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•

www.mycl!lt(MnUnel.com

Paae A 10 • The O.llv SenUnel

ALLEYOOP
'

PHILLIP

ACROSS

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\What's Inside

111011111011 S3 I'IIIM
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• Pool lac.
1D ·DIIteled

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

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Ott, Ot4, ••• TttiS J((AIN CfL~ IS
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((tAL~Y lJPSfT!
Tttf MUS'CLf Cf~L

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GOT

S'C~OLAitf~IP[ .

HUSI-I, LUI&lt;EY !!

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THE BORN LOSER
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BE.llE:.IJE:. Mi., ['IJE ~ Tii'!:ilt'-Ko
\0 Tf\E. BE.':&gt;T Of"''(

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f\N'I'ENE.D, C.I-ll E.F.,.

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'aubl.tlr'tCt

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Sitting third hand,
3D Flit1111t"
DOWN
garQOYIM 42 L1t11t ldil
blrila
24 Comalock 43 ..... you hold Q-j-2 and
31 "I'Mnute" 1 Hound'e
LCMIIal.
44 Phcll 1ft
it's your turn. Yesterkid
t,.n
25 Give oil
44 Slucly herd
32 - W.....,_ 2 ColtOnllll
H arownlall- 47 - lu
day, we learned that if
..._
3 CEO
purple
41 ~
you will be going
34 SlnQif
dig,_
27 ICoolle
51
o.m- 4 -bocilt 28 FHCit.g
HMtly
high, you should put
35 Golf'•5 Point
rnolllle
up the jack; the botDlnltl
ICklltlve
2t "Sieler Act"
3S Long-acllve I DelenM
roln
tom of equal cards.
volceno
org.
st
Warier
However, what hap~~-m-,
pens if you cannot
win the trick, because
partner (or perhaps
second hand) has already played the ace
or king? What would
you do then?
If you think it
beneficial to tell partner about your·honor
sequence, drop the
queen, the top of the
touchers. This guarantees that you have ·
either the queen and
the jack (perhaps with
one or more lower
cards), or a singletol).
Now partner knows
..
~
that he may underlead
CELEBR,ITY CIPHER
at trick two and you
by Lula Campo•
.
will win the trick eiCtltbrlly Cipher e&gt;yplogromo '" c,..tod from quotatiolla by lamoue
people, pool ond prennt. Etch lonor In lilt cipher atanda lor onothtr.
ther by playing your
Toctay'S clue: E equals Y •
jack or by ruffing. (If
'lAO aLSLNO MH
RTS
it is ~ no-trump con·
tract, hope p·artner
'
MB
VIH.'
YA I 8
can read the position
correctly.)
·
KOYMR
OONRINU
This agreement
M H
SAO TRKE
'8 M F 0
aided the defense in
today's deal, which
ZNM8MZ YM8ATL8
occurred in London •
- appropriate on St.
IFDMIMTR.'
George's Day.
HIIOMADOZC
II TAR
When We$! over- 'My age II )Uit I number; It IHfl'\1
called, he was primarfitI Rkl II.' - 45-yHr•old pHoher
ily hoP.ing to make it
harder for the opposi·
tion to reach a spade
contract. However, .
despite the adverse 0 Jtorrange ltnori of the
ocromblod wordo bo·
vulnerability, it wasn't low four
to form four slm~la warda.
impossible that EastWest could win the
N0 C RA B
auction. South, .after htl"""'l-.;.l....;:.,..;....;,l;.,.z.:.....--1
1
receiving a single raise I.=;:~:;:~~·=~·- l
from his partner, took I"
an understandable
P E L P A
shot at game.
1-"TITi

planned
Annual Racine
Middleport
cele ration a fun
school

C"N'T FIND IT, DAD~
LOOI&lt;.$ \..IKE THAT
BALL'$ HI STORY!

Marauders fall to GA. 11

Orion Nelson, as
Ernest Young Sr., 72
Stella Sarson, 66

l

PRANUTS

APRIL23I .

West led the dub
ace, and East correctly
signaled with the
queen, promising the
jack (or a singleton).
West continued with
a low club, not the
king. After winning
with the j' ack, it was
the work of a moment {or East to shifi
to the diamond
queen. In another
moment, the defenden had the first four
.tricks. ·
Note that without
thie defense, declarer
has 10 major-suit
winnen.

Elstem schools
to dismiss
ealty on Frtclay

~=·;;::;;·~;;::;~·::::

I 1 1 1 1':::If.'.
I I'K WI EI II CI Ie

"'
Customer to butcher:"Do you
N E CH E
have a 151b. roasl?' Butcher: "No,
8
bull'll order one.' Customer:'That'a
~·:::·~·;:;~·~·:;:·:.,not necessary. Ijust lost 151bs. and
;_.
., wanted to see how much that
D
looked like In ••••••• •.. "
I
Complttt tho chuckle quoted ;
.L ...J.-.L.-.1..
. ...J.-.L._ J .
Oy flilln; In th1 mlulng words ;
you dtveloo from atop No. 3 bolow, ·

-- Acquiri~g somethins yo,u
want for cnher yourself or l

loved oue looks very encouraging. Once you are stimu·

Jared IO do SO, nothing Will
stand in your way.
CANC£ll (June 21-July
22) - Reopond to any inner
(eelini!J you mighr have about

State offers

COLUMBUS (AP) .The state said 'TUesday it is
providing bminesses a ,onetime workers' comp refund
of $600 million to help
. stimulate .the economy.
The Bureau of Workers'
Compensation w~ll give
· refunds in December
through .a one-time, 75 percent reduction in businesses' worken' comp premiums for the first half of next
fiscal year, which begins
July I.

Ohio
ICIIAM-LITS ANIWIU
Growth • Rival· Fling • Person • EIGHT
·
The high achool team had a very poor flrst half. The · .
coach explained that It was a time mix-up. Hie team ' . ·
started at nine o'clock and the game atarted at EIGHT ·:
'.

•

Wednnd.ty, April 24, 2002
An exciting year ahead
might be in 1tore (or you in
terms of your relationships
both work-wise and socially.
You'll be well accepted in
each and can go far.
.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) •• Your flnancw base can
be considerably strengthened
I( you make it a priority. Even
a previously unreachable luxury could be gratified. Tautul,
· creat yourself to a binhday
gift Send for your Amo·
· Graph prediction• for the year
ahead by mailing S2 and SASE
to. Allro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Do• 1758,
Murray Hill Station, New
York, NY 10156. De sure to
•!Ore your Zodiac sign.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

TUPPERS . PLAINS Schools in the . Eastern
Local School District will
dismiss at I :05 p.m. Friday
due to a teachen' inservic~.

one-time
refund ~

,.

a potentially auamao&amp;e personal goal. Even if you can't
explain " · it'll make sense to
you as it unfolds.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -·
There's a po11ibilicy that you
could meet aomeone who i•
potentially a good, close mociare. The strong appeal wiU
be obvious to both. ·
_ VIRGO (Aus. 23-Sept. 22)
• This may be rhe right time
to promote something thai
you ve been working on. The
liming could be excellent.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Although something mar
. occur that reau your flalth, 11
wiU demorutrare 10 you how
great your telf-a11urance b in
a&lt;:hievin1 detirable rnulu.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No)'.
22) ·- Should :li joint endeavor
require a bit more input than

was initially anticipated, you
mould be the one to ttep up
to the plate. You're capable of
hining a home n~n.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) ·- Becauoe each
pany involved in a partnenbip
situation hu solid contribu1

· t1om ro make, 1Ucces1 i1 tn the

offing.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. t 9) -- No one can do a
better job than you when it
comet to handling people in
hish places. You'D work ••·
ceptionally · well ,with rhe
powen that be.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19) - You've experienced a
ttrong rise in popularity lately
•• you could lind yourself in
· much demand socially, Capi·
talize on it while your liar ;,
aocendina. · .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
• It doetn't maner if you start
out dow or are rarins to p.
you . will end up beona
mongly focused and motivated. l.oor time can be made
up on thinp you've been put-

tins otT.

ARIES (March 21·April19)
··Although you're a lone ea. gle in your thinking moot o(
rhe time, ideas you develop
with a collaborator may be the
Qnea that are 2pt to be the
moor succellful. Be a team
player.

Pick J: 6·2·2
Pldl 4: 1·1·4-0
IU~ 5: 4·!H 1·23·32
Pick J c!aY: 5·8·5
Pick 4 d.y: 6-1·5·3 '

West Vll'llnll
Dai!Y :s: 9·H .

Index
U1di1•-I2PIIpl

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

I

'

BY llltAM J, Rm

RACINE - A parade of
floats featuring flOWil\'8, a v~ri~
ety of entllrtuinment. crowning of a que~n. kiddie games
and more will be included in
the all-day activit!e$ at the
ninth annual R.ACO Flower ·
Festival to be held at Star Mill
Park Saturday.
Kicking otT the event will be
the parJde at 10 a.m. Lineup
will be at the Pizza EKpress at
9: 15 and participants are
reminded that floats must .
include flowers to q11alify for
prize money. Prizes al\' SSO for .
first, $30 for second, and 120
for third.
The parade winm~rs will be FLOWIR FIITIVAL HOPII'UL&amp; ~ Five Southern Hl&amp;h School
announced and the Flower candidates prepare to contend for the title or queen durlnl
F~stival queen crowned in Racine's annual Flower Festival. Sponsored by the Racine Area
ceremoni~s to be held on the Community Organization (RACO), the festival will take place on
stage at noon.
Saturday at Star Mill Park. Those competing ara, from left, Car·
Queen candidates a1·e olyn Bentz, Kim McDaniel, Rachel MarehaU, Tfavanne Moore ,
Southern High S~hool stu· • an? .~ln.di!Y ~mlth. _(Tony M. Leach) .,, '!. ...
.,1
dents Carolyn Bentz, daughter
., •.,_.,.,.,
of Mrs . . Mary Nitz; Kim
McDaniel, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jackie McDaniel;
Rachel Mmhall, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Marshaii;Travanna Moore, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Moore; and
Lindsey Smith, dnughter of
Mr. and Mrs.James Smith.
Entertainment will begin at
11a.m. with the Rock- N·
Country Cloggers presenting
an hour-long show. Music by
the Racine United Methodist TO ENTERTAIN- "Mountain River" wllll)erform from 3 to 4:30
Church Choir with signing by p.m. Saturday at the RACO Flower Festival to be held at Star
the church team will be pre- Mill Park. In the vocel·lnstrumantal group are from the left, Greg
sented between noon and Hart who plays guitar, Joy Mason on the baas, Herb Mason on
the banjo, and Bob White, the mandolin. (Submitted)
12:30 p.m.
Country Grass, presenting a
variety of new and old coun- until the festival cnncludes at 6 WhiiL• there is no dtnr11c fhr
'm ftcn to set up hoorhs auy·
try, blues,. rock-a-billy and p.m.
Games will be cumluctcd by one intcrcst1•d is ask,•d ttl con·
bluegrass, will play from 12:30
to 2 p.m. at 'which time Mike the ltacine United Mcthndist met Jennifer Hoback, ')41).
Hemmelgarn, a juggling ven- Church yo11th group for the 21m. DurlnH the day there
triloquist, will have an hour's kJds st~rting at 11 :30 a.m .. ilnd will be drawill!(ll fi&gt;r pr.izcs
at 1 p.m. at kiddie tr:1ctor p11ll every half hour. Time is no
performance.
admissio11 charge nml parkiug
The Mountain River Blue will be held.
Plowen by the basket, pot or i1 fr1•e.
Grass Band will play from 3 to
l11 the event of rnin, the fcs·
flat
will be available at the
4:30 p.m. and Steve and .Bev·
crly Pottmeyer wi.ll take the park, and rcfre!lunenn and tival activities will be mnved
to Southern Hi~h School.
stage at 4:30 and entertain crafis will be for sale.

BREEDeMVOAI~YS£NT1NEL,COM

Mli)DLEI•ORT - The Vill&lt;tflt' of Mkkll~purt ~~ ~ !t~p
dt~\er ttl lln~lipi nll 1)1~11~ (Or th~ Cll11\\'l'i\iOn of Mi\ldl~port
El~lllt'llhiT Sd1nnl tn • t1l'W v iii~ holl.
Ma)'Or Santly 1&lt;111i'"'''lli sukl Mond.-y she h&lt;~s l't'tdwd &lt;1
pmpo~al frum tlw tnxhitrnuml tlrn1 nf Hm11~ &amp; Ki1111 ut'
t'&lt;llumbus tn pr..•pnl\' 11 mw !tml)' nt' hnw thr S}\&lt;ll'~ \'oil b1•
Ust•d liS ,\jail ~lid ht&gt;lll~ !ll Villlllt'' lltlkt•,,
The Villnlt" h•s t\'td\1\'tl ,, ~nllltlt i tlllt'llt thnn tlw Mdg.~
l.m·,ll Sdlutlll&gt;imkt th1· til\' tr11nst\•r uf the tht't'e Middlelion sd1ool f.lt'ililil•s - tlw Mdi(S Mldttlt• St•htllll , Mhtdl~·
port Ell'lllcntiii'Ylllld th&lt;' Ct'lltral Uuiklin~ - tl\lt&lt;' th~y al\'
VII I'll ted hy the district i11 tiwur uf m·w bttiltlin~~S II OW under
t tmstruniun ,
·
01'11!111111 plan. tl1r the cl~nwm.~ry bt1iltlin~, pt't'!l'llf~d tn
tht• villni!C a Y\)111' 11110 by An:hitt•t•t Stt•phcn Ot·~iit•r of Marl·
~tt&lt;l, ~ailed li&gt;r the cullstrnctltm 111' ll j11il f'ilrllity i11 tht• school
~ymn.1slum lll\'&lt;
1 lind vill11~~ ufli~t·s in om• nf the sd11ml'il
clos~room win~.
A•·~ul\lill~ tu l;umAr..·lli, ~tnt~ j&lt;lil imp~•·tnr~ hnw sll itl the
jui\must lw built US ll S~pllrllt~ llti&lt;IChllWIIt tO the buiklilll! rur

s~mrity purplis~s . Tlw n.~llmind&lt;·r uf th&lt;• builtlh1t,&lt;

will now
ustd thr pnlin• ot1k~s lllld oth~r villlll!\1 np~r.ltions.
lllnMrelli .~aid.
·
, 1'1\e Vill~c~ C\lllilllthi[C ~lid en~hll'~ril\~ firm, floyd
J~rown~ · AliSo illtt!, will 'e\'k [Cr11m tuntlinl! lor he $ij,.50tJ
feASibility study throu~h the Gtw~rnor~ Olllcc of
Appullldtill.
·
·
Uses .fill' the mlw1· twu IJUildhi~~S 111'1' still i11 the plnnllhll!
stu~u. The Mlddkpnrt I•luunilll! Cllllllllissioll, wurkinl!
.:JoscJy With II dtill'li!' l'tlllll11ittl'\\ plitiiS 10 l',\t;lbiish II 11011 •
pflllit I'Oundntinll (\) r.tiS\' tlllllls rm I'CIIllVIItiniiS llllll tu hdp
murkct th~ builditiW! .
1'h1' Cll llllllitt~ •· IH&amp;s dis,·ussl'd IIW'kl•titlt( the Middle
S~hool buiklil1~. Mi!(innlly Mlddkpu11 l-lil(h Schuol, us ll
highcr·l&lt;'llrnin~o~ ti1dlity 'or lill' k.ts•·d nilkt• ~pnl'c. Uses lor
tlw, C••mrul Uuildinl!, hccausl' of its ~~~~·, •Ire nun·c limitt·d. ,
Ckl(l11'r su~stcll thnt the hulldillt( b1• il'll'c d IIi st111'11~1' spu~r
been usc uf the hil,!h emf ni' brhtl!hll( th•· huiillin~ hit&lt;&gt; l't)de
und ADA complinn~c .
b~

AT THE CAR WASH

Donation for trip.

Dallj 4: 2·1·6-9 · ·
Cllli 25: 1·2·4-5·7·16.

calendar

Jail) village offices p.ltttmed
for building

I HOEFliOHtMYDAILYSENTlNEl.COM

Hiah: 60S, Low: 50s
. Debllll. A1

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lv CttAilWII HOII'UCM

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ITUESDAY

.

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L-.....h....:::::::t:::J..lJ •

New

IUCC I

...........

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31 Tulc

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. AS
B3·S

86
AS
A4

A3
A3 ·
B1·3
A2

e 1001 Ohio vo~ter Publlthln1 co.

Punding for the Easter 11
Elementary eighth l(raden'
trip to Willian·1sburl(.Va .. May
1:\-15, got a hoo~t Tuc1day
from the Ohio Educatioual
Support Group. The OES
made a S1,000 donation
toward the rrip expenses.
Aeccptinl! the cer1'monial
check from Alisha Myers on
behalf of the clau wa1 jc11ica
Hupp, u Anl(ie Rig~~by,
teacher, Betty Holman, Terry
l)um and Adam Gonnicklc
look on. (Charlene Hoeflich)

'

.

UNDER NIW OWNIRIHIP - Courtney Butcher, ·left. dlreo·
tor of operation• for the Mel&amp;• County Chamber of Commerce , etanda with Randy Triplett, new owner or Hutton'•
Car Wash In Pomeroy. Triplett, who own• al~ olh r cer wath·
· 1n11 fllcllltlealn Parkerlbura. W.Va .. aeld the car Wath will be
completely remodeled with new 1oft bruahee. pumps, buQ. ble bru1he1. awnlnp, end paint job and will be open for
buelneu 24 hour• 11 day. (Submitted)
•

April 21·27 is

National Laundry ancl Linen
Week ·
and

Atl•lnlalrcltlve Profeaalonala
Week ·
Holzer Medical Center salute• both our Launclry ancl Unen-Department
and our Administradve Profe11ionals
thia
week.

•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discou£w the Holzer Differertce

www.bolzer.org

�'.

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

.....

