<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7017" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/7017?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T19:59:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17420">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/d5884169c75d006875de31e19cc05666.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1d20ac5abba518590095bebacd0e33a9</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="22988">
                  <text>Rl Dlt••

Tllf~PU

...

Sunday. Apfll11 1 1001

Meigs girts finish sth. B1

Tyson ~anager accu~ in !~migrant

smuggl1ng pJot commits su1ade . · ·
bond and fatal trill next

SHEL8YVIU.E, Tenn.

{AP) - One of six foru~
~

Foods

~ (liOSCCUtor bas

mana~

tl-Ill
smuaalina

~ with ..........:
.
i . ---PII
tn m ITil\\lghrtt

said the ntaXJmwn ~sible
sentence fur any defendant
convicted on all 36 counts
would be 395 yean in
prison.
.
"l knew 1te was havi~ his
ups and downs but didn't
know he · was this
depressed," said Doug
'frant, Rowland's attorney.
'"This is one of the worst
traaedies t've ever known."
Authorities said Rowland
had been working as a hos·
pitul nul'l!e. His ~Y was
found in the bed of his pick~ truck, parked in a wood·

sdleme killed l;limself widt

his rifte, police said Friday.
In~ said Jill\11'1)'
Rowland, 36. was found
with a~~ wound In his
d\est 11\ul'Sda)i four days
aftr.r he left ~ telling his
wife he needed to get away
to think.
Bedfunl Coonty coroner
Aubrey Richards ruled the
death l Silicide.
Rowland, a funnet manager at 'fYson's SltelbyviUe
plant, was indicted Dec. 11 ·
on federal charges of con·
~ is survived by
~~ to · sMuggle illegal pany plants in nine states.
nnnupnts to work al com- He was free on a $100,000 his wife and two sons. .

rooms a rare security
for cautious.homeowners
.

NEW YORK (AP) Welcome tu the new world
of real estnte ads: t'ouNtury
brow.-.stone, six fireplaces .
- and high·te&lt;:h, armo~
reinfurted silfe room.
That describes the house
in Jodie Foster's hit movie
"Panic
Room." In real life,
Wlitch.lng "World Traveler"
safe rooms are still exceed·
in a morning sefftlling at the
ingly rare, but offer cautious
Toronto International Film
(and very wealthy) home·
Festival.
owners a safe haven from
Freundlich subsequently
home invaders.
·
decided the trade-center
"People who think these
images were appropriate for
are
like bomb shelters the film, wltlcn re~::ounts a
that's not what they're for,''
man's journey tu reclaim his
say:;
l..ou Palumbo, director
soul. The flnal shots of the ·
of the Elite Group, a securi·
towers come in a dream
tY . firm that has designed
sequence in which the man
safe rooms in New York and
furitasi:tes happy endings for
Los Angel~. ''The concept
the troubled people he's
is to insulate you aod your
encountered on a cross•
family
from intruders who
country ramble.
"Him irnaalnina everyone , are trying tu rob or kidnap
he met along his journey as
healed, as whole qaln, and
here's \his shot of the World
1\'nde Center. Somehow, 1
felt it was paying respect to
those
events,"
said
Freundlich, who added that
he's heard only positive
reaction about the images
from audiences at advance
sc:reenlngs. "It reminds them
of an innocence before Sept.
11. It Is a little bit painful,
but it doesn't leave a sour
taste. It's a little bltter5weet."
"It Just worked, and I
wanted It there as a symbol
of my belief in the city,"
Freundlich 8ald.
Jel\nifer Westfeldt and
Heather Juergensen, writers
and stars of the current
romantic comedy "Kissing
Jessica Stein," went the
opposito route, shooting new
Manhutum overviews to
replace trade-center footage.
Their film screened Sept.
I0 at the Toronto festival nnd
again Sept. ll, the second
screening drawing pained
gasps from . the auolence .
when the trade center
ap~, they said.
When those imnges.came
up, it really wu like a kick in
the solar plexus," Juergensen
sold.

.Jimages of trade center preserved
· in fresh films shot before Sept. 11
LOS ANGELES (AP),Lnst weekt:nd's tup boll·
The World Trade Center office druw, ''Chlin.ging
lives on in a handful of new l.lines," included britf nash·
tllms whose makers left es of the trude center. ''World
intact their pre-Sept. II Traveler," a road-trip drama
footoge of the ty.oin lOwers starring Billy Crudup and
out of respect for the dend Julianne Moore that opens
and defiance of the terrorists Friday, fentures a prominent
. who destroyed the buildings. .skyline view of the trude
. In the weeks after Sept. 11, center early on 111\d 11 aorthere was a ruSh to ec~tclse , gcous nighttime view oflhe
shots of the trude towers , {owers near the end.
from · such comedies ns . A&amp;B home video releases
"Zoolander"
and another reminder of the toW·
!"Serendipity." Studios and ers April 30 with ''The World
flhnmnkers felt the imnges Trade Center: A Modem
would be too wrenching so Marvel," 11. History Channel
soon after the terrorist documentary completed a
attacks.
few months before Sept. II
But other movies that on the construction of the
came out late last year such stcxscrapers. ·
as "Vanilla Slty" and
'It references the events of
"Sidewalks of New York" Sept. II, but it's not about
included shots of the tmde those events," said Jason
center. As time passes, film· Campbell, murketing direc·
o.nkers say they sense audi· tor at New Video, A&amp;B's
!nces are better prepared to distribution partner. ''The
handle the sudden nppear· program really is a love let·
ance of the vanished towers ter to the trude center."
on screen.
..
.
The originnl script for
"I think It's hke our me.m~ "Men In Black ll," due out In
orles of 11 loved one," said July, Included an action
director Sam Raimi, who left scene toward the end that
images of the trade center in would hnve showed the trade
his upcoming adnp,tntion of center in the background.
"Spider-Mnn." • Probably Director Bnrry Sonnenfeld
right after the death ot' some· said thnt after Sept. 11, lt was
one we love, it's sometimes shifted to a rooftop with the
hard to look nt their pictures. St11tue of Liberty on the horl·
Then Inter, there's a need to . :r.on.
look at them."
"Men in Black II" co-star
A "Spider-Man" trailer Will Smith snld he thinks
..!that included images of the peo~le are increasingly able
World . Trade Center was to vu1w trnde·center pictures
quickly pulled Ia t fall, nnd with wistful affection instead
the action sequence depicted of pained memories. .
in that ad hns been cut from
"Just the other day, I
the movie. But Rnlmi said it looked nt a picture from two
was important for him to years ngo with my kids, ..
leave the skyscrapers in Smith snld. "We were at the
other shots.
. · Statue of Liberty with · thll
"I didn't want to erase the twin towers In the back·
image of the .twin tower5," ground, nnd It really did feel
Ralmi said. "They're seen good seeing the towers
throughout the course of the standing."
·
movie, because we didn't
As the towers collapsed
want the terrorists to win."
Sept. 11, audiences were

i

Markets
fromPIIIIDI
On the upside, these funds
offer comfort to the other·
wise nervous investor.
''These ilren 't a bud thing,
if the investor feels they need
them," says Don Cassidy, n
senior analyst at Lipper Inc.
"And sometimes the (insur·
ana) are not horrible, I've
seen them os low os 25-30
basis pOints a yeur on vnri·
able annuities, And then, of
course, hi~her,''
The Srruth Barney Cnpitnl
l'reservation Fund can invest
in both stocks and bonds, and
the guarantee behind it
comes from AMBAC insur·
~~nee, Investors in this fund
have to hold on to their
shares for a minimum or live
years. The COIIt for the insur·
ance is 7S basis points per
year on top of the fund's
Other annual expenses.
'Julie Russel, a financial

consultant at Salomon Smith Cassidy. "Yeah, the fund
Barney in Wellinaton, Fla., could b6 down at some point
says the Capilill ~servntion In time, but you'll nave
Fund a great flt for some of unlimited upside potential if
her clients. "I can honestly you Mid It (the fund) long
say to a client that they can term."
buy a premier money.manaa· ·" And then there are the mar·
er 1111d no matter what tfie kets. Look nt put performW'ket does five years from mance over five· and IQ.year
now, ,rou 'II get your money · rolling periods of the S&amp;P
bn~o'
p.
500, and you •ve got to won·
s ,
· rmc1Pll1 der if gunrnnteed funds are
Pre$crvalton funds also worth the extra cost:
require a flve·year Invest· According to Ibbotson
ment commitme.,t, and Associates the Chicngoshare~olders mu1.1 reinvest b ·e· d •ec'uritles resea h
ull dividend and interest a.
•
n:
income back in to the fund firm, over the past 76 years
and not take any money out (from 1926 through 200 I)
of If the Insurance backing Is there was a . IO·pen:ent
to be honored.
chance or market I~ over
On ,the downside, five five-year rolling penods; and
yeurs 1s considered a long- over 10-year rolfing periods,
term investment In the minas the chonee of loss wu 3 per·
of m1111y money pros, and cent.
insurance Isn't the only way
(Dian l,i4uvlch Is a nation·
to cover your asset•, ally syndicated mutual fond
"Another way to give your· columnist, auJhor. and pubself more of a potential liJI~er of an educaJional fond
upside is to buy o decent, bal· mutual
Web
site:
anced
fund,". suggest hJtp:llwww.allbouJjimds.com.)

.

you."

The safe roam can be as
si-;nPle as a closet with a
reinfotted door and a phone
inside. 'IYPiclllly, it's a room
separated · from the rest of
the house by reinforced
walls and a hidden, magnet·
icaUy locking door. Features
include independent ventila·
lion systems nnd phone lines
-and, for longer stnys, pe~
haps 11. toilet.
For the ultra-security-conscious, options can include
lining the room with armor
or bullet-resistant Kevlar,
setting up a closed-circuit
TV network: to watch the
rest of the hoine, and
installing a backup geilern·
tor.
Foster's battle against
Intruders from within her
secure walls earned more

than $73 mi Ilion at the box
office in three weeks, creat·
ing a buzz about the littleknown security technique.
(Screenwriter David Koep~ ·
changed the name to "panic
room" for a more com·
pelling title.)
The idea is simple,
Palumbo explains. [f an
intruder enters your home,
you flee to the safe room.
Inside, using a phone line
protected from the attnckers,
you summon the authoritit:~~.
Industry experts won't
speculate about how many
safe rooms there are,
although 11 number are in
Manhattan townhouses and
Hollywood mansions. None
come cheaply: A fully
equipped room can cost up
to $500,000.

Mel~

SOUTHERN ROYALITY
Weather .
High: 50s, Low: 30s
Detlllls, A2

·Letter deadline

·obsenatlon
APPLE GROVE - The
85th birthday of Harry
Stobart will be observed
with a dinner at the Red
Barn in Apple Grove on
Sunday. April 28 fro"rn 1-4
p.m.

aubmeets
MIDDLEPORT
Wildwood Garden Club
will meet Wednesday at
11:.30 a,m, at judy . Kay's
. Restaurant in Middleport.

·RACINE Racine
Area
Community
Organization will meet
Thesday at 6:30 p.m. for a
potluck meal.

Southern High School's prom king end queen were chosen Saturday night In front of a
large capacity crowd at the school.'s gymnasium. Macy Rees and Rachel Marshall, pic·
tured above, were selected from a large group of candidates who competed for this
year's coveted titles. (Tony M. Leach)
·

Jobless rates down in March
FROM AP, STAfF REPORTS

OHIO
Pick 3: 4-5·7

Pick 4: 9-4·9·8
~ptrl.ottll:

3·11·33-35-40-47

10nul·llllt43
Klcktr: 1·2-6·9·3-1

Pick 1 (nl&amp;ht): 2·3.0
Pick 4 (nl&amp;ht): 2·5-3·2
W.VA.

Dally 1: I· 7·5
Dai(J 4: 1·7·5·5

Pa\'11111111: 27-~2-44 (8)

hctlon• -

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

12 , ....

AS
83·S
86
AS
A4
A3
A3
81·3
A2

C&gt; :1002 Oltlo volley f'ubllshln1 Co.

lost control in a right-hand
curve, slid le(t of center and
was struck broadside by a
westbound 1997 Ford Ranger
pickup truck driven by James
M. Drehel, 40, Langsville.
Drehel and a passenger, Alan
L King, 36, Pom~roy, were
injured. and taken to Holzer
Medical Center by Meigs
EMS, the report jaid.
The crash, the .second traffic
fatality of the year reported by
.the patrol in Meib"' County,
remains under investigation.
troopers said.

Bloodmo.bile
collects 68 units

Plan

2

(740) 145·5334

DARWIN - An IS-yearold Athens man was killed in a
two-vehicle accident Saturday
on U.S. '33 that also injured
two local men, the GalliaMeigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reported.
Clyde A. Brown was pro.nounced dead at the scene at
the 12:10 p.m. crash by Dr.
James Witherell, assistant
Meigs County coroner.
Troopers said Brown was
eastbound in a 1969
Volkswagen Beetle when he

POMEROY - Meigs
County Health Department
will provide free blood lead
screenings on May I for
children from six months to
six years as part of a state·
wide effort to fight child·
hood lead poisoning.
Screenings may be schecl·
uled and materials obtained
by calling the health depart· ·
ment at 992~6626.

.RACO meets

Weekend·
crash kills
Athens:man
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - The last
day that letters ro the editor
pertaining to the May 7
primary will be printed in
The Daily Sentinel is
Wednesday, April 24.
No letters regarding the
election will be printed
after that date.

·1nc1ex

For more Information
about the
opportunities
Buckeye Hills
Career Center
offers, please call

Hometown Newspaper

County's

POMEROY - With the exception of
Lawrence County, the area's unemployment
rate declined slightly during March, the Ohio
Department of Jobs and Family Services
reported.
-'
That was in contrast to the state jobless
rate, which rose last month.
G:illia County's rate dipped 0.3 percent
from February to 6.4 percent, ODJFS found.
Meigs County, listed at 10.9 percent in
February, decreased 0.5 to 10.4 percent in
March.
Lawrence County's rate jumped 1.5 percent during March, from 5.6 the month prior
to 7.I percent. Other counties, however, saw
a decrease: Athens, 0.3 to 5 percent; Jackson,
0.6 to 8.3 percent; and Vinton, .09 percent to
14.6 percent.
,
Ohio's unemployment rate rose O,J percentage points to 5.7 percent in March, the
st.1te reported'Friday.
The national rate was 5.7 percent in
March, up from 5.5 percent in February,
"Even though the economy is showing
signs of recovery, the rise in unemployment
in March continues to reflect low demands
for workers," Tom Hayes, director of the
ODJFS said in a news release. "Employment

.ON THE WEB
Unemployment information
can be accessed
from ODJFS at
http://www.state.oh.us/odjfs/
was down slightly compared to February
while the numb~r of those seeking jobs
increased."
The number of unemployed Workers
increased in March to 336,000 from 322.000
in February. The March unemployment rate
in Ohio was up from 3.9 percent in March
2001. The number of unemployed has
ipcreased by 111,000 over the year froni
225,000.
Rates decreased in about three-fifths of
Ohio's 88 counties and ranged from a low of
3.5 percent in Holmes County in northeast
Ohio to a high of 14.9 percent in Morgan
County in southea.u Ohio.
Aside from Morgan, Meigs and Vinton,
four other counties had unemployment rates
higher than 9 percent, including Adams, 13.2;
Pike 10.2; Monroe 9,7; and Huron, 9.

lhe Holzer Health

•

POMEROY - Donors Langsville; Donna Hawley,
gave 68 units of blood when Robert Barton. Tim Smith,
the Red Cross Bloodmobile George Harris Jr,, Jennifer
visited the Meigs Senior Garey, Heather Brooks, Trish
Center last week.
Garey, Daniel Thomas, Cinda
Multiple gallon donors were: Eaton, Christopher Miller;
Harry Brown, 1 gallon; Marsha Mike Wilfong Jr., James Eaton,
Barnhart and Robert W. Frank Herald Jr., Dinah
DartQn, 2 gallons; Barbara Stewart,-Unda Haley and Don
Dugaii, 3SaJions;Janet Pea'vley, Vaughan Jr., all of Middleport.
6 gallons; Mary K. Spencer, 11
Raymond Mueller, Adrian
gallons; and David M. King and Hubbard
and
Marta
Thomas Hart, 13 gallons.
Blackwood, Rutland: John
Donors by community were: Rice,
Reedsville: Darla
Susan Reeves, Susan King, Thomas, Carolyn Charles, and
Gerald Rought, Virgil Windon, Oris- Smi!h: Syracuse; Urban
Harley Johnson, Jackie · Graf, Marrilee Bryant and
Hildebrand, Dolores Will, Jim Esther Smith. Long Bottom.
Will, Paul Marr, Thomas Hart, Beatrice Morgan, Gallipolis;
Phil Ohlinger, Dennis Gilmore, Joseph Bailey, Chester; Richard
Marsha Barnhart. Mary Voss, Spencer. Coolville: Charla
Janet i'eavley, Harold Gilmore Brown, West Virginiac
Jr., lletty Coughenour, Jack Retired and Senior Volunteer
Coughenour, Mary Spencer, Program (RSVP) workers
Billy Spencer, Donald May.. assisting were Helen Bodimer,
Dan
Follrod.
Melody June Ashley, Betty Spencer,
Lawrence. and David King, all R.ita Buckley. Mary Lou
of Pomeroy.
Hawkins, Gerry Pullen, Jerry
Barbara Dugan, Evelyn Crawford. Ted Hatfield, Peggy
Mugrage. Charles T. Mugrage, Harris, Ken Harris and Carolyn
Janice Salser, Ronald Salser, Grueser.
Harry Brown. David A. Beattie, The Rocksprings Better
Michael Swiger. Doris Grucser, Health Club worked in the
Randall Arnold, Paula Brown, canteen. The next scheduled
and Timothy Thorne, all of visit will be June 19 at the
Racine.
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Lenneth
Lonb'Stteth, Center.

One lane

An Inspection of the Pomeroy;Mason Bridge Is scheduled to ·
begin today. The Inspection will result In a one-lane closure of
the bridge through Friday, according to Ohio Department of
Transportation spokesman Stephanie Filson. The Inspection will
be conducted .by ODOT's consulting firm, URS. (Tony M. Leach)

•

tne IS now...

