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                  <text>· NEA CroiiWOfd Puaal•

Colnnaunlty ·

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honors director. AI

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MalpCcunttta

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't I

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Whlt'slftslde

Kwt~ "'"~· ~- ~'

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r.ll\

am

hn

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l'llon

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A.ltjliUi;

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()pt:l'llf\1 lflld • It

Five petals

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•

MEN
I,

••

In ycMerduy's \:OI·
unm, I used the ~'Om·
pound noun "run·
out." 1 wasn't sure
whether it is one
word or hyphenntcd.
So, I opened the die·
tionury to try to find
out, a111l hnmedhuely
. my eye suw the woril
"quincunlt" •• whut
docs thut rncun 1
1'hi~ tlllnl will l!ive
you u hint •• if one Is
nccdctl, of course.
First, though, how
would )'ou plnn the
play in five clubs uf·
lcr Wc~t lends u
heart?
South'~ two hcttrts
IT'S Vf~Y GONFV$1N6
wu~ u Michaels CueBid, ~howing at leuM
/
.
.
8f1N6 A
5·5 In spndes and el·
thcr
minor. North'~
MA£-t
two
no-trump
uskcd
LAl&gt;'t'8UI.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
for the minor suit.
South jumped to indl·
by Lull Campo•
CtltbNiy Clpnor Cfi'piOQrlmo tro cottlod from quolollono by ltmouo
cute
his
powerful
J
- l o, Pill and PrtMt11. Etch lltttr In tnt clphtr lllnclli tor anotnor.
hund. North might
· Todly'l CIUI: J tqulll W
~
huvc · passed, but
'X~NODQIOIT
PWDJL
WDIV•
jud11et1 that his twn
honor curds would
OWK
YOKY"
IVAW
OILI'·
prove useful.
With two dinmond
MU,
z·A I I i'l M I' W I 0 W L I ft •
~0 W"'Y! YOU LOOK ~i "'')"'' losers, ynu must
~E.,.._VY It-\ PC.~~! r--_.
nvoitl conceding u
W I MT
I I' Q D ti W 0 V I' .L
KP •
black-suit trick. If
!~putlos nre splitting
W 0 A f..'
LOI
ftiiVAI
budl~. you wil probaQDWIIW
NDTMI'
bly tall hecuuse dum·
my'H trump8 nrc so
lnw; surely an npJlO·
F'AEVIOUS SOLUTION - Oonvtrllllon II the enemy ol good
wine and food.' - Allred Hllohccck 'Long mtall make thor!
nent cun overruff. In·
llv11.' ·John Lubbock
stead, you should uiisume spades nrc 4·3
WOlD
UMI
and cuter ror n 4-1
trump break. Win _..._..,_......;;;.....;;; UlttJ ~r CLAY R. POllAN - - - - with dummy's heart 0 ho,ongo lortofl of '"'
•crombltd worcb bt·
nee, unblock the lowlour
to lorm lour •lmplo word•.
spude queen, play u
trump to hand, ruff u
spudc In the dummy,
1-tf''v)'d:::.~ druw the remaining
trumps, and run the·
spade&amp;. You lose onl)'
MUPHT
those two diamonil
'-~~ tricks.
South had four
fives, two five-card
p H E 0 T I :;: :~
My roommate and
to tne
suits, and was in u
. laundry mat to do our wash. She
five·level contract. A 1-.,.,
1411""'1,_,
1' .,.1....,1--t began eorting the clothes and un·
quincun.11 is an ar- ...._...~.........................~.. .-....~,. der her breath she muttered, ·
rangement of five ob· ,---...,....,~...,....,~..,"Dirty, really dirty, and only dirty 11
WEll., IF NA,OLEON loiAD
1 OON1T Tloll~l( TM~'s
1
jccts
in u square, with
U N N E A C we have enough ••••• ·I'
SEEN TloiE MISSISSIPPI,I LL
NICE, M"AM ..
one
at
each
corner
1·
...
,
........
~~D,...,.l.......,ll"'i~~-1
C:omplttt tho chucJclt qUOIId
SET l-IE WOIILD I-lAVE
and
one
in
the
mid·
-'-·
....t..
_..
•
...._
......
--'·
br 11111"11 In tht miMin~ word•
....t..
CROISSEiD IT!.
rou dt\'110!1 from otop No. 3 below.
die. That made me ...
thl nk of a bridse taPRINl NUMBER!O ld!HUS IN
ble. Botanieall~ it I•
THU! SQUARES
u five-petaled uower
• UNSCRAMBlE ABOVf .lfTURS
in which two petll~
TO GU AN5WU
.
ore interior, two are
'
.
e.11tcrior, and one is
KJlAM.I.ITI ANIWIU
,,
· partIy interior and
.studio · B'udg9 ·Crowd- Rlchsa - BROTHER
partly e~terior (what·
My
aunt arrived unexf'!ctedly,for dinner. 'I left a mesever that mean5!} . .
eage on your machine. she said. dad/ explained that
we didn't have an answering !ll•chme. 'Well, • the
laughed. ' I hope the person I call•d didn't have a , .
brother I"
.

WOM£W

[l

••

THE BORN .LOSER
'( C.M.JG:&gt;kT YOl.)R ll'liE:i&lt;:.VItW
ON ir\t eu~l ~~~~ RC.POI't.i
Ll\:&gt;i NIC:.f-1.i-

\.JE.U... DONE. !.

ooq

0

.MAitCIE SAVS
~E THINKS YOU . LAU6~ Ai
M'&lt; ANSWERt ON iloiE
TESiS I(OU &amp;IV&amp; US •..

Daallis
Hazel Montaomery, 82
Betty Kellv, 71
Marnyn Watson.~ 69 ·
Dtt1R1, AI

I0

III

III

Hlah: 80S~ Low: 601
Dttiiii,A2

.

Animals need
homes
'

. OALLIPOLIS
According to officials from
the Oallla County Animal
Welfare · Leaaue (AWL),
«rea relldent 0110: Stover
liar five &amp;hepherd71ab mix
puppies who need lovlnll
home8.
.
Interested parties should
contact Stover at 740·245·

ms.

AWL member Chris
Cozza said she has eiaht
kittens and a mother cat
that need homes. Cozza
said Betty Halley hail six
klttens from two different
llttllrl, and Jerry Davl8 has
four kittens and a mother
cat.
.
Cozza asks interested ·
parties to contact her ai
740·441·1647. .

Council
approves
funds for.
project

.......... 44

tlldw: 1+1+2-5
....
,. ,, ,..,.20-24-26

llldl.Jlldl I -

5· 1-3

4-1+1

WMVIrsfnla
IWri:M-4
Dilly .., 1·5-7·8

ADua:lll: ••:ze-31·~ (1J)
~nc~ex ·

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lon~nn

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Village secures
$47,000for
demolition .
av liliAN J. Ruo

BFIEE04PMYI:)AILYS!NTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
upproved $47,000 In financ·
lng through Peoples Bunk,
N.A., for the demolition of
the Murk V building und
Spencer's Murket building
during Its regulur meeting DIVILOPMINT IITI- Future development of the Merk Vaile
Tuesduy.
·
et the corner of North Second Avenue end Mill Street 11 oruolel
The meetlnll wus held If Middleport Ia to remain t1 vltlble bualneaa center, eccordlng
Tuesday due to the Memorlol to conaultent Jim Hertzler, who met with Middleport' I Plennlng
Duy weekend hollduy.
Commlltlon Tuesday. (Brien J. Reed)
Muyor Sundy lunnurelll dis· Western · Auto bulldlnn, Houchins suld the vlllune
. cumCi
progress
demoli- be tween the dcmoIllt on site
• should be curet\11 In uvoldlnl!
•
don of the
Murk on
y buildins
on the corner of North Second und Peoples Bunk, hos been u sltuutlon slnlllur to thut
Avenue und Mill Street, und condemned, lunnurclll suld Involving the Pinner property,
The owner hus been given 60 which wus condemned In .
the Spencer's Market bulldlnll duvs to either brlno tfie build· September und only demol·
onDemolition
Mill.
· building 1ng' un to 8U~e stundurds
•
on the
or lshed when It collupsed by ltH
•or
neurlv
two
demo
Ish
it.
own accord following heuvy
Wus deluyed ''
'·
lonnarelll suld both Junet ruins.
·
weeks while legal and flnnn· Reeve, who owns the build· "Whut concerns me Is thnt
ciul arrangements were flnul· ina, and Formers Bunk und we condemned thut building
lzed. between the vllluge und Savln11s Co. which hold8 a months uao ond nothing hap·
the ' bulldlnas' owners, Cw:J.I. mortaaae on the property pened and now 1\ slmllnr sitU•
und Kay Platter. Th.e project have been notified by mall of atlon uauln could arl1e,"
should be colltpleted, .tbe Nlte . the condemnation,
Houchins said.
·
cleaned up and traffic restored The bulldina was damuaed Councilman Roaer Manley
on the bloc.k "In a few days," durlnt the collapse of .the commended lunnurelll for her
lannarelllsaid.
Mark V bulldin11 eurlicr this work In coordinutlna the .
Tom Dooley, owner of the month. Severall!ou~~es have demolition and seeking public
Middleport · Department also been condemned, and the t'undln11 for the project, which
Store, said the effect of the ownen of those bulldln11s was unuvulluble.
street closlnfl "Is becomlna have also been notified and lunnurelli will uppolnt u
hurtful."
.
·
alven ihe 60·day period to committee to consider per·
"Anythlns that can be done repair or demolish the build· day chur~es for Inmates In the
. to expedite opening the street lnas, ln accordance with vii· vllluae nil. lunnarelli said
woulll be appreciated," laae statutes and the Ohio · other v luges und counties
Dooley said.
Rivlsed Code, lannarelli 8nld.
Meanwhile, ihe former Council President Stephen
l'le1M 1M council, AJ

dlsbid strategy

Ohio
Pldt 1: 3-3·!
. l'ldl •: S-0-f-5
llpllt.IMII: •»27·39-4,_., .

·Holzer dosing

"

James Stump, D7

I'!

I
I, I I l

'(!5,

Eaales mdy for NC. 11

I

'm:ti~' S~'\\Q{llA-~"Btis·

PEANUTS

MIDDLEPORT

IY hAN J, RIID

which re1ulted in a compre- pluclna mobile home1, 1ub8l·
hen1lve rehabilitation pro- dlzed houJina or other non·
T re_m
. aln"laf aram In the bu1ine11 dlltrict, retail lll'llcture8 on the tlte.
MMiddJD
1eDg:LrtEP101 R10
tHe con•tructlon of a river· Up 10 $400,000 18 available
viable •Ina• center, there front amphllheatet, and other throuah the CDBO downtown
are thlna• which must be lmprovemenu.
revitalization proaram from
~·~he top of the litt of Hartzler suue•ted that a. the ~tate. But even If the vll·
tatk•, accordlna to Jamea comprehensive review of the laae doe• not 11Uk revltallza·
Hartzler, 11 10 review and e=l•tln zonlna ordinances, lion funds, ronlna restriction•
In 1965 and virtually should be
considered,
I hten zonIna ordinance• unc anJed
II
Iince
then,
be
Hurtzler
laid,
If
the retail
relatln1 to tlie downtown
...~_. 1 _£_.
1
butlneH district, etP."Ially In comp IOIGV mmcuiately, and community 11 to 1urvlve ln
llaht of the demolttion of the that thole ordinance• be daht- the Ions term.
.
. Mark v bulldlnJ on ened In order to control what Such zonlna rettrlcdons
Middleport's butiett ttteet fY9' of butlnetl can locate on wou1d'be the first ttep In the
comer
·
the comer of North Second CDBG application process,
Hartzler
met
with and Mill - and eltewhere In followed . by butlne~t and
Middleport'•
PJanninJ downtown Middleport
maltct M\leyt. A financial
Commlislon on Ttletday 10 ''We're at li erossroldt," commitment from the vlUaae
diJCUH a downtown butlllftl . Hartzler ltld, "both literally would al.o be required, u
ltl'ate.JY wltidl. he not pre- and flauratlvely with the would a flnanclul commitpate~S tn 1994. '11lf fWdy wfl demolition of the bul!dJnp on ment on the ttlllL of local
lllO!IIItlclcd u a.- of die vit dill comer.-wtiiltls &amp;um on bulldlnJ owner1.
applk:atiOO'"tor dow0: that tile will deUrmlne '7he ultlmu pi of any
town revitalization Cundl, Middleport'• mall 1114 cOm• downtOWn lmprovementf,
whld! w11 ultimately rejected metM futute.u
· includlnJ , a revitalization
alld never pui'Md aUin.
Now, few rellrialont eAitt Jtllnl prOJM, It to encouraae
The same year, l'omer~ on land 1111 In the uncral re~nvettment In the down·
'"' awarded ~ Iundt fot bullnm dllltlct. There are 110 town area by private
lfl ~ bliilneH dlMria, rMtlc:cionl, for eumple, on invettors," HIIIUier tald.
·
BIII£DA1YDAILYIENTIN£L.COM

liP'•

POMEROY - Holur
Consolldnttd
· Health
System~ nnnount'l!s the clos·
lt~i of Its Iolli term OW'Il unit
111 Vetcruns
Memorhtl
Skilled Nursltli Center. . Ano
ltuer thun Sept. t. 2w2,
nct::ordlna to Thomus lt
Tope..l clinlrmnn, president
und &lt;.:EO.
"The net::esslty to dls~on·
tlnue skilled nurslnll 111 our
Veteruns Mcmorhlllooutlon
Is very dlsu~~lnth\a to us,"
Tope snld. Our lon11 term
cure reslden.ts·ulonll with the
employees nre our muln
~onccrn ut this time nf
chunge. We ure uctlvely
seekln11 u potentlul buyer
who will keep these llt:ens~d
nunlng home beds In Meigs
County."
Tope emphuslzed the oiTer
or employee ln~entlves In
order to provide the contlnu·

ntlon of both ~mployment
nnd pntlent ttlre o~r the
l!P&lt;:omln@ 9~ ·dny period.
Current stnrt' will be ~neollr­
naed to "PPIY ftlr positions
w1thln Holter Ctlnstllldated
Henlth Syste1ns.
"Residents, fnmllles lllld
employees nl'\1 belnll
Informed ol' ull options
nv~llnble to meet their
needs," Tope . udtled. "The
prim~ 10nl Is to reassure ·
ull of those 11tl'ectl!d of our
tt'mcern fur th0lr fUture."
Currently, HCHS Is In
dlscussloM with pot~nth!l
buyers who huve tl)lpl\\ssed
un Interest in u~qulrlnll these
lltt.msed lonlltllrm c:"re beds
to Nmuln In Mellis County.
Tope suld "We will keep
the Mel11s County 1'\lsldents
informed, us opportunltll!~
pro~ress with potentlnl buy·
erM.

U.S. 33 PROJECT

Delays won't
affect.Ph.ase I
construction
'

IV TONY M. WON
TL!ACHeMVDAII.VI!NTINI L.OOM

OREAT BEND - Work crewH continue removina larae
umount8 of dirt and rock 1111 con8tructlon on Pha8e r of the
Ravenswood Connector project move8 tllona.
Don Tilll8, Ohio Deportment of Trunsportotlon (000T)
project munn11er for Pliue I, said Wednesday despite Aome
minor weather delay8, Jl!'01Jre88 on the flr81 of three 8el•
ment~ of highway aeared toward connecttna U.S. 33 with
the Rhchle BrlcfGfe lind lntentute 77 at Ravenswood JJ
"moving ahead o schedule" and the pmject's dlrt wtlrk 18
nearing completion.
"At the bealnnina or Phasetiil we hod 3, I million yards of
dirt that had to be moved. ow, we have only 180,000
yordsleft," 1ald Tillis.
"Duplte some 8pot8 of brid weather, everythlni Is oper·
utlng veey •moothly. Phase l's scheduled completll;n dale 18
September 2003, however, we anticipate flnlshlna 8ome·
time W'ound the end of thl8 year," he added,
Accordinato Tllll8, PhaH J will encompan a 1even·mtle
stretch of "Super Two" hlahwll)' belJinni ng fr6m the brldie
to an urea near Ohio 124 and Portland Road and Ellge Hill
Road near Racine. Plan• for the proJect'• nrst sectl6n alw
. call for the conAtructton of two brldaet and four lntenec·
tlon8.
The COAl Of the Pha8111 HJI'MIII will total 522.3 million.
"Besides r:oneentratlna on the completion or din work,
crew• are liliO focu8ina on main line puvlna 11nd 811ttlna
beams for the project'• two brld.aes on Township Road 13~
und Townthip Road 135," 8ald 111111.
·
Tllli1 added a 1,000-Joot section of Ohio 338, just 80Uth
of William S. Ritchie Jr. 8rldae, It r:uffently c1Med due to
construction.
Trame comlna from We8t Vlralnla to Ohio, •ald 'nlll&amp;,l•
required to turn ·rl.a!lt onto 33! when e"ltlng the btitdae.
Traveler• mutt u811 Ohl6 124 -• a detour.
·:'Thla section of 338 18 8jlbeduled w be closed ftlf 60
day•, however, because of speclt1c weather problems, con·
structlon wtn probably run over an lddltlonal 10 daya,"
ftid Tllllt.
.
.
_ ..Meanwhile, ~lnuu_oo_tbe .ond plwe of- tiN~­
proJect, whlr:h Involve~ four mile~ of hl~way thlit bealns
at Ohio 7 near Five Polntt and enda .20 mllea •ot of Sutton
Townthlp Road, and PhiiH Ill, a 4.5-mlle pp between
Mornlna Star and Portland Rmtd that wtll ultimately con- .
nect all three secclon1.
The COlt of the entire 16-miJe conn«tor project, projected w be completed In June 2004,1w bun etdmate4 at ' "
million.
.
.

Mar3.1 ..
For more information about tobacco
prevention or casation, pleo~e call
.

'

(740J 446·5940

MEDICAL; CENTER
Discover the Holzer Df/ferena

www.holzer.oq

•

•

�Thurtchly, May 30, 2002

PageAl

The Daily Sentinel

H. 2002 .

Ohio State prepares to build $145M research center

Ohio ••ther
Plltlav~Miy31

COLUMBUS (AP) - As state sup·
pon for higher education continues to
dry up, Ohio State University is preparIng to con 1truct Its largest campus
building largely with a variety of other
sources, Including federal dollars.
The $14~ million Biomedical
Research Thwcr is meant to push Ohio
State Into an elite league of research
· universities.
·
"It just seemed that we were not going
to be able to build this building in a rea. sonable time frame if we waited for the
state," OSU President William Kirwan
told The Associated Press in an interview.
"We've taken it upon ourselves to put
together the straleMY so we can move
ahead with this butlding and create the
space necessary to continue our
momentum in biomedical research."