COLUMBUS (AI') - A dru:g ttu~
ment initiltive proposed ror ,the No"' $
ballot would m&gt;em tlte progrest that
Ohio hu nude In trettittR drug and
alcahtl! ,bu,en, Oo\1. Bob 'lll&gt;t't &amp;ilid '1\le$•

lU}I

Cooler temperatures prevail
Th~ r~in
till'&lt;'~ Al!•in

•

Taft slams proposed ballot issue

Ohlowe1ther

""""··~

PllpA2

O't ~t ~~SOOI'-1tll PA£SS

will cntl a~nm the 31'\!&lt;1 un Thunday, but 1:1!mp~!l'fl•
will be utt~~t\onably t out.
·
Nurthw,.~t11rly wlmls pumpl'tl inw the l'l!gllll\ by il h.!ih pl'l!&amp;•
&lt;llttc IY&lt;IM\1 will.keep rempcratttre~ ht the 1\0s Ill\ Thursdty_ the
National \Vc&lt;1thcr Scrvitt ·said.
·
Lo\'-" Wcdncsd.ty 11ight will be ill the lowtr SOl.
A Warmup im 't cltpcctcd to btgin Ul\t\1 S.uu!day, ltlM'&lt;I!ten
. !&lt;till. .
Sunset ton4!ht will be at 1!:I ':i, and ~unrlsc un Thurtdty at
t.:4\l {\ ,11\,

The Ohin Ct~ian fur New Dru:g
Polldtl proposed the eunstltutionll
amendment, whith would require
judges to ~entente nonvloll!nt lir;t-tlm~
drug affi!ntlen ~ tl'l!lttnel\t lnsteild or
priml'!. Cutl'l!ntly tju~ ha~ the option
to do ~ither.
·
lfthl! group gtthen ~~~.~21 valid sig1\ttures o( Ohio voten by t!itrly August,
the issue would go ~n the ballot In
Nuwmber. Tal\ and his wife, Hope, &lt;1
drug-prewntlun attillist, haw promised
to work tgaillst it,
''lrthls issue goes to a Vllte, Hope and
I will be th.e first In line to vote no,"t'dl:
told an audience ofseveral hundred drug
treatment protilnlonab.
. ·
'Ill\ !aid pamae of the issue, motlcletl
on sintllar elfora inAritonund Califurnia, "would undermine current dru~
ttl!ltm.ent prugrom&amp;."
Thuse include Ohio's 48 drug court!,
which $p~dalite In the treatment of
ttrly olftnden. He salt! Ohio's drug laws
~re effi!ctlve boectuie ortheir.''curot ~nd
stick" appruach that t~Uows judg.!s fleltl·

bility In 1entencing
&lt;lirenden.
t'atl: (avon ueument over prllon time
thr ~"Ill• nonviolent
olfendtn but beliews
judlfl ihould' haw
th't option ihould
tftatment rail,
M
''!)rug c:oura have a
~uable tout thlt the
drug lniti~tlve would eliminare," Taft
~.ald. "Addktinn is not a one-sitt-.fin-ill
di~a1~. 1'tt.ltment should not be a ol'!esite-fin-all sillutloll."
'Thft prontlsed to work l'or the issue's
defuat lind may help raise money to do
it. Hupe 1'aft already has spoken i&gt;Ut on
the bsue.
·
The initiatiw muld saw tallp&lt;~yets the
COIIt or housit~~Mnvlolent oll'enden In
prisons, said J:idward Orlett, manager fur
the Ohlu Campaign lbr New Drug
Polities. He said the Initiative would
expand drug coum m aU 88 counties
and hlN "tss6son" to look at eath c11se
tlld retonlntelld treatment.
"That win be thdt job, to ntake sure
treUtl'!ellt is tailot•made Ill eath l11dlvld·
ua!," Odctt said,
Orlett said Ohiu's drug courts senti
till), many first-time uffi!nders ttl jail,

where It costs more than $20,000 a year
to keep them. He said last year, mort
than 1\,000 offenders Mre charstd Witll
. ftlo11y drug pouesslon and 4,300 of
them Wl!nt to prison.
"They're only reaching a wry small
percentage and they'it very expenslw;•
Orlett salt!. "The !tate acknowl1dged it
can· treat people fur Under $4,000 I
yeu."
Tdt acknowledged the cost ·of treat-1
ment is hi~h.
"We spelld 11early $172 million a year
on drug treatm&lt;!nt progmtru in the state.
It's never enough, but it's a lot," Taft said.
'Thft, who races a re-election campaign
himself this year, predicted voters will
teject the plan once they know all the
details. He said that It's his duty ai govefl\l)r to educate the Vlltel1.
.
"This Initiative I! too full of loopholej
and too .many unansWI!tcd questions for
Ohioans to support it," he said.
The Initiative's backers in January
Mked Auditor Jim Petro and Ohio .
Inspector Oelleral Thomas charle1 tq
Investigate its accusations that stattl
employees, including some in Taft'~
office, were Working against the illiti~­
tiw on state time. Neither Petro nor
Charles (ound eno11gh evidence to warrant a probe, they said.
,

Attomeys consider more

W..ther fbrecaat
Thnight... Shu\Wn, mainly until midnight. l.llws in th~ lower
51!;, 5ullth winds &lt;1mund 15 lltph b~eoming welt. Chtnel! t&gt;f
rain 80 pcrccm.
Thunday... Partly dourly. Highs In the loWI!r 601. NorthWI!&amp;t
winds lO to IS mph.
.
Thursday night. .. Mostly eleu. tows in the upper 30$.
Bxtenclecl fotecaat
l'rldoy. .. Mostly stmny. Highs 60 to !iS.
Jlritlay ul~ht ... Mustly d~u. t.owsln the lower 40!.
Stttunlay... Pmly doudy.A ehanee of 1howen ilnd thundl!rCOI.UM»US (AP) - As
. storm; dtirinif the night. High! ill thl! upp!!r 601.
his ~rltlay execution due
Stmday... A ehantc orshoWI!rt and thundentcmm during the nean, eo11vleted k!U~r AltM
day, otherwise partlfduudy. Lows In the ntltl SO&amp; ~nd hl~th• In
Coleman hu thrte appeAls
th~ upp~r (lt);,
beFort two Cederal tourta, and
Mlllld~y.. .P~rtly doudy. Low. In the ntld 408 and hlahs in the
hil lawyen lite ~onslderlng 11
nutl !iOs.
.
rourth .
·n,~sduy. .. M!!!tly cluutly. A ehon~e uf ahowen. Low. In .the
Attarneya argue that a plan
lmVI!r SO! and highs in the upper fitls.
· to Ult cloltd•elrcuit tmnlmia•
alon or the th~utiOI\. to relt•
tlwa orvlctillll will turn
, Coleman~ deach Into • 'apectator
aport." They &amp;lid they might
appeal a Jud.. 't declalon on
Tueaday to let tht ltate trtnaCOLUMBUS (AP) - Ltt- have been rtqulrtd to haw mit th.• execudol\ to a room In
lalatlun oUowlng 1ehool dia- atudenta rtclte the Pltdp oC' the prlton complex,
trlcts to 1et uldt 1 dally Allegiance.
Coleman, 46, o(Waukepn,
minute of silence Cor 1chool·
But the Senate, concerned IU., ia achedulid to clle Friday
ehlltl!'en ttl prAy or rtfiect Ia about teUlng local achool db· by 11\ltclion for tht 1984 belt•
h~Aded ttl OtlV. Bob Tilft.
crlcn wh~t to do a~ well a~ tht lng death or Marlene Waltera,
'rhe Houae pAlled the finAl lmplkatlonl or allowlna 44, or Norwood in auburban
version of the b!U 'tUesday, one prayer In tehoolt, made the Ci11clnnatl. He abo has been
week after the Senate daily silent period valunury convicted of l'our murtlera In a
appmwd· it, The Yl!nlon w~1 1 And did not Include the word multlame crime spree In 1984
comproml!e b~t\\11!~11 HoUle "prilyer." It alao rtmoved the and hu been sentenced to
anti SenM~ v~rlitltll of rite blll pled~ provlalo11.
death !11 Indiana and Illinois.
1ponsoretl by 1\ep. 1\ex
"At 1 cumprontlae, we ·apllt
Bealtle1 the poa~lble appeal
03tmchroder, o l\epublie1n the dltrerence:• Datruchroder of the .doaed-clrcult televlllon
front Pretuont.
It! d.
decillon, Coleman hal two
'111ft lm said he would 1lgn Th1 final wralon aent to 'rift appeal&amp; before the U.S.
til~ 11\MIUte.
h\cludet the word "ptayer" Supreme Court and a third
Orl(lillttl.ly, the House WAnt• anti ~Uowt - but cloet not befort 1 federal appettla court
ed to require every local rtqulre - school dlttrlcl:l to In Cincinnati.
~~lmol bo~rd to p111 A rule let Allde time
the aUent
Judge Beverly Pfeiffer of
m a ml~tlni!
thAt sruderm period.
Pun kiln County Common
ulJ! CfV~ I daily mJnUtO Of
It alto lnelutlet 1 provltltm Pleas Court on Theaday threw
silence "for prayer, fllfiettion saying that school• can set out a lt~w&amp;ult that sought to
ur 111udltatlon' on mord, atlde time far the pledge, but preve11t the !tate fmm ualng
phllu'sophlcal or pAtriotic that ttudenn rt not rtqu!Nd the eloled·drcuit 1yatem. The
. themes. SehOtJII olio would to partlclptte.
~ state nit! it plant to use It for

· Is as execution date
nears for Alton Coleman

Legislature sends governor bUI
that allows moments of silence

Joe Case, a spokeaman for
Attorney General Betty
Montgomery, said Monday ·
. that Montgomery agrees With
the Ohio Supreme Court'•
ruling last Prlday that Cole•
man's requelt came. teo late. :
The second appeal before
the
U.S. Supreme Court
dec11
,, 1ng a11a~ment
a on reJect
that CoIeman wu me
' e~tIveIy Involve&amp; Coleman '1 murder
reprtaente d by hi1 1awyen 1n conviction for the ltl'lngula•
appullng hla capiw•murder tion of 15-year·old Tonnle
conviction In the Wiltert ca~e. Storey o( Cincinnati, two daya
On Monday, Coleman uked befoze Walten was killed.
The 6th Circuit lent that
the U.S. Supreme Cou~ to
. hear hls claim that prosecuton c111e back co the trill coutt for
Coleman's
choae a racially blued jury in re•entendng.
hh 1985 trial Cor '1/altera' lawyen said the Supreme
death. He IIIIo asked Ju.•tlce Court should resolve that tale
John Paul Steven&amp;, who over· befort Ohio carrie• out the
·
··
lees death pellalty lppeila In execution.
Ohio, to delay the execution
The atate argues that the
while thli court conlldera the two cases are unrelated and the ·
appeil.
state may proceed. '
Coleman'• lawyetl claim
Coleman i1 the only current
th~t chen-Hamilton County Inmate to face death sentence&amp;
Proaecutor Arthur Ney's team In three states, according to the
Improperly removed ·nine of Washington,
D.C.•bated
12 black jurots (rom the tdlll. Death Penalty Information
Coleman ia black.
Center.

Alton Coltmon, 46, of IM:Juk., Ill¥ 1$ Scheduled
to die Friday by inje¢on for the F984 beodno death
of Morlene IMim of Norwood In suburban &lt;'ncinnotl.
He also has been convkted of four murders in a
multlstole crime~ In r984 and hGs been
sentenced to death In Indiana and /UinoiS.
the ll~t
·..· time b·--use
... the·~ ··~
ao m•ny
wltn•ssea
'mm
vic•
~
"
tlma' '""u
•·~•Uea.
PCeHl'er nld Coleman 'a
lawyenJntatnted no evidence
to Juatlty their claim that the
tnnamiulon would vloltte hls
rlahta. The judat .alao noted
thu no recorillna will be

made,
"The judlif hu aanetioned

Mr. Cofeman\ execution to

being I apectiltor &amp;port," aald
Lori Leon, 1111 attorney repre·
aendng Colel\\lln.
Alao Tuesday, Colem~n'•
lawyeraasked the 6th U.S. Circult Court of Appeal! In
Cinclnniltl Ill 11op the execudon.
.
'rhe request Will part of an
appeal of a U.S. District Court

* ,. . .

ror

.

Democrats: Vote * *
Dr. Eric Hasemeier
for Ohio House of Representatives
EdUCitlon

"March For Meals"
.

.
Think~ to your QlntrOUI dOnltlonl 1nd IUpport, thl MIIQI Ienior

Center 1 Flret Annutl "Meroh for Metlt" o1mp1lgn reoelvtd · over
15,000.00 In contrlbutlont.
Your plrtlclpttlon h11 helped to m1k1 our entire community IWirt of
the dilly nutrltlontl ntedt of the 200 older 1dult1 who receive Home
Delivered Mella. Your ltlltttnce will help u1 to continue the Home
Delivered M..l progr1m.
Agtln, the Mtlge Bin lor Center atatf 1ppreol1tel your eupport.
Sincerely, llellndl Wellington, Nutrition Director •
P1tty Plcktne, Aotlvltlte Dlreotor
Middleport Chun:h of Chrllt I FllltWoodl Churth v.M. I Fllhtr Funtrll Home
HtrriMOnviHe Elemenlill')'
1 Pomtroy Llbrll')' Stall'
1 V•uaJI•n'•
fllllsbul')' J.!lemtntll')'
1 .R«klprlnp Rlhlb
• RC, Coke, Peptl
Pomeroy Ellmenlll')'
• Trinity Chun:h ot
• Mtlp Middle S~hool
Rutland Eltmtnt•ry
Pomeroy
1nd 8t1ft
l!J.Food !ifrvlce
• RIK!klprlnp Fellowahlp • Channtl 'J7
BrownJ Food 8trv~a
Cllll
I WVVK 11M rroa
1'lnwlh)' Smllh
• Calllpolll Harley
• Community Chnt
Southern Lonl!lchooll
0~~~~0~'911=~'~iltli;ti
01111)' 8tnllntl
• C.C.
· ·
Melp Count)' Ch1mbtr
8U81n Melli lith 1riCie clwaltha Middle khool
Eamrn Hlp khool, Eu..rn Elemenlll')', Honor llodety, An Honor Sodtty, Prlnclp~l
Kdward•, Superlnttndtlit 0.1')'1 Will
.

• Dod01 of OtlfOPIIillc MttliliM
• Mtlltrl ollu~ntll Ainlilllllrllltn

• lldltlot of klttlct illlflllllttllftt

Wedneadly, April 24, 2002

www.mydally..ntlnel.com

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Joy FM spoilson Obituaries
Crabb ·
Stella Sanon
in concert

LOCAL BRIEFS

'

RACINE - Stella Irene Sarson, 66, R.:tcine, died Monday,
April 22, 2002, at Rocksprinl!' Rehabilitation Center in
Pomeroy.
She was born April 28, 1935, in Ripley, W.Va., daughter of
IY MARK H•• LI'IIIN
the late Holly and Ella Rhodes McCoy. She was a longtime
MHALLBURNOMYDAILYIIEGIS'IER.COM
friend
and employee of Dallas Hin Quality Farms and Arthur
: POINT PLEASANT -Joy FM is bringing one of Ameri. ca 's prentler Southern Gospel Groups back to the Tri-County Hill Greenhouses in Apple Grove,
Surviving are her daughters ahd sons-in-law, Barbara and
lrea.
Tom
Lane of Racine, Cheryl and Paul Milliron of Racine and
· This Friday night, the Crabb Family. along with Michael
Bowling, will be performing in concert at River Valley High Stella "Sammy" and Vernon Nobles of Racine; a son, Michael
School in Cheshire. Doors open at 6 p.m. and the concert starts Sarson of Racine; grandchildren: David Milliron, Tommy Lane
at7~~
. and his wife, Shellie, Brandy Lane, Becky Alley and Michelle
, "It's going to be a great time in the Lord;' Joy FM announc- Alley, a great grandchild, 'JYler Pavich; and a sister, Louise
Whictcomb ofWaverly.
·
er Beth Ann Rollins said.
.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her hus"We're really looking fofw:.rd to having them back.~' station
band,
Lewis; five brothers: Clarence, John, Clifford, Darrell and
!llanager R.:tndy Parsons said~ "They were here a few months
,
ago and put on a sensational program. People were really Billy; and a sister, Rose.
Services will be held Thuriday, April 25, 2002, at 11 a.m. at
blessed. Listeners have been asking when they'd be back, and
Letart
Falls Cemetery Chapel with Rev. James Satterfield .offiI'm happy to say that it's this Friday night." ·
"The Reason That I'm Standing," marks the lOth No.I song ciating.
Friends may call at Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood on
for the Crabb Family. From their first No. 1 song, "Please ForWednesday
from 6 to 9 p.m.
give Me," in 1998, the Crabb Family and Mike Bowling have
contiJ:tually added songs to their list of chart toppers.
All 10 of the Crabb Family's No. 1 songs were written by
founding member Gerald Crabb. He also wrote "Not Even a
·DEXTER- Orion Ray Nelson, 85, Dexter, died Tuesday,
Stone" which was a No.1 wng for the Perrys several years ago.
April
23, 2002, at Overbrook Center in Middleport.
.
Mike Bowling's "Thank God For The Preacher" was nominatHe wa1 born June 5, 1916;in Dexter, son of the late Pearley
ed for Country Gospel's Recorded Song OfThe Year. Gerald
also wrote Wade Spencer's "Just a PrayerAway," which Is nom· Hobart and Nellie E. Murray Nelson. He was retired in 1976
as a section foreman from the New York Central Railroad. He
inated for Bluegrass Recorded Song OfThe Year.
Tickets are $10 in advance, $12 at the door. They can be pur- was a member of the Dexter Church of Christ.
Surviving are his wife, Virginia D. Pierce Nelson of Dexter;
chased at Joy FM's studios in Point Pleasant and at Willows
two sons and daughters-in-law, Richard R. and Carol Nelson
Bible Bookstore in Point Pleasant.
·
of
Delaware, and Wayne E. and Marsha Nelson of Swanton;
Joy FM can be reached at 304-675-2727.
four g(andchildren: Melanie (Dean) Miley, Kristin R. Nelson,
Melissa L. (Dennis) Thornton, and Timothy W. Nelson; thrcG
great grandchildren: Joshua and Samantha Miley and Taylor
Thornton; a niece, Joyce (Pat) Cochran; a nephew, jerry
(Lennie) Davis, Gallipolis; and a sister-in-law, Carolyn J. (Otis)
Litchfield, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his brother,
Hobart Nelsori, and his sister, Arline Davis.
· .
BY KMI DOTION .
Services will be held at 1 p.m. on friday. April 26, 2002 at
KDOTSONOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport with Rev. James Keesee
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio's 4-H will have a new headquarters officiating. Burial will foUow at Vomchriltz Cemetery in .De)Clocated in Columbus called the Ohio 4·1-1 Center affording 4- ter.
·
H members, volunteers, other community organizations and all
Friends may tall at the funeral home on Thursday from 2 to
other Ohio State University partners the opportunity of hav- 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.
·
ing a state-of-the-art center with a multi-purpose space for
hands-on program opportunities.
• The 40,000 square foot, $12 million center will have educa·
tiona! conference and classroom facilities, and technology that
. will link the Ohio 4-H Center to Ohio's 88 counties, the
nation and to the world.
. A fund-raising effort is being spearheaded by, the Ohio 4-H
'
fouhdation steering committee, of which local Ohio Valley
Youn~r
Bank Vice President Jim Dailey is chairman.
• "We starte~ this several yean ago," said Dailey. "The Ohio ·LONDON- Erneat H. Young, Sr., 72, London, died MonFarm Bureau 'Federation and Nationwide Insurance Founda- day. April 22, 2002, at Riverside Methodist Medical Center.
He was born in Mei~ County on Feb. 17, 1930, son of
tion announced a S4 million challenge grant for the 4-H cenArthur
and Ida Warner Young. He was a veteran of the U.S.
·rer. Every $2 raised by 4-H members and volunteers will. be
matched with $1 from Nationwide. In addition, Nationwide A(my during the Korean Conflict.
Surviving are hi1 daughters and sons-in-law. Tammy and
promised an initial $2 million to the project in September
David Bell of Kentucky, Sherry Young of London, Freda and
2000."
Gary Harris of Harrisburg; two som and daughters-in-law,
; So far SS.S million has been raised.
,!lrnest,
Jr. and Pammy Young of London, and Arthur and April
"The Gallia County 4-H advison were the first to come
Young of London; 14 grandchildren; 10 great grandchildren; a
forth and make a pledge to the building;' said Dailey.
"lt'fi be located on the northwest corner of Lane Avenue and si1ter, Wanda Adanu of London and several nieces and
Fred Taylor Drive acro11 from the Shottenstein Center;' he nephew1.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by Linda Ebenadded. "It will be a atate-of-the•art facility, not an office buildbach
Young; a brother, Elmer Young; and a sister, Ruby FerIng, but a learning center for viliton, 4-H members and adviaots that will provide conferencing, training and other educa- nando.
The family invites friends to call at the Rader-Lynch and
tional opportUnities.
,
"We have outgrown the OSU Ag Administrative building on Dodds Funeral Home in London on Wednesday from 5 to 8
campus, but more Importantly we will have the ability to hold p.m., whete .services will be held Thursday at fOa.m. with Rev.
teleconferences with Gallia couutians. Live telecasts to do Charles Manning officiating. Burial will follow in Pine Grove
.training without physically having to go to the center," Dailey Cemetery in Middleport.
laid.
·
. Dailey said that the (oremolt thing people wanted from the
center is for it to be "theirs" - a place where every county
)VOUld take ownership and feel at home there;
·
, Each county and dub is taking part in the fund-railing. There
Premier- 9.75
Federal Mogul - .52
ant 25,000 volunteers and 286,000 4-H members in Ohio's 4-H. AEP-48.03
USB-23.20
Alch Coal - 23.46
Rockwtll - 20.&gt;48
: "We're growing, not shrinking, and that says a lot when you Akzo-42.72
Gannett - 77.13
Rocky Sootl - 8.40
jhink of bow many other actiYitles youth can be involved in AmTectvBBC- 31 .28 General EIICir1c- 32.80 AD Shell - 53.14
OKNLV -8.18
Inc. - 41 .90
Searl - 53.96
these day1,'' said Dailey. "l got involved in 4-H because of Alltland
Hailey Devldlon- 54.89 Wal·Mart- 58.05
AT&amp;T-13.86
bVB's scholarship program (where 105 4-ijers have shared in Blnk One - 41 .50
. Kmart-1.34
Wendy'1 - 37.14
Kroger- 22.78
1181,000). 4-H kids are different. They overcome that fear of BLI-15.16
Wollhlngton - 14.72
l.ancll End- 51.12
public speaking, can relate to adults and basically, well, 4-H Bob Ev1111 - 30.08
Dally
atock reportl ara
Ud. -19.118
BorgWam., - 81 .32
tha
4
p.m. clollng
teally producea great kids:' ·
·
NSC-22.1111
Champion - 2.98
qUotee
of
the previous
: Groundbreaking for the Ohio 4-H Center is scheduled for Charming Shopl- 9 Ol!k HI Fnn:ill- 20.96
~v·•
tr111eacttont,
proOVB-24.34
Cl1y Holding - 18.20
Sept. 7.
·
1/ided
by
Bml1h
Partntr1
BBT-37.95
Col-24.10
· To mae a donation or to pt Information on the project, DG-15.86
11 Advelt Inc. of Gal·
Pecpift-28
llpolll.
.
Pep~lcO - 62.20
you can ~ontact the Ohio 4-H Foundation at 2120 FYffe DuPonl-44.84
P.,oad, Columbu1, Ohio 43210,614-247-6904 .

