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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 ·

�•••

woi ss

41

a sa sa s: i•ll&amp;lit

BRI FS

on

TtiP'PERS PLAlNS Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District's regula
board meeting of June 17
has ben changed to June 24.

ndto
~;000

I .Mil

JUN.

I !boO

'~
'~
'.2till

uoo
IlOilO

aoudy,.rainy Saturday

-i!Uiil.

.

'liOO

Dissolutions
flied

5

energy
111ore details

''

'

NOTICE

•
•

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

-~~~~~· 1

Con tetlon Polley

0111 11\lil'l f:IOlltt!!lln d lll5tM Ia
10 bt M:tlllt"- It Y\111 ~ ot 1111
tlftlf il'll at111». ~1M M'WtftiO!n
tl (?40) MNUI,

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-• _ __ __ - .
IMfll - · ... -

.=-:=,a..

Subscrib« today.

'I'M~

Saturday, June 15th and
Sunday June 16th
Dally a-e. Sun. 11:30 - s

500

SAM t.o'AJ101t

CHlCf~ U~tm&gt; MltHOOKf ~

~lftlll~l"l

fiiiiMIIIIMI\..11

bt. lD

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•aoPM

Othltl' ltNIOM

1lfl WNlllttRS t.D

AMTtlllnt

&amp;-aoPM .
fAR MMI IHrQRMmoHI (llLI

Plants ·

•~ra oal7~a-.a

for

$5.00

...._...._to
reltore each individual we serve
to fullest poaalble level of physical, mental, social,
It Is the mission of the

the

avocatlonal, sensory and spiritual function.

ue
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'I

•

•••bill•

· • Occupational Therapy
1

Phyllcal Therapy
• Speech Therapy

1111 nm

•II•••

PLEASANT
VALLEY

�The Daily Sentinel

!The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

utts in at

7~,~~':.'!·;::=·.~~51
-.mydellyMntlltel.com

DEAR ABBY: Till: wama~~. who
asked if there Were: any rules of etiquette. or guidelines for wbca llli exspouse is IIQspitalized or die$.
remindrrl me of a pUlfilt inci&lt;lea.t
When my beloved .lmsbud died,·
his. ex-wife was DOt Ollly .- tho
funeral borne thankina evc:ryoae for
coming (as. though she were the
bereaved widow), but she spoke at
length at the Catholic Mass about
how she foond "acceptanCe, forgiveness, blah, blah, blah ... "
That WOINII had been married 10
my husband for on.t:¥ seven years.
and they had been divorced for ll
years when I married him. We had
been married for 13 happ)' years.
That I c0111dn't bury my dear busband without this woman's interference was very upsetting. -STILL
UPSET IN FLORIDA . ·
.
DEAR STILL UPSET: If it'&amp;

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dlck.,.on
Publlaher

Chit,...,_ Hoelllcl'l

Diane Klly Hill
Controller

GilneraiMlMliQtl'

n,,,,.,..w

,......,. • Hlltw"" ~~Hln• ,._ JM wrn~~. ..w IMm
. , Af6jfd lit t41tfq.,Y lltrlr h ti6ttH •MIIIcWI Mtft11 W ~f 111M1hr.
No • ......., lfflfn ll'ill h
1.-.. ,,.._, h I• ,.., '""'· - . , , . .

u...., ,. ,.,.tHM~~t~o.

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txt'ftiHrl M t111 coiwiiUI ,.,.., t n lfw COIIttftl,., tt/th OAitJ \oitUq

ollwwbt ttMftl.

·

--

NATIONAL VIEW

·Progress

-·
·--=--

Bush~

European trip may have
had its constructive side qfter all

• Odessa (Texas) American, on Bush s trip:
President Bush's trip to Europe has been one of
those largely predictable events where national leaders reassure the world of their undying friendship,
speak broadly about past wars and events, and vow
to work together for the good of humanity.
Nevertheless, Bush's speech before the German
parliament, or Bundestag, in Berlin during the trip
was enlightening maybe not to the Germans who
were there or to those who read the text, but to Bush
himself.
If nothing else, Bush got out of the isolated world ·
of Washington and heard a decidedly different, and
distinctively European, take on American military
efforts in Afghanistan and on U.S. foreign policy in
general.
·
· ... Furthermore, communist demonstrators burst
into the chambers and interrupted Bush's address.
About 20,000 mostly leftist demonstrators protested
on city streets.
·
With far more decorum and far less grandstanding,
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and · 'Other
German leaders expressed concern about apparent
U.S. plans to attack Iraq as the next phase of the continuing war on terrorism.
·They complained about America's unilateral
efforts to build an alliance with Russia, apparently at
Europe's expense ....
And it's probably a positive sign that the president
leam~d that international sup~rt for the U.S. war
isn't endless. And Bush was nght to press Putin on
arms shipments to Iran. Maybe it was a constructive
visit, after alL
.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, June 14, the 16Sth day of 2002. There are
. 200 days left in the year. This is Flag Day.
: Today's Highlight in History:
: On June 14, 1777, 225 years ago, the Continental Con,ress
: in Philadelphia adopted the Stars and Stripes as the nauonal
· flag.
On this date: ·
In 177S, the United States
was founded.
In 1841, the first Canadian parliament opened in Kingston.
: In 1846, a group of U.S . settlers in Sonoma proclaimed the
: Republic of California.
·
: In 1922, Warren G. Harding became the first president
· heard on radio, as .Baltimore station WEAR broadcast his
: speech dedicating the Francis Scott Key memorial at Fort
McHenry.
In 1940, German troops entered Paris during World War II.
In 1940, in German-occupied Poland, the Nazis opened
: their concenlration camp at Auschwitz.
: In 1943, the Supreme Court ruled schoolchildren could not
: be compelled to salute the flag of the United States if doing so
: conflicted with their religious beliefs.
: In 1954, President Eisenhower signed an order adding the
· words "under God" w the Pledge of Allegiance.
' In 1982, Argentine forces surrendered to British troOps on
. the disputed Falkland Islands.
• In 1985, the 17-qay hijack ordeal of TWA Flight 847 be~an
: as a pair of Lebanese Shiite Muslim extremists seized the Jet. :liner shortly after takeoff from Athens, Greece.
·
: Ten years ago: The Barth Summit concluded in Rio de
: Janeiro, BrllZiL The C~icago Bulls won the NBA champi, onship, beating lhe Portland Trail Blazers in game six, 97-93.
Mona Van Duyn became the first woman to be named the
. nation's poet laureate by the Library of Congress.
: Five years ago: President Clinton opened a yearlong cam• paign aaainst racism with a commencement address at the
:University of California, San Diej!O, in .which he defended
: aft1rtnatlve action and plead.ld w1tli Americans to confront
· ; and erase their most deeply held prejudices. A 1939 comic
book featuring the firat ap~arance by Batman was auctioned
• off for $68,500 at Sotheby s in New York.
: One year ago: The Bush administration announced the Navy
· ; would end Its bombing exercises on Vieques Island off the
:coast of Puerto Rico by May 2003. Pre'sident Bush sparred
· with Huropean leaders in Sweden over climale change, unwa• vering in his opposition to a global warming treaty. Mike
Gartner, Jar! Kurri, Vyacheslav Fetisov and Dale Hawerchuk
• were elected to the rockey Hall of Fame.
: Today's Birthday : Actor Gene Barry is 79. Former White
: House news secretary Pierre Salinger is 77. Actress Marla
: Gibbs is 71. Acwr Jack Bannon is 62. Rock singer Rod Argent
(The Zomblest Argent) is 57. Real estate developer Donald
Trump is 56. Singer Janet Lennon (The Lennon Sisters) is 56.
Rode musician.Alan White (Yes) is 53. Actor Eddie Meklca is
; SO. Actor Will Patton is 48. Olympic gold-medal speed skater
:Eric Heiden is 44. Singer Boy George is 41.

