

I

(8'1'1-353·'10ZZ)

Call for more
irifolfree est/male
WV031256

t

•Garages
•Compiete
Remodeling

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·1671

949-1405 TF~

.740-667-0363
,,

l&gt;o'\ I S'l

i~~~:a:!

II

Supplement; Life Insurance;

and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;

Retirement,
Mtljor Medical

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

i1J
,.,..,.

""""'"·"""'

TFN

·--

£•"'-'

Contact Ulal

992·7522

3J795 Hi/4rul Rtl.
Pommry, Oilio

740-992·5232

Tree Service

Delivered
&amp; Spread

LIC1n11d &amp; Insured
Haalth Problem·•?
Want More Laleure Time?
Tired ot Mowing?
Not A Spring Chicken?
LIMITED OPENINGS

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump &amp;rlndlng
• Bucket Truck

$15,00 p1r ton
B·10tonl
llmltad area

.(740). 742·7037

(740) 992·1536

Lt•v• name 6 No.

· lnf~Cft~~j~
J.D. CONSTRUCTION
New Home• &amp; Remodeling
"Speclitllzlna In Low Homes
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
llfA
1
Goruges, Pole Buildings. Concrele
1
Roofs &amp; Siuing
Cllmmcrclul &amp; R&lt;sldentlol
~
(740) 991· 3987
lit!~ .
Owner &amp; Opera1or, John Deun TFN

11Jt

1f1:.,.

Ill"I

' FREE E;STIMATES

~ft~f.;'~~~

740-992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

.

.

Replacement Windows

Uvinurl

·Advertise

LIME·

STONE

In this space
for
'25 per month

Tel~ e the

PAIN
out of PAINTING'
LiJI IntJ

Jc, 1! 1•:1 y•;ul

Delivered &amp;
Spread $15.00
per tonl8 to 10
tona, tlmltad
•r•al call for
deta Ia. Cell:

::•m &lt;IMc
Auto, 380 En4x4, C.lub Cob,
a~-..

farty birds start
6:30

Proaresslue top line .
Thursdegs

Prooresslue

CoueraU on SUndays

Ortaavename
and number

: 010. (740)441·1021

YOUR COnCRETE
connECTIOD,llC

WOLFE
I

Heating &amp; Cooling

' I I I II
I I

I

I 1 &lt;1 I

(740) 742·8015

24 Hr. Emeraency Service

Bed linen •Nerf B•r
• Tonneue Cover
• Ventvllor • Bua
IShlt,ld &amp; Full Line

Licensed· Insured

Thermal ZoneTM equipment

118 Ford Explarlr XLT, v-e,
··loadod, go- l&lt;opt, . 11rft,
33,000
mil",
111.500,(740)1182-7887

(10 yr. partti:&amp; labor warranty)

J=~- 1

Flnan~lng Available

1985 3110 -

~oond .

Servl~ all

Pomeroy fqles
BinGO 2171
Euerv Thursday
&amp; SUnday
Doors Open 4:30

: (740) 591·2173

' 'I'YIIPL, Cit! "'-• 15985

I

Krls
Kanleckl

JOlES'

BISSEll

1

•

Self-Storage

843·5264

&amp; 401K Rollovers;

Athens, Ohio

High&amp; Dry

\liddlqwr·(. I lit io 1:' 7h0
Local

7SO Easr Stale Stroot Phone (740)S93·6671

"'"'~~

R. llupp 111, .

l{od,~

oflor 5pm

·· olltlt
1101
In 0\'lrdrtv..
Truokwlton
drlvon
.flNydtly. 14100. (304)773-

Dealers

Stop &amp; Compare

Free Estimates

LARRY SCHEY

I000 St. Rt. 7 So11th
CooMii1, OH 45723

i,.................,...,................
CARPENTER ;·
SERVICE
BUILDERS IDC.
YOUNG'S

V. C9~?~1~G Ill

.
C.b. v-e. Auto, Nr, Cruloo,
-Factory CD, EaCIJIIIonal
·•Truck. 112,1500. (7~)2!8·
For poria 11183 Ford F·250
4•4, LWB, NT, 351 Wlncl'oor Erlfllnt. P•T Front-end

All Mnkes Tractor&amp;.
Equipment Plllts
Factory Authorized
Cuse·IH Plllts

•NtwHomea

'Room AtldNiono"
New Homes • Vinyl
Rtmoclellng
• - Oorogoo
·, Siding • New Garages
; Replacemen1
• !loetrlcll &amp; Plumbing 11
• -lng &amp; Guntrt
W'nd
1 ows' R00fimg
• Vln~l81dlng &amp; Pointing ,
• Polio ond Poroh O.Ckl COMMIICfAlend IESIDEIIIIAI.

