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Analyze

Soren Kierk~:ud
wrole, •g see 1t all
perfectiJ; there are
two possible situ:a-tion.s - ooe c::m either

do this or that. My ·
honest opinion and
my fri-endly :ad\&lt;~ is
this: do it or do not do
it •• you will regm
both.

K

At the bridge table.

then: ll'ight be two
pl&gt;Mible hoes or play.
but usually one )ll'ill
wurk. If yuu find the
winner, you wi II not
regret it. And somctimes there ~ more
options than .two.
This might make it

A VISIT FROM CUFFORD

1JigRed

IIMiners tap~ 11

tmnler both to ckcidc
and to be sm:ce8sful.

THE
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but you shuuld still
apply your mind to
the problem.
. In this deal, you
reach four spudes. After West leads the
dub . queen, how
would Y01J JliUC«cc7
With all his points
in the other suits and
4-3-3-3 distribution,
it wpu ld be reasonable for North to rc~pond one no-trump.
Note that three notrump makes easily.
Should you win
trick one in the
dummy and take the
~p:l!le finesse1 Should
you win trick one in
the dummy and take
the heart finesse?
Should you win trick
one in hand and play
two rounds of iliamoods. hoping West
has the king and thus
establishing a discard
ror your club loser?
Each or those three
possibilities could
work, but none is correel! You should win
trick one in hand and
immediately continue
with two rounds or
hearts. This establishes dummy's heart
queen, on which you
. h your d'111can pttc
mond or club loser.
Then you draw
trumps 11s quickly as
poss1ble. Your 10
tricks are five spades,
two hearts, one diamond and two clubs.
Do not leap to COD•
elusions. Try to cons.ider un the possibili·
ttes.

Cllltpaa .
5

Five-cormty mUy set Saturday

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Til- Ia no -nil llut life."
-Jolin Rulltln
.
'\lie Is IMIIeup OI!Mibleand 1111111.'- ~I.._ :

.., Joy J.

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Complete !he thvc:kle qUCited
b1 lillin; In tho mlainv words

,.... d.,...IOD 110111 11t11 Nco. 3 below.
PRINT NUM8EREO tUTU$
IN THESE SQUAUS

.

REEDSVIlJ.B- A benefit auction for the Golden
Harvest Community Food
Pantry has been planned for
June 29 at 10 a.m. at the

.;:.1. . ;

.

Reedsville
Fellowship
Chllldl of the Nazarene. AD
J)l11CCcdS will go to l:ienotit
ihc buildini or a new p~~~uy.
For information, call
740-667-6524 or 740-667-

6524.

Lottlltes
Ohio

llldt. J: 3-4-9
llldt. 4: 1-2-2-3

UNSCRMialE lfllfiS 0
GET ANSWER
.

tenot !!Q\'U1l&lt;ll' Ql\di&lt;btt.. Clwk'~

Smla

POMEROY - "Clifford
the Big Red Dog" Yi&amp;iled
children a1the Meigs County
District Public Library
Wednesday.
Children
enjoyed buging and having
~ir picture ~ with the
gtant dog.
Amanda Milhoan~ coordinator, read to about I00 local
children from two "Clifford"
boob by Norman Bridwell.
Otber . librarians · helped
fourth through sixth . ~
write stories about thett own
big pets and paint pictures of
them.
Smaller children colored
pieces of the Red Dog and
glued the pieces on a toilet
paper roll. Refreshments
were also rrovided by the
library to al tile children.
Clifford, a popular dog
character in cbildnm's books,
airs on Ohio University's

.

,.~

IIEWSMmlM.VSOII'ML.t&lt;lM

- . . loy CUlt I. POUAN

· 11-.,. 0 G;:...;.;R....T:....;:;0.-.:....T ...., ~

REEDSVILLE -At ti.'lllOO ~ lift ~~ t(!
llMnd • ~y nlly in R~'"lk fur Ohio g~­
;al ~ lim H~ *'d hi:s lieu-

100 local
cluldren meet
. at librmy

JAT

FaFTLIII

~~cw

to kids

WYZZII

SAY CH II- one child smiles for her picture with "CIIffonl'
at one of the summer readi~ PfOil'8I'M held by the library in
Pomeroy. PBS emplOyees took the flee pictures for any Child
who wanted to meet the Rtl&lt;l Dol- (Joy J. Settles) ·
WOUB Public Television.
Three employees from the
local PBS station took free
piCIIIRIS of children with tht.
Red Dog &amp;~~d gave them
books and stickers of the
chatacter. .
.
Milhoan said children love
this ~gram and have a lot
of fun rUding. Sbc also said
the prograili gives kids an
incentive to read in the sum·
mer for prizes. ·

The summer reading program continues at the
Pomeroy library for chit.
dren.
The events will include:
Robert Kreidler, a story
teller, June 26; movie and a
popcorn, July 3; Mark Wood,
11 m~~gician. July I0; Billy the
Book, July 17; Mark Wude, 11
ventriloquist, July 24; and a
kickoff pool party July 31 nt
the Syracuse pool.
.

Tht ~Rlllly oo the Rhw~ is husloed by
Athens attomcy frank La\-elk.. who
owt\S an histlllk ri\'dfront hoolilt oo Ohio
ll4,.jUSl ou~ of R~'rille.
·
Attordilll to Meit:s Cou"l)&gt;
Dtnltlmttic Party OIWmlM Sue Mais.oo,
the rally is ro-hostlld by the ~
pill'1ie.~ in Meigll, AtOOrls, \\'\ashinghlll•
Gallitt IUid Vintoo l'\lUUties.
The entire sllltewide ticket 11M ~
in-riled, IUid U.S. Rtp. Thd Strid:.lruld and
State Sen. Mike Slloemttker are o.lso
~pcc:ted to attend.
''This is going to be one of Hugan's
bigest e~~nts in southern Ohio during
his sumn'ler camp~tign." Muison su.id.
"We t.'tpect a 1~-e crowd from throughout the n:~ion."
''This will be the best opportunity fur
local vot~m to meet the Denlornitic slo.te
before the No'mil her election."
Hagan is 11 YouugstoWll native who bas
served two decades in elected oflire.
ilit:luding four terms as a CuYllholla County Commissioner.
He is married to ~~(tress Kate Mulgrew.
His running mate, Thvnres, i$ 11 member of Columbus .
Oty Council with a state and national reJ.!Utlltion as a leader
in the areas of health and human servtces. She also ha.~
served as o. tllte repmentati\-e, mid was .the fi~! A~­
American woman e'Ver to hold a leaderslnp po.~ttlon 10 the
Ohio House, that of minority whip.
Roger and Mary Gilmore of Pomeroy will perFoml music
durinJ the rally, along with Mountain River. Picnic-style
food ts also included In the $20 1\dtnission pri1.-e.
Groups who attend are asked 1o·shure rides. Mllison said.
because porking on the Lavelle property will he limited.

5u1i all •a: I 1-17·21-36·37-40

. SCIAM liTS AMSWU$
Fathom· Lobby· Vodka- Kingly- HOLD the BABY
Before the movie began a man spilled drinks and .f-?.P"
com all over his pregnant wife. A woman asked, You

JUNE19I

to hold rally
in Reedsville

CELEBRITY CIPHER

"'Lul8

Hagan, Tavares

aren'lgoing to lei him HOLD the BABY are you?'

·

. . . . . . . 14
ICidter. 2·2·9:1·:$.0
ludi 1' S: 2...._17·21
llldt. J illlht: 8-0-S
pldJ 4illlht: 1-8-6-4

WestVIIJin._
.,.., :S: 3-()-()
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~--··= 1·3-4-7-11 (23) .
TIIu!lldny. June 20,2002
In the yeur nheud the more
knowled~euble you be&lt;omc
·in your chusen field of cndcuvor. the less upt y1•u will
be to tnukc u missteP. nnd the
~rcutor your P"&gt;hub&gt;litles for
nchicving ·"'&lt;cess und oppor·
lunities.

GEMINI (Muy 21-Junc 20)
•• Persuns who ure under your
SUIK:rvision toduy muy require
some skillful hundlinl! nnd
monu8cment. If you oren't
dill~cm. they might unexpcct·
edly do Sl&gt;melhing they
shouldn't. Know where to
look for romuncc und you'll
find it. The Astro·Gruph
Mnldunuker ln.tuntly rev.euls
which si@ns ore rumunllcully
perfec1 for you. Mull $2.75 to
Mtuchmuker, c/o this newspaper. P.O. Dux itl7. Wickliffe,
011 441)92.
.
CANCI:lR (June 21-July 22)
•• De cureful not to make ,de·
munds loduy on someone you
like, yel would resent and i&amp;·
norc if the roles were re. versed. Stop und consider
thin@s from his or her per.
· s~ctivc.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Should ynur mule or s.•meone
dear 10 your heart be a bit
grum;&gt;y tuduy. lry to be a
more utTcctionlliC thun usunl.

Love und attclllion is the
mogic elixir tlml could soothe
frayed nerves. ·
.
VIRGO (Au@. 23-Sept. 22)
•· If you hope to huvc somethin&amp; wol'lhwhile tn shuw for
how you ~pent your time to·
day. avoid apathy. Don't us~
excuses u&gt; neslect your du·
ties.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) •
• Self-discipline will be an ab·
solute muM loduy if you ore to
have any hope of coming out
on the plus slde of the leilgcr.
An otlditlonul do..llc will be
required when hundlina the
rcsoun:es of another.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov.
22&gt; •• Should something untoward unupccledly occur today; you might fall prey to
ta~lng out your frustrations on
~K:rsoM for whnm you care
the most ·Don't blame the in-

noctnt.

SAOITTARIUS (Nov . 23Dec . 21) -· Pc!'ons with
whom you ' ll dcol toduy will
be oble to eusily perceive
who\ is In buck of your ac- .
lions. -Don· t attempt to use
subterfuge. Insincerity or fulse
flnttery to 11chlcve your ends.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -· Unfortunutcly. toduy .
you may have trouble dlstin-

J!Uishina between pelllons you
should treat aenerously and
those you should not You
may shght the worthy and reword the undeserving.
·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) ·- Caterina to an indlvld·
uul about whom you know lit:
tie. but whom you believe can
do you some good, will be a
mistake today . Slick to the
tried and lrlle who have previ· •
· ously helped )lou.
PISCES (feb. 20-March
20) • You will be a~kina for
trouble today if you lre$pass
In forbidden area~. Be careful
who you mn with or how you
respond lo someone who is
tryinato beaulle you.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) •
··There·may be a price to pay
If you don'ttreat ousineu endeavors seriously today, even
when involved with fraends.
Make certain the demon:ution
· between the two ~~ ucknowl-

·: llalna-lt ....
Oassifieds
84-6

tomics

DearAbby
Editorials
Movies ·
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

~7

A4

A6
A3
A3
81-4

A2

, ~ :1002 Ohio V•lil&lt;l Pllb'illli"' CO.

PUN WITH CUFFORD - wednesday at the Pomeroy Library, local children painted and wrote
their own story about a giant pet. A librarian also told a story of 'Clifford the Big Red Dog' as
they ftnished, (Joy J. Settles)

H..._ Medical lqulp111ent, Inc.
Oxygen and Related Services.
Medical Equipment and Supplies.

edjcd.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy
20) •• Associates or companions wjll be only paitlally in
uccord with your ~urposes or
objectives today. They'll be
even less enchunted If you try
to munlpulute them to do
·things yo~r wny.

\

ESSAY WINNER - Amanda Richmond of Rutland was the
winner of the annual oratory contest sponsored by the
Mei&amp;s County Chapter of Right to Life. Her essay was on
abortion. As county winner she participated in the state
contest. Here the Rev. Father Walter Heinz, local chapter
president. presents her with a plaque. (Charlene Hoeflich)

288 J State Route 160 • Gallipolis
For more information, call
(7
··6-4091
•..

•

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer· Di[fer·ence ·

www.holzer.org ·
..

�--

The 'hi1y Se!ttinel

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Health official: Deadly virus found

in mosquitoes in

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. RACINE

Scftlll .

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Ia Nan:h., Bill Nme

CSS8titd 1be ~of

. • Pcsick:ut.lqllaa r....
mer lft'Sidetlt TomWolfe,
Who ~$red after S3 years

Summer arrives,
appropriately hot

EMSnms

_..Home NatioDal Bank..
. A~ to t.nk ollic:iab,.
this c:li:aue-of pti$1W1bd ae. Med a "'ddmino dfett.~ or a
reananging
of vuiQus.
a~ at 1be boll, whim,

in 111m, cte.atul an OMJUitlillity
·for ptOiootioos and the addi-

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

to slaves·
tall: .about the slaves who
6\l'td in bondqoe ~nd died,"
said H.all, 'Mio has led unsuc·
tessflal oeffcrts in Congress to
have the goven~mem ~
p far :da~ 011 its leg.a-

Redskins football team, will
head the foundation. Fuller
~id t~ effort woo\d setve to
"'remember .alld ~gnlte
.and give dignity to tbose
fmm whom it lwls beer! with~)'.
~ld for too long."
The NatlM.al Foolld.atron Hall admitted that ~ rnay
for
Atik.an·Amerit'ln have difficulty getting the
Htrit~ which woold be ~~eeesSary support to ~ve
religlble for ~natclling reden~l hi~ ~ l~islatiOft.
fUtiicls., woold "*lse halt the The Ohio rongres~man 's
money for the memQri!ll, fi~t suggestion in 1997 that
Hall ~. The design, loc~· the governnltllt ~palogize for
tkln llnd t()St or the memorial . slavery sparked hate mail ancl
have not been determined.
a heated national debate.
The Rev. Btttt ·
Three
later, llall ~nd
cl\a)lll,in of the
U.S.
John Lewis, ().