Orion Nelson

Gallia steps up to back
new 4-H state center

Deaths

Emest H.

Road address;
• Kathryn Frasure of Dexter
POMEROY - Tuppers reported the theft of a .38 calPlains-Chester Water District iber revolver from her residence;
plans an outage for Thursday
• Autumn Goode of
from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Pomeroy reported a teleBedford Thwnship, for Rock- phone harassment complaint;
springs Raod from Kingsbury · • Robert Calhoun of CarpenRoad to Cook Road.
ter Hill Road reported a breakWhen service is restored, in at his residence. A firearm,
customers will be under a boil medication and a microwave
advisory until a sample is were taken during the bll!ak-in;
taken and results are received.
• Charles Meeks of Gilkey
All cooking and drinking Ridge reported a break in 'at
water should be boiled for his residence, which resulted
three minutes.
in the 'theft of a Beretta 9MM
pistol and a stero;
• Myron Miller of Dutchtown reported a theft of
POMEROY - Units of money from his residence;
the Meigs Emergency Service
• Karen Hart reported that
answered eight calls for assis- damage was done to her van ;
tance on Tuesday. Units
• Chuck Hawkins of Rut;
responded as follows:
land reported he was struck
CENTRAL DISPATCH with a tire tool. Charges are
2:27 a.m.. Vomce R.pad, Stef.1 currently pending.
Williams. Holzer Me-dical Center;
6:13 a.m., Price Strong ·
Road , Barbara Buck, HMC;
8:29 a.m., Ohio 338,
Robert Johnson Sr., Jackson
RACINE
General Hospital;
Racine/Southern
Alumni
12:04 p.m., Overbrook
Nursing · Center, Barbara Association will hold their
Hayes, PleasantVaUey Hospital; annual banquet on May 25 at
6:44 p.m., South Second, Southern High School. Dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m.
Mary Pickens, treated;
Tickets can be purchased
7:25 p.m., Unio'1 Avenue,
for S12 at Southern High
Larry Klein, HMC.
School,
Racine
Home
POMEROY
· 1:05 p.m., Second Street, National . Bank, or by calling
Robert L. Kuhn, O'Bieness Shirley Johnson at 843-8579 .
Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND .
1: 13 p.m., Old Dexter
RACINE - Friends ofthe
Road, motor vehicle acci- Library will have a book sale at
dent,Jerry Vankirk, treated.
the Racine Library May 3 and .
4, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. A second
book sale will be held on May
9 and 10 at · the Pomeroy
Library. All categories ofbooks
are
available. Books are given
POMEROY - Several
complaints are under inves.ti- . for a donation to the Friends.
gation by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department.
According to Sheriff Ralph ·
E. Trussell:
• Charles Payne of Letart
POMEROY
Boats,
Falls reported a trespassing campers, jet skis · and other
and criminal damage incident items stored in the building on
when two unknown individ- the fairgrounds are to be
uals went fishing without per- removed Saturday. Members of
mission and cut a fence to get the fair board will be there
to the pond;
beginning at 10 a.m. and indi• Jack Jenkins of Star Hall vidual! with itcm1 to take out
Road reported someone had of storage• areI asked to be there
damaged his 1995 Jeep Wran- as early as possible to empty the
gler by putting bleach in his gas building. Those not removing
tank. He also reported itenu their possessions that day will
were taken from his residence; be charged an additional fee.
• Faye Campbell of Dexter
reported a telephone harassment complaint;
• Rebecca Grate of Chester
POMEROY - SaveWell
reported ~ telephone harasse- of Cleveland has issued the
ment complaint;
following corrections to a
• Mike Appel of Carpenter story that appeared in the
Hill Road reported that . April 11 edition of the The
someone backed a van into Daily Sentinel dealing with
his yard and 'Caused damage;
prescription drug relief
• Danny Barrett of Dexter offered by the company:
reported a telephone harms• The cost of the card is $84
ment complaint; ·
·a year. not S52 a year, and
• Brandy Stark of Pomeroy serves a household of 10.
reported she received a dog
• The · correct number to
bite from a neighbor's dog. She call for information is 1-877was treated at Holur Medical SAVEWELL (1 -877-729Center for the injuries;
3935).
• Tuppers Plains Chester · • The fax number listed in
Water District reported a theft the article is no longer in
of water from a Gold Ridge operation.

Plan outage

Sr.

LOCAL STOCKS.

EMS runs

Banquet
planned

Book sale

Complaints
probed

Remove
from storage

Conrec:tion

Current Potltlorit

Owntf tnd Mtdlcll DlrtCIOI tl
Oft Coli M1dktl AJ!od11t1, AtlttM, OH
• CHIIIUI IICYIIj, O.U..C.O.M.
I

•

I•

The Daily Sentinel
Ruder Services
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01o1o

=

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One 'J~:m-·-- 12

Dr. Eric HINmtltr ·
l.tldtrsh lp Experience .

Flmlly Life
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.Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

w.dn11d!J. Apl!l 24. 2002',

'J_t!!l!!!l~e!!....!B!::!e!.!n~d!!!..____~WH~~·~.~. ,r:!~!!!!2~~
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.The oany Sentinel

•

Graduation ce e ration protoco

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.H2•21 58 • FIX: 74o-H2•2157
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Ohio· Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
O.neral Manager

Diane Key Hill
Controller

IAHtNI'' the. tdllfW urt wttl1't1m1. 1'hl','f l'huuiJ b1 lrnlh41" JOO wurdJ. AllltUif'l
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Rli!P

NATIONAL VIEW

Rude?
It may be that polls find there~
more complaining going on

PERKINS' VIEW

Rights should be acc~rded to victims of crime as w~ll

• Dayton (Ohio) Daily News: A new .~paper reports: "A
J
nationwide polllinds Ameri(uns arc not nearly as nice us we
used to be." We're n1dcr.
Cynthia Casey appeared before the
that courts consider victims' cluimsfor
Now, just huw do you suppose a poll could determine that?
Utah
Supreme
Court
last
month.
She
restitution.
It couldn't, of course. All it cun determine is that people say
argued she was denied the right to be
There is, of course, the usuul refle~t·
there is more rudeness these days. But come on! People
heard
at
the
change-of-plea
hearing
of
ive
opposition to amending ·the i
always say things are getting worse. That's just nostalgia for
the man who molested her I 0-year·old
Constitution - for victims' rights on ,
youth at work.
son.
any other purpose. If it is not already il'lt
In the poll, 73 percent of respondents said people treated
The defendant was originally charged
~
the Bill of R1ghts, the argument gocs 1 •
each other with more courtesy in the past. The respondents
in
a
state
district
coun
with
aggravated
then the nation's founders obviously"
cited cell phones, cars und store clerks us part of the current
s,:xual abuse of a child, a tirst-degree .
•
did not deem it necessary. '
"
rudeness problem.
felony.
However,
the
prosecutor
in
the
But
Feinstein
cnunlcrcd
thai
argu.
.
In rebuttal, some gcMxl trends o1.1ght to be noted: ·
1
case offered to reduce the rap to "lewd·
ment the last time the victims' rights
New York City, once the national capital of rudeness, no
~ess involvin~ a chil~,'' a misdemeanor,
COLUMNIST
amendment was debated in Congress,.
longer has any such reputation.
m
e~tchunge
for
a
gUilty
plea.
·
''In 1789," she noted, "l.hcre were notl
Movie the.aters have started running notices. that people
Casey objected. And she wanted the
9 mil.lion victims of violent crime each~
really shouldn't talk all the way through a movie. And this
district
court
to
know
it.
But
by
the
till)e
molested
him,
and
second
by
a
court
year. In fact, victims ot· violeni.crime!
seems to be working.
.
the aggrieved mother was given the that hears a plea for leniency·•by the each year in this country now outnum.:
The large· corporations that own chain stores, hotels and.
chance
to make her feelings known, the criminal, while giving. short shrift to a ber the country's ·entire population:
whatnot require their employees to attempt courtesy, whether
court had already accepted the plea plea for justice by the victim.
when the Constitution wns written." l
it co!ll~S naturally to th~m or not. That, too, seems to help.
agreement
and
sentenced
the
child
For
several
years
now,
Sens.
Dianne
Indeed, never in his worst nightmare:
It IS mterestmg that, m a day when people complain that
molester to a mere eight months behind Feinstein, the California Democrat, and could James Madison, author of the Bill:
·you can't say anything anymore for fear of offendin!l some
John Kyl, theAriwna Republican, have of Rights, have imagined that th~
gender, race, age or oth~r group, they also complam that . bars.
Utah's
highest
court
affirmed
that
tried to win passage of a.constitutional United States would be as lawless, a1 ·
there's more offendmg gomg on.
Casey should have been heard during amendment that would place the violent, as it is today. 11lat an aggravut- ·
Maybe there's just more complaining. What we know for
the change-of-plea hearin~ and before nation's victims of violent crime on ed assault would be committed every
sure is that a poll would lind that people think there's more
sentencing. Nevertheless, 11 upheld the equal footing with criminal offenders. 29 second~. according to the FBI Crime·
coQJplaining going on.
·
lower-court ruling.
· And this week their proposed victims' Clock. A robbery every 54 seconds. N
And that is how courts throughout the rights amendment received an enthusi- forcible rape every si~t minutes. A muro:
country routinely .treat crime victims astic endorsement from President.Bush, der every 27 minutes. Murderers and
and their families, even in states like who noted that victims all too often are rapists, armed robbers and child molesUtah that boast victims' rights laws, •or "an afterthought in our criminal justice tcrs all enjoy the protection of tho
'' system." ·
C
· ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRES S
th~ scal.es. of justice\ are tilted against
The p~sed amendment 1.,. stral·ght· oThnstlluthiO~. . .
cc
'
Today is Wednesday, Apri124, the I 14th day of2002. There
cnme v1CI1ms.
'
at t eJr VIctims are not uuordecJ
are 251 days left in the year.
Indeed, the rights of the criminally forward. ' e rights of victims of vio· comparable protection can hardly be
Today's Highlight in History:
accused _ including the right to legal lent crime are hereby established and held out as the exprm intent of the
On April 24, 1800, Congress approved a bill establishing
counsel, to due process, to a speedy shall not be denied by any state or the nation's founders . Ruther, it was more
the Library of Congress.
.
trial, to an impartial jury of peers, to U~jted Stateeds,"bit declares.
likely an oversight on their part.
On this date:
i
·
·
confront witnesses, a"ainst self·incrim·
approv
Y11 two-thirds majority For far too long the criminal justice
· ·
h 10
.
S of the House and Senate and then rat1- system has been imbalanced in favor of
In 1792, the national anthem of Fmnce, "La Marseillaise,"
matlon
are
set
ort
the
U.
· fied btv, at lea•t
· · I of fenders
·
" 38 of 'the 50 s·tates, the cnmma
. Crime victims
. .
was composed by Capt. Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle.
Constltutlon.
·constitutional amendment would d
In 1877, federal troops were ordered out of New Orleans,
Crime victims have no standing
. h . . be . ·r:ed f b eserve the same standing under the
ending the North's post-Civil War rule in the South.
under the Constitution. Whatever ~ulre t at VICtu~s nothl 0 pu · law, and the victims' ri~hls amendment
. h .. 1h
.
he court proceedmgs and that they be sponsored by Sens. Fem~tein and Kyl
In 1898,.Spai n declared war on the United States after
"ng
ts
ey
clatm
are
defined
by
statu·
allowed
to be heard at sentencing and and endorsed by President Bush would
rejecting Ameri.ca's ultimatum to withdraw from Cuba.
.
tory law. And when statutory law
1h ·
ln 1915, the Ottoman Turkish Empire began the brutal ma~s
comes into conflict with constitutional paro e eann~s.
finally give it to them.
deponation of Armenians during World War I.
law, statutory law bt'el"".
It alsa wou d require that victims be
""
notified when their attackers are (Jo.reph Perk/no~ i.r a (·olumnist for
ln 1916, some I,600 Irish nationalists launched the Easter
So a sexually a used child is twice relea~ (or escape) from prison and The San · Die flo Union· Tribune
Rising by seizing several key sites in Dublin. (The rising was
victimized.
First, by the man who
Jo.feph.Perkin.rUnionTrib.com.)
!
. put down by British forces several days later.)
. I
I
ln 1953, British statesman Winston Churchill wa~ knighted
by Queen Elizabeth 0.
I~ 1962, the Massachusetts Institute of T~hnology
'HARDBALL'
•
achteved the first satellite relay ofa television signal, between
Camp Parks, Calif., and Westford, Mas's.
ln 1968, leftist student~ at Columbia University in New
i
york began a week-long occupation of several campus buildmgs.
.
In 1970, the People's Republic of China launched it~ lirst
WA.SHJNGTON - For dec~il, the Arabs th~n there ar~ Israeli~. to? Elected to HtaRd guard over Israel,
·satellite, which kept transmitting a song, "The East is Red."
· l~raeh. Defense Force guar~ 1ts secu· De!'logr.tphtcally, the Jew1sh state ts he spends his days playing prison
· In 1980, the Umted States launched an abonive attempt to
nty wJth a rou~. yet effect1':e• rule of an tsland 1n an Ar~ian Ilia; Even if the guard to his nemesis, Vasser Arafat.
free the American hostages in Iran, a mission that resulted in
engage~ent: Kill an Israeh and 10 enemy casualty rauo remams at.3 to I,• The tighter a watch he keeps the more
the deaths of eight U.S. servicemen.
Arabs dte.
· Jsr~l will require a heroic wil~ to suf- abuse he . dumps on the Palestinian
Ten years ago: President Bush and Democratic challenger
But w~ happens when the enemy fer 1t for much longer. Isr..el 1s, after Authority leader, the further his poll
Bill Clinton made long-distance back'to-back appearances
wants. to dte? H.ow does the IDF pro- all, a very small country. If someone numbers drop and Arafat's rise
via satellite hookups before . the National Association of
teet even the co~er pizzeria if the does not know a casualty personally,
Shanm's problem is not a 'toss of
Hispanic Journalists meeting in Albuquerque, N.M.
en~my has th~ de!tbe~~ purpose of they su~ely ~ someone who does. nerve but of vision. There's a reason
Ftve years ago: The prosecution and defense presented
dym~ a!ong wtth hts vtcums~
· . The 1rony 1s thai . a "get ~ugh" why the old hard-liner is looking with
opening statements in the Oklahoma City bombing trial of
Thts !s the conundrum facmg ~ appearance that'll reflected in a higher "interest" at the Saudi plan for Arab
limothy McVeigh. The Senate voted 74-to-26 to approve the
defe.ndmg Israel from t~e .Pm~e Israeli mu{derratiowould trigger even ·recognition of Israel in exchan$e for
chemical weapons treaty, live days before the pact was to take
Mmtster to the young l.sraeh ~mg ~IS greater dangers. Were the JDF to retum Israel's withdrawal from the temtories
effect Comedian Pat Paulsen died in Mexico at age 69.
duty. HiJw .~ . You guard. ~ewtsh l!fe to f!le !'ld. JO..to-1 standard, that ~ld captUred in the 1967 war. When what
One year ago: A New Zealand air force plane rescued four
when ~e sutc!dal Paleliliman you re easdy.1gmte an even greater fire m the you've done for a half century doesn't
ailing Americans at an Antarctic research station. Reformer
P~~ung your ~le. from ~xpects Jslam1c world than the one burning work anymore, you: ve got to try someJunichiro Koizumi wa~ chosen pre~ident of Japan's ruling
h~s name to be glonfied 10 death! What today. It would Ieopardize Israel's thing else.
'
p~y, guaranteeing his election a~ the counlry's neM prime
kind of deterrence can you enforce "coW peace" with J:gypt and i!JI peace- Consider again this gruesome f~
mtmster. 1lle Supreme Coun ruled, 54, that police can arrest
:ovhen ~e kil!er knowR that his surviv· ful relations with moderate Jordan. · ~f suicide. When a youn¥ Palestiniatl
and hanclcuff people for minor traffic offenses. The Rev. Leon
mg f~tly wdl be honored and reward- . The option of tliCalation is alllO gird,s himself with dynamite and headt
~ullivan, a pioneerin~ civil righL~ cru~ader cred.ited with help~ w!th.comfort he could never pro- closed to Israel. Even if the LJ'nited . tooneofJerufilllem'sbusie!ltstreetcor&lt;
lh{\ end South Africa s system of apartheid, died in Scott'idale,
vtde m hfe?
States moves on Iraq, Saddam ners. he carries a rich life insurance
Anz., at age 78.
Put even more bluntly, what do you Hulisein's llrst target will be 181"Jel. policy. He knows that his family wiA
Today's Birthdays: Critic Stanley Kauffmann is 86. Actor
do when, to paraphrase an old movie What would Hussein have to IO!ie by receive benefi!JI He imagines m hif
J.D. Cannon is 80. Actress Shirley Macl..aine is 68. Author
line, you_r enemy's suicide means Juring the Arab world's 10051 'bated mind the afterSiow of celebrity thai:
Sue Grafton is 62. Actress-singer-dirt4:tor Barbra Streisand is
neve~ ~vmg to say you're SO!Ty?
~y into a fight? Whatever retalia- will He«le on hili name.
'
~· Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley i!i 60. Country sin~er
. Thill ~~ the ~ game, ~I finds uon comes from Israel would be offset The question is, how do you "get
Richard Sterban (Tile (}.Jk Ridge Boys) is 59. Rock music1an
ttself losmg. Smce Sharon s VIlli! to the by the elevaiN position HWisein rough" with an enemy who asb onlt
Doug Clifford (Creedence Clearwater Revival) is 57. A'-1or·
~emple Mount in September 2000, a would 8S11UIII¢ in the huge land of that you Jet him die'l
l
playwright Eric Bogosian is 49. Actor Michael O'Keefe is 47.
Site m East 1er:maJem sacred to l?oth IJilanL
· ·
Chriw MartluwM, autlw of "Now. Let
kock musician David J CB!UJhaus) is 45. Rock musician Billy
Jew and Mushm, nearly 1.200 hves
The man confronting thill vacuity of Me Tell You Wha1 I Really Think"
Gould (fatth No More) ~~ 39. Actor-comedian Cedric the
have ~n lost.
•
opti0118 ifl Ariel Sharon. Having just (Free Press; 2{){)1) and "Hardball"
Entertainer is 38. Rock musician Patty Schemel (Hole) is 35.
While a VJetnam-like "body count" Wl11td 14. this Jlol~ier•politician is able (Touchsw11e Boou, 1999), is a IUJtlolfr
Rock musician Aaron Come~s (Spin Doctors) is 34.
show~ ~f~ o_f the .dead were ~I~ bac~ on~ hfe of wars~ elec- ally syndicated coluntniNifor lhe &amp;u,.
Thought for Today: "Never practice what you preach. If
Palest1J113!1! ~IS prov~s hule solace uons.m which .hu gel·toUgh pohcy has Francisco Chronicle and 1he hosl oj
you're going to pr;tetice it, why preach it':"' - Lincoln
to the politiC~ and cmzens of Israel. cenamly held lUI own.
"Hardball" on CNBC and MSNB€
Steffens, American joumalist-refOil)ler ( 1866-1936).
For one thmg, ~here are loU more
But wbat·taA Sharon look forward cable clumnels.
'
.
&gt;

h
osep
.
erK.ins

TODAY IN HISTORY

Suicide . m~ans. never having to say you're. sorry l

.

