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                  <text>Pllge A10 • The C.lly Sentinel

Mondlly, Aprll8, 2002

www.mydlllly•nttnet.com

AU..EYOOP

UIDGII:
~r---

PHILLIP
· ALDiil

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L'rv\ f&gt;,FAA\D YOUR ROO'\

v.,.,ICP&gt;J~W~~­

Fl.X..~ WE.'~ (.,0 ~ 'It&gt;

~='.,. 1'11\\/E. TO E.'i.i~i'\1\E

100'1'1'1

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t;(iRPIC.iC.O IT Fllt':li,
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OON.. 01'1 \I 1

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lnatnlmlntl

BIG NATE
t WII.OTE POWN lt.LL MY
FEii.LING,_ IN 8LI'ICIC.
"'ND WHIT E I THI!J
WI'IV, i&lt;.ELLY C.I'IN ltEI'ID
I'IND DlcOE!.T IT IN
HEll. 0\o/N TIME!

I!.N'T T M.O.T &amp;ETIEFI.
TH"'N H"'VIIo/Go $0ME
&amp;IGo, EMOT ION ...L
5CI.Mi! F'"'C.E·TO "··

--,,--

PEANUTS
WEt.L, MA'AM, l
Plt'N'T ~•ve AHV
~mWi PAPEir. ,,

SO 1 DID MV 1-lOMEWOir.K
ON A PAPEII. PLATE ..

:~t~:~ ds"o~~ht? ~~~

I MONDAY

a Hllbar
alg~t
a ,,.
rttldue

Whars Inside

eummor

44

:Ill KQI

Mte~lne

ptrll

,

State examination
to begin VU?dnesday
BY BRIAN J. RIID
BREEDCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

We allier
Hlsh: 60s, Low: 40s
......... 2

Wall Sbeet

CELEBRITY CIPHER

rebounds from
IBM scare

by Lula Campo•

CMbllly Clplltr crypiQGrlml lrt crllltd lrom quo!allont bV lln\0111
11101111. llllllncl pftatnl. EIC~ 111111 In th• clphllr Nndo lor 1no1hor,
TO!Uy'l Clul: R equalt U

!T

CRtO

LHVO

VAIZUTHV . • ,
Tl

OPW

-

NEW YORK (AP)
Wall Street shook off a profit

TZUVSO' HV'O

(HZWBTIHV

I' YAM

VAIZUTI

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OPTVF , '

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MWIWJ
UH88H
.
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'NIIure, not cantenl wllh denying
him the ability to l~lnk, hll endowtd ~1m with the iblllty Ia
W~ll.'. - A.E. flt)ljlmtn
.
.

11 1 1 •

YHPAUY DA 1~Y

·

0./11:3 -Q 3h.. .( P~ 1.'-QU

f) 'f:1 ~C:.• WOlD

tv.. "" I:Jq• 0

CLAY

lAM I

•~•~~~ ~v
t . POIIAN~~;;:;;;;:the
bo· ..~~
low to form four olmple wordo. w.

0 four
loorronao ltrlort of
KrombloG word1

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r-,-K_,. .H I G N T

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2

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s N A wK

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1 I· a I· I·

I had attended a neighbors
birthday party. At the buffet table
I .1 Ia · I
I heard one not so smart fellow
· · · ·
, say , ' Birthdays are good for you.
E B T S H E :~: ~~~~~~ ~~o have the most live
e
A Com~ltrt !ht chucklo quotod
. . . . . · 1 V bv filling In fho milling wordt
you dovolo~ f1om "'~ No. 3 below.
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
2

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L OMy 0

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Evon wlw n thhtj4&lt; toke • dl·

rec.:linn yuu don'c L' hoou~.
lhcy ;~rc liktly h _t tU i ll out tn
) 'nllf .u1V.1111

'Cf

llfllfS (M.orch 21-/\pril IV)

•• Uotfunnn~lc ly, lhtrr'o •
ch;m ·.~ yuu Lulllll t'ICJttfil' UC't
,, hit ·m urt \l rr•~ du111 uut:ll in
ftu,fl't ll11 lm·,,lvtuh.'•H• wich

''''"'"· IJ•m'l bluw tllltip 1&gt;111
T 1yin~ 1u I'·""'
"P ' l•ruk&lt;n IIIIIIJII&lt;:e! The

u( rr••1~&gt;11ion .

A•lfo-(:urh M .uduuakcr can
ltcl jl yuu
whAt to

"'"I'""'""

du w nutku thr r4:btion•hip
work . M.1il $~.75 w Mol&lt;h·
111•ker• .:lu ddt ncWif''f""·

l'.ll.

u,,

~ut1nn.

17;", M11rr•y Hill
Nrw York. NY

111151·.
T.'.UIWS (Arril 2li-M&lt;y
219 •• So111e utt"l"'•lrd ml•·
I.&lt;IUU1

nu"'ht

COUll! ftv ll1 pC'O•

r'•
who """lfy dun'l uk•
dt~ntmg l"ttitimu. lf1 .a m"lntnt.lry coudiriun for thum;

don'l ukc tt I"''""""Y·

&lt;OEMINI ("thy 21-June

21~

•• Y'"' n11j,l!tl ftml1ha1 ..,,,.,.

thllll( ft~AHnJI1y 11III1CfUtll tff

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h•n•lt uf

HELPING
LAW ENFORCEMENT
..
\

Yeompn · Visor · Testy · Length ~ START stONE

"How old are you?" the little girl asked the old woman.
' I'm 98,' the old woman bragged. "Wr.Ni,' the little girl
gasped, "did you START at ONE?'
;

~n ut hllr.

SI•Y &lt;nul, b• p01icnr
will wurk lh&lt;ut·
~&lt;:fvro h•,k Into _you r .:~ ...
C AN C~ Il (JuH&lt; 21·Jul y .
22) •• llr fl rut If you find
yu11nulf ht•in!'· prcuurrd lnro
doi nM ~n n u:thitttc that yuu

on•l

t hi n~

k11(JW Wtll nut ~t.'rn yuu r bctt
imtrftcl. l}uu't ~u..-cumb.

LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) •• ff

Sumrone who •urt• b:ttkh1K
onion won'l til wr ll whll

POMEROY

Council handles
personnel issues

S/\C l fTAI~ f US (Nav. 23·

" "· 2 1) •

Thi•

""Y bo

the

1ioy II( rrekonlu~ wh•n thuoe
unft t1iohcd
you've IWt~t
m•dor lhc "' ~ brgln It&gt; 111p
yuu up. Ur rrrpored to •wr
wh:.t you' re doing :uu.l take

'"k'

c.are of them.

tou oclf-tc·rvmg, they will Jo

(:111'"-lCOilN (lloc. 22· :
~·" · 19) - ~l oon r•rtidr.~•ing
ltl competitive iot1al &lt;~C t vtun,
yuu 'II b. jml~ed morr by the
tp• unun•hlp yuu duplay

11p,

to

arhlevr YOiff objttdv• If 1hi•
haf'JJ4.'f11,

VII~CO (Au14- 23·S&lt;pt. 22)
•• II troublrn!~ktr y11u know

rould clrvrrly lncermjjOit you

•i&gt;WI con A&lt;Itn t i~l infi&gt;mlallun
h&lt; nr ohr It , lrylot~ ltf gtt •
fwld of. lle nrdul, oud watch
rva"ylhinl }'fm uy .
Li lli ~/\ (lltrt. 23-0tt. 23) .
• lJuntt let anyone couvin.:-e
you t h11t yuu •hould 1hare

yll!lr h•rd-&lt;"•m&lt;d "'"'"'Y wlt b
lllllf&lt;OIIf Whu WOJ phy"""Y
prt~HI.

but h••l'"' h•nd in

IH.Iiltti1C!nt.

I~&lt;

(Oct. 24-Nu•.
22) .... Vuu nuy hne a JVtilt
•••d co urr••• your llldcf't'lldence. 10 tt brhocwc• ycm
"' •void dk..toriol lyp••·
SC:OI~PI O

(

Pick 3: 8·5·2
Pick 4: 7-5-&lt;1-8
llucklyls: 2-14-17:30-35
Pick 5 dey: 5·2-6
Pick 4 dey: 1·8·3·8

FROM ST!off REPORTS

W.VA.
D8lly :S: 7·4·7

D•IIY 4: 9·3·1-4

C:Uii 25: 5·7-15-19-22-25

I lulloa • 10,....

l'cop1t nan tn thiuk you'rt
what thry u n to triJ' you
You fnay not hr ;~blr

OHIO

Index

you.

'

calendar
Classifieds
comics
Dear Abby
· Editorials
~es

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

.5

7-9

10 ·
5
·4
UQHT liAR DONATIO" - In a show of support for local law enforcement agencies, Bruce Fish·
3
er,
r.N~ner of Plsher Funeral Home In Pomeroy, recently donated two new pollee light bars to the
3
Mel&amp;a County Sherlfrs Department and one to the Middleport Pollee DeP.artment. The new llgl1t
6·7
bars
will replace the existing ones, .whlch were old and In need of repair. Pictured left to rlgl1t,
2
Deputy Dan Leonard, Bruce Fisher and Middleport Police Chief Bruce Swift. (Tony M. Leach)

th, II by lll'W WtJI )'UU rJ:~y
tht jjOIII&lt;. Win or full whh

/\QU/\1\ fUli (J•n. 211-F•b.
f 'J) - Obj&lt;cllvt• dut tuay br
hnporunt tu ynu uughr nur

River Cities Nurse On·Call·
1·8«»-462·5255

be' rqually w to other rnem·

brn uf your fanu1y. l)uot't'
111.3kCI' a iune 1f tln.•y Uou'r
th.uc your ~:nthu•iil,m .
l' l SCL~

(f-r.b. 2rt· M01&lt;h 20)

t'"' will ••.,ly

If you have health questions or concerns, call
River Cities Nurse On-Call and speak to a
specially trained RN.

f'(ll ~tlonM wuh 11ht1un .Jt1Y•

Jcnuw.Jt· alli umld uu.• rll yuur pa:llt'Jint and iuluranu::. Ut! care..
ltt~4iy

you mrL'r.

POMEROY - Personnel issues were addressed and
financial matters discussed during the regular meeting of
Pomeroy ViUage Council.
After meeting in a lengthy executive sessiun, council
agreed to discontinue the employment of Patrolman Andy
Myers with the Pomeroy Pulice Department.
Myers had just cumpleted his 6-month probationary
period with the department, according to Police Chief
·
. Mark .Proffitt.
In other matters, cuuncil alsu:
• agreed to hire ~atth eW Bradford ·as a part-time dispatcher with the pohce departm ent;
• agreed to place a marker honoring Dr. George Huntington near the Pomeroy Municipal Building as requested
by the Meigs Coun ty Historical Society;
• raised appropriationJ in the General Fund;
• transferred S6,000 from the General Fund to the Street
Fund;
• agreed tu transfer ·a liquur license trom L. J. Pomeroy
LLC to United Energy Incorpomed.

The Holzer Health Ho~ine is now...

v.aL.It.

•• lovtn dtou~h

MIDDLEPORT - The state of the village's financial
records is poor, Mayor Sandy lannarelli told members of
Middleport Village Cot~nc il at their regular meeting Monday evening, and a special audit
of the books will begin Wednesday.
&lt;;:ouncil approved · 2002
appropriations based on. a certification from the Meigs County
Budget Commission, totaling
$555,481.83 in general fund
·money, but agreed that some of
the appropriations, submitted
last year by former Clerk/ Treasurer Bryan Swann , will not
carry departments through the
year.
lannarelli and council members said last night that while
there is no reason to believe
funds are missin g from village
coffers, the Auditor of State
must review all records to determine the village's true fin ancial
condition .
Swann resigned late last year
and was replaced, first by
George Hoffman, who resigned
shortly after his appointment,
then
by
current
and
Clerk/ Treasurer, Susie French,
who says that great discrepan~
cies exist in the village's records.
The. cost of the audit is esti mated at S12,000,lannarelli said, which must be paid by the
village.
Council approved payment of bills in the amount of
$78,251.21, with lannarelli voting "yes" to break a tie.
Councilmen Stephen Houchins, Robert Pooler and Roger
Manley voted against paying the bills due tu the state of the
appropriations approved last night, Manley said. Linda
Haley, Bub R.obinson and Kathy Scott vuted in favor of the
payment.
In othe~ business, Council discus.ed th e possibility of hiring one o~ two part~tim e employees for the summ er to help
with grass cutting in cemeteries and parks, but tabled action
until the. next meeting.
lannarelli suggested that a truck route for trucks making

PIMH ... Vll..p, J

I

SCilAM.LITI ANSWIRS

•
'

UC'C'AJimt:11ly 14•t C\"Q nl t ru n
their cmmc in the Y''ar 1bead,

and revenue warning from
IBM Monday, bouncing
back from a sharp early drop
as investors regained their
confidence about a business
turnaround. Blue chips
declin.ed mode!lly while tech
shares managed a sulid gain.
The Dow Jones industrial
average closed down 22.56,
or
0.2
percent, at
10,249.08, recovering from
an earlier loss of 150.01.
The bulk of the Dow's
dedine was due tu IBM.
The broader market 6n·ished higher. The tech-dominated Nasdaq composite
index rose 15.84, or 0.9 per~
cent, to 1,785 .87, recovering
from alms o£36.19 earlier in
the day. Analys111 said buyers
attncted by lr.N~er prices for
N:~~daq issues accounted for
the .modest upturn.The N:u·
daq fell 1. 8 percent l:t!t
week, to a year~to-date lms
uf 9.2 percent.
· T he Standard &amp; Puor's
500 index advanced 2.56; or
0.2 percent, to 1.125.29,

LOCAL MODELl - Those cute talking babies In the commercial for a Parkersburg, W.Va.
restaurant are ' home grown .' Sharp Facemyer, (ight, son of Bill . and Cheryl Facemyer of
Pomeroy, and Halle Ann McBride, daughter of Mike end Jennfer McBride of Reedsville, are featured In an April commercial for the Point of View Restaurant on Parkersburg's WTAP-TV. Miss
McBride plays a birthday girl who wants to be taken' out to the restaurant for her celebration,
and Facemyer plays a kid "In the know' with all the specifics of a birthday promotion at the
restaurant. The children were ·chosen fw their photogenic nature and their expressive ability,
according to Scott Johnson of Pomeroy's Falcon Design and Marketing, which directed the ad
campaign, (Submitted)

~;;IN~T~H~E~SE~SQ~U~A~R~ES~~*~=\=:;=:=:;:;::=~~
-. -~~c.:~~~~~e.mreRs To 1 . 1 1 1

••

Tuc&gt;ol•y, Avril •r, 21N r2
h 111i~h r hchou•'c you cu

Hey, baby!

currenov 43 s~on-aiOI)I
at Monaltllr'l
wrltlr o. -

7 111111'1
bOttom

MIDDLEPORT

r-1~.;..;..

with his heart king,
he couldn't recuver.
·Try it 2nd Aee.

APRILS I

40 PLO

oppotlte 41 Coueteau'l
N Tlmt llmh
I l'luotl
31 Alttr ltpl.
mlddlt
n COifiOI'It8 1 Aahllltt'· 31 "- w~lal" "'""
atory
» Olill'd
Caut 111n 41 IOCMI
Ill• ''"
' 31 lnlov I ' 10 ltlllld
nov.l
13 "o-no
31 Mild
4&amp; Huron
:II AIIIIOII
•~rub
••~ltllve
nelgftbOr
••Ill
II Polyneeltn 31 lchool
11 P111t
41 luelnetl · ~ltnle
111lgnman1 53 OPe
!!II•·
21 lrnall brook 3a Toothpntl
···
~ Thi ltcir'a M lntlllll
type
:Ill ·olui\•111111

tht'lll.