River Cities Nurse On·Call
i

1·800..462·5255
If you have health questions or concerns, call
River Cities Nurse On-Call and speak to a
specially trained RN.
Check wilh

/ MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
•

www.holzer.org

about medication concerns.

"

•

I

�•.

•

- ~~-------------------Ohio weather
Tuesday, April 23

I ....,_ lsa-..s• I •
INO.

0

0

ol COiumbuo

1#•117" I

•

0
KY.

, 2002

~~~~!E) Q

w.-.

Inc.

•

............

-

loo

·Sunny skies on Tuesqay
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Weather forecast
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows 35 to 40.
Tuesday... Mosdy sunny. llighs in t~e upper 50s.
Tuesday night... Mostly clear. Lows near 40.
Extended forecast
Wednesday... Pardy cloudy during the day. then cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Warmer. Highs in the
. upper 60s.
·
Thursday... A chance of showers in the morning, otherwise
partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s and highs in the upper 60s.
Friday... Mosdy clear. Lows in the lower 40s and highs in the
upper 60s.
·
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s and highs in the
: upper 60s,
·

..

PROFICIENCY TEST

=Fourth-grade
\reading exam
!determined
·niost difficult
COLUMBUS (AP)
Schoolchildren in Ohio have
more trouble passipg the
state's fourth-grade reading
proficiency test than they do
any of the other 14 proficiency tests the. state gives annually, The Columbus Ditpatch
reported Sunday.
ln the 2000-01 school year,
56 percent of studen!J taking
: the test passed it, and only
: 15.6 percent of the school dis: tricts that receive state report
• cards - 95 of 608 - had
enough fourth-graders pass
the test to meet the state standard of 75 percent proficient.
• In contrast, 80 percent of
. students passed the fourthgrade writing test in the same
•. year, and 83 percent of school
districts met the state standard .
.

six~~~ :~: :~~~~~:rsrth~

PageA2

lo

The Daily Sentine:i

poinu when he .took it three
yean ago, but said it wasn't
because he had trouble figurillg out what he was reading.
"I undentood aD the words,
but I didn't underitand what
they were asking,'' he said...
Teachers say fourth grade Is
when reading becomes diflicult because, after concentrating mocdy on fictional stories
and using their imaginations
in the tint three grades, chi!dren are asked to use information to form conclusions.
"Most of our problems
(with the test) come from
reading in the nonfiction
area;' said Cathy Schulte, testing and curriculum coordinator for Canal Winchester
h Is..
scoo
"In K-3, we teach kids to

read. Then in fourth grade, we
turn. We're reading to learn.
take the tests covering read- There's a big difference."
ing, writing, math, citizenship
• and science.
The reading test requires
children to distance themThe fourth-grade reading selves fiom the text and write
test is designed to show
whether students can under- objectively, which . is not
stand a plot, analyze it and fig- . always easy for them, said Pat
ure out what .may happen Enciso, an associate professor
next. They must decipher of ·education ·· at Ohlo Stat&lt;!
words from the context of Univenity.
·• familiar words and .rell fact
Mitch Chester, the state'•
; ' from opinion. The test also assistant tuperintendent for
:; includes poetry, fiction and assessment, said teachen might
: nonfiction.
need more help directing chilFor the writing test, te&lt;aehers dren to focus on the skills they
read the questions out loud need.
and they are based mosdy on
"Some people blame the
make-believe situations.
kids. ... Some blame the test.
"All we had to do was, What I would argue is ·the.
they'd show us like a picture major factor is instruction:• he
of a basket and we had to say said.
what was in the basket," said "All kidJ have the ability co
Lauren Johnson, now a fifth- read weD."
grader in suburban Upper Ch.ester said the 56 percent
Arlington.
of fourth-gradm passing the
• She said the reading test, reading test in the Wt tchool
: which she failed last year, was year was lO points higher than
more difficult than she antici.- th.e percentage passing in
pated, while the writing test, 1996, the tint year die test was
which' she passed, seemed easy. given.
Her brother, Evan, now a "If you look over time,
teVenth-grader,' missed passing there's been tremendous
the reading test by a couple of progress; J.1e said.

Monday, April 22, 2002

·Small-town maternity
wards give
to high
costs,

MOllOy, April 22. 2002

Predatory lending a personal issue
DAYTON (AP) - When said she also was promised there
Priscilla Eva refinan~ed her would be no fees.
Cleveland-area bungalow, she
Eva signed the agreement
thought she was getting a lower without reviewing it.
interest rate and a deal to.pay off "I was relieved;' she said.
her student loans without "What I needed was a tempoincreasing her mortgage pay- rary leg tip to recover from the
ment.
financial blow of medical
What she says she got was a expenses:•
higher interest rate and payBut Eva said she continued to
ment, and thousands of dollars get biDs on her student loans
worth of hidden fees.
and later ·discovered she had
Ev:a believes she's the victim been charged $8,700 in fees and
of predatory lending, the prac- would have an interest rate of
tice ofloaning money at terms 11.99 percent.
that make it diflicult or imposShe sued Midwest in July
sible to repay and making the 2000, accusing the company of
borrowers' homes vulnerable to fraud.
foreclosure.
In court documents, Midwest
Predatory lending is at the denied engaging in predatory
center of a tug of war berween lending or .defrauding Eva. The
cities that want to regulate the company no longer operates as
practice and the state, which a mortgage lender, and caDs to
wants uniform rules.
its office were not answered.
Opponents of a new state law
The Ohio Department of
say Ohio has done lirde to pre- · Commerce· said that Midwest,
vent predatory lending.
on June 30, 2000, voluntarily
"It basically tells cities they canceled iis license to make seccan't do anything to stop this ond mortgages in Ohio.
problem,'' said Diane Cin·iryo, Dayton was the first city to
an attorney for a fair-housing ban predatory lending. Last
adyocacy group in Cleveland. July, the city barred high-cost
"All the state did was copy and loans issued for amounts
cut and past some federal Jaw beyond the borrowers' ability
chat already exists. In Ohio, you t6 repay, or in which the payhave more protection when ments were more than halfof
you're buying a toaster than their incomes. It also banned
when you're getting a mort- loans with fees more than 20
gage."
percent higher than those of
Ev:a, 45, is a single mother similar loans.
who supports herself as a classiCity Commissioner Dean
cal violinist and school coun- Lovelace said residents were
selor. She wants to spend more complaining that they had
time with her 5-year-old son been encouraged to refinance
but said she's been forced to their homes and were not
play at eVery musical eng;.ge- aware of the n.'Sulting higher
ment she can find.
interest rates and fees.
"What it has done is put my
"I 'hear a story every week,
life on hold,'' sl]l! said.
and I'm not exaggerating,"
Predatory lending often Lovelace said. 'They're losing
begins with an unsolicited their homes and their inheriappeal door to door or by mail, tances:'
e-mail or telemarketer, suggestBut Dayton's ordinance
ing homeowners use the equity raised concerns in the credit
in their hom~ to pay off other industry, which believes that
loans. The poor, minorijjes, the such laws co.uld drive out legitelderly and single women are imate, n&lt;m-predatory sub6-equent ~·
' ''i , · prime lenders. Such lenden
Ev:a, who underwent i:ancer often serve people with weak
surgery and mUsed 13 weeks of credit histories, and the loans
work in 1999, Wl!1ted to more cypicaUy come with higher
quickly pay off'S6,000 in med- interest races because of the
ical billt.
high.er risk of default.
She said Midwest National
Lenden said they could not
Mortpp Bane Inc. of Cincin- tailor their practices to ccwer
nati promised to reduce her 7.1 the hundreds of Ohio commupercenc interest rate 10 that her nities that could pau predatorymortgage payment of $785 lending laws.
•
would indude her student loan
The Legislature then .preand credit card paymen11. She empted such ordinances.

More parents buying prepaid .·
tuition despite price .liikes ·
COLUMBUS (AP) -The
number of Ohio families buying guaranteed tuition credits
more than doubled this year
compared. to last, despite an
unscheduled price increase in
January, the state said.
The Ohio Tuition ·Trust
Authority said 10,810 new
families enrolled in the
authority's guaranteed savings
plans from Oct. 1 through
March 31 , while the cost of
tuition credits rose 17 percent.
During the tame period a
year ago, 4,200 new families
enrolled. There are about
116,000 guaranteed fund
accounts.
The plans allow parents to
buy credits for future tuition
at current costs.
Credits on March 31 cost
$59.50 apiece, up from $51 on
Oct. 1. There was an annual
increase of $5 in October and
an unscheduled increase Jan .
15 of$3.50.
•
The unscheduled increase
came after five of Ohio's 13
public, four-year universities
- Kent State, the Univenity
of Akron, the Univemty of
Cincinnati, Cleveland State
Univeniry and Youngttown
SUte Univmity- increased
tuition as much as 6 percent
for this semester.
Those increases came after
Gov. Bob Taft and state lawmakn cut higher education
· funding by 6 percent; or $12 I
ll!illion. to help balance a S1.5
billion rute budget deficit.
The Tuition Trust program
raised its pri~ again April l,
to 169 per credit, to reflect

"The No. 1 concern is to
Ten days after Gov. Bob Taft
make. sure in the state of Ohio signed the bill, the Cleveland
we do not develop a patchwork City Council passed a predatosort of regulation,'' said bill ry-lending 'ordinance. Council
sponsor Rep. Chuck Blasdel, a President Frank'jackson said the
Republican from East Liver- city wants to uphold its authorpool. "We need a uniform set of ity to protect residents when
standards."
the state has failed to do so.
Blasdel said allowing comThe American Financ:W Serrnunities to enact ordinances vices Association, a trade group
could result in overregulation, for mortgage companies, has
forcing some lenders out of the sued to block both local ordimarket. reducing, competition nances.
and increasing costs to conAssociation President Randy
sumers.
Lively said many lenders arc
The state law, which goes national companies that rely on
into effect in May, restricts state laws to plan and run their
predatory lending to the degree busi1;1esses.
_
that it bans the practice of mak-_ Allowing local laws on predaing a loan without regard to the tory lending would increase
borrower's ability to repay it.
and complicate the already
It also requires the lender to extensive paperwork required
disclose aU terms of the loan and forc.e lenders out of the
before the borrower signs the market.
contract, including a warning
"It gets almost incomprehenthat the borrowers could lose sib!e;' he said. "It would bring
their homes if payments are not the mortgage lending industry
made.
·to its knees:'

TOLEDO (AP) - Some whether you have 10 newsmall-town hospitals, faced borns ot none at aU," said
with growing competition Gary Gould, the hospital's
and rising costs, have replaced chief executive officer. "It's
their maternity wards with purely volume dr.iven."
more profitable health care
The extra space hilS allowed
centers.
the hospital to expand its
"It's ·very difficult for a emergency room and increase
small, rural hospital particu- surgeries.
larly when you're surrounded
Four other nearby hospit;lls
by other hospitals," .said stiU deliver babies. "It would
Cheryl Herbert, president of have been a bigger issue if we
' Morrow County Hospital in were 15 miles away from
Mount Gilead.
another hospital," Gould said.
Seventeen hospitals in Ohio
Women also are choosing
have shut down maternity to give birth at bigger hospiwards over · the past three tals that have the comforts of
years, according to the Ohio home.
"It's more of the aesthetics;·
Department of Health.
Five closed in towns where Herbert said. "The actual
the only option now is dri- technology with childbirth
ving to another city. Other isn't much "different wherever
hospitals are struggling with you go."
the decision.
.
Hospitals in the last decade
.Hospital administrators say have spent more money
there are a number of reasons adding birthing suites with
for the closings - more whirlpool baths, stereos and
expectant mothers choosing plush furniture.
Some even· offer candlelight
1 hospitals with added comforts, soaring malpractice dinners for the proud parents.
insurance rates and the
"It's their opportunity to
. increasing costs of technology. put their best foot' forward,
· "Rural hospitals don't have and have the beginnings of
the financial resources to keep what they hope will be a long
up," said Herbert, who took relationship with those famiover a month after the hospi- lies," said Mary Yost, a spokes: tal closed its obstetrics wing woman for the Ohio Hospital
and put in a chronic pain Association.
·
treatment
center
in
"You don't necessarily
September 2000.
make money in delivering
The numbers have dwin- babies, but you can develop a
died nationwide also.
relationship.
with
the
. There were 2, 940 materni- patients," Yost said.
· ty units in 1999, a drop of 463
A proposal to close Hardin
since 1991, according to the Memorial Ho$pital's materniAmerican
Hospital ty ward in Kenton angered so
·Association. That number many residents that the board
includes hospital closings and decided in early April to delay
mergers.
its decision.
In California, the only · Voters wanted to know
maternity ward in Concord, why the hospital was making
Contra Costa Counry's largeJC such a move after they
city, closed in October approved a 19.5_million hosbecause 90 percent of women pi tal levy last August.'
were going elsewhere.
Bobbie Sellars, who gave
That same month, members birth to a boy there on April
of the Petaluma Health Care 5, said the familiar surroundDistrict
in
northern ings were important. .
·
California wouldn't allow
"I knew everybody .who
hospital owners to shutter a was going to be in my delivbirthing center, saying it ery room;• said the first-time
would be irresponsible.
mother. "That put me more at
Ohio has 164 community ease. I wouldn't want co go to
hospitals.
a strange hospital with strange
Belmont ·
Community people."
Hospital in BeUaire in eastern
Administrators say Hardin
Ohio closed its birthing cen- Memorial might not survive
ter a year ago after the num- unless the ward is shut down.
ber of newborns dropped The closing would save about
·steadily.
$4 miUion over the next five
"The stiff' has to be there years.

WAclBQDI
Mayldl

ONLY

S:f().OO

'l

\

Jane Doe
Pomeroy
City HOI ltal

Name of N u r H ' - - - - - - - - - - Piace of Employment-------Your Name~-~-----~--~--­
Addre11 - - - - - - - - - - - - --------,Phonell

I

Ads Must Be Prepaid

I

. .·-··----------------------.J
Mall or Drop off at

continued uncertainty about
future tuition costs because of
declinin'g state support for
higher education.
But program enrollment so
far in April stiU appean to be
increasing,
said
Jackie
WiUiams, the Tuition Trust's
executive director.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

LOCAL BRIEFS
Area to host

Plan revival

road. The car then struck a
. fence and a tree, the repo'rt
DEXTER - Old Dexter said.
Church will hold revival serThe car suffered functional
WILKESVILLE - The vices April 25-27 at 7 p.m. damage.
annual state championship each evening. The Rev: Ed
bicycle USCF sanctioned race Barney will speak on
ftlns
wiD again be i)osted in Vinton Thursday and Friday, and the
County this year ·by the ReV; James Oyer on Saturday.
POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
Wilton Civic Association.
answered 11 calls for assis· The race will be Sunday.
tance over the weekend. Units
May 5, starting at 11 a.m. in
POMEROY ..-. Rebecca responded as follows :
Wilkesville. The race route
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Foster, 30, 42103
includes traveling on state L.
Saturday, 2:56 a.m., Veterans
routes 124,325, 160, 689.and Enterprise Road, Pomeroy,
143, and Meigs County Road was cited for unsafe speed for Memorial Hospital, Derek
1 and Vinton County Road 9, conditions by the Gallia- Winebrener Holzer Medical
.covering 69.1 miles. Bikers Meigs Post of the State Center;
p.m.,
U.S.
12:12
wiU travel through Vinton, Highway Patrol following a
Gallia and Meigs counties and one-car accident Sunday on 33/Darwin, Alan King II,
· Mike Drehel, HMC ;
will end the course in Ohio 7.
4:11 p.m., Pearl Street,Alica
Troopers
said
Foster
was
WilkesviUe at 2 p.m. For more
information,
call northbound in Salisbury Burton, treated;.
7:16 p.m., Oak Hill Road,
TeamCOLUMBUS hotline at Township at 7 a.m. when the
Benjamin Wolfe, .St. Mary's
car
she
drove
hydroplaned,
740~ 321-1446.
causing her to lose control. Hospital;
The
regional/national
The car went off the right
9:19 p.m., Dyeville, assisted
USCF bicycle road race tour side of the road and over- · by Rutland, Kevin Morris,
of southeastern Ohio is turned, the report said.
O'Bieness
Memorial
Sunday, June 2, traveling the
The car suffered disabling Hospital;
same route. The race will also damage.
Sunday, 7:04 a.m., Ohio 7,
be hosted in the Wilkesville
motor
vehicle accident,
Quentin 0. Ramsey, 20,
area by Wilton Civic Caldwell, was cited for failure Becky Foster, treated;
Association.
1:08 p.m., Main Street,
to control by the patrol folA spaghetti dinner spon- lowing a one-car accident Shirley Boring. Camdensored by the association wiU · Saturday on Ohio 32 in Clark Memorial Hospital. ·
be served at ·the Wilkesville Columbia Township.
POMEROY
Community Cen.ter, starting
Troopers said Ramsey was
Saturday, 12:12 p.m. , U.S.
at noon. For detail.s aboutthe. eastbound at 3:22 a.m., 33/Darwin, motor vehicle ·
dinner, caD 740-669-3915.
swerved to miss a deer and accident, Clyde A. Brown,
went ofT the right side of the dead on arri,val;

bike race

EMS

Drivers ticketed

Sunday, 2:29 p.m., Fourth
Street, Eber Pickens Sr.,
HMC.
SYRACUSE
Sunday, Fourth Street, Ann
Mills, HMC.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Sunday, 8:21 p.m., Main
Street, Christy Tucker, OMH.

Noodles

available
RACINE
Dorcas
Bethany Sonshine Circle is
taking orders for homemade
noodles to be available at the .
Racine Area Co mmunity
Organization Flower Festival
Saturday. · Orders may be
placed by calling Lois Sterreu
at 949-0032.

Committee
meets
POMEROY . Meigs
Counry 4-H Club Advisory
Committee will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at the Meigs County
Extension Office.

VFWmeets
TUPPERS PLAINS
Thppers Plains VFW Post
9053 of Tuppers Plains will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday
for election of officers and a
special drawing.

Protesters gather at World Bank headquarters
WASHINGTON (AP) About 1,000 shouting protesters gathered Sunday outside
the downtown headquarters of
the World Bank, demonstrating
against the policies of finance
ministers meeting inside,
before marching to a rally ~t
the Washington Monument.
The crowd was mostly
peace_!\11, and there were no
arrests.
Police did move into the
crowd at the rally at one point
to stamp out a small fire, after
an American flag was set
aflame. The flag was set on fire
during a ~euflle between the
protesten and young men carrying American fiags, taid
Captain Hmry Berberich of
the U.S Park Police.
Once the fire was out, "people in the crowd were agitated IN PROJUT- A protester look11111er at a pollee officer outside the headquarters of the World
and 10me of their agitation . Bank and International Monetary Fund Sunday In Washington. demonstrating against the pol~
they turned oil us;• Berberich clel of finance ministers meeting Inside. (AP)
said. Poliu had to push their
way through the .crowd, he
said.
Earlier, outside the World
Bank, about 100 protesters
moved at one point to block a
police car slowly driving by.
But they were stopped by
police on motorcycles and
ho~-,eback.

"

All ads must be prepaid

CLOSING - Bobble Sellars holds her two-week Old son
Magnus Petltt outside their Kenton, Ohio, home. Sellars was
able to deliver Magnus at 1he neamy Hardin Memorial Hospital
after plans to close the hospital's matemlty ward were put on
. hold beCa!Jse of pressure from the local community. (AP)

The Daily Sentinel
.... ill. .

_ , . . . . ......... Qo.

Pi l 5 h;d . . , . •

UIOQ4.

Mmdlp

........ ..... ttl C&lt;lurl ...
Pw••rDJ· Ohio~
I J id ct1•

~-·-"'·

• ,r~n.·rrt'ff'fMMd
fleONo "" 'PIP9 trn ' t L
P II

.News DINMbo..,...

.,

...... tpaon,....

OlplrtmMt .......... ..-:

o...... IIWliiiF
Of'

1

FUJlNITURE
&amp; DESIGN -....:,:,_.,
............_ . T _ _
Mllllftl
•

•IICN
•12
711

_,

Est 14

-~":,'*,:•r•oot-111
11wDIIr
c..........
_ _ _ .._.,
H ,..,

••

....

10-

.,., IIGI.....,.U11111•

~~~--­

............. 721

..

a. Fl1 S~n

-_,_
.