.

DEAil ABBY: I am a hiah
achool senior. With araduation day
fall approachina. I have some
preuina qu,ations.
.fim, what are the rulu of etiquette reprdina sendina lnvita·
tiona/announcement•~ Do I have
to invite all the me'Tib~rs of my
family to my 1radu. n party that
ia supposed to be fo1· my friends?
(I would rather not even see moll
of these relatives, but my Brandmother is insistin1 that I invite
them.)
Second, what is the best way to
keep track o( gifts, so I can properly thank the gift-givers?
Abby, I have been reading your
· column since I learned how to
read and would greatly appreciate
your input. POLITE

t

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
SEN[OR DUDE IN AMARIL·
LO,TBXAS
DEAR DUDE: Ask your puents if you can have two separAte
gatherings - one for family and
the other for your. contcmpo•
rllries .. (Try to give family mem" ·
bers the benefit of the doubt. As
you get older, their finer qualities
may emerge.)

Write what each penon !Jives
you on the card that acconlpanles
the gift. That Wly, you can easily
keep track of who aave what
when it comes time to aend
that\k-you notes, be.cauae it's
always a nice touch to refer to the
gift in your note.
P.S. Best orluck to you, grad!
DEAR ABBY: My sisttr ~nd l
have both becomt engaged. We are
very close and are considering a
double wedding. Our fiances think
it's a ncar idea. I've never boen to
a do1.1ble wedding and luve no
idea how it works. Con you please
help us!- NEWLY ENGAGED
[N EL PA.SO
.
DEAR NEWLY ENGAGED:
Double wudtlinl!ll uru cxtru-spcciul
cwnts - n11d they ca n reduce

expenses.
I discuss this topic - and more
· - in my bq,oklet, "How to H~ve a
Lovely WlddiniJ." It can be
ordered by sendina a busineuaized, self-addreased envelope, plus
a check or money order for S5
(U.S. funds) to: Dear ·Abby Wedding Booklet, P.O. Box 447,
Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447.
(Postage is included in th~~rice . )
However, since you uke Qbout
double weddinl!', I will offer somv
tips fron1 the booklet:
'IWo sisters or close friends m~y
wish to be muri~d in the same
ceremony.
. They may shore the mne mendants or uch . may haw her own
maid of honor. Each groom will,
of co urse, huve his own best man.

Meigs teacher reviews
life of Warren G. Harding
POMEROY - A lesson in
history on the life and service
of one of Ohio's presidenti,
.Warren G. Harding, was given
by James Oliphant for members of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American Revolution.
The Meigs High School
teacher
gave a history of the
life
and
times of the
29th president elected in 1920.
A native of
Marion, he
Ollphlnt
was the first
American
president to take office after
World War I and the first
president born after the Civil
War, Oliphant noted.
In 1891, Harding married
the divorced florence Kling
DeWolfe, five years his senior,
and the daughter of Marion's

leading banker, Oliphant continued. He described her as a
strong willed lady that
brought
Harding
little
domestic happiness, but who
Wll instrumental in his sucCCJS as the owner of a busine11
and in his political career. She
was said to have worked tirelessly for his election as presidcnt in 1920, and i·n her own
words said "I have only one .
real hobby - my husband."
Oiiphant noted that Mrs.
Harding did, however, have
mixed feelings about her huaband's nomination for president In 1920. Both were in
poor health and she was
aware . of his extramarital
aft'ain, but they never became
a campaign 111ue. florence
Hardlng proved to be an
active campaig.,er and Harding won by a huge popular
and electorial major!tiet.
When the Hardings moved
into the White House,
Oliphant continued, the

opened the m~n sion and
IJtOUild! to the public and
thr~w herself into the job of
Fint Lady with energy and
will power.
Republicans in Congrel!
easily got thu president's signature on billi. They eliminatcd wartime controli and
shishcd taxes, c!tnbli!lwd a
federal · budget
system,
restored the high protective
tariff, and imposed tight lhni.tation&amp; upon immigration.
!Jy 1923, the postwar
deprc11ion seemed to be giving away to R new surge of
prosperity and newspapen
hailed Harding u a wise
stateunan •arrying 011t .hit
can1palgn pronuse "Leu government In butlnesa and more
business in government."
[n conclusion, Oliphant
talked about the trip the
Hardlngs took to Alatka and
the western United Statet, of
his health worsening; and hit

.

d~ath

in San f'rancisco in
1923 . Upon returning to
Washington, J),C., he uid
florence Harding destroyed
presidential papers that might
eti1barn11 him before attending his fun eral. She died In
Marion in 1924 and II buried
there in a memori~l tomb
next to her hmband.
Abbie Stratton, regent, dbcussed 11ravc, marking plans
and plam for the celebration
neKt year of the 95th anniversary of the chartering of the
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chnpter. Mary K. Yost gave
the flag fact: The flag of the
United Statc1 of America
should be dilplayed ·daily. .
Hosten for the meeting
were Patrlda Holter, Betty
Milhoan and Peggy Moore.
The next meeting of the
Return Jonathan Meip
Chapter DAR will be held at
the Racine Public Library on
May 11 at 10 a.m.

If they tlellre, each bride may

or honor to the
other bride, and each groom nuy
serve u beat nun to the other
serve u mAid

l!fOOI\l.

The brides do NOT need to
dress alike.
The eosrumcs of the mendants
should harmonite, although they
need not be identical ..
If th'c bride'! .re nut sisters,
ehureh and r..eeption invitlliona
must be iuued scpantely.
The reception is umally given
jointly, and either nne or separate
receiving lines may be formed.
(P.wliue PliilliiJI ami. Iter tidughltr
jta1111e Pliillips sl1i1re r~e pseudony111
llb(~uil Ml11 Bul't'n. Writr Dear Abby
til www./)twtlbby.tmtl or P. 0 . Box
6!i4~0, l.&lt;~s thl,~rlrs,

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was 18-1/2 inches long.
Grandparents are Charlie
and Karen WiUiamt of Rutland, and Dick and Chadotte
RACrNE - Rich and c .ar- Wamsley of Racine. Great.rle Wamtley of Racme grandparents are Eva Teaford
_,.,...._ _....,. announce
of Racine and Lillie Moore of
the .birth of Clarklburg, W.Va .
a so.n, Clayton
Lee
Wanuley,on
·Mar.h 18 at
St. Jo•eph's
Hotpital in ALBANY - Misty and
Timothy Althou5c of Albany
Parken~-~~.., burg, W.Va. announce the birth of a
daughter, Jadelyn Ra4!, born
~W-"Y
He
on April 13 at the O'Bicness
weighted
five pound., two ounces and Memorial Hospital.

announced

AlthouHS
announce birth

•

.

A call for poem•

She has a tister, Mikayla
McCabe. Grandparents are
Write a poem and win
Ron and Dian Hy1cll and
Marvin and Bonnie Althoute the $1000 grand prize.
ofAlbany, and Steve and Char- Hollywood's famous Poet
lene Chaney of Pomeroy. · Society II 1ponsoring a
new poetry contett, open
to everyone, with no entry

· NOll reports

for duty

fcc .

To enter tend a poem of

Navy Lt. 21 lines or len to~ free

ALBANY Shawn M. Noga lm recently
reported . for duty at Aircraft
Intermediate M~iutcnaucc
Qcpartmcnt, Naval Air Station, Kcflavik. lcJ:land.
Noga il a 191:!7 graduate of
f.lenndcr High School.

Poetry Con·tJ!It, 1626 N.
Wilcox Ave #1 26, or enter
o.n linc at www.famouspocu.com. A winner's list
wi ll be sent to all cntranu.
Deadline for entering is
May 11, 2002.

Thurtday, April 25
TUPPERS PLAINS
.,._ permits and can- VFW POll 9053, Tuppers
not be gu.ranteed to be Plaint, wfl meet Thurlday,
~nted a epeclflc num- 7:30 p.m. at 1he poll homl.
OfllcM wll bl eltcttd and a
ofct.ye.
draWing wM be held.
' Wtdnntrr,Aprll24
ATHENS - SuMvol'l . ot
MIDDlEPORT - Middle
po11 Utenuy Club me11t at 2 Suicide SUpport GrotJP, 7 p.m
p.m. at the home ot Gay Thullday, Athene Church of
Perrin. Jetliw Bowen Will Chrltt, .785 W. Union St.,
lud • dlec:uttlon of "'ce AltleM. For more Informa.Bound' by Or. Jant Nleflen. tion, call593-7414.

"*'"

POMEROY - Meeting,
Poplar Ridge Ridge FWS
Church, ott Ohio 564. John
Elewlck, epeaker, Elernlly of
Point Pllaeant to sing, 6:30
p.m. Su~y.

Monday, April 2il
RUTLAND - Slaff from
lhe Meigs County TB Clinic
will be giving ekln tnte at
lhe Rutland Flrt Department
from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Skin 1es11 will be read on

MayBtb

. ONLY

$10.00
Ineludet Photo

Jane Doe
Pomeroy

· DeadUne:
May 2nd at 5:00 p.m.

1
II

PMnt~ --------~-------------- 1

· Wednetday from 4:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Pomeroy IJII 5:30 p.m. For mor1 lnforChurch of Chrlet, tree com· mallon, call 992-3722.

lu~. Apt1128

1X2AdRUDI

Addr•• ----------~-----------------

Friday, April 26

munlty dinner Friday with
HIVIng from 5:30 to 7:30
p.m. Public lnvlled.
·

JIHUIIcf,. 1/t. .JII/IIIJ oj .Af.Ji&lt;:IM

Name of
Place of Employment
YourName

CALENDAR
POMEROY - Childhood
Immunization Clinic 1·3 p.m.
at Mtlgt County Health
Department. Children mt.m
be accompanied by parent
or lfgal guardian and shot
record mull be provided.

MAY 6 ·12

·------------------------,
NurN'------·----~ I

MEIGS
: Community Calendar
le publlehad u 1 trH
aervlce to non·proflt
to
groupe · wlahlng
announce meeting• and
special events. The cal·
endar le not dHigned to
pro!llote uiH or fundriiNra of any type.
heme .,. printed only u

.... ,,.,,.
-······

lidW . . . .

Meigs Notebook
Wamsley birth

CA !IOOiill,)

Ads Mult.Be Prepaid

I

·~·-------------~----------~
.
'

Malt or Drop off at

~!vale

TUPPERS PLAINS Bethel Worship Center,
localed In the Tuppert .
Plaint School, will holl a
week of spiritual renewal
April 28 to May 4 at 7 p.m.
each day. P..tor Lonnla
Coate, from Reetoratlon
Chrletlan Fellowship of
Alhene, will be the gunt
speaker and !here wll be
special
music
every
evening. For Information,
call Putor Rob Barber at
740-667-6793.

The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
All ads must be prepaid ·

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel-

"'~,,~ f? Tlt~l ,, ~...

�1t111 A I • Tr. Del!y SentiMI

The Daily Sentinel .

Pllp81

Handmade
Holiday Tre118111'e8
Spring Craft Show

reviews Jane
•'
Austen I

. . . . . . . . . . M.ltll

'WEDNFsn\Ys .

HIGHLIGHIS

llhkfmw...·.

- Middle·
port Literary Club members
n:vicw.,d a J•ne Austen biog- ·
raphy when they· met recently at the honie oflda Diehl in
Pomeroy.
leah
Ord,
president,
opened the 1\teeting, and the
club collect Wil! repeated. A
card was signed for an ill
member, Ord announced
upcoming meetings, iltcludmg ·a group discussiotl of the
autobiography, "ke Bound,"
Shields is along-time lan of
at the next meeting. DbcUs· Austen, and is extremely
sio n question sheets were well-qualified to write this
passed out. A picnic will be biography, Not only is the
held for the group meeting book an entertaining account
on May B at 1 p.m.
of Austen's life, but contains
Frattkie Hunnell; vice pres• collttl\ents and observatiom
id~nt, introduced Jeanne . about her novels.
Bowen for her review of Anyone searching for direct
"jane Austen " by Carol information about Austen
Shields. To illustrate her wiU fittd a scafl:ity of an evireview, Bowen displayed pic· dence of her llfe.The first line
turcs of homes in which of Shi~lds' book is, "Jane
Austen lived and a map show· Austen belongs to the nearly
ing towns a!!ociated with her unreachable put."
life and writini!J. She also
Very few of Austen's letters
related events In Jane's life to were preserved. She kept no
events taking plac~ iu the diary and only three noteUnlted State! at that titue.
books of her stories remain.
Bowen began her review by There arc no real, portraits of
telling the group that "Jane her. An author might be
Au lt~n" is a new biography of tempted to add specul~tlon
a ·favorite . British auth&lt;ll" of based on Austen's fictitltl, but
more than two centuries ago. Shields makes the point that
Among Shields' works ue Austen's books are fiction ~nd
"The Stone Diaries," a novel not autobiography, The
which earned her the Pulitzer reviewer pointed out thM we
Prize ln 1995.
cannot make assumptions

GlOUSTER - ~m tOOWt· u~ its domin»IC\' of -~ ~
t'.Oinpetition, eliminating moo
dlan..-e.sTrimbk h:ld of~ ......
kague lionNUn~ ~ w ~
DOVER - GaDla Academy\ Bri:mna johtiSOI'I and
Easrem \ . Garlt'lt IW't . ha~
~ l'Wlltd
"·1""·
..
~ tow Ohio
r
High School

. . . . .fTT ,.,• • , , .. ,

UUJtdiUIM.
5

a.-·..

Nlllftln•t.•

f

nfiQ't
...., u ut'
I

t

:·~

'•

.

Coildles
~tion

~ Atadtmic
• All-Ohio
.I

next full.

Karr. Wse&gt; 11 guard. l'liiTk'&lt;l a
4.()() GPA and a'ltr'Jged I5.0
PPG. He plans to &lt;~ttend . th~:
· Ohio St~te Univemty in the
full.
Familiar boys' names include
Logan\ R~n Swinehut,
M:triett:l's John Fan, Wheelersburg\ Andrew Burleson, 0~
Hill's j:unes 1\-mn, Belpre's Pat
Klein, and Ironton St. joe\ DiU
Dressel.
Othen on the girls' li~t
included Wheelersburg\ Emily
Hc:hl and Gl'lo'en \Megan 'Thckett, whq has signed with the
Uni~mty of Rio Grande.
The pla)ll:n on the . tc'.Ull
wen: selected by the coaches
association based on du:ir academic eNceUence and ~'Qntri­
butions to their reains.

SfJe Dan Polcyn's stoly
o Page 81 ·

an

CLEVELAND (AP) - It\
bad enough the Indians can~
steal bases. On Monday night,
it appears they had a b~se
stolen fio1n them.
In the fourth inning, Omar
Vizqud stole second, and as he
slid •into the base, the throw
from Chicago catcher Sandy
Alomar hit umpire Brian
Runse in the foot.
The ball skipped away, and
Vizquel went to third.
But Runse, who was positioned on the infield in fiont of
the bag, ruled d1e baU was dead
when it hit him, and Vizquel
wa,1 sent back to second .
However; according to Rule
5.08, "If a thrown ball accidentally touches a base coach, or a
pitched or thrown baU touches
an umpire, the ball is alive and
in play."
Indians manager Charlie
Manuel was convinced the call
was wrong.
"I want to hear what they
have to say about that one," said
Manuel.
What made the ruling hurt
even more was that after being
sent back to second, Vizquel
. got thrown ouc at home trying
to score on a double.
Manuel wa,1 hoping for an
interpretation from crew chief
Chuck Meriwether.