At tilt' ICCOII.J t:~ulc,
North opened hh
hand . 1. do nut mind
light up&lt;·ning.o&lt;, how ~
ever, this collection
suffers trom one mnjur dmwbac.k: the rebid. It is nil, right if
parmer responds one
no-trump, two clubs
or two spades, but
whc11 South bid two
hcaru, North had no
guod call , his chosen
two spndcs su!A!csting
n six-card suit.
We!! led his fourthhighcll diamond,
South ducking his nee
in the lwpe of ruffing
his diamond loser in
the dummy . How~
ever, East accurately
shifted to the ace nnd
another heart. Dcclar~
cr'l only way to make
the contract now was
to play low from
h~nd , fi1ie u inl! Em
for the jack. Out who

lllue-

t7
It Ptiglll dll.

· M nst of the ti111c, I
rcndt bridge d ,tssc!,
l!iVillll studt:ll!! tlc,tb
on w hi ~ h to prn rtk~ ,
However, o.:.:usi on ,\lly I wntch IIH'm
_shutTic und pl11y . In
!tUne wnys, thi s is
more instnt&lt;·tivc fur
n1e uccuu•e I sec the
type! uf mistnk&lt;•s they
mukc . In Fcuru nry,
twu t:tblcs were in •tctiun, iltld th•·y t•ro du c~ ..t ci11ht wild
deals. This week, let's
louk nr six of them .
Th e re Wc1·e .fiv.c
wun1c11 ami three
IIICII pluying, but II! I
will be rutntin11 Jcnls,
nnd so player!' pO! i·
tious, I am 11oing to
me "he'' to' r~fc r m
cvcryouc.
~krc is d;· ~ l one . At
tltc first table, North
passed in !&lt;•c undpusi ~
tiun, ! 0 lln!t O~lCIICd
one din111n11d . .Then
Smllh produ ced n
te xtbook two- hc nrt
wcnk jmnp owrc3ll,
l.w ying the cuutract.
Tlt..:rc w~rc ~cvcrnl
route s ho111c, ilud
South liluud Oil&lt;' of

&amp;?.:1!. · C.OUI.m'i YOU t-\1\\/t""~

L1-\i\D TO et{OUrtE. i\ ""~

"IIIM!d,

14 llncl

Watching deals ·

THE BORN LOSER

. lhap llur

U

Drtlll

Wlllllml
1111Mr
out or-- u Employ
41 Vlltmln
3 CltruatrM H "- - doll
''"''"
4 Mid-i
tnd , .." 42 Mr.
oapltll
a7 Clpe Town
Mullllurgtr

21 HoiiiW

O,..nhoa "'~' • I

FRANK &amp; ~ARNEST

I l'tDDIIY
2 Pull'1 ribblt

clwetllrl

\'\tlm!rltbll) N't!Uiul-r
Writ Nlltlll bll
M~l
IA
Pi n

lltn

Hometown News,..,_r

lllomt

•tt QII•fl
;.

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Melp County's

" ::'-10p .. lOok
'*''
DOWN

6 AJUI

lkwlll

14 Alllllllbr.
IICioMby
II Tan

It - - 01111 .., It IIIII

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ful.

dleck with
•

phylicion about medication dt\cerm.

I

I

DICAL CENTER
Discover the Hol1Jii/lllllierence

www.holzer.org

�•
t

I"

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

•

Tuelday, April I, 2002

www.mydallyunUnel.com

'1Uud11J. April '· _:1002

Wednead•y, Aprl110

•

1-131'.. 1'1

0
. W.VA.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio's unsuccessful attempt to win Hy.undai Motor
Company's first U.S. plant cost taxpayers about $21,000, including air fare,
hotel rooms here and abroad and plane
and helicopter trips over potential sites,
a review of state records showed.
· In trying to land the Hyundai plant,
Ohio officials attended secret meetings
in Washington, Seoul and Los Angeles,
handed out hundreds of dollars in gifts
and - with help from the private sector - treat.ed Hyundai officials to dinner at one of the country's best French
restaurants, according to state documents released at the request of The
Associated Press.
·
"We put a great proposal together

and there are a lot of factors to be considered;' Gov. Bob Taft said. "The competition was very tough."
Hyundai announced April 1 that it
will build a SI .billion plant employing
2,000 people near Montgomery, Ala.
Alabama beat out Ohio, Kentucky and
Mississippi.
Alabama offered Hyundai incentives
worth more than S234 million, including money for job training, highway
improvements, land purchases and tax
credits. The package comes to $117,317
for each of the 2,000 jobs expected to
be created. Kentucky Gov. Paul Patton
had offered Hyundai a S123 million
incentive package to build the plant in
Glendale, Ky.

. employee saw what appeared to be a knife when a passenger's
b~g \vent through an X-ray machine, said airport spokesman
Ted Bushelman.
Sunny PI. CIGW( COIIGy
Showttl T......,.
~
Flul!tlo
Snow
too
About an hour after the terminal reopened, it was closed for
12 minutes when scanners revealed scissors in a bag, Bushelman
said.
The terminal was closed so long the first time because a security employee stopped the wrong bag and let the suspicious one
go
through, he said.
·
BVTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Highs in the upper 60s.
T-he rain will end and the Northeast winds 5 to I 0 mph.
sun will break through the
Wednesday night ... Mostly
clouds · across the area on clear. Lows 40 to 45.
Wednesday as high pressure
Extended forec:a1t:
AKRON (AP) - An instant bingo charity sued the state
builds into the · region, the
Thursday; .. Mostly sunny Attorney General's office Monday to get back property seized
National Weather Service said. · and warm. Highs in the mid · during gambling raids.
,
.
Light winds will shift to a 70s.
The Firestone Park Athletic Association of Stow contends
southerly direction and temThursday
night ... Mostly that the state has not charged it criminally and therefore is
peratues will start to warm up clear. Lows 44 to 49.
holding its property illegally.
. ·
agam.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs
Attorney Donald E. George said Fireitone Park is a legal
Daytime highs in the 60s on in the lower 70s.
charity that operates baseball teams involving 400 children.
Wednesday will warm to ·the
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
"They've .taken our property and shut down our business
70s by Friday, forecasters said. Lows near 50 and highs 70 to basically because we're in competition with the Ohio Lottery;•
Sunset tonight will be at 75.
George said Monday.
8:04, and sunrise on WednesSunday... Mostly cloudy. A
day is at 7:01 a.m.
chance of showers until midnight, then a chance of showWeather forecast:
DAYTON (~P) -The Payton Daily News was one of three
Tonight .. A chance of ers and thunderstorms. Lows
showers until about midnight. 46 to 51 and highs in the finalists for a Pulitzer Prize on Monday in the investigativereporting categoty for its series on foreign athletes.
Gradual clearing late. Lows in lower 70s.
Reporters and editors who worked on the series huddled in
the mid 40s. West winds 10 to
Monday... Mostly cloudy
15 mph becoming north. with a chance of showers and the office of Editor Jeff' Bruce to watch for word of the
Chance ofrain 30 percent.
thunderstorms. Lows.46 to 51 announcement.
The Washington Post won the category for a series that
Wednesday... Mostly sunny. and highs 66 to 73.
exposed the District of Columbia's role in the neglect and
deaths of 229 children placed in protective care.
Bruce said he took comfort in knowing the Daily News was
a finalist.
·
.
COLUMBUS (AP) -A California woman is charged with
attempting to murder her husband of three weeks by putting a
drug into his soft drink at a fast food restaurant.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft il to leave Tuesday for
Police said Christina Combs, 29, tried to overdose her husband. David, 26, on Sunday to get out of the marriage. She was an eight-day trade mission to Germany, a trip postponed last fall
charged with aitempted aggravated murder and is jailed in lie11 because of security concerns following the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks.
of $500,000 bond.
The couple, from Escondido, Calif., about 30 miles north of Taft hopes to get German companies to open or expand
San Diego, were in Columbus visiting relatives of his, police operations in Ohio. He and business leaders will visit Munich,
Frankfun, Stuttgan, Wiesbaden and Hanover, site of the world's
said.
David Combs had a violent reaction to the drink at a Taco largest industrial fair.
The trip had been scheduled for October.
Bell restaurant and drove himself and his wife to Mount Carmel
German companies employ more than 37,000 Ohioans at
St. Ann's Hospital, police Sgt. Stan Latta said.

¢~·- ·····
Sunny, warmer rest of week

Charity sues AG's office

Dayton paper ·In finals

·Bride accused of murder try

Taft to leave for trade trip

Startling forest find made
MILFORD (AP) -Tree experts have confirmed a startling
lind of old-growth forest in southwest Ohio.
For years, the staff of Cincinnati Nature Center's Rowe
Woods and its 800 acres in Clermont County knew that portions of the forest were mature and relatively undisturbed.
· Now, they know they have one of the largest chunks of oldgrowth forest remaining in the state, including trees that sprouted before the Revolutionary War.
Confirmation of t~e forest's age and ecological significance
came after a year of mapping and inventory revealed that Rowe
Woods contains at least 5 percent of the old-growth forests
remaining in Ohio.

Bond set for

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
year after the fatal police shooting ofan unarmed black man led
to rioting, the city's police union
on Monday approved a proposed
settlement of a lawsuit that
·accused officers of harassing
blacks on the basis of their i:ace.

Union, which 6led the lawsuit
against the city last year, was all
that w.as needed to send the lentative setdement to a fedaa1
judge.The deal must be appl1Md
by aD parties and U.S. District
Judge Susan Dlott, who will hold
a hearing in about a month.
Scott Greenwood, general
coui1cil for the ACLU in Ohio,
said Monday night that the vote
by the groupi board of directon
- not complete and probably

\VOUid be announced Thesday.
Dloa has ordered aJI parties ~

DAYTON (AP)-'- A judge has set bond at $250,000 for a inform her of their vote by close
man charged with murder in a slaying Saturday at a rooming of:::~cl-Police oflihou~. . . .
. .
.
.
.
cia1s said Monday the lawsuiti
W1ll1e john Feaster, 43, 11 accused of fatally stabbmg ~Jeev aDegatiOn. were false, but that the
K. Das, 26.
.
union joined in ihe sealemmt
Feaster, whose Web site lists him as a public spealrer, motiva- i' negocWicms and endorsed the
tiona! speaker, lecturer and TV host, had planned to hold a . deal to have a voice in lhaping it
~o~m.April 20 for ~amilies a~ ~rder victims, acc~rding to an under the fedml courwupermvllatlon sent to Ctty Cotnnu~~soner ldotha Boot11e Neal.
vised mediation.
~easter has ~d he lw bad trouble adjlll~' to life ouaide
''We don't do it, we haven't
pnson after servm~ 20 yean for ~ !979 cormrnon for unarmed done it, we nem will do iC:'
robbery and breaking a~ ~ter1ng.
Roser Webster, president of
FOP Queen City Lodse No. 69,
br11d1
sald of the raciaJ-pro6lins allep.
HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - The Delta Air Lines terminal as tions.
He
said
he
expeca
recordCincinnati/Northern KenNcky lnrernarional Nrpon was shut
down twice Monday because ICI'eenm detected what appeared ~ of police-community
inrmctions during the five-ytM
to be wyporu in carry-on bap.
.
agreement
to conclwiwly show
The t«minal was closed about 1 112 hours after a security
lhat Cincinnati police do not
•

doses tea mlnal

'

139 facilities. -In addition, Germany was Ohio's sixth-largest' ·
trade parther last year, importing more than $758 million in'
Ohio-made goods.
'·

.•

Chief: Train fire no threat
VANDALIA (AP) -A train engine caught on fire but was
never a threat to hazardous materials being carried in several of ·
the rail cars, a fire official said Monday.
.
The engine fire on the CSX f.-eight train occurred Sunday
night on the eastern side of this western Ohio city, about tO ·
miles north o( Dayton.
·
·'
"They think the engine overpressurized, exploded and then.'
the engine caught fire," said Vandalia Fire Chief John Sands.
·
Sands said the fire extinguished itself and there was no need ··
for any evacuations. He said the two people on board the train .
were not injured.
·..

Plane crash kills Ohioan
SEVIERVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -An Ohio man was killed when "
his ultra-light single-seat plane crashed near the Great Smoky ·
Mountains National Park after taking ofF from ~n airport.
·
Phillip Walter, 46, ofVan Wert, Ohio, died Saturday when the
small aircraft he was £lying crashed in a wooded area about.onequarter mile west of the Gatlinburg-Pigeon Forge Airport,
.town spokesman Bob Stahlke s~d. The airport is located in
Sevierville.
Stahlke did not knaw Walter's intended destination.
When emergency workers arrived, the plane was in flames,·
Stahlke said
;
.

'

PIG responds to complaints
CINCINNATI (AP)- Procter &amp; Gamble Co. announced a
program Monday aimed at satisfYing complaints from customers who said they were promised toys as part of tQe com-;'
pany~s sales promotion of its Pampers diapers.
.
.:
The company offered parents Fisher-Price toys through the
"Pampers Perks" program if the .parents collected points printed on diaper packages. P&amp;G underestimated how many parents .
would mail in points and didn't have enough toys to distributewhen the program ended Jan. 31.
.
,
;
P&amp;G said Monday that parents who participated in the Perks
program and did not receive the toys that are 011 backorder wi!I
receive a book of coupons and have been mailed letters witli
the date that their toys will be shipped.
·
The majority of the toys in the Perks program already have .
been shipped and the backordered toys should be shipped by.'
. the end of summer, P&amp;G officials said.

.

'

Cindnnati police
union OKs settlement

Jury deliberates Ttaficanfs fate · th~ =:an~!~~:
CLEVELAND (AP) -A jury was to enter its second day of
deliberations Tuesday in the corruption case of U.S. Rep. James
A. Traficant Jr.
The ·blustery, nine-term congressman declared Monday:
"There's not one damn bit of evidence that anybody gave me
any moneY-" ·
.
Traficant, who defended himself even though he is not a
lawyer, suggested during closing arguments that he was the victim of a government vendetta.
·
. "Congress has been passing laws. They have given the. IRS
and FBI too damn much power, and when you are born in the
Unired States of America, you are born into a pannenhip with
.
the IRS the day you are born," he said.

Ohio's incentive package to Hyundai
was "competitive" with other states, Taft.
spokeswoman Mary Anne Sharkey said.:
Taft's office refused an open records;·
request by The Associated Press for
details on the package on the grounds
that the material contained ''very sensitive confidential business strategies."
Ohio's expense$ ')Yere far less than the
$386,241 that Miuissippi spent.;
between late July and early March try-.. :
ing to attract the South Korean compa- ,.
ny. Missis~lppi's biggest expense was a.:
$212,035 bill to an engineering compa-.'
ny to determine the suitability of cer-· · .
tain sites for road, utility, water and.
sewer improvements.

'

illegally single out blacks.Websrer
also said the tetdement is good
for the union because it requires
city oflicials and those who sued
to be accountable along with
police for lighting crime and
improving police-community
~elations. .

The Meigs County ·Department of Job and Family
Services (DJFS), serving as the fiscal agent for the Meigs
County Family and ChUdren First Council, is soliciting
proposals to Implement tbe county's Help Me Grow
program. The .program ·is a collaborative of the state
Departments of Health and Job and Family Services and
the local DJFSs. The program serves children from birth
through age 3 and their families. Preference wUI be given
to tbe proposer ·whieh presents the most Integrated -and
coordinated approach, hieludlna the utilization of sub·.
contracts, to serving this populatl~n.