"2000 Flinger, 4•4. XLT

~101

1DO West main St.
Pmeroy
992·0008

740.742-3411

ROBERT BISSELL DIPOYIII
CONSTRUCTION . PUrl

STftTE STORE

Now Open
1.1 a.m. • B p.m.
Mondaythru
Saturday
Cloud Sunday

FREE ESTIMATES!

992·5479

mEIGS counTY

412811 mo. pd.

Free Estimates

I \Ill 11\\11 '\I
-, 1!1\1!1 -,

Authorized Agent

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout

Slzea 5'x10'
to 10'x30'

BryanRHVII
· New Homea, Room Addltlona,
Garag11, Pole Bulldlnga, Roofa,
~ldlng, Oecka, Kltchana, Drywall
AMore

Jeff Warner Iris.

~

wv 11031712

740-949·2217

.1 Buy, Sell or Trade

•:.-.-liiiiiiiiil_.l

Cellular

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, .OH 45771.

·12002) •

t . J,":~

...ll'iL
1

Hill's
Self Storage

collent Cancltlon, 2nd Own·

'
or, 71,000 ootuol mil•. 2 Roolclonllol or oommorclal
Door, Nr, 1111, CNIH, Pow- wlnng, ,_ oo!VIco or ro·or Mlrrono, Powor Sunroof. polra. Malfor Llconlld oloc·
CD Ployor, MU11111to Ap- lrlclon. Rldonour Eloctrlcal,
ptOCiote . . Alklng $4285. WVooo3oe, 304-e75-1788.
{7«1)245·5087, (30&lt;1)713·
;15188.
------. ,~1187 Oklo -'tlrora, 73,000
Public NOIICI
·milol, fully IOldod, llllhlr
-11; oxcollen1 condHion, Thl •nnual r•port
111.000.00. 7«1·0411-7003 Form 880 PF tor lha
11108 Ford Ranger 2 wi1HI Klllllll l'oundallon,
,dn..: 4cy1. 5 oi&gt;Hd, wKh lern1rd V. Fullz,
.air. 03,000 mlloo. Excolltnt TrUitH II IVIIIIbll
·oondlllon. $4,200. (30&lt;1)875- lor pullllo 1n1peollon
'11325 or .-~ngo (30&lt;1)8G5- 11 l1rn1rd V. l'ullz
87&gt;42
Law Olllce, 111·112
:nll8 6·10 Pickup, 5 opood, Weal llcond llraet,
~~1.. 1410, not&lt;lo body PollllfOy, OH 41788,
work, $3000, booko tor during
regullr
•-taOOO. 11112 s-10 Bluor, bualn- houra lor 1
: Nice. t31l00. (7«1)441-em period ot 110 day• · St 681
~~ IIOIWt Mulling. VB. eubllqUinl
10
Connoly Drive
Auto, LOidod. $11,800. publlctttlon ol lhll
IITLippeora Plains, OH
J304)e31-32Z4. ~.~~.. .Moo· notice.
ooge.
Also serving
·aoo1 Ford .,_ se, olr, (5) 11, 17, 18, 21, 22,
sausage gravy
cruloo;;I'll~. ti~. 2i, 24, 21, 21, H, 11
&amp; bl~~eulta ·
outo,
32,000
mlloo,
Dally Lunch
$8,750.00. '140-742·1317 I) 2, 2002
Specials

• Footers, Waiii,StepS'
Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
und Drives • Stencil
Crete
Free E!Uinuues
Servin&amp; Ohio und W. V.

Sunset Home
Construction

I
.

