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yoor·tOIIUllttl oflhrft

BARNEY

no-tnamP.&gt; West lelllb
the spaile four ud
611-'\t pllts up the rune..
How would you pro~?

.

North should nll$e
to three no·IN~P·
Even If a tluee·dll·
mood response wuWd
be muur~~l, not a

tnmsfer bid pomislna
five or IIKn bcarts, to

show a minor indl·
cates a band that is ei·
tbet very unbalaneed,
leaving the responder
&amp;erlou~l;y concerned
11bout oo-trump. or ....
more likely •• so
strong that the · re·
spondllr is thinkina

MOVIE

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TAAT 1 CAN'T COME TO
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C106 tS SI.&amp;PIN6 OM MV
LAP. AND IF I 6ET UP,
IT WIU Dt5TUII.IIIoliM ..

I
!TUESDAY

JUNE 41

You have silt top
tricks: two spades
(aiven trick one)\ two
hearts and two ttllbs.
The other three tritks
cun come from dla·
monds, but there Is ~
potential snag. If an
opP&lt;Inent c:nn hold up
tile diamond 11\.'C 11ntn
the third round, you
will need a dummy
entry to reach the estubhshed two dia·
mond winners sitti!ll
there. And what ls the
only potential dummy
entry'? Riaht .... the
spade queen.
,
Who has the spade
kina? Since presumably West · led his
fourth-highest spade,
l!PPIY the Rule of
Eleven. Subtract the
value of the c:ard
West led •• the four ••
from 11. This tells
you there ure · seven
curds hiaher than the
four in the North,
Bust and South hands
combined. And yo11
saw them all at trick
Ulle.
West And
has the
spudeSo,king.
to
make dummy's queen
a hater entry, you
should win trick one
with the spade ace.
Then you drive out
the diamond ace and
cruise home with an.
overtrick, later playina a sP.ade toward
dummy s queen If
necessary.
If you found that
play, you ure proba·
bly feelin' groovy,

Buy, 8111 or TY1d1
• lnlht

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- CELEBRITY CIPHER

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Poww still out

Lull

The fellow epplled I job 11
an lnduatrlelapy. He was given an
envelope to deliver to the next
floor. The fellow opened the •~"~·
velopeancl found 1 note thet ..-ad:
"Report for work tomorrow. You're
our ··· · of • ··I"
...
8 Complete
the chijc~l• Qijate!j ·
by llllln' In lht 11111111111 worda
you dt¥tlop rom altp No. 3 btlow.

l

POMEROY - An tstl·
tunted I,000 Amerlenl\
Bltetrk Ptl\WI' (AEP) ~US•
ton~rs in the Ptll\ltroy lilt;\
ttre still without po~r this
mo11tlng fullowing n series
ol' hnense thunderstorms
thut rumbled through the
ttren 'T\lesd e~nlnt~.
Att:llrtllilg to un ABP
otlleittls, the storms' high
winds, hllll untl liahtnlnt~
brouaht down trees und
trte limbs, knooked down
power lines, broke utility
poles, 111\d looked out ""'"
el'lll elcc:trldty clttults .in
the Mel¥s nnd Athens
COIII\Iies.
The esthnlltetl time fur
complete power restorlitlon
in POmeroy hM been set tor
5 p.tn. todll)'.
Meias County Sheriff
Rnlph Trussell snid follow·
in_g lllst niaht's storms his
otllce received 110vernl c•lls
llbout downed trees nnd
power OlltlllleS. However,
no sianlficnnt dunu\ae
within the coutlty hns been
reported.
·
Representatives with the
Meigs County Highway
Depnrtment nlso reporte&lt;l
Incldct\ls .of fullon trees und
downed power lines und
snid no ronds were closed
becnus11 of high water.

Lottwlles
Ohio
OullnQ • Stucy • Leitve • Juttly • NECESSITY ' '
· I've noticed In 11111 feet peoed, modern world, II only
t1k11 • ahort period of time for • 1~txury to become an'
ltllolutt NECESSITY.

..
•

, Wednesday, June 5, 2002
Your opportunities and fl.
nnnclal prospocu look ruther
hupeful for the year ahead. Be
cureful to moke the molt or
cuch and every npponunlty lo .
rcop to the fullest reward1.
OEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
• If you let y\t\11 1Xl1DV8¥Unl
whilnt dominate your spend·
Ina habltl todny, you will
have to pay the conaequancu
lt't wl~e to practice prudence
~~ all tlme1 . Oemlnl, treat
~ounelf to a blrthd&amp;): alft.
Send fur your Atlro·Oraph
predictions for the year ahead
by malllna S2 and a SASE to
Attro·Oruph, c/o this newap_a•
per, P.O. llu~ 167, Wickliffe,
OH 44092. Be aure to llate
your zodlnc •ian.
CANCER (June ZI·July 22)
·~ Situations that require prl·
orlly treaunent Ahould be
alven your undivided allen·
tlon today, Serloua career
mallen 1nould neither be
viewed Indifferently nor
ahelved until u later date. Be
rca~nalble.
.
LEO (July 23·Aua. 22) ••
When asked for un opinion
today. either say nothlna or
tell thlna• like 1hey are •• 11
dlplomoflcolly aa poulble. In·
•lncerhy could. be viewed u
nattery und reaented.

Hlah: '10s, low: 60s

.

about a slllm.

Posre~

THE BORN LOS~Il

w.ther .

22)

be
your fl.

aleo e•·
Don't

ro~lll!l~ .

10•

1ome miracle
'
ltuar.
(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
• Even I IIIJht deviation or a
mutuil aoar may hurt a pari·
·
nerahlp arran1ement todl!)l.
Chock ahead olllme to milk•
certain your coun111rpart Ia
readlna from the aame tona
lheet •• 1'011'
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov.
22) • To maintain 1 produc·
tlve achedule 11 all tim.. , .
keep 1 clote eye on the clock. ·
If you hove a deadline to
make today, Once you r111 be·
hind, play!na eatc~·up will be
dlrRcult.
.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 23· ·
Dec, 21j·· Soolalarace! are
IIWIYI mportant, bUI today
they 11111y be vital when In the
company or tomeona other•
look up to. Be on auard and
don't do or ny any1hlnathat
can tamlth your lmaae.
CAPRICORN (Dei:. 22·Jan.
19) •• Be kind and tolerant to
thOII In your chara• tod~,
thoulh be careful notlo over·
lndufa• them. BehavlnJ In a
· manner to tlmply aaln their

upproval can bwkflre rr they
!ton thlnklna you're a puth•
over.
·
AQUARIUS (Jun. 20·Ptb.•
19) • Maklna ~ promlle to..
othor! that you· know you
cnn't deliver in hopei or rna•
nlpulatlnathom will be a dla·
amou1 maneuver today.
Thoae to whom you maka 1
commltm.ont will call lo til(
marker.
..
PISCES tPab. 20·Mart"
20) •• Avoid taklnft apecult,~
tlvo rl1k1 In unram 1111' 11111.
lnuud, try to dltolpllne your;.
111r In how you llandre alr
your material arfalrJ: al!'
make due with whll JIPI(
have, without borrowlna rrom.
01h1r1.
:
A~IBS (MII'Ch 2l·Aprlll9)
.. You'd be wlae to relY,
tolely on your own judam•lll
today rather than on the ad•
viCD or tiiOQlltll who. ICI(
Y9Ur e~~IUIO tO lhe prob!:EI
You will have a bluer hlna
on It than they .
"
TAURUS (April 20·Ma!l
201·· II' a wl•hrut thlnktna (o
be leve that lr you leave
thlna• to their own devlcui
thay will eventually wor~
themtelvet out. Squarely (au
whatever comet up today :tn4
take care of It,
•

Pick s: &amp;·8· 1
Pick 4: NI•0·8
Iucke" 1: 11·16·27-28·!!1
Picks day: 1·7·1
Pick 4 d1y: 7·2-2·!

W11t 'VIrtlnll
Dilly S: H ·8
D1I!Y 4: 0·7·2·0

.

caali :as: &amp;·7·8· 13·1 8·21

lndu
:a ltctltlftl - 1:a ,.. .

Calendar
Classlfl•ds
Comics
D1ar Abby
Editorials
Movies ·
Obituaries
SP.orts
Weather
II 2002 Ohio Vlllf'l

·

A5.
B3·5
Be
A5
A4
A3

A3
BI·3
A2

Mll1hln1 Co,
•

MilliON ACCOMJIUIMIO - Myl(ln Duftt.ld, ttllilrmlln of till! .
Middleport Coll\munl\y AUOOIIItlon 'a M~ 4 comm~, fllla Ill
the ftMIInder · of .the tl!t!wot'lla 1\tndrlllaint ltll~ on
Middleport's "T. • The QOlll of $'1.000 hila I:IMII~tiiChed. (Bflt~n
J. Reed)
.ht~ ~ollti!~t h1 Middleport.
Oil\ ~:"ertltbre~ 1\Jr nllwm
fur nut ~untmer will oo prt•
scnted II) tlrst, scrond nnd
third plllt.'l! winners. Oncy live
pltlllth~~ will beju~. Wls~
Sllld, by M~l~s County Muster
01udllni!rs, 11nd pllrtldpnnl~
must rtal~ttt prior 10 ju~Jttlng
111 Mltfdlepott Depnrtmllnt
StOre. Juty J 15 the real~tfll·
tlon dtudlh\t, Those with
question~ ubbut the wntest
ure nsked II) ~1111 Wise nt 99:1·
~m.

Josephine Smith honored at
Racine/Southern banquet
RACINE -· Specllll recoa·
nillon wns lllVI\0 to Josephine
Hobttck Smlth, 92, who grnd·
unted 7~ yeal'8 nao in the elMs
of 1927
when the
Raclne/Soulhem Hlah School
Alumni As~ocintloi\ bunquet
was hllld May 25 nt tho
sthool.
Blghte n fnrnlly members,
. includln1 son Dun nnd his
wire Donna Jenn, illona with
their children Don, Bonnie,
Pnlth, Tnm1nY Ted 11nd most
of their titmn leN were at the
banquet. All of these arlltUI•
children · and most or the
IJrent•grandohlldren lltll ulso
aradulltel
of
RIWine/Southern.
Don Smith lold ot' hls
arandmother's determln.nlon
{O arndunte from high schoql.
For her final two yelll'8 of hlah
school, she walked eiglll
mileM, from the Old Town
P1u1s nren where she lived, to
Rnclne. She would walk 10
Rnclne on Sundl\y1 Sliiy with n
Racine family tnrouah the
week, nnd then wull( bock
home on Prldoy ufler Rchool.
It was usually well after dark
when sho would orrlve home,
he suld.
Alumni Donrd membcn
who planned the reunion were
Shirley John&amp;on, Lisa Allen,
Junle Maynard, Tom Weaver
and Southern Principal

· pproved

IV TONY M, LIAOH ·

m~CftltMVOAilV!lENTINnL. OOM

RACINE - Southenl Local'~ new superintendent wns
!lft1~1nlly approved for 1.1mptoyment during the rtcent meet•
Ina or tht.\ Southern l'llnnndul Plunnlng nnd Supervi8lon
Commlst~lon.
·
.
Btlb Oruesl.\r rurmer grudunte of Southern High School
und resident of Meigs County, was un~~nittltlUsly upprov~d
for u three·yenr tuntrn~t with the Suuthern Locur School
District by members of the flnnnclnl ~Ianning cotnmlsslun.
Orueser, who officially begins his duties Augull I, will
replnue the tliH trl~ t' s former superintendent, Jnme~
Lawrence, who retlrttl in M11rch nfler hi t~ tontruut tclll~\\·ul
wus voted down by the Southern Lucul tlottrd (tf F-ducilllutl
In JMuary,
·
Prior tu be~omin11 the district's new superhlletn.lertli
Orueser wus superintendent of the Wurren t:.ncal Schoo
blslritt.
.·
.
".1 nm Vilry ex~lted nbuut remrnln~ ttl Meigs Ctlunty and •
working with. the peo~le of the S'tJuthern Lo~~l St:hool
District," ~nit! OrueMer. "I feel there Ill rent putentlnl within
the dlmlet nnd I nm looking forward lo ussumln!J my
respon~lbllltlesln Augusr."
.
In other 1\UIIIIll'll, the ~ommlsl!lon upproved the hiring of
Dobby Ord IIII th~ dl strl~t'slnterlin superintendent. Ord will
undertnke the role of nctlnll superinh!Mdent until Jut~ 31,
nt\er which, he will be rel)ht~td by Orueser.
The financial commlssfon'M next lltheduled 111eeting wlll
tnke plucil on July 16.

Center Dlabetta Support Group
mill
Sunclay, June 9 from 2:00 • 4100 pm
. at the Hoapltal'a Shelter Hou11.
Guilt SQtoktr • lb.nver Hugh11 of Tht Down Under Restaurant, who will

I diiCUII "Healthy Outdoor latlngN.
In Me!ge Cgunty: ' Thurtday, June 20 at 10:30 I\" · Malgs Senior Center

Dl•••...

June 10, 11 and 12 from 2:00 • S100 pm In the fflfiCI'I

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Discouer tlw Holzel' Difference

www.holze~rg

...

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NewSouthem
superintendent

The

••

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e1tte11ded to Reeky VnnMeter
Zusp~~n nnd t.arry 1md Patty
Cln:la wht1 ~erved liS ho$b for
the evenlna. .
. C:lll'l'Oll Cleek sJIIlke niKlut
nn effort to pl~tce a complete
set of ltnclne/South.ern yenrboob In the R11elne PUblic
Llbr11ry. Severul hnve been
collected but others are still
needad.
!)()n Weese, ~on of former
teu~ her Carl Weese, was rec·
oanlted lind thanked fur his
donation ofseveral yenriKloks
that belon111!d to hl8 futher .
Once domued to the llbrlll')',
the books muy be used for
review but mliy not be
checked out of the llbrlll')'.
THI OLDIIT OltADUATI - Cleek Mked that nnyone hav·
Joeephlne Hoback Smith, 92, Ina ylmrb11ok8 from nny year
who aredueted rrom Recine whluh they nrc willlna to
Hllh School in 1927, WII the donule oontuct hint or Shirley
oldeat arer:luate attendln&amp; the John8on. Any duplicate book5
2002 Rllllne/Southern Hllh received will be uuctloned til
School Alumni banquet. She future. bnnquet8 lind the
wee alven apeolel reooanltlon monle5 pluoed 1t1 the scholnr·
end
preeented
llfta. ship fund. The uu~tllln or
(Charlene Hoeflich)
Ohio River Beun mulle elpe·
elully for the AI umnl
Oordon Fl8her.
As8oclntlon were nuctloned
Roaer Sayre, Clm of by Dan Smith wllh the money
1965, aave the invocation and aotna to the 8choltlt8hlp fund.
the benediction und the junior D6natlon8 to the 5Chohtr·
cll\88 of Southern served the 8hlp fund have reeently been
·
received In memory of
dinner.
Lawrence Hllldore, '43, June
All araduates were recua· .
nlzed and speclul thanks were · lfliHH 111 AluMni, AI

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Ohio weather

Rutland H.S. reunion draws 250

. 1Cekicr" •

tam•· I

••••
••

Stormy weather at an end
•
BV '!liE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Showers and thunderstonm will end over most of the area
late tOnight, the National Weather Service said. Some storms
may linger over southern Ohio on Thursday morning.
Skies Will become partly cloudy on Thursday, with highs In
the 70s.
LoWs ton~ht wiH be mostly in the 60s.
.
·
.Sunset tol'llght will be at8:57, and sunrise on Thursday is at
6:03a.m.

Wtather foM&amp;st:

Thnight ... Showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the upper
60s. Southwe~t winds around 10 mph. Chance of rain 80 percent
.
Thursday... Showers and thunderstorms likely. Highs 74 to
78. Northwest winds 5 to I0 mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Thursday night ...Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 50s.
Extended forecast:
_
·
Ffiday... Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 80s.
~
Friday night... Mostly clear. Lows In the upper 50s.
Saturday... Mostly clear. Highs in the mid 80s.
Sunday..•Partly cloudy. Lows near 60 and highs In the lower
80s.
Monday...Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the lower 60s and highs 7S to 80.
1\lesday... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the upper 50s and highs near 80.

I

Group hopes
to 6park' . .

teens this

·

summer
IV K!lll DoTION
1\00tSoNIMYDAILVTAIIiUN!.COM

-161 Parkln1

"I araduated from Marietta
Colleae, and they have a real·
ly nice teacher's supply store
. up there and I got used to
running there every time I
needed aomethlnJ and when
I got back, there waan't really anyplace''The
to c:loteat
run," place
Price
explained.

Price hopes that as the
schooll re1eaae their moniea
tO be apent each year, she will
see an increase of local
teachers as cuatomers in the
futore: ·
·-··· ·
Teacher's Pet doesn't just
cater to teac hen, thoug h, t he
store can also provide needed
supplies to local home·
schoolers who have students
of their own.
"l'.ve had some hoine.
sc hooIers caII in, " -Price sa1d.
"I have a lot of resource
.
books and la'ffuage arts.
Most of the stu that! have

Lot

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p,m.

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-; KKELLVOMVDAilVTRIBUNE.COM
. GALLIPOLIS - Rick L.
er has been on the job as
-yal · lis city manager · for
- 1wo san said he's finding
.. the ex · ce "incredible."
~ · . "The community is won-derful and has welcomed me
. ·..with open arms," he said after
. ·attendmg his first City
Commission
meeting
..Tuesday following a full
· ·. schedule of learning about the
. city's operations and meeting
, · YJith department leaders.
~· . "It's going really well,"
·:.: ~rter said. "It'~ a great oper. at1on and I'm seeing a lot of
,-pride in what they do. I'm just
· · happy to have the opportunity
·. to be part of this city."
.· Carter, a 22-year U.S. Air
. ·Force veteran, will work with
, outgoing City Manager E. V.
• Clarke Jr. for a period of time
· _as he absorbs the city's
.·administrative structure.
· "We've had a busy time and
Rick is getting in a lot of good
.discussions with the heads of
:t~e departments," Clarke told
... Carter's most recent Air
· Force assignment had been at
. Dayton's Wright-Patterson
.·base, after a career spent both
·.within the U.S. and overseas.
·.He intends to move his fainily
..io Gallipolis in the near
. future.
· · In other matters, the com. ,mission approved a draft plan
. for t!Je.Gallia-Jackson-Meigs, ·Vinton Joint Solid Waste
Management District follow. ing a presentation by Lance
.·Wilson, the district's execuJJ ,tj,vo.direc!or. . · .
: ... The plan replaces one that

I ..

