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•RBEDSVlLLB A
t!Qil advisory issued by
ppers Plains-Chester
ter District hi Olive
wnshlp has been lifted.
.-esults of a umplo taken
Tue&amp;dlly are conaidered
safe.
• The advisory affected
customers on Ohio 124
from the lnterseetlon of
Bd~n Ridge Rood to the
Intersection of Barr
Hollow Road. ·

-

:;Gl'lde Clrds

rudy

ALL I'M OOlN615 SITTIN6
ON YOUR ISLANKET.. IF :r'OlJ
1J.V TO PULL IT AWAV"'!,LL
SUE '1'011 FOit ANIMAl. CIWEL1V!

ROCK SPRINGS Students In grades 9·11 at
Meigs Hlah School may
pick up their arade cards at
ihe high school computer
rOom, from 8 a.m. until 2
p.m., Monday through
Frldny.

NOW, TloiAT'S
ANIMAL CRUEL.'N!

ICIAM-Lm ANIWIM

Historical
Society helps
kids explore
area's past ·

.,...·::... H~~·low:..... SOS
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"UIDI'IIOU

backbone of our local eoonomy and the money one spends
in them goes back into
improving the community in
manY ways," said Butcher.
"For example, payroll is
directly derived from the purchases of customers, which
goes toward the payment of

'

[nviltd sptilket$ tillked
llboot music unstruments, ooln
oollecti~ 1 and eating nutri·
tlous f6ixb, The speakeh
were Bob White, Bob
ORI\:~m and Linda King, The
lot day of cam~ illtlutled a
visit tfl the Brennerhas&amp;ett
hlll?'ld,
· . Here, day camPe.h ~njoy
milking sro?'le ooup fur h111di.

Thmatoes, other ~.&gt;egetables,
and astone was added to a pot
of soup while Wade Colllns
and Brayden Pratt cut out
pl«es uf tnwnships in Meigs
County to form a puule.

SMtlnel photos
by loy lefties

POMEROY Eleven
l01:al children exPIOrtd the
hlst\\f'y of Melas Ctll?nty at a ·
di!Y 1:1\mp htld this week at
the Meigs County Hl&amp;tflrical
S01:iety.
Chlldren from arades 4·6
lwned about tilt hlsrory of
Melts County, wl!Ue p,ll!ticl·
patina in~ ~oo• ~~v~tles.
~lunteers lhowed them looa·
tlons of different pl~s il'l the
county, tuld stories, a?'ld sung
sonas with them.
Vruious ;runes were jllayed,
such u croQuet, Chinese
checkers lind dominoes. Also
campers completed 11 histnrl·
cal booklet with facts and
lnformlltlo?'l about the county.
The children were a~slgned
to bring namim ot their l'amily
members to make a fllmliY
tree from t'elt. Other crafts
Included slate palntlna.
desianlna tin cans with nall
holes to hold candles, and
paper pu&amp;zles from a Meigs
County map.

deal or humility.
. .
VIROO (Aua. 23-Scpt. 22j
-- The enc:oura11ement you 'I
receive from your aaeoclatea
concernlna one or your proJect• will be heart warmlna.
lt'a exu~lly what you need fa
be Apurred onward tuward
aueceu.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0t:t. 23) •
- Don't be deceived by outward appearancea today. Instead, meet them head on.
Thut which appeal! to be dlt·
ncult at tim alance may tum
out to be the eaaleat for you to
Khlevli.
SCORPIO (O~·. 24-Nov.
22) -- You may have a mind·
upandlna uperlente ?odsy
that will broaden your appreciation for aood ars ano all
thln11 of beauty, und will
areaUy refine and advance
your tuses.
SAOIITARJUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) .. A reraon who
think• 11111111 dea of you may
bt Instrumental In puu1n11
aomethlna toaether that haa
the P.OIIntlal to acquire mone·
tary benen11. Be aura to show
your aratltude.
CAl'RICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
19)-- Plndlnf a pleaunt companion to pa around with to·
clay will ~me euy for you

to you; do 10.

~"

POMEROY- As a

residents .

' btta L ' ~

of ttue Area Agency on Aging in
Mllrietta, has announced that
.
.
the agency has now joined
Pfizer Shore Cords
Pfizer In snaking ~vailable
are OIIOi/ob/e at the
medications to sentors who
might otherwise be unabte to Area Agency office as

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that appllca- we// OS SentC?f centers
dons for Pfizer Share
located In Athens,
Cards are available at the
Hocking, Meine
Area Agency office as well
:rr
11s senior centers located in
Monroe, Morgan,
Athens, Hocking, Meigs,
Noble, Perry and
Monroe, Morgan, Noble, t.u...sh.
ti'
Perry and Washington rru mgton COUn
counties.
"Most of the 40 snillion Medicare l!eneficlarles in the
U.S, are able to participate fully in the health care system.
However, about 17 mllllon, many of whom are elderly
seniors, do not have any prescription coverage," said Lane.
"While some ofthese Individuals find alternative ways to
pay for medicines, often paying out of pocket for them,
ihere are many mote who simply can't afford them. As a
result their Illnesses- many life-threatening- go untreated," according to the director.
She said that the Hlll'l'ls Poll taken last whiter showed that
40 percent of low-Income adults have not filled a prescriptlo?'lln !.he past 12 months. In addltion tow-income seniors
without drug coverage lite substantial1y more likely not to
·tllke their prescription drugs as prescribed than their countetpllrts wfth prescription coverage, she 11dded.
't'he Pfizer Share Card program is committed to helping
these low,income Medicare beneficiaries get their medi·
cines as well as helping them better manage their health
citre, Pflzer'srrogram is desi~ned to bridge the gap In drug
coverage untl broader Med1care reform Is implemented,
nccordfng to Lane.
't'he program offers a $1 S fee for each 30-day Pfizer pre,
scription for nil Pfizer prescription drugs available at retail
phnrmacles, as well as two co-promoted drugs. It Is a simple, easy to enroll process with no membership or enroll·
ment fees, allcording to the agency director.
She said the Pfizer Share Card is accepted by most retail
phnrmllllles In the U.S. and that there are no flmils on the
number of prescriptlo?'ls or snediclnes.
Th be eligible for the card, you must be 65 years of age or
older or otherwise a Medicare enrollee, you must have lndi·
vidual reported gross Income below $1 8!000, or joint reported ;ross Income below $24,000 and have no oilier prescription coverage, Lane noted In a release about the program.
For more .lnformatlon or to receive an application for the
Pfizer Share Card Program, residents may l-800-717-600S,
the Area Agency on Aging at I,800-833·0830, or Meigs
County'sloc:al Senior Center at 992-2161.

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solution to the dilemma faced
difficult to pay their
drugs, the Area
has partnered with
5I

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· Calender
0111lfltds

up for lower
dn1g costs
II\' CHASIUMI HOINCII

.

because like bcaeta like, Your
conaenlul attftude attraets
thuse who are also DJrttllble.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Peb.
19) .. Take on taaka that In·
elude the beautltlcatlon of
your aurroundlna•· You'll
achieve the most lllilfi&amp;Ctlon
today when )'DU aet a chance
to uae your creativity and ar·
tlstlc talents.
PISCBS (Peb. 20-March
20) .. If you flirt today, be
prepared ror the person so ralurn the favor. Your attrac· .
P1ven111 to memben of the
opi!O!Ite aendcr Ia at a hlah
point, and even an Innocent
amite could ·be taken aerl·
oualy.
AR?ES (March Zl·Aprll 19)
.. Throu11h lhl klndneu of
another, aomethlna you
thou&amp;ht very difficult 10 nnal·
lze will be completed today
with relative cute. You'll bi
very relieved to act It out or
the way.
TAURUS (April 20·May
20) •• Never be bAihful about
ualna terma of endearment
when ?hey are richly de·
acrved. TQ!Iay, If you art In
the po11tlon to !Ina she prui!CI
. of IOmellne who l1 lmportont

team
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENnNEL.COM

Ooling ·Await, Valet· Nimbly· NOT on IT
The train made an unacheduled atop. A man Juml)4td
aboard, only to be told by • porter that he would have to
get oil blcauae the treln didn't really atop there. 'That' a
okay; the man amllecl, 'In that caae, I'm NOT on IT.'

Thur1day, June 13, 2002
The year ahead may brlna
alx,utthe achievement of ~ev­
eral JOIIII. Much of thla may
be due to .thc effort! ur a loyal
auppoller who has your beat
lntcrc~t at heart.
OEM INI (Muy 21-June 20)
-- The ways and mcana to ac·
quire somcthlna you've been
wuntlna will he fnrthc:omlna
today. lluw It comes about
will warm yuur heart and
aladden your spirits. Major
changes are ahead for Oemlnl
In the comlnfrl year. Send for
y.our Astru-Oraph predictlonl
by malllnJ 52 uild an SASE PO
Aatm·Orallh c/o thit f)eWIPJI·.
per, P.O. Box 167. Wickliffe.
OH 44092. Be aure to atate
your zodiiiC alan.
CANCER !June 2t-July 22)
-- Althouah 7 may be lmpor·
tant fur you tu as~erl yuur~eif
today. you'll do ao with a
reat deal ur tact and charm.
hose who need to be dl·
rected won't Phlnk of you al
·
'belna puihy at all.
LEO (July 23·AUJ. 22) -Don't be reUcent tOifay when
lenin&amp; others know about
aomclllln11 remarkable. you
have recently done. You're
not a brauurt; you'll find a
way to tell othe11 with a 1re111

local taxes, which in tum
helps support our schools;
public safety departments and
stteets and parks," she said.
"We feel this unique program will create new opportunities for the collaborative
m;ll'keting of the goods and
services available in Meigs
County,"
added
Betsy
Nicodemus, tourism director.
"We are positive that the
planned success of the marketing campaign, along with
the 'Dollar Days' event, will
result in an annual projec?,"
said Nicodemus.
For information, contact
Butcher at 992-5005.

,

HISTORY DAY CAMP.

FOit YOVIt OWl#
~ AGTIOI'IS'.

ott. At#l&gt;
wttOSf FAtJLT
1$ TttATl

:.rre~b~sinr:;:ro:~

rnl~ tor publication In The
Dally Sentinel, while five
r.dlu brolltutlons in the fum\
of public service annooncements will be aired on
WYVI( 92, I.
.
·
The pro?OOtiOiis will detail
the .fullowing mpics as they

.'

YOU OON7 T A~f rtti'P0fti$1IILITY

•

. • employment/community
interest and support:

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Llbft win NIA tltlt, 11

THE BORN LOSER

-

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87

A7
A.!
A.!
B1,2,4

A2
2001 Olllo Wiley I'll~ to.

Need

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(740) 446·•••o
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'

J

Discove_r the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

�•

The Daily Sentinel

Local officials asked to recruit
candidates for RU .OK program
Itt KM DoliCIM
IIOOTSONOMYDM.YTR18UI'£COM

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-

End of week looks cool, wet
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A cool and wet end of the week is in ston: for the area.
Showers and thunderstorms were expected Friday and into
the weekend, the National Weather Service said.
temperatures will be below nonnal, forecasters said, with
highs of 65-75 and lows in the 50s.
.
Tri-&lt;:ounty residents may get a break from the rain on
. Sunday, but temperatures will continue to ':'e cool. .
.
Sunset tonight will be at 9:01, and sunnse on Fnday IS at
6:02a.m.
WMtber rorec:ast:
. Tonight ...Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstonns. Lows 60 to 65. Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday...A chance of showers in the morning, then some
midday sunshine followed by a chance of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the upper 70s. West
winds around I0 mph. Chance.of rain 40 percent.
Frida~niht ... A chance of showers early and again late, otherwise
y cloudy. Cooler with lows in the mid 50s. Chance
of rain 0 percent.
Ext.ebded roi'Kast:
Saturday...A mix of clouds and sunshine with a chance of
showers. Highs in the lower 70s. Chance ofrain 30 percent.
Saturday night ...Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 50s.
Sunday...Mostly clear. Highs in the mid 70s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s and highs in
the upper 70s.
.
'i'ucsday...Partly cloud~ with a chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 50s and highs m the upper 70s.
Weanesday... Mostry clear. Lows in the upper 50s and highs
in the upper 70s.

BY KlviN Klu.Y

I

I

I

· GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis and Gallia County
are agreeable about looking
into the possibility of partnering on the county's proposed Kanauga/Add1son
sewer project.
City officials met with
county commissioners and
representatives of URS, the
Columbus engineering firm
planning the sewer project,
on Wednesday to gauge
interest in having the project
tap into Gallipolis' sewer
treatment plant.
The need arose after
American Electric Power
and Cheshire officials
announced in April. that AEP
is buying the villase. rendering useless Cheshtre's plans
to put in a sewer plant that
would have also served
Kanauga and Addison area
residents.
Because funding agencies
like the U.S. Department of
Agriculture~s
Rural
Development
Administration look favorably on communities joining
together for sewer proJects,
the county is now look1ng at
utllizina GalliJ?olis' treatment system, satd URS Vice
President Orca Otey.
"We had literally wrapped
up the seeond revision ofthe
preliminary
engineering
report" for the Cheshire project, Otey said, when sale of
the village dashed plans to
tie Kana·uaa and Addison
into the Cheshire project.
"That Ia not now a viable
option and we have to look
at other alternatives for
treatment," he said.
·The city would aain from a
proposed joint project by
Jncfualon of a capacity fee in
the estimated cost to handle
needed
expansion
at
Oalllfolls' plant for additiona flow, amon" other
benefits, officials satd.
But coat and flow euimates are needed before fur·
ther discunion, and city
officials encouraged URS
•

•

0UtLJ1tN fRDIUM -G.!tie Coutnt1
SI'Mlriff Davtcl L Merlin ICklresseO village end township represeatatl'&lt;es. It
TUesdl)l's TRIAD meetln&amp; outlinint the
new RU 01&lt;. ~~tt~~r~m. (Kris Dotson)

Deputy JWia ~00. program puticipant and c:oordin.itor, willll'l'lll&amp;e a
pre--determined time for the c.ompu.ter to.
call the penon's home. If tbe persoo is
okay, then they just Deed to ADSWCJ and
han&amp; up. If the persoo doesn't ~~~~&amp;wer.
the computer calls back shortly - a1ro
re-deteimincd depending

011

the indi-

eidual's need.
If the person doesn't answer a second
time, an alert is given to ihe 911 dis.patcher who in tum conlaets. local law
enforcement. A printout is fiven to the
officer listing the person s loeatioo.

.........