COIKRm/BLDCK/UICI

'*Ford Thunderbird LX. - - - - - - Connie's
41,000 1 owner mille. Llko C&amp;C a-ot Homt Mlln1•
Child CAR£
""-:.;;:.;:·1.:;8500;::::..:
, (:;_;7«1~1.:.;H8:..84:.=85 - . Pointing, vinyl old·
lng, oorpontry, doora. win·
has openings, 15 yr.
~M
Orand
priJc
se.
Now
·
bolllo,
rnol&gt;lo- · v-e. aU10mlllc, co ropolr ond ,.,.. For 1,..
experience, Certllled
P 1 o ~ o r • o111mo1o co11 Chef, 741HI92·
In Meigs, Athensand
=~~k=~~':"'~.~: 6323=::.·- - - - - - 8J:30AM S~ndTahy, washington counties,
(304)875·11325 o..nlngo
Superior .._
une 9th ""
8
Q
24 h
(304)18H7&gt;42 .
.
Malntenanoo .
Racine Gun Club
pen
'lours.
Hire i aklllod hendv man. P!IIH owordod: Maol
7 Days per week
18t5 Oflltci.Am OT; 2 door, Wo do an rapalra on homea, fllll, 11111 llah;ond mony
St. . At. ?Tuppers
741&lt;, 141811. 1M Coralca. BIG ond Small. Cerpontry, mn. Food boVoraae
8&amp;1&lt;, ~. 1084 S·10, 4.3, plumbing. water 11n11, ond lioat p...Vidod. lrxt~
Plains, OH
ve, Auto, .AJC. S3505. 1M trtnehlng, painting. Froo II• po111 avarl-. OPif! 10 CALL 667-6329
. lloN111, 83K, 12805. 14 oth· 1:::1ml;t;.;••~·~(7;;;40;;,;)4-4;;;..;..;1.0;,;1.;;13~.. o11 yautha12 ond
Ill In 110011. COOK 110- "'

_....lty-.

~

Racine, Ohio ~5771

Fully laodod. Excel· Cell 24 Hra .. (7«1) 4-48· L-----...11~
Condition, aeaoo. 0870, Rogora liniment •
(304)$75-atel
WolllfiJrool[ng.
~------.

--hoNbr

• Muat have good
Comf11!1nlclllon akllla
' Mual have good
driving racord
·provldt own
tranaporlatlon
• Mull have ability 10
bt a TEAM playar

I

~opo.
lont

....·

,., ....

BASEMENT

CONTRAaGIS, IN&lt;.

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

·'r~~;.~":W~:O.~ ~~~.~~~~::~8~5: i

m thte newa~ 11

NEEDED

--........

r1Q I~

1o.4

P/1

::~=C.maro 1 own· U~~~~~uor· \ (140) 992·3l94

wantld: Writer. Contact A~
len W. RoBS at (7~)448All .rHIMIOIO _,11111
870il

IUbjocttolilo ~--1
Drl..-. wonted· 23 or old·
tetlon. telephone In tl'le
or. drug ..,_,, no COL, ~olr -otnv Act 011111
home and willing to work WOUld you llkt to help a
wn~o~~..- n1ffiOit 10
~ driving record, h"""h
ec:twte11M .....,
wook-ondo &amp; holldaya. child In nood? You'll recel ..
IIIII IYollabll, pold YO·
Muotl:&gt;o motlvatod end Hexl· up to $1085.00 monthly re- ootlon, call 1·800-531-e553. IM...,..IOI, tlmtldOn or
Dto. Will train. E•porlonct lmiJu...,onl lor each child
dllotlfnlnltlon biMd on
In providing dlraot oora or pia,., In your home ll wol
SUMMER JOBS
-.-.rotlglon,Ha
working wllh Ol&lt;ll&lt; adulfl o aa tho grolltlcatlon of holpNO EMPEAIENCE
flmlllllr ltiiUI or Mtlonll
pluo. Sltll IHtod nuralng lng I chll&lt;l. II )'OU are tn
18-IG TO START
origin, or'"' lntontkloiO
t -8118·1174-JOBS
11111tante enoouragtd to Olllo raoldonllnd would
mokoonyouoll
tPI&gt;I~.
~ppllcotlono oro llko
Pi ....... llmttltlon Of
Tranoport
-tor
100
bod
IYllloiJio lllilo Molgo Mufti· to line! Out abOut -lng oklllod nurolng facility. F'ruSonlor Confer, Mul· a tootor ~ront coli:
·~~
vldl 1roneportatlon tor
~rry Holghll, Pomeroy,
KoUino
Adklnt
pnyolclln eppolnlmentl, TMI nlffiPIPir wUI not:
OH. An EOE Employer.
(7«1ltl4-4310 or
k.-.lyMMpl
coneultt
tto. Mutt ha"''
- -. •
•
147'r·SO.NICCO
good driving record, onjoy
111111 wf&gt;loh loIn
ADVERTISING Not&lt;l on OCCOIIonol WHk• working with rooldonto end
ond bobvolttor In my homo tamlllu. Pooltlon Ia port· ·-or tho low. oui
SALES
tor 2 112 ancl 11 year Old limo, 111ft toalod nuralng
lnfomtod lilolllll
bOyl. Mull navo rattranctl. tll1tan1 p..ttflld, not ...
REPRESENTATIVE 1740)441-1417
qulrtd. lntlrallod opptlaontl -~~... H¥ortllodln
thtl. .,..,,,.,.,.,.
lltoUid apply In po.- to:
For well established
Night Ooak Socratary. Ml· RockOpringo Rlhlb Conlor,
av......_anllft .....
croooh Word, Typing, 8·10 38750 Rockopnn,; Aood,
Local Co.
Monday·Thurodoy, Sond Pomeroy, Olllo 45 G.
SERVING THE
Ftooumt lo: Clalllpolle Co· EKiondlcaro Hillin Strv·
roor conogo. 1178 Jockoon
TRI·COUNTY
Ptko, Clalllpolla, OH 45831

a

1

HaPWANm&gt;