TAKING THE REINS- Rick L. Carter, right, Gallipolis' new city
manager, conversed with outgoing City Manager E.V. Clarke Jr.
prior to Tuesday's ·city Commission meeting. Carter started
his duties Monday. (Kevin Kelly)
expires ne.&gt;~t rear that had
been in place smce 1993, and
updates and revises rules
from the previous plan,
Wilson said.
The draft has been subject
to public hearings· and state
Environmental · Protection
Agency scrutiny, he added.
EPA's suggestions have been
worked into the document.
Police
Chief
Roger
Brandeberry lhanked the
commission for its April 2
decision to request a hearing
from the state Department of
Commerce Division of
Liquor -=:ontrol on a liquor
license transfer.
·
The transfer is sou~ht by
Courtside Grill, lookmg to
obtain the licens!l held by
Mogs Inc. Since the commission's move, Brandeberry has
met several times with
Courtside's owner, who has
taken steps to stem problems
at the establishment.
"It's satisfied me that it's

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gone from being a problem to
a positive business situation,"
Brande&amp;erry said. .
·
He asked the commission to
consider withdrawing its
request for the hearing, which
had been set for July, and
commissioners agreed.
City Auditor Margie
Landers said she and the
water/sewer office staff are
working on a proposal to
allow eligible senior citizens
a discount on water and sewer
rates that increased an average of 3.5 percent last month.
Commissioners, citing the
hardship on seniors with limited income and past discounts allowed by the city,
requested a new break be considered after giving final
approval to the rates on May
28.
.
.
Landers sa.id she will be
obtaining copies of action
taken in other Ohio cities to
use. as a model for Gallipolis'
action.

•

•

AEP-41.78
.Arch Coal - 22.99
Akzo-44.20
AmTech/SBC- 33.25
' Aehland Inc. - 37.48
, ~.'AT&amp;T -12.26
·, •Bank One- 39.40.
·' "BLI-17.70 .
Bob Evans- 30.17
• BorgWarner- 68.39
· •Champion - 2.96

Federal Mogul- .69 Premier- 9
USB~23.18
Rockwell - 21 .22
Gannett- 76.88
Rooky Boots- 5.95
Ger~e~a eeaoo-~.cxs RD Shell - 54.08
GKNLY-6.15
Sears - 58.12
I-WiayDI\tlllon-51.86 Wai-Mart- 54
Kmart-1.04
Wendy's- 36.80
Kroger- 22.17
Worthington- 15.20
Lands End- 61.94 Dally stock reports
Ltd. -20.56
·are the 4 p.m. closing
NSC-20.86
quotes of the previ.. •·0\&amp;u •IQ Slqla- 7.71 Osk 1-1 A a 0111 3l.Cl5 ous day's transac. ·•City Holding- 18.90 OVB-23.85
tions, provided by
BBT-36.91
Smith Partners at
Co!-24.75
.t, OG -18.53
Peoples - 27.15
Advest Inc. of
Pepsico- 51.79Gallipolis.
..· DuPont - 43.95

for reaourcea are K or Pre·K
throuah 8 and I have a few.
that are hlah ~hool, but the •
high school Is a little more
specialized."
Price is ·alwaylt willina· t~
accept orders for more spe· l'zed
·
c1a
1 1tems
and welcome•
lqe office supply or teacher
orders.
Teacher's Pet is open on
weekdays, from 4-8 p.m.
until June 10, when Price will
exteat1heir hours tO. noon to
6 p.m., Saturdays from 10
am to 2 p m clos d
· ·
· ·•
e
Saturday.

40) 992-2217

Sprucing Up Racine

•

~omm1sstoners.

I

Alumni
from PapAl

Proffitt Turner, '59, Olen
Hensler, '47 and Delbert
Hensler,
'41,
Thomas
Hensler, '48 and Charles
Hensler, '54. ·
After all Braduates had
been recogmzed, 40 who
. serve or had served in any of
the armed services were recogn_ized.
.
F1sher announced the win-ners of the Alumni/George
Sayre Scholarships. The two
.scholarships were awarded to
Joey Manuel, son of Mr. and
,
Mrs. Sid Manuel and to Tyler
. r.----~----------------~ Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
••
Joe Johnson. Both will attend
• •
Tile Ohio State University.
Door prizes of flowers
,
(USPS 213-NO)
•
donated
by the local growers
Ohio Vallay ~ubllohlng Co.
were
awarded.
The event
Ptibtlahed ev~ry afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
closed
with
the
singing
of the
Correction Polley
Pomeroy;
Ohio.
Second ·claaa
Alma Mater, accompanied by
Our main concern In all oiorles Ia poolage paid al Pomeroy.
~shf.'lis Ihle Relye, Class of
to be accurate. If you know of an Member. The Alsooiated Press and
error In a story, call the newsroom lhe Ohio Now- Aasoclallon.
Pootmu•r. Send addreaa correc·
It (740) 992·2156.
Graduates
attending
Ilona to The Dally Sentinel, t t t Court.
St.; Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
included: 1927, Josephine
New• Dlpartmente
Hoback
Smith; 1930, Wilma
Subecrlptlon ratea
The main number 11 992·2156.
Styer;
1932, Elma Ihle
Bwo
ce"ler
ar
motor
raute
Oepartment ext~tlons are:
Onl-k
$2
Louks; 1933, Harold Roush,
0n1 manlll
se.70
GtMrelmeneger
Ext. 12
1936, Mary V. Easterday,
One$104
Dolly
50 conta
Lucy
Taylor; 1937, Susan
Ext. 13
Newt
Sublcrlbtro not aealrlng to pay the
Holter
Gates, 1938, Clifford
e~~rrltr mat remit In advance direct 10
Ext. 14
or
The Oolly Sentinel. CredH will be given
Beaver; 1939, Wayne Roush;
e~rner each week. No subacrlptlon by
1941, Chuck Foster, Carroll
Other Hrvlcee
mall permitted In areal' where¥home
Norris;
1942, Paul Beegle,
carrier seNice Ia available.
Ext. 3
Adnrtlelng
Martha Lou Beegle;, Ruth
MallsubsaiDIIon
. Carnahan Sisson, John A.
Ext. 4
Circulation
tn- Mttlga C(li.;;"y
Kessler, Sam Curtis; 1944,
13 Wttke
$27 .30
Ext. 5
ClauHiedAd•
David A. Brewer; 1945, Nora
2e Wttke
$53.82
52 Wteke
$105.56
Wolfe Lewis, Bootie Lee,
To aend •mall
fllllo outoldl Molgt Co\lnty
Bilt Roush, Blondena Taylor
newaOmydalytentlnetoom
t 3 Wttke .
$29 .25
Rainer,
Audrey Hoback
· On the Web
$56.56
2e Wttkl
Boichyn,
Myrtle Easterday
52
Wtekl
$t09
.72
www.mydally-tinal.com
Holter, Dorothy Powell

...
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The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

Healthy Start
Healthy Families

•

•
IS

BY KEVIN KEU.Y

teacher's Pet' open in Point Pleasant
New shop
spedalizes in
classroom
·supplies

.

mana

LOCAL STOCKS

OALLIPOLIS - Attention
Bv PAM WILUAMION
;!~enbu~~!,ltington
or
Oallla County teens:
pamwOmydallyrf&amp;iater.com
Tired of running·, Price set
There 'a a ·meeting In the
POINT PLEASANT h ~ h
f d
Parking Lot, eyery ihursday
Tracie Price saw a need for a up 5 op •Or ersel an her
evenina- phuuo have fun.
t••ach"r's
• su~ply sto...
"' ~eers,
o' 1 PIright in thettlheartb of
1
r.ood
· Local youth have decided
n
the
are
so
she
fi
ed
it
with.
tn
easant, se na u '
'
1
11utsday
from
7
Teacher's Pet, her new letln borden, work6ooks,
to hold a get-together for
to
11
teens aolng Into seventh
teacher/office supply store at note
. Pad s, pe ncliS • wa II dec;o213 Sixth Street.
. rations and more.
grade tl\rough finishing 12th
New Life LUtheran
Price,
a
1997
graduate
of
Her fellow educators have r:;:;:-....;..;;;;;.;..;.;.;;~:::;...::.;.;:..;_,::::;:.:.::~--~------.•
grade at New Life Lutheran
Church
In
Gallipolis
Church every Thursday from
Point Pleasant High School, already turned out to support
7 to 11 p.m.
knows how important it is for the new business.
teachers to have what they
"The teachers seem posiThere will be musk (bands
and deejays) along with vol- the plate."
need since she has a degree in !lye b~t when I opened I w~s
leyball, ·basketball and
"And although we won't be
education herself and Is cUf· JUst ,h1tting the end of thts
refreshment• all for the low, laying down specific rules for
rently working ns a substi· ~ear s money and th~y ca~e
tute.
.
tn and spent that," Price sa1d.
low price of a smile.
the kids it is a commonly
"'J'heh! Isn't a whole lot to known that alcohol, tobacco
do for yoUth in Oallia County, products, and drugs are defilli everyone well knows, and 1 nitely not welcome," she said.
think tbla would be a great
Hubble said that come rain
The Ohio Valley Cru1ade for Chrilt wi1he1 to ~
.opportunity fur all ages of kids or shine, Thursday nights are
thank the many people that helped malce the
to get together and just hang "on" for the summer.
· Gospel on the Levee a su.:.:euful Family Fun Day.
out and ltave fun," said com"If the weather isn'.t good,
Health Care Coverace for
mlttee member Jenny Hubble. it's _not a problem beca_use
TIHinltt to tiN followln'ggroups am/ Churc!Ns:
Ohio's Worklnc Famlllea .
"And maybe It wlll help the we'll have a lot to do inside
Mount Hormon Unir•d Brethren Church Octhtl Wonhlp C&lt;nr&lt;r &amp; C.O.R.E.
lncomlnaseventh graders that thanks to this great facility,"
Team, Hubson Christian Fellowship Church, Long Bonom Uni[cd Mcrhodin
mlght have had trouble mak· she said . .,
· Church Sund•y School, Rejoicing We Church, Pomeroy United Merhodl1t
lng friends with kids from the
And the goal behind this
Church, Mount Union ll&lt;ptiat Chur&lt;h,-Ri¥e!-V•IIey Wot~hlp Centtr,
aurroundihg areas. This endeavor?
Krcb'o Ch•p•l Uni"d Methodior Church, Mlddl&lt;pon Plut Baprln Church,
would be a pat time for
"There's a lot of trouble out
RoodoVIIIe United Methudlot Church, Trinity Church, Flrot Souohern Bapli11
them to meet kids from the there for kids to get into,
Churdi, laurel Cliff 11rc&lt; Methudlll Ckuoch, Hea1h United Merhodlll
Hea~hy Start offers no-cost or low-cost health
other schools before entering especially at this a.11e, we're
Church, c..nlci·SUIIUn Unl"d M&lt;thodlot Church; Pomeroy Church of
junior high," she added. · · hoping that by starttng this, it
care coverage for kids (blrt~ to age 19)
Chrlat, Victory Baptiu Church, Ent~rpriae Unlrrd Methodl11 Church,
The one thlni the commit- may steer them awar, from
Mid
Valley
Chrlotlon
School,
M&lt;igJ
Minillerial
Auoc:loolon,
WJOS,
and pregnant women.
tee and Pastor John Jackson that," added Hubble. 'If you
JOY-PM
CotJI&lt;I
88.1, Melli' County Rlsh• ro Life, MelgJ County Healfh
Wlntt!d emphuized is that give kids enough positive
·
D•J1"rtmont, M&lt;IIIJ County Enmg•ncy Modlol S.rvlcCJ
there will 6e adult supervi· fhin~s to be Involved .in they
Healthy Famllltl offers no-cost health care
lloh at all tlttlel.
.
won t have time to look for
Sptda/ thanltJ "' to thon who ga¥e generouo anonymoui Individual
coverage for the entire family· parents AND kid•.
"There wlil be teachers and fmd trouble."
donorlun111D
George
Wrlghr,
john
Muller,
Mayor
John
Bl
..
unar
and
the
t'rom the achool. ayateml, a Jack•on aald the church is
Village of Pomeroy1 to ]uhn Warn&lt;r, Putor Mark Morrow, Bill Quickel,
repre~entatiVI
lrom the only providing the facility
Healthy Start A Healtltt Famlllet Covers:
Morry O'Bryant1 John Rlebtl and Gory Griffith for oh&lt;ir mony_houll
ehurch, ind other community and a moral environment they
dtdleittd tu thls project! to the Prayer iCam1ro the musidant;
adllltl that will be on site at thought it would be a aood
tu
Solltl
Rock Sportl, Inc., 11nd n1arif othtrt roo numcrou• to rhentlo'il
all times," added Jackson.
way to serve the community.
Doctor Vl11t1 ·
V11lon Service~
For
ohoir
lobor
and
proye11.
·
''The response from com·
Hubble
and . Jackson
Ho1pltal C•'*
Dentll Care
Thanlt you to •~ttyolu wl1o atunJ,J a_ntl 1upport1tl th1 '"'"''
mUlllty and ~Chool groups has encourage anyone wanting to
lmmunlutlon1
Mentll HuHh
been so positive," said get involved to please call the
Sub1t1noe AbuN
And Much Morel
Hubble. "'l'lie PlUDE team church at 446-4889.
·
Pretcrlptlone
will be 1ponsoring one of the
The Parkin&amp; Lot at the New
Putor Rod Brbwer, Event Coordinator
Thundays and we've also Life Lutheran Church Is
On behalF of Th&lt; Ohio Valloy Cru11de for Chrln
had student councils; Key located at 170 New Life Way
Cluba and other• ttep up to · In Spring Valley.
all

.

Maxine Oadin Griffith and Karen;
Betty and Thurman Orim; David
Orueser; Charles Haley; Ann Weaver
Hanning; Gary and Charlotte Harrison
Harper, Jack Harrison; Joe Hawkins;
Judy HermJn; James Hewitt; Betty
Slawter Hill; Robert Hill; Danny and
Lois Holliday; Evelyn Likens Hollon;
Mary Kay Davis Holter; John and Clara
Mae Hysell Jeffers; Merle Johnson;
Herb and Janet Ogdig Jones; Vtvian
Hysell Jones; Patty Kenzel; Rosanna
Kitchen; Lynn and Darlepe Kreuzer;
James Lanning; Virgil Likens; Kenny
and Betty Jeffers Longstretch.
Judy Slawter Marinacci; David
Manin; Bruce and Joan Snowden May;
Danny and Judy Cremeans McDonald;
Henry and Ainslee Wilson McKnight;
Henry and Darlene Milam; John and
Alberta Snowden Mon~.gornery; Larry
and Linda Midkiff Montgomery; Jack
Morris; Janet Mowery; Delma Riaas
Nelson and Downey Nelson; Edwin and
Goldie Knotts Nelson; Jack and Mary
McKinney Nelson.
Mike and Bonnie Grate Nicholson;
Gloria Ooff Oiler; James Oiler; Carol
Pack; Paul and Rose Slawter Patterson;
John Phillips; Bobby and Rosemary
Pope; Helen Rife Reinhard; Harold
and Marjorie Rice; Eugene Richards;
Junior Rife; Ronnie and Marjorie
Priddy Rife; Kathleen Rogers; Karen
Schindler; Jerry Schoonover; John
Scragg; Rex and Catherine . Colwell
Shenefield; Paul _and Katie Shoemaker;
Viola Shoemaker; Shirley Cremeans
Simmons; Benny and Mary Slawter;
Bob Smith; Darrell Smith; Bob and
Judy Lambert nSnowden; Carol and
Verna Snowden; Tressa Snowden;
Helen Stevens; Charles Stewart;
Charlotte Rupe Stewart.
Doris Thomas; Jim and Eleanor
Taylor Thomas; Kathleen Haley Tillis;
Pauline Haley Tillis; Sue Turner;
Thomas Turner: Barbara Grueser Van
Meter; Jim and Darlene Smith
Vanaman;
Elizabeth
Chapman
Webster; Martha Wess; Barbara
Starbuck Weygandt; Evelyn Hill
White; Robert and _Lanada Thomas
Wilcox; Raymond and Marilyn
Wilcox; Norman Will; Hallie Willard;
Ronnie and Wanda Poster Williams;
Nate and Joan Bartrum Wise; Sharon
Quillen Wise; John and Joan Rife
Wolfe; Mary Dyke Woodrum; Virginia
Avis Wyatt; Wayne Roush; Roma
Cremeans; Judy Eads; .Linda Haley;
Donna Will Htggins; Brenda Loper;
Leo and Linda Morris; Richard
Nelson; Wayne Nelson; Sonny
Slawter; Jeff and Carolyn Snowden;
Roger Barret; Roberta Smith Meyer.

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·The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3
. :~W--ed_n_e_sd~•Y~·~J~u~ne~5,~2~00~2~----------------------------!www~~-m~!~~i!!~n~t~n~~-~~~----------------------~~~~~~~~~-~~

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PARK PlANTI.NGS- Ten Chinese Dogwood trees h~ve been planted at Star Mill Park as part
of the Racine Area Community Organization's improvements to the facility. Shown here are village emplo)ees John Holman, left, and Jack Lyons, Jr. planting the trees. Playground equipment
purchased by RACO at a school auction will be installed in the park soon. (Contrib~ted)

LOCAL BRIEFS
First bike out will be at noon Salurday, and
the last b1ke out at I p.m. The party will last
from 6 p.m. to 2 a.m., with mus1c by Phi I and
~EDSV~I:LE - Olive Township Trustees Lyle Moon of Blitzkrieg. from 6 10 I0 p.m.,
w1ll hold the1r regular monthly meeting on and MTP Box from 10 p.m. unlil 2 a.m.
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the township
The cost of admission is $10 for each rider,
garage on Joppa Road.
$5 for passengers and $5 per person for the
party. Free tent camping is available. and benefit shirts will be sold for $15.
Food and door prizes are included.
POMEROY
Southeastern Ohio
Regulators Motorcycle Club will host a poker
run and benefit party at Good Times in
Pomeroy on Saturday.
·
POMEROY - A program on Alzheimers
The event will benefit Candy Mays and Disease will be presented under sponsorship .
Jayne Collins, who were recently injured in of Norvartes Phannacy Corporation Thursday
an automobile accident, and the families of at II a.m. at the Senior Citizens Center.
Carleton Drummer and John Ridenour, who Lenora Leifheit, R.N., is in charge of Ihe prodied recently.
··
gram.