EMS calls
answered

ceo use
BY MIWIIIA Rtllte'

MRUSSElL~OAILVTRIBUNE.COM

.,m only 14 years old and I wont to live to be

GALLIPOLIS - Students
a wty old age, but if I hove to breathe your
in the Gallia County Local
secorid-honcl smoke, I may never be able to
Schools took a stand against
CQI/ege, play boslcetbol~ 1001'1); have
smoking last week in an effort
to raise awareness about the
children
them grow. If you wont to
health hazards smoking and
continue to smell glOSS, hove bod breotl1 and
second-hand smoke produce.
stained teeth, fine, but don't push it on me.
Safe and Drug Frl"c, 'ichools
Director Jan Coen coordinatSo Smoker, won't you plecise t7y to quit
.ed an activity with elementary
smoking or ot leaSt keep it to yourself.'
and middle school students,
Aaron Angt., VInton EIIIMII.. ry School IIUdlnl
.allowing them to voice their .
. opinions and write letters to
the editor about smoking in
"I'm only 14 years old and I taste like smoke. Smoke also
public places.
want to live to be a very old burns my eyes and makes it
More than 250 entries welll age, but if I have to b!llathe hard to breathe. I feel that I
received, including one from your second-hand smoke, I should be able to eat in •
Aaron Angles, an eighth grad- may never be able to attend smoke-free, healthy e'.lYironer from Vinton Elementaty, college, play basketball, marry, ment.
· &lt;f'
who voiced his strong opinion have children and see them
"Smokers should have to
about second-hand sinoke.
grow. If you want to continue step outside or wait until
"I believe in equal rights for to smell gross, have bad breath they're finished doing what
everyone, but it is not equal and stained teeth, fine, but they are doing (shopping, eatwhen you dirty my breathing don't push it on me. So Smok- ing, et~,) and smoke in their
air with your nasty, dirty ciga- er, won't you plea~e try to quit own home or vehicle. Secrette smoke," Angles wrote.
smoking or at least keep it to · ondary smoke is as dangerous
"If you want to be one of yourself," Angles wrote.
to non-smokers as smoking
the 400,000 that dies this year Jess H. Vaughn Jr. of South- the cigarette yourself.
from smoking, that's tine, but western Elementary also had
"The adults ·of our society
don't expect me to go with some strong words for smok- should set an example for the
you;• he added. "If you contin- ers:
children of today. Just say 'no.'
ue to smoke, do so in your
"Smoking in public places After all, every citizen has a
own home or auto, not in. has become a big health issue. right to breathe fresh, smokepublic places such as ~estau­ It really bothers me when I go fee air."
rants, ballfields, school func- to a restaurant and I'm trying
In conjunction with the lettions, and other places ·that to eat. My food loses its good, ters, and National Kick Butts
people my age attend.
healthy taste and begins to Day, Deanna Pope, R.N., from

attend

ana see

the &lt;llilia County . Health
Department, Cindy Liberatore
tiom Holzer Medical Center,
and Melinda Norman of
FACTS spoke to elementary
classes throughout the district.
"What would you do if
someone asked you to try
smoking?" Pope asked a class
of Kindergartners from Bidwell-Porter.
"If I ever saw a cigarette I'd ·
pick it up, break it up and just
throw it away." one student
said.
"Why do people start smoking, because they think they'lll
cool?" Pope added. "Some
kids may see their parents
smoke, and think it's okay, but
it's not, it gives us smelly
breath, smelly clothes, stained
teeth and fingers, and it hurts
our heart and our lungs.''
Coen also added these statistics: Smoking kills more than·
400,000 Americans each year·
- more than alcohol, cocaine,
crack, heroin, homicide, suicide, car acCidents, fires and
AIDS combined.
Each day roughly 5,000 kids
under 18 try smoking for the
first time, and more than 2,000
kids become new regular, daily
smokers.
Smokers lose an average of
12 years of life due to their
habit

POMEROY - Units of
Meigs Emergency Services
answered eight calls for assistance on Monday. Units
respondtd as follows:
CENTRAL, DISPATCH
9:36 a.m., Palmer Sm:et,
Anne Wallace, Holzer Medical ·
Center;
2:41 p.m.', Second Street,
Dwight Logan, HMC;
4:54 p.m., Ohio 7, motor
vehicle accident, Gwendolyn
Warner, Michael Davis, Mark
Porter, refused treatment;
9:00 p.m., Cole Street, Joe
Conley, HMC;
10:12 p.m., Noble Summit
Road, Robert Moodispaugh,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
POMEROY ·
3:31 p.m., Ohio 7, Bryon
Watson, PVH.
.
RUTLAND
10:37 a.m., Dexter, Nelly
Michael, PVH .
SYRACUSE
10 a.m., Maples Apartments, Eileen Roush, St.
Joseph's Hospital.
, .

Driver cited

MIDDLEPORT
Michael W Davis, 35, 222
First Ave., Gallipolis, was cited
for assured clear distance by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
St:lte Highway Patrol following a three-vehicle accident
Mond•y on Ohio 7.
Troopers said Davis was
southbound at 4:50 p. m,
when he was unable to stop in
time and struck the rear of a
stopped car driven by Mark
-----:------------~------------------------~ · D. Porter, 31,46940 Morning
Star Road, Racine, who had
stopped to allow a car to
make a left turn.
Davis' car then went off the
left side of the road and struck
a large sandstone, and then
collided with a parked car
owned by jackie L. Tanner,
27500 Ohio 7, Cheshire.
Davis' car then rolled over
onto its top, the report said.
Davis' car was severely dam'
.
aged, and slight damage was
reported to the Porter and
Tanner vehicles, . the patrol
said. ·

week.is critical ·for ·

vehicular chase through the
village.
According to Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark Proffitt,
Randall L. Ealy, 42, was
recently arrested after leading
police officers on a motor
vehicle chase through village
streets.
Proffitt
said
officers ·
responded to a domestic vialence call on Friday evening
at a residence on Mulberty
Avenue. As officers pulled
near the home, a red van sped ' ·
away from the scene, almost
hitting the police cruiser.
The driver of the van failed
to stop for both sirens and
lights, said Proffitt, and continued his attempt to elude
officers.
Officers eventually got the
van stopped, and upon
approaching the driver, could
smell alcohol. A field sobriety
test was administered by officers, which resulted in the
arrest ofEaly.
Ealy is being charged with
felony DUI, third offense
FRA suspension and failulll·
to yield · right-a-way to
oncoming traffic.
The felony DUI and FRA
susp~nsion both carry the
possibility of Ealy forfeiting
his vehicle, said Proffitt.
Ealy was released on a
$60,000 OR Bond and is currencly awaiting his scheduled
court date.

Barbecue set
RACINE .- Racine Volunteer Fire Department
chicken barbecue, Sunday,
servicing to begin at 11 a.m.

Election
planned
MASON - VFW Stewart
Johnson Post 9926 Ladies
Auxiliary are holding election
of officers for the year 200203, April 16 at the regular
meeting. There will be pot
luck refreshments after the
meeting.

_To sln1

HOBSON - Melody Trio,
a nationally-known gospel
group and performers of "So
Much to Thank Him For"
will sing at Hobson Christian
POMEROY - A local Fellowship Church Thursday
man is arrested following a at7 p.m. The public is invited.

Man·amstecl

WASHINGTON (AP) · Agriculture Secretary Ann
Veneman said lawmakers have
to make significant progress
this wee.k on an overhaul of
farm programs if the changes
are to occur this growing season.
. House and Senate negotiaton must "come together and
determine whether they can
make the necessary compromises:'Veneman told a gathering of agricultural journallsts
on Monday.
She said the Bush administration has not set a deadline
by which Congress must finish
work on the legislation in
order for it to apply to this
year's crops.
· The new bill would replace
a· Jaw enacted in early April
i 996 and scheduled to expire
ibis fall. Farm groups say the
subsidies authorized by that
bw were inadequate and have
been pressing Congress to
•

'

..•

enact new programs for this
year's crops.
The House passed a farm
bill last fall and the Senate followed in February. Lawmakers
agreed last month on overall
spending levels for a compromise ~ill. but talks have been
stalled on a long list of issues
involving rules for evetything
from farm subsidies to food
stamps.
The lawmakers are schedd
f,
all
u1e to meet orm Y. on
. ~esday for the first tl~e SJ?ce
nud-March. In the mte~Jm,
the!~ aJdes have been meetJ~g,
tra~ng proposals, on a daily
ba~ts. ,
. . .
. We U ~ave an mdJcatJon
week of whether (the bill)
will come together or not
come together;'Veneman said.
The farm bill negotiators
agreed last month on overall
spending levels for broad sections of the legislation, which

'h!'

would increase farm subsidies
by about 70 percent over the
next decade.
·
But lawmakers still must
agree on the rules lot various
subsidy programs and there are
sharp differences over Bush
administration proposals to
expand the food stamp programs. There are also serious
disagreements among lawmakers over conservation programs, labeling requ-irements
for impotted foods, and a proposed .ban on meatp,acker
ownership of catde and hogs.
· The Bush administration has
not taken a position several of
·the issues, including the meatpacker restriction, But Keith
Collins, the. Agriculture
Department's chief economist
and one of the Bush adminis"
tration's top farm policy analysts, said Monday that the .
meatpacker bail could wind
up depressing livestock prices,
just the opposite of what sup-

porters of the Senate-passed
measure intend.
"You create uncertainty i_n
the markets and when you
create uncertainty you get
lower prices," Collins s~id.
The legislation would forbid
packers from owning catde or
hogs within 14 days of slaughter ·and would require the
companies to see off' their livestock. Packers own an estimated 8 percent of cattle and 27
percent of hogs.
. The provision is a major
issue in South Dakota's Senate
race, which could be pivotal in
determining which party controls the Senate next year.
(Editor~ note: The bills are
H.R. 2646 and S. 17J1.
On the Net: Information on the
bills: http: I lthomas./oc.gov
. House Agrie~~lture Committee:
http:I lwww.agricullllrt.house.gov
&amp;nate Agriculture Committee:
http:I lagriculture.senate.gov)

.LOCAL STOCKS
Pr1111ier- 9.85
Rockwell - 19.45
Roci.y Bool!t- 7.20
RD Shell - 63.00
Seara - 50.73
Shoney'l - ,35
Wai·Mart- 58.78
Wendy'l- 35.94
Worlhlngll)n- 15.31
Dally atock rapona art
lha 4 J .m. OIOiing
quofll
lhe prlllloua

Federal Ml&gt;gul - .78
. USB-22 .67
Gannett-78
General Elecll1c- 36.116
GKNLV-5.15 .
Aahland Inc. - 44.86
AT&amp;T-15.03
Hl!l1ey Dlllldlon- 63.20
Kmart - 1.20
BankOne-nn
SLI- 16.09
,
Kroger - 22.07
L.aOO. End- 47.03
Bob Evans - 29.48
Lld. - 18,50
BorgWamer- 83.02
NSC-23
Champion - 3.15
Charming ShOpS- 8.87 Oak Hll'lnllnolal-20.05
City Holding - 18.15
ovs-23.70
BBT-37.75
Cot- 22.79
DG~ 15.44
Peopitl- 26.14
DuPont - 48.88
PeP81co - 50.81
AEP- 47.12
Arch Coal - 23.23
Akzo-45.46
AmTacll/SBC- 36.63

dal"a 1ranue11one, pro.

vlded b)ISmHh Partnent

at AdvNI lno. ot Gil·
llpoiiJ.

4,

The Daily Sentinel ·

Village

Reider Services

flom,..1

CoiTectlon Polley

deliveries to Valley Lumber be
more clearly marked to eliminate damage to streets in the·
area.
lannarelli said she has dis·cussed the problem _wjth' the
store management, and that
empiQYees there are doing
all they can to discourage
trucks from traveling away
from the marked route.
lannarelli reminded council of next week's clean-up
week in the village. Residents can place trash and
. unwanted items at curbside
for free pickup next week,
liut tires, paint, batteries, air
conditioning a'nd refrigeration units will not be
accepted. Pickup will be

Our 1111111 ccnoem In II IIIOitn II
10 I»_....... 11 you ~olin
error In a IIOIY. oallllw -001n
at (7ol0) 11112·2156.

A Proposers Confe~nce wiD be held Thursday, April 11,
lOOl at 10:00 A.M., In the 3rd Floor Conference Robm of
the Meigs CouQty Department of Job and Family
Services, 175 Race Street, Middleport, Ohio. Additional
Information will be provided at the Proposers
Conference and there will be a quest~oq/answer IJ'rlod.
Attendance at the Proposers Conference is mandatory ·
and a condition for a proposal .to be accepted for
evaluation.

The Dally Sentinel • Plge A S

LOCAL BRIEFS

•

Ohio ·offering 'competitive' ·Incentive package~

Ohio weather

Security

Page Al:.

Newe Dlpailli...,t.
The llllkl IUIIber It 11112·21 56.
Deperlmlnt llldentlonl are:
Qenlrllllll!1111f

.....

Ext. 12
Ext. 13
Ext. 14

01

OU.MMcM
AdliatiJinl

Ext 3

Circulation

Ext 4

begin in · the lower end of
Middleport and proceed Lo
South· Second Avenue·.
lannarelli also discuued
recent incidents of animal
cruelty, and said anyone
found harming or killing an
animal in the village io subject to an $.800 line and six
· month jail term.
A meeting of the recreation committee will be
held April I 5 at 1:30 p.m. in
council chambers, Scott •
said.
Council also:
• Authorized Police Chief
Bruce Swift to promore a
part-time police officer to
full-time and to hire a parttime officer to fill vacancies;
• Approved the mayor's
report of fines and fees ,collected in March m the
amount of$4,166.70.

All 1\f_.f

~~

htl

TH-Ill '• ', 1

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel

"G})fae~ ftJ ~ £?
Tit~~ (tJ

ap,"

fJ'J

�'

.Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

_The_oa_ny_Sen_tin_el-----=.~ the·Bend

.Page M~
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•

DenDicke...on
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.'
NATIONAL VIEW

...

Despite carping, EPA is still
protecting the environment
• The VIctoria (Tex.) Advocate, 011 EPA :1·/ateJ/ attempt.r to
reduce p()l/utiun: When Environmental Protection Agency
administrator Christie Whitman stated the obvious recently,
environmentalists immediately set up a clamor that Whitman
was signaling industry that it might not have to cooperate
with federal efforts to reduce. air pollution.
ln fact, Whitman was simply describing reality,.when she
said that sman attorneys for utility lirms that ore cliarged with
Clean Air Act violations would wait for an appeals court decision before settling any lawsuits with the EPA. ·
.
Of course they will . No lawyer with a bruin would agree to
a settlement when a successful appeal might preclude the
need for it. But that doesn't mean that the EPA would stop
·pursuing violators. Whiunan used the Clean Air Act example
to illustrate her point that relying only on lawsuits to get companies to comply with the law often results in delays, resis·
tance and obstruction.
On the other hand, the administration:s less confrontational
approach can sometimes be more effective and less expensive
than constant liti~ation . The most recent example is the
"Clear Skies" initiative on clean air, which Wh1tman was
defending in her testimony.
These are fair points to make. Oetting industry to voluntari!y cooperate wi!)l gov~rnment to clean up the envirooment is
more likely to yteld qutck results than court battles ....
What's 1mportant is whether the Bush approach will yield
results. 111 some cases, it already has: Aller review, the administration proposed the same tougher new standards for arsenic
levels in water as the Clinton administration had.· The EPA
ordered General Electric to clean up the Hudson River....
ln other cases, the jury is still out, and there may be reason
for concern. But that does not mean the Bush .administration
is intent on trashing the environment or that the cop has fallen asleep.
.

TODAY IN HISTORY
.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, April 9, the 99th day of 2002. There
ore 266 days left in the year.
·
· Today's Highlight in History:
On April 9, 1942, American and Philippine defenders on
Bataan capitulated to Japanese forces; the surrender was
followed by the notorious "Bataan Death March" which
claimed nearly I0,000 lives. .
On this date:
In 1682, French explorer Robert La Salle reached the
Mississippi River.
·
.
·
In 1865, Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered his
anny to Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court
House in Virginia.
·
In 1939, singer Marian Anderson performed a concert at
the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., after she was
denied the use of Constitution Hall by the Daughters of the
American Revolution.
In 1940, Germany invaded Denmark and Norway.
In 1947, a series of tornadoes in Teus, Oklahoma and
Karisas claimed 1691ives.
ln 1959, NASA announced the selection of America's
first seven astronaut': Scott Carpenter, Gordon Cooper,
John Glenn, Gus Grissom, Wally Schirra, Alan Shepard and
Donald Slayton.
In 1963, British statesman Winston Churchill was made
an honorary U.S. citizen.
In 1965. the newly built Houston Astrodome featured its
first baseball game, an exhibition between the Astros and
the New York Yankees. (The Astros won, 2-to-1.)
· In 1993, the Rev. Benjamin Chavis Wall chosen to head
the NAACP, succeeding Benjamin Hooks.
In 1996, in a dramatic shift of purse-string power, President Clinton signed a line-item veto bill into law. (However, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the veto as unconatitutional in 1998.)
Ten years ago: Former Panamanian ruler Manuel Noriega wu convicted in Miami of eight drug and racketeering
charges; he is serving a 30-year ·prison sentence. Britain's
Conservatives scored a ccme-from-behind national election victory, becoming the lirsr British political party to win
four straight elections this century. . _ _ __
. "•
Five years ago: The CIA apologized to Gulf War veterans
for failing to do a better job in supplying information to
U.S. troops who blew up an Iraqi bunker later found to contain chemical weapons. Social Seed~ officials pulled the
plug o~ an Internet .site that pro':i . individual earnings
and reurement benefit ~rds aJJlld pnvacy concerns.
One year ago: President George W. Bush sent Congress
detaiiJ or his $.1.96 trillion budget for fiscal 2002, in ~hich
he targeted scores of federal programs to make-room for his
10-year, $1.6 trillion tax cut. American Airlines' parent
company 51uired bankrupt Tram World Airlines, becoming America s No. I carrier. Baseball Hall-of-Fainer Willie
· Stargell died in WilmJ,ngton, N.C .. at age 61 .