X3 Greeting $10.00 1X5 Greeting· $13.00

. Happy
Mother's
Day

Happy
Mother's Day

Sentinel·

BWt.~

fum.
Johnson, a
IKan
senior guard.
cmieda4.00
GPA and averaged 18.0 points
per game md will awmd St.
~ter\ College in New .Jemy
~

a heartfelt "Thank You" coul(_be
you could ever olve your mother.
,Don't miss this opportunity to say lt.

ble than others. I think you are
one of these people wlth
"nontextbook"
ilnatomy.
Because of your bone and Jigament structure, actlvltles that'
many people perform without
difficulty cause your wrist
dtgtJIIfl'(ltJvt ~777
bones to slip and slide around
of asynovlo/ Hmng thclt more than Is Ideal. This pro·
CCUfS Ql (I COftlliluent:l
duces painful stretching of
of rep«tted ITGUII'ICII.
supporting ligaments and or
pinching of the synovial lining
complaint because a l!llllgllon of Involved jointS. This would
cyst Is a·sack-like bul&lt;&gt;in" tim ·exp.lain the episo~es of hand,
" "
t d
pa
h
originates from a joint or a . wm an arm m you ave
tendon sheath and becomes experienced.
"ill d , h
. . tl 'd
One potential long term
u c w1t synov1a1 u1 .
•
h "·
d
consequence of halllng many
, The anw an wrlm are - . d f hJ
f .
common sites for .,":lri~ion epuo
el
o
t
s
type
o
h
d
all Injury,d
cysts because of the arge w · at we octon
e
·
1repeate
·
f.
number of jolnu there You rn1crotrauma,11 susta mng au see &lt;&gt;•nglion cysll are beiil!lled ficient cumulative injury to
•.,..
b1 b
gli
to be a degenerative process of r ng a out a tP.n on cyst.
a synovial lining that ccurs as a . So what should you d!l1
f
d
!'lint you need to see your
consequence o repeate trau·
•
.
.
. .
mal· At the cyst dl!llelops • the doctor· to de.terrruned' tf my
fluid within it stretches the til· gueu II ._an a~~urate tagnosl!
sue· to. form a "bump:' The of your cond1t1on. If so, he or
description ol a cyst may cause the ~ill probably recommend
a reader who has never had. exerctses to keep .the musdet
one ~fthese to assume that the that move the .wrut and hand
cyst Is a soil fleshy bump. Not 1n ~p condm~n. ~ong with
to I In fact, fro~ the feel of a avotdance. of activttte! that you
cytt 1t 1s 10~~umes d1Uicult to know Will hurt you. Molt
determine 1f tt u a solid tumor ganglion cysu need no treator not.
ment. However, particularly
The firm cytt can push large . o~ pai~ful ov.~• ~ay
upon adjal:ent tiuue and, require mjectton or lutg"al
thereby, cause paiH. In the removal to !lop the pain.Your
wrist lt can wen cause endugh family doctor or an o!thopepre11urc to cause dahtage to dlc 1urgeon ca~ adVIse ~ou
bone.
about your chotec for hrnng
I think the wrltt pain you optimal pain·free writt tUnchave experienced since ~hild- tlon.
hood it the consequenc~ of (Family Mtdldlll It a wtlt/y
the way your wr!.tt are made. · column. To 111bmlt qut~tlons, wrltt
Un(ortunately, not everyone II lo jolrn C. Wo!£ D.O., Ohio
puc together in ~IC.3ctly the University College of Otttapatlrk
fnhion that iJ illullrated in my Mtdltlne, P.O. &amp;x 110,Athem,
anatomy book. Some individ• Ohio 4!701. Pt111 tolumns ilftl
ualt have wrltt bone joint! available
on liM
at
that ar~ 'Jess ruechanically sta- WIIIIIIJhradlo.orgljm.)

t

,.....•

ToYourMom

"fht hands tiM~
l1tll for
are :nmon
gtmgUGn ')ttl btoauN .
- oflhf. number
Of ja/ntJ tiJire. ~
~Oft believed td be a

..,

•

ay

Wrist problem could
be tumor related
Question: latn a 29 year•old
woman, and I have had thl!
illll\fiYing pt()blcm iince childhMd. I have diflkulty doing
any activity that puts pressure
on nty wri!tl, that is, any aalv·
lty that bends my hands back
with any degree of exertion.
When I do thlt, I get pain in
the back o( my hands and It
also shoots up my arms, but
not all the way to my elbows.
. The pain can be quite
sever~,makingju1t moving my
hands up and down unbear·
able. On other occasiom it il
--~
1
jult u.ncorruortab e.As an adult
t f
1 have had gal\ g11 on cyu
o
the wrists occasionally. I've
rea·d about carp a1 tunne I synLl h , .
drome, Wme
&lt;1oe1n ,I seem to
h
Wh
mailed bmy IY";!Pioml.
.at
cou · e eau1tng my wmt
pain?
Amwer .•r ·he Wtl!· 11•1 a complicated mechanical structure.
· It 11\Vo
' 1Vel th e two lower ar
·m
bone! eight wrist b()tles called
carpi b(Jtlel, four fingers and
the thumb. All ·of thele pam
move in reladonship to Otic
another. They are all held
together by the c."lle"ive
work of many individual lll!llmentt, muselet and joint captule1, This complex arrange. mcnt maximizes movement
that allow• ul to do amazing
.thinll' with our handi. Unfortunat~l~ ttic(hanicalstability is
..ctill&lt;:;d to 10mc degree to
accomJIIlth chit tleldbiiJty;
Each of the bony joints in
the hand• and wrist has a soil
dJIUe lln1ng that produces alubricaling synnvlal fluid. The
h!ndom that move the lingers,
hand and wrist IIi&amp;! baek and.
forth over the wrillltructures.
ThtU h!ndons run ·through
thfatht that produce a lubricad11g tynovial Ouid too. So, all
o( chit 41ire"lY rebrel to your

ftpriU7,ZII2
SabidlyliiJI.- 5 PJL

would later become "Pride
and P~judice."
Through an unhappy love
alTair and a move to the city
of Bath, Auuen continued to
write and revise earlier
works. Bath became the set. ting of the novels "Persuasion" and · "Northanger
Abbey."
When Auuen wu 30, her
father died and his wife :rnd
daughter were left without
about Austen's life from the much support. Her brother,
~huacters and plots of her Edward, IJ'IVI.' them a house
novels.
called Chawton Cottage in
Bowen told the group that the ·rural countryside Austen
Austen was born in Steven- loved. She resumed writing,
ton, in Hampshire, England, and in 1811,published"Sense
in 1775. Her father, George and Sensibility," and the folAusten, was ~. chufl:h rector, lowing year, "Pride and Prejnnd although he was very · udice." Neither was published
well educated, the family was using Austen's name.
not well-off financially. As a In !St5, "Mansfield Park"
chJld, Austen was encouraged
to read whatever she liked and "Emma" were published.
and it was probably in this
By . the age of 40, Austen
way that she was introduced became ill with an undiagto the novel, a literary form nosed illness and died in
just coming into favor ln 1817.Herbrotherhadherlast
England at the end of the two novels published ·using
18th century.
· her own name, one that is
Austen loved the country well-known to this day.
setting of the rectory. She
The roll call for the gro_up .
formed a dose bond with an was answered With a descr!polder sister, Cassandra. As a tion of a favorite recipe from
child, Austen wrote stories . one's family.
and venes, and was encourThe next meeting wlll be
aged to read her works to her April 24 at the home of Gay
family, While still a teen, she Perrin, with the program to
began work on a novel which be a group discussion.

FAMILY MEDICINE

(Your
Mother's
Name) ·

(Picture)

Love Terry,
Kelll &amp;. Justin

(Your
Mother's Name)

Love Terry,
Kelll &amp;. ·
justin

Ublh J•u stay

alive

Dtadllnt for thl1 SPtCial Mother'• Day Trlbutt 11 Tutlday, May 7, 2002

SACRAMENTO, Calif.
(AP) - Vlade Diwc should
have known better. The Utah
Jazz are ageless, resourceful and
supremely tough - anything,
in fact, but done.
Donyell Marshall had 19
pointll and eight rebounds, and
Karl Malone had 18 poinu and
12 rebound! u the Jazz
shocked the top-teeded Sacramento Kinll' 93-86 Thcsday
night, evening their con·
tentiow playoff series at one
game apiece.
Andrei Kirilenko scored 15
pointll and blocked five shou aJ
the Jazz ran out to a big lead
during a horrible 6nt-half perfonnance l:ly Sacramento.

Fill out the form below and drop off the payment to
The DallySentlnel "Mother's Day''
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
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ONE: A.1X3 GrHtlng...$10.00 B.1X5 Greeting•••. ·'!"""~·~~·I

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Ada Must Be Prepaid
Mlllr. Cheolr. AVIIIIble to: The

'.

-

sanMl~

•

POME~oY

Eagles dominate Trimble, 13-1

La

Sentinel

--

I

shl@klt•.

~

m

w~ ha.ne ~

tool: a I-ll Ql

run 1\)r

&lt;l

:\.(l ~

~) ~ th!tl.' 111\lf\' t\111~ il'l
...... ~\'\'1\th .atl'&lt;l lfimbl\' 1;01 000¢
n~rlter ha&lt;.:l&lt;. iti tile lloot-m t:K tile

~
w, lim wh&lt;ffi
~ ~M ~ ~t ~ until
pul)' AmM ~ ~led ...... whtcl$ ot..lft\1.' oil' ...... Thlt\~t.at hme.
to le'ld llif lb.- "~ i11 tht- 'Si~. M~tl ~ 11!\1
~~ hi~ were jenny i\rmte"S
inning, 1\)\\'dl .too- l)tl' \\lith ,a $1tlf;le, Dillon &gt;11~ T\~ \vith 3 OOubk ..tlld :I\1W,k, M~ J&gt;o\\'-bled 1:0 put ·runn&lt;en n tJm1 ~ ...... ~ with ~ cll ~I ~ .toobk
'II~, Ashley
~Trimble 13-1 ~night
00 ~'1&lt;1 .an.l thi!\1 \\'-Ill: and Anlli~;~ \\'ailed oomc ~­ H~ a .toobk, pnrt Cal.oway .a :11.11~
in ;a 'J'ri..\\lley Coo~
n~
111\d &lt;ALl\\~ ~ .a S.at\&lt;ly 1\)wdliW ~~~ R.UI ~~~. Cal- ~. R~ Loow\el&lt;. .a "'~"· A~
.
~J~me.
sattilke to bring away ~ ~~ RBI 'Sitlf;le, l~\l\d: ~~~­ Holter ..t dooble, R~ Rober~\ t\m
&amp;$rem ~ IIOW l 2-1 0\W.alllll\d 9-1
oome Arma
ll,ll'd .atld &lt;~.n error alklwed t\\~ rum to ~~~~~ \~..til \~t th~ :lit~ .
in the TVC Homt~g Division,
In thl.' fuurth ~. then il:l:i l'llillip$ w.illtcl, ..tltd JeSsk-a
il~l.',
&amp;.\tm1 toolt &lt;advantaF ·of il':llliC inning RoMr®n $1ngled, Hlll~r ~OOoenll.lll wo~lltcd to ~ oome ..
'ffin\ble hlttt~ ''~~ Unmtoll ~ttd
pat pito::hill8- pll~ outsllnding came in to pineh run, ~~ ~'Qll\l J\111, ami \Vdll.'r ~.ld\1!\1 011 .alll.'fi'Ut ll.l tlni$111~11~fe·~ 111\d pounded tb.l.' dioyligbts 1111d thild. tho:11 Mafg~n ~~r 'Sin~~!\~ M'C hOOI\' .. filii. 0111;)11 Wi~ll~l ll.l
Co:);loth I}.am l)l:;utltltt ~t&lt;l, "~ ·
out offiimblt pitt:hing. &amp;nun ham- 1:0 lmod1: home anc. Dillon w~lkl!\l roi!.'C hom\' th..- lln~l nm
th\'

.an.J

nmon "'

mered · out fourlt'l.'n hitt in tht :And Arm&lt;'$ w..rlkl!\l, thc11 1\)\\"oell inning.

llr

Meigs outlasts Gallia, 3·0
lh DAN PaLcYN .
DPOlt~LYTRt8UN£.COM

GALLIPOLIS
"- Thl.'
Meigs Lady Marnuden outlasted Gal!ill Acade-my. J-0 in
non-leaQ~~e softbilll Tuesday.
With th~ win at Mtmori:tl
Field, Meigs improves to 7..{.
on the se~~Son.
The g~~mr turntd into a
nine-inning pitchen' dud,
with Meigs finally iaking d1e
lilad in the top of the ninth.
Carrie Abbott led otT the
mune with a single off Gallia
f~shman pitcher Amanda
Lewi~. then Amtmda Fetty
reached on a ban· dropped in
left Add by the Angels.
1\vo batten latt:r. Mindy
Chancey's ion-ball double
into right-center pla"ted
Abbott and Fetty. Chancey
later scored on the front end
of a double steal with pitcher
KGtie jQffen.
jefFers worked all nine
innings for the Lady MGrauden, giving up (our hits und
striking out 10 Ansels. She
gave up just one fn:c base by
hittint~ a batter. The victory
improves her personal season
mark to 7-3. .
·
Her opposite number.
Lewis, worked eight of the
nine Gallia innings in lllking
the loss. She gave up just five
hits and mowed away seven
hitters. Lewis iss11ed five
walks.
Haylie johnson worked the
sixth for Gallia and did not
surrender a hit. johnson
walked three and struck out
one.
Both teams were nble to

PluM Ml Melp, II

" ............ u

Southem

tops RV
IYiconWoul

SINTINEl CORRW'!lNilENT

RACIN!i -

Th~

South&lt;'111 Thmatlnt's St't:lf\'&lt;1 two
rutt~ itt the lir&lt;t 1111\lt't! attd
llt'Wt lm&gt;kl'd bJd: In
tk~Jtitlg th~ Riwr ~lie~
l~akle~ ll · S here 1\lt'S.la~
night in Radllt'" Star Mill
l}Mk,

Sm1tlll'rtl is ntlw r,.,.
owroll. The win wo~s
Snmht'rtt \i thil'l.l in a rnw.
Sm1tht'tl\ scort'tl fil'llt in
tht' tlt'llt itming wht'tl Litke
Hill It'd tllf with " '""lk,
Jn&lt;l rudt' h\llllt' \lll a Mm
A~h tl'ipk Ash, wlm had a
l!reat 8•11\lt' .rnd \Wl\t :\--1,
rude· home 011 Llralldtln
l'i t'l'l:~ \ fl-:1 j~,ruundout, thl'
mll't l -n.
Snuthm1 atiJe,l threl'
runs In the thinl when
with one out Uricc Hill
doubled ~ttd Sl'oretl on a
M.m • Ash sltl!!lr, tht•tl
Pierce IMtllllll'~tl ,, triplt'
ttl push Ash .r~r\,ss the
plut~, '""! Curt Cruud1
.1dti~J an 1\.BI si 11gl~ .
iht• SC\lf\' W(IS lltlW 5-ti ,
1\.ivcr V,lllt•y tbul!ht bark
with tll~l ru11s i11 the fourth
wh~11 I h1stit1 Gibbs doubled, Jm·y Gr,lh"m sin~jleJ,
ami Eddy h"d '' two-ru11
!lnt,~k. th r st' l)f\' 5-.2.
Suuthrt'll \Vl'nt On . to .
sro~ tour In tht· thurtlt
ami thn·c in the si~th (or
the ll-.'1 t&lt;tlly.
Curt Croud1 I!Ot the
will with relit-( fitl111 Justin
Allen whu ra 111c ir1 to
LONG DAY- Meiss pitcher Katie Jeffers worked all nine Innings In picking up the win tor the
Lady Marauders on Tuesday. (Shannon Shipley)
·

Pl1111 111 Southam, II

McFann stops SHS Larkin retums; Reels
BY Icon WOIJII

CINCINNATI (All) - Uurry Lurkin
Southern's Klltic Sayre and ·
dot•SII't lik(• l(l!ttin~ a day of!~ but thi~ tin1c it
OVP CORRESPONDENT
ll.achcl Chapnian wolk~d in
RACINE - Striking out the lim inning, but were left
1111!!111 have hdpcd.
eleven batters, Geri McFann · strand~d 011 two Southern
The ~lu1t1pin1! shommp !\'turned m the
pitched anoth~r great game in llrikeouts. !.loth teams wt•nt
Cittcinnnti Rcd!' lincup and hit 11 run-scorini!
leading the River Valley down 1-2-3 In the sc,oml,
~hrglc nml1nndc a pivotru dctensivc playThcsRaiders to a 5-0 win over the then an c.rror at third ai1d an
dny night in a
vktory nver tlw Colur.1 do
Southern Thrnadoes Thesday error nt short allowed
Rm:kit•s.l
.
Larkin iinl!lcd hom~~ run :ti tho !ted~ took
night at Racine's Star Mill · Traccwdl to ~:orne home with
tiro lead in the fourth, :md threw · mit Jmc
Park.
another run for RiwrVallcy in
Ortiz ut third b:t;e whc11 he str,,yutl mtl fi1r
. McFann fanned eleven and the third, the score 3-0.
had a no-hitter bid broken up
In the liflh inniug a walk to
durin~:~ an tn1relat~J rundown ill the !evcnth.
by a Katie Sayre single in the Erica Taylor, a Hood si nK!~,
Larkin. whn w~nt 2-for-3 with u wnlk,nlso
1evcnth inning. ltiver Valley is and an error let hn111 ~ two
lluttl• a nk~ piny up the middle to steal' u hit
now 10-5 and Southern is 1!- more runs. Southern mud~
ti·om Juau Uribe in the fourth. ·
"l'1n fim.li111:! !kJtnurhin~:~ that, hopefully, I'll
5.
,
two great plays co nail runners
b•• able to ;tkk with for a wl1ilc,': L.trkin ;aid.
On paper the game looked ai the plate with Sayre holdinl;
like a pitcher's duel between on for the tal!!l , Sayre also ltRd
"It'~ a muiQI!e to lind con~i•t••t1 cy.''
Mcfann and Southern's 1everal great throws to nail
M~ 11 1111cr Bob 13oonc i!-lW hn11 the 1l.iy nfr
Rac~el Chapman, however, runners at second.
lm Sunday in Chk:rl!'), whc11 he Wil! in n 5River Valley had the game
Vet Riwr Valley led 5-0.
for-27 slide. L:arkin, who ttliir!Cd most of la!t
well in hand as they capitalSouthern had what looked
1ca!ml with tom groin 1m1sdcs, lw been
ized on Southern errors early to be a run in tht.: fift[1. but the
slowed this month by pulkd lllu~elcs in his
McFann again ttymied the runner at third did not tag,
side.
Tornado ban with a great then Sm1thern put loaded th~
Colorado lmt itll third in n row, dnrppinl:!
eiTort, however, Southern had baset in the finale y~t did not
th~ NL's wor;t Ncont to (J-14.
irs opportunities and lefl eight score. Emily Hill reached on
jimmy Haync1 (2-2), who h:t~ bccn r~p.:at­
bate runners stranded.
an error, Dean Pullins walked
cdly nnrghcd up by 1hc Rnckk&lt;t, Wive up
River Valley •cored two and Katie Sayre hammered a
d~rcc hitl and tl1t1~e w~lk~ in;ix innlnt4'1 hcfnre
runs in the fint inning when single into right flt.:ld. M.:Fanu
rurninl! a 3-2 lead CJVcr to th~ buUpcn.
Amy Hood led /off the g.~me worked out of the jarn to win ) IJJnny Graw1 forced Col or~do w mami .1
with a walk, ellen with one the g.~mc.
runner at ~ecomi in the cit~hth inninjC n• he
out Nicole Watkiru reached
McFann walked six, I!'IVC up
gm tour outs lor his ;c:vcnth tgvc 111 nine
on an error at lint. Hood jun C&gt;nc hit, fanned eleven.
chance•.
came home on the overthrow, and had a good defense
Jumn Jcnnint4'1 (1 ·2) w~• pitchin~ un •ix
then an error in left field behind her with jun two
day;' rl"'t ~nd had occa•iunal cnmrttl l:tll!C!.
allowed another run to come errors. Southern made IeVen
C:olllrado all() made a •ouplc uf flddi1111
home, the seore 2-0.
errors.
cmm th.n kt•pt jcm1h114'1 in truubl~ liurm11 hh

·'·2

,iN irmilll!ll·
Lcatlilll! 2· 1 , J cr mitl~ wulk.cd Au!till Kc,trll!
to op~n the fillh ~nd I!UW up jiiW11 L~RltL'\
duublc. Lurkin, who 1nt out lust Sumluy'! ~~~tHe
in Chirugo b~ct~u sc ot' his ·!lu1np, 1inl!lcd to
ri1!11t tu tk it, and Scnn Cu"'Y hit 11 ti'IU-out
si uwc thnt put the R~d 1 ulwat~ to stuy.
jtt:ut Eucarnadou hit .hi! IClllll· hll!lt . t1tih
lmmcr in rh~ Ar1t 11tl' jcrminj.t'l, wl111 wrvc up
fiw hitl, wolkccl three umi hit 11 b11tt~r ..
"Ewryonc's kind of strui!Winl! ri11ht now,"
Jcmlilll!ll ~aid , "Ottc pitch here or nne there,
umllt could h11w I!OIIc the other way."
Larkin preserved · the !cud with a rr kc
dcfcn&gt;iw play in the &gt;cwuth, whcu l 1rtiz
wulkc,I :111.1 muvcd LIJl 011 a &gt;at:rltk.•. Ortit
!t11JlJlCO at thil'l.l whcit Or.:~o~ Nnrtnll 'iulodcd
m ril!h~. thc11 cased t&lt;lWJI\l hnllll' J! Nurtnn
j,!tlt c.ru~ht in 11 rumlt1Wt1 h•rlfw.1y w ,ccond
lmc.
Larkin chased Nort011 back tow.1rd Ar!t,
then whirled ru1d tt tadr 11 pntcct throw to
thil\i bruicntan Aaron Bnonl', who taj,;i!cd
Ortiz a! hr llovc buck to the bilsc.
Rockies rlf!lll fielder Larry Walker, silk•
lined fi•r " week with a sprilittcd lii!-UIIctll in
his ri[~ht elbow, returned a11d had a pJir uf1i11 ·
[!IC!. .
Uribe wJikcd and Walker sin!llcd 1harply
throu~th the hole at !rcond in the thurtlt .
H.tync~ ch~11 wJik~d fudd Helton to icldd the
hJ~! ~nd went to~ 2-0 count on fodd Zc1le,'
who !I'll the tllllbolil
fiWI!itlt1g auJ hit it
lu I'CI\tcr fi1r .l l,lrf'IN~~ tly.
Afi~r J wiiJ pttdl .IJVJIII.:cd the ruunc11 hl
•c~m1d Jnd third, 1bdd HllllJnd;wonh hit ;
1.1.-rifke tly 111 let! fidd for 3 ~- I I~Jd .