Supreme Court allows
Cincinnati to sue gunmakers
COLUMBUS (AP) - A .to pursue its claims.
lawyer for one of the nation's "While we do not 'predict
leading makers of guns says the outcome of this case, we
Cincinnati will have· a hard would be remiss if we did not
time proving its legal case recognize the importan!:e of
that gun manufacturers have allowing" this type of lawsuit
cost the city millions of dol-· to go past the initial stages,
Iars.
Sweeney said.
"Every appellate court so In October, Connecticut's ·
far which fuis addressed the Supreme Court rejected'a simissue - with the exception of ilar lawsuit by the city of
the Ohio Supreme c-ourt - Bridgeport, Conn., saying the
has held that manufacturers city could not recover the
FIWICI&amp; - · 1001.
would not be liable for the costs of gun-related violence.
Grilled
lawful manufacture and sale The justices said the dty had
Rlbne Steak
of non~defective products," not suffered sufficient direct
(IIDicl rrt IWI IICIII
said Lawrence Greenwald, a losses from gun violence to
lloll.
Baltimore lawyer represent- make It able to pursue its case.
ing Accokeek, Md.-based In April 2001, the
88
Beretta.
Louisiana Supreme Court disThe Ohio Supreme Court's missed a lawsuit brou.ht by
4-3 decision Wednesday New Orleans on the basts that
allowing the lawsuit to pro- a new state law prevented
ceed was good news for such an action.
· lawyers for the city. ·
In October 2001. the
They said the decision wlll Florida Supreme Court
allow the city to prepare for declined to review li lower
trial by demanding access to court's dismissal of a similar
documents from gun manu- lawsuit brought by Miamifacture.rs regarding ~es!gn, Dade County.
marketmg, sales and dtstribuBecause those similar lawRoutt ISO • Coolville
tion of firearms.
suits have failed, Cincinnati
,t_,
.-...._..__ 1Uo.
. . . . ., . . . , . , . . , .
....._. ___ ::
The decision has important Mayor Charlie Luken wants
ramifications in at least 27 City Council to discuss
887-6100
867-6101
similar · cases around the whether the city should spend
OPEN 24 hOin/7 dlyaa w.k
7:00a.m. • 10:00 p.m.
nation because it is the first the mone,Y to gG forward with
time a state Supreme Court i••ts:.,:l::,aw:;;s:;u::lt;.·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
has upheld a lawsuit on the
merits of the case, said
Jonathan Lowy, senior attor. '
'
ney for the Washington·bascd
'•
Brady Center To Pievent Gun
Violence.
·
Justice Francis Sweeney
said the ruling means only
that the city baa enough facts

II

....

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or,._,...,

'12·

City, county explore
sewer project ·
KKELlYOMVOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

OAWPOUS - Township tru.s~
and loW couocil membeR were asked
for their assistance ill rec:ruitina polel)o
tial candidates for the ~~~:w RU OK system at Tuesday evening's TRIAD meeting.
'
.
Representatives from the townships
and villages of Centerville, Rate«XXCC,
HuntingtOn, Morpn. AddiSOil, Walnllt.
Rio Grande, Crown City and
Springfield listened as Sheriff David L
Martin briefed them oo the new calling
program.
"We have the computer in place and it
is located in the 911 Center," he said.
"Our fust step is to ftnd Dill who neech
this life-saving service."
The group viewed a video that
explained the benefits of the new program. funded by a grant from the Ohio
attorney general's office. The video is
also available to church and other civic
OQ!anizations to view as well as being
shown Monday through Friday mornings at the Gallia . County Job and
Family Services office on Third
Avenue.
What is RU OK1
It is a computer-gener.ted automated
catlin¥ system thai calls seniors or anyone disabled and living alone every day
to check on them.

and the county to consult
with its engineers, Burgess
&amp; Niple Ltd., and prepare
projections . by
midSeptember.
Bringing Gallipolis into
the project had been discussed previously, but Otey
noted that a stumbling block
was a reluctance by the City
Commission to exclude
annexation in discussions.
City Manager E. V. Clarke
Jr. said that because
Kanauga residents who
attended past public: meetings were opposed to joining
Gallipolis, tfie city is more
willing to bypass annexation
if both the city and county
will benefit.

=

A
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...,""'!"'____________

Healthy Start
Healthy FamilieS

'

Dally 8-6, Sun. 11 :30 - 5

Reader Services
Comotlon Polloy
OUt I N I I I - Ill .. tiOitte II
lO biiCICN!Ilt•. HVOU mow ollil
-Ina IIOIY. 0111.._ _ _
al (7-40)81NtM.

Newt DIDINnlnt.
IIUIIIfitr II MNtH.

I

'

Saturday, June 15th and
Sunday June 16th

The .Daily Sentinel

•
I

The !Nin

Dlpilmwnltllllnllanl are:

bl. tl

a-til 1111111811

Health Care Coverage for
Ohio's Working Families

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NOTICE

Afte11111"' . '
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500

LOCAL STOCKS

' ... 311'11111 Ada

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TolendtHIIIIU

Plants

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for

Mjw.mydllyaeliltnll.oom

. OtithiWeb

$5.00

Edwards Movina nnd Rigging, Inc., hns
been contracted to move gcnerntors, turbines and transformers into the Rolling Hills
Power Plant in Wilkesville. Ronds will be
shut down nlong the following route for the
duration of each move. We will be starting
at the Meigs Rail Siding in Rutlnnd proceeding to Hwy 124 going west. At
Wilkesville we will be tuking Hwy 160
north to the Power Plant. We would appreciate your patience and ·cooperation. Move
date: June 17, 2002.

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

992-2117
1-800-992-2608
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The Daily Sentinel• Plglt AS

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Electric Blues

'Under.the Elms,
The ~ Ohio Uni\&gt;ei"Si~ Summer Band will begin its
~senes"UndttdteEims' on Wednesday. John Madden
will beoondooing tbe qlelling oonoert t9 be held at 7 p.m on

lbe~~Grem
~ts will be presented oo June 2.6 and July 3 with John
OimeroondUdin.g ; lui~ 10 with .Michael Robinson conduct-

ing, 1M Ju\y ,., wid! Riobard Suk, coodueting.

Bluegrass
1\vo of the area's
most popular groups will
be appearing on the
sa~ stage Saturday,
June. 15, at the State
Theater
in
Point
Pleasant, counesy of lhe
River Valley Opry.
ldletymes
and
RetroGrass will present
an unforgetable evening
of Bluegras.~ music. The
pro~ram starts til 7 p.m.
Tickets are $8 and
available at Camp
Conley Exxon and Main
Street Photography, as
well as at the door.
Children aged 12 and
under free.
For more infonnation.
call 675-7279.

Dance

cw-1 .

Dance at Southside
Community Center with
"Chell')' Rodge." from 7
to I 0 p.m. Goodwill
offering at-cepted at the
door. For more infonnation, call Peg Dowell at
675-2049.
.

llrtiM JJiif liiJ 'Miiltlld;- ab\. ~ forh rourtt1 i'me"'tet -~ "'lod 'MW: ~"-

'&amp;eel~~ .. ~ Be!iiii!IW:ay&amp;llool•,.W!Oelt: assed~·bySawt '*au•~ ScJom
~ AS&gt; ell'~e. ~ ~m ~ ~ efftJot ...as ._ Micbll ltenry; ~
Ott/1\, ~ &amp;i«l!li'l ~- $e&lt;:QM :grade WIM'h ~t -.Md ~h'leli$ ~ M1~ I tl 8al~
Wh&amp;i111C ~. ~ ~ :shiJIIer, ~ . . M&amp;di:te".and &amp;OienGle etbt w.illld 'Mnnel$