Ell. 13

Oll•••mc••

......

FLA.IR
:::::::::t·

Est 12

___ _

~lltld..,_...,.

- ... n. Dllr-. 111 C&lt;lurl.
a., Pw • a;; 0111 41711•

n. , . .....r- ,. 1112·2161.

,

The Dally Sentinel• PaGt A3

www.myclallyHntlnel.com

Est4

Hundreds of police at the
World Bank, the rally and
throughout downtown had
riot gear ar the .ready, including
helmeu .and long barom, but
mocdy did not need to IUe it. NOT MOVING _ Protesters block a police car slow·
The prorescers, who orlgi- 1y driving bV outside the downtown headquartsrs of PUtEFUL GATHERING - Protestsrs
nally did not have a permit, the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, gather outside the downtown headquar·
· were granted one Sunday for · demonstrating against the policies of finance minis- tsrs of the WOI1d Bank and International
the march to the Washington ters meetJng. (AP)
Monetary Fund. (AP)
Monument.
Astistant Police Chief
Terrance Gainec estimated the finance officials tpent the final underground parking garage work week, Ramsey said
crowd .as hlgh as 1,SOO, day of their meeting~ focusing and using it as a tleqoing area police were "going to have our
on how co more aggressively for the weekend demomtra- hands full" on Monday when
although ocher wimasn put battle globJI poverty, including tions, taid police spokesnun
several unauthorized rallies
the number ar between 500 an education initiative intend- Quintin Pecenon.
~!~·said the protesten ed io get more children world- With protests planned to were expected during morn--'·lly gs· 110
-'·• ,·nco pr1·- · continue into the 1t1rt of the ing rush hour.
·wece mosdy well-behaved. Wide• ~..,....'1M key is not to ,stem:ltype mary tchools.
each other and just· co keep
On Satunby, tens of thouc.oot." be taid ofthe interacrion sandJ of protesren marched in
betwWn police and pn;testen. the city agaiJUC causes nnging
t, 22 student
fiom globaliution co the B~ah
BiD •••
..~
'a
ar adminiscrarioni Mideast poliNew York Unillmity, wore a
shill mask and a sign. On one cy.
tide, it laid: MHello my name ~ · The spring meeting of world
capitllism" and on the other: financial powm ar the World
MHello my IWJ1C is W2r.".
Bank and IMP brought the
Mltee our culture spreading protesUn to Wasbingr.on, but ·
i~~elf amJII the plaoet fiom anti-globalizariOI) forcet did .
Asneric.t outWmt,"Werul said. · noc teem to min4 sharing the
uWh;1t scam lne is thas this is lUSt' wich -ochec cawa.
3 culture thas puu money
Audlorilies do not piOYide
~ ewrydling elle."
official croWd figuret for
Some saudt cymbals and demona1 •riMs in Washington.
bells. OdJm held aloli: , lS- but Police Chief Charles
foowaD ~ o( a WOIIW1, Ramsey gave a rough estimate
with uitpuayinJMPeopleover of 35,000 to 50,000 on
Pro6C' hung aJOUnd bee neck. SGmlay.
Protaten said the symbolized
Whll&lt;! no danomttaron
iMigmoo• people at£ectat by wae armted during Smuday's
Wodd Bank policies.
n\!llfl, 25 people,armted
Inside dJe bl.ti.lding. wodd 1arer for uru-6d1y erd:«ing an

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

PaptA4

.-

! ....,. Apr! :0. 2112

_The_oa_ily_Sen_tin_el_ _
.

The ·Daily Sentinel

__=.By
the
Bend
.
.

DEAR. ABBY: Onjan.l3, 1997,
I joyfully anticipated the birth of my

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

second child. 'I\vel~ houn later, my
uterUI ruptured durina labor. An
emergency C-section followed, but
my son, Mark, wu left with nQ brain
activity. The doc;tor told me Mark's
chance&amp; of survivina the niaht we~
grim. I felt as though I was falling
· backwatd into a tunnel. I knew then
that I would do whatever I could to
sp~re other parents this \Yrenching
pam.
Then it hit me- organ donation.
As I plunged into the darkness of
death, I was thrown a lifeline.
Althoygh my son would not live, at
least something positive could come
from his trugedy. Donating Mark's
organs was the ltart of a series of
small miracles that helped . me to
cope. Two years later, I met jacob, a
little boy who ca,n now run, jump
and smile at his mpm because he has
my baby's heart.

Den Dickerson
Publlaher
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Utt1r1 10 til• 1dltor ,.,, wl'lcf~t. Thry sho11Jd blltn lhott 300 wowh. All Utttn
flrl tNb}•CI tu tdltllll and mutllk lf/lllld fJ#I4 lnd11d1 llddnll ond "l11pltont tllltrrh.r.

1-tot~esr.

Nu un~lrn•d lttf"' wltl br publfshtd, l~nen 1hmlld ju llf p01lt11111, tuiJIHulnJ
/uUII, lfOI /Hfl()tUt/111,,

Tht nphllnnl uprrued In lht c"lum11 brlow an tit. ccmseniMI of thr Oldu Waiii'J
Publillllftl Co. '1 t'dlturlul board, urrlm uthtrwis• llull'd.

NATIONAL VIEW

No teeth
Administration may remove
strongest part qfprivacy law

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Vouchersforprivate education deserves rejection

• The San Diego Union-Tribune, on Bush ~ministration :
and medical privacy protection: Not even a full . year has
passed since federal rules took effect protecting the privacy of
'
medical records. Yet, the Bush administration announced last
By
the
end
of
the
current
Supreme
No,
Olson
replied.
First
Amendment's
(Establishment
week that it is proposing to drop the most important of the
Court term, we ·will know whether the
I have the mission statements of most Clause) is respected."
new medical pnvacy rules. That is, the requirement that docEstablishment Clause of the First of the schools receiving these vouchers,
No such surveillance of how public
tors, hospitals, insurers, HMOs and medical researchers
Amendment
prohibiting
excessive
and
each
one
mandates
as
in
the
money
is used in parochial schools is
obtain the written consent of patients before using or disclosstate entanglement with religion- will Saint Mary Byzantine School hand- required in the Cleveland program.
ing their medical information.
·be
fundamentally eroded.
book- that "every student participates That means that, contrary to the ·
The health care industry had until April 2003 to start com·
The case, Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, in daily religion classes." Furthermore, Establishment Clause, there is a clear
plying. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy
involves
an Ohio program in which as the Sixth Court of Appeals notes - advancement of religion and, obviousThompson announced the administration's change of heart.
$2,250 in public tax money is given in in declaring this program unconstitu- ly, from the stated missions of the
He attributed it to concerns that requiring health care
the form of vouchers- tO mainly low· donal - these schools interweave schools, there will be a continual entan·
providers to obtain patient consent could have "serious unin"
income Cleveland families to move "Christian doctrines with science and glement of church and state.
·
tended consequences" and might result in diminished health
their
children
from
poorly
achieving
language
arts classes," req\liring that
As
for
the
claim
that
parents
are
makcare for many patients. ...
.
public schools to private schools, "' aiJJearniilg takes piiiCeS in an atmos- ing independent choices on USing the
· As medical files have become increasingly stored in commcluding
religious schools. So .far, in phere of religious ideals.'"
. vouchers, the reigninl! Supreme Court
puters, it is that much easier for patients' records to be
the
case
to
be
decided
by
the
Court,
But
Olson
told
the
Supreme
Court
decision in this kmd of case is ·
obtained by those who ought not be seeing them. Yet, the
99.4 percent of the children using those that parents sending their children to Committee for Public Education v.
health care industry argues that obtaining a patient's consent
vouchers attend religious schools.
such schools make "a genuinely inde· Nyquist ( 1971 ). It has never been over·
before releasing his or her medical records to third parties is
Under previous Supreme Court rul- pendent private choice.'' The state's ruled.
·
an undue hardship....
ings,
the
constitutional
test
as
to
money
goes
to
parents,
who
decide
The
Nyquist
decision
reads
in
Bush ·adminislration officials chafe at the su~gestion that
·
answer to Theodore Olson - ''The fact
.theY are doing the bidding of the health care mdustry, that · whether the use of public money for how to use it. .
religious
schools
violates
the
separation
Actually,
the
way
this
works
under
that aid is dispensed to parents rather
they have taken the teeth out of the new medical privacy
of cburch and state is: Any such statule the Ohio program, the stale sends the than schools is only one among many
r\lles. But those officials will have a hard time convincing the
must have a secular p~se, must nei- voucher check directly to the chosen factors to be considered ... Its substan·
overWhelming majority of Americans, which feels strongly
ther
advance nor inhibtl religion, and school made payable to the parents, tive impact is still the same in the
that medical records should be kept confidential.
· '
. cannot involve excessive entanglement . who then endorse the check to the absence of an effective means of guarof government in religion.
school. And the state piiiCes no restric- anteeing that the state aid derived from
In the Cleveland program. a Lutheran tion on how the school may use the public funds will be used exclusively
school offers this mviting welcome to money.
for secular, neutral and nonideological
parents who want to use publicly fundAs Justice O'Connor wrote in Capital purposes. In this case, there is no such
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ed vouchers to enroll thett children:
Square Review &amp; Advisory Board v. guarantee."
Today is Monday, April 22, the I i 2th day of 2002. There
"It is highly inconsistent for anx par· Pinette ( 1995): The Establishment · As Thomas Jefferson said, ''To comare 253 days left in the year. This is "Earth Day."
ents to send a child to this school if they Clause forbids the State to hide behind pel a man to furnish contributions of
Today's HighliRI!t in History:
... are not living a Christian life or will· the application of a formally neutral cri- money for the propagation of opinions
On April 22, I 970, millions of Americans concerned about
ing to learn how to lead such a life (and) teria and remain studiously oblivjous to which he disbelieves, is sinful and
the envtronment observed the first "Earth Day."
are not a supporting part of a Christian the effects of its actions."
tyrannical.''
·
On this date:
con$"egation through worship and Moreover. in Earley v. DiCenso Justice - O'Connor, concurring in
In· 1451 , Queen Isabella I, who sponsored the voyages of
sharin$ of time and talents.''
( 1971) - involving state supplements Rosenber.ser v. Rector, best summed up
Christopher Columbus, was born in Madrigal; Spain.
Dunng the case's oral arguments feb. for the salaries of teachers of secular the situatton: '"Public funds may not be
In 1509, Henry vm ascended the throne of England fol20 before the Supreme ·Court, Justice subjects in private schools, including used to endorse the religious message."
lowing the death of his father, Henry VU.
Sandra Day O'Connor asked Solicitor religious schools - Chief Justice The Supreme Court should keep reli·
In 11J6&lt;!: Congress ~uthorized the use of the phrase "In God
General Theodore Olson - who was Warren Burger, writing for the Court, gion free of government involvement
We Trust on U.S. coms. ·
arguing in favor of the .voucher pro- warned of excessive entan_glement of by deciding against publicly financed
In 1889, the Oklahoma Land Rush began at noon as thougram for the Bush administration - church and state when pubhc funds are vouchers for religious schools.
.
sands of homesteaders staked claims.
whether the prOgram makes any "effort provided 10 religious schools. "A-comIn 1944, during World War IL U.&amp;. forces began invading
to '!* sure ~- the moner that ends prehensive, di~minating and contin!'· (Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned
Japanese-held N'ew Guinea with amphibious landings near
up to the parochtal schools IS not used mg state surveillance,'' he wrote, "wtll . autlwrity on the First Amendment and
Hollandia
for religious training."
inevitably be required to insure that the tht Bill of Righu.)
In 1952, an atomic test conducted in Nevada became the
first nuclear expl0$ion shown on live network television.
In 1954, the televised Senate Anny-McCarthy hearings
began. .
BUSINESS .MIRROR
In 1964, President Johnson opened the New York World's

TODAY IN HISTORY

Fair.
In 1990, pro-Iranian kidnappers in Lebanon freed American
llosta2e Robert Politi II after nearly 39 months of captivity.

In f994, Richard M. Nixon, the 37th president of the United
States, died at a New York hospital four days after suffering a
stroke; he was 81.
Ten years ago: The Supreme Court heard 3rguments on
Pennsylvania's restrictive abonion Jaw (the court upheld most
of the law's provisions the following June; bitt also reafftnned
a woman's basic riRht to an abonion). In Guadalajara,
Mexico, more than 100 people were ·killed by a series of
sewer explosions.
Five years ago: In Peru, government commandos stonned
lhe JapaneSe ambassador's residence, · ending a 126-day
hostage crisis; all 14 Tupac Amana rebels were killed, 71
hostages were rescued. President Clinton flew over the flooded town of Grand Forts, N.D. A jury of seven men and five
women was chosen in Denver to hear the Oklahoma City
bombing trial of Timothy McVeiRI!.
·
One ye~r ago: Leaders of 34 Wesrem 'Hemisphete nations
meeting in Quebec agreed to !ilick with an ambitious plan to
create the world's largest free-trade zone by 200S and penalize any country that !illllyed from the path Of democracy. Two
spacewalking aslroltWU., including Qmadian Otris Hadfield,
installed a massive Canadian-built robot ann on the intenJa.
tiooal space station. In a boxing match in South Africa, Hasim
Rahman stopped l..atnox lewis in the fifth round 10 capcure
the WBC and mP heavyweight titles in one of lhe ·bigp ·
upsets·in boxing histoiy.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Eddie Alben is 94. 1V ~
Aaron Spellin~ is 79. Actor ~ Cole is 77. AcUas
Olarlotte Rae ts 76. Adress Estelle Hams ("Seinfeldj is 70.
Singer Glen Campbell is 66. Actor Jack Nicholson is 65.
Singer Mel Carter is S9. Country sinF Cleve Fr.mcis is 57.
Movie dim:tor John Waras is 56. Smger Peter Frampwn is
32. Rock singer-musician Paul Carrack (Mike and tbe
~; Sl!u=ze) is 51. Actor Joseph Boaoms is 48.
Actor~ Sb'les is 4). Comedian Byron Allen is 41. Actor
Cbris:poace is 38. Actress Sheryl Lee is 35.

••••,..Alii u. 2111

Organ donation turns tragedy to triumph

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74G-ft2·21H • Fax: 74G-ft2·2157
www.mydallyHntlnel.com

Charttnt Hoeflich ·
General Manager

PapAS

So just what's ~p with Wall Street these days?