Ga., proposed a resolution
that wouid have ~re.tted a
(()lllmission to study the his·
toric:al economic impact of
slavery •11&lt;1 that uktd
Congress to express a ·~
tnitment to rectify misdeeds
ofsl.avery,"
Hall said he woold lobll;t
fot his latest proposal .until ·
he leaves Congress, He 1$
waiting to be rc:onfirmed ~y
t~ Senate as the U.S. ambls~
sadot m the United Natiocil
food and agricultllre agencies
in Rome and rc:ould leave
Congress as early .as mid:
July,

~of-~ees
• Those
111111 new .
mplo~ are as follows:
• Mid: H~l •. ~ president and seruor tendtag officer.
comes to Home Natiaoal Bank
. from Oty National Bank.
where be was \&gt;ice lftSident of
(()IISumel' tendin&lt;&gt; fur 12 years.
Pritt to City N~tioo.J. llovodl
was llnneh managa" of City
loan in Athens;
· . • Newcomer Carolyn
.Bradford. executive vice pn:sident, joined Home National NlW A.DDmONS/PROMOTIONS- Home National Bank in Racine has recently promoted se\1O.nk in Mlf'Ch, Bradford has erel people end added new individuals to its team of banking professionals. From left, front
2D yean of banking experi· row. are Christina Wood, teller supervisor, and Christie Cooper Smith, data processing superence, most recently as vice visor; second row, Shelly Fortune, Syracuse branch manager, and Carolyn Bradford, executive
~resident . of
National vice president; last row, Roma Sayre, loan officer, Mlck Howell, vice president and senior tendConsumer Loan Servldng for Ing officer. and Bill Nease, president. Connie Sauters, the bank's new financial manager, was
tlie Bank Oile Corp.;
unavailable for photo. (Tony M. Leach)
••• Roma Sayre, who has been
• Shelly Fonllne, a Home ously
the s111dent loon · • Connie Sauters, a bank
with Home National Bank for
employee. has been ~ to
2() )'ea!'$, was promoted to National .Bank employee for representative;
11
yean,
has
taken
over
the
•
Christie
Cooper-smith
has
lhe position of financial manager.
loan officer. She was fonnerly Syracuse branch manager
advanced
to
the
position
of
• Christina Wood was proa· branch manager at Home
position.
Fonune
had
previdata processing sllpervisor;
moted to teller supervisor.
National's Syn~cusc branch;

been

r·

Lawsuit accuses priest
·of abusing 40 children

i~••

·
AROUND THE REGION
in all classes. Games for all ages
·: Benefit sonpest awards
Show canceled
will held throughout the day. .
. Saturday

light now ,o. e111 bring IKimt 2of your

: CHESHIRE - A benefit songfest will
be held at.7 p.m. Satwday at Old Kyger
Chun:h, 16 Old Kyger Chllfl:h Road,
J:hcshire.
.
• The event is being sponsored by the
tlil\ of Love Foundation with all j)roteed&amp; aoin&amp; to help people in need. For
lnfunriation, call 740-379-2937.

fiYOdtt 1.1-l·lof styles for 1gmt low pfktl

a.BVELAND (AP) - A woman filed a never~ qaln."
lawsuit ~ttusiq a priest who killed himself ill The dloet~t~ clec:lined to c:omtnet~t except to
Mlldl of i~ touthina her 111c1 140 or ~ ~ Its lawyers wm revlewina the sllit.
men c:hlldrei\ at a tit)' cb~~~Ch in the mid· Rooney, 48, Shot himself in the lltad slloniY
lHOs.
al\et • woman told the dlac:ese that he wtllaf·
The lS·year-old woman, idtntifted only as ly abused her when she was a child. She said
"IIIlO Doe." sued the Cle~ancl CathOlic: it hiDDened at Sacred Heart of Jeslls Chlln:h
Dioc:ae, c:lalmina it kntw about the ReY. in Wadsworth in 1980. a ytar after Rt!OIIty's
·
·
Donald Rooney's abuse and li.iled to stop onlinatlon.
him. The Plain Dealer rtp01tod.
The woman who filed slllt Sl~ Rooney
She said Rooney molested altar boys IIICI illt)II'OJifefly touched her and 11bollt lO other
alw airls in the basement of St. Patrick's airls while they wore altar robes. $ay\na he
Otwth.
.
was tittlna the aarments.
The Sllit filed Wed~ In Cuyalql The woman was told that 11 simllllf number
Coonty Common Pleas Coll1t asks fof class· of boys In the proaram to bteome altar boys
ac:tion statlls, which WOilld endtle the stllllents hlld also been to~~~:lied lm~ during their
who may have been "fondltd, molested or robe fittina. Schulman saad..
·
inappropriately touc:hc4" by ~ey to loin as The woman informed a te~~ther abOut what
plllntilf's. It alm nunes St. Pltrick's Ch~&amp;n:h had happened to her ancl lhe other &amp;iris and
as a defendant.
when nothina, was done she tried llnsutten·
"The c:ase isn't about money." Howard fully to orgamu the airts to boycott the altarScb~&amp;lman, the woman's lat~yer, told the girl proaram, ac:eonllng to the sllit.
new$~. "It's abollt aivina 11 voice to vic:·
Last week. a San Franc:isc:o woman sued
lim$ of Father Rooney.liopilully, that com· Rooney's alate and the diocese for $10 mil·
billed voice will lead to a clla~p and this will lion, alleaina that he aroped ancl kissed her.

A prewvation group
.nys it has raised enough money to talie th~:
first step toward savina a cemetery on 11 Lake
Brio Island for Confederate prisoners of war.
Abollt $41,000 has been collected - enough
for a down payment - to buy the prison site,
said David Bush, a Heldelbera College anthropoloaist and leader of the &amp;rOUP·
Two Civil War fons, the cemetery and the
remains of a Union prison aro on Johnson's
lslancl, where waterfront lots sell for up to
$200,000 an acre. The site was deslanated a
Nation11l Historic Llndmuk in 1990.
.
The ~rollp, Friends and Descendants of
JohMOne Island, bas entered Into a pllfl:ha&amp;e
aareement with landowner Carl Zipfel to buy
H5.S acres encompassing ·half o~ tho prison
compollnd and one ofthe rons built In 1864to
protect tho prison from Confederate raids ..
The aroup still needs to mise the entire
$350,000 purchase pric:c for tho she, Bush said.
Zipfel has said he would donate the rest of
the land if the group gets the money.
There. were about 30 Civil War prisons, and
the one on Johnson's Island Is only site not
dc:.troyed by con. truction. Bush said. The

•

said.

.

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·~ .The Daily Sentinel
•
:• Reldet services Publlahe&lt;l an.rnoon, Monday
•

(U.,.21-)
OhiO Ylllty Publlthlng Co.
~

:

through Friday,

Correction Polley

• OUr main ooncarn In all atoriH Ia

• to be accurate. II you knOW of an
triOI' In a aiOry, call the nM&amp;room
at (7401 992·2156.

DepartrMnt INdentiOns are:

o-.thllnllll*'

•• or

.

PATRIOT - The annual songfest at
Bethesda United Methodist Chllrth, corner of Hannan Trace Road and Ohio 775,
is Sunday at 7 p.m.
The event will kick off a week of
Vacation Bible School. For more information, contact Sabrina Cunningham at
245-5366 or Chris Holbrook at 245-6451.

CENTERVILLE .- Thurm.an-Vega
Parish's Good Neighbor Thrift Ston: will
have a half-pice sale on clothing during
July.
The store is . at 349 State St.,
Centerville. and is open Thursdays and
Fridays from 10 a.m. until5 p.m., and 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturdays. The store
will be closed July 4.

Seminar
offered

NELSONVILLE - The
School of Public Safety
Services
at
Hocking
College and Sirchie Finger
Print Lllbomtories Inc. are
offering a two day
Advanced Criminalistic&amp;
seminar for fulltime certified law enforcement officers on July 15 and 16, 9
a.m. to 4 p.m.
The seminar provides n
firsthand look at the latest in
high tech equipment for col·
lection and evaluation
physical evidence and will
be led by Don Penven, tech·
nical support group director,
Sirchie Labs.
A factory certification
program in proper proce· .
dures for field testing of
narcotics using . Sirchie's
NARK II reagent · kit will
also be presented.

or

P. RKER BURG. W.

- lnt~:n:s~ pmans whn
have ~mt..'tl :at le:ast :a b&lt;K:h~lor· Ill:~:~ :and "oo m:aintai~ ; :!.0 ~tl1ld~ point
ll\~e nl:l) qmtlif) forre~:­
ommendution by 11 ;:ounl\'
school su~rintt•ndent to
become a substitute lellthet
in the st11to: ol' West V~iniu.
Upon «~mplctiQil ol" 18
clocl: hours of tlrient~ti011
:tnd a sntisf;lctOI'Y criminal
badq~round ch~k such
indivtduals could quulit\
for a subslitut.: teocher p.:rmit.
The troining is sdft'dul.:d
for Monday. July S. 6-9:30
p.m.: Thursduv. Jul..- It. 69:30 (l.m.: and 'alurday.
July 13. 9 a.m...::i p.m. u1
W.est Virginia Un i..-~l'liity­
Purkc~ bu rg
Room
2536.The registration fee
for the truining is $ 100 per
person puyable to RESAV.
For· additional info rinntion. please Cllll Irene
Murphy at 304- 273 -0892. ·
Registration will be held
from 5:45-6 p.m. Monday,
July 8th

Birchfield
reunion
HENDERSON. W. Vu. Descendants of Sum und
Melvina Birehfield will
hold their unnualreunion ut
the Henderson Community
Building. June 30. A husket
dinner will be hllid ut noon.
Friends und relurives :m:
welcome.

••
•

N~l Departm1nt1

·

Store promotion

Sonlfest planned ·

RIO GRANDE - The 26th annllal
Antique Car Show at Bob Evans Fann is
fiat~rday. from. 10 a.m. llntil S p.m., in
cOnJunction w1th the farm's . Bluegrass
Festival.
·
: · Registration ends and judging begins
»l I 11.m. Awards will be presented at 5
p:m. There will be first and second place

Thl main nul\ibtr 11 882·2158.

island, about .50 miles east of TOledo, wasn't
developed llhtil the 19SOs.
The oreserved are1t woold inc:lllde the survlvlna
Fort Jcihnson. None of the more than 40 I'Jrison
blllkllnas remain, but excavations of two donni·
tories llild a hospillll have turned up several relics.
"Everyday fs interesting out here," Bush
said Wednesday. ''We find so many dl fferent
things. Today we found shells they used to
make jewelry out of."
.
Historians have preserve4 thousands of
pqes of letters from the prisoner$, he ••ld.
An:haeoloaista want to link .their f1ndln1Js
with the letters.
·
About 40 school aroups visited the site this
spring to learn abotit Its llistory, Bush said.
Francq Ruffini, sUite preservation officer,
said the Ohio Historical Society asked state
lawmakers repeatedly and llnsuc:cessfully in
tho 1990s for monoy to buy the lund.
Most or the money the arollp hns collected
Is from Individuals and small foundations . 1b
get the rest of the money, the group plan to
approoch foundations in nonhwe t Obio and
0111anizations that fund historic projects, Bush

Admission to the event is free. Dash
•
plaques will be awarded to the first 50 POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Three
antique vehicles registered. Panicipating . River Avian Center . demonstration
in the show are members of the scheduled for 7 p.m. Thursday at TuAppalachia Old Car Car Club and the Endie·Wie has been postponed until
Southern Ohio Agricultun: Heritage . futher notice.
Club.
For more infonnation, call 1·800-994FARM (3276). ·

Antique ·car show

Group out to save
. site meets lint
TOLBDO (AP) -

be

POMEROY- Units of
the Meigs ~nc}'
Service ansv;ercd seven
calls for llSSiStliDC'e on
'M:dresday. Units respond.:d as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12: 10 a.m.. fllatwoods
_Road, Sandy Lewis,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
4:44 p.m.. Ohio 124.
motor . vehicle ac:cident, ·
Knren Hllrt, Evond:t Haley,
treated:
.
5:02 p.m.. Pine Grove
Road, motor vehicle accident, James Smith. Mickie
Hollon. treated;
6:02 p.m.. Bnll Run ,
Kayla
Col in.
Holzer
Medical Centor;
8:26 p.m., Eagle Ridge.
Dom Hyseii,HMC:
8:53 p.m.. Happy Hollow
Roud, Sam Withams, PVH;
9:49 p.m.. Page Street,
Gmcie Hoffman, treated.

Ex1.12
'
E~l13
E~t.

14

Other ••rvlcea
Ext, 3
AdVIrllelng
Clrvul.tlon

Ext. 4

CIIUiited ACII

Ext. 5

To Hnd •mall

new~Omydallylenllnel.com

On the Web

www.mydallyaenllnal.com ·

Court Si,
Pomeroy, 0111&lt;&gt; SICClnd-claai.JIOitogo
paid at F'omoroy.
Mombon Tho AIIOCiate&lt;l Preaa and
111

tho OlliO ~~r AaaociaHon.
Pollm..lln . Send oddrell correc·
ttonltO Tho Ool!y s.ntlnel, t 11 COUrt.
St. , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

ly Cllrrltr ar motor ;oute

$2

$8.10
One yHr
$tOol
Deily
.
50 cente
Subocrlboro not ~airing to pay tho

carrier may r.mt In adVance dtrect to
The D,lly Sentinel. Ore&lt;lll will t&gt;e given
carrier tach wHk. No IUbacrlptlon by
mall ~rmltted In ortu Where hOmo

carrier Ml'\llce 11 ovallable.

Mill su~KatDt~en .
'""'*MfioicOI;oiiY__ _

t3WHkl
28WHkl
·&amp;2-

$27 .30
$53 .82
$tOM8

Rollo outlkll Melgl COunty

t3WHkl
28WHkl
&amp;2 WHkl

AEP-41 .83
Arch Coal - 21 .14

OuPont - 4U2
Fedaral Mogul - .67
USB- 23.27
Gannett - 76.53
Ger1eral E[llclrlc - 30.35
GKNLY - 4.85

Papaleo - 51.88

Premier -

8.99

Rockwell - 20.41
Rocky Boots - 5.89
RD Shell - 52.18
Sears
- 56.47
AT&amp;T - 10
Wai·Mart
- 57.41
Bank One - 39.43
Ha~ay Davidson - 52.19
Wendy'a - 41 .07
BLI-18.95
Kmart - .87
Worthington - 16
Kroger - . 19.60
Bob Evana - 32.46
Dally stocl&lt; reporta are
Ltd. - 20.95
BorgWarner- 80.15
lhe 4
closing
NSC - 22.11
Champion - 2.90
quotes o lhe previous
Charming Shope - 7.87 Oek Hll FNrdal - 20.57 day·a tranaaetlont, proOVB - 24
City Holding - 17.25
vl!led by Smith Partners
BBT - 37.89
Ceil - 25.80
at .Adveet Inc: of
Galllpolla.
OG - 18.86.·
Peoplea - 27.eo
Akzo - 43.60
AmTech/SBC- 31 .24
Aahland Inc. - 39.85

f.m.

Subacrlpllon rat••
OMOM moru~

LOCAL STOCKS

Sili.26
$56.88
$109.72

'

Mariners blank

Reds,2-0
See today's sports section ... B1

•

I

I

FREE
Parkin

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
"IIRAND NAMit l'uRNITIJRit AT DISCOUNT PRICitS"

FArrv WV

1371

•

Iii•••

No two people have exactly the same hearing Ieiss. Approximately JO%
of hearing losses may be helped medically. And the remaining 90%
mA,V benefit frOm
. aidS,

0pon .. .m • Spm Mon·Thure
..m · • pm Frl
L8ter houre by appointment

�wa#.II•·•J

•

ALL I THE

• •

a an

urstng VtSttors

lo\ a 6i11Lcom

TM Dsltw SsniiiMII • P-ae A 5

ILY

•

••

set

•
•
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•

•

POMEROY- An eq&gt;an- We J&gt;I:OO!ise a mutually l!en-

sion of its volunteer pro~ram i&amp; Underway at the
Roc:ksprings Rehabilitaton
Center.
As a way of enhancing
the quality of life fur its residents, the Center is seeking
more community interaction.
"Out whole approach is to
involve more area residents.

eflcaal tllperience for eac:h
V()J\lnteer and resident," said
Dena ·Warren. llCtivities
director.
She invited those with .
special skills or talents. like
ans and crafts, story telling,
book clubs, quilting or crochetin~. to share them wilh
the restdents. Warren can be
reached at 992-6606.