�'

12

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o.tn11t 3. Kanua City 0
, s.om. 1. Mahllm o
N.Y. Y l - 2, otllland I

Booed
in
Oakland,
Giambi
strikes
back
First-place Expos over-

shadowed by hockey .
BY TilE ASSOC!Att!ll'llE$$
Mo~ttre~l m~~~~t Frank 1\l:lbinson heard
(ht'ermg, ~nd couldro 't undeNtand why.

the lixpos l~ns

. Sure, the ream wa~ beating th~ Mllwau~ Brew..n and
maintaining it! hold on first pla(l! in tht NL Ean, but the
cro\vd\ r.mdom outburst! left the Expos beruddled,
·
"First time I he~rd them I said, 'What are they doingr Why
are they dteerinl! like thatr We hawn 't done anything,'"
Robimoll said after a 5-4 victory Thesd~y night
fh~11, the Expos checked the scoreboard and realized the
ch&lt;'etittg Wasn't (or them:
With Mo11treal lkittg Bostort irt a tint-round NHL playoff
gatne :tt the Molsoll Centre, the season-low cro\vd of 3,S6t at
Olympic Staditun reacted exdtedly to scoring updates of the
Canadiell!' 5-3 will,
"Whetl they Were dl:lillg sotne big theer ollt ofnowhete, you
knew to ltmk up on the board and y&lt;?U'd s~e a sctlre, or something," outfielder Brad Wilkerson sa1d.
· Wilkerson and Vladimir Guerrero eath hit two-rutt singles as
Montreal extended its winning streak to rour games and
remained on top of the NL East.
this is th&lt;' latest the Expos have led the division since 1996,
creating hope that the Canadielli would return the favor of
Uoshit11! scoring updates ill October.
"I would cert~lnly look lbrward to It," 1\oblnson said. "If
they don't, I'll give them a phone eaU."
In other games, it was: New York 4, St. Louis ~~ S~n Francisco 12, Chlcaill:\ 4; 1\rltona S, Atlanta 21 Lo§ AnStl~! 9, Pitti•
burBI' b: Florida 4, Houston 3 in t 2 innln~; Ciueinnati 3, Col·
onido 2; ami Philadelphia 8, Sat! Diego 5.
.
Wilkerson~ tWO•out slngl~ tapped a four-run thlrcl. to put
the lixpos up 4"2. All ltttlltll! earlier, Wltkenon dropped Raul
Cu!alloVa '! two-out lly In len fot an ertor Ill the nrew..n scored
th~ir nm twtl flit\!,
"We didtl't play 1!1:\0d defense tonight, but We stayed together and \w picked cadt other up," Robil\son said.
Milwaukee lost ft~r the flnt time under itlterltn manager
jerry Royster to end a ft~ur-game winning &amp;treak.
"It ended because \W didn't play very \WU:' 1\oyster said.
"We made enough mistakes for the oppolititlll to beat us, It
didn't haw to end though. It could have Vl!ty w..ll continued.
We pretty n1ueh l!•w that l!ame away."
'lbtno Ohka . (2· t) allow.!d sbt hits and ft&gt;ur runs - all
uneurued .- In olx Innings. 13en Sheet! (1-3) allowed s~ven hits
utid fiw rtllt! 111 four lnt1it1g; hi the lou.
Mll'fS 4, CARDINAL8 3

Wilmn, ~pladtil! it\Jltted Ali· Star catcher Mike Pin·
~·hit a 1!1:\•ahead sing!~ to lead Jeff D'Amico (2-1) and the
t:"~ewVork Met!.
.
.
• Plana lined art 11...131 single 111 the 1\m, thetl srabbed for his
lett han11trh11! as he was ruunl11g tol\ru.The Mets called Piaz~~~~ lt\Jury a tl1lld left hanntrlug strain, He li day•to-day, artd
was nqt expected to start Wednesday night,
Mm Morris (4- 1) took the lou for the Cardinali, who have
4ropped 11w In a row, eight oF tllne and are 1-7 on their 13·
~ame road trip.
,

Vane~

:

.

GIANTS

12, CUllS 4

: Thre~ Son Prandscti players- ttone named narry Bonds -·
llotncrcd to t&gt;fllet a two-run shot by Sammy Sosa at Chicago,
David Uell a11d 1\eggie Sanders each hit two-run homers and
drove in another ru11, a11d rsuyoshl Shlt\Jo !lad a solo homer
attd another RBI.
:Kirk ltueter (2-1) stmered twtl hits over leVI!tl innln~,
allowinl! his only runs on Sosa's ht&gt;tner In the Iilith,
.
:

DIAMONDIIAClKI 51 BRAVf!l 2

.

' Curt Schilll11g (4-1) gave up four hlt! and struek out 10 in
cl~o~ht ltming; as Arl~onll wo11 at Atlanta in a rematch of la8t
Y)!ur's N 1.. chutl1plonshlp lerles.
; The mamo11db~cks hdve won Ieven straight at Turner Field
· sjnce the bcginni11g t&gt;( lm season, induding three In the
NLCS.
:ju11g Uong (0· 1) !!live up eight hits and five runi In six
lttnlng~ in his l1r1t tnlljor league Appearance. ·
Dob&lt;llliU 9, PntAtlll 6

: K~whlsa Ishii wlthltood llitllburgh's six-run second it1nlng
t(l become the Orst Los An~eles rookie pitcher to win his first
fOur start! since ~ernando ValentuelQ In 1981.
Ce1ar ltturlt' twtl-run dt&gt;uble highlighted a llve•run !lith at
the Dodgers took a three-run lead, Jolt II, then got it back all in the first six Innings.
MAWNI 4, A8TMO• 31 12 INNINOI
; Alex Gonzalez'• one-out single In the 12th 1cored Lull .·
Ca;tUit&gt; and IJIIYI! florida • win over vl1itinll Houtton:
; Cutillo hit hit dub-te~ord 23rd triple off brandon Puffer (01) with Oil~ out In the 12th, Atld Gonnlet followed with his
IJllttlt!•Wlllning hit.
. Vladimir Nunez (3-0) allowed two hlti In three scorelen
ll)ning~ ,

PHIWIII I, PADRBI 5
: l'at UurreU homered and drove 111 cwo runt, alld Phlladel·
ph1~'• beleagu~red bullpen pitched (our tcorele;s Inning~ in the
l1hilliet' vl"ory over San Dleso.
1'he l'hi1He1, who had loJt !our straight and eighr o( I0, oVI!rcame a 5-0 fint· inning deficit,

,

ev TilE ~SSOCIATED PRESS

·games, Franklin gaw up 'three loll of the season,
off Brad Radke in the third
His furnter fans booed him, hits in 5 2-3 innings.
The Indians had been 7-0 inning. The homer was the
held up derogatory signs and
Mclemore, who hit his first at Jacobs Field, the only tint this season for Tampa Bay ·
threw back one of ·his fuul grand slam and drove in a undefeated team at home in from its 3-4-S spt&gt;ts in the
balls.
career-hil!h five runs Monday the majon.
order- a span of 212 at-bats.
.Heck, even his · name was night, tripled in the tit'th
Ritchie struck out eight in
TIGBRS 3, RoYALS 0
misspelled on the.scoreboard. inning and · contihued home his longest outing of the sea- jeff Weaver pitched a liV!!, Jason Giatnbi didn't let any . on shortllttlp David J;ckstein '$ son. He is 3-0 with a 1.32 hitter for his first .career
or that bother httn Thesday ' error on the .relay,
.
ERA in four career starts shutout as · Detroit won at
night. He was too busy trying
BLUE jAYS 2, RANGERS t al!ainst Clewland.
Kansas City.
to win the game for the New
Eric Hinske hit an ltBI
DBvtL RAYS 6, TwiNS 4
Weaver had five complete
York Yankees.
· double and scored Toronto's
Steve Colt homered and . g.tmes last year, and lost all of
Playing at the Coliseum for other run at Thxas.
Tampa Bay beat Minnesota them.
the first time since leavinl! the
Hinske also grounded into for the eighth straight time at
Randall Simon hit a threeAthle~ics: Giambi hit a sev- a double play on John Rock- Tropicana Field.
run homer in the third,
enth-mmng double that pre- er's only pitch of the game.
Cox hit a go-ahead homer
ceded Jorge Posada's hotue
Rocker was recalled earlier run and gaw the Yankees a 2- in the day from a minor
THERE FOR YOU
I win over Oakland.
league assignment to which
, While there were a lew he never reported, Instead of
cheers, the Cortner AL MVP gt~lng to Triple-A Oklahpma,
of Every
who left the Athletics as a free l~ocker stayed in California on Your Side Every
agent for a $120 mlllion, ·and worked'on his mechanics
We're there when you need us. We're a single source for ALL
seven-year deal heard heck- with 'Ibm House at a clinic
·
your Insurance needs:
len all game.
.
owned by the former
•Auto -HOme .of'Nnclal Procllcll ~
"( wouldn't be human if I 1\angers pitching coach.
said it. didn't · affect me,"
ORIOLI!S 7, R.llo Sox 5
Call me ... Stop by, .. H'a your choice!
Oiamblsaid. "But It\ just not
Geronimo Gil hit two
penonal and I don't want to home . runs and naltimore
take it penouaL"
stopped Boston's six-game
Nlthlmrld ..
IMUrtnttl
"Yeah, there was a lot. of winning streak,
FlntnclaiStMcta
booing, but It was done In a
WHI'l'E Sox 5, INDIANS t
_
• .,. ... lW
good way, They let their feellbdd Ritchie pitched
ings go. That was OK," he three-hit ball for eight
laid. ''I understand, I guess." innings and Chicago sent
"I got here early to say hi to Cleveland to its first home

Minute

Day.

c

r-;:===========================;-l

all
theit guys,''
"I I
knew
would he
be auid.
circus
act."
The fans wete ready for
his return, ·
And when the lineups
were posted on the scoreboard, he was listed as
"Jiambi."
The crowd of 40,360
bMed Giambi · when he
came tltlto the fl~ld to play
first base In the bt&gt;ttom of
the first. Jeremy Giambl
opened with a single, and
was reunited with his brother at the bag,
Glambi was heavily booed
-just like at Yankee Stadium, actually - when he
batted in the second. He
grounded out, but wound
up 2·ft&gt;r-4.
The Yankees did little
agai111t Tim Hudson until
Glatnbi doubled to start the
seventh and Ptlud~ followed
With a home run.
Orlando Hernandez (3-1)
Improved to 5-0 in seven
IWII against Oakland, strik·
lug out 11 in eight innings,
Mariano Rivera relieved
to begin the 11lnth and started by throwing sill straight
balls, He eventually retired ·
·pinch-hitter Greg Myers on
a popup with runners on the
cornen for his sixth save in
eight opportunities.
The Yankees are In Oakland on Wednesday and
Thursday, and Hudson .
hopes the fans will lay off
Oiatnbl.
MAiuNtiiUI 1, ANGELS 0
1\yan Franklin won his
tlrtt major . leaJIIIe 1tart and
Mark McLemllre accounted
for the only run at Safeco
Field.
Seattle has won four in a
row and 14 of 1S. Anaheim
l01t ill fourth straight IJllme
and fell to 0-6 against the
· Mariners thit season.
Franklin, who has made
seven relief appearancfl this
season, got to pitch because
manager Lou Piniella did
not want to start soft-to11ing
Jetties Jamie Moyer and joh11
Halama

in

conlecutive

The Dally Sentinel • Pege 8 3

Late Gall rally·edges Meigs

,... ... .._ AROUND THE DIAMOND
....... L.eiiUt
SOIII'Uoootooo12.~4

www.mydllllyae:•tlnel.com

HOW

TO

SPO~

A'·

HIR0.

GALLIPOLIS- Alter a big
inn~ng late in Th~y's P'!'e
al!llmst Galha Academy, Me1gs
was set to earn .a big w~n .
But, t~e Blue Devils ·had
other plans,
Michael Warren slapped a
. shot ~o the shortstop with no
outs m t!'~ bo~otn ,of the seventh, dr1vong m N1ck Merola
from third base as Gallia Academy rallted past the Marauders, 10-9,
,. , ,
W~rren,, the Blue D ' tls
starting p1tcher on the afte~noon, went 3-for-3, as Gall•a
Academy , snapped
~he
~arauders three-game wmnmg streak.
, f&lt;
..1 ,
.. 'd
~ s a great Win or us, sa•
Gallta Academy head coach
Braek H.ouc hens. .. 1 know
Meigs has been playing better
baseball. ·For us· to come from
, d an d beat th em, 1't
behm
·
almost r,ee·1s as good as beatml!
"
Logan. ,
The Blue Devils took a 4-2
lead goinl! into the sixth as
catcher Bobby Jones had a pair
of two-run home runs, both
driving in Andre Geil!"r,
For jones, who went 2-for3; they were his filth apd sixth
home runs of the season.
Geiger also went 2-for-3,
while Drew Bush went 2-for4 for the Blue Devils (6-4) ,
Meanwhile,Jacob Smith and
Buzzy Fackler each had a pair
of hits for the Marauders.
In the top of _the sixth
inning, Meigs went hard to
work at the plate, A two-run
homer by Fackler, and a tworun single by Jacob Smith,
highlighted a seven run inning

WVU clubs Bobcats
ATHENS - Ohio went four inninl!l without getting a hit
and the Bobcats managed just five on the day as visiting West
Virginia defeated Ohio, 16-8, in a non-conference baseball
!!"me on Thesday at Bob Wren Stadium,
the host Bobcats (13-20) were held hitless through four
irlniugs by West Virginia left-bander Zac Cline. However, after
junior Omari Briscoe walked to lead off the filth, (reshman
Brian White hit the first home run of his career to break up
both the shutout and no-hitter, bringing Ohio to within two
at 4-2.
West Virginia (20-16) then responded by scorinl! five runs in
the sixth inning on (our hits, highlighted by a two-run double
from leadoff hitter Chad Blevins. Tim McCabe closed the scoring for the inninl! with the tint of two home rum on the day
- a two-run shot - that l!ave the Mountaineers a 9-2 edge,
Ohio battled back with three runs each in the sixth and seventh inn in~ against a trio ofWest Virginia relievers, closing to
within I 0-8 after seven,
·
Senior Mike Arbinger homered and Brandon Wheeler hit a
two-run, pinch-hit double in the sixth innin~. during which
time the Bobcat! picked up four of the1r five ~~~~ for the gam~.
They scored their.three rum in the seventh ,wJt~out a songle h1t
- taking advantage of three walks, two w1ld p1tches, and two
infield groundouts.
,
,
,
The Mountaineers added onsurance runs on both the e1ghth
and ninth innings, pastinl! a five spot on the scoreboard in the
ninth against two Ohio pitchers,
Mike Frownfelter started the ninth with a bunt single, and
scored on a two-run home run by right fielder Jarod Rine.
Blevins doubled two batters later, and Eric Grimm followed
· with a two-run double to score Blevins and Travis D'Amico.
McCabe's fourth hit of the afternoon advanced Grimm to
third base, where he scored the game~• final run on a wild pitch
by Ohio right-hander Dan Cobb.

Meigs
framPIIp81
advance runnen to scoring
potition, but until the ninth,
neither could finish the job.
Meip tttanded 12 runners in
the 1111me, while the Angek
left teveri out in the cold.
The Angel defente cut
down three runners at the
plate. Meip ttranded runnen
at third In four different

~=========~================:::::::::::::~~

'

fur the Marauders.
"I think OlJt Jlllys sho~ a
lot of hem coming back," said
Meigs head coach Dan
,Thomas, "The hit the ball
really hard. Gallipolis just
played a heck of a game. It
wasn't that we made mistakes
in the field there towards the
end. They hit the ball when
they had to hit the ball and
that.'s baseball. That's the way it
goes."
Gallia Academy, though,
quic'kly began to cut into the
Marauders 9-4 advantal!" in
the Blue Devils' half of the
sixth ~ Warren doubled and
scored on a Wade Caldwell
base hit, and Dustin Caudill
d
score on an error.
Caldwell scored on a single
,
h
by Donme Johnson as t e
n1 1 d ·
Mlaraudhers o y teh btyh twoB.I
n, t e seveh nh • ef hu'e
Devils
had. t e L.
eart oG t · etr
rd
o. gler dcomong
d J to ""t das Metger
1
son e an ones an
ero a
··-'k d · h
were w .. e wtt no outs,
lo~.dong up the bases, .. .
We felt really good, md
Houchens, "When I looked
over (on the dugou~ and saw
every player standmg: up, I
kne':';' we could make It happen,
Before Me~la came to the
plate, Metgs starter J•mmy
Smith was relieved by Darrick
Knapp. , ,
, ,
The p1tchong c~anl!e d1dn t
matter to the Dev1ls as An!!"lo
Hardy drove . in Geil!e.r and
Jones on a smgle to ae the
game with no outs, settong up
Merola's game-winning run,·
"We have good senior leadership and I've got great assis-

innings. The Blue Angels also
had their problems scoring
runners, leaving three over at
the hot corner.
In addition to her double,
Chancey alto ~Died a single:
Nikki Butcher and Jeffers had
the other Meigs hill.
Whitney Williams had two
hili for GaUia. Cara Dunkle
and Johnson recorded the
other two Angel knocka.
Gallia Academy (1-9) wUI
pity hott to River V11fey
today.

tome (IOOd playa. We have
b"n lucky with our pitching
too. lWI Lodwick did really
well after Krlttl (White) BOt
hurt, and then Katie lloberteame alona. up &amp;om the
ton
8Eutern bitten were Jenny
Armes with a double and tin- mervtt and hu done an ouc·
tie, Sandy Powill had a dou- ttandins job.''
fanned
eight
llobertton
61e and •lnale, Athlty Hapr a
double, Janet Calaway a tin· and had till walka in doing 1
· 81•· lWI Lodwick a tlnale, peat job to pick up the win.
Alyua Holter 1 double, Katie Allory Hooper tuffered the
lloberaon two tinsJes, Mor- lo11, but had relief from
pn Weber three sinales, and Christman and Sikonki.
'lbpther they fanned eight
}111ica Dillon 1 tingle.
1\'imble hltten were Brun-- strikeoutt and had ten walu.
Eastern hosts Welllton
ton and Christman.
Wednesday
and hota Water·
Coach Pam Douthitt aald,
"We played good defense ford in a league make-up
overall. Our infield made Thursday.

..

-·--~
·

\l~ t ~ 1:: lt1 \1• t.IW~

CASI! NO
01 cv 101

Pllrcll•a•

hah.U, '~·~\l.·t"" II ' ' • • •tw••~ I
t" )tq ·"'tl "~t.:hlll• \l'Ur

•n• lbcl,. .....,.....,....,..