IT .IoYcE M. ROHII8IM
NEW YORK- You wouldn't know
it by the stock 11'13l'ket's perfonnance
last week, but nearly 60 percent of the
companies that have reported earnings
for the ftrst quarter have beat Wall
Street's expectations. And another 26
percent met them.
Aside from a big blip upward on ·
Tuesday, the market had a pretty dismal week because investors didn't
think earnings were good enough, and
companies' forea~Sts for coming quarten weren't upbeat enough either. Yes,
companies are making profits, and )'I!S,
the economy is showing plenty ofstgnJI
that it's recovering. but the nwtcet
wants more.
.
Peq&gt;le who have followed the economy for decadM find Wall Street's !utitude a little out of touclHvith mality.
"I . think the economy is in pretty
decent · shape,"
said
Murray
Weidenbaum; a professor of «0110mics !f1 Washington U = ~ St.
Louis. 'We've &amp;ad the
mtkldt
recession in a long time. ... The consumer has certainly been the 111M of this
show. Housing has held up. ...
Businesses 'have worked off IJIOIIt of
the excesses of the boom yean of the
late I 990s."
The problem mighl be !hal peopk
wbo have been in tbe StoCk inartet
only since the. late 1980s have expccta-

tions that don't correspond with the
1ong-tenn realities of the economy and
investing.
After the crash of October 1987, it
took 15 months for the market, as mea·
sured by the Dow Jones industrials, to
return to its pre-Cra!:h close. No one
exP«ted such a quick rebound.
Since then, the market has had even
more spectacular comebacks, inchld·
Jog one that at the time seeffit\!d impossi&amp;le - it took only seven weeks for
the major indelles to regain the jVOUod
they lost after Sept. I I, includmg the
Dow'S 1,369-point plunge.
Such m:overies have only encouraged the instant gratification Wall
Street craves.
The economy itself has created high
expectations. As the nation en1e1'ed
from recession in 1991, economtsts
warned that the m:overy was not libly 10 be ,-obust. The m:overy rumed out
to last nearly 10 yeaB and included
growth ·rates of nearly 4 percent in
1997 and 1998 and a phenomewl 7.3
permit in 1999. Even in 2000, wben
growth was slowing. the economy mil
~ by about S percent.
Jd . Ratajczak. an economist
reUred from Georgia State University,
looks at the cwreot state of the economy and the StoCk market as a COI'RCdon after years of excess. "You have to
be subfAIImal
for a Wlule after being
i

abnormal in order to get to nonnal," he
laid. .
"P~Ie think there is something
wrong, • Ratajczak said. "There's noth·
ing wrong - we tried to build our
tower to the heavens and that was
denied ... now ,we've got to come back
to earth."
.
Weidenbaum suggested investort
look at a Jong·lenn cl\art for the Dow
-going back a few decades- for an
idea of where their expectations of
growth should be. .
·
"Nonnal is not nearly as good as the
second half of the 1990s,'' said
Weidenbaum, who was chainnan of
President Reapn's COuncil of
Economic Advisers (and therefore was
working on monetary policy during the
1981-82 recession).
Weidenbaum and Ratajczak aren't
-saying anything that Wall Slreet hasn't
heard already. Ani many market
watchers say investon have indeed
gotten more sensible during two down
years on Wall Street.
· But a market uninspired by the posi·
live signs so far might still be hankering after the boom years. Ana while a
m:overy might be at hand, JO far it's
not a big enough recovery for many
people on Wall Street.

•

'

Abby
ADVICE
Thday there are nearly 80,000
people in the Unittd States on the
waiting list for organs. Seventeen die
each day while waiting for a transplant. April 21-27 is National Organ
and Tissue Donor Awareness Week.
The process is a simple one: Sign an
o~~ dono~ card a~d discuss the
dectston wuh · fatntly members,
because in many states family consent is mandatory at the time of ,
donation.
ilor more information about organ
donation or a free donor card, n:ad-

sp~~eehless

boy wiU shout at the
crack of a bat A~~d a d11af' Rid will
h~u the round of nin apinst her
windows.
Burn wh t is ldt or Dltllnd scaner
the uht$ to tht win!ls to htlp the
Oowen_grow.
If you must bury.somethina,let it
be my f~ults, my IM'tkntSses, and all
my prejudice against my &amp;Uow man. .
Gi~ my sins to the devil. Give my
soul to God. If. by chanct, yo11 wish
to remember me, do it with a kind
detd or word to omeone who
needs you. lfyou do IIIII h~ve asktd,
I wiU livt forever.
(Reprinted with pemussion from
The Living Dank, www.livingbank.org.)
(Amlittt Jlltil/ips dnt/ lttr da11gltttr
jMHIIC Jlltil/ip.! short! the pmtfltm)llll
Abisoilll:m llttl'rtl. Writt Door Abby t1
u~t'u' DearAbby.rom or P.O. Box
69440, I..» AtWflts, CA 90069.)

Siblings mle
at.
AAU
national
•
••
gymnastics compebtion
••

•

CHESTER - "Keeping it
in the family" was certainly
the theme for four area youths
recently at the 2002 AAU
National Thmbling Team Triali.
Their coach is Debbie Bark~
er o.f Chester.
Four athletes from Wjll.
Power Thmbling and Gymnastics of Gallipolis were recently
.selected in Vincennes, Ind., for
this 36-member te:tm.
While that in itself is quire
an accomplishment for this
rural community, what makes
this even more remarkable il
that the four consilt Qf two
sell of siblinjp.
Stephanie Jarvis, 13, and
Dianna Jarvis, 15, are the
daughters of Gary and
Suzanne Jarvis of Gallipollt.
Matt Brinkllr, t 5, and Ariel
Brinker, 20, are the chlldren of
Ron and Lynne Brlnkllr, also
of GaUipolll.
They were pare of a nine

•

WINNING
TUMILIRIStephenle end
Dianna Jarvis and
Matt and Ariel
·Brinker, members
or Will Power Tum·
bllnaend Gymnas·
t_los, coached by
Dabble Barker of
Cheater, are mem·
bers or a 36-mem·
ber national teem,
(Submitted)

member delesacion sene to
Vincannes of March 23 to
partlclpate In the trials.
1b quillfy for the team, a
female athlete had to place

First Baptist
Church
April21-24
·6:00pm Sunday
7:00pm Mon-Wed
Speaker: Jack Gwinn
• Special SlnQinQ
• Nursery Provided
Pastor Rick Ru\elnvltes public
for more Information
ca\\ ·

Members they will represent
the sport of Thmbling and
Trampoline at various nation~ ~ cotnpetltlons for the next
two ycnn.
Their fim appearance It
scheduled at the 2002 junior
Olympics in Ausust In
either first, second, or thltd in Knoxville, 'Ienn.
one event in chis open ase
CQmpetltion. A male athlete
had to place fine.
As AAU National Tham

740-949-3131

Meigs Notebook
. As a group, TOPS OH 2013
club wat presented with an
awatd for best average Weisht
Jon in a year and the TOPS 10
COOLVILLE - Coolville Blue Ribbon Contest.
TOPS OH 2013, TOPS held
their meeting on April 16 at
Coolville Elementary School.
Weigh-in begins ac 5:30 p.Jl1..
~ith the meeting from 6:30 to
7:3Q.
MIDDLEPORT ;.... TOPS
OH
570 of Middleport met
The Weekly Besc Loser certificate and fruit basket were for ill regular weekly meeting
presented to Pat Hall. There at Overbrook Nursing Center
was · a tie for Monthly Best recently.
l..oser award between Beverly Janice Curry, leader, disThompson and Annette King. cuned the Area Recognition
The Quarrerly Best Loser Day which was held in Lan. award was given to Traci caster on April 13. Winners
Carter.
from the chapter were recogLedra Tanner made a pre- nized: Nancy Manley of Midsentation about time manage- dleport for a 1011g the wrote
ment, "Why do we procrasti- for ARO; Bernice Durst o£
nate:• A meeting followed Middleport, a newipaper carwith a ditcunion of Area rier for The Daily Sentinel, (or
Recognition Day held on walking more than 1,000
miles; Debbie Grover · o£
April I 3 in Lanca•ter.

TOPSwlnnen
In welptloss

TOPSmemben

recoplzecl

Pomeroy, Chapter ' Angel,
voted by the memben of the
chapter as the member who
has done the most for the
chapter; Shirley VanMeter of
Lanjpville, weight recorder, for
h~ving a perfect ~sume of the
chapter sent to ARD; AI Graham, Syrncu1e, who loll the
molt weight in his division;
Julia Hysell of .Syracuse for
being a 20-year member of
KOPS (Keeping Off Pounds
Sensibly); and Durst, for being
a nine-year KOPS member.
For the next two weeks,
members will make · flowers
for the retidcnts ofOvcrbrook
Center.
Karen Hill of Racine had
the program, "Fat or Fiction."
The group !"eeu every
Tuesday evening at Overbrook. Weigh-in is from 5 to .6
p.m., with a meeting to follow.
The public it in.vited.

We remember those who hawe paued away
and are eapeclally dear to us. .
WI Will pubillh I IJIICIII PIQI diVOtld Ia thOII WhO ll't gone but nat forgotten. They Will bl
almllar to thl 11mpl1 btlow:
·

you wish, Mleet one or the lollowlna FREE vti'NII below to

..

Community Clltndar le POMEROY - Melge High
published 11 a friiiii'Yice School Junior Parenti meet·
.to non-profit oroupe wlefl. lng will taka place at the
tno to ennounc. lllllllnol Meigs County Library at 7
and lfMCIIII-..ta. TM c.~­ p.m. to finalize the prom.
lfldlr II nol dniQnld to
POMEROY Yvonne
.,~ Iiiii or funckela.,, of •nv type. 1t1m1 .,. Pear1011 ot Pleuant Valley
pt1ntld only 11 lfNICI per· Hospital will apeak about
m1t1 and cennol bl """"""' luput during lite Caring and
wet to bl prJnt.d a epeclflo Sharing Support Group meet·
lng, 1 p.m., at the Meigs
number of up.
County Multlpurpou Senior
· MONDAY
Center.
, POMEROY - Pomeroy .
Chapter 186 OES inapectlon;
RACINE - RACO meell
· 7 :30 p.m. RefreahJTIIIflla to 6:30 p.m. for potluck.
folloW.
I
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middle·
.TUESDAY

•

----

port Literary Club meets at 2
p.m. at the home of Gay Per·
rln. Jeane Bowen will lead a
dltcUIIion of 'Ice Bound" by
Or. Jerri Nlelun.
· MIDDLEPORT - Wild·
wood Garden Club, 11.:30
a.m. Wedne1day at Judy
Kay's Rellaurant.
POMEROY - Childhood
Immunization Clinic, 9·11
a.m., 1·3 p.m. at Meigs Coun·
ty Health Department. Chll·
dren mull be accompanied
by parent or iegal guardian
and shot. record mu1t be pro·
vided.

-

David C. Andrew•
lull 10, IHt·~ 8, 1880

May God'• anQele
.&amp;ulde you and
protect you
throul&amp;hout time.
Alw~Jtln our

hearta,
John and Mona Andrewt and

lamllr

lte10m111ny your trlbult,

1. We hold 1ou In ounhouah111nd memories forever.
2, M11 Ood ~rudle 10u In Hl1 urm1, now and forever.
3. Forever ml11ed, no~er lor&amp;ollen, Moy Ckld hold you In !he palm of
H\1 h•nd,
.
4. Thunk 10u for 1he wonderful day1 we 1hared 10111her, My pruym
wUI bf wllh you unlll we meel•&amp;•ln.
l, The duyo we1hureil we11 awecl. llon&amp;10 1ee you •&amp;•In In Ood'l
heavenly &amp;lory.
6, Yourcour~~ae and briYer)' •lllllnoplre uo.lll,ond 1he memory olyour
omlle nu."' wllhjuy und illll&amp;hler.
7. Thc&gt;u&amp;h ou1 or •l&amp;hl,yoo'll forever bf In my hun and mind,
8. The day1 m11 come tnd ao. bu11he 1lme1 wethared wlll11woy1 re11111in ,
9. May 1he il&amp;hl or pe~ee lhiM on your f~ee for elemliy,
10. Moy Ood'•••a•l•aulde you oncl pro1ec1you lhrnuahrnu lime.
II. You were allahlln our life lhOI bum1 forever In our hciMI.
12. May Ood'•ara&lt;:euhlne over you for all lime,
.13. Yoo are In our lhou&amp;hlllnd prayers from mornlnJIO nlghlund !rom
yeur1o y01r,
14. We 1end lhiloMIIUII wllh a Iovin&amp; kill for e\emal re11 and htpplnoll.
15. May lhl L.ord bim yo~ Wilh Hiiii'IICel ond warm, lovlna h11n.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN TillS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND .7.00 PER LISTING • i12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Flll out the form below and drop otT to.
,

MEIGS CALENDAR

(Joyce M. Rosenberg il a btuiness

writer for The_ Associated Press.)

•

Dear

en may contact the National Kidney my body by the use of a madune.
Foundation at Box OA, 30 E. 33rd And don't cill this my "deathbed."
St.,NewYork,NV 10016.The'Wtb C:ill it n1y"btd oflife," and l11t my
address il ww\\\kidney.org. - , body be taken ftom it to http others
EU EN KULIIC, NATIONAL l~ad fuller lives.
·
KIDNEY
FOUNDATION
Give my light to a man who hts
DONOR FAMILY COUNCIL
never seen a sunrhe, a baby's face or
DEAlt EU.EN: Please ~cc:ept love in the e~s oh woman.
my deepest sympathy for the IO$$ of
Gi~ my heart to a penon wh01t
your child. I have long been a cham- o\vn heart bu caustd nothing but
pion of Of1Pn donation, and I Mlute endless da}ll Qf plin.
you for making a loving and positiw
Gi~ my blood to thi: teen-ager
deciuon at such a deVIIstating time in who has been pull~d from . the
your life. Although Mark could not wreckage of his cu, so that he might
li~. you made su~ that his death live to see his grundchildren play.
had meaning - as the foUQwing
Give my kidneys to one who
essay by Robert 'Il:st makes clear.
depends on a machine to exiu from
TO REMEMBER ME by ~k to week.
Robert Test.
,
Thke my bones, every nmsde;
At a c:ertlltn moment a doctor wtll ~very fiber and nel'Ytl ·in n1y body,
determine that my brain has ·teased and find a \V'dY to make a crippled
to function and that, for all intents · child IYillk,
and purposes, my life has stopped.
Explon: every corner of my brnin.
When that happens, do not Thke my cells, if necesSIIry, and l~t
attempt to instill artificial life into them grow so that someday a

The Dally Sentinel
With Fondeat Memorlet
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
DEADLINE1 FRIDAY, MAY 17, 12 Noon
Plme publi1h my 1rlbu1e In-------------~---··-·-·-··"'
the lpeclol Memory Paae on Friday, May 24.

r----------·---.. .
1 ,

I

.

lNameofdeeeued·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

1Relation1hip to me

Number of tele.:tcd •cne _ _...._

I Dattofbinh

Dateofp•••lnl------

1

•

1P r i n t y o o r n a m e h e r e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 11Addreu
Phone number:..------

~ City
I

I

Stale---- "'P.---1

Make Check Payable to TilE DAILY SENTINEL

.

L-------------------------------------·-------------·--

�•

Page AI.

•

The Dally Sentinel

2002

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Diamond Roundup, Page B2.
Complete Rotary results, Page B3

Is Effort to provide nursing home info;

heading to Romta
BOSTON (AP) - Oudinlll Bern~rd t~w flew to'
Rome tbr meetings on the
selt ablue eri$is in the
Ront~n Catholic . Chutch
after telling parishioners that
"immedillte ~nd decisive
chanll'1s" were requited to
11ddress the problem.
lAw wn one oheveral cardinah to deliver n\enages to
puishionen on ~unday in
advon~e of their unprecedented mteting with Pope
John Pa1tlll to discuss a s(an·
dal that has shaken American
trust in the chun:h.
bw, who has been at the
center of much of the growing criticism over the chun:h's
handling of abusive priests,
appNred in public Sunday for
the first time since Easter.
· In a "spedal message" to
the 600 wonhippers at the
Cathedral of Holy Cross,
Law .said thot he would convey to the pope the gravity of
the problem and the need for
1ncreased protection of childnm, services for victims and
support for active prie!ts.
"Some hove likened the
situation ... to last year's Sept.
I 1 tragedy, a crisis which
shocks the hem and soul and
which must spuk immediate
and decisive changes in order

to prevent possible recur-

renee in the Future," L~w
said,
The cmlinals of New York,
Philadelphia, Miami, Detroit
'and Baltimore also had messages of encouragement for
their congregations Sunday
as they prepared to leave for
Rome.
·
1\velve of the 13 American
c ardirt&lt;~b ~re expected to
attend the meeting.
"Despite the anger and
broken trust that many feel
toward me, and despite perceptions that (the meeting) is
simply a gathering of aged
conservative cardiMls and
Vatican officials, please know
that as long as I am in positiot\ to do so, I will work
tirelessly to address this crisis
and to underscore its severity," Law said.
Law's · remarks were met
with applause by parishioners,
but ouuide the c~thedral
about three do~en protesters
called 'for his resignation and
questioned the signific~ncc o(
the Rome sunimit,
.
"Nothing's going to come
out o( it." said Mike
McGuire, 38, of Dracut, who
was brought up Catholic. "It's
just a meeting of the boys
club. Tho little, too late."

New project begins
Ukdnesday in six
states, including Ohio
· WASHINGTON (AP) - All that
. Anna Spinella wanted for her three
elderly relatives was a place where ·they
could spend their final years in comfort.
Instead, she says she endured a nightmarish eltperience trying to find good
nursing homes for them.
"! went in to see my brother-in-law
on Christmas Eve. He looked like he
had not been clean since the day
before," said Spinella, 68, ofTampa, Fla.
"His sheets were sopping wet. He was
umhaven. He had not been cared for
since I left the day before."
Spinella, who founded Advocates
Committed to Improving Our Nursing
Hontes, ended up moving her relatives
.several times before she found a facility
in nearby St. Petersburg, Fla., that she
liked.
"They were staffed sl;fficiently. The
food was good. The nursing staff
seemed to know what they were
doing," she said,
The government hopes to help. A
new six-state pilot project is mlended
to give consumers information·that will
enable them to compare the quality of
nursing homes.
The project will begin Wednesday in
Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Ohio,
Rhode island and Washington state. The
first ads listing nursing homes and
information about them ate to appear

Prlcasaood

Thursday in major newspapers in those
states.
The ads and online help - available
Thursday at the Centers for Medicare
~nd Medicaid Services' Web site- will
give families information on things
such as the prevalence of physical
restraints at a facility and the frequency
with which residents contract new
infections. The government will not,
however, rate the homes.
The federal agency hopes to take the
proposal nationwide in the next year.
"If you don't know anything about
'nursing homes, you can begin to look
at this and say here are some objective
data," said Dr. William L. Minnix Jr., ·
president of the American Association
of Homes and Services for the Aging.
The group represents 5,600 not-forprofit nursing homes.
For nursing homes, the new project
will"drive us toward improving toward
excellence. II will raise the bar over

time," he said.
.
Medicare administntor Tom Scully
declined to discuss the project before
Wednesday's launch.
Many advocates remain leery.
Janet Wells, director of public policy
for the National Citizens'&lt;::oalition for
Nursing Home Reform, said the . government's information will help consum~rs ask questions.
··
But, Wells said, "There's really no substitute for visiting a facility and talkin&amp;
to people who have an experience witlt
it to see what their experience is ."
'
Spinella said the government's information . could be misleading for con~
sumen. "! think the things they tell you
to look for is not really a gauge. The
gauge is what happens behind thoi
doors... s.he -sa1"d.
....She urged people to .give a nursinJ.
home the "smell test."
:
"If it smells, people have not bee~
changed," she said. Consumers. alsO: ·
should make several visits when select;;
ing a facility and ask to see beyond the.
ent!2Dce hallway and breakroom, shC::
said.
'
"You don't go from nine to four dur•
ing the day. You go at seven in thi
morning. You go a~ seven in the
evening. You go on Saturday. You go at
an odd time;· Spinella said. "Is there a;
staff person in the lunchroom? If any:;
body is choking is there somebody that
can do something? I would look at the
laundry. See how far back they are oq
laundry."
·
"The things you have to look for aflt,
not things they will show you. You have
to dig them out."
~
••
~

..