Armr

.

Dear
Abby
ADVlCE '

MEIGS NOTEBOOK
,.Kinp' .
to perfonit at
local church

SAINTS AND .SINNERS

Here~ one way oj reachi~g sexual equality in church
'

If I were the pope - and you will be
happy to know that I have not been
approached - I would maintain the
church's rule concerning an unmarried
priesthood as the present pope has done.
But I would also go to work on ordaining women ASAP, which Pope John
Paul II has not done. •
Ordaining women would, of course,
help to alleviate the serious clergy
shortage. But that .would not be my
main reason for doing it. Nor would the
issue of equality enter into it (the argument put forth by various women's
movements).
The trouble with equality is that it has
come to stand for sameness - same
duties, same roles.
Equality is the $reat leveler between
the sexes. It etimmates the peaks and
valleys that make the domestic landscape interesting. It destroys the variety
and richness of married life and the
interplay of unequal forces that prompted the Frenchman to say, "Viva le difference!"
At best, equality between a husband
and wife makes for happily married singles (rather than happily married couples), whose lives proceed along parallel lines rather than interconnecting
ones. If you had a rope whose strands
did not mtertwine, it would break the
fltSt.time you put any pressure on it.
The pnesthood should be open to
women, therefore, not on the basis of
equality, but because a woman priest
would bring something new and different - something related to her womanhood - to the office of priest. She

.

said, "We Catholics are fortunate to
have a celibate priesthood. A lot of
Protestants wish they had it."
He pointed to the time-consuming
demands of the ministry .and to the rising divorce rate among the Protestant
clergy. Many ministers - like many
priests- work 12 to IS hours a day. Is
this fair to their wives and children?
. Then there is the problem a minister's
wife has of livin' up to the expectations .
of the congregallon her.husband serves.
COLUMNIST
It is often said that a married clergyman is better able to counsel people
would not be just a priesl dressed in with marital ~roblems, but I wonder
women's clothing.
how strong I at argument is. Being
•
rd'
·
,
married
Dives a man certain insights
At a woman s o mauon con,erence 1 into marr'i'ed
life that he wouldn't have
attended several years ago, much of the otherwise. On the other hand, as one
rhetoric was centered on the "injustice"
. h
· ed
and "inequality" of Withholding ordina- pnest . as pomt Pl!l to !DC• the min~tion from women. ..
ler's marital experience IS confined to
p h ·
ld b
one marriage (or maybe two!). This
er aps 1t wou e better to get away experience would be of o.nly limited
from talk of "em)XIwennent" of women
lo
and stress that a priesthood with women he p to him in dealing with the variety
in it would be more human and appeal- of marital problems that come to him.
.
· Actually, there is a good deal of doubt
10
tfany of the women at the conference about how effective clergymen are as
were warm, attractive feminine types. marriage counselors.
They did not fit into the classic mold of "At least IS percenl of people visiting
the saintly woman _ "humorless, sex- their physicians are Rrimarily bringing a
less, fearsome and forbidding" _ as sexual complaint, says a medical
h
&lt;
d
school professor. "An even greater perone.nun at t e s;on,erence escribed the centage of visits to clergymen are sexustercotype_ of religious women.
.
Much of the' scandal in the Catholic al m nature. But for some reason, docChurch today is being blamed on the tors and clergymen are woefully naive
about sell relations."
·
celibacy requirement. If priests were Is this another area where women
allowed to marry - so the argument
goes_ a lot of what ails the priesthood priests would do a better job?
would go away. Not everyone thinks so.
(George R. Plagenz is a columnistfor
I had a talk once with a bishop who Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

George
Plagenz

WASHINGTON TODAY

Bush becomes conver~ to nation building overseas
BY &amp;1011111 GIDDA

neral

WASHINGTON - President Bush
seems an unlikely candidate to be a
backer of nation buildin$, the process
whereby wealthier countries use money,
expertise and encouragement to achieve
good ~ovemance where it is lacking.
Dunng the 2000 presidential campai~n, Bush said the Clinton administration had ~one overboard on nation
buildin,, a v1ew shared by many fellow
Republicans.
·
Nation building earned a bad name in
1993 when what started out as a U.S.Ied program to feed starving Somalis
.got caug~t up in local politics lind took
a dark: turn. A day ion$ firefight led to
the deaths of 18 Amencan soldiers, not
to mention untold numbers of Somalis.
Driven by events, though, Bush has
become a convert. Alluding to the
Palestinian territories on Monday after
meeting with Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, Bush said, "What we've
got to do is work to put instillltions in
place which will allow for a government to develop."
The idea is to have a smoothly functioning, accountable system in the territories, one that operates openly,
enforces the law, roots out ·corruption
and m~ts the basic n~s of the ~ople
.- all m place by the tune a Palestmtan
state comes into being.
This, Bush said, would give "great
confidence" not only to Palestinians but
to Israelis as well.