~ 8tn ~e se Wid~~~ l'ade ~effort
~~~~-..~ElM~~~

••d Mlw•:s• 1lM: International
Washboard Festival is
offered June 14-1 fi in

Locobazooka

;-. downtown ~. Ollio.

• Locobazooka! 2002,
two-stage met11l festival
with Sevendust, Filter,
Audiovent and others: .
July 17. time not avllilable,
$20.
Harris
Riverfront
Park,
Huntington, ticketmaster.com

: S~n~ "by the
~· COlumbus Washboard
~= Co,, it 1'9tu~ wasb•.• OOitd musi.:c and ctal\-s, a
• qullt show, an antique ·
: . c,ar show and ~~
: man contest. The kstival
• is aim lhe site fur tbe
: casting of the Hocldng
• Coonty
Bicentennial
Bell. Fot more \nfuimation call (800) HOCK·
: lNG
or
visit
: www. l800HOCKlNO.c

llghtMWJOIIWiilttfttMMhfJO'f
fMilt ll-l-tor~tot l·lftM to. ptkt!

••
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om•

Jamboree

•

!'
:

:

Picnic with
the Pops

• Doyle Lawson and

Quickililver~

.June 14, 1

p.m., Ticket prices are

: . $13 and $16, Coalfield

•• Jamboree.

Atnlty

••• For snore infurmation
:: call (304) 752-2900.

Men~s

••
••••
...
r.,. .

Billfolds Col08ftes&amp;
\s&amp;: Women

f.=

t/2 Price 25% 0
Russell

Stover
Candy
t · ~mund'

ex

Watt1hes

30%

$'1,99

HI·Val

Zlppo

Lighters
Ctaarettes 30%
OFF
1

Michael Scott
Exhibit

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Multicultural
Festival

"' • The Mid-Ohio
,..
f:.. Valley outdoor intema: tiona! festival is offered
June
14-lfi
at
: Parkersburg Ci!y Park,
: Parkersburg, w. Va. Folk
• music, dance, food,
I crafts and more are
· •• included. Hours are from
l 6 to 11 p.m. June 14: II
, a.m: to 11 p.m. June 1St
: and noon to 8 p.m. June
• US. Admission Is free.
: For more information
: call (304) 428-4405 or
• visit
www.parkel's- ·
: burgcvb.com.

Kenny
Chesney,
· Montgomery ·oentry, Jamte
On exhibit :II the museum, . O'Neal and Phil Vassar: June
825 Gallia St., Portsmouth, 1• 7
$19. so $41. ·o·
Ohio: "Michael ·scow The .. , p.m.,
· • .J •
Diaries of Linle Red Hen," fea. Polaris Amphitheater. For
more lnfonnatlon call (614)
turing 30 surrealistic oil paint- 431-3600.
·
inl!s by the New Richmond
art1st. Hours are I0 a.m. to 5
SCOrptons
•
p.m. 1\iesdays through Fridays
and I to 5 p.en. Saturdays and
Sundays. Admission is $1, 75
Scorpions, DeeJ! Purple
cents fot children and students, and Dio: June 16, 6:30 p.m.,
except Fridays when It's always $15·$42.50,
·. · Polaris
Amphitheater. . For m.ore
t,ree. Ga11ery adm1ss1on 18 rree infortnl\lion
call (614) 431·
to museum members. FQr more
infonnation on this event call 360!).
(740) 354-5629.
Mamma Mia

i'

1.35Patlk
113.45carton

Concert

Music
on Main
' .
Ashlund Main Street offers
the second annual Music On
Main concert series lit 6 p.m.
Fridays on Judd Plaza. The
series, free wtd open to the pub·
lie, continues through June 28.
Sponsors ll!ll Higgins Otevrolet
of Irontoo, Ohio, wtd Adelphia
Media Services. Featured bitnds
include Ernie Thacker and Rt. 23

Photo Exhibit

Entries are being accepted
from I:30 to 3 p.m. June IS for
"Hit Us With Your Best Shot III,"
the new.photo competition sponsored by Kentucky Profes.110nal
Communicators,
at
the
Mamma Mia: June 18 Highlands
Museum · and
through June 30, 8 p.m., some Discovery Center. Categories are
matinees, $45-$60, Ohio portrait, landSCilpe and themed:
Theatre, (614) 469-0939.
fai111 and festivals. Divisions lllll

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with Teddi Leigh, Friday; One
Eyed Gypsy, June 14; Cliff Riley
und The Jazz Syndicate, June 21;
and The Convertible Blondes,
June 28. Downtown retuilers,
such us The Frame Up Gallery,
The Originul Anny Navy Store.
Just Scrubbs, Greuebear Gallery
and others, remain open until 8
p.m. Friduys to participate in
Friday Night Sidewalk Sales.
Call (606) 32.5· 7692.
.
wnateur and professional •. with .
t'llrtlficates presented to wmners
in each division, and the best of
show receiving u $25 first prize.
The exhibit opens June 25 with a
reception at. 7 p.m. ut the museum. Entry fee 1s $15. Fonns lllll
available 111 the museum,
Winchester Avenue, or during
the entry submission period June
15.
E-mail
CathieinAshiand@webtv.net.

. The Huntington
Symphony Orchestra
continues the hoe-down
at 8 p.m. June 15 111
Harris Riverfronr Park .
Barbershop music and
Broadway clitssics are
featured . The 193 7
Flood performs at 8 p.m.
June 29. Lawn chairs or
folding chairs may be
used. For ticket information, call (304) 525·0670
or visit http://www.huntingtonsymphony.org .

W.Va. Birthday
West Virginia Day is
celebruted June 16 with a
concert by the Kanawha
Valley Community Band
at 2 p.m. m Kanawha
State Forest. The event is
sponsored
by
the
Kanawha State Forest
Foundation. Birthday
cake. and living history
demonsttations ure available free from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. June 20 at
Prickett's Fort State
Park. Fairmont. Cull
800-C ALLWVA.

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Qll'el

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Crow's Family Restaurant

•

FM~Urlng KeNUCky Fritd Clalcktn

1400 IH!Im -'""ut
Qll~ltt, Ohio

Jill- 40 441·1711

OPIN

•

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o1vu WIIK

For Information on how to advertise on
this page, contaCt The Dally Tribune

992-2155 • Dave Harris

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: The Daily Sentirel

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The Daily Sentinel

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WASHJNO'ION ~ Wh'almlt ~m tall~ 0.4,.....

ddae ill ftw aiOiths, ll_riel)'
llld other tiiiiiY JI'OChiai.
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NATIONAL VIEW

•

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Arts education has a ddJnite
role in promoting learning

KONDRACKE•s VIEW

·Democrats need to return to Populist themes

S.ucl ••list•

of JWsllem.

'

A flood of c:orporute scnndnls - from ctiminish the effect.
Democrats.
Enron
to
Andersen
to
Tycoplus
more
Mennwhile,
scartely
a
day
goes
by
'lbele's division wnong Republicans,
• The Clarion-Ledger (Jackson, Miss.), ota
GOP tax cuts for the rich suggest that without some new eYidenc:e of CO!pOi'Ble moreover, about what needs to be done
· arts educarima: Arts education is not just a nice
Democrats could profit this year by mi behavior. The latest i the indictment and what the political consequences will
sounding populist themes.
of Dennis Kozlowski, CEO of Tyco be.
.
: frill to add to school curricula. Studying and parDemqogic uppeals to class wufare lntem11tional, on tax evasion charges.
The New York Stock Exchange is rec: ticipating in arts programs improve the basics, as
probably
won't
work any better than
Kozlowski
had
none
of
the
political
ommendlng
that its companies submit
. well, according to a new study.
iltey have i.n the !)list. And Democrats links that Enron executives had to the stock-option plans for executives to a
· A report by the Arts Education Partnership
have yet to link the Bush administration GOP, but he Is a juicy symbol of corpo- vote of stockhOlders - a proposal res! t·
to any specific case of corporate malfea- rate malefaction and misrule.
eel by the Business Roundtable, a top
found that schoolchildren who are involved in
sance,
even
with
Enron.
Kozlowski
received
hunclreds
of
mil·
corporate lobbying group.
·
drama, music and dance do better in reading,
But polls perSistently show that the · lions of dollars In pay, stock. and oerks Last week, Henry Paulson, the CEO of
· writing and math than those who focus only on
public believes that Bush is too beholden while he headed the company. Ancf, in a Ooldman, Sachs &amp; Co., said at the
to corporate America, and that typical gesture of generosity his board National Press Club, "I cannot think of ll
those academic disciplines.
Congressional Re~llbiicans are even had appn&gt;ved a deal that would give him time when business overall has been held
The study also seems to suggest that arts edumore so. So there s" every re11son for $135 million und $3.4 million 11 yeor for In less repute,'' citing Enron and wide·
. cation may especially be helpful to pOor stuDemocrats to say: We can clet\n up this life if.it fired him. Thlks are under way to sptend mlsrepresentation of corporate
dents. ·
mess better than the GOP.
reduce the amount.
e~~mings.
Also,
.
at
11
time
when
House
As
The.
Wall
Street
Journal
reponed
In the latest issue of the New
This comes as no surprise to parents and stuRepublicans
can
come
up
with
only
last
week,
thou&amp;h,
many
ousted
corpoDemocrat
publication Blueprint, OOP
dents who value the arts. They know that the
$350 billion over 10 yeurs to finance a rate mosuls have received flit severance actiVI$1 Marshall Wittman identifies
enrichment of the arts programs have life-long
prescription drug plan for seniors - and packages - $1.5 million a year at "corporate influence" as the Achilles'
· effects.
nothing to help the uninsured get health WorldCom, $12.5 million at Lucent, heel of Bush and his pany.
million
at
Adelphia Polling by the DemOCI'IIcy Corps indi· .
Too often arts programs are the first to be care- they've just passed a ~nnanent $4.2
repeal
of
the
estate
tax,
t.'Osting
$740
bil·
Commu11ications.
cates an opportunit~ for Democrats if
slashed ·when money is tight. Arts education
lion.
Even though Democrats have tried · they employ popuhst themes. EIJ!hty·
should be mandatory.
Benefits of that cut would flow entire· ·desperately to tie the Bnron debacle to five percent of voters agreed wltfi .the
ly to the very rich. Refublicans rejected the Bush administration; there's no evi- statement that "too many people in P9W·
President Bush has proposed $11 million be
11
Democratic proposa that would have dence yet that it helped the failing coer- erfUI positions 11re acting imsponslbly,
spent to support arts education projects. That .e~tempted
all but the top 0.3 percent of gy company.
·
hurting ordinury people, und they are not
should be used to promote the arts as a necessity
families with est11tes of more than $1
But Son. Joe Lieberman (0-Conn.), being held accountal)le for their actions."
in every school.
million In order to guarantee that they, chalnnan of the Governmental Affairs The Democracy Corps is headed by
too, can escape tax.
Committee, has just obtained thousands liberals James Carville, ·Stan Greenberg
On another front, without saying a of pages of docU~J~Cnts detailing Enron and Bob Shl'\lm, who urged Vice
word, Democrats may benefit from a contacts with tile · admil)istrafion - President AI Gore to emP.hasize "the
miiJor fallout of Bnron and other scan- though not with Vice President Cheney's people versus ~ powert\11' theme in the
dais- the lack of investor confidence in energy policy task force.
2000 race ogwnst Bush.
BY THE ASSOCI.t.TEO PRESS
corporate earnl~s reports, resulting \n It's clear that the administration does That's one option for Democrats in
Today is Thu~sday, June 13, the I64th day of 2002. There
the stock markets failure to refl~t the tilt heavily in fav,or of enqy companies 2002, thou~h it's been criticized recently
11re 20 I days left in the year.
economy's recovery. .
- · to the extent of dismissing by journalist Joe Klein as "aggressive,
Today's Highlight in History:
Even though the economy as a whole Environmental Protection Agency warn- pessimistic and unsubtle."
On June 13, 1966, the Supreme Court issued its landmark·
grew by more than S percent in the flrsl ings on aiobal wanning and defendina The alternative I f11vor is being put forMiranda decision, ruling that criminal suspects had to be
quarter, the S&amp;P SOO is down I0 percent the dumping o~ coal-mining waste Into ward by Lieberman, who identifies himinformed of their constitutional rights prior to questioning
for the year, largely on·fears that prized West Virginia ~untaln valleys.
· · self as "pro-business" but proposes to
companies
will
tum
out
to
have
been
·
Moreover,
on
a
whole
list
of
proposed
reform corporate America to benefit "the
by pollee.
faking their profit statements.
corporate refo s - pension /rotec· new investor middle class" th11t's been
On this date:
·
The president's party ordinarily would tions, new acc9untlng rules an over· "reeling in the ruins of Enron."
In 1888, Congress created the Department of Labor.
benefit from a return to prosperity, but If sight- Republicans tend to favor much (Morton Kondrr.tckt Is txieutlvt tdlror
In 1900, China's Boxer Rebellion targeting foreigners, as
well as Chinese Christians, erupted into full-scale violence. · workers see that their pension pi~s anti weaker measures than Democrats,.creat· Q( Roll Coli, the newspaper of Capitol
40 I(k)s remain in the doldrums, it will ing a political opportunity for Rlll.)
.
In 1927, aviation hero Charles Lindbergh was honored
with a ticker-ta~e parade In New York City.
In 1942. Pres1dent Franklin Roosevelt created the Office
of War lnformailon and appointed radio news commentator
. , Elmer Davis to be its heail.
RYAN'S VIEW
In 1944, Germany began launching flying-bomb attacks
: against Britain during World War II.
In 1967, President Johnson nominated Solicitor General
· Thurgood Marshall to become the first black justice on the
U.S. Supreme Court.
·
In 1971, The New York Times began r.ublishing the
Start with the premise that ethicR are are, as a society, as ethical as we have sports ieaaues (bueball excluded) work
· Pentagon Papers, a secret study of America s involvement
learned. They aren't bundled like soft· ever been.
hard to fe~n~t out the cheaters.
In Vietnam.
ware inside the newborn package of The evidence isn't In the Incidents In oth~r words, the message from folks
· ~ In 19771 James Earl Ray, the convicted assassin of civil
hands and feet and peach-fuzzed head.
themselves but In our collective reaction Uke Caminiti that using steroids is an
rights leaaer Martin Luther King Jr., was recaptured followSo when retired baseball player Ken to them. For every breach listed above, acceptable personal choice doesn't hang
ing his escape three days earlier from a Tennessee prison.
Caminiti said last week that his use of there was a counterbalancing condemna· in the air unchallennd. It is met by an
. In 1982, King Khalid of Saudi Arabia died at the age of
steroids to boost his performance didn't tlon (perhaps overly so in some cases). equally clear and louder message that
. · 69; he was succeeded by a half brother, Crown Prince Fahd.
hurt anyone but himself. he was mistak- The Incidents provoked varying degrees using steroids degrades sport, that an ath• In 1996, the 81-day Freemen standoff ended as 16 remainen. Every accepted ~ct of chea!lng, ·of outrage •• a clear slana! that they are tete's self-serving rationalizations do not
;. lng members of the anti-government group surrendered to
manipulation and Obfuscation scrapes not accepted norms of behavior. The ch1111ge the fact tfiat, among the rest of us,
the FBI and left their Montana ranch.
against whatever tablet of ethics a society offenders were held up to widespread and there exist certain core beilefs about how
. Ten years ago: Democrat Bill Clinton stirred controversy
passes from one generation to the ne)lt. sustained public sco1dins.
.
ethical hu~ belna~ ought to behave.
during an appearance before the Rainbow Coalition by crit·
Indeed, Caminiti's lldmission, without Yes, unfortunately, there is an inherent · It is tempting to look back. and long for
. icizing rap singer Sister Sou~ah for making remarks that he
remorse or moral regret, seems further message In the baseball-steroid story that the old days, when people understood
' said were ... filled with hatred' toward whites.
· evidence ·of a growing tolerance for cheating is necessary to succeed. ' right from wrona. But thoee days never
, Five years ago: Ajury voted unanimously to give Timothy
unethical behavior. Enron cooks the Caminiti said he used steroids to help win happened. ln the idyllic '50s, for examMcVeigh the death penalty for his role In the Oklahoma
books. A father produces a ph(lny birth the Most Valuable ~er award In the ple, the era of ''Ozzle and HIU'riet," there
City bombing. The Chicago Bulls captured their fifth procertificate so his overage son can play in National League in I . J::xperts ~uspect were the television quiz-show scandals.
. , fessionai basketball championship in seven years with a 90the Little League Worfd Series. A pres!- performance·enhancing druas are behind McCarthyism, college-basketball betting
86 victory over the Utah Jazz in game six.
dent shifts the blame for his sexua mis- the remarkable home-run records In the scandals. Blatant acts of racism and se~t· ·
• One year aao: President Bush met behind closed doors
conduct from himself to his accusers. last few years.
ism were considered perfectly accept' with NATO leaders In Brussels, Belgium, where he pitched
Some of our most respected historians . We've also seen eterold uee climb In able.
.
his missile defense plans.
.
admit to plagiarism. A Kansas school football, traek, cyciina and o~ sports, Michael Josephson, the ethics auru
Today's Birthdays: TV host Ralph Edwards is 89. Smger
board sides with 28 students accused of leadin- ambitious youngsters to tum based In Southern California, recently
Bobby Freeman Is 62. Actor Malcolm McDowell is S9.
cheating rather than with the bioloay ncreasmg1y to body-building "supp! =· told the Los Anples nmes "We keep
Singer Dennis Locorriere (Dr. Hook) is 53. Actor Richard
teacher who tried to hold the students menta" that can give them an cdae it). ath· wanting to measure whether (ethics
· Thomas Is St. Actor Jonathan Hogan is S I. Actor Stellan
accountable.
letics. Indeed, many talented youns ath· today) are tietter or worse, and then we
; Skarsgard is SI. Comedian Tim Allen is 49. Actress Ally
Catholic bishops and cardinals quietly letes believe that they either must uee aet hung up with every example, which
Sheedy is 40. Rock musician Paul deLisle (Smash Mouth)
transfer predatory priests to new parishes performance-enhancins drugs or slve up can tie us In knots. My anatr,sis is sim·
• is 39. Rhythm-and· blues singer Dcnlece Pearson (Five Star)
rather than face scandtl.
on their most cherished dreams.
. pier: We're not good enouah. •
~ is 34. Rock musician Soren Rasted (Aqua) is 33. Actor