'

.College Notebook
will t~&amp;b ~ th!lllenging · hils ~~~ the ~
ltllld including the pro- Ma.~t and A«&lt;Unling
ductkln or ll senklr ~ Deptrtment Schol•rshlp Ill
le\~llhesis llnd ll dus IJiught Mllritltt ool~
by CNN eontriblltOf Ste~ The scllolarsllil? was award·
RObens. husband of ~~e ed 11t the Spnng Hooors
Robens or ABC News This Coo~ tioo. It I&amp; awarded ttl
Week.
•
• junlllrs and ~l&lt;&gt;h who haw
Roberts '' the &amp;on or Ptl!hP deel~tred mlljors within the
and K!lrtn ROOelts of 1\\tnlll, department and blkve a cllmuand wall gr~duate with a blaeh· tali~ gnde point awrqe of
tlt'lf ohru in Ma.y 2003. He is 3.0 tlf better.
.
the ar~nds,on of F1~ and Dl~is is a nllliredng nwjor.
Jud!IOII Dill ley of l'lalriol tmd
the IIlli~ Fra~ and M11.r11in
Roberts of Rae111e.
coo~

PATRIOT _
~
Washington Uni\~ity S~eniOf
Stephen Roberts (Qilllia
Ac:ld.mly, t999), or htriot
recently tOmpleted llnother
semrestet on the uni\'tnily's
dun's u 1
To ~ the dean's list, a
student mllSt athit~ve a 3.S
arade .point
cavefllRO or
ab0 ve .

~~: U:
OPA for the

sprina quarter while
s t II d 1 i n I
under a form e r
RoMm
Dopartment
of Justice
attorney,
atcompllshed
authors and scholars, and Ilk·
ing courses enhanced buuest
speakers suc:h a&amp; White House
press sec:retaey Ari Fleischer.
· With a m~or In t)OIItlcal
science and a minor In hlsttlry,
Roberts Is focuslna Ills educatlon on the production and
analysis of public policy as
well as the general application
and manqement of politics.
Roberts haa been accepted
into the University Honors
Proaram, the National Soclet~
of Collegiate Scholars,
Golden Key lntematlonal
Honor Society, and the PI
Sisma · Alpha National
Political Science Honors
Fraternity.
Addltlonall~. he is cumntl~
active in sevenal eJttracurricu•
. lar acdvitios Including the
University Band, Colonial
Brass (the basketball pep
band),
. Student·Alumni
Society, · and . College
Republican&amp;.
To obtain 11 hands-on
knowledge of political
processes, Roberts hu token
on a pos Itlan nt the
Republican
National
Committee in one . of their
fundraislna offices, throuah
which he has helped oraanfza
numerous national political
events and fundraiaera.
In the upcoming yeat, he

On dean's list
MARIBTrA - Brynn M.
Moss of Lona Bottom, Trlcla
K. Divis o( Pometo.Y, ilnd
Jamie M. Drake of Rac:lne,
have been named to the
Dean's High Honor List lit
Marietta Colleae ror the
sprlna semester.
Moss, tho son of Jeanette
M. Orate ofLona Bouomdsa
petrole11m enarneerlna and
environmental science major.
Davis, the daughter of
Oreaory and Janice Davis, is 1
markttlna major. Drake, the
dauahter of Thomas and
Debl'l Drake of Racine, Is a
s119ns medicine m~or.
Students an the dean's list
earn a a.radc point averaa111 of
at least 3.S.

Receives
schol1rshlp

- Wendy N.
Shrlmphn of Pomeroy has
been nilmed to the ~n's list
fur the spri~ semester 1t
Capital
Un1versity
In
Columbus.
.
. In order to be naflted ttl the
list, full-time students m11st
MIDDLEPORT - Caitlin hllve achieved a lfade point
R. Kelly or Htrsbey, h ., has a~ of at least ~3.4 .
been selected for Honors
Admission
ill
Maey
Wash Inaton Colleae In
Frederltltsbura, Vl.
·
She Is the rl'lnddauahter of
Pam Kelly o .Middleport and ADA _ Three local 5111•
Is 11 senior at Hershey Hlah dents have been named to the
school
d • ll
Ohl0 N 'Honors Admission Is ean 5 st at
ortncm
offered to students who apply University fur the sprlna
early and wbO have II" ous· quarter.
·
·
tanding hlah school perfor- Michael c. Leifheit, son of
manco rteoru and SAT acorea.
Mary Wuhlnaton Colle11e
Ia re~arded u one of the
nation s most academically·
select! ve llnderaraduate In ttl·
tutlonsi and this year, received
approx mately 4,300 appllcations far 8SO seats ln the
freshman c:lass.

Recelvedean•s
list honors

Gndu•tts
Marietta

POMEROY Trlcla
Dnvls, dAughter of Gregory RACINE - Jamie M.
and Janice Davis of Pomeroy, Drake of Racine recently

.

PO~OY

Roger and lentft Leifheit of
Pllfueroy. Olld Hllbbltd, sun
of Sharon Hall of Radne and
Jan~ Hubblrd.l 11nd Keltht.n
bl"ll'l(h, oon ot R01111d and
'leres11 Branch of Masoo,
W,V.., were n11med k1 the
dean's Ust mr atto~npllshlna
a Mmie point a~ of at
lellst H .
Lelllleit and Bnneh are
pharmacy ·
1nd
Hubbllrd a erimlMI justlc:e
malor.
·
O.N.U. Is a private llnl\lei'SI·
~ affiliated with the Unlltd
Methodist Church.

Bll

1{: DeLIIle,

Ch.ri$\)1 D.

Drake, Tommy J. Perrell,

J~

Otatt1 Wh.ltt~ey C.
l.. Jones,
~las w. Jude, April lA
Kiser, Del.nM F. Lemley.
Alysoo N. uwl$, cmle L.
Lightfoot,
Ashley
8.
MeKinney, Amllnda J. Miller,
Oary P. Mitth, Olliver W.
Noms, Jessica L. Pore,
Johsua D. Price, Terrie A.
Ree~ Roger B. Rlg~ts, Adam
W. Roush, Collin c. Roush,
S.ndn 0 . Southern, l.a111'l
Sowde~t Julie A. Spaun,
Jamt$ . w, Stewart, SMnnQII
'fhomlls, Nicole D. White,
'teresa L. Williams and J..eila
R. YOlchllm.
:
To achieve the Deans Honor
status, students must be
full time and earn a
RIO ORAND! - The ful· enrolled
3.'75
arade
polntaveraae (011a
lowlna Meias County stu· 4.0 scale) durlna
the semes"',
dents have a~hieved the
dean's list for the sprlna
semester at the University of
Rio Orande and Rio Ol'lnde
Community College: Mtl\lan ·
B. Avis, Mary B. Bllalr,
Matthew 0. Boylas, Matthew
P. Caldwell, Danyan Collins,
H~sm.l~t Delft

MEIGS CALENDAR

"'"'l)f'S

list

•

Saturdav. June 22 &amp;sundav, June 23
8:01am· 5:00
Dllllltrltlons:
Blackslllth • Printer • caruantrv
Author, mike Weauer
Saturday, June 22nd
:Jenkins In mechlnlcsbUIJ"
The Confederate attempt on
Pennsytuanla's Capitol
at 11:30 em end 1:30 pm

Civil War Home Guard
Ladle• Aid .Society will be herei
R~l Civil War Cake Reception 1pm - :3 pm 6oth da~

Country Store 8nd Count ry Kitchen Will reopen
"Homemade Ice Cream"