The United States is not yet deeply years, some for military assistance, the
involved in Palestinian nation buildmg rest for nation building.
·
but is encouraged that many ·The U.S. track record of nation buildPalestinialiS seem to have embraced the ing is not good. Washington spent a
!Ilea.
small fortune in the 1980s trying it in
Elsewhere, Washington is taking on Zaire and Liberia - with almost noththe role of international handyman in ing to show for it.
earnest. An example is Afghanistan,
Ivan Eland, a foreign policy analyst at
where officials fear terrorism could the Cato Institute, says he has little faith
resurface if the country is left to its own in the process.
devices.
"Basically, people have to want to do
The administration is planning to it themselves," he says. "If they are
spend $900 million in Afghanistan over open to trade and investment, they
two years in hopes of creating a vib1'1111t probably won't have much need for
democracy, leaving behind a generation · aid/'
of brutish misrule. Other donor coilnIn the Palestinian territories, the chaltries are contributing as well.
lenge is great and resources are scarce.
After Sept. 11, Pakistan emerged But the administration believes the
from relalive obscurity pn the U.S. political imperatives of making the
strategic map. The U.S. assistance pro- Palestinian Authority a viable entity
gram for Pakistan is $625 million this ahead of statehood leave it no other
year, much of it to repair the sad state of option.
Pakistani education.
Challenge No. I is reform of
It's a place wh~re thousands. of Pal~stinian security forces, some of
schools teach ~s.lamtc fun~entaltsm . wh1ch have been focusing riot on Jaw
-and breed ffillitants . PresulentPervez and order at home but on attacking
Musharraf says the education system innocent Israelis as a means of dealing
must be modernized. Washington con- with long-held grievances.
.
curs.
.
.
The administration hopes that as
In Colombia, the administration refonn happens in the territories and
believes the twin evils of violence and security for Israelis is enhanced, Israel
drugs will persist unless the country will be more amenable to productive
s~gthens as institutions, creates jobs, negotiations, leading to a more neighmakes ~h~ justice system acces.sible to boiiy environment in the region.
the m&amp;Jonty and curbs corruption and
·
persistent human rights abuses.
.
(Geo1Je Gedda has covered foreign
The United States has provided $1.7 qffairs for The Associated Press since
billion in Colombia over the past two 1968.)

DROP US ALINE.

111

Coun a. PoQ~o~oy, 0111o
740-tn·2111

"

200 Molin IL, Paint PINiom. W.VL
:IOW7a.11N

••

.,

grounds.
They have made &amp;ix 11udio
recordings and four video
recordin~s in the last five
rears whtch contain 39 origmal songs written by Sue
King.
·
POMEROY
"The
Kings" of Hocking County
will be appearing in concert
Hermon
at the Mount
United Brethren in Christ CHESTER - Funeral serChurch at 7 p.m. Sunday.
vices for Homer Biggs were
· The group consists of Sue conducted
Jane Beattie of
· King and her two children, the ChesterbyUnited
' Sarah, 13, and Jonathan, 12. Church at EwingMethodist
Funeral
. The multi-talented family Home
on
May
31.
·will be presenting every- Casketbearers
were
Roger
thing from inspirational viaHarry Holter, Charles
· lin duets, the three-part Gaul,
Frecker.
Wood, Jerry
Southern and country $ospel FrederickRobertand
Brian
·harmony to banjo p1ckmg Frederick.
' and twin fiddling bluegrass
· gospel to yodeling. . ·
· The Kings have won several music awards, includ: ing Instrumentalist of the
..: Year for 2001 for the state
~ of Ohio for gospel music,
and first place as a 'roup at
SYRACUSE _ A program
· Renfro Valley, Ky. s 1998
. Gospel Talent Search.
on the Meiss · County
Sarah tied for first place at Cooperative Parish was given
· . their 2000 soloist gospel tal- by the Rev. Bob Robinson.
' ent search, and she and her assistant director, at a reeent
' brother have won numerous meeting of the Syracuse
trophies and ribbons for Asbury United Methodist
· both classical violin and fid- Church.
·
· d1e style playing. Jonathan The minister used the theme
also won an award for of '1ime to do and Too late to
·
Do" as it related to the various
, banJO.
1 The Kings have appeared activities of the Cooperative
in numerous concerts across Parish. He noted that the Rev.
. Ohio,
Indiana
and Keith Rader is direcwr and he
Kentucky, as well as per- displayed photos of activities
forming
in
Arkansas, taken by Joan Robinson.
.
· Maryland, North and South He reported on the food
, Carolina, West Virginia and pantry, commented on the
Florida.
work of churches and their
The ~roup has opened for ministers in the program. and
The Smging Coolces, The noted that God's NET is not
Pfeiffers, The Perrys, TBN's just a place to entertain chitBetty Jean Robison, The dren, but to help them with
Faster Family, Pure in Heart needs they experience in all
and many other groups, and facets of life. He also talked
have performed with The · about the work camp from
Lewis Family and comedian Bowling Green that has come
Carl Hurley.
into the area to help with
Other places where they home repairs.
have performed include Mary Usle presided at the
Renfro Valley Kentucky's meeting opening with a read. Entertainment Center, Tom ing, ''This is God's Promise to
Raper's RV Rally Preble You." ·The purpose was
Country Historical Farm, repeated in unison, and Freda
, the Ohio State Fair, and Wilson gave devotions using
, numerous nursing homes, a reading, "I Failed Many
festivals, camp meetings, Times." ll was reported that
banquets, fund-raisers, con- 23 sick calls had been made.
· ventlons, revivals and camp Jean Stout gave the treasur-