.... r!Mcl •• " " - ' pt.ce. at ,... ......

Beginning at lha h•reln ct•acrtb•ct.
L• AIIM Mualclo.et. Nortll-1 Ol • during t1w .........1 llflo
...
• ... u lol llarelolore or gl'ltntor'l • ~::..'t
Dalandenta,
conv.,.CS by '"" Mkl w.lfa and Iva
1) ·
..
Htlen Mien 10 '"" Mkl unletia Mid g!tnlon :
In pul'llllllnce ol an Roy •net Iva Welle,, lll'le tn.tr • - • Roy ,
Onar ol Sale In the ~hence W..t • ' - the Welte daoeaaad the ·
1110,. tnlltleciiCilon, 1 Walla Run Ro•ol n lllncl d•r 01 A~~guet.
will ollttr lor Mia al laet lo • corner, 1111 •nd Eva Wlltla
public auction. 11 lh• '""nee Soutll 110 lett ~aecl t"" tat dey
Courlhoua• · In lo • corner, lhance or October, 1tt1.
P-'Oy, Ohio, In .... bat to the line or Being Tract 1 ol
lbclve n•IMCI County. abov. mentioned lot; Cartlllcate ot TNnater
on lhe 23rd day or thane• North to tha No. 1 !rom Ettate or :
Mly, 2002, et 10:00 place or beginning, Lawrence Walla ol .
o'clock •· m., the containing 1112 acre, record In Volume 303, •
following ducribad maraSI!CorOIHND•· PIECE · p•g• 477, Deed :
11111 atllte, to wit:
' Recorda ol Melga
Situated In the Being In 100 Acre Lot County, Olllo.
Tllwnahlp or Labenon, 142, Town 3, Range 11
Subjlcl to alllaaaea,
county or Mlltga. and ott.., Olllo Com,.ny'a aaMmanta •nd right
Stela or Ohio, and Pllrcll•u,
and or . .yofrecorct.
• nd
Parcel Noa., 07· ·
further deacrlbad •• b 0 u n d • d
07· :
tollowa,to-wlt:
daacrlbed •a toltowa, ooua.ooo,
Baing In 100 Ac:ra Baing • lot :SO toot 00111.000 •net 07· ·
Lot 142. Townahlp 3N, Waat •net 110 teat ~7.000
.
Range 11Wolllle0hlo South; lhenca 30 r.at
PARCEL NUMII!R:
Company'• Purchaaa, Eaat and 110 North out 07-totllli.OOO
•nd being • parcel ot '"• Northaut PROPERTY
created out ol the corMr or thl tollowlng ADDRESS, 331 ao
Roger and VIolet ducrlbed
land: Walla Run Road
Willford property Beginning al tha Porttand, OH 45770
(Volume 310 page lilt, Nortllwaat corner ol
S•lct
Premia . .
Melga County DHd tha Ianda of Roy Louted •• 33110
Recorda) bounded and Wella; thlnca Solllh 21 Walla Run Road,
deacrlbacl •• tollowa: rode lo • rock comer Portland, Ohio 45770
Beginning In tha between n Ianda ol
Said
Promlaea .
canter of Walla Run Jamu J, Wellon end Appralaad lit $5,000.00
Road al lha northaaal H.C. Jonea; thence In and cannot bt aold tor
corner or the Taaala •
Nortllwaatarly laaa than two-thlrda or
Walla,
p r 0 p., t y direction lit rod a to • tllalamount
(VOlume 303, page 477, ataka In Walla Run
TERMS OF SALE:
Malgi County Dead Road; thane• In an $1,000.00 down, ·
Recorda); thane• Eaatarly direction 14 remainder
upon
along Taule Walla' rode to the place ol tandar of daed.
aattllna South 112.02 beginning, containing
Sharlll or Melga
teat to the center of one acre, more or 1111. County, OH
Willi Run Creak, EXCEPTING the coal,
·
pa ..lng Iron pine eat oil .and DU •• FRANKl
by thla aurvey at 11.00 reaarved by Jamaa J, WOOLDRIDGE co.,
and tt.OO IHI; thence Wllaon and Minnie L.P.A,
tonowtngtha
Walaon.
Allomeya tor Plalnllft
meandera or Walla Baing lht aamt 100 South PNrl st-t
Run •• 1pproxlm1taly promlau conveyed to Columbua, Ohio 4320f
by thalollowlng lllva Halan Allan by Riley 1114) 221-1102
courna:
Cochrtn and Wile 1nd
•
11 North .11 dag, recorded In Dead 14) 3, 10, 17,24.2002
34'22" t!aal t.I31HI; Book 115, Pagalll, II) 1, 2002
2) south 73 dag. Rtoordt or Deeda, . . . , . . - - - - - 21' 17" Eall43.231ttt; Mllgt County, Dhlo,
In MemOry
. 3) South 13 dig, THIRD PIECE: Baing ;=====:::;~
It'll" Eeall7.00 lttt; In Section 14 tnd 11,
4) South 38 dtg. Town 3, Range 1t ol In Loving memm·y uf
82'23" E~t111.01 ltlti the Ohio Company'a RODERT N, CLARK
I) North 77 dag, Purchaaa, bounded
who pussed uwny
33'35" Eaat 24.44 lett; and
,
Thine• leaving oatd daecrlbad aa lollowt.
22 ycnrs ago.
creak North 07 dag, Beginning In lha
April24,
1980.
canter of the Walla
88 , II" WHIZI.OI
The
mernMy
of
leal lo an Iron pin 111 Run Road In Mary
someone denr
by lhlt aurvay 11 the W111on'l Una: thane,•
Soulhwaat corner of down Mary W1taon 1 Is like u treasure of
tha Clarence 1nd Una tlx rode to lha
gold,
J o y oa
waddle center of Well a Run;
property (Volume 321, thence down Wallt Thut never dulls or
p•g• 321
Malgt Run 48 leal; thancaln
tarnishes,
county ' Dt 1 d direction 10 the Road; Or grows the leust bit
Recorda); thence lhanoa Wattarly along
old.
11ong Wtddla't Wall llld Wtlla Run Road
line North 07 dtg. II' 41 laat to tha place or We cunnot bring lhe
18" Waal 121.00 ltlt to beginning, Baing the
pust huck,
1ht cenllr or 1111 Wall• aama real aatata His ra~e nnd hands
Run Road, pa .. lng an daacrlbad In d11d
we cannot I()UCh,
Iron pin by IIIIa aurvay from Roy Walla and
But
we treasure
at 110.00 1111; hanca Eva Walla to Ltwrtnca
along the canter ol Walla 1nd TtUia Walla
loving memories of
Willa Run Road South or record In Volume
him,
12 dag. 07' 21" Watt 178, page 127, Dead
130.1111111o lht polnl Racordl of Malga Whom we loved so
or
beginning, County, Ohio, which
much.
containing · 0.42 tera, dttd contained lha
Sndly mi•oed oy '""·
mort or llta,
following language: It . Larry : dnu 8h,.r·in ·law,
Subject IO Ill lagll Ia undaralood IIIII
Joy nnd Kran&lt;lchildrcn,
NHIMnla,
nld granite ahall not r
p
&amp;w d
ThI
I b o vI rtnl, IIIII or tall "ld
mnru, cnny
en y
daaorl
pllona
were -·:::==-=~;;.~;~;:=~::::=
made fn
aooordanca
whh 1n 101uar 1urver
Help Wanted
conducted by Jamal
~- Stewart, PI 7421,
during November 1nd
Daoambar, 1113, and
J1nu1ry 1nd February
1114. laarlnga are
baaed on auumad
North/Bolllh direction
lor lha l!aal line altha
Charlll Campbell
property (Volume 300,
page 411, Mala•
County
D11d
Recorda), •nd art
Intended only to
exprau
angular

.

.
Meigs starting pitcher Jimmy Smith throws to the plate on
·
Tuesday (Shannon S hIPIey)

tant coaches (Matt Bokovitz
"It's hard to take a game
and Rich Corvin),'' said when you're up by so many
Houchens. "Together, we were runs and you give it back to
just trying to keep the kids up, them little by little," said
.reminding them that we have Thomas. "You've got to play
the ~apabilicy to come back every inning like it's the last,"
offensively, and we did.
Meanwhile, the Blue Devils
"Yo•J just have to persevere, will also take on a coupty rival
If you allow, younelf at any- today as they travel to River
time to think it's over, then it Valley.
will be soon."
NOTES: The Meigs JV boys
The Marauders took a 2-0 improved their record to 11-0
lead early as they scored a run Thesday with a win over Galin the first inning, on a sacri- lipolis, 6-3.
fice fly by Josh Napper scoring
oiGalllpolla
KyIe Hannan, an d anot her run Metgo
11 0 oo7 o - g 7 3
in the second as a sacrifice Gallll
ooo 223 3 - 10 12 4
rob
Smt
'
th
·
JL
Smith,
Knapp
(71tnd Facl&lt;lor. Warrtn,
grounder by Ja •
Aoochl (0), Moroll (7) lnd Jonll. WP Merola (5-0), lP - K1111pp. Melgo - Ja.
dro·ve 1'n Knapp
'
Smllll2-4, 3 ABI: Fecklor 2-4, HA, 2 ABI:
The Marauders will try to Knopp 2 runo.·oA- Wamtn 3-3, double:
rebound today at Southe.rn,
Getgar2·3, 3 runa: Jonea2·3, 2HA, 4 ABI,
3·runa: Buah 2-4; Hardy 2 ABJ,

·

JUNIOR HICH.TRACK RESULTS
. 1o.e.

111 ,.,., 1/I!IIY

·

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110M ~nllaa - K1rinan M' II ' Chrlallln 1111.
W111amactn SO 20,4; leiVII
100M hUIIIII - Wklalnl E 11.8:
au: Lftlllen 9H au: o\nglll
a.rnar ~ 11.'i ~OHE 20.1:
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21...Mc0rl1h E 28.7: ScliWtlaln =:~W.. 3~ 2u; Hen·
ooiL•tiY - 80 IU; M 114~ lky E St.t; Franton OVC 32.2~
OH 18.0; OVC 18. I : IIV 18.3; o: Hupp I! 82.4; WNw 3U; ROillh
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0

ft'lP "And More!" ·Ooo

m•a•urement.

Summer Job .Opportunities
. "Attention all College and
graduating Hip School
Students"

. Alao the rlghl to Ull
one·hall or 1111 water
Southern hitters were produced from a
wallr wall now locllad
Ash with a 3-4 night, Brice on real allele
Don't pass up this opportunity to
deacrlbad In Volume
Hill doubled, Wes Burrows 111,
page 361, DHd
make $3.000 to $5,000 and more
si11gled, Joe Manuel dou- Recorda of Malga
durinr the summer aaonthl.
In
man
bled, Brandon
Pierce County,
common with (lo&gt;rmar)
stymie the RV raUy in the
tripled, and Crouch, Dally Granlore, their halra Lui(ino't. Inc., in JackAD would
· fourth. Allen fanned two to
1111gn, II le
HiD, Justin Allen, Ty Hill, 1nd
like to 'JK!Ik you about our
luriMr agrHd by 1nd
end that inning then pitched
IUIUIIIel' job openilip
and Tyler Little each tingled. betwttn the parlltt
another. Matt Ath pitched a
thai tha partlai will
1-2-3 inning and Brice Hill River Valley hitten were ahllt lhl exptnHt In
. No experience DIIC81H171
proportion•
finilhed off che game. Gibbt with a double and equal
Pleue call u• at 740-395-xro
ptrtllnlng to tht
• Crouch fanned four, and tingle, Adam Sebultz a sin- umplng of llld Wiler
lor' JllOl'B inlormetim.
rom tht well and the
Ash and Hill one each. The gle, Graham a iinsJe, and malnten1noe
or ttld
Fun tlsae DIIPOI'tunWet
Eddy a tinsJe.
combined co walk two.
well. ,urllltrmort,
al10 avalfahle. .
Southern hosts Meip (larmtr) Qr~ntor~
Chris Brown tuffered the
hereby grant to tht
lotJ with five ttrikeoutl and today, while River Valley QraniHa, their hllra
l!llploJ•
entertains OaUia Academy
gave up twelve hits,
and
11t1gne,
tha
rtght
'
-------:-:-and ea11manr . to fay, ntelnllln, operete,
rap1lr 1ni ramo~•
watar line aver lftd
.., ... tha nNII ......
it11rtbed In Volume
, .., , ••• 1111, DH4
lleoorlle or Mtlge
County, WhiOh llld
Wllar line It to run to
lhl hOUII of tht
The lyraoute• llr the ..... DlttriOL
OrtnteNon ectlltallne ~~Wet DIIVICII Truok m•r b•
.,_, .... 111118. '
will
tHIN lntpaotect at tile lhtrlll't ltlt of,_
....... 01oGONa.OO
lllctt lor I 1tt1 Chaw trntmtJII pl1n1,
llofMI
ALIO
THI
..,0 pltiiUp, 4 oyf. Vtllowbutll lloa;,
fiOU.OWINQ
re1u11r
IMftUtl ti'IIIIMIHfell, ctut1n1
Tha ..... of Ollla,
DIICIIIIID IUAL
STANLEY HOME PROOUC
All bl;a mutt N bullneH hourt I
...... Coul!ly.
UTATI: .
MuNum Pomeroy 7:00pm
rtOIIWIII ly tile 1.111. t1 t:ll p.m.
llluttall In the
April 25th
dleltllll no ,..., 1111n
Wt rHtrwe 111e
ltnoflsiJI Ohio, 1110. Towneltlp of Lelllnon,
1:00 p.m. May · 20,
Bingo,
Glftl, Gamet
Nlutl~ny or ·
"' the County of ......
20112.
lttntft..., Morll 11 and1181eof0hlo:
"Arcanclr
from Fr~r~Ce
Truok will ba Mill
Ohio
FllltT "ECI: Iaing
Welcome
11 11, no wtrrtnl)l ~1 .. 11 •.24,2001
1111111111'1
1 1*t or 100 Acf8 LCIC
•JOflfHIICI or lmplltd
10, Town
11
~ the Ohio Compeny'~

Southem
from Pllpll

to

r.

Job

no

••Hilt

:,Y:C:

..

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___:.

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'

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Qtribune - .Sentinel ·..
CLASS IF I.B D

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,

sunset Home
Construc:tloil

eus.NESS IS GREAT

-·INti!

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. --~~~~llliltMllllo ..... h~

WfiOfh!li
~ 'e'ol 'IISSloM

AM.\\\11\.

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~:eA.•w.h

WE~
~ lblftt $11U;$Wiftll$, ~

*""lln~·~· .

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

Ail

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Atdhoriutl ApHt

"""'~­w,\),

liWIIIIIU.~

I'OIIi.ctllfMIMtnm.,.._~"

"-• HomR, Room Addltlona,
0..1111, Pole Bulldlnp, Roota,

....

Skiing. -Oecb, KltoMna, Drywttll

I

FREE ESnMATESI

992-5479

~ 011\o-.i

Chuclt or Jetrr .t

·B ryMIRwvR

JetT Warner Ins.

~

tti'ti'l:flliW~Y.~

Dtspl•v Ads

Cellular

~ \\llii\.Sl¥.

740..742-3411

(740) ......,

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No wellt-ina pMII&amp;e

HOWARDL.
. WRITESEl.
Rooftnt Home NlwHoftlll
Mllntenflnet.
~lttt
GuttoDown Rtmodlllng
Spout
l ComiiMitt I
FlttEstiml,_ I=Ml ISTIM~TESI

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS

'""'"'~ 011010~&gt; l tOO
Tl\\oltait't ht $'11\il'fa

&amp;UPIRSTORI

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• A~· $1101110 ~·· , O.y&amp;

740-. .1171

AliMtm~&amp;

llquipment Pw
F'lctocy 1\uthllrittd
c.st·IHPw
Dtaltn

IM Sr. Rt, 7SottiA
C()O/vll/t, OH 4572.1

.740-667-0363

Hill's
Self Storage
VaHey Hosl!ltol, o non·l)tuOI
1\ultheare fuclil11. cllitently has open .
J)t&gt;Sitlons fur the l'ullowlng:
I)~ Part -time ML'l'IM't'
fur Bvenlngt!/Nights (3tl hours" W\\t\k
ill' millt) Mu&amp;t ha\'11 tWIll\ lm1nedlarely
dli!lble lUI' WV lll:llnse
~) Iw!ll'art&lt;tl me experienced
.
Phlebotomists tor EYenlnyt!INtghts
(30 hours a week llr more)