Trustees meet

Plan benefit

Alzheimers program

Spencer.
1946, Hennan R. Carson,
David B. Sayre; 1947, Mary
Hayman Lewis, June Holter
Ashley, Grace Rose Earich;
1949, Eileen Cartwright,
Caroll Cleek; 1950, Della
Johnson Sauer, D. Aaron
Wolfe, Ruth Bradford
Frank, June Beegle Roush,
Ruth Badgley Hill; 1952,
Larry J. Roush, Doris
Hensler Ihle, Gene Wells,
John Fisher, Janice Roush ·
Briggs, Virginia Arnott
Rees, Juanita Timmons
Wells, Janice Hayman
Simpson, Esther Coelle
Salser, Marilyn Brewer
Beall, Dora Birch Lipps.
Alice Davis Wolfe, VIctor .
Wolfe, Gary L. Gibbs,
Ronald Gillilan, Grace Hill
Griffen.
1953, Dan Smith, Joan
Brewer Daniell, Elizabeth
Diddle Fisher, Harold
Circle; 1954, Joyce E.
MallJI'el; Shirley Powell
Shively, Lowell Salser;
1955, Lillian Powell Weese;
1956, Ruby Holter Turner,
Sl,lirley Beegle; 1957,
Claudia Shiels Roush, Doug
Graham, Larry Ebersbach,
Dennie Hill, CArroll Harris,
Dale Whitlock, Phyllis lhle
Relyea, Dwain Sayre,
Lester Manue I, Larry
Badgley, Don Johnson,
Emma Lee Brewer, Robert
Euler, Marilyn Cleland
Capretta.
1958, Dale Hart; 1959,
Arlene Theiss Wallace,
Nadine Roush Euler, Mary J.
Cundiff Lavender, Shirley
Johnson; . 1960, Mary Grace
Stobart Cowdery, Don
Weese; 1961, Mariam Foster
Complimem,
Joyce

Gloeckner Badgley; 1962,
Roland Sayre, John Wynn
Rees , Allen Graham, Kathryn
Brace Hart, William Bill
Ellwood; 1963, James Oiler,
Jess W. Wood, Kay Willford
Graham; 1965, Roger Sayre,
Nancy Parker Campbell,
Gordon Fisher, Tom Weaver,
Linda Eichinger Collins.
1966, Linda Adams Evans,
Gary Denny Evans, Gary K.
Wilford, Larry D. Circle;
1967, Sherm Cundiff, Ray
Roger Proffitt, Sr., Cliff D.
Ashley, Nancy Yost Circle,
Brenda Strawser, Anita
Houdashelt Moore, Nola
Obitz Ditzler, Patricia
London Cox, Bob Grueser,
Marvin T. Hill; 1969, Jeff
Donahue. Albert Proffitt;
1970, Brenda Holman Stuart,
Jan Alkire Hi II; 1971 , Shirley.
Congo Sayre, Don Smith;
1972, John Eichinger, Doug
Rees, Teny Vamey, Tim lhle,
Joe Johnson; 1973, Bonnie
SIJlith Myers; 1974, Faith
Smith Varney; 1977, Denise

Talbott Manuel, Lisa Allen
Woods, Bobbie Chapman
Hill, Scott Wolfe .
1978, Perry Hill ; 1983, Ted
W. Srnith; 1987, Tracie
Hubbard
Stein;
1990,
William Brad Maynard;
1991,
Junetta
Beegle
Maynard, Jerry Smith; 1992,
Marcy Hill Wyatt, Michelle
Evans, Robin D. Manuel,
Jenny Varney Ridenour;
1993, Michael Evans; 1995,
Bridget Varney Heldreth ;
1997, Paul Smith, Jamie-A.
Evans: 1998. Amy M.
Varney; 2000, Ed Smith;
2002. Joey Manuel. Lori
Sayre. Tyler John son.

PLEASANT
I
I

--~-

VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�•

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~

--=.IJ th8 lend

Opln

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740112-21541 • Fu: 7..0 llt-2117
www.mydlillyMntiMI.com

~~El

i•
I

I

I' binh,
DEAR ABBY: I was adopted at
34 years 110. My adoptive
~

•..

Publlaher

'

..

•

DIIM Kay Hill
Controllef

NATIONAL VIEW

Drying•out

parents always told me I was
: adopted. They also told me that I
: was lucky ttiey took me because
! nobody else wanted me, and "that
1irl" who liVe birth to me aban·
: doned me at the hospital.
:' All my life they made sure I
\ . lcnew I was no catch, and my father
• ·, told me as a child that if anyone
'" else had adopted me, they would
have aiven me back as soon as it
turned daylight.
Then last year a miracle happened. My birth mother found me.
We talked on the phone, and sho
carne for a visit. Allby, she is the
sweetest woman I have ever met.
She was only lS when she save
" birth to me, and she placed me for
~ adoption in the hope that I would
· have • better life than the one she

ADVICE
could offer.
The closer my birth mother and I
become, the laraer the rift has
bec:ome between me and my adoptive parents. They cuntinue to sal
terrible thinas abOut her. l haven t
introduced tllem because I'm afraid
they would say or do som~thing to
either embarrass me or hurt my
birth mother's feellnas . They still
refuse to call her by name.

his sister and family Cjndy and
Cunnlnpam bllhl1y . Harris,
Davey Spitz of Chicaao, and children

• San Antonio (Texas) Express-News, on border water
pla11 11eeded: For several years, Rio Grande Valley farmers
have complained that !he Mexican governmenl has nol repaid
a water debt of billions of gallons.
Wilh u droughl in progress. !heir crops are dying.
On the other side of I he river, northern Mexico farmers ulsp
complain thai !hey don'! have enough water and are losing
millions of dollars.
Eighl hundred miles westward, in the twin cities of El Paso
und Ciudud Juarez; explosive populalion and industrial
growth are putting the area at risk at running dry in less than
20 yeurs.
Meanwhile, Laredo is frunlicully looking for new sources or
wmer to keep up wilh its rapid population and commercial
growth.
·
.
And who can forget thai since last year the ~io Grande, !he
main water source for bolh. sides of the U.S.-Mexico border,
is running dry 50 feet from its Gulf of Mexico mouth?
· Even though there have lleen joint efforts from bolh sides of
!he Rio Grande to address water needs, these efforts apparent·
ly haven 't been enough.
·
From Brownsville and Matamoros to El Paso and Juarez,
border communities face worsening water shortages. Rapid
population growth and fervid industrial development dunng
I he last 30 to 4(1 yeurs. plus the severe decade-long drought,
have pushed the region's water supply toils lowest-ever level.
The North American Free Trade Agreement, which has
impacted the border more than any other area, has meant addi·
tional water constraints.
.
Besides the Rio Grande, or Rio Bravo in Mexi~:o, the binational Amislad and Falcon dams utso are drying up fast.
Border communities'in Texas are part of a slatewide regional planning effort. But what is missing is a comprehensive
binational plan to address the water deficit on both sides of the
Rio Grande, the largesl border economy in !he world.
A comprehensive plan does not mean another treaty. The
two nations already have the 1944 treaty, which allocates Rio
Grande water to both nations.
What is needed, instead, is a two-nation plan 10 search, buy,
conserve or even share wa1er....
President Bush and his Mexican counterpart, Vicente Fox,
have discussed water issues at least twice since bolh leaders
took office more than a year ago. Yet, no major policy agree·
ments have been struck . .. :
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TODAY
IN .HISTORY
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.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PFIESS

:
•
:
•

Dear
Abby

It's getting to the point that I
don't even want them aro•nd. My
husband says if they bother me that
much, I should tell them not to
come over any more. I won't have
a problem with that, as I have very
few feellnas left for !hem. I'm glad
l finally found the mother I always
wanted - and the one who aiwa)'s
wanted me. - BIRTH MOTH·
ER'S DAUGHTER
DEAR DAUGHTER: You are
no longer a child. At 34 rears of
age, your childhood is behmd you.
If your birth mother is the mo1her
you always w1nted, then cherish
your newfound relationship.
Your adOj!tive parents may call
you ungra1eful, but please remember that THEY are lhe ones who
. should have been grateful to have
YOU - and they had no right to
make the hurtful comments that

haunt you to !his day.
DEAR ABBY: Upon entering a
relationship that has the possibility
of becomma a lifetime involvement, when should a senior wid·
ower disclose to his potential
future mate that, due to medical
reasons, he'll be unable to fulfill
any "bedroom responsibilities"?
Should discreet disclosure be
offered before any close feelin~s
develop, or sholtld the subject watt
•• however loniJ •· until mtimacy
becomes the obvious natural progression?
Clearing the air early would give
the lady an o~ponunily to amicably
end the relattonship. On the olher
hand, if I delay too long, 11 decision
might never be required! Your
thoughts,
please.
SPOKESMAN FOR MANY
UNSURE GUYS JN. SAN
•

DIEGO
DEAR UNSURE: There is a dif·
ference between clearing the air
early and making n premature
announcement. Wail . until )'OU
know the htdy well enough to dis·
cuss the subject of sex without
embarrassment to eilher of you.
According to .my mail, although
many women ure ·interested in a
sexual relationship, not all are. ·
P.S. I don't know how ton~ it has
been since you discussed thts subject wilh your doctor, but you
should know that in recent years
!here have been muny advances
made in the area of male sexuality.
(Pauline Pl1iltips and l1er daughter Jeam1e Philltps slwft! the ps~u·
donym Abigail Vm1 Buft!n. Writ~
Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com

or P.O. 8ox69440, wsA1tgel~s. CA

90069.)

MEIGS NOTEBOOK

Southwestern water crisis
needs immediate·action

I

w.dnHdl!• luM I, 21102

Adopted daughter tnds a mother's love

r

Dun Dlcunon

'

Page AS

;:_The_o_any_Se_ntm_·e_I_ _

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Ch•ttne Hoeflich
Genenll MI!Mger

•

Today is Wednesday, June S, the !56th day of :1002. There
are 209 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History: ·
On June S, 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated
after claiming victory in California's Democratic presidential
primary. Gunman Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was immediately
arrested.
On this date:
In 1783, Joseph and Jacques Montgolfier publlci,Y demonstrated their hot-air balloon in a I 0-mlnute flight over
Annonay, France.
·
.
In 1794, Congress passed the Neutrality Act, which prohlb·
ited Americans from enlisting In the service of a foreign
power.
.
·
In 1917, about I 0 million American men began registering
for the draft in World War I.
.
In 1933, the United States went off the ~old standard.
fn 1940, the,Battle of France began dunng World War II.
In 1947, Secretary of State Oeorge C. l\1arshali 'ave a
speech at Harvard University in which he outlined an atd program for Europe that came to be known as ''The. Marshall
Plan."
In 1967, war erupted in the Mideast as Israel raided
Egyp~ian military targets. Syria, Jordan and Iraq entered the
confltct.
.
.
· In 1975, Egypt reopened the Suez Canal to International
shipping, eight years after' it was closed because of the 1967
war with Israel. ·
·
In 1981 , the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention reported that five men in Los Angeles - all homosexuals - had come down with a rare kind of pneumonia; .
they were !he first recognized cases of what later became
known as AIDS.
In 1999,jazz and pop singer Mel Totme died in Los Angeles
at age 73.
Ten years ago: The government announced the nation's
unemployment rate had jumped to 7.S percent the month
before, the highest level in nearly eight years.
·
Five years ago: Harold J. Nicholson, the highest-ranking
CIA officer ever caught s~yin$ against his own country, was
sentenced to 23 1/2 years m pnson for .selling defense secrets
to Russia after the Cold War.
·
One year ago: Senate Republicans spent their last full day in
power before turning control over to Democrats, a change that
came about because of a decision by Vermont Sen. James
Jeffords to leave the GOP and become an independent. ·
Today's Birthdays: Rock singer Laurie Anderson is 55.
Country singer Gail Davies is 54. Rock musician Nicko
McBratn (Iron Maiden) is 48. Jazz musician Kenny G is 46.
Actor Chad Alien is 28. Rock musician P-nut (31 I) is 28.
Thought .for Today: ''The only folks who give us pain are
those we love the best." - Ella Wheeler Wilcox, American
poet ( 1850-1919).

PERKINS' VIEW

Free trade troubles disappointing to .Bush. supporters.
President Bush hus disappointed his
,
the p.Jsident said, "the passqe of this
free trade supporters. .
bill sends an important messaae that we
Back in March, his administration
are committed to free and open trade."
slapped a 30 percenl 1ariff on sleet
Indeed, trade authority alves the presimports. earning the ire of America's
ident the power to neaotiate internatlon·
European and Asian trading partners.
al trtrde 111reements that Conaress can
The administration followed that blaaccept or reject, but may not amend.
1ant1y protectionist action this month by
Every occupant of the Oval Office,
impo
. smg tariffs on imports ofCanudian
from Gerald Ford to Oeo11e H.W. Bush
softwood lumber, which account for
enjoyed the executive prero1ative.
roughly one-third of the U.S. supply of
However, the president's fast track
wood.
COLUMNIST
authority expired in 1994. When former
American homebuilders suy that the
· president Bill Clinton asked Con1ress
average tariffs of 27 j)ercent will jack
,
to renew it in 1997, he was rebuffed by
up the average price of u new home by . . ·
.
lawmakers who raised labor and envl·
$I 000 $I SOO
ston m t~e Senate bill, whtch lhe White ronmentallssues.
Then t~erd·s the farin bill, which the ·House fmds particuia~ odious, ':"ouid
It is because Conaress has refused to
presiden~ all-to-obligingly signed a few bar any Chlm~es in ashington 5 SO· restore the Jlre&amp;ldent'a trade authority
weeks ago. It will ratchet up farm sub- called "anti· umping" laws. If that treaty that of more than 130 free trade
sidles by a whopping 80 percent. And it l'l!ea~ure makes it into lh~ final trade agreements in force throughout the
will set the American taxpayers bock a btll, tt coul~ prompt a presidential veto. world, the United States is sl1natory to
slaggering $190 billion over the next 10 (The provtston allows Cpnsress .to only three ... the North American Free
ye·ars.
reconstder treaties thut don t jibe wtth Trade Agreement and bilateral pacta
So it will be quite an undertaking for the. U.S. "anli-dumpina" .ta;:vs, dimin· with Israel and Jordan.
.
President Bush to re-establish his free isht~g !fe effe~tiveness of trade pro· · By comparlaori, the European Union
1rade credentials, which is why he needs motton uuthortty.).
has 27 free trade a1reements in effect,
Congress to send him a trade bill he can The Senate also tncluded a provision includln1 20 neaotlated durin&amp; the
. sign before summer's end. And why he that ,woui~ triple .the ,money spent on 1990s. And even Mexico, our NAPTA
needs to balance some of the damage he pubhc as~tstance for dtsplaced workers, partner alona with Canada, has ne1oti·
has done to free trade by signing multi· to ,$12 billion ovet 10 year~. The tax· ated ciaht free trade qreements with 32
national agreements this year that open payers would also b'e11in paymg 70 per· countrfes since 1993.
rather than protect markets abroad nnd cent of the health insurance costs for
What is at stake In the Senate and
tho.se
claiming
unemployment
because
House
trade ne1otiationa are several
Ih
aome.
·
f
rt8
0
As fortune had It, the Senate voted
•mpo ·
pending multinational trade accords.
last week to grant the president the . Pro·tra~e senators on both sides of the They Include the Free Trade Area of the
"trade promotion" authority he has been lllsle belteve the two chambers will America&amp;, which would cover! counseeking to negotiate those multinational 8 ~!ke a trade COIIUlroml~e.
tries in the Western Hemlsphe , and a
treaties. It is the first time in eight years
. There is no dollbt we f~ goi"j to 1et free trade J1Bct coverin1 the 1 2 mem·
that both houses of Congress have thts to the p~.Jsident, sal Ie~a ben of the World Trade Or1in ation.
agreed to restore that power to the chief Republican Sen. ~h~rles Orassley. It 5 The United Statea needs to reafflnn
executive. .
a landmark btll, said Montana ita role as the world'sleadlql proponent
The overwhelming vote in the Upper Democrat Sen. Max Baucus.
.
-and practitioner- of tree ana unfetChamber, by a bipartisan two-tllii:ds Meanwhile, fresi~ent Bush was tered trilde. President Bush should use
majority, followed ·ihe House's . narrow . buoyed bfe the Senate s timely yote as some of his ~lltical .capital to encourpassage of trade authority - previously he trave e~ across the Atlantic last age Senate aiid House neaotlators to 1et
known as "fast track" - last December. week, seekmt amona other thinas. to him a trade bill he can enthusiastically
. It is left now to Senate and House reassure the uropean Union that the sian
.
negotiators to reconcile the differences United States has not suddenly
(J~1plt P1rkl111 Lr a columnLrt for Tlt1
between the two versions of the trade e~braced 8 mercantilist trade ~Ucy. , San D/110 Union· Trlbun1 1md can Ill
legislation. Most sianlficantly, a proviAs I beain my trip here in urope, Nachld at Jollph.PII'IIIIIIlJnlod'Hb.com.)

JOseph
Perk1ns

1

·

.

•

RED GREEN'S VIEW

There~

aformula to whLmen do things so q~,ickly

Men &amp;enerally like to do lhings fast.
Drive, eat, change channels. It's a long
list. My wife often says to me, "Slow
down. It's not a rtice." I think she's
wtong. I think it is a race - a race
against time. We know we have to do
things every clay that we don't enjoy.
We don't complain about that. Our only
protest is to get those things over with
as quickly as possible, to allow ourselves more time to do. the things we
want to do. Things that men enjoy, they
do slowly. Like fishing or watching
sports. Or thinking.
There is one exception where men
have something they enjoy though tend
to do too quickly, but that's because
thev' re trying to get the J. ob done before
&lt;
h
h
· d
1hetr partner c anges
er mm ·
Oenerally the speed at which a man per·
forms atask is mverseiy proportional to
the pleasure he gets from the job. so the
ne"t time you're in a place of business
·
~
to
and the c1erk 11
_,naaorever, JUSt s P
and acknowledge that you're in the
gr.~:. of someone who really .enjoys
Gettlna up to code
Whenever you build a structure or put
·
h
d
an addit1on on your ouse or 0 an,Y
renovating, you have to deal with vanour professional codes, Maybe a build·
ing Code to get a permit, or an electrical
code, or a plumbing code. These are
guidelines that must be met, in order for
the J'ob to be annrove4. These gui~
,.,..
lines or codes are there to protect you
and your nei~hbors from having to P\11
up with a. building that is either unsafe

.a. .,

·

one of the Marriqe Codei. Hindailht Ia
over-rated.
No rt1p0111e NQUincl
In aracle I oEnalish clan, I wu introduced to the concept of the rhetorical
question. · The queatlon that does not
need, and doe• not want, an antwer. I
have since dlacovered that . thetorical
queatlon• are an important ~ of any
marrla1e. If you're inatried, here are a
few quettlona that you should not
answer:
COWMNIST
• What were you thlnkln1?
• Did I 10 to coUe1• for this?
·1 h
ood h'
•
it somethinal did W1'01117
or uns g tly. Codes are a g I 1111. • Was
How stupid do you tblnlc I am7
Unfortunately, there are also codes for • Where
dO you let theae ldeu?
having a successful relationship. I call
The
power or IIOddDI
them Marriage Codes,
But where the buildina codes are pub· At work or at home, I wou!a adviae
.
· #
•
h M · Code
to not be quick to uy or do
1•c ni.onnatton,
1 e amaae
s are everyone
anythinl.
When I look back over my
Top Secret. You can look up how to re[ationahipa
careen, I have to con·
properly install a toiJet, but yQu are not clude that youand
pt into a lot more trou·
allowed to look up what your partner
consideij
· a ntisfactory birthday gift, or ble for thlna• y011 aay and do, dian for
an acce ble comment on lief new thin=ou ·iloil't uy and don't do. If
up, I could beCome a pretty
dre.. or ratyle. Many of us are flyina tbl•
.
blind and Me oflen bhndsided. Now, I ~UCCCH I oOIItlcian.
Quote
of
the
Day:
"An~y
who
think Marriage Codea are a gOod thing. tbinkl machiiiCI are better iban people
They make us better huabanila and proteet us from behaving like sinaJe pea- has never owned a pull·ltlrt lawnmow·
pie. My problem is the secrecy tliin1. er." - Red Oreen
,
Life has proven to me that when lt
(Red Gre1n/JIM 1111r of "Tit61hd Oretn
comes to women, I'm 1101 a good gueu- Show, " a tlllv/Jion 111'111 IIIII Ill ~U.S.
eed 'da
· he
And on PBS and In CaiiOI/a on tile CBC
er. 1 n gu 1 nee Ill I se areas.
and thl author of "Tit6 R#d retn
the only people who can help me are Network,
Book"
and
"Rtd ONtn Tdlkl Can: A Lovt
otl\er women. Other married women.
But meeting privately with married Story. " Watclt for thl /taturr. /lim "Rtd
worilen is apparently an infraction of Gtttn'l 'Duct Tap~ Forever'~ at a thlaur
nearyou). ·

Red
Green

.....