The list goes on, allowins one to rea- We can'.t deny that this is the reality.
Wo can't control the poor choices lndl·
' Jamie Walters Is 33. Singer-musician Rivers Cuomo
sonably conclude that;we have lost, or at But this Is also the reality: The wide· viduals matce. We can control only our·
! (Weezer) Is 32. Actor Ethan Embry is 24. Actress Sarah
least misplaced, ou, moral compass. spread use of steroids has not made them responses and our own choices ..
, Schaub is 19. Singer Raz B (B2K) Is 17. Actress Kat
Some say American society has become any more acceptable to us as a society.
Collectively, these make up the tablet we
• Dennings is 16. Actresses-Ashley and Mary-Kate Olsen are
"Survivor'' writ large,: in which It is not ·We do not shrug our •shoulders in · pass to the next generation. As Josephaon
only OK but admirable to game the sys- understanding and reslsnation whea ath- says. we're not good enoush. But our
16.
: Thought for Today: "What intellectual snobs we have
tern to one's advantage, to exploit the letes are exposed as users. We see them compass Is pointing In the rillht direction.
• become I Virtue is ilow in the number of degrees you have
loopholes in the rules, to take the unsport- as cheaters, not ns "Survivor"·like con- (Joan Ryan Is a columnist for the Son .
ing shortcut. .
· testants cleverly playing the angles. . Frr.tnclsco Chronicle. Send comments to
• - not' in the kind of person r,ou are or what you can accomI believe that this view is wrong. l Steroids 11re Htiil publicly condemned, her
/e-mail
ot .
; plish In real-life situations.' - Eda J. LeShan, American.
believe that the evidence shows that we perhaps more so .than ever, and most joanryan@sjchronlcle.com.)
' educator.
.
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Victims of priestly abuse to
address Catholic hierarchy
0"(
US• Co.,.'---f!J"-f"-fMN
Catholic Bishops opens
.J
, Da"-tOumJ
an
ucu-L
~

·

=

(AP) - On the eve Of l
crltlcll mntiJia to diStils&amp; dlstl»&gt;lning
abusive
U.S. R0111111 tathollc
bishop$ stened to the WMChiq personal Staries of those victims of prieStly
molestation thlt in many ways prompt·
eel the meeting.
The victims pnssed . l l'ldlcal
demand: that this Week's meietllll take
__.,
ti .......1 .... , ...,
col,.......
ve
ac
on Who
.........kept
ng ""' ••uCln to
aemow bishops
abusive cllllfo
gy on duty willie Ignoring wanli~
"A 1 "'" · 1 "-""-' .......
·and bared
ot "' surv
u ....r
their von
souls......,.
lO these
men.
There were 1 lot of tears," Slid Olle partlclpBIIt, David Qohessy of Survivon
Netwodt of Those Abused by Priests.
Cardinal Theodore McC.rrick. of
D.U 1 A$

· WASHINGTON (AP) -l'lulclent Blllh is moYin&amp; towanl
: a cleclualion of how to establish a Palestinian state u be
: rounds Ollt Mideast consultatiolls with the forelp minister of
: Saudi Arabia.
· An liii\OUIICeiMII by the Plesklent flesbina 011t his call fer
· Palestinilll Slltehood c:oukl come u early u IIOltt week. It Is
libly to be balanc:ed with calls fer firmer measure&amp;. to end•
ror attacks Oft Israel.
Secretary of State Colin Powell hu f1oatecl the iclea of 1 provisional PllestiniU\ Slate. Wblte House .net State Deplrbilllilt
officials Slid Powell's statement wu pnmature, but they clid
110t teject the possibility of 1n interim wte.
.
Prince Saud ll·faisal, the Saudi roman minister, wu meet•
ina Thursday with Bush to reinforce ihe aequest of several
Arab leaderi that Bush act quicldY to mate • state lll.d to
~ Israel to give up all of the West Bank, Qua .net .....

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WASHINGTON (AP) - A U.S. mil~ transi plane
• carrying 10 peoplo crashed 01\ takeoff in A hanlstan
• Wednesaay, killina three AmeriCllls, millwy offi als slid.
•: ~ seven others escaped with minor IIIJuriea.
The crash - the deadliest in the Afahan campalan since
seven Marines were killed in Janiii!Y - did not appear to
, have been caused by hostile file, the Pelltap\ llld.
Col. Rick Thomas said renains of threii servicemen were
recovered at the crash site, about 3S miles southwest of the
.. Afghan town of Oardez. Thomas, 1 s~ for U.S.
Central Command, said names would be withheld until rela·
' tive&amp; are notified.
.
, Seven others aboard !he plane suffered minor IIIJuries rang·
. Ina_ from a broken lea to cuts and bruises. They were taken to
, 1 U.S. base at Kandahar for treatment.
·
"

• WASHINGTON (AP) -The American Airlines dispatcher
' : who handled the flight carrying alleged shoe-bomber Richard
. Reid has tlled a wlllstle-blower complaint with the Federtl
Aviation Administration.
In the ll·page complaint, dispatcher Julie Robichaux. said
American Airlines interfered with her job and punished her
I for telling flight crews of possible secunt)' problems,
.
· American Airlines spokesman Steve Tanltel denied the aile• gallons. ·

grown. 1..._.... 1 will be wiser ana more
""~"'hen the commi
::f::~...
ttee preSeveral victims of prieat molest&amp;·
tlon were scheduled to tell ir stories
to the full Catholic hieran:hy on
Thursday
when the U.S. Conference of
Catholl'c Bishops conference opens.
The two private sessions on
Wednesday were unprecedonted. So
was the media brieftna afterward, du...
Ina which three victims bluntly pre&amp;ented arievances ·whilo two cardinals and
an lrchbishop looked.on.
Mark. Serrano, a survivor network
leader who is now 38, held up a picture
of himself at aae ll and told of hls rape
by l priest. ''Listening comes easy. Talk
comes cheap. Moral action is priceless,"
he said.
· .
Serrano Insisted that cardinals and
bishops should be "fired or defrocked"
if they Jailed to protect youths.
Blrller, the bishops' president, Wilton
OregoJ')' of Belleville, m., said the que&amp;·
lion ofCiisciplining errant bishops could
come to the floor durina the meetlns.
Veteran historian Jay P. Dolan issued

Slllemeftt that "it il time fer the bish·
ops to do the ritht thl111 and eiiiiCt le&amp;:~wilT puntshl)lahops u we~1

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:tklll

= - 1 R.,- Mahony of Los
Aqeles Slid 1ft 111 Auocllted Press
lntervi&amp;w that "I thlnlt we ~ to take a
look. at SOIIle llll't of llllll:tiOfts" concerti•
~ =·thouah perhaps l!ot durina
Mlhon.Y ietMinecl adamant on anoth·
er ~ ruue. Insisting that the bi~
11\U&amp;t defrotlt In) Driist pllty of past
....... the so-called uro tohran&lt;:e
..,
~·
...... polls, ...... ~ ABC Neu..
..... """
......
w•
and the other released ednesday by
n.. 11111~iac Unlvenltv, eteh round more
~
'# •
IIIUI
~~ of AmeriClll Catholics
back Mab()Oy's position•
The cardina.I vowed that he ·-"' other
anu
bishop&amp; woukl tontlnue that strict poU •
cy in their dlocesea even If this week'$
natiOIIll meetlna .net the V.tic:U\ qree
on aluer atandlni. "We're not backln&amp;
oft'," be said.
Mahony also wants a natiooa1 com·
mission proposed lO inve&amp;tiaate the cUJ'o
rent crisls to work It an accelerated
g:co with higher status, a broader man·
te and more Independence from the
bishops
The 'draf\ina committee, ltd by
Arthbia~ Harry =n of St. Paul ani!
Min"!!r.
1a.e
• 1nto
.._ i••• wor
Wedn ay ntaht on this and other
amendmenta frOm bi•...._• 107 """'"S
worth. The commi..;T~u~to
release Ita cot\Ciuaiona Thundly.
Flynn's committee Oftly lsaued its
ofialnal drat\ for diacuaaion June 4, an
e~ttremely tlaht time frame for an
important CatTioUc policy statement.
Tho bishoDs will spend Thursday and
Pridu work.1ns on the policy, which is
Intended to be binding across the troubled American church.
Since January, when the crisis began
with the caae of a J)edophiie priest In
Boston, at least 2SO of the nation's
46,000 priests have resigned or been
auspendect over sexual misconduct
claims. Four bishops also have
resigned, but none have left their P.OSt
because they mishandled abusive elerSY·

'RAYING IIOR 'htE CHURCH - Cardinal

Bemard Law holds a. staff during a
Sun&lt;!~ Mass at the Cathedral of Holy
Cross In Boston. u.s. leaders of the
Roman Catholic: church asked parish·
loners to pray for their bishops as they
C&amp;thor In Callas this week to debate a
proposed sexual abuse policy. (AP)
Cardinal Pemard Law, whose Boston
Archdiocese has been the epicenter of
the crisis, arrived Wednesday afternoon
at the hotel where the meetmg
· ts
· L~
•
""mg
held. He smiled and shook hands with
onlookers but ignored questions from
reporters.
All of the .nearly 400 retired and
active bishops in the United State.s are
invited to this week's conference, but
only the active prelates ·- who number
around 28.5 - can vote on the policy.
The bishops were expected to hear
from historian R. Scott Appleby of the
University of Notre Dame, editor
Margaret Steinfels of Commonweal
magatine, and Mary Gail Frawley!J'Dea,,a psychoanalyst who specializes
rn treatmg abuse victims.
·
Thursday afternoon the bishops take
up the refonn proposals behind closed
doors and could continue the talks into
the evening. The fonnal debate and
action Friday will be open to media
coverqe.

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SHOW YOUR PRIDE IN AMERICA

TODAY IN HISTORY

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·smith places in campus

......

talent showcase at OU
POMEROY -

Boone'
" B .J ."
--.., S m i t h ,
da111hla' of'
Grea and
V'~tla Smith
placed in
ibc

~lly

aU-campus
talent showcase sponsorcd by lbc
lllllllt
Student
A I u mn i
board of Ohio University at
Templeton -8 lack burn

W JOy t

Auditorium in of the Ohio University
Albens.
President Roben Gliclden,
Auditions for the talent Leonard Raley, vice presishowcase wen: held over a dent
for
University
period of several days and Advancement;
Meaan
ibc field was nsnowcd down Moran, DJ for 105.5 FM and
to 16 c:ontestants.
a representative from M,Y
Smith performed the Sisters Room. a local 0111111·
Mutillla McBride :~ zation · for abused and bat"Broten Wina" and pi
tered wotnen, who were
fourth ovcnll, lbc only solo recipients of the proceeds
Kt to piKe. Fant was award- from lbc evening's event. ·
ed
to
the
band, Smith is a senior at Ohio
"l.oogfellows." .
Un!v~rsit;y ~h~re she is
Judaes for lbc competition maJonng tn aV!auon manageinclucfed Rene' Glicld.en, wife ment.

Memorial

It~ a

.

.Coleman graduates from Berea
BEREA. Ky. - Soulbcrn
High School pduate Crystal
Lynn Coleman wu one of
227 students at Berea College
who received degrees recently.
Morris Seligman Decs, CoFounder and Chief Trial
Council for the Southern
Poverty l.aw Center gave the
tommcnc:emcnt address. .
Coleman received the
American Society of Animal
Sdence
Undergraduate
Scholarship, presented annu~
·ally to stOOents who ranlc in
the top · I 0 peR:CRt of their
tlass, are folincl to be of tbc
highest moral charKter, and
are pursuing a career in tbc
animal science industty.
She wu also presented tbc
Delta Tau Alpha Award for
her scholastic exellcnce in tbc
field of Agriculture and
Natural Resources.
Coleman is tbc dauabter of
David and Michaela Kucsma
of Racine and received a
Bachelor of Science in
Agriculture and Natural

s Q.V I

Resources, and was also
recently named Berea College
Studerit Employee of the
Year, and recipient of the
2002
David · Kinder

world 0
di erence

Scholarship Award. as the
resuk of her service as stuclellt
manager of the cattle operl·
tion on tbc Berea College
Fann.

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1··---····--Fiagt.&gt;ay··~-Faaay]une .t4, 2002
!
Fly your ·flag pro .dly.

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CLEVELAND (AP)
Vicente Padilla pitched out
of jams for most of his 6 1-3
innings Wednesday night,
leadina the Philadelphia
Phillies to il 7-3 victory over
the Clevel1111d lndi1111s.
Padilla (9-4) was in trouble tbrouahout his 126-pltch
outing, but the right-hander
got .the big outs when he
pe:eded to and limited the
Indians to three runs and
qine hils.
• Tempers flared briefly in
the ninth when Jose Mesa
lfdlled · Cleveland's Omar'
)f"tzquel in the back with a
~ch. Mesa may be unhappy
lif~th Vizquel, who in his new
~¥~tobiography,
suggested
jtlat Mesa choked in Game 7
Qf.the 1997 World .Series.

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~~HS fauzrts

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:::• Jellsb on

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:·TUPPERS. PLAI~S ~egistration .for junior high
Jlitd high school · football.
!Gtlf, volleyball and cheerrf:ading at Eastern High
School will be held from 9:30
a':m. to S:30 p.m. June 17-20
pt the EHS office. ·
·• Parents or guardians must
itCompany athletes to complele all athletic papers.
•For information, call athletic director Pam Douthitt at
74Q-98S.3329.
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All-lVC baseball, softball teams announced
STAff REPORTS
tint team, while Deniclc Fackler; a
RACINE - The Eastern baseball junior pitcher/ccnterflelderlshortstop
team, who advanced to lbc regional was llllited to tbc second team. ·
semifinal before falling to eventual
stale champion Newark Catholic, had
thi'ee representatiVes on the Tri-Valley
Conference Hoclcing Division first

team.

Jimmie Putman, a senior pitcher
1111d centerfieldct, Charlie Youna.
another senior who pitched and
':ed centerfield, and senior fust .
man Ben Hoker were named to
. the first team for the Eagles.
For Southern, .senior pitcher and
centerflelder Matt Ash and Justin
Allen, a junior pitcher/sliortstop were
also named to the first team.
Eastern senior Chris Lyons, a pitcher/shortstop, and Southern's Brice
Hill, a senior pitcher/centerfieldcr
were named to tbc second team.
On the Ohio Division squad, John
Stanley, a senior pitcher and clesianated hitter for Meigs was named to the

STAFF REPOIITS

RACINE - Melas' Ditcher Katie
Jeffers was named MV~ of lbc Tri·
Volley Conference Ohio J;)lvlsion
softball team relet~sed ~tly,
Jeffers, a junior, is joined' on the
first team 'by teammares Mindy
Chtmeey, a junior centerfle\der, lind
Jaynee Davis, 11 sophomore who
plaYed first base. ·
~~.~!,.I~~PJli!!
Nikki Butcher, a sophomore short·
stop fur Meias ~named to the Ohio
Division second team.
.
Also on the Ohio squad, Melas'
Undsey Bolin, who dieCI In on out~
mobile accldent in Murch, WIIS nomed
to lbc first lellm posthumously. .
~~
In the Hockina Division, Ellstem ~~:!'.;;:;,;,~- a.~ 'i~Nl!~... ~--. ,_
and Southern combined ror six play·
IIV" ~~~c~~~~~ ~•. _
ers on tbc first tet~m. ·
For the Eoales, Sundy Powell, a
sophomore shortstop, Kuss Lodwick,
11 sophomore pltcher/centerflelder,
lind Twt Caluway, a senior leftfleldcr, while the 'IOmadocs were repre. sented by sophomore cotcher Katie

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PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
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11Nct1 ,. ...... '3. 1001

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Gelllpolla, OH

1

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Middleport

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210EMtMI

Top three hold spots

•••na

Pomeroy
'1'40

F&lt;lllowilg l'ooOIIo, S1er1ing Mal1in.
Jinvnle Johnson and Jeff Goroon held
their~ tqllhme poollions In lhe
points standngs.

Consistenq keepillJ
\Aio.U--... •
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UPCOMING ON THE TRACKS

•

In contention

,.., Slilus Satellite Radio 400
Where: Michigan International Speedway,
Brooldyn, MiCh .
W..: Sooday, 1 p.m. EDT.
" - di&amp;Wicl. 400 miles; 200 laps
Blnldng: Tum 1-4, 18 degteea.
Dool&amp;nclk'll chllmplon: Jeff GOlden
" - rtc:Ord: Dale Jarrett, 173.997 mph,
June 13, 1999.
'
OUI!Ifytng NCOI'd: Dale Earnhardl Jr.,
191 .149 mph, Aug. 18. 2000.
Storyline: High speeds and long comers
push engine durabiiHy 1o lhe lim~ at Michigan.

, c. m Cox News Service
...... ~.Pa.
usty Wllllaa&gt; fuund out last week that a per·
slslent pain In his left f'oot wasn't onlY from
broken toesoulfered during The Wlnst&lt;m.
It's from a broken f'oot.
.
Filmili8 oommerclal81n Daytona Beach, Fla., "!
was slandlng there doing all thO!IO talmo, and It felt
llke !had a golf ball under my shoe," Wallace said.
X-rays l'OlVI!eled two bones at the top of the f'oot
"were snapped clean OJ)art."
Wallace is still able to drive
the No. 2 Fbnl. Hill bigot con·
cern is how to make his &amp;ae·
tured -.car team eoncep1

R

Rangers rally with seven in to top Red~
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WINSTON CUP

By ALLEVINE

woll!.

L
And Metal RQoflng &amp; dlrig

mntointlon.

Dool&amp;ndlng chomplon: Kevin Harvld&lt;

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"'""

snatched a probable Rudd
. victory In Sunday's 1\Jcono
500, opening tho door for
teammate Dale Jarrett's
win.

Wlt 0.\lla A.~ M

practice Saturday to wln at

"Don't give me a gun to play with right no\\;
and you sure don't want to take me to Las
Vegas with you," said Michael McSwain.
Rudd's crew chief.

"What havu I got to do? That's two in a row

that's been taken away from us by tiro prob·
toms. Then go back to Richmond," said Rudd,
referring to three races ago, when he was lead- .

·

lng, then was hit by Rusty Wallace because of
a tire going down. .
Was he thlnklni, ;'Oh, no, not agalnf'
"I don't know," Rudd saki. "They all sort of
run together. l gue" the good thing Is we're up
front when we're havtnw: trouble, leading
races, and just [encounter] a lot of freak cir-

ESPN.

feelill! d#). mare
Michael Waltrip finished eighth In the No.
15 Chevrolet, and St~ve Park was 23rd In the
No. I Chevy. That was slgnlllcant tor the strug·
gllng Dale Earnhardt Inc. drivers because
Dale Earnhardt Jr. said during the weekend
they've got to perfurm better or risk beins
replaced.
It was Waltrip's seoond top. 10 flnlsh In three
races and Park 's best On ish In the past three.
"Certainly ln a couple or wueks, we'll have
to take the emotion out of It and makeR busl·
ness decision," DEl VIce Prcsldon1 Ty Norris
said.
"We doflnltely dld tell Michael that we were

o~Utr ·• - l'l!"~lvllllla500
~oRaceway

looking at other drivers," Earnhardt said.

"His job was In his hand~"' to speak. He has
been running a lot better."
He conceded thar· Park Is In a tough sltua·
lion trying to overcome a hood .InJury.

(

at certain stages."

·

"It's not going too yood right now for Steve,"
Earnhanh said. "It's very easy to point a fin-

lo\1\41.00 OOOft OONII\\N