Aprll24 DIIV.

16oz. pkq.

Showboat

Yorktown·
Bacon

.Pork&amp;

Beans

Crisp

New York
Orlqlnal

Lettuce

Texas
Toast
. Jiffy

..

MONDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Zastudll chosen
by Ravens
NEW YORK (AP)- On
Saturday, New Orleans picked
center Ohio State defensive
lineman LeCharles Bentley, a
first-team All-American from
Cleveland, as the 44th pick in
the second round.
From MAC schools, Baltimore chose Ohio University
punter Dave Zastudil in the
fourth round and Toledo running back Chester Taylor in
the , sixth round. Tennessee
chose Akron wide .receiver
Jack Schifino in the fifth
round.
University of Cincinnati
defensive back Lavar Glover
was selected by the Pittsburgh
Steelers in the seventh round . .
Glover was the 212th pick
overall and the last Ohioan
selected in the draft.

Monct.y, Aprll22, 2D02

Jose Rijo wins again after seven years
CHICAGO (AP) -Jose Rijo trot- unearned run as the Cincinnati Reds unheard of."
ted out to the mound as if it was just beat the Chicago Cubs 5-3 Sunday.
But Rijo is one of those rare stori.,;
another start, not the
He scattered three hits over five that is as good as it is true.
end of an amazmg innin~ for his first victory since july
He was one ofbaseball's best pitchers
comeback
almost 13, . 1995, also against the Cubs at in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and
seven years in the making.
Wrigley Field. He walked one and he was the MVP when the Reds swept
Just before he tl!rew his first pitch, struck out one.
Oakland in the 19'XJ World Series. But
though, he called shortstop Wilton
Adam Dunn had a two-run triple, he also had a calcified ligament in his
Guerrero over. The two took off their
and Austin Kearns homered for the first right elbow that was getting. progrescaps and bowed their heads as Rijo said
time in the major leagues. · Danny sively worse.
a short prayer.
He made his last start July 18, 1995,
"1 wanted to thank God for this Graves allowed a run in the ninth, but
opportunity;' he said. "But words can- got his sixth save to preserve Rijo's vic- but left the game· in the third inning.
He walked off the mound clutching his
tory.•
. not express my thanks."
Five elbow surgeries and almost . "I felt so goodjust.to finally have the · throbbing elbow and fighting back '
· seven years after making his last start, chance to.be on the mound;' said Rijo, tear.&gt;, ·knowing he was facing surgery
Rijo relived his past, allowing only an whose ERA dropped to 1.38. "To be ·that could end his career.
able to live this at 36 years old, that's
The 36-year-old Rijo missed the

Reds

FROM STAFI' REPORTS

RIO GRANDE -Megan
Garnes and Brooke Bolin
each scored in two events and
two relay squads from Mei~
High School also scored to
pace the Marauders to a fifthplace finish in the 22nd
Annual Gallipolis Rotary
Relay Invitational held Saturday at the University of Rio
AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
Grande.
(AP) - Ben Wallace, the
Garnes captured her club's
Detroit Pistons forward, won
lone individual .title by winthe Defensive Player of the
ning the 400-meterS, edging
Year award by a record-setting
Myers from Miami Trace for
. margin.
the victory. Garnes' time was
Wallace receivei:l 116 of 120
1:03.2, while Myers came
votes (96. 7 percent) to
across
in 1:03.8.
become the first Pistons playShannon Soulsby of Meigs
er to win the award sipce
placed fourth in the 400 in
Dennis Rodman in 1991.
1:06.3.
Wallace became the . fourth
Garnes placed fourth in the
player in league history to
· 200, finishing in 27,6 seconds.
lead the league in rebounds
Bolin finished fourth in the
(13.0 per game) an\1 )&gt;locked
100-meter hurdles, posting a
shots (3.5), joining Hakeem
time of 17.7 seconds, just less
Olajuwon and Hall of Faniers
than
a second behind Gallia
Karecm Abdul-Jabbar and Bill
Academy's Jessica Bodimer,
Walton.
who won with a time of 17 .1.
Bolin finished third in the
300 hurdles. Her time was
54.1 seconds. Bodimer completed the sweep of. hurdle
races by posting a winning
DODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) .
time of 51 seconds flat.
- Far· removed from the .
Meigs relay teams took
glamor of the NBA, Hall ,pf
place in the 4x200third
Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
meters and fourth in the
made his professional head
4x400-meters, respectively.
coaching debut in the southThe 4x200 team tutncd in a
west Kansas town made
time of 1:56.8. Unioto took
famous by the television series
the win in the 4x200 with a
"Gunsmoke.''
time of 1:54.6.
Abdul-Jabbar's Oklahoma
The 4x400 squad finished
Storm team blew a 14-point
with a time of 4:44. Gallia
second-half advantage, then
Academy won the race in
rallied for a late lead before
4:27. Ironton was second at
losing 98-97 to the Dodge
City Legend in a United
4:30 and Miami Thlce came
States · Basketball League
in fourt~ with a time of POUND IT OUT~ Meigs distance runner Emily Story work during the 1,600-meter run dur·
lng Saturday's Gallipolis Rotary Invitational track meet. (Dan Polcyn)
game.
4:33.4.

Wallace named
topNBA

defender

. Yao Mlna
dared for NBA
draft

1

12 P•clc,
120z. ~

Cane

Gold Meal

AU Purpose
Flour
Limit 2 Please
5 Lb,

298 SECOND STR ....
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE APRIL 23 l 24

prime years of his career, and had his
elbow rebuilt five tim.,;. Yet when the
Red1 gave him a minor league conm~ct
last season, he stunned everyone by
pitching well enough in relief to earn a
call-up in August. He was the ltrst player since Minnie Minoso to appear in a
major league game after getting a IJQte
for the Hall.
Juan Cruz (0-4) allowed four runstwo earned - and four hits in six
innin~. walking five.
"I'm tickled for him," Boone said.
"That's really exciting."
And it's not over yet. Boone said Rijo
.pitched well enough to earn another
start SaturdaX againsr San Francisco.

Meigs girls finish fifth

Jabbar makes
coachlna debut

41$ .

Peanut
Butter

Page 81

BEIJING (Al&gt;) Yao
Ming, a 7-foot~5 center from
China, has been cleared to
· enter the NBA draft.
His current club, the
Shanghai Sharks, made the
·announcement after Yao
helped it win its first Chinese ·
Basketball Association championship.
Yao has been projected as
an NBA lottery pick, possibly
No. 1 overall.

Leonard wins
WorldCom
dasslc
HILTON HEAD ISLAND,
S.C. (AP) - Justin Leonard
survived
some
anxious
· moments to win the WorldCom Clauic, a feat even he
considered unlikely just days
ago.

Leonard dosed with a 2over 73 for a 14-under 270
total, a stroke ahead of Heath
Slocum and two in front of
Phil Mickelson. Slocum had a
70 and Mickelson ·a 71.
I

.

Bellisari
happy for
his cHance ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ohio State quarterback Steve
Bellisari was selecred by St.
Louis in the sixth round SWlday, but he won't be competing
for a job with Rams quarterback Kurt Warner. The Rams
said they will try Bellisari as a
safety and on special teams.
''I'm going there to try to
run on special ~w just like I
did my tmhman and sophomore year here:• Bellisari said.
. The Buckeyes' three-year
starting quarterback didn't play
in last season's final two regular
season games after being arrested
on
drunken-driving
chai:ges. He pleaded no contest
to the charge and was sen. tenced to three days in jail.

l:lo ~ to the 6dd lOr

the Outback Bowl on New

Y~ Da)t .He plliaed iOr 320
')'Rids and' two toucbdalvns and .

for a score as the Bucbya
rallied from 28 points down 'to
tie South Ca191ina, before losing 31-28 on a last-second field
!2D

goal
.Bellisari, of Boca Raton, Fla.,
joins Ohio State linebacker
Courtland Bullard, who St.
Louis chose earlier Sunday in
the fifth round. Bullard, of
,Miami, Fla., collected 47 tackles

last season.
"You see other people get
picked and you're just waiting
and waiting," Belliwi said.
"Then you finally get the call
and you just can't believe it~
happening."
Dallas also chose more than
one Buckeye.
On Sunday, the Cowboys

took fWiback Jamar Martin, oi

Canton.

.

Earnhardt Roush leads Ohio spring game
posts win at
Talladega
FROM STAFF REPORTS

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) - The game
plan ·was to stay up front. and Dale Earn-"
hardt Jr. made it work to perfection. ·
The third-gen.eration NASCAR star
staned fOurth and never tell lower than that
after the first few laps of Sunday's Aaron's
499 atT~ Supersreedway.
Earnhardt \WIInd up le:lding 133 of the
188 laps on the 2.66-mile oval, holding off
teanunate Michael Waltrip by a car-length
at the end as the Dale Earnhardt Inc. driven finished 1-2 in a restrictor-plate nee
lOt the third time in the last six tries. Earnhardt, like his late father, has become
a master of the superspeedways, racing to
his thfu:l victory in four plare races.
Mark Martin, inmlved in the wreck,
caused the third and 6naJ caution of the
day when his ba~ car staDed in the
grass on the back straightaw.l)'· eight laps
from the finish.
Kurt Busch, one of four Roush Racing
. driven in the 43-car field, wound up third
and was disappointed he didn't get a victory for team owner Jack Roush, in serious
condition in a Birmingham hospittl after
crashing a small plane in south Alabama on
Friday.

ATHENS - Dion Byrum
rushed for two touchdowns,
including the game-winner in
overtime, . and
Freddie· Ray
tossed a 44yard scoring
strike to Tierra
!'ought to lead
the offense to a
47-41 victory
over
the
in
defense
Roulh
Ohio's annual.
spring game
Saturday ar Peden · Stadium.
Kevin Kerr kicked a pair of field
goals and three extra points as
th; teams used a system that
included points for first downs
by the offense and turnover
gained and forced punts by the
defense.
Fullback justin Roush
(Meigs '00), given the opportunity to start after slight
injuries to regulars Joe Sherrill
and Ray Huston, led all rushers
with 41 yards on 19 carries.
Keith Warren added 37 yards
and a score on nine rushes. LOWER THAT SHOULOER - Ohio University fullback Justin Roush prepares to,

PluH ... Routli.IJ

deliver the blow against a defender in Saturday's G'reen-Whlte football scrimmage at Peden Stadium. (Dave Harri:;)

'

•

�Page 82

Baseball

The Daily Sentinel

•1n

Indians lose

Sentinel•

Mand.,-. Aprll22, 2002
t •ui~u,· \ 111h•t•~ lt1 '"''1 "'1~ ''· 1

a row

} tiUt' Mlvht h1 ~iiU\1, \ l,h i \·1'\-.I IU»: h ~ l u \ \~ r

"We pitched better in thi5 series," pay."
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Most teams
Twins
manager Ron Gardenhire said. "It
Hocking, who committed two errors at
would be "cstatic to open the season 11was a sweep - that's fine - but it was just second base, misplayed Ellis Burks'
7.
But the Cleveland Indians would feel three games in our ballpark." .
grounder with one out in the fourth.
The
.
six-game
skid
prompted
a
brief
Thome then snapped an 0-for-15 skid
much better if. after
starting n-1. they hadn't team meeting in the Indians' clubhouse with his fifth homer to give the Indians a
lost six straight games to after. the game, during which manager 2- 0 1ead.
their division rivals.
Hocking atoned in the bottom of the
Charlie Manuel told his team to relax.
The Indians lost 4-2 to the Minnesota
"In the last few days we definitely start- inning with a two-run double. Buchanan
Twins on Sunday to end an 0"6 road trip ed trying too hard," Manuel said. "Once walked. Dl1stan Mohr singled and Thm
that saw them fall out of first place in the we stop doing that, we're going to be Prince sacrificed.
AL Central.
'
fine."
.
Hocking followed with a liner, · and
"We don't like coming home 0-6, but
Torii Hunter had three hits, Denny ·
we've got a lot of games left and just need Hocking hit a two-run double, and Brian right fielder Matt Lawton made a diving
to keep our heads up and our energy Buchanan had a solo homer as the 'TWins attempt. but the ball scooted out of his
high," said Chuck Finley (1-2), who swept a three-game series from the lndi- glove when he hit the ground.
ans· for the first time since May 28-30,
''That was a big play in the game," ·
allowed 10 hits in six innings.
1993.
Manuel
said. "H e made a heck of a try
On the Hip side are the Twins, who
Reed had not gone more than five and the ball squ irted out. It's like things
went 8-1 on their homestand after dropping four straight to the Indians at Jacobs innings in his previous three staru this have not been going for us."
Field last weekend.
season. Aside from T~ome's homer, Reed
Jacqu e Jones then doubled home
Rick l~eed ·(2-1) had his best outing of allowed only five singles while walking Hocking to giv~ the Twins a 3-2 lead.
the season,limiting the Indians to a two- two and striking out three.
"We kicked it around out there a little
run homer by Jim Thome over 6 1-3
"One thing we did in this series is we bit but we pitched the ball well and got
innings. Eddie Guardado pitched the pounded the · strike zone," Reed said. some key hits, " Gardenhire said.
..
ninth for his eighth save in as many "We didn't do that in Cleveland. We feU
Buchanan hit his second homer in the ONE DOWN - TWins second basesman Denny Hocking fQrces
chances.
Cleveland Indians's Omar Vlzquel (13) out at second. (AP)
behind a lot of hitters and they made us fifth to make it 4-2.

I

22,2002

r.'

Tn•be

Carr starts off draft,
NFL

NL in 1998.
2000.
Mike DeJean earned three · Facing the team he played
saves in the series.
for from 1995-2000, Damon
PIRATES 9, PHIWES 3
went 8-for-13, scored seven
Jason Kendall, a three-time runs and drove in six during
All-Star who began the game the series.
batting .136, hit a basesDerek Lowe (3- 1) pitched
loaded triple that sent Pitts- 5 1-3 innings for the victory,
burgh to its sixth straight and Ugueth Urbina got his
win .
seventh save. Bryan Rekar (0called up before the game
Kendall drove in four runs
for the surprising Pirates, from Triple-A Omaha, took
who lead the NL Central the loss.
after losi.ng 100 games last
In the fitst game,John Burseason.
kett scattered seven hits over
The Pirates swept a three~ five innings to win his season
game series from Philadel~ debut.
phia in Pittsburgh for the first
Burkett (t-O), who began
time since 1992.
. the season on the disabled list
with a sore shoulder, allowed
PADRES
5,
DODGSRS
0
DIAMONDBACKS 7,
two runs, struck out two and
Brett Tomko struck out a walked one. Tim Wakefield
RoCKIES 1
Randy Johnson overpow- career-high 13 in seven pitched four perfect innings SO CLOSE, BUT .•• - Hous·
ton's Richard Hidalgo con·
ered the Rockies, striking iimings as San Diego avoided for his fiut save.
nects
for single as Giants ·
out 17 and pitching a two- its first fo~r-game sweep at
catcher Yorvlt Torrealba waits
Dodger Stadium.
hitter at Arizona.
WHITE Sox 11,
for the pitch during the third
Johnson's fastball reached· Tomko pitched two-hit
TIGERS 8
·l'nnlng Sunday In Houston.
101 mph as he became the ball to help the Padres stop a Jose Valentin homered durHidalgo was a home run
three-game losing streak.
majors' top winner at 5-0.
ing an eight-run burst in the
short of hitting for the cycle
Phil Nevin and Trenidad first, and pinch-hitter Ray
Johnson, whose c.areer high
In the Astros 4-0 win over
is 20 sirikeouts, fanned 17 or Hubbard homered to end Los Durham delivered a tiebreakthe Giants. (AP)
Angeles' four-game winning ing single in the seventh for
more for the sixth time.
The Big Unit leads the string.
Chicago.
majors with 51 strikeouts. He
The White Sox led 8-3
YANKEES 9, BLUE JAYS 2 after the first, but it was tied
tied teammate Curt Schilling
Roger Clemens (2-2) took at 8 after the fourth.
for most strikeouts in a game
a one-hit shutout into the
this season.
Bobby Higginson homeeighth, and Alfonso Soriano red, doubled and drove in
· ASTROS 4, GIANTS 0
hit his second leadoff homer four runs for Detroit, which
Dave Mlicki pitched one- oin five days ..
dropped to 1-8 on the road.
hit ball for eight innings, and Jason Giambi, booed by the The White Sox won for the
Houston finally beat San Yankee Stadium crowd when 10th time in 12 games.
Francisco at home.
he fouled out in the sixth, hit
Antonio Osuna (3-0)
The Gianu had been 11-0 his fourth homer of the sea- pitched 1 2-3 perfect innings
at the Astros' ballpark that son in the eighth.
of relief. and Keith Foulke
opened in 2000 before MlicSoriano homered off Chris pitched the ninth for his fifth
Carpenter (0-1) in the first,
ki stopped them. ·
save.
Mlicki allowed only one singied in the second aild
runner, giving up a dean sin- doubled in the sixth. With a
MARINERS 5, RANGERS 3
gle to J.T. Snow with two chance to hit for the cycle, he
lchiro Suzuki tripled twice
outs in the second inning. flied out with the . bases
and scored two runs as SeatBilly Wagner nlieved in the loaded in the seventh, leaving
de overcame two home runs
ninth and gave up David his average at .395.
by Alex Rodriguez in his forBell's two-out double.
mer ballpark to defeat Texas.
Barry Bonds went 0-for-3.
DEVIL RAYS 2,
Rodriguez homered twice
The Giants star had reached
0IUOLES 1
in
a game for the 22nd time
Ben- Grieve hit a tiebreak~
base in 58 straight games datinp; RBI single in the eighth in hi• career, and the second
ing to last season.
to lead visiting Tampa Bay t~me against Seattle. But
Rodriguez's offense wasn't
over Baltimore.
BRAVES 4, MAtu.iNS 2
enough,
as the Rangers
Rafael Furcal tied a mod- Jason 'JYner hit a two-out
ern major league record by single off Sidney Ponson, dropped to 5- 13 for the
.
hitting three triples to lead who had retired his previous team's worst start.
Freddy
Garcia
·
(2-2)
gave
Atlanta over Florida at Turn- nine batten, and went to second on Randy Winn's single. up two runs on seven hiu in
er Field.
Furcal matched the nurk Grieve drove in 'JYner with a six-plus innings, and Dan
Wilson homered for the
held by several playen, with single off Erik Bedard.
Doug Creek (t -0) retired Mariners.
Lance Johnson doing it most
Doug Davis (2-1) allowed
recently on Sept. 23, 1995, Jay Gibbons, the only batter
for the Chicago White Sox. he faced, in t):le eighth to five runs and seven hits in six
The last Braves player to pick up the win. Esteban Yan innings.
accomplish the feat was got three outs for his third
ATHLETICS 6, ANGELl 5
Danny O'Connell for Mil- save.
Pinchhitter Greg Myers
Ponson (0-2) lost his sevwaukee in 1956.
hit a three-run homer off
Furcal scored all three enth straight decision.
Troy
Percival (0-1) in the
times he tripled, .each time
Rso Sox 12, RoYALl 2, bottom of the ninth inning
driven in by Andruw Jones, as
1ST GAMII
to win it.for Oakland.
Atlanta won it• fourth
n~- Sox 8 t "'-·
It was Percival's lint blown
AIW'
1\UI:AJA 7 t
straight game.
2ND GAME
save in three ~hances this seaBIU!WJ!RS 5,
Johnny Damon highlighted son. He was making his secCAJU&gt;INALS 3
hit huge weekend by hitting . ond appearance since coming
Milwaukee won its fourth a grand slam as Botton com- off the disabled list Thur~y.
in a row since Jerry Royster pleted a doubleheader swr;.ep
The Athletics had not hit a
replaced fired manager Davey_ a K r ~
pme-ending home run since
Lopes, beating St. Louis at
Damon also homered in Rickey Hendenon did it on
Miller Pari~:.
the tint game, and Manny May 9, 1995. Eric Chavez
Jose Hernandez homered as Ramirez connected twice for and Scott Hatteberg aha
the Brewers swept a four- Boston which has won six in homered for the A's.
game series for jull the sec- . a row, its best streak since
The Angels lost fo r the
ond time since joining, the winning six straight in May fourth time in five games.