..

._

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

POMEROY - Braydon Cunninahum
celebrated his fint birthday on April S
with a purty 111 the
home of his parenis
Shawn and Leanne
Cunningham.
.· .
Attenilins were his
sister,
Kall
Cunningham;
his
"'
grandparents, Ron and
1udy Clark, and Robert
"'
and
Sharon
t....::J.Jt......~.llrool Cunninaham, and his
"· CunnlnJhlm great-grandparents,
:: ·
·
Mary atid Simon
. · Geistwhite; and Rob, Pam, Kyle, and
,.:! • Brook Cunningham.

...

Allison, Katl)le~n. Meredith, and Davey.
Crooks is 11 patent attorney und will
begin working with · Hahn Loeser &amp;
Parks business firm in their Akron office.

PHS lf'lds 11ther
1tTrlnlty

POMEROY - The SSth reunion of
the Pomeroy High School class of 1947
over the Memor[al Day weekend includ·
ed o luncheon at Trinity Congregational
Church.
Frank Vauahan gave the blessing prior
to the dinn.er prepared by Ralph Werry.
Co-chairmen Kenny Wtggins 110d Joe
Struble welcomed class members and
guests. The 11fternoon was spenf remi·
niscin1 about school • ul)dating others on
.,
· family hap~nin~s, telflng about retire·
ment activities mcludlng .volunteering,
and
exchanging 1randparent stories.
, MIDDLEPORT - Ed Crooks, son of
Charles and Nancy Baird told of their
~ Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Crooks of
~ : Middleport, graduated Cum Laude from experiences on a voluntary mission. trip
;, 11\e Unrversity of Akron Law School on with their church to Honduras, Wiggins
•1., Mayl9.
.
had a couple of jokes; and letters were
, 1• AttendiJII his graduation and aradua· read from claur.lates, John Howard,
tlon party, hoate!l by his parenta were Dick Rosenbaum, BUlle Jean Barnitz
., ., hia aunt and uncle Cinda and Oeorae Hoelscher, and Joan Scholl Childs and

,,.

·

Crooks JfldUiteS
fromAkron

Betty Heilman Gilkey, who were unuble
10 attend.
Attending were Wilma . Neuttling
Mees, Evelyn Cook Clark, Murtha
Schreiber Mayer, Mildred Kuptiena
Phillips, Ida Johnson Murphy, Frunk
Vaugllan. Frank Ryther, Joe Struble, and
Ouy und Donna Morris, all of Pomeroy;
Beuy Tedrow Dobbins, Hamden; Evelyn
Lnvorine Fieger, Toledo; Puul E. Jacobs,
Sou1h Shore, Ky.; Horton and Geraldine
Thomas, Howard, Ohio; Barburn Roush
Goodrich, Weslerville; Churles and
Nancy Baird, Etowah, N. C.; and Joanne
and John Parsns of Granville.
A memorial display of deceased class·
mules was posted. Included were Bill
Mayer, Earl Thoma, Victor Young, Jr.,
Bob Pickett, Jean Lee, Charlene Smith,
Jim HuwieY,. Helen Brown, Stanley
Nease, Kemlworth Neuse, Put Strivers,
Horace "Bud'' Abbott, und BHi Lehew.
A telephone call to COnch and Mrs.
Herndon Wilk ~ revealed that she is
recovering from heart surgery n~d ~e has
knee problems. They had been InVIted to
attend the reunion.
Decorations were in the PHS purple
and white colors . Arrangements of
panzies accented with the golden numerals "SS" decorated the tnbles. Barbara
Roush Goodrich volunteered to prepare
for the 60th reunion.

Dan's has everything you
need for Father's Day!
• Knives
• Carhartt
• Boots
• Levi's
·Shorts
·Shirts