•

grammar is sweet music

0

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

;

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

DBAR. ABBY: I wish you would
run. your collection of"pet peeves"
agt~n. Seventy yean ago I learned to
col\luaate verbs,111d I am amued at
the number of people who us•
"got" when they should ~ay "have."
Thank you.- MR..J;"II.ANDi!R.SON, LEVIllOWN, PA•
P.S. Remem~r. Abby, "Got has
got to gol"
DBAR. MR.. ANDERSON: It
~~~~ been nearly 10 yean since these
rules of basic grammar appeared in
my column - and we can all use
this refresher coune. Read on:
DBAR. READERS: A while
back, I wrote a column on the mis·
use of words and other Irritants and
· named a few. I 'then asked ~eaden to
send their pet peeves concerning
common mistakes in grammar and
pronunciation. How's this for a collection!
The "lie" and "lay" confusion: Th
"Jay" means to set or put; to "lie"

RUSHER'S VlEW

put forth in our public schools, for
rational discussion and debate?
·,
The New York Times is commend- .
'
ably frank in explaining why not. As It ' ,
said in a recent editorial, the argument' .
.
for intelligent design "is a disingenuous · .
to mask the true goat here,
attempt
~r,
which many adherents acknowledge Is '
t9 9pen the st~d~nts' minds to the pos- : '
st btfity of u dt vmc creator, rather than '
leaving them with the soulless process·
es
of evolution." And that, the Times · ·
COLUMNIST
would have us believe, must never, · ·
ever, be allowed to happen. As the edi· ';
a purely atheistic theory of evolution . torial concludes, "no theory that · •
have been faced with u more insidious (explains the mysteries of the universe)
foe. Certain people whose scientific by mvoking the supernatural deserves a. ·
credentials cannot be questioned, and place in a public school science cur- : '
whose methods ore purely scientific, riculum."
.
have begun arguing that the very strucNote the breadth and sweep of that .
turc of the universe as perceived by last sentence I Yes, the universe Is full of .
modern science, und the scientific mysteries. And of course no one may · ,
record of life's development here on teach, in a public school, that a God, or . 1
earth, can ~nlr, be !lnders~ as the !'"Y other supernat~ral phenomepon, ih
products ot 'intelligent destgn" - m fact the explanatton. But we must go ..
which necessarily requires the exis- further still: The by no means discredit· ·
tence of an "intelligent desi~ner," or (if' ed view, held by many intelligent and
you will forgive the ex)'resston) a God. rational people, that "intelligent ' ·
The perniciousness of this view, from design" is the most plausible explana- : ·,
the standpoint of the atheists, is that it lion of these mysteries, can never be
can be, and is beirig, put forward with- ·permitted to be discussed in a public~
out disputing those pans of the theory school science curriculum. Any consid·" •
of evolution that are scientificaii.Y eration of the sheer possibility of a God/'
demonstrable. All it takes issue with ts as a rival to "the soulless processes of· '
the proposition that those pans can be evolution," would be unconstitutional. t 1
expfained as purely random accidents,
A worldview that afraid of competk 1
rather .than the products of intelligent tion is in deep trouble.
. ·"
design. And that is a proposition over (William· Nusher is a Distinguished
which, today and for the foreseeable Fellow of the Claremont Institute lor .. .
future, reasonable people can and do the Study of Statesmamhlp and Politi·
differ. rf so, why can't both views be cal Philosophy.)
•

.

•.

' t.,._/

lv IICIIY lAIII

Rusher

1

Fello-hlp
n•

.d•ftJ

r-

LAMBRO'S VIEW

Embattled George W to tug GOP to fall victory -·

=·
J:

p •

all that will determine the outcome for
Bush and his party in November. Manu· "•
facturing rose for the second month in a
I'OW in March. Overall biJAine88 activity, as·• •
it is measured by The lnsdtute for Supply •
Management's mdex, is up to 55.6, &amp;eating alf the forecas~S. Con8tnletion ~ . .
il),i showed illl biggest jwnp in a year in ·
Fetli'Ualy. Housing sales ~ better than. ·
·ever.
•:
. Helped by Bush's 2001 and 2002 tax ·
cuts, the 1l!COVerY is twning out to be ' :
much sllunger thin l!llYOIIe prediCied just · ,
a few JJIOJ1th1l ago. Aftir a nearly 2 pettent
GOP rate in the founh quarter diat IIIUnned' ··
analysts, blue chi_p ~lie fon:!castm • '
now believe that fU'IJI quarter growth could .
come in at raiy 4 ~ll orbeaer.
··
Thal rate of expWiort is going 10 be •
~forstocbthatwill allloltave~apo!it. . ·
ical impact that no 8I1IOIIft ci neptive •
advertmng can ea8ily Overcome. Higher
&amp;tock value8 ~e going to mean m 'd -,
wealth for 111081 ci die 93 million lhn-· .
holderJ who now own the Atneriaul econI

I

omy. .

·

·

And this in IUI1l will blunt the Dernocl1JIICh..touUd fear ~gn apinst ' ·
Bullh's Soda! Security !donn~ 10 let ;
worktn invea tome of dldr payrou tae~' ~
in IRA~ nUll!! fundi.
•·
There • nod ling like a ri8il)8 growth 1W
in lfAXk and bond portf'oliOii 10 ~ :
our confidence in the fuuR, apecially ·amorrg younger wortcm •
wid 10' ~
build wealth for their kidt' «kation lWid
(or their rccimncrl.
1
SornedtingtellsmetbaldteDemoalU'
~pened campaign cry. "lrtlltnlbef the••
Enron liClllldal;" is f10ins 10 fall a .liltle tlal, •
this year.
,,
,
(Donold l.omhm II ji/Jinflln for ~
tinning Morton Kondfvcke.)
·" .
I

tllll'

•

Dear
Abby ·
ADVICE
means to recline. Remember, chickens lay eJ!IIS. People lie down.
The use of"aU are not" when the
penon means "not all are." Example:
Saying, "All women are not beauti-ful,'' when one means, "Not aU
women ar.! beautiful." .
We frequently hear "between you
and 1." Wrong! It's "between you
apd me." Another irritant is "try
and" inStead of "try to." For example, one may try to. win - then
lose. But how can one try and win
- and then lose!

r--~=~.,

child
is
being bullied. Indica·
tors
may
involve
unexpla.in-

Bullying is a problem in
today's society. Sixteen percent
of American children are bullied. BuUying can refer to physical harm, verbal th~eats, namecalling and psychological
~bl~
intimidation, such as ostn,clzinjuries,
ing or spreading rumon.
torn clothChildren who appear "difing, atixiety,
leaky
...
r
fe~ent" - those who are sma.Uer, .
fear
of
weaker, shy, sensitive, have trougoing
to
ble making friends or have low school and other places,
self esteem- tend to be bullied. dep~ession, and chani!Cls in eatSoya are more likely to be ing and sleeping habits.
the aaresson and the victims.
What can parents do to avoid
Phylical attaclu a~e aimed more or help their children in the
frequently at boys, while girls event that t~ey are being tarretort more often to verbal geted by bullies? Parents should
attaclu and psychological p~es- talk daily with their children.
turet. The most common Find out what il aoing on at
group to engage in buUYlng are . school. Recognize the child's
middle and junior high school feelings. Expl:lln similar situastudents.
.tiont that occurred in your
)3uUying can caul'e serious childhood. things.
difficultiea.Vlctinu may experiLet them know how you
-ence poorer relationships, trou- handled
ble adjusting, 1onelinen and
Talk with teachers about
depreuion. Both the attacker how the child acts when
and the child who it traunia· around peen. Never blame
tized may exhibit · problem your child for being a victim of
behavion that include tmok- buOying. Help him identify if
ing, drinking, bad gradet,IOcial there are any behavion or
i10lation and long-lasting low chamcteristict that may tempt
self-esteem.
otheu to buUy. Maybe he hal a
Parenu should be alert to whiny voice or he cowers
signs that may identify their when approached. Help him

William

BY DoNAul U.·••tc
polls show that they ore enjoying a slight
WASHINGTON - Presidents often lead over the Democrats in Congress.
have a rou~ time in their second year. Much of this has to do with Bush's
fill!t-year VIctories ore iiiJ but forgotten. immense popularity and its coetraiJ effect
The DppOfiition party is on the attack in this year's conlests.
almost daily. The voters are preparing to
A front-page headline Tht$day in The
pass judgment on his party that usually WMhington Post about the baale for conIOI!CS seats in the midterm elections.
trol of ConjreSs said it all: "House
President Bush should have it so e$y. Democutts' Climb &lt;leu Steeper."
'This is only a small portion of what is on
"h'slike Mount Everest for the Demochis plate in this campaign year:
rats," elections analyst Amy Walter told
Throw in two wars, one againfj( the AI the .P081. "The aritlimetic suggestS there
Qaeda and Taliban tenorislll, and the other are JU81 not enou~ seats out diere'' for the
between Israel and Palefitinian terrorisu. Democrats to wm back the House.
.
Add the disgruntlement in his conservaBoiled dowri to its political ts~~enlials,
tive base over his support for steel and the midterm electioM may be summed up
lumber tariffs, amnesty for illegal immi- in this possibly future headline: "Bush CO.
grants, and the hated
gn finance optS Democrats on the lssut11, Holds
reform bill. Mill in the usual
dis- House, Narrowly Reclaims Senate By
p~ with
about ev
'ng the One Seat"
Unillld Stare~~
abroad TO!i.~ in 110nte Several factonl are wotting agai1181 the
irritability and crdss words between DemouaiS this fall: Redrawn diSirict line~
Republican leaden! and the White House under rrapponionment are making many
over BLL1h's stalled agenda Then 1lCa80II it GOP~ lllloo:im. The adv~
with an economy that appean to be on the at irx:umbclx:y, with all of 1111 campatgn
mmd but, in the words of many on Wall perks and assilllanCe, is, if anything,
Street, "is not out at the woods yet"
$ttonger than ever, especially in a time or
I've left out a lot at other thinp n:quir- war w!tm' voters hilltorically do not mte
ing the pmident's attention:, but you gel . for chanit·
the idea. 1lWi is mud! more than the typiThere were at lea8t " competitive
· cal piUident has 10 emend with.
Howie l'8CCII in 1990. Thi year anal)'IIB
Still. there n always the COillplainer5 can oount no more than 11m: dozen or 110,
· who say he is noc dOing enough to suit if that
.
them. A front-p~~F ll1iCie in The New The Republicans need a net P.n ci one
York Times quoc:ed ~Y Reoubl.ican5 sea to take bllcJI the Smale. Ritlht now, it
on Capitol Hill who dfJ not think Bush is loob like bQih partie~ may be a6le to hang
doing enough 10 help his pity in the~ on 10 all the a. they hOld - with pering congmsionalrace~. At the time the hap.8oneexctption: ThebaalefortheSenarticle appc:MJd, the pm!ident was on a ale loob lilc.e it will be decided in Soud!
multi-t~ate campaign swing dwugh the DakDta wh= Rep. John Thune hllll a narSouttl on be(lalfof Howe and Smale can- row lead over fmihmoo Democnltic Sen.
didaw
lim.Jolwon.
Dellpite the COillilalll carping, the fact
The coritinuing economic recoVery,
· remains that the
internal generic however. ~ pcdJapJ the bi&amp;J91' facwr iJf

.

One hem supposedly educated
people say "between she and I"
instead of the correct "bet\veen her
and me."
And how about the word "irtegatdless"l just plain ''rep'rdless" will
do, but reptdless of how "irr.!gardleSI" grates on one 'a nerves, it has
nosed its way into the dictionary. (It
meaMJ'reaardless.'~

Tllk about overusing a word, I
nominate "basically." People whet
start every other sentence with the
word "buically" usually ha~ limited
vocabularies.
My pet peeve - double neplives: "I don't !mow nothing" and
"We don't 110 nowhere" are the
worn olrenden.
Sante people think the p,lural of
"you" is "youie.'' It's not. 'You" is
both singular and plural.
The word "forte" (meaning strong
point) is pronounced "fort"- not
for-tay.

Bullying.still.aproblem

Atheism faces new challenges in educational forum .
Until recently the atheists quietly
enjoyed total dominance of public education on the subject of the development of life on eanh. Darwin's theory
of evolution, though acce~ted by many
religious believers us stmply God's
plan, does not require the assumption of
a Divine origin. lt is equally compatible
with the atheistic bellef that the universe is just a cosmic accident, without
either 11 purpose or a creator. Evolution
. therefore could be, .and was, taught in
the public; schools without any reference to u Ood, in keeping with the
default atheism which the Supreme
Court has for several decades decreed
must be taught to America's schoolchildren, in supposed deference to the
constitutional bar against entanglement
of church and state.
llte "creationists" were thus easy to
portray as the aggressors when, several
years ago, they opened a campaign to
require public schools to teach, not only
the theory of evolution, but an alternative theory that the universe, and the
life species found on eanh, were created directly by Goo, usually over a much
briefer span of time than the hundreds
of millions of years called for by the
theory of ·evolution. With few and
recent exceptions (Kansas, for
instance), the campaign has been
unsuccessful. The failure·of creationist
theory to accord with available scientific evidence - fossil life forms, for
example - has prevented it from win·
ning substantial support either in the
courts or in public referenda on the subject.
Recently, however, the enthusiasts for

· · " · Apl!ll. 2012

•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-812-2158 • Fu: 740-M2·2157
-.mydlllyHntlnel.com

Pap .s .

reb lit

MIDDLEPORT A
1eport on the recent ladie1'
retreat held at the Middleport
Church was given when the
Meigs County Chui:chet of
Chrill Women '1 Fell ows hlp
met recently at the Bradford
Church of Christ. Theme of
the meeting wat "Bride of
Christ."
Onerting tong for the
r
meeting was the "Old
Rugged Crou" the prayer
lOng wat "Amazing Grace."
Pal Thoma had the opening
prayer, and Zion Church had
devotion•, uting "The Master't Garden" by Ida Murphy
and "Spring Search" by Ann
· Lambert.
During the busineu meetlng, memben diiiCutted the
remaining quilt blocks, and
may do nact ·them to '1he
Senior Centtr.
A spring ladiet' day raUy
will be held Apri11J ar Ctidwell.
' Monthly dinner• being
held at the Pomeroy Church
were announced with the
next one to be .held AprO 26.
Dwishc Icenhower will per·
form. _
Paula Picbm read "l!a.ur
E.,,.. by Marprec Holmet,
and "Who Will Move the
Scone; during the program.
Kathryn Johi!IOn thowed
memben how to make l!itr«
uting styrofoam eggs and
material, by puthing the
edges o( the material into the
egg with a nail file or othtt
. tharp objClo':t.
1\efmhmmu were terved
foUo:Mng dOting payer by

e.

Communlt' Calendar Ia
publlahacl aa a frtt ..rvloe
to ncin•proflt groupe wleh·
lng to announoa mMtlnge
and apeclalevtnta. Thl cal•
andar Ia not dteiQnld to
promote aelaa or fund·rale·
are or any type. Item• are
printed onl' •• apeae parmite and cannot be guaran·
teed to be printed 1 apeclflc
number of daya.
·

Nancy Wells, CWA Chairman, announced the baking
contett, "Oatmeal Cookies:'
on May 2 at the hall. She alto
announced May 9 11 deadline
~ t ni
·
bt
d
ALPRED - Alfred United .or ur ng •n pop ta ' u~e
Methodilt Church celebrated eyeglaoel and IOUp label! for
' ...
Sunday w1'th a tunr•··· depu t'let• con.e.~nce.
Ea•c•r
•
R
a
· 1egi'1ative
·~rvt' ce. B•enda johnaon led
O'f
rueter,
-the service
• and the . choir chauman,
·
reporte d on the
u
·
with ''Morning Hat wa
....
r11eve11•1WI'th1 157 .,,
riVen
a1
Op•ned
~
h
1
80
Broken," followed by prayer 1 e r owen M • n JV to
-· "",one 1ho uJd
by JohniOn. .
yean. He tQI'd ~.e.
c er Proclamation. was be thinking of ways to con·
.,.111
te-·· wat•r
Jiven by choir membfrs and • ••
•·
by tinging, "Jetut Chtltt1 Our
Oon and jane Prymyer wiD
King h Riten." Choir mem- do the janitorial work in Mar.
o{ ~"ounty de •
bert tpeakin.,. were Otie Mae The ••l•c11'on
~ ·
" Jo Barringer, t'"•FoUrod, Mary
,........ was held ·
Janice Ri"hie, Plorence Ann The Grange dlscus~ed the
Spencer, TifFany Spencer, llag and lighting at the springs.
Dori• Dillinger, John Taylor, All mastcn in the county
and Lloyd Dillinger.
have tickeu for the Grange
Meditation• were given on aanquct, to bf held April 19 at
..1 Walked Today Where Jesus the Meigs County Senior
Walked" with David Barringer CeAnpeer· il~· blr•hd. ..,. no••d "•ere
J
D
s
. .,. .... "'
at ames, anny pencer as ch~~ of Mur•'el B-d'ord and
Peter, Ruth Brooks at Mary, ~
•• "
Mother o{ Jesus and Sutan Ft'llncet OoejJiein.
p u·
M M gd 1
~dey Hanning, Eva B010n
uThet · ~hoia?aoo' ..:;n.~On and Gene Lambert were
Day of Jlesurrecclon" and reported tick.
"The Spirit Song:• The pro- Rosalie ]ohn10n, lecturer,
gram wat elated with "l!aner pretented a progr:lm ~bout
. People, Raile Your Voices" by April. Group tinpng of"April
che conpgation.
Showen" opened the progl'am,
An l!atier breakfast, ega · and a tkit, "Where'• the fire?"
hunt, Sunday school and wor- wat presented by Helen Quiv·
thip terviu foUowed.
ey and Sara CuUunu. "Noah'•
Ark;' a reading by Johruon,
&amp;.
wu followed by a tlower quiz
.... . . IILISW
game. Helen Quivey and Kim
HEMLOCK GROVE - Romine won the pme.
Annw! impec:tion was -held Sinpng of"Whcn You Were a
when the Hemlock Grove met 1\alip" concluded the program.
reundy at the Grange Hall l'omona Inspection wu
with Muter Roulie Story aruwunced (or May J at Star
pmiding.
Granp.
Opal Dyer; Grange county The May mudng will IN
dt!puty, conducted the impec:- pr.i!cedlld by ' poduck dinner
tion.
at 6:30 p.m .

Alf11d
ctllbrlteJ IEaJttr

G

Abigail Wi11 Burttt. Write Dtdr A &amp;b)! dl
www.DtarAbb)I.COHI or P.O. Box
fi9HO, l..os Atl,l!«les, CA 90069.)

TUESDAY

CHESTER Cheater
Township Board or Truateee,
regular meatlng, Tueaday, 7
p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY Bedford
Townahlp Trueteaa, 7 p.m.
Tueaday at the townhall.
POMEROY- Malga Coun·
ty Htlllh Department, child·
hood Immunlzt.tlon ollnlo,

· Tueaday, 9 to 11a.m. and 1 to
3 p.m. Taka ahot recorda, chll·
. drtn m1111 be accompanied
by parent/legal guardian.
Check availability or vaccine
barort going by calling 992·
6626.

.Post 9053 will m"t In the hall
at Tuppera Plalna at 1 p.m. on
Thursday. Offlcara will be ·
nominated, and a meal will be
aei'Vtld at 6:30p.m.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Wid·
RACINE - Special meet· owa' Fellowship, Friday, 10
lng or the So.uthern Local a.m. at the Golden Corral In
School Board or Education at Galllpoila fer b'laklaat bullet.
the high school, Tuesday 7
p.m. lor the purpcae of Inter· . SATURDAY
viewing candidates lor the SYRA&lt;;USE - Heritage
auperlnttndent'a job.
Family will be at llymn alng at
Syracuae Mlaalon Church on
WIDNUDAY
Bridgeman Straat Saturday at
MIDDLEPORT - Middle· '6 p.m.
port Literary Club, 2 p.m.
Wednaaday, home of Ida TUPPERS PLAINS- Hick·
Diehl. Jaanna Bowen to ory Hilla Church ol Chrlat near
review Jana Auatan by Carol Tuppera Plalna 'Super Satur·
Shlalda.
day,• "The Prodigal Son' Sat·
urday, with r~latratlon at 9
THURSDAY
a.m., and the program ending
TUPPERS PLAINS- VFW at 1. Lunch Ia provided.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
··CO·ED FLAG FOOTBALL TOURNAMENT
Point .......nt, wv
a.turdlly, M•y 11; 2002

{lflillltiMIIIINAII II~ Alfllll, IHI) .

• Ordn•noe field•
Charldene Alkire.

Dobby or myself aCb:r the meetina.''
"See Bobby or me" is correct.
The "infer" and "imply" mix-up:
The writer "implies"; the reader
"infen.'' (It's like pitching and
catching.)
Please do not say "o" instead of
"rero;l' Or use the word"that"when
"who" is correct. ("That" refe11 to
inanimate objects, "who" to people.)
Now, lend me your ear: Don't use
"loan" as a verb, as in, "Loan me n
20." It should ~."Lend me i 20.''
''Loan" is a noun; ''lend" is a verb.
FinaUy, the misuse of the word
"ask": Some say "ax" instead of
"ask." 1 would much rather be
"asked" than "axed." Wouldn't you?
(AiuliHt Pl1illt'ps a~ttl her tla~~ghltr
jra11nr Phillips shart thr pseudOH)IIII

MEIGS CALENDAR

.,

work on changing these things
that may attract bullies.
Help him lncreue his ability
to ntllke friends and get along
with others.
[~cruet your child on how
to defend herself in a nbn-violent way. Most bullies will give
up when·1they see that the victint will stand up for herself.
Try not to confront the buOy
on behalf of your child. Many
times this backfires, ·and the
buUy increases the attacks.
1lllk with school penonnel
to make sure they have a poUcy agalntt bullying and that
they enforce it. School coun·
sclon can aasltt children in
learning h~ to stand up for
themselves. Teacher• and
school admlnistraton should
no longer conllder bullying a
normal childhood behavior.
Help your~d become succeuful in ocher ways. Lee him
find friends who he can rely on
to help him OUI, .
If nothing ~eenu to work,
put your child'• welfare 6nt. A
change of 11Chcdule, clalll'Oom
or school may rieed to occur.
(&amp;ky &amp;tr /1 Mt/gl . County~
Bxttllll~n agenrjorjam/1)1 anil tllll·
~umtr ldlnalltommunlty iiMiop·
mtnt, Ohio Start Unlwrllly.)

. Also, people use the word "snuck"
instead of "sneaked.'' Althouah
"snuck" somehow sneaked into the
dictionary, it'a not used by people
who use proper En&amp;lish
Ask someone to defi;&amp; "hoi pol·
loi," and it\ a good ~t that he wiU
say "high-tone or upper class."Actu·
ally. it means "the masses" - or the
general population.
"Nuclear" is pronounced "nukelee-er," not "nuke-you-ler"l
And how about "he's (lOt,'' "she's
got" and "they've got"? The better
word is "has." ("He has,'' "she has,''
etc.) "Got" has got to aol
The month of February has two
"R's" . in it, but we keep hearing
"Feb-yoo-ary." ·
.
·
We frequently hear that a man has
"prostrate" trouble, when actually
he has "pros-tate" trouble.
Another error - usin§ the word
"myself" instead of"me.' Example:
"If you have any questions, see

elltllnorelllne

•G•m••be..n.ea •.m.

~s.

• Doub.le ealmlnetlon

• MO entry fH per te•m

e Mutt btt 11 r••ra or older