-

~~~~et~ Slllet~ J!llltltll
IT~IIOINO.

.

1, Sterling Marlin, 2,064.
2. Jlmmta Jonnlioil, 1,928.
3. Jaff Gonion, 1,1188.
4. Marl&lt; Martin, I ,852.
5. Rusty WaMactJ, 1,828.
d, 'lb!w 81W'iwarl, 1,820.
1. Mtlft i&lt;en11811l1 1,794.
8. Ricl&lt;li Fludd, 1,728.
e. JeH Burton, 1,706.
lO. Ku~ Buecn, I ,899.
11 . Bl" Elllon, I ,8110.
12. Dtllo Jerltrt, 1,623.

24\,.$4&amp;00 2fi'.m$!6.00 28',.,,$59.00
30\..$69.00 321....$,9.00 40'....$109.00

13. Aldqr Oraven, 1,811. ·
14. Oali Earnhamt Jr., 1,581,

27. Aabbv Gomon, 1,247.
28. Mike tklnner, 1,189.
20. casev Atwood, 1,1 35.
30. !';en !lchrader1 1,I 17.
31. HutStrlcldln, 1,109.
32. Bran Bodine, 1,096.
33. Jerry Nadeau, 1,085.
34 . John AndreHI, 1,085.
35. Kevin H&amp;rvlck. 1,058.
35. Stacy Complon, 1,017.
37. Johnny Beneon, 984,
38 . Joe NamBCh&amp;k 1 809.
39. Steve Park. 7«.
-10. Rick Ma81, 576.

15. r,llchaal Wa~fip, 1,531.
B. l'l)&gt;an Newman, 11478 . .
7.
Lebon... 11~47.
18. Dave Blaney, 1....o.
10. Kyle l'eHy, 1,435.
i!Q.I!oblly Loboole, 1.412.
21 . Jimmy Spencer. 1.41 1.
22. Wtld Burton, 1,351.
23. Elliott Sadler, 11.~6.
24. Jeff Green, 1,2..,,
25. Jeremy Mayfield. 1,269
26.Boblly Haml11on, 1,276.

l ,_rry

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Thomas

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Gallipoli8. Ohio

740-446-2002

Valley

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Pt1n1rt .

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Ohio

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u•u' Pleasant, WV

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.
• 3. 5®11 tlggs, 21'!.~4.
~. Ortt Billie, 2,00T.
8. Bobby Hamll10n Jr., 1,904.
6,
Willactl. 1.9G7.
7.
LajOie, ,1111.
8. Ike Laughlin, 1,899.
9. Bcort Wlmmot, 1,648.
I.Q. I!taay=, 1!610.
UIIIY. ,7Q.I.
l . l'llnk
r J!·d•813.
G.Tim iaa~Mf, 1,....,,
1~. Silane Hmlol, 1,1120.
u,
Alhtoh _Lewlo, !"508.
Ul.lltrv Foy!, 1,4..,.
17. Je1i 1:1Mil, 1,489.
18, 1bny Ralnas, I ,483.
10. 1bdd B&lt;XIne, 1,452.

I

11.l

20. Kerry Eirnhon:ttl 1,437.
21. Johnny Sauter, .1430.
aa. cal:ll' M••ra. 1.•23.
23, Kevin Qrubb1 1,384,
2&lt;1. Joll Purvlo, t ,309.
26. M-Waltrlp, 1,161 .
26. Ron liornlday, 1,1 69.
27. Jimmy Sp0noar1 983.
26, Shano Hall 1 869,
29. RICky i'lonarlck, 648.
30. Kevtn leplge, 843.
31 . lyndon Amlc!&lt;1 817.
aa. Jell Burton, 7•5.
33, ~r.ty Kirby, 124.
34. Jay !J.outor, 723.

35. Mall&lt; Grtth, 870.
38. Ohl!d Cllantn, 828.
37, Briln 1/kllcera, 6911,
38. Bred,_""""' 5110,
39, MIU Harman, 587.
40. Kaiey Kehila. 553.

TRUCK 8111111 8TANDIIIOI

1. David Starr, 1,078.
2. Rlctc Ctawlord, 1,081
3. tad Musgrave, 1.058. ,
4. Mlka Bllll, I ,Q.I I.
5. Jason Leffler, 953.
8. Robert Prestloy, 949.
7. Dennis Setzer, 928.
8. Travlo Kvapll, 815.
9. Brendan Gaughan, 911 .
10.
Cook, 894.
1L Jon Wood, 864,
12. Lance Norlck..,J!.-42.
13. Brtln RoM. """·
1• ·
Cllbbt, aoo.
15. loance Hoope&lt;, 788.
18.1!0bby Doller, 788.
17, Oallot Comrtrli. 780.
t8. BlH ~r. 763.
19. Matt Crafton, 758.
20. Jaoon Small, 747. •
I

,_rry

eov

.

·.)1

mike Bing, Owner
Randy Bing,
Technician
Jim Bing,
Technician
Usa Jett
7 40.992·1998
740.667·6133

.,

I«HHGAN IN1ERNA110NAI. SPEEII'MY

By ALLEVINE
e. 2002 Cox News Servlee
Long Pond, Pa.

N

o one in the Winston Cup garage

Wnched Friday when qualifying was
technically rained out on a beautiful.
partly sunny da~ Water 1\'om heavy rain the
night before kept seeping
through the track, making
for unsafe driving condl·
lions.
At Pooono.llseems, U's
always something.
The hlatorie track once
hl!d qualtMng canceled by
(og, a caution llag for deer
on the track and a race
start delayed becaulljl a
PETTY
groundhot! had scompered
up on the asphalt.
Another year, the fog was so thick during
driver lntroducUons that drivers randomly
waved to the crowd, no matter whose name
was called, because people In the stands
couldn't see them anywl!'
Al1d then 111m wu the bizarre moment
dlirlnfla. race in 1• when a fan ran acl'OSA
the track.
"It was the strangest thing I've ever come
· ....-111 racing," Kyle Petty said.
"If one of us bad hit hbn that would have
ruined our careers. We knOIO' we would have
killed him," said Jimmy Spence•
.

i

ll'ack: 2-mile oval, 18 degrees banking in
Turn 1·4.
Wh~re: Brook~n . Mich.
Grandatand eeatlng: 136,373.
Races; Sirius Sa1e11He Radio 400,
Sunday: Papsi 400, Aug. 18.
Date opened: 1968
Flm Wlnaton Cup race: Motor State
500, June 15, 1969
On the Web: www.mispeedWay,com

A'11-9ael
• II r Slrui:UM.Inc.

'

Mare study ahrd an lOft ·nils
' NASCARomc~aa vatted

1nillanapolu

Speedw!IY last week to examine the track'e
aoft walla and delermlned lhllt furth~r
study is needed beft&gt;re the S&lt;&gt;ahead 18(!iven for the ·
tecl'uiololy to be used at WlJIIIon Qlp tracks.
'lbo soft walla Will remain In lilt for the
' Brlckprd &lt;1110 II Indy on A\111. C, howevK

~

,.
•

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CONSTRUCTION
(740) 992-5009

- A/Lfullw

lArry W. Ba11ks,
Ow11er/Operator

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.BANKS
736 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Copyrlglit2002 Cox Ntwt Sei'VIdt. Dlttrlbuttll ~ Unlvertal Prese Syndicate. (800] 255-6734. 'For releas' tho week of June 10. 2002.

8·7 •

(Beside Goodwin's
Auto Sales)

v.ird stuff from Pocono _...TRACK PROFIL£-11111

DRIVER SlANOINGS
WIHI'IOII CUI'

Bing's
Auto
Repair

ger at Steve, and everybody, Including myself,
Is trylnR our hardest to really be optimistic
about thai."

l'llalnD Rill, .. lhauld fiiiiiM lhMr'lllld
*'II cut lla I'IIIIIM SOO mllli1111 400.

iiiU Pitch • 41 OC· 11 Overhana

liUOO

Pocono for the seoond

straight year. A week ago at
Dover. the No. 21! Font was poised to win when
a crewman failed to t~hten the Juw nutS durIng a late pit stop.

Drhw jllm, \ - li.W• CGiii"iiiidiC en how

10'110'

740-742-2289
1·800-837·8217

Winlton Cupr Sirius Satelllre
Radio 400, pre:race 00"""'8"
12l~)).m. EiiT.SWidaY on FoX.
Blllcb: Kro110t aoo Presented
by o....; 7;30 p.m. EDT
S.tuntay on FX.
.
Crlftmlall1'ruck: O'Reilly

that

Maybe we lovt ''6ur"
~PM~ too 11\00h, ei)!Wb\ftd
tl\at tilt ~~~ &amp;tarttd In
,.4
-·~.u~
f
.
(bilt blllltll oo 61\ti
ln conlfl&amp;t, tm: "'!II"""' to pA.nltriea
·t.. uow~ elaewhert II~
UMI flna In A.merltl ~tally
'"!~- n&lt;&gt; ....... )
I
dllln 't tllt that the Rtil. IOU~NYD lnu .......'1 llrt ~Ill\
~"' "I
h il · 1' auperlor. M~bt wt prefir
Whlte, '""
0
lit ' ~ our pffivlru!llll rlvlllrlea to
the Port!lllltll, lrldltlooiliY nlltlooal OMi.
.
1 powtr In tilt t'Ootball work[,
Maybe tht llllll&amp;t haa 11
~ &amp;t'lft\1 M&amp;Cll'l, A.l\\t\rlca ft\t'llt IIM~-roottil p~h@•
can t aet behind lt•1'-:M.:..~.. loalcal ttllll thai\ that
Saow hat cenan~~. ~•
1@1\\t\ roqh tlftlla In the thouah. M~be If wt tan~
s · lclwl4 b'l tho the World Cup th! notloo
c!':et~':t Majilr Waut thatA.ft\l\rl~lllilll\t llllp,l!rll!f In
Soccer whit\ It llrOppeil two everythlna can't I'Ut Ita uaty
tuma.
held. That Ia oot 1 thoualit
Dill a~!l9d1 n\lkla court any~ Ia rtail'J to ~Mpt
caae out of lhli two ltlm&amp; that thiat daya. • ·
mltel to ulat? Doll I!"J• What a lrtlt chanee to
bady_ out thtrt rtmembir ahow tilt unli'Jihlt wt haw
NA.SL?
htlnl about lfMt S.Pitft\blr
. M~bt the world'l vtrtlon II. Tlltlt Ia pltiii'J ofllnii'Jin
of fOotball Ia a threat to tither Ctlllnfrl•• tl.lht now,
American aporu. A.l\v all, 1 and aotne of the dfapl1111 at
have heard IIJ!UIY DIOIIa ll'J the Wlnlll' Olymplca provtll
lhlt "Socctr Jlllt h11rfa tool• that wt Olll bt 111\llH In
bill" •• lnollldlna forftltr aport. Tha World Cup alwa
Cowbo11 quartertiick Troy 111 aHothar chanet to II@ ao.
Alkmln, who blamed the
The World ~~~ Ia the
acii'CII'J of lllpt!'lllr quarter- blueilt ~
In the
backa onaoccer In a natiOilll· wiifld, llid the
orltY. t1f
ly.Jyncllollld radio lnttrvlew. aporu fana II\ the United .
Therl wert PtJople who statea have lanortd their
rulaled the acldfllon of aac· lnvltatlona.

Main Street,
Rulland, Ohm

It was going to be a great
story: Rudd coming from
las! because he had to
change an engine after

"I !hlrtk [long) races get boring

llfl\lll\tl\t, .

Rutland Bottle Gas)

·

cumstances."
This one felt like a victory, just like at Dover.
"It was going to be a1·2 Yates finish," Rudd
said. "It looked like we hrulthe win with 10
laps to go. We wcr~ sitting 1here, biding our
time, waiting and watching the laps oount
down, watchlng·that rearvlew mirror and
keeping that space with D.J. back there."

1

992-5432

a fire.

..-·:,---- niEY SAID IT
I

Rudel optimistic anid
'freak circumstances'

228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

A flnl tire with little more than siX laps to go

..... 13 - IJudae/Saw Mart 360,
Se8ra Point Raceway
July 8 - l'el)tl400,
Daytona Dltel'netlollal Sa-lway
Suit •• - Troptcana 400,
Chltqoland Sa-lway
·
1u11·n - New E • d iiOO,
Neil Hipll)tlllre 11\tel'natlonal SIJM&lt;Iway

•

llO'

POST-RACE NOTES

R

A LOOK AHEAD

~----....--...--......--r-----r-----1 ROOFING

I

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

Long Pond, Pa.
Icky Rudd's team couldn't have been
more deflated If II had been run over by

:ioo, Jlllie 22, 111m. EDT o"

METAL

I
I

Crow's
Family
Restaurant

By AL LE,VINE
c. 2002 Cox News Service·

ON THE TUBE

•xe 6 lXI

Rice: O'Reilly 200

I When!: Memphis Motorsports Park,
Memphis, Tenn.
1 Wilen: June 22. 1 p.m. EDT.

BuiCh noc:e NCOIII: Kevin Harvld&lt;, 118.590 mph,

"1'\'e Md a toll of top.!Oflill8hee !elt!ht, actually!.
WO'I'e,led a lot of laps this i&lt;8t, but haven't won,•
he said. "The engines have been super strong. Pit
•l!I!JS haw been l'Mll'aet.lly&amp;n and I got good rars.
l'"'IJ\IIt got ill I!Oilhe handl111i package better.''