Q
290 North Second Ave • Middleport

-3684

~~~~·
Healthy Start
Healthy Families

~ : ----------------------~-------------------------------------------------~----------~-II '

2002
...

".'·'

"'·'

.

111"11

...I

...
'.

au

'~'' ol f

l'amlly

.• .•
,,

.

~·· mem

tri

Missions trip
I.
to Dominican
. Republic begins
••
Monday
...
~ ·

..

lodol1•" 1111' IOJ /111'

AnnYIIIy

I'll

110

Monthly

I 1' 1

Hourly

1

$17,720 $1,477 $8.58

2

$23,800 $1;810 $11.157

3

$30,040 $2,504 $14.55

4

$38,200 $3,017 $17.54

IS

$42,380 $3,1S30 $20.52

1! I

';

~~'

'

l'llllllly

MIDDLEPORT - A team
of student• and adults from
the Middleport Church of
Chrill Will be traveling to San ·
Luis, Moca in the Dominican
Republic Monday to ,help
buDd a new church whlclr
' will double a• a tchool for the
children of the area.
The team con1iata of
•I
; 1 Shauna White, Jared and
1, Terry Sayre of Oalllpolla,
1 Marva Blackburn, Brooke
' William• Vau1han, and TAKING MilliON TRIP - Six membera of the Middleport Church of Cl\rlat will leave Monday,
"., Donald Vaughan.
June 10, to work In a mlulon field In San Ll.lla, Moca In the Oomlnlqan Republic. They are,
1; White 11 a recent fraduate from left to right: Jared Sayre, Shauna White; Donald Vaughan, Brook VIIU&amp;han, end Terry Sayre . .
J• of Meiaa Hi1h Schoo and the Not pictured Ia Marva Blackburn. (Contributed)
dau1hter of Dwayne and
Kathy White. Jared Sayre and Kath~ Blackburn of and is the daug~ter of conduct several vacation
will be a senior at River Indiana, wtll be a senior at Richard and Barb Williama. Bible 1chool pro~rams
Valier, thia fall, and Terry, Berea Colleae in Kentucky Donald Vaughan is preaident while in the Domtnican
Republic, be1ides work·
Jared 1 father, ia an employee thla fall. Brook Vau1han, of the Vaughan Agency. .
wife of Dodaer Vauj(han, will
of the Oavin Plant.
The team will return ina on the' building pro·
Bltckburn, dau1hter of Dan be a junior at Ohio Unlveuity June 20. They plan to ject.

.,

:li - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '1

••"'
.,"

· MEIGS CALENDAR

~·.

Community Cale dar Ia
publllh,cl 11 1 fr•. .._
,1 viae to non-profit grou
.., wlahlng to 1nnouno
mllt~nga and apeolll
IYIDia. Tha oalandar II
" • nol da1Jgnad to promo-.
:. 11111 or fund·rllaara of
.~ , any type. ltema 1r1 prlnlad
1 only 11 epaoe permlta and
·.. oannot bt guaren-.H to
, · bt prlnlad a epeolflo num·
· btr of d1ya.

- -..

...

-

•I

lw,11 1t

I l1 lrlr1 11 Jl,

Annuelly

IIH

I

111

I hllll'

1111

l•r• 'lrl.HII

d

11,1J

Monthly

I J•l

Hourly

1

$13,280 $1,108 $8.44

2

$17,810' $1,493 $8.88

3

$22,1S30 $1,878 $10.82

4

$27,150 $2,283 $13.18

IS

S;t1,770 $2,848 $18.40

llr111 ·,1111

•I (

.... .

P1mHy

'11ili11 11

rtJp

11J

fl.qr

1'11

) IJf)

.
AMUIMy

Monthly

I P1

Hourly

1

$8,880 ,. $738

$4.29

2

$11,840 $898

$5.78

3

$11S,020 $1,252 $7.28

4,

$18,100 $1,1SOt $8.77

5

$21,180 $1,785 $10.28

TUPPERS PLAINS - Canter. Lunch at noon, pro·
WIDNIIDAY
.PAGEVILLE - The Scipio Tuppt11 Plain• VFW Ladlll · gram to follow. Pam Learman
Townehlp TfL!IItel will hold ~~x~~r· 7 ~.m. Thureday at ot The Ohio Coneumers
their regular meeting 11 8:30
Council to epeak.
p.m. on Wldnnday It 1M
Pagavlllt Town Hall.
RACINE - Racine Grange
to mill Thurlday, 7 p.m. at
RACINE - Revival and
HOBSON - Brother Larry. the hall.
Youth E~angallem with Tim
Let to 1p11k ~~ Hob1on ·
and Melinda Mannee, ~t.
Chrlatlan Fallowahlp, Wad., 7 FRIDAY
p.m.
POMEROY . Melga Moriah Church of God,
Subscribe today
County Chapter PER' Friday, Racine, Friday and Saturday
Mllga County SenloriCJtlzena at7 p.m .• Sunday at9:45 a.m. .__ _ _ _ _ __...~o...-------~
THURSDAY

(740) 992·2117 .
1·800·992-2608

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

•

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�PlOt A I • The Deily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallyalllttMI.com

DiQift(Jfld Rot~ltd~~p. Po,t B2
Riwmidt nior rwsttlrs Pap BJ
What migltt ltG~ bttn t, Pagt B3

Wahama alumni meet for annual
MASON. W.Va. - The Jim S1ewan inl.roduced Williams. B tlpre, Ohio;
2002 Wahama Alumni ban· classes.
and
Walburn Eugene Jllll\Cs . Milton Florida
quet was held Maf 25 at 6 acknowledged his role in the and gues1 Dorothy James;
p.m. in the schoo cafeteria association for 20 years and Mlll)' Foreman Tllllbet. MIISOII,
with Jim Stewart, president. gave him the outstanding W.Va.; Joe Be~ Trinided,
welcoming alumni and guest. Wahaman Award for his dedi· Colo.: HDZL"I Weigand Smith,
Marjorie Clarke W~lbum. cation to the group.
Ma on. W.Va.; June Tucker
vice president. gave the invo- Stewan presented Clo.rkc and VanMa1re, Mason, W.Va.;
~:~lion preceding the turkey Smith wi\h inscribed !-Shins Geraldine
Hesson Gibbs.
dmner prepared by the Eastern as o thank you for thetr seven Leum, W.Va. and guest Carl
Star. Alumni and guests w~re · dedicated years os officers. Gibbs.
seated at tables decorated in The new officers Dee
1941 - Nellie McKnight
the patriotic theme. Candles Bunlllarner and Wilmerine Hill Smith. Hartford, W.Vu.:
• favors were at each place.
were tntroduced to the groue. Garland Clyde Roush und
Theme for the banquet was Patricia Roush Smuh . guests Dornlhy Roush, Opal
"Where Are The Wahamuns." acknowledged the Humh Saunders. Pam Schlerethund
A huge poster held the address- Family for their fuithfulutten- Koren Frederick; 1942 Doris
es of Wahamans and maps of dence us a family. ·
Curry, New Haven, W.Vo.;
the world and an American flag Wahama Cups were award- Dick Ord New Huven. W.Va.;
decorated the walls.
ed to sever~ I in recognition of Geraldine Stewan Greer, New
Speaker was Major Bob dedication to their respective Haven, W.Va.: Lena· Wolfe
Dewhurst, U.S. Army retired. profe.ssions. Included were Cox Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., and
He joined the staff of the Dr. Ed Spencer, Keith guest Ray Stith: Roy Roush,
Alabama Baptist Children '51' McClung. Mel C'lark. Gary Florence. S.C.. und guest
Homes and Family Ministries Fields. Betty Burris, Sen. Christine Roush; Albert
after his retirement in 1992. karen Facemyer, Mary Stevns Roush. Letan. W.Va. and_guest
His role at what wos Mack. Stella King Morgan. Ennu Roush; Ralph V. Gibbs,
described at the state's most · Barbara Lieving Zerkle, Pete New Haven, W.Va. and guest
comprehensive, child and fum- Burris. Charlotte Cook Dorothy
Gibbs;
Mel
ily service agencr. is providing . Yonker, Albert Roush, Clark, West Columbia, W.Va.;
leadership and vasion in com- Arruruh faye Dewhurst. Annubelle Liev ing Roush.
municating the ministry's Donald Roush, Mary Stewun Letun, W.Va. and guest Emory
direction and attracting the Fowler, and Ben Roush.
Roush; Doris Grinstead
financiul rescources necessary Door prizes were awarded to Yonker Letan, W.Va.; Glenn
to sustain the organization's Marcellus
Waid,
Mary McMilfion ..Mason.W.Va. and
multi-million dollar budget.
Bunon,Doris Elliot Coffee. gllest Della McMillion; Leland
A world traveler. the speak· Orpha Fields, Everett Foreman. Bumgumer, New Haven,
~r·s work has focused on chil· Judy
McWhoner.
Gary W.Va. and guest Florence
tlren in Uganda. Venezula. Bumgarner and Mel Clark.
Bumgarner.
Trinidad, .Jamacia, Punoma, The 50th unniverslll')' Class
1943 - Ben Sayre Hilliurd.
Great Britian and .France. He members. the Wahamu Elite. Ohio: Annabelle Grimm
holds an associate degree in were seated at a table decorat· Hudnall New Haven W.Va.;
law enf~rcement and~ bu~h~- ed with t.he sch?&lt;JI c~lors. flu~s Dorothy Russell Dawson New
lor of SCience degree m cnmt· and thear semor pactures m Haven, W.Va.;l945 Hester
nul justice from the frames. Favors were corsages Weaver, New Haven, W.Va.;
University of Maryland and a und boutineers, Address books Ralph W. Sayre Parkersburg.
muster ot arts in manugement of their fellow classmates were W.Va. and guest Grace Sayre;
from Central Michigan also included. Members were John L. Dyer. Scott Depot,
University.. Bob is currently presented crystal cundy dishes W.Va., and guest Albena;
pursing a doctorate of educa· filled with candy.
Joyce Roush Carson, West
tion degree in children and Entenainment was provided Columbiu, W.Va.; Lorena
youth studies. He is also a by the Under Construction Rickard. Haynes; Letart,
graduate of the U.S. Army burbershop quartet They W.Va.: Norma Weaver Poole
Counter Terrorism School and closed their program with Parkersburg, W.Va. and guest
the U.S. Dept. of Justice Drug group singing of God Bless Charles Weaver.
lnforcement Academy.
America, Gerald Kelly,
1946 - Pete Burris, New
Dewhurst talked on the soloist. Singing of the Haven, W.Va.; Betty Roush
"Deterioration of the Internal Wahama Alma Mater was Burris. New Haven, W.Va.:
Threats." He stressed the only directed by Stewun.
Charles Yeager, Mason, W.Va.
way there will be peace is for Attending were: 1927 - and guest LaVeni Yeager;
each individuulto evaluate his Evelyn Foglesong Proffitt, Lois Hart Bumgarner, New
or her own heart and soul. He Mason, W.Va.;l929, Suruh Haven, W.Va.; Orpha Weaver
talked about his self evalua- Zuspan Foster. M11S011, W.Va.; Fields, New Haven, W.Va.;
lion and challenged the group Donald Roush New Haven, Betty Grinstead. Rice, Marion
to do something kind for W.Va.; 1933MildredRou$hFryc, Illinois;
Sally
Rouih
someone in need ..He stated New Haven, W.Va.; 193S Leotu Clark, West Columbia, W.Va.;
that making a difference in Reitmire Roush, New Haven, Wallace Stewart, Lexington,
someone's world is what is W.Va.; 1936 Survilla Johnson Ky .. and guest Viola Stewart.
written in .the Bible, und cited Gilland, New Haven, W.Va.
1947 Donald Hart
the Ten Commandments as
1937 Clara Rollins Plymouth Meeting, Pa. and
the instructions for life.
Capehean, Letan, W.Va.; guest Marjorie Hart: Willis
He was presented a token gift Loueva Hart Dick, Lima, Ohio; Dudding Flager Beach, Fla.;
from the group by Walburn.
Paul Fitzgerald, Point Pleasant, Martha Jewell Cook, Flager
The Dewhursts live in W.Va.; Florence Higgins Beach, Fla.; Sarah Kelly
Burmingham, Ala.with their JohnSCJn, Phoenix, Ariz.; Jaines Gibbs, New Haven, W.Va.;
· five children. He is a stepfather, Staats, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Robert Barton, Middleport,
adoptive father and haS been a Ernestine Gibbs Werry · and Ohio and guest Bonnie
foster father to 32 children.
guests Stephanie and Shannon; Barton; Enid Layne Adams,
Walburn. scholarship chair- 1938
Alfreda
VanMeter New Haven; W.Va. and guest
man, presented alumna schol~ Meredith, Belpre, Ohio; Alice Carroll Adams; Dorothy Perry
arships to Jason Simpkins for Rollins Brinker, Letart, W.Va.: Sayre, Hilliard.
SSOO ; the Class of "SS" to 1939 Raymond Grinstead,
1948 - Danny Yonker.
Krystil Mullins for $200; Mason, W.Va. and guest Donna Mason, W.Va.; Barbara Lieving
Class of "65" to Cassandra Fowler; James L. Hart, Zerkle, New Haven, W.Va.;
Leigh Roush $200.00; and one Hunicane, W.Va. and guest Kathleen Grinstead Roush,
for $250 to Ashley Hoffman Sandra Hart.
New Haven, W.Va.; Dale Sayre,
from an anonymous alumni.
1940
Opal Rollins Hilliard; Evelyn Bleuing

~rick. Ravenswood, W.Va.: 'Hiicldluton, Va., and &amp;lie t Milan. W.V..
Verla Roush Hunh, MISOII. Lois SJICnccr: Patty Weaver,
1967 - Wanda Ha.rrah
W.Va.; FllllCCS Stewart Youna. New Haven, W.Va. and &amp;lie 1 Staffonl Roctronl, Ind.:
Ouuleston. W.Va.; Evalee flY Donald Weaver.
HliTiet Walsh Dorado. Miami
Wolfe. Middleport, Ohio:
19Sl - B.cn Rou h. Letart. Lakes, Florida and a~~est Gary .
Anarah Roush Dewhurst, w.Va.; Paul Roush Daleville. mtia:
Jim
~aynud.
Letan,
W.Va.; Lawrence Va; 19S4 Mo.ry Stew rt Pomeroy. and auest SbtlrOO
Stewtut,Mi&lt;ldlepon, Ohio and Fowler, Pt. Ple11sant, W.Va.; Maynaril: Lois Kina Pllrky,
~t Bea Stewart; Joe Amick. Ronnie Flowers. ElkOrove Letart. W.Va.: 1968 KIJ'OII
nt Pleasant, W.Va.. and &amp;uest Vill~~&amp;e. 111.: · and guest Sta~ts Hindel. Letan, W.V...;
Lou Amick; James Sprouse, Barbara Flowers; Robert Chritina H11rruh, Muon.
Lon2bonom. Olli~
Ho.rlcss. Mo. on. W.Va..; Jim 'fi.Va.: Sonya Yonker Roush,
I!i49 R n
Fry Stewart, Chester,Ohio; 19SS Letan, W:Va.; Oat)' OMCII
Manley. Middle :1950 - Patty Oibbs Wald. New Well ton. Ohio and auest
Arlene Sayre Ori
Letan, · Haven, W.Va. and auest Penny
Green:
RObert
W.Va. and guest . Oeorge Man:ellus Waidi_ • MarJorie Dewhurst, Hoover Ababa.nll;
Grimm: Aleta Snyder Weaver, Clarke Walburn, Middlepon, 011ry Fields. New Haven,
New Haven, W.Va.; JIICk A. Ohio; Mary Stevens Mllc.k. W.Va. Gregg Gibbs. New
Johnson. Kettering. and Mrs. Cannonsbura. Pa.. und guests Haven. w:w.. and auest
Jack Johnson: Billie June Hayes Cho.rles and Gail Mack:Jim Robin,
w. Va..; . RObert
New Haven, W.Va.: Vernon Proffitt.Mason, W.V1.: Carol Redmond,
Parkersbura.
Smith, New Haven. W.Va.
Proffitt. Mason W.Va.: Put W.Va.. and guest Christine
19Sl - Eleanor Weaver Roush Smith, Pomeroy, Ohio RedtnQnd: 11170 Stlllla King
Davis, New Haven. W.Va.: and guest Raymond Smith: Moraan.Ltturt, W.Va.; Bany
Rose Ross Corliss, Pomeroy, Peggy Mc:D.anlel Edwards, Haynes, Letan, W.Va.; Nancy
Ohio; Nancy Scally Roush, Mason, W.Va.; Robert E. Roush Woodard, New Haven
New Haven. W.Va.; Dorothy Roush, Mason. W. Vu..; Su ie and guest Ron Woodard!
Blessing
Bartholomew, Cartwright . Hall, Pomeroy, Roben L. Roush · Letart,
Arlington. Va.; 1952 - Dean o.nd gucit Suso.n Mullins.
W.V11.: Pam Roush Simpkins,
Knight, New Haven, W.Va.;
19S6 Betty Jones Mason.
W.Va.: . Cathy
Lawrence
Scarberry. Rawlings. Mason, W.Va.: Ruth Mcdermitt Keam.s. West
Henderson, W.Va.; Martha Lieving Roush. Letart. W.Va..: Col11mbha. W.Vu..; Trecha
Juhling Reitmire, Mason, 1957 Jerry Arnold, New Haven, Morris Banoni Vienna, W.Va.
W.Va. and g\lcst John W.Vu..; Everett Foremlln. and guest Bll . Barton: Lynn
Reitmire Sr.; John Kelly, Sheffield Lllke; Peggy Blessing Sayre Brown, Pomeroy, and
Madison. Indiana: Arlene Rogers, ViCilllll, W.Va.: Phillip guest Harold Brown;Kuren
Bond
Me
Dermitt, Bunon. Mason, W.Vu. gl1est Froendt Fucemyer, Ripley,
Ravenswood, W.Va.; Ruth Mary Burton; Ralph ·Siewon. W.Va. mnd · guest Les
Board Zerkle. Burganstown, Mason. W.Va.: l9S8 Agnes Fucemycr: Linila Roush
Pa., and guest Ray Zerkle: Young Roush, Mason, W.Va.; Fields,Hartford, W.Va..
· .
1973 Jean Harrah
Euwnc McKinney. Hartford, Linda Brinker Meudows,
W. a. and guest CeCelia Leturt, W.Va. and guestLymuel Grimm, Letart, W.Va.: Oar~
McKinney; Wayne Capehan, Brinker;
11959 Donuld Bumgarner, Letart, W.Va.;
Mason, W.Va. und guest Julia VanMatre. Pt Pleasant, W.Va.: Marshal Sprouse Bumgarner.
Capehart; Jame Roush, West Doris Elliot Coffee, Vinton, Letart, W.Va.; 197S Teka
Columbia. W.Vu. and guest W.Va.; Wilmarinc Clark Hill Dewhurst Me Cauley, Letart.
Elizabeth Roush; Loretta West Columbia. W.Va.; 1961 - W.Va.; Brenda Marr Roush;
Li~ving Rous~, Daleville, Va; Ptlggy
Dee
Anderson Carol ·Stuats; 1979 Diana
Lots Ann Gabbs, Hartford. Bumgarner, MIISOil. W.Va.: Joe Marr Bricklcs. Rncinc: 1981
W.Va.; Keith McClung, Kirby, Racine; 1962 - Howard - May Ann Elias. .
Baltimore Md.; Sandra Foley McMillic;m. Mt. Nebo, W.Va..; · 1982 - Murk Oldtiker.
McClung, Baltimore, Md.; Sharon
Parsons
Fox. Huntinaton, W.Va.; Mike
Patsy Ford Allinder, St. Cottageville, W.Va.; Lnrry E. Reitmire, Syracuse, and guest
Albans, W.Va. ; Eugene Roush !Aturt, W.Vn.: Tom DeniseR.citmlre; 1985 - Terrl
Weaver, New Haven, W.Va., Knopp, Kel1ovn, -w.vu. guest Oldaker, Huntington, W.Va.;
und guest Marilyn Weaver; . Lynn Knopp; Patricia Thy lor 1986 - Jon McOiuley, U:tun,
Amofd Roush, New Haven, Hollllnd. UOO, W.Va. lind guest W.Vn.
W.Va., and guest Mary Darrell Hollllnd; Allee Sriyder
1991 - Steven Pickens,
Roush; Shirley Grimm KarT, Hunter,Putaskala.IUidguestJohn Leon. W.Va.; 1992 - Jack '
Owensboro, Ky., and guest Hunter, Putty Newland OUTOII, Reitmire Jr.; 1998 Megan
Otie Karr; Phil Johnson, Marietlll, OU., and guest Doug Humh Pickens, Leon, W.Va.;
Circle Pines, Mn.; Jacob Carroll; 1964 Bonnie Stauts 2001 John Robert Morgun,
Gibbs, Worthington, Ohio and Smithson, Letart, W.Va.; Bwburu Letan, W.Va.; 2002 - Lisu
guest Edith Olbbs; Jean Sherry Zuspan, Mason, W.Va.; Keams, Christy 1\trley, Nath~n
Winebrenner Ogilvie, Ft. 1965 Mary Anis, Pt Pleasant,, Fowler. Tess Friend, Sand~ .
Cloud, Fla .• and guest Daviv W.Va.;
Jud_y
Duncan Hoosier, Jason Simpkins,
Ogilvie; James Banon, McWhorter, Pt Pleasant. W.Va.; Krystll Mullins, Cassandrq
Orunville, and guest Kay Mary Fostur Hendricks, M11S011, Letj_h Roush, Ashley Huffman
Barton; Edward. Spencer, W.V~.: 1966 Nancy Proffitt, and Holley Bwnitz. .

CAT scans·may be CAT ''scams''
Queadon: In my town there
has been heavy advl!l1ising for
a facility that offers a CAT scan
of )'Our lungs for as little as
$200. They claim it can detect
lung tumors when they're smull
enough to be cured. I smoked
for many yem before I got
smart enottllh to quit about 10
years ago. What are the benefit5 and risks of these CAT
scans for an old smoker like
me?

AIIIWerr The scientific evi·
dence clearly shows smoking .is
bad for one's health, but you
already knew that. Despite this,
, there are about 45 million
Americans who continue to use
tobac:co producu. As you obvi·
ou1ly know. lung problems
includinJ emphysema. chronic
bronchitis
cancer occurred
much more often in those who
smoke. This overall risk is
influenced by the amount you .
have smoked, that is, the number af packs you smoked per
day multiplied times the num·
ber of years you engaged in this
bad habit This is ellpresled in
pack-yean of smoking.
Someone with a five pack·year scam." · ·
· ·
·
amoking hiJtory haJ a lower The risks vma benefits that