The National Weather
Servite liiiYs ~cnnered ~huw•
ets and thunderstorms will
cotltitlue until around mldnlaht In the artm, with lows in
thillow to ntld 60s.
·
Sllattered afternoon showers 11nd thunderstorms will
tontlnue ·
Friday.
Thmperutufl!s will reach tlie
low to mid 80s.
It will be mostly sunny
across the stnte SatUrdll)', wlth
temperatures In the 808.
·. · Sun!et tonil!ht will be tit
8:53. Sunrise Friday will be at
6 :0~ a.m.
· Weather toreta~tt
'tblllght ...Prutly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thun-

black students.
Joseph F. Johnson Jr. will stan his new job July 8 as a special
W!Sistant tn state school Superintendent Susan Zelman.
.
"His work for us will be critical around closing the achievement gnp," said Roger Nehls, deputy superintendent. "It's the
next frontier In terms of us moving Ohio's academic achievement ahead."
·
Johnson, 45, will be paid $96,000 a year. He told The
dei'StOtniS, LoWs ill the lower Columbus Dispatch in a story published Thursday that he's tak60s. Light and varinble winds. Ing 11 pay cutto come to Ohio, but he believes Columbus 'lower
Chlltlce of rain 30 percent.
cost of living will close the gap.
Friday...Partly sunny witlt n
chance Qf showers and thunderstorms. Highs 84 to 88.
West winds ~ to I.5 mph, COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Chlldten's Hospital hill! hired
Chance of rain 30 percent
two doctors from out of state as co-directors of a ·pediatric heart
Friday nlght ...A chilllce of center it plans to open.
evening showers and thunder- Dr. Timothy Feltes, who will be chief of cardiology at the censtorms, otherwise partly ter, was recruited last year from Baylor College of Medicine in
cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s. Houston, where he helped the Texas Children's Hean Center get
Chance of rain 30 percent.
started.
. Extended rorecastt
Or. Murk Oalantowicz will begin work this summer ns chief
Satutday... Mostly sunny. of thoracic surgery. He cutrently holds u similar post at the
Hll!h~ in the tnld 80s.
Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children &amp; Women in Orlando, Fla.
S'atutday
night. .. Mostly "We're bringing in some _of the World's experts," Feltes said.
clenr. Lows In the upper ~Os. "It will most definitely bring patients not only from central
Sunday... Partly
cloudy. Ohio, but in the region and throughout the world. And that's not
Highs in the mid 80s.
exaggeration."

.Pecllebtc heart center planned

11t111 diNctor niMH

Conjoined twins treated

.conjoined
COLUMBUS (AI') twins born

Children's Hospital is trcatin!l u set of
April 24, ~ hospital offlctnl snld

COLUMBUS (A,P)- The hettd orthe federal'l'itle 1 program Wednesday night.
18 coming to work for the Ohio Department of Eduttttlon, which
The twins are In Intensive care nnd haven't yet been separathopes' he will help uloi!e twhlevement. l!liPii betWeen white. and ed, the spokeswoman said. No decision has been made about
'

House approves Sl.7 billion budget fix
COLUMBUS (AI') - The loined 39 Democrats In vot·
Hou8e htts narrowly nppt:t~ved 1ng agttln!t the .bill. Speaker
a bill d~signed to .111 a $1.7 Lttrry
Huuseholder,
tt
billion hole iii the slllte budget Glenford Republican, .needed
with tttx ln~reaseli, botrowlng ~0 votes ror pamge.
1111d tt raid on the nate's rainy Utldllt the plan, the state tax
day fund for lti!last $600 mil· on tl!llll'ettes would lnoreaile
lion.
31 ~ents a p11c:k to !S cents. It
The bill, appft!ved ~ 1•43 · also borrow!I $34~ million
Wednetidlly, Willi to go to the from s~hool construction
Senatll for conliidertltlon llf money provided by Ohio's
Hnulie changes on Thur1day. tihtlte of the national tobac~o
ll.epubliclllls Tolfl9tlnkman settlement.
of
Cincinnati,
!tell The bill also Increases the
Damlichroder of Frllmont, IIIli on trusttl - the Increase
Keith fiaber of Celina and will lapse In . 2005 - and
John Wlllarnowskl of Lilflll requires In 200~ that Income

tax brackets rise with inflation, meaning a small pay
raise won't automatically put
someone ln a higher bracket,
An amendment added
Wednesday removed a small
Increase In the amount retailers ttre ullowed to deduct
from the markup on cigarettes,
The amendment allowed
Sen. Jeffry Armbruster, a
North Ridgeville Republican,
to vote on the blU. His vote
was in doubt because he owns
a company that operates two
convenience stores.

at state dollars, couldn't have worked
for this project, said Caroline Whitacre,
the College of Medicine's vice dean of
research.
"Other medical centers are building
new facilities," Whitacre slid
Wednesday. "To be able to att!'llct .
researchers we have to be able to offer
them state-of-the-art facili9es and· to
retain the outstanding researchers we
have already we have to have outsta6ding facilities to put theril in."
:
Kirwan, who ts leaving Ohio State for
a similar post at the University of
Maryland next month, said improving
resem:h space became a rruyor priority
soon after he arrived in 1998.
;
· At that time, he was presented witS~ a
report that said the university's reseii!Ch
facilities were woefullr small compared
to other ml\ior universities, he said. ·

The tower, to be constructed on the
west side of campus at the OSU
Medical Center, will be funded with a
combination of private donations, fed·
era! grants from the National Institutes
of Health, money set aside for biomedical research from the state's seulement
with major tobacco companies and
internal OSU funds.
·
The I O~story building is projected to
open by late 2006 and will nearly double the amount of space OSU can
donate to biomedical researt:h.
The project, spearheaded by Fred
Sanlilippo. dean.of OSU's .C:ollege of
Medlctne, also. Involves hinng more
than 100 additional medical faculty
members above the current total of
about600.
The old model of university construction funding, waiting for years for a tui'IJ

Chance for rain lingers in .area
IIY TH[ AI3Sot1At~O I&gt;~ESS '

-·

doubiP Y,our

'

when that will happen.
·
.
'f!te ~ospit&amp;! woul~n't release further information about the
babtes, mcludm. thetr names, gender or hometown. .
·
Conjoined twms sometimes share organs and limbs and
always are identical.
·
'

Literature, poetry teacher dies .
· GRANVILLE (AP) - Paul Bennett, who taught American
literature an!j poetry at Denison University for 49 years, die&lt;! of
cancer Tuesday at his home. He was 81 . .
.
.Bennett was an instructor from 1947 to 1996 at Denison,
where he established one of the nation's first undergraduate
writing programs and founded the literal)' magazine "Exile" in
19~3.
.
Later, he was a force in establishing the Harriet Ewens Beck
Lectureship, an endowment program that brings writers and
scholars to the university.
In 1992, Ohio University presented Bennett with a Significant
Achievement Award.
·

Boys CO~vlded of ISSIUit
CANTON (AI') - Two more boys have been convicted. of
charges tied to the sexual assaults of a 7-year-old girl.
. Stark County Family Court Judge John Hoffman ordered h9th
youths, ages 10 and 12, to be evuluated.
·
··
Investigators said the two were among live boys who took
turns assaulting the ~irllast summet, forcing her to touch them
or raping her. The gtrl said she was victimized twice, once in .a
vacant home near her mother's home and another time in a broken-down car.
Charges of rape and gross sexual imposition against a 10year-old were reduced to sexual imposition. It's the same plea
deal given lust month to a 9-year-old paniciplll)t. Their age was
the reason cited for the reduction.

com ort &amp;save!

Right now you een bring home 2of your
favorite La·Z·Boy• styles for 1grut low prlcel .

LOCAL BR EFS
Mr'p1 Cil••tey Watson

EMS

Deaths

· Protestant·denominations .
:look for strategies in nevy
·. study of church leadership

Betty Kelly

Plan meeting

will

992-2117
1-800-992...2608

Dance set

LOCAL STOCKS

: •P.EP - 43.88
. ; Aroh eo.J- 23.95 -

Ftdtral Mogul- .57
USB-23.&amp;2

Rookwtll - 21.08

Gannllt- 75.83

• ; ~111d lno. - 31.10
: • J.TIT-12.01
• : Bani&lt; One- &lt;10.51
; •11U-18

.OKNLY- 5.15
·Beare- 57.30
Harley Davdion- 53.28 Wai-Mart- 54.53

.

Council

Prtmllr- 9.10

: 1 ~. --45.18

• ··lmTICII\'88C- 35:05

Rooky Booll - 8.55
Gannl Eltotrlo- 31'.35 AD 811all - 56.20 .

from PIIJIAI

charge prisoners for housing,
food and other expenses, as
. Kroger - 22.89
Landa End- 81.93
well as administruti ve ser·
• ;iob Evan1- 30.70
Ltd. -20.33 '
• •torowamlf- ee.82
vices
performed during the
the 4 p.m. oloalng
NSC - 20."8
: : Chmplon - 2.95
prisoner's
incarceration.
• Chinning Shopo - 8.01 Olk HI f'Nnclll- 2UO quotaa of lhe prevloua
Jay Shutt, president of the
dey'a lranaactlone. proOVB-24.111
~H~Ing-18.15
vided by Smith Partnera village's consulting firm,
BBT-37.14
al Adveet Inc. of Floyd Browne Associates,
Peoplea- 27.05
DG-17.1!8
Pepaloa ,... 60.93
Gallipolis.
DuPont- &gt;48."8
reported on tests performed
at the villa$e's potential new
water wellm Hobson.
Tests indicate that the water
is free of trichloroethylene
and other volatile organic
(UIII'IZIHIOI
compounds, Shutt said. TCE
Ohio Val~ Publlllllng Co.
has been detected at low lev·
Publl- tvtry tlltmoon, Mon&lt;Jty
tMrougM F~day, 111 Coun St.,
els
in water from Middlepon's
eorr.ctlon Polley
·Pomoroy,
O!lfo.
Stcond-clllo
Well 4. which would be
Our main oonoem In 11110rltlll potllgo Plld II Pomt'l&gt;t'.
Mltnbtr.
The
Aaoclattcl
Pt111
and
replaceJ by the new wei i.
to bt aocurate. H you know of an
error In altoly, caN lhe newaroom lito Ohio ~ Aaoclatlon.
· · The tests indicate levels of
,_._ttr.
'Send 1ddre11 correc·
at (740) 1192·2158.
iron
and manganese which
llono to Tho Ody Sonllnol, Ill Court.
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45759.
exceed the quality standard,
Nlw1 o.ptrtmentl
Shutt said, but filtering
Subecrlptlon rat11
The main nu/'pber Ia 1192·2158.
·
equipment
would be installed
Depa- extlflllonl a,.:
ly • - or motor route
OnllS2
to
address
those
levels, which
$8.70
a.ntrll miUillflll'
Ext. 12 Onll montll
poses no health threat.
·
Onll Yilt
$11J.l
DIIHY
ij() cento
An
analysis
of
the
well's
Ext.
13
'·•
detl~ng to PlY tho
pumpin11 capacity is nearing
..,., may . - In tctYance dlrtct to
M
Ext.14 The DallY Stntlntl. Credk will bt a1wn
completion, Shutt said, but
..,., uch - ·No IIA&gt;ialpllou by
preliminary results indicate
Other HI'VIcet
rn1tl ptnnllll;d In arNe: wn.r. harM
that
the well has the potential
AIMitlllnt
Ext. 3 center - • •••-·
to pump at a much higher rate
Kman- t.07

wendr'l- 36.85
Wonhlngton - 15.60
Dally etock repona are

The Daily Sentinel

,_

•

-not

FREE
P•rklng .
FINANCIHO AVAII.Ait.l
0

~=

Frf.t·f:

FLAIR

"IIRAI'ID I'IAM&amp; PIJRI'IlTUR!. AT DISCOUHT PRICU"

WV 875~1371
I

Circulation

Ext. 4

CtQIHied Ml '

Ext. 5

OnthiWib

•

fiii:IC.

than either of the .village's
existing wells.
Tests will continue to
. deterini.ne how many wells
could operate from the new ·
well field, · and the pumping
capacity of those wells.
Results of those tests are
expected nexi month.
Shutt said bids for the
painting of the Mill Street
water tank are expected to be
awarded next month.
Preliminary work is underway on the aerial mapping
project approved at council's
most recent meetinl!. The
new maps, . which w1ll pri- ·
marily be used in future
water and sewer projects,
will be based on county m~ps
and on-ground survey work,
which should begin soon, Subscribe today • 446-2342
according to Shutt.
Council also:
• Approved the village's
2002 budget of $2,009,000;
· • Approved payment of
bills m the amount of $
· $13,686.45, which included
the cost of the April spring
cleanup. totaling $1,542;
Present were lannarelli,
council members Houchins,
Roger Manley, Kathy Scott
and Bob Robinson, and Clerk
Susie French.

MIDDLE.I'ORT - As.ll
Slreet Church wm hold i~
Vautioo Bible School.
Monday through . Friday.
from 6:30..9-p...m. The tbtm&amp;
is "UncQQUl\01'1 Heroes."
For more infocmation. call
992-6443.

Wlnnus

announced
RACINE - Usa C~
was the winner of a patnted
window and Dulle BenQ 11
music11l sohlier. given llWil)(
by the Enduring Freedom
Support Clroup at the Racine
Area
Community
Organization's recent Flower
Festival.

PAGEVILLE - Sdpio
Township Trustees will hold
their regular me~:ting at 6:30
p.m. on Wednesday at the
Pageville Town Hull..

Plan
presentation
CHESTER - U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland. 0-Lucllsville.
will pre~nt new U.S. flags to
the Chester Courthouse and
Chester Fire Depanment ut 4
p.m. Friday. A program is
also planned.

nustees meet
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township Trustees will meet
Monduy at 7:30 r :m. at ·
Syracuse Vilhige Hal .

Ramp dosed
POMEROY - pomeroy's
levee und bout launch will be
closed all day Saturday due
to the Gospd on the Levee
concert:

•

www.~.oom

•

,.

eluV«Jk

Vacation Bible
·School ·
Monday, Jane 8
a Friday June 7

SUbscribe today • 992-2156

8:80PM ·I PM

"Unt:DmmDn ReiD••"
All t:IIJllb811 W81t:DID8/
Call (74tn 111 14411or ...,. lnl•••lloa

•

"i. '

ALFRED Orange
Township Trustees will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at thehome of the clerk, Osie
Foil rod.

A~ s~NuJ

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

To meet

Proud to be apart
of your life.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

To Mild Hllltll
newtOmydlllyllntlntj.oorri

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

planned

James S. Stump

Reader Services

,

sclwMII

Hazel E. Montpmeiy.

•••

Hell/thy Start offers no-cost or low-cost health care coverage ,
. for kids (birt~ to age 19) and pregnant women..
HeiJithy Famlllel offers no·cost health care coverage for the
entire family - parents AND kids.

HARRISONVILLE
Derek C. McDaniel, 17.
35153 Page~ille Road.
Albany, was ~ited for failure
to control by the &lt;ialliaMeigs Post of th.e State
Highway Pallot following a
one-~ar
accident
Wednesday on Sdpio
Township
Road
52
(Mudfork)',
Troopers said McDaniel
was southbound, four-tenths
of a mile south of Ohio 143.
at 3 p.m. when be lost control of the cur he drove and
struclt a concrete bridge
rail.
The car . had disabling
damage, troopers said,

MINERSVILLE - Marilyn J. Grindley Watson, 69, of
Minersville, died Monday, May 27, 2002, at her residence.
Born May 23, 1933. in MinersviUe. she was lhe daughlerof
the late Ronald E. Grindley and Cora Artie Grindley, and was
a homemaker and member of lhe Syracuse Nazarene Church.
Along with her parents, she was preceded in death by a son,
David Lee Watson; a brother, Roger Grindley; mather-in-law
and falher-in-law, Christine and Gil ben Freeman; and two sisters-in-law. Martella Birchfield and Connie Drake.
She is survived by her husband, William (Dave) Watson,
whom she married November 19. 1951; u daughter and sonin-law, Dena and Tom Roseberry of Syracuse; three grandsons, Trenton, Colby and Andrew Roseberry of Syracuse; a
sister, Wanda Roush of Racine; two brot.hers. and four sisters·
in-law. Ronald and Leila Grindley of Grov.e City, Richard and
Dee Dee Grindley of Westerville, Sharon Kincade of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., and Joanne Smalley of Zanesville; brothersin-law and sisters-in-law, Gary and Linda Freeman of
Pomeroy, llild Charles and Eileen Watson of Baltimore,
Maryland; special relatives, Norma Jean and Bud Jaines ·of
Montana; ana several nieces, nephews and special friends.
ftlns
.Services will be hel~ at I p.m. on Fri~a~. Mar. 31. 2002. at
Ftsher Funeral Home m Pomeroy. Offictallng Will be the Rev.
- Units. of
· Mike Adkins. B.urial will follow in Letart Falls Cemetery. thePOMEROY
Meigs Emergency
Friends may call on Thursday, May 30, 2002, from 6-9 p.m. at Service
answered 10 calls
the funeral home.
for
assistance
on
. CONSTRUCTION CONnNUES - Work crews and heavy
Wednesday:
Units.
machinery continue to remove large amounts of dirt and rock
responded as follows :
.· as construction on the first phase of the Ravenswood
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Connector project moves along. (Tony M. Leach)
I :28 a.m.. Willis Hill,
Vicki Hysell, Pleasant
Valley Hospital;
6:55 a.m.. Ohio 7.
Willie Jones, Ca.mden Clark Memorial Hospital :
.. .
9:55 a.m.. Ohio 124,
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Betty Kelly, 71, New Haven. died
motor vehicle accident,
Thursday, May 30, 2002, at her residence.
Daniel
· Bable, Cabell
' Arrangements will be announced by Anderson Funeral
Huntington
Hospital;
Home, New Haven.
11:18 a.m.. Ohio 684.
•
Bertha Mitchell, Holzer
: ': CLEVELI\ND (AP) - A nary results.
Mcdic.al Center;
group of major · Protestant • The new study, funded by
1:39 f .m.. Mill Street.
CROWN CITY - Hazel E. Montgomery, 82, Crown City,
. l!enominations is using a new the denominations and the died
Chantel
Hoffman. HMC;
Wednesday, May 29, 2002, at her residence.
survey on effective church Lilly Foundation Endowment
6:28p.m.,
Walker Alley,
Born March 29, 1920, in .Ross County, daughte.r of the late
leadership as the basis for a Fund, used surveys and focus Jessie M. and Irene Queen White, she was a homemuker. und Margaret Walker. PVH:
dialogue on how to stem grou~s to identify key charac- attended Elizabeth Chapel and Canaan Missionary Baptist
8:24 p . m . , ~ Rocksprings
declines in church member· terisllcs of leaders who have Church.
Rehabilitation
.Center.
··
. ship and start ·new cong~ga- "successfully established new
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Thurman Blake Weaver. treat~d.
· ·lions.
congregations over the past Lee Montgomery. on Feb. 4. 1999; two sons. James Monroe
RUTLAND
Leaders of seven Protestant two decades.
12:54. p.m.,
Noble
and Roger Lee . Montgomery; two grandda11ghters, Tiffany
• denominations said Tuesday
According to study director Montgomery and Jami Addis; three sisters, Goldie Hill, Sylvia Summit. Mardu Capehart.
that the study, conducted by H. Stanley Wood, successful Perkins and Marjorie Mullins; and two brothers, Alvin White PVH;
· ·center for New Church church leaders have displayed aild Frank White.
.
3:08 p.m., Mudforll
··Development at Columbia a specific · set of "'entrepreSurviving are a son, William. Eugene "Bill" (Dorie) Road, motor vehicle acciTheologic
Seminary
in neurial" characteristics, such Montg-omery of Crown City; four daugliters, Shirley (David) dent. Patrick McDaniel.
·.Georgia, &amp;!Jggests churches as tenacity, perseverance and Lilly of Gallipolis. Gloria Jean Montgomery SimEkins of Derek McDaniel. treated:
may need to rethink the way the willingness to take risks.
Middlepon, and Ellen (James) Addis and Nancy (Charles)
8:31 p.m., Ohio 684,
· ·ihey have established new conThey also tend to be vision- Brumfield. both of Crown City; nine grandchildren and 12 Elmer Bowles, PVH.
, gregations in lhe United States ary leaders, with n charismat- great-grandchildren; and five sisters, Ruby Montgomery,
. ·and the type of people !hey ic abilitr to communicate Grace Mullins. Ida Pilcher and Ruth Willett, all of Gallipolis.
send to set up the churches.
their viston, as well as an and Frances Hyde of Georgia.
• Together, the denomina· ability to delegate tasks and
Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday in Willis Funeral Home,
1
ROCK SPRINGS
, :tions represent more than 10 recrutt good assistants.
Gallipolis, with Pastor Garland Montgomery officiating.
: · million Christians, but all of Wood said the survey also Burial will be in Mount Zion Cemetery. Friends may call at Salisbury Township Trustees
meet Tuesday at 6 p.m.
; :them have seen their mem- is looking at ministrtes in the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Friduy.
at
the
township building on
; t&gt;ership shrink dramatically in Hispanic, Asia~, Kore~n,
Rocksprings Road.
• .the past 20 years. The denom- black and Amencan Indtan
' inallotts involved in the study communities to ''tell us what
are the Evangelical Lutheran nuances may exist" .· about
LONG BOITOM - James S. Stump, 67, Long Bottom,
Church of America, the successful leadership in those died Monday, May 27, 2002, in Jackson General Hospital,
Ripley, W.Va.
Reformed
Church
in cultures.
GALLIPOLIS •• Sounds of
Born Dec. 17, 1934, in Vinton County. son of the late
America, the United ·Church
Robert Hoyt, director of
will perform at the
of . Christ, the Christian new co~gregations for the Francis V. Stump, and· Clara Manin Stump of Albany, he was Bluegrass
AMVETS
in Gallipolis on
·
Reformed Church, · the Evangelical Luth~ran Church a member of VFW Ohio Chapter 53.
Surviving in addition to his mother are two soris, James F.
Episcopal
Church,
the of America, said "we have
Presbyterian Church (USA) always assumed that any Stump and Michael C. Stump, both of Nelsonville; u daughand the Lutheran C~urch· ordained person could start a ter, Joella Stump of Albany; 10 grandchildren and several
Missouri Synod,
church." The study results stepgrandchildren; three brothers, Richard Stump, Carl Stump
The denominations have . suggest instead that church and David Stump, all of Albany; and a sister, Barbara Dewey
gathered for a two-day con· leaders should be looking or of Albany.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Carol-Rose
. ference here at the United teaching some specific skills
Blaskowisk
Stump.
: Church of Christ headquar- for people they send out to
Services
will
be I p.m. Friday in Souers-Cardaras Funeral
· :ters to discuss the implica- found new congregations, he
Home, 46 Fayette St., Nelsonville, Ohio 45764, with the Rev.
: ' dons of the study's prelimi· said.
.
•
David Edgell officiating. Burial will be in Asbury Cemetery,
••
Hocking
County. Friends rna~ call at the funeral home on
: . -.------------------------~-----------­
Friday
from
1'1 a.m. until the ume of services.
•••
••••