24'x32'
Pole Bam Kit

CRAFISMANTBUCKS

Defending champion: Dennis Setzer
Cl'lllemln 1hlclc I'1IC8 record: Jack
June 16,2001.
Sprague, 85.585 mph, May 13, 1999.
BuiCh quolllylng NCOIII: Jay Sauter, 171 .860 mph,
Cl'lllemln lhlck qllllllylng record: Greg
1 June 15.2001 .
1 BiHie, 120.139 mph , May 7, 1999.
. Storyline: Tho Busch Sarles' flrst visit to Kentud&lt;y ·
Storyline: Memphis Motorsports Park is one
I Speedway In 2001 broughllhe largest crowd io watch I of just six on 1he schedule less than one mile
a sponlng event in lhe G~ater Clnclnnati/Norlhern
in length. The track. which joined the series in
Kentucky area (attendance: 70,3381.
. . 1998, has produced lour dlllerent winners.

I
I

Rudd's flat tire lifts

ror

I

Rice: Kroger 300 Presented by Ot'eo

1 Where: Kentucky Speedway, Spana, Ky.
ll'lck: 1.5 mile tn-ovat
I Wilen: Saturtlay, 7:30 p.m. EDT.

slump ends

He's been oulrun tiy rookie
teammate Ryan Newman flw
times In 14....,., Newman also
1\as a 'Win In tnt non-points
even~ The INinston.
WAlLACI!
Consistency has moved Wallace
to ruth In points whUe Newman has fallen to 16th.
Sharing Information that both drlvera find beneficial has been a challenge thel'l!nske team.
No. 88 cat to victory
"I had to use provlslonals In the first thme races
because I tried his.setups and I just couldn't drive
Br"-LIVINI
them,' Wallace said. "I ~~n1 back to my stufT and
....
0."""" Sorvlce
eveey\htng got cool ngaln. But I've go! to figure out ·
·how to taUor l h l s - team stufT."
Look at past results, Wallaee said.
"The year beft)re, I won nine poles and four
raees. Last ~. l had no polee and one win, and
that was the first year l was running ()!art-time]
with ,Ryan. This is the first year In Winston Cup
with bOth teams running wide open, and rw 1!01 no
poles ~d no wins yet."
Maybe the kid will teach the old dol new tricks.
''Tiley have a much more technical approach
than we haw," Wallace said. "I approach lllwlth)
more of a seat-of{J\e.pants, been·thei'B&lt;lone-that
type anltude. Some of tlitse [new) guys that
haven't been at these raee tracks don't g91 stuck In
the old way of dointi thln1!8, They'D aet realllt!tl""'
slwln trying somethl'lli' Wjlen we liioklll. the
··•'' -~liO
aetup, we go, ''11\at'o ,_r 110ing to WO!it.'
•'They're dolllg a lot or 1hat with thetr lnstru·
IMittabon il'ont tlitlr hlOt .... tons. They're using a
lot or compUters lind l'mjust, more or l088, saying,
'Chang, the sprili8, chaii@O the shook.' "
·
But Wttllace has quletly crept Into championship

Tri·County' Headquarters For

I

I

BUSCH SERIES

••

,,

�..
an.:.:
nee;

:·The Dally Sentinel

••: ------·----------------------------------~~~~;:~~~~~--~
••

:·

.''
·'..••.

.

•

:

•1m1•

:..~ araz•
••

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.

.........

'

. . M. 11tillunt(740)446 2342 Sentinel (740) IIN156

...........

"'

Othlt._~,•nu
•

minus-)) than Cosla Rica.
BIU.iljoimd SpUI ill '111
~1he fiiSt round~

.

·. Croatia, which finished
· thiJd in the soccer champi·
•onship four years ago, had no
. surpnses this time and headed
' home

: ~Mexicans ftnished 2-01 to win Group G and will
play the runner-up in Group 0
- it could be the Umted
: States - on Monday in
· Jeonju, South Korea. Italy
·wound up 1-1-1 and faces the
· Group 0 winner, which also
could be the Americans, 011
Tuesday in Deajeon, South
Korea.
The United States needs
ooly a tie to advance. It pla~s
winless Poland on Friday m
Oaejeon. But the Americans
aren'tlhinking ab!&gt;ut draws.
"I think we better win the
game outright,~· defender
Eddie Pope said. "I think it's
· dangerous to try and play for
a tie. That's certainly something that I don't think most
of the guys feel comf011able
with. I think that if we go out
and play hard and do the
: things we've done in the past,
and do the right things, we
· have an opportunity to win."
Turkey's team was among
Brazil's biAAest fans and was
paid off for 1ts rooting interest. BIll the Thrks had to do
their part, too.
Brazil moved into the second round with a S-2 rout of
Costa Rica at Suwon, South
Korea. Ronalda and · Rivaldo
kept up their goal-a-game
INICe as Brazil went 3-0 in
Group C.
T\!rkey, needing a lopsided

•
•

&amp;.

:'• YOKOHAMA. Japan (AP)
~: - Mexico tied Italy 1·1 and
·:Ecuador s~sed Crollia 1-0
: Thursday nilht. sending the
• Me;lticans ...a Italians into the
-: secood round of the World

··eup.

CLASS I

THANK YOUI - Italy forward Alessandro Del Plero celebrates
after scoring a goal In the second half to tie Mexico 1·11n their
2002 World Cup match In Olta, Japan, on .Thursday. (AP
Photo/Luca Bruno)
loss by Coslll Rica and its
own win, got both, beating
China 3-0 in Seoul. South
Korea; to advance for the first
time.
''This is the hapr,iest event
in the whole world, 'said Naci
Orld, a sandwich seller back
in Turkish capital, Ankara.
"We played very well
today, we controlled the

match and had plenty of
chances," coach Senol Gunes
$aid .. "We were under pressure
in our first two games and
we' re very glad everything
goes according to the pi&amp;~~ and
we've advanced."
•
Turkey and CO$ta Rica each
had one win, one tie and one
loss, but Turkey had a better
goal differential (plus-2 to

"This i&amp; important. to gi~ us
confldente ill the fiMl round
of 16.¥ Rivaldo Wd aflet
scoring ooce.. "We ha~ ......
lion•. 1. team lhlt won lhe
world dwnpionsbip four
lime$, but~ ha~ our fed on
1he ground.,.
Bruil willplll.Y lhe I'Wlllel'up in Group H 1.tleob&amp;. llpln,
on Mooday. Turkey faceS lhe
Group H winner on ~)'
in Mi)'&amp;gi, Japan. Russia,
Japan. Bel&amp;iurn llOd Tlmi~
all c:ould advance from that
group.
Turkey, in its fi'SI World
CUp in 48 ~ got p is by
Hahn Sas and Bulent
Korkmu in the first nine minutes. Umit Onala. whose
passes led · to the first two
goals. scored in the 85th.
At the finlll whistle, flU\s
poured out of homes llOd
stores throughout Turk~y.
Some of then\ wn~pped flags
around their heads: People
gathered on balconies llnd
clapped as cars drove past,
honking horns.
In its World CUp debut,
China was outscored 9-0 in
IO$ing all three games.
"Qespite the disappointments. this has been a tremendous learnin_g experience for
the team and; on a more gen·
era1level. for Chino's sOCCQI'."
coach Bora Milutinovic said.
In the Seoul suburb of
S~won, Brazil sho~ it ~an
sttll play the beautiful
game.• The_ prettiest goal
came from Edmilson in the
9th minute11,mwhen ~ .~ .a
131ong
pass, 1p
an u": aU'
and sent the
I home wtth a
scissor-kick, putting his team

ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEOUL, South Korea
I
American soccer has come a
'
long way: The United States
"'
is the favorite J!Oing into
Friday's game agamst Poland.
The players say they won't
deserve to advance to the sec·
ond round of the World Cup if
they can't get at least a tie.
British
bookmaker
Ladbrokes lists the United
Stlltes as an 8-11 favorite to
beat the Poles, who already
have been eliminated, and has
lowered the Americans' odds
of winning the World Cup
from 250.1 to 125·1. The U.S.
team has a chance to go
through the. first round CONFIDENT COACH- U.S. national team coach Bruce Arena
unbeaten for the first time speaks to the media during a press conference .Thursday In
since 1930, yet much of .the Seoul, South Korea. Arena said the U:S. must put Its best
team thinks the soccer world team on the field Frl&lt;!ay against Poland In the final Group 0
treats them like dirt. ..
match; (AP)
"A lot of ,teams still don't
respect us," said 20-year-old if we go out and play hard and South Korean volunteer
midfielder
DaMarcus do the things we've done in would draw a ball from a pot
Beasley, among the new the past, and do the right to decide which team
breed of pla,Yer out to change things, we have an opportuni- advances. ·"All drawings will
U.S. soccer s image. "We've ty to win.''
.
be in Seoul 60 minutes after
done pretty well in the World
A couple million soccer the games in question," FIFA
Cup and are (ranked) 13th in fans got up early or stayed up spo~esman Keith Cooper
the world, but they don't late to watch the first two said.
know that."
games, which began at 5 a.m.
There hasn 'I been a World
Coming into this month, the and 2:30a.m. EDT.· The game Cup tie broken like that since
· Americans had been 1·8·1 against Poland in Daejeon 1990, when a drawing of lots
since their retum to the World stllrts at 7:30a.m. on the &amp;st separated Ireland and the
Netherlands, who both went
Cup in 1990, advancing past Coast.
0-0·3.
But both nations were
the tint round only in 1994.
"1' m hopeful that our phiy
when they were the hosts. In in this World Cup will help assured of advancing; the lot·
1990 aild 1998, they went 0-3, the sport grow in the United lery determined only their
·
finishing last among the 32 Sllltes, help our professional opponents.
teams four years ago.
league, and help everyone
''That would be a disaster
With their 3-2 upset of fifth. down the line, as well," U.S. after getting three points in
ranked Portugal and their 1-1 coach Bruce Arena said. "It's the first game," forward Joetie with co-host South Korea very encouraging to see that Max Moore said. "If it came
in front of 61,000 roaring, kind of suppon, we're real down to a coin flip, It would
red-clad fans, the Americans · thrilled.by it and proud of it." be a disaster fat the team."
moved within one point of a Heading into the final group
If the Americans finish secsecond-round matcbup with games, South Korea and the ond, they would play their
either Italy, Mexico · or United States are both 1-0-1 second-round game Monday.
Croatia. They would advance with four points, followed by If they win the group, they
with.a win, a tie- or even a Portugal (l-1) with three and would get an extra day off and
.
Joss if South Kotea either Poland (0·2), which has been p!ay Tuesday.
beats the Portuguese or loses eliminated, with none. South
"I think that we need to put
in a rout that swings goal dif· Korea leads on goal differ- our best team on the field. I
ence, 3-l. The Americans think if we get too cute and
fiere nee •
"I think we better win the have scored four and given up try to play ahead, we're gain~
to get ourselves in trouble,
game outright," defender three.
Eddie Pope said Wednesday.
If the Americans and South Arena said.
"I think it's dangerous to try Koreans finish with identical
The chances of a quick
turnaround
- the United
and play for a tie. That's cer· goals for and against tainly something that J .don't which would happen if the States could play B$11in
think most of the gu_ys feel United States loses l -0 and Monday - has Arena thmkcomfortable with. I thmk that the Portuguese win 3-l - a ing that "it wouldn't hurt to

cer

•

v

'

'

Ot ~

C*) IJS..SDt

o~.H~
•

Mo...-...y ~hru Frtday
8:00P.m. ~o 5:00 p.m.

I nth.•,..'*• ¥.-..-e VeNt Sah• SIIQn 1
Uo To 1. !&gt; W'O.-.di'S• 3 ba)ra
O"oH· I. !5 W10.-.dl"" 20._ Per Word

•tt• Muat: ae

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NOTICES

T 11 •
o 11 1o TNIMI~ "*"'• 1111111
Deportment of otter tor aolo ot
~':tu::. ~~ourc~, =IC - - 011 thO
1
w111 11oaf on":lltli tho t:= 0~::~~~
Hou" tram :a to 1 tourthou.., 011 July
p.m.• Juno 1a111, ot ae, aoout 10:00 a.m.
tho Athono Dlotrlot of .. ld do..,, tho