1\tma day Saturday from 9
, Community Cllend1r Ia Ilea welcoma.
a.m. to noon. GNe-away days
·publllhecl •••
will taka place awry other
'v!H to non-pt'Otlt QI'OUPI
FRIDAY
'wlahlng to announa. . POMEROY - Pomeroy monlh.
· mHtlnga and apaolal Church of Chrlat fleO com·
tventa. Tht ca~nctar Is not muntty cookout Friday, at SYRACUSE - Free cloth·
lng anti food glw·away at
cttalaned to ptOmote ••~• 5:30 to 7 p.m. ·
the
Syracuse Firat Church of
or fund·ralaata ot any
· type. Items are printed CARPENTER MI. God, Second and Appla
: only • apace pel'mltl and Union Baptlat Church, lea StreetaJ. Saturday, 11 a.m. to
. cannot be gus111nlHCI to cream social, Friday, 6:SO noon. t-or more Information
be prtntti a apecltlo num· p.m. chu!Ch located off State leave maaaage at 992·1734.
bel' of daya.
Route 14S, south of
•
Carpenter.
SUNDAY
TMURSDAV
CARPENTER The
POMEROY Rook SATURDAY
. Boelk Family, preaching and
Springs Belter Health Club, POMEROY - Summer elnglng lhe go1pelat 11\e MI.
Thursday, 1 p.m. at the Fun with the •san• program Unfon Baptist Church,
Rocklprlnge
United Saturday 1 to 5 p.m. at the ·Sunday, D:4S a.m. Churoh
..Mtlhodlat Church.
Hlllalde Baptlat Church, Ia located near Carpenter.
3D724 State Floutt 143, Take Route 14S .from
, POMEROY- Million out• Pomeroy. Games, food, lei· Pomeroy to Csrpen'-'· turn
,.ach Cllnner, Pomeroy lowahlp, prlzts and aurprll• lilt jutt before the railroad
.:\lnlttd Methoclltt Church, '*· Paitor Jamea .R. Acree · tracks on Carpenter Hill
· ~uraday, aervinQ ffom 4:30 lrMtea the public. Bueea wllk Road and follow lht elgna.
to 8:SO p.m. Fret barbecue run In an are11 or lor pickup David Wl111msn Ia paetor.
chlektn dinner. Public Invited. ·call the church, 992•6788.
MIDDLEPORT - The
•
REEDSVILLE Tht Pint Flldge Boye from
! POMEROY - Oemocratlc Hearta
Gaatonla, f'l. c. at .the Ash
and
Handa
Fellowahlp
~~~ecutlve
and Csnlral
Committee, Thur1dsy, 7 of tht Church of the Nazarene Street Church, Sunday, 10
p.m.. Carpentera Hall In In Reldlvllle will haw a free a.m. P11tor Glenn Flowe
::Pomeroy. All Interested par· clothing and amall houaehold Invitee public.

'* ..,.

a

Achieve dHn•s

ucu copy end chat ebit abOut the boolll
mike, will aluelnformal chats In the print shop

·Keeping
Meigs
County
informed

POUR GRADS - Roll 9\IM 1M hiS 011\1111~; l\mllnd6, ~~~~~~ and Ami, lfadulted ftom tout Olfterent schOOlS this S!)ring.
Mepn waa an honor lfldlllll.\tinlm 1\thens Hllh School and pt11ns to attend llOIIege at the UniversitY of South F1orlde. Amanda
ltMfualed flom 1\sbllfy COllett In Wltmon~, Kent wlth e B.S. In social w6!1\. 1\mlll'llduated with an associate's degree In busl·
MU flom Hocltlfll COI!ep and hopes to wolk In tlanlllft. Bufks tom!)le~ hll!l tloetorate In counselor education. i-le will con. tlnue his wo!l\ as a tollnaelof at W&amp;llspflng Retreat &amp; Resou~te Center,,e residential treatment fbclllty In Albany, speclallzlng In
.·the rehabilitation of cult abuse ¥\tllms. (Contlibuted)

MIDDLEPORT - Ohkan
Coin Club, Monday, 7 p.in. al
the Trolley Houle In
Middleport. Meeting and
auction.
Relraahmenta.
Public Invited.
'

POMEROY - Veteran•
Servia. Commlsalon, 9 a.m .
Monday, at the ofllct, on
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
TUESDAY
RACINE - Racine Area
Community · Aaaoclatlon
(RACO) potluck · dinner,
t\Jeaday, 8:30 · p.m. at Star
Mill Park.

AROUND TOWN

·Florida visitor honored
at Bradbury Church
MIDDLEORT- Mildred
Jacobs of Safety Harbor,
. Fla., who has been visiting
here for several weeks was
honored recently with a
party at the Bradbury
Church. .
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Denver Nelson,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Nelson, Lancaster;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Burnen, Letart; Mr. and
Mrs. TateWerry and son,
Chester; Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Vanlnwagen and son,

Middleport; Mr. and Mrs .
Jerry .
Vanlnwagen,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
David Vanlnwagen and son,
Tyler. Racine; Ierrod
Vanlnwagen, . Pomeroy;
Ernest
Vanlnwa$en,
Middleport; Emest Bmg,
Racine; Milford Hysen,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Reese and daughter,
Alexander; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Beach, Sabina;
Shirley Frazier, Middleport,
Rose Grindstaff, Racine;
and Erin Gerard, Chester.

18tlt Annuli

CoMmunity

Health and
Welln••• .fair
'

:

P•r ... lllfiN P••lfrl

Saturday, June 29, 2002
·:

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center .
10 am· 2 pm

: II Cbo!eatero!JG!ucoaa
•
II Pulse Ox!metr.y

'

Sentinel

Screening lncludee a 12·hour rast &gt;beforehand.
Spaces are limited for this screening, eo call now
to reserve a apace • (740) 441·5055.

For Ages 10 and up.

le,.........,........., •e-••tltr

(Children under 18 mu•t be
an

lll•hllllll wllll • nrletr ef hMIIII 1....••11•••

ALL ere lnvltelll
Clveltlen.t C•ll ·

ROUTE 1, 101471 POINT PLEIIANT, WI 21110
FOR ADDinONILINFORIATION

M..1urlng total choltlttrol.

Channel13'a StormTraoker W•ther
will be ther. from 1:00 • 1:30 pml

llt;telgbt!Welgbt

7heDallv

(7401 ••••••, . .

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

........" ... •'"' ............. will ...
'1'1111 DILIVIIIV
•1'11111 IIT·U'
'1'11111 I'AIIKINO
•l'fllll LAYAWAY

PHONE (304) 875·1371

FLAIR
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

1304) 878·11737

"IIIAND NAME FURNITURE AT.DISCOUNT PRICES"

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MONDAY
POMEROY ~ Vacation
Bible School ualng the
theme ."Faith .Mountain" at
the Mt. Hermon United
Brethren Church, 36411
Wickham Road, Pomaroy,
Monday through Friday, 6:30
to 9 p.m.

COURTYARD FLOWERS - Members of the Hemlock Grove
4·H club provided pots of flowers to enhance the courtYard
a t the Rocksrlngs Rehab Center. Pictured with their flowers
· ara left to light, front, Darby Gilmore, Kaylee Kennedy,
Marissa McAngus, Alaine Arnold, and beck, Caitlin Swartz,
Adam Phillips, Brooke O'Bryant, and Andrew O'Bryant.

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RT. a
0ALLIPOI.18 FI!IIAV
WV25515

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The Daily Sentinel

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The Daily Sentinel

Hearings
set Monday

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Din Dfctareon
Pu'lllthlr

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Ctwtll .. llllelli
Gtn.-11&amp; 'h"llll

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for murder
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NATIONAL VIEW

KONDRACKE • VIEW

Afghan actionsforetell of our commitment to Iraq

Anti-smoking campaign appears
to be having an impad

Itt Maln011 lt-.w:tt~

• The Goshen (Ind.) News. on lmoking at/$: Whenever
presented with survey resuhs, it's always good to look a
step beyond the findings. Knowing who · bllDI:rolled 11
study is helpful in determining if the results might be
skewed.
· ·
· Seemingly at cross pu~oses with its profit margin cig;uette manufacturer Ph11ip Morris also puts oui the
"Thi~k.. Don't Smoke" advertisements, a campaign in theory a1med at curbing teen tobocco use. Anti-smoking nds
are also produced by The American Legacy Foundation
~hich was started four years ogo as part of the $206 bil2
· lton tobacco mdustry seulement.
The Legacy Foundation paid for research looking at the
effectiveness of its "truth" ads vs. the Philip Morris
efforts. According to findings published in the June issue
of the American Journal of Public Heahh, non-puffing
k1ds exposed to "truth" were more likely to reject future
smoking. In contrast, the influence of the Philip Morris
ads "was associated with nn increase in the odds of
youths intending to smoke in the ne1tt year," un e1tcerpt
from the Journal reads.
·
True, different people are impacted by different types of
messa11es. Maybe there's a potential smoker out . there
who fmds shortness of breath a more compelling deterrent than death, poison and animal waste. Maybe.
Probably not.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursduy,June 20, the 17lst day of2002. There
· are 194 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On June 20, 1782, Congress approved the Oreat Seal of
the United States.
.
On this date:
In 1756, in India, a group of British soldiers was impris. oned in a suffocating cell that gained notoriety as the
. "Black Hole of Calcutta"; most died.
In 1837, Queen Victoria ascended the British throne following the death of her uncle, King William IV.
·
In 1863, West Virginia becume the 35th state.
In 1893, a jury in New Bedford, Mass., found Lizzie
Borden Innocent of the a1t m11rders of her father and stepmother.
. In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, the U.S.
, cruiser Charleston captured the Spanish-ruled island of
Guam.
ln 1943, racc-~eluted rioting erupted in Detroit; federal
troops w~re sent tn two days later to quell the violence that
resulted m more than 30 deaths.
In 1947,,Benjam!n "Bugsy" Siegel was shot dead at -the
B~verly Htlls, Cahf., mansion of his girlfriend, Virginia
Htll, apparently at the order of mob associates.
In 1963; the United States and Sd'vict Union signed an
agreement to set up a "hot .line" between the two superpowers.
· : In 1967, bolter Muhammad Ali was convicted in Houston ·
:of viol~~ing Sel~ctive Service laws by refusing to be draft·
· ed. Ah s conv1ctlon was ultimately overturned by the
: Supreme Court.
.
In 1979, ABC News correspondent Bill Stewart was shot
. to death in Managua, Nicaragua, by a member of President
: Anastasio Somoza's national guard.
: Ten years ago: An enraged mob forced South African
· President F. W. de Klerk to cut short a visit· to the black
: township of Boipatong, the scene of a massacre three days .
earlier.
Five yea~s ·ago: The tobacco. industry agreed to a massive
. se~tlement tn exchange for major relief from mounting law. su1ts and legal bills. The summit of Industrialized nations
: opened in Denver, with Russia taking its place as the new
: eighth partner.
.
: One year ago: Houston resident Andrea Yates drowned
· her five children in the family bathtub, then called police.
Yates was later sentenced to life. in prison. American Lori
Berenson was convicted and ·sentenced to 20 years in prison
: by a Peruvian court for collaborating with leftist guerrillas
:Billy Collins was named the I Ith U.S. poet laureate.
'
: Today's .Birthdays: Actress Olympia Oul:akis is 71. Actor
: James Tolkan is 7 L Actor Danny A•e.llo is 69. Rhythm-andblue~ sinjler Billy Guy is 66. Actor John Mahoney is 62.
M&lt;;&gt;v1e ~1rect'?r Stephen Frears is 61 . Singer~songwriter
. Bnan Wt.lson 1s 60. Actor John McCook is 57 . Singer Anne
:Murray 1s 57. TV personality Bob Vila is S6. Musician
·Andre Watts is 56. Actress Candy Clark is 55. Tina Sinatra
:is 54. Rhythm-and-blues singer Lionel Richie is 53. Actor
: John Goodman is SO. Singer Cyndi Lauper is 49. Rock
· musician Michael Anthony (Van Halen) is 47. Rock musician John Taylor is 42. Rock musician Mark DeGliantoni
. (Soul Coushing) is 40. Rock musician Murphy Karges
· (Sugar Ray) is 35. Actress Nicole Kidman is 35. ·
Thought for Today: '"Histot¥.' Stephen said, 'is a nightmare from which I am 'trymg to awake.'" - From
"Ulysses.'' by James Joyce, Irish poet (1882-1941).
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lf President Bush tllpeet ln~qi dis.sidents to risk their necks to help gel rid
of Saddam Hussein, the United States
has to do a better job of en ·uring stabil·
ity in Afghanistan.
·
·
This message wus delivered to Bu.sh
on June S by Senate Foreign Rel11tions
Chairman Joseph Biden (0-Del.),
who's been urginl! u beeling·IIJI of the
international secunty force. ISAF, th11t's
currently operating only in the AfghWI
capitul. Kabul.
Aides SII.Y Biden told Bush thot he
supports the ideu of ''regime chunge''ln
Iraq, assuming that Saddam won't agree
to full-scale weapons inspection Wid
11ssuming that Bush cun get internation~I an.d Congression11l bucking for 110
mvaslon.
One aide quoted Biden as telling
Bush, "The reason your father didn't go
on to Baghdud in 1991 is that he'd h11ve
to stay for five yeatS. If we get rid of
Saddam now, we have to be commilted
to stay the course:·
And, Biden reportedly added, "Our
failure to support 11 stronger security
force in Afghanistan doesn 'I Inspire
confide_nce •b?.ut our ability to slay the
course m Iraq.
It's a warnmg that Bush should take
to hem. Americans may be looking
beyond Afghanistan to the ne1tt big onti·
terrorist operation, but notions in the
Middle East and central Asia have to be
looking at Afghanistan as a model for
w~at will h~ppcn to them if they side
wtth the Umted States.
·
Iraqis have eveey reason to doubt
American· reli.ability. I~ ,1991, as U.S.
forces.were dnvlng lraq11nvaders out of
Kuwan, Bush's father encouraged
northern Kurds and southern Shiites to
rebel against Saddam Hussein. When
ther di~. U.S. forces foiled to come to
the1r atd ns · Saddam wreaked bloody
vengeance on them. Al\er the damage
was done, the United States merely
im110sed no-fly zones to keep lmqi air·
croft out of northern and southern lraq.
. Again in the mld·l990s, when
Saddam decimated Kurdish opponents

In the IOW11 of lrbil, the Ointllft lltdlnin- PQtitic:al suppon to extend tsAF muistmtion tilile:d to intervene di~y. a.te lniO other cllits ... we11111 wtill!ft
lnste~ it metely expanded the ~fl)' Aftlllmisttm r.ll b1adt 11110 the ~ son
zone.to the s.outh.
of ~ and WIVklNiml IMt spaWned
Now, Bush seems determined 10 top. the 'hlibon..., U,f:~o not ~ ~
pie Suddwn to pre.empl hi · •ve~op.
menl of w~ of m'-'1.!1 desttu«iiO.
MJminislrlltioo
In doing so. he will hllve to de(llmd at ing an Afghan mn¥ to ~Qbll&amp;h
lea 1 to some extent on indigeoous. ooJer in the coo~. but thiat will
resistance.
luke Ill lelll t 18 moot.lls.
But if the Kurd~ and Shiites - and Melll\whlle, ne~ repxt!i lndieo.tt tho.t
dissident Sunnis. 101' that mauer- cusl promised interrnuitllll:ll11.id to tebuild the
11n eye at Afahunistan. they lllllY vml Wlll"ra\'l\gtd oounuy i&amp; slow in urh'iJII.
wonder if !he'"United States will lollow
ln two sepumte speeches. Bush hli!\
~$h on ~ml~ of aid and securily hinted tat somethlJII like the Marshall
1f mthtwy vu:loey , . won.
Plan for Afghonistllll. but so l1lr the .
The American record in At'ghunistan United States h11.s pledged only $296
is not ~ood. After ~viding weapt!ns million for I'Cf:Ollstruetion, ttllll~ to
and usststllnce to religious rebel&amp; ltght- $3,8 billion spent on the v.w so f~~t.
lng the Soviet Union tllrouah the 1980s. A 8etlitll' Bush aide told me that the
the United State bu ' icully abandoned Marshall Plan he envisions will be
the country at\erword.
international. but even the $4.5 billion
Warlordism and chilO$ ensued. lead- pledged by the lntemationll community
jng the country to welcome a takeo~ 1s slOw In lll'rivina.
by Islamic fanatics. the Tal iblm, who In M11y, the House~ a $1.3 bilterrorized the populution and invited In lion, foul" yeru- aid packqo. lncludina
Osuma bin Laden.
fund for reconstruction nnd miliwy
Since ousting the Thllbtan. the Bush training. Bielen's commhteo is expected
administnltion bus given strong pollti- to take up the measwe- and hold pubcal support to the interim government of lic hearings on Afghan policy - later
Afghan leader Humid Karzai Including this montti.
b11cldns his re-election 111 the historic An Afghan scholar who's been to the
loya jlrga notional conference.
re~lon ret:enlly, professor 10m Outtiene
Alfied troops h11ve stayed to uproot ol the Univel'$hy of Nebraska 'at
Talibnn and AI Qaeda tronghold$ and Omaha. told me thnt U.S. performllllce
have intervened to protect the l&lt;nn:ai In Afghanlston so far Is better than
aovemment from enemies sueh as the widely reported.
fundamentalist warlord Gulbuddin But, he snld, "The Afghans pray at
Hekmatyar. a U.S. nHy In the 1980s.
night that the United Stales willlteep its
But Biden, other Senate Democrats commitment. The)' worry that because
and visiting. Journalists 11te critical of we did leave in 1989, we might leave
Bush for fwllng to secure the c:oun~ again and creole a vnc:uum thnt will be
outside Kabul from warlordlsm and for filled again by extremists."
following .through on promises of ··a Not only Afghw1lstan, he said, but
"Marsh11H Plan" to rebuild the country · :'the Muslim world Is going to be grad·
On MaY- 23. wh~n the United Nation~ ms us on how we perform In
Security Council voted to maintain the Afghanistan. I'd give us nn 'A' right ·
4,700-person lSAF force in Afghunistun now, but the nex.t exam Is comfng ·
- but not enlarge It - Bidcn snid this soon." It's coming, for sure, In Iraq.
meant thut the force would be "penned
up In Kabul ."
. (Mortoll Kolldrtlt'kt Is t,tf!CIItivt tdi·
He ndded. "Unless we r,rovide the tor of Roll Call. tilt lillw.fpQptr of
necessary diplomatic, military and Capitol Hill.)

~'au~

flil~.nn­

RYAN'S VIEW

Third World quality of care creeping·into our system
8Y JOAN RYAN
in§.
, Christian Hardy is grateful he left the . . 'Once pediatricians und sub-special·
jOb a year ago instead of waiting. The ;sts move out of stutc, once hospitals
sitUation is so much worse now: The close their pedlutricservlccs. the impact
usual frustration among those in his will be felt by all children, and our
profession has turned to a roiling11nger. health-cure system cannot recover,"
Hardy was a pediatric cardiologist at says Lucy Crain, c.linlcul professor of
Oakland Children's Hospital. Now, he's pediatrics at UC Sun Francfsco.
training to be a pastey chef.
"I don't think the public realizes the
"He left because of the growing ramifications this will have on regular,
· administration headaches," said his insured, middle-class folks in terms of
wife, Karen, a doctor who is the CEO of access to health services."
the Bay Area Pediatric Pulmonary Just lust month ut Oakland Children's
Medical Corp. "He is very happy he left Hospital, employees' pny was cut 20
when he did, so he doesn't have to deal percent overnight, instituted in large
with what's going on now."
part to offset projected . Medi-Cal
Christian Hardy's story Is e1ttreme, decreases over the .next live years. this
but his e1tit is S,Ymbolic of the crisis In means some doctors and other hospital
pediatric medicme in California, P,nrtic· workers are cutting back on their hours,
ularly for doctors serving poor children. reducing even further the services avail·
Facing a $23.6 billion budget deficit, able to Bay Area children.
Gov. Gray Davis intends to cut Medl- The ranks of pediatric specialists have
Cal reimbursement rates for pediatric been thinnin~ In California for years.
specialists - such as cardiologists, The cost of hving is high and the govneurologists and oncologists - by 40 ernment reimbur~ement~ tow. TOOuy,
percent. This would mean doctors . the average walt m California for any
would be reimbursed at I985 rates.
child to see a pediatric neurologist, for
The. cut would put California last example, is six to eight months.
among aliSO states m how much it pays Remember, 11 child sees a specialist only
for pediatric services.
if there is suspicion that something Is
"These kinds 'of cuts will be the seriously wrong.
.
break in~ point for doctors," said Karen "We were aghast when we 11rst heard
Hardy. 'You have to re-examine how about the cuts," said Suzanne Giruudo
you can absorb these cuts, because you director of California Pacific Medlcoi
have your own household to run and Center's child development center.
bills to pay."
"We're heading for big trouble. Right
Manr doctors already have stopped now, CPMC gets reimbursed about 1.5
accepttng Medi-Cal patients. Some, or 20 c~nts on the dollar from Mediwbo are philosophically committed to Cal. So we have to do a lot of fundraisserving poor children, are leaving for ing to cover the shortfall. This cut will
states where they can honor their com- mean more fundraising or turning kids
mitment while still making a decent liv· away, and we have never hud to turn

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un)' child away,"
Kids who can't get uppolntments to
see doctors will turn to already crowded
emergency rooms for care, which costs
consl&lt;lerably more in the Ions run and
means people with insurance will face
ever-lonser walls.
In more and more California communities, children huve no access ut ull to
specialists. Lust yeur, o team of pedl·
atrlc ear, nose ond throat specialists
from Southern Cnllforniu flew to
Redding for ·.a ton!! weekend of Slll'l!lcal
procedures tor ooout 40 kids. some of
whom hod been wultlrtg as long as 18
months for lrcutmcnt. The mission wus
disturbingly similar to Americun medical expeditions to the world's poorest
and most remote countries.
"Should California be allowed to
become 11 Third-World country in Its
healthcare resources for its youpgest
und most vulnerable population?" Crain
asks.
Davis must cut the state budget. No
one denies the necessity or challenge of
the tusk. The tough cftolces he makes
will retlect his, and presumably the
state's, priorities.
·
Duvis is lncreuslng by 34 percent the
pay of P.rison guards, who contributed
$2.5 1111lllon to his campaign. At the
lime same ·ttme, he Intends to decrease
by 40 percent the pay of those who treat
poor, sick children.
What should we think of ulellder who
makes such o choice; and whul do we
make of the society thut stands for it?
(Jomt Ryan IN a colrmmlst for the San
Frarwls(;o Clmmlde. Send comment,, 10
her In care of thl.f lleWSfJOfJer or send here·
mail at }oamyan®.rfchrrmlcle.com.)
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MASON COUNTY

Living it up in the p~st at the·
Farm Museum's CMI War Days
'Scholarship Guy'
~ looks to help ·
.area students
av MAliK lfAu ....

Muon COw\!1

will be oveft'WI .
.
&amp;mY unlfonnl and
41lri~ tht anl'tual
JUM 22-23,
umberofCiviiW4rteen·
will be on lwldl pont~)"
Ina aoldlers ancl c:ivll o.nt duro!l!j tht war. DemoMirlltlons of
blacbrnlthll'tl and ~od
~till&amp; ancl tarpen~ wUl be
i\veulthemuseum'sworking

ao hanl to urn it, It's a lot of atsJII~,
the
moneY., and the)' alve It to tfor those who
tactics
and
historY
of
thO
Wilt,
MASON- When business theae ldda. ThOy're fanUtatlc
soldiers will be drllllna
people In Mason see Morton ~le."
Braaa comln.t, they open List year, those "fo.nUtstlc lhrouahout the day ut~lna thi
their wallets. He's kriown as people" opened their heW
''The Scholarship Guy," a lnd wallet~ for a lOIII of more
"
t~lclcname he has earned by than $33,000.
ralslna more than $200,000 In "The people In the Bend
scholanhlps for Wah&amp;ma stu· area alway&amp; come throuah,"
dents since 1994.
Braaa aald. ''They believe In
The lonatime chemistry maklna a dlffererice for these
teacher stat:(ed raisin&amp; the students. When I uk for help,
funds after lie watched some they write the checks." ,
1993 students araduate with There are accounti111 procehonors and have little-to-no dures In place to make sure
.. financial support for colleae. the students actually use the
"I was so ani")' about It that money for tuition and books,
· I couldn't stand it," Braaa Braaa said.
' recalled. "I was so upset and Teac:hlna chemistey takes
burt that [ started aoina door- plenty of tlme. So the princl·
to-door in Januaey to make pals at Wahama have let
sure the kids had the bloklna Braaa use his planni~ time
to ao to colleae,II
to nifse the funds. Still, aside
Since then, Braaa has from helpln( the students,
touched hundreds of atudents Braaa's bOileT In the collpae
Uvea, but alvea all the credit e1tpirlence alao ·helps moll·
to the dozens of businesses vate him.
. and people in the Bend area "I'm really colleae-bound
that alve 10 wililqly.
oriented," he ex.philned. "l
• ''They never say no," Braaa think eveeyone sl\ould ao to
. said. ''The people In thia com- colleae even if It's just one
munity are wonderful. They year. They should ~ave the
make thia happen, and there option to experience that. It's
are araduates out there that an enriching experience for
. woufd never have made It everyone. It was Tor me." .
.. throuah colleae without the Braaa did his underaradu·
help and aeneroalty of these ate work at Glenville State
people."
ind his maat*'• at WVU, so
And some of those people he knows a little bit about col·
are former students of leae II fe. And to this day, he
Braaa's that are now parents appreciates the. impact col·
of his students. "Some of leae has had on his life and
·
. theae P.COP.le I've had In class. career.
Now they're moms and dada "I can't lmaaine where I'd
· too," be said.
· be If It waan 't for college,"
· He tries to pay them blck Braaaaald.
.
by ahoppina In their atores, With
the
PROMISB
but realizes that none of them Scholinhlp proanm comlna
are looklna for thlnaa In Into belna. many Wahama
return, that they just want to atudenta wlll hive to rely leaa
on Braaa and buslneuea for
help the kldt.
.. "1 uae their aervlcea," acholaral\ipa. That may be a
Braaa aald. "I really like and aood thlna. becauae lut year ..!'!,.,_....
respect thee people. They~do waa Braaa'a laat year at
ao much for atlidenll. Thla Waha11111. He lw acce~ an
money Ia taken out of pocketa offer to teach In Melas
and caah realsten. They work County.

eruoy

MHII tiURNeM'/I),\II.VRlQISliR.COM

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manllll of umt ·l'fom tht ~ · Mttllanlt$bull. In an a~
of the CMI War,
10 tl(lt!lre lfll'rlsbllra d~
Mike Welvv, author of lleftlft the. InfamOus blttle of
''Jenkins 111 Mecblwklsblq: ~bull,
The Confeclal• A~ on "Nelvv will tlto ~~~ In~
Pei'IMylvanll's ~\IAI~Ill mal cbat&amp; In the museum'&amp;
be on hlncl stlnlll, &amp; l~ Dril'lt ~ lt H:30 a.m. and
and diacusalna }ila
lt. 1:30 p.rn, on Sa~, dis·
Wuvv wrote the ftctlonal tusslna Cotedertte moYe•
nove\, detalllna a &amp;Ollthtm mtllta, latatlon of uoops, the
flmllts [le!lfs u they effect of the war on
endurtd the Civil Wtt, u t Medlanlcsbura, ancl more.
memorial to the l6 The Civil Wit Home Ouattl
Confed~rttes who died In Ladles Aid Society will ~Ill l
Mechanicsbura.
CMIWlrcake~loolmm
The novel also fallows l p,m, to 3 p,m, on both dllYS
General Albert Q, J~nkln11, Inl\ooor of Ct&gt;l.lohn S. Mobs
born at the Jenkins Plal\tatlon of !he 43th Vlralnla CAlvary
Museum In Oreenbaltom, as al\d Vlttorla R~1 Trumbull
he
m&amp;u·ched
Into Ouutb, a Conceuerate spy.

The ~:Wple was wed at a Civil

War
encampment
at
Letthworth S.tate Park · in
Castile, N.Y., 011 MllY 18,
Mobs)' and RO$e ue ~
~ by John and Tlti1tha
M.:Coy Bilcknam. .
The brid~ Is the dauahter or
Bill and Ann McCoy of
Galliptills Fe'!¥· The groom is
the son of Tim . and Diana
Bucknam of Pel1)', N.Y.
. Tht Farm Museum's country
kl~hert and regular ~hibits
wdl all be open dunng the
event •nd 11-e$h, homemade ice
cream will be avall~ble.
The museum w1ll open its
gates to visitors lmm 9 ~. m. to
s p.m. dally.

A IOLDIIR'I IJPI- ~t one of the West Vlrgh'lta State !"arm
M11tt11m'a tvenla, last year Brad Clay, member of the 36th
vtralnla, COmpany A, gave 11 !)resentatlon detailing what sol·
dltl'l dUrii'IJ tnt Civil war wore and why. Clay's company and
fl'om otner CMI War ~naetors from around the area will get
topther at thla year' a "CiVIl War bays • at the !"arm Museum.
.(Pem Wllllemaon)

2nd Set Free

Prom Orlgln1111o or 1311 C-41 proce.. roUt.
IM one 01 our cltrka for dttillla of the
tru)l Trut Color Film Club Card.

HAVI! 8 ROLLS DEVELOPED
AND QET THE SEVENTH ROLL
DEVELOPED FREEl

Trf Ua ftr All
Ytur Phtttflnlahlnt Nte4al
SWISHER LOHSE
Ph;mtlilcy
Ktnntlll Mcelillou9h, R. Ph.

Chclrlta Rlftlt, Jl Ph.

llrtecrlpllon Ph, te:a-atss
11 aEaat Main Sn•t

PCifiiii'OY, Ohio ·

HOURS
Mon · Frllam · a,m

Sal. 11m- Som
Sun,CIOHCI

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Sftltinel

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The Daily Sentinel

WNBA action, Pagt B2
U.S. Sot::c¥r uds acctptanct, Pagt B2
Diamoltd ROIUtdup, Page IU

'fHuRsoAY'S

Ff«lM STAfF REPORTS
with renewed
HUNTINGTON - The Marshall
season
ticket
University Athletic Ticket Office
holders over the
announced that they have surpassed
next two weeks
11,000 season tickets sold for the
on
moves and
2002 Thundering Herd football seaadditional
tickson.
ets. All season
"We are very happy witht he Sales
Ioc at io n
that we have had to date,'' Ticket
changes will be
Manager Michael Carpenter said. "
made based on
We don't want to make sure that fans MARSHALL Big Green priwho have not yet purchased their
ority points.
tickets know !here are still plenty of "Once we have completed all the
great seats available for this fall."
changes for season ticket holders,
The ticket office will be working we will be able to begin making

Melts asads .

pllylnBACF
-pfddessk

Dinner
Blu~

• Mother's and. Father's
Day Covered Dish dinner .
at Southside Community
Center Friday at 7 p.m.
Everyone .
welcome.
Covered dishes and
desserts appreciated.

.FestiVal
•

. Looesome Ri:ver

hand, Rarely Hero and

5""11

renowned
die stage
at Wt&lt;e
the
Bob E\&gt;ans Famt B ~
Festival. The full-day
event be)rins at 10 a.m• .and
lasts until tO p.m., .and will
:also ioclude the Cherty
Ridge
Band
and

'Cherry Ridge'
• Dance

Artist Series
• The · Three River
Avian Center. will be on
hand with their collection
of feathered friends at ThEndie· Wie State Park
Wednesday at 7 p.m., as
pan of the Point Pleasant
Summer Artist Series.
Program is free to all.
Bring a lawn chair or blatt·
ket for seating.
·

MusewnOpen
•
The Collis P.
HuntingtOn . Railroad
Historical Society opens its
museum fu&gt;m I to S p.m.
Saturdays and Sundays
through
Labor Day.
Admission is free: but
donatiOI\s are accepted.
For more information call

youth

Acoustic Blues
• Scott Perry will present acoustic blues at the
Court Grill in Pomeroy,
Friday, beginning at 9 p.m.
with a $S cover charge.
For more information contact the Grill at 992-6524,

"Carnival"
• HuntingtOn Outdoor
Theatre enters its ninth
year with eight perfor·
tnances of the musical at
Ritter Park. The musical is
performed July 20.21 and
July 25-26. Oates open at
6:30 p.m. The ticket booth
opens at 6 p.m. For more
lnfurmation on this event
call (304) 523-8080.

Steve James
• Orrin Star Book
Binder Steve James will
perfonn in the new Fur
Peace Station Concert Hall .
at the Ranch at 8 p.m.
Saturday night. Oates open
at 7 p.m. lTckets available
at the Court Orill in
Pomeroy, or with ailllllliOr
credit cill'ds at 992•759) or
furpeaceranch.com.

•

Stleet Fair

--

• The fourth lll'llllllli event

,,

t....h,.J..,..
I
'I
,..,..., uoe a petting
ZOO, magtC

shows. rub&amp;rdi.ICk.y ring toss

and ~'~lift is otfenld froin 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. Satwday at the
Kanawha County Library
. .
For more information ta1l

rew Stadium In
Columbus has
served as the
headquatters for
United . States
' soccer fans irt central n11d
southern . Ohio during
FlFA World Cup 2002
with crowds of up to 4,000
turning out to watch matches
on big screen televisions and
"jumbotrons."

(304) 343-&lt;1646.

Exhibit
• On exhibit In the
Science Hall second-floor
Jlllllery,
"Pastures:
Photograph,Y by Steve
Brightwell,' through June
• 30. Hours are from II a.m.
· to ~ p.m. For more In for·
: mat ion I! all (304) 344803S.

Another huge crowd Is
expected Friday when the
United States takes on peren·
nial power Oermany In the
qUarterfinals of the tourna·
ment. Match coverage begins
at 7 a.m. with klllkoffaroul'ld
7:30 a.m.
The U,S. has enjoyed
unprecedented success at this
World Cup thanks In large
part to Columbus Crew strik·

Crow's Family Re

t~urant

F'3aturing Kentucky Fried Cltlclcen
114 mllt·IMII'Ih or
ltamwoW •MIIIonlrldge
M111011, 'WHt Viralnll
~~~~- 1*141771-11111