·Health.Care Coverage for
Ohio's Working Familie:s .

TM~Stnlihat•P QeA~

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Healthy Start ·
·Healthy Families

· www.mvdllllyaentinel.c:om

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�'

Page AS

•

.The Daily Sentinel

'

summer
•1ng
June3

.J0,2002

ereen eav rea.
tran

Dear

Abby

~=

~DVICE

~~
8:30 to 11 G.m.
ond 1 t.o l:JO
p.m. at the CAA
centtrJI olfke
in Cheshita

Mrs. Edward G. Robinson was
very .tetive with the USO, organizing visits of young women to various military camps around Los
A~~geles in the early &lt;lays of the war.
My mother was one of those college
t~itls who volunteered to socialize
wittl the ·unifonned men before they
'Shipped Ollt.
01\ A given weekend, they took a
~bartered bus and went to daliCes or
"sodals" with the boys - giving
them someone to talk to. The girls
were fully chaperoned and had their
u\Vn lodging for the night, until
their return to Los Angeles the followil\g day.
Mrs. Robinson wrote a small
book abOUt this ~roup, called "The
Desert nattalion, ana gave one to
each ofttle volunteers. Moniloalled
hen&gt;llly copy to someone else In the
battalion and has never found a
te\)lacell'lent, much to her dismay.
Slie says it was a great eXperience

and felt she had helped in her own
way with the war effort on the home
front.
This was one of those unique
local activities that happened in
response to World War II. I hope the
memory of these effolts can SOJ11Chow be preserved, There are so
many inspiring stories about life at
home and abroad during World War
II that my generation unfortunately
may never know.- DAVE KOHL,
WEST LINN, ORE.
DEAR DAVE: You're right, there
are. And since rou brought up the
subject of inspiring stories, "War
Letters," the extraordinary collection of historical correspondence
from the Civil War to the present
(collected by Andrew Carroll, published by Washington Square
Press), is now in paperback and
available in bookstores. I recommend it.
DEAR ABBY: I ain planning to
'

College News
vice p~ident and setVed as seco~~d teams, with 20 natned
master ·of cereniOII\es for the to a third team.
Hon~ Day- lul'tcheo~~ .
Second team . members
teeelved $~00 scholarship
awanls. which were matched
.
by the Washington State
POMeROY - Wilmin~ton Community College Board of
Colt~¢ jUI\Ior Jol\athan 'l'rtlslees.
ltaggert.y of Pomeroy was Stoban will receive an asso1\ati\td to the dean's list at ciate of arts degree in liberal
Wilmington College in a"s transfer/psychology coilWilmington. .
' centration from the college in
T'o be eligible, students Ju11e.
must eam a srade pohit aver, She is a member of the Phi
~ ~:~r at least 3.5 Oil a :4.0 fhe.ta
Kappa honorary,
~ale.
.
recently setvlng as the col·
lege's chapter president. She
a... ..
c~aired the PTK regional
ntl
ftNI
leadership conference last
TUPPERS PLAINS - · fall. and chaired the local
Mlchaelle Stoban of tuppers chapter's fall orientation and
Plall\s was !lamed to the All· Induction ceremony.
Ohl~:~
Academk Second She has been named to the.
'team,
representing president's and dean's lists at
Washll\gton State Colt\lliUI\ity Washington
State,
the
College ill Marietta,
National Dean's List, Who's
The
teams
.ptovide Who, . and Outstanding
~liltewlde recagnltlon to out- transfer Student. She is now
~tlllldi~ tWo-yl!at tl'lllege stu· ellt~&gt;lled at Manetta College,
dl!nh. ~~~ ~tlldentt were pursuillg a bllchelor's degtee
1111m00 to l!ach the tlt'$t and II\ p~y-diology.

On . .
.. nts list

1fe's symptoms
may rule out tests
Oullstlon:

My wife hus

family
Medicine

.....11a1d to

rlcs·.

Porh11ps · 1111 MRA
(Mul!nutit
RusonllllC:C
A11glog•·~m 11 SllllCIIII
form of · MRI) or lUI
anglogrttm whiutl dy11 Is ·
hth~eh.ld Into the arteries
wfll bo 1111cessary to anlu·
11111 her ccrcbrlllllrterlos.
(" F'1111til,v Mi!tlit'i1111" I~ 11
\\~tk/y t't!/11/1111. 7b Slll.mt/t
qH~.~tltHIS, ll'rihl 16 JtJit11 C.
~\Wf, . /),()., Ohio Ullil'f!r.dty

h11d severe houduehos, cold
swe11ts 11nd blackout spells.
From my 'reudiniJ&amp;. I think
those could bo symptoms ol'
un unourysm. rf sa. wh11t
can couso it to proaress to
the serious condition of
rupture'/
supplied by tho blood. tho
Answer: The symptoms br:un cells c~tn't function
·• h '-i properly 11nd In severe
your WhO as .,.,on cxpor • cases will die. This is whlll
cnc:lniJ cun be due to u num·
bcr of conditions. Whon we eull:t stroke I
CtJIItl!ll tJf ().~IWJHitltic
fllccd with u dlu1nostlc • Second. tho physk11l Mi!tllri/1~. 'P. (). Box 110,
J)U:U:Ie, we doc:tors consider swelling of lln nneurysm or Atlttrts, ()/tlo 45701 . Pttst
the most common condl· the dlsplucement or brAin f't!/tll/1/1.~ 111'1' tl\'tll/ttbll! tlflliHI!
tlons
first.
Mlgrlllno c:olh c:11used by blood out• 111 ~~''''''tJhmdltJ.t!~.)
headAches, dlubetes or oven side the urtery lnc:rouses thl!
llnlticty arc drumllllclllly prossutu lnddc tho skull.
more llkely to be tho cuusc As u result, not only tho
of her symptoms thun Is " bruin cells In thurou of thil
cere brill uneurysm.
unourysm ure "squee1cd,"
Despite the stutlstlcs but ulso the whola br11ln Is
involved, h Is ulso part of u Affected by the lncre11sed
aood dlngnostic workup to pressure. This prevents the
consider the less likely - sufferer from pcrformlna
but very serious - condi· his or her usulll thin-kina
with natlonwld• long dl1tanoe
lions thut 'con CIIUSC II Qivcn lind llfO•SUSlllnlnQ tUSkS,
set of symptoms.
• Third, despite the fact
· Before 1 ao uny further, thut the bnin Itself c1111not
Plu1, 400 anytlm• mlnutt•
let me expluln 11 few terms. foul puln, u ruptured
An aneurysm Is u dilution uncurysm can llClliully be
or swelling of u blood vcs· !JUite p11lnful. This . Is
sci. These ore most com· l:iec11use tho P.rcssuro, Inside
mon in :merles bcc11usc the skull Impinges on other
with 1 two-v.ur
ltrvloe agrHmtnt
•
they opcrntc und1.1r hlahor structures thllt do huve puln
pressure than do veins. The nerve endlnas.
aneurysm comes about
crebral uncurysms pose
because of wcukcnlna In very lillie risk when th y
the urterr, wuli. The term nrc small. Laraer ones,
Ctt 1 Sony Ericsson R)oo for $tt.tt1
"cerebral' . pertains to the those over 5 mill, huvo
Suueated rtfall prkl: $4t.se
brain. Therefore, 11 cercbrul some risk of rupturing with.
Mal~ln rtbltt: $SQ.OO YIMir COilt S!t&gt;tt
Clttlhhtctltllhtlti tu apply
oncurysm is un aneurysm of' the p115511gl.l of 'time.
one of tho muny urtcrios Consequently, they should
Wt'lll'llll wtl'lt thllll Kll'lttlt!l !ttl 'llolll'lllltlliofiH.
that supply blood to the · be ovuruatcd by 11 ncurosur·
bruin.
geoil. The areuteat b1merlt
Ccrcbrul uncurysms ure for most people with on
on t~e National Nttworlt plan can bt
rclutlvcly common. Fifteen usymptomutlc nnd smull
yours If you come In to in ATitTWirtltll
to 20 percent of the populu· aneurysm, however, comes
dealer today. .
tion h11vc very sm11ll oncR from periodic evuluutlon
welcome to mlifo.
(2 mm or smollcr) and S und control, when neces·
percent have mo~e sianlrl · sury, of blood pressure.
cant ones mcusurma 5 mm llillh blood prcnuro Is·
or arcatcr. Despite the hlah probu~ly the .greatest con·
prevalence of this dlaordcr tribullng
foetor
to
and the tendency for uny aneurysm
rupture.
aneurysm to cnfar11c with Hcr~dlty, ·high cholesterol
time, the freqUency of and bthcr factors pluy 11 mlc
bleeding from them Is actu· us well.
.
ally rutllcr low - ubout 10 Prom simple statistics
per 100,000 population.
nlone. It Is unlikely thut
When un aneurysm rup· your wife's symptoms urc
turcs it causes problem~ t;y due to u ccrchruluncury5m.
three different mechanisms: This Is partlculorly true If
• The rupture reduces or she Ia under 50 nnd has no
cllminutes blood supply to family history of cerebral
1ome port of the bruin. A hcmorrhaae. D spite lhla,
vigorous supply of oxy11cn you should mention ym1r
· and blood su11ur (glucose) concerns to her doctor the
Is neccuary for tfie brain next time she Is there.
cells to function . Without This will ullow ull thro
these vital nutrienu bcin~ of you to discuss yclur uwar,

·

leg\) has lllvested over $26 mll- Bowman, VP financial alld
lloo In ll bulldlng~ oo the Rio adminisltlttlve affairs for Rio
tlrande campus.

Dahlbe~'s ~llow

trustees,

Andy

AdelmMn, • Polly

Hetm~~li

l{t)by 111\d . Bt)nny

Wetlierllolt,

Don

C\xner,

Hufl\\\111\, were In attendanci1
whell he received the 11ward.

Also 11t1ellillttg lhlm Rio Onll\de

were

and

Dr.

~ildent,

DIIIUIISIIr

\.

IWird

Today in the Sentinel ... B8

"'P~ee: ft ~ ft

lllllriiUII-

m

Ciga
Carton... •

Ami~

Billfolds

New Seledlon • 1/2 PRI"' ..'

Po

Blltty

Dorsey,

be married. This will be my third
trip to the altar. My question: Would
it be proper for me to wear white? If
not, what would you suggest? CHERYL IN CLINTON TOWN·
SHIP, MICH.
DEAR CHERYL: Although
whitt! no longer symbolizes virginity, it does signify a first-time bride.
Consider wearing a long or short
dress in a pale pastel color, offwhite or white with color in the trim
and accessories. An afternoon dress ·
(long or short) or a dressy suit
would also be appropriate.
Congratulations on your forthcoming marriage. I hope the third
time is the charm.
(Pauline Phillips and her daughter Jeanne Phillips share the pseu· .
donym Abigail Van Buren. Write
Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.)

.

ME[GS
CALJBNDAR
Community Calendar percussion two two-liter Saturday with potluck
II publllhed 11 e fl'ft bottles of soda and chips, supper at 6:30 p.m ..
aervlca to non-profit and brass. dessert.
meeting at 7:30 p.m.

groupa

wlahlng

to

ennounc:. meetlnga end
apaclal eY~H~ta. The cal·
tndlllr Ia not dealgned 't o
promot. aalel or fund·
ral11r1 of 1ny type.

are printed only
apace. pennlta and
cannot ba guarantMd
lteini

· I I'

to be printed • apaclflc

numblr of d•Y•·

THURSDAY
RUTLAND - Revival
at Emmanuel Apostolic
tabernacle, located on
Loop Road, olf New Lima
Road Mar Rutland, with
Evangelist Freddy Harris
from Durant, Okla.,
ThurSday
through
Sunday, 7:30 p.m. aach
evening.
·

Members lo bring food
RACINE - Southern . bank items,
Local Board of Education,
regular meeting, 7 p.m.
PORTLAND
Thursday, at the high Lebanon
Township
school.
Trustees, Saturday, 7
p.m., township buildling. ·
POMEROY - .Town &amp;
Country Expo meeting,
SUNDAY
Thurs., 7:30 p.m. Anyone
RACINE - Pure in
Interested in promoting Heart to perform at
the event . and helping Carmei·Sutton United
with 2002 Expo Is Invited. Methodist
Church,
742·3020, 992·2924 or Bashan Road, Sunday, 11
949·2746 lor info.
a.m. Public invited.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411
meets Saturday, 7:30
p.m., lodge hall, for work
in the E.A. degree.
Refreshments. Master
Masons welcome.

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local band banSALEM CENTER qual potluck, Thursday,
6:30 p.m., at Royal Oak Star Grange 778 and Star
Ali!sOI't. Woodwinds bring Junior Grange 878 meets
covered dish or salad, In
regular
session

'

RACINE - George
Holter Jr. family reunion,
Sunday, 1 p.m., at the
home of Jim and Karen
Werry on Court Street
Road near Morning Star.
All descendants and family
friends
Invited.
·Chicken and baked ham,
table . service provided.
Bring photos, stories,
covered dish. 9&lt;19·4000
for information.

Omnde Community College.
"Carl h~ dedicated much of
his llfu to Rio Orahde's success " t~~~ld Dr. Bany M. Dorsey
· · lticllt of the commllillty collllld the lli\lvet"$ity. ."We
ue his leade11hip and advice.
The OACC could not have
selecll!d 1 tnOI1! de&amp;erving reclp-

a11d LUiume Ra$t lctit for Its award."

HEALTHY START

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

Can
es &amp; CDs 20

Sun lasses
1

PRICE

Call Today!
992-2117
1-800-992-2608
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services
175 Race Street

Middleport, Ohio 45760

'Filii DELIVEIIV
'Filii IIT•UP

•Filii MIIKINO

'liltll LAVAWAV

PHONE (304) 675-1371

Fl#AIR
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
"IRAI&gt;ID I&gt;IAME F\JRNITUR~ AT DISCOUNT PRICES"

IIT.2
OALLIPOLIB FERRV

wv 21515

The Daily Sentinel

�Opinion

_The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

.PapA&amp;
1hundlly. lilly H. 2102

THt~OOZATs

252Upper
River Rd.

A~ ATTACKING!

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-912·21118 • Fu: 740-112·2157
www.mydtlllyHIItlnel.com

Galllpolla, OH

I Ui-UH 1:!

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dlckeraon
Publither
Ohllrltne Hoeflich
Gentrel Manager

Valley Lumber

Dlant Key Hill
Controller

555 ParkSt
Middleport

Unen 10 tltt HlltW.,. wdtUMt. T1t11 tlunlld IH l111 lUll JOO woNt. AU le1t1n
.,. 1djtct to eclltilfl a~ttl .mMIIIw llftttd •M iffriiHit lllldrrn •tull~t.pltont """'"''·
No "'"""" ltltm wlU lw p•bil.sh.wl. Untn sltu»lfl lw ;,. rood IIUI1, llllfiHnU.,
isrMn, 1t0t p«&lt;onaUiitt.
·
Tltt oplnlo~tiiXP'fiiM/IIf lilt col liMit INlow an tit• COIIIfllfS•I of lltt Olllo MrU.J
,.,.ltlllllilfJ C~t."' ulltBriltlfHwutt. ""''"' 01/ltrwiS~ IIDttd.