W.t.ty liM ot Rkl

atroet or 10011
fl n t
alto"'.
pullllo

::"..J:::l:'~~-=

W..tarty liM ot Rid
1111 -tiOIIell pl!llllt

a11'041t or

Plll't

=: :!':' ~~ :':.~'::! :=.n"t: r,&gt; r.:,:o~ 110::
fOld

WID be an oppoll\llllt't to wit.
biiiiNIInll.
lor tho publlo to Situated In the Tilot 'tWo; Sltua*l
dlooun 111d nk Counl't ot Mol.., Ill In tho 'hlwnohlp of
quoa11o11a abOut tho tho Slit. ot Ohio and Solem, Countv of
Dlvlllon of ,._,,.,._ . In the VIllage ol Mtlga and tho stat.
PIOIII'Imt In Hocking, Dutar.
ol Ohio, and kllovill
Z.!Mitl, Shade Ill-, Tl'aol-:
aa baing In SaotfOII·
and Gilford state Porool One: Known ,...._ 'hlwn light and
Foraeta.
.. baing Lola Nol 10 111118' l'lltoan ot tho
ud
11
111 Ohio Compan.,
11111, 12, 13, 14,1001 Lonaatrtlh'll Addltton ~~~~~ ~~~tlnnllltl
Ito
·
to Martlnallura, now One Hundrtll and
Duttr, •• lllown 11., l'lltv (180) ""' Iouth
give a couple of players a
Publlo
Notice
lilt
Pullllo Plat ol \ht Nortll-1 1
brealc.''
llooorda 111d lltlng oornar of Lot No
"It's something . we' ve Tho Vlll1g1 ol IliON
Twlnty, aa doeollllld
llllked about," he said, "but Poii*O't 11 aooapt111g · portloullrly bDu11dlcl In Ihi Plat ol
we don't play on Monday and IRIIII llldl tor 111.. and daoorlllld •• blntiiNih'l Addition
groduota, lollowa:
·
to Mortlnallurg:
Tuesday unless we win on 11111
unta1d1
plua
(n
•
Comm-lng
II "'' Thanoo 1111 NinetY- .
Friday, and that.'s got to be our Oolllll) ind tl DMII, Nortllooat corner of Nino (10) l'aah
approach.''
· .
Pull tor a 0111 .,..r . Rkl Lot No. 10 whloh Thann south
· Poland is trying to salvage period• All 111tod II 1110 the IOUihaaet seventy l'lvo 1111
bldo ohaiiiiii'ICIIIYICI aowtr ot Lot No. aa In l'eatl Thonoo WR\ .
something in its first World In
tho Clark'l 011101, aald Addlttoll, oald Nine V'!'tlno Nina (ta)
Cup appearance since 1986. 110 hot Mlln s11'041t point balno 1110 I'Ht; Thonot North
The Poles, slower than Po,.,_.,, Ohio on or marked lly on Iran lovanl't•I'IYt (711
Portugal and South Korea but btlort 12:00 Noon pipe-, Thanoo olono I'Ht to tha pilOt o .
liT. .lunt 14 aooa. tht Northerly tina. ol llllllnntna.
perhaps more physical, lost 2· Tho'Po,.,_y
l:ou11o11 Rid Lot No. 10 IOUih
l'trool Not. 13·
0 to the South Koreans and 4- ,..,,.. tho right 10 ea Dog. ao• W•t II . 00141·000, U·
0 to the Ponuguese.
1001pt or l'llHt lft't 1'011 to Ill Iron pin In 00141,000, 13·DUI.
Ill• IRtarly nne of • ao,ooo, 11' 13·001 .
"We did very well in quali· 0 ; allllldL ,
pullllotlrtll orolloy: 11.000 tnd 11· ·
tying, but we haven't won a
lhonao louthlrl't 00111.00
match since December 20()1,
along lha llllarly
Th t
1 II ova
and we didn't even play the
nnt or eald 1111 dttorllltd property 11
montlonad aii'HI or lurthar known 11
top nations beforehand."
alloy
1oo I'Ht to an 31111 Hilltop llolld,
§Oalkeeper Jerzy Dudek said. (I) I, 13, aooa
Iron
pill In tho Dtll1ar Ohio 11741. ·
If we had done that, like atO
lauthwaat oomtr of
A dtpotll of 1
Korea did, maybe we would
Lot
No.
21:
Thtnot
CIIITIPIID
CHICK
Publlo Notice
along the Southerly P''tlllla to 1111 lharlll
have lost, but we would have
of Rid Lot No. II or CAIH, lor ton '
got valuable experience from NOTICI TO IIOO.III Uno
North 13 Dag.• I 1' (10%) ptl'lltnl ollhl
those better teams.''
·
.lilt " I'Ht to an puroha" prloa Will
Dudek thinks the Poles Vo~~~~~~~om~r1~: Iron pill 111 tht be raqulrtd at tht
have almost ~n obligation to Doportmtnt 11 Wlltwly lint at eald limo the llld It ·
rood known •• oooepttd.
'
beat the Amencans. ·
aoapllnl 111llld llld1 pullllo
Dtjlot
ltraet:
Thanot
Tho
I'ULL
Pllrohllt'
"We have 10 make some on 1 1111ou11Pumpw NarthwRitrl't along Drlot thllllll polcl TO•
present or gift for the Korean Truok. •1d epoolfiOI· lht WRtarly llnl of THI IHIIIII'I' within :
01" 111 obtained aold publlo read or TIIIITV (10) doye •
pe.ople' " he said' "We
. want
. to lion•
11 lhl VIllar.
Clerk'l
100 l'tttto the tram tilt ellIt at lht
wm for them, because tf we ·on1o1o 110 111 Main tii'Ht
lnt
or plooo ol 1111, lllcl,unltlt paid ·
beat the United States, it ltrttt, Pomeroy, Ohio
Inning.
within tight (a) dlya ·
might help the Koreans go 41711 All ••allld bllll
trotl Two, lelng lrcm tho 11111 of ailt :
through to the next round _ ahalllll roo•!vlld 'oil known 14 Lot No. II lhlll llltr tnttl'llt et •
.__ h ld ..
or bllort 11.00 AM. In Langatrength'l the rtlt allan (10%)
an d .t. ..y s au . . .
I!IT, June 24, 2002.
· to per oont until paid, ·
Notes: Arena sa1d hts one The Pomtroy Counoll Addition
Mertlneburg,
now and on tenure to do •
regret in the South Korea 1111rv.. tho right to • Dt•tw,
mo r • aa, tht puroh111r '
game was not . putting mid- aooept or rtloot tny partiCularly boUIIdlld thlll be lclluclglld In
fielder Pablo Mastroeni in as or 111 bide.
end d11orlll1d 11 oonllmpt of nurt.
loltowe:
Apprllltd 111 ·
a substitute .... Arena ma.de a Kathy Hy1111
•aglnnlng
11
lht
121,000.00
Ttrm1 of '
potentially telling statement Cltrkll'rRturer
•authtllt comer of 1111, Ollh IIALPH I. :
about F Josh Wolff, who Ylllltt of Pomtroy
Lot No. 21 In llld TIIUIILL, lhtrlll, ·
addition, 11ld oorner
Mlahltl .1. Llndtn •
replaced Clint Mathis in the Ill) e, 1a, 1002
btlng morkld lly an Attorney tor Plalntln •
82nd minute. "I thought it 210
Iron pin 101 In the 1111 ChHier Avenue,
was.important to get Wolff in,
w..tarly lint ol t · lulll 400
·
even if for five or 10 minutes,
Publlo Notlot
publlo rolld or 11rttt: Cltvlllftd, Ohio ·
·
because we may need him to .---~-­ Thtnat Wntwly 44114
1lang
the
Southerly
·
•
help us." .. , MF Eamic
IHI!I'III'I''UALI! ofltld Lot No. 11, (1)8,11,
Stewart, . who didn't · plah (CIIt NO. 01.CYo017) Nlnlty•Ninl (II) I'Ht .-----'-~~
Monda~ after straining his le
Thl •tate or Ohio, to an Iron pin 111 In
groin m the opener, feels Melge county, .,, lht lllltrly lint Of
public. ttl'lll
ready to play Friday. ... Pureutnt to the another
or
IIIey:
Thenot
Beasley and Os Jeff Agoos command or And loulhtrly along
the
and Frankie Hejduk each have orcrer of 1111. llluad lllltrly lint of the
one Jell ow card ·and Arena rrom the Court or 1111 menllonlll atrnt
Cammon PI•••• ot
11..y l'lfty (10) l'nl
coul keep out some or all of atld aounty, 1nci to or
Ia
Iron pin 111 11
them to make sure they don 'I me dlrHtld, 111 the thlon
loulh-1 corner
get a second yellow and eotlon or Lllllll or 11ld Lot No. 22;
.
· one- Auoolallon,
ltnk Nallontl
111terly
rece1ve
an automatic
Aa Thtnot
alonglhl
Southerly
game suspension. ... Polish Indenture Truettt, line Dl llld Lot No, II
MF . Piptr Swierczewski is Pltlntlll ve . Ttmml 1 dl111not ol Nlntly·
992~2155
suspended for the game for Kennllly, ••· 11., nlnl (til ""' 10 en
getting two yellow cards.
Dlfendtnll, 1, .Relph Iron p n In . lht

United States favored over Poland
8Y RONALD BwM

Othlt.,.CNanuuJ
•

1\tttittr (304) 615-1333

BuySell

or Trade
In the
Classlftedsl

----

---·

•

PHepe ld

�............ 13,-

au n 1t-5 n •

'nw

"'-Dllf

AUftOOP
7

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• ,_.._'Mils. Sl'l(llo.
All 'Win.

eM

ANIIJoriatJA.pet

snllle ~wl w.v.

992-5479

Ffte ..,..,

. . . """"... RooM A·llfldcltlllttoiOIY....
Qarq11, P'*luldlt •• ~~~~-­

....

lldlnl.l)acn. K1lOMM. Ekpll

~K

-

Ftet&amp;timlltS
•

FREE ESTIIIATISt

740-742-3411

.

MIIHY Ftfvuton

740.941-2217
Slllefx10'

to 10'1130'
Houri
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

,.• •
'

sou,.,

h

WQ\lbl

ne~r make ·
thM "mi lllle""t) ·
lnlhi:s dell~, It helPs
&amp;\1 \0 be a peWml t
lf .yoo ~ Ia hi
'~'*•· cl~fendlna
l\lliMt thret 110•
t~ ~ woulcl be

~t41M

At# "o•t

· =t~We&amp;t

·~

Parta. S.~ict

~I Dry

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

Self.Storagt

4351 lh. Rt. 180
Qalllpoll., OH 45831
NPM•

Wpm

•••

these d~ Is a ~
IS to Ill. North, wilb
nine. ~lnb, Invited
aamc.. Sooth moved
on1 llltllr lu rean~t he
diun 't b~ave 1110 ~!*de
~even. (bmember

••

I
•
..•

. 117l.lncllt••

Pomel'oy,OH ·

)
;

(740)ttNIOI

740-992-5232

ovwull? The norm

••

Mon ..,,..,.