•

OPIN t DAYI A'NIIk ,

AEP sponsorlna

•

:MOO llellm Avenue
. Ollllpolll, Ohio .
Phone (740)441-1711
OPIN '1 DAYU Will( 0

er Brian McBride (wearing
No. 20 in photo at left), who
has scored two goals and had
an assist on another score.
In addition to the U.S.•
Oerm.nny match on Friday,
Brazil, winner of four World
Cup tit)es, will face England,
whose last championship
came in 1966. Coverage of
that match begins at 2:30
a.m.

'The Miracle
Worker'
•
''The
Miracle
Worker'', an Ohio Valley
Summer · Theater production will run through June
30 in the Forum Theater on
the Ohio .University cam·
pus in Athens. Tickets are
available at the Fine Arts
box office In Kantner Hall
on the · OU campus in
Athens. Call 740-S93-4800
for more information.

toumament
MASON, W.Va. - The
American Electric Power
Fourth of July Baseball
TOurnament will take place
July 4-9 at the J.C. Cook ballfields.
There will be two divisions
-Pee Wee 10 and under and·
7-8 year old.
·For more Information, call
(304) 773-5528.
'

O'Brien d~s
out of

decathalon
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP)
- For four events, Dan
O'Brien showed flashes of
the past, when he ruled the
decathlon. Then, all of a sud4en, O'Brien's body remind·
ed hiin that he's 35 years old.
·-O'Brien's comeback was
interrupted when he dropped
QUI of the decathlon at the
U.S. Championships before
completing the first day of
liOmpetition.
· ln third place among the 16
CQmpetitors after the first
four events of the two-day,
jO-event decathlon, O'Brien
slipped . the 400 meters
because his left foot had
5ecome too painful.

allocalions for new season ticket
holders based on their date of pur.chase," Carpenter said.
Once all allocations are made,
remaining available seats will be
made available for sale beginning
July I. Fans purchasing new season
tickets after July I will have an
opponunity to "Choose Your Seat"
on July 20 at Marshall Stadium.
The Marshall Athletic Ticket
Office also announced that only 300
tickels remain for lhe Virginia Tech
Game on Sept. 12 in Blacksburg.
Although the Big Green Priority

\

deadline has. passed, fans may still
order tickets. Locations wm · be
based on the best remaining tickets.
Herd fans in Parkersburg, Point
Pleasant and Gallipolis will have a
chance to get together to talk to MU
coach Bob Pruett and several Herd
players Thursday at a trio of Season
Ticket Camvan stops.
The caravan will roll into
Parkersburg's North End Tavern
from II a.m. to I p.m.. Turnpike
Ford in Gullipolis from 2-4 p.m.,
and then Village Pizza in Point
Pleasant from 4-6 p.m:

Andrew
Carter
THE CHEAP SEATS

The
(Everyman~'

World Cup

•

(304) 736-7349.

Gharleston

at Southside

Communitr Center with
"Cherry Ridge" Saturday
from 7-IOp.m. ·

R~ . .._._.
ru£ more lftmunllllon,
call
l..S00-994-FARM
(32?6) or visit the Bob
Evans Farms website at
www.bobevans.rom.

rL_M..___.

BELPRE - The West
Virginia All-Stars defeated
the Ohio stars 36-0 in the
ninlh annual Battle Against
Cystic Fibrosis Football
Oassic played last Friday at
Belpre High School.
. Kennedy Award-winning
Parkersburg
quarterback
Marc Kimes threw for 191
yill'ds and two touchdowns on
ll-of~l6 passing to lead the
Mountain State team to a
seore which matched the
biggest mar&amp;in of victory in
the event's history. Ivan
Hawkins • formerly of
Parkersburg Soulh - caught
four of those balls for I 09
yards and both tO's (37
yill'ds and 29 yards). Hawkins
al;so ·opened the scoring with
a si:t·Yard run during the first
penod.
.Kimes also caught a touchdown pass on a razzle-dazzle
play in the first quarter.
The West Vtrginia defense
held the Ohio squad . to just
I!&gt;8 total yards while picking
UP. 313.
.·
Parkersburg linebacker
Mark Swisher returned an
interception 87 yards for a
West · Vi~inia
score.
Ravenswood s Eric Reed
added 11 30-yard field goal in
the second quaner.
Fonner Meigs High School
players J.P. Vl!l'ian and Tyson
Lee played in the game for
lhe Ohio stars.
The game annu'ally show·
Cases many of the top senior
football players in the MidOhio Valley.

• Jam Session will be
held Friday at the Letart
Community Center, 7~10
p.m. Country, bluegrass,
and gospel music. L.etan
Pioneers 4-H will pro\lide
concessions. _

.....4., J••• H. 211J

Marshall caravan to make local stop today

HlGHUGHfS

Jam Session

Page II

•

•

OarShow .