NATIONAL VIEW

992·6611

Release
Government needs to get qff
dime about detained academic

WASHINGTON TODAY

Today is Thursday,' May 30, the !50th day of 2002. There

•

•

Today's Highlight in History:
·
On May 30, 1431, Joan of Arc, condemned as a heretic, was
burned at the stake in Rouen, France.
On this date:
In 1539, Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto landed in
Florida.
In 1854, the territories of Nebraska and Kansas were established.
In 1883, 12 people were trampled to death when a rumor
that the recently opened Brooklyn Bridge was in imminent
danger of collapsing triggered a stampede.
In 1911, Indian!lpolis saw its first long-distance auto race;
Ray Harroun was the winner.
·.
. In 1922, the Lincoln Memqrial was dedicated in
Washington D.C., by Chief Justice William Howard Taft.
In 1943, American forces secured the Aleutian island of
Attu from the Japanese during World War II.
In 1958, unidentified soldiers killed in World War II and the
Korean conflict were buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
In 1971, the American space probe Mariner Nine blasted off
from Cape Kennedy, Fla., on a journey to Mars.
In 1982, Spain became NATO's 16th member.
In 1996, Britain's Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson were.
granted an uncontested decree ending their ten-year marriage.
Ten years ago: President Bush ordered the seizure of
Yu¥oslav government assets in the United States after the
Umted Nations imposed , sanctiohs in an effon to force
Yugoslavia to observe a cease-fire in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Five years ago: Child molester Jesse K. Timmendequas was
convicted in Trenton, N.J., of raping and strangling a 7-yearold neighbor, Megan Kanka, whose 1994 murder inspired
"Megan's Law," requiring that communities be notified when
sex offenders move in. (Timmendequas was later sentenced to
· · death.)
One year ago: Standing among trees in Sequoia National
Park in California, President Bush pledged to protect "these
works of God" and other natural treasures from mankind.
Former French Foreign Minister Roland Dumas was convicted of corruption and sentenced to six months in prison. Moses
Malone and college coaches Mike Krzyzewski and John
Chaney entered the Basketball Hall of Fame.
Today's Birthdays: Country musician Johnny Gimble is 76.
Actor Clint Walker is 75. Actress Ruta Lee is 66. Actor
Michael J. Pollard is ~3. Actor Stephen Tobolowsky is 51.
Actor Colm Meaney is 49. Actor Ted McGinley is 44. Actor
Ralph Caner is 41. Country singer Wynonna is 38. Rock
musician Tom Morello (Rage Against The Machine) is 38.
Rock musician Patrick Dahlheimer (Live) is 31. Actor Trey
Parker ("Newsies") is 30. Rapper Cee-Lo (Goodie Mob) is 28.
Actor Blake Bashoff is 21.
Thought .for Today: "Only the man who finds everything
wron~ and expects tt to get worse .is tho~ght to have .a clear
brain. ' - John Kenneth Galbratth, Amencan economtst.·

.

Mortm
Kmlracke
COLUMNIST

Crow's
Family
Restaurant
F••turlng
K•ntucky
Frl•d Chicken

POST-RACE NOTES

B¥ RICK MINTER

c. IIIlO&amp; Cox Nowa Sarvlce

A

T

- Rkk Mlnttr

ON THE TUBE

'

Wlnaton Cup: MBNA
Platinum 400. 12:00 p.m. EI&gt;1'

'.
,.

Buach: MBNA Platinum 200:
12:30 p.m. EI&gt;1' SaturdaY on
FX.
Craftlman Truck: MBNA
Amsr!ca 200. Saturdall 330
~m. EDT on.ESPN.

Beron 70 lapa htd been nm In thO Coke
600, Jerry Nadeau had deol! with ol'llulty
radio, o broken jack, a penalty for 11 tire
roUina out of his pita.and an lll:handlinK car.
But he and hil crtw wtre determined to
chan1e \heir luck de~pllo be!na n lap down.
On evory p!ltlop, the crew made radical
chuala chana•• In a oearch ror a HI·UJI that
1\ould work.
"JUit hana on and don't wreck the car,"
crew chter JamH tnce told Nadeau on the
npel!ed two-way radio. "I promiH you we'll
eventually malot tha cur better."
"I won't evtr alve Ul'o" re&amp;ponded Nad1111u,
who Ia ftll!naln for ll\lu~ Johnny Ben10n In
the No. 10 Pontiac. Nadeau tlnlahed 28th.

A LOOK AHEAD
June 9 - Pocono 600,

Pocono RacewaY
Sirius Satellite Radio 400,
M!chlpn International Speedway
June 23 - Dodp/Save Mart 960,
Sean Point Raceway
July 8 - Fe))ll 400,
Daytona International Speedway
July 14 - Trop!cana 400,
Chlca110land Speedway
J11111 18 -

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

Jll' Itt deniM twitch
. Dale Jarrett reacted anarUy to publllhed
nportt that he ml11ht leave hll job a1 driver
of Robert Ya!et' No. 68 !lord. ·
"I'm the drlwr of the No. 68 car until
Robert Yate1 decide• I'm too old to do this,"
Jarreu u!d .
Jarrett did uy that car owner Andy Pvtnt
had approachlld him to Inquire about h!a job
t!tuotlon. Petree helped build and ws1 part
.wner of Jamtt'1 nrat race car.
Jamtt 11ld he and 1pon10r UPS hava con·
tracu with Yatet throuch tllellOOI 81810n and
are In neiiOtlal!ona tD renew them.
He a110 11!d hit team had !allen behind
technoloa!cally and that 111ure won no quick
IJJCII.

THEY SAID IT

that could be used to help · candidates
this year, but he makes a convincing
case that without the investment the
pany would be bankrupted by campaign finance reform.
In 2000, the pany raised $185 million
- $100 million in soft money, mainly
from a few hundred rich individuals,
unions and corporations and $85 million in hard money from a pool of
400,000 smaller donors.
Republicans raised $155 million
more, but the majority was in hard dollars cultivated from a direct-mail donor
list of 15 million names.
McAuliffe embarked on modernizing
the nuts-and-bolts capacity of the party
well before it became apparent that the
McCuin-Feingold bill would pass, eliminating soft money. Now, he says, it's
vital that he did so.
"I honestly didn't think that McCainFeingold would pass. We had to make
these fundamental changes in our party
just for survival. Now, we look like
geniuses because had we not done this a.
year ago, honestly, we'd be out of busi•
ness."
"Just think where we'd be," he added.
"We'd be stuck renting space all over
town, spendinj! hard money. We'd still
have a$4 milhoh mortga~e on the DNC
headquaners 3/8 that we d have to pay
with hard dollars.
·
The membership of the National
Democratic Club, a separate entity from
the DNC, is scheduled to vote today on
a board recommendation to· sell ·its (Morton Kondracke is executive edi·
building to the DNC so that McAuliffe tor of Roll Call, the newspaper OJ
can begin gutting the structures in Capitol Hill.)

"We're probably not there yet,
but if we can keep picking up
and keep having good luck, we
could even contend for the
championship this year."
.... Mltl1ln, . . . . . .

...,.. c-r+ llldrc,..., 600.

DRIVER STANDINGS
WINITON CUP
ITANDINCII
I ' Sl.U·~ "l"in
M
U
o 1
• n·
••••
2. M.n nNII1, t . -.

3. Mark Martin, 1;1132.

4. Jell OOI'don, 1,584.

e.Jtmmlt John11011. 1,518.

.,

8. Rutty Wallace, 1,~?6.
7. Tony Stewart,1 ,D44.
a. !Wrt S..ldl, 1,5~.
9. Rlclcy Rudd,1,485.
10. Sill EIIIQn, 1,437.
11 . J.n Bunon, 1,388.
12. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 1,351.

13. Ricky Cravtn, 1,334.
14. Mtohatl Waltrip, 1 2811,
15. oa•·
•-rrttt, 1,"8
.
~..
• 3

27. Mikt Sklnntr:1j001.
28. Jetr
Nldtlll. ,003.
211.
Gordon. m .

30. ~n hrader, 947.
31 . Brott Bodine, 1138.
32. John Anaroni. l138.
33. ~n Harvlck, 033.
34. Hut Stricklin, 927.
35. Caoay Atwood, 865.
38. Johnny Bln11011, 861 .
37. Stacy Compton, &amp;47 .
38. Jot Ntmtehek, 735.
39. 81- Park, 804.
40. Rick Mat, 878.

18. Torry l.abonto, 1,280.
17. Ryan Nawman, t ,248.
18. Wild Burton, 1.235.
19. Davt Blaney. 1,230.
20. Jimmy 8ptnCtr,.t,217,
21 . Bobby L..bonto , 1,212 .
22. Kyle _Ptlty, 1j208.
23. Jtff OrHn. ,186.
24. Jertmy Mayfield, 1,176.

25. EIIIQn Sadler, 1.~

28. Bobby MamiHon , 1,058.

-----------------------------------------IIIICH IIRIII
IT-.NDINGI

20. Lar,Y Fovl, 1,282.

S.Scott AIOa1.1,821 .
·
4. R =, 1,718.
lin, 1,8113.
5. Milot
e. Oraglllflllt: .,862.
.

24. Kw;~n Grubb, 1,1&amp;4.
25. MldiMI Wollrlp, 1,181 .
28. Ron Hornlclay. 939.
17. Jimmy~·· 906.
28. Lyndon 4mlck, 617.

! .,IliOn ~ller,1,858.
2. Jack Sorague, 1.837.

7. KtmyWII~Kt; 1,&amp;41.

8. Bobby tWnllton, Jr., 1,818.
9. 8t.cy Compton, t ,586.
10. McMurray, 1,549•
11 . Scott Wlmmtr, 1,542.
12. nm SIW1or, 1,422.
13. Hank Parker Jr.. 1,380.
14. AlhiDn L.ewle, 1,351.
15. Silane Hmtet, .MIS.
IS.J.n Purvll, I,..,.,.
17. Jtff OrHn, 1,294.
18. Tony AllnH, 1,284.
19. Johnny Sauter, 1.281 .

1

I
I

21 . c~ Moara,1,234.
22. ~riy Eamhll'dl, 1,213.

23. TOdd Bodlnt. 1,185.

3. Rick Crawfotd, 728.

4. J111on Ltfftar. 723.

5. Tod Muagrava. 713.
6. Darlnit St1ur, e,n.
7. Btlan R-. 875.
8. t.anca Norlck, 853.
9. Jon Wood. 860.
10. Tarry Coole, 836,

2$. Jtff Burton, 736.

30. Shone Hall, 720.
31 . Rlcl&lt;y Honclrlck, 640.
32. IWJy I(Jrt)y, 838.

11 . 'll'lvll Kvopll, 1134.

12. R®trt PrHIIel', 824.

;33, Keooln

LapaQt, 813.
34. Btlon Vlckeil, 595.
35. Jay Sauter,_8118.
3e. Chad Chemn, 5&lt;48.
37, Mikt Harmon. 486.
38. Kutv ~lint. 450.
39. 0111 Pardua, 43e.
40. ~

TRUCK 1111111 ITANDINQI
1. Mike ~iQ, 754.
2. Dovld Storr, 71!3. .

t 3. Bronaan

Gaugflln. 860.

14. Carlot Contrer~.~n.
t 5. Lance HOQP&lt;Or, ooo.
16- Botlby Dotter, 1183.
11. Juon Sm•N. 1558.
t 8. M.n Crafton. 528.
10.
Olbbt, 808.
20. IIlii'Latlar, 808.

cov

Nto•-· 425.

Caution makes tor fun
finish for Jeff Gtan

-

•

•

Main Strctt1

Rutland, Oh10

740·742·2289
1

Bing's
. Auto
Repair
(Beside Goodwin's
Auto Soles)

ffilke Bing, Owner
Randy Bing,
Technician
Jim Bing,
Technician

lisa Jett

740·992·1998
740-667-6133

DCMR~·-

INJERNAnONAI. SPEEW«&lt;
rr.otc: 1·mlll oval. 24 degrttt blinking In

By RJCK MINTER
c. 2002 Cox Newt Service

J

Rutland Bottle Gat)

.-.•TRACK PROFILE .....

Concord. N.C.

err Green held off a rapidly clotina Gna

B!flte io win tha Carqueot AulD Pi1111300
Dwell .erlel race SaturdaY at Lowo'1
Motor Speedwa~
Green hed been cru!aln1 aloili with a nve·
18C0nd lead when a Ipin by_ Dan P.m!UI oet up
a four·lllp aprlnt to the nn!ah.
Blllle, runnln1 oecond at the t!ine, took a
pmb!e and made a pli•IOP ror four 111th tlrta.
Ill rejoined 111e race In HVttllh place bUt
drove beck tD ltC&lt;irid In two Jape and almott
poaoed Green on the wt turn of tha race. .
"I knew Gre1 would be comln1. bUll didn't
~he'd be oomtn11 that rut." Green IBid.
Blllle. banp4 up at the prev!0111 ract at
Nll%lll'elh Spoedwa~ ~aid he mlt!ltt have mt.
jwlpd h!a bid t'or tha vlc!Dr)&lt;
"I drove It a Utile too deep In the corner," he
said.
Scott Rlt!Pftnilhed 1111rd, ahead or Mlkl
Mcl.41J8hlln and Tod4l Bodine.
Green, a po,.,tlme BUICh racer, hall the
dominant car for m01t or the ract.
A 1!x-car Cl'llh on lap NVen heavUy dam·
8Pd the cart or Joth 111c11eton. Stuart Kirby
and Jetr Fultz. All three drtvera were unln·

tuml, 9 degr... on tht IIIIIQhll.
Whtrl: Oowr, Dtl.
A-: MBNA Platinum 400, Sunday;
MBNA 400, Stpt. 22.
Raw ~: Mark Ma~ln. 132.719. Stpt.
21. 1997.
Gl'llnclltand Mlllng: t 40,000

!In Opllllcl: t969

F1r1t WlniiOn C!IP ,_: Muon.OI~on
300, July 8, 1969

BANKS

•

CONSTRUCTION
736 E. Main St.

._.,...,... _... __,..._.. ...

"WWIDIIataW. . l'lw•-111'**

jUred.

Cppvrlght 2002 Cox Naw• BorAce. Dlltrlbulld by Untwrlll PrNI Syndicate. (8001 2155·6734. 'For rtltiH lht - k ol MIY 27, 2002 .

•

Concord, N.c.

fudpu pa hlrd ride

Sunday on FX.

January and eventually connect them.
In addition to all this, the man who
gained notoriety as Bill Clinton's master fundraiser and pal has done what he
does best: raise money. He collected a
record $47 million last year and for the
first time r;~ised more hard money than
soft.
This year, he's planning to raise $60
million - another record - and to use
it more concertedly than ever to help
House and Senate candidates.
· ·
There's now a daily "message" conference call linking the. DNC communi-.
cations office to press offices for the
House and Senate ·leadership and the
Democratic Governors ' Association.
He's also sharing polling paid for by the
DNC with House and Senate cam- .
paigns, which didn't happen in the
Clinton era.
· McAuliffe got in minor trouble last ·
week for predicting - on the basis of
briefings from . experts that
Democnts would pick up House seats,
but not the seven · required to uike the
ma)ority. .He's now back on message:
'.' Its tough, but doable."
He predicts that Democrats will pick
up two or three Senate seats and four to
SIX governorships.'
But ultimately he will be judged by
how well the party does in . 2004.
Primarily. he's got to replace $100 million in soft money with 4; 100 million in
hard money.
His plan is to save $20 million in rent
and staff cuts and raise $80 million $44 million from small mail and phone
solicitations, $8.7 million from the
Internet and $28.8 mi II ion from major
donors.
"What's frightening," he said, "is that
the Republicans. with the White House
and the doubling of hard-money limits,
will be able to out-raise us by as much
as $255 million in 2004."
.To overcome -that delicit at the polls,
Democrats will need more than a nutsand-bolts mastermind. They'll need a
good candidate and a great message.

.

brief nre In the pill kept Robby
Gordon trom bolna a flotnr In the
lndlonopol!a &amp;00. but tha lovlatloa of
runnl111 two of theaport'l
blatlt even~ on the tame
dl)l went like clockwork.
Gordon drove hlo Indy Oir
to an olt!ltth·plaOOI ftnlah In
the 88th runnlna of tho Indy
1100. 111on tlew, via hellllOptor.
to Lowt'a Motor Speedwll)(
· H!a hellooptor landoclln
lhelnne!d wlth mora thon
an hour to opan before tho A. GORDON
atlll't or tho Coca·Cola
Raolna FamUy eoo.He
.
aprlntld to hlltNm'• hauler to the chHI'I or
the orowd In 1111 atandl.
·
"ll'a botn a lot or 11m, and t fttt! areat," he
said. "I 110t 1 utUt 1weoty but not too bed."
ClQrdon said ht waa dolnv nne at Indy
bet'ore tho tire In hl1 pill HI him btlok.
"Track poatl!on waalht ke~ and the pit tlrt
rulntd It," htaa!d. "Wa wtre In IUih poattlon
when It htppened, and II wu nail~ really
hard to pau all day lona."
Ho had another aetback when he arrived at
Lowo'1. Ho had to 110 to.tho book of the pack
for 111e •tart becauae he milled the mandatory Wlnaton Cup driven rnettlng. Butby Lap
10 he had driven allll1e way to aeventh place.
He Dnllhocll6th.

rav!s Carter and Carl Haas. who loot the
sponsor for their two can earlier this year
.
when Kmart rued for bankruptcy protec·
tlon, announced Sunday that Dlsoovtlr Card will
oponsor their No. 26 Ford for the next six
Winston Cup races.
Todd Bodine, who lost his rldeln the team's
No. 66 when Kmart left the sport, wW be tha dr!v·
er.lt Ia the c~ll card oomt~~~ny's flrot part!clpa·
t!on In NASCAR rac!na.
'1\t a time when the economy Ia still skept!~l
and many corporations are heda!ns their beta.
It's a iood alttn that a solid company like
DIICover Card Ia wWinato Invest In motor·
aporta," Cnrter said.
Carter has been keep!na the team's No. 2&amp;car
runnlnll with Frank K!mmol as the driver. The
No. 66 Ford has not ntn since February,

1968.)

228 Meln St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drlv•Thru Window

992-5432

Team signs up sponsor

Democrats need more than a master strategist at helm·
The conventional wisdom is that cam'l'
paign finance reform will dramatically
weaken the political panies, but
Democratic National Committee
Chairman Terry McAuliffe is retooling
his pany to fight the trend.
While unregulated soft. money can
still ·be raised - until Nov. 6 - he's
amassing it in record amounts to buy
the hardware and software necessary to
raise limited hard money in the future.
This includes a new · headquaners
complex- now likely to involve totally refurbishing two buildings on the
present DNC site on .Ivy .Street
Southeast rather than construction of a
. new building -- plus the latest in politi·
cal high technology to fill it.
McAuliffe already has acquired a $10
million computer system to help candidates build their own Web sites, contact
activists, deliver messages and urge
voters to get to the polls.
He also convinced 50 state pany
chairmen to give the DNC their voter
lists and will update them to ensure that
addresses 11nd phone numbers are accurate for get-out-the·vote contacts this
year.
By this week, lists containing 58 million names will have been "scrubbed"
in 18 states, especially those with
Senate races this fall. correcting 3.3
million wrong addresses.
When combined with other initiatives
- such as a $5 million program to fight
redistricting battles at the state level, aid
to state and municipal candidates in
2001 and the establishment of programs
to target women and Hispanic voters McAuliffe may ~o down in history as
the Democrats top nuts-and-bolts
chairman.
Never shy; McAuliffe told me that he
aspires to be to the Democratic Pany
what some legendary .Republican chairmen were to the GOP: Ray Bliss, who
built its direct-mail system in the 1960s;
Frank Fahrenkopf, who amassed
national voter lists in the 1980s; and
Haley Barbour and Jim Nicholson, who
established the GOP's television and
mass e-mail capacities.
Critics say McAuliffe shouldn't be
spending $28 million on infrastructure

CBAnBMAN TRUCKS

Coneord, N.C.
OOOIII\I!ed as NASCAR'a lronmM Sunday
with his re&lt;:ord li56th COIIS8CIItlw alart, 4llo
Ytai'Oid Ricky Rudd's aclilewment Is more
than • footnote: this a tbrmula every mldllnl crisiS·
wracked male l'OCOII!Illes:The
raster the car. the YQ\Ul(!t!r you
look. And Rudd's ride wos claoe
·to ROOd enough.
Rudd was running oomfor~
ably In tront un tU a caution
came out 246 mUllS lrito the race.
He went Into one end or pit row
first and came out the othor
12th.
It was hiS crew that looked
FIIJOP
old and slow on that stop, put·
tlng their man In the position or llghtlng his way
bock through traffic for much or the rest or the
nlt!ht.
When you get on the other side of -tO, you can looe
momentum pretty qulckl~ Rudd ondod up finishing
fourth.
It was left to a one-race specialist to claim .
NASCAR's IOnt!'St race. ond to nmlnd the woitd
that then Is some life left yet In his old throttle root.
After Mark Martin flashed ac11l81i thollnlsh llntJ,
he returnild to the trontstretch to cut donuts In the
lnfteld like some young punk. Just like that; crow•s
feet and disappointment dlsappea~.
Then he parked In a makeshift victory lane, dis·
playing a perfect symbol for revlvlll, thai No. 6 •'onl
with Vlngra written lal'l!e all owr lt.