,.

~~~(llf.F'~
~~N.~'&lt;T

()I.W..OI~

00 t.Q.I~ ~--­
QUit.

'
••
•'
•

.Getftftttft.
e
CONSTRUCTION Cr
J.D.

N•w Homta &amp; R1mudtllna
~
''SpiCIIIIIIn&amp; In Loa Homtl
'
&amp; Rubber Rooh"
~
01!11'1, Pole Bulldlnt•• Conorete
11
•
Rool'a Ilk Siding
·"
Comme~l•l &amp; Rt11d1nll•l
.A
('140) "2-3987 .
ti!!J
Owner &amp; Operator, John Dean I'PN ·

ft

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement! Llh Jniiurence1
Burial and Final Expanltll Cancer &amp;
Denial, Retirement,
Ptnelon &amp; 401K Rolloven1
MortppJ Mljor Medlctl
• Nunlna Home

Th1 CRAFTY,

Advertise

SPOT

LlmESTOIE
DIIIYII'ICII lprtad
IP1QIIII ton

1111.00

446-4"5

740.742·7037

.

1 1i •' lh• · l'r\IN

". '

'

i

, u: • ll'i1INfiNCI

In thla apace l
tor
'25 ptr month .

(PICtory Oullel)
All nrllcol Wlade 1rt
made to ord" 11
o1r lotallan
1 Vefllaola • Wood
1 Mink •lte
144 'I1IW Aft. .......

PEANUTS

.ftftftftftft~
I

'

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11

I

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I

1J

:I
:I

• Drlvtwaya, Patloe,

Parking/play A11111
Sldtw&amp;lkl, Floo11

aa ~~~ lxpertenoe
,,..lllllllllel
(tall frae)

'il£~f\~~
!It IIH)"1'00 ~'&lt; ....._ """

ol\cn

J r---~

aee, 1nd lllihea the
rest of his apadaa. to
defe11t the c:ontr~~:t.
One should neither

~

an optlrnlst nor apesalml8t be, but a reallat.

m+"

Call fo,
lll/Oifrft l$1/matt

...

AID

lltft

' It • l

M"tiHI.IOftftHMM .~

-... 0.

MCitiUMW

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j.,,....,..:;.,.:.;_;,...;;..,;...:,--1

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1.-~...-...--r-""'i

1
- -

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- · · ·
U ~ C0 S

I'r"

Thurt lnatNclor compal'ld art
c i ' lo lift .. gil~· lo wine. On1 atu·
'":::-;::;-;;;·:;-::;:
..~,.~ dtnl qulppea, 'lguna thll means
,.
.If yo~ get too much of It you .. • •
C 1 T E V A , . ·.,
1
8 c-lt~e
1M cll~~tklt ~uottd
_ _ _ _ _ _
by HlllftO '" 111t1 Mlllift!l -a1
1'011 a ..lop ' - ' ..., t10- 3 below.

I' I I I

r

I I I I I I'

ICIIAMUTI ANIWIU
Mortie • Clash • Wtaty • Peeper · SOMEWHERE
Aa 1 young child I would alwtya D•t upaat when I
htii'G ptOple 11~1ng that tnt world w11 doomed and
w11 going to end that day. Mv uncle laughed and said,
'Con'\ worry about that, lt'a alrtldy tomol1'0w SOME·

WHERE I'

W\10!125

•••

Advertise In
this space tor
*100 per
month

•

••

i•
•
;'

P1idu~, June 14·, 2002
You tnn~ h11iko b number of
huare~tlllll ~hmtuc~ In the 1lillt
•houd, lncludlna In tho woy
you ourn your money, how
you Rr.nd your leisure tltno
or wit 1 whom ~ou ;hoose to
auolull&amp;o. Trnn!Furni wll~l

I

••

i:

IItle~ tr~~fnrtnln~.

0 Ml I (Muy I·Junc 2U)
•• Althy111h yi\U tnUY. RIO the
humllr n tcu~lttll unil puklna
run at f:IA~ tllltet! 1111~ nut
U~l'lt•. II Ill VI frlttt muy
lu a offtn~e anti be ~ulte An·
s'emundlntt
Y· Oat • unt~t oon lnnuancu
II ully un·
lhut'Uttllltfn ~ou In the yeur
. ahead, Send ur ~ur A~tfll·
Orach !lrtdl~tlllnl ~ mulllna
12 11 Amu•Oru11h c/u thla
now•n~r, P.O. 0OK 167,
Wluk I o, OH 44UU, De sure
Ill atalo (;our tudl~e sl,n.
CAN llR ~J~ne 21· uly 22)
.. C~•nm•l'li • matter• mua\
be h ndlcd pt'tldcn\ly or cl!l
. scverulllpJl4.munltl18 cun tillp
~ht throu~t your rlnyen.
lt m•~ uve boon jjaln•
may turn out Inked In rtd ln.·
11000.
I.EO (Jul~ 23-Auu. 22) ..
Unrortunlile ~llU may luck
lho focus tli uble to brlnM
hour rot'llcR to nr on a num·
If of nhjactiVC! ~OU !CI for

'•
I

l•
\

New Horne•• VInyl
Sldlna• New 01r11etl
• Replac:emenl
Window• 1 Rooflna

'

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COMMOCUL IIIIIIIISIDmiAI.
FREE liSTIMATES

lI

740-tt2·71Stt
(NO SUNDAY

•
••
I

Advertise your
message

Haning's Constructioll

$8.00 column Inch weekday•
$10.00 column Inch Sunday•

Fo,.,tn: L.arry
Owntr:
40·387.0111
Ronald 'Miok' Haning
Matlna "Chrle' Hanlns~
740·882-0780
Ill W740·91·0818
Call: 881·8383

'

lft

1110 lot:~~hld.)

______
______
---------------------------------- - - - ----------- - - - - ----;.:.;;;;:;.;:;::

lloltiCIUMO ,

dtclllter

ctan 11\ake three notrun\p wllh fewer
lh11n the usual 2S or
26 point~ when he
knows •here lhe
mlttslna blah c~artls

(lff..ul•'IOU)

'

I()~alii) Cone rete

I

I

tb~at

IF Bllsl I&amp; 11n optl·
ml&amp;t, he lUilMU his
putttOr ho&amp; 11 8ewnd
MlMWe, &amp;U he pl~S IIU
caK.'OIItoalna sp~~UC 10
111 trick one. How·
ever, doc:huer ducks
. . - - - -......--.., the nick, and sud·
denly the contract Is
;.---.;,I s11fe. South can drive
out the diamond ace,
win I trick wlth tho
sp11de jack, dlslodfe'
tl\e hellft ace, aet II
with lhe sJ)llde ace,
and cross ihe street
wllh an overlrlclt.
Thethe
pessimist
ovet't
Illites
~pach! queen
with his kina. Even If
South ducks, But Is
one slop ahead. He
drives out one spade
stopper, pta In wllh
the dllmond llltl, dla·
lodaea the aecond
sJ)Ide stopper~ realllna
tlit lead wflh tnelieart

'

Ct

cr:':

How ma111 points
tlucs Stlllth promlle
fur his 01111-no-trump

\

Poclttt Kn1&gt;4M
• Col11otlbM
"A Cl.lt
th1

AllldtiJ OMt

lind tile t1um1111
bltd?

:,...__

MACK'S

JJMHIIIMJJ.

(740) 448-1044

ll . . ., Dots
feel ll ...Oman

~~

OUICJI··

..

B~IND

bcfble Cl\ll\SI~i . . .
•~~.» slft'et," At an
..-,why
h\v

Tttt"ts A Ft.Y tH MY
/
AUIWt't

J4N6'1-0363

O!ACawt
. • Gravely .
Aldnl, Ohio 45771

llad 'Wriltt, cl~alll\lld,
";. ptssllmst i lllllln
whOloob both . . .

• All Ma 1fatlot l
Bqlllpmttlt Pw
Flctcly Aulhoriatd
Cw-IHPw
Dalen
lfXJO St. Rr. 7SoiiM
Cool\tillt, OH 4m3

Guttn-Down
Spout

~-­

== =
..,..._.,
Be realistic
......., ........,.
CDildiall
'

HOWARDL
WRITESEL
Roof'H"'t Home
Mllntnnce-

...... .

:~

.,_RitvM

Jetl' Warner Ins.

...
ttl"''" ·~
.... lilt'*.
s-11

..

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SUIISet Home
Collstrlfctloll

CeUular

"'*"'" .... a?

.

I

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I
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ll

I

~mti!!Cit' lud~ , IJo Ia~~ ao ~ou
will he uhl tt~11lve more. .
VIROO (Au11-. 23·Scpt. 22)
.. Feollna ~urry fur ~our~olf
und a~pc~:Hnu ntha111 to pick
up ~our ~lti:u~ hn~ no pluuo In
tho wor for.:u tml~ . Do u
llllsltlvc thlnkar und on'l 11l·
ow yuursalr lo aut In u 1\mk
about unythhll,
LIDitA (Sept. 23·0ct, 23) •
• Whon It eQITtea to hijndllna
f'llnd• ~~~~~~~~~ In bY. mun~, the
admln lttrln~ of It mu11 be
~•n•aed wh ~xtreme cure.
attar yet, tlon I vuluntaer ••
lat someone else du I~
SCORPIO (Oct. 4·Nov.
22) •• Bven after Y.Ou may
h1vo •chlevctl an objcvllvo,
rnet1~ures mu&amp;l be taken lo au•
lldlfl whut ~ou've a•lned.
Con lllons ore &amp;ItCh th~ a
verul can easily t~ R4ll r
hotsKmrtr'Y.Itfa"
. 23·
0 Tr~ I s (Nov.
Ol!c. 21) .. 8elna o dlclectl·
alun. you I1We to ~Iva udvk~ •
How•var, ~o:n•n on! will be
mort lmprt!
the cxnm·
Cit you !It lhun y the ~hi ·
UROilhy fUU C!puURO, Do 0!8

rft

I

I

bt

talkln~,

CA RICORN (Dec. 22·Jml.
Ill) ·· Unrortun~laly.. ~ou mu~

be u bU 1nore JuUiblo \han
U!\IUI tud:(. and will btl h.-d If
not curefu . To be on tho ure

r.r

Mlllu, don' t tukc u nkaron
aon~ or thlna~ you now I 111o
ijb\1\11. .
AQUARIUS (lun, 20·1'ob.
IY) .. 'l'tlduy. If yuu tre~l mat•
te111ln wu~8 thut ~'Onl\1~0 your
D!Rill:l ulc~, the~ urcn 't upl m
currt thlnftR nu lo ynur salls•
fnct n3. ncnnslsloney sub·
atantlu I~ lowel'!l your prob·
abll\tiCR llf $UCCC!!,
PISCES (Fob. l O·Mnrch
20) .. 1'uka yQur time h1 p.~rfor1nlnaall tll!kl lotluy. If you
}a;k tha pull cnce n~ceuary
. ur dohtPc your work. ~our
tcntlul or 11111klnl mlatu e~
1reutly ln~ru~el. •• and
chunee8 arc, you will mukc
one.
·
ARI£S (Mnrch 31·Aprllllll
.. Unl~sa you llkt lll!lna. It
miaht be best for tou Ill Avoid
Ill forma or 111111 IIIIi today .
This 11 not onu of your lu~klor

r.·

do~s.

AURUS (April 20· Muy
20) •• Tuke ynur pride out or
1hc pl ~ luto lulluy when In•
volvcd with other!. If lhcre 18
~o m ethln M lhcy ~~~~~ du bolter.
d!llt't rel\isc to 1oc this anti ul·
lnw 1ho1n 10 tukc cmurotuvor
thlnt~'·

\

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a1

$150,000 in grants to local
governments approved
.., • lftl! J.....
lllttf:ttli OM.'fSDitiNILa»rrl

EROY - A tlMl .
@U.btic buri!ll QQ 3002
COO\rau.nhy De~&gt;.t\\eQt
8lod: Grant ~s WM&gt;
roaducted
. du.rillf.
Thunda,)"s tt~IIIU ~­

l!\&amp; of 1M Me~~ Cooaty
COO\ro~
G~nt
Admini t~tw

Je11.n l'nlssell
~

ro.~d~K:ttd

heuig_Ill\ the ellll.llt '.
CD'BG fOtra11l1
1\WW to lot.lll ~OY\mt-

11\ellt$.

El.llrl~

"Yollt Li~: Tile ~test
.CHES19 - Fni!nds of
Show
in Thwn ' is the theme
J,B. lllld K~ Ridenour
for the Meig:' Cootity District
bl\'11 planned a benefit fur
Publi · Library's summer .
. l'!m on ~une l2 .at the
readin&amp;
pro&amp;r.lll for children,
~ Fire Station.
On Wed~sday, librarians
· Servina or a spaahettl
took
tbe theme to heort. and
!l'inner will begin at II
·
put
on
their own tim~ ' of
a.m., and a silent awion
sorts,
tomplete
with &amp;antes,
ill take place from then
refreshment&amp; and ~11lllope
until 2:30 p.ril ~ will
Mil lc,
be a ll\'llawioo at 3 p.m.
A fac»painuna St~tion w.s
Door~ will be awW.
popllllt, •s were clown
td .a\11 theft: will be ~
cutouts like this one, demon·
manc:es by live blnils and
strtted by cute 'lYra Huxley.
&amp;il\'leS.
Tile mdln&amp; program runs
Any~:~ne with items to
through
Aug. 3, IICCOidlng to
dot'llte are asked to call
Clliklien's Librarian Amlilda
Elmer Newell, 985·3537:
Milhoan, and children may
Ridenour Oas, 985-330'7;
sian 11~ for it at any of the
or Pickens Hardw~ 304·
llfuary s four locations:
1'73-SS83. Donations of
Pomeroy, Middleport, RllCine Dog" will .visit, followed by
ples and cakes m 11100
and
Eastern,
s~teller Ruben Kreidler on
iteeded fur the dinner•.
Pries are awurded to chil- June l6, a movie with popdren who complete a relldina CQI'I\ on July 3, mnaic:ian
record CllCh week, and 1 sum· Mark Wood on J11ly I0, Billy
mer's worth of special events the Book on July 1'7.tmd venIs planned for eaeh week llt
tbe Pomeroy Libfanl, Next
'I'UPPBRS PLAINS week, "CIItfurd, the 8 Ia Red
Eastem Junior Hiah foot·
ball welaht lll\iftl! scheduled fur June 2S and July 2
has been canceled.

·
SAVEUPTO
LME:IlCUill $4.. 800
. 0

SAVE UP TO
ss~soo

..-------.
t
LINCOLN

missioncn 1\PP"&gt;ved ll
totlll of SlSO.OOO in pro-

Greatest show

pl•nn•d

this 100ntb, wtll-

Jetf Thornton,
~
·t of.._
u.a

jeet l'undiag 11. fullow :
Middleport VHI*It, t'ot
~lttet

triloquisl Mark Wnde on July
24.
.
A pool puny nt London
Pool in Syrncusc will wrnp up
the summer progmm on July

31.

S1ntiMI photos by lllln J. Reid

llUJ!fUV~emenl '~

. $211,000; VHla&amp;t Ocl
Rlldne. $2!1,000 fllf fire
~llipmenti._
Olh't
Thwnsbip. ~s.ooo t'ar fire
equipm~nt: ·
Rutll\!'d
. Thwnslllp; $2!1,000 lor
Stttet
imptu~n\ents:
Scipio Township. $32.!100
for fire ~uipment: and
PomeroY Fire Dllplolttnltnt,
$25,000 for fi~ eq11lpment.
~ formula a~nt J)fOJnm
also
ln~llldeS
$17.000 nell for adnlini&amp;·
tration lind fllir housin~
11 •tivhies.
The commissionm will
sian 11 resolution 11ecepti~
the projKts on June 21.
In other business, 1.'\)11\·
missioners
11pproved
lr11nsfer requests from the
ttnlmal ttutlty hwesti&amp;ll·
tor, Board of Ele~:tions,
Court of Appe11ls 11nd
engineer. 11nd approved
p11y mtnt of bills in the
1111\0UI\I of $2S8,681 .S9.
Jeff Thonuon, pttsident
of the bollrd, returned to
work Thursd11y nfter " I 0-

·

returned

to -.-.a. Thursday
0

""'"

after a 1().dav stay
'#
at a rehabifit8tion
facility at 1he .
u"'~ltu of
, ....... ~,1
Nebfaska Thornton
·
.

•

has undergone

two. ."~
MAW su-n-.
'¥"''.._
SfQ ~

but said he.·

11

not require

additional
.
·, ""'¥""' lzation.
~I

day stt~y at 11 tthllblllllltlon
fal:ility 111 the Uni~hy
of Neb~ska. Thornton htts
undergone two mlljor
surger1es since lllnlltry,
but s11id ha will rmt require
11ddltion11l hospitllliutlon.
Also present were

Commissioners
Mltk
Duvenpott and Jim Sheets,
11nd Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Crews battle two afternoon blazes Thursday
Itt Joy J. IITn.a

NEW$~~1lVSEt.ITINEl.COM

W• will n..at or beat
any co.:retltoi''a
. advartl
price on
thaaama tire.

2·wh•$2495
4·whHI$4995

1

lltdiWta - Ill . . . .

• StMcl lnalu!IH up 1o I q\1111\t ot
Motolwall !Ill !Mid MW Mo10101all Oil fllttt
• Pl!to!m Mulll.fllolnt\IWtlelt lnlf)tCIIOn
•l.llbt
• CMclt IMI Hllllte...I!V ftUh:lt

We feetu,. ell majof b,.ndl:

G~t,

FIMtone, Glene,.l,
Michelin, 8rlclg..tone, Continental,
UNIROYAl., 8F Goodliol'i. MounllnQ

Allin II min"'" or Ina

and balancing may ba elttfa.

•1*111\lflilloiH may lit tltl!11.

Calendar ·
Classlfltds
Comics
DtarAbby
Editorials

Movies ·

Obituaries
Sports

W..ther

·

A3
83·5
Bfi

AS
AS
A3
A3
Bl·l
Al

• i002 Olllo ...., l'ulollllq Co.

POMEROY - Firetlahtors were busy in
Pomeroy Thursday afternoon with two stnteture
tires.
About 30 Pomeroy, Syroc:use 11nd Rutland flroflghtcrs responded to ·II tire on People's Thnuc:c,
where an unOCilupled ,tlndcrblock Gptlrtment with
an attached garngc was declnred u totlll loss.
Rick Bl11ct1nnr, Pomeroy tire c:hiel~ Stud the cnuse
of the fire Is still under investlautioo. Blncttnnr said
the owner of the building is unknown ut this lima,
but pollee 11te set\tchln&amp; for dctulls.
AI the same time, six 'Middleport firelighters were ·
containing u fire on Bust Muin Street. ot the
Colnomatlc Laundromnt. An cihaust system wus
. used to clcilr the smoke filled business ut'tet n t1re
started In a dryer.
Donnn Young, il customer 11tthe laundromat, s11id
she opened the dryer to find flames bumina her
clothes. Her aronddauahter, 'lilmlko Riffie, culled
the Fire Department.
.
·
DRYD PIU - Fl~tflll\teruuapect oily clothe• u
Youna, wbo pulled out fiery clothes, sutfcred no
the cauae of 1 flit It · the Pomeroy Colnomatlc inJuries.
Laundry ori htt Meln Stlltt Thuraday. Middleport bon Stivers, Middleport tlre chief, said he sus· . 1'1111 ICINI - Pollee continue to probt the cause
ftr.fl&amp;httr., plcturtd here enttrtna the bulldln&amp;, pected the clothes combusted from oil or grease, of 1 structure fire on Peoplea Terrlct In Pomeroy on
r.•pondtd while Pomeroy c~twt were on the scene causlna the fire within the dryer. Stivers said he did· Thureday, The bulldln&amp; wee unoccupied. (David
of • ft,. on Ptoplea Ttrrece. (Joy J. Settltl)
n't see 1 smoke detector within the building.
Herrlt)

THE AREA'S ONLY
DEALER

~

•
Check All Our lnYifttory On Our Wtbaltt www.tumplkttlm.com
...._ '*'

lllllllt of !llllllnllsn. 'Ptlsu lnslude ftlhlaa; 1111,

*" •

tlllfl, ~,abet Mt lllotudad

'

T

HOURS:
Mon • Frt
9·7:
. Sat. 9·5

LINCOLN
PREMIER
EXPERIENCE
l

1:00 • 9:00 PM • S.V.n Days a Vle•k
kll ; ·

1 On phyalcian

ia O'lallablt 1o 11M pallenta with minor illntaa and lnlury

Pallenla ffrf11 olio laltt ociYOuiCIQI of lht ....- offtrtcllhfOUih our

EmeraeMX Department
• Erne~gency Physician On·Site 24 ~rs a Day, 7 Day. a Week
for IIIONinlonnation,

coli

.111•4.11
'

MEDICAL CENTER
-JACKSON

Discouer the Holzer Diffe1·ence

www.bolzer.org ·

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