~~~~t;;;-~--------------~-,
.

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e£ddrllll -------------------------------------I
I
• ltalt: - - - eZip: - - - "-•
CltJ:
"
I
:(
I
I
PlcUe liD-our lomt, dttadund mail with team romr (8 men &amp; Swomen maximum) and ·
I
enuy payment. All thtcb m1111 be made-out 10 the "Plwant Valky Wcllneu Center.'
I
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PLEASANT VALLEY WELLNESS CENTER
304-675-7222
•

Cominglhu

,, ((;.

in tile sentinel-

(lft~

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•

A ltxander tvltatks Me(gs,
7!ibe top.~ Ttvi11s, Awr 7

The Daily Sentinel

Awt 7

Page&amp;.
•••day.Aprllt.2001

--------------------------------------·
TIJEsnA.y's

Lady Eagles rip Southem, a-o:

HIGHLIGHTS

I

.

'

'

IV ScoTT WOU'I
SENTlNEL CORRESPONDENT
TUIIP51tS I'LA INS - lk hind a
KrlstJ White 011~- hitter, tlw EJSt\'rtl
En11b pouml ed the Snllthcrri Thrn~ ­
durs K· O Muntl&lt;~y ni11ht i11 11irl~ V&lt;~r.i ·
ty H od:in~ Dil i1iun sut'tbJll .l~tion .
White WJs ne,lr IIJwkss itt hurlinl!
Enst~rn to its tilth win of the sc.rson.
mik i n~ out H Southcrn battl·rs ami
wn l ki nt~ just one. E•lstern is now 5- 1
ovcrnll nnd Southcnt ts 5-2; Both
tC&lt;IIIIS ttre noW :2- 1 in the ka~\le ,
In wh"t lookcd to bc ~ fluod J1itl'lt·
inl! dual c&lt;trly, Sotttherni's ll,tchd
Chaplllllll ;lttd .Easternls Wh ite

.

Pro Baseball
MLI
Monday'aQNatlonat Lt~t~ue
Pittsburgh 1, Cincinnati 0
Houston 8, Colorado 4
Sen Diego 8, Arizona 0
Montreal 10, Florida2
Atlanta 2, Philadelphia 1
Amtrtoan Latgue
· Cleveland 9, Minnesota 5
N.Y. Yankees 16, ToiOnto 3
White Sox et Detroit, ppd., rain ·
Seattle 5, Anaheim 4

•

honked up iu a scordcn shutout
through two innin~. Then the Southern defense fell apart behind its talent-ed pitcher, and Whit~ responded for
th~ Eagles with a renewed venl!l'ance.
"t{ristn pitched one of her better
tot·nHcs tonight," Mid E&lt;t&lt;tertl· coach
Pam Douthitt. "That set the tempo for
us Jnd g.tw u~ son1e 111011Wimuu. We
&lt;llsu had one of our better nil!hts at
the pLite, and our defense was strong,"
W hite struck out eight of the lirst
ni11c battm she fared, T hen in the
third inning, Eastern made its mow.
Nkki Phillips sittl!led and Je nn y
Artnes reached on an error, followd

by another single by Tilfeny 13lssell tO
load the basel. Carrie Wil!llins reached
on an error, and Sandy l'oWI!ll had an
lt BI double fUr a 3-0 EHS leAd.
Southern's C hapntatl had been
pitchitll! well herself, but the two
error. prowd costly as ajallefCalawny
grourtd out brought home ye t another run. The Eagles soared on to a 4· 0
lead,
·Southern th reatened in the fifth
With a lead-off walk to Chapman but
she was . stranded on three straight
strikeouts. £astern plated a single run
ir) the filth when Sandy Powell singled, advanced on an error, and scored

on a Krista White single, 5-0. .
·
In the sixth inning, White who hac£
whizzed through the previous five
inningg, had her no- hitter broken up
by Emily Hill who singled down the.
line to right field. Hill was left strand-,
ed however, and the score stood 5-0. ,
Eastern plared three insurance·runs&gt; ·
in the sixth when Amanda Yeager
walked, Phillips gained her second
single, and with two out, Wil!llins
reached on an error to drive in a run.
Another came in on a groundout and. .
Sandy Powell slammed . her third hit,

,..... -....... ,

Pro Basketball
NBA

bats·are!
dea in loss
to Pittsburgh

Monday'• Qamaa
Orlando 83, Houston 74
Detroit 105, Atlant 99
Cleveland 111 , Indiana 99
Chicago 105, Boston 100
San Antonio 99, Portland 87
Dallas 105; Utah 96
Seattle 102, L.A. Cllppara 100
Minnesota 100, Golden State 93

Cin

•

Kensethums
second Win
ofsuson

PITTSBURGH (AP) The Pirates already look
T hey realize it's tar too early to much better than they did late
get overly excited, yet the Pitts- last season . to closer Mike '
burgh Pirates Williams, who pitched a score-·
wel~ome SUI!- .less ninth for his (ourtb save in"
gesttons they as many chances.
nti!;ht be this season's "!Witts or
General manager Daw Lit_..,
Phillie;,
tlefield had minimal financial ,
Namely, :1 team projected to resourtes to begin his recongo nowhere that ;udde11ly riles struction project; the $48 tnil- ·
up to be a lot b~tter than fore- lion payroll is about the same as
C&lt;tlt.
a year ago, and includes $8 mil- ·
The l'irates, coming off a lion· plus being paid to the'
100-loss smon, ran their record mlw-release'd Derek Bell and
to 5·1 fur the tirst time since the Inju red Pat Meares.
1983 by getting another 111ong
No . ttmter, · Littlefield_
smrt from a supposedly weak improved the Pirates' depth by;
rotation In a 1· 0 vk tory Mon- Iandini! pitchers Kip Wells, Josh: ·
day over the Cincinnati lteds. .f"'gg and .Sean Lowe fiom the;
Brian Giles, who sat out the White Sox for Todd Ritchie, ·
opening Week of . the le&lt;t~on and by sil:!"ing vetenln pitchers
with a itrain ~d lttusd e in his Villon e, Williams and Brian
side, doubled off Ehller Desseno noehringer, plus former Gold
In the sixth for his fltst "hit and Glove second baseman Pokey ·
s(o~d th~ only run on Aramls tteese.
R amirez's saerllke Ry.
lteese has steadied a previNot only did they win a ously inconsistent · infield
~ome opener foh the .first time defense, which in turn . has
In ~ine years, .t •. P1rates ran boosted.e pitching staff whose;
thetr 1110dC!t wmmng streak to 2 04 Eh • t'-ro h '
·
" V'll , 7 j 3 • .
l'-1'\ "
ug siX games Ill,
tiw bchi nd ,,on
1 ones - . b m tiall .
d fro
t
scorelesi innirig;. ·
su s, n Yrmprovc · m 1as ,
•
It might · not sound like year s 5·05· ,
much, but it's the longest such . ?f cour~e, ~t helped tha.t the
streak siuce September 2000 Reds w~re wtthout the InJUred
for a fi'anchlse coming off a Ken Grrffey Jr., ;rnd that sho~t··
dub record-tying ninth coil- stop ~arry larktn sat out Wlthle~utive ludng se~on. _ and a stramed rrb case muscle. A~ a.
wns univcnally predicted to result, Dessens (0-2) lust despite
CIRCUI CATCH - Cincinnati s horts top Gookle Dawkins (3) makes an over the shoulder div- endu re a 10th 1uch season ,
limiting Pitub~rgh to four hits
Ing catch In front of Reds left fielde r Juan Encarnacion Monday. (AP)
over seven mnmg;.