ri4k of these problems than you uked about are summadoes someone with a 100 pack· rized as follows: Risk: Out af
year history. Not smoking for a pocket expense, unne«ssary
number. of years •• li~ radiation, finding subtle, non·
have wisely done .. will
serious abnormality. Benefit:
the risk af these disabling and Discovery af small tumor.
potenlially life-ending diiCUCI As you c:illl see fiom the reJa..
by roughly two-thirds, but it tive lengths of the list5, the
doesn't reduce that risk back to "Risk" side is · substantially
a never-1moked level.
longer and two of its items need
. Recent yean have run some additional e.~~:planation.
major advancemenu in digital Though the rotdiation dose to per-

ana

•

processing and innovations in
other related X-ray technolo,
gies. This has made it possible
to create images of our inteml)l
organs that were barely
dreamed of a few decades ago.
The current venion of CT. or
CAT scan, equipment makes it
possible to obtain detailed
amages of the lungs and other
organs rather quickly, and with
a relatively small amount of
radiation at a bargain price.
Several years ago facilities in
Ohio, as well as in Florida
where you live, began to adver·
tisc low-cost screening scans
that had to be paid for by the
patient. The reason he or she
must pay is that insurance com·
panics, HMOs, and PPOs don't
pay for "unnecessary" screen- .
mg exams. That 1s, exams
wllere no symptoms warrant
the test and the general cost of
doing the test on many symptomless individuals is consid·
ered prohibitively high for the
few abnormalities that are
found. In ·fact, some doctors
have called this kind of eittrepreneurial screening lest "CAT

•

form one chest scan is small, it
does increase the risk of cancer,
and radiation exposure is cumulative so that sUbsequent scans
add to the cancer risk. A more
signifiCant finding af a not~uite­
normal area on the study. These
subtle abnonnalides muy be the
consequence of scarring infections, damage from years of
smoking, lung llllllOB of malig·
nant arid non-malignant types .
and maliy Olher healili problems.
These fmdings not only, cawe
considerable wony for the indi·
vidual and his or tier loved ones,
but they iiecessitate more teata.
These obviousl~ increase some
associated riskS fiom the teata
themselves.
So, 1· think tlie smartest .
choice is to talk to your doctor
about your health history,
including your concem about
lung cancer. Then together you
can decide if a cr scan af the
lungs or other tests would be
helpful.lf ~our health insur·
anc:e will
bly
J&gt;art or
all of the . 'II, ins
of your
paying the entire screening test .
bill out of your own pocket.
And what aboUt the benefit.:.
ftnding lung cancer when it is
small and cilrable? Well, sure, it
does rarely happen that way.
The key word here il "rarely."

re"J'

("Family Medicine" .;, a
weekly column, To 1ubmlt
queltlons, write to John .C.
Wolf. D. 0., Ohio Unlvmity
Coliege of Omopath{c
Medicine, P.O. Box 1,10,
Athens, Ohio 45701. Pa11
columns are available online
at wwwjhradlo.orglfm.)
•

,

Today's complex medical problems require a
comprehensive plan of care that begins with your doctor
to every member of our staff.
.. an~ extends
.
Our professional team knows what it takes to help
you recover. That's our job and we do it
· with great pride.

Call today for apersonal consultatio~.
t

Rocflsprings
REHABILITATION CENTER
740-992-6606 .
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH -45769

"~'=~~::"l'~

EXTENDJCARE•
F~tl"'y

f4u#l Opporruntry Provtdu ofServtm www .cxtcndlc:arc.com

,,

OSU's
Swisher

WORLD CUP SOCCER

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHUGHIS

u.s. u

Gl'tiNorlllan
•ms U.S. Open

icked in

rst round

be:lla

NEW YORK (AP)- Orea
Normon, who hasn't n\1\de o
CUI In the U.S. Open since
1996, und Jeun VIm do 'lelde.
whose spectocular eolhapse
cost him the 1999 British
Open, both eamcd berths In
this yenr's U.S. Open.
Nonnnn shot " S-und~ 139
totnlto joln John Hu ton and
nmnteur Kavin Warrick ns the
· qunllflers from Old Men\orlnl
· Golf Club In Tllrnpn, Flu.
Vun de Veldo wns one &lt;If 22
pluyers who n\nde It through
36 holes of qualifying In ·
Pul\:huso. N.Y.

War Emblem

'Lookln1 aood' ·
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP)
- Wnr Emblem tuned up for
the finul time before tho
Belmont Stukes 1md trulner
Bob Buffcrt snld the bluck
colt wns "looking good" l'or u
run 111 the Trlple Crown.

, Moulds may
drop
endonement
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.
(AP) - Bun'ulo Bills wide
recriver Eric Moulds hus not
decided whether to. continue
· endorsing 11 bodybuilding
supplement, u deul thnt might
be In vlolution of NFL policy.
Moulds' endorsement of
· NJTRO·'Iech. 11 nnturul pro·
teln supplement thut's free of
ony substances bnnned by the
NFL, Is not the Issue. The ·
lengue Is concerned nbout the
supplement's munufucturer,
MuscleTech Reseorch nnd
Development Inc.. which
also muke~ products thut con·
tuln bnnned ~ubstunces.

Ball State's
Bulllnpn pa
to Pirates

·

..... 81

NEW YORK (AP) - The
Pittsburgh Plrutcs know No.
I druft pick Bryan Bullington
sti 11 needs .ilome work. ·
"We still look nt him us n
couple ot' yeurs away," gcner·
nl munuger Duvc Littlefield
sold ufter tuklng the Billl
Stute rlght·hunder with the
t1rst pte!( In 1\tesday's drllfl.
"On the plus side, thllt muy
moun ... he'll be uneven bet~
tcr pitcher thnn we see now."
Bullington, who throws a
94 mph l'ustbull, Is the nrst
pitcher drufted with the top
pick since Detroit took Rice
rlght·hnnder Mutt Anderson
in 1997. Littlefield envisions
Bullington rts u No. 3 starter,
~vidence l)f the Jack of stur
tulentln this year's druft.
·: The 6-foot·S, 210-pound
Bullington,
the
Mid·
Amerlcun Conference curcer
strlkeout8 leuder with 370;
cauaht the Plrutes' attenrlon
ufter going 11·3 with 11 2.84
ERA und J39 strlkeoutH and
18 walkA In 104 2·3 lnninaa.
Although he knew he WU8
being considered as a top
pick, Bulllnston didn't know
for sure. until his name
announced.
In a draft class that waa
aenerully considered lackina
in college talent, 14 colleae
• players were tuken In the flm
round. This year's crop didn't
have us many surefire
prospects a1 last ~eur, when
Minnesota took catcher Joe
Mauer with the flm pick and
Cubs pitcher Mark Prior went
second.
Tampa &amp;ay took B.J.
Upton, a aood-hlttlng, sUck·
f!eldi na shortstOP- from
Qreenlirler
Chrlitlun
Academy In VIrginia with the
second pick.
The draft run• throuah
Wcdnellday and can last up to
50 rounds.

I

I

CHARLESTON, W. VII.
(AP) - Ohio Stnre stnndoot
Nick Swisher joined his
11\lhef, funoor mlijor lequtr
Stew Swisher. us 11lirst·round

•

b!IS~ebt\11 drut\ dml~ Tuwluy.
"Me and 1~ old man have

SOllltthlng to shnre now" the
young« Swisher sn.ld. "11m so
excited, It's ridiculous."
So wns dnd. H~ tlenred out
n sporting ·ROOds S\tlfl) 's suppi~ of Atl\letlcs' c11ps aft«
NICk WIIS tuken by Qaklnnd ns
the 16th overall selection.
''They're kind of dii'IWtmt.
They're not l~ trnditionnl A's
caps," Nick Swisher suld with
u luuah durina n llunlly ~o-ook·
out T\tesduy evenlna ut his
Pllrkel'l!bufi home.
.
Nick Swfsher is u~,;ustomed
to being dil'furent. His oowbtly
· boots und Wl!st Vlrglnln
upbrint~ing enn1tld the rlboing
of his Ohlo Stlltlltenmnll\tes.
When he wns Introduced fur
ench ut-but ut home 1!1111\\IS,
the public ntldre~s ~ystem
playL&gt;d "The Good, the Bud
und the U@ly" from the 1996
Clint Et1stwootl movie.
· Swisher Is the hit~hest pick
under l!llh·ycnr Buckeye
t.'OIICh Bob Tbdd. The swltth·
WHILI .HI'I DOWN - USA •a John O'Brian dribbles over Portuaet'a Petit durin&amp; their Group D. 2002 WOrld Cup soccer · hltt11r butted .348 this seuson
whh u tcurn-high 52 RBh nnd
rnetch 11 the Suwon WOrld Cup Stadium Wldneaday. The U.S. won the &amp;ame 3-2. (AP~
I0 home runs. The junior
pluyed 39 .@umcs In• center
YOKOHAMA, Jopun {AP) - Tho the United Stntos, which finished lust or.
nettl nnd IS lit lll'llt buse.
Mt:Brldc's
hcudc:r
auvc
tho
U.S.tcum
Amcrlcuns took their turn ut shockln11 four yeurs uao, but now l111s lldvllnce·
He sturtetl In ull but three
Its
llM~tthreo·golll
l~ud
hi
n
World
Cup
the soccer world Wednesduy, upsetting ment out of the llrst round well hi
gumes
In·his three seusons und
In 12 yeuMI.
.
·
I!OWerl'ul Purtuaul 3-2 In the World sight.
llnl~hed with n .323 curecr
Bnck came Ponullni, rnnked l'll\h In
With 11 youthful lineup - und with·
Cup. .
uveruge.
·
the
world,
.but
muklnt~lts
lll'llt
World
A tournnmunt thut beaan with new· out their twn most creutlvc pluyers.
.
Steve
Swisher
husn
't
hesl·
Cup
uptl.Curunces
in
16
yenrs.
Beto
comer Senegnl stunning dot'endlng Injured Clnudio · Reyna and Clint
tllted to chime In with udvlce
champion Frunca wa~ further juiced by Mnthls - the Amcrlcuns jumped scored off 11 scmmblelnthe 39th. U.S.
from time to time.
aheud 3..() within 36 minutes, then held veterun Jetl' Agoos, moklna his World
"He hns to keep everything
Cup
debut
111
uge
34,
tried
Ill
~:leur
u
on nt Su won, South Korea.
on
nn even keel," the elder
cross
by
Puuletu
wllh
his
let\
lea.
only
"We took udvuntuac of our chunces,"
to
send
the
bull
.
l
t\lo
his
own
gouT
In
the
Swisher
~ald. "The highs cun 't
sold Brltln McBride, who scurod the
be too hll!h und the lows cun't
winner. "We bunkered itt nnd held ?I st.
''It
was
lmportunllo
I.'Otuc
nut
qul~k·
be tl)(J low. All the 1nedlu
them ol'f.''
ly,"
McBride
suld.
"They're
11
very
uuemlon
In the world doosn 't
John O'Brien, one of sl~ U.S. piny·
mukc udifference on the lleld.
crs mllklna their World Cup debuts, yond teum, we needed to muke sure we
You cun hit the bull und huvc
scored just four minutes ln. The put them .on their heels curly. In the
nothing to show for lt."
Americans got another h1 · the 29th second hulr we probubly sut bnck ll lit·
Steve Swisher WliS tuken in
.
minute when 11 shot by Lundon tic bit.''
Now they cun look 11houd Iilli mulch
the tll'l!t round by the Chltlli!O
Donovt\n, one of the two 20·ycllr-olds
White Sox In 1973. He pluyed
In tho lineup. dellected ln otT n defend· with !.'()·host South Koren, which buut
Polond on T\tesduy. The winner of I hut
nine SCIISOIIS With the Chltlli!O
. 11111ne will ulh1ch u spill In the t\lm
Cubs, St. Louis Curdlnnls nnd
"rtmnd.
Sun Dlellil Pndres. He wus nn
Russin
bent
Tunlslu
2·0
Wcdnesduy
nll·stur In 1976.
MIXID IMOTIONI - Portuael' 1 lOIII·
with
two
gonls
within
11ve
minutes
In
Nlck Swisher !lltrucred little
keeper Vltor Bale atenda alone 11
the
second
hull'
tn
Kohe,
Jupun.
stutcWldi! uttentlon ln high
Brien McBride, rl&amp;ht, end teetnmate
F.gor.
Titov&gt;
wus
helt~d
by
u
poor
school,
despite being selected
DaMaroua Beaaley, of the the u.s. eel·
ull-stute
three times. In buseebrete McBrlde'a acorlna thl third aoal
PIMIIIHUpHI.II
bullnt
Purkersbut·g
High.
qalnat Portu&amp;al Wadnaaday. (AP~

Cards edge closer to Reds, 8-5 Reds si n first ick
within ours o ·draft

CINCINNATI (AP) - Without Juson
Slmontocchl, the St. Louts Curdlnuls probu·
bly wouldn't be where tliey ure
now: one win shy of first
pluce.
Somehow, the unherulded pitcher who
spanned the ·globe to act to the big leugues
keeps coming up wltn wlntl when they're
neel1ed most,
Slmontucchl took u shutout Into the HCV·
enth Inning before tiring on a muyay
Tuesday nlgnt, leading the Carcllnuls to un 11"·
S victory that extended their dominance over
the Cincinnati Reds.
When the Cnrdlnats' pltchlna stuff wns
depleted by Injuries, they guve Slmontacchi
(4·0) u chance. In return, 1\e's atven them a
chance to cutch the tlrst-pluce Reds, who
leitd the NL Central by only one game. ·
"It's hard to describe tlie lit) lie's given

Red S

us," monuger Tony Lu Russu sui d. "He's
been roully spec lui und reully needed."
The Reils nnve been ulone In tlrst since
April 26, tuklng jjrout pride In their vontnge
polnl. They led the Curcllnnis by us anony us
five games, u cushion thut's ull but vanished.
Some of their confidence hus slipped
uwuy, too.
.
St. Louis hus won six of Its elllht games
nautnst Clnelnnutl, lncludlnl! u HI·B victory
lit Clnergy Flcl.d on Muy 12 !hot Included the
Curdlnuls' biggest cornebuck In u dcc11de.
"You'd like to sturt mlxlnaln some wins,"
said Auton Boone, who hit uthroe·run horner
In 1he etahth Inning. "You feel like n lot of
P.eople ure suylna, 'Well, you cun't beut
them, und It's 11 muat win und ,this Is u huge
series.' 1 do feel ll~e. tomor~w·s 11ume ls
PIMM ... Idp,IJ

'

Indians take pitcher firSt
CLEVELAND (AP) The Indians selected Stanford
junior dght·hander Je.,cmy
Outhrle with
their nnt J)lck
of the 2002
buseball draft T\telday, the
22nd selection overall.
"He's a winner fr~p1 an
elite colleae Pf9ir&amp;m, said
John Mirabelli, lndlans o sis·
tant general munaaer, scout·
Ina operations. "We believe
~oi~...eolld rni\Jor-lea&amp;ue
Outhrle, 23, Is 11·1 with a
2.34 ERA tn 134 1·3 tnninas
this spriniJ for the Cardinal.

Tribe

1

He Ia 24·5 with a 2.58 BRA
over his last two seuons.
Jt was the third time
Outhrle has been driil\ed. He
w111 selected as a high school·
er by the New York Mets four
ylll'l aao and asatn taat year
by ptusburah.
Guthrie 18 represented by
aaent Scott 801'111 but will not
enter contract neaotlatlona
unlll Stanford completes
post110 a110n play. The Curdlnul
(43-16) will play Southern
Ca.llfornla ·(37-22) In a bestof·three serlet In the NCAA
Super Regional&amp; beglnnlna
Friday night.

Cleveland continued a
recent trcl)d of draftina pitch·
m. A yeur aao, the Indians'
flnt three picks and elaht of
their top nine were . pltchen1
lncludh\g Dan DenhiiiTI ana
Alan Home In 11\e flnt round.
Elaht of Cleveland's last II
nm·round picks have been
pitchers. Pour of them, Paul
Shuey, Jarct Wrlahl, Tlrn
Drew and C.C. Sabathln,
huve pitched for the lndlans.
, The Indians took third
basemun Mull Whitney, I 11..
from Palm Ourdens (Pia.)
Hlah. School with the 33!'1
overall selection.

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - No ft~t·round ftuco for the
Clnolnnatl Reda lhit time. Houn after they c:ho18 hlah
achool pitcher Chrl&amp; Oruler In 11\e draft, they alsned him.
The tlaht·handet from Brentwood, Calif., qreed &amp;0 a
52.5 mllfion aiantna bonua 1'\lelday evenlns, aliortly after
the RedA mild• hlrn lhe third ov.rall pick In bUeball'a draft,
. Orulw, 18, wanted to play ba~eblll11ther lhanao to col·
tep - one lmporunt reuon why the ltecla ·Wile wllllqiO
mike hlrn.thetr ~o~ I pick.
"l tUde It verycltlt that we wlllted'10 alan him u 100n
u poeilblt," aene1'11111111qer Jim Bowdtn nld: ''We did·
n't want to 10 thrmllh the auJMttr."
Laat year, the Reds made left.handtt Jeremy Sowen their
top plclc - the 20th overall - even th0111h he wttmed
clubtl beforehand that he Intended to ao to Vttrtderbllt lllllea•
be aot li .... $3 million.
They never tot ol011 ·10 an aareement, with the Reds
offeriDa leu thll\ llalf of wblt Sowers aouabt. He went to
~It, and the Red• toet their rlaht to •l&amp;n him.

ay··
"MbaOt

0111..,, 11, IW a ftlll acholmhip to attend Mzona State

but wantec1.10( aw. ~ lna&amp;ead,
"I Wilt 10
1...- llutball, and thll'a that,"
Orullr llld.
•• tileD - IOillllncel was • little ldd,
'lb fulftlllt out
Te an unbelievable ho&amp;lor."
The e.;foo4.3, 1
phoHr went 4-3 with. a 1.49
DA In MYeD ltd
1111011 for Liberty Htah School.
Hutruak out 13U•n•ln 66 INilnp.
·
HI WOI'Ucl au&amp; It CIWIY l'llld lui weekend while Hill
fl Plllll cMOIItr Jctna,r l'encll watched and chatted with
lila fatMr.ltm. lstati WMimDroslecl.
"Ht lila a bttelr \111 sklna bill and benet clllnleiiP than
'1\lm ....... slid lelloh, who Ia aspecial C()IIIUltant with

.......

'

Onaler eettled for loll guaranteed money than 1.111 year'•

No. 3 9.lck. Rlsht·huldli O.won Brazelton lOili four-ylll',
SU riilllioa contract with Tlmpa Bay. Rlaht·hander Mark
Prior, cbolln No. 2 overalllut ylll' by the Chlcqo Cubl,
~a ftva-yw,

SIO.S miiUon dial.

Both of ihote plteherl played In collep, leavtna them In
position to att more money than a hlah tchool pitcher.
I

,

I •

�I

The D ily Sentinel

'

1 Waf Mt JO?

THE
DIAMOND
Nllballa..s.--~
MIN
a " ....

skunks

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13-l

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - With
MinntSQta 's lineup t'lnally at filii
trenglh, Luis Rivas ~o~:e nt +foNI with
fl\~ nms ~ and 11~ RBis as tho!
'TWin set a team record for victory
ma11in, 23-2 over the Cleveland
Indians on TUesday night.
Jlldlue Jones had foUr hits and tive
RBis,l)ustan Mohr was 4·f01'6 with a
two-run hon\er and A.J. Pieriynski
also was 4·fut.6 for the Twins, wi\Q
set • fmnchise record with 2S hits and
mis etlthelr runs ~ by one.
Ahet an assortment of inharies over
the ftnt two months, the 1\vins used
their best lintup fur the t'lrst time
since opening day,
Starter R.i.:k !teed (6-2) ga~ up
three hits, two .of them home runs by
Jim 'Thome, in seven inninas liS the
TWins Improved lo a ml\jor leagueleading 20.9 at home.
Twins shortstop Cristian Gu!man,
who's been pii\Yin&amp; throuah 1111 nssort•
ment of knee, lbotand shoulder aches
this year, wa~ benched fur ~ow ina up
late fur t~atment befure the game.
But In the ftf'lh G:trdenhire had to send
hlrn in as a pinch-hitter for Denny
Hocking, who left with a mild strain
of his left $roin.
·
The lnd1ans, who arrived with a
fouf'gnme winnlna streak and eight
wins 1n their last I0 (!ames after a 925 stretch, allowed more thnn 20 runs .
for the second time this season.
The Twins scored I0 in the seven.th
- their biggest lnnlna In 42 yeats of
edstence. Mohr, Piertynski and Rlvns
- the bottom third of the order had 12 hits, II runs and. ei(!ht RBis.