EXPOS 6, MiTS 3
Bruce Chen, traded from
the Mets to the Expos during
the first week of the season,
won in relief at Montreal.
Lee ·Stevens homered and
drove in three runs as Montreal improved to 11-8 and
moved one game ahead of
New York and Atlanta in the
NL East.
After losing Thursday, the
Expos · won the last three
games of the series. And each
day, attendance increased at
Olympic Stadium. ·
Mo Vaughn came off the
disabled list and had two hits
for the Mets.

'*·

NEW YORK (AP) - David
Carr was the most newsworthy
quarterback of the NFL draft's
opening round.
Drew Bledsoe
stole the head-.
lines i'lr the final
. round.
Carr, the Fresno State star,
, joined the Houston Texans to
begin the proceedings on Saturday. As the fint player ever
drafted by the expansion team,
Carr got right into the mood of
things, declaring:
"They do it big in 'Thxas,"
Carr said. "I can't say enough·
how I feel about the 'Thxan
organization. I'm proud to be a
'Thxan and I want to beat up on
the Cowboys . more than anyone else." .
He'll get a chance in the season opener Sept 8. Tha t same
day, Bledsoe will make his regular-season debut with the Buf' ·' Bill
,..,o
· s against the New York

Expos run Mets outta town

n.

a

Check Us Out For
Brand Name-Tires Including
Mastercraft &amp; Daytona!!
(mounting &amp;

Included In sale)

The place for
your sports•••
The DaUy,.
Sentinel

Brake Jobs - '49'1 &amp; Up
• Other Services Available •
Come ... Rob Lllwaon,
Kevin Hudlon, and .Jr. Wll10n
Mondly·
Blturdly
IAM·9PM

CloiedSun

540 Oener11 H1rtln911',
Middleport, Ohio

(740) 992-1400

_.....,l'ht

Roush
lnNn .....,

sey.

..

practically completes it

eg tere
Licensed Practical Nurse

I

=

ELVIS! II

,'!'::"

vollnllhlrtlll, ·on 1111
7111 cfity of May~OOI,
1111 fiUtllltll of I Ill
ttla,ln.- lilt

. def'tltH.
"It had a touJb, physical
aam• today, thowlnJ the IW·
tltdt that WI have tried 10
lnslill all. sprlna." Nld htad
coach Brian Knorr. "The
oft'ense came out slow and the
dmiiH
atOund early. But
In the Ncond hal{, tht o&amp;nse.
""" 10 ur..
"I wu very pii&amp;Hd with
J~ttdn R.outh and with tht

II~, for
lilt llltllfll of Melli
C011nty Hllltlt Dtllttllt
for 1111 purpoei of
Currtntl•••nn•.
IIIII 111 Mini 1
......1111111 oil Ill of
1 mlll(t) 111 1 till 1111
......,"' 1 ,_1111111
. '"'
...,. - lllllllr
of
nlualltn,
whllh

lin mill

a.w

Y.nll.

watched .the tcrimllllp,
tine, X.Vi11 Calbtrry and the deMIIH pbtbly looked
~llh Adamson added 1ix better, but tht o6nN only
cackles. Joe Sellm and Pece had cht two tllfnovtft and

cacklef, whll• 1\ich ConJtaD-

Brately re~d .tumbles co
tally ~hree poina mh for w

•

)'011

maintained

I

coupJI of lonJ

drlwt."

-----'I

Business Services

IIMUIIII II till Hllll

10.10) for nth .
huncl"ll 111111" t1
vtluldtn fef llvt (I)

.

m

~.

It

with many top-notcli QBs at
Florida. But few of those
Gaton passers made an inipact
in the pros, and now that
Spurrier Has been hired by the
Red!kins, he's decided to build
his tint NFL attack with Ram-.

Byrum finished the day with
only six lttempts, but pined
19 yards.
In the paNlnJ dqataMnt,
Dontnll Jacklon eomplmd
12 of 15 attempU for 71
Ray wu tuCCMfill on
four o£ hit MVIn thtowt for dtt'entlv. &amp;one.With tht tcor·
awudld
• 62 yardl. Mllml mnsftt R.yan Ina ty~tlm, poinff
Hawk compleced elx ot 10 10 the oil"11111 for btplnJ
po~N~tlon 1114 teodniJ polna
atcempa for -49 yards.
Otnnu
Chukwuemeu and 10 tht defeAH for
paced die defenH with teVIn turnovm and f'ordnJ J'llllfl· If

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

(

Bleds~e

"It's a quarterback's dream to
play for him," Ramsey !llid. "I
get the best of both worlds. I
get to go the NFL, and !.get to
play for Coach Spurrier."
In all, 15 quarterback were
taken, many in tbe later rounds
_ perhaps inspired by New
England's success with Brady, a
sixth-rounder in 2000. · Such
college QBs u Antw.lan Randie El oflndiana (second round
to Pittsburgh), Heisman Trophy
winner Eric Crouch (third
rou11d to St. Louis) and Steve
Beli'ssari of 0 hi'o State (sixth
round to the Rama) will be
tried at other positions.
The rqost popular position in
Jets.
the draft was defensive back: 52.
. Bledsoe was acquired lrom cornerbacks or safeties were
New England during Sunday's chosen, including CBs Quentin
seventh 'and las~ rol!nd of the Jammer offiJW (fifth overall to
draft. The Patriots received Buf· San Diego), ~hillip Buchanon
falo's first-round choice next ' of Miami (17th to Oakland),
year for the 11ine-year Vllteran Lito Sheppard of florida {26th
. who lost hisJ'ob to Tom Brady to Philadelphia) and Mike
during the Patriots' march to Rumph of Miami (Z7th to San
the NFL title last season.
francisco) in the tint round.
"Everybody talks about the Safeties Roy . Williams, the
need for quarterbacks," Bills eighth overall choice by Dallas,
general manager Tom Donahoe and Ed Reed, 24th to Balti·said. "All we know if, we're more, also were fint-rounden.
·happy tci know that we were in
The national champion Hurthat position and had a chance ricanes had t 1 playen taken to do this."
five in the fint round _ with the
Among the teams helping 'ThnneueeVolunteen getting tO
thcm.wlves at the position were chosen.
Detroit, which took Oregon's
"That just reUs you the type
Joey Harrington third overall, of talent they had on that team
and Washington. The Redskins and why they ended up wintraded down twice in the fine ning the national champiround, gathering extra picks, ornhip," said Rick Spielman,
and still got its quarterback of Miami Dolphirn vice president
the future in Thlane's Patrick of player penonncl.
Ramsey to conclude the tint
The five lint-rounden fiom
round.
the Hurricanes were DBs
Even
Harrington
was Buchanon, Reed and Rumph,
stunned when the Liorn chose TE Jeremy Shockey and rackle
him right after North CaroUna Bryant McKinnie
defensive end Julius Peppers
While the Hurric.a!U!I andVols
went to Carolina.
"were dominating the draft, such
"I was just about to sit down bigtime programs 111 Ptrin State
with my mom and dad and (2), S}'DCUSC (2), Geo1Jia 'Ikh (2)
watch the Liorn pick someone and IllinoiJ (1) didn't have nearly
else, and I got a phone · call. ·I the presence. And Arizona didn't
was shocked. I was caught off have anyone se~
guard, but I'm thrilled to be
One polirJon often ignored in
there,• Harrington said.
recent yan, daht end, wu in
Ramsey will be tutored by dmwJd. Three went in chi 6nt
SieVe Spurrier, who worked IDUI1d: Shockey 10 the G!anlis,