R

(Georse Gedda has covered foreign
affairs jor The Associated Pres.r since

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

UPCOMING ON THE TRACKS

By St... Huauner
c. 2002 Cox News Service

and made that point clear during .his
July 4 meeting with Sharif.
Sharif, Riedel wrote, "seemed a man
possessed with fear of war.
'
"The prime minister told Clinton that
he wanted desperately to find a solution
that would allow Pakistan to withdraw
. with some cover. Without something to
point to, Sharif warned ominously. the
fundamentalists in Pakistan would
move against him, and this meeting
would be his lust with Clinton."
Clinton held tirm. He reasoned that
any concessions to Sharif's position
would only reward Pakistani aggression
in Kashmir.
·
Finally, Sharif backed down and
·agreed to accept a joint statement, in
which the key clause read: "The prime
minister has agreed to take concrete and
immediate steps for the restoration of
the LOC," the line of control dividing
Kashmir.
That meant that Pakistan would
observe the informal border, or line of
control. that runs through Kashmir. It is
the point over which the two sides are
not supposed to cross.
Today, a million troops are deployed
on both sides of the line. Gideon Rose,
of the Council on Foreign Relalions, is
not so sure catastrophe can be avoided,
as it was in 1999, despite urgent appeals
from diplomatic peacemakers to
Musharraf and Indian Prime Minister
Atal Bihari VajP.uyee.
"If they .don t get the messaj!e, then
things could blow up," Rose smd.

TODAY IN HISTORY
are 215 days left in the year.

One win for the fossils

Can we forestall all-out war between India, Pakistan?

Bv GEORGE GEDOA
Intelligence Agency estimate.
WASHINGTON - Escalating tenIndia accuses Pakistan of engaging in
sions between India and Pakistan recall cross-border terrorism into Kashmir
the period in 1999 when the two coun- and rejects Pakistan's suggestion of diatries
avened a potential nuclear cata- Iogue. Pakistan has.carried out three test
• St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times, on detained colclysm with a decisive assist from launches - the latest on Tuesday- of
lege professor Mazen Al-Najjar: May 14marked
President Clinton.
.
.
. a missile capable of carrying a nuclear
six months since former University of South
During an anxiety-ridden White warhead into Indian territory. ·
.
.House meeting on July 4 that year,
Musharraf has won broad U.S. supFlorida teacher Mazen Al-Najjar was imprisoned
Clinton persuaded Pakistani Prime port because of his stand against
pending his deportation. It is time for ·the
Minister Nawaz Sharif to withdraw his Afghan-based terrorism, but Riedel
Immigration and Naturalization Service to deport
forces from the Kargil region in the dis- paints an unflattering portrait of the
him or let him out of prison. As the U.S. Supreme
puted Indian territory of Kashmir. The Pakistani leader in an essay published
two countries dodged war then, but now by the Center for the Advanced Study of
Court recognized last year, indefinite detention of
again
they are at the brink.
.
India at the University of Pennsylvania.
stateless illegal aliens is not an acceptable option
Accordmg. to · a first-perso,n account While Sharif was eager in 1999 for an
under the Constitution.
by a top national secunty ·atde, Bruce accommodation with India, Riedel
Riedel, Sharif in 1999 wanted no pan of wrote, Musharraf "seemed to be in a
The INS has tried unsuccessfully for the past
a
conflict with India. But he was different mold. Musharruf was a
six months to find a country to take AI-Najjar, the
opposed•
by his military chief at the refu$ee from New ~lhi, one of the
Palestinian father of three American citizen
time, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, "a man millions sent into exile in the 1947 catdaughters, who overstayed a student visa. Now ...
some feared was determined to humble astrophe that split British India and the
lndia once and for all."
subcontinent. He was said to be a hardAI-Najjar should be freed from detention unless
Precisely
100
days
after
that
fateful
liner on Kashmir.".
the government can show that he is a danger.
White House meeting, Musharraf ·The border region Kashmir, which
The Justice Department hasn't been able to
deposed Sharif in a military coup. Now has an overwhelmingly Muslim populashow that in the past...
president, Musharraf is at the center of tion, · had a Hindu maharajah when
the
latest flare-up over Kashmir British India was partitioned in 1947.
Then: last November, following a final order of
between the two nuclear-armed rivals. He opted for India, and the South Asian
deportation by a federal appeals court, Al-Najjar
The Bush administration is worried neighbors have been in states of war or
was re-arrested and placed in the Coleman
that the conflict could so distract nearly so ever since. Kashmir is
Pakistan that it will cease cooperating claimed by both governments. ThreeFederal Correctional Complex in Sumter County.
·
with U.S. anti-terrorism effons along fifths of the fertile Himalayan region is
He has been there, held mostly in solitary conthe Pakistan-Afghanistan border. On in Indian hands •. the rest held by
finement for six months, .while the government · Pakistan's list Qfpriorities, helping cap- Pakistan.
tried to find a country to take him. If that hasn't
ture al-Qaida fighters pales alongside
During the tense summer of 1999, it
the stakes in Kashmir. Or so some U.S. ' was clear that "the civil-military
happened, he should be released. If the governofficials
believe.
dynamic between Sharif in Islamabad
ment refuses, Al-Najjar's attorneys will rightly
The humanitarian considerations of a ·and Musharraf in Rawalpindi was conask the courts to intervene.
nuclear blowup are mind-numbing: a fused and tense," accordms to Riedel.
poteniial death toll of 8 million to 12 As he described it. Chnton firmly
million, according to a Defense supponed India during the Kargil crisis

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'1he Monster Mile'

..

'

- lllllt MlltW

Pomeroy, Ohio
(7 40) 992-5009
Larry W. Bank1,
Owner/Operator

�PapAl

The Daily Sentinel '

The Uaily Sentinel
MLB discrisses steroid ust, Pogt 82

SI.Jta

Pap II

.MASON COUNTY

.. 11111 , . . . , . . 2111

H1 lan ers'
.
woes continue

'fHuRsoAY'S

Meigs
fails to

·HIGHUGHIS

'

.,

'

'
.
.
L- \
COmpany WSS
·
ks
.
h
SayS C eC
ro•-d
a..,
'~
V"-'"

\ (o'clock) on Saturday. So I
~ad to like mine to a check
~= loan etac::e they
eft
me $34; •employee
OreR Roush said.·"TTie way
i-'
they"re talking. they're not
IIY MAliK H••
aomg
to (rel.inburse him).
...... ,.., __ ...,.....
And that upsets me very
....,.....,..,_,.-.'ma!ISIEIU:XlM
because. I ha·•e
• a
NEW. HAVEN, w..Va. - Imuchfami1
·
·
.....
~ .. ,
Probl
'th
11· arae
Y to ,._,
. ems . WI
payro
Roush produced receipt
checks at Hl~hlariders from the payroll cash serAlloys Ll.C contmues, but vice that charged him $34.
the owner says he is ~ver- · ''Absolutelr, he will be
the checks.
reimbursed,' said owner
everal ~mploytl)s, ~·of Dt. Boris Bannai. "Any of
whom WISh to remain our employees that were
anonymous. say they 'Were inconvenienced will be
forced to wait until taken c~ of." .
Saturday afternoon 10 . aet Bannai indicated the
their ~hecks, which ·\iiey checks were held until
couldn leash until Tu.ay Saturday solely to make
because banks were ~lOsed sure the money was In the
over the Memorial Day account to clear.
Weekend. .
"We tried to watch our
"They had them over cash-flow with the payhere 1111 this time, and they roll," Bannai! said. "We are

I·-

HONORID - Officlills gathered to honor David Brtcllay, tKecutlve director of the National
Community Action Foundation. at ~ wectnesctey h.tncheon In his honor~ From left ire Bob Garbo
of Athens-Hocking-Perry Community Action Agency, Gallle County Commissioner Skip Meadows,
Gaiii•Mai&amp;s CAA Executlw Director Trlsh McCulloiJih, Gellla Commissioner Bill Davis, Bradley,
Matas County Commissioner Mlck Davenport and Roaer McCauley of Corporation for
Appalechlan Development. GarbO end McCauley joined Bradley on his bicycle tour of the regton.

' .

Honoring
Bradley
Duvid Brudley, e~ecutive
director of tile Nntionul
Community Action Foundntion,
has ~n touring Appalachin by
bicycle to mise nwilnlness of
Community Action agencies
and problems fat.:ed bY low·
Income Appalachlnn residents.
Wednesday was Duvld Bmdley
Duy in Gntlla 1111d Meigs coun·
ties, in honor of Brndle)''s
efforts to sJ)O!)ight the role ofCAAs nnd their advocacy for the region's diSildvantaged. Brudley was
honored nt a luncheon held In his honor at Gllllia·
Meigs CAA's office In Cheshire, right. (Bryan Long
photos)
.
,

a

''1

maklna sure the payment
will be paid.
.
"We had a shortage of
cash flow. Payroll is a priority," Bannai said. "We
are looking to lind 11 solulion. When our cash-flow
will be OK, they will~et
th etr
· checks on t1me.
·
·
ts
h
"~I
·
was a very s ort "" ay, m
my ooinion. We will do our
best:•r
When
· ·asked
if
Highlanders was in trouble,
Bannai said, "I would not
say the company is in trou·
ble. We are shon in cash·
flow. · We are talking to
financial people right now,
and I think we shQuld be
OK."
Bannai indicated that
Highbmders had ftred up its
lll!ltest furnace this week,
wh1ch will double the
plant's production and
solve Its cash•flow issues.

underprivileged
families in.Mason County
1

Development (HUD) office. . drop the "not in my neighbor·
Home loan programs are hood" syndrome," Thabet
available through the WVHDF said. "When people see that
in 47 of We~t Virginia's SS black and white sign they
'eounties. There are several think. "Oh no, what's movina
provisions and requirements into the neighborhood?' It
ihat .8Ptlllcafit8 have to meet. may not be a bad thing at all."
B~tcellcnce
~orporltlon ""'flilthhitm hofiiehbldi"1nebrlte . Accepted families receive ·
. (CEC), 11 non-proftt orl!aniza. lauldellnes arc lS (J&gt;Ilows: For no-interest mortgage loans and
don tha~ helps . fow~income · ilhe penon, mAximum U,tcome are evaluated every three years.
..,.,fi!IT!II)~ali~ th~. f~ be $17,350; for two pco·
"Having an increase In home
~ w ltom,rowiiilrsl\lp,
· ,. ' , 1St 9,85,0I'tllrile, &lt;$21;300: ownership is good for the com"Bverx family deserves that our, $24,800; five, $26,800; munity," Thabet said. "The
chance, Thabet said about 5lx., $28,750.
· state was awarded $8.S million
owning a home. "Children Those accepted must also last year and worked It on 11
raised ln low-income housing attend cl1sses that familiarize first-come, ftrst·served basis."
see people who don~t go .to them with all aspects of home
For more information call
work
every
day.
They
don't
ownership,
from
Insurance
to
CEC
at 675-4900 or visit the
Diane D. Boster, executive
WVHDF Web site at:
director for th&amp; Arthritis see people buying a new car maldna repairs.
every
three
years.
They
grow
"We
aak
people
that
they
www.wvhdf.com.
Foundation, said the founda·
to
ex.peot
that.
It's
what
we
don hopes to pull in $3,500
can do for the children."
from the day's event. ·
As of July 1 2002, CEC
BENEFIT FOB
"It's people like Hope and
will
have
hel~
funnel
more
Holzer volunteers and
employees that are the drlvina than SI mfiiion Into the
force behind the Arthritis Mason County economy
Mutlo Pe~rm~ b~ member• of Blitzkrieg, Union
throuah housing services thei
Foundation," said Boster. ·
llooat, Liquid Cry1t11, end mcnl
Boster said the fund·raiser provide. Funding for CBC
clients
comes
from
the
West
Tonight at BPM • $2.00 oonatlgn
was one of three In the area,
Vlrgi
nla
Houslna
with one com.tna up at HMC- Development
Puna
Jackson and one previously (WVHDF)
with
money
held at Holzer Senior Care the U.S. Departmentfrom
Pomeroy, Ohio
of
Center.
and
Urban
The following sponsors Housing
took part: Connie Cottrill,
Holzer Home . Care, Peoples
Bank, Holzer Medlcal
Equipment, Dr. Wllllam B.
Thomas
Jr.,
Holzer
Community Health and
Wellness Department, Holzer
Extra Care, Ohio Valley
Bank, Oak Hill Banks,
Rebecca
J.
Nelson,
Bowman's
Homecare
Medical Supply, Plante
Moran, and Wyngate of
Jackson and OalllpoHs.
The Arthrl.tls Foundation
Ohio River Valley Chapter
can be reached at 7A0·3534774 or 1-800-3S8-038Q for
'
more information.

·HMC rocks to ·raise fuhds

for a

research

nnhritis they have, followed
by appropriate treatment and
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer physical activity to reduce the
Medical Center and the effects of all types of arthritis.
. Arthritis Foundation held a The organization offers
Rock·A·Thon fund raiser Information about the proven
Wednesday afternoon, send· treatments, programs and ser·
Ina hundreds of employees . vices available to people with
anC:l volunteers to thefr rock· arthritis coping wfth the more
lng _chalrs.
than 100 .different types of
May is Arthritis Month.
arthritis and related diseases.
Around 6,000 Oallla coun· "We · had a fantastic
dans and more than 40 mil· turnout,"
said
Bonnie
lion Americans suffer with McFarland, HMC Wellness
thfs disease.
coordinator. "We had a lot of
Oallla
County Holzer employees donate
Commissioners' President their money and time todaY.,"
Blll Davis proclaimed May One of the . chairs of this
"Arthritis Month" In Oallia event was Hope Price. No one
County and he, alona with knows the Importance of
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland and nnhritis researcli more than
HMC administrators, joined' she does, as she has lived with
in the rocking for this cause. the disease since she was 23.
"We want to urge all cltl· "A physical ther~plst rec·
zens to join In support of the ommencled I ao to Cincinnati
Arthritis Founcfatlon and for tralnins Tor a self-help
learn more about the services course and that's how I got
available for this disease, to involved with the Arthritis
make Informed choices about Foundation," said Price. "I
nnhrltis care In pursuit of a would like people to know
happy, healthy lifestyle," said lt"s not an old person's dis·
Davis.
case. It can strike anyone at
The Arthritis Foundation any ll&amp;e. Although arthritis
brings a focused effort to can't take your life, it cailtake
''make this the year that you a lot of llvlna out of your life.
aet active" and to Increase the "We need to work harder to
awareneas of the type of find a cure," she added.
BY K1111 DoTSON

~DOTSONOMVOAILVTAISUNE.COM

Becky Ackerman Family
Jimmy's Sports Bar

.

Proposals should be aubmltted to Michael L. Swisher, Director, Meigs County
Department of Job &amp; Family Services, P.O. Box 191, 175 Race Street,
Middleport, OH 45780 no later than .June 7, 2002 at 4:00 p.m. All submissions
must .be received by mall or hand delivery by the above date and time. No
materials received alter the date will be Included In previous submissions nor be
considered. The department reserves the right to reject any or all proposals. In
aecordance with 29 CRF part 31, 32 Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family
Services Is prohibited from discrimination on the basis of race, color, national
. origin, sex, age, religion, political belief or disability.

•

Jackson&amp;lb-ldns
. #{Qti.ilfo/Rose Bushes

REG~ f~ $}498
each
Bolls for:
&amp;.. mulches

~

•Border rock
killl

BYESVILLE - No Meig girls
advanced to Friday's finals of the
Division 11~~:~\onal track and field
championships at Meadowbrook
High School on Wednesday.
The 4x200-meter relay team fin·
ished eighth in Its heat.
Brooke Bolin did not advance in
either hunlle event, nnrrowly missing qualifying in her · heat of tho
300-meter race und finishing sixth.
Shannon Soulsb)' finishedd~tth
in her heat of the 400-meter
,

Woods,
Anderson win

Roush Memorial
. MASON. W.Va .. - Becky
Anderson of Racine and Keith
Woods of Bradbury have won
their divisions of the 2002
G.O. Roush Memorial Golf
Tbumament. Woods shot net
rounds of 64·60-124 for the
men's championship while
Anderson tired 67-69-136 for
the ladles championship .
Woods won by six. shots over
. Ric,Ue Blain of Point Pleasant
whose net scores were 65·65·
130. Joyce Quillen of Racine
lost by just one shot to
Anderson with a two-day net
total of 72-65-137.
Following the tournament,
the players were treated 10 a
dinner provided by Mary's
Tee Time Grille.
: A total of 40 men and ten
women took part in this year's
memorial tournament. The
tournament is played each
year in memory of G.O.
Roush, the father of Riverside
Golf Club owner Gary Roush.
G.O. Roush was a home
builder in the Bend Area for
many years prior to his death
in 1974.
The follo,wing players were
in the money during this
year's tournament:
•
•

LldiH Dlvtllon

1.Bec:ky AndotJOn, Roolno, 87·80-1341
2.Joyct Oulllon, Roolno, 85·72-137
3.Diono Bodkin, Pl. Pl-nl. 88-71-13&amp;
4.DI~ono Silk, Now Hnv.n, 73·71•1+1
•
Mont Dlvtolon
.

t.Kolth Woodo, Brodbury, 84·11l&gt;-124
iRiohlo Blain, Pl. PIHIInl, e&amp;-e&amp;-130
:~&gt;Bruot .Jtnkl. Bidwell, e3.e8-131
ot.Bodtt HUIIIII, Mteon, 85-87-132
~.Lorry &amp;ngor, Choolor, 88-H-1:!2
4.Dovld Rood, Sr., MalOn, e&amp;-87-132

the ral'n made you fall behind ·
on your flower beds? .