Services held

Coopeaallve
Pllrlsli P"O&amp;••m
detalleCI

er's report and Ann Sauv~e. ~m U¥1 Clvilliul ~
the treasurer's re]IQI't. An and the Lmt's. ~ a•~
offering was taken and bless- in unison.
ing boxes ~ere tilrned in.
Q~ Holter, juni« . past
Attending wer_e pastor Boo counctt«. reid sc:ript~~R
a~ Joan Robins.oo. Muy ·. from llht Jlsabn, Reported
L1sle, Hope MOOfe,. lean iU was Ruth Smith's sister
Stout. Ann Sauvage. Ruth who is l\Qspita.li~ed.. l.m)'
Crouch, Freda Wilson, Mae CleiUiil who is home from
Bl~nt. Elma Louks. and the hospital, and W.mn
Mane Hou.dashelt. Crouch VmMeter who is lmpitalhad the cl0$1ng pnyer.
lad.
State
sessioo
w111s
anoounce.d Aua. Hl-21 at
Ea.st La.ke by Mary Jo
Barrington who also read a
thank you note from &amp;tim
POMEROY - A ladies Smith reall.rdhl participation
retreat to be held at the Zion in the spri~ ra,ly held at the
Church
Tuesday · was Senior Citizens Cent.e r In
announced at the recent meet- Pomeroy and a.ttended by
ing of the Meigs County over SOD of A memben.
Church of Christ Women's Next
meotlng
u
Fellowship held at the announced. for
June 18 at 6
Pomeroy Church.
p.m
..
with
a
produets
puty to
It was also announced tha.t
vacation Bible school will be precede the mcetina. Vi&amp;iton
held at the Zion church on are welcome and order&amp; can
July 22-26. The meeting be telephoned to a.ny lodae
opened with
singin11 of member.
JoAnn Ritchie spoke about
"Sweet Hour of Prayer•'~' and
"I Gave My Life for Thee," the rally a.nd thanked those
with Leona Hysell Oirolami who pllrticipoted. Pi1111lst for
§iving the opening prayer. the meeting wu Helen Wolf&lt;
Christian Unit~" was the Cleland tlllked about Fa.ther's
theme of devouons. Peuy Day · 11nd read a poem,
Bole was song leader.
"Fathers are Wonderful
For the program, Bible sto- People."
ries were pantomimed, includ- Attending the meeting
ing Jesus healing the · blind were Betty Youna. Eva
man by Ida Murphy and Peggy Robson, Marjorie Fetty,
Bole; Moses in the bulrushes Erma Clol.and, Arden Depoy,
by Cindy Eaton, Kathryn 111net Depoy, Julie Curtis.
Johnson as Rahab, Ann Gary Holter, Jo Ann Ritchie.
Lambert as Lydia, and Pat Laura M11e Nice, Mary
Thoma on paning the Red Sea. Holter, M•ry Jo Bmlnger,
Nellt meeling will be June Helen Wolf, Opal Hollon a:nd
27 at the Zion Church with lnzy Newell.
devotions by the Pomeroy
church and a program on
security alert. Refreshments
were served by the host
church.
.

Fellowship

plans1ebeat

Member
recoplzed ·
CHESTER - A SO-year
pin was presented to lnzy
Newell by Erma Cleland,
deputy state councilor, when
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of America, meet
recently at the hall.
Helen Wolf, councilor, presiding at the meeting which
opened with pledges to the

MILITARY

Clifford C.
Minnick

TENT REVIVAL

POMEROY - Ann,Y Staff
. Sgt. Clifford C. Minnick.has
arrived for duty at the Vilsec:kOrafenwoehr
Military
• Community in Gennany.
Minnick is a signal system
. support speCialist witJ:l tJ:le 7th
. Army Non-Comnuss1oned
l Officers Academy.
Minnick is the son of Rosa M.
' Miller, BIIT Oak, Mich., and
I 011ll'les W. Minnick ofPaneroy,
• and a 1983 ~ ofBIIITOik
; High ScOOOI in Michigan.

VICIORY BAPTIST CHURCH

1homas·H.

111'1dO
GALLIPOLIS - Marine
· Corps Pfc. Thomas H. Tirado
recently reported for duty
with Headqu!'rten ~nd
Service Battahon, Manne
Co!Jls Base, Quantico, Va.
Tlfado is a 1996 sraduate
of Gallla Academy Hish
School in Gallipolis.

.

JUNE16-21 @7:PM
SPECIAL MUSIC EACH SERVICE • NURSERY PROVIDED

"SPECIAL SPEAKERS"
EVANGELIST DR. RANDY TAYI.OR. WIST UNION, WV
SUNDAY· 10:AM- 11 :AM· 7: PM ·
DR. LARRY EMERY, MASSILLON, OH
PASTDII, MASSILLON IAPT1ST TEMPLE
EVANOELIST, DR. CiARY EDMUNDS, COSHOC10N, OH

PASTOR JAMES E. KEESEE
INVITES THE PUBLIC
992-6772 • 992-9052

"PLEASE COME AND BRING A FRIEND"

187-8100

Of'EN 14 llwtlf daVt 1 _ .

867-6101
?:QO 1.m. • 1~00 p.m.

Afamily's tribute to agood daddy
COMlltg tlti.t WHOM ilt liN ·.
~ 'l'llttti-StftliMlTEMPO HdiOil ·

Your Friends
&amp; Nei hbors
Meet Des Jeft'ers, one of Farmers ·
Bank's Pomeroy branch loan omcen.
1 think or It as a challenp, to pt my cus·
tomers just the rlaht loan, to help them achieve
what they have set out to ac:compllsh.11
·

11

Doa hu only been with
Farman Bank for l)RO yeAr, but
hu been In tho.bankln1induatry
for 23 yean. Doaarew up In Molal County In tho Brlllbury 11101.
He 1tartod hla Qaretr In Athonaln 1919. Dol worked both In
Middleport and Rutland before worklnaln Pomoro~.