~. ·59

--

hllrllll on Oil IIIII
PubiiO Notloe . Vlllaga Of MldclietMirt,
.., vor1111ton tor lht
.
Ohio, paeald on tlla
1.. VIII 1001, tha NOTICI 01' ILICTION lOth dtly Of l'ellnlerr,
VliU.I for Oil IIIYI ON "'OIIOIITION 1001, lhtrt Will 1M
lllortnatl from, 11tv. Codt. 1101. ' tllbmllttciiO 1 - Of
U,NO
btrrtl to :111.011 111.01, 11,11; the peopla of aald
It ,U .
Gu 113.01: 117.04, os: aubdlvlalon ot •
Vlhllllon.a lnoNMICI 701.11, 31; 711.14; Primary ILICTION 10
from IUO per 74U; 31101.11 (a)
1M htld In tht Vllllgt
lhOIIIIIId oublo IMI NotiOI II hlltlly ol Mlddt.port, 'OhiO, II
10
glvtn that
In the rtglllll plaoea at
T II a
T 11 p 11 n u an ot
o t vatlng tlllrtln, on tilt
Camml11lanar linda lltiOiullon ol tha 7th diy of Mey, 10011
IIIII tllllvtl'lltll dilly loard ol County the qu .. uon or
prodilatlan ol all and commll.. ontrt ol 1111 levying a tax, In
111 ba valu.a county ot Malgt, 110111 of thatan mill
aooordlng to tha Pomaroy,
0 h 1o, limitation, tor tha
following aollldull: p1111d on the 1111 blnellt ol Middleport
AU. OIIADII Ott day ol l'abruaty, 1001, Vlllega lor the PllfPOM
OIL TAXAILI
lhtft wtll.bt aubmlttld ot l'lrt Proteotlon.
VALUI
to a vote of 1111 people laid I l l being t
AYellgt
Dally. ol aald Mtllga County rtntWII oil milia aU
Produallon: One atthe Primary IIIOtlon r111 not ••eliding I
IMirrtllll' more ·
to bl htlll In 1111 (two) mille lor aaoli
• 1,140 parllbl.
County of M"''' Ohla one dollar of
AYifllll
Dally II thl 110~111 pliCal VtiiiiHon, whloft
Praduotlon: Len ol vollftg, tlllrtln on emounla to twenty
.than Ont blrrtl
TuHdly, the 7th day Otnll lo.IO) for IIOh
I ,110 I* bbl.
of May, 1001, the hundred do litre of
NATUIIAL OAI · quaatlon ol ona·hall valuation lor live (I)
TAXAILI VALUI
paroenl 11111 and Ull Yllll.
Avera I • . D111 y tn lor the purpa11 of The polla lor· ••Ill
aleollon will bl optn
Produollon: IIOhl PIIOVIDINO
MCI'ormort I SOO ADDinGNAL
II 1:30 t .m. and
I* MCP
GINIIIAI. IIIVINUI remtlilopan unlll·7:10
Avarage
Dally 1'011 CIIIMINAI. AND p.m. oluld dty.
Produallon: Laaa ADMINIITIIAnVI
ly Ordll Of the IOird
than tlaht MCI' 110 JUITICI IIIIVICII ol lltollont of Mllgt
Pit' MC)·
AND PAYINO THI County, Ohio.
The tiling deedllnt 1 Xp 1 N8 1
0 p DlttcfMaroh I, 1001
Daniel Graham of Colomdo to previously, the most tight end\ lor oil and 1111 ADMINIITIIATION 01' John N. lhlt,
New England, and Jerramy Ween in a seven-round dmft were prodiiOirt Ia May 31 , SUCH LIVY, for 1 Chtlrperaon
1001.
continuing period of Alii D. lmlth,
Stevens of'Mshlngton to Seattle. 16.
(4)11, 1002
=·~Inning July 1' ~~~·;: 11, 12 I It,
In all, 24 tight ends were selected;
1to
·Tht pollt tor ••ld 11!l:a
_ __ _ ...:,__· eltotlon will bt open - - -H-ap_p_u_A_d__
· Publlo Notlot
II 1:30 a.m. · tnCI __ ..;,;;;:;.:;..:.'~-.
rtmtln open until 7:30 ·
NOTICI 01' II.ICTION ~,.m~~~:~ ~~~· loard
ON TAX I.IVYIN ·
.
IXCIII OP THI TIN o lltollone ol Melgt
MILL LIMITAnDN County, Ohio.
lltvltld Code
. Dlltd Meroh 1, 1002
llotlonUIIII.11 'co), John N. Ihie,
1701. I I, 1701.11
Chtlrperaon
NOTICI It hertbu IIIII D. lmlth,
Publlo IIIYIOI HIAIIINO IIIQUISTI given
IIIII In Dlrtator
IN THI, COMMON
!,~ICid 1~•1ofOOIItd at MUIT II.IINT TO: PllllutnOI of 1 April I, 11, 12 • 21,
p.."~:!f1C~~~:ToN
0
Tftlrd"-and
Vlnt HIAIIINO CLIIIK, lltaolutlon ot tht 2002
MIIGI COUNTY,
. 111'1111, IIIOint, Ohio, IONHVIOIIIONMINT'•L.
Vlllllll Counoll of the - - - - - OHIO
"
VIllage of lltolnt,
Publlo Nollot
Happy
PIIOTICTION
Ohio, Pllltd on the
IN THI MATTIII 01'.
gr::=:-~r
AQINC~
P.O. iiOX 4th dllf of l'tbruary, NOTICI 01' I.LI!CTION ,
IITTLIMINT
Birthday
~0.:~~ 4~~~r.~~:i 2002, thlll' will bt ON TAX LIVYIN
· 01' ACCOONTI,
(4) 1J,II, 2001
(TILIPHONI• 114• aubmllltd to 1'1011 of IXCISI 01' THI TIN .
144•1111). "PINAL. . lht peopla of aald
MILL LIMITATION
Tater
":~.::'cro~~~! It0
AOT
0
1
lllbdlvltlon
II
1
IIIVIIICI
Code,
;.
1
OHIO
N :
Alii Primary II.ICTION to ltallone 31101.11 (0),
Gueu ·W/10
Publla Nollot
ACTIONS 01' THI b1 hald In tht VIlla..
1701.11,1701.21
Aooounu 1nd _...;..;;;.,;,;,;...,;,;,;,;;,;;.;;.._ DIIIICTOII WHICH Of lltolne, Ohio, lllfit NOTICI 11 hereby
Love
voYohtrt of tht THI I'OI.LOWINO Alii II'I'IOTIVI reg11l1r placet of given
that In
following named APPLICATIONI
~PON IIIU:NTOf~S voflngthlrtln, on the purtuanot ol I
lld11DI1ry haa bltn AND/011 VIIIII'IID II'I'ICTIVI DATI. 7th dly of May, 1001, llttolullon of lhl
tiled InMtlgl
the Probate
·court,
co 11 nty, COMPLAINTI Willi PUIIIUANT TO OHIO lht quaallon ollevylng VVII~IIa~g~t~C~o:un:a~ll;o~l~~~~~~;~~==~~
AND THI IIIVIIID COD I 1111, In 110111 of 1111 .
Ohio tor epprovtl • IIICIIVID,
I'OLI.OWINQ DIIAI'T, IIOTION 374 a,o~1 A ten mill llmllltlon, tor
Help Wanted
1
":.'::'~;m~g~· 21111 PIIOPOIID, 011 PINAL ACTION MAY lht benefit ol llaolne -:::::;;=.=::::~;::=~:;,:;::::;=:,
PINAL
ACTIONI II APPIALID TO Vllllgtlor the PllfPOII I"
• Third and l'lntl Willi
IIIUID, IV
01 Current lxpenM•·
Yetergns Mcmorlgl Skilled
Aoaount of Ntno)C T H I
0 HI 0 ~tei~ONMINTAI.
ltld Ill being I
Nur!IIDd Cent"r hn• lmm~dln· t"'
lrodtrlak,
Truttte lly
of INVIIICHMINTAL
IIIVIIW APPI•Lt IIPIIOtment ot IIIX a r • " q
"'
"'
1111
Trull Crellld
PIIOTICTION
"
1.7 mlllut 1 rill not
qpeplDI,IS
for
the
fp!Jowlgg;
111m 1101 the Lui Will
AOINCV IOIPA) ~C::~:l~NJ:~¢,~ ..oNCIIng1.7 mill• lor
R IS
d NUfSC/
•lnd Tttt1ment of LA
IT
WIIK, A I
T HI tloh on1 dollar of
·
0 10klra•..__ ~~!ld
"AOTIONI" INCI.UDI INVIIIDNMINTAL
VIIUIIIon, whloh
1 Ul 111,,_1_
IITATI NO. 21771 ~~:.,ICA:I~'W,I~~ IOAIID 01' IIIVIIW) ::.~7/o~fT~~~n~=~
Skilled Nursing Cenlcr · Full tl111c/
• Pourth Aooount of IIIPIAI. 01' OIIDIIII IY A PilliON WHO hundred dolltrt of
·Purt time vurlou8 shifts.
Ill
THAN WAI A PAIITV TO A Vlllllllon tor live (I)
~:U:::, ~~~h~·~:~! lOTH
IMI!IIOINCY
PIIOCIIDINO
~~~.
New Salary Scale!
laallmtnlery Truet OIIDIIII~; THI III'OIII
THI
Tha pollt lor t1ld
ljlnrere.lled, please "Oni&lt;ICI H11111nn
0 10 r~ •
D• vI d IIIUANC ' DINIAI. ' I'ILINQ
DIIIICTOAN
II AI'PIAI.
I Y 1I101 Ion wIll ...
'
"
.,. open
Re.wurr:t!l tU (740) 992·2104,
Mom/av
MODII'ICATION
011
WITH
11
1:30
t.m
.
tnd
'
'UJ:/.~.~::l'ont IIIVOCATION 01'
IN 10 DAVI 01' , remain open unt117:10
thruu II Frida , 9AM • 4PM
lrt lllld thlrllo, ttld I.ICINIII PIIIMITI NOTICI 01' THI
I ld d
'--..:;,:~4.::.;:..;.:.::::.::,.:.:;;:.:::..;..;:;:,.:;.:,..,;_..,J
'
' PINAL.
ACTION. tl.m. 0 11 ty. .
r::o~::,rn:l ::,:~ ~:~,:~ CI I 0 II PUIIIUANT TO OHIO ., ordaroi\ollhe lolrd
aeld Court on tilt CIIITII'ICATit; AND IIIVIIID CODI o lleotl a of Mtlga
. 24th dey of M1y, THI APPIIOVAL Oil IIOTION 3741.07, A g~"\!'~~·11, ~002
2002, 11 whloh tlmt DIIAPPIIOVAL 0 I' PINAL.
ACTION . John N
IhI 1
aald
1ooount will bl p L AN1
AND
IIIUINO,
DINYINO,
Clltlrptrton'
'
oontldtrtd tnd
IPIC.,ICATIONI.
M
01 DVIOPYJNINOQ,'L. Oil IIIII D. lmHh,
11
oontlnued from de~ "DIIAI'T
ACT10NI"
II
IN I W1Ng
A Dlrtotor
10 dllf until llntlly
Alii
WIIITTIN PIIIMIT, I.IOINII.! . ~prll I, 11, ~2 I ill,
dlepoNCI ot.
VAIIIANCa a002
Any
ptraon ITATIMINTI 01' Oil
THI
DIIIICTOII
Ott
WHICH
II NOT
lntereeted may tile
PUbliC Notlot
PIIICIDID IV A
wrlllantooount
••otpllon
to ==~~!~AI.
IIIII
or IO
DIIIICTOII'I)
PIIOPOIIb ACTION,
metttrt perttlnlng to NT1 NT
W1TH MAV II APPIAI.IO I«&lt;TTCI 01' ILICTION
ON TAX LIYY IN
lhi1XIOII110n Of the • IIIIPICT TO THI TO THI lilAC IV
IXCIII
01' THI TIN
1111
Dwight Icenhower as .. ,
lrutt,
nol
lhtn IIIUANCI, DINIAI:J I'ILINQ AN AI'PIAL
IIYI deyt prior 10 lila lTC. Dl' A PIIIMIT, WITHIN 10 DAVI 01'
MILL LIMITATION
IIIYIIId Cocll,
dall 111101 hllrlng.
I.ICINII, OIIDIII, IIIUANCI 01' THI ltolloile
11101.11 (0),
. 1101.1t, J701.2.
1
=~~
1
~NJ:IIIIJ~~
:'=1'cACTI~~j.IAI.I
Friday, April 26, 7:30 p.m.
· luok
NOTICI II hereby
IUIMIT WIIITTIN MUIT II I'ILID Jlvtn
Meigs Middle School
~ .t htt
In
Common Pille COMMINTI 011 WITH:
pureuen•• ol 1
Court
, Pro bill IIIQUIIT A PUII.IC INVIIIONMINTAI.
Auditorium
DlviiiOn
.
IIIVIIW APPIALI llnolutlon of tht
MIITINO
Melt• County, Ohio
Admission $5.00
Ul loard ot County
DIIAI'T COMMIIIIO!'.r,
IAIT TOWN ITIIIIT, Comm1111one,. 01 till
Advlnol tiOklll IVIIIIblt Irom eny
Co11nly of . Melge ,
Pomeroy Elementary Filth Gredt
1•1 a, 2002
,_oy,Ohlo, palllltl
Student
or 11 Pom1roy Elerntnttry.
Publlo Notlot
on lht 1"" dey of
. All ~ WJ! \lO IOWi rd lilt ~OI!Itfoy
l'lbr~. 2102, thall
1 - . y , 111MQrlldf tllMii 'lfld Tl1j).
Will IMI IUIImllllciiO t '
TM lltolnl VIU,...
¥011 of "" ....,,. Of
::.".:: 11111~~1 ,:O:~
Hid eubdlvfelon II 1
... l'lrtl , ....
l'flmary II.ICTION to
IMI hall! In 1111 Collnty
~
f-: 0~
of Melt•• OhiO, 111111
11111111 plllll Of

~·
Tilt jNIII fer ulll
1111111*1 Will .. ....,.

11 litO a.m. and
11111111'1 .,.,. 1111111 71111
;

""'.,.,
ollillldly.
oliN ..,., .
IIUIIOnl of ......

·-

------_:Puiii~II!_!!N!!all~lll!_._ 0-'1~111.
...... COUftlf ~Oftn N,

,..,....,r INnly ,...,

c.••

.,....,

Cf!IIIJII-

IIIII,

lfAIUftlid Rill D. 11111111,

IIIII folltwlftl lhl DlrUII1
0 hIt ·
Till Allril I, 11, II 6 It,
CIIIIUiliUIIAIIf"t
11t0J

-··-----~----+---------..;_

__________

-

�W«W.mydlllyMntlnel.oom

Monday, Aprll12, 1002

. Sentinel•

. The

Qtribune - ·Sentinel -

II

In one week With us ·

REACH OVER .111,000 ·p
PLUS YOUR

•
•

/ '(

•

.

sunset Home
Construction

. .I.Ltll.
Cellular

'

II

Monday thru ·Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
" I I, \ It I

o..,

• Start Your Adl With ~ l&lt;t'tWOr'd • tnci~Jdt Complete
Ottcrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrtvlltlont
• Jncludt Phone Number And Addrtll When Nttdtd

• ACII Should Run 7 Dtyl

Authorizttl Agrnt

BryanR..vee
Ntlw HomM, Room Adclhlont,
Qal'lgn, Pole ll,llldlnga, Roofl;
Siding, been, Kltchena, Drywall
&amp;Mol'l

992·5479

740.742-3411

Jeff Warner Ins.

HOWARDL.
ROBERT BISSELL
WRITESEL
CONSTRUaiON
Roofing- Home •NtwHomta
Maintenance- • Oaragea
•Complete
Guttera- Down Remocllllng
Spout
Stop 6 Compare
.Fret Eatlm~tu FREE ESTIMATIS
740.H2·1871

,.,N

•

Case·IH P111s
DeAlers
lrx)O St. Rr. 7 South

Coolville, OH 45721

740-667-0363
WtiiNICit

fi40)MNa1e

Alllllbl

(110) IIN110

......

~~~~:•:: Supplement! Llfll1111lnnce1
11nd Final Ellpellllell Cancer &amp;
Rellrenient,
·
&amp; 401K Rolloven1
MaJor Medical

111411 mo.

•ts.oo par Ton

lOIII'

Tree Service

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump 5rl ndlng

• luckat Truck

ato 10 Tone

•

Plltl

li!

Delivered
&amp; Spread

FREE ESTIMATES!

AU Makes Truttor &amp;.
Equlptnont Plllls
Factory Authoriud

Local 843·5264

1:00 AM • 1:00. PM

Llmftad Aru

(740) 7~2·7037

HENDRIX

""lt~miiM

llya4ltlqo4 .

. Heatlna 11 Coollna 10 Vr. ""'•

24-HR.

1.11101 Wlnlftly

SERVICE
"One Prloe.
COOLINQ
Anytime.
RIPNCIIRATION All the 1lme,"

API'I.~I

COIIMIRCIAU
RIIIGINTIAL

RIITAUIWIT
IQUIIIIINT

HIATINO

I'I.MING

ILICTIUCAI.

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

lSSl7 s~oi Rt. 7 North • Pemti'DJ', ou mao
• •·H food rur tomb1, hua•, 11oer1, chlckona and
rabb\11.
• Seed l'u1a1oo!

• Onion Sell .
• Pull Llno of Bulk Otrdon Sood1
• Panlllror Spalllfteull~ Dc111nod l'or Olllllen Clvpt
• Now·l1onllltor BuiUIIO!
• All bua.lol hm bcon po11orn 1o11od to moot
Aaronomy A11oolo1lon Stundortl!

Ltlvt N ""

~~~ft~~~

HOMe GROWN A8PARA·
GUS. O~a1111 McKean 1M3 Ohf'IY 1114 10n 80.000
Farm, sse Canllnarv Road, m1111, IIIW 11rn, dual tiC•
Phone (740)445•0442
hllll1, Cai1MIIOI IUIII up.
0~0 (304)175·
I \H\1 ,I 1'1' 1 II ',

J,D, CONS'I'RlJCTION

u:o·

,\ 11\l \ ljlf"

A
filii I
&amp;
l11!•.1

I

ilijjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiij 1884 ,ord Ranoer XLT,
ib
FAIIM
A/OJ. P/1, llpd, .oyl.,

r

.,, •
...,.JII'MI'NI'

83,Uil0 mllu. 13000.
~:/288·1810 (aoll olttr

1850 MIIIIY H1rrl1 33
O 1
Tra01or ~~~lllzer Sproador, 11184 ford RanJ:;;l • P •
4
SPlllllrl (opora1oo on :~. ~t.o11:, • mlltl
Wo1 Llnel) (140]21141•1144&lt;1 S~~e~lltnl Concl111on. 17800 ,

Wood

l:p":;.

An AO 4 '"" no 1111 plonlor. 17401441- 1212
Ulld lo plant 100 IOrtl .. 111111 QMO IONOMA INOk,
(740)21141·1352
. eo ooo mllel, txotllen1 oon·
Ml Dill&lt; 1umlng plOW, 140 dHiOii, I4•.800.00 (740)II48o

Porm Ill 1110101 WI CUIItl'ola- ,:;:.::.·----~~
13 1 1

101

a lk)t drtlltr 304•7•

3241

r
-

~~w.w

1111 lnllrnlllonii47DO OT
o1411 tnQinl, I llltl&lt;l Ulfllo
million. wllh 28' alumlniM!l

1

"
'-- -UHd
-··
W1nlod
lo buy:
Motlllt
Horne: C.ll 1740)441o0171
or 304 I•BHB

::au:k.w:.Jo~do~Jt=:

New Homc1 • VInyl
Sldlna • New Oara,ae•l
• Replacemen•
Window• • Roonna

740-tl2·711tl

0002
.
18H Toyo~~~ T1 00 IIIII
King Cab. Loldtd, 4o4L70K
mNu, f11 ,1100 ciO,
(740)-

Owner &amp;. Oporolor, John DeAn

Advertise

PIIIIII'O!I Eeales

' STONE

In this

Everu nul'ldlll

space

· tone, tlmltad
area oall for

for

Doan Open 4:30
Early bll'dlltll't
6:30

detaha. Cell:

(740) 1181·2173
Orltavename
and number

•so per .
month

RliSIDENT/AI, &amp;
CMANUPACTUNED HOUSING
HI·Emclllncy Heat l,umps, Air
Conditioners &amp; Furnacllll

1 Lost 271b.
in 32 daya.
100%
naturai/Ouaranteed

·

(lO'alr &amp;10'11281

ft/4 Ton, ...,..,

812·3174

(748) 992•31 11.4
992·6635 jPI

~=t~dtf.:

Ownlr
GtlleArm1

~*"' ~ 40~ ~-----'~·~w~·~·
I

'
•

,.

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

L.---------1•

Proarelllue top Unt

Thul'ldlys
PI'OIII'tlllut
Cllutl'lll an SUIIIIItl

Quatlly Conarttt Work

Drlvewaya, PIIIOI,
Partclng/plly Ar111,
Sldewalka, .Floora
II YNrl llllptrllnOI
,,.. 11111111111

·

•llliCIV. lnnntory

....__

• llonk l'ln•nchiM AvMIIMblt

• l'rlclll ;J'n rtt Alllludplll

Advertise
In thll IPICI

for
1211 per month

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

..........,. rtllb
llllllllllllllltltt
·l'tltltl ,... lltrtill Ill
Dllllt-S

'&amp;:,.

WILLIAMS
EXCAVATION

MllNLEVS
SELF STORACE

33561 Weyi&amp;NIId.
Ohio 45769
1
~Sarvlct You
Con Count on•

,_,oy

,... Clle1lf

I

SUndiV

WmMnl¥ Clll HtiW M1HIIII .

I'K~I: li,H'I'IM~'l 'V.N

740-092·7038

G&amp;R
Sanitation

fi

(740) 7424011

fJ!IZli/J IIITIRTitll:.\1.
•fir~.'/,~ 1~ 1:r1~~ ,;.r.,~.~:1~~nttulllml'l!i!
HERBALIFE
·
• Vno 111 Ym c:r~nrr•,_,
ti~Uili)J
Dl11rlbu1or

BIRGOZ171

COOOfCTIOn, LLC

( of,'"""' 1:)

lndependenl

T'N

~~lf.:

Delivered &amp;
Spread $111.00
per ton1 I to 10

(NOSUNOAV

~

Now Hom01 &amp; Romodcllna
· I~J
"Speelollllna In Lug Hmnc•
....
&amp; Rubber Roof!"
1/n.
Oorogo1, l'olo llulldhl&amp;l, Concl'illl It! II
Rool'a &amp; Sldlna
Commorelol &amp; ROIIdcnll.ol
&amp;
(740) !1!13·3987
ill!~

ft~~~
LIME·

COMMIACW.IM llliDIMTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Llotnlld I lnaul'ld

Health Problema?
Want More Llleure Time?
Tlr1d of Mowing?
Not A l~rln.J Chloun?

LIMITID OPININQI

(740)'992·1536

•

•

Sl'lf
Storage

HOUI'I

••
•

•
•
•
•

Hill' ~
trlth lltlat 11111
ltllllt't
1 1/2 yrt.
CGGktr lpenltl (m)
7yrt
Mixed 8htphlrd
ldult/pupt ... mo.
otci pupt
Aid Hutkty lhtphlrd
mix (m) 1 yr old.
• llut HHitr pupe

•

•

(SyraauN, Ohla)
Bulldozln11
Tr11Ckhot/1111Ckh01,
land clurlnJ, Septic
tank, dltchln1, w111r
llnu. 1111 work,
baHmonurlfooten,
driveway!, pond•

(lntul'ld)
FrH .E11tmatta

' 740-H2·311111

40111th llrHt

Ntw HIYtn, WV

•"•lldtntlol

I·

�, ...... The Dlllly Stntlnttl

MondaY. Aprll22, 2002

www.mydllllpentlnel.com

•

,U,LEYOOP

IIUDDK

3=.
·S
"~
• t:illiOII*' ==~
~~~ .t:rJ.,

PNIU.IP
ALI)II\

AC~..
, ........

-·........
•

....

hltl

•

~

•

A il f

\Yilll

••
f:NT

NOHll

at Fail Jet

I?Chemroom
II Mink vr
DOWN
ennlna
10 AI~
I ZIDDtd by
21 lteln ftlltl 2 COIIHn'e

V:"~~~~~••' Well
Ell1\

lll&gt;i . . . . ..
hu ...
Mp111

II Mild DltW

I;~:. :

o,&gt;onlrt•l.. d' ••

30 Houttny,

Other side
Last wel!k, we
looked at openins
leads. This week, let's
move to the other
~ide of the table and
. , study some trick-one
' problems faced by the
thirtl hand.
l; i~t. the most bask
ogtccment: Suppose
!lartl1ct leads a fourth·
hil!he!t dub two, and
dummy has .three low
dubs. Third hand
dubs.
holds Q·J-3
Whkh club should he
piny?
There Is o11ly nne
right nnswct: the jack,
, Wh~u l!olng third
hnnd hil!h, eontrlbut1 ing the highest end
· yet played to the
trick, put up the bottum of Ct[Ulll cards,
Why? Suppose partnet has the king and
declarer takes the jack
with the ace, · It
shouldn't be beyond
the most soporific tif
l'artncrs to work out
tiMt third hand hu
the dub queen. Un·
hm playing a deceptive gnule, why
would declarer win
. the ja~k with the ilce
If he could have won
the trick with the
queen?
Th~t l!n 't the end
of the defense, though
-- as In this deal.
. South had A tot1gh
dedslon ~ner his part•
ner's tWo • sp~de raise ..
He knew (rom West'l
double that the opposiNg high ~ards
would be b2dly
pl:h:ed, but South felt
&lt;
he had too mu(h to 1
.