•

,

lntri~uirig.
Exciting. Exhilarating.
Excrucmling.
And that was just the group phase.
Cenainly, FIFA World Cup 2002 has provided more than its fair share peaks and valleys for fans and players alike, what with the
ehminalion of some of the traditional powers and the advancement of underdogs from
· places where soccer isn't supposed to thrive.
Gone are prohibitive favorites France the defending champion - and Argentina
- a side hailed as the best in the world by
some before the . tournament. France went
out with barely a whimper -· .Josin¥ all
lhree matches in Oroup A wilhout sconng a
goal. Argentina headed home with a win, a
loss and a draw to its credit .
Group winners included clubs like
Denmark, South Korea, Sweden, Mexico
and Japan - not your typical list of likely
cup winners.
Brazil, Germany and Spain were the only
traditional heavyweights to win their
groups.
OUCitl- Cincinnati's Ken Griffey Jr. Is hit by a pitch from Mariners' pitcher Freddy Garcia In the first Inning
The rest of I he "Sweet 16" included Italy ·
Wednesday In Cincinnati. (AP) ·'''~
.
.
(3-time champ) and England (1966 winner),
••
along with the United ·Slates, Senegal,
Paraguay, Turkey, Ireland and Belgium.
The Round of 16 provided some of the
most inspiring p)ay in the tournament.
Senegal and South Korea advanced to the
world's "Elile 8" with stunning "golden
goal" victories over Sweden and Italy,
respectively.
·
CINCINNATI (AP) -. Junior got outplayed by replaced Griffey in center field in Seattle after their
South Korea, co-hosf of the lournament
the guy who replaced him. Bret Boone did a number February 2000 trade and has II homers this season
along with Japan, rallied from a 1-0 deficit
on the rest of his family, too.
- nine more than Griffey, who's been limiled by leg
in the final two minutes to force overtime in
Boone and Mike Cameron homered, . and the injuries.
its
match against the Italians.
.
Seattle Mariners rode another impressive start by
Boone led off the fourth with his ninth homer and
England and Brazil - who face each
Freddy Garcia to a 2-0 victory Wednesday night made the pivotal play. The second baseman dove
other Friday - enjoyed the most compre,
over the Cincinnati Reds.
onto the outfield grass to stop Sean Casey's
. hensive victories, with England winning 3-0
Garcia (10-4) gave up only three hits in ei$ht grounder with two runners aboard in the first, then
over Denmark and Brazil eliminating
innings and retired the last 12 batters he faced, wm- threw him out from his knees. ·
.
Belgium, 2-0.
ning his sixth straight start. He also had a single and . That was as close as the Reds would come to scor· Germany - the United States' opp&lt;jnent
a double- one fewer hit !han he gave up.
ing off Garcia, who hasn't lost since May 19. The
Friday - scored a lacklusler 1-0 win over
Ken Griffey Jr. was in the Reds' lineup, facing hi.s right·hander has given up only nine earned runs in
Paraguay, While Spain needed penally kicks
former team for the second straight night. He was hit 45 innin~s during his six-game streak.
·
to beat a scrappy Ireland side. Turkey
by a pitch in the first inning, then grounded out and
Kazuh1ro Sasaki pitched the ninth for his 16th
required jus I one goal to knock olf co-host
struck out before singling in the ninth.
save and his 98th as a Mariner, matching Mike
Japan.
Griffey had been relegated to ~inch hitting for 10 Schooler's team reconffrom 1988-92.
So what about our guys?
days because of a pulled hamstnng. He returned to
Reds manager Bob Boone - Bret's father - tried
Glad you asked.
the lineup against the Mariners on Tuesday niW!t, to get his lensed-up team to relax. durin~ a clubhouse
The United Stutes has provided its fans
got his 2,000th hit in the series opener Tuesday mght meeting after an 8-1 loss Tuesday mght knocked
with some hi$h drama in this tournament,·
and made a sensational catch at the wall.
them out of first place in the NL Central.
.
This time, two Mariners with Cincinnati ties pro.- It didn't work. The Reds went 0-for-8 with run- . from its glonous victory over Ponugal's
vided lhe biggest hits and the highlight play,
ners in scoring position, extending !heir long stretch ' "Golden Generation" side in the opening .
Cameron led off the second with a homer off
Elmer Dessens (4-3), ending an O.for- 12 slump. He
PlttH 111 Drench, Bl
. Plttst stt Everym•n. Bl

Mariners drench Reds

•

· i: Lalmbeer to
~ ._d the shock
; AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
CAP) ·- The Detroit Shock
blred former Pistons center
Bill Laimbeer ·to replace
Oreg Williams as coach.
· Wllliams was ftred earlier
ill the day after the Shock
siarted the season 0-10, the
worst in six-year histocy of
the league.

Dunleavy to
stay In NBA
d...tt
.

·DURHAM, N.C. (AP) Duke junior forward Mike ·
Dunleavy will remain in lhe
NBA draft and forgo his final
season with the Blue Devils.

Prosecutor: LeBron James' mentor to be indicted
CLEVELAND (AP)- A father figure to high school basketball star
LeBron 1ames is the target of a tworear fraud investigation and will be
mdicted on ·Thursday, prosecutors
said.
Eddie Jackson Jr. will be charged
following a grand jury investigation of
mortgage fraud and money launder-.
ing, spokesman BiU Canterbucy of the
Summit County Prosecutor's office
said on Wednesday. He would not say
what specific charges would be filed.
Canterbury said Prosecutor Sherri.
Bevan Walsh will announce the indictments against Jackson, 35, of Akron,
and four associates on Thursday in
Akron.
Jackson said lhe investigation had
nothing to do with James.
Canterbury said Jackson has been
cooperative with investigators and has

promised to tum himself in, ·
Jackson's lawyer, Angelo Lonardo,
confirmed the existence of a grand
jury investigation to The Plain Dealer,
which reponed lhe investigation on
Wednesday.
"It's way too early to talk about
this," I,.onardo told the newspaper.
"The process is just getting staned.
We'll go to court, hear the charges and
stan frOm there."
Lonardo did not immediately return
telephone calls seeking comment.
Jackson said on Wednesday that he
was unaware of the story.
"I haven't read it," Jackson said. ''I
haven't talked to my lawyer about it
yet, and I have no further comment."
Coun records show Akron police
have been investigating Jackson for at
least two years, before James became
tbe top high school player in the coun·
I.

try.
.
James, Ohio's Mr. Basketball the
past two years, has already been on the
cover of Spons Illustrated, which
dubbed lhe IS-year-old ''The Chosen
One."
He will be a senior this fall at Akron
St. Vincent-St. Mary High School and
is expected to be a top NBA draft pick
if he decides to skip college and tum
pro.
·
James recently broke his left wrist
when he got undercut during an AAU
tournament game in Chica¥0. His
wrist will be in a cast for s1x more
weeks.
James and his mother, Gloria, have
described Jackson as LeBron's father,
saying LeBron's biological father has
never been involved in LeBron's life.
According to court records, ,PPiice
seized Jackson's 2000 Lmcoln

Navi~ator, a 2000 Jaguar S-type, a
Tosh1ba laptop computer and I0 boxes
of documents from an Akron home
last August.
.
· A detective lold a judge that police
·have probable cause to believe that
Jackson and associates "are committing offenses of conspiracy to commit
mortgage fraud and money launder- .
ing," the news~aper reported.
The affidavit states lhat Jackson
began depositing thousands of dollars
into banks and buying properties
around May 1999, two months after
his debts were wiped away in federal
bankruptcy court.
Jackson . served prison time on a
cocaine-trafficking conviction, and
after his release in 1993, he reported
an average income of $7,859 for five
years on state tax returns, the affidavit
said.
·

'.

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U.S. soccer looking for
wins - and acceptance
at home in the States

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. harder.
"MOO of tbc Ullittd Slalles tauw
playiq in 1M Wllllld Cup,~~ ~Amta
Wd Thursday. "'llle~ w0111'1.1D't tMw :ft"rt
ptayU., me Ge.rmarls. Yw laugh Ill !bat that's ~ tNtlt..~

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at soccet's premier ~Yelll and a tnm !bat ~
,__..., ltlllde a: habit of bealiot up Qll tbc Arlleriarls.
But Ibis US. 1e11m blows it's oo tbc Yerg&gt;e Qf
getlin&amp; withio a. gUM of tilt ~v~
unthinbble - lhc Wl:!dd Clip ftML If that
llappens. the pla)letS would ~ . _ .
Slals bad ~~When you're~ pDitll!l, awll,)' fiom btUia
the best in 1M wtll'kt, ~bat's gu to be int:tnlive

-

ON THE TURE

UPCm11NG ON THE TRACKS
Crow's

~here.'' forwant

Frunily

»

Drench
ftom,...81

'

without a clutch hit. Since ·
Adam Dunn's three-run ·
homer in the seventh inning
of a 4-3 win over Pittsburgh
last Saturday, .the Reds have
gone 0-for-26 with runners in
scoring position.
Cincinnati is hitting only
.2 I8 with runners in scoring
position, worst in the majors.
They never got a runner to
third base after Bret Boone's
play ended their first-inning
threat.
Reds third ·baseman Aaron
Boone - Bret's brother went 0-for-4, flying out with
Griffey on second to end the
game. The first series
between the Mariners and
Reds also marks th~ first time

that the three Boones have
been involved in the same
game.
·
Norts: Garcia singled past
a drawn-in infield that was
expectin~ a. bunt, doubled
into the nght-field comer and
struck out. He's 6-for-20
career (.300).... Cameron's
homer was the 99th of his
career. Griffey has 462. ...
lchiro Suzuki went 0-for-3
with an intentional walk,
ending his hitting streak at
eight games. His AL-Ieading
average slipped to .370. ...
Reds SS Barry Larkin doubled in his first at·bat,.
extending his hitting streak to
12 games, tied with Todd
Walker for longest by a Red
this. season. ... Reds INF
Wilton Guerrero suffered a
bruised right foot during bat·
ling practice and wasn't.
available. A medical exam
found no fracture.

a ,.

ltt LS&amp; ntl

suxeis onlbeGamam.a~~ •

Clint Malhi1 said.
The Amcrielns. we • bi&amp; IUI""•"""'dot"' - .5-l,
~. to .Brilish bootrqat.er Ladllrotes..
But don~l lelllbalto LandQo Donovan, a
year-old Slriter fur me United Swes.
«(don't think w~ should loGe to Ge.rmany:.~ he said. "\Vb)'
can't we beallhem?'
Four yew'1 ago. Donovan watched the Ameriwl&amp;' fi.rsl..l'OWICI
World Cup game against the Germans whet~ he Wti a biJ11
school sophomote in Redlands, Calif. The Unit~ States WllS
fearful and got puslled liround in a 2..0 l05S.
Donovan's a pro now, lind has two goals in Ibis~ CliP.
in which the Americans upset Portugal and Mtltko, tied Sooth
Koru and lost to Poland.
He and teammate DaMucus Beasley, also 20, think Ibis pme
~~&amp;lliost Gennany wiU be diffmnt. With youthful spunk and
ambition, they think the lournamellt belongs to them, that the
United Stales should advance to the semifinals for the first time
since the first Wood Cup in 1930.
The Gennans are big. physical and relentless. They've ~
S1 World Cup games to six for the United States. But they no
longer intimidate the A~caos, whcM belief in thetnselves
reached a new high following Monday's 2..0 win over Meltico.
"They are twice my weight.~· 1llid Beasley, listed at 126
JIOUIIds. the lightest player in the tournament. "I can be feisty. I
can push with the best of them.TUbe an ant runniq uound." ·
Since that loss to Germany in Puris fOW' years ago. the t~
have met three times, with the United Stales win.niq 3-0 in •
1999 exhibition game in Aoridll and winning 2..0 later that year
in the flFA Confederations Cup in Mexico. In Man:h, Germany
poo~ the Americans. winning 4-2 in Rostock as Mathis
scon:d both U.S. goals.
.
The Americans are very familiar with the foe they wiU fliCe io
Ulsan. on the southeast coast of South Korea. Nine of the 23 ·
U.S. ~layers have spent time with German teams. While the
Amenc:ans are speedier, the key to stopping their bigger ~
nents is to mark them tightly and match them push for push,
shirt grab for shirt grab. especially on comer kicks and free
kicks.
"We're not going to be able to match up J&gt;hysically wilh the
Germans around the field," Arena said. ''That's impossible.
We'd have to go back to the U.S. and get the Lakm to come
here and play for us."
Germany is a soccer insider. advancing to the qullrterlinals or ·
semifinals of five straight World Cups, but losing in its lut two
· quarterfinal games.
Miroslav Klose. tied for the World Cup scoring lead with five
goals, and Carsten Jaocker have been a potent force, but the
scoring has trailed off since the opening 8-0 rout of Saudi
Arabia. Germany needed an 88th-minute goal from Oliver
Neuville to beat Paraguay in the second round.
A loss would mark a low point for the German~ who never
have been kn.ocked out of the World Cup this early by a nonEuropean nalton.
"We must not make the same mistake we did in 1994 and
1998, when we played Bulgaria and Croatia and everyone
. thought the semifinals were within reach," goalkeeper Oliver
Kahn said.
'"J'hey will be a very unpleasant rival. They fight a lot, like us,
and lhey are very patriotic guys who give everything for their
country. We have to be very careful."
The U.S. players don't consider themselves unpleasant more like interlopers. Who expected the Uhited States to reach
the .9.uarterfinals?
··'The team that has to win this gwne is Germany," Arena said.
"If we don't win this game, we'll be fine and wc'llgo home and
everyone will be happy.
"I'm not sure how the German team will be doing if they lose
to the U.S. They may not be heading straight back to Frankfurt
after the game."
In Germany, the game is huge. While U.S. players ore getting
more attention back home, appearing on late-night shows with
David Letterman and Jay Leno this week, it's not the same. ..
"They hear Arena and say, 'Whcre's the stadium?'" the coath
Jllid.

_~-­
I •
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Restaurant

A LOOK AHEAD

'-aturiftg

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-

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~lsv.wrforsons

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match to its Cl'llshing. 3-0
loss to Polad\:1 in the final
group match. The U.S. had
to sweat it out on the final
day or group play, but
received some much needed
assistance from South Korea
to advance . wh~n Korea
defeated Portugal, 1-0.
In its first. Round of 16
match on foreiJUt soil in .72
yem, the U.S. met a fllmililll'
foe in reaionol rival Mellico.
As it hnd to u certain degree
aguinst Portugal and South
Korea, the U.S. scored early
und defended well to
advance, recording a 2-0
victory.
U.S. players have given
the television mucky-muck$
ample fodder for highlight
reels from Brian McBricfc's
diving header against
Portugal to Brad Friedel's
save of not one, but two
penalty kicks ogainst South
Korea and Poland. ·
By the by, McBride and
Friedel sive the U.S. its
Ohio connection. McBride

still'S for the Columbus Crew
of M.Yor Le~~gue Soccer,
while Friedel Is a native of
Westlak~
and formerly
played for the Crew.
This World Cup has been 11
coming out party of sorts for
youngsters Lllndon Donovan
and Demoreus Beusley, und
has given established "Veterans like McBride, Friedel,
Claudio Reyna and Burnie ·
Stewart a grnnd stnge on
which to perTorm.
And they hn¥e not disuppointed.
.
Ouite llQssib'lv the onlv
downside for the U.S. has
been the play of veternn Jeff
Agoos, u solid defender ot
the club level who struggled
mightily In ull three group
matches before he was sidelined with u calf Injury mid·
wuy through · the Poland
del)acle. Sadly for Agoos, he
wus victimized on five or the
six g011ls the U.S. surrendered in group pluy and was
responsible for the foul thot
gnve South Koren Its penalty
kick.
His injury will keep him
on the bench for. the remainder of the comP.etltlon - u
fnct thut won 1 leave too
many U.S. fans crying. ·

NOTICE
Edwa.rds Moving and Rigging, Inc., has
been COQtracted to. move generators, tur- ·
bines and.transformers into the Rolling Hills
Power Plant in Wilkesville. Roads will be
shut ~own along the following ro.ute for the
duration of each move. We will be starting
at th~ Meig$ Rail Siding in Rutland proce~dmg. to Hwy. 124 going west. At
W1lkesv11le we w11l be taking Hwy 160
n~&gt;rth to the Power Plant. We would appreCiate your patience and cooperation. Move
date: June 25, 2002.
l

u.s.