.

525 NORTH SECOND STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AouwiSO • CooN!..
r• ..,..,, aptww
, ,...... ....,.

Doa really enjo~alhe public and holplnalhem to maeltholr
flnanclalaoall. Do1 1tmed In banklnt~ln tho oporatlona depwt·
mont and then moved on to coll~tlona. Ha hu alao worked In
lendlna and u an omca manqer. In hia pre1ent po11tlon Dol
conconlrllel on consumer londlna, helplna hl1 cu1tomora with
peraonal, car and real estate toan1.
Do1111y1 buly when he'1 not 11 work with family and a variety \If
actlvltlel. He really enjoyllltendlfll hil dauahter'a and two 10111'
eportlna oventa, 10 don't be aurprlaed If you aee him In lhntlllda 11
one of their volloyball, buketball, aoftball or bMeball IIDIDI·
He 11 also acllve In hla chu~~:h, the Middleport Church of
Chrlat, where ho 11 Jill! or 1ho Mu1ic Mln_:;l•ltry,;,ol•..•m....,
. Helii
· oldliilreg-11----------.
tho choir and Ia a dolcon of tho
•
church board. In addition, Deaalta
on I he Melaa Counly Houalna
Aulhorlty Board and pllllclpatel In
tho Relay for Ufo.

(F' :IJ) Farmers Bank

MtmbtrFOIC

•J

~

Wc'reYourBankjorf!(l..,

�The Daily Sentinel

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Nevtt m/1\&lt;i thll.! ~~ pla}:'ersdldn't made some of the World's best feel than this was at Aul!llsta, 'he said.
Woods won !he Masters in April,
oouldn't evtn bre11.k 80, Or that onty the privilege of playing ·the Black and is off to a great start in his quest
six ))layers broke pal' Thumlay, tilt Course at Bethpage State Park.
to become the first player since Jack
smallest number in the first round of "This golf course is more difficult Nicklaus in 1972 to win the first two
&lt;a U.S. Qpen since no one did at than Pebble was playing;• Woods legs of the Orand Slam.
windyShlnl\eCOI!k Hills In 1986.
said, referring to his 15-stroke victo- · Garcia, · !he 22.year-old Spaniard
A beast uf a course only brought ry in the U.S. Open two years !IJO· who first challenged Woods three
oot the best ill the World's No. I play- . "You hit one poor shot and you re years ago in the PGA Championship,
going to pay the price."
chipped in for birdie on the fifth hole
er.
"l trled ttl *'BY oot llf troUble M Bethpage Black didn 'I get into and had two big par saves toward the

.

record li sn\gle btnbe •nil 15 guys like weekend golfers who pay $39 fur

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. DETROIT (AP) - Dombtik Hasek seconds left.

-.$ked to be traded to the Dettoit Red Defenseman Nicklas Lidstrom won
Wlnlts betause he Wli$ surt they would the Conn Smythe TrophY as the most

hllaaol~- ......

take lllm to the Stanley Cup. TUrn~ out
It wa~ the \lther way around.
Ha~ek: finally wt&gt;lt the Cup he has
chased thtolilihout li Hall of Fame
career - an\:1 ISOO-~al scorer Luc
Robitaille did, too - as the Red Winas
beat Cllfullnll 3-1 Thursday night to
win their third Stanley Cup In srx sea·

W... !llhiloo ltt'O """~
llwillll' ld\ool • ID " '"'

valuable player In the playoffs - the
first Buropeiln to win it. ,
Detroit, with one of the greatest col·
lectlons of Hall of F9me talent in
league history, went wire-to-wire in
winning coach Scotty Bowman's NHL·
record ninth Stanley Cup, breaking a
de with former mentor Toe Blake.
~ons .
.
·
Bowman, who first coached in the
'l'omas Holmstron\1 a su!'J)rlsing scor- final s during the 1960s, became the
er for 11\Uch of the playoffs, and second nuijor pro sports .coach in two
· Brend-.n Shllnahan, a surprising non- nights to win a ninth title, ioinins
$00tet l'or n\Ollt of the llilit two rounds Lukers co11ch Phil Jackson. f:ormer
scored blltrolt's lt)ids In tlahtl~ played Boston Celtlcs coach Red Auerbach is
Oattu! ~· th11.t tnlrtored one of the most the onlY. other coa~h with nine titles in
defel\~~-dMtlnattd tlnul~ ever, With any of the four malor sports.
HIGH .;. Detroit Red Wings goalie Dominik Hasek carries the
onlY 21 goals scored.
·
But this dtle wilfbe remembered just FLYING
Stanley Cup after they defeated the Carolina Hurricanes 3-1 In game 6
The Red Wings . sealed lt with
·
PleeH
1M
Wlnp,
BJ
the Stanley Cup finals In Detroit. (AP)
of
Shllnllhlln ·~ empty·net goal with 45 ·

~ · tf,M.

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'

RACINE PLANING MILL
MHIWork
ClblnltMalq
SyracuH

PIMH 1M U.S. Open, BJ

ngsWin
Stanley Cup

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end of his round for a 68.
"You've got to realize that I· or 2·
under par, or even par, is always
going to be a good round," Garcia
said. "There's not fling to be a lot of
good scores today.
He was right.
The Black Course was as brutal as
everyone expected.
Dudley Han recovered from a
triple.bogey by closing his round out
with three straight birdies for a 69.
He was joined by K.J. Choi of South
Korea, Jeff Maggert and Billy
.Mayfair.