Indians starter Rynn . Drtse (5-4)
allowed five runs, seven hits and four
walks in thre.! innings - his shortest
outing of the season but still better
than some of his tenmmates.
Chad Paronto gave up four runs In
one Inning nnd Cnnrles Nngy guve up
nine runs in two innings, leavinl! a
bnses·londed, no·out jam for Mark
.
Wohlers, who gave up five runs and BAiTEFIED - Cle'le!lll'ld relief l)ltllher Merli 'Wohlers wipes sv.oeet fl'om his face after belfC
only got one out. Only Ricardo replaced on the mound by teammate Ricardo Ftlneon In the SMntll lnnll't TUesdey.
Rincon wns unscathed.
Wohlers pitched one out as Minnesota scored ten .runs In the lnnlna and won 23-2. (AP)

AmerlcsnLtap~

-

W L
• "
311 II
lt 10
ltti
II

~~

""' Gil
.ltl
......
I
.... IIIII
,OICIO
I&amp;
.:111 10 111

Giants extend San Diego slide; Pirates win
SAN DIEGO tAP) ..;.. Jeff Kent hit n into n first·ploce tie with Los Angeles In
.
lhree·run homer off Bobby Jones (3,· 4) the NL West. · ·
In the first innln(!, and visltml!
8REWJiJRS 6, CUBS 5, 11 INNINGS
.
Snn Frnndsco extended · Snn
Alex Sanchez utoned for his ninthDiego's losing streak to 11 sett· inning bnserunning blunder with un RBI
son· hlgh six gnmes with u 3· 1 win sing,le in the lith as host Milwuukee
Tue~duy,
·
won its seuson-hil!h t'lflh strulght and
Kirk Rueter (7·3) improved to 10-2 beat Chicago for the seventh time in
lifetime nsnlnst the slumP.ing Pudres, el(!hlgames this season.
·
.
who hove dropred !S of 19. Burry The Cubs got u three-run homer 11om
Bonds went O.tor-2 with two walks nnd Todd Hundley but ~loser ·Antonio
lellds the mlljots with 67 rree ~asses .
Alfonseea blew II S-3 leud in the ninth,
Giants shortstop Rich Au lin c~me costing Kerry Wood hls seventh win.
off the dlso.bltld list und doubled tWice.
Brewers shortston Jose Hernandez
ASTROS 61 DIAMONDBACkS 4
•d
·
• h r. · •
•
Brad Ausmus nit ngo·aheud single In he u career h1g ,with .our hats. .
· the seventh inning, nnd Lnnce bcrkman
. DoDGERs 10, ROCKIES 4: ,
added his 19th home run In the eighth as
Er1c Kurros snapped 11 ninth·inmng t1e
Houston rallied ut Bunk One B~llpurk. . ~lth u two-run single, and Adrlnn Bellrt
Junior Spivey homered for Arizona hit u three·run homllr for the second
which lost for only the second time in . gnme in n row ut Coors Field us Los
30 sumes when lending ut\er six Angeles won its fourth strulght,
lnnlnss. The Dinmondbatks dropped Jesse Orosco (1 · 1) got one out in the
eighth. According to the Ellus Sports
·

NL

'

Bureau, the 4S-year-old left:y became
the oldest pitcher to win a ml\)or league
game since Charlie Hough tossed II
shutout for Florldu in 1994 at 46.
Los Angeles has won 10 of 13 overall
and seven .of eight aguinsl Colorado this .
year. The Rockies hove dropped three
straight.
MARLINS 5, PtttLLI~ 0
Josh Beckett lbsted only three inninas ·
because of another blister, but five
Floridu relievers finished a four-hitter ut
Veterans Stadium,
.
Luis Castillo extended his hitting
streak to 22 aumes - lonaest in the
ml\lors this season - as the Marlins
won their third straiaht.
PIRATES 5, ExPOS 2
Chnd Hermansen homered on the sec·
ond pitch rrorn Carl Pavano (3· 7), and
Rob Mackowiak went deep twice Iff·
Olympic Stadium. Mike Williams ·
closed it out for Jimmy Anderson {S·7),

Rijo
pulled
from Reds
rotation

•

ClNClNNATl (AP) .L"
Jose Rijo is out of me
Cincinnati
nltlltliQQ
again. Ul(t it's unclev
wlledler lle'U ~- F' bllc.k
in.
The 37-yur-o.ld ptldlet
who o~ 11~ lliDjor
elbow opemioM wiU 10
back in the bullpen for a
whi~. manqer Bob 8oooe
said 1~. He II'~ no
indieatillll wbether it's a

R•·

IQna-tenn ll\Qve.

~
~ '

01&lt;-···

at
Willie
~ u• :-c-:-J·&amp;,.~n
iztto
•

It N. V, I'WtM

••••••

.....Ill•••...

ltlm Sox 10, TIGEIIS S
At Detroit, Johnny Damon
und Shell Hillenbrand eoch
went 4-for-S nnd Curios
BueriJu drove In four runs us
Boston beut Detroit to
Improve to 23·6 on the road.
John Burkett (7·0) allowed
four runs In the first two
inninas, but settled down nnd
allowed five runs on 10 hits
ond two walks In six innln(!s ..
Jose Lima (1 ·4) took the
loss in relief, allowing five
runs In 3 1·3 Innings.
BwE JAYS 3i
DEVIL RAYS
Justin Miller pitched seven
innln11s of three·hlt bull, 111\d

fellow rookie Eric Hinske hit
two home runs ns host
Toronto bent Thmpu Bay for
their seuson-hlgh 11fth strnl11ht
win,
Hinske put Toronto up 2·0
In the fifth with u home run
otf Paul Wilson (2·4), who
pitched the first complete
game of his career.
Mill&lt;er {4·2) allowed one
run, striking out Sill and walking three,
RoYALS 3, WHtT£ Sox 2
At
Chicago, Miguel
Asencio got his .first major
league win 11s Knnsas City
hnnded the White Sox their
eighth loss In nine arunes.
Asencio . (1.0), making his
third career slllrt, gave up one
run and four hits over 6 1-3
Innings. He walked two nnd
struclt out two,
· Mlltk Buehrle (8-4) allowed
I~J', l i i iM"i ' l

Picture this tnaurlnce Expert
On Your Sid$.

If you're looking for auto, homt,
bualntaa, htalth or lilt lnturanot
Call mt... Stop by...
~
lt'a your oholotl .
•

.

•·rdon't know the llll.\wer

to IMI," Boone said.

lnstew.l of Rijo st.n~ng

Mitt Saturday in Ano.beim.

. right-hander
Carl~
Almanzu will make his
fitst mii)Of leque &amp;tart.
Almanzu, :IS. has made
136 .elief appemneu
with Toronto,. san Dieao.
the New York Yankees and
the Reds.
Almanzar wu a starter
in the . minors when he
beaan his. career with
Toronto. but WIIS shifted to
the buiiJIOn a few years
later. He fitll!ed be'd prot,..
ably never pt a chUICe to
start in ,the m~.
"I neYer even t~ht
about it," Almanzu wd.
"My lut fi~ yews l'~
been pitchina one or two
inninas."
. Rijo tetumed to · the .
mlljors last season for the
fitst time since 1995, when
he had his elbow liaament
.eplac:ed, That started a
S!lriO~ Qf ~oeratlons that
s1debned ham so 10111 that
he &amp;ot a Holt of Fame vote.
He returned as a reliever
·IIISt season and made the
club out of sprina trainina
as u reliever aguin this
year. He aot. a chance to
start three weeks into the
sc11son, complctina his
comeback: from the opera·
lions.
Rijo storted well but
be&amp;an to fade and develop
a stiff shoulder as the
inninas piled up. The Reds .
skipped his turn In the rota·
tion )ast week, havin&amp; him
pitch out of the bullpen.
He
started
aaain
Saturday aguinst . Atl~nta
and ,ave up seven runs m 1
7-1 oss. His arandfather
died later that night, and he
~as been in the Oominican
Republic for the funeral.
In eight starts Wld five
relief appearances, Rijo
hilS gone 4·3 with 11 S.21
ERA.

• Hlumlnum
I Black

•Red
•Green
Roof Paints
PICKENS
HAitDW41tl
.MAlON,

GOTCMA - Oakl•nd'l Aamon Hernandez. riaht, tale out
seattle'• lchlrc Sulukl at home J')iata In the tenth lnnina
Tueaday. (AP)
• ·
..__...,.....,.__...._..,....,....,....,..........._.....__,

~ ~~

jll!&gt;tl~

h 1hlh "'*ha ... ~· ._. .• ,,.,.,....~ !
~"' ·'~!-\ \:t• loo..llullo. l't,lt~ ~ hit Ut~o:.t'H h•

W, VA,
1·30...?73·1113

......

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~

·----------------------------------------------------------------------------

·woods leads Riverside Senior league

...

""'-'~

-.ed

·: MASON -K&amp;ith ~~
hi&amp;
his S&amp;mi·
ti'uck and it looks like he; i seriws abOOt &amp;Qtt QtlCe ~uin.
,' Woods and hls. tellm took tli'St pll.l« TU~ Ill R1~
-CiQlf Course. thus pushlna bim into the top $pOl with lU
point and 1.1 fllllr-~nt lead OYff ~ a~t Dilve Jk't'lby Ill
·7 I.S in ~ e:ourse'$ SeniOf Men's Leogue.
· · ln third pi~ is RG!ph ~ of New Haven with 69,S
points.
·
~ A_IQIGJ of43players w~oo ha!td~ with -l~· pmn
l.lvwluble.
· : In fitst ~ace 111 ·12 (SS) \Ita&amp; the team of Woods, Curotl
-Nwrls of t"Ku.se. ~~~~ McOanie.l Qf ~iddleport. 81\d Clm
,Greene of urrieane.
·
• S~'OOd place at -II (S9) look like the team of Coo Wilsoo
·of Chestllf, Luther TUd:llf uf MO£oo, 81\d FNd Smith and P!lul
'l,.anham,'both of Ripley.
· Third place with · 10 (60) was held down by RooGld
Brownina of Mason. Doo Fields of Hartfoot. Jlldl fl)ll of
·Cllnon. and S~cyre,
·
.
• · Closest to the pin honors went to Norris tlll 17 ttnd
.81-owning on tl4. ·
·
.

'::bu,y,

•••••••••••••••••

·'.:: , 'lhe Top 20 standlnp for the

.

leape (78 players total)

.

.,' ,, 1
~

2.
. ' 3.
• . 4. '

5.
6.

• 7.

. ' 8.
, I

9.

" 10.
. • : 11 .
• . 12.
13.
' 14.
. . 15.
~

16.
17.

18.
19.
20.

Keith Woods
Dave Jacoby
Ralph Sa~
ClaUde Proffitt
TenyHupp
Bob Anderson
Buck Hall
Lew Gilland
Rondal Browning
Jack Fox
Harley Rice
Dewey Smith
Ken Whited
Paul Lanham
Floyd Chapman
Jim Lawrence
Dana Winebrenner
Cuzz Lauderrnilt
Don Roush
Bill Howard

75.5
71.5

69.5
64.0
64.0
60.0
59.0
58.5

58.5
54.5

.• ,•'

Upset

••

framPipl1

•' '•

•
I

i:learln&amp; throw by aoalie Ali Boumnijel
'for his 110111 In the S9th minute. Russia
·:,was awarded a llcnalty kick after
~:Tunisian defender Rahl Jllidl used hls
' body to knock down Alexander
' ,Flllmonov as he turned to shoot on &amp;0111,
·· ·and VoleryKarpln converted In the 64th.
'. Also Wednesd11y, Oerman)'. fresh
. 'from an 8·0 romp over Saudi Arabia,
:took on I.eland at lburokl, Japan. The
·Irish tied Cameroon in their first &amp;rune.
·: : Brazil's Rlvaldo was fined $7,000 for
·••his theatrics oaainst Turkey,
, : FIFA hit the .Brazilian star with the
~.!fine Wednesday for faklna an ,Injury in
•· the team's opener. The worlll soccer
· ~oraanlzalion stopped short of suspend·

51.0
49.0

I lllll•&lt;irml'&lt;tlli!.'Mil

--~

48.0

~·-ttilll)'
"'liloM Ill:!'

44.5

IMiit ...... ~.. - ·
. -rGn.:
!OW.t&amp;.

......."'!. ~

48.0

MoMIMIIII llotlllill'

48.0
46.0

.....*"........

ing him.
Rivaldo is tho first ployer punished in
o crackdown on so-called "simulation"
- pretendinfJ to be fouled.
tn inju'l_ time of Brazil's 2·1 victory
Monday, TUrkey's Hokon Unsal kicked
the bull at ·Rivaldo. who was prepming
to make o corner kick, Rivaldo, who
three minutes earlier scoted Bm&amp;U's sec·
ond goal, wen~ down clutchlna his heud,
even thoujlh he was hi t In the 1hi 1h,
Refe~e K1m Youna·Joo of South Ko.eo
ejected the Turk.
Rivaldo quickly got up ond continued
plll)'in&amp;.
·
FIFA's dlsciplinnry committee studied
o video ond decided Rlv11ldo was suilty
of simulotin&amp;ll foul.
In 11n interview with the Brulliun
doily Oazetu Esportivu, Rivaldo admit·
ted he hammed it up.
"The bull didn 't hit ~Y fnce, It hit me

---·~---

:11Mfiill'

tlfil!-~~

51.0

Edge
..... ,....1

•••
••

...
'"m

-...~

. some new memory.
· guy you hll\"en 't seen - li lit·
On Tuc doy, he fuced Ken tie guy who's .rome out of
'
· ·
Orltl'ey Jr. for' the first time. nowhere."
The Reds.huve seen _plenty
aot
him
out
three
timus
nnd
•
ielished the moments,
of the Curdlnt~ls' .offense.
imoortant. This is " team
..1 ~st think obout my ~nd whil:h scored I0 eonsec11tive
we~ve. gotto be
. at."
wutc lng ut home, seem* ·runs w"He pulling oft' that
what
Ori ffey . doos, eomeblll:k the lust time they
With Stmontacchi on the Simontaechi . st\ld. "I'm still were 111 Cineruv,
' ....h C rd' I
• mound, that's tough to do.
enjoy in• this,"
. This tune.
t e a 11\ll s
' ; He hns ployed in four fwm
The naht·hundllf *{IVC up pulled nheud 7-0 ond were
' sysl'ems, an Independent one ron and sill hits 1n 6 1·3 never In serious trouble.
lenguc. the'ltolian profession· innlnas bcfo.e tiring on u Femundo Vinll hud three hits,
; .ol 1eogue, the Venczuelon humid, 82-dearee night, low· lncludln~ u pnir of run-siX)!'' ·
d Albert u..1 18
•lvinter leaaue and the 2000 crlllf. his ERA to 2.48.
tn&amp; smg es, un
• ...,o
..Olympics for Italy before
"I m Impressed with him," hit o two-run homer off Jooy
: jinally ' mukin&amp; it to the said Boone, who homered otl' Hamilton (3·3) us St. Louis
: 1J~lijors . One of his hl-hli&amp;hts Mike Motthews, "He's got a picked up where It len otT.
"It's gOOd to come into this
~-was pltchin&amp; in .elief ago1nst real easy motion, but he·s
· .the Unil~ States on monaaer · quicker thun you think and atmosphere tmd have o
· , ;Tom Losorda's birthday.
his bnll's got some finish . chnnce to cutch up n little
• . It seems that every time he He's · o little like (Oreal bit," sold J.D. Drew, who ulso
• ~itches nowadays, there's Maddux in thot reaatd. He's n drove In twol runs, "But I

.

!Alta ·

' ....
··~---- ·
-..-"*'

52.0
51.0 ·

J

three runs in eight innings but Oakland defeated AL West
missed his second opportunity rival Seattle.
to become the first n!ne-grunc
With runners on first and
winner in the AL.
second undone out, Lon1. hit
ANGELS 3, RANGERS 0
Shigetoshl Haseaawa's · (3·1)
Scott Schoeneweis came· pitch off the will in center
within one out of his second field.
career shutout, leading the
Billy Koch (3-0) pitched
Angels over Texas at two innings Wld the A.'s won
Amihelm.
. despite gettln&amp; outhlt by the
Garret Anderson and nm : Mliinen 14·5:
Salmon had RBI doubles to ,
... ·
support Schoeneweis (4·4),
w~o allowed four hits.
Troy Glaus, hit a two-out
triple off Dave Burba (3·3) to
end an O.for-15 slump. He
entered the gome 2·for-18
against Burba.
.
ATHLitTICS 3, MAJtiNERS 2,
10 INNINGS
ThiTCnce Long hit 11 gamewinning double in the bOltom
of the IOth Inning, and Eric
Chavez homered twice u host

Iilii 1\1 I ~JI I 11 : .

.,...... ..

wllbt

Giambi homers in Yankees~ win; P:s .edge M's
NEW y~
· K (AP) Jason Oia bl hit a three·run
homer du
ew York's
eight-run sixt inning und the
host Yankees hit four home
runs in 11 13-5 victory ovet
Baltimore on Tuesduy.
Alfonsl'l Soriuno, Robin
Ventura and Rondell White
also homered for the Yankees,
who lend the mnjon with 96
homers In 59 games.
Oiambi hlliltWo•ron double
In the first off Scolt Erickson
(3·6) and lidded his 16th home
run In the sixth.
Rumlro Mendoza (3·2)
pitched I 2·3 innlnas for the
win.

ha

·' Phil Jackson and obe Bryan co

I

AROUND

.

-

think we t~ke e~body with
too SAme intensity. '
Nom: Griffey slnaltd in
five lit·bllts, le~tvlng him 4·
· for-l8 slnee returnlna !rum 11
torn knell tendon. He hlls
only two hits in his III.St 23 lit·
bllts: lndudlna a. bunt slnalu.
·"' -~
..... R~"
""8 ht1ve- .t-........t
- ..,.,.....
RHP Jose R.ijo from too rot.ll·
tlon for now. Reliever Carlo.~
Almanzar will stlltt in his
,
,
place Suturduy In Anllhe~m , .
"' The C11rdlmils put RHP
Onnett Stephenson on the
lS·duy DL. He 11¥1rnvnttd
his sore left hnn\stnna while
throwing In the bull~n
Sunduy. LHP Bud Smith wus
. Clllled up from Triple-A
Memphis lllld will stun
Friday in An11hcim.

t'rt~

ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, JUHE8, 2002

tCkOOAM
..TIMS Oft SPICI.li.INTII\IST •

.

AncleRonvute Prlaon Cam11 Sumter Ga. plctult by 'Thamlls
O'Dea,lllte PIIVI.. IW lee. CE 6th "'I· Mlitl!\1, Hon~ ~ l
810., Art L111on Wll'llll St; Xvolt. on atoM b~ T.J.S. IJ.I~.
·

-FURNITURI

.

.

4 pc, Hard roctt maple pea.., BR tub, ao!a, chll~a, w t&lt;~l\lt$,
cabinet, Queen aiH hydebed, 3 pc. maple BR aulte,
Wakefield night stand, 1011 1011 delk, Dunttn Pllyt.
IIDtt, Butta~ table, cedlr cheat, ;u d . GE sldt by ut.
CU. Electric rariget, Tappen mlcfowave oven, G.E.
6
23 C\1, fl. Kenmore c:ll11t type doll) lltflet. 6
mort,
G'-ASSWARI!
atltctlon at glaaawatt, Ftnton, Kno&lt;ltna Dog,, Pink
Compote, Witt Pot..~ t1S Dllthtt llflOlt p11t..m
. jaR, Oil lamp, lalllfll, old cat blnka, E.L. Walth wtiQht
clock, tadlo t:tock , ..Ito comb., Lg. amount ot
ieMity,
doltlea, qultta, blankets, luggage ut, antlqut
qullla, Qltat cookwatt, Rtvett wara cookM.ra, &amp;m. kllt:htn
applltnca, liOn akltltta, boulltull&lt;lng Edward Sllvtt toft. &amp;et, Old
11' Fl~dlng 01 Moata, Hotaea In the atorm, O~et rasorve
Prl
1'l 1ng
pant
p.,.t\llt, 1arm loota plus much mora.

in tho lea," Rivaldo was quoted tiS say~
ina. "Obviously I OXtJUerntod so thnt he
would be expelled; .
,
"He kicked the ball at me, nod thnt s
somethlna thllt should not be ollowed.
He telllly deserved to~ ejected."
.
Turkey al.eady Is cnmpalgnlng to ·
hnve more experienced referees work Its
games. It nskild FIFA to .eplace ref~ ,
com C~io of Benin for the upcoming
.
mute h aaa nst Costa Rl ca.
"He is not In position to offic:inte 11
.
match in the World Cup," Turkey couch AUCTIONI!I!R NOTI: AVlfY good euctlon. Thlt plotult w11
Can Cobnnoglu chaime&lt;l,
found In lht attlo, 3111 muat"' Mu ..um p~Het.
England ca~taln David Beckhum
.
DON'T MISS THIS ONIIlt
apoloaizod tote Enallsh nnd J11ponese
RI"K p•"'RSON "'U"TION "OMP"'Nu
soccer fans nftcr his players fnilcd to
'"
~&lt;n
n '"
'"
n "
ocknowled&amp;e their cheen at the end of 11
Allc:TtONUit ltlttt PlAII$0N fta
disuppointlng 1· 1 tic with Sweden on
rn.nu Oil na.s•u
Sundoy,
·
1MtCtl1or: Mtnnlnl IUou
· "I wunt toupoloHize from me and the
Cn• NG: I ton l'telu Count»
. rest ofthe.pluyers, Beckhom sllid.
TIIIMS: CASIIOIICHECit

------------------------------

-

�"'AMeli Ia S«vice"
lSS37 Sl. Rt. 7 Nortll•l'onleroy, OH • 5720
1·~= Bow 16.ooor..;...................... sas.6S

.. ....

I''

&amp;ow9.001Twi~~e .....................si6.9S
20.000 PIMtic Baler 1\oi~~e ................... $1~ .7S
'Oftss Posaares willl S..lfur
.
perton
12....................................... ~ .00ISO lbs.
Slutf..................................... U .99/SO lbo
: fur barns. pens. cages. &amp; lnlilen

..•..•
t:r.~ ~"a•y
... t.o s ~ oo r-.. ft'll ..

Cellular

Walls. SlOps •
'Riil Wadr.,
and Dri.., • Stencil
(Me
~Estimates

:smin&amp;Oirio alld W.V.

HOWARDL

Spout
Ate Estlmltts

·

Authoriutl Agtnt

992-5479

74();.742-3411

IOIEIT IISSRL
COIIStiUCilON

WRITESEl
Mllnlenlnclo
Gutttts- Down

.

Nlwttomn
GllrlgM

COII.IIIta
AtmOdellng ·
Stop • Complrt
FAEEESlWATn

7*'12-16n

740-9U-2217

.

..............
._., ....n
. ---...........
............

.....