Rt Stumble

horne

c=_:-"

a.a.
5 tlprawl
!I ~ t Oldllhoma
U lro vr ala
town
$4 Palntlnt•
7 'foptllaloi:.
n 0n1- • Componr
" lllllty
ltrtok
3? ,Oitllght
t IDitt
,_ llitlt
10 ltml piltll
12 Valolillc
rock .

40 Ll' a-.t

41 .,DI,r···

41 LIYtr wllll

U HIYII .

holt•

H .:.
·
ipumenta

44 Vtrllly
41 Stint alta

Nlllf

41 l'liyw!IQIIt

pert

Sl Unlatch, to
• bird
52 Good, In

tnack
24 Whirlpool
locllt

Whit's inside

42 Grev or
-lerna
U - - up to
II TV'I Grtfl\n
Dnt'l Hrl

t? Vellty
Ill llrthrlght

It l~ velley
MOU
31 Mollaule 50 "lltn• -"

aemDit

33

31 LIHit

awaltoW

DIJon

. 31 Mond.cl

3t -Lenke
31 !'lying

oontrecttotl It Plpt IIHing
4t Pula
20 8r11h
aholca
aongatar

.tVe £.0$ T $0
MtJGt4 F01tf$T
.t CAN'T eveN
1&gt;0 A

~&gt;eGeNT
GoMr-ove~t.

formation

Wilhelm loves OSU, tl

Deaths

.THE BORN LOSER
"i'~\ !-~Ill, BIZU'\'1J$!

'

,.1-l"f\i \»,.'( ~~ ti' 7

i&gt;\t1YOU C£H.~

• &amp;U..Pl

pol!.

r

•

1~...---~~.....w

Ann M. Mills, 64 ·
Detllll.. AJ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUll C1mpa1

J ,

I

XY

HZJDLfll
X'J

NI.LJN

WHRXLHV,

ILLO

C T H' Y

w

UZ NV

XN

W V.I.

0 XI L

DZV

0 XI L

-

Trade Center
display

~~~tlnndo nih:;~rhl~~

•

.

I I r ~I r~4 :1 N:~,i ve~h~o~~~lrat

t~~~ coac~

1
•,..-l"o"
··
..:

r I' ·. I'

6

.,

ahnr

'Birthday
April 2:1, zuo2
lht nlJIIIty to wurk ill dm~
proximity with people •ml
' ru~nl.ty,

~ till I!UIInt.-ln :t Hfotig Aeme of

illdcpclltlcl1« will be a gin to
~. tro'"""d Iii till' y~ar ohtod.
It'll put you way nbov• uth·
rt!J.

. 'UtUIWS (AI&gt;rll 20-M•y
20) ... ~ lrrou g\low ynur f!IIO "
tlont a11t (cclilt@' to overrule
yuur lo14k otnU corhtau11 ll!lllr,

h

CA ll

rcilcct 1•oorly

Image yuu

~·mr~y

u11

th&lt;

m lilet!do.

u,c your htHnl, ntH your ~n ..
oltlvill"' TryiiiK to p•tch up •
brukc11 rotilnll«l thr Aotru•
Ornph Milt&lt; hm•krr co1i help
you llll~&lt;lt•toud wlm to ,jo to
ll'"kt th c rolnt!M;hll' work.
Moil 12.78 to Mate &gt;maker,
r/o thb 11rwopoprr, 1'.0 , llox
IH~,

.Murray Hill Sutlun,

New York, NV

1111~6 .

c;I!MINI (M••Y ~1 -Julle 20)
p&lt;u~lr

uu your
11110tr wlt•l ho or 1he dutlll't
like wllilll•k• rur 111 1wkword
•• i'mltli1K

r·

time with tvcryune In 1ttcm•
tlonre. DDII't rut Adamprr 011

Y&lt;lllt lll;tl&lt;,

CANCI:. Il Otlltc 21-July
22) •• tnuk u11 tht brl~ht !Ide
ui thin~~ ;ud MUArd opnlt11t
t~w.lctl ttc' ttt ukc yuundf '"''

)

ll(e too ~·rluu•ly . lr you count
you/ blc,.lug,, you'll hiVr!

nnu·h w cht't!r •bout.
Lllo 0uly ll-Aug. 22) ••
lhve • ,Joilulte ngure in mind
•• to ltow IIIlich you're oblr to
•p~11d ~dor•

Koluy out oud
palnthtK tit• town nd. If

Dec. 21) •• Try to aovrrn
your behavior ou &lt;hat you
don't tuffie 11nyone'1 (cathen.

Index

oerloua compllcatluri
"rheo, talk thlnyo out · and •
apulot;ltu fur any lndil(retlon
on your part.
CAI'IliCOllN (l)ec. 22- '
J•n. IY) •• Should orrloul
!( •

you 1re ienslbla 1 you tan h1Veo

complii!Ations cauard by ·ah

• aood tim• whhout going

overr""'"" on your part de·
velop1 otrolyhten thlntp out by
oollnd rmonlna. Your mi...J
It IIIII apmtlve, ,0 Ulo it, ~ .
AQUARIUS Uon . 2U· frb .

broke.

VII~OO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- You may h1ve to •tari 111
ovrr If you gt~about what you
hope to occumplioh in a haphu;rd """""'· You can fi!llth
hi il thn..,(y n1anner I( you•re
nlfthodical•nd nrdorly. .
UUI\A (St\!t. 23·0ct. 23) •
J)oll't ptt•Judgr peopl.' you

19) -- Uusine11 involvententl
wit~ lriend1 1hould be mlctly ;

avoided, lt'o 1 crltlnl area
where If either you or your

rnl•take. You could b• po11lna

poll ha"dle thlriJll poorly, On·
ger pointing. could en~ue.
PISCES (feb. 20-Marth 20)
•• Hoed your own coun1ol,
eopccially anythina that lin to ,

lome•

do with a clme partner or ..

nte•t fur cfie Ant tiH1e, I! lt
could turn out to be • ~l•m

on • rrlotiunohlp with

one 11reat.
SCOI\1'10 (Oet. 24-Nov.
22) .. An rrronioUI reaction
to 1 finandai n1attet Could

Colt you a pretty p&lt;nny. 1r
you
c;n

Aei

t~rn

thla devrloplna. you
thlna• back around

wltl1 oom• lntriiiJrnt thlllklnl,

SAOITTAI\IUS !Nov . 23•

CLEANING UP- Approximately 60 people, Including memb.ers

of youth groups and concerned citizens, showed up to help
clean parts of Leading Creek and Little Leading Creek Satur·
d•3Y rnornlng, Some youngsters shown here also picked up lit·
ter along Leading Creek Road near Middleport This year's
Stream Sweep coincided with .Earth Day, which was observed
Monday. (Submitted)·
.sponds to the 32nd annual lunch and a Stream Sweep
Earth Day, whi ch was tee-shirt.
observed Monday. Partici·
This year, volunteers filled
pants included Girl Scouts, the Rutland Township dump
4-H members, Boy Scouts, truck with garbage, a slightly
and just concerned citizens, smaller haul than last yeat. ·
Freeman uid .
.
"I'd' be happy if we Yl:l'1Jt, .
In retum for thefi' labor, all out and couldn't find any litvolunteers received a free ter to pick up," Freeman said.

your mltr. Oou't let utheu
inlluC!ru:r you or cau1e you to

brhavr badly.

111\1£5 (March 21 -Aprill9)
.. - lf you treat co.workers 111
fru!1id1 md eqmal1 instead of

•

MIDDLEPORT

Middleport Council .
approves projects
BY BRI~N J.

IN HONOR OR MEMORY - Individualized luminaries will light
up the night on May 4 at the Relay for Life to be held at Easl·

ern High School to raise money for the 'American Cancer Soc~
ety, Here, Sue Lightfoot, seated, and Jo Ann Crisp walt for customers at their post In the Farmers Bank lobby. (Charlene Hoeflich)
a circle, are filled with cat litter, later recycled, and the candles are placed imide.
It is a way relati,ves and
friends have of paying tribute
to loved ones while supporting an organization which
continues the work to find a
cure for cancer.
"As the luminaries light up
the night, it is so painfully
clear ' why we are here and

why we . need to continue to ·
raise money," said Sue Lightfoot, luminary chairman, a!
she encouraged participation
in the project to "light the way
to a cure."
Last year, 332 local victims
of cancer were remembered
with luminaries.
The Relay for life brings

. MIDDLEPORT -'- Middleport Village Council
approved Sl9,000 in aerial photography and mapping and ·
authorized bidding for the painting and refurbishment of
the MiU Street water tank during their regular meeting on ·
Monday evening.
.
Jay Shutt of Aoyd Browne Associates, the village's engineering firm, reported on the recommendations of the
Board of Public Affairs, which met yesterday afternoon.
Shutt and the BPA have planned the water tank repair for
several months, and last night, council passed an emergency
measure authorizing the solicitation for bids for the project.
Shutt, on behalf of the BPA, asked council to permit
Mayor Sandy lannareUi to enter into a contract with the
low bidder, but Councilman Bob Robinson proposed, and
council accepted, an amendment to Shutt's proposed mea·
sure, requiring council to act before a contract is awarded.'
Robinson said he felt the firumce commAtee, of which he
is a member, should be permitte~ to review any proposals
and that lannarelli should not be given "a blank check" .to
spend on the project.
.Shutt said last night passing the measure on an emergency
·basis was required if the project is to be completed by the
end of ihe summer.
Councilrrun Roger Manley voiced his opposition of the
: emergency nature of the action, and Councilnun Bob
Pooler voted against it.

...........elly.AJ

'

•
.'

PIIIM . . . PraJ•tt.. A3

Need Exlaa Help?
Taking care of a loved one, or need personal care for yourself?
Does housework have you down? FeE!Iing overwhelmed? let us
helpl A professional, private·duly home care agency, we offer
personal care, homemaking and respite services i~ your home.

Holser lxt• a Care
(7401 446·9560
or toll free (8001 920·8860

merely pmom with whom
you labor, It will rnakr a huge
dlffcrrncr In how they true
you in rrtum.

REED

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Lottetles

I I I I I I

•'

POMEROY - A rash of rock-throwing incidents on
Fisher Street has prompted a local woman to seek action
from Pomeroy Village Council.
Pomeroy resident Arlene Hevner met with council Monday night to discus&lt; the possibility of installing a street light
on Fisher Street, .which, she said, would deter area youth
from throwing chunks of blacktop and rocks on homes and ·
vehicles along the avenue.
· ·
Using sc~eral pieces of blacktop as a visual aid, Hevner,
who lives on Fisher Street, explained to council that the
installation of a street light would "greatly discourage" the
rock-throwing incidents, which has resulted in the damage
of sr:veral homes and automobiles.
Hevner said the area is usually "pitch black" during the
night time and, despite routine police patrols, the rockthrowing situation still exists,
Council deemed the installation of a street light on Fish·
cr Street as "important and necessary" and decided to
increase police patrols of the area while a search for a new
street light gets underway.
In other matters, after hearing numerous complaints
about the recent issue of Gharter Communications dropping its cable discount' with seniors in the village, Councilman Larry Wehrung informed council that he is currently ·
contacting other cable companies to see if they are interested in providing cable service to residents within the com"
munity.
'
Council also:
• agreed to hire Priscilla Riddle as a part-time dispatcher,
Gene Chaney as a part-time patrolman, and Heather Wise
as a part·time call-in dispatcher; aU for the Pomeroy Police
Department;
• approved · the purchase of four new H-rated tires for a
police cruiser at a cost of$229;
• scheduled Pomeroy's dean-up week for May 13-17,
Leaves, garbage, etc. will be hauled from the premises, however, Jircs, lumber, batteries, and similar items will not be
taken away;
• transferred SS,OOO front the ·General Fund to the Street
Fund.

Relay for Life
May 3•at EHS

GN I
ha
would work better,)
explained that It Wll I time mix·
. Hlaand
team
1tarted
at nine
Sout h won ·Bast •1 j ac k ,.~~====:.:~up
&lt;~'clock
the game
started
at
with the a(e and eonR E5 N0 p
tlnued with the spade l-..,.,i'-r-o
;;,.;o...;
·c~mpllle tho ahucklo quotod
8
jack, 1\eading the po- ~._..~1__.1_.~.1 .,~I_._.J.I--1
bv fllitng In tht mlui~g warda
sition . well, Wen vou dtvtlc~ lrOtn IIIP No. 3 bolow.
went In with his ace, • PIINI NUMBERED l!fi!RS IN
ca!lted the club king, ·
IHES! SQy,t,m
and continued with a
UNSCtAMBL! .t.aovt mnu
low ' club to But's
TO O!T ANSWU
queen; Then East acSCIWA-LRS ANSWIII
curately shifted to the
hem nine, giving the
Fusion ·Round· Hitch • JQrkln ~DECISION
The elgn hanging behind the boss's desk read: "A
defender! livt:i tricks:
Real Executive Is Somaone Who Can Take Aa Long As
one spade, two hearts
1
She Wtnte To , To M•ke A Snap DECISION.''
Atld tWO clubs.

141 SAIO loll ONI.V SAW ~&gt;!Ell
FOR A SECOND. BUT FOil Tlol!
lt&amp;ST OF loi151.1FI NOT A
MONTiol WENT IV WloiiN
loiE OICIN'T TMINI( OF lol!ll ...

BY TONY M. lEAcH
TLEACH@&gt;MYDAiLYSENTINEL.COM

Candle lighting
honors
•
cancer surv1vors

I I . I1 li ..1
.

RUTLAND - "You can be
· on~ of those people that just
talk about the environment, or
you can actually d11 something
·
about it."
That's according to Jim
Freeman, watershed coordinator for the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District.
"These people wanted to do
something about it," he added.
What "these . people" did
was
spend ·part of Saturday
High: 70s, Low: 40s
morning cleaning litter from
D...III,A2
in and around Leading Creek
and Little Leading Creek in
the second Leading Creek
Stream Sweep held at Rutland Fireman's Park .
Approximately 60 people
attended this year's event,
which was sponsored by the
Meigs SWCD in partnership
with the Rutland Township
Board · of Trustees, Meigs
GALLIPOLIS A
Recycling and Litter Control
3,000 piece 3-D puzzle
depicti,l li the .•. Wqrld "and !1-utlan.d.~Y!lluqteer Fire
..
Trade Center twin tow- · Department.
The event roughly correers and surrounding ,
New York City area is
currently on display in
th~ Ohio Valley Bank
main office lobby.
·
The
pu~zle
titled
"New York, New York"
was assembled by Lee
•
Martin of Gallipolis in
1999
and
therefore
shows the area as it originally stood before the
tragic events of September 11.
·
The exhibit may be
viewed by the public
between the hours of 9
IY CHAIILINI HOIFUCH
a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday
HOEF"ICOMYOAI"YSENTINE".COM
through Friday, through·
POMEROY - Candles
out April.
lighted in honor of cancer survivors and in memory of thole
who have lost their battle with
cancer is always a highlight of
the Mei(!! County Relay for
OHIO
Life, an annual fund-raiser of
Pick l: 1·2·9
the Mei(!! County Unit of the
Pick 4: 3-5-4·9
American
Cancer Society.
luckey• 5: 3·24·26-33·37
The ceremony will take
Pick 3 n!l!tt: 3-2-3 ·
Pick 4 nljht: 0-1·5·2
place at dusk on May 3 during
the 18-hour event at Eastern
W.VA.
High SchooL
D•I!Y 3: 9· 1-7
Again this year, personalized
D•I!Y 4: 9·5c2·8
·
C.tli :zs: 2·5-9-16·20·24
lumin'aries are being prepared
with computer generated clip
art at the Farmers Bank and
may be ordered there for a S5
donation. They will. also be
I Wan- 10,....
~vailable at Eastern the night
Calendar
·
5 of the relay right up until the
start of the ceremony.
Classifieds
7-9
Plain white sacks are indi·
Comia
10
Dear Abby
5 · vidualized, and decorated in
colorful designs to depict the
Editorials
4
person being remembered
Movies
3
thtpugh
his or h~r hob~y. proObituaries '
·3
fession , service, or kindness in
Sports
6·7
Weather
2 a community. The sacks,
arranged for the ceremony in
$ lOOl Ohio Volio)o Publlaliln1 Co.

-

.

FROM STAFf REPORTS

branch hosts

XV,'

IXVRKLP

1 .
_

Leading
Creek ·
Stream·
Sweep a
success

Gallipolis ova

X

WH DiG. R T

.

Resident
seeks relief
from rascals

Weather

·

Ctltb!lty Otp~tr cryptogram• ore orUtlld lrom Qualallonl by lemoua
people, poll end pre11nt. Eio~ totttr In tht ~P~tr 1\ondalor anothor"
Todly's clul; fi rtqUJif P

I IA r RIL II . I

West gueS!ed well
to lead the dub two. ·
(One could compose .
a layout in which the

f

Orion R. Nelson, 85
Harold N. Hudnell, 65

.

·poMEROY

47 Mlklll
knol

or

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Hometown News,.per

lit Aillal
Mlillrllle

aOlllet

It I

•• tl

·Melp County's

VIMitOII

1tmt

II Collt1

6!(J~IIIt

liHll\

17 Yvll'

II Wllltl
110maattt

• K' It

~"

-

14 llutttr'l

A. q J

................

110 11Im

13VriwM

MONTY IM by Jill! Mttldlclt_ _ _....,

Indians .snap losing skid, 6

NIA CroiiWOrd PuUle

MEDICAL CENTER
'
Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org
•

., •.

"

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="464">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9909">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="22990">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="22989">
              <text>April 22, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