•

~~~' ~ · lli •.'lll,

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much as I could," Woods said after a Tiger's wallet.

Bethpage Black Is no longer the most · 3-under 67, breaking down a tonur· Woods missed only three fairways
ftightening thing about this U.S. oos day into a simple ellplanation,
and never had a putt for par longer
Oriel\,
·
An 18-foot birdie on his final hole than 12 feet. He made that (!ne, along
lt'~ lht slgllt or1taer Woods on his ~ave Woods a one-stroke lead over with six others of at least 8 feet.
@alWe &lt;and in the lea&lt;!
seralo &lt;la~lli after a long day that "The only time I've ~utted better

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CLSVELAND (AP) - Even
wbell Ricky Outlerret doe~ some•
tblna tlglit for the C:leveland
Indians tl\ese dayK, something goes
WI'Ul\il,
0Ut1erreE strained his left aroin
while scoring on rookie Chris
Mllgrllder'll triple In the IOth
lnnfng, giving the Indians a 2· 1 win
over tlie Baltimore Orioles in
'l'hutsday's only scheduled mlljor
leaaue aame.
Gutierrez, b malor disappoint·
ment so far in his tint season with
Cleveland, drew a one·put walk In
the IOth bft Willis Robettll (3•2).
Maaruder followed with a liner

tor thtt: tor "'"
atrtnath Ia rn•dt
Nrflct ln wuknaa.

,,.aortptlona

l~el'a

I

112-1432

PHARMACY

Wt

Cleveland pulls out win in tenth over O's

w. Mllft lt., PomiM'OV I

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

1S7.C N.lnd Ave.
Mlrklltport, OH

HI.U18
•

t

'••

Ift dla
""'
"rt's been a roush year for me,"
. . ftS .A
said Gutierrez, who signed a three·
-.-.lliilllliini~ii!ioiloiolii•--- year, Sit million this winter· to
OriOleS 1 . replace
Roberto Alomar at second
base. "I' ve been pinch-run for,
toward the right-field corner that
bounced off the rubberized warn·
Ina track.
As the ball eluded right fielder
Gary Matthews Jr., Gutierrez was
waved home and scored easily, but
grabbed hi s upper leg after cross·
lng home plate . ·
The Indians backed' away from
mobbing Gutierrez as a trainer
~lime out and helped him limp off.

pinch-hit for. Hopefully, I can get
things turned around."
· Jerrod Riggan (1 · 0), recalled earHer in the ilay from Buffalo when
Paul Shuey went on the IS-day dlsabled list, pitched the IOth and got
his first ALwin .
Ellis Burks homered for the
struggling Indians, who went 3·4
on their homestand and will start
an Important stason-long 12-game
road trip on Friday In Coloracfo.

Riggan only found out he was
being brought · up late Thursday
nl.sht, and arrived in Cleveland ·
wtth only one pair of underwear
and a sh1rt to take on the trip to
Colorado, Florida, Montreal and
Boston.
'
But Riggan's wife came to the
rescue, making the three-hour drive
from Buffalo to · deliv er some
clothes to her husband. ·
"She gets the save," Ri ggan said.
Gutierrez has grounded into a
league- lead ing II double plays,
and he entered Thursday's game
with eight errors and only nine
RBis.
.

�ll!lnntlnel.coai
·-- ••w.n¥'
...

• ww.mydt~ u t11111elcom
•

INDIANS NOTEBOOK

Omar on Mesa's drilling: "It was a cheap shof' to

•

CLEVELAND (AP) If Mesa had promised retribution
Cleveland lndiiiiS fans can hold a aalinst Vi:rq~l. who showed him
JNdae, so can Jose Mesa. Omar up in a sprinalrl.inin&amp; game a few
~ has • blseball-med bruise years aao and recentll s~led in
on h1s bact as proof.
bis new auiObio~y. "Omar! '.
Mesa. Pbiladi:lpbia's closer, has a lhat Mesa cholted in Game 7 of the
lona·running feud goina with 1997 World Series.
Vizquel, his former CleVdarid team- Mesa blew a save in that game as
mate, and hit the Indians shortstop the lndiiiiS lost a chance for .their
in the bact with a pitch Wednesday fllSt Series title since 1948.
niallt.
With the Phillies leadina 7-3,
."011, yeah. It hum," Vizquel said Vizquel came up with one out.in the
l'hundly, showin&amp; a larae well on ninth inninato face Mesa, who was
his ri&amp;ht side. "Wiien you aet one at booed by unforgiving Indians fans
97 (mph) in the back, it hurts. I'm in both of his oppeunmces in the
still a little sore."
interleague series ·between the
It seems Mesa is SOil! as welt
teams.

U.S. Open

•.• ,....1

U.S. OPEN SCORES
U.S. o,.n GnidM Snrw
Atlllltp

Nick Faldo, who received
a special nemption to play
in his 60th consecutive
major only two weeks qo,
made good use of it b~ holing a 35-foot putt on hts last
hole for a 70. Others who
held their _jround against
par were Phil Mickelson
and Stewart Cink.
·
As for everyone else?
Defending
champion
Retief Goosen was 9-over.
through 12 holes and fin·
!shed with a 79.
British Open champion
David Duval couldn't beat a
16-year-old. He and high
school quail fier Derek
Tolan each had a 78, and
probably shared one other
thing in common.
"I didn't think I'd be nervous, but watch the tape,"
· Tolan said. "I'm walkina
kind of funny. It's like I for·
got to breathe."
Inhale, everybody.
As tough as it was
Thursday; there could not
have been an easier day for
scoring with the cloud
cover, overnight rain that
softened the fairways and
greens, and no wind.

:=...-.
COurw .

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Allmtnlldlll, N.Y.
.......
,as m1111on

VIIYiniRIIIIII1111: 7,114; Pr.lO ~)
Flnt 1'10111111
(a -'lui')
~ Woodl
34-33- 17
·SMalo Garcia
34-34- ee ·
Dudley Hart
33-36- 69
I(.J.CIIol
.
35-34- 69
Billy Mayfair
34·35- 69
Jell Maaaert
34-35- 19
Pill! Mdillon
35-35- 70
Franltlin Langham
34-3&amp;- 70
Stew Lowery
38-34- 70
Padralg Harrington 35-35- 70
s.....,rt Clnk
35-35- 70
NICk Faldo
35-35- 70
Charlel Howell Ill
35-38- 71