'140.84Na17

8tltll1)t101

to10'xJO'
Houra

E•st State Street

Athens,

11-~~

Krls
Kanleckl

High&amp; Dry

:i98'1ll l:laahan Road
Racli\e, OH 4!17'11

~elli!llnt

?~0

Looii84.U26ol

~~~~:: Suppltmtnttl.lk! lnsuranl'tt .
IM
and lflnalltxpenses; Caltl'tr &amp;
·tteUrtmtnt,
&amp; 40lK ltolloven;
Major Medlt11l
liJ/

?tOO o\M • e:OO I'M

-

Ill

Self-Storage '
JJ?JS Hilllli Rt
A*"'JJ OW.

74().992·5232
Shade RIYer AG Servll't
· "Ahead ln Service"

Send resume ltl:

PUASANT VALLI.t\' ttOSI&gt;ITAl.
clo ttuman Rtlillll\'001

MS31 SL Itt. 1 North • 1'1!111eruy, 011 mao

Delivered
It Spread
ats.oo
"'ton
e-totona

1!20 V.lley Drht~
hint l'ltillillnt, WV ~MSO

Ot ~II (:\lW) 6'8-M. lll1t1.l"l"
Ot II'Mt hi (3ilot) 6'18-0?S

AAIIOI

· Unlit.«~

~·ll ret~~

rabbit;,
~

Onion Sets

F'ertlllter Spedflcol\y Oc•i11ned lbr Garden Cltlp!l
New Ftrtlllicr Buggies

,,..

All bul!lll•• hove been pallem 1e01ed to meet
"arunomy Ao!ll&lt;lotlon Stalldnru•

l.ttvt Mlllt a No,

Business Services

....,.

F\J\1 Line ur Bulk Onrden Setd•

(740) 742·7037

-

for llmbi, htl~·· . ...... &lt;hlckon; ....

fu.J~ftC~~~

t: . ,•_,~

a,
I !•'•I

J,l), CONS'fRUCTION

New Homes &amp; Rennxlellng
. "SpedalltlnR In Log Home•
&amp; ~ubber Roo!!"
Ourageo, !'ole llulldlngo, Concrete

&amp;, ,

,,.,,,.,Mirror

~IIi

IExc~lu.rlvt Dealtr
IFa~·torv Direct

&amp; Siding
Commerolal &amp; ~esldentlal .
- ~oofs

1Jn..
ltl u·
-

(140) 992·3987 . .
Ill!~
owner &amp; Opcramr, John Dean ttN·

O~etett~~

neplacement Windows

LIME·

STONE

T.1l" 'lw PAIN
,,u' ',f ~1ilNTINGI
t •••

111•· ,. 11 ,. 1

v· 111

Dlllvt..S&amp;

lprtld 1111.00

per tonl ato 10
tona, 1lmlttd
1r11 0111 tor

futl'll Tllul'ldly

11 SUnlllu
Doo11 Open 4:30
flrll ~lltll'l
6:30
Preoreulue tap lint
Prot~~ ealue

(740) 581·2173

Covtreu "' Sundays .

Or IIIYI name
and numbtr

RESIDENTIAL &amp;
MANUi''ACTUREO HOUSING
HI· Efficiency Hellt Pumps, Air
CondltlonerN &amp; Furnacc!l
• Tonneue Conr
• Venhl10r • Bu1
jShhtld II Full Line

HERIJALIFE

BIRGOl111 ·

JbUndlyl

dttahe. Cell:

't4~lllllltlllRB1.

Pomti'OII fiiiH

Drlvawaya, Pallet,
Parking/play Artas,
Sldewalkl, FIDOI'I
II VMtl IKptrttnoa
''" l•llmllll
(loll lrM)

lud.;p~udellt

Dl•trlbutur

I Lost 27tb.
In 32 daya.

Advertise

100%

naturai/Ouaranleed

1

In thll IPICI

740.882•7031

I

for
'28 ptr month

MANlEYS

...

SElF STORACE
Ntw Hmntt • VInyl

!

--1411•-Jiim~-.

!.Jrl

-~

...,_11/r I!"""' /''JP"
....- - ·'

• llephk~ernent
Wlnduw• • Roollna

971eech St.
middleport, OH

CGMI!d® tMIIIOIIIIW.

. (18'111r610'K201

Tlrtcl ot Mowlna?
Not A lprln.ll Chlolltn?

(740) 192·3194
H2·&amp;635

(740) 992·1536

FAEI UTIMATI!I

74Mt2•7111
(NO lUNDAY CALLI

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Sldlna • N•w On;••

Httlth llrobleme?
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LIMITID OPININQI

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Melp County's

Hometown News,.per

DOWN

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along ·

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41 Daok
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Atltl

.

Southem boys thump Meigs, B1

5"-

41 Kllia'

motlllf

10 Beneficiary
WWkl
21 Root . 43 HoMr

;:rna

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M Knock

44

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41 Pwtorml

lllarply

Leonard Cohen 1s
. 31 •-aoll11"
lloncl'a fOil • CUll
47-500
blllol
41 Chin
. best known as a
aM HaN
wood • ~mp~r
Olluauln
7 TOniiiO
27 Pllnllll
uetolndor (2
; singer, but he is also a
and limon
jeiiiH
Hln~~
wde.)
, poet and novelist. In
:11 Dr.llotgan I bib on
2t
4t Tulip color
Ofilia
t El Dcndo
lrlum a SO "Aiaddln"
"The
Favourite
oomloa
lool
:10 Fr. m 11
Drtnce
Game" he wrote,
:11 '-don 10 Oralncrop 31 Dry-11 Dellv.y
llonl
1NOk
• Thlilk llloll 11 KaMpe " Ill
"Seven to II is a
4 0 , _ · 12AAA ·
27 Courllng
U Trippel
huge chunk of life,
llonMI
• GO"''IDN :IIS.yl
41 Pll!llplonl 1t Hljlpllr
wnhout
full of dulling and for.I!!Y
11 Sup1rman'1
lhlnklno
getting."
In bridge, though,
seven from 11 can be
vital. When partner
leads what you expect
to be a fourth-highest
card, you should apply the Rule of
Eleven. Subtractitlg
the value of the card
led from 11 tells you
how . many cards
above that one lie in
the other three hands.
·'. (You ignore the !cadI er's hand .)
In this deal, look at
' the North and East
hands only. Defending against three notrump, your partner,
CELEBRITY CIPHER
West, leads the spade
by Lull Cempo1
seven. Afier declarer
C.lobrlty Clphor cryptogromo ore crootoa tram quototlon1 by lomout
calls for a low card
-11. put ond preoont. Eoch loHor In tho clphor ollndo lor anothor. .
Today't clue: C .equals G .
from the dummy,
which spade would
you play? .
'PWTZWFMZK:
M
CDZJ
H G L
Although three no·
FWJ J P
F0 W
F Z IF 0 L Z H 0 I.
crump by North is
laydown here, it is
PMKP
DY
G W' P
right to open one notrump with that
TLYIWZWYTW
Y L H. '
South hand. If you
start with one of a
WAMY
WPMZ
minor and partner responds one spade, ygu
PREVIOUS SOL.UTION - 'The future Ia not what II waa.'
have no accurate re- Bernard L.avln
·
•
-11!!1' .!.t.lha only etHic wllhoulamblllon.' - John Stti•k
bid.
Seven from 11 is
WOlD .
four. So, there are
OAMI '
four spades higher
than the seven in the 0 Roorrongo lottors of rho
four scrambled wordo bo·
North, East and
low
to form four olmplo wordo.
South hands combined. And you, East,
~ ALI S A
can see them all :
~-,~,r-_....,lrTz-1
dummy's king and
. . . _ .
your ace-jack-nine. ~~~:;~~=~...J
So, declarer has no
A E W. E V
spade above the ,
:....,.,__,.,....,.,~
seven. (If you study · ·
. .
the spots carefully, ~:;~~~~~ ..
you can work out that,.. R U G 0 D
From The Have You Ever No·
South has exactly the
4 15 1
.;·. tlced Department: Summer is that
four-three-double. . .
.
time of year when thousands of
ton.)
'people rush out to the great outIf declarer cannot .,
T E N E l T .doorsand --- --. -. ·
beat the spade seven,
i 7
~C) Comploto tho chucklo quoroo
neither should you -- L.-.1..-'---'·'---'.-.L.----J
.
by filling In IM mlulng wordo
you dovelop from 111p No. 3 bolow.
underplay with the
six, leaving West on
lead. Another spade
·allows your side to
take the first four . _...;.;:;.;;..;.;;.;,:;,;.;, :,_ _.._,.~.....
tricks. -Later, the club
ICRAM.LITS ANsWiu'
king is the fifth defenCarbon • Apple - Hence- Wicked. ·ONE: PIECE •
sive trick.
Customer to butcher:"Do you have a 15 lb. roast?" · ·
Note that if you ·Butcher: 'No, but I'll order one." Customer:"That's not •
· play any spade other
necessary. I just lost 15 lbs. anCI I wanted to see how .
much that looked like in ONE PIECE ..'
than the six at trick
• •
one, the contract
.
makes.

Turkey harvest down in

James Knighting, 76
Wilkie Holman
·
..

Charter.

Debllls, Al

lo•:c

BARNEY

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Wt-liNfVtft

TONI6t4T'S
TOPI(a

~·M

FftLING I&gt;OyiN,
.l MA~f A l&gt;fNT AL
APPOINTMeNT ANI&gt;

\

(UfltS' ~Oil
rt4e

Tt-!t"' GAN(t~ IT.
IT ALWAY$
Gttei~$

tLtJes

VP.

THE BORN LOSER
,..

I

~~~E,

'Two oF 1-1e~&lt;. 5'E:C.IN..

1/'AI/IA.

fl~ (.001'.£() 01 NN(~ ""'- '

c.t-\I(.l(.ffi Pt&gt;-.1'\'!.1 K~(-1,

tO!t ~ TOI'IIGI{\!

N-10 .PI~"-Wl.E

1!\f

,.
,c;..&gt;-

1--J 1-\IC.I-\ 01'\E
I~ Tfll~'r

-~~~~!

0 .

--~

WEL.L. ...

.I1-rl-nl

I1--,.,l

If

, PEANUTS

The late5t medical report
says that cookies are
qood for yolJ.

I

~ SO EAT LOTS OF COOKIES !
811'( TllEM

FOR VOOR 006 !

BUV TIIEM BV TWE

I I I I

MILLIONS !

. SMj},RE TWEM WITH
VOUit. 1'06 ! "

~---

~---,..

=

.•

•

ahead .in rareer matters or

,

your .,pirntions. Work in tandem with any opportunity
that comes your way.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Conditions art favorable to make thor critical work
change you've bun conrem~
plating. Once initiated, see it
through to condusio11. Know
where to look for romance,
and you'll tlnd it. The AstroGuph Matchmaker instantly
reveals which oigno are roonantically perfect for you.
Mail S2.75 to Matchmaker,
c/o this ncwspap&lt;r, P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156.
GEMINI (May 21-june 20)
-· A good time could be had
with those with whom you
1hare counuon Interests. Your

role should th.r of the orsanizcr who gets rveryone to-

gether.
CANCER. (Julie 21-July
22) -- Some ~hanges you
make at work ~ni~t prove to

.

benefit yourseli ~nd your family. This could be something
you do at home or in a workshop.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ~­
An ·:usodate might invite you
to join in a social gathering. 1(
you do, you might discover
you have more in conunon

with this penon than you realized.
VIRGO (Aus. 23-Sept. 22)
·- All conditions in general
look good for you, but whore
you can shine the mosr is in
financial dealinp.
LIBRA (Sept. 2J.Oct. 23) - Now io the time to promote
products, i11ues or interests

th.lt you h.lve a p&lt;Boital stake
in. lt's the sincerity you exude
th.lt brinp IUCC&lt;SI.
SCOR.I'IO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Even if you don't pasleis direct control over an imporr•nt matter in which
you're intereoced, the resultS
could end up pleasins you :u
iC you did. Keep the bith.
SAG ITTAll. IUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) - This misht be a
clay when you can relax a bit

•

•,
r

.

Thuuday, April 25, 2002
Noticuble improvements
will take place in. the year

•

.

•
breather,

High: 605, Low: 405

Detlllls, A1

MelgsVSC
·meets
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission will
meet at 9 a.m. on Monday
at the Veterans Service
'
Office, 11.7 Memorial
Drive.

Middleport rec
Committee
to meet

becauoe•

contingencies are involved.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb '
19) -- This could be a cia~
when the good guys finis!:i:
first. Make certain you con~
tinue to act in accordance
with your highest idealo andl

half-hour prior to sunrise
until noon ·~ach day. A special
youth-only _turkey hunt was
open last Saturday and· Sun"
day on public hunting areas
only, for hunters 17 and
younger.
Only bearded gobblers may
be taken during the spring
hunting ·season. Hunters arc
required to take their turkey
to an official check station for
permanent tagging by 2 p.m.
on th e day of harvest.
Hunters with the proper
permits may take ·a limit of
two birds durio)g the fourweek season, but no more
than one per day,
About · 260,000
wild
turkeys arc present in Ohio
this year, according to Division ofWildlifc estimates.

MIDDLEPORT
Jltliddleport
Recreation
eommittee will meet on
¥ay 7 at 1:30 p.m. at village
hall.

.

tleneflt dinner
planned In
Chester
•
·CHESTER The
an'l'llial ·benefit dinner of
the Cf:iestet-Sbade His-.
rorical Association will
be held Friday at Royal
Oak Park. The ham ·dinner will be served at 6:30
p.m. Tickets are $10 each.
Lawrence Eblin will
provide . harmonica music
during dinner and Donna
Greene, story teller, will
entertain after the dinner.
To
conclude
the
evening there will be
door prizes and an auction. Donations of items
for the auction are welcome.

Lotteries
..

Ohio
Pick J: 5·7·1
Pldc 4: 1·4-4-3
SuperLotto: 5·11-14·26-32·45
llonu• liD: 34
Kicker: 1·6·9·9·S..O
luc:jleye !: 1·22-29·33·36
PickS nltflt: &lt;H·6
Pick 4 n!pt: 4-7·8-5
Wftt Vlrpnill
Dallr J: 3-:!·3
Dallr 4: 4-7-3-8
Pow•rll..l: 1-13-16-33-43 (1)

~

"

an impact on the number of
turkeys harvested and the ·
cold temperatures . re.ally
dampened hunting pressure,'"
said Dave Swanson, wild
turkey project leader for the
Ohio Department of Natural
Reso~rces.. Division
of
W1ldhfc. As the weather
improves, we know we'll see
more hunters in the field and
an increase in harvest numbers."
This is the third year that
.spring turkey hunting has
been open statewide. Prior co,
that, the spring hunt was only
open in 57 counties.
ODNR estimates that
more than 90,000 people will
hunt turkeys during the
extended four-week season,
which runs 1hrough May 19.

PLANNING FOR EMERGENCIES

~

and take a
dealings you have, )&gt;e it one;
or many' are all on track and
nmning omoothly.
•
CAPR.ICOR.N (Dec. 22-i
Jan. 19) ~- There'• qothins w
bt gained by diocuuing your:,
plans regarding an ambitiou ·
aim with othen. You know
better than anyone ebe wha~

standards.

Weather

POMEROY
Cold
· weather and high winds
dampened opening day har~
vest numbers -for the 2002
spring wild turkey season.
Preliminary figures reflect a
33 percent decrease from
2001 fim_-day harvests across
the state, mcludmg a decrease
in the number · of turkeys
killed in Meigs County on
Monday. Last year, 135 wild
turkeys were harvested in
Meigs County on the open· ing day of the season, com. pared to only 87 on Monday.
Guernsey County led the ·
state in first-day harvest, with
!56 wild turkeys . taken.
Hunters in each of Ashtabula,
Harrison, and Muskingum
Counties took 136 turkeys,
and in Coshocton, 134.

Index
:altdltn•-11 ......

Calendar ,.
Oassifieds

Comics
Dear Abby

Editorials
,Movies
.Obituaries
SJ&gt;9rts
Weather

AS
84-6
87

A4
A6

A3
A3
81-4
A2

Q 2003 Oltio Valloy l'ublllllinl CO.

'fAILETOP EXERCISE- Members of the Meigs County l.ocal Emergency Planning Committee
·(LEPC) and Emergency Management Agency (EPA) gathered at the Meigs Senior Center on Tuesday to conduct e tabletoJ) exercise geared toward preparing local emergency agencies for a possible terrorist attack or hazardous meterlals situation. (Submitted)

Meigs Co. LEPC, EMA
hold 'tabletop exercise'
BY TONY M. WoH
TLEACHIPMYDAilYSENTINEl.COM

POMEROY - In an effort to prepare local
emergency agencies for a possible terrorist
attack or hazardous materials situation, memben of the MeigJ County Local Emergency
PLanning Committee (LEPC) and Emergency
Management Agency (EMA) gathered in
Pomeroy on Thesday to participate in an annu.a! tabletop exer:c(se.
During the prepare&lt;!rtess exercise, which Wol$
held in the conference room at Meigs Senior
Center, those in attendance were given an
emergency scenario to review, and afterwards,
formuLate a plan of action tlut could rectify
the situation.
According to Dave Harris, public information officer for MeigJ EMA, the core objectives
of the exerciJe included initial notiticatiol'l and
rctponse techniques, incident assessment and
command. communications and actions taken
to protect the gener.al population.

Also discussed among the members was traffic and access control, responsibility of EMS.
tire and hospital services. and proper release of
information to the public, said Harris,
Harris added the exercise is a requirement
for receiving both state and federal grants and
is an excellent tool when preparing local ag~n­
cies for possible emergency situations.
"Eve,ty emergency management agency
throughout the country i5 required to hold the.e
annual tabletop exercises if they are to receive
any state or federal grant money;' said Harris.
"It's also great training for local emergency
agencies who might, someday, encounter a terrorist attack or Haz-Mat siruation; such as a
leaking chemical barge or train derailment," he
added . " It really helps members of the
LEPC/EMA better unilerstand their responsibilities if an actual event does occur."
Renee Young. representative ·with the Ohio '
Emergency Management Agency, served as
facilitator during the exercise.

h .new
ent

~eac
·

a

_
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEDID&gt;MYDAilYSENTINEL..COM

POMEROY - WBNS-TV will rcjoitl the lim·up '" '
Charter Communications cable, after represellt.ltivcs of hoth
the C:olumbus televisioll station and tin· cank C&lt;Jillp.my
reached an agreement Wednesday ~Vellillg.
Kurt Leachman, operations managc·r tor Charter Communications, confiro11 ed th at tlw a~reement was readtc•d Jll &lt;t
prior to a public meeting i11 Mari~tta designed to :oddrc·1s ·.1
contract stalemate which resulted in removal of I 0- TV from
the lineup on Monday.
· The Marktta meeting was organized by Michael Mullim ,
a member of the Marietta City Council and the city\ liLili cics commission.
Under the terms of Wednesday's agrt·entcnt. 10-TV will .
return to the local cable lineup within 24 hours, alld the
P hio News Network will be added tn Chartds extended
basic service within .10 days, on a one-year trial basis.
On Monday, the cable company dropped .111-TV from its
channel lineup because, Leachman said, of a letter rec eived
from the station asking Charter to do so.
.
The two parties were unable to agrc·e nn terms to continue Channel l()'s presence in the local market hcramc dt~r­
ing .contract negotiations, WllNS Jll\iltc·d th .tt Charter
include both Hl-TV and the Ohio Ncw1 Nc·twnrk in the
sam~ seven-year contract, Leachman said.
Doth WDNS and ONN arc owned by Di spatch l'ritlling
Co. ofColumbus.ONN is scrambling fnr viewers: It recently lo1t nine percent of its potential viewer• when a Cleveland cable carrier removed ir fi-om its lineup ea rlie-r this year.
The 24-hour Ohio news and feature ~t•rvkc· h.ts been oil the
air for five years, but has yet to turn a prolit .
Many local viewers expressed displea1urc· with tlw lo" of
Chann el 10, not on ly becallse of th e ( :oliornhu1 .md
statewide news content carrird on itlri hH.d Ill''''' pro~r.1 111"' ,
but because the station is the fl ag~hip ft&gt;r C lhio St.&lt;te Uni ~
vcrsity athletic programs.
"'We're pleased tO have 10- TV b.otk "" our lineup,"'
Leachman said rhis morning. "We will h.ow ONN on the
system for a year on a trial situation and before th e end of
that year, we will check with customer\ to 1ce how wdl tlu·y
like it.
"If everything goes well, we will continue ONN a1 part
of ·our package. I know this will make a lot of OSU fan&lt;
happy and give our viewers a chance to try a new ~e-rvit· c ."

Lane restriction

slated for Ohio 32
FROM STAFf REPORTS

CHILLICOTHE - Motorists on Ohio 32 in Jackson
County will face lane restrictions· in the weck1 10 come as
the construction of the interchange at Wellston moves into
full swing during the Ohio Department of Tran&lt;portation
District 9 spring construction &lt;ca:.on .
As crews from the Complete General Comtruction Company begin excavation work along the project •itc, westbound Ohio 32 will be redu ced to one lane both ca&lt;t and
west of the route's intersection wirh Ohio 327.Thi' pl1a1o of
the project is tent.nively scheduled to begin M~y 1, and
while the lane restriction is in effect nrotori;ts may
encounter some traffic delays.
Currently, traffic impact$ arc minimal, and Ohio 327 traffic
continu~'S tO be maintained in two lanes, Cl&lt;»urc of the route
will become necessary during Pluse 3 of the project; at wh1ch
time, Ohio 327 traffic will be detoured onto the newly constructed County Road 88, Wellston Indu;mall'ark Road.
Complete General Construction of C.olumbus was awarded a contract in the amount of approxnnatcl y $'1.155 omllton
to build the interchange just south ofWell&gt;ton. The proJect
consists of the construction of a full intcrchJnfle at the mtcrsection of Ohio ·.U and 327.
The construction oC the mkrchange woll uke two full
construction f('asons to complete, and the &gt;ehcdulcd &lt;om pletion date is June 30, 2004 .

~:

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 2(!),
-- Fringe benefitS that h.lven'c;
been apparent to you may to"
v.eal thenuelves. Once you
spoitlitin: put them in the
pot and ketp the fires bumonsARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
- A Conner associate may approach yo~ , again to htlp
come up woth a oalable promotion on a project that
could bendir bolh of you.

Did you know that lhe Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation is

of's01 ing grant monies for Transitional Work Programs~
Did you know lhis pregram can reduce your workers' camp costs~
Call Holzer Work Link lo see how lhis program con be provided at
no charge to stale funded employer$.

ftolgr

WorkLiak

Call
.

446-1733 or
....... 1·866·308·2266

MEDICAL . CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org

'

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