The Melge County Department of Job and Family Servlcee (DJFS), serving as
the fiscal agent for the Meigs County Family and Children First Council, Ia
aollcltlng propoaala to Implement the county's Help Me Grow Program. The
program Ia a collaborative of the atate Departments of Health and Job and
Family Services and the local DJFSs. The program serves children from birth
through age 3 and their families. Preference will be given to the proposer which
presents the moat Integrated and coordinated approach, Including the utiOzatlon
of sub-contracts, to serving this population. For a copy of the Profile of Propoaer,
Sample Budget Format and Proposed Budget Form contact Jane Banks at
Melge County Department of Job &amp; Family Services (740) 992·2117 extension
,~

MASON, W.Va. -Claude
Proffitt, the Timber Man,
from Patriot, Ohio. remains
on top in the Riverside Senior
Men's Leuaue. He still has
his· slim one-half point leid
over Dave Jacoby from
Athens. Ohio. Thetr point
totals are not 58.0 to ~7 .5 for
the season. Ralph Sayre of
New Haven is alone in third
at 52.0 for his season's effort. ·
This week's low score was
turned in by Keith Woods of
Bradbury, Ohio, Dave
Bumgarner of Pomeroy.
Thrry Hupp of Mason, and
Charley Yeager of Mason
with a score of -10 (60).
Tltere was a tic for second
at -9 (61) witb the teom of
Dale Harrison of Pomeroy;
and Bob Anderson, Buck
Hall and Haske! Jones. all of
Ripley, and the team of Ralph
Sayre, Dave Jacoby, Claude
Proffitt and Bob Hysell of
Syracuse.

~ency helps

Itt DAN HDMa
OHERMES.MI'OAILYREGISTER.COM
POINT PLEASANT .,..The Point Pleasant Rotary
heard from guest speaker
Heather · Thabet, executive
dlte,ctot: &gt;' ,of • C.9)1\lnu~l!&gt;:

advance

·didn't hancrthem out until! getting our checks out and

sr. ""'·

l.Jook MoiOnoy, Glillpoill, 87-87-134
&amp;.David Bodkin, Pl. Pltuant,.ee--t:M
r.Mikt A1111on,
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(ll.Jomoo MooKn t, l1111rt, 55-7G-135
it .Stovo Soflotd, • P11111nt, 7U3-13e
lti.Tony OUgan. Rulltnd. 87·7G-137
f3.Rogor Long, Mlddiii)Ort, e5·7G-138
(4.01ry 81111, Pomomy, M·73-13D.

•

Nets one win

away from

•

NBA Finals

.

EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (AP) - After letting a
20-point lead drop to one, the
New Jersey Nets used a 20-1
'run to make certain it would·
n't happen again.
Taking control of the game
with stunning quickness. the
Nets pulled away from the
Boston Celtics in the fourth
quarter to a I03-92 victory
· Wednesday night that gave
them a 3-2 lead in the Eastern
Conference finals.
·
With one more win, the
Nets will be going fo~ their
firRt title since the days when
they played with a red, white
and blue basketball. ·
Jason Kidd was the star of
the show once !lllain for the
Nets, who got out to a bill
early lead for the third consecutive game. Kidd finished ·
with 18 points, 12 rebounds
and seven assists, and his
jumper with 9:30 remaining
started New Jersey on th~
game-clinchlna run.
I

FINISHER

-Meigs'

Shannon

Soulsby runs the final .leg of the

4x200.meter relay Wednesday. (Dan

Polcyn)

•

J1gers
claw
Green Jilizve pitcher tough on the. mound
down
Tribe
DMIION IV, IIIGION 15 ToulltrJMH
'I

BY IuTeN CODPIII

SCOOPEAOMYOAILVTRIBUNE.COM
TUPPERS PLAINS - W~at can be said of the
Newark Catholic baseball team s offense?
Well... what?
Not much.
There hasn't been a need here ,as of late for the Green
Wave to produce a hi$h number pf runs.
The reason for that IS simple ... pitcher Oeorgr. Biddle.
The junior righthander dominated Newark Catholic's
district tournament, allowing only one run ... unearned

at Beavers field. Lancaster
Fl1day, May 31
I..eesbura Fairfield (21·5) va. ToJonto (21·8), 2 p.m.
Eastcm (16-4) vs. Newn c.dlolic (23-6), ~p.m.
Saturda)', Junel
Reaiooal Championabip, 1p.m.
Winner to atlte t.oumamenl at OSU J1111e 6, 11 a.m.
'

PluH HI RIJIOIIII, 12

Eagles bring interest in baseball
IY BUTCH CooPIII

'

BCOOPEROMYOAILVTAIBUNE.COM I
TUPPERS PLAINS - From
his job as an elementary school ·
teacher, Brian Bolen aets to sec
the future in the bright eyes of
youna children.
These days; those kids are talk·
ing baseball with Bolen, the head
coach at Eastern, which takes on
Newark Catholic in the Division
IV, Region IS semifinals at
Lancaster's Beavers Field.
''They're asking about the base·
ball and. they want to know all
about it," said Bolen. "They're all
excited about it, too, and that's
great. 1 don't think it's been that
way for awhile."
And the talk and excitement is
not just confined to the arade
schoolers, either. There has been LEADERSHIP- Eastern's Chris Lyons, seen here leading off from first base
against New Boston taat week, In one of the Eagles' eKperlenced seniors lead. PiuHHIIaJiel,l2
Ing the way Into the reglonals Friday. (Butch Cooper)

CLEVELAND (AP) - As thUn·
der rumbled in the distance and
liahtning streaked across the sky. the
Detroit Tigers did u little storming
back of their own.
Down by four runs, the Tigers
scored eight runs In the seventh
. inning Wednesday night to rally for
a 9-S victory over the Cleveland
Indians.
·
Damian Jackson's three-run double highlighted Detroit's biggest
inning this season just moments
before thunderstorms arrived at
Jacobs Field · and caused a nearly
two-hour delay.
,
Trailing 5·1, the Tigers got seven
hits - a homer, three doupies and
three singles - two walks and a sac·
rifice fly off Cleveland starter Ryan
Dresc, · reliever David Riske (0·2)
and Ricardo Rincon In the seventh.
Jacob Cruz homered and Robert
Pick doubled twice when Detroit
sent 13 batters to the plate in the sev·
.enth, shortly before severe weather
rocked the Jake and caused a 1-hour,
41-minute rain delay in the bottom
of the eighth.
. Knuclc;leballer Steve Sparks (3·S)
wus ·on his ~uy to losmg for the
fourth time in five starts before the
Tigers rallied. .
I
The Indians threatened in the
eighth following the delay, loading
the bases with one out against Jeff
Farnsworth. But Juan Acevedo came
on and got two popups before working the ninth for hts seventh save .

Boone goes deep again as Reds down Marlins
MIAMI (AP) - Aaron Boone is
still in the groove.
One niaht after lifting the Reds to
an 11th innin11 win wid\ a solo home
run, Boone struck again in his first at·
bat Wednesday night. He hit a threerun homer in the first in nina and.
Cincinnati went on to beat the Florida
Marlins 8-2.
The NL Central·leadina Reds won
their (IW()nd straight and are 3·2 on
their six-game road trip that ends
Thursday. .
Boone has turned out to be an
unlikely source of power for the
Reds. He entered the series with three

home runs, and now has six after
going deep twice on Tuesday and
once Wednesday.
"I guess J had some making up to
do," Boone said. "It sounds simple.
but I'm really trying to come in and
work on the things I want to.do, then
go out and have aood at-bats. That's
truly how I'm looking at it and h~fully it's starting to clic~ a little bt.t."
Th~ Reds wasted no ttme rouahtnll
up Florida's Josh Beckett.
The)l batted around in the first
·inning and scored five runs, high·
liahted by Boone's three-run shot.
The Red1 handed Beckett (2·3) the
. I

worst lOSS of his young career - CBS·
ily his shortest outing. He was pulled
without gettina an out in the second
and ended up allowing .seven runs
and eiaht hits.
Beckett missed two starts earlier
this month with blisters on his right
middle finaer. b!lt he offered that as
no excuse.
"It was just one of those nights. I
hope my number doesn't f.et called
like that again," he said. 'I wish I
could just say that I was unlucky, but
I was bad, too." ·
Cincinnati Improved to S..(} at Pro
Pla&gt;'er Stadiu111 since last season and

have outscored the Marlins by a com·
bined scored of 37-16.
While the Reds were am,assing 14
hits en route to eight runs, Joey
Hamilton was turning in a solid per·
formance in his first quality outina
~i~ce returning from a ham,lring
IDJUty.

Hamilton (3-2) pitched six scoreless innings. allowing five hits while
striking out two.
11 was a nice turnaround for
Hamilton, who gave up seven eamed
runs in 2 2·3 innings Friday against .
Atlanta.

'• .

�•

www.mydal~ratntlnal.com

The Dally Sentinel • P"9! B 3

Ptll Bl•l'heD RrSt IIIINI

Major league owners discuss labor, steroids
CH.ICAOO (AP) - Bueball 8axbalt officials also Mldltssed
c:om•issioller BIMI Selia ~ the ~~ or ISltiOids.. sa.Yina a testWt~~Msctay rrom a meenna With ina s~ .:ould be in place soon.
tom OWMIS hoDd\.11 labor mJb
Selaa said the ~ng wu all~
wiD 1• roa dHl with ~~~~ but simply btQuse the OWnetS h.dn ' t
without PfOvidina details on bow met $1Rte Januuy. It wu a wideto do it.
fllftlit\1 ~na covering such top~~ nttd tO mate a deal," Selig its as umpirin&amp;. the lell@th of
said llf\cr the four-hour mceti111 at games and a lawsuit by
a hotel Mil' O'Hift lntmuation:al Minnesota's Metrope&gt;litan Sports
Atrpon. "~ ~ to get to the Facilities Commission in an
tabre to mate a deal: We'~ not attempt to bind the Twins to their
Metmdome lease and block the
&amp;Oitllto do it anyw~ l'lse."

leaJue rrom ~~~~ rid oftbe tum.
After reports or II proposed sutlemcnt th~ would tl::ep the 1\l:ins
in Minnesota 111 leiiSt through the
2003 season, Selif said Twins president Jerry Bell ' ga~-e I report to
the dubs on the whole Minlll'.Sota
situation."
As Seli ba in the ~t. be said
contraction remains 11 'very liiable
nnti
.
,......on.·~
Selig also wu asked about recent
comments by players and former

pia~

sayin11 steroid use is rampant. One former player, Ken
Caminiti, said be used steroids during his MVP year.
"I've been too&lt;:emed the last two
to three years, and the pioblem

needs to be.ddressed,'' saiii Selig.
Rob Mllllfral, baseball's executive vice president for Iabar relalions and human ~n:es. said
baseball is ~ing the steroid
issue, and pointed to such efforts as
a testing program that was imple-

mented Ia 1 year in the minor
lequcs.
Ke said the next step should be
implementing such 1 prowam in
the m~ leagues.
·
"We ve made a comprehensive
proposal .to
the
Player's
Association to deal with the tssue
of SletOids and testing for steroids
at the m~or le4311e level, and we're
hopeful that it's an issue that will
be resolved in the bllrgainiog
· process,'' be said. .

lhe 'Big Hurt' all for steroid testing
av Tilt ~S~TtO PRESS
New Yorlt: Mets manqer Bobby have to addltSS the issue, but be's not'
Franlt Thomu wants baseball to valentine thought those estimates surt bow.
·
stlrt testing lOt .steroids. sa,yina he wett overblown.
"It's easy for me to sit here and say
feels ''cheated" if other players are "Only if it's in the water or there's ldon'tCllleabout&lt;!rugtestingbecause
usina clruas.
. some way plawn. are ingtSting them I don't take Stemtds and dOn't take
''I don't know who's on and who's withotlt knoWing~ it." valentine said drugs," be said. "It's nola big deal to
not on," the two-time. MVP s~d before his team's home 11ame agllinst me, but obliiously there is much
Wednesday before the Cbttb&amp;O White Phil~phlL ''I dlinlt it's ~ total ena· ~tet cause for concern that goes
Sox pia~ the New York Yankees. aeration unless you're saytq some of anto why )'Oil would or would not
'"'lteee as definitely more activity in ihe stUff lite MetRx mil and the agree with doing that."
the weiaht room nowadays. I was blender stuff is a steroid, then l stand Owners woufd like to ttst major
hoping tllat it was just old guys wort- . corrected.
ltaBUtS for druBS, but the union b.as
lllf hard In the weaght room.
"As far as something injeettd or opposed testing in the past.
'I reallf think it's time lOr testing. It prescribed, I think It's J)reposterous to Management has made a proposal
really Is.'
sar 8S pen:ent."
about steroid testing in collective barTWo · high·proflle former players Caminiti said steroid use was com- gllini~~&amp;.
·
.
said tet:ently that ~lllroid usc is ram- mon knowled&amp;e in clubhouses, but ''TbC association ·regards the issue
pant .In the m11Jor leagues. Ken players and manaaers disputed that: . as a serious and complicated•one and
.Clmlnlti estimated that at reast half of "I ~·~ 't seen anybOdy use, or will treat those discussions accordint- ·
mllor leaguers use slllrolds, and he anything hkil that," Thomas sllid. "I ly," union spokesman Greg Bouns
told Sports ruustrattd he wu on them don't think guys talk about it. I think said.
when be won the NL MVP award in the aurs that are doing are keeping it There may be romors about certain
1996. .
quiet.'
· players, but Yankees manager Joe
Jose Canseco put the number even Atlanta Braves pitcher Tom Torre said that's all he's ever heard. higher, saying 83 pertent of players Olavlne, the team's player representa- rumors.
use steroids.
live since 1990, said the union may "I'm not sure how widespread this

R•onal
f1omPipB1 . ·

I.

I

aaalnst Lancaster Fisher
Catholic in the Wave's district
title game, a S· l victory last
k
He· also shut out Fairbanks
10.0 In the district semifinal a
week earlier.
Eastern will meet Newark
Catholic in the Division IV,
ifi 1 1
R i
Is
a:f~~ Field i~e~c':~r. a
Game time is set for s, p.m.
Eastern hend conch Brian
Bowen was at the Oreen
"' •5 dl tri fi n1
.. ave
s ct n game at
Pickerington and came away
imp,ressed with Biddle.
'I really didn't get a aood
look at their defense," said
Bowen.
Biddle hasal.02 eamed run
av-oe with 80 strikeouts In
671-.
nnings of work·:
"He's got a good curveball

and good slider,' Slid Bowen.
Newark Catholic's batting
"He throws his curve and his order last week had shortstop
slider to set up his fastball, Dolan leading off whh catch·
which is really the opposite or . er Dusty Layton batting see. what we've seen alot this ond, rlllhtflelderTroy Nichols
year." .
third followed by Petticrew
Biddle missed the sec:tionals and Biddle.
after being hit in the wrist by a
"At the plate, .they sellm to
fast ball, t~~using a swelling be a pretty good hitting
bruise. Ke was able to return team," said Bowen.
·
by the time districts began as
It has been 16 years since
Scotty Lake and Kevin Dolan Eastern bas been to the
handfed the mound work In regionals and. according to
sectional play.
Meanwhile, the Oreen
Walie has the offensive firepower to back up Biddle If
needed:
ln the cleanup spot, first
baseman Brad Pcttiorew has
been the anchor to the Newark
offense.
With 13 home runs this sea·
son, including a two-run shot
aaainst Fi:1her Catholic, he
poses a tl\reat every time he
steps up to the plate.
"He's a .big.
Bowen.
. hitter," said

Lyons at short - which provides the J!lagles plenty of
experience where It counts
the most.
''It is (important) and at
growing in baseball in sur· this poilit of the season, with
rounding Meigs . County them beina seniors and four
communities. .
years playing baseball, ther,
''The people around the really know what to do, '
community have said sQme said Bowen. "When they get
good things about the base•. In pressure situations, touah
ball program," sald Bowen. situations, they know what
''Our attendance has been up they need to do.
from what it has been In the
And the pressure and
past." .
.
tough situations have come
"I think the atmosphere is often for the Eagles, who
really good. The kids are have played in some close
really excited about it and games, coming up In the end
for the win.
positive. They're going 10 go
"We've had a lot of close
Into the (regional semifinal) games this year, so we've .
game with some confidence, had a lot of different looks
which Is good."
and different situations that
A big reason for the Eaates they had be confident and
successes this season has get the lob done," said
been the . leadership of the Bowen .. "'they play with a
teams five seniors- includ- tot of confidence."
ina starters Ben Holter,
These seniors, along with
Jimmie Putman, Chris Lyons the underclasamen on this
and Brad Brannon.
year's team, rrovlde the area
''They've done a great job grade schoo children with
this year," said Bowen of his role models and an Interest
seniors. "We have a good in playing youth baseball.
mixture of kids. We've aot
"I think the youth pro·
'guys that know they lead grams is very, very impor·
vocally. They say the thlnas tant to the success of the
that need to be said when hiah school proaram," said
they need to be 11ld."
Bowen. "When tbe kids see
"They lead by example. . this' and they get excited
They come out everyday and about It, then what they're
work as hard as anyone else thinking Is 'I want to be
on the team. They give there. t want to be like Ben
.everythina that you expect at Holter' or 'I want to be like
practice and the other kids Bradley Brannon.' They
see that."
really look up to the kids. I
Three aeniors make up the think our kids do a areal job
Eastem infield - Holter at of beina good role models
first, Brannon a.t second and for them." .

MORE LOCAL SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

problem. is," Thrre said. "I've seen

IIIILICIII
TIEIEIIIIIL

TillliMED

t.d'.•-'l'tir•

players go from tall, skinny guys to MlitJI.
.tall, strong guys. Sure, you can say
be's got to be doiiiJ s,omethlng, but
I've never had an~v tell me for
sute that. 'Tbls person (s doing this. •
It's always. 'I beatd this guy is doing .
it."'
Toronto manager Bilek Martinez
believes his clubhouse is clean.
"I would ~bt for the character of
my 2S players, ' he said. "There are so
many wonderful people that play
baseball. You have to be c:arefW not 10
paint everybody with the same
brosh."
But as a player, Marti~ admitted
21tH. Stcond A'n.
he didn't always know what others
992;...5627
were doing around him when baseball
went throtiBh a drug-using scandal in
the 1980s.
~-"I came from the baseball generation or cocaine abuse," Martinez said
befo~ the Blue Jays played Boston. "I
was naive to that when my teammates
.a.Unban
we~ involved."
lR'
~

Bowen, they haven't ever
won 11 regional contest.
Last year, they lost to
Southern In the sectional, lllld
before that, they fell In the
dl$1ricts.
Bowen believed that last
week's district championship
win, a 6-l dei:islon olier New
Boston, will give his team
momentum going Into Friday.
"New Boston was a really
good team," said Bowen.

s--.s.,r..

J

•

-

FINALS

THURSDAY
5:00PM
EASTERN

.

•
•
•
••

-

SATURDAY
1:00PM
BEAVERS
FIELD
IN
LANCASTER

(16-4)

..•

vs

.•

NEWARK
CATHOLIC

•
•

-••

(23:..6)

•
•

•
••

GOODLUCI&lt;

.•

C3leck out
the

"The kids were toti8h and battied all the way throuah."
• In the other regional
semifinal . aame, Toro~to,
which .last won the state title
in · 1998, · will take on
Leesburg Fairfield, No. 2 in
the latest coaches poll.
That same is scheduled to
begin at 2 p.m.
The regional championship
will be played 1 p.m.
Saturday.

I

IN THE SWEET 16 REGIONAL TOURNAMENT
AT LANCASTER!!

~~~-&amp;entinel
for
the
· of ·
·
II:.LI-'S .
· .--. nti'MIJ '
El5t8nl

. ~7o.tp

EASTERN

•

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•
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EASTERN
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Frw F.atlm~t• • W\IIJDIJ

(740) 992·2753
(740) 992-1101

(877 .JSJ-7011)

Call for more
info/free es1imare
· WVU312l6

Haning's Construction
Owner:
Ronald
"Mick"
Haning
740·367-Q181
740·992-Q780
hristina "Chris' Haning
Cell: 591 ·8393
Can• 740·591-0919

Foreman: Larry

IIMepert.OII

(740) 992-1705
Tonia Reiber
lktttsell by lilt 01111

Stltellldkllllen

~IIJ &amp; Vegetable

Fllts'LIO
10" Hinging Baskets 'LIO
Wide Aasortmenl or Hefbs. AnnUals.
Perenni&amp;lt In 4' pola lot
Ollly Mf aclll
Momlng Stir lloed • CR 30 • Recine, Ohio

.

1·7

CONCIEif/ILOCK/IliCK
Local 843-5264
Ml'lllcare Supplement; Life lnsunmce;
Burial and Final E~penses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Mediad
• Nursln11 Home

• FOOI.t:rs., Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
and Drins • Stencil
Crete

i1!
..,_

Free Estimates
Serving Ohio and W,V.

GIBSON
GRAPHICS

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing- Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout

• Garages

Fr" Estimates

FREE ESTIMATES

Hours:
Mon-Sat 11J.4
217 E. 2nd St. •
Pomeroy, OH
(740) 992.· 5908 .
Pd. 1 mo. 5128

Wt underst1nd your ntfltll
for quality ~lness
produds 11 fair prlte.
Wcalm to mut yoor

. - Let ...rlllollbtlp
JOU pt the produd you

•relooldna for.
Our ttrvlcet lndude:
BUIInea Card~, Fa• Cover

Shetb, IAtterhftld, Slam,
Ennlopn, Fllera. Labell.
Brothum

Contact us at
(740) 992·7522

949-1405 TFN

low as

$25.00

;.~~;,·,!~~~~·~~Moat

• NewO.rege1

• EIKtrlcol A Plumbing
• Roofing A Gu!Wt
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Pointing ,

BISSEll

•Complete
Remodeling ·

Dealers .
1000 Sr. Rt. 7 Suuth
Coolville, OH 45723 ·
.740·6~7 -0363

Stop &amp; Compare
740-992·1671

FREE ESTIMATES

POITIIIItJY, Ohio

TFN

. 740·992-7~99

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

Monday~Frlday B~5PM

.um Hit.u u

Po"""" Ohio ·

I

Kris
.Kaniedd
l.lCENSED MASSAGE
THEliAJ'lST

10 Yean EJ.pcrie~
SP""Iallzi"' In; O..p

m '""•· Swo&lt;llsh. &gt;nll•llu.l
Cranii)U(:ral.
renexolotY· Myorasclal
on&lt;1 Yoao Therapy otn
. Certificates A'Yailabl~
$36-4' minutes

740-992-5232

• Saturday 8-2pm

Tree Service

Licensed lnaured
Health Problem•?
Want More Lelaure Time?
Tired of Mowing?
Not A Spring Chicken?
LIMITED OPENINGS

• Top • .R&amp;moval • Trim
' Stump 6rindlng
• Bucket Truck

(7 40) 992-1536

1oo West main SL
Pomeroy
992-0008

' (3041 773-11412

The
·Daily.
Sentinel

1/no.

l!!!l
Jln..

St Rt 681 &amp;
Connely Drive
IIT"tppe,ra Plains,
Afso serving
sausage gravy
&amp; biscuits
Dally Lunch
Specials

illi1j
A
m~·:

(F1ctory Oullel}
AU •ertlcal bllndt are
made lo order 11
our loeallon
• Verllealt • Wood
• Mlnlo • Etc

1441Wr4 Art•..,...

446-4995

LIMESTONE

WilliAms
EKCIIURTIOG
~use,Ohlo

Dellverid I
Spread $15.00
per ton, B to 10
tona, limited
•re•, c111 tor
details. Cell:

. Bulldozing,
Tracklloe, lllickhoe,
Land Cle1tlng, hpllc
'Titnkl, Ditching, w.ter

&amp;llewlt'LIMI

BII•Work, Poncll,
Drlveweyo
S11emen1111'0011ro
lniUred,
FREE Eollmotoo

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

~

New Homes &amp;. Remodeling
"Specializin&amp; In Loa Homes
&amp;: Rubber Roofs"

.

Roofs &amp; Siding

Commerc,lal &amp; Rcsldcnlial
(740) 992-3987
Owner &amp; Opern1or, John Dean

l &gt;b" the PAIN
o u ~ Gf PAINTING!
L~~· ll1"

J-,,• fry .J'

Ulll1 PIITII

Or leave name
end number

A

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areaa,
Sidewalks, Floora
21 Y"" I!KperltnOI
F'"l!lllmltll
(toll''")

"SALES AND SERVICE"
WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING

877·353-7022

1

UIUiiiD
AU.

RESIDENTIAL&amp;
MANUFACTURED HOUSING

TVI'U OfO I I A -

10 Yl.llqiJI,.1011NCI

FREI! EBTIMATI!

1-11 01'1'1 II \I · tfltllill l !Hi lt

740 992-9158
9J[iiii[i;iii'J
::==~ (304) 773·9550

l::r::r:=::t

• flrtoe In YtHr t:umpm!Hfr
•
Warranty On Seled Mndt'h
•·Kt:E •~~'f'lMAl' K~ •lfiii:F. fn••nwy
•ll.-nk •'lnunch•~e Aulh1blt
• Prk.. Tn Fll All Rod~oll

IIIIICII. ILOCKI IITOHI

Free Estimates

HI-Efficiency Heat Pumps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnaces

·

POIIIefl!l Eagles .
Blll60 Z171
Evef11111undly
&amp; Slllday
llHrs Open 4:30
forty birds start
&amp;:3D
Progressive tap Une .
1111111Rys .
Progrealue
Coueralllll Sllldays .

Qulllty Conc:ntt Work

w-.•merlcan•llndardalr.com

• t'nt 5 lc KVo•r f'•rt Worranll011 • free fllrdl•l 'l'hcmu,.lal
'

·

. (740) 742-8015

u.t~rle4,

• Hilling a. Air Conditioning

4 •

tit!~
TFN

CODDECTIOD,llC

• Air Conditioner•
~
• tlervlce On All lrondo
• Ao81dentlell Light Commerc111
•10 yr. pen11 Labor
·

992-2155

lfl::..

YOUR COncRETE

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING ,&amp; HEATING
•HHiing

~

Garages, Pole Buildlnas. Concrete lll'il .

. (740) 591·2173

740-ee2·3N5or

M

111,1.!}

~~ftftC~~

412&amp;11 rno, pd.

BUND SPOT

Cell 304 &amp;74-3082

~~tt=;fft~ftt.

mEIGS COUnTY
STillE STORE

The CRAFTY,

Maintenance Jobe.

. fJ!!'.ElYJ

1

East State St.reet Phone (740)S93-6671
Athens, Ohio

1(.~~

Parts &amp; Service

(740) 446-1044

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

El•ctrto, Plumbing,
•nd •mall Home

Phone

.....,. V&lt;i!ol'ct S&lt;i!ol@
IQ"I
Up 'ro :t S Wo«&lt;l&amp;. ~ O&lt;i!oytli
Ov•r :ts Worcta &lt;to• ..." Wol'&lt;lt
Acta Mtuat • • II'"Nitp•lo

l"ehlct~t&amp;

7f22/TFN

Hours

Now Open
11 •·ITI· • 8 p.m.
New Homes • Vinyl
Mond•y thru
Siding • New Garages ·
Saturday
• Replacement
Closed Sunday
Windows • Rooting

Free Estimates

.

~ ! ;::- .::;.~~.:'~

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment PartS
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Pans

4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

BUILDERS InC.

Jim Au•rk

•

740.742-3411

.,

COMMIICIAland AISIDINIIAL

992·8215

0-.«'Ailt•.r

r

FREE ESTIMATES!

Le1v1 n•m• I No.

JliS flfC'JRIC li
PlUmBinG

J

O.ragn, Pole Building&amp;. Aoafa,
Siding, -o.c:ka, Kltchlna. Drywlll
6More

(740) 742·7037

· ·P•tlo 1nd Porch Decke

V. C. YOUNG Ill

!"'a~~y thru Friday
8.00 a.rn. to 5:00 p.m.

Ot ... To(14G)MN111

Pllt8

•New Homes

$]5,00 pe[ ton
8·10 tona
limited area

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

Romodellng

~ ..... To(l40) , . -

DIPIIYIII

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

Delivered
&amp; Spread

O'xlO' &amp;10'K20')

CARPENTER

.

JONES'

97 BeechSt
ffilddleport, OH

YOUHG'S

·Today.....

· Od'ifooe.H~

992-5479

Sizes 5'x10' .
to 10'x30'
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

$8.00 column Inch weekdays
$10.00column Inch Sundays

ror bonis. pens, &lt;ap. &amp;. nilers

ttribunt(740)44&amp;-2342 Sentinel (740) 99N156

BryenA••-

Authorized Agent

Racine, OH 45771

740·949·2217

1M

New Homtl, RoomAclclltlciM,

Hill's
Qcb CAtieC &amp; Gravely
YOUTH
Self
Storage
Massey Ferguson
NG 29670 Bashan Road

DERBY

.........

lOt\

lbl.

sunset Home
Construction

Jeff Warner Ins.

wv N031712

8:30AM Sunday,
June 9th @ The
Racine Gun Club

Advertise your
message

Golden Bow9,000 'l'oli» ___._....... $1~
20.000 Pbslic Balet 'l'ollne- ... ....- .... ~ SlS.7$
Top Dress l'lsiiiRS with Sulf11t

949-2115

Cellular

740-985-3948

•

•

213l Seen~ lllle.

IIM't_ .. _ __ _ _ _ .....

Racine, 0111o 45nt

the Rest"

per
month!

Goldcft Bow 16:000 'l'oli»...~·-·- .. S18..6S

.fiGS IIIISSftGE
THERftPY

CONTRACTOIIS, IlK.

Pocket Knives
&amp; Collectibles
~Cut Above

. .your
.business
on this
page for as

-

Serike~

3SS37 St R1.. 1 Nonh • l'l&gt;motoy, OH 4$120

P/1

.MACK'S

Advertise

e·••
..,.... ..

llrt Jill sbeaefl

• tl • Pll&amp; a I

1

•
,.

'

11

........

v· utta •

•·

HERBALIFE
'
lndependenl
Dlelributor

1 Lost 271b.

in 32 days.

PLUMBING
4011th8trHt
NeW H•v•n, WV
~ •Relklentlol

100%
natural/Guaranteed
I..JBtne

FreeEalt

740-992·7036

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

�~

AU.EYOOP

""""" ....... _..._

••mot

' l .... t k"' .. " '"'"' h..•~l:l'\."tlr.L.. . . . . \ ... l ...

_...,.IO'tlll'

Nil: llutilt

Notcibus
Thi&amp;

c:omm~nt

by IU\a·
lish humorist . AI~lt
Atkinson was publi~hed in tM mucllmis td Puncll: "II is
very considerably
smaller thlln Au lrnli11
11nd British Somllli·
land put tolltthtr. As
thi n&amp;s shmd 111 prosent thllftl \s notfli"ll
much the Telt~o~ns c~o~n
do ubout this; 11nd .. ,
they ttrt htclined to
shy. aw11y from the
subject i.n ordinary
~o-un"trsattun, muttering ~fenSively about
tl\0 siae of Qnlll!lts." ·
Although we lire inclined to shy IIWny
from the subject. for
the next two d11ys.
let's hove a look ut ll
~~~~ 'ft~as

couple of deals that
hi&amp;hlighl an impor·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

tant aspect of de·

fcnsc: findin11 cno1111h
winners.

0\'4b~W...~M-It!l-~-bf~
,......, ......... . . -, hell '4lW 111\1\t ~
IQi-

ln this luyout. you
tllll sittin11 West, look·
Ina 111 your htmd nnd
Ntlrth 's. dcfcndlna
,.
.
.... P':
"'ll ngninst n contmct of
r tM.oo't ~ow w~o~.~\\lt~L
.st~ ...il-l.tt-~ t ~~01 tlilllfl heurts. You loud
the spnde ace: throe,
et,.t~ W~ W!\W
nine, five. You cash
I W...lt\Z.\ E.l&gt; etru'M!
tho spade king: six,
four, seven. How
I
wouhl you continue?
II is not norm11lly
i
recommended to roft
bld ll fiVt•Card SUit,
but those spudes ccttninly look like a six-

fodl11 eM: wtqllllt

'M

!

M

•

·:•• -1'1·
~..;:.

••
••
•••

..!· PEANUTS
••

DID I TILL 'tOO I
60T A. &amp;UNT FMM TNE
HA~OHAL!HOOWMENT
FOlTWI A~TS?

Everything MUU Goll
Oerd of Thenke

llmmell C. Turner's
family thank! Millllla
alld Hetb 1ll1101 of the

Rutland B.M.S.,

0' Bleness nll!morial
ll&lt;l$~ltal, Birchfield
funeral Home, Rev.

O•k Hill Hea111...1
110 Ch•rlette Ave•u•
O•k Hill, Ohle
toll oil olofo &amp;ole llovlo 21'P toWIJI'd Jod&lt;1011 toh

9am

n.,,

. j/j!li'IJ2

Wtloveyoll

Mommy, D•aav,
olordiln,
MawMawal

1\iellds who prayed,
brought food, lent

noweri, aave

donation! and
stopped b~ to give

their co"dolen.:es.
Your support wa1
hurlwarmlnaand

greatly apPttcl~ted.

.

lTHUASDAY

I

••
•

•.

\

•

Aud!DMtr • Madln WHtmmrtl149
chain • HuiWWialmt god £otpg

'
'
,.
•

\

lounaor•, S1..,.1, Sli&lt;Niorlal, la¥t Stall,

.

Couehtt, Sil'olgkl8ack, Roclintr&amp;

llilu

Rou.nd, R..tangular, Calf., o..rbod,
EK~rn. Nfah~land•

when wron • . Tho thouahtful
mnnncr y11u II u~c when cor·
rec1tn¥ tmothur will ba $rcnlly
upprocluted und rospcclcd.
Ocl n jump on llf~ l&gt;y under·
!IDnc.llnll the lnnucncca 1ho1'll
aovorn you In 11\c ycnr nhcud.
Send for our A!lrt&gt;·Oruph pre·
· dlctlonR by mnlllna S2 und •
SASB to Amo.Qruph, clo
this '.owwspupcr. r.o. no~

Miial Wotdrobtl, VOIItfcal "ling C:a~l:,·
Metal Sh.t.lng Unit•, ~oclrla llod•,
ca ...,
o..~ •• Air ConojjltOhotl, Compultt'l, C:optor1

And MUCH MPllll

740·8112·4103 or 892·0709

,,,1

r

H

dr ,

, r'l

I • '• · 1740) 446 -5 347
I • "''"I

Frldnv, Mny 3l. 2002
scvcrnl good thlni!M 1hu1
t•ould huvc 11 positive effect ·
on your t\oturc security could
tlcvclop for you In tho ycur
uhrtotl. Keep Ihe full h. bccouso
whlle they mny not Ul&gt;pcur IO
be "too SfHlCiuculor, In lime
1hcy wW prove lhcmselve~ .
. OEMINI (Mny 21·Juno 20l
.. It 's not your purrt,se to
eYer cmhnl'rui\s nnnthcr, evan

Kitsbtn Epulpnwnt
sro.. wlilo Grill, ~oad Wrxrmor, Doe, Fryer,
Bun~ Co!IH Mdktl, Serving Tobit, R.ltilllllillllrl,

r,

1740) 370 · 2720

"

•
•

I

I
I

17~H .

•

I

Murnoy .. l!ill Slnlion,

New Y11rk, NY

101~(&gt;.

Be

su1c tn ~lute your tmllm: ~~Mil ·

CANCER (June 21·July 22)
· The smull, '"n&gt;iuernte uceoJK
you do fur mhcrs shovld nnt

be untlcrcstlmnlcd for their
impn&lt;L ·1hey wollnocun much

the ICC illiCillllllln ~ou·.
may I'L\uhll',
IIHII'C h l

lH&gt; (July

De sci('clivo

your

2 .' · Au~ . ~2 ) ..
whet~ chn11dna

fli.cndK. Tho8c who ore

•c rlou&lt;·tnlndod ll11tl tlluturo
w

'•

·e-n Do~

tAM I

O' U 8 N E N

I I' I• I I I

,, INWI 0INKI~

I II I' I I I~.
AFT L E

MIXALC

I I I I I' I'

I he elderly gentleman can .
out of the bank shaking his heaa
and muttering out loud, "I ramem·
bar when the signs In the bank
said, "Next Window Please.' Now
they read, '. •• • • • • ·I"
·
Compltto tho ckucklt Quottd
bv llllin; In lht mlulng worda
you dt•tlop from 111p No, 3 below,

Ie

ICI.AM.t.m ~NSWIItS

Negate • Thump • Depth .·Nuance • CHANGE
My roommate and I went to the laundry m•t to do our
weah . She began sarthig the clothes and under her
breath she muttered, 'Dirty, r11Uy dlrty,'and only dirty If
we have enough CHANGE I"

'

!If neceaaary)

,.,,

CPUIL

\

9am

I

.IOKKGC . '

.

IUind•y, .tun• 2

Not rtlpO!lliblt for accitltnl• or lou ol fi!OIIIII)I.
AM pu~kaMI rnu1t bt NmO*I alf.•lle
Sunday, Juno 2. ·
Rtftt•htnllnll will bt IIYailabl•.

It

HIIQ

.. .•

.

fNtlt11 1 Flow. ·Ditploy Rtfrtg~n~tar

aoer gerege .
38 Hudaon at.
Middleport, Oh

MAY 30 I

•t

l•tunl•y, Jun• .,

liliiilll o•neyant, the

American
!.eglonalres, and
thoMe famll~ and

•1.

IIQCI

woao

doubleton. If so, you
(West) can cosh tliree
spade tricks 11nd huve
the hc~rt ace. in the
buckl!round. But
where is the fifth
trick?
II is unlikely Bust
hus u club honor.
Your only rcul hope
for success lies In
your singleton dia·
mand. At trick throc1
shift to the diumona
fi VCJ.
Declurcr
will
prllbubly win In hund
with the queen und
, loud u low heart.
Rush In with the ace.
then loud the spade
two (or juck). East
should sec whut Is
needed. He will ruff
the trick (assuming he
sturted with two ,
trumps!) und return u
diumond, allowing
you to ruff und to de·
lout the contrnct.

•

•

1.1.

ILKGC

lliii!VIOUS SO~UrtON - 'M.OlQQrll~ knowt nolnlng nlgntr
11\an lt..n, bull&amp;ltnl ln,llnlly ..coQnlua ;.nl~a ,•- Slr ~nnur

of un echo with a

•••

•••
•

W\IQOILUII

10·

II'IOKU

10\ITGII
.II'I·U

.

trnct~ EIISt• West must
,........., win five tricks •• their
lltraet. Enst's spade
nine is surely the stllrt

••
••

••
•

Tf'IU\1~

-

TQIIUlt

· IGCI'Klt

IG .O \Ilt

'""'*

To defc11t the con·

·: BIG NATE

:

IQ

p

btltu!cr.

••

&lt;

.IUU\1

TUIMTUI

I

.••

by L,ula C:.mpaa

.

·

..

~nn

serve u~ n ~nnduil fqr tic;
rlvlnfl ynur yrcnte~t hcnefhs.
Plnyful pol~ cun only off~r
play,
VIRCJO (Auy. 2J·Sepc 22)
.. Draw nn 1hu !kill! untlutl·
ani! you've uovclupcd In the
pll! l In !CrVC D! tho CXIrll!
you ' ll need tu uchlcvc your
ulfflcull objaclivcs. They' ll
blend lmoalnotlon wllh deter·
mlnullon.

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0&lt;:1. 23) •
• You will be ublo to dcnl
wllh u difficult sltunllo.n bo·
couso It will be 1lmllor to one
you recently manaacd. The
methods you aucceufully
u8od then can be replicated.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24.Nov.
22) .. You nro the one who

ahould be !CIIlna tho example,
hecuuac lhoso wllh whom
you're Involved won't have
the· 11t!}'ina power ~ou poa·
scs!, .ShOW your IIUff, lllld

1h9 will follow .

.

SAGITTARIUS .(Nov ,

2~·

Dcc.ll) .. If ym1 find there l.!
1umelhlna lhnt need' "' be

done thut you ~:~ n ' l do 1111
your own, don 't hesltale to
rtnd n pc"'"' whu cun help
out. Mutunl heneflt• cun he
dcriv(•tl.

CAI'Illl'OI~ N (l)ec . 22·lll1t.

19) .. l.tJOk fur IIIIWIId! 10 hc
llllldC fur 1\lllWthinv, WOI'Ih•

r~conlly nccom·
pllshcd, bul were nol 11rnperly

while yuu

COI11j)CI\Sill~ll

fnr,

AI,IUAKIUS (Jun . 20·t'ch.
I Q) .. ARsNt ynuridf' If ymt
urc Involved In 1111 endcnvnr
which Is not doln~ too well
under the nu&lt;plct~s of li s /'''~·
liltnt hw dct·~. Ynu cn n

l

n 1\

better joh, solllkc the reins.

I'ISCI::S (l'cb. 20·Murch

20) •• It lsn'tllkcly thAI you'll

consider nny •ucrlncc too de·
mundlng In helplna !llmconc
you love. Your unMelfl !h uul·
htdc will not only be com·

oncndnblo, but arco111}1 npprc·

clutod.

ARIIiS (Murch li ·Aprll

19)

fnr you to
come up with ldcaa thnl pro·
duco the arcutcll aood for the
arentcn nutnben. su when
you conjure t'nc of thc!c up.
be auro 10 shure II with l~c
aroup.
TAURUS (A'prll, 20·MAy
20) •• The wonderful dllJ1¥CU
1&gt;08lurc you nrc cnpnbla 11f
rlrnwlna upon will 1crvc you ,
well. Yuu rc tlol npt 10 ~ UC •
~ (l i Hb lu uhlhlciC! thnl block
you from !Otncthlnjl you
.. lt' i not unu1uul

WIIIH ,

.

'

�......

~

TVC Hocklnc crown, 11

•

a1

M.aaa Caunty'a

Whit's lnslcl1

158,000
awarded
for equipment

Big AI and The
Heavyweights

IY IIIlA" J. R~m

Marth• !antuer, as ·
Betty Kel ,--.,I
Bertha M hell, 40
Dll8111.AJ

'2002: A Space

Marshall

Adventure'

'lUcker Band

~23-!7~7.

Picnic with
th Pops
•

Symphony
Sunday

Hunth\IIDI\ SyMJ)hoftY

0Nhe~tnl15 Piunl\l With the
Poos ~-h party will be

Saful'day lit Stun.·Itt the Harris
Ri'l'eltoilt Pllrk:. For lntbnna·

•
The West Vlfllinln
Syn\phony On:hestra' lOth
i\nl\UIII summer ~'tlelwtlon ld
offeted MQy 31 • June 2 an the
Unlversll}' of Ch~~tleston IIIWI\,
For mare Information call (~04)
342-0151.
. .

tiM call (304) !12S·06?0.

Lynyrd Skynyrd ,
8 l.vnYrd S!cynyrd l\1\d .38
SJeClal ·will be perfutml!\1 ,
TUesday at '7 p, m, .at the

l:luntlfli\ol! Clvi~: Arena, Ticket ·

I'ORIIVIN 4- Tht Gtllla County aroup Pofll'llln 41a one of tt'illrataoapellfOupa alated to perform at Goapet
on the Le'illt Saturday, In ectdltlon to tnt fl'tt ooncerta, lrtt food anct otl\tr attractlona are planned.

•

'

'

·'Gospel on The Levee' offers free family fun

• Nllt\W on Su~ nt Hooklllll

Huts Conoe Uvery..Then! 111'11 kidS

contests, piMS und lllltul'll nctlvl·
lies, For toonl lnlbrmnlloo cnll J.
~.

Flea Market
I Htx:kina

Hills Fnmers Flen
· Market will lie hold on weekm
tram 9 a.m. to 4 J1.m,, the mlll'ket is
loollted on u.s, 33 and Ohio374.
For more Information emil ·(740)
!174-'7991.

OMBROY Pl'\le
aospel en~ertalnment,
booths offtrllll free food
of nll t.~pes und t'ree
llmusemel\t nttrnetloll8
for chlldl'\ln ul'\l plnnned fiJr
Suturd~ty's Oospol ill\ The Levee,
The at\ernoon 11nd cvtnlna evtllt
is sponsored b~ the Ohio Valley
Crusade for Christ,
Amona those · nets booked to
ilppo•r lire The H11rt Brothei'B, The

Dluearus Dls!1_1ples Poralven 4, be11ns and eornbread, eottun llantly,
Cl~ liesund ffiend~. Alftn Stli~k tiiQ\'18 In 11 baa and oth r Items.
And CuniPIII\Y and His Will.
In addition, the CORE Drama
'lblll\l (rom Bethel WorKhlp Center
In Tuppers Plains, 11 .YilUtl\ dramli
aroup at\d n ulownrna mlnl8try
from Laurel Cliff PM Methodist
Chureh In Pomero~ aN 1118\l
e~tpccti!d to p~.~rfurm.
At 11111st I~ churches plllli to aet
up booths ofl'ertna free fnod and
rel're8hmrenta, lnoludlna hot doa•.

A"boun!lllhouse," ollmblna wall
11nd ob~taole count will be avail·
able at no l.liJSt to 11hlldren In atten·
dance, and the · First Southern
baptist Chu~t~h of Pt!mero~ will "et
up 1t8 "kiddie train,"
·
The oontert Is set to bealn at
il:30 p,m,1 1111d the boothii and other
f'llmlly attr~etlonil will be open at 3
p.m.

prltes iire $22..!10 • $2.7 .~(), For ·
more information tall (304) :

696-5990.

:

Will Sbaat

dips·····

: NEW YORK (AP) Another spate of bad news
- thiS time, ful'el:liSIS 01'
disllppoh\111\a rett1li sales
n'1tl u downgrade of
AT&amp;T's debt by Moody's
Investors Seryh:e J)rotnpled Investors to P.hiy
It snle yet llllllln Thul'!lil~ty,
leaving the stock nmrket
narrowly mhted, Blue chips
fell torn fourth strulght ses·
slon.
It wns Wall Street's best
session In four days ns
te~hnolugy eked out a
modest guln while blue
chips P!)Sted their smullest
loss Itt four days,
The
Dow
closed
Thursduy down II .35, or
0.1 pei"Cent, 111 9,91Ui9,
htw1till lost 304.31) In the
p~ filtH: sessions.
The market's broader
lndlcatnrs were mlx.ed. The
Nusduq composite lndelt
rose '1.-'3, or 0•.5 percent, to
l,63 1,9:2, a minor come·
buck from n three•session
loss of 73,24.

Ohler

Pick II 9-4·5
Pick 4: 11.0•9·1 .
lllckeyl! 1: 3•13·14·29·32
Pldt I n!J!tt: 1·7·8
.Pick 4 nljht: 2·4·9·5

c.•li :as: 1·2-5·10·22-23

Incubus with
Phantom Planets · •.
•

Comlna 1oun ...

Bad Company/Foreigner

lnc:ubus wltl\ Phlllltom Plllllel8 will be I'!CI'ftlhnltlll

• Blld Company 11nd Forelaner will be pert'onnlna,
Wednesday ut 7:30 p.m. ot the Natlonwldo Arena, Sundlly, JUlie 911t 7 P.·lll•lit the Polaris Aml!hi~Maler. 1ltket
Event seatfna prlc:e Iss~. For more lnfil~matlon ~11111 · prlueN n $17.50 ·13?.50. For more lnforinatlon on 11\15
800.64.5·26:17,
event ellll (614) 431·3600,

Index
J hctlolll- it .....

Caltnd•r
Clesslfleds

A5
BS· 7

DearAbby

A4

Obituaries

A3
A3

Comics

Editorials
Movies

Sports

WAYN.

OJ • Mu1lo • Drink Sf*tllll

Stop By For
A Fun Tlmel
(740) 992·5884

W1ather

I

88

A&amp;

81·5

A2

C ~DOl Ohio Valley Publllhln1 Co.

Crow'• ·Family Reataurant
Ftatw'U., Ktlftldy Prltd Cllldtn

sue ndvnn.:.'\lments In equip·
ment Inventories for county's
emergency response teams ..
According to Byer, . law
enfoi"Cement agencies, fire
departments and emergency
medical un ncross the county
will likely benet1t from the
grant.
A smuller grant of $1 ,677
was awarded to Meigs
County through the same progl'l!m shortly after the Sept.

the grant award announced
yesterday.
This hue.st grnnt may be
used for 11 vllriety of emergency equipment, to increase
the · prepuredness of locul
agencies In the event of n terrorist attack. It may be used
to purchase personal protec·
tive equipment, such liS
turnout gear, chemical, rudio·
logical and biological detec·
lion equipment, decontamino·

MEIGS ACCIDENT

mer including hand-held
radios und chargers.
.
B yer said he will meet with
police and fin: chiefs and
other administrators lo deter·
mine the needs of their agencies amd will closely evaluate
both the requirements of the
grant and the most practical
uses for the funds , to ensure
that equipment purchased
will meet specific needs of
the agencies.

Commissioners
ap rove public
de ender contract
Bv

IRIAN

J. RIID

,BREEOOMYQAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Meigs County Commissioners approved
u new contract with the Ohio Public Defender's Office durIng their regulur meeting on Thursday.
Attorney Michuel Westfoll of the Athens office of the state
public defender, nnd John Algae of the Columbus office,
presented the new contract, with u face value of $45,792 and
discussed increasing state budget restraints, which have
resulted In n decrease in reimbursement from the state for
public defender costs. The new contract reflects an increase
of $3,000 from the current contract, which e~pires on June
30, due to those state reimbursement cuts.
Through the contract, the O.P.D. puys local attorneys for
public defender work on the behalf of indiaent dafondants.
Cupltni murder casos, child support cases and other time·
Intensive cases are not Included ln the contract, but routine
mfsdemennor und felony criminal cuses are covered under
the contract.
The contract provides considerable savings for the coun~
ty when compared to un appointed counsel system in which
attorneys ure appointed and puld by the county on u case· .
by-case bus is. Pomeroy Attorneys L. Scott Powell and John ·
.
.
Lentes
will be paid under the terms of the new contract on
DltlVIR INJURID- ASyraoult man remelna in Cabell Huntington Hoapltal, Huntlnaton, W.Va.,
u tlat-fee basis.
followin; thla accident WtdnJI~IIY on Ohio 124 near Mlnal'llvllle, Denial S. Bable, 20, College
· The contract costs will be paid In quarterly Installments.
Street, waa airlifted to the h~plt•l by MedFIIght lifter the 9:515 a.m. accident, the Gallla·Melgs
In other business, Ron Enstm11n und Mickey Williams,
Post of tha State Hi;hway Petrol reported, Troopal'll aeld Bable was northbound when the truck,
members of the County Veter11ns Services Commission,
owned by Gallipolis 8ulldln; Supply, went off the rl;ht aide of the road and atruok a concrete , mel with the commi~sloners to request the purchase next
cul'illrt. The truck continued on, Whert It struck 11 tree and than rolled over onto Its side. The
year of u new nine-passenger van for medlcul transport.
truck
had
te'illre
Clema;e,
and
th6
accident
remains
under
Investigation.
(Cava
Harris)
The agency's 2000 van Is nearing 90.000 miles, Willi11ms
'
suid, und the Veterans Service Commission hopes to trade
the vun In on a new model during Fiscal Year 2003.
Eastman and Williams estim11ted the cost of u new van,
with the trude·in consideration, at $15,000.
According to Williams, 108 veterans from Mei8S County
huve received medical transportation services throli8h the
Veterans Service Office to date this year. Lllst year, 288
were provided with services. Since last year, Williams said, ·
the oft1ce has mode att~mpts to coordinate appointments 111
IV TONY M, WaH
A recent study revealed one
the Chillicothe Veterans Administration Medical Center In
Tl!ACHOMYDAilYSENTINEL.COM
I! V
In four American homes has n
order
to reduce trips.
.
r. I • • 1
hundyun. Apprmmhtcly 60
POMEROY - De~utles
Commissioner Jim Sheets suggested thut the county con·
. '/percent ' of gun owners keep
with the · Meias . ounty
sider the state purchasing program, which otl'ers equipment
Sheritl''s DIIP.Grtment · Ill b\l
lllelts will WdA/Iit' nreurtns In the home for hunt- at ne11otlnted prices will\ private companies, before the
giving uwuy free gunlocks on
crt SO ~ lng und recre11tlonal purposes. 2003 budget is prcpured.
·
. Suturouy ns pnrt of n
Al.l- ~by
Tl\e other 40 pe~ent typically
According to Williams, Mei11s County hus the fourth·
In wnR~..,
sll\tewlde cumpul~n aeared
possess u 11un tor crime pre·
hiyhest per-capita veterans populnll!&gt;~ In the stale, with
townrd flrtnrm sufety nwllre·
ventlon anil protection.
2,178 veternn. receiving nearly $3 mtlhon in veterans ben·
ness,
a.m. to 2 AM
According to lhe Notional
efits.
·
In un effort to promote
Safe Klus Cnmpui11n, each
At the request of Michael Swisher, Director of the
__,_,
ye11r, unintentional t1reurm·
flreurm s11fety education to
Department of Job 1111d Family Services, the commissioners
gun owners across Ohio, ·Lt.
related Injuries require ho~pi ·
approved bids from Banks Construction, for replacement of
Oovernor
Maui'Cen n wt!lllerfuliden .nnd n fnntns· tul treatment for an estimated
the roof on the department oft1ce, in the amount of $!1, 150,
O'Connor, in conjunction tlo w~o promote the lmpor· l ,500 children nges 14 and
from Noble's Painting in the amount of $2, I SO for exterior
with Project HomeS"afe, hns tance~ t flrellfm safety," said Iinder. The average three year
repnlrs on the building, and from Anderson's Furniture of
kicked off u cumpnign Meiss outuy Sheriff R11iph · old Is strong enough to pull
Pomeroy In the amount of $2,437 for new tile flooring In
thrtmahout Ohio to distribute Trussell.
the trigger of many of the
the otl1i!e lobby.
.
50,000 free auni(X)k.g to gun "Improperly stored flrcurtn!f most common handguns
Commissioners also:
owners.
,
pose danger to any house· nvnllnble In the U.S.
• Approved the closing of portions of Heiney Road in
The free gunlocks wlll be !tOld . nd aunlocks ore lln ProJect HomeSufe Is funded
Olive Township and Heifmun Roud In Salisbury 1bwnshlp,
at ven away ut more than 60 excell t wuy to help prevent by the National Shooting
following u recommendation from Engineer Eugene
Wal·MIItt stores 1111d/or sher· an u ntentlonal shooting Spons Foundation 1111d il $5
Trlpleft, and public vlewlngs and hearings held yesterday;
lffs' offices statewide on from
urrina." he udded.
million federal grnntadminls·
• Approved 11 bid for bituminous materials for June from
S11tUrd11y from 10 a,m, to 2 "The
Meigs
County tered by the U.S. Department
Asphalt Materials, Inc., M11rietta, and referred the bid to
p.m. Loenl lnw enforcement Sheritr. Department Is very of Justice,
Triplett:
wlll be assistlna with the hono~ to participate in this For Information about the
• Met with Swisher· in executive session to discuss per·
alvenway and lnstructlna aun aiveaw~ und hope the free free aunlock 111 veawuy, con·
sonnel m11Lters.
owners on how to properly aunloclli reduce the number tact the Meigs County
Present, in uddhion to Sheets, were Commissioners Mlck
use the free lock.
or fireirln·reloted · il\luries," Sheriff's office by culling
Davenport, who conducted the meeting in the absence of
·
992-3371.
"This aunlook campaign Is suid Trui18ell.
President Jeff Thornton, and Clerk Gloria Kloos.

Sheriff's d•rbnent offen free
pnlocks fOr county
·
I

D1lly 1: H·7
DillY 41 9•9·0•8

Doawootl 'Tl'llll Event:
Wouve your own basket with
Leotn Hutchlnson, Dried l'lowet'll
and hllnd·woven bnskelll will be
for snle, More lnlbmlntiOil eall
(740) 385·8130,

Program, Grunts were nwnrd· II terrorist uttucks, Byer said, tlon equipment and special-

ed to nil Ohio counties to pur- nt which time he applied for ized communications equip-

High: 80s. Low: 50s
Dttall1tAI

Wtat Vh'llnll

trail Event

POMEROY - Protecting
local emergency W()fkers In
the event. of 11 domestic ttrrorlst o.ttatl Is the goal of n
$!18,000 arnnt awnrded to the
Meigs County Emergency

Manllgement Agency,
EMA Director Robert Byer
announced the grant from
Ohio Public Safety and Its
Emergency
~nagement
Agency during Thursday's
reaular meeting of the Melas
County Commissioners who
1\Ctepted the grant and
approved the establishment
of a new line lttm ror the
funds,
The funds were awarded
throuah the State Domestic
Preparedness
Equipment

grant received

New deal a $3, 000 increase
over current contract

• 'l'be Mlll'Shi\11 Tllektr Blll'ld • .
will be pl!!Ylna Frldav at 8 p.m.
at the Coyotes Wild Doa
Saloon. 1l~~ 11ft $15. ~
nmre lnfunuatlon ~:all (304)

Sunday

'7

lllll~'!Oo'lll'$tN'tiNEl.OOM

Rtds swtep Mll'llns, 11

Nature on

Homeland secu

a•• ..,..

f.olt......r·"

The 8th Annual NatiOnal Cancer Survivors Day Picnic
Sunday; June 2; 2002 • 1:00 • 3:00 p.m.
lob Evant Fanne Picnic Sheltw, Rio Gt ande•
Good load, door print and lots of hug&amp;. ,
Op.n 10 ·any a:ancer &amp;Urv!YOI', lhtlr family and lritndt,

au Malllll.

Come celabraltllttl

.

It ppaltldll)l Holatr Mttlkol CMfw, Holw Cllnlt, Plio4'tno-llcol ~lu ond llta Community.

'

•rake lht roccl ocrou from lht rt&amp;IOUronl.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discouer the Holzer Diffe1•ence

www.holzer.org

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