0.'111 Low Ill
32-39- 71
'Ibm Lehman
37-34- 71
Scoll Hoch
35-38- 71

all ason with a bid back, returned
to Cleveland and was hllpl)y 10 be in

Mesa's first pitch was in ide and "Maybe the book has somethi~
nearly hit llQutl. ·
to do with It," he said. ''I doll t
"I wasn't sure something ,wa• know. It was a cheap shot. Maybe
goina to happen, but I figureo he ~ he has pen a little Stn$itive abOut
1\ad somctluna in mind," Vizquel what I Said."
said. "His first pitch was right at my ViEquel hit a hotner in sllrina
elbow and I got out of the way."
lrainin&amp; a few yeus aao off Mesa
The lltllt one drilled Vitquel. who whCtl they were teammates, and
exchanged glances and t.hen words after crossin&amp; home plate. Vi19,uel
with ~esa as he slowly walked to said he played the crowd by tuana
first base.
off his helmet and wavina.
"I can't really say wh11t I said to "Jose said, 'Next time I see you I
him," Vi~l said. "He said some- am aoing to drill you,'" VitQuel
thing like, Did you feel it?'"
said. "I thought he was fooling
Vi:rquel said he hos been waiting around. I auess not."
for Mesa to g~:t even with him for • ll:DDIE'S BACK: Catcher
some time.
Eddie nubensee, who has missed

1bdd RoM
'Ibm Gille
Jote Marta Oluaal
c.ato
Bowden
ThamaaLThamaa 8jom
RcbMt Kartuon
Jean Van o. Yelct.
o~ Chalmtrl

!;,~rnM&lt;

Scottt.tceanon
Bob l'My
.'Ibm Bl'fllm
MlchHlCampbeU
tanLegoatt

Plul
S..nltoweld
Nlelal Fulll
Rocco Mt&lt;lll1t
Bill)' Andradll
Len Malllac:e
SM Strk;l(er
llllmhllrd Langar
Nldt Prloe

35-ss- . 71
35.s&amp;- 11
ss.ss- 71
33-:111- 7 1
35-ss- 7 1
35-ss11
37-34- 71
34-3771
35-37- 72

~~: ~

35-37 72
36-3672
35-37- 72
36-34- 72
35-3772
37-3536-36,&amp;
37-35- 111
·se-36 72
36-36- 72
36·38- 72
37-35- · 72
34-38- 72

!!

-----------------"I hope they leave it like on the Black, he quickly
this for you guys," lim offered o correction.
.
McGovern told reporters
"There are six par Ss." he
after a 75. "Then I'll ask all said.
the questions."
Some of the shots resem·
Some of the scores were bled what New Yorkers go
typlcll for n Thursday at through on the Block, too.
Bethpage Black - just not
Davls Love Ill, who was
the weelc of a U.S. Open.
3-under plir on the front
Bob Estes, a winner two nine, hit 10to the knee-high
weeks ago at the Kemper fescue on No. 16. His full
Open, had three double swing with a sand wedge
bogeys in a round of 81. came to o holt when the
The course · played nearly club hit grass, and .the ball
five strokes over par, ani! went only IS yards.
when Billy Andrade was
"This is a great golf
asked about the two par Ss course to get to pluy," Love

said, "And when they mow
the rough, it will be even
better.'
The Bl11ck is no muny tliis
week. .
One of the few players
who managed to cope was
Garcia, whose blistering
sllut included a chip-in for
birdie on No. S. He missed
only three fairways and
took just 2S puns - 13 on
the bnck nine, including par
saves l'rom nbout 10 feet on
Nos. lt'i nnd 17.
"The greens weren't ns
firm, but I'll tell you one
thing - thex were fast,"
Gnrciu soid. 'I think these
· greens ore probubly the
slopiest, llittlest greens I've
ever seen in my life."
Thill wns n dig ot U.S.
Golf Association officials
who sug~ested that a 72·
hole scortna record might
be broken this week
because of the relatively
tlut greens: Ther also sold
that while the Block was
tough, none of the holes
lent themselves to big num·
bers.
Try telling that to Justin
Leonard, who was 1-under
par until two chpps with the
wedge moved his ball about
6 feet on No. 12. He took
triple bogey, shot a 40 on
the back mne and finished
with a 73.

the tool weather.

nubtnste has three degenerative
discs in hi bkk lind has been rellabilitatlna at his home in
Windern'ltrt, Fla., where he said It's
been lollsty.

.

"It's the first tlme I've bttn in
Florida Ill this time In 16 ytllrs," he
said. "I told ~ kids they sbould
film the next 'Survivor' tries at
elttended sprin4 II'Ginlng in Winter
Havtn, Boy, i tt hot·"
'llubtnsec has been winait14 n
bat 11nd recently begun pluytnl!
catch.
·
.
'

Wings
. . . . . . .1
as much btina Hasek's fii'SI,
just as Ray BoUrque's farst with
Colorudo was a yell' 1g0.
Hasek. who 111 37 may now
retire now that he's got n Cup,
finall~ ~ave up o goal - Jell
O'Nmll s line chive that he htld
no chance to play late ln the
second period - after sht~tting
out Carolina for more than 166

minutes.
But it wus Hasek's almost
perfect play over the final three
gwnes lind the timel)' scoring
of Brett Hull and Igor Lurionov .
that turned urounCI the series
and finish¢ a season dominut·
ed by Red Winas from stwt to
finish. Their Presidents'
Trophy for winning the regulnr
season was all but nssured by a
22·3·1 Sllllt.
From the time Brett Hull
scored with just over a minute
left in Oume 3 to prevent
Detroit from going down 2·1 in
the series, allowi'!4 Lurionov to
win it lute In the third overtime,
Detroit outscored Carolina 7·1.
· Detroit tensed its fans
throughout the first period
without a series of &amp;OOCI scarina chances without getting the
first goal, only to get It early in
the second period.

Holmstrom. skati~ down
the slot, stuck out his suck with
his right hllnd to deflect
Llrionov's puss from the ri&amp;ht
eirele through Arturs lrbe's

pods.

.

Holmstrom's eighth goo! of
the playoftS, at 4:07 of tlte Second, was all 11 jrunmtd Joe
Louis Arena crowd needed to
erupt, n wove of cheering red
1111d white - mllny in replica
Red Wi ll!!S jerseys - thnt
beg1111 to congregnte outside the
arena by curly llfiemoon.
If the first goollook'ed bi~ In
a low-scoring finals in whtch
the no winning tenm hus scored.
more th11R three gouls, the second look-ed even bigger.
In o series in which newiy'
every key pi wus scored ut
even strength, Shannhllll powered in a shot from the riallt circle ut 14:04 - only the third
Detroit gout in.22 power-ploy
chances.
It wns Shnnultan 's second
goo! in two games ufter he htld
only one goul in I0 ~runes, and
he rulsed his unns m relief ns
much celebrotion of the 2-0
lead.
But, turned uside rerutcdly
for the equlvulent o 2 112
games by Husek, the
Hunicancs finally scored · on
0' Neill's power ploy gout ot
IB:SO, only the second in 23
chances for the Hurricanes.

· YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP) Japan &amp;ained a place In the World
Cup by scrvina a co-host- It proved
• it deserv~ ttie s~t by adYin in&amp;
unbeaten 1nto the ecand round,
Belaium struuled back from the
:brink of elimination with two l.re
aoats aaainst Ru sla and also moved
on, It gets the unenviable task of
• meetlna four-time chlmpion Brazil
· in the round of 16.
· After lo ing all three J!lmes in its
World Cup debut in 1998 Japan set
off local rejoiclna with a l-0 victory
over Tunisia on Jrrlday in Osaka. The
J11panese finished witb two victories
1nd a tie - against Belgium - In
• Group H, and set up a match with
Turkey on Tuesday In Miyaai for a
place In the quarterfinals.
• · Japan is the second Far East team,
after ·!':forth Korea In 1966, to gain
'the second round . The North
'Koreans lost in the quarterfinals to
Portu,al.
.
"Thts squad has made · history for
Japanese Tootball," Japan Football
· Association president Shunlclro
. Okano said. "They will be able to
advance to the second round in 11
very good mood."
Added Philippe Troussier, th 11
Frenchman who hns turned around
Japanese soccer, ''It's a beautiful
·story we have cteiUed." .
· • In the first World Cup in Asin, the
· other co-cost, South Korea could
ensure it reached the second round
with at least a tie naalnst Portuaal
Inter Frldar. The South Koreans have
gone out 10 the first round in five
.previous World Cup appearances,
but no host ever has foiled to reach
. the second. ·
.
The United States pluyed Poland in
Group D's Olher game, also needlna
u draw to ensure moving ahead.
. A 39-year-old South Korean who
. said he wanted to help the teum by
. becoming 11 ghost 12th player was in
· critical condition ufter setting him·
self on fire hours before the Portugal
gume.
.
The mun lit 11 candle and bowed
several times toward the sea in the
, southeastern chr of Busan before
. pouring paint thiOner •over his body
and setllng himself on fire, police
said. .
He left n note declnring: "I will
become the 12th soccer player by
:; ~ecoming a splritknnd will run for
·. 'the victory of the orean \Cam." ,
Tens of thousands of red-clad fans
•: ·aathered in downtown Seoul ahead
:~ ::or the game, listening to rock bands,
: :cloppina in unison, wavlna South
:. ·Korean flags and chanting "Oh,
:: :Pllsung Korea" - "Korea's sure to
·· ·wlnl"
,: In Moscow, where rioting lust
,: Sunday after nloss to Japan resulted
•• In . two deaths; 12 people were
: detained following Russia's elimlna·
• ti
::· on.
Large numbers of gun-totina
•: police, some on horseback and oth·
:: ers accompanied by dofs• patrolled
:. · the city center nenr the our outdoor
:' television screens that broadcast the
• match live. Some 2,000 extra police
were on the streeu.
:: Russia could have advanced with a

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CAUGHT IN TMI MIDDt.l - TUnisia's

Zoubelr, center, Is cau&amp;ht between
Japan's ShlnJI O'no and Kojl Nakata, left,
durin&amp; the 2002 Wortd Cup Group H soccar match between Japan and Tunisia at
the Nllflal Stadium II In Osaka, Japan.
Japan won the match 2.0 and qualify to
the neKt round ea winners of Group H.
The other teems In Group H are Ballium
and Russia. (AP)
tie, and reached 1·1 on Vladimir
Beschnstnykh 's S2nd·minute goal.
But Belgium turned the.aame around
with goals by Wesley Sonck and
·Marc Wilmots in the 78th and 82nd
minutes, and hung on, 3-2.
''We're really hnppy that we could
show this is not n team you can
throw away, like they sald bock
home," conch Robert Waseige said.
Nobody said anything neaative
about Jupan, even when 1t was tied
0-0 at the half with Tunis.ln.
Coming in to start the second half,
Hironki Morlshima pounced on a
loose boll ln the penalty area after 11
defensive mistake by the Tunisians,
and out in Japan's first goal in the
48th minute. Hidetoshi Nalcnta added
one in the 7Sth, heading in a cross
from Daisuke Ichikawa. ·
~ussin conch Olea Romantsev said
his team was hurt by trying to pre·
serv~ a tie.
"We could have scored an,other
goal and gone on to the neltt staae,
but frankly speakina, they were bet·
ter.... Oenerally speaking, we didn't
play our best," Romantsev said.
Other teams already in the second
round are Italy, Meltico, Sweden,
Senegal,
Denmark,
Enaland,
Germany, Paraguay, Spain and
Ireland.
Mexico's advance sent fans back
home runnin" vlctora laps around
main plazas, •and hun reds of po II ce
stood by to make sure celebrations
didn't get out of hand. A public security official said about I SO youths
were detained, mostly accused of
harassing women, attempted vandal·
ism, throwing bottles, lanitlng fire·
works or possessing drugs.

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23133">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23132">
              <text>June 14, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