FOit T WOI'l..TH,'Thxus (AI')
- Maybe practk,• is (wcrl\lted.
Matt Kcrrscth won the Samsun ~/ Radio Shut k 500 em
Momlny despite r·unnin ~ only
flvc h1ps in .practice nt 'Thxos
Motor Sp~~d wuy.
His (cw laps ramc Friday,
bd ore he blew :111 cn ~inc. SaturdLIY's p rmic~ wus nrirm l nut,
1111d rnorc wet wcftthcr Sulllhly
postponed the race, lcavinl!
ewryom· Ktt&lt;·ssing about chns·
sis set-ups on the rep3wll 1
1/2-mile ovnl.
·
K!!meth found the rm1wer,
h oldin~ the lead with 11 hltc·
ra ~c. two-tire . s.top 1111\1 drivilll!
m an easy victory in his No, 17
Roush !~ acin g Ford.
The k•·y rnon1c11t in Monuay's ra~c was the two-tire pit
stop 11car th~ cml.
It was thu sc:cond win uf the
scnson :md . the third of his
crm·cr fn r · the form ~ r
NASCAI~ Wi mton Cup rookiL· of.thc year, who solidified his
hold on •cwnu place bchi11d Stcrlinl! Mnrlin - in
th ~ season points:

Red 5

Phil Gamer

1ets the ax

DETROIT (AI') - Sumcbndy had to go foll uwinl! the
Til!crs' 0-6 start , l)etroit
decided twn w:ts better, w the
tca n1 Orcd rn:lll:tl!cr 11hil r.a rncr ar1d g•· ncral nl lllltl f!c r
Randy Smith .
T he di11n issa l of Garn er
tied the quickest fi rin l! of n
nrarral!cr. who started the sc~­
IOII since 1900, accurllin l! to
the Elias Spurts llurc:r u. Baltimore fired Cal Ripkcn Sr. In
I\IIIII afte r the O rioles lost six
wr nrcs en route to an 0-21
start.
Til!ers president !)ave
Do rn browski will add the
general tnnnal!cr's du des.
luis Pujols, the T il!crs'
.bend ! coac h, will take over as
1!1 ana~:~c r on an imeri m basis.
I-l iA debut Will ptmponed
w h ~n th~ 1!3rn e against
Chical!o was rained out.

Griffey begins to Eastem still perfect after win ·
rehabilitate knee

CINCIN NAT I (AI') - K ~11 Grifl'cy Jr. •myeu behind
Monday to begin rchabilitati nj.! the ~ n ee he inj u r~d on
Surtday, and the Cinci nnati l ~cds rep laced him on their
.,
rtmer a1 they b~l!-111 a road trip in l•ittsburl!h.
.T h ~ llcds arc hopilll! Clriffcy can return to actioll in
three to six week.• if rest :111d phy•ic:ll rchnbilitarlon ~anlt ~a l
his ril!ht kM~. If nm, th ~ option is surf1cry, whid1 C1Juld
keep him nut fur the rest of th ~ !CJSill1,
~t~id Dr. Timothy Krcmchck, the tcari1
physidnn.
'·
1\ ubcn. M:rtco WJ! called . up ffo111
Triple-A L.ouisvillc m take Griffey's ~pot
on th ~ 25 · 111~11 roster. Mateo was battill!(
.364 (4-fur- 11 ) with a run scored and
two doubles in three I!UII1C! with
Louisville.
Mateo wn~ uril!i nnlly in the Reds' start-Gntt.)'
inl! lineup Monday in ri11ht field awrinst
the Pirates, but w;r.~ &gt;cr.ttchcd with a head
JN IJIANt\I'OLIS (AI') cold and rcplnccu by Adam Dunn. juan
Walker !\acing cut tics with ·
Encarnacion replaced Griffey in center
Sarah Fisher, the third woman
tlcld.
to race in the lmlia napolis
GritTtoy partially tore the patella ccmlon
50(1 and one the ri!itll! stm
and partiall y dislocated his ri~o~ht kr1c..icap during :1 runin the Indy l ~adnl( Lcal!uc.
down 111 Stmday'1 KJII1c .tj¥tit1•t Mnmrcal. ~indnnati
At 1!1, Fi1hcr became the
placed the All-Star .:enter fielder"" the 15-day di.ablcd list
youngest person to compete
after the 10- inninl!, (J-.'i win over the llxpm.
in the Jill when 1he r~ced in
Grifft'Y, who W:l! bothered durillfllprin~ traininl! by tellthe 199'J se~1011 finale at Tcxa.dinitil i11 the same kowc, w.11 hurt a1 he wa~ beinl! ragged
M6tor Speedway for Tcanr
by Expos third ba&gt;~eman Chri•Truby i11 the !t'Vcmth innin(!.
1)cJfrcy.
{irltTey had trlcd to !!Core from third base ·on a grounder
Sh~ joined Walker ''acini!
and wa1 tr.1ppt•d ln ,, runclnwn .
the next tcmm and earned
· La!t year, OrJffi•y nti••ed IIHN of the Am time rttonths
alr nrnrt 11.04 111illion In her
,
1 bcc~use o( .r pmi .. lly torn left lwmtrin(.l.
, next 21 m.L ~tam.

Walker radn1
dro,s Sarah

Fisher

Reds

of

'

.\

;

r

BY loOTT WOIII
Emorn brok~ · a scoreless
SENTINELCOARESPONOENT
deadlock in the s~cond inning
iU Pl1 EI~ S . 11LAINS - when n re nt Buckley drew a
't'he Eastern Eagles kept their walk, Cody fa ulk sinl!led
perfect mark Itt tact by ham· home a run, Bradley Brannon
111crir111 out ni 11e hill in defeat· si ngled, and another run came
ir1~ the rival Southern Thrna- ho111e ·when C hris Lyom
docs, 5· 3, Monday night in an reached on an error, the score
exciting Tri- Valley Con fer• 2-0,
's outheru tied the gattle in
cncc Huckinl! tlivisfon W!JllC.
Eastern is now 5-U 011 the the third innir11! when juKtin
year, while Southern drops to Allert led off' with a double.
3-2. Eastern is 3-0 in the Joe Cor nell reac hed un a
lca~:~ue and South'ern is 1-2. . Adder's d roi&lt;e, ~nd Wes Bur-

rows singled and advanced on
an error in center, a mistake
that allowed the run to score.
Burrows the11 came home
when Brice Hill reached on
an error, the score 2-2. Easterrr
threatened in th e third when
Jimmie Putman singled, but
was left stra nded.
. Southern went up 3-2 ·in
the fourth when Aaron
Ohlinger reached on an error·

Plea• -

llie.m, 7

IV JJM IOULtiY
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
'
ALUANY. - ih~ L~ dy Marauders pi~ ked
up their !t~ond wi~ awrin!t three los!e! 31 they
downed the Lady Sp:trt;'l lll 6· 1
Kara MUll~r led ofT the first With a bale on
balls attd Anuuda Petty dr ll l~d one to center
Aeld for the Maroon and Gwld's first run. Fetty
waJ out at thi rd. Mindy Chancey lo(ted one to
short center, Nikki Butcher reached ori a error
but buch wer~ ldl m:111ded as Alex r.ecorded

.

,

•

IWO OUt!.

Katie JdTcn retired the Spartans in order to
end the lim. 'Tbc second saw little action other
than a Jeffers sinl!lc, Musser l!l'tting a board on
and error.
Mcil!l plated three runs Jn the third . IIQ RIP - Meigs' Alicia Werry takes a cut at
the ball during Monday's win. (Jim Soulsby)j
'PleiN ... Melp.7
1

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

Fryman slam drives Tribe to win
· CLEVELAND (AP) - Matt Lawton
circled the date on his calendar months
ago. And after hitting a home run against
bis former team, he circled the bases
savoring every·step.
"There's no better
feeling," said Lawton,
Cleveland's new right fielder and leadoff
hitter. "{ couldn't wait. This il the team I
wanted to beat."
lawton and Ellis Burks each hit tworun homers and Travis Fryman had a
. grand slam Monday as the Indians won
their 2002 home opener, 9- 5 over the
Minnesota 1Wins.
.
For Lawton, the win was . especially
sweet. He had been drafted by the 'tWins ·
in 1991 and spent 10 seasons in their
organit:ation before being traded last July
to the New York Mets.
In December, the Roberto Alomar deal
lltought him to the Indians, and he had
been counting down the days untir he
~ould again show the 1\vins they had
made a mistake trading him.
.•
After Fryman's slam off Eric Milton (11) put Cleveland ahead 7- 4 in the third,
lawton fonowed Einar Diaz's double in
the fourth with a towering drive over·the
right-field wall.
.
"He throws a pretty good fastball,"
Lawton said ofMilton."But I'm a fastball
hitter. So it wasn't like facing Pedro Mar~
tinez."

Tribe

Meigs
from Pap&amp;

Cleveland's Matt Lewton Is all smiles after his two-run home
run In the fourth Inning of the .ndlens 95 win over the Twins Monday. (AP)
LOOKAnHAT -

Please excuse Lawton for the trash tallc.
He had heard enough of it in the past few
days.
LaWton said several of the J\vins had
caUed .him in recent days, bragging that
they were the team to . beat in the AL
CentraL
Sporting new uniforms and featuring a
lineup with less pop than past teams, the
Indians won their fifth straight game and
sent an early message to the 1Wiqs.
Cleveland didn't catch Minnesota until
after th,e All-Star break last season but
won its sixth AL Central title in seven
years by going 14- 5 against the 1\vins
and clinching the division with a win
over them Sept. 30 at Jacobs Field.
It figured to be tougher for the Indians
to repeat this season, but with a 6- 1
record through its · first seven games,
Cleveland is showing no sil:!"s of decline.
"In my opinion," Fryman said. "We're
still the best team in the division."
Fryman hit his sixth career slam off
Milton, who was tagged for a career- high
four
nine. earned runs and eight hits in
.
mmngs.
Rookie Ryan Drese (2-0) , who made

1

Chancey got first on an error
llut was f01ced out at second as
Butcher grounded to short.
Two errors by Alex allowed
Jaynee Davis and Miranda
Stewart to reach safely. Another
Spartan error foUowing the
second Meig; out saw the Lady
MarauderS post a 4-0 lead
The fourth, fifth and sixth
frames proved uneventful for
both squads.
Fetty hit to short center to

open the seventh but was out
at second attempting . a steal
Chancey singled and stretched
it to second on a error at short.
Butcher singled and stole &lt;econd crossing the plate after a
pair of Spartan miscues.
Alex managed one run in
the lower seventh on two
Meigs errors and a single by
Caul over.
Jeffers was the winning
pitcher, giving up one run, two
hits, · striking out nine, and
w.tlking two.
Tulcrus gave up six runs,
seven hits and struck out three.

l'ltblk Noticto In Ne•·•P"Iotn.l

his season debut last week on 2 I / 2 hours
notice, allowed four runs i!nd eight hits in
five shaky innings. He walked five and
struck out five.
The right-hander, who won the No.
5 starter's spot after an impressive
spring, was moved up in the rotation
when personal problems forced Chuck
Finfey to miss a start last week.
Jacque Jones had four hits for th e
1\vins, who stranded 13 runners seven in scoring position.