IC·

AREA

GIVEAWAY

Pallota to

IIIIo

lfEuoWAN'IID

"I 10:' It I "

Mon-Sit

217 E. 2nd St •
Pomeroy,OH

(740) 992·5908

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

1087 TlaQo
Y11Y niCe. {304)118So3834

lii6

loeallotl

Other Acccuorles

Brands

I

1 I

(7 40) 949-1521

I

I

11 ~o) 992

('

•,nn

Qua lily Concnll Work
· Driveways, Patios,

Parking/play Areas.
Sidewalks, Floors
28 Ytlrl E•Piriii!Cf
Fr"EIIImllla
(tolltrae)

an-353-7022

boyou

woo.

~: 2000 Hl1rllr OMen 1200
•• 1100- LaCol of
f10,800- Col .·7pm,·(7.10,....,.,5
·2001 CIA 100 F41, 8tlvor
.... Clrajlttloo. 2500
mllll Wilf1 Syr. tatendld
~ $1500. (7.10)448117tQ

I.LIIIOIO
M

RESIDENTIAL &amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING
HI-Emclency Heat Pumps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

'l!!'.!!lY! ltm:rr:=.

ALL TVI'II
M-trt
IOIC .. ILOCK t tTO..
JO YUOa UI'IJIIIHCI

Free Eslllnales
·

~illllf: f:r II~~

FREE ESTIMATE

Mulriii' IIIJFI

(304) n3-9550

740-992 9158

(----oleman lj

• l'lft! a. II Vnr l'ort Worrondto ~~
• Fr.. llllllal 'l'he.......,..t
·
• v... 10 v..r c.....,..._,.
Wornn1y On Htleft M!"!d\

1'111':£ f.HTIMAl'l'., •IIUHF. ln.. nlrlrJ
• lllnk t'IMn&lt;l.. 1\Yolloblo
• Prkeo To Fit Alii Biocl..,.

HERBALIFE
Independent

PLUMBING

wtttduwwa

Outrlbutor

Mig

1 Los1271b.

40tllth Streit
New Hlv1n, WV

•

7

1

8ttrd ntrnel ~arl

in 32 days.

iiUtll.

100%
natural/Guaranteed

740-992·7036

•Resl~lal

e;:
882·2343

�•

, . A 10 • The Dlllly S1ntlnel

••moa.

Cris carter

NU Cl'oaaworcl Pu .. l•
•

PHILLIP
Al·DD

11

1 •• • •

·~·

. ---

•• Itt
' ' ' Il I

...
.••.,,, ..

•At

~

-

• Q J Itt
I

••

.

...."'"

11&amp;•1111- •••••••••

• lttta
• AU
• Ill J

I I

•Au•
• tt I · .

='""~

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

..,
•

Mit: ~

14

- """!i' .........
.~
I

._I

,_

10

.Tt41NG$ TO G.tlivl TOI&gt;AY
IONf

$tf0f

CAfi.PfT
GtfAur

ttAT

••

BARNEY .

I

THEN
OUT'IMMl,MA.W··
IT ~A\(
IGHi
BE-...
·

f

Cia:

tf1N'

~

f. .

Ir

'"!m-1'" .:::::::1

•

~..L::.::=l!~ I u__.J.......J~
THE BORN
LOSER
.
.
'
~1-\,._\ COME.'.&gt; Wilt'. 'i'OlX&lt; UVE~ ""t"'IJt-. ~
Dlt-l~rt. :S~E.C.I,._L T

N-It:&gt; "'
t--1\C.E.

C.t\IN-ITI !

'

f

•

/;

\

••

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
DetaU..A3

f

1 I I I Ia

1-1

I
I

I
I

J' .

~~!~ t~e 1~:t t~~~~:

G~~~~tRMBte

and claim.

FOR

I· I

I' 1• [ I' ' I'
=1·=j=·
I I I I J I:·j

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."
. : ~

I

..' ..,'

--....
_.•

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

•

'

.r

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 ·

•

I I I I 1

I

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

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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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. ' ••

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