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Athirst for promotion: Martin mlkl111 Coors happy

DRIVER STANDINGS

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mike Blno, owner
Randy Bing,
Technician
Jim Bing,
Technltltm

01\ly Julnmy tl&gt;!tlsoil'e No. IU l'ollll o~
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Who t\lll•lll!d ~ lsi:
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tlill'dull "'""· "\Yr gol OIU~k a lop dowt• atul ha&gt;l
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Gutcbi ftahts twd far llft:h pia

TANDING

DISH!

992-5432

. Mt&amp;.

Mieh11el Klose neulna a
toum11ment-hlah tlve to
d11te. Fellow £1'0ntrunner
K11rsten Jantker - at rouah·
ly 6-fect-3 Inches till - 11lso
provides the U.S. Another
'W9!tY in the air.
For the U.S., speed on the
outside will tie ct~~clal •
Eddie Lewis did ll nice job
acttlna up and down the
wlna ~olnst Muico and
Cobl Jones - Americ~t's
"super sub" of sons - clln
give lhe team 11 boost wllh
1\ls iloeecl. Beasley missed
the Mulco m11toh with an
InJury, but should. return for
fr1di\Y'S tnfttch tO IIIVe the
U.S. some moro speed.
So, bottom Hne, olin the
U.S. win?
Why not? ·
.
In this World Cup of lhe
eommon m11n, nnythina Is
possible.

Next for the
comes 3"
time World Cup chamPion
Germany in the quarterfinals
on Friday. The · Oermans
roosted Saudi Arnbla for
eight g011ls in the their tourncunent opener, but blew 11
lute lead In a 1·1 drnw
1180inst lrelnnd before top-:
ping Ct1ntcroon 2·0 to round
out aroup play.
Otrmnny edged put
Parnguay 1-0 to reach the
quurterfinals.
·
In Germany, the U.S. fnces
an extremely athletic, highly
physico! teom thnt's teehnrcmlly sound. The key for the
United Stutes will be its 1\bil·
ity to mnlnt11in possession of
the ball and moke the most
of ony ond oil scorlna opportunities.
.
.
The Germans have been
superior in the ulr, scoring 11
m'l)ority of their &amp;Dills on
heuders with lanky striker

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Pomenly, Ohio
Dtt~thru Window

POST-RACE NOTES

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1UQ( PROFILE
SIMS I'OINr llaWW
'rlloltt il&gt;mllt road ilOUrtt, t t IUrnl Of
va!Yino longthl and degttta of tlMki~O ·
Whtrt: 80IIOMA1 O~llf.
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BANKS

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(740) 992-5009
lArry W. IJa11ks,
OWIItriOperator

�,. .,,,

The Daily f»entinel

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in lipt air at Coors rlelcl

BY ntE ASSOCif.TEO PR£SS
bas gOlle longer witbollt ever pitching
Jason Giambi IUid ~ New York a shutout.
Y:lllkes put up a pretty big number at A day after Barry Boncls nearly
Coor.; Field.
chauged the mound after a pitch
qiambi. _Robin Ventura and behind his knees ~pa Bay ~Alfonso Soriano homered and the ie Tnnis Harper.
wu no hostiiYan~ romped pa.sl ?he c;otorodo ity.
Rocktes 20-11) Wednesday mght.
Tampn Bay staner Ryan Rupe hit
'Tm e11.hau ted right. now. bu? you ·three batters - not Bonds - IUid
ha\'e to keep running and go~n~ threw a wild pitch in four bad
· around the biases, and you can't quit. innings.
Giambi said. "You can't even let
.down when you get a big lead here
DooGEIIS S, BLUE JAYS l
because lik:e what happened tonight.
Kazuhisa Ishii got his II Ph victory
you can score quite a few runs and and also drove in ?he first t~~o'O runs of
get right back in the b3llgame."
his rnajor league career as Los
· The Yankees posted their highest Angele woo at Dodger Stadium.
' run total since beating Boston 22-1 at Shawn Green, wllo played for
Fenway Park exactly two years earli- Thron?o from 1993-99, hiP a tlm:e-run
er.
'
homer. He has 18 home runs in his
Even though scoring at Coors is last 26 games.
down this year. it was hurd to tell as
the Yankees continued their first ?rip
RANGERS 7, CtlBS 4, 10 JNNlNGS
10 the parte. Pitcher Andy Pettine conTexas won in extra iruiings for the
tributed his lirst major league extra-. firs? time Phis year, scoring the gobase hit and RBI, and Jorge Posada ahead run in the IOth at Wrigle:t Field
scored four times.
on Jeff Fassero's wi.ld pitcti wtth ?he
New York has 30 tuns, 35 hits and bases loaded.
six homers in two days a1 Denver, Sammy Sosa hit his m'9or leagueand will try for u sweep Thursday.
leading 26th home run for Chicago.
"You get to the point where, unlike The Rangers had been 0.7 in extra
in other ballparks, you just relax and innings.
let things happen because there is
nothing you can do about it,"
PADRES 3, RED Sox l
Yankees manager Joe Torre said. "It Boston slw'ter Frank Castillo
is fun because everybody ·comes in s~iked umpire Bill Welke and was
and just sort of shakes their heads." eJcc?ed in a loss at San Dieao.
· Castillo was upset abOut being
CARDINAI.S 6, ANGF:I."i 2
called for a balk in the seventh
On the night the Curdinuls started inning, right before allowing an RBI
paying tribute to broadcaster Jack double to rookie Julius Matos that puP
Buck, St. Louis won its fifth in a row the Padres ahead 2-1.
on Placido Polanco's two homers.
After Matos' hiP, Castillo yelled at
A d&lt;~y at\er his death, Buck was Welke, was tossed and rushed the
memorialized in a pregame ceremony umpire. Castillo stepped on Welke's
and the team carved the initials foot - the pitcher said ·it was accl"JFB" in ?he grass just beyond the dental- and had to be restrained by
center·lield wall and also behind sec- teammates.
ond base a; Busch Stadium. His
closed cas~et will be at home plate
BRAVES 4 TIGERS 1
Thu(sday before Phe Cardinals play
Kevin Millw~ took a shutout
Anaheim.
into the eighth inning · to win at
Turner Field . .
0RPOL.ES 6, DPAMONDBACKS 1
Chipper Jones doubled twice and
Curt Schilling struggled against Julio Franco and Gary Sheffield hit
Baltimore, giving up Tony Batista's consecutive homers for Atlanta.
two-run homer and Gary Matthews
Before the game, the Braves traded
Jr.'s two-run triple at Arizona.
outfielder George Lomburd to Detroit
Schilling was trying for his major for reliever Kris Keller. Lombard
league-leading 13th victory. He has pinch-hit in the eighth and flied out.
lost consecutive decisions for the first
time in 31 regular-season sPans since
ATHLETICS 3, J»PRATES 1, 10
last July 8.
PNNPNGS
Schilling, who made his major John Mabry singled home the
league debut with Baltimore in 1988, tiebreaking run in the IOlh inning and
~av_e up six runs und seven hits in six Oakland won at Pittsburgh,
mmngs.
The Athletics improved to 10-1 in
interlengue play. Terrence Long made
GPAN1'S 8, 0F:VPL RAYS 0
a key catch In center field early in the
Jason Schmidt struck out II in his game, then VJalked and stole a base
first career shutout and San Francisco before Mabry's hit.
won at pacific Bell Park.
· In his I64th career start, Schmidt
METS 4, TWlNS 1
allowed five hits. Among active
Pitcher AI Leiter came up wlth two
pitchers, only Jason Bere ( 185 starts) rare hits to .send New York over

Yankees starting pitcher Aney Pettltte holds his heai'l
after giving up seven runs In the fourth Inning to the Rockies, as Pettltte
watts for manager Joe Torre to pull him from the game In Coors Field In Denver
on Wednesday. (AP)
HERE HE COMES -

Minnesota at Shea Stadium.
EXPOS Ci, ROYALS 3
Leiter hit u key double and added a Vladimir Guerrero threw out a runsingle, raising his career average to ner at the plate and also hlt un RBI
.095. He end~d the TWins' three- double at Olympic Stadium a$
~ame wi~ning streak and is 6~0 life- Montreal won its sixth in a row.
lime ugamst them.
Torno Ohka won his founh straight
decision and sent Kansas City to its
sixth consecutive loss.
·
PJuL.ut:s 4, WHITE Sox 3
Pinch-hitter Jason Michaels' RBI
single capped Philadelphia's threeNATPONAL LEAGIJE
BREWERS 8j ASTROS l
run comeback in the ninth inning 111
Veterans Studium.
Eric Young hlt a leadoff home run
Chicago relievers Keith Foulke and and Richie Sexson and Jose
Rocky Biddle could not a 3-1 edge. Hernandez homered Iuter
Mike Liebenhul hit un RBI double Milwaukee won at Miller Park.
with one out, Tomas Perez had u Houston lost its seventh in n row on
tying single and Michaels followed the road.
with. a single.
· ·

as

Reds Notebook: Bob Boone thinks team needs to relax
' CINCINNATI (AP) - Manager Bob Boone
thinks his Cincinnati Reds are feeling Phe pressure
of a pennant race and he wants them to do a few
things to fix it.
.
Forget about the standings. Take a deep breath.
Relax. Have 11 little fun.
Boone conducted a rare team meeting Tuesday
night following an 8-1 defeat against the Seattle
Mariners that knocked the Reds out of first place
for the first time since April 25.
.
On May I 8, the~ had a five-game lead over St.
Louis and were bemg described lis baseball's most
surprising team. Since then, they've gone 12-14
and fallen out of first because their offense is having big problems.
The defeat against Seattle dropped the Reds one
game behind the Cardinals and led Boone to deliver a postgame message: Stop worrying about the
standings and start focusing on the game.
·
"To me, that's how you succeed in a pennant
race -by playing it In a microcosm," Boone said
Wednesday. "You start looking at the big picture
and what happens? There's pressure and tension.
You can't play the gume that way.
"That's the toughest thing for people who
haven't been through a f,Hlnnant race: How do you
deal wilh it? When you ve got a lot of guys who
haven't been through it, the message is to play it

-

'

pitch by pitch and don 'I worry about the bi$ picture. We're going to find out about the big pu:ture
soon enough."
·
Unless the Reds start scoring more runs, they
won't be near the front of the pack for very long.
Their .221 average with runners in scoring position
is the lowest in the majors.
Since they started getting attention as one of
baseball's surprises, they've ~otten few clutch hits,
and there's been no indicauon that the slump Is
ending.
.
. ·
"We've probably r,layed that way for three
weeks," Boone said. 'We just haven't gotten .big
hits. l don't think there's any magic involved. It's
just relax and do what you do."
The Reds are hoping that things will pick up now
that Keq Griffey Jr. is back in the lineup. He was
relegated to pinch hitting for 10 days after pulling
his hamstring.
He had two singles 1\lesday night, but the R~ds
went 0-for·l 0 with runners in scoring position and
stranded 10 runners. Griffey was back In the start·
ing lineup Wednesday.
.
"Everybod~ wants to do well," Griffey said.
"Sometimes tf you sit back and relax, it works. The
biggest thing is not to try to hit the 500-foot home
run or to go 4-for-4. You have your best days when
you can't go to sleep and you have aday game and

you come in halfway out of It and all of il sudden,
you get two or three hits."
"I think everybody's trying a little hard," short·
stop Barry Larkin said. "We've been struggling for
a while now."
.
:
JUNIOR BACK
Griffey was back in the lineup for a secontl
straight game, showing no fallout from his colli·
sion with the outfield wall.
Griffey slammed into the wall to make a catch,
hitting his right knee hard on the padding. Left
fielder Adam Dunn split his knee open wl\en he r1111
into the wall last week, requlrin§ I0 stitches. ·
"He's a litile softer than I am, Griffey said.
Dunn, a former quarterback at the University of
Texas, had this comeback: "See how many game)i
I miss this year."
Griffey staned 1\lesday night for the 16th time
this season. He had a pair of singles, including a
we~ grounder in front of the plate lhat spun for a
sinsre, his 2,000th career hit.
Griffey kept the ball and will add it to a trophy
case his wife built in their home.
·
PROMOTPON
The Reds promoted Johnny Almaru from ass is·
tunt scouting director to special assistant to the
general manager. Almaraz j.oined the club as a
scout in 1991.
· ·

lutment HI.. Sat June
22, (1-1), Roger Karl rttl·
dtnct fOllOW llanl. nHr
Chllttr, dllk '&amp; chtlr,
bool&lt;ctlt, rockll. kitchen
't:;'k'' clollling, gtcturtt1
•• ·~·lllkl, c .•. bid·
ding, etc (7~)HI•4:1M
Gltlge Satoi June 11-21

trom 1 to 4. lalllll Run
A~d1• trom 124 nrtt trtlllll
011 1111 , Croci&lt; IWMPfr, DA

~ Trimmer~

mlorowaYI,

odl-. etc. Alln or lhlnt.

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Sunset Home
Constnlction

~ONo45m

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t.'ltle

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Cellular

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992-5479

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Sldlhg, Decks, ICik:hens, ~

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FREE ESnMATESI

740-742-3411

'HOWARDL
WRIIESEL
Roofing. Home

Malntenn:tGutttfs·DoMI
Spout
FM Estimates
949-1405

Hill's Sl'lf

LARRY SCHEY

RlnMidlflnt
Slop I Corn!!*tl
FREE ES11MAltS

740-981-1671

Qt60:rca'C &amp; Gravely

Storag~

M11sey Ftfvu1011
Pans l Sertice

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
4351 St. Rt. 180

~~
Highll Dty
Self-Storage
JJ'M llilatl I&amp;
· .\mlnjl Oiit

GaUipolls. OH 45831

(740) 446-1044 .

Monday.FI'Iclay .SPM • s.tunlay Npm

MACK•s
PocMtKnW..
&amp; Colllctlblll
'A Cut Abo
the Re$t
Houra:
Mon-Sit 1G-4
nr 1. tnct St •

CELEBRIT'lCIPHER
bfli*CrrpM

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(740) 9&amp;2-5908

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

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

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Pomllnly.OH

740-992-5232

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(141) ft2-3194
992·6635

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Qulin

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PEANUTS
'I'ES,

ENJOI{IN6

SUMMER SCMOOI. ..

I Bei..IE\IE

BeEN
&amp;000 FOR ME ...

IT SAVES A LOT

ON SUNSCREEN

Th1 CRAFTY,
lUND SPOT
.(Factory OUtlet)

A.U vortleol llllnolo
liiQ to onler at
01r lotttloll

SCUM-liT$ ANSWDS .