Case-IHPw
Dealers
I0011 Sr. Rt. 7 South
Cooll'illt, OR 45723

.740-667-0363

Parts &amp;Service

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

RACO r:ooo DRIVE

Stat S'x10'·

4359 St. Rt. 160

June&amp;

10 10'x30'

Gallipolis, OH 45631

e-Noon

HOUr$
?:GO kM • 1:00 PM

(740) 446-1044

Aldht~~Co-Op

Mondly.,rldly WPM • Saturdty Npm

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

~

FREE ESTIMATES!

All Makes 'fulctor &amp;
Equipment Pam
FactOrY Authorized

Hill 's
OrhOrd.t&amp; Gravely
Self Storage
Maa..y fergUIOII
20670 BaSitan Road
Ra&lt;:IM, OH 4$771

, , c&amp;tr •

Bty~~nRtevu

New ttomM, Room Acldltlona,
Gliragu, Pole Bulldlnga, Roofa,
· Skiing, O.C:ka, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

Jeff Warner Ins.

'k~•W.Ikt

Rooftnt Home
.

sunset Home
Construction

1/.~ MACK'S
Pocket Knives
High8l Dry • Colltctlblta
'A Cut Above
the Rest"
Self-Storage
Hours:
Mon-sat 10-4

J3795lfJ.iRJ.
Ptlltm)l c»;.

217 E. 2nd St. •
Po\ntroy, OH

74().992-5232

.(740) 992~5908

H" ~hl' PAIN

Pomet1!1 flllts
BIAG02171

Pd. 1 mo, S/29

lOIII'

Tree Service

• Top • Removal • T:rlm
• Stump Grinding
• lucket Truck

Loeal843·5264
' Medkare Sll)lplemtnt; Lift Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retll\!11\tnt, ·
Pension &amp; 40lK Rollol'trs;
Mortpat; Major Medical

• Nuhlna Home
'

"""'

Tht CRAFTY,

cut :f PMINTINGI
1r.o· I o' t ., y·u

lUND SPOT

L••'

(F&amp;toly Olltltl)
AI ~lui Windt ~n
lilllh IO Ofdtt II
'Oillt loulllltl

Ull1 Pllllll

• Ver11.\lli • Wood
• Mlnil • ISle

Tllursdavs

Progresslue
Coueroll Gn Sundi!IS

144'111WM. .....

44HHS

STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
lHEATINQ

A ...iM•

•Htltl"'l

• illt CCII'Idttlonera
SfA,.'Ul
•hhlce en All lrellda
• RMiiltlllltll Llfl~l CoMmtrattl
•10 Yf· ptlrtt • Ltbor

•litltl"'l 1 Air C!lllcHttonlng
www.amtriOtnMa~rdllr.caM

"SALES AND SERVICE"

Con rile's
Child CARE
hll openings, 15 yr.
expe~enct,

Certllltd

· Open 24 hours.
7 ~ys per week
St. Rt. 7 Tuppere
Plains, OH

YOUTH
FISHING

DERBY

I:SOAM Sunday,
.lun• 8th 0 Th•

a.m.· ap.m.

......

1DtWtlt blain st.

812-0008

' Part&lt;lng/play Areas,
Sidewalks, Floors
28 Ytlrt Exl*'ltnce
(B71.J!3.7022)

Call for mo;,
itifolfree e•timate

Frw Ettlmattt
(tollfretl

877·353·7022

WV0312Sli

Jim lh•rto
lleolrla, l'lumblng,
•nd lmoll Home
Malnllnonoe ~ob•
1:104) 173·1411

Now Open

Mondaythru
·. Saturday
Cl.-td lundly

Driveways~ Patios,

.IllS fUCJRIC II
PlUIIIIRO

STillE STORE
11

YOUR CODCRETE
Your
, CODDECTIOD, LLC
Concrete
' (740) 742-8015
1
Connection LTD Quollty concrtle Work

In Meigs, Athena and
Washington counties,

HEATING &amp; COOLING .CAU 667=6329.

Business Services

flel'll Tllll'llllll
6 SUndey
Dtors Open 4:30
fortglllrd$ start
6:30
Preoresslue top Une

•
Windows • Roofln&amp;

COMIIUtW.IMIIIIDilf!IAl
FAEE eSTIMATES

740-lt2·7Stt

SUNDAV l.ill~l•lll ll~!z:;~!:!,!

I

Roofing, Siding, ftdd·On$, Electrical,
Plumbing, Decks, Remodeling,
011JWIII~ Painting.

Haning's Construction
Foreman: Larry
Owner:
740·387·0181
Ronald "Mick" Haning
C~Matlna "ChM1" Haning
740·992·0780
Cell• 740·591·0919
Cell: 591-8393

�•
Page 8

e•Tbe DIIIJ SanUn•l

.AJJ.EYOOP

acMu

.....
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..Ul,......,.... $11-•
....
...
....,
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,,_ -

PHIUIP

ALDER

t

$

rtt
C1

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ltCI 11tt

. . . . . 11 • •

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NL

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W I q' 1

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Three ares

7 . . .._.... D U . . ._.,,. ...... M . .._

•=-- ::-,,
...._

:t=J:nd
._
"am-••

We all l&lt;ttQW about
the tlm:e R's -- reading, "'riting and
(a}rithmeri~ -- but
what an: the three rs~
If you have all
thn:e, it will help yuu
. to solve today's &lt;kill;
You ure sitting EiU-~t.
lookin~:~ ut your hund
and North's. Defend·
i ng uguln t four
~pudes, your partner
leads the diamond
1.11.-e. Whut toor defen.~ive tricks do you
hope to win?
It looks us thoi.tgh
dC~:Iurer can lose ooly
three tricks: one
spade and two dia-

31 P

'CIIIl

til-*
........

...

UI'IIIM"a

....

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.

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44 ...._

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tttM
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pllt
....
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33111
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......

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ell'-

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lA

t't

, . Wl II

WK ll
• J".l... ~
• a'f

b

--

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A !\J:S.1l

~

S&amp;Oun••

oowu

.. K:U

t

nzes •

..... I

"'"'

bt

NIARn*

ISHING 1HE JOB

t

4r1!11Jt•
..,

•:-:=,

• .._...........

tr t LR
....
$1-Wt II
stt• Prllll
-s IIILpiCil
~

··

....,._

SC!u,

......
r-'1111""""11--,r-r-,

Four
Is
will
Buckeye
Girls State

•

Eddie A. Russel. 54
Dll \tl A1

monds. AII sensible
lines seem to leud to
I0 tricks. And East.
who knew his purtner

THE BORN LOSER

,...

!ILNJ-, e.t..AA, !llM, !ILNI, 13lN\,
. !llN\, eLI&gt;J\, !ll~. elM ...

ruted to huve nothing
of value bc)'ond ·the
two top diamonds,
CELEBRITY CIPHER
decided thu.t South
would succeed unless
by Lula c.mpoa
given a nudge in the
c IJ'Il)CW..=-... - h n \ .. !01 ¥ *llf"""""
I*IIJII, put""'
l!acll .... In ... ciiJI*lltllllliQi ·
wrong direction. InTod!QI'$ eM: Wtqlllls C
stead of playing the
'C: .D lHO IH IHIT TA~H
diamond two at trick
one, Eust dropDCd Ahe
liM tT'ItLM
IHHD PZH
10! This would normully be the start of II
MTHHIC PZIP . aHMWIHO
high-low from u doubleton. West knew
IL tTTA'IC:DI'
PA 0 ••
that thut wus impossiHilt.',
ble becuuse it would
give South five diamonds -· he would
T s c: I' C: K c: I t D 0 H T T A
not huvo rebid two
PREVIOUS SOlUTION - 'Much tllott, much ~ " no-trump. However,
EU!lpldM
West saw no reason
'Ht that wouiQ nao. tna till~ muat c:Lirnb 1t1a tttt.' - Tllomla
. to Ou!gues~ his purl· . ~.J!F~y!:.:ltf~~~~-=~-:--~~~~~~~
ner. So, West eushed '::~:::~' S&lt;l:'\\.4)'~.-l£'E~S•
the diamond king und · ---~.;,._...; lollt.oi ~, Ct.AY a. HIW.N - - - - - conlinued with u third
round,
0 Roarranv• . 1-'!e" af the
Now look at the
foor ocrambltd wordt bt- .
situation
from low to 'form lour almplt wordl.
South's point ofview.
0 0SN0 G
East was presumubly 1-r-l;...,.;.I..;,.,;I!,;_;;.I~~2-l
poised to overruff
. . . . .
dummy's s pude ":::::;~~::;:~~..:~
seven. Then, if the ,.., G U H 0 0
spudc finesse lost, the . 1--.,.,.;....r--.,.,r;.-r--l
contract would full.
South, ussuming u 3·2 . '-::·::;:~·:;:·~-~
spade breuk. rurfed ,..,
with dummy's 10.
· R E S A E ::,,
Most people know what Is
Suddenly ~ust hud .
1111 meant when It Is uld that talk.is
two trump tncks.
:::·:;~·~-:;:~·~l., cheap In this election year, we
The three l's were I"
..
can agree,that holds true except .
hiJ!h lighted by un
C R E K 0 T . when ........ does it. ·
Enslish uctress; Ellen
I~
I~.
Com~ltte lhe . c~ocolt quate&lt;l
Terry, in her uutobi· . . . . . . . 1 bv fllllno In the mlulnJ warda
ography: "lmuglnavoo d•••l011 tram atep No.3 below.
tion, industry, nnd in$ PAINT NUMBmo
~~ ~~
~~ 1•
telligence •• the three
· i~l~ET~T~~-~S~IN~SQ~U~A=RE:!:S~·~·=~·~·=~·:::;-=~·=*"~·
• I' s •• ure ull indispen... UNSCRAMBLe FOR
snble to the uctress, v ANSWft
·
.
but of these three the
· · ·I • •
:
greatest is 1 without .
SCIIAM-I.ITS ANSWilS
doubt, imag1~ntlo~."
Spunky -Image. Guild. Unkind. KIND of GUY
tiv~f~~h1~de~~gtnaThe fellow applied for a Job •• an Industrial spy. He"
·
.. . wa1 given an env1lope to deliver to the ne.xt floor. The
; : fellow opened the envelope and found a note that read:
.'Report for work tomorrow. You're our KIND of GUY I"

.....

L.Oi:) Of (:&gt;EQPLE (..\:&gt;\'E'.t--1
TO \'N..K~D\0 ...

""

""

"''

. OALLIPOUS - Anty
Bowm1m•Moore. Edwatd
JOIICS Investment representative in Olllllpolis, will
host a free pro&amp;rtlnt for
fnvestors

NATE THE II'IPOII.TA T

TtiiNt. l'i&gt; WINNING

THE T&amp;~M TITLE!

Wf!.'RE A T ·~M !

I

I KNOW
TAAT,

FOOL.'

I! I I' I

nrn•.1"r

Is 1 I' 1

MAKE THE

I
1..

TO SIT 11-1

LI~~MARCIE

I WEDNESDAY

JUNE Sl

I

I

I e
I'

n

h

e r

Tuesday,
111M U',
at 6:30
p.m., at

:::: ·:

BIG NATE

o

office,
990A
Second
Avenue
lowiMII Moort ln, 0alllpo11s.
•OueMs will he11r from
~ward
Jones
and
Americ:llll Funds expens on
whether the sto.ck market'&amp;
heyday will return and
wli11t flnanci11l decision&amp;
Investors should mllke this
summer.
For det11ils or .to reserve a
seat, coniact Moore at 441·
944l.

1•
I' I' ·1
I I I I I I I

....

Thursduy, June 6, 2002
l'hc1·c'K u MOOd ~huncc you
mny tukc It upun yuursc!f to
unucrMO n .sclf·hnprovcmcnt
Jl'Oilrnm In the ycP.r uheud.
Whnt 1ron~plrcs con be u total
l'emakc of your oltltudc,/•hl·
lo~uphy ~na dcmeunor, u I of
which Will contrlbule to u
succe~sful, new life.
GP1MINI (Muy 21-Junc 20)
-- l.lc rrcpurcu 111 ac1 whot
you !live out toduy should
your love of jokes 6c played
on the wron~ j1ersun. You
muy not like ~~~ ur her rclort.
Know where to lonk for ro·
munce nnd you'll find it, The
Amn,_Ornph Mnlclnnukcr In·
stanlly rcvculs which sians
111e romnntlcnl))r pe•fcct for
you. Muil $2.7' Ill Mdtch·
mukcr, c/o !hi~ IICW!PDP.e!1
P.O. Do~ 167. Wickliffe, 011

44092.

CANC"ER (June 21-Juiy 22)
•• Thi~ I! clc~rly nut a pllod
day to dod~c uuln~: your wurk
or lmndllng u compUcnh:d ~~·
!lsnmcnt. Tho'c who nrc cK·
peeling you tn full111 your du·
lie! will come down on you
quite

hurd. '

LEO (July 23 - Au~. 22) ••
i\lihnuvh you mny be In u !oclnblc mwu loduy, bo curoful
nf lite companions wlih whom
ynu choose 111 htiiLM out. Coli·

'lllrtbdlt''
•
frunllltllllllli ~~~•cs cun c1·cutc

tn&gt;nblo lhul.wll Involve yon.
VIROO (Au~ . 23·Scpt. 22)
•• Wholcvcr It 1s you're holl"
lny Ill uchluvc toduY. could totuny be lust ·· with ll.ttlu or no
chun~c uf bclnjj reu·lcved ••
shuuld ym1 lln~ II dl fncull to
discern between O!!Crtlvcncs.l
ond u~greaslvcness.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·01:1. 23) •
· You may be. forced to deal
with someone toduy when
hammerlna out n problem be·
tween you. The pathway between you will only widen lr
neither or you arc uble to
rurae a now roud.
·
~'CORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) •• A business mutlcr must
be evuluotcd lovlcally tod~y .,
wlihuut uny cmollon being allowed to enter Into the as!eU·
ment •• If you arc to have ony
hope of dccldlna Its worth or
· fmllllc!. Don't tuke anythln¥
ttahtly.
SAOITTARiUS (Nov. 23Dcc. 21) •• All fmportunl
naroemenl you've been work·
Ins on muy ao 1uuth on you
toduy unleu you are wl!linJI.
lo mOdify or ulter u number of
J19IOI! thut you thought WCIO
vltnl. Seek ou1 aood substl·
lutes.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
19) • To receive rroper remu·

'
norutlon tur your produ~Uvily
tnduy. you muM ensure that
tho person f11r whom you ore
dulngthc work ooknowlodaos .
up front whutlllhe will pay.
AQUARIUS (Jun. 20·Fcb.
I~) .. Yuu will be u wol·
c1&gt;med uddhlon to uny soc:lnl
Mlllhcrlnlltodoy, but be oure·
ful nm to monopoll&amp;o tho
~pmllaht. Mukc ocrtuln olhers
ore ublc to act on st1gc from
time to lime.
PISCES (l'eb. 20·Mareh
21l) •• Should the aolna 1ct u
bit tou&amp;h today. you may
wunt walk away an(f leuve the
tuk unflnl3hed. Unfortu•
··nluct)4, If la'ft unattended
. what you did llllcompllsh will
deteriorate and have to be re·
done.
,
. ARIES (Murch 21 ·Aprlll9)
·•• Don't pretend to be ltnowl·
edaeublo about KOmethlna
that you know llnlc abollf.
Not only will Y.OU be lnatantly
chullcnaed on It, you can lo~e
the ~upport you have worked
hurd 10 nnaln.
TAURUS (April 20·Miy
20) •• Thorou1hly examine
your nnnnclal picture nnd do '
whatever It take• 10 801 thlna•
In order. U}lleu you huve
clcnn book!, lOme kind of
aauntlct muy come down on
you todoy.

lltdllll-11 ....
Calender
AS

Cllsslfleds

Comics
llelr Abby
Edltorl1ls
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
\/VIIther

B4·1
· B7

A5

AI

A3
A3
11·3
Al

.' II 2002 Ohio Vtllty Publllhltll Ct.

•

Reenactment filming now in
·doubt.at Buffington tsland
Footagefor film .
to be shot during
celebration in July
Itt TOMY M. LIAott

TI.~VOo\l\.'tSIN'flt:t!I..COM

PORTLAND - A ntovlo
crow Is poised to C:IJ)IIlnl the
Battle ofBumnaton lsllllld on
cllmOfll for a fu11·1enath feature Civil War tllnt.
However, the ls$ue Is still in
limbo as some members of
the e~t's host reenactment
aroup feel the crow's pres· UIHTII CAMIUI AOTtOMI- Amovlt crew co~.tld poaalbty be
et~Celsn't s11ch a aood Idea.
on h1nd d~.trlnt the re~n10tment of Th1 Battle of Bufflnaton
· Betsy Nicodemus, Melas latand on July 19-21 ne1r Portland to 111001 '"nu for en
Co1111ty dlle!:Jtor of 'IOurlsm upcomlna full·l•nath Civil Wlr movie titled, · "Kill The
and Retail De~t. aald Mtaaenpr.
• Howewr, v.rloua memblra of tn. 111ent'1 hoat
she recently sDO&amp; to actor
retnactrntnt
&amp;rouP Ml the crew'1 p!Utn" lan't t~.tch 1 lood
llld member ofthe film 'a prolcltl.
(TOny
M.
l.eiOh)
duction team Dan Wort,
about the ~sibillty or shoot·
1!11 scenes dwi!ll the 111tn11al Olbbona 11nd Harris ue p~~r- soil, lnvolvt&lt;ltl fOI'(.'t of 8,000
Battle of Bumnaton lsl1111d sued by a troacherous tum· Union soldiers under the
reenactmelll on July 19-ll for coal Union lieutenant who dlroetlon ol' Otns. Htmry M.
a full·lenath Civil War movie• .withes lo Intercept the secret Judnh nnd Edward H.
Nicodemus said Wort · measqo at allllOSts IUid sell Hobson, which routed n
requested permisalon from the lnform11Uon to the hiahest smullor fon:o of 2,000
the county for a small crow to bidder North or Soutli.
Cont'odcrnte rnlders gom·
shoot foOiap of .the annual "At\'r apeaklna with the m11nded by Morann.
batt!• reenactment 110 that It Melas County Hletorlcal Mora•n ese11fd the
could be .lnc:ltlded In various Society abotlttlie movie crew, Buffinaton lsl11n enaaae·
scenea of the uocomlna tllm. which would only be throe to lilC.Int wlth ubout400 men and
'ntled
AKIU
The four peojl , we thouwht th wns cuptured on July 26,
Mea~," the film, written matter WAS settled, 81lid 1863, t\Onr Salineville In
and directed by Indiana fUm. Nicodemus.
tmrtheast Ohio while trylna to
maken nm Rlchaldlon and "However, we've now tlnd a sure ph1c:o 10 cross th
Mlchlol Kouroubelea, is an NCelved word th11t 110me mem· Ohio River Into Confederuto
ICiventute/drama that follow• ben or the event't holt, the oeoupled western Vlralntu
Ult joume.y of 1 youn1 9ht Ohio ~unteer InfAntry (now West Vlralnln),
Confederate apy namea ClvU War reenactntent aroup, . Durt~ the Ohio l'lld1
D1nlel Oibbons who 1eta cloe•n't neceuarlly Willi tlio Mora11n s men cnptured nno
lliiiJht up ln a web of Ilea and movie crew thoro, cltlna their P.ttrofed ncurly 6,000 Union 1101·
ln11.11ue while atlemptina lo pteiO!IIlt 111 1 'dltti'ICtl&lt;&gt;n' lllld illers and mllltlo, destroyed 34
doiiYir a secret dlapatoli In tl)'lrti the Almlna process brltJaes, dlsrullled mllrO&amp;tcls 111
northern Ohio.
would 'take IWIY l'rilm the moro th11n 60 pluees, lind
Olbbons dlaaulsed as a battle's authentk:lty," she al\ld, diverted tens of thous11nt:b of
Union aoldler, enllats the aid "The matter Is still being Union troops from other dud s.
of a northern photoar~pher dlsc:uased and I'm aure 11 For lnformutlon on the
named Bet\Jamln Hariis and pro116f resolution will present movie, contuct Nlaodemus by
topther they must deliver the itll61f," ghe added.
. culllna 740·992·2239; or
aecret letter to 1nrorm1nts The Banle of Buft1naton vlah tne nlm'a omclnl webIOCtlled In Clevel1nd,
lllutd, which Is the only Civil ·she 111 www.klllthemessen·
. Durin&amp; their adventure, · War bnttle fought on Ohio gerfllm.com.

Gallia contractors
band together
IV KRPI DoTI~
1\00TaONI&gt;MVOAlLVTI!liUNl.COM

eol\tructors nnd building
supply vendors Jn Ollllltt
CoiJnty.
"If )'till Include ull ot' the
oontrn~tol'!l nnd their fuml·
lies, th y probubly ~unlthe
plants nnd hnspltul uM one of
lhe top ~mployel'li h1 Onllln
County," snld Steve Mur~en
of Bl11ir 8ullder8, th~ u~stllll·
ntlon 's memhershlp chnlr·
man.
"We l'e~d u lnt nl' mouths
nnd t:ontrlbutc ~reutly tn our
loct~l eoonnmy, • nllded Ben
Hush of Hnsh Construction,
nnd the ussol.'lutlon's vlc11
president.
OCCA hus four gouts In

OALI..IPOLIS - 011llltt
County
ContrnutorM
As~oeltltlon (OCCA) hu~
rurill d with th~ aoul of glv·
Ina loenls the best opportu·
nlty to bid nnd c:oMtrucl
jobs within th eounty.
''Our purpose Is to enellur11111 the mlll1ullon of' OCCA
.nnd building supply vendora
In resldenllul, Industrial
eommcrclnl nnd ngrlcultural
constmcllon projects," stlld
Assoolutlon Prcsldtl\t Rick
Murtln of Vcrtlcml Concrete
Wulls.
"OCCA tmd building sup·
ply vendors. lneludlniJ
crnplnycos, spous s und tnhul.
IM to lnt'nrm the pub·
tlhildrcn hope thnt this usso· lie. fllm
wh111 the~ dn mut or
elution wll1 'help Improve the theirofceonomlc
·
stundnrd of Hvlna In our "When peoplehupuct.
us~ nutsld~
eomtnunlly," Murtrn sold.
Thcl'il 11rc eurrcntly 90
PIIIIIHIGIIIII.AI

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

c-.-'!!~
Ohio Senior

p,.. and Op1n to
I

Cltlanaln the Community

Tuea.y, June 11, 2002 • 1 • 4·pm
in tht Hoapital'a Education &amp; Conftrtnct Ctntw
Refreshments will be serveel.
If you plan on altlnding, piJCJit R$VP to the HMC Marketing Offlct
at

446·1011

MEDICAL CENTER
Discouet• the Ilolzar· Djlfcwtmce
~.holzer.org

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