DIANE MILLIRON
COMMON PLEAS
REGARDING DRAFT
1nd JOHN DOE,
MEIGS COUNTY,
ACTIONS.
Unknown Spou11, I I
OHIO
COMMENTS OR
any, of DIANE
PUBLIC MEETING
MILLIRON whou la1t CASE NO. 01CV159 REQUESTS MUST BE
pl1ce of 111ldence II
SUBMITTED WITHIN
known a1 55 South
AFFIDAVIT FOR
30 DAYS OF NOTICE
Third, Apl. 14,
SERVICE
OF THE DRAFT
Middleport, OH
BY PUBLICATION ACTION.
45710, but whoal
. "PROPOSED
pra1ant pll!'l of CONSECO FINANCE ACT I0 NS"
ARE
rIll den c 1
II
SERVICING CORP WRITTEN
unknown will taka
lkll GREEN TREE STATEMENTS OF
notice that on
FINANCIAL
THE DIRECTOR'S
November 2, 2001 0
• SERVICING.
I NTENT
WIT H
2:10p.m., CONSECO . CORPORATION
RESPECT TO THE
FINANCE SERVICING
ISSUANCE, DENIAL,
CORP., lkl GREEN '
Plalntlll
MODIFICATION,
TREE FINANCIAL
VS.
REVOCATION, OR
SERVICING
DIANE MILLIRON, RENEWAL .0 F . A
CORPORATION !lied
et al.
PERMIT, LICENSE ,
Defendant
0R
VARIANCE.
Ill Compl1lnlln C.u
No.
01·CV-151
In
the
THE
STATE.
OF
OHIO
WRITTEN
p
Court ol Common
II.
COMMENTS AND
Pie.. Melgo County, SUMMIT COUNTY: REQUESTS FOR A
The third frame produced •lit- down in order. The Spartans, Ohio llllglng thafthl
PUBLIC MEETING
• ·~ JIM ScM • UY
up for out one, Wayne Dicken
Delondont(o),
DIANE
REGARDING
A
SEN,t\NEL CORRESPONDENT
drew a base on balls, advancing de action from either side. The however, continued their assault
MILLIRON and JOHN
Adam L. Oro .. , PROPOSED ACTION
ALBANY - The Alexan- to third on a passed ball, Zach Maroon and Gold went up 5-3 with a walk to Jake Hale who DOE, Unknown being llrat duly MAY BE SUBMITTED
ders Spartans exploded for five Lustgarten walked and stole·sec- in the upper fourth on a shot advanced on a stolen base and Spou11, II 1ny, of oworn, depouo ond WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
MILLIRON IIYI lhlt hi II lhl NOTICE OF THE
runs in both the lifih and sixth ond.Jason Warren lofted a sacri- over the left field fence by Fack- wild pitch, a Brooks single to DIANE
have or Clllm to hive a It 0 r n I y
I or PROPOSED ACTION.
inninS"~ to capture a 12-5 win fice Oy to center scoring Dicken, ler: Dill retired the Alex batters left, Lustgartens hit, a walk to an lntaraot In the raal CONSECO FINANCE AN ADJUDICATION
tall d.. crlbed SERVICING CORP., In HEARING 'MAY BE
over the Meig; Mnrauders.
Mike Hawk singled Lustgarten in order to end the fourth.
Warren ancl a pair of singles by ..
below:
the above entltlod HELD o N A
Meigs lit up the scoreboard in and Dill retired the final batThe first two Spar:tm batten Hawk and · Grigsby. Jimmy
Sltuatod In the e c II on
l.o r PROPOSED ACTION
ol loreclotura, money IF A HEARING
first as lluzz Fackler ripped a ter of the inning on a S!Ounder ftied out to center to open the Smith, in for Burnem fanned Townahlp
County of relief and Judgment, REa UE s T
oR
single to center with one out, to third. 1Wo consecutive ntis- fifth but toot is when disaster the final two Spartans. A single Sallabury,
M,elga 1nd State of thot .. rvlce ol OBJECTION IS
followed by Doug Dilb base hit. cues by the Spartans allowed struck.Justin Brooks singled and by the Marauders in the seventh Ohio: Being In 1ummon1 cannot be RECEIVED BY THE
Sallabury Townohlp made upon the OEPA WITHIN 30
Both runners advanced on a · Derrick Knapp and Kyle Han- prompdy advanced to third on a
proved fruitless as Lawson ond a pan ol Fraction defendant( a), DIANE DAYS OF ISSUANCE
passed ball and Josh Napper nan to get aboard to open the steal ·and passed ball. Four
2, Town 2, Range 13 MILLIRON and JOHN OF THE PROPOSED
retired the final three batters.
drew a walk to load the bases. ~~:cond frame.Jacob Smith lined straight base on balls plated
ol
the
Ohio DOE, Unknown ACTION. · WRITTEN
Sophomore Dou~ Dill was Company'o Purchau Spou .., II any, of COMMENTS, .
Fackler crossed the plate after a hit to cC:nter scoring Hannan Brooks. Hawk drove in two
and beginning 301 DIANE MILLIRON REQUESTS FOR
Jinuny Smith drew a freebie. and Facklers sacrifice plated more rum with a drive to left. tagged for the loss despite a feel North of the whooe lut known PUBLIC MEETINGS,
Dill was replaced on the mound commendable petformance. Dill Southwllt corner of addrall lo: 55 South AND ADJUDICATION
Smith was fOrced at second on a Hannan.
2; thence Third, Apt . 14, HEARING
fielders ' choi~e by Zach Glate
Following the second out the by Eric Bumem. A walk to L.C. delivered 97 pitches in his stint Fraction
Eut
1215
fell; Middleport, OH REQUESTS MUST BE
with Fackler plating the Marauders recorded a walk to Grig;by and a single by Andy on the mound, striking out four, thence North 33 45760, that tho SENT TO: HEARING
OHIO
MaraudeR second run. Spartan Napper and a Jim Smith single. Doudna chalked up two more allowing four hits and walking degree• w..t 550 preoent addre11 ol CLERK,
IHI;
lhenCII
North
40 11ld diOiendonl(l) Ia ENVIRONMENTAL
five.
hurler Ryan lawson recorded A grounder to first ended the Alex markerS before the third
degrHa w.. t 122 unknown end cannot PROTECTION
lawson went the distance for feet; thence South with · reaeonable AGENCY, P.O. BOX
hU first strikeout to end the tlmat. Dill then put the Spartans out.
be 1041, COLUMBUS,
Meigs could generate no Alex, fanning four and giving up 43·114 degreeo Weal diligence
Meigs rally.
down in order to end the
320
IH!; thence Walt eiiCirbllnad; Thot the OHIO 43216·1049
offense in the s~ as they went two walks.
FoUowingJwtin Brooks' pop- inning.
185 . feet; thence following effon. were (TELEPHONE: 814·
South 320 IHI to the made to . .cen.ln . 844·2128). "FINAL
place ol beginning, the eddraaa ol the ACTIONS :
ARE
ACTIONS OF THE
Mntt Ash in the sixth on a ball outs and no walks in going the Burrows with a double and containing 1 .11 defendant (a):
mora or 1111. Search ol ·Court DIRECTOR WHICH
that cleared the left field fence. distance. Soutliern 's Justin single and Justin Allen had a 1crn,
Excepting and Docurneng,
ARE EFFECTIVE
The ball appeared to curl Allen suffered the loss, despite double.
reoervlng th~refrom, Telephone
UPON ISSUANCE OR
Eastern
goes
to
Vin
ton
a
certain
parcel
Dlrectorleo,
Operotor
A
s T ATED
around the foul pole but was pitching a good game, fanning
Pap&amp;
County
Wednesday
and
conglnlng
.57
of
an
Al81otenca
ond
EFFECTIVE
DATE.
called foul with no damage three and walking just two.
acraln the Nonh p1rt Certified
and PURSUANT TO OHIO
Eastern hitters were Charlie Southern goes to Belpre.
thereof, which w.. .R81Idenca Mill REVISED CODE
and came home on two done to the Eagles.
convayid
to Manning Servl011 ratumld.
SECTION 3745.04, A
Young,
Cacy
Faulk
and
Cody
After Chris Lyons reached
t.hrowing errors. Eastern tied
II Tu_. Plllna
D. Wtlballr, by deed
That Ihie Clae Ia FINAL ACTION MAY
the score in the bottom half on a walk, he scored on an Faulk with two singles each, SOU!hem'i;'~~~ ~ 3 3 3 8 d1tid June 1, 1152, one ol thou BE APPEALED TO
the inning when Cody Faulk, error for an additional Eastern while Ben Holter, Ken Ams- Elltem . 0 2 0 1 1 1 • _ 58 8 referRed to which 11 .mentioned In Section THE
WP - ChanleYoungandCacyFaulk.
hereby made. The 2703.14 ol the ENVIRONMENTAL
Bradley Brannon reached on a insurance run in the sixth, 5-3. bary, and Bradley Brannon LP
- Jutdln Allan, Man Ash (6thl and . foregoing being part Revlaed Code ol REVIEW APPEALS
.fielder's choice and scored on a . Young picked up the win each singled.
Bra..O. Pleroe.
of the rill Illite Ohio.
COMMISSION (ERAC)
·
conveyed
by
deed
(FORMERLY
KNOWN
Southern
hitters
were
Wes
for
Eastern
with
seven
strikeYoung RBI single. Eastern
recorded In Deed Adam L. Groll • A s
THE
went up 4-3 in the fifth when
Book 1.84, Page 1105 00055312
ENVIRONMENTAL
Ben Holter singled and scored
and Deed Book 13,
BOARD OF REVIEW)
Page
135
ol
the
SWORN
.
TO
BY A PERSON WHO
on a Cacy Paulk single.
. Melga County Deed BEFORE ME, end WAS A PARTY TO A
Eastern hurler Charlie
Reconlo.
oubacrlbld In my PROCEEDING
Th. Petitioner preuncelhll
BEFORE
THE
Young then stepped it up a
1 2002.
further
alleg11
thlt
day
o
DIRECTOR
BY
notch and retired Southern in
by raaoon ol default
FILING AN APPEAL
order. the rest of the way. The
oflhl DefendaniCI) In . Nol8ry Public lor the WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
the
paym1nt of I S-ofOhlo
NOTICE OF THE
only blemish was what
promleaory
note,
(4) 1, 11, 23, 30,2002
FINAL
ACTION.
appeared to a home run by
occordlng to Ita (5) 7, 14,2002
PURSUANT TO OHIO
gnor, the conditione
REVISED CODE
of • concurrent
· Public Notice
SECTION 3745.07, A
mongage dHd given
FINAL
ACTION
to 18cure the
ISSUING, DENYING,
payment of Nld note
THE FOLLOWING MODIFYING,
ond
conveying
the
APPLICATIONS
REVOKING, OR
( ; L I ( II I 0 I·
premiHI detcrlbed, AND/OR VERIFIED RENEWING
A
h.ve been broken, COMPLAINTS WERE
S
PERMIT, LICEN E,
IH·. tn J· JU.F:
.nd th. l.m l hie . RECEIVED. AND THE OR
VARIANCE
bacomaabiOiu...
FOLLOWING
DRAFT,
WHICH
IS NOT
•
Stop
collection
calls,
The
Potltloner
PROPOSED,
OR
PRECEDED
BY A
an RBI single down the line
CIQOO MIKLY INCOME
.
pray1
that
the
FINAL
ACTIONS
PROPOSED
ACTION,
reduce payments up
MdlngOur--1
at third, the score 8-0.
Delendant(o) named WERE ISSUED, BY MAY BE APPEALEDFtN
SuppMit,
Paltlgtl
Southern's Katie Sayre
above be required to T H E
O HI O TO THE ERAC BY
to SO%, lower interest.
enawer ond 111 up PROTECTION
ENVIRONMENTAL
FILING A
. N APPEAL
lllll11ldlalllyl
reached in .the final round on
Nonprofit, licensed,
Geroulnt~ ·
their
lngre1t
In
11ld
AGENCY
(OEPA)
WITHIN
30
DAYS OF
an error, but was leli'ltranded.
For Fr., lnlormiiiOn,
real
eatate
or
be.
LAST
WEEK.
ISSUANCE
OF THE
bonded.
, Powell led Eastern hittm
forever barred from ACTIONs-INCLUDE
FINAL
ACTION.
CaUToi!Frtt:
aooertlng
the
111ma,
T
H
E
ADOPTION,
E
R
A
C
APPEALS
with three hits, two singles
1-I00-3a7-t170
1-800-847-5869
lor foreciOIUII of MODIFICATION, OR MUST BE FILED
and a double; Phillips and Bis(24 hll.)
llld mortglga, the EPE LOF ORDERS WITH:
sell each •had two tingles, and
m1rahalllng of any R A
ENVIRONMENTAL
'=:::::::::::;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::1 No&gt;~A~~I40~,000
FIIIIT VIAll CAIII!tlll
llenl, and the 1111 of (OTHER
THAN REVIEW APPEALS
No ,;-mlllu11fn010n CMioJI
White had a lingle.
EMERGENCY
........ u.oao..,-.
----NoUp
oald raal eagta, and ORDERS)
; THE COMMISSION, 238
White fanned thirteen
.
the
procaedo
ol
uld
EAST TOWN STREET,
Fl1 IU fotml lnJm ......
Fronl Monoy 1111 E&gt;&lt;ponwo Pold. Cd TOI
1111
applied
to
the
ISSUANCE,
DENIAL,
R0 0 M
300'
Southern batten and Walked
No oxper1onoo. CIIIOI lrH:
FIH 1.-61HOII1.
p
1
y
man
t
o
I
MODIFICATION
OR
COLUMBUS,
OHIO
just on~ in a superior effort .
P.ua-'1 Cl1lm In REVOCATION OF 43215. A COPY OF
The &amp;ethman hurler showed
the proper order ol LICENSES, PERMITS, THE APPEAL MUST
the poise of a veteran and
Ito prtortty, 1nd lor ~~~~ CES, OR BE SERVED ON THE
auch other . and
DIRECTOR WITHIN 3
took a!'t early· conunand that
further relief aa II CERTIFICATES; AND . DAYS AFTER FILING
1tretched all the way to . the
Juet enc1 eqult.bll.
THE APPROVAL OR THE APPEAL WITH
THE
DISAPPROVAL OF THE ERAC.
6nale.
. ·
DEFENDANT(&amp;)
p L ANS
AND
FINAL ISSUANCE
AdYertltlng.
Southern'• Chapman also
NAMED ABOVE ARE SPECIFICATIONS.
OF REVOCATION OF
_,..,., II not ...,anelllfe
pitched well but the Southern
REQUIRED
TO "DRAFT ACTIONS" NPDES PERMIT
ARE
WRITTEN
defeme. fumbled around five
ANSWER ON OR STATEMENTS OF
ASHLAND
BEFORE
THE
11
DAY
THE
DIRECTOR
OF
BRANDED
errors. Chapman gave up
_,ltlct our Nita~ at
OFJUNE,2002.
r~
MARKETING ABMI
eight hill . and walked juat
BY: REIMER I ENVIROHM....,,ll.L
FACILITY NO 410
1pl1- number Hlted below
PROTECTION'S
LORBER CO., L.P.A. (DIRECTOR'S)
ROUTE 1124
three batten.
CONIECO FINANCE INT EN T
WIT H MINERSVILLE OH
Southern hosts Symmea
SERVICING CORP.
RESPECT TO THE ISSUE
DATE
Valley Thesday while Eastern
ADAM L. GROSS, ISSUANCE, DENIAL, 0410112002 '
playa at Vinton County
Attorney et Law
ETC. OF A PERMIT, RECEIVING WATERS:
,
~for
PlolntiH·
LICENSE, ORDER, UNT TO OHIO RIVER
Wednesday.
~•u........,
ETC. INTERESTED p E R.MIT
N0
PERSONS
MAY 01Noo114"AD
P.0. 8oall88
'IWinaburg, OH 4.t087 . SUBMIT WRITTEN THIS ACTION WAS
80uflom000 000 0
- · ou
(330) 421-4201
COMMENTS OR PRECEDED BY A
Eullm004 013•
Ut ·
. PROPOSED ACTION.
REQUEST
A
PUBLIC
(4) t , 1S, 2002,
IN THI!. COURT OF MEEnNG
. LP - RleNI Chopnln IJid Katie_..,
~
WI' -

.

'

Your Rlcht lo Know, Drll"l!d Right to \'our

Alexander whacks Marauders, 12·5

Eastem
from

~gles

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

1

Meigs ·picks up.second Win~
.

www.mydellyttntlnal.com

t,..,.....

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--.
I&lt;'*---"'"'"''
..........
-..
.

\

.,

�tltribune- Sentinel -1\e
We Cove·"'"".,

Mel~, Gallla,

And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Cant

Cellular
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HOW IQ WRITE At:! AQ.
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To Help Get Response ...

Word

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Dally In-Column : t :00 p.m.
Monday ·,rlday ror lnserti'On

Display Ads
All Dlaplay: 12 Neon 2

lutlnen Days Prior To
Publi cation .
rn Next Oty's P1per
In· Column: 1:00 p.m. Sunday Oltplay: 1:00 p.m.
For Sund11ys Peper
Th~nday ror Sundays

MANLEVS
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�!••• A 10 • The Deily

Track ~· field: Meigs girls second at Vinton County, 11

1\teeday, April I, 2001

Sentinel

NiA Cro11word Pu .. le

lliDOR

•

PHILLIP

ALbER

a1

Melp County's

.

Hometown Newspeper

I

.AJUtlt
• t I II

•

'

lll

.....
..
~

What's Inside

• J ID H
t AKQJtl

"'.QJ .
Dnltr: NGI'th

V\llntrtbll: IIU·Wt-'
hlllt.

"""'

INT

I'm

l'twti
..

t

1:111

~

OjltniO(IH-: • I

On the second deal
played by ci11ht of my
lludtnts,
North
opened a modern
weak two spades.
South bid what he
hoped hi! could makl!
-· and right he was!
The contract is unbeatable on any defense.
West led the
;IT'f
~1fT
henrt nine, Bust win~--..
tttiNctf TO Phi
ninll with the queen
and cashing the nee .
TOl&gt;AY.
·
Knowing the king
'
was on his ri11ht,
South dropped a
· craf"ty 10. Suitably
duped, East took the
henrt king. Now East
tried a club shill, but
· South finessed the .
queen. Then, caking
no prisoners, declarer
crosaed to the diamond I0, finessed his
club jack, and claimed
. an overtrick.
At the other table,
North pmed. With
CELEBRITY CIPHER
such a weak suit and a
by Lule Cempoe
rebid problem over a
Otllbnty
Clphlr
ooyptogr~mt
111 orultd from quolltlonl by 11mou1
one-spade respo_nse by
poople, flllllnd priHIII. !loh ltHtr In lht olphtr tllndl for enolher.
partner, Ease should
Todly'l clut: Ff fi/UI/t C
'
1
have paned too .
1'CTDTIP
RMUOO
UMCG
he
opened
However,
QWOTAK
Tl
KMI
ZWHG
u~o ro F~r f'.OOUT fill~..,. ,.Mm M.INE. Mf.OIU~ ~..,. one diamond. South
OMUGDZTIP DM
OWIL'
f\~\1\~C. Dli!e.~ 01' Oif\EI&lt;'..
WI if\ Ia, ~IOC ~ ~HJ.E.O
correctly passed ••
OZMAQU WORZ
\--JOMf.t-1\
ONI~!
when the opener ~ids
'1'0
WAOM
OGCHQ
I'ZM
your primary suit and
your hand 11 unsuitMIAK
NIIRDIWDO.'
able for a one-no•
trump overcall, pau.
VCTWI
UMMCQ
Then, if you bid the
PA!VIOU8 SOLUTION - 'I lUll want 10 bl an OfyrJ!plln.. ,
oornptttngle the moatlmrnant thing.'- (Amelloln otymplo
suit on the next
gold medillll) Dlrtk Part
·
•
round, It h natural.
Welt responded one
spade, ·East rebid one
no-crump, and South
HOW COU~I&gt;
ltorrongt ltrltn ol rht
came out of the un- O lour
YOU BE
ICI'Gmblea worclt bt·
1..?.::::==:._~
dergrowrh with a IIIW ro lorm
S.UC.H ~&gt;. ...
lour olmplt wordo.
A....
~. . . -_,.....-1---.......J penalty double. West
FE CAFE
tried two hearts,
paued back to South.
-""""t'J-~1 What would you
have done?
DA R L W
Two beam can be
defeated, bur it takes 1'
I~
speciflc defenn .
I
South sensibly contln·
ued with three dia- . 0 R P 0 D
..:::;
Flretgolfer: "Why didn't you tell
I
1
1
everyone
you had made a hol!l·
I I.
mon d'· w hic h en ded ·
.
ln-&lt;&gt;ne?' Second goiter: 'I couldn't.
the auction.
;;:~::;:;:~;:~,L, I had promleed my wife 1wouldf'!'l
l 5110VLP HAVE STAVe"
West led the heart I·· N E R G T y
I play • • • • that •• ·I" ·
IN PRE· SCHOOL:;,
nine, East winning .•
·h h
d
Complelt ·the chuckle quottd•·
Wll t e queen an
l17
by lllilng In tht miffing worGt: 1
shifting co a trump.
you develap from tttp No. 3 btiiiW.

MY

OF

FROM STAFF REPORTS

li11cs 1/te .~rlt•tldllrc.~ cJ/'

Indians smack lWins, 81

High: 70sJ Low: 40s

Detiiii.A2

Stamps prl_ce
Increases
June 30
WASHINGTON (AP)
- Starting june 30 it'll cost
more co keep those cards
and letter! coming.
The first-class mail . race
will rise 3 cents to 37 cent!
and most other prices will
also go up. The new rates
were approved in February
and the effective date was
announced Thesday by the
Postal Service's board of

't

.. .

80\ICrttOt!.

The pose office said nondenominated stamps valued
at the new 37-cent rate will
go o.n sale in mid-June. One
will feature the U.S. fl ag,
and there will be a fourscamp set depicting antique ·
toys. There will also be a
"makeup rate" stamp, dis·
playiug a star, worth 3 cents
for use with leftover 34cent stamps.
The increases atl'ect only ·
domesti c mail. The international letter rate of 60 cents
for th e tim ounce to Mexico and Canada and 80 cents
to other countric1 remains
·unchanged.

I

I' I Ia I

I

I

I I I I

0

~:!~~·! ~~~fin=~~ • ~~~~ES~M/J~~NTTUS I'

IJOeSoAY

APRIL 9!

the club queen tucceufully,
drew
trumps, and · exited
with the heart jack.
Euc returned Jill
spade, but South
ruffed, cubed the
dub ace, and exited
with the club jack,
endplaylns East co
lead away from the
- - - A-2 of beans to declarer's I 0-6. Nicely
donel
. WrdnotiiAy, April Iii, 2002
· You may want to ouldvate
ffVIrll now lnterelll in tho
yur ohud. They conld turn

out to br quit• rxdtin11 and '
pruwmive In or••• where you

were J•rowi~&gt;LHiy traolitional.
AIUI!S (March 21 · A[lfil IIJ)
· • I'Uoh hArd tu (ultill an ambi·
'cion you\ t been harborit11',
but were •(raid tu la un,h.
Your
will bel w•ll dlrccud, "' 11up prutrU!Inadn~o
Aritt. rrrar yuu,.l( to a birth·
day ~ill. St11d (or your Atlro·
Clroph prtdlttil!llt (ur tht year
ahnd by noailin1 t:Z and SME
to 'Aorro-Guph, e/o thll
n•w•r·'P"• 1•.0. Do" 1758,
Mumy Hill 5mlon, New
Yurk, NY 1"150. Dr Jure to
fbto yom Zodoac Jif'.
1

'""IIY

TAUI~US (A~nl

20-May
You could br in (or •
furrriH wlwu yuu ditco•er
that Wllliull• who you liM"
20)

~

ulfd didu'r lhiuk hijhly

you

or

aclually admir11 your

abilici&lt;t •11•1 znt (ur ll(e.
lU!MJNI (May 21-June 2IJ)
• Look out (ur tom•thinerhat
mi&amp;ht n11kt a J!Ood "'cond
wurrr "' urntllllf. You're in

e ~~~~~MILE '

0

RI

11. 11 . r ,. I' I' I'
I

I that I

I

0~110

I

Pick :S: 3-3·6
Pick 4: 9-4·0.8

ICUM-Lnl ANIWIII
Knight • Moldy • Swank • Behtlt· LONGEST
&lt;
I had attended 1 nelghbore birthday party. At the buf· ·
fat table I heard one not 10 amart fellow 1ay, 'Birthday~
ere good for you. the people who have the most live thti
LONGEST!'

W.VA.

Dally J: 3·8-6
Dally 4: 6-4-9-2

•
;'••I•

I

,

llffd

to (urthcr your ombiti~l

or yu11r cont(orr
You 'll fond ut•rortuni11.. tu collect valuAble bill
wiodom.
LllO Ouly 23-A••· 22) ••
Vou con rock up fOntt lm·
~reul•e scorlf, both career·
wi11 and linonclolly. i( you
utilize the calenh and indullri·
""'""' that you J'I'HIH·
Vll\00 (Au~o 23-Stpr. 2i)
- I( you're auuctcd to 101111ono, 'thll might be the day to
1pproach thl• indlvl_duol and
Olllelld your fttlillllf of &gt;doniradon. lit bold In ""''e" or
•• io onr

llmft.

or

the hflrt.

LIIJRA (Sfpl. 23-0ct. 23) •

• The primory rea1011 (or your
tucceu it your ptrtittencc in
punuinglmporunr objecti..,..

Follow your nnural inclina·
lion• to further your otnbl·

tlortf,
SCOII.I'IO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) •• SomethinJI wMhwhilt
that will provldc you with •

I

....

•

I (OrtUII.Cr cycle Whore txtra
rundt can br acquired. ·
CANCEil (ltutt 21-July
22) • The .runult or practkal
k11owled~r •• which nn be

•
'
..'•

11n11 or achievement can be ;
accontplllhed if you look for
wdo In upro" your ortllllc •
an creative abilltiet. .
'
MGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- '
Ore. 21) •• Stick wilh any e(. ••'
(oru to increm your 11mln1 •

yuur rrtourc11. You ,
will make tucceu(ul inroa.V in :
b01e or

yuur endeavor.
CAI'Itl CORN (Dec.
i
Jan. I Y) •• l'eople may auto- '
matlfally turn to you _{ur ludfhhlp and dirrctlon. They'll
"""that you're rht Oht who
ctn make rhlnp happen (or

Z2·

.

ludllye 5: 10.12· 19·20·24
Pick :S nJpt: 0.3-0
Pick 4 nJpt: &amp;-8- 2-3

,

•

P~ggy

Bowli ng Gn·c n, Ky., the

&lt;III C

parry both of 1\.utland, th e parents ltutlaml Furnintre of Rut-

agrrlml &lt;IIIMitrr. /1 di1c; 1w1 t•stn l•- ;llld exenttors of the L'St:ttc of land, whic h so ld thc111, and

I

J I I

late· Jordan Slllith nnJ

Mission group,
ESC interested
in Bradbu
schaol bui ding

(Eidlwr\· 11otr: A /"wmit ..,,,_ Yost and Donald Yost Sr., m:mufacturcr of the heaters..

r

BtG NATE

Damages sought
in fire deaths

MEIGS LOCAL

CaiiiU: 3'4-6-14-1~5
I

Index
. :Uicdllt - 12 ......

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
~ :ICIOl

A6
83·5
86

AS

A4

A3
A3
Bl -3

A2

Oltlo Vlllty I'UIII~hi!'f CO.

lislt imtom1cc• clr _g11il1.)
RUTLAND - The t:nnili cs of two victillls of a 20011
house tire huve tiled Wr&lt;lllgful death lawsuits blamiti!-l tlw
fire 011 fa ulty spac:c heaters.
Chris Smith and Erica
S111ith , both nf Pomeroy. c:ocxecutnrs fill the• estatc ·of till'

the lntl' Donnld Yost Jr., filed
11curly idL· ntic:n l lawsuits in
Ml'i~s ·Cou nt y ConH11llll
l'l cas Co urt, blan&lt;intt th e fire
whi ch killd their rt•spec;tiw
chi ldrc•n on rite wntlc.&lt;s space
heaters used to heat the
h0111e .
DESA ln tnnatio nal of

Ada111 and jadyr1 Swartz
Sheet' uf Rutl:md. the holllc·
ow ucn ,

,ll'l'

n:.lmt•d :ts d~· ti.· tl ·

dants.
Yost Jr. , 2 1, dil'll i11 a11
attemp t to rescue Souith , 4,
tro n1 the firt·.
Th e w tnplaint dem and,
unsp er iticd da111a~c s.

Bv CHAIIUNI HDEI'\.ICH
HOEFliCHCIIlMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

'POMEROY - 1'\vo requests have been made to the
Ml·igs Local Uoard ofE du ~ation for the Uradbury school to
be vacated when students move into the distri ct's new elc·
lllentnry buildin!l next year.
A dele!lation from Common Ground Missions met with ,
the board last ni_ght to express their interest in acquiring the
hloilding to be used for a Bible college along with a youth,
disaster and social service center.
Les Hayman, pastor, spoke on behalf'of tl1e intcrdenomiol.llional ~ro up which is working through the Meigs County Commissioners to gain control of the building. By law
tlw building cannot be transferred directly to the rninistry.
Supt. William Buckley reported that a second proposal for
t)w buildinl! has been received from the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center. He said he had met with ESC officials earlier t)'lis week.
The deadline for applying for the buildings to be vacated
whL·n the new elementary and middle schools open in September, 2003 was April I. Buckley reported that both proposals fur the 13radbury buildin g met that deadline and it is
now up to the Hoard to make a decision.
The Meigs County Cooperative Parish has already
applied for the Pomeroy Elementary Scpool to house its
va rious programs - God's NET youth center and the
clothing and food distribution centers, now operating in
three sepa rate locations.

Forever
young
Library is .
McLAughlin~

fountain

of youth

BY BtiiAN J. REID
BREEOC&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT For
Carol~
McLa lt ghlin
of
Pomeroy, working nt the Middleport Library ha~ b~cn "a
real lifesaver."
McLaughlin work~ at the
library as an aiqc through the
Experience Workj .program,
form erly known as Green
Thu111b, a .!pedal work pro·
gram for se nio rs operated by
the U.S. Govc monent.
It was after the deaths of her
husband and a oiumher of
orh er clmc rclatiws - in
qukk .uiCCC'!iOn ScWr:tJ years
ago that McLaughlin
decided to enter the Workforce. Though she was at the
age when most arc considering retirement, she took her
first "real job," and hasn 't
regretted it for a n1omcnt.
"I kneW · it was time to get
back Out With the publi c,"
McLaughlin said.

Carole MoLiulhlln
When her five children
were g!'IJWing I.IP. she, ,was an
active member of the band
bomtcrs and other organizations, aot&lt;l she ll1isscd that contact once her children were
groW't1 and her husband gone.
" It's been a fL•allifesnvcr seeing people ag.1 in,." she said .
McLaughlin said her dpctor
a~o~rccs that the sochl intera ction and physical activity a'!nciatcd. wi.th lm job lm hdped
her maintain excellent health.
McLaughlin now . works
hnlf"tintL' at the. library, and is
paid through Ex.pcrience
Works . While the paycheck
might help Mclaughlin make
end! lllect,the most important

part of the job, to her, is the
social interaction with library
patrops and her co-workers,
who make her feel like she's a
" regular" parr lif the staff.
Shl' is im:ludcd in all of tl1c
library sm tr partks an d gift
exchanges. and, because she's
ar1 ExpL·rience Works empl oyee rather thaol a library
employee, she'• able ro be
more active in the Friends of
the Lilmry book sale and
otl1cr activities.
" I really enjoy oi1y work, and
I enjoy the people · I work
with," Mc-Laughlin said. "I
have a good thin g and I enjoy
it. I have no plam to leave anytime soo n."

Reed works his magic at
Meigs Co. chamber luncheon.
BY TONY M. WCH
TLEACHOMVOAILYSENTINEL.COM
MID DLEPOI~T L&gt;avid

Copperfield he's not, nevertheless, Farmers Bank and
Savinga Co. Prc1ident Paul
R.eed
entertained
those
attencl'ingThesday'! meeting of
the Meil!'l County Chamber
of Commerce with a magic
show following the unexpect. ed cancellation ofgue1t !peaker, Mike Bartrum.
Reed ltcpped in to sa ..e the
day after Uarcrum , Meil!s
County n1tivc and football
player for the NFL's l'hiladclphia Eagles, had to ca ncel his
appearance due to an illrtcso in
the family. From rope rric:k! to
sleight of hand, Reed. dazzled
audience membcn with hi1

own,

unique style
of magic.
However,
behind the
"smoke and
.
m1rrors
wa~. in fact,
a scriou1
mes1age,
Rlld
''This
spontaneous ~1agic show is symbolic
of the real magic that the
Mcig5 County Chamber of
Commerce performs every
day," said Reed. "l~ve been part
o( the chamber since the early
1990s and am very proud of
their accomplishment! and
dedication to promoting the
business community within

..

Meig! Cowtty."
According tn chamber officials, llartrurn has agreed to
rcsthedulc for another meet- ·
in g.
In keeping .with the chamber's continuing series on
community update!, Pomeroy
M;ryor John Blactcnar spoke to
those in attendance about current activities in ·the village.
Dlacttnar c~p l aincd that
comtruction on a new boat
docking facility along the
Pomeroy Amphitheater will
begin soon and that funding
has been obtained to build the
village 's new ri ..erfront walk ing path.
l.llaetcnar alJO gave updates
on various nl"W projects and
summertime entertainment.

Pl•a• -

lreclbury, AJ

Board addresses
personnel issues
BY CHARLINI HOIFUCH .
HDEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POM ERb Y - Looking to the 2002-03 school year, the
Meig.• Locall.lmtrd of Education at Tuesday night's meeting
reviewed, renewed or didn't, the contracts of numerous certified and non-certified employees, and accepted several resignations.
Continuing contracts were awarded to Joyce Hill, Lea
Ann King, David Longsworth arid David Wilcoxen.
Five year contracts were · given to Teresa Carr, judy
Crooks, Jim Crow, Ron Drexlcr,Janet Hoffinan, Ueth Lawion, Tcawana· McCaulla, Liz Story, Carin Taylor, and Julia
Vaughan; and three yean contracts to Janice Cady. Michelle
Gillilan , Jeremy Grimm, Jan Haddox, Janice Haynes, Jason
jackson, Metra Peterson, Kathy Sargent and JeffWayland.
. Awarded one-year contracts were Travi! Abbott, Denis~
Arnold, Kimberly Barrett, Kenneth Bond, Kellie Harmon,
Sharon Hawley, Kathryn Hill-White, Jennifer Hoffman,
Kathy Hudson, Jennifer Jones, Matthew Kinnard, Nikki
Lamb,•rt and Daniel Thomas.
Teachers hired on one-year contracts for next school year
pendi ng the completion of all certification requ irements
were jennifer Cummins and Carol Wolfe.
Because of a lac k of funding at thi• time to continue their
positions, the board voted not to renew the contracts for
Martha Holter, Nathan Robinette, and Becky Stone. The
board also voted not to renew the long-term substitute
teaching contracts due to a lack of need for Urian Allen and
Lisa Honaker.
Approved by the board was the renewal of the C/Ctended
se rvic~ contract for Tim .Simpson, vocational agriculture
teacher, in the amou nt of 50 days for th~ 2002-03 school
year•.
Non-certified personnel given continuing contracts wer.e
Joe Gilkey. mechanic; Kevin Jl'Well and Carla Milhoan, bus
driven;Tana Kennedy. three-hour cook;William Morri• and
Ronald Mullins, cuJiodiam.; ·and Nancy Carnahan, adminiwative Jecretary.
Hired on two year contracts effective next school year
were bus drivers, Lou Hemsley and Don Richmond.
Awarded •upplemental contracts in athletic coaching
PIM•-Malp,AJ

them.

AQUAI\.IUS (Jan, 20-Ftb.
19) - U11 • lorgr doH of

common ""''• liut do nor
underestimoto your (telinJI
on thonllf either. Your intul·
II•• per&lt;eption• can be Ill·

tremely helpful

alttMl.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

(or JellinK

PISCES (Feb. 20-Mardt 20)

•• Thlt il the tll11f ICl If! OUI
and circulate, upc&lt;iolly I( tltinp have betn olow for you
in the romanct dc-partn~ent.

·You could meet fumeonC'
new and tXCitin~o
\

. Holzer Medical Center recognizes our
Pediatric Nurses for their dedication and service,

www.holzer.org

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