• llmfSTORf

• V~rtle ... • Wood
• Mlall • lite

Dlllvftd • SpfHd

NEWSPAPERS

Special II ton

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$135.00

446-4995

't4G-742·7037

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•

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• Htlllng
• Alt Condm_,.
• &amp;er.iot On AM lrlnde

•
•

$r.,~.J .

• llettdlnlltll a Light ComJMrolal
• 1oyr. P.rlt a Lllbor
• Htlllng a Air Conditioning

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas,
Sidewalk&amp;, FIOOI'I
ae vea,. l!lll*ltnc.
,,.. l!lllllllltl
(toll IIIII

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PlUIIIIRG
~lm

BUILDERS IOC.
New Homes • VInyl
I • New Oar·aaesl

Business Services
t181 'lbr1 T!uctc, Fon1 311Q, CIO o - 1 Homo Molnte·
!lied, A~~n~ llood, 111soo. P.~nttng, ¥tnyt •ld·
17401318·111?
·
tnv, Clrpontry, doorl. win·
- - - - - - - . biltnl, molltitt homtt
itpltlt .... mort. ""' ''"

188? Font !Ianger, ltv
Foot 111111 Kawewld Bo;w
300, Q4, Go11 Car~ Good
.::;Oondt=llon;:;:.;;.,._t
U=O)«ll
;;.:.:
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tiN c~ t&amp;oo, EM!tnd·
ld Clb. Eaettltllt eomlllon.
Loaded. 11,000 • mlln
113,000. (304)e?S-3oe0

=:

Ht!Mltt otll 01111, !40-HI· haa openlnga, 15 yr.

e3U.
~--~-:--~,.-- IXptrltnct, Ctrtifttll

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In Mtl(ll, Alhtnl and

FullY In•-· 'at 111 your
home repair Ml&lt;il. Call
740-~2-tttO or 1~Q.441·

Walhlngton counll..,

;;.:85:.;.14:--,.,.-~IDD5 Ch_.y Slarra E•l. Supo~or Homo Malnll·
Cab, 1/IITOri, ~,4, L -. nenoo · w. do 11 . . . on
Clttan, No ~UII, ~Uht ' - lnolde and oot. c.~
tlltil,

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080, pen~~ Diumlllng, ''"""hlng

"Free ·
da~t or out
(740)4&lt;11·01 13
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1o10J2~&amp;·H78

Ch..lld CARE

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Open "4 hOU""
"'
••·
7 Oaya ptr WHII.
St. Rt. 7 Tuppll'l
Plalna, OH
CALL 667·8329

flEft

mARKET

NEWSPAPERS
Cover All The

July 4-5-8

740•949•2734
Campaltll with

water, liewer &amp;

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•IHtrto, Ptumbtne,
•nd am•U Home
Mlllnt.n•nn JoR

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Connie's

..,

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....,..~

, Molar Sut&gt;/eotll

Grotto· lNB.I'en • Qljirlt • ~I· WORKING
Young man toco-woflt.ar. 'I used to wonder if I COI.Itd
alford to get married, now I wonder tf t can get along
without a WORKING wife!'

Windows • Rooflna
COMMERCIAL and
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Roofing, Siding, ftdd-Ons, flectrkl~
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Haning's Construction
Fortman: Larry
740·367·0181
M111na "Chna• Haning
11• 740·591·0919

Owner:
Ronald "Mtek" Hanlno

740·992·0780
Cell: 591-8393

,•

••
'

Fwluy, lmoc 21. 20112
Owing tn 1.(•\ly Luck tn~ins
u nl.'w \IUC'I't.'~o~t iu voUI' uffulrs
h1 the )'Ctu· :1\wud.")'ll\lr finutl·
••:h1l , hu,tn"·s~ nml Mw.:lnl pro ..
p(.,;t~ ull 1\1\ik .. cu..:ouru~intr .

Stw'll du "'noc ••f tltc ~pu•l~·
"ork. but tho'"" willlw lltl

lX""·
ANCI ~ H (lome 21 ·1uly 22)
.. Sudul 'illlutilllts ynu either

Ill

(.' I'CIIlC l\1' UfC put ill \:IHII'»C. of
will wur~ nu1 ln evcryun~·s.

l•lcllsumhl~ sutlsl\tctiun lOOliY
mod earn yn11 m11ch NSilCCt

frvm someone hl . whom

yuu'r&lt;' uUructcll. tiel

11

jump

un life hy undcrsttutdlna the

inl1uc11c••&lt; thm'llgu~~rn )'llll
In tht· ycu nhcutf. Scll•l fm
vnur Astm·Gntph prcdlctiuns
by mullin; $2 to Astro·Oruph. ·
c/o thi~ .newspaper. P.O. Uu~
1~7. Wivklltl'e, OH 44092. Do
sure In stule yuur zU&lt;lluc •It!"·
LllO (July ll·Aua. 221 ••
There is u rciYtlrtl in swo·e fur
ynu when yuu put those: you
love ubovc ~our own intcrosl$

tolllly, h wtll be uf the kind
thut no umuunt or money cun
buy.

221

VIRCJO (All¥· 2J·Sqll.
., Aonung ruur peers ynu wll
be the must (ur -~ l~hted toduy

in nnuuut drulin~~ . Follow
on ~~~or u~scs~oncm~.
hccnu~c yQu' rc the one whu
cun lcud them to ~~~~·cess .
LIO~A (Stpt. 23-0..'t. 23l •
·As t1ntmdttl condition~ troolll
in " fumruhlc lli~cll\&gt;n fur
)'&lt;•U tndt~y. Y''" should bo.• uht~
tu scncnotc l.11r~cr ~11in~ from
snme~hi1111 tlmt os uln.•11dl' PIQ·
dudu~. '" well "' in u'"'"'
urcu.
SCORI'IO. (Oct , 24·No• .
· 22} •· Whut comes cus)' is
~cncrully whut is noeuut for
us. und. "'n~&lt;:qUQntcy. whut is
lw~t for us us welt. Toduy It
will pn.we quite jiSQ to pursue u cuursc ulon; those lints
of l~usHcsistuncc ,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) •• Then: is un old
suyi"l!· "IF It isn't broke,
don't try to lh it." Toduy,lhls
wilt be true of you. Don't
foolishly try tQ uftcr u siluu·
tion thm is nmnlna smoothly.·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·1un.
19) •• lnltiute some contnct
tmdlor oclivity with cto~c
·friends· tuduy . You muy be
lucky for them, und tlory, In
turn. muy be lucky for you.
Tha relotlunih\pi you .shure
will he tn the 1'1101 of it.
throu~h

AQUARttt tlun. 20.Ftb,
•• IMt~ud of u~inu tu

l~ l

tllo'-.hfy

or

ditnu\{\lt:

some. .

· thin!' ~~~~~ dr~m '" beln8; too
nmth t\•r ~"" 10 hln1dte, think
in terms 11f ettlur~in» it. Tho
bi~&amp;rr the ul&gt;je&lt;:tlvc ti.&gt;\tuy, the
l\1\'~ier ymt'll get,
PISCES \l'~b. 20-Mnn:h 20
·• Sodul ''(llllto~ts &lt;·oultl ho ··~·
pcdully lu~k f\lr rmo tll&lt;I~~Y
111 helplnp to furth~r your
.t•luns. Don't be sh ubout
cunsttltlniJ persons with
whmn you hul't 11 t'rlcndly
rup\)tlrl.
ARIES !Mu~~:l\2f · Aprlll\l )
•• Some UIIJIOYtrnublc de tl·
opmcnt wlih whi~h you've
h11d to .cuntcnd luully mny
hoke u p111pltlolL~ tum.

TAURUS (April 20-Mny

20) .. Shaw us much C\11\Sid·
crution us ymt con to wtlh
those you doni toduy. It muy
trlucr soonethh•M una~llllCt•
edly beue11c.
OllMINl (Muy li·J11nc 20)

•• This I. un e•~cll~nt ''" tu
devote ull yuur uucntlun tmd
cnefllY on ilousc sillnlli&lt;•ns th11t
. woulil mukc or suve yuu
money. Ylllt're h\ un cspe·
clully ¥wd cycle !tor JICncrnt·
in)l funds .

�ESC

......

~5

the .amount of $150,000

each, to the ESC and'
~&gt;l)df,su.tj~ .1\1
Uni~ity Gf R~o Grande
''"'.s•"'n r.u1
Crossroads · program, for
yoot'h 'Set'Vioes, and a
II\' BMMIIl. . _
$30.,()00 oontr.act
with
·BRI!l:04!&gt;~~&gt;-'ILYSENTINn.OOM
Prosecuting A«''mey Pat
POMEROY
The Story for inve~ti,galion serAthens·Metgs Educational vices for the DJF'S' child
Service Center will assume welfare division.
responsibilitijes for the
Mid Davel\port presided
"'Hee,p Me Grow" programs at die meeting in the absence
previously administered by of President Jeff' Thornton,
Aoess to Human Resource who has again been hospiDe~t.
talized at St. Mary's
Me~
County Hospital in Huntington,
Oomm1ssi0ners .approved a W.Va. Thornton was lTans$286,317,65 oontract with potted to die hospital by
the ESC duril\ll their regular medical helioopter earlier
meering Thursday,
this week, and remains in
. 1"11« to acnns on lbe Oll1i· tbe lntenstive Care Unit.
~ lhe oommrssioners . Thornton has battled
in eXOOJtive session with health problems siQce
~QfJobandFamily December, 2001, when he
SeMces Dirocror Micllael underwent the first of two
Swisher, ~ iudicated that emergency surgeries. He had
the reoommcMaOOr: to awaro ret\lmed to work last week
the rontraa to die ESC came · from a two-week stay at the
from a re\llew oommlttee.
University of Nebrask,a.
Gallia-Meigs Community Commissioners approved
Action J\t,atcy has operated a resoluoion authorizing
the pro~ms under the Engineer Eu:gene TripleJt to
tenns 'Of a w.day d!lltract .apply for emetgellCy fundsince Aooess cealied opera- in.g through the Ohio Public ·
lions earliet this year.
Works COmmission for the
The ~Help Me Grow" pro· repair of a bridge on
gram proVldes early inter- Lellanon Township Road
vention services oo low· 136, .and a resolution authoincome families with small rit.ing
Randy
Pyles,
children. In the past, the Highway Superintendent, to
Mei:gs County Health purchase salt products
Department,
· Carleton through
ohe
Ohio
School and other local agen· Department
of
des .have operated wmpo- ·l'ransportation.
nents of . the program
The board also approved
through
subcontracting transrer ~uests from the
aiTaJ\I!ements with Access; · oounty audttor and sheriff,
1l1e ESC will assume and al?proved payment of
open1tion of the programs bills m the amouni of
on July I .
$432,065.52 .
Commissioners
also Commissioner Jim Sheets
approved two contracts, in also attended.

P

SAw•m ·

·
Wiill dSSUIHe

IIMtoui\ 72

••·natal

Meigs Coun s
own ·'Calliope Kin
...... goes to Washington·

1

~~~o&amp;Os

. Bv law M.

'Delli

U.~'II.YSENnlm.XlOM

MIOOlEPORT -

Middleport's own

~~. K~ of \tie World" wiO once again
~t ~ COOYI\y dllring the national
1~1\Ce Day pa.r.tde In Wasllingtun,

D.C.
.
For \tie thlld ~ in a row, Msron Duffield
and his old-f.a-sbloned ·dN:Us calliope will
·~ \tie ,joorne:y to our t~atioo's capital on

July 4 to

rtidpa. e · in the annual

p
. a

I~ Day parade, whlcll runs fut ~Jne

Mite along Coostil\ltion Avenue.
The parnde is na~ly televit&gt;ed 11M is
usually attended by II\OI'e !ban 500,000 people

ead\~,

"rt ts truly an hoool' to once ~a\n represent

I
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I

Meigs COOl\~ II\ this 11\smric 11ational eVent,"
said lllifficld, \lS he put tbe finishi~ touches
. Uli a lhlee \\leek refu~shing of the wlotful
d~s wqoo that boo'Sel&gt; the .aged calliope 00
special t~ts.
.
·
''Collslderi~ what has tran~plred over lhc
last year, this Fourth of July parade will feel
extnl. $pedal," he added. "l col\sider it a privIlege to rel)reScl\t both oor'WI!nly alld wunlly
in this parade, whlclt Is ~red toward tbe cel~tlOII of out nation's 11\dependeoce."
For those who don'l know exactly what a
~lllope Is, Duffield explained that a calliope
ls all air ()£ steam.powered keyboard instrume~ most often used at ooldool' events, . uch

.

• ti'Mitw • f:ttuur;-...

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HOURS:
Mon • Frl
9·7:
Sat.9·S

AI VAI t A a I

•

as parade~. cami\r.lls and cin:uscs. Calliopes
reached tbeir peak in popularity around tbe
tum of the century and are oonsidered rare
musical iltstruments.
Duffield and his wire, June. have ut&gt;ed their
~liope in various fuirs, festivals and celebrations throughout 1he ooum:ry for !he past 30
years. Myro11 has played on 75 different calliope.~ over a 15-sr.ne area and is oortsidered to
be "'TheCall\ope Kinsofthe World" by those
who view his hve pertonnances.
However, lhis kit'lg's reign may end sonie· ·
titne in the immediate future.
"'This oould possibly be our last year of tmv·
elin.g with the calliope," said Duffield, as he
wiped clean the decorative gold scrolls that
adorn the sides of tbe circus wagon.
"We never really expected to perform this
lOJ\1!. After our first flve years, we said, 'Let's
do 10 years and then we'll quit.' After 10
years we 11aid, •Let's' do 20 years and then
we'll definitely quit.' Well, after 30 years, it
might be time oo quit traveling, which has got·
ten harder to do the older we've got,'' he
added ..
"But, you never know. We oould still be on
the road for another 30 years," laughed
Duffield..
.
Duffield's appearance a1 the Independence
Day parade is being sponsored by the Meigs
Cooney Tourism Board.
.

Eastern Local board
approves staff
II\' BRIAN J. REID

advisor; Debbie Weber,
junior high volleyball
TUPPERS PLAINS ~ coach; Shawn Bush, golf
The Eastern Local Board of coach: Susan Parsons, ele·
Educa!lon approved stall' mentary choir director; Pam
and sop~lemental oontracrs Douihiu, aihletic director
during as regular board and varsioy softball coach;
meeting on Wednesday.
Tim Simpson, assistani varThe following were hired . sioy boys basketball; David
on one-year conoracts: Gwen Weber, assislant varsity girls
Hall, educational aide; basketball; Heaiher Wolfe,
Christi Lisle, fourth grade yearbook: Cris Kuhn, high
teacher; Mary Jo Buckley, school band and choir direc·
special education teacher; tor.
Wanda Shuler, speeial edu·
The board also approved
cation teacher; and Lesa the following volunteers:
Sidwell, bus driver.
Brian Bown, Bryan Durst
Amy
Gillilan
was and Soon Christman, assis·
approved as a substitute sec· tain varsity football; Cathy
retary, and Lori Anll Bailey Edwards. Jared Soewan, and
as a substitute cook, custodi· Juli Hayman, assistant varsian~~d:f~~· supplemen- ty girls basketball; and Billy
tal contracts were approved: Sheppard, assisiant varsity
Linda Faulk, senior class PIHH iH E•atem. AJ .
BREEll@MYDAILYSENnNEL.COM

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        <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>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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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>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <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>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23162">
              <text>